Read DEATHLOOP Online

Authors: G. Brailey

Tags: #Reincarnation mystery thriller, #Modern reincarnation story, #Modern paranormal mystery, #Modern urban mystery, #Urban mystery story, #Urban psychological thriller, #Surreal story, #Urban paranormal mystery, #Urban psychological fantasy, #Urban supernatural mystery

DEATHLOOP (33 page)

Zack confessed to him once, in very hushed tones, that he was unable to ejaculate unless he had within his sights three full pots of Marmite standing in a row, and as Sam ate Marmite at the rate of knots, and as the local shop was frequently running out, Zack was at his wit’s end to clear the matter up.

After considerable thought Justin told Zack that although numerology was not his field, he felt his need for three pots of Marmite as against one or two was telling. He suggested that the problem Zack was experiencing could be with his perceived notion of the nuclear family. What were his views on being an only child for instance, and had his mother insisted on him eating Marmite at times of stress? Zack pretended to be fired up by Justin’s elucidations, and announced that following their talk he had decided to confront his mother and have it out with her.

When Zack relayed the conversation back to Sam he laughed so much there was a moment when he honestly thought he would end up in Casualty with serious internal injuries. And so deciding to see just how far they could push it, each day they would think up more and more outlandish symptoms to put to Justin, until finally he realised what Zack was doing, (about the same time he refused to make him any more acid), and vowed never to speak to him again.

Zack knew that Veronica’s take on things was that he had suffered some kind of mental crisis probably as a result of drug abuse, but that as the deaths had stopped he should forget about it and move on. And as much as he wanted to subscribe to this theory too, his conversation with Rose had made him face up to the fact that his continuing paranoid state was to do with a real fear that the deaths had not stopped at all but were simply on pause.

Zack just wanted someone to say…’
Oh that old thing… the deaths!
’ and laugh at him for letting them get to him. Maybe a psychiatrist could do just that. Zack was also confused about the suicide’s boyfriend. Why had he plucked him out of the air? Had he seen him in the neighbourhood and just plonked him in Brunswick Street for good measure? What was that all about? Zack was mighty relieved that the deaths were imaginary but it still begged the question as to why he had conjured them up in the first place. If a few visits to an expert could cut through the swathes of theories that he had come up with and other people had come up with, Zack felt he had to give it a go.

Back in his office he called Tracy and for once she picked up.

“You weren’t kidding were you?”

“I did warn you.”

“He’s impossible.”

“He’s instructed you though?”

“I wouldn’t go that far, but I’m working on it.”

“He’s covering for someone, there’s no other explanation.”

“That’s what I think too but he won’t have it.”

“He’s got no family to speak of… no one to help him through all this.”

“So he said. Did he tell you about his mother?”

“No, what?”

“She was hacked to death last year apparently and now his father’s doing time for killing the man who did it.”

“Changing the subject for a moment,” said Zack, suddenly irritated by Jason’s fantasies, “Susan has made allegations of rape before.”

Tracy went quiet then she said: “Who told you this?”

“Never mind, but it needs to be checked out.”

“It
would
have been checked out, no question, and the cops have said nothing to me… unless…”

“Unless?”

“Well… it could be that she made other allegations under a different name. Any ideas?”

“Try Allen, Susan Allen, and she used to live in the Clifton area of Bristol, I know that much.”

“Was she married then?”

“Couldn’t tell you but I sometimes noticed mail in her flat addressed to a Susan Allen… so you never know…”

“And it’s not just a hunch all this?”

“No, it’s not.”

Tracy said she would see what she could dig up but she was suspicious of this new information and Zack knew she was.

CHAPTER 21
 

Elizabeth Frisk had agreed to see Zack that afternoon. Luckily someone had cancelled otherwise it would have been a bit of a wait. But now Zack sat across from her in a very comfortable consulting room on the edge of Hampstead Heath he felt a complete dope. He hated asking for help from anyone - to Zack it constituted weakness, and he was many things but he was not weak. It also suggested he had faith in this sort of thing when he didn’t. He was desperate that’s all. He sensed that Elizabeth had picked up on all this as she threw him a rather icy smile, flourished a Parker pen and opened a large note book, her gold charm bracelet jangling at her wrist.

Elizabeth was in her forties, with long blonde hair and translucent skin. She had a full figure, to some an overweight figure but at almost six foot she carried it off. Today she was wearing a long purple velvet skirt, a lilac blouse and over it a mushroom tailored jacket. She looked the part all right thought Zack, glancing at him over her gold rimmed spectacles with quizzical candour. Elizabeth was an attractive woman, certainly, but utterly sexless. It was rather like she had been offered her quota of sex appeal at some historic date but with a thin smile had declined.

“So let’s jump in at the deep end shall we, Zack… is it all right to call you that?”

Zack shrugged as though it was a stupid question. Then he noticed her jot something down in a large sprawling hand.

“What brings you here today?”

There was nothing for it, if he felt a dope already no doubt in an hour’s time he would feel even worse but what was the point in taking part in this charade if he held back?

“I keep seeing people,” he began, “strangers who call out to me by name just before they die.”

Elizabeth shot him a glance, it was brief but it told him everything he needed to know and that was that he was alone in this, which is what he had suspected all along. Elizabeth allowed herself a small, barely perceptible frown and Zack could tell she wanted to ask a question but she held back. That’s what shrinks did apparently, they gave you a bit of rope and watched you hang yourself.

“Like a human magnet I feel drawn to a place, to a person, and I can’t resist. The first time it was a suicide, a girl jumped from a roof, she asked me to catch her, they all ask me for help, and they all seem pleased to see me, then they die and I find mobility again, and I move away. These things, whatever they are - visions, wild imaginings - they are so real. They are just so real.”

By this time it looked as though Elizabeth had written a page. She continued writing for a while, then looked up.

“How many of these incidents?” she said.

“I’ve told you about the first, the second was a heart attack I think, the third was a traffic accident, and the fourth was a young black guy, he’d been stabbed – but of course he hadn’t.”

“When did they start?”

“A few weeks ago…”

“Does anything precipitate these events?”

“Not really, I know when they are about to happen though, the atmosphere gets heavy and I can’t breathe.”

“You have a sensation of not breathing,” said Elizabeth, correcting him like she would a child.

“No, I don’t take a breath, literally, it’s as though something else is keeping me alive. I move towards the dying people with an inevitability but I also feel misplaced, as though I shouldn’t be there. Then I freeze - no movement at all. Just as my mobility comes back my breathing returns and when I first hear it pumping in and out of me, it’s deafening.”

Elizabeth leant back in her chair and looked at him. “Can you remind me what you do? I think you did tell me when we spoke on the phone.”

“I’m a corporate lawyer with Nyman Holder and Drew, you might have heard of them.”

Elizabeth made no comment but wrote down the name. “Would you consider your job rewarding?”

“Not remotely, but it pays well, and when most people ask I say I’ve sold out so I might as well say that to you.”

“Can you explain what you mean by that?”

“I used to do legal aid, criminal defence, but I moved on, I climbed the money tree.”

“Do you regret that?”

“Yes and no, both have their downsides.”

“Would you say your work is stressful?”

“Yes, but I don’t mine for gold in South Africa which I imagine is a whole lot more stressful. I get well paid, I enjoy the fruits of my labour.”

“How about family life?” she asked, pleasantly.

“I’m single, but before you ask, no, I’m a confirmed heterosexual.”

“Promiscuous?”

“Not at all, just a serial monogamist, there’s lots of us around.”

“Are you in a relationship at this present time?”

“Yes.”

“Did you meet this woman before the deaths or after?”

“In between…”

“Are you happy would you say, generally?”

“I was very happy and Veronica makes me happy, but an ex-girlfriend has accused me of rape. She’s out for revenge, but obviously not everyone sees it that way.”

“So you have denied the accusation?”

“Yes.”

Elizabeth seemed to think about this for a short time, then dismissed it and moved on.

“What about your parents, do you still see them?”

“They’re dead.”

“Were you close?”

“No, I hated them both.” Elizabeth stopped writing and waited patiently for him to continue. “They were both extremely weak, with my father it was drink, and with my mother it was sex. My father left when I was quite young, I didn’t see much of him after that.”

“And how do you feel about weakness?”

“I despise it.”

“For what reason?”

“It’s lazy, it’s the easy option, fortitude isn’t a gift, it’s an achievement.”

“Brothers, sisters?”

“No, I was enough of an inconvenience, once bitten as they say…”

“Stepfathers?” said Elizabeth, scribbling furiously again.

“Hundreds of them…”

“And were those relationships successful?”

“Not remotely, I tried to kill one or two.”

“But you didn’t succeed?” asked Elizabeth, with a smug grin.

“Not through want of trying,” said Zack, enjoying his private joke.

“Do you want to talk about those experiences?”

“No, not really, I’m sure you’ve heard it all before. It wasn’t imaginative, just the mundane torment of a child.”

Elizabeth’s pen stopped just for a second then she turned a page. “So looking back, did anything happen that was out of the ordinary that could have sparked these incidents, do you think?”

Did he tell her about the regression? Was that a good idea? Elizabeth waited, sensing something else, guessing what it might be.

“I took part in past life regression.”

Elizabeth looked up at him as though he had just confessed to drowning a litter of kittens. “And?” she asked.

“I saw a man dying and he too asked me to help him, and for a while I was convinced the visions were real… sorry, I’m not explaining this very well.”

“So the visions you now see are similar to what you saw during the regression, is that it?”

“Well yes, there’s a format, certainly.”

“A format?”

“A common denominator if you like… I don’t know who they are, these people, and yet they all seem to know me.”

Elizabeth stopped writing for a moment, whisked her specs off and frowned then the specs went on again. “How about drugs?”

“I took a fair bit of acid at one time and some other stuff, speed, heroin, although I never mainlined, and I had the foresight to steer clear of crack, but for the past ten years or so nothing to speak of. Coke of course, now and again, but who doesn’t do coke - now and again? Generally speaking my years of stimulants are behind me.”

“Why is that?”

“I got older, I conformed, I started behaving myself… who knows?”

“Why do you think these dying people ask for your help?” said Elizabeth after a moment.

“That’s why I’m here, for you to tell me.”

“Do you like providing help for people, have you in the past?”

“I enjoyed it at the law centre, at least I think I did…”

“You
think
you did?”

“Well, I was struggling to get a tenancy at that time, so, possibly I liked to think of myself as a guiding light to the undeserving poor… but maybe the truth is that I took the only job that was on offer.”

“And would you say you helped people now?”

“No, I provide a service for which I’m amply paid.”

Zack realised that Elizabeth was unlikely to crack this in an hour, but if today was anything to go by he’d be hobbling around on his zimmer frame before she came up with a solution. He wondered what she was writing. Was she writing ‘arrogant bastard, let’s mess him up even more’ or ‘no hope, deter from coming back’ or ‘this could net me thousands, speak even slower next time.’

Eventually the hour was up and Elizabeth marked the fact by closing her book and smiling up at him.

“You want answers but there are no easy answers, not with something like this. It might be a long haul, are you up for that?”

“Not unless you can guarantee me some kind of result.”

“There are no guarantees I’m afraid.”

“Why do you think this is happening to me?”

“I’ve only the basics here and it’s much too early to say.”

“Stress, a reaction from the hypnosis, or drug abuse, which would you say was more likely?”

“There’s no quick fix I’m afraid…”

“But if you had to choose, which one do you think is the more likely…”

Elizabeth smiled across at him as though she had fended off questions like this a million times before, then she stood up.

Zack felt weirdly depressed when he left Elizabeth Frisk, realising as he ambled through her idyllic cottage garden to the Mercedes parked up in the street, that he hadn’t mentioned guilt. Maybe he would mention that next time, if there was a next time.

Elizabeth had told him to think things over and get back to her. What did that mean? Yes, I’ve had a little ponder and a hundred grand is just within my budget so let’s kick off with a 5 year plan. The woman was pleasant enough but totally uninspiring. He knew from limited knowledge of psychology that the idea was for the client to find the answers to their problems themselves, through hints, suggestions, and tricks with mirrors probably, but it seemed such a laborious way of going about things. Why couldn’t she just say: ‘this is a reaction from over work, stop working.’ Or ‘the drugs are in your system still, so keep clear,’ or something constructive. As it was he was no wiser, and a fair bit poorer.

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