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Debaser
Debaser
Debaser
Ebook199 pages3 hours

Debaser

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When the mutilated body of popular music superstar Ryan Watson is discovered in the suburban apartment of two drug-addled and blood stained local youths both police and press have a field day.
KIDNAPPED! BEATEN! RAPED! KILLED! EATEN! screams the hyperbolic headline in one tabloid newspaper.
DRUG FRENZY LEADS TO FACE OFF! screams another.
A clearer cut case of murder, then, it would be difficult to imagine. But is there less to this than meets the eye?

LanguageEnglish
PublisherMax Frick
Release dateMar 22, 2013
ISBN9781301060511
Debaser
Author

Max Frick

Max Frick was born in Scotland where he spent more than half of his life thus far in a new town not dissimilar to the one depicted in his novel Debaser. At the age of twenty-five, seeking something a little more fulfilling than the drudgery and routine that his hometown had to offer, he upped sticks and moved to Prague in the Czech Republic, where he imagined artists and bohemians drank freely and deeply from the cup of life. There he would write! There he would shine! There he would make his name! There, alas, he lives to this day in a life of drudgery and routine not dissimilar to the one depicted at the beginning of this bio.

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    Debaser - Max Frick

    DEBASER

    By Max Frick

    Copyright 2013 Maximillian Frick

    Smashwords Edition

    *****

    I find myself always torn between two beliefs: the belief that life should be better than it is, and the belief that when it looks better it is really worse – Graham Greene

    Our dignity is in direct proportion to our passion – John Ruskin

    1

    Framed in the doorway he cursed his trembling fingers as they tried, ineptly, to re-button his fly. He felt sick. The pounding in his head was virtually indistinguishable from the pounding of the music. Through fractionally open, sleep encrusted eyes he glimpsed the carnage. The grey light of morning, intruding through the bare window, had lent the room a lurid veneer, and the grim reality of the situation forced itself upon his attention.

    Last night the drugs – more, and more varied than he was used to – had tinted hard fact (their depraved behaviour and its horrific conclusion) with an innocuous shade of fiction. Beneath the half-light of a solitary light bulb – still burning but ineffectual now – it had all seemed different, funny even.

    ‘DEBASER!’ screamed the music accusingly. ‘DEE-BASER!’ it screamed again.

    A number of unwelcome sensations were battling for supremacy inside his throbbing chest, welling up and receding, before welling up again more violently. Vague anxiety, the usual victor on mornings such as these, had, on this particular morning, been ousted by dread and panic while despair, biding its time, looked on.

    He pressed his hands to his forehead, pushing the palms firmly into his eyes.

    ‘Think!’

    Above the din of the music he could hear Dooly whining, by the front door at the other end of the room. The dog's distressed ululations – desperate, pleading – seemed to accurately vocalise his own inner turmoil, and they affected him as the heart-rending strains of a violin might.

    ‘Poor cunt. Must be starvin by now. Just wants to go home. ’

    He took as deep a breath as his fearful condition would allow.

    ‘Come on, Billy, think! Should wake him up. Make him deal with it. Fuckin psycho! Right! First things first. Switch off that music.’

    He took a few timid sidesteps along the back wall, hardly daring to look where he was going. For there, beneath the window, lay the source of his anguish.

    Half crouching, with no small effort, he reached out a quivering hand and blindly fingered the front of the CD player. To better orientate his wandering fingers he risked a quick glance over and away and... Click.

    ‘Oh, fuck!’

    Outside, the diminutive twitterings of some few birds provided a cheerful counterpoint to Dooly’s baleful whining. But their cheerfulness could do nothing to lighten the mood in the room, only serving to bring out in bold relief the full horror of the situation. And it was even more horrific than Billy had first thought: as a result of that quick glance he had made a bewildering, grisly discovery. His sufferings were cranked up to hitherto unknown levels and a tidal wave of nausea coursed implacably through his body. The bile rose to his throat. He rested the palm of a hand against the wall to steady himself and his stomach made a fist. Its contents surged upwards through his trembling frame and were forcibly deposited, with a splash, onto the carpet.

    The gestural equivalent, in humans, to the note of hopefulness that Billy suddenly detected in the heightened pitch of Dooly’s whining would be the raising of eyebrows. He lowered his. Somebody in the stairwell! He listened apprehensively. Footsteps! Dooly’s tail wagged uncontrollably and an involuntary series of expectant yelps emanated from the depths of his animated body. Was someone at the door? He strained to hear, not daring to breathe. Silence. He raised his head slightly. Footsteps, next landing. He released his quivering breath. Neighbours only. But still Dooly... The front door swung vigorously inwards as though dealt a powerful kick by the sole of a heavy boot. It rebounded off the inner wall (leaving a handle-sized piece of wallpaper embedded in the plaster) and swung back towards its assailant. It was halted by a firm hand. Billy, had jolted violently at the noise and instinctively spun to face the intruders, whereupon he had lost his balance and fallen back against the wall. He now found himself staring into the eyes of a somewhat disconcerted policeman, while another younger officer attempted to keep a gathering of nosy neighbours from rubbernecking ghoulishly into the room. The dog, free at last, snaked sharply round the door-jamb and fled through the curious assembly.

    That was the last straw. Billy quite simply could not possibly feel any lower than he did at that moment. Then his foot slipped and he dropped arse first into the puddle of tepid vomit. A few drops squirted out at either side of him, splashing his bare forearms. He leaned his head, wearily, back against the wall and even allowed himself an ironic half-smile. His capacity for suffering had, in a few hellish minutes, been utterly exhausted and his captors, who now held his fate entirely in their hands, had, paradoxically, afforded him a sense of release. Even the dampness of the sick, as it seeped through the seat of his jeans to warm his clammy skin, was mildly comforting to him.

    With his heroic entrance the policeman had no doubt intended to arouse the admiration of the onlookers, not least that of his second in command (he could have knocked after all), but the scene that greeted him had unmanned him more than a little and he now strove to superimpose the unflappable demeanour of a world-weary paperback detective over his obvious agitation. The appropriate attire – a careworn suit, say, and a shirt casually unbuttoned at the neck, no tie, and of course an overcoat – might have better enabled him to achieve this effect than did the navy-blue uniform that his lowly position as beat bobby called for him to wear.

    The neighbours were eager to condemn. The wrought-iron banisters lent a metallic resonance to the cacophonic clamour of damning voices now ringing from top to bottom through the cold concrete stairwell.

    ‘I’m never piggin done bangin up at them! Comin and goin at all hours, loud music day and night!’

    ‘That's if you can call it music! It’s just noise!’

    ‘Aye, that’s right! And the language! Always effin and blindin!’

    ‘It was quiet before that other one moved in, but now...!’

    ‘Last night I heard them shoutin cut off his effin head! Cut off his effin head!

    ‘Well, I’m not surprised it’s came to this. If you live like animals, sooner or later you become animals!’

    Finally, after a few false starts, the second policeman managed to intervene, telling them, in patient tones, to go and wait at home and someone would come around to take their statements later. Reluctantly they dispersed, nodding and shaking their heads emphatically, each in sympathy with the grievances of the other, and the young officer stepped inside to join his colleague, closing the door behind him.

    He too was unmanned by the scene he encountered and had to swallow hard to keep from retching. His superior, who had since regained his composure, fixed him with a stern if hypocritical stare. They then proceeded to scan the room.

    It was a typically small living room, longer than it was broad and sparsely furnished. The eyes of both officers were immediately drawn to the far right-hand corner of it. There - at the base of a life-size cardboard figure with its arms raised (of the type a record or video store might use for promotional purposes, though only the white back was visible) - lay the bloodied corpse of a young man. It was partially obscured from view, at one end of a couch, by the couch itself and also by what appeared to be a curtain, complete with curtain rail, draped haphazardly across the midriff. While his junior partner remained transfixed, the more experienced officer got on with the task at hand.

    It was abundantly clear to him that what they were dealing with here was two age-old but distinct struggles. The first, and least important of these, was man’s struggle to conquer himself, to raise himself above the level of the beast. A struggle evidently given up some time ago, if he were to judge by the squalor that now confronted them. Broken bottles and beer cans, drained to the dregs and crushed, before being tossed casually hither and thither, formed no small part of the garbage that thickly cluttered the floor. At the foot of a threadbare sunken armchair and the couch, long-ignored dinner plates and takeaway food containers were left carelessly lying and capricious summer flies, disappearing and reappearing, fitfully partook of the furred blue-green remnants of what had once been food and now - to the flies, at least - was again. This aspect of the room, while surely in breach of some council/tenant agreement, did not constitute a crime, and was testament only to the bacchanalian slovenliness of the flat’s youthful occupants. In this respect it was perhaps no different to the houses of other young men in the district upon whom the officer had had reason to call in the course of his duties.

    It was to the second struggle (by far the more serious), and anything that may be connected with it, that he now turned his attention. This was one individual’s struggle for survival, another battle, as he could plainly see, sadly lost.

    Blood, chilling in its ubiquitousness, tainted everything. It heavily stained the carpet in several places. The armchair cushion and back were also stained, and crude red handprints, reminiscent of a child’s schoolroom artwork, were daubed on either arm. Smears of blood were clearly visible on the couch too, and from a splatter low on the wall, beside a CD player at the back of the room, thick dark drops had trickled down and extended left and right along the skirting.

    In the near left-hand corner, still connected to the mains, a television, exposing its scant innards, was lying smashed screen upwards behind its stand. Again spots of blood flecked the wall beside it and traces were discernible on the jagged corners of the broken grey glass.

    The officer paused, scarcely able to envision the savagery that had occurred here.

    Immediately in front of him a small upturned table had spilled its contents onto the floor. Various pharmacological agents – powder, pills and resin – both within and without small resealable clear plastic bags, were mingled with assorted related paraphernalia – cigarette papers, cigarettes, lighters and loose tobacco. An upside down ashtray half covered a credit card – a platinum American Express credit card – and the officer, flicking the ashtray aside with the toe of his boot, cocked his head for a better look. ‘R. Watson’ read the signature.

    ‘Hmm?’

    And then, of course, there were the two probable perpetrators. Suspect number one was absent-mindedly tracing random patterns with his finger in what looked from here like vomit, while suspect number two lay sound asleep foetus-like on the couch with his hands tucked contentedly between his thighs. Blood liberally stained the clothing, and smeared the skin, of both young men.

    On the floor beyond the armchair was an old-fashioned Polaroid camera, angular and ungainly, and one, two… six photographs. The elder constable gave his subordinate a nudge, and, with blatant disregard for copybook procedure, despatched him to retrieve one of them. This brought the young policeman within close proximity to his first dead body and he could not resist a closer look. At first he seemed puzzled, narrowing his eyes as though he were not quite sure what it was that he was looking at. His eyes suddenly widened. The shocking realisation blanched his rosy cheeks. Quickly snatching up a photograph he returned it with trembling hand to his superior, who, curios to know, yet none too keen to see, what had so disturbed his underling, took a moment to study it.

    It appeared to show, in washed out colour, an unlawful sexual act taking place between two partially dressed males. The dominant male (clearly identifiable from his clothing as suspect number two) was kneeling behind his seemingly unconscious partner (presumably the deceased, vaguely familiar) who, positioned on all fours, was having his head pulled roughly upwards and backwards by the hair.

    ‘Sir’, ventured the young policeman. ‘I think you should take a look at the body. But brace yourself!’

    And this, with a degree of outward composure bordering on suavity, and a far higher degree of inner trepidation, his mentor now did.

    With a sweep of his foot he scraped aside an assortment of litter from the right shoulder of the corpse and crouched before it. At a swish of his hand flies, like a flock of startled birds, took off, and frantically described figures of eight low above their carrion. A swish back scattered them further.

    It, he, lay unseeing, eyes staring ceiling-wards. The left arm was trapped beneath its, his back, the right, palm-upwards by his side. His trousers had been pulled down and were gathered in folds, unfastened, around the calves; the legs were crossed at the ankles. He was not wearing any underwear. A puddle of thick, dark, coagulating blood, that had spilled from a deep gash in the head, now formed a sort of thin pillow beneath it. The officer had seen instantly the cause of his colleague’s distress and the same strong feelings of perturbation gripped him now (though he was determined not to let them show). Part of the face was missing. The mouth hung open slightly and the whole right cheek, from just below the eye socket down to the lower jaw bone, and from the nose back to the ear, had been torn off. Raw flesh hung in ragged shreds around the dark cavity, and two half rows of top and bottom teeth, yellowing towards the molars, were exposed.

    As he affected to coolly examine the body...

    ‘Extensive bruising, mm-hmm. Possible fractured skull, ah-ha. Are those teeth marks?’

    ...the officer was all the while racking his brain for some light-hearted, flippant remark that would, he thought, corroborate his outward calm; something glib and wholly inappropriate, of the type that springs so readily to the minds of his fictional counterparts under similar circumstances. None was forthcoming and he retreated to his original position at the door, where he rejoined his companion, took a moment to compose himself and began to question the suspect.

    ‘Okay, son, what’s your name?’

    ‘Billy. Billy Wilson.’

    ‘Okay, Billy, what’s through the back there?’

    The officer nodded towards the doorway at the back of the room.

    ‘Em, two bedrooms and a bathroom.’

    ‘Is there anybody in there?’

    ‘No.’

    ‘And through there?’ he said, nodding towards the door to his left. ‘Kitchen, right?’

    ‘Aye.’

    ‘Is there anybody in there?’

    ‘No.’

    ‘Okay. Now, who’s this?’

    With a flick of his head this time the officer indicated the couch.

    ‘Tony. Tony Drake. Do you want me to wake him up for you?’

    The officer paused.

    ‘I’ll ask the questions son. He’s fine where he is for the time being. And who’s that?’

    Another flick indicated the body.

    ‘Ryan Watson.'

    The officer paused again, this time to scrutinize the face of his interviewee.

    ‘Don’t mess about, son! You’re in a lot of trouble here. Who is that?’

    ‘It’s Ryan Watson.’

    ‘It’s Ryan Watson?’

    ‘Aye.’

    ‘Thee Ryan Watson?’

    ‘Aye.’

    ‘The Ryan Watson who’s currently topping the charts with Just One Of The Lads, his fourth consecutive number one single, as a solo artist?’

    ‘Aye.’

    The junior officer

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