Book Jacket

 

rank 1070
word count 73291
date submitted 20.01.2010
date updated 24.06.2011
genres: Fiction, Thriller, Crime
classification: adult
incomplete

LYING TO GOD

Ian Gosling

Step inside the mind of a serial killer... feel his anger; share his pain

Warning: You will find no comfort here

 



THE FIRST TIME ADAM KILLED there was justification; he was angry and frustrated. If his crime had been discovered he could have got off with manslaughter.

BUT ADAM KILLED AGAIN and again until his anger subsided. He stopped before they caught him.

NOW HIS ANGER HAS RETURNED. More controlled than before, his preparations have been meticulous.

Adam will be their accuser, judge, jury and executioner. The first, a stranger – for practice. The last, a gift – for a friend. The others – for Him. Their crime - LYING TO GOD

Detective Superintendent Mike Barton is called to a crime scene where he sees the mutilated body of a woman, hanging beneath a bridge. He is reminded of the Cambridge Ripper murders; more than a decade earlier. He caught him; he’s in prison.

Barton’s fears that they have a copy-cat are confirmed when he receives an email from the killer promising more victims.

The promise is kept. As the killer taunts him with more emails, Barton repeats past mistakes. When it gets personal, his frustration boils over into anger.

 
rate the book

to rate this book please Register or Login

 

tags

, abuse, bible, brutal murder, cambridge, kidnap, mind games, mother, murder, obsession, ocd, police procedure, psychology, psychopath, rape, revenge,...

on 25 watchlists

127 comments

 

Text Size

Text Colour

Chapters

1

report abuse

                                     Part One

        MOTHERLESS CHILDREN

 

    Sometimes I feel like a motherless child

    Long way from my home

    Motherless children have a hard time

    Motherless children have such a real hard time

    A long way from home

            Traditional

 

    Therefore shalt thou fall in the day, and the prophet also shall fall with thee in the night, and I will destroy thy mother

                        Hosea 4:5

v       

 

                                FRIDAY 13th AUGUST

 

When he was a boy, nobody believed him. Perhaps they might have if she’d beaten him, but the abuse was never physical. The torture she administered left no outward signs, though the pain was real and enduring. The damage she inflicted was permanent, yet visible only in the mind’s eye. His are the wounds that never heal, but continue to fester and exude their pus; a foul poison simmering and seething inside his head like a witch’s brew.

    The boy is now a man, and has at last found people who believe him.

    Keith believes him; though they don’t talk about it much. They don’t need to. Keith has endured the same pain. Keith understands.

    Sandi believes him. They talk all the time. Sandi senses his pain; but she doesn’t understand. She tells him she wants to. He’s tried to explain.

 

    He has been telling Sandi about her for days, weeks, months. There are days when he talks of nothing else. The cauldron is always simmering. Sometimes it boils; the pressure becomes too much to bear, and the whole malodorous mess erupts. Then he rants and raves and his words lose their shape; they all come out sounding the same and it makes no sense. He sometimes wonders if it ever will.

    There are nights when he wakes, trembling and crying, and seeks comfort in her arms. And Sandi holds him to her breast while he weeps like a lost child. Like a motherless child, only recently orphaned.

    The worst times are when he doesn’t talk to Sandi at all; when he just sits and stares with his eyes wide open. Stares right through her. And when she stares back and tries to look into the tangled mess of his mind, he turns away. Those are the times when he wonders why, and what on earth is she still doing there?

     He’s been counting down the days and becoming increasingly restless as the confrontation has drawn closer, his moods swinging wildly. One moment he’s ready to take on the world, and he wonders if he really needs her at all. The next he’s running for cover, and she shows him just how much he does.

    She’s been sitting with him all night, holding his hand, stroking his head; soothing him as the blood vessels in his neck, pumped up with a cocktail of anger and adrenalin, pulse alarmingly. When he wavers, she does the talking. Her voice calm and reassuring, talking him up and urging him to shake off the black shroud of depression before it smothers him.

    Though he hasnt slept, he feels renewed, and tells her, ‘I’m ok. I’m ready now.’

    He knows she won’t try to stop him. They both know that nothing will be right between them until this is over. He nods impatiently as she reminds him of what he has to do, ‘Take control and don’t let her get inside your head. Stick to what we agreed and it will be all right. Just go straight there and get it over with.’

    She waves from the top of the stair as he opens the door, and again from the window as he crosses the street; breaking his step to take a backward glance. Picking up his pace, he quickly reaches the corner.

   

    Go straight there – where else would I go?

    Get it over with – too right I will. The bitch is history!

    Go straight there and get it over with – Oh yes, bring it on!

    If only it were that simple.

    By the next corner he is already having doubts.

    Should have – could have – waited.

   

An old friend is calling him; offering reassurance. At first he resists. Ignoring the lure of The Free Press and hurrying past The Cricketers, he walks purposefully towards the bus station. He weakens, and drags his feet as he approaches The Elm Tree.

    Should have – could have – waited

 

    Maybe, he had this in mind all along. He could easily have gone another way; taken a route that avoided temptation. Shaking it off, he carries on. 

    But, now the open doors of the Clarendon Arms are beckoning, and good old Jack Daniels, his persuasive friend, isn’t going to let him get away that easily – What the hell? Just one won’t do any harm.

    ‘The usual?’ the barman asks. Hes already opened the bottle of Jack Daniels and starts to pour, without waiting for a reply. He reaches beneath the counter, where he keeps a small supply of the iconic green-glass bottles that contain six-and-a-half fluid ounces of ‘the real thing’ for his more discerning regulars; everyone else gets Coke from the fountain on the bar.

    He shakes his head, ‘Not today, I’ll have it straight.’ He picks up the glass and tosses it back. The double-shot disappears in seconds; the unadulterated spirit sears his throat. ‘Aaagh… that’s better.’

    Inevitably, he stays too long in the company of his two-faced friend and just one becomes two, and then several more.

     Not for Dutch courage, or at least that’s what the voice inside his head is telling him. This is a wilful challenge to her. It will add to the drama. She abhors alcohol. It is the only vice from which she abstains. He imagines her backing away in disgust, as his whiskey sodden breath assaults her senses. And that is as good a reason as any to have another.

    He doesn’t really know what he is saying. But it’s all about her.

    The barman listens and urges him on, ‘Cow! Just like mine was. You’ve got to sort her out ... show her who’s boss. Do you want another one?’

     ‘Why not? Same again, cheers mate’

    Should have – could have – waited.

 

    His old friend Jack has betrayed him; again. He doesn’t feel drunk just a bit unsteady on his feet – but the barman won’t serve him any more.

    ‘You all right, mate?’ Someone offers a steadying hand, ‘Take it easy.

    Brushing the hand aside, 'I’soright, I’ll be ok… jus’ need some air.

    Staggering, he struggles through the double doors.

    Grabbing at the arm of a stranger, he slurs incoherent words of apology, then tripping on the step, falling headlong; spread-eagled on the pavement.

    Scraping his face off the slabs, he sits on the kerb and shrugs off the comments of the passers-by, ‘What are you looking at?’

    Picks himself up, dusts himself down and shuffles towards Drummer Street – Arseholes … what do they know?

    Seeking salvation from the bus-station kiosk, he grunts at the spiky-haired youth behind the counter, ‘Coffee, black, three sugars, no lid.’

    ‘Sorry mate. Gotta put a top on; health and safety.’

    Mutters and mumbles, as he throws a handful of change across the counter. Takes a couple of sips as he walks towards a bench – can’t drink through this poxy hole. ‘Fuck it!’

    Fingernails clawing at the rim, trying to prise off the ‘Bloody stupid lid!’ Suddenly the flimsy plastic cover surrenders. Too suddenly, and he knows it’s going to spill and he knows it’s too late to stop it.

    Feels something warm and wet, looking down at the muddy-brown trail soaking into his new T-shirt and, ‘Fuck… Fuck… Fuck it!’ He shouts, at no one and everyone.

    Sitting on the bench, spilling more coffee than he drinks; struggling to keep his eyes open.

    As his eyes close, his voice fades to a mumble. The coffee is all but gone, his confidence too, and when he wakes only the dregs will remain.

    Should have – could have – waited.


 
                                       AFTERNOON

 

Should have – could have – waited.

    Stumbling – trips up the step and falls into the bus.

    Mumbling – ‘Um, er… Tr… Trum… Trumpington. Er, um… single… no, er... return.’

    Fumbling – coins spill from his pocket and cascade onto the platform.

    ‘I’sokay, sno problem… look… gosomore money, here’s a tenner.’

    The bus driver brushes aside the banknote, ‘Can’t change that. Exact fare only.’

    ‘C’mon you bastard… j… j… jus gimme a fuckin’ ticket.’

    ‘Exact fare only. Now get off my bus before I call the police.’

    ‘Fuck you. I’ll walk.’

     Should have – could have – waited.

 

    It’s only two miles. It seems a lot more, and every step offers a choice; carry on or turn back. And every decision is the same – Too late; can’t run away now.

    Approaching the wooden gates; hanging askew on broken hinges – Almost there.

    Imagining the house; hidden behind the thick hedge – Is it really three years?

    Walking up the driveway; sees the house – Looks the same.

    But being here isn’t what he expected – Feels strange.

    Should have – could have – waited.

 

    Feeling agitated; no longer excited, but nervy and apprehensive like a trespasser skulking furtively in the cover of the shadows.

    The sound of the gravel crunching under foot echoes through the trees, crackling like gunshots. There was a time when the dogs’ ears would have pricked up at the slightest sound. Bruno and Jasper would have raised the alarm and seen off any intruder, before they got within sight of the front door. But there’ve been no dogs here for years. Only he can hear the sounds of his footsteps; amplified by his growing anxiety – Why am I feeling like this? Why should I feelguilty?

    His lips twist and quiverWhat’s she done to my garden?

    Trying to keep his mind focused on his mission, but can’t ignore the neglect that surrounds him. Taught by his father, he has tended this garden since he was a small boy, barely big enough to wield the tools. And now – Where did all these weeds come from?

     Dandelions, docks, and thistles are growing through the gravel. They always did, but he would pluck out the tiny seedlings before they took hold. These invaders are deep rooted and triumphant. In the sunnier parts of the dishevelled borders, the summer’s growth of herbaceous perennials heroically scrambles thorough the withered stems of several previous summers; somehow managing to defy even the choking ligatures of bindweed. In the darker places, starved of nutrients and light, the battle against the advancing armies of nettles has been lost.

    And the lawn; always immaculate – broad emerald-green stripes manicured by the razor-sharp blades and heavy roller of the ancient ride-on Atco; piles of clippings collected in its capacious grass-box, then carefully emptied onto the compost heap – now looks more like a rough cut field, scalped by the slashing knives of a jobbing gardener’s rotary mower; the clippings left to rot where they lie.

    She knows how much he loves the garden – Does she really hate me that much?

    His heart quickens as he climbs the wide stone steps at the front of the house and stands under the ornate portico. He rubs his hands over the columns, looks up and admires the carved stonework. His forebears spared no expense in employing skilled artisans to decorate the house, and the elaborate entrance is merely an appetiser for the architectural feast waiting inside. This is what he has come back for.

    He grew up in this house, although he can’t remember when he last thought of it as home. Maybe once, but that was years ago, before she drove his father away.

    Now he feels like a stranger. He was always a stranger in this house. She never wanted him. He was – as she never tired of reminding him – an ‘accident’. Every day of his life, he has borne the burden of her resentment and he hates her for that.

    Sometimes in his darkest moments he hates his father too, for leaving him alone with her.

    When he was eight or nine years old, about a year after his father left, he started to write about her. He wrote stories and poems in the pages of his school books. He wrote in his English book, in his Maths book, in his History book, in every book, and in any book – he just wanted them to know. He just wanted someone… anyone to take notice and take him away from her.

    His teacher told the headmaster. The headmaster called his mother to the school, and suggested she should take him to see a psychologist – “The school just doesn’t have the resources to deal with problems like this…” 

    It was official – he was a problem.

    She didn’t need resources to deal with the problem. She locked him away – down there – without his books, no pens, pencils or paper, and nothing to eat, and nothing to do except cry. He was down there for four days. Then, she sent him back to school with a note, “… sickness and diarrhoea”. He wasn’t really ill of course, though he couldn’t tell them that. He was too frightened, but he never wrote anything about her in his schoolbooks again.

    Problem solved?

    No; not at all.

    Sometimes when he was down there, she left the light on so he could read. She never let him have paper when he was down there, and the only book she allowed him was The Bible, and he would never have dared to deface that. So he wrote on the walls instead, using ballpoint pens, pencils, crayons, marker pens, whatever he could smuggle down there without her knowing. She never went down there, so it was always his secret.

    One day he when he was down there, he found a rusty old six-inch nail.  He hid it under his shirt and took it back to his room, where it is probably still hiding on the ledge above the door. Sometimes he would hold it in his hand, scribing circles in the air as he imagined gouging out her eyes. Or he’d imagine she was a vampire, screaming as he drove the metal spike through her heart, before he watched her shrivel to dust.

    He remembers his twelfth birthday.

    He returned home from school, did his jobs for the day, sat down at the kitchen table at precisely five o’clock, ate his tea and then did his homework. She didn’t make him go down there; she never punished him on his birthday. On his birthday he got to spend an extra hour or two in his bedroom. 

    After she bolted the door, he used the nail to scratch a poem on the bedroom wall. He could have used a pen or pencil; it would have been easier. But the slow process of precisely gouging the letters deep into the plaster was altogether more satisfying. He wanted it to be neat ­with no mistakes, and with only the moonlight for illumination – after his father left, he had only once dared to switch on the light after she locked the door and that cost him a whole day down there – it took him several nights, and it hurt. He still has the scar where the nail cut into his palm. Whenever he looks at the scar, he remembers what he wrote on the wall.

    I’m an orphan

    It’s not my fault

    SHE made me like this

    SHE made me an orphan

    SHE don’t need to be dead for that

    Dad is never here and it’s HER fault

    He ran away from HER

    SHE is supposed to be here

    Not just HER body

    But in HER head

    SHE is always here but SHE is never here

    SHE is meant to love me but SHE don’t

    SHE wouldn’t lock me down there if she did

    SHE hates me but I don’t care

    I’m meant to love HER but I don’t

    I hate HER

    SHE should be DEAD

    One day I’ll be bigger than HER and then

    I WILL KILL HER

    It won’t make no difference when SHE is dead

    I’m an orphan already

    She never knew it was there, hidden behind a poster, and though he knew she would never read it, it made him feel better. At the time it felt like the ultimate act of defiance.

    Should have – could have – done it before


 
                LATER

 

Should have – could have – done it before

    He knows that was never possible. But today on his twenty-first birthday, the time has come. The house is his at last. His inheritance from the father he hardly knew. Soon, she will be the outsider; the stranger not welcome at his door.

    Trembling with excitement, he takes another deep breath and a firm grip on the bell-pull. It is over two years since they last exchanged words and he expects their meeting to be brief; he will allow no room for her arguments.

    Ringing the bell a second time; waits – a moment seems like hours. No reply.     Pulls again, shouting, ‘I know you’re in there.’

    Pressing his face against the door.     He can’t see any movement – the small, richly coloured panes of antique glass are translucent, but not transparent – only the dark, silent shapes of the hall furniture. Large, imposing pieces, handed down the generations; all catalogued in his memory. The reception hall is a dark and dingy place when the sun is at the back of the house. It hasn’t always been. Originally, the room was illuminated from above by a large roof lantern. His grandfather had it covered over during the war and it was forgotten; he will restore it one day.

    Suddenly, all the colours of the rainbow are dancing on his face. The rays of the low evening sun are streaming through an open door, flooding the hall with soft amber light, and backlighting the shadowy figure standing in the kitchen doorway. The shadow moves towards him, calling out in a strident tone, ‘Go away, boy. I don’t want to see you.’

    ‘It’s no use playing games, Mother. I’m not leaving. You’ll have to open the door sometime.’

    Hes resolved to be fair to her, fairer than she deserves; fairer than she has ever been to him. Although he doesnt have to, he is going to allow her a few more weeks. That’s fair, considering shes had years to prepare. But fair isn’t something she understands and now she’s laughing at him; not in jest, but in derision. The cackling shadow shimmers behind the leaded lights, like a multi-coloured ghost, as it moves towards the back of the house. Then she’s gone, and the light is shut out as the kitchen door slams.

    The voices are clamouring, demanding action – Fool, did you think it would be that easy? What are you going to do now? Give up? Let her win, again? Do something.  Quick, go to the back of the house, the side door is never locked.

    Now inside the small lean-to outbuilding, he’s standing opposite the kitchen door. He moves towards it, footsteps clicking on the uneven, quarry-tiled floor. He’s too late. The key is already turning in the old-fashioned lock. The rusty levers havent seen a drop of oil for years and groan as they force the bolt, grating, into its keeper. Denied entry, he leans back against the door and marshals his thoughts.

    The old scullery has changed little since his great-great-grandfather built the house. He can hear a familiar, slow, steady and strangely reassuring sound …plip-plop, plip-plip-plop… the original cold water supply still runs through Victorian lead piping to the ancient brass tap over the deep Belfast sinkplip-plop, plip-plip-plop… it’s been dripping for as long as he can remember. Fixing it is on his list of jobs.

    It’s a long list. He has big plans for the house, although he has no idea how long it will take or what it will cost. Theres a little money left from his father’s estate, but nowhere near enough to finance even the essential improvements and repairs. When he gets a job, he’ll take out a mortgage to pay for the major repairs, but in the meantime, there’s plenty he can do.

    Fortunately, his forebears’ improvements were always practical rather than aesthetic, and the house still possesses a wealth of original architectural features: fireplaces, cornices, doors, ironmongery, window sashes, and shutters. Restoring these treasures will require only the careful removal of a century’s accumulation of layers of paint, ingrained with dirt and dust. It will be hard work, but it will be a labour of love, and hell start as soon as he can – as soon as she is gone.

    But shes still here, and making him angry.

    Fists hammering on the door, he sees her shadow moving behind the glass.

    He’s shouting at her, ‘Open the door, you evil witch.

    Thumping on the door, ‘Come on’ he rasps, ‘open it now or I’ll...’ his words tail off, sticking in his throat as the shadow moves closer.

    Her hand is reaching out towards the lock; then a click as the key starts to turn. The levers are groaning, the bolt grates, and then the handle turns and the hinges creak, the high-pitched noise offends his ears; jangling his already ragged nerves.

    Should have – could have – gone home

    Too late now; the door is wide open and she’s facing him. ‘Or you’ll what?’ she snaps; her words sting like a whip lash. She glares at him with a stare turns him to a jelly.

    Should have – could have – gone home

 

    She is forty-three years old, and by any measure a good looking woman. Her figure has filled out slightly over the years, but only in the right places, and she dresses to enhance the curves. When she sees a man she wants, she smiles, and her eyes sparkle, conveying an unambiguous message – she knows what they want and she can give it.

    The face she shows to the men who take her fancy is everything they dream of – beautiful, seductive, sensual; skin soft and unblemished, pale natural tones lifted with splashes of colour, subtle hints to highlight her high cheek bones, and darker shades to emphasise the dewy, turquoise pools above. Beneath a powdered and perfectly proportioned nose, a pouting crimson gash glistens, moistened by the flickering tip of her tongue; advertising the pleasures in store – she keeps it in the jars on her dressing table and puts it on for any man who cares to look.

    But he sees her as they never do. The face she shows him is the stuff of nightmares– cruel and hard; pinched cheeks, thin, twisted snarling lips and cold piercing eyes that hurl daggers with their stare – she keeps it in the darkest corners of her mind, and puts it on only for him.

    Unlike others, he can see the evil inside. This is the whore who broke his father’s heart; the witch who summoned his childhood demons and brewed the mess inside his head.

    ‘I, I, I’ll, I…’ he stammers.

    ‘Come on then,’ she begins to taunt him. ‘If it’s worth saying, let it out… don’t wet yourself.’

    Should have – could have – waited.

 

    Memories come flooding back. Across the kitchen, he can see the door leading into the hallway and beside it another door – that door, the one that leads down there. Behind that door is the steep flight of hard brick steps on which, in the darkness, it was all too easy for a small boy to lose his footing. He can see the boy now.

    He’s standing outside that door; crying as his mother’s hand turns the latch above his head, crying as the entrance to the cellar opens behind him, crying as he waits for the command he knows by heart – “Down there, boy! Get down there and pray to God to forgive you for dishonouring your mother.

    The boy’s tears mix with the pool of urine on the floor, as he tries to plead for… what? Forgiveness… Mercy… Love?  She doesn’t know the meaning and the boy is never sure what to beg for. His words, all tangled up in the stammer, won’t come out; so she can’t hear him anyway and it wouldn’t make any difference if she could.

    But he can hear the boy’s voice clearly as he stumbles towards the steps. It’s always there. It’s part of the chorus inside his head, and as long as he keeps the words inside his head, the boy doesn’t stammer.

    Should have – could have – waited.

    But he has to speak, ‘I, I, I, I’ll…’ He stammers, trying desperately to unravel the words from his tongue.

    ‘Oh! Shut up and come inside,’ she crows, cutting him off – as always.  She’s never given him a chance to conquer his impediment.

    ‘You’re pathetic. That’s always been your trouble you can’t say anything because you have nothing worth saying. Do you really think I’m afraid of you?’

    Her face sours, her lips and tongue writhe, savouring the rancid venom of her own words, as she pours scorn on him. ‘Oh! Poor little thing, look at that sad little face. Oh! Poor little boy, he’s upset. Never mind.  Do you want your Mummy? Do you want Mummy to feel sorry for you?

    Come to Mummy,’ her voice softens as she takes his hand, and draws him inside.Come in. I’ve made some tea.’

    Then she laughs, cackling again like the witch she is, ‘Do you know how pathetic you look? Sit there and listen, I’ll tell you how it’s going to be.’

    And to make her point, she smiles at him, but not as a mother should look on her son. That should be a look of love. But her smile carries no warmth, nor any pretence of tenderness. The smile she reserves for him is grotesque. Perfected through years of practice, it is brutal and designed to instil fear.

    He says nothing, but feels – as he always has whenever she taunts him – frightened, diminished, inconsequent; worthless. She’s right, he is pathetic. Now he just wants to run and hide  Why did I come here?

    The solicitor said the bailiffs would get her out. But the thought of today has been in his head for so long. It’s a dream he’s been living since his father died, leaving the house in trust for him. Under the terms of the trust she had a right of residence until her son’s twenty-first birthday. He’s been waiting nearly five years to laugh in her face as he turns her out.

    And now, with just a few words and her poisonous glare, she cuts him down, and he feels like a helpless child again.

    Should have – could have – waited

 

    As he expected, their meeting is brief.

    And very one-sided, which foolishly, he had not anticipated; though he has no reason to be surprised. It was always this way and he doesn’t know why he thought today would be different. There is no discussion, and therefore no compromise.

    She talks at him, and ridicules his naivety. Did you really expect to find me waiting with my bags packed?’

    She tears up the letter from his solicitor and throws the pieces in his face. ‘What do I care for your threats? Two extra months … am I supposed to be grateful?’

    Her voice shrills, assaulting his senses and battering him into submission. She is in total control; she always has been. They’re her rules. She rails at him, lashing him with her tongue, until she becomes bored with him and wants him gone.

    Her words hiss as they escape from the twisted smile, ‘I’ll decide when, if ever, it’s time for me to leave.’

    Then pungently, and smiling again – just to emphasise the point and leave nothing to doubt – she dismisses him. Spitting out the words like poison darts, But you… you pathetic, useless excuse for a man… you can leave now.’

    He doesn’t argue – he always knew he could never win; never has – and he’s left with less than when he arrived. Not just empty-handed. Worse – drained of all his reserves of confidence. The tank is now empty, and all that remains is the useless residue of what might have been – he feels less of a man.

    Physically, he is a big, powerful man – a couple of inches over six-foot, broad shouldered, used to row at number three in the college senior eight – but she has reduced him to insignificance.  He feels smaller than he has ever done, smaller even than the boy in the cellar. He has been crushed by the pressure of their mutual hatred; crushed into non-existence.

    She has extinguished him.

    Should have – could have – waited


 
                MUCH LATER

 

Should have – could have – waited

    He spends hours just wandering the streets; going nowhere. Her words are still hanging from his face; their barbs stinging his skin. 

    Sandi will be expecting him to return and tell her everything has gone as planned. It should have been so easy, they had it all worked out. Every word was rehearsed. When it came to it, he said nothing

    Now he is afraid to go back home, and too ashamed face her. Ashamed to tell her he lost his nerve; afraid he will lose her.

    The clamour inside his head is deafening. The actors take the stage, as they have done so many times before.

    The boy (pleading): Please Mummy, I’m sorry, give me a hug, I’ll be a good a boy.

    Her (sneering): Poor little boy… come to Mummy. Now get down there you little brat.

    The boy: Please Mummy… I don’t want to be alone. I don’t want to be an orphan.

    Her: Don’t talk nonsense… count yourself lucky… there are lots of little boys who don’t have a mother to look after them.

    A man he used to know: Leave the boy alone. It’s not his fault.

    Her: Keep out of this. He’s got to learn.

    The boy: Please, don’t go Dad. Please stay!

    The man: I’m sorry son. I have to go.

    The boy: Why? What have I done?

    The Man: Nothing. It’s not your fault. becoming distant: I’m sorry; I just can’t live here any more. It’s not your fault.

    The boy: Why can’t she go instead?

    Her: Because I have to stay here and look after you. Now get down there, and pray to God to forgive you for dishonouring your mother.

    Now the voices are joined by more sounds, as somewhere in the recesses of his mind, his John Lennon jukebox starts playing – ‘Mother, you had me but I never had you… Father, you left me…’

    And once the songs begin to play, he can’t stop them. Only the voices can do that. Sometimes he can choose between the voices or the jukebox. Sometimes they fight for his attention. Sometimes they are all silent, and then – sometimes he wishes he could turn them on. Because, when he can’t hear them, he’s afraid that he might be dead.

    …one thing you can’t hide is when you’re crippled inside’

    The jukebox only plays two songs. He knows there’s another track waiting to be played. It’s his favourite song, but the jukebox never let’s him select it

    Shuts his eyes and all he can see is her face.

    Clamps his hands over his ears, but can still hear her voice over the jukebox. Still laughing at him; still mocking him.

    The jukebox falls silent, and now all he can hear are the words she left him with; shoutingYou’d better get used to it. I’m never going to leave this house”.

    Should have – could have – waited

 

Chapters

1

report abuse

To leave comments on this or any book please Register or Login

subscribe to comments for this book
J.Adams wrote 687 days ago

I'm not sure how many chapters I read, I couldn't stop. And as I have said repeatedly on Authonomy, I don't care for serial killer/grisly/horror/thriller/crime books. But, when they are well-written, well. You just can't abandon a well-written story. And "Lying To God" is one of the most well-written books I've come across. This book doesn't even need editing, really, but I did find one typo: Chapter Three, Fifth Paragraph below the header: "Much Later," the sentence reads: "A rather pathetic object of ridicule is all that most people see, if indeed the notice him at all." "the" should be "they." No other problems, this is a well-conceived, well-crafted book that I am more than happy to back. Wishing you the best,
Judy Adams
The Existence Game

lizjrnm wrote 707 days ago

WOW - this is so good I couldn't stop reading! Adam is truly evil but doesn't know it which is the worst kind of crazy! Anyway - your prose is polished and edgy and I like your style! BACKED

Liz
The Cheech Room

Sheila Belshaw wrote 713 days ago

LYING TO GOD:

Ian,

This is crime thriller writing at its very best. A riveting read that had me spellbound from the first line. You skillfully progress from a brief slice of backstory, just enough of character and problems to put us in the picture, and then gradually, with a sinister but steady progression, we are right there at the very moment he is compelled to act.

The present tense is perfect for this dramatic story. You take the reader right into Adam's heart and mind with the immediacy of the writing. I couldn't bear to stop reading and want to the first copy to hit the Waterstone bookshelves to be mine.

Backed with admiration and enthusiasm,
Sheila (Pinpoint)

BDNelson wrote 717 days ago

Oh my God! This is chilling! I want to buy the book...read it all. Great work here. Backed.

Abigail's Cries
The Autobiography

Su Dan wrote 228 days ago

you have a great style; original, and flowing...poetical prose...
l shall back...
read SEASONS...

Wilma1 wrote 472 days ago

I have just finished chapter three it’s a compelling read and I like the returning voice Should have.. its almost mesmerising. This is a really good thriller the constant mocking of his mother and ill treatment so cruel enough to turn a mind. I think I need to re read chapter three as I’m not sure if he killed his mother or not or if she died I must have missed it. I will have to come back and read on. Great story

Sue Mackender
Knowing Liam Riley – I hope you can make time to read some of mine.

CarolinaAl wrote 527 days ago

Edgy. Simmering. A gripping thriller enriched with stunning imagery and intense narrative. Packed with emotion. Well conceived, well written. Backed.

Tom Balderston wrote 533 days ago

Well done. Quite an accomplishment. Shelved and still reading.
Tom Balderston
The Wonder of Terra

James Apologist wrote 544 days ago

I am interested in your book and am putting it on my watchlist. I will be reading parts of it as soon as I can. In that it is related to the Bible, it perhaps bears some similarity to my own book, which, if you are a Christian, potential Christian, or a thoughtful and objective skeptic in this regard, you might enjoy. Its title is "Things Are Not as They Seem."

Romilla wrote 554 days ago

Ian,
This is truly a dark, haunting tale of a life gone bad - the relationship that Adam bears with this mother to begin with is an enstranged one, a sad one perhaps when the mother-son relationship simply doesn't materialize in the way that nature deemed it to be; in all, you appear to be a really sensitive writer who pays a lot of heed to the character's innate feelings - you try to capture the thoughts of bad Adam - trying to draw the reader into his pysche in the most terrifying manner and yet leaving the reader with enough to feel some sorrow for his unfortunate life.
This novel is vicious in the sense of presenting some of the most horrifying thoughts that could exist in a killer, a product of a life gone awry. However, I cannot help feeling sadness for Adam and that to some extent, society is responsible for indulging such negative feelings in him - it kind of regenerates in him in the most darkest way.

Haunting indeed! And i am backing this read.

Romilla
Forgetting Sally

Ann Mynard wrote 597 days ago

You've set this up well, Ian, the background to Adam's reason for wanting to kill his mother. I like the immediacy of your writing in the first person, it certainly adds to the tension. The attitudes of mother, Sandi and Keith towards Adam is well put across and convinces the reader of the reasons for the way he's going. All the best with your book and I'll back it.
Backed, Ann Mynard (Windshadow)

philip john wrote 600 days ago

Difficult subject matter, handled well. Excellent style, too. Well done!

Philip John (Dead Reckoning/The Ambassador's Last Post)

mvw888 wrote 619 days ago

A chilling glimpse into a disturbed mind. The events are horrible, of course, but there really is a certain subtlety to the way you present them, as fractured remembrances. Everything here is in place for a good thriller, and your writing is spot on. Very good.

---Mary
The Qualities of Wood

Paul T. wrote 635 days ago

Excellent writing this - powerful, chilling and absorbing. Adam is such a well developed character, I could sympathise with him in spite of his actions. The plot is well-crafted, with some unexpected twists to maintain the suspense.

All in all, a great bit of writing. There are a lot of serial killer books around, they have to be exceptional to stand out from the crowd - and I'd say this one is! Backed!

Paul T.

DP Walker wrote 659 days ago

Hi Ian
I really liked this - some great descriptive prose and a clear story. Definitely one I would pick off the bookshelf.
Backed
DP Walker
Five Dares

Steve Palmer wrote 665 days ago

Powerful and compelling stuff. Backed.

Steve (Scar Tissue)

J. Hamler wrote 666 days ago

Chapter 1

Psychologically a very intense story. Supported by some excellent writing. At first I wasn't so sure about the repeated mantra: Should have could have waited, but it does the job of reinforcing the angst and anger. The ingredients are here for a riveting character study of a sociopath. Well done.

Cheers

John

Violet Darkniss wrote 669 days ago

Ian, you sure have the `gift' of can-opening the depraved ravages of a brutal, brutalised mind. Scary, fast, drving, your book dragged me by the scruff and wouldn't let go....and kind of metaphorical tribute to it's protagonist...

Truly well....executed....

From the fireside,

Ms Darkniss - Sequinned Begonia

JoeDPalermo wrote 673 days ago

Ian.

Your writing is excellent. You certainly draw the reader into the story and keep him/her there. I know many will truly enjoy reading this,

As for me, I would not finish this book. I always look for something positive in what I read. When I feel that I will not find it, I put the book down and go on to something else. I have scanned from chapter to chapter, and I do not think I will find the happy ending I look for. That's just my hang up.

Keep Smiling
Joseph D Palermo

Andrew Burans wrote 674 days ago

A strong and powerful novel. The inner angst is especially well done and the foreshadowing is excellent. Your dialogue is tight. Backed with pleasure.

Andrew Burans
The Reluctant Warrior: The Beginning

Sly80 wrote 677 days ago

Astonishing portrait, 'the blood vessels in his neck, pumped up with a cocktail of anger and adrenalin, pulse alarmingly'. Few people can write drunks quite as convincingly as here, and then there is the child's despair, 'I'm an orphan already'. That is one totally screwed-up soul. The accident is strange too, the hit-and-run knocking him over. Adam seems a different person afterwards. As for Keith, and his reason for studying medicine! 'Time stalls; they can hear the silence', chilling writing accompanies these two unsettling characters. The newspaper article, though answering one question, leaves many unanswered and throws in a few more for good measure. What happened to Adam's mother, and who did it? Who was in the car? What were Adam and Keith up to in the cellar? Where is the missing victim? This is exactly what a crime thriller should do ... backed.

Possible nits: 'his words loose [lose] their shape'. 'if [he] was inclined to apply'. 'if indeed the[y] notice him at all'. In the pitch: 'ticks of[f] the names'.

carlashmore wrote 678 days ago

Ian, I have to say that I love this book. It is a compelling, enigmatic and beautifully written example of the thriller genre. Infact, I would go as far as to say it was one the finest of its genre in the site (and trust me, I've read a few). There is something both poetic yet simplistic about your prose and I think it's perfect for publication. I couldn't nit pick anything. Carl. The Time Hunters

Lockjaw Lipssealed wrote 678 days ago

I liked the title the first time I saw it...it's what got my attention. But what kept me reading was solid writing and a great story. This took right off for me and held my attention. No serious issues...a few missing words. (There was a place where you mention that he could have used a "pen or pencil, that would have BENN easier" The "been" is missing.) Also, a few places where the word "had" was not needed...might read a bit smoother without it.

Lockjaw

Wheel42 wrote 678 days ago

Fantastic style - loved it. I also write thrillers and I must say, I feel I have learned a lot from reading yours. The pace is perfect and it's easy to get into his tortured mind. I would buy this book. Job well done!

Please have a look at Bound By Birth - I think you will like my evil one.

Backing you with pleasure!

Randy
Bound By Birth
www.randallwheeler.com

William Holt wrote 678 days ago

This is a highly entertaining read, full of suspense, with all the motivation necessary to turn a person into a monster. Everything appears to be working here, chapter after chapter. Shelved with pleasure.

Bill

Callaghan Grant wrote 680 days ago

This is really fantastic writing. Your descriptions are vivid and evocative. The air of mystery you create traps the reader completely as you end each chapter in a way that demands we continue that we may learn what our poor Adam has done. I love the switch to newspaper layout at the end of chapter 3. It pulls me right into the story and makes me a part of the neighborhood in which these doings are happening. I have enjoyed this work tremendously.
Loving regards, Callaghan

mindrose wrote 680 days ago

Quality writing, several levels up from so much of what I've read here. Backed.

Beval wrote 680 days ago

What a great psychlogical thriller this is. My birthday is in October and things kept happening on the day and I got loads of extra chills as a result:-)) I know that is just a neat bonus for me and other Librans, but it is very nice.
Adam is of course, as crazy as a box of biscuits, but the way he rationalises everything is very clever. There were moments when I wondered if it had happened in his head and not for real. That sense of the unexpected, the moment you are unprepared for lifting this way, way above the ordinary.
Backed.

Callaghan Grant wrote 680 days ago

This is terribly sad. It's well written although a touch repetitive. I understand that repitiion is to put the reader in the same headspace as the MC -- inducing the sae repitition that he endures constantly. One little improvement I'd suggest for chapter one is where you say: No; not at all. You should use a comma there instead of a semicolon. I shall read chapter 2 in a couple of hours, but I am backing this now.
Loving regards, Callaghan

mongoose wrote 681 days ago

Ian, this is mesmeric. It has a true dark poetry. It's a cut above so much of the thriller/crime genre. I wasn't entirely convinced by the present tense (it's not a favourite of mine) but, as I read on I stopped being so aware of it (which shows it was working okay). A few times it slips though so watch for that.
for eg: 'that feels IS not unexpected'
'tears up the letter and THROWS the pieces in his face'.

'words LOSE their shape' (not loose)
I was quite surprised at the end of the first chapter to discover how young he is - I don't know why but I had him down as much older - 30s, even 40s.

But seriously, very little snagged at me with this. I loathe reading on screen so kudos to you that I read to the end of Chapter Four without pause. I don't read much in the way of crime/thrillers now but I do think I would read this - it's the dark psychological angle that attracts me. A living nightmare.
Very very strong writing, IMO, and I'm very pleased to back it.
Jane

Famlavan wrote 682 days ago

Lying to God

This is a chilling story, starting from inside a killer’s head wow
I think the repetition gives this an eerie almost disconnection of the characters feelings.
This is a well-crafted book – Good luck

Michael Croucher wrote 682 days ago

My kind of book; it chills and engages quickly, and seems well crafted, by an excellent story teller. Shelved.
Michael Croucher (Bravo's Veil)

Mr. Nom de Plume wrote 683 days ago

Very strong writing with some interesting features, namely the dialogue. The "Her, The Boy, The Man" introductions to quotes from characters may not be needed if intersperced with descriptions of each character before the words are spoken. The thriller genre fits well. Literary fiction may also characterize the work. Backed. Chuck (Paperboy Adventures)

JoeDPalermo wrote 684 days ago

Hi.

I have read part of the first chapter. I have this on my watch list. I will read more and comment on it later. In the meantime, can you read, comment on, and possibly back Jamie 7?

Thank you
Keep smiling
Joseph D Palermo

JoeDPalermo wrote 684 days ago

Hi.

I have read part of the first chapter. I have this on my watch list. I will read more and comment on it later. In the meantime, can you read, comment on, and possibly back Ja,ie 7?

Thank you
Keep smiling
Joseph D Palermo

Bocri wrote 685 days ago

Lying to God is a potent thriller with the strength to put an armlock on the attention of the reader until its final pages. The justification for Adam's 'condition' is expertly revealed and the how and why his sense of frustration & helplessness is channelled into human sacrifices is detailed in cold and clinical prose. The terror and desperation of each victim is revealed in graphic prose. One has just to read the passage describing Christine's inner scream to experience the thrilller genre at its zenith. Backed. Bocri. The Tuzla Run.

Alan Martin wrote 685 days ago

Well done for the sinister style of writing which gives a disturbing introduction into Adam's mind. It's quite tough on the reader following it to the end of the first part, I guess it would be a bit worrying if I was too comfortable with it!

greeneyes1660 wrote 685 days ago

Ian, I am not a fan of serial thrillers, however for someone who is, this will be extremely satisfying. The strength of course comes from the emotional abuse which unfortunately is not fiction and the basis for real life serial killers on a whole.

What I like in the beginnning of the book is how you show his struggle, the inner turmoil he puts himself through. Deep down he doesn't want to become a killer he wants to be loved by the woman who brought him into this world and if she had, you might have had to use Keith as your main character. Very powerful message.....

The fact you allowed Adam to be a father is also a crucial part to your story . A wake up call, that we really only know a person by the facade that they wear...well done backed Patricia aka columbia Layers of the heart

happypetronella wrote 685 days ago

I've a liking for serial killer type stories, and all nineteen chapters have thrilled me. Backed.

nans wrote 686 days ago

Read it, liked it.
Intriguing pitch, well presented.
Minor problem with inconsistent tenses.
Missing commas and periods.

dave_ancon wrote 686 days ago

You have a talent in writing, that is clear. The beginning and all the way through the first chapter, the plot is confusing. It's hard to tell where this is going. I'm sure you'll get there, though, for it's plain that you know what you are doing. I'm honored to put this on my shelf. Dave

scatteredfrost wrote 687 days ago

Lying To God..your pitch pulled me in and your story delivered. Well written with a perfect pace. Future best seller here.

backed
Pamela Frost
aka scatteredfrost
Houses of Cards

D. Regan wrote 687 days ago

Yeah, Jack Daniels is a persuasive friend, isn't he? I like that. In the 5th paragragh you've got two "sometimes" in one sentence. I think it sounds better if you take out the second one. I like the John Lennon reference. It's not the typical story I would reach for. I tend to avoid stuff with murder or anything scary. But it kept my interest and I'm backing because I liked the writing. Best of luck.
D.

carlosbuzo wrote 687 days ago

sounds very interesting! i am looking forward reading this book! hopefully. All the best!

George Fripley wrote 687 days ago

I like the dark tinge to this book. Also, the pace is keopt such that the reader does not lose interest. Adam is suitably sinister and I confess that I was compelled to read on to find out more.

George Fripley

J.Adams wrote 687 days ago

I'm not sure how many chapters I read, I couldn't stop. And as I have said repeatedly on Authonomy, I don't care for serial killer/grisly/horror/thriller/crime books. But, when they are well-written, well. You just can't abandon a well-written story. And "Lying To God" is one of the most well-written books I've come across. This book doesn't even need editing, really, but I did find one typo: Chapter Three, Fifth Paragraph below the header: "Much Later," the sentence reads: "A rather pathetic object of ridicule is all that most people see, if indeed the notice him at all." "the" should be "they." No other problems, this is a well-conceived, well-crafted book that I am more than happy to back. Wishing you the best,
Judy Adams
The Existence Game

Kidd1 wrote 687 days ago

Warped and compelling! Inside the head of a maniac, a chilling calculating one at that. Wow! Great piece of writing. Well structured, plotted and characterized by a master scribe. Backed.

John OBrien wrote 688 days ago

Lying To God (great title) brilliantly places the reader inside the mind of a disturbed individual. Written with a nice dose of realism and very worthy of a backing.
John O'Brien - Other Face

Thetinman wrote 689 days ago

Wow. Ian. You whipped up quite a story here, gruelling and heart wrenching, there isn’t a person on earth that wouldn’t feel for the MC. I soaked this up and loved every single word. And you were so careful too, no typos, not overdone, just enough to convey the horror of Adam’s anguish. Superbly done, and permanently shelved so I could read more.
Just one thing. You have a phrase ‘ate his tea’. Is this a british thing or a typo? It was the only thing I could find and am somewhat pleased with myself over it.
Happily Backed
Paul
We’ve Seen the Enemy

Ariom Dahl wrote 690 days ago

This is sad and scary and quite horrible … not the writing, which is excellent, but the content. I can back this, and I hurt for Adam, but I’m not sure I can read a lot more.

South Florida Writer wrote 690 days ago

Ian,

Thanks for backing Vanished From Sight. Interesting place you're from. I ran out of time and couldn't go past chapter 1, but I liked your voice and the descriptions were appealing.

Backed.
Loretta

A Knight wrote 693 days ago

This is a chilling, excellent piece, complex and more than a little frightening. The realistic characters add to the gritty, dark overtones of the story, and I have nothing to offer in way of suggestion.

Backed with pleasure,
Abi xxx
"Everyone knows the rule: Stay inside the Wall, but Tisha believes rules were made to be broken." -Relic

lisawb wrote 696 days ago

A great psychological thriller that is compelling and dark. This is powerful, chilling, and so captivating that I will return to it even though I usually don't like thrillers. The intrigue and suspense has been caught brilliantly. The structure and plot is complex giving it depth and the whole package is professional.


Backed,

Lisa

Rubedo wrote 697 days ago

Excellent work! Chilling concept. A must read. Backed

123