Subject To Change
by elfin
His iPod, the internet, digital television,
fast cars
that smelt of pinecones rather than rotting food and stale cigarette
smoke. Simple, modern conveniences taken
for granted by those who had access to them each and every day. Take those conveniences away, and what's
left?
Strange, then, as he sat in front of his
computer
terminal staring at the Google logo all dressed up in holly and
animated
coloured lights, how little it seemed to mean to him to have it all
back.
He missed her, yes, he missed her terribly. But he knew, deep down, that she wasn't the
reason why the 'glad to be alive' feeling had worn off so quickly after
he'd
left the hospital.
One minute there was happy chatter, sunshine on
his skin
and a feeling of belonging like he'd never known before...
In a second elation had turned to fear, peace
to terror.
Maya and his mum by his bedside, holding his
hand. When he'd realised he was no longer
in the
unreal state he'd been living in for God-knew how long ("Four months,
Sam,
four long months, baby."), he'd had the urge to leap up and cheer. The urge, but not the strength.
But he'd remained in 2006, he'd been moved to a
general
ward after a couple of days and discharged a week after waking to go
home. Finally.
Where a man died, slashed by a snapped loom
belt, bled to death under his kitchen table with the blood on his
stainless
steel oven....
Best people he'd ever known.
Best friends he'd ever had.
His mum's death had almost broken him, but even
then he'd
know - hadn't he? - the depression creeping around his relief to be
alive.
A few days later, sitting in a large comfy
leather
armchair he'd found himself talking nonsense to a stranger, talking
about a
time when his mum had been there for him - and mentioning in passing
that she
was still there, back in 1973.
When he'd gone back to see the shrink, he'd
talked
nothing but common sense, saying he'd had very little sleep that last
time he'd
been to see her, but he was sleeping much better now, everything was
fine. He was fine.
"Are you sure you're ready to be back at
work?"
"Sam... since you came back you've been
different."
"I know, but you've been... harder somehow,
like
there's more fight in you. Which is only
to be expected, I suppose...."
Unable to think of anything more to say, and
remembering
that was exactly the root of their problems before the accident, Sam
pointed at
the papers in her hands. "Are those
for me?"
Sam didn't try to stop the bubble of laughter
that rose
from inside him. "No, you don't
understand." It came out as a
half-plea. "I made him up.
I imagined him, I imagined them all, built a
world in my own head, somewhere for me to live when I couldn't live
here."
Shaking his head, Sam was still smiling,
"Co-incidence. I must have read the
name somewhere."
"DCI Gene Hunt, 1954 to 1973.
Started off police life as a lowly constable
and rose up through the ranks to become a DCI in CID in 1969."
"That's impossible...."
"No. I
mean... this is him. This is the
Guv."
But Sam couldn't buy that.
Something she'd said... "1954 to
1973? He resigned in 1973?"
The details weren't on the sheet she'd handed
him.
She handed him the copy of the old newspaper
report. Front page as far as he could
tell, with the
headline, Tragic Hero.
For a second he couldn't take his eyes from the name under the
catchline. Jackie Queen.
How had he known? How could he
possibly have got that right?
"DCI Gene Hunt confronted Edward Stokes after
he
fled a
corner store in Trafford Park where he'd held the owner at gunpoint and
stolen
fifteen pounds in cash.
"This was a tragic end to a bizarre story. DCI Hunt had famously spent the last six
months searching for a missing colleague."
Sam could feel his sense of reality twisting in on itself. "DI Tyler vanished on the way back from
a football match in June this year."
He felt sick, a slick blackness creeping around the edges of his
consciousness. "At the time, Hunt claimed
Tyler had
been walking beside him and couldn't have just disappeared. But since that day there's been no trace of
him. Hunt was cleared of any blame and
searched tirelessly to find him. Now, it
seems, that mystery will die with him."
"You're a right ray of sunshine this
evening, aren't yer?"
"Don't be sorry!
Give me a smile."
"See? Strange
thing, Sammy, but when you smile you light up this pub."
The lights were too bright.
He lifted an arm to shield his eyes and found
his hand restrained. He pulled it
towards him, panicked and frightened.
Maya. Turning his
head to look at her he felt the pounding of a hammer against the inside
of his
skull. For a moment he thought he was
going to throw up, when he didn't, he sat up cautiously on the floor of
the
office and clutched at the sheet of paper.
"Sam, do you want me to call a doctor?"
Insistent hands on his arms, persuasive,
frantic.
"I don't leave any of my team behind, Sam. Not even you."
Opening his hand again he stared at the
thirty-three year
old newspaper report.
"Don't believe in coincidences,
Sammy-boy."
~
What about Annie?
And Chris? Ray and Phyllis? He glanced at Maya but couldn't bring himself
to ask her to look them all up. Did he
really want to know? What if… if one of
them was alive and well and living in Manchester? What
if he met them and shook their hand and
they stared him in shocked recognition?
NO!
They're not REAL! You weren't
really there!!
Maya dropped him off, promised him she'd come
back later,
after her shift was over.
He walked straight through into his bedroom,
closed the
curtains and dropped onto the bed, wadding the sheet of paper even
tighter in
his fist. Closing his eyes and letting
the tears leak from under the lids until the first sob broke free and
he cried
effortlessly into his pillow.
He went to the toilet, and returned to the
chaos of the
sheets to pick up the crumpled, tear-strained photocopy he'd clung to
so
desperately leaving the station.
A place, a time he'd never been to.
What the hell was he thinking?
The fact was - apparently, because the whole
fabric of reality and thus the realism of any facts, was starting to
fray at
the edges - that a DCI called Gene Hunt died after an armed robbery in
December
1973.
And why were his memories - the recall of his
dreams - so
powerful even now? Why could they make
him cry, sweat, make his pulse race and twist his stomach in knots? Why could he remember so vividly the sound of
a gunshot and the image of Gene Hunt dropping like a rock to the floor
of a
newspaper office? Why could he feel the
tears on his face, the sudden, shocking loss in his heart?
And the flooding relief at the ridiculousness
of a man being saved by a silver hip flask?
Because they really happened.
That was the only explanation for the
newspaper report - the missing DI and the man who'd been so pivotal on
what
he'd imagined was a twisted journey through the labyrinth of his own
mind. He knew Hunt - how was that possible
if he
hadn't been there?
So what about the sand in Annie's palm when
she'd taken
his hand that afternoon on the roof? Why
in god's name would he have drawn in such minute detail?
The phone started to ring as soon as he tried
to get back
to sleep, and it was only some professional autopilot that got him out
of bed.
"Sammy-boy."
"Sam?
Sam?"
A short laugh.
"Not yet, but it's possible."
"There's been a stabbing."
~
Moss Side was the same dumping ground it had
always
been. Those who couldn't change and
those who didn't want to. He hated it,
he always had.
"When did it happen?" Sam
tried to keep his irritation to himself,
no point in making Chris' - Mike's - night worse than it already was.
"Well, what have the witnesses said?"
"Do we know who he is?"
"What about his wallet?"
Of course they were.
That was the procedure, the protocol.
No one could do or touch anything before forensics had processed
the
scene. When had he forgotten that? Wasn't all this structure exactly what he'd
spent months trying to impress upon Hunt and his team? Why was he fighting it now?
Everything had changed after the scandal of the
West
Midlands Serious Crime Squad and the corruption subsequent
investigations had
revealed. There was so much red tape now
it was difficult to get anything done.
So why was a part of him hankering after the
freedom of
Hunt's type of prehistoric policing?
When he got back to the apartment, Maya had
apparently
been and gone. There was a note on the
table which he read and dropped back where she'd left it.
It didn't mean anything anyway.
Strange that he thought of Annie as he read the
meaningless, Hallmark words. Sweet Annie
who'd anchored him right from the start and kept him anchored, telling
him over
and over that he should just enjoy it, that it was real - she was real
- who
was he to claim he'd made up her life?
He determined to enjoy the one pleasure he was
still
finding in this modern life - his kingsize bed - and climbed under the
duvet
after a quick shower. He'd smoothed the
crumpled report of Gene's death out on the bedside cabinet and brushed
his
fingers thoughtfully over it before turning out the light.
Ignoring the phone calls - first to his mobile,
second to
his landline - he took another shower.
Again two minutes later, his mobile playing Pulp's 'Disco 2000'. Another joke?
There was nothing for him here.
Now.
He wasn't coming back.
He was turning his back on it all.
In a way.
"…and so they should be. Welcome,
if you've just joined us. It's just coming
up to ten o'clock on Tuesday
December 19th…." He pressed a small
flat button and touched the iPod's jog-wheel as he turned off the ring
road
onto the slip road.
Look at those cavemen go
Slowing the jeep to a full stop, he left the
engine
running and took off his seatbelt. All
thought had stopped now. There was
nothing except the words of the song playing in the car and the memory
of hard,
dead eyes staring up at him accusingly from a torn and bloodied face.
Take a look at the Lawman
Winding down the window before opening the car
door, he
stepped out and closed it, crossing his arms on the sill and screwing
his eyes
tight shut.
Wonder if he'll ever know
He didn't have to wait very long.
Is there life on Mars?
Mad to imagine this could work.
Cruel to do this to those who did love
him. But one thing the past had made him
was selfish.
He scraped himself up off the ground and
started off at a
run, feeling more alive than he had ever done while his heart had still
been
beating.
"Where's the Guv?"
"Where's the Guv?"
The ride was bone-shattering, the suspension
non-existent, the handling akin to what he'd always imagined an
armoured tank
would feel like. As he jerked the car
hard into the top of Trent Road, he almost snapped his wrist. But the sound of a gunshot echoing off the
walls meant he couldn't have cared less.
It scared the blackbirds, and set his heart hammering.
The braking distance took him passed the
commotion. He couldn't tell from the
general chaos of
the scene what had happened and what yet hadn't. He
was out of the car and running, passed
caring if he caught the bullet meant for Gene, as desperate as he was
not to
die before to stop the Guv from dying today; as if that would answer
every
question, solve every riddle and stop him from going completely insane.
"Everybody DOWN!"
The guy dropped like a rock, straight down, his
skull
caved in from the blow so powerful Sam couldn't believe he'd been
capable of
it.
Sam dropped the pipe and glanced up, straight
into his
own eyes, wide and terrified, staring up at him from three feet off the
ground.
And there was something oddly familiar about
those
words. He didn't know what else to say,
and didn't have time to think of something before himself as a
four-year-old
boy was off and running, up Trent Road, and Sam found himself crazily
wondering
what kind of mess he was making of his own psyche.
Sam approached cautiously, threw a smile at a
staring
Chris and wiggled his eyebrows at a scowling Ray, stopped next to
Gene's
outstretched leg and took a deep breath before crouching down.
Without warning, Gene's arms wrapped around him
in a bear
hug he hadn't been expecting and he heard his name, "Sammy," muttered
roughly into his ear.
"Sammy."
~
He dropped onto the hard cushion and accepted
the double
measure of single malt he was offered by a still-shaking hand that had
already
tipped back a good quarter of the bottle down a thirsty throat.
"Where have you been?"
"Asleep."
Sam took a mouthful of single malt and savoured the after burn
of it in
his mouth.
"I'm sorry."
Sam shook his head slowly when Gene finally
turned to
look directly at him after emptying and refilling his own glass. "You wouldn't believe me if I told
you. I don't know if I believe it
myself. But it's not important. I'm back now."
"It's true."
Sam closed his eyes for a second, listening for
sounds
beyond the general hum-drum of the office - the chirping telephones,
the rustle
of paper, male voices talking over one another.
There was nothing more. No
trained analysis, no rhythmic, electronic pulse. He
smiled.
Gene stared into his single malt, silent for a
long time
and Sam let him be. He stared out into
the office he'd so hated the last time around and determined to find
all the
good points about it. Even Ray's stoney
silence wasn't going to get to him. Not
today.
What was that corny adage?
Today was the first day of the rest of his
life. The world was, quite literally,
his oyster. He grinned to himself.
Gene's quiet words brought him back into the
confines of
the office and wiped the smile from his face.
"Shut up. I
looked for you, tried to find you. You
might not have thought you'd be missed but I never leave a member of my
team
behind." He could hear the anger
creeping into Gene's voice; six months of repressed rage at… what? Sam's betrayal? His
own inability to find some clue as to
what had happened?
"Why couldn't yer?
Just a word, Sam, didn't even need an explanation.
I'm not yer wife, I'm just not used to my men
disappearing for six months then reappearing like some bleedin' rabbit
out of
hat to save me life." Those hard
eyes were softening, almost begging.
Gene swallowed half the whiskey in his glass
and stared
into what remained as if all the answers Sam couldn't give were at the
bottom
of it.
When Gene spoke again, against the silent
backdrop, it
was nothing more than a whisper.
"Why?"
"Why did you come back?"
Swallowing the rest of his whiskey, Gene shook
his head
slowly. "Sam…." There
was a desperation in that single
utterance of his name that was shocking.
He turned, and the pained expression on his usually careless
face was
just as much of a surprise.
Gene chuckled, a rough sound.
"Apart from one of my best men
reappearing alive and well after six months to tell me he's been asleep
but
he's back now? Absolutely nothin'."
The answer wasn't as straightforward as he'd
imagined.
Something else he needed though, apparently.
Gene's hands got a hold of him around his waist
and
half-lifted, half-pulled Sam into his lap.
Sam straddled his legs, their mouths still locked together,
heads
twisting as they tried for more and frustrated, couldn't find it.
Mouths locked together they jerked each other
to quick,
clashing climaxes, coming down fast from roller-coaster highs.
He smiled. Then
laughed.
"You could use this…."
"No one…"
"Not until we've put our willies away,
Sammy-boy."
First thing to do was find a new flat. Not least because they'd had to let his old
one to some other poor new boy who had the dubious honour of working
with the
drugs squad. Sam was relieved - he'd
hated the place on sight and he thought maybe he'd need somewhere with
space
for a bigger bed.
As his eyes slowly closed and the dark
unconscious of
sleep crept along his limbs, he heard a distant voice, more comforting
than any
he'd heard the last time he was here.
fin