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Mirror Man

Jacques Von Kat

Broadthumb Publishing

Copyright Ā© 2021 Jacques Von Kat

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be

reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any

means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording,

scanning, or otherwise without written permission from the

publisher. It is illegal to copy this book, post it to a website,

or distribute it by any other means without permission.

Jacques Von Kat asserts the moral right to be identified as

the author of this work.

This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names,

characters, places and incidents portrayed in it are the work

of the authorā€™s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any

resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual

events is purely coincidental.

ISBN-13: 978-1-8383121-1-4

Cover design by: EC Editorial Cover Designs

For our parents.

&

In loving memory of Frankie, Wayne and Craig. Gone too soon.

Chapter One

April 1984

I watched the world and the townsfolk pass me by from the reflections in the shop windows. This part of town was my favourite place to people-watch in my hometown of Thorne, as the faƧade was made entirely from reflective glass. My second-favourite location was outside the library, though I didnā€™t sit there often with it being opposite the police station. This spot was better, longer, and I could watch everyone via the store fronts until they vacated my line of sight.

I watched the world like this every day, though it rarely changed. The local family-run shops were dull and gloomy with their aluminium or wooden doors and faded lettering. Even the graffiti on the walls and shop shutters was black and white; the favourite line of the moment was ā€œThatcher is aā€¦ā€

I couldnā€™t repeat the last word.

The townā€™s faƧade may have been dreary, but it was the inhabitants I was waiting to see. They brought colour to the world around me. Streaked hair, neon tracksuits, and khaki pants were the current styles. Iā€™d never seen such an array of coloursā€”some days it seemed people had stepped right off the catwalk. Folks around here followed the trends in magazines and Topof the Popsā€”now even men were wearing makeup. I didnā€™t know what that was about; youā€™d never catch me in blue eyeshadow.

A group of screeching mothers strolled past, pushing their even louder screaming kids, no doubt making their way to playgroup or a coffee morning. A police car passed by resembling a giant jam sandwich, and I kept my head down ā€™til it was gone.

My preferred spot was a battered wooden bench covered by remnants of green paint and which had a concrete frame on either side. With all the jagged reminders of who had sat here before or who was boyfriend and girlfriend, it was apparent to me that everyone who had sat on this bench before me either had a pocketknife or a marker pen in their pocket. Iā€™d yet to include my name; Iā€™d never had a girlfriend, or even kissed a girl.

I scratched off a lone streak of green paint with my fingernail to reveal the rest of the brown slat underneath, then picked at the tiny flecks stuck under my nail. I liked to keep my hands clean, and not only my hands; my face was also scrubbed clean every morning. I couldnā€™t see any excuse to be dirty if you had access to waterā€”soap was a bonus. When Iā€™d attended school, some kids were unkempt. I couldnā€™t fathom why; they had to have had water at home, surely.

I looked back to the glass windows, and my pulse quickened as I spotted a suitable candidate. I examined the manā€™s reflection as it sauntered by. He was average height (around five foot nine), his brown hair was permed, and he had a moustache. The man walked with his hands tucked in his jean pockets, and he leaned slightly to the left. If he had moved his hands up to his belt loops and worn a Stetson, he could have passed for an extra from a Spaghetti Western. I nicknamed him ā€œThe Texan.ā€ I gave a name to everyone I followed. I had a nickname too: ā€œThe Mirror Man.ā€

The man reminded me of a gunslinger, and the sight of him brought me back to this morningā€™s conversation with my grandad during breakfast. He hadnā€™t stopped talking about Marvin Gaye being shot since it had been reported in yesterdayā€™s paper. He liked his songs; Iā€™d often catch him singing I Heard It Through the Grapevine. I would laugh when he couldnā€™t hit the notesā€”no one in our family was a particularly good singer, though we all loved music.

Grandad couldnā€™t understand what had happened to Mr Gaye. Heā€™d only been forty-fiveā€”ā€˜No age at all.ā€™ His words, not mine. He said guns in America were meant to be for protection, not shooting like you were in the Wild West. I told him I was glad we didnā€™t have them where we lived.

Mum snapped when I muttered those words. She snapped at me a lotā€”and thatā€™s when she chose to notice me at all. I didnā€™t know which was worse.

ā€˜Donā€™t be so naĆÆve,ā€™ sheā€™d told me. ā€˜Of course, we have guns here! What about farmers, the armed forces, and the IRA? Plus, all the antique ones from years ago.ā€™

I didnā€™t know anyone with a gun (not that I knew many people), and I certainly wouldnā€™t have put farmers in the same category as the IRA, I knew that much.

I got up from the bench, smoothed down my clothes, and paused for a green Vauxhall Viva to pass before crossing the road to catch up with The Texan. My heartbeat thudded in my ears as I wondered if the unsuspecting man could be ā€˜The Oneā€™; the person to show me the way.

There had been many potential Ones, though they had all fallen at the last hurdle, plunging me

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