WILDERNESS
OF SINNERS
PROLOGUE
In 1976 my parents finally decided to buy a television
and as a family we would regularly sit down to watch Dr Who, The Muppet Show
and various Light Entertainment programmes but for me, as a six-year old boy,
there was nothing to beat the Sunday afternoon ‘Cowboy film’.
I saw myself in bar room brawls, pitted against suitably
threatening, but ultimately inept opponents or riding hard for the border,
hearing the whine of ricochets among the rocks and feeling the smooth but
urgent rumble of hoof beats beneath me.
Most of all though, I was enthralled by the stage on which these unlikely tales of the old west were played out. There were endless plains beneath an impossibly blue sky, tall, menacing looking cacti and gigantic rock monoliths like the rotted stumps of mighty stone trees. It was a vast landscape of dazzling silence that looked as if no one had ever set foot in it.
I dreamt of wandering in shadowy canyons, feeling the eerie silence that preceded a gunfight and watching sunsets that filled the sky to its furthest corners. I tried to imagine how it would feel to be perched on one of the high rocky outcrops or maybe what it would be like just to hear the crunch of gritty sand and scorched grass beneath my boots. I wanted to be there more than anything else I could think of.
Most of all though, I was enthralled by the stage on which these unlikely tales of the old west were played out. There were endless plains beneath an impossibly blue sky, tall, menacing looking cacti and gigantic rock monoliths like the rotted stumps of mighty stone trees. It was a vast landscape of dazzling silence that looked as if no one had ever set foot in it.
I dreamt of wandering in shadowy canyons, feeling the eerie silence that preceded a gunfight and watching sunsets that filled the sky to its furthest corners. I tried to imagine how it would feel to be perched on one of the high rocky outcrops or maybe what it would be like just to hear the crunch of gritty sand and scorched grass beneath my boots. I wanted to be there more than anything else I could think of.
CHAPTER
1
THE FROMESIDE CLINIC
THE FROMESIDE CLINIC
“Are you passionate about customer service?”
I looked up from the
paper as the bus lurched forward again into the light early morning traffic.
Was I? The shuttered shop fronts of Fishponds Road slid past the window and
across the aisle from me a big heavyset man in orange overalls lolled against
the glass, chin on chest, arms folded.
“Do you have the commitment and ambition to succeed?”
Well, I was starting
to really hate my current job, and I’d gladly swap it for one that didn’t
involve starting this early on a Sunday morning, but that clearly wasn’t what
they were looking for.
“The successful candidate will be able to contribute
effectively towards the integration of in-house back office systems.”
We came to a stop at
the lights beside the park railings and the guy in the overalls looked up and
blinked a couple of times before snuggling back up against the window.
Integration of in-house Back Office systems. I nodded thoughtfully to myself
but I had absolutely no idea what it meant. I scanned down to the next line.
“Will demonstrate an ability to act as coach and
mentor to ensure continuous growth.”
That was more
promising, after all, how many times had I pictured myself in situations where
my stirring words would inspire people to tackle seemingly insurmountable odds,
to go the extra mile. On the other hand it had been a struggle just to drag
myself out of bed and down to the bus stop this morning.
“Will have the proven ability to…”
I stopped reading.
Just who were these
so-called ‘successful candidates’? Were they robustly cheerful, bristling with
efficiency, simply fizzing with positive energy? Or were they just the sort of
people who were always telling me to live in the ‘real world’ and to not be so
negative all the time.
Whoever they were,
none of the ads intended to recruit them ever began with the words ‘Have you
got absolutely no idea where you’re going in life?’ And none of them, it
seemed, were looking for twenty something daydreamers who still thought it was
possible to find a job where they could go on real adventures.
The bus came to a
stop on Manor Road and as I got out to walk the remaining three hundred meters
to Blackberry Hill Hospital’s East Entrance I told myself that I wasn’t looking
for an ‘office job’ anyway.
Right in the center of the hospital campus, at
the end of a broad tree lined pathway, was a modern three story building with honey coloured stone facings, large
areas of glass, and potted evergreens flanking the entrance. This was the Fromeside
Clinic, and behind its pleasing façade were solid concrete walls,
reinforced polycarbonate windows, remotely operated doors, numerous alarms and
closed circuit television cameras.
Inside were patients suffering from, psychosis, neurosis,
personality disorders and the effects of serious
alcohol and drug dependence. They were also murderers, rapists, arsonists, and
people with a litany of horrific crime to their names. That said, I felt almost
well disposed to them this morning, they might be criminally insane but they still
weren’t crazy enough to get passionate about customer service.
I pressed the buzzer beside the
double doors and through a second set of identical doors I could see Phil in
the ‘Control Room’ window at the far side of the foyer. He looked up and a moment
later I was buzzed in.
The little window into the
control room resembled the ticket office at a railway station and from his
console behind it Phil operated all the Clinic’s external doors and the most
important internal ones as well. He could also see monitors which showed the
entrances to the two wards, the approaches to the building itself and various
stairwells and corridors within it.
He was about sixty with a
square impassive face and grey hair parted sharply to one side. Despite the
Clinic’s policy of informal dress Phil had adopted a sort of quasi uniform
which included one of those dark blue military style sweaters with reinforced
patches on the shoulders and elbows, a white shirt, clip on black tie and a
high visibility vest. He’d even made himself a rectangular white plastic badge,
which read P. MORRIS. CONTROL. Perhaps he was working on a special hat as well.
I showed him my photo ID badge
and he looked down at it suspiciously then his eyes flicked up at me as if we
were at some remote, windswept frontier crossing. He’d have liked that, a
greatcoat, a striped sentry box, maybe even a gun.
‘Morning Phil,’
He reached behind him then slid
my set of keys through the slot under his window and followed them with the
clipboard with its signature sheet.
‘Sign here.’
I handed it back and Phil
buzzed open the door to my left and moments later after being buzzed through
the one beyond that, I was inside.
Blimey!
ReplyDeleteLove every word, particularly: "Whoever they were, none of the ads intended to recruit them ever began with the words ‘Have you got absolutely no idea where you’re going in life?’"
Jonathan