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Storyline and first chapter>
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DAMAGE
Storyline
A chilling exploration of physical passion and
psychological darkness.
'Damaged people are dangerous. They know they can survive,' warns
Anna Barton, object of an obsessive love which destroys everything
in its path...
Chapter 1
There is an internal landscape, a geography of the soul; we search for its outlines
all our lives.
Those who are lucky enough to find it, ease like
water over a stone, on to its fluid contours, and are home.
Some find it in the place of their birth; others
may leave a seaside town, parched, and find themselves refreshed
in the desert. There are those born in rolling countryside who are
really only at ease in the intense and busy loneliness of the city.
For some, the search is for the imprint of another;
a child or a mother, a grandfather or a brother, a lover, a husband,
a wife or a foe.
We may go through out lives happy or unhappy successful
or unfulfilled, loved or unloved, without ever standing cold with
the shock of recognition, without ever feeling the agony as the
twisted iron in our soul unlocks itself, and we slip at last into
place.
I have been at the bedsides of the dying, who looked
puzzled at their family's grief as they left a world in which they
had never felt at home.
I have seen men weep more at the death of their
brother, whose being had once locked into theirs, than at the death
of their child. I have watched brides become mothers, who only once,
long ago, were radiant on their uncle's knee.
And in my life, I have travelled far, acquiring
loved and unfamiliar companions; a wife, a son, and a daughter.
I have lived with them, a loving alien in surroundings of unsatisfying
beauty. An efficient dissembler, I gently and silently smoothed
the rough edges of my being. I hid the awkwardness and pain with
which I inclined towards my chosen outline, and tried to be what
those I loved expected me to be - a good husband, a good father,
a good son.
Had I died at fifty I would have been a doctor,
and an established politician, though not a household name. One
who had made a contribution, and was much loved by his sorrowing
wife, Ingrid, and by his children, Martyn and Sally.
My funeral would have been well attended by those
who had gone further in life than I, and who therefore honoured
my memory by their presence. And by those who believed they had
loved the private man, and by their tears gave testimony to his
existence.
It would have been the funeral of an above-average
man, more generously endowed with the world's blessings than most.
A man who, at the comparatively early age of fifty, had ended his
journey. A journey which would certainly have led to some greater
honour and achievement, had it continued. But I did not die in my
fiftieth year. There are few who know me now who do not regard that
as a tragedy.
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