by John Nicholl
White is The Coldest Colour
John Nicholl
Copyright © 2018 John Nicholl
The right of John Nicholl to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by him in accordance Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
First published in 2015 by John Nicholl
Re Published in 2018 by Bloodhound Books .
Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publisher or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
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Contents
Also by John Nicholl
Foreword
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
A Note from Bloodhound Books:
A Cold Cold Heart
Also by John Nicholl
A Cold Cold Heart
Foreword
A note to the reader
White is the Coldest Colour is entirely fictional, but draws on my experiences as a police officer and child protection social worker. During my career, I was faced with case after case that left me incredulous as to the harm sexual predators chose to inflict on their victims. This book reflects that reality.
The story is set in 1992, a more naïve time when many found it extremely difficult to believe that a significant number of adults posed a serious risk to children.
The book includes content that some readers may find upsetting from the start.
It is dedicated to survivors everywhere.
1
Thursday 9 January 1992
The video featured two middle-aged men wearing nothing but black leather bondage hoods, who were eagerly assaulting a seven-year-old boy with shoulder-length russet-brown hair parted in the middle. Their blows gradually increased in severity until their victim slumped unconscious and bleeding. He hung there, suspended by twisted arms, with his head dangling towards a white-tiled floor stained with intermingling bodily fluids.
As the film came to an eventual blood-spattered conclusion, fifty-eight-year-old Dr David Galbraith wiped himself with a paper hankie taken from a box kept next to the computer, discarded the soiled tissue in a waste paper basket to the right of his desk, switched off the television and ejected the tape from the VCR.
He returned to his seat, balanced his gold metal-rimmed reading glasses on the bridge of his nose, opened the olive-green cardboard file on the desktop in front of him, and began perusing the contents. The cellar provided an excellent production studio, both functional and aesthetically pleasing. It wasn’t quite perfect, of course—the family kitchen didn’t provide the ideal access point. And forcing the Welsh oak dresser aside on each and every occasion was an unfortunate necessity. But, nonetheless, its development was something to be proud of. And only utilising professional assistance on a strictly cash basis from like-minded contacts made absolute sense. Security was everything.
Lining the walls with eight inches of highly efficient soundproofing foam was truly inspired. Even the most piercing and prolonged screams couldn’t be heard in the rest of the house, or anywhere else for that matter. It was entirely practical, as was the stainless steel medical trolley. Where else would he keep the various tools of his trade?
He actively controlled his breathing and closed his eyes for a second or two, before opening them slowly and refocusing on his notes. And what of his plaything? How did the process begin? It was important to pin down the specific details, important to identify the precise moment in time. Ah, yes, he first saw the boy at the Gwyn Children’s Home, and decided immediately that he provided suitable project material if the opportunity arose. And of course, fate smiled on him.
Galbraith turned the page. He was driving in the direction of Caerystwyth, and despite the poor visibility he spotted the boy walking, head bowed, in the opposite direction. That was worthy of a symbolic pat on the back if anything was.
Whether or not to abduct the boy wasn’t an easy decision to make. He knew it was risky. Maybe he became complacent and gambled with his freedom. And what if he’d been caught? It just didn’t bear thinking about.
The doctor bit his lower lip hard and resisted the impulse to shriek as the pressure in his head escalated exponentially, pounding, booming, compression and sound that made him twist and blink and squirm and pant for breath. The long game would have been a much safer option. Why the hell did he deviate from such a well-established and successful protocol?
He repeatedly clenched and relaxed his fists. At the end of the day, the opportunity to make fantasy reality was just too good to ignore. That was reasonable, wasn’t it? His actions weren’t entirely irresponsible. He’d entertained numerous guests over the years without even a hint of police attention. All right, he hadn’t abducted a child before, that was a first, but he’d taken a minute or two to weigh up the pros and cons in his mind before acting. The country road was predictably quiet. He hadn’t seen another car for at least ten minutes or more, and even in the unlikely event that one had come along at an inopportune moment, what would the driver have seen in those few brief seconds anyway? It’s not as if he struggled.
The boy recognised him as soon as he braked, reversed and wound down the window with an electric buzz. He appeared impressed by the car. Why wouldn’t he be? And the appalling weather certainly helped. He took little persuasion to jump into the front passenger seat despite his usual diffidence. Yes, he complained somewhat, and started asking infuriating questions once he realised they weren’t travelling in the direction of the children’s home. But, he was still a powerful man. It wasn’t difficult to knock the little bastard senseless.
Galbraith laughed, head back, throat taut, Adam’s apple protruding. What a glorious moment! He’d felt omnipotent, as if he could get away with anything. And who knows, maybe he could have. There was no room for doubt that day. No invasive, incomprehensible cacophony inside his skull to make his life a fucking misery.
Transferring the boy to the car boot was an excellent idea. Utilising the Persian rug to facilitate his journey from boot to cellar was a stroke of genius. And Cynthia didn’t suspect a damn thing. Not that she’d have dared ask any unwelcome questions
anyway.
Carrying the boy down the twelve cold grey concrete steps proved easy enough. Throwing him to the tiled floor was virtually effortless. It only took a few slaps to bring him back to semiconsciousness, before administering the fast-acting psychoactive drug. And it worked quickly. But then it always did.
Good old Sherwood only took about twenty minutes to arrive. All he had to do was make the call, say they had a guest waiting, and he came immediately. The fool must have driven at breakneck speed. What the hell was the man thinking?
Sherwood paused momentarily when he saw the dark blood pooled around the boy’s head. Why did the man entertain such regrettable doubts? If only he’d learnt to embrace his true nature, things may have worked out differently.
Galbraith frowned. And he had to do much of the work himself. He had to pull the boy up by his hair, and slap him in the face, again and again, until he eventually regained consciousness and supported his own weight. He had to push him hard against the cellar wall and hold him there by his throat. He had to order Sherwood to secure the boy’s wrists in the black steel manacles above his head. He had to force the feeding tube up one of the boy’s nostrils, down his throat and into his stomach. Coming to think of it, he addressed the majority of necessary tasks without significant assistance. He could almost certainly manage the entire process unaided if required.
The doctor’s eyes narrowed. What the hell was he thinking? A man of his elevated status and superior intellect shouldn’t be burdened with manual labour. That was the role of the followers, rather than the visionaries.
But, was he doing Sherwood’s memory a disservice? The man wasn’t totally useless. He stripped the boy off and hosed him down with the high-pressure washer, he held his head still like an attentive staff nurse, he fetched the high-calorie intravenous fluid and attached it to the drip stand, and he made the coffee afterwards. Now, that was something Sherwood was good at. Maybe at some point in the not-too-distant future he should consider a suitably pliant replacement. It was certainly worth considering.
Galbraith broke into a smile that lit up his face. Sherwood was so disappointed when told that producing the first video would have to wait for another day. The man never did understand the need to maintain meticulous records, despite his social science background. It was another of the simpleton’s insurmountable failings.
His smile evaporated as quickly as it appeared. It was something of a shock when the boy’s heart stopped after just ten days. But at least the process was immortalised on film for future reference.
Sherwood hadn’t taken it well, of course. It seemed guilt could be a terrible burden for those who indulged such pointless emotions. What was it he said at the time? He thought they’d gone too far. He thought they’d crossed a line. And maybe he was right. What use was a dead child?
Dismembering the body proved a surprisingly demanding process. But at least, the surgical skills learnt in medical school had finally been put to good use. And keeping Sherwood onside was an onerous task. All the fool had to do was hold the boy’s head and limbs still. How hard could it be? Was it really necessary to throw up constantly and howl like a hungry baby?
The floor was soiled to such an extent that it was difficult to tell the original colour of the tiles. And the stench! At least Sherwood cleaned up fairly effectively after a great deal of animated cajoling: 'Will you stop throwing up, man? Use the damn bleach, unblock the drain, you’ve missed some. Come on, Richard, you’ve missed some!' It may well have been easier to clean up and bag the damn body himself.
And then came the grim aftermath. Fantasy-offending-remorse-fantasy-offending-remorse, a depressingly predictable pattern. But this time was different. Sherwood tried to minimise his responsibility. He spouted some mindless crap about loving children too much. The man was a childcare expert, he was a relatively intelligent man, he’d read the relevant text books, he understood the theory from an academic perspective. He must have known that was utter shit. Surely not even Sherwood could be that deluded?
And even after all that, he tried to help the man despite the obvious inconvenience. He showed him the four videos, which at the end of the day spoke for themselves. In reality they weren’t so very different. It was blatantly obvious, but for some inexplicable reason it needed saying. What more could he conceivably have done? He’d even shared that he too experienced occasional nagging doubts in the early days of his offending, all those years ago. All right, it may have been more to do with a fear of arrest than a crisis of conscience, but for a time, in the early days of their relationship, he had hoped that Cynthia may change him. Perhaps if he’d chosen an emotionally stronger woman she’d have steered him along a different path. Maybe if Cynthia had spawned boys rather than her two nauseating female brats, he’d have understood what it was other parents felt for their offspring. But, no, no, the bitch couldn’t even get that right.
It beggared belief. How could an apparently intelligent woman be so consistently stupid? And Sherwood wasn’t much better. If a respected doctor such as himself could abandon any semblance of a conscience, learn to fully embrace his true nature, and view life and death from a purely Darwinian perspective, why the hell couldn’t Sherwood do likewise? That was the one thing which may have saved him. Was there really a need for that endless self-indulgent soul searching? What was it Sherwood said on the subject? That the burden of guilt was overwhelming. That there was no escaping the dark world he’d played his part in creating. What the hell was that about?
And despite everything, he’d utilised his therapeutic skills in an attempt to help the man. He’d explained why they did what they did. Why Sherwood did what he did. That he was facing his true self for the first time, with no room for his usual rationalisation, self-deception or denial. But Sherwood’s guilt became even more entrenched. He insisted that Gareth’s death was a watershed moment. Gareth! He actually used the boy’s name, and claimed he’d never offend again as a result of his death.
Galbraith slammed the palm of his right hand down on his desktop. Claiming he’d talk to the authorities rather than harm another child was an abomination. Sherwood became an intolerable liability at that precise moment. Something had to be done. It really was as simple as that.
Two days passed, and Sherwood was still maintaining his laughable position. The man even turned down the opportunity to attend a gathering of the ring. He hadn’t missed a meeting for years. That was far too significant a development to ignore. Enough was enough. Providing the paracetamol was an act of human kindness.
He sat Sherwood on that ghastly bohemian red leather settee of his, poured one tot of single malt whisky after another down his ungrateful throat, and handed him the tablets one at a time. He even did that for the man before repeatedly reinforcing his feelings of guilt and remorse: 'You’ve done terrible things, Richard. You will never overcome your guilt. You will harm other children. Death can be a welcome release. It needn’t be painful.' It was something along those lines. Anyway, whatever his choice of words, they had the desired effect. That’s what mattered. And liver damage wasn’t such a bad way to go, was it? Why concern himself? Sherwood was better off dead. There seemed little purpose in further pondering such inconsequences.
Galbraith removed his spectacles, closed Gareth’s project file, and was instantly back in the present. He ran a hand through his neat black hair, rose easily from his seat, pulled up his pants and trousers, and tucked his shirt-tail into his waistband with both hands. It had been too long, far too long, and no amount of reminiscing would sustain him, however dedicated his approach.
He took a GP referral letter from an inside pocket of the bespoke navy-blue single-breasted suit jacket hanging on the back of his study door, removed it from its ivory envelope, returned to his seat, unfolded it carefully, and reread it for the fifth time since receiving it the previous morning. The dead child was the past, and a new project was essential if the pressure in his head were to become even remotely manageable.
He bl
inked repeatedly as a single bead of sweat ran down his forehead and found a home in his left eye. It was looking hopeful. His new patient was the correct gender and within the required age range. He had to be worth a look, didn’t he?
He closed his eyes again and nodded once, confirming the conclusion of his ruminations. Yes, yes, of course he was. New projects made life worth living.
2
‘Will you read to me, Mummy?’
‘Oh, Anthony, it’s well past your bedtime. What will the teacher say if you fall asleep in class again?’
‘Just a few pages, please. I’m feeling sad.’
‘Come here, cariad, and give your old mum a hug.’
Anthony buried his head in the warm orange wool of her jumper.
Molly disentangled herself from her son. ‘Now then, into bed with you, and I’ll tuck you in nice and snug. I’ve put your teddy and a hot-water bottle under your quilt.’
‘Just a few pages, please. I don’t want to be on my own.’