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Carnage Boxset Page 86

by Jones, Lesley


  Swanning; Posing or posturing around.

  Take/ing the Piss; To take liberties at the expense of others, or to be unreasonable. To mock or make fun of.

  Tarted Up; To improve the appearance of something.

  Telly; Television.

  Tits Up; Something that is no longer functioning or working.

  Tuppence Worth; Phrase used when someone has brought all the evidences to support his point of view.

  Vest; Tank Top/Singlet

  Whaz; Urinate

  Whizz; Speed

  MARLEY—A CARNAGE NOVEL

  From the author of Carnage 1&2, comes this follow up novel. Marley tells the story of Carnage from Marley Layton’s POV. It will give you the missing years.

  Marley is a companion novel to Carnage 1&2 and both of those books should be read first.

  ‘So, they want me to write a book? They want to know about my band, my life, my loves and my losses. But they have no idea what they’re asking for. If I give them what they want, they’ll get so much more than the sex and drugs and the rock and roll they’re expecting. They’ll get the secrets that I’ve kept for so long, they’ll get an insight into the person I really am, or at least was. They think they know my story, they know nothing.

  If I do this, if I write honestly and give them the ugly truth, people will get hurt. People that I love, people that have already suffered in the worst possible ways.

  Do I do this, or do I walk away? Taking my secrets to the grave.’

  Marley is an adult contemporary romance. It contains content suitable only for grownups with an open mind. There are scenes of group sex which include m/f/m a little bit of f/m/m and even some f/f/f/m/m/f/f/f. There is drinking and drug taking involved. A lot of swearing, some Essex slang and some very high emotion. Please don’t complain after reading this book that you wasn’t warned.

  And yes, of course, you’ll need tissues.

  Prologue

  I wipe the steam from the mirror with the palm of my hand, clearing it enough to see my reflection. I rest my elbows on the granite counter and lean forward, taking in my image. I rake my hand through my hair, then over the stubble on my chin. My eyes are bloodshot from the weed we smoked earlier, the after-effects of which have also left me feeling decidedly depressed.

  I stood in the shower and cried tonight for the first time in a long time over the death of my best friend, my bandmate, and my brother-in-law, Maca.

  So pointless.

  So tragic.

  So unfair.

  Drawing in a deep breath, I leave the steamy solitude of the bathroom and head for our dressing room, passing the sleeping form of my wife—my rock—on the way.

  I smile at the thought of having a dressing room, feeling like a stupid fuck as I do. Of all the material things that fame and fortune have blessed our lives with, this dressing room makes me feel like a horny teenager in a sex shop. It’s the sort of room I dreamt of as a kid, back when I was thirteen or fourteen, trying to imagine what it would be like if Carnage made it big. I never imagined having one like this though, on property that I never thought I would be able to afford … to own.

  Ashley’s clothes are lined up along one side and mine along the other, with everything broken down by style and colour. In the middle, we both have a mechanical shoe carousel that moves from floor to ceiling. Ashley’s shoes take up her entire carousel, along with three-quarters of my space. I’ve also notice that a few of her winter coats have managed to sneak their way over to my side. The woman has fifty feet of wall space for hanging her gear, and another twenty for all her knickers and bra’s she insists she needs and still, she needs more room.

  It’s not that I mind. She can have whatever she likes. She’s my world, and I would give and do anything for her.

  At the end of the room there are two full-length mirrors that tilt and unfold so that you can see yourself from all angles. In the centre is a tacky, Hollywood-style mirror, complete with lights around the edges. In front of it is the kind of sink a hairstylist would use, with a chair that leans back. All of Ashley’s crap surrounds the surfaces on either side of the sink: make-up, face cream, hair shit. I have no idea what ninety percent of it is, or what it does—nothing, as far as I can tell. You can’t improve on perfection, and my wife is perfect. She’s stunningly beautiful, has curves in all the right places, and she’s so much more than I could ever deserve—so much more.

  I pull on a pair of boxers and the automatic lighting turns off as I leave the room. I laugh to myself at the full-on description I’ve just run through of our dressing room. In case you couldn’t tell, I love that fucking room.

  As quietly as I can, I take my sneaky stash pack of cigarettes and lighter from the chest of drawers next to my side of the bed.

  Ash will give me shit if she catches me smoking. She makes an allowance for a few joints on occasion, but she hates me smoking cigarettes. It’s been an emotional few days and I need one, maybe two, to calm my nerves.

  Ash has never smoked and thankfully, neither do any of my kids … well, not cigarettes at least. I’ve caught Joe with a joint a couple of times, but the boy’s twenty-four so what can I do? I’ve given him the talk—warning him of the dangers of hard drugs—but I don’t know how much more I can do. I know, considering my past, that it’s highly hypocritical of me to lecture him, but at the end of the day, I’m his dad and it’s my job. Besides, what I did when I was younger is irrelevant. He does as I say, not as I do, or did. Yeah, I’m a pretty strict parent—who’d have thought?

  I slip quietly out onto the balcony, closing the doors behind me and light up. I lean one hand on the railing and bring the cigarette to my lips with the other, drawing in the much-needed smoke into my lungs. I know it’s a filthy habit. I know the toxins and chemicals can kill me, but the pleasure I’m receiving from the little stick of poison right now, I couldn’t care less.

  Ash has never been a nag. She’s never really got on my case about things, but she hates me smoking.

  Fifty. I’ll be turning fifty next year, and I’m grateful for every day that I’ve managed to stay alive. I let out a long breath as images of the life I’ve led, the things I’ve seen, people I’ve met, and places I’ve visited rush through my mind. I’ve done some stupid shit in my time, and I mean some really stupid shit.

  Goosebumps erupt over my skin, and I shiver. It’s a beautiful warm summer’s evening—the kind that reminds me of the long school summer holidays we enjoyed as kids—days when the sun always seemed to shine and the air smelt of fresh cut grass. We thought we were invincible back then. All that mattered was the music, practising our next cover, and attempting to write our next song. We thought we knew everything—thought that we would live forever, but obviously we knew fuck all.

  The damn breaks again and I grip my hair, trying to quiet the loud sobs that are escaping. I hear the door click behind me and turn to see Ash staring at me.

  “Babe?”

  I turn away from her, gripping the rail as another sob escapes.

  “Oh Marls, I knew this would happen. I warned you, didn’t I?” She’s not accusing, just stating a fact. She did warn me. She knows me better than I know myself and I love her for it. Her naked front pushes into my bare back and her arms slide underneath mine, wrapping around me.

  “Talk to me, Marls. Please, don’t shut me out.”

  I turn and face her, pulling her in tight and breathing in the scent of the woman I’ve loved for twenty-five years. She’s one of the very few things that I haven’t fucked up in my life, not since the early days anyway. She’s loved me at my worst, stood by my side, and pulled me back from the brink so many times I’ve lost count, but she still doesn’t know all my deepest, darkest secrets—most, but not all.

  “It hurts, Ash. It still fucking hurts so much,” I say into her hair. The smell of her shampoo calms my racing heart.

  “Of course it does, especially on nights like tonight when you’ve been talking about him and remembering all the goo
d times.” She pauses for a few seconds and I know she’s struggling not to cry herself.

  “It’s normal, Marls. You just need to let it out. Don’t bottle it up like you used to. Just let me in and the tears out.”

  She takes my hand and leads me back inside to the bedroom and over to our bed.

  “Get in and give me a cuddle. You’ve shut me out these past few weeks and I’ve missed ya.”

  I let out a long sigh as I climb into bed, feeling guilty because she’s right.

  I’ve spent the last few weeks practising for this year’s Triple M concert with Conner Reed, lead guitarist for Shift. Because of the tragedy his band has recently endured, we thought it would be a good idea to collaborate and bring in some extra revenue for the charities we support while at the same time, commemorate and celebrate our lost bandmates.

  This will be the thirteenth year we have held the event and it’s gone from strength to strength. The diversity of the charities we raise awareness and money for keeps a broad selection of the public interested. Despite Maca being gone fourteen years this December, there are still a lot of Carnage fans out there who turn out every year to support the cause, and I couldn’t be more proud of what we’ve managed to achieve between Georgia, Len, and myself.

  Georgia, George, G, or to Maca, Gia, is my little sister and the bravest person I’ve ever met. How she has held her shit together and clawed her way back to becoming a functioning human being again, I will never know. I couldn’t have done it, but she did, and with the help of Cam, she’s in a good place. She still has her moments. I still get the odd call from her in the middle of the night when she can’t sleep, or because she’s had a bad dream, but they are few and far between now and I’m glad—glad that she’s found her place in the world. Her family and this charity pretty much take up all of her time, and despite the fact that her job is to promote a charity that was set up to honour her dead husband, Cameron King has been on board and one hundred percent supportive since the very beginning.

  Despite my doubts about their relationship when it first began, he has been a bigger man than I ever could have been, and I’m not just talking about the size of the man’s dick here—which is apparently legendary. No, I’m talking about his capacity to love my sister the way that he does. I might even go as far as to say he loves her more than Maca did. Don’t get me wrong, Sean loved George, but their relationship was borderline obsessive of each other.

  I let out another long sigh as I pull Ashley back into my front and she grinds her arse against me.

  “What are you thinking about?” she asks me quietly.

  “Anal mostly—Humph,” is the noise I sorta make as Ash elbows me in the ribs.

  “We were being serious, Marls.” I kiss the top of her head and give her nipple a squeeze.

  “I’ve got a hard-on now. I don’t wanna talk, I wanna fuck.”

  “Don’t try and deflect. I wanna know what’s going on in that head of yours right now.”

  “I just told you and it earned me a crack up the ribs,” I complain.

  “You either talk to me, Marley Joseph Layton, or I go and find another bed to sleep in. Don’t shut me out, I’m being serious.”

  “George,” I tell her honestly.

  “Well, that’s disturbing. Anal and your sister in the same convo. I’ve always thought you two were overly close.” I bite her shoulder.

  “Ow! I’m joking you arsehole. What about her?”

  I shrug my shoulders, “How far she’s come.”

  I feel Ash nod her head. “She’s in a good place, possibly the happiest I’ve ever known her to be.”

  We’re both silent for a few moments before Ash asks, “Have you thought any more about the book?”

  My stomach does a few backflips and I instantly feel too warm.

  “I can’t do it to her, Ash. She’s been through too much already. Fuck, I’ve caused her enough shit in her life … I can’t do it.”

  She wriggles around and faces me, reaching out to stroke the stubble on my cheek with the palm of her hand. Her soft fingers rubbing over my whiskers calms me down a little.

  “Will you still not tell me what’s so bad? Is there stuff about you? You scare me when you won’t even discuss it with me. We’ve been together a long fucking time, babe. What’s past is past.”

  I raise my eyebrows as I look at her. We both know full well that she’s full of shit.

  “So, if you read something about me shagging someone way back when and we just happen to bump into that person, you’re gonna be fine with it?”

  She pulls her head back so she can look me in the eyes. I notice that hers are shining like she’s about to cry.

  “Did it happen since we’ve been together?” She asks me quietly and my fucking heart breaks for her.

  “What? No, babe. You know everything that you need to. You knew about it back then, when shit happened.” I sit up in bed and pull her up to straddle my lap. I feel ashamed. I treated Ash like shit when we were first together, mostly because I was terrified of what I was feeling for her, but partly because I’m a complete dickhead.

  “See? This is why I can’t do it, not even for charity. If I write it, I want to be honest. I want to tell the truth, and if I do that…” I trail off as I think about the damage it would do. “If I do that, then I’m gonna hurt a lot of people, including my sister. I’ve fucked up her life enough and I’m not gonna be responsible for doing it again.”

  Ash looks up at me from under her lashes. “But you’re not gonna tell me what it is that might upset G?”

  “No,” I reply without hesitation. “I don’t want you having to keep things from her. I don’t want you knowing shit about Sean and worrying that she needs to know the truth because she doesn’t.” I press my forehead against hers. “We were young. We fucked up and then, even when we got a bit older, we still sometimes fucked up.” I meet her gaze and continue. “I’m still here, Ash. I can justify and explain my actions, but Maca’s not and I’ll never do that to him. I won’t hurt my sister and I won’t ruin Maca’s reputation. It’s just better for everyone involved if the book doesn’t get written.”

  This whole argument has been going on between us since a publisher asked me to write my life’s story. They would cover the costs involved in editing, promotion, and whatever else needing to be done to bring a book to print and digital. All the proceeds would go to Maca’s Music & More charity. It would probably bring in a lot of coin, but I can’t lie—if I’m gonna put it out there and publish the fucker, then I’m gonna want to be honest and tell the world the truth. And if I do that, people are gonna get hurt, especially my wife and sister, and I can’t do that to them.

  “What if you just wrote it and made the decision after you finished it? Write it all down and then decide if it’s really as bad as you think it is.”

  I smile at her. “You only want me to write it down so that you can read it. I’m not fuckin’ stupid, Ash.”

  Her brown eyes sparkle as she smiles back at me. “I’d never do anything to hurt you, baby,” I tell her, “and if I was to write this book with honesty and from the heart, I can’t guarantee that I won’t do just that. There’s things that I’m not proud of—things that I don’t want you and the kids to read about.”

  “Well that fuckin hurts in itself,” she says, her smile now replaced with a frown. “The fact that you’re keeping secrets from me fucking hurts, Marls.”

  I can’t win. “Fine, have it your fuckin’ way. I’ll write the book so you can read about my life—the good, the bad, and the fuckin’ ugly, but don’t you dare complain to me that you’re not happy with some of the life choices I’ve made. I don’t wanna hear you complain about how ugly things have been for me.

  I expect her to climb off my lap and storm off, but instead she surprises me by wrapping her arms around my neck and kissing me. “Shut the fuck up and stop behaving like a martyr. It’s all in the past, but if it’s gonna help you, write it. If it’s gonna leave you miserable
and depressed, walk away, babe, walk away.”

  If only she knew that it’s already too late. The book has already been written. The second the publishers came to me with the suggestion, I couldn’t get the idea out of my head. I laid awake every night for weeks, going over past events in my head: the good, the sad, the bad, and the bits that are so fucked up, I don’t think I want anyone to know about … ever. In the end, I decided to write down all of it—the truth about my life, Sean’s, my sister’s, and Carnage. I’ve been brutally honest throughout the whole process to the point where I’ve actually begun to see things in a different light. I’ve finally accepted the part I played in fucking up and fucking with the lives of my little sister and of my best mate. Now, I just need to decide what the fuck to do with all these words that have the potential to break hearts, maybe even minds. Do I leave it as it is and tell the truth, or do the kind thing and leave bits out? I’ve hated lying to Ash, but I know that if she knew it’s already been written, she’ll force my hand either way and want to read it. I’m not sure if I’m ready for that. I’m not even sure if I’m ready for anyone to know the ugly truth, especially Ashley.

  * * *

  Later, after making love to my wife, I abandon her sexy sleeping arse and slide out of bed and head silently down the stairs to my office. I fire up my laptop, pour myself a glass of my favourite single malt and sit back on the leather sofa. I begin to read what I’ve spent the last six months writing behind my wife’s back.

  I skim through the prologue, which covers the early years, and jump straight into the part where things take off for us, and at the same time, fall apart.

  Carnaged

  By Marley Layton

  Chapter One

  1985

  I tilted my head back to let the ice-cold beer slide down my throat.

 

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