at rest. Or, she showed her spirit to the end. That might make people feel better. Good old Abbie, she managed to crack a few jokes even when she was about to be murdered. What a lesson to us all. What a fucking lesson to us all in how to deal with the problem of being murdered. Pay attention, children. If ever you’re captured by a psychopath and he’s about to kill you, here’s this letter by Abigail Devereaux. That’s exactly the spirit in which to be murdered. Brave and forgiving and at the same time not taking herself too seriously.
But I’m not wise and I’m not forgiving and I’m not brave and I just want it all to go away. People talk about what you would have for your last meal as if it were some little game like your desert island discs. Well, if there were a last meal I wouldn’t be able to swallow it. And if there’s a last letter—a brilliant bit of writing to sum up my life—I won’t be able to write it. I can’t write a howl in the darkness.
When I was first here, all that time ago, I was tormented by the thought of ordinary people a few hundred yards or a mile away. People in a hurry somewhere, wondering what they were going to watch on TV tonight, feeling for their change, deciding what bar of chocolate to buy. Now it all seems far away. I don’t belong to that world any more. I live in a cave deep down in the earth where light has never penetrated.
When I was first here I had a dream about being buried alive. It was the most frightening thing I could think of. I was shut in a dark box. I was pushing at the lid of the box but the lid couldn’t be opened because above the lid was thick, heavy earth and above the earth was a stone slab. It seemed the most frightening thing that my brain could think of. Now I think of it and it doesn’t seem the most frightening thing at all, because I’m already in that grave. My heart is beating, my lungs are breathing, but it doesn’t really matter. I’m dead. I’m in my grave.
‘Did I fight back?’
‘What are you on about?’
‘I don’t remember. I want you to tell me. Did I come peacefully? Did you have to force me? I was banged on the head. I don’t remember.’
The laugh.
‘Still trying that on? It’s so too late for that. But if you want to play that game, all right, yeah, you did fight back. I had to smash you up a bit. You fought worse than anybody. I had to give you a few thumps, quieten you down.’
‘Good.’
‘What?’
‘Nothing.’
Do the knee-ups. Don’t give up. One, two, three, four, five. Have to do ten. Try. Try harder. Six, seven, eight, nine. One more. Ten. Horrible sickness rising up in me. Don’t give up. Breathe, in and out. Never give up.
All right, then. My last letter. It’s not to anyone. Well, maybe it’s to someone who doesn’t exist, whom I might have met in the future. Like writing a diary. I used to write a diary when I was a teenager, but it always had this embarrassing tone. It made me into a stranger, and one I didn’t particularly like. I never knew who it was for, or to.
Where was I? Yes. My letter. When did I last write a letter? I can’t remember. I write lots of emails, and every so often I send postcards, you know the kind of thing, the rain is raining or the sun is shining and I’m thinking of you, here, now. But real letters, well, it’s been ages. I had a friend called Sheila who went and lived in Kenya in her gap year, doing voluntary work and living in a thatched hut in a small village. I wrote her letters every so often, but I never knew if they were going to arrive, and I discovered when she came home that only a couple of them ever did. It’s a strange feeling you get when you’re writing to someone and not knowing if they’ll ever read it. Like those times when you’re talking to someone, really talking, I mean, and you turn round and they’ve left the room. What happens to those words and thoughts? Things that don’t ever arrive.
My mouth felt horrible, full of
Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child
Etgar Keret, Ramsey Campbell, Hanif Kureishi, Christopher Priest, Jane Rogers, A.S. Byatt, Matthew Holness, Adam Marek
Saxon Andrew, Derek Chido