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MY ENEMY'S ENEMY

🇬🇧Andrew_Hixson_0481
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Synopsis
Cape Ore: a small village on the Suffolk coast, shrouded by fog and overlooked by a twelve-mile spit once home to a military base. The community faces economic ruin and struggles to survive. When DEFRA (the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) buys the derelict complex on the spit, locals owe the department a thank you. They don't ask too many questions about what's going on, and they don't care that staff rarely venture into the village. But when people start dying, livestock falls ill, and a tragic fishing accident occurs in the harbour, they start to question whether their luck has really changed. Their suspicions are aroused, however, by the discovery of two Russian bird watchers in the local church tower, a glimpse of what is believed to be a submarine surfacing nearby, and a Russian trawler anchored out on the twelve-mile exclusions zone with more aerials than fishing nets. Nevertheless, life continues until a stranger arrives and people die....
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Chapter 1 - MY ENEMY'S ENEMY

1

An abrupt squeaking of brakes split the heavy air. The gloom drew to the vibration of the No.71 bus from Melton. Swirling into a hasty gap. Coalescing around the beams of the headlights, two giant index fingers probing the cloudiness.

The mechanical folding access doors were open, and I strode off, placed on my rucksack full of clothes, sniffed at the air, wrinkling my nose at the smell of the sea.

"Brisk," I announced to the driver.

Without responding, the doors shut, and the coach drove off into the pea-souper.

For a minute, I stopped in the mist, where visibility fell to three feet. By the bus stop, a road marker pointed me toward Cape Ore. I ambled along until my foot missed the ground and kept going.

The earth should be in that space!

My limbs, now flailing, thrashed for momentum, descending until I spotted the raging ocean far below and saw the broken edge of the cliff.

A hand grabbed one of my arms, yanking me back with immediate forcefulness.

"Thanks," I gasped, turning to my saviour.

The man was compact, well-built, with an oval face, strong cheekbones, a snub nose, enormous eyes, a large forehead, and puffy lips.

Eastern European, I realised

A pair of powerful binoculars hung round the neck

A twitcher?

Surrounded by fog, he was gone.

The air remained muggy and frigid as the featureless mistiness dwindled. After a while, I crisscrossed an agreeable track worn by sheep, leading to a meandering trail across the moorland, and a broader path between two fields. In the distance, cows grazed, but no evidence of farm buildings. The land grew less rocky, and the route turned into a bricked pathway. The fog collected in again. I found myself on the coast.

The masts of many fishing crafts showed. I headed in their direction and encountered a harbour set up into an inlet. Boats in different dilapidated states bobbed in the swell. Countless torn nets lay near the Flint wall in a state of repair.

The endless stone road curved to the graveyard, past the exquisite, dark-spike poking up through the density and unveiled itself as the spire of the Church. The cobblestones led past the murky burial ground, and into the village. From a delicate rise on the outskirts, I experienced a superb view.

Ornate streetlights were at irregular intervals beside the cobblestoned roadside, glowing anaemic in the softened daylight. The location maintained a single route. Halfway on my path to the inn, where the notice swung in the breeze. At the distant point of the town, another monumental building. There is a field at the school.

A short distance in front of me opened a front-door to one of the tiny, terraced cottages. A slight, shrivelled elderly lady, wrapped up against the chilly air, remained in the door, breathing an uneven swath of steam, which mingled with the dim wispy veil.

Another door unlocked, followed by many others. People moved out of their dwellings and gathered along the street. Standing still, gazing along the road, attention beyond the tavern to the far-off school.

One stride backwards into a thoroughfare between two homes, I rested on the walkway. Everyone stood silent in their doorways. Dressed for the weather, their hefty, dark coats struck me as odd, and an entire minute elapsed before I realised what niggled me. Past the old gentlewoman, a younger couple in their thirties, next to them a man of fifty. A gathering from pub stood with drinks in their hands. A mixed group of men and women, young and old. They watched a house on the opposite side.

Another door opened, and I was trying to catch the house opposite the public house, a fair way along the street from where I stood. The remnants of the haze made life difficult to discern what developed. People came out of the house.

Dissimilar to the audience who emerged from the bar, this possessed order.

A formality.

A procession.

Distant figures arose, carrying an enormous box on their shoulders, two men on either side. The supporters strolled to the end of the small front garden of the house, turned into the slender street, starting towards me.

The gate of the memorial, a middle-aged, balding priest with a crinkling but friendly face, stood. His white surplice glowed in the fogginess, a complete contradiction to the dark clothes of the parade and the other locals, and in his clasped hands a Bible.

Mourners moved at a sedate pace, while the coffin rocked back and forth beneath the four men, advancing up the avenue, preceded by friends and family. A woman in a full-length black coat, dabbing her eyes with a handkerchief. An older man slipped an arm around, behind the grieving couple, two young men. One gazed at the ground, while the other glared at the solid wooden box, dressed in formal black. Along the roadway, heads turned to follow the progress.

As the casket approached, I turned my head, straightening as I stared past the bereaved. My attention fixed on a narrow passageway on the opposite of the road, further along from me.

A gloomy opening, residences on either side, the faint gleam of the nearby streetlight diffused through the mass, provided an otherworldly radiance to the scene. A tall, thin, silhouetted individual stood in the shadows. Black against the dark grey. Only when following the march past did I glimpse a face.

As the entourage departed, the figure disappeared.

The minister returned to the plot of remembrance. I took an instinctive, respectful step back as the column of people passed.

The second of the pallbearers stumbled. In slow motion, as a shoulder dipped, he lost traction on the damp sheen of the rounded cobbles. With the grip on the polished wood in peril before equilibrium returned, but the sudden movement, the change in weight distribution, caused another slip, more severe this time.

His feet slipped as he collapsed. Others tried to compensate, attempted to reinforce their failing grips. The man with the murderous stare ran ahead, seeing the inevitable unfold. The coffin continued to lilt as it slipped out of the clutches of others. Crashing onto the cobbled pavement. Bouncing on the firm surface. After the sound of splintering timber, the lid jarred open, and slid downwards.

A streetlight above projected a sallow glow onto the body, illuminating the pasty white face. A man, the white shirt, merging with the pallid skin. His face contorted in astonishment. The lips rolled back from gritted teeth. His forehead lined, and the eyes bulging forwards, straining to escape from the skull. The pupils dilated, and dark against pale irises.

With the top replaced, I looked at the young man. Scowling at me, eyes a frenzied contrast to the empty view of the corpse. The staring lasted as the coffin lifted again, before continuing on their melancholy way.

Only when the last one entered the cemetery did the remaining villagers withdraw into their houses.

The man followed the cortege.