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Authors: Iain Edward Henn

Switchback Stories

SWITCHBACK STORIES

Like switchback trails with their unexpected twists and turns, these tales lead us through a maze of mystery, murder and psychological suspense, deceit, obsession, romantic intrigue and family secrets.
Switchback Stories
explores the mixed fortunes of fate that can surprise any one of us at any time:

In Washington DC a charismatic anti-drug lobbyist is targeted by a powerful crime cartel. With precise planning, the assassins close in on their prey – alone in his house – only to confront the one scenario they could not envision.

A Boston airline disaster and an extraordinary twist of fate have given a selfish man the chance to commit an undetectable killing. No-one will ever suspect a crime has taken place. Is it the perfect murder?

An ambitious actor has a foolproof way of advancing her career, at the expense of another. Nothing can go wrong. Sometimes, however, everything going right delivers the most unforeseeable result.

A famed South African diamond, unique for its light reflecting brilliance, is guarded by advanced technology. A dynamic cat burglar uses a variation on movie stunt trickery to plan a daring heist.

An aging drifter forms a bond with a young woman and her son in the Australian countryside – what is it about their small town he finds both familiar and unsettling?

In England’s north, the ‘Last of the Lighthouse Keepers’ uses his knowledge of treacherous waters for a desperate act – setting in motion a chain of events even he is powerless to stop.

A collection of seventeen tales with a twist, by the author of the bestselling novels ‘The Delta Chain,’ and ‘Disappear.’

Praise for Iain Edward Henn

s novels:

“Fast paced…hooks the reader in…”
– Publishers Weekly


Stylish, craftily-worded thriller…a fantastic read.”
– Martin Treanor in The Huffington Post

SWITCHBACK STORIES
Seventeen Tales With A Twist
IAIN EDWARD HENN
Sunfire Publishing

Copyright 2014 Ian E. Henn

(aka Iain Edward Henn)

First published 2014 by Sunfire Publishing.

The right of Ian E. Henn to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him under the Copyright Amendment (Moral Rights) Act 2000.

All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means – electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other – except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Apart from references to actual historical figures and places, all other names, characters and places are the product of the author’s imagination and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Some of these stories were originally published in the following publications (shown in chronological order):

‘Trick Of The Light,’ in Woman’s Day (Australia) January, 1990;

‘The News Flash,’ in The Australian Women’s Weekly, June 1990; Woman’s World, (U.S.A) December, 1990;

‘Confidence Betrayed,’ in The Australian Women’s Weekly, July, 1991; Hemmets (Sweden) 1993;

‘Secret Day,’ (aka Private Day) in Woman’s Day (Australia) July, 1991; Woman’s Own (UK) May, 1993; Hjemmets (Norway)September, 1992; Ugemagsinet Sondag (Denmark) 1992; Hemmets (Sweden) March 1993; Fact and Fiction 2E, 1995 edition, Scandinavian University Press;

‘Storm Bay,’ in Woman’s Day (Aust) September, 1991;

‘Lady Luck,’ (aka ‘The Promotion’) in Woman’s Day (Aust) May, 1992; Woman’s World (U.S.A) July, 1993; Woman’s Own (UK) November, 1993:

‘The Suicide Note,’ in The Australian Women’s Weekly, January, 1993; Hjemmets (Norway) 1992; Ugemagsinet Sondag (Denmark) July, 1992; Hemmets (Sweden) February, 1993;

‘A Seed Of Doubt,’ in The Australian Women’s Weekly, March, 1994;

‘Dark Of Winter,’ in Woman’s Day (Aust.) July, 1994;

‘Ordinary Angel,’ in Woman’s Day, January, 1997;

‘A Candle For Carrie,’ in Woman’s Day, January, 1998

‘Walk With Me,’ Indie Book Bargains UK –Drabbles fiction, 2013

All stories revised and updated 2014

For my parents

“A mountain is composed of tiny grains of earth. The ocean is made up of tiny drops of water. Even so, life is but an endless series of little details, actions, speeches, and thoughts. And the consequences whether good or bad of even the least of them are far-reaching.”

-Sivananda

Switchback –
“Roads, trails and tracks with hairpin turns and steep rises and falls.”

-Various sources

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION

THE SILVER CHAMELEON

DEADLY BY DESIGN

TRICK OF THE LIGHT

THE NEWS FLASH

A SEED OF DOUBT

SECRET DAY

LADY LUCK

CONFIDENCE BETRAYED

STORM BAY

THE UNDERSTUDY

ORDINARY ANGEL

DARK OF WINTER

HUNGER VALLEY

WALK WITH ME

EYES ON YOU

A CANDLE FOR CARRIE

THE SUICIDE NOTE

About the Author

By the Same Author

INTRODUCTION

I
n the movie that bore his name, fictional character Forrest Gump famously stated that life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you’re going to get.

I’ve often thought of short story collections in the same way. You never know what each new tale will bring.

For an author, the short story is a chance to explore different ideas, characters, styles and genres.

For both the writer and the reader it’s a literary road trip.

Like a motoring holiday, where each day you visit a different place, so the story collection takes us on a sightseeing tour across a landscape of diverse characters.

In this collection, each brief stop gives a glimpse into those lives. In one town we meet a warm hearted, aging drifter, whose stopover in a farming region brings back memories – but how, when he hasn’t been there before?

In another tale we’re drawn into the fast-moving world of a charismatic Washington DC lobbyist who is targeted for destruction by a crime cartel.

In another place an ambitious actor’s cruel plan has the desired result – however result and consequences prove to be two very different things.

Life is full of ironies, and the plot twists in a story are reflections of just that.

One of the first ironies I struck in life was when I was a teenager in my first job as a despatch boy.

I was sent on a foot errand to hand deliver letters to important clients in the Sydney Central Business District (yes, this was long before the era of the email).

I left the building via a back exit into a small narrow alleyway where I saw the body of a man crumpled on the ground. He had just jumped out of a window in the building behind ours. There were several people pointing above and paramedics already approaching.

I watched for a moment and then went on my way to perform what was, by comparison, my trivial task in a bustling, crowded city.

When I returned an hour or so later, the body and all the surrounding activity was gone, there was just a chalk outline on the ground to mark where the body had been.

This was just a couple of weeks before Christmas and I read later that the festive season was the worst time for suicides.

To my eyes that chalk outline represented not just a body, but a life. I wondered who the man was and what had pushed him to this. I wondered, if he hadn’t jumped, what might the next day have brought, and the day after that, and a year beyond that? I was struck by the irony that everything is so very important to us, whilst seemingly insignificant at the same time in the vast expanse of things.

Over forty years later, that chalk outline is often in the back of my mind when I’m telling the stories of my characters’ lives.

I’ve been telling stories for as long as I can remember. When I was very young I acted them out, with all the roles being played by myself and my imaginary friend, Red. I only have vague recollections of Red, but my parents sometimes remind me of that imagined boy.

I wonder if he’s still around, looking over my shoulder, whispering his ideas, making his suggestions and still playing some of those parts.

These stories have been drawn from my first published mystery and suspense fiction, in the 1990’s, and the years since. It includes ‘Secret Day,’ based on a true story, which appeared in several magazines and was then taken up for inclusion in a text by the Scandinavian University Press, ‘A Seed Of Doubt,’ originally commissioned and published by The Australian Women’s Weekly and ‘The Silver Chameleon,’ written especially for this collection.

The plot twists are sometimes uplifting, sometimes bittersweet, sometimes sinister, the characters’ emotions traversing the highs and lows you’d expect on a switchback ride. The stories touch on acts of good and acts of evil and the ripple effect our choices have on everyone and everything around us.

I hope you enjoy. The journey starts here.

And if there was a road sign at the beginning of this trip, I’ve got a feeling Red would be standing alongside it and that it would simply read:

Unexpected turns ahead.

THE SILVER CHAMELEON
One

H
is diary was not really a diary at all – the term implies a certain order and structure – but instead a written whirlwind of names, dates, places and subjects that seemed, at a glance, to defy the physically possible.

And yet that was the very thing about Matthew Carpenter, thought Nancy Yates, the man simply defied the physically possible.

October 4th. His ‘official’ day began at 7.45
A.M.
at a breakfast meeting with the three congressmen who were his strongest allies.

At 9
A.M.
he was on the other side of the city for an interview in the Washington studios of the nation’s highest rating TV morning program.

At 9.30 he was several streets away for an interview on a nationally syndicated radio talk show.

10
A.M.
and he was back on Capitol Hill for no less than fifteen meetings – some of them lasting less than ten minutes – with key legislators. These meetings were held in various rooms as the politicians went about their normal day, in and out of hearings and voting sessions.

Many of these meetings were conducted on the run as congressmen ran late or were called upon for urgent matters.

Matthew Carpenter knew how to improvise, tracking legislators down, strolling with them as they were called from one meeting to another.

Lunch with an influential senator from New York was wedged in between 12.45 and 1.30.

In these recent weeks, Carpenter’s days had been more chaotic than ever. He was no longer just a well-known face in the lobbying crowd, vying to attract the attention of the political heavyweights. Now he was the cause de jour, sought out by many of the bandwagon jumpers around him.

As a Washington DC lobbyist, he represented the interests of many corporate and community clients, but this project was his own personal creation, and he was its best advocate.

His anti-drug initiative was the talk of the town, and was harnessing more and more media space. Carpenter ran it the same as any of his lobbying campaigns.

As a result Nancy Yates had hardly seen her boss this past week.

She was firmly positioned in Carpenter’s office suite, in a building on the outer rim of the city’s main circle. Volunteers came in to assist from time to time, but she was often alone, manning the phones, conducting meetings with those interested in the Initiative.

She was forever organizing and re-organizing his “diary.”

Somehow Carpenter made the impossible schedule work.

That was just one of the things that amazed and impressed his feisty, matter-of-fact office manager. Nancy spoke to her boss constantly throughout the day. Like most high-flyers, Carpenter’s cell phone was almost permanently glued to his ear.

It was perhaps fortuitous then, that Carpenter had set aside half an hour from 2
P.M.
in the office, for a catch-up, prior to heading across to the Senate building.

Nancy had received a media request that she believed was of particular interest.

‘You remember that LA woman who interviewed you briefly, oh, about six months ago?’

‘Of course. Good journo. Nice girl.’

‘Down, boy-’

‘I meant nothing by that, Nancy-’

‘I know, I’m joking. Goodness, we are touchy today. You’re as bad as my husband. Anyway, I’ve had her on the phone this morning, rabbiting on.’

‘About?’

‘She’s based in DC now. She wants to spend a week with you, fly-on-the-wall doco stuff, a week-in-the-life series of segments for her news show. But she stressed something very special about her proposal, she’s emailing the details, wanted to know if we’d consider it as soon as possible.’

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