Today I am pleased to be able to
participate in the blog tour for The Key to Deaths Door by Mark Tilbury. My thanks
go to Sarah Hardy @ Bloodhound Books.
About the book
If you could discover the murderous truth of a past
life and seek justice in this one, would you?
Teenager Lee Hunter doesn’t have a choice when he nearly drowns
after spending the night at a derelict boathouse with his best friend, Charlie
Finch. After leaving his body and meeting a mysterious light, Lee is sent back
to relive the final days of another life. A life that ended tragically.
After recovering from his near death experience, Lee begins to
realise that he is part of two lives linked by the despicable actions of one
man.
Struggling against impossible odds, Lee and Charlie set out to
bring this man to justice.
Will Lee be able to unlock the past and bring justice to the
future?
The Key to Death’s Door is a story of sacrifice, friendship,
loyalty and murder.
Extract
I have an extract from Chapter One of The Key To Death’s
Door by Mark, and this is below for you.
Hope you have a nice cuppa and your feet up whilst you read this.
Chapter One
The day before I died started off pretty much
like any other. Up at seven. Breakfast. Ready for school. Just one slight
difference: me and my best mate Charlie Finch had cooked up a plan to tell our
parents we were sleeping at each other’s houses. Clear the way to spend the
night fishing at a derelict boathouse along Feelham River.
With
the boathouse side of the river largely overgrown, we’d decided to row across
in my two-man inflatable dingy. The perfect adventure for a pair of losers
trying to spice up their lives after the summer holidays. September should be
banned. Whoever had the idea of inflicting double maths and history on kids
ought to be thrown in jail for cruelty.
The
plan of telling our parents that we were spending the night in a friend’s house
should have been simple. The reality proved more difficult. After tea, as my
mother was getting ready for her night shift at the John Radcliffe Hospital in
Oxford, I took a deep breath and moved in for the kill.
‘Is
it all right if I stay at Charlie’s tonight?’
‘Charlie
who?’
She
knew full well who Charlie was, but sarcasm at this point didn’t seem a wise
idea.
‘Finch.’
‘I
don’t trust that boy, Lee. He spits.’
My
brain failed to make a connection. ‘Charlie’s all right.’
‘As
for his father… don’t get me started on him.’
For
once, I was in agreement. Daryl Finch made my guts wobble, even though he was
in a wheelchair. ‘He’s—’
‘Don’t
you dare say he’s all right. He’s not. And I’m not keen on you spending time at
his house.’
‘It’s
only for one night.’ I played my trump card. ‘And there’s no school tomorrow.
It’s Saturday.’
‘I’m
well aware of what day it is.’
‘Please,
Mum. I don’t like staying on my own when you’re working nights.’ This wasn’t a
lie. I hated being stuck indoors. It made me feel as if the walls were closing
in. Even in winter I left the bedroom window open slightly.
‘Why
don’t you watch a DVD?’
‘I
don’t like films.’ The truth. I much preferred real-life adventures – if only I
could ever manage to escape the house to have one!
‘What
time do you plan on coming home in the morning? I’ll be in bed, so I don’t want
you disturbing me.’
‘Around
teatime. Me and Charlie are going fishing tomorrow.’
‘It’s
been raining most of the week.’
‘It’s
not now, though, is it?’
‘Don’t
smart-mouth me, Lee Hunter. And stay away from the weir.’
‘Does
that mean I can go?’
‘I
want you to promise me you’ll behave.’
‘Scouts
honour.’
‘Don’t
act the fool with that Finch boy. Especially near water. He’s the size of a
grown man.’
Not
yet fourteen, and built like a nightclub bouncer, Charlie was designed to cause
suspicion. He had the brain of a chicken and the heart of a lion. ‘We’re going
fishing, Mum. You have to keep quiet, else you’ll scare the fish.’
She
puckered her lips in the small mirror in the kitchen windowsill, inspected
something on the side of her face, then turned to me. ‘I want you to call me in
the morning and let me know you’re all right.’
‘Okay.’
‘Have
you got any credit on your phone?’
‘Yes.’
She
took her handbag off the back of a chair and fished a fiver out of her purse. ‘For
lunch tomorrow.’
‘I
don’t want—’
‘Behave.’
She thrust the money in my hand, touched my cheek, and disappeared out the back
door.
Okay.
Good start. Now all we had to do was get past Charlie’s parents, and we were
home and dry. Or wet, considering where we were going!
I
put the dingy in a backpack and walked to Charlie’s house carrying my rod and
keepnet in one hand, and a canvas holdall filled with the rest of my gear in
the other. I left it all behind the garage at the end of his drive as planned,
and knocked on the back door.
Charlie
opened it and deposited a glob of spit on the concrete. He was dressed for the
boathouse adventure in jeans, a baggy jumper, and a floppy hat more suited to
summer. ‘My old man wants a word with
you.’
‘Why?’
‘Because
he sucks dicks. Just stick to what we said, okay?’
Daryl
Finch sat in a wheelchair near the front room window. His thinning grey hair
was slicked back with grease. A cigarette dangled from the corner of his mouth.
He stroked his beard as if it were a beloved pet. ‘Charlie says he’s staying the
night with you. Is that right, boy?’
The
room reeked of cigarettes and stale piss. Thank God my mother couldn’t see him.
Or smell him. I nodded, scared to speak unless I somehow revealed our guilty
secret.
He
squinted at me through a cloud of smoke. ‘You telling the truth? Or have you
two hatched a plan to stay out all night?’
I
suddenly believed he could see right inside my head. ‘No.’
‘I
was your age once. I know what it’s like when you get a sniff of the girlies.’
Charlie
rescued me. ‘We don’t even like girls.’
Finch
turned to his son. ‘What’s that supposed to mean? You queer?’
‘No!’
‘Got
my first sniff of pussy when I was twelve. Can still smell it now if I close my
eyes.’
I
thought that might be difficult with the smoke billowing from the end of his
fag.
‘I
can smell bullshit,’ Charlie whispered.
Finch
squinted at him. ‘You got something to say, boy?’
Charlie
shook his head. ‘We’re gonna watch a movie.’
‘What
movie?’
Charlie
hesitated. He looked at me. I wished to Christ he’d think of his own answers. ‘Batman,’ I blurted.
‘Porn,
more like,’ Finch senior said. He looked back at me. ‘Your old lady all right
with this?’
‘Yes.’
‘You
don’t look too sure.’
‘No…
she’s fine.’
‘She
managed to get off her high horse yet?’
I
shuffled uneasily. I knew what he was talking about. Back in the summer, I’d
been mooching about in a cupboard in the spare bedroom. It was a spillover
wardrobe for my dad’s work clothes before he’d run off with another woman two
years back. I’d searched through the jackets and coats looking for clues to his
new life. I didn’t find a thing. But I’d stumbled across a fifty-pound note. To
a fourteen-year-old loser like me, it seemed like I’d stumbled across a
fortune, made all the more sweeter knowing it belonged to the bastard who’d
abandoned us.
But
it turned out my mother had put it in the jacket to save up for Christmas. I’d
confessed straight away. I loved my mum. I wouldn’t do anything to hurt her. It
was an honest and stupid mistake. I told her I’d treated three of my mates to a
week of meals in the local café and the cinema. Skipped the cigarettes. After
her initial anger and disappointment, she’d gone to the parents of the other
three boys to demand they pay back their share of the spoils. Which they did. All
except Daryl Finch, who’d wanted receipts and cast iron proof of his son’s
involvement.
‘You
can tell her from me she looks horny when she’s mad.’
Charlie’s
mum walked into the room. ‘Who?’
Finch
studied his wife for a few moments before saying, ‘Not you, and that’s a fact
you can take to court.’
‘So?’
Charlie said. ‘Can I go?’
Susan
Finch handed her husband a can of Foster’s. Her grey hair was pulled back in a
tight ponytail. Lines creased her forehead as if she was permanently frowning. ‘Go
where?’
‘Boy
wants to go to his mate’s to watch porn.’
Charlie
sighed. ‘I just wanna stay over at Lee’s.’
Susan
walked out of the room. ‘There’s no school tomorrow. I don’t see why not.’
Daryl
Finch looked at me, eyes sly. ‘Your mum can stay over here if she wants to.
Call it a swap.’
Susan
closed the door to the kitchen. ‘I heard that.’
Finch
grinned. ‘She still a nurse?’
I
felt a lump in my throat. I wanted to walk across the room and smash his stupid
bloated face to a pulp. ‘Yes.’
‘Reckon
she wants to take my temperature?’
‘I—’
‘Don’t
listen to him,’ Charlie said. ‘He’s just winding you up.’
Finch
removed the cigarette from his mouth and dropped it in a cup on a scarred oak
coffee table. ‘Had me a nurse once. Pretty as a peach. Had some fucking rare
nights with that one. Should’ve married her instead of that lump-of-frump
through there.’
Charlie
shuffled uneasily. ‘Don’t take no notice of him. He’s pissed.’
Finch
belched. ‘I ain’t pissed. Just reminiscing.’
‘Fantasising,
more like.’
Finch
didn’t seem to hear him. ‘She was called Jessica. Posh or what? A good horse
riding name, don’t you think? I used to imagine her in the saddle.’
Charlie
gave me a look to suggest he wished his dad would do us all a favour and drop
dead.
‘Met
her when I lost my fucking finger.’ He held up his right hand to reveal the
stump where his index finger used to point.
‘How
did you lose your finger?’ I asked. I don’t know why I decided to offer
something to the conversation.
‘Personal
business, boy. Nothing that concerns you. Almost fucking died, I’ll tell you
that much.’
‘Can
I go now?’ Charlie said.
Finch
nodded. ‘I ain’t gonna tell you to stay outta trouble,
cos that’s like telling a dog not to bark. But be careful. Cops are always
looking to nick lads for nothing. Trust me.’
I
followed Charlie out the room and waited in the hall while he grabbed his bag
and his fishing gear from the garage. He didn’t speak again until we were
halfway to the river. ‘I hate that bastard.’
‘He’s
all right,’ I lied.
‘He’s
not. He’s the biggest cunt who ever lived.’
I
thought my dad qualified for that title. I asked him if he knew how his dad had
lost his finger.
‘Picking
his fucking nose for all I care. He’s so full of shit. There was no nurse. Only
in his head. No one with any sense would look twice at him.’
‘Your
mum must have—’
‘She’s
a doormat. Lets him walk all over her. I swear to God I’m gonna smack him in
the gob when I’m older. Tip him out of that fucking wheelchair right into the
path of a lorry.’
‘You
don’t mean that.’
Charlie
stopped. ‘I do. More than anything else in the world.’
‘Why’s
he in a wheelchair?’
‘Because
the lazy bastard reckons he’s disabled. But he ain’t. It’s only so he doesn’t
have to work. Says his back’s fucked. But he’s soon up and out of it when he
sets about Mum. Or when his drinking buddies come around to play poker. There’s
nothing wrong with him. I sometimes feel like ringing up the job centre and
dropping him in the shit.’
We
walked the rest of the way to the river in silence. At least Charlie still had
a dad. By the time we reached the spot opposite the old boathouse where we
planned to cross, I was having second thoughts. The boathouse looked spooky
under the darkening sky. The wooden gates beneath the building looked as if
they might lead straight to hell. We hadn’t thought this through. We hadn’t
even brought sleeping bags, for Christ’s sake. It would be freezing cold at
night. And our plan to light a fire seemed suddenly daft and dangerous. What if
it got out of control? Caught the place on fire?
I
took my backpack off and dropped it on the ground. I put my rod, keepnet and
holdall next to it. ‘You sure this is a good idea, Charlie?’
‘What?
Fishing?’
I
pointed at the boathouse. ‘Staying over there all night. What if we can’t find anything
to make a fire?’
‘There’ll
be plenty of shit lying about.’
‘Can’t
make a fire out of shit; it’ll stink too much.’
‘Ha,
ha, Hunter. Ain’t you the comedian of the century.’
‘What
if someone sees the fire and calls the cops?’
‘Like
who?’
‘River
patrol.’
‘Don’t
be a gusset all your life. This is Oxfordshire, not London. They don’t have
patrols here.’
‘How
do you know?’
‘Cos
it’s hardly the drugs capital of the world, is it?’
‘Why
don’t we just stay here and do some fishing?’
Charlie
launched a gob full of spit at the river. ‘Because we agreed to go to the
boathouse. Anyway, I’m not sitting on the riverbank all night freezing my nuts
off. What the hell’s wrong with you?’
‘Nothing.’
‘Good.
So unpack the dingy. You sound like my mum on one of her bad head days.’
Reluctantly,
I took the Orange Explorer Pro 200 out of the backpack and attached the foot
pump. The dingy had been a birthday present two summers back when my dad had
still been at home playing happy families. To be honest, as much as I loathed
him, it was my best present ever. It even had wooden oars and welded on oar
locks.
It
took about fifteen minutes to inflate. Charlie helped the effort no end by
unzipping his fly and pissing into the river. I launched the dingy into the
water and held it in place whilst Charlie loaded the gear. He climbed in and
more or less filled the bloody thing on his own.
‘And
how am I meant to fit?’
‘You
can sit on my lap if you want?’
‘I’m
not kidding, Charlie. There’s not enough room.’
He
looked up at me, brown eyes almost obliterated by his long thick fringe. ‘I
thought this was meant to be a laugh.’
‘I’m
only—’
‘If
we don’t hurry up and get a fire lit, it’ll be dark. Then you’ll be moaning
you’re cold and can’t see.’
Against
my better judgement, I squeezed in and rowed across for all I was worth. It was
a good job the river was calm. At least there wasn’t much of an undercurrent to
pull us off course. I didn’t want to consider what might happen if the weather
changed – if we got trapped in the boathouse, or dragged towards the weir
trying to get back across.
The
boathouse looked far worse up close. The wooden gates beneath the building were
rotten. So were the posts securing them. It all looked about as stable as Daryl
Finch. There was a stone wall either side of the gates with rubber tyres fixed
in place to act as buffers for larger boats. I rowed alongside and kept the
dingy steady while Charlie tied the boat to a tyre.
He
then hauled himself up the wall using the tyres as a makeshift ladder. He stood
on the grassy bank, his hands resting on his hips. ‘Piece of piss.’
I
handed the bags and fishing gear up to him. As if sensing my apprehension,
distant thunder rolled across the brooding sky.
‘Is
that your guts?’
I
clambered up the wall and joined him. ‘I fucking hope not.’
A
spiral fire escape ran up the side of the building. It had a metal roof shaped
like a Chinese hat. Most of the green paint had peeled off, leaving the metal
to rust and flake.
‘How
are we going to get in if it’s locked up?’ I asked.
‘Smash
a window.’
‘It’ll
be cold enough without breaking a—’
‘Not
if we stick something over the hole. Come on. We need to make ourselves at home
before it gets dark. And get some fire wood. What did you bring to eat?’
My
heart jolted. ‘Nothing. I brought the maggots.’
Charlie
spat in the river. ‘I ain’t eating maggots.’
‘Very
funny.’
‘Seriously,
dick-brain, I thought you were gonna bring the food.’
‘Why
me?’
Charlie
laughed. ‘Cos my old man would skin me alive if I took food from the house.’
‘I’ve
got a fiver.’
‘Brilliant.
We’ll toast it and have it with the maggots.’
I
felt like Robinson Crusoe. ‘Maybe we could eat a fish. Cook it over the fire.’
‘You
ever tasted river fish?’
‘Nope.’
‘Tastes
like shit. Someone brought my old man a pike once and he got my mum to cook it.
I’d rather eat cat puke.’
‘You’ve
eaten cat puke?’
‘All
the time, Bozo. Delicious.’
A
light drizzle started to fall. Great. Now we would end up wet, as well as
hungry.
‘I’ve
got some fags,’ Charlie said. ‘Nicked ’em off me mum.’
‘Won’t
she notice?’
‘Yeah.
But she’ll think it’s the old man. And she wouldn’t dare say nothing to him. I
took her lighter, too, but they’re always losing lighters. I reckon there’s a gremlin
in the house keeps nicking them when they’re asleep.’
‘Perhaps
that’s who pinched your brain.’
He
punched my arm. Hard enough to send shock waves along my shoulder. ‘Maybe
that’s who nicked your bollocks.’
The
rain came down harder, hitting the dirty brown river like silver pellets.
Charlie
grabbed his bag, his fishing rod and the keepnet and walked up the fire escape.
‘Tell you what. You go back into town and get some grub, and I’ll build the
love nest.’
‘What
the fuck am I supposed to do with the boat when I get to the other side?’
‘Tie
it up.’
‘What
if someone pinches it?’
‘I’ll
keep an eye on it.’
I
grabbed the rest of the gear and joined him on the small veranda outside the
wooden building. ‘How can you if you’re getting stuff for the fire?’
‘No
one will nick the boat. No one even comes along this part of the river.’
‘We’re
here, aren’t we?’
He
didn’t answer that. He tried the door. Locked. ‘Don’t think much of the service
around here. Could have given us a room key.’
‘Maybe
we ought to just go home.’
‘Remind
me to never go on holiday with you.’
‘Don’t
worry. I won’t invite you.’
Charlie
turned sideways and put his elbow through the single pane. Glass stuck to his
jumper, glinting like jewels in the fading light. He lifted the catch and
opened the window. The rain fell harder, bouncing of the small wooden veranda,
drumming on the slate roof.
‘In
you go, Gus, before we both get drenched.’
Built
like a two-legged whippet, I climbed through feet first. Glass crunched beneath
my shoes as I moved aside to let Charlie in. He wiped rain out of his eyes and
passed our gear through to me. ‘Sweep the glass out of the way. I’ll come
through headfirst.’
And
so he did. Landing with a thud and hoisting himself up with a grace that belied
his size. One of his hands was bleeding. Now what were we supposed to do? We
had no food. No warmth. No bedding.
I
should have taken that as a warning of what was to come.
About the author
Mark lives in a small village in the lovely county of
Cumbria, although his books are set in Oxfordshire where he was born and
raised.
Mark served in the Royal Navy, and was left to raise his two
daughters alone after being widowed. He finally took the plunge and
self-published two books on Amazon, The Revelation Room and The Eyes of the
Accused.
He’s always had a keen interest in writing, and is extremely
proud to have his fifth novel, The Key to Death’s Door published along
with The Liar’s Promise, The Abattoir of Dreams, and The Ben Whittle
Investigations relaunched by Bloodhound Books.
When he’s not writing, Mark can be found trying and failing to
master blues guitar,
and taking walks around the beautiful county of Cumbria.
and taking walks around the beautiful county of Cumbria.
To connect with Mark you can find him on the following social media
links
Website: https://marktilbury.com/
Facebook - Mark Tilbury
Twitter - @MTilburyAuthor
If the above extract has grabbed your interest you can buy the book
from the following links below: -
To follow the rest of the tour
and see other bloggers thoughts, check out the rest of the blog tour with these
fabulous blogs:
My thanks to Mark Tilbury for providing this excerpt, the publishers
Bloodhound Books and also Sarah Hardy for
my spot on the blog tour.
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