My Little Armalite

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Authors: James Hawes

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JAMES HAWES

My Little Armalite

Contents

Cover

Title

Copyright

Dedication

About the Author

Also By James Hawes

Prologue: The Primal Scream

Part One

1: What I Knew About Guns

2: The Very Important Paper

3: London, at Last!

4: Into the Hole

5: The Armalite

6: Opening Up

7: Thank You, Sir, and Goodnight

8: Not in My Name

9: The Big Match

10: Sash Windows

11: Einstein and Newton

12: The Last Person

13: Heiner Panke

14: What We Do Not Know

15: An Englishman's Nightmare

16: Mortgage Repayment: 2/6

17: A Goal for England

18: A Shit-Hole Run by the Red Army

19: Careers Advice

20: Antarctica Breaks Away

21: Sucking Diesel

22: Archaeology

23: Liberal Blather

24: How Hard Can It Be?

Part Two

25: Power

26: A Thick Bed of Liberal Broadsheet

27: Thinking Clearly

28: An Icy Male Paradise

29: The Home of the Black Rifle

30: Special Relationship

31: The Irrational Fear of Physical Violence

32: A Lump of Metal from the World of Men

33: The Genetic Make-up of London

34: Cameras

35: Good as Gold

36: No Cameras

37: Dad Pants

38: Unencumbered by Trousers

39: Respect

40: My Little Armalite

41: Vulnerability Assessment

42: Superbug

43: Prague, Of Course!

44: The Enemy

45: Of Course!

46: Legroom

47: An Anglo-Saxon Name

48: Tons of Flab Wobbling About in a Big Net

49: Waste the Pig

50: Into the Forest

Part Three

51: Singing for the Dying

52: A Mere Liberal Englishman

53: Outside the Liberal Box

54: A Black, Bloody Insurrection

55: A Deep and Very Middle-European Ditch

56: God Knows

57: What Things Will Come

58: Erbyerk Again

59: The Shock Outrunning All Pain

60: In The Paper, At Last

61: Gunsmoke

62: A Little Speed Hump for Real-Estate Speculators

63: Leader, Lead: We Demand to Obey!

64: Women, Indeed!

65: Like any Good Teutonic Politician

66: I Have a Dream

67: Tutus for Party Bosses

68: The Global Locusts

69: Straight Down the Line

70: Low Overheads

71: Saved

Part Four

72: Et in North London Ego

73: Sic Incipit Gloria Mundi

74: The Avoidance of Tragedy

75: Normality at any Cost

Acknowledgements

This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author's and publisher's rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

Version 1.0

Epub ISBN 9781407014609

www.randomhouse.co.uk

Published by Vintage 2009

2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

Copyright © James Hawes 2008

James Hawes has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work

This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchaser

First published in Great Britain in 2008 by Jonathan Cape

Vintage
Random House, 20 Vauxhall Bridge Road,
London SW1V 2SA

www.vintage-books.co.uk

Addresses for companies within The Random House Group Limited can be found at:
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The Random House Group Limited Reg. No. 954009

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN 9780099513254

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Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Bookmarque, Croydon CR0 4TD

To Nerys Lloyd and our three sons

MY LITTLE ARMALITE

James Hawes is the author of five novels, including
A White Merc With Fins
and
Speak for England
. He is Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing at Oxford Brookes University and lives in Cardiff.

ALSO BY JAMES HAWES

A White Merc With Fins
Rancid Aluminium
Dead Long Enough
White Powder, Green Light
Speak For England

Prologue: The Primal Scream

Darling, it's three a.m. and I'm sitting here in my clever little study area under our stairs, just where I should be. But I'm afraid I'm not working on the Very Important Paper. Instead, I'm recording this prologue, headset in place and hands free for … well, listen.

Do you know that sound? Of course not. Let's hope you never will. But millions of living men know it just as our ancestors knew the knap of flint on flint, the screech of blade on whetstone, the drone of bombers overhead. The soft click of shells being thumbed home against the surprisingly gentle spring of a …

That noise again outside! Now,
that
one you know all too well. A carful of hooded little sods snarling and rapping past, rattling our Victorian sashes. At three a.m.! So much for
on the borders of the conservation area
. Yes, OK, cities have alway been noisy, but the Pooters only had trains to ignore, not deliberately unsilenced primate bloody braying. Even uPVC units would only dull it, but uPVC is obviously out of the question and we simply
can't afford
quality double-glazed hardwood sashes right now. Even if we wanted to invest even more in a depreciating bloody asset. So we say (especially to ourselves) that you get used to the noise, that we hardly notice it, that it's just part of life in this vibrant, diverse …

Fuck, ow! Sorry, darling, shit,
that
noise was me banging my head on the underneath of the staircase. Again! I know, I know there was nowhere else for my desk to go, even with no piano for you. I'm not saying
there
was
, it's just that …
hardly notice
? It's three bloody a.m.! We've got a baby scarcely sleeping through, kids to get to school, careers to service.
Hardly notice?
Christ, when
we
were twenty (which isn't
that
long ago!) you had to shove a half-warmed kleftikon around a dirty plate if you wanted a drink after eleven. At midnight, London (where ordinary people could afford to buy in Zone 2) was settling to sleep. By four in the morning (which we hardly ever saw, even at twenty) the streets were patrolled only by defenceless milk bottles. And now? Now midnight is just the start for the uppers-raddled shits whose little brothers and half-brothers and step-brothers will make our darlings' schooldays hell if I don't do something fast. What was so bloody bad about grammar schools anyway? Oh, if those little
fuckers
… Sorry, darling, but, well, if they knew that I could walk out now and just put a whole clip right through their tinted bloody windows and into their stinking …

… Sorry. Not very liberal. I admit that it's hard to restrain myself from employing my new skills. When you know that you
can
do something, morality easily follows suit. But my sights are set higher than tactical victories, however tasty. A prophet armed at last, I'm aiming for the only thing any of us can do, nowadays: I'm going to make
bloody
sure that our own darlings are ahead of the pack when the ice caps finally melt, the floodgates burst and the border guards tear off their uniforms, throw down their guns and run.

Of course, there's a chance it'll blow up in my face.

Not literally, I mean. But figuratively it's possible. My cover story of Muslim extremists is good and timely. In the present funding-friendly climate it's hard to see why any thinking copper would
want
to challenge it. But I still might get caught.

In which case you'll need financial support. Which is why I've recorded my story for you to sell. I don't believe my fate will be without some resonance. The world must be full of ex-lefties riddled with despair, bafflement and shame. If it isn't, it's full of cretins. This might tide you over until my pension kicks in. As far as I know they can't strip me of my superannuation rights for having stepped a wee bit beyond the liberal consensus! Knowing that you're financially catered for, I'll sit happily in my prison cell, vastly respected by my stupid and violent companions due to the
nature of my offences
, as smooth and smug as those men in every life-insurance junk-mail flyer: men who have
provided for their loved ones adequately
and
protected their mortgage
.

Christ, that bloody word again, that primal scream of our times!

What? Did we ask for the earth? For gravel drives, lofty gables, double fronts and all-round gardens? No. All we wanted was the sort of everyday thing navvies chucked up by the tens of thousands all over north London between Dickens and Hitler to house medium-grade clerks. Just the usual modest period semi, for God's sake, with a pair of tallish bays and four half-decent bedrooms, set ten feet or so back from the pavement of an averagely quiet residential street within realistic toddler-wheeling distance of a fair-sized park with the standard ducks and suchlike in any, repeat
any
, repeat
any, old
part of Zones 2 or 3 that lies a safe-ish height above sea level and diesel fumes, with ordinary human neighbours who sleep at night and reasonable schools where our children will not go in fear because they speak normal bloody English.

Well?

Sorry?

Was that really so much to ask in return for twenty years' unbroken CV in a highly respectable graduate career?

Ah.

I see.

Of course. Silly me. I was forgetting we've committed a mortal sin that will blight the rest of our lives and our children's too:
we didn't buy a house in London last millennium
. End of family story. Social mobility crash-stops. History swallows us up.

Oh, but I think not.

Do you hear this noise, darling?

Listen.

Cthlick!

I'm pressing the last round down. My clip is full.

So be it. The world has chosen to renege on the clear agreement I made with it back in nineteen eighty-four. All I am doing is setting things right. There is a fine Anglo-Saxon tradition which holds that crime is in fact not crime, riot not truly riot and even revolution not really revolution at all when it aims merely to restore good old normality.

Result? Happiness.

If all goes well tomorrow, if my gun doesn't jam and shoots straight, if I don't lose my nerve at the vital moment (which would be quite understandable), none of the friends who will, in the fine years to come, gather from the neighbouring streets to eat no doubt organic meat and drink good red wine around our big old table in our high-ceilinged home whilst we discuss the burning cultural and political issues of the day, guided, as we have ever been, by the wise and liberal comments in
The Paper
that morning, will ever suspect me. We'll simply have become what we always were, round pegs in round holes, with no gap
for darkness to shine through. Even you'll never know.

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