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Michael Robotham - Shatter

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Synopsis:

Winner of Australias Ned Kelly Award for Best Novel,

Joe OLoughlin is on familiar territory standing on a bridge high above a flooded gorge, trying to stop a distraught woman from jumping. She is naked, wearing only high-heel shoes, sobbing into a cell phone. Suddenly, she turns to him and whispers, You dont understand, and lets go. Joe is shattered by the suicide and haunted by his failure to save the woman, until her teenage daughter finds him and reveals that her mother would never have committed suicide not like that. She was terrified of heights. Compelled to investigate, Joe is soon obsessed with discovering who was on the other end of the phone. What could have driven her to commit such a desperate act? Whose voice? What evil?

Having devoted his career to repairing damaged minds, Joe must now confront an adversary who tears them apart: a man who searches for the cracks in a persons psyche and claws his fingers inside, destroying what makes them whole.

With pitch-perfect dialogue, believable characters, and intriguingly unpredictable plot twists, Shatter is guaranteed to keep even the most avid thriller readers riveted long into the night.

Shatter - image 1
SHATTER

(aka The Sleep of Reason)

BY
MICHAEL ROBOTHAM

The third book in the Joseph OLoughlin series

Copyright Bookwrite Pty 2008

Shatter - image 2

eISBN : 978 0 7481 1399 6

This is for Mark Lucas, a friend first.

The sleep of reason produces monsters.

Goya (The Caprichos)

The words of his mouth were smoother than butter, but war was in his heart: his words were softer than oil, yet were they drawn swords.

Psalm 55:21

There is a moment when all hope disappears, all pride is gone, all expectation, all faith, all desire. I own that moment. It belongs to me. Thats when I hear the sound, the sound of a mind breaking.
Its not a loud crack like when bones shatter or a spine fractures or a skull collapses. And its not something soft and wet like a heart breaking. Its a sound that makes you wonder how much pain a person can endure; a sound that shatters memories and lets the past leak into the present; a sound so high that only the hounds of hell can hear it.
Can you hear it? Someone is curled up in a tiny ball crying softly into an endless night.

1

University of Bath

Its eleven oclock in the morning, late September, and outside its raining so hard that cows are floating down rivers and birds are resting on their bloated bodies.

The lecture theatre is full. Tiered seats rise at a gentle angle between the stairs on either side of the auditorium, climbing into darkness. Mine is an audience of pale faces, young and earnest, hung over. Freshers Week is in full swing and many of them have waged a mental battle to be here, weighing up whether to attend any lectures or go back to bed. A year ago they were watching teen movies and spilling popcorn. Now theyre living away from home, getting drunk on subsidised alcohol and waiting to learn something.

I walk to the centre of the stage and clamp my hands on the lectern as if frightened of falling over.

My name is Professor Joseph OLoughlin. I am a clinical psychologist and Ill be taking you through this introductory course in behavioural psychology.

Pausing a moment, I blink into the lights. I didnt think I would be nervous lecturing again but now I suddenly doubt if I have any knowledge worth imparting. I can still hear Bruno Kaufmans advice. (Bruno is the head of the psychology department at the university and is blessed with a perfect Teutonic name for the role.) He told me, Nothing we teach them will be of the slightest possible use to them in the real world, old boy. Our task is to offer them a bullshit meter.

A what?

If they work hard and take a little on board, they will learn to detect when someone is telling them complete bullshit.

Bruno had laughed and I found myself joining him.

Go easy on them, he added. Theyre still clean and perky and well-fed. A year from now theyll be calling you by your first name and thinking they know it all.

How do I go easy on them, I want to ask him now. Im new at this too. Breathing deeply, I begin again.

Why does a well-spoken university graduate studying urban preservation fly a passenger plane into a skyscraper, killing thousands of people? Why does a boy, barely into his teens, spray a schoolyard with bullets, or a teenage mother give birth in a toilet and leave the baby in the wastepaper bin?

Silence.

How did a hairless primate evolve into a species that manufactures nuclear weapons, watches Celebrity Big Brother and asks questions about what it means to be human and how we got here? Why do we cry? Why are some jokes funny? Why are we inclined to believe or disbelieve in God? Why do we get turned on when someone sucks our toes? Why do we have trouble remembering some things, yet cant get that annoying Britney Spears song out of our heads? What causes us to love or hate? Why are we each so different?

I look at the faces in the front rows. I have captured their attention, for a moment at least.

We humans have been studying ourselves for thousands of years, producing countless theories and philosophies and astonishing works of art and engineering and original thought, yet in all that time this is how much weve learned. I hold up my thumb and forefinger a fraction of an inch apart.

Youre here to learn about psychology the science of the mind; the science that deals with knowing, believing, feeling and desiring; the least understood science of them all.

My left arm trembles at my side.

Did you see that? I ask, raising the offending arm. It does that occasionally. Sometimes I think it has a mind of its own but of course thats impossible. Ones mind doesnt reside in an arm or a leg.

Let me ask you all a question. A woman walks into a clinic. She is middle aged, well-educated, articulate and well-groomed. Suddenly, her left arm leaps to her throat and her fingers close around her windpipe. Her face reddens. Her eyes bulge. She is being strangled. Her right hand comes to her rescue. It peels back the fingers and wrestles her left hand to her side. What should I do?

Silence.

A girl in the front row nervously raises her arm. She has short reddish hair separated in feathery wisps down the fluted back of her neck. Take a detailed history?

Its been done. She has no history of mental illness.

Another hand rises. It is an issue of self harm.

Obviously, but she doesnt choose to strangle herself. It is unwanted. Disturbing. She wants help.

A girl with heavy mascara brushes hair behind her ear with one hand. Perhaps shes suicidal.

Her left hand is. Her right hand obviously doesnt agree. Its like a Monty Python sketch. Sometimes she has to sit on her left hand to keep it under control.

Is she depressed? asks a youth with a gypsy earring and gel in his hair.

No. Shes frightened but she can see the funny side of her predicament. It seems ridiculous to her. Yet at her worst moments she contemplates amputation. What if her left hand strangles her in the night, when her right hand is asleep?

Brain damage?

There are no obvious neurological deficits no paralysis or exaggerated reflexes.

The silence stretches out, filling the air above their heads, drifting like strands of web in the warm air.

A voice from the darkness fills the vacuum. She had a stroke.

I recognise the voice. Bruno has come to check up on me on my first day. I cant see his face in the shadows but I know hes smiling.

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