Because
to exact vengeance – real vengeance – is a huge step to take.
Even
something relatively innocuous, like retaliating to a foul on the football
field, can be transformational. Not least because it may exacerbate the
situation, turning a one-off slight into an ongoing feud, but mostly because it
casts you, the victim, as another aggressor, denying you the moral high ground.
‘He
did it to me first,’ is a flabby explanation if the other guy is lying
unconscious, or worse.
And
yet the urge to take revenge can be potent, especially when justice appears to
be absent. And it doesn’t just have to be revenge for yourself. How do any of
us feel when we hear about disgraced politicians being hounded out of office
and yet continuing to lead gold-plated lifestyles, or about organised crime
bosses who remain untouchable by the courts, or even petty criminals, whose
offences are not victimless, being left alone by an overworked, understaffed
police force? If justice has seemingly quit the field, what else is there?
‘Vengeance
is mine!’ A quote attributed to God himself in Deuteronomy.
We
all hope it’s true, whether we’re religiously minded or not, but we see scant
evidence of it on Earth. And so, what other course is there apart from taking
the law into our own hands?
This
is the ethical dilemma at the heart of my new novel, ROGUE, which sees a
low-ranking police detective – DS Mark Heckenburg, who some readers will
already be familiar with – embark on an off-the-grid mission to avenge a whole
bunch of former colleagues, 26 in total, who were mown down in a gun attack on
a police party.
I won’t say any more about the synopsis, except to add that while Heck has played fast and loose with the rules before, often using trickery and coercion in his dealings with the underworld, he has never taken that final step into out-and-out criminality. But then, never before has he been cut as deeply as this.
But
in truth, in a civilised society, is there any excuse for revenge? We all love
an antihero. Someone who gets straight to it and deals with the matter hands-on.
But would a real-life vigilante really be so reassuring? What if he decides he
doesn’t like us either? What if we ourselves were to short-cut our way past the
law, and then suddenly find that we have need of it too?
Of
course, I’m not the first thriller writer to analyse this complex issue. Many great
crime novelists have gone there ahead of me, tackling the question of ‘revenge or
justice’ from a range of different angles.
MAN
ON FIRE by AJ Quinnell, aka Phil Nicholson (1980)
A
former Foreign Legionnaire turned drunken bodyguard is devastated when his
charge, the sparky young daughter of an Italian businessman, is kidnapped,
raped and murdered. His only recourse is to wipe out the Mafia clan
responsible. Atonement through violence is the message here, though it comes at
a huge cost.
THE
EXECUTIONERS by John D MacDonald (1957)
The
army lawyer responsible for jailing a GI rapist is tormented in later years
when the criminal is released and commences to harass and terrify his family.
Vengeance as viewed from the victim’s perspective, normal life massively
disrupted by the obsessive, malign behaviour of someone who just can’t forgive
or forget.
THE
HUNTER by Richard Stark, aka Donald Westlake (1962)
A
professional robber is double-crossed during a major heist and left for dead. Later
learning that his share of the haul was used by a former associate to buy entry
to a crime syndicate, he goes to war with the syndicate itself. Solid actioner,
this one, featuring lots of immoral people violently intermingling in a grubby,
immoral world. Even so, it’s a thrill a minute.
DEATH WISH by Brian Garfield (1972)
When muggers brutalise the family of a liberal-minded businessman, he buys a gun and embarks on a mission to annihilate the city’s criminal elements, becoming a cult figure as he does. A study in human darkness, the vengeance-seeker hitting random targets he’s got no personal beef with and enjoying the support of his whole community. Let’s not pretend it couldn’t happen.
A
TIME TO KILL by John Grisham (1989)
When
a black child is raped by white supremacists, her enraged father guns the two
hoodlums down even though they’re in police custody, his legal team soon fighting
an uphill battle to keep him from the gas chamber. Probably the most adult take
of all, the parent’s understandable reaction squared off against the price
society pays if everyone assumes the role of judge, jury and executioner, the
race factor only deepening the question of discriminative justice.
ROGUE
is published by Brentwood Press in both ebook and paperback on October 24.
More
information about Paul Finch and his work can be found on his blog. You can follow him on X
@paulfinchauthor and on Facebook
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