Friday, April 10, 2020

The murmers inside me

The story is told through the eyes of its protagonist, Lou Ford, a 29-year-old deputy sheriff in a small Texas town. Ford appears to be a regular, small-town cop leading an unremarkable existence; beneath this facade, however, he is a cunning, depraved sociopath with sadistic sexual tastes. Ford's main outlet for his dark urges is the relatively benign habit of deliberately needling people with clichés and platitudes despite their obvious boredom: "If there's anything worse than a bore," says Lou, "it's a corny bore."


Despite having a steady girlfriend, a childhood friend, and schoolteacher Amy Stanton, Ford falls into a passionate, sadomasochistic relationship with a prostitute named Joyce Lakeland. Ford describes their affair as unlocking "the sickness" that has plagued him since adolescence when he sexually abused a little girl, a crime for which his elder foster brother Mike took the blame to spare Lou from prison. After serving a jail term, Mike died at a construction site. Lou blamed a local construction magnate, Chester Conway, for Mike's death, suspecting he was murdered for refusing to break the law to enable Conway's schemes.



To exact revenge, Lou and Joyce blackmail the construction magnate to avoid exposing his son's affair with Joyce. However, Lou double-crosses Joyce: He ferociously batters her, and shoots the construction magnate's son, hoping to make the crimes appear to be a lovers' spat gone wrong. Elmer is killed instantly and Sheriff Bob Maples, Lou's mentor, reports that Joyce died after a short stay in a coma. Though Lou believes this means he has gotten away with the crime, county attorney Howard Hendricks becomes suspicious of Lou's version of events, as well as his alibi, and a third person is suspected to be involved. This suspicion falls on Johnnie Pappas, a young minor criminal who Lou has befriended, and to whom Lou gave some of Conway's money, which is revealed to have been marked. Lou is allowed to enter the distressed Johnnie's cell alone in order to reason with him, only to murder him and stage the scene as a suicide. Though many accept that the case is closed, more people begin to suspect Lou of being involved, including the deputy, Jeff Plummer. This also includes Amy, who presses marriage even after a sadomasochistic encounter with Lou begins to convince her that he is hiding a dark side.


A bum injured earlier by Lou attempts to blackmail him, revealing that he eavesdropped on a suspicious conversation Lou was involved in. Lou, seeing a way to tie up multiple loose ends, agrees to bribe him; he also agrees to elope with Amy, who he is planning to murder. On the night the bum returns, Lou beats Amy to death, intending to frame the bum and stage it as a home invasion murder and attempted rape. The bum is killed by Plummer after Lou chases him through town after failing to kill him, and Lou is sedated and put in a hospital. Lou is visited by Plummer and Hendricks in the hospital, both who are now convinced that he is behind all the murders, and Plummer reveals that the weakening Maples killed himself, convinced of Lou's guilt. They show him a letter that Amy had written and intended to give him during their elopement, one which subtly urges him to come clean for his crimes. Lou denies that the letter is incriminating, but Plummer and Hendricks force him into a jail cell, where he is unsuccessfully tortured with audio of Johnnie's voice and pictures of Amy.
Eventually, Lou's attorney arrives and releases him, though he admits that he cannot get Lou out of town. Lou accepts his fate and ruminates on his past, concluding that his hatred and violence, especially towards women, stemmed from a childhood incident involving his old housekeeper molesting him in order to get back at his father, with whom she was unhappily involved in a sadomasochistic relationship; this incident led to him abusing women as a substitute for her and led to his Dementia praecox. Knowing that his fate is sealed, Lou covers the house in alcohol and candles. Eventually, Plummer and Hendricks arrive with a team of police, as well as Joyce, who is revealed to have been alive all along, albeit heavily injured and unrecognizable. Joyce assures Lou that she did not sell him out, and he affirms his affection for her before stabbing her to death. The police fire on Lou, killing him but destroying the house in an explosion in the process. This story by Jim Thompson "The killer inside me"

.Film adaptations


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