#1
and when, exactly, did he become
Detective Ian Ratliff of Missing Persons?
certainly not here
squatting over the compost bin
releasing his insides as his dressing gown swings open
and the dark shapes of trees make busy with the wind
and he wants you to know he does have a toilet,
he has two,
not a brag but a fact but
cowboy builders broke the pipes downstairs and
between small-claims court and his wife,
Annie,
who locks herself away every morning,
well…
look,
the pinky bits of dawn on the horizon,
and regrets can take any shape,
like the hurt which curves from the bottom of his belly to the
tip
of his spine
and £60 can get you a long way,
but that is true in both directions and
sometimes when he cannot sleep he watches Annie
and she mutters and her nostrils flare and
she never says much,
except in couples therapy,
with Norman who wears a Hawaiian shirt and a gold chain
who takes her side by impulse and
look,
here comes the day,
something he can ball up into the shape of a fist and
people want to feel safe and they don’t want to know what that costs,
and he will stick around I’m afraid
you might say his self-importance is justified
Detective Ian Ratliff of Missing Persons,
who has lost a son and will shed some blood but I better stop
now,
or I will give it all away
#2
and he hates those men who
park up and
open the door and
let their lives spill out of the car,
coffee cups and laptops and vetinary boxes and the spare steering wheel
and then spend five minutes stuffing it all back in.
and Detective Ian Ratliff of Missing Persons
may be hanging on by a thread
a bottle of whiskey
and TV static
and a headache
and all the sadness raging up inside of him but
when he steps out,
he is a man,
ready to work.
#3
and there it is,
six-thirty
another day
at the cost of work
and it is payday drinks
and the department are going to a bar
on a boat
and he tells Annie
that he is going to stay over at a colleague’s
someone she knows but never speaks to
and he hires a flat in the city centre
and he makes his excuses in the office
until he is sat alone
in a grotty sports bar
with the other lifers
and at least,
here,
he doesn’t need to hide his despair
which seems to cast about like a forest fire
and he keeps moving bars
and he tries to think about nothing in particular
a rum and a beer
a rum and a beer
and there he is
a stranger,
laid out on his arms
atop the bar
and he looks up as Ratliff takes a seat
and he is young,
and Detective Inspector Ian Ratliff
of Missing Persons
knows something in the young man’s despair
and what harm can it do,
to buy him a drink?
and then it is much later
and he is stood in the flat in the city centre
as the young man lies on the floor
as all the blood in his body runs out,
via the skull
and he didn’t touch him,
didn’t lay a finger on him,
but he is still stood there,
not phoning the ambulance as
the life goes
wherever it goes
and he takes a seat
and he pours a drink
and he understands this is the end
of something
and then he does reach for his phone
but it isn’t for the emergency service
but an old friend with a van
and
together
they bundle the young man up in the carpet
and drop him deep,
into a dark hole
in the earth
#4
and here is August
where everything dies
bleached grass and bins
rotting in the sunshine
where even the pigeons
seem at the end of their
nerves
and Detective Ian Ratliff
of Missing Persons
eats a Tesco meal deal
without tasting it
and squints across the square
built to commemorate … someone
and hid phone dings
an email, no subject,
and all it says is
one hundred thousand
and there is an attachment
and his signal is poor
and it takes a minute to download
and then
on the bench surrounded by scorched earth
he watches a four minute video,
blurry,
but unmistakable
watches himself
dispose of a young man’s body
and whoever sent it tried their best to remain anonymous
but,
back at his desk,
it takes him ten minutes to get a name
and a face
and an address
which he recognises,
and yes, he feels a thrill,
and what is it his mum used to say?
in for a penny in for a pound
an then he follows her over the back fence
and finds her shaking
and gazing up at a streetlamp
he steps closer
he thinks about his son
who would be twenty five now
and who is the only human he has ever loved
the only one to prove him worthy of that word
and he thinks about the gameshow host
and then he sighs
and the hunger begins to leave
and she doesn’t look up at him
but seems very focused on the way the light bunches up against the shadows
and he sighs again
Detective Inspector Ian Ratliff
of Missing Persons
and he lifts the gun
and touches it to the side of his own
head
—Published 10th of January 2026
About Jack Jenkins
Jack Jenkins is a writer and editor from Bristol, UK. He works in children’s publishing and, in his free time, he writes strange, confessional stories and poems. He has been recently published in the Libre Lit, The Adelaide Review, Apple Valley Review and The Frogmore Papers. Currently, he is deep in the draft of a dark espionage thriller called ISME.