The Enemy of My Enemy Is My Enemy (short story)

 was the fifteenth story in The Book of the Enemy. It expanded upon the narrative author Jay Eales had began in his previous Faction Paradox short stories Mightier Than the Sword and Born Among Briars.

Summary
1953


 * James Sheldrake is born, blind in his right eye and deaf in his left ear. In the maternity ward a couple in black clothes watch him before departing.

1960


 * Gideon Barrow is born, in later years claiming to have been able to recount the entire experience through drugs. A comic book writer, he used this material in his work. What he was unable to recall is a couple in black that seemed to fade into the background, present at his birth as well.

1965


 * Michelle Louise Montague was being brought home by her parents as a couple in black stood in their lounge, looking at the bookshelves, nodding in approval, and vanishing before the Montagues reach the lounge.

1967


 * The first memory Montague has is of her sister, Donna, being born. As Donna took up her parents time, Donna would push herself back into the spotlight in attempts to reclaim attention in increasingly bold ways.

1969


 * Bobbie Buchanan was born. Rumors of occult circumstances at this birth in later years were started by Buchanan. None were ever substantiated. There may or may not have been a couple in black present at his birth.

1970


 * Sheldrake is expelled from school for dealing psychedelics, and two parents wearing suits of all black depart the headmaster's office as he waits outside, propping the headmaster not only to expel him, but to contact all potential schools he might go to and would have a letter of reference for jobs discouraging them from accepting him. As such he takes a job in a tannery.


 * That same year, at the age of five, Michelle Montague writes a story about a turtle. She asks her parents to get it published.

1974


 * Jim Sheldrake marries Edith Neville.


 * Barrow reflected on his life as a cover story for his father, an anti-nuclear activist, who would sneak around nuclear bases and use his son as an excuse if caught, and how he hated this life but misses his father now that he's left.

1976


 * At school, Montague was an outcast for various reasons, but in part because of her writing. She had completed her first novel, which she showed to nobody.

1977


 * Sheldrake starts a new job at the Gas Board and his wife, Edith, announces that she's pregnant. Sheldrake, not able to be stuck at the job for another four years, quits it, though later says he quits the job prior to being told about his child. Sheldrake submits idea after idea to publishers, including comics based on the Mister E television series, stories he didn't even remember writing.

1978


 * Barrow received a second-hand typewriter from his estranged father - which he then took and used to write his own comic book strip for the local paper.

1979


 * Barrow was gifted a pack of tarot cards from an uncle who encouraged him to investigate the occult. Around this time he decided to pursue music instead of comics.

1982


 * Del Rictus, one of Sheldrake's former editors from Amazing Comics, who has since left to start his own company calls him. He suggests that Sheldrake come work for him on The Man, which he's just acquired the rights for. Atom Comics then launched both with this title and The Secret, also written by Sheldrake, to critical acclaim, though not major sales.

1983


 * In the New York offices of Gumshoe Periodicals they're looking for someone to take over the Muck Monster line of comics, with Sheldrake's name coming up. The run is a commercial and critical success, readers and critics loving the work. In Scotland, Barrow felt a similarity to the author of this work, and gave up on music.

1984


 * After a series of fights with Del Rictus, Sheldrake left Atom Comics, and The Man and The Secret both had cliffhangers. Barrow was offered the job, but sent a letter to Sheldrake, asking for his blessing. Sheldrake sent a rude one back, telling him to back off, and as a fan of Sheldrake's work, Barrow declined the offer.

1985


 * Barrow begins a series, Apex at Spitfire Comics, a superhero, combining his dual loves of comics and music, as well as blending elements of his interest in chaos magic and Nazi Germany. It was a success.

1986


 * Sheldrake's Muck Monster was doing so well that everyone at Gumshoe wanted to work with him. So he and Steve Mandrill got together to create a deconstruction of the superhero genre, a look at those who would even put on the mask in the first place. Thanks to some behind the scenes machinations, Mandrill and Sheldrake ended up owning the rights to the characters after the first publication run. TickTockMen was a critical success, and even outside of the comic book world people began to look at Sheldrake.

1987


 * The success of TickTockMen led to a promotional tour, including a stop at a comic shop in Glasgow. The owner of the shop had them stay for a social gathering at his favorite local pub, with Barrow invited. The dinner went off without a hitch. In later years, Sheldrake says that he recalls Barrow saying that he was inspired to be a writer by him, and saw his work later in Spitfire, saw it as a bit of a tribute to Sheldrake, and thought it a nice phase, but something to grow out of. Barrow would dispute this, saying that as far back as 1978 he had been writing comics, and hadn't even heard of him until 1982.


 * A few weeks later, Barrow gives a Q&A to a fanzine, headed by Buchanan, who was a fan, and much like Sheldrake, wishes him luck, and advises him that he can't do both drawing and writing, he needs to choose between the two, something Buchanan calls later the best advice he ever received.


 * Barrow examines his flat and considers his tarot cards when he hears a thump outside, a book, Liber Nyx, decorated in occult symbols and talking about chaos magic. He thinks it must be from his uncle. It wasn't. Barrow begins to read and perform magic from the book.


 * Montague, staying at a friend's house over the holidays from university, ends up watching an interview with Sheldrake on a children's program with their younger sister. Seeing how odd he looks with his hair and beard, she begins to pretend that he's the headmaster of the school where wizards go to train, named Standish Lopsiday.

1989


 * Barrow writes a comic for Gumshoe, Madhouse: Mister Grin is a Very Naughty Boy, off the back of the Knight Errant movie that year, turning the Knight's villains into fully fleshed out psychologically complicated characters. It was a stunning success, and made Barrow into a celebrity in the comics world. He started a column in a comics magazine where he would comment on industry trends, sometimes talk about his friends, like Buchanan, and frequently comment on Sheldrake, as a high profile creator. Sheldrake would later comment that as far as he could tell, Barrow made his career by trashing his own.


 * At this time, Buchanan begins his career with the comic Son of God, about a superhero who's actually the antichrist, also basing it off of TV star Simon Rose, becoming the template for his later work, focusing on celebrity and spectacle.

1990


 * After writing for 36 hours, working towards a deadline, Barrow collapses from exhaustion. When he awakes, he comes to find a completed script. He does not recall writing it. Moreover, it involves him inserting himself as a character into the work, talking to the main character about what he's had to do to please the readers. He looks back at prior work and sees that there have been hints this entire time, hints he doesn't remember writing, but looking at the scripts they are there. He then resolved to attempt a variety of intoxicants and hallucinogens in a controlled fashion to see how they effected him.


 * While traveling to London, Montague's train was delayed, and she found herself with an idea for a book, but without a pen. A couple across the way had a spare though, and handed it to her, and so she began to write, Finn Foster – Boy Warlock. By the time the train arrived, the couple had vanished. As she left the train, she noticed a red headed boy in a school uniform with a cat behind him, a perfect match for what she had written down.

1992


 * The original deal for TickTockMen was the rights reverted to Sheldrake when it went out of print, which was expected to happen - everything went out of print at some point at that time. But due to the success of the book, Gumshoe periodical just kept putting out copies, again and again, leading to a breakdown in their relationship with Sheldrake. Sheldrake left Gumshoe and vowed never to work with them again.


 * Living in Portugal, teaching English, Montague married a journalist, Ricardo do Nascimento, who had a suspicion of fiction and a bit of a drinking problem. He was laid off as Montague became pregnant, angry that Montague was supporting their family he turned to violence. Isolated from friends and family and scared by her husband, Montague decided to redouble her efforts towards writing.


 * Barrow was asked to reinvigorate the old '50s science fiction hero Lex Christian: Space Chaplain into an anti Thatcher political comic called Lex, which was a massive success.

1993


 * For his 40th birthday, Sheldrake gathered his friends and family and declared himself to be a ceremonial magician. This surprised nobody.


 * After one fight too many, Montague left her husband and the country, with help from the Portuguese police. She took her daughter and three chapters of Finn Foster to her sister Donna.

1994


 * Sheldrake performs a ritual to contact an entity which might serve as his personal deity. In the end he was contacted by an entity that called itself, a Roman snake deity that was identified as a hand puppet. Sheldrake was enthused.


 * Barrow and Buchanan team up to write the continuation of Muck Monster, with the two cowriting the first few issues, and Barrow plotting the series and being an uncredited editor/mentor for Buchanan as he wrote the rest. However, working together took its toll on the two's relationship, and Barrow decided to take a plane to Kathmandu to get away from the environment for a while.

1995


 * Barrow claims to have been abducted by aliens in dark robes and skull masks while in Kathmandu, and they explained to him the secrets of the universe. From this experience, Karma Knights was born, about terrorist heroes fighting against secret societies that run the world.

1996


 * Montague continued writing as a single mother, getting rejection letters back, dealing with depression, and eventually hearing back from an agency who was interested in representing her. Curiously, the secretary for the agency was out that week, and a temp was in, who pushed Montague's manuscript at the agent. As soon as it was accepted, she didn't come into work the next day.

1997


 * Rejected by twelve publishers before being accepted, Finn Foster and the Diamond Gondola had ML Montague as the authors name on the cover, so as to not scare off boys reading a book written by a girl. The book wasn't promoted that much at first, but it got around quickly by word of mouth, and slowly the depression effecting Montague began to lift, though she wrote in scenes with various personifications of it to show that others too could overcome it. In particular she wrote herself as something of a self insert, Finn Foster's best friend, Gillian Griffin, who had a lot of scenes with these personifications of depression.

1998


 * Billy Nguyen came to Sheldrake's house to talk to him about coming back to the comic industry, wanting a whole range of comics from Sheldrake, not just a single comic, and as Thunderhead Comics wasn't affiliated with any of the groups Sheldrake had previously turned his back on, he could have greater creative control.

1999


 * Sheldrake published the first work under the new imprint, Imaginary Friends, a comic about combining the greatest figures of literature and obscure gothic horror stories into a single continuity, a single sandbox to play in. As was his standard at this time, when Hollywood came calling for a movie deal, Sheldrake took their money, not thinking that the movie would ever be made, that it was just free money. He simply went back to work on a new story of how.

2000


 * Finn Foster and the Black Sun is published, to record breaking sales. The villain of the piece was rumored to be based on a former acquaintance who would lie to make himself more interesting. Montague would make no comment when asked.


 * Barrow received an email telling him to be on the lookout for a movie called Cyberia, it was very similar to Karma Knights, people on set were carrying copies of the work, costumes, scraps of dialogue, and themes were all lifted. Barrow reflected back to his original time doing chaos magic, to make his work popular, and reflected that he didn't specifically ask that his work be adapted directly.


 * Buchanan begins work on his most shocking comic yet, in The Management.

Characters

 * Sceneshifters
 * Jim Sheldrake
 * Gideon Barrow
 * Michelle Montague
 * Martin Montague
 * Donna Montague
 * Bobbie Buchanan
 * Edith Neville
 * Del Rictus
 * Leonard Holland
 * Steve Mandrill
 * Jez Splatt
 * Nicola
 * Ricardo do Nascimento
 * Philip Goodman
 * Billy Nguyen
 * Simon Sheldrake
 * Colin Shields
 * Belinda Sheldrake
 * Story
 * Steve O'Dowd
 * Daniel Strunk

Continuity

 * Jim Shelrake's time in Camp Gulliver is expanded upon in PROSE: Mightier Than the Sword.
 * Sheldrake writes a series of back-up stories for a licensed comic based off the Mister E television series. One of them explores Mister E's homeplanet being in a time war with a terrorist organisation known as the Black Sun Brigade whose motivation lies in actions Mister E's people had yet to take. This story is "a shade too close to the truth". (COMIC: Star Death, 4-D War, Black Sun Rising)
 * Imaginary Friends: The Hundred Year War: 1969 has a 1960s spy character named Malachi Yarrow (PROSE: No Enemy But Despair) and an imaginary spy character named X-12. (PROSE: Pre-narrative Briefing S)