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Tuesday, 25 February 2014
Thursday, 23 January 2014
THE JOB - a short story
"Life isn't like it is in the movies, is
it?" she asked as she lit a cigarette with shaking hands. The tears had
dried tram lines through her make-up, but she didn't care. Panda eyes were like
war wounds to her. She been there, done it, and cried to prove it. She flicked
her cigarette even though there wasn't enough ash to flick.
I shook my head.
"Do you think that they know?" She took
another long drag. "Do you think they know? How hard it's been? How hard
it is for us?"
"I doubt it," I answered. She was
referring to our employers. And I knew what heartless bastards were.
She nodded, the ash finally falling to the floor
at her side. "I shouldn't have listened to him."
Him was the job. The contact they had given her.
"No, you shouldn't have."
"I'm weak." She hadn't heard me. "I
should pay more attention to my head and less to my heart. My head is never
wrong. I knew what he said was crazy, but I believed him."
"Yes, you did."
"You think I was wrong?"
Her eyes pleaded with me to say no. To tell her that
what she had done was the right thing to do. But I couldn't. I couldn't agree.
But I also couldn't see her cry more. "I think you did what felt was right
at the time."
She nodded nervously. Tears filled her eyes again,
but they didn't fall. I could see the vein in her right temple throb, but her
skin was as white as a sheet.
"You thought it was right," I repeated.
Then she asked the question that I knew she'd
wanted to ask me all night. "What do I do with the body?"
I sipped on my whiskey. "Where is it
now?"
"Still in my apartment." Her eyes darted
about the room, but I knew no-one else was listening.
"You can't leave it there."
She gave me a proper 'duh' expression and
shrugged, "Hell no!"
"Was there a lot of blood?"
"About two pints." Her training had
kicked in. It was a common mistake to think that the human body held tens of
pints of blood. It averaged at seven. Try pouring half a pint of water on the
floor; it looks like a lot more than just half a pint. Two pints, however,
meant that she'd caught an artery. That was messy.
"What flooring do you have?"
"It's a new build. Wood flooring but concrete
under it."
That was going to be a problem. The wood would
need replacing, but concrete is porous. The evidence would be there forever.
"No plastic sheeting?"
She shook her head.
I sighed.
"I know! I fucked up."
There was no point in panicking about it.
"And you left it?"
She nodded, but her nerves made her whole body
shake. "I wrapped it up in the rug. I didn't have anything else to
hand."
"Okay. Then there's a chance the blood hasn't
soaked through." It was a very slim chance.
"Will you help me?"
I thought about it. I didn't like it. Not one bit.
Helping her would make me an accessory. If I helped, I'd have to be extremely
clever about it.
"Please?"
But how the hell could I say no? She was on the
edge, about to fall in to God knows what kind of emotional psychological
nightmare. And I cared for this one. She was still wet behind the ears, but she
had potential. She had to know that even though we worked alone, we were still
on the same side. We were still part of a team. And she wasn't quite ready for
the fall out. She needed the backup, the same way that I had on my first kill.
I nodded. I'd help.
She physically relaxed. But her hand was still
shaking as she stubbed the cigarette out.
"You need to tell me exactly what
happened."
He'd told her that he loved her. He'd told her
that the only thing stopping him from being with her was his wife. He'd
suggested, on more than one occasion, that had it not been for his wife, they'd
be together. She believed him. She said she knew what it was like to be in
love, and he was most definitely in love.
I'd heard that story so many times before that I
knew she actually believed it. I also knew how nasty perception could be. Very
misleading.
The next time, she'd take the sob story with a
pinch of salt. Eventually, she'd be completely numb to it. But that stage took
time. She wasn't quite there yet.
He'd told her that he'd dreamt of his wife dying.
That if that happened, they could be together. He'd said it wasn't about the
money. But even she knew what liars men can be when it comes to money. At the
end of the day, he'd come to her to kill his wife. He'd just been like so many
others. He'd thought that a sob story would make it easier. Maybe for himself,
but it didn't really matter to us. And she knew that. She understood it.
Like I said, she had potential. She'd learnt from
the school of hard knocks.
Logistics were always tricky though. To dispose of
a body, you needed to know and understand the logistics. Height; weight;
clothing; distinguishing body marks. Would a shallow grave do? Or a lead weight
so it sinks to the bottom where the fish were hungry? Or would I need tools?
Something to chop it up with, or acid to wash it away?
As I've already explained, her training had kicked
in. She knew it all. Even down to the dental work. She knew what would need
destroying and what wouldn't. She knew bank account details, where the passport
was. We could book a flight somewhere and make it look like a runner. We had
those kind of tools at our disposal. That was the team. That's how we worked.
A phone call had got the target into her flat.
That was all it had taken. That and a promise to spill the beans. Knowledge can
be persuasive.
Her flat was great. I was actually surprised when
I entered it. I'd expected her to be messier. But it was modern, with white
walls and splashes of abstract colour enough for you to think you'd walked into
a gallery. Of course, blood was a bitch to cover on white walls, but not
impossible. Luckily, the kitchen - the murder sight - was large. And the body
was on the floor in the middle. There was a bit of blood splatter on the
laminated white gloss doors, but a bit of bleach would clear that up.
We rolled the body, inside the rug, on to a large
plastic sheet. The gaffer tape secured it tightly. The blood was dry and rigor mortis had kicked in. That's a good time to move a body as the blood has dried
up and the body is rigid - that makes it easier to 'roll'. When it gets past
that, and purification kicks in is when it gets really messy. The bowls and
bladder loosen and the smell is nasty.
We'd bought replacement floor boards, and after
getting the body into the boot of my car, I set about ripping up the blood stained
ones. I had UV lights with me so I didn't miss any. It had gone through to the
concrete below, but we scrubbed it with bleach as best we could before laying
new underlay and replacing the boards. When we were finished, it was as if the
murder had never happened.
She poured me a whiskey while she smoked a
cigarette. She'd stopped shaking. Support from a friend can do amazing things
to the nerves. She felt in control now. It had made a remarkable difference in
her demeanour.
"What now?" she asked.
"I'll get rid of it." I already had the
concrete block ready on the bridge that I was planning to throw the body over.
I'd have to stop off first and remove the jaw. There was also need to remove
the left arm where a very personal tattoo was situated. But I had my garage to
do that in. The grinder was sharp enough to destroy a jaw and an arm.
She nodded. "Thank you."
But I had to know. "Can I ask you one
thing?"
She nodded again.
"Why did you kill him? He hired you to kill
his wife."
She smiled for the first time in the two days we'd
been sorting this out. There was glint of something quite evil in that smile.
"Because the wife paid me more."
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