1
BRISTOL – ENGLAND
Jack
Catholic held Lucy’s arms just beneath the shoulders and pulled her close,
pressing his lips to hers.
Her
death was less than one hour away.
She
nibbled his lower lip then giggled. He smiled and kissed her again, wrapping
his arms round her back. Jack held onto that second kiss. He didn’t want to
break it. It felt critical suddenly to keep it going as long as he could.
Beside them the river flowed, the late afternoon sun coming down through the
struts and cables of Clifton Suspension Bridge, two hundred yards away and hundreds
of feet up, spanning the valley.
Lucy
turned her body just a little and gave him a pat on the wrist. He loosened his
grip and pulled away. She laughed. “Are you trying to suffocate me? If you were,
you did a pretty good job.”
“If
I’d been trying to do that you’d be dead by now,” said Jack.
“And
what would you do with my body?”
He
gave her a quick up and down glance then
shrugged and thumbed over his shoulder at the river. “I’d dump you in there.”
“In
front of all these witnesses?”
He
looked at the cars moving past parallel to the flow of water. The valley sides
were steep. Across the river were woods and a railway track. This side was pavement,
the road and then another steep slope crowded with houses. The two of them were
the only people visible on foot. “What witnesses?”
“On
the bridge!” Lucy pointed.
“Those
dots?” said Jack. “Those aren’t people. They’re ants.”
“They’d
see everything. Not to mention all the people driving by. You’d never get away
with it.”
Jack
pulled her close again. “Maybe I wouldn’t care about that. Besides… I bet
they’d applaud me. They might even help to cover it up.”
“Then
you’d better get on and do it,” said Lucy. “I’m bored.”
They
kissed again. When they pulled away Jack felt a tightening across his stomach.
It crept round his sides and into his lower back.
“What’s
up?” asked Lucy.
His
cheeks were tense but he shook his head. “Nothing.” He looked at her. “I just—“
“What?”
Jack’s
gaze locked on her eyes, dropped to her lips, rose again. Something wasn’t
right. “I don’t know.”
“Do
you feel sick?”
“No.
I think maybe…” He turned away from her but couldn’t keep his eyes elsewhere.
It wasn’t real, it was probably indigestion, but it felt real: it felt like a
premonition... or foreboding. It was silly and almost certainly something he
ate.
Lucy
ran her fingertip from his shoulder to his elbow. “You should lie down. Let’s
go back up to the hotel.”
“Yeah.
Probably a good idea.” Jack gestured to the bridge. “Why don’t we get an ice
cream or something first? I think I can just about stretch to that. What do you
think?”
“Okay.”
Lucy slinked her wrist through his arm. “Sounds wonderful. Then afterwards we
can go back to our room and—“ She stretched up to his ear and whispered.
Jack’s
smile broadened to a grin. “Who could refuse such a demure and respectable
lady?”
“If
you think that’s respectable I must not be trying hard enough.”
They
both laughed and turned toward the cut-through that would take them back up to
the top of the hill.
“By
the way,” she said, “I hope you don’t mind. I know this is our first trip out
of London and everything but I sort of invited someone to call in and see us.”
Jack
was a little disappointed but he made himself not mind. “Sure,” he said as they
started the steep climb. “Who?”
2
Several
miles away, Sam Decker pulled in under the trees at the side of the quiet
suburban street fifty yards from his destination. He cut the engine and reached
for the bag in the foot well of the passenger side. He kept his head up, eyes
slowly scanning left to right.
No
one in the street; no one visible in the windows of any of the houses; unlikely
he would be seen but he kept the bag low just the same; kept watching, opening it
by touch.
He
withdrew a black automatic pistol, ejected the magazine, checked the rounds,
then reinserted it. He pulled the slide back then let go. It snapped forward,
chambering a round. He checked the safety catch was in place then set the gun
on his lap and took the shoulder holster out of the sports bag. He returned the
bag to the foot well, eyes still on the street.
This
was the moment. Every action he’d taken over the past five years led to this
exact point in time and space. The past and the future had only this one pivotal
instant between them. It was an arbitrary point – one that he’d chosen – but a
point that needed to be set. He couldn’t keep pushing forever. The likelihood
of discovery was increasing each day. The opportunity to continue amassing
capital was becoming outweighed by the risk.
Sam
put the shoulder holster on over his shirt, took his black suit jacket from its
position over the passenger seat and slipped into it. He inserted the barrel of
the pistol into the holster and let gravity drop it into place.
The
decision was made. It was time now to take his activities to the next level. He
could no longer think like an innocent man. From this point on he was potentially
a fugitive. Every situation had to be planned from its worst-case-scenario.
There could be no surprises.
Down
the street the building he had come to visit stood tightly amongst its
neighbours; one more three level terraced house made descript by its
shabbiness. The whole street was thirty years beyond its prime. That particular
house exhibited decay that looked many times that age: too far away to make out
exact detail but there was a fuzziness, a lack of focus that meant peeling
paint, splintered damp-stained window frames, cracked glass, dishevelled
garden.
It
suited its owner.
Sam
reached into his jacket and touched the pistol with the first and second
fingers of his right hand. He withdrew them, running them along the grip then
opened the door and got out of the car. Nobody was in the street but it didn’t
matter now. They wouldn’t be aware of the gun if he were standing next to them.
He started walking along the pavement toward the dirty grey house.
Three
more stops to make and then he could leave the country; that was all: this one…
both of his stashes back in London later that night… and before he left Bristol,
his sister’s hotel.
To
see her one last time.
I love the opening "her murder was less than an hour away" - John
ReplyDeleteDun dun duuuuurrrnnn!!!!
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