He looked round, furtive then, passed over a slim package. I took out a fat envelope from my jacker, pushed it across the table. Now, crunch time, I said
“Wee bonus for your trouble.”
He peeked inside, said
“Ah, you’re a grand man.”
Displaying once were teeth, once were off white. Tipped his forelock.
I drained my boilermaker, stood, then as if a thought suddenly hit me, said
“Next few days, you need to touch base, I’m at The Chelsea Hotel then, I’m in the wind.”
I swear to God, he sang, yeah, and very badly, like this
“…writing sad-eyed lady of the lowlands for you.”
Ruined it by adding
“Dylan.”
No freaking clue.
I was moving, said
“I’m more your Rory Gallagher kind of guy, check out the track Philly.”
The only truth I told.
* * *
I figured I’d bought me self, about two weeks grace.
Then Mexico or bust.
It was arranged I’d join a batch of German tourists in Houston, to make the coach trip into Mexico.
Had my flight to Houston, my ticket for the coach.
Until then, all I had to do, was stay alive.
Four nights in, I got back late, had caught a late movie and a late dinner, both forgettable. I’d had a few brews, was feeling a nice buzz. The hotel lobby was quite, bathed in a warm amber light, muted.
Nice.
In the corner of the lobby, were two leather chairs, coffee table. Hadn’t noticed the figure until I heard
“Mr Finnerty.”
She was dressed in a short black dress, tight black t-shirt, killer heels kicked to the side of the chair.
Her long blond hair, cascading down to her shoulders, catching the amber light. A vision.
I asked, trying to catch the gulp in my throat
“Late hours?”
“Lame, right?”
A bottle of Black Bush on the table. Dented but still three quarters full. She said
“A relative died and The Irish, they take a drink, yeah?”
Same old tired fooking clichés, I added my bit, said
“Or, the relative recovers, a drink.”
Laugh, if brief.
She bent over, seeking a second glass, allowing me a full jail term appraisal. She asked
“Join me?”
“Sure.”
* * *
…and so Dear Reader, I married her.
Kidding.
Jesus.
We were at it like rabbits within two drinks, howling at some dark moon.
And thus, fookit, I lost focus.
For the next week.
I was mesmerised, was I in love, Jesus, I don’t know, I was on torrid heat.
Then, time to skip time.
My flight to Houston was that day, at noon. I got out on the roof, retrieved the stash. I’d left my gun on the pillow, would have to take it apart, flush it. Homeland Security were top of their game.
I was thinking
“Going to miss her.”
Got back inside.
She was sitting on the bed, my gun held loosely in her right hand, like an afterthought.
Dressed in white jeans, faded denim shirt, bare feet.
She asked
“Running out on me lover?”
Jesus wept, she looked irresistible.
I smiled, went
“You jerking my chain sweetheart? Come on, we have a great thing going, I’ll be back in a week and what do you say, we grab some days in The Caymans?, sound like a plan?”
She gave the briefest smile, said
“I have a plan.”
Shot me in the gut, Oh Christ, they’re right, it hurts like a son-of-a bitch. She leaned over me, the tattoo over her eye looming clear.
Whispered
“You arrived in the very nick of time, the hotel is fucked, debts like a cheap Enron.”
Ball-breaker, huh?
She stood in front of the mirror, ran her lovely hand through that glorious hair, asked
“A cut maybe, you think?”
Then hefted my case of cash, stopped, asked
“Ohio, this time of year, nice?”
And was gone.
I’d wrapped my hands around my stomach, trying to hold my entails in, blood seeping then gushing through my fingers.
All I could see was the mark above her eyes.
Definitely
.….….….….….…sure
.….….….….….….……an
.….….….….….….….….……angel.
You think?
© 2012 Ken Bruen.
About Ken Bruen
Ken Bruen has been a finalist for the Edgar, Barry, and Dagger Awards. The Private Eye Writers of America presented him with the Shamus Award for the Best Novel of 2003 for The Guards, the book that introduced Jack Taylor. And in 2010, the Mystery Readers International bestowed the Macavity Award on Ken and Reed Farrel Coleman for their crime novel Tower. Ken lives in Galway, Ireland.
Triangulation
by Anonymous-9
She was like a fish to the bait, Chrislyn was. All a man had to do was speak ooey-gooey love mush and she had the worm in her teeth and the hook halfway down her gullet.
I’m the long-suffering gal pal watching as man after man caught her in a sentimental net and gutted her for all the cash he could get. Business investments, medical problems, operations for Mom—Chrislyn fell for them all.
Sweetie-pie
Hunnee-bunch
We’ll be forever
You’d think even a dumbsicle like Chrislyn had her limits. But no, the line of credit on the house her daddy left her got tapped three times last year for a no-good chisler, and now her 401k was in danger.
Think I hadn’t told her a million times to stop? Warnings slid off that girl’s back, easy as lies dripped from the tongues of her crooked lovers. Like she was covered in cling-wrap and nothing sank in.
Sweetheart
Punkin
Us till eternity
The deadbeat-du-jour had tapped everything he was going to get without a ring and showed signs of taking a hike with no forwarding address. Chrislyn was mewling the man-trouble blues.
I wanted to do good.
I wanted to do right.
I wanted to get involved.
Truth is, I needed Chrislyn’s problems. Anything was better than thinking about me, lil’ ole Dee-Ann. Didn’t set the world on fire with my looks at 21, sure as heck wasn’t happening at 40. Come-to-Jesus truth: I needed Chrislyn’s blonde good looks and routine romantic implosions. It’s called living vicariously. I know that now. I didn’t know it then.
The idea hit on a typical Saturday night—me in an old bathrobe with a mug of tea and cats purring on top of the computer desk. I’ll pose as a man and hit her up for more than she’s ever been hit before. Then give it all back with a talking-to about being more careful.
A few taps on the keyboard realized Chrislyn’s dream man; polished, professional, sharp-dressed. A phony Facebook page came alive with borrowed photos, likewise a Twitter account and email. He was real as life: Ben Adams, attorney-at-law. The profile said he currently resided in Dubai to facilitate business deals but would be back in the good ol’ US of A by next year to visit his homes in Vegas, South Beach, and Beverly Hills. Ben stumbled over Chrislyn’s page and sent a message.
…even though you are with a boyfriend, I saw immediately that you look exactly like the girl of my dreams. Hello, Dream Girl.
It didn’t take long. She replied with a picture tanning poolside in a microkini and confided that the relationship was on its last legs.
Can’t wait to hug you
hold you
whisper sweet-nothings in your ear
Buying a voice changer fast-tracked the whole game. For less than a hundred bucks, I plugged the thing in and altered my voice into ni
cely modulated male tones. I got a second cell number with a Beverly Hills area code and told her calls would bounce right through. Manly man Ben Adams would foot the bill for international call-roaming.
Ooo,ooo I’m getting there.
Are you almost there, darlin’?
Let’s go together ooooohhhhhhhhhhhhhh!
Sugar Britches!
Loverman!
aah aah aah aaH aAH AHH AAAHHHHHHHHhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Oh
Boyyy
Mmmm.
We talked for hours every day. We had ear-busting, furniture shaking, hot-monkey phone sex every day, too. I egged her on: lingerie, toys, flavored lube, warming lube, pleasure enhancing gel for ladies only—you name it, she tried it.
It was time to move in for the money.
I knew Chrislyn had a $100,000 line of credit on the house and half was blown already. Another forty-eight grand sat in a 401K, plus she had a savings account with a few thousand—plenty left to scam and I wanted all of it. I wanted to look in her eyes and reveal she’d almost given everything away to a stranger. I wanted to see it sink in that Dee-Ann had her best interests at heart.
“We need to be together,” I told her, between bouts of heavy breathing. “A hundred grand would sew up my commitments in Dubai and you’ll recoup immediately from proceeds.”
She promised to get the money ready for transfer. Then she threw a curve ball.
“If we’re going to do this, I need to see you, I need to hold you in my arms. I’m ready and willing to fly to Dubai.”
Shit Shit Shit! Think quick. “I’ve got more flyer miles than you, doll. I’ll come to LA over a long weekend on the downlow. The company can’t know I’m leaving the country, they’d think I was dealing on the side. But this isn’t a deal—this is my honey-baby, sweetie-pie, gorgeous girl.”
Hoo boy, how was I going to pull this one off?
* * *
“Some broad needs an actor to pose as a Beverly Hills hotshot so she can prank a girlfriend,” my agent said.
“What’s her name?”
“Dee-Ann somebody. Pays five hundred for a couple hours work.”
A suit, briefcase, a fresh haircut—hey, I could come up with that.
I met my new employer at the Hotel Skylite on Century Boulevard a mile from the airport. The suit was borrowed from a pal who wore it one season on The Young and the Restless. Dee-Ann gave the threads an approving eyeball up and down. Too bad I couldn’t return the favor. She was no beauty queen, not with an extra fifty pounds on and none of it in the right places.
A cocktail waitress slid over. False eyelashes and a black cocktail dress harmonized with the execu-lounge vibe. Beer for me, diet soda for Dee-Ann. The false eyelashes flapped Morse signals: Big spenders, NOT.
Dee-Ann didn’t care or didn’t notice and got right down to it.
“I’ll come early and take a room. You be early too and I’ll hand over the keycard.”
“What about the bank transfer? How do I do it from a hotel room?”
“I was getting to that.” She worked her lips around the soda straw. “I’ll leave a laptop for you. Chrislyn will assume it’s yours. After a few drinks, invite her to the room and use the laptop to transfer from one account to another. Ever used PayPal?”
“Sure. It’s not brain surgery.”
“I’ll be down in the parking lot. Soon as that’s done, go to the window and open the curtains. That’s my signal.” Little pinwheels of delight spun in Dee-Ann’s eyes. “I’m going to come right up, walk in and tell Chrislyn she could’ve been ripped off, killed even.”
She pushed a scrap of paper across the table.
“What’s that?”
“It’s a list of pet-names she likes.”
I was expecting X-rated material but it’s all Honey-this and Sweetie-that. Affectionate stuff.
“Looks like you’re a real friend.”
“Thanks, I try to be. Chrislyn’s an awful nice person. Just needs a little protection from her own self.”
“Without you, there’s no telling where she’d end up.”
That made Dee-Ann smile. We set it up for Saturday night.
I held off telling Alexa about the job because Alexa thinks everything involved with acting is squirrely. Then I broke down and blabbed anyway. She kept putting me off about a briefcase but after a couple days of no-tickey-no-laundry in the love department, a leather Tumi showed up. Alexa said as long as the tags stayed on it was returnable.
I opened the thing up and there was a revolver.
“Alexa, what the—?”
“You don’t know what might go sideways on this job. Miss Dee-Ann’s not paying five large for nothing. A little insurance never hurt anybody.”
I knew better than to argue with Alexa.
* * *
OOOOooo the butterflies! They’re fluttering in my stomach, Getting ready I couldn’t hardly hold the mascara brush steady and now my hands are sweating all over the shopping bag handles. Thank gawd the Skylite bar is dark and nobody can see me gettin’ shiny.
I pick a teeny cocktail table to sit at and set everything underneath. The bag is full of lingerie and a hundred thou cash. To hell with electronic banking, it’ll be so romantic to make love with money spread out around us. It excites me! I hope it excites Ben too.
There’s a guy coming in now. OMG he’s wearing a suit with a briefcase. OMG he’s gorgeous. Is that him? I hope it’s him! He’s smiling, he’s headed this way. It’s him! OMG look at the muscles under that suit. He works out!
“Chrislyn?”
“It’s me. Hi!”
I jump out of my seat and give him a big hug. He pulls me right off my feet, rocking back and forth before setting me back down.
“You sure know how to sweep a girl off her feet!”
“Sit, let’s have a drink.”
“Is the room ready?”
“Yea—”
“Let’s get out of here, Ben. I want you all to myself, darling. Let’s shut the world out.”
“Whatever you say, hunnee-doll.” He slips a cell phone out of his pocket, turns it off and tucks it into a gorgeous, shiny briefcase. “It’s all about you and me now. No interruptions.”
Have you ever heard anything so romantic? All the way up in the elevator I tell him how he came along at the perfect time.
“My heart was breaking with those other guys and the mess with the money and all—but now you’re heeere!”
I tell Ben over and over he is the one and before I know it, we’re in the room. Ben excuses himself to use the restroom.
I hang my jacket in the closet and tuck the shopping bag in there too—a surprise for later. He sure is taking a long time; he probably isn’t, it’s over-impatience. I roam around the room—his laptop’s open on the desk. Just like you’d expect from a successful attorney.
My eye falls on the briefcase. I don’t know why, maybe it’s just that I’ve been fooled so many other times before…I nudge it with my foot. The designer label’s really real. My foot slides the case closer. I can’t resist unlatching the top. It’s so new the tags are still on. Mister Rich! There’s a gun in there too. Smart man, knows how to protect himself. What I’m really interested in is the cell phone. You can tell so many things from calls, text messages, photographs. It nestles in my hand and briiing! turns itself on. Scrolling through stuff… funny there’s no trace of me. I’m… completely… erased. Message after message from some girl named Alexa. Pictures too; super LA-skinny, pufferfish lips, ugh.
I hear water running in the bathroom sink, handwashing, splashing. The thought of his hands on me turns my stomach. I can’t stand it, can’t stand him. Can’t find a man I can trust. The phone tumbles to the carpet and I pick up the gun. Tender words endless booty calls the more I look at these disgusting pictures of that WHORE and her text messages the more I hate this two-timing, low-down, LYING user
Son of a bitch
Creep
SCUM SUCKER
I
cock that hammer as the door opens.
* * *
Time’s getting on. I hope he’s not taking advantage of her up there. What the hell are they doing anyway? Maybe this was a bad idea crosses my mind when Chrislyn steps into the parking lot. The backlight halos her blonde hair and for a moment an angel wavers in the doorway. The angel morphs into Chrislyn as she steps onto the lot and harsh halogen strikes her face. Something’s wrong because her mascara is streaked and Chrislyn never wears makeup slutty. The pink shopping bag on her arm is full to bursting—she came loaded for bear, for something.
I get out of the car and wave. She heads over at a trot.
“Dee-Annnnnn, I’m so glad to see you’ll never believe what happened remember that guy I met online the one from Dubai—“
I peel her arms from around my neck and give her a shake. “Where is he?”
“He’s…up in the room.”
“Take me. What’s in the bag?”
She hands it over. I push aside a negligee and crotchless panties with the tags still on. Underneath are stacks of bills, big denominations. My fingers sweep something hard and steely, warm to the touch. Gads, what have those two been doing?
It’s a long ride in the elevator and by the time that bell dings and the doors open, Chrislyn’s face is tighty-whitey white.
Three swipes of the card it takes to get the room open and she lets me go first. “In there.” Points childishly at the bathroom.
He’s splayed crosswise in the bathtub, one shiny shoe still on the floor and looking passed out drunk except for the hole in his lapel with red coming out of it like a rose.
No breathing. No nothing. Bucket-kickin’ dead.
For a second I’m going to explain the whole set-up, even deliver my memorized lecture to scare her off men but… there’s no need for truth anymore.
We got the cash.
We got a gun.
She’s my sugar-doll baby now.
© 2012 Anonymous-9.
About Anonymous-9
In 2010, a committee of the International Thriller Writers nominated Anonymous-9 in the first round of short-story judging for a Thriller Award. She won Spinetingler Magazine’s Best Short Story on the Web 2009, and received another Spinetingler nom for the same award in 2010, as well as two Derringer nominations. Anonymous-9 has published a dozen short stories, the twelfth being “Triangulation.” Ten are contained in an e-book collection of noir, horror and satire titled Hard Bite & Other Short Stories, sold on Amazon and Smashwords. Her eleventh story was published by New Pulp Press in Crimefactory’s First Shift anthology, released in 2011. A full-length novel based on the award-winning short “Hard Bite” is in final polish. www.anonymous-9.com
The Big Click: March 2012 (Issue 1) Page 3