JONATHAN
STURAK
A SMUDGE OF GRAY
A
NOVEL
Also
by Jonathan Sturak
NOVELS
COLLECTIONS
Copyright © 2012 by Jonathan Sturak. All
rights reserved.
Published in the United States of America by Pendan
Publishing
This is a work of fiction. All names, characters,
organizations, places, events, and incidents are used fictitiously and/or are
products of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living
or dead, events, or locales is purely coincidental.
The Library of Congress has catalogued the paperback
edition as follows:
Sturak, Jonathan
A Smudge of Gray : A Novel / by Jonathan Sturak
p. cm.
ISBN: 978-0-9825-8944-1
To
Uncle Mike
Chapter 1
A subway station bustled, infected with morning
commuters. Some walked; some ran; some stood; some slept. Trains zipped by in
every direction, screeching from the forced steel-on-steel contact. Chaos
engulfed the dwelling, yet everyone seemed to have a plan. Burgundy tiles lined
the floor, abused by the soles of humans. Overflowing blue trash barrels
littered the walkways next to benches. Red digits from clocks stabbed the
stuffy, sweat-soaked air. It was five minutes after seven o’clock in the
morning.
A particular train slowed. It was not
unlike the others as its stainless steel exterior displayed its share of graffiti.
As the train’s speed diminished, its moan echoed off the concrete walls and
entered the ear canals of the thousands of busy animals. The sound from the
train was just as ear-piercing as the others in the fleet of speeding metal, but
there was something different about this particular train—something not about the
way it looked, but rather the occupant it held. The train finally stopped. The
doors burst open and the crowd waiting to embark fought those struggling to
exit.
Trevor took a seat on a bench next to an
elderly woman. Above them, a flat-screen television provided the commuters with
a weather forecaster highlighting the day ahead—sunny with high temperatures reaching
fifty degrees, above average. Trevor eyed the woman and smirked, just enough to
show his dimples, but this female wanted nothing to do with him, even if he
looked like a leading man in a romantic comedy. She scrunched her face slightly,
wrinkling her brow in disgust. The elderly woman stood up to catch her train.
What the bum needs is a red uniform, not
some change,
Trevor reflected.
Across the tracks, a group of kids
played hide-and-seek through the legs of the travelers. Trevor chuckled as he
watched a dark-haired girl chasing after a younger boy.
“Is this seat taken?” a soft voice
reached Trevor’s ears.
“No. Please take a seat.”
Before he even turned to look at his
visitor, he knew it was a young woman. He also knew she was beautiful, and her
natural scent invading his nose added even more to the image of her in his mind.
He looked up and saw the breathtaking woman with her blonde hair draped over
her white designer coat. A devilish smile emerged on Trevor’s face as she took
a seat on the bench, a smile that was more than a movement of facial muscles.
“It’s good to take a seat and reflect,”
Trevor added.
“I know. It’s exhausting dealing with
all this madness at the start of the day,” the woman sighed.
“Everyone in the world always seems to
be in a hurry,” Trevor said as he scanned the action around him.
The woman dropped her train ticket stub.
The air blew it toward the turmoil, but then Trevor stepped on the stub with
his shoe, saving it. The woman noticed the shine on his shoes as he picked up
the ticket.
“Thank you so much.” She smiled warmly
as he handed her the stub and offered his hand.
“My name is Trevor.”
“April. Nice to meet you, Trevor.”
“The pleasure’s all mine. I like your
scarf. Very classy.”
“Oh, well, thank you,” April responded
as she grasped her expensive garment.
It was something she had picked up a
month ago on a weekend shopping trip. Even though she had worn it every day
during her morning commute with probably five thousand people eyeing it, this
was the first time that someone actually commented on it—someone who piqued her
interest the moment she had seen him.
“You have great taste,” Trevor replied
as he opened his trench coat.
At first, April just took the compliment
at face value, but then she saw the added meaning. The same Burberry pattern lined
his coat. April raised an eyebrow as she tapped his arm.
“Ha! How ironic! Well, real men wear
Burberry.” She slid a bit closer to him.
“So what brings you here, Trevor? Where
do you work?”
“I work for myself actually. I’m in the
consulting business.”
“Like a corporate consultant?” she asked
as she glanced at his briefcase.
“Something like that. You can call me a jack-of-all-trades.
I help people who are in need of help.”
“Sounds very mysterious,
Mister
Trevor
.”
“Do you like mystery, April?” Trevor
whispered.
A sudden shriek erupted. Everyone turned
toward it. The beggar was harassing a woman who had knocked over his change
cup. Two men in suits intervened. The bum sat back down, and then the people
continued.
“So, where are you headed, April?”
“I’m heading north for work. Just
another typical day in paradise.”
Trevor looked at his left hand still
holding his paper ticket stub.
“I’m actually heading north also,” he
lied as he covered the word “Southbound” with his left ring finger.
April peeked at Trevor’s shoes again and
studied their rich gleam. They were classy and well maintained and she wondered
how he had kept them so flawless. She looked at her black heels and noticed a
scuff mark on the face of the left one.
“So, April, don’t you think it’s kind of
serendipitous that out of all these people here, there must be a thousand, we
had the pleasure of meeting?”
April took a moment to compute his
reflection, to energize her synapses with thoughts. Her eyes shifted from his
shoes to his left hand holding the receipt. It wasn’t the paper that she was
interested in; it was whether he was wearing a wedding ring. The bulge on his
gloved finger left uncertainty for April, uncertainty that made her desire to
find out. Whatever the situation, she thought, all that mattered was the way he
was seducing her with his presence.
“Well Trevor, you do have a way with
words. There’s something different about you. I can’t yet place it,” April
replied with coyness to her tone.
A sudden screech jolted the couple’s
attention. A train slowed marked “Northbound” in red letters.
“Here’s our train,” Trevor said.
He stood up and grabbed his briefcase,
crumbling the receipt. Trevor offered his hand to the woman who had occupied
his time.
“Thank you,” April responded as she
accepted his hand and followed his lead.
Trevor guided her through the crowd, as
a path seemed to clear, allowing the couple to enter the train car. April felt
protected in Trevor’s presence and she hoped the train ride would allow her to
see the real man.
The train doors shut. Through the
scuffed window, Trevor and April sitting next to each other looked like a
couple traveling together. Without warning, the car propelled on the track, and
just like that, chaos ensued.
The bench that had housed the outwardly
random meeting between Trevor and April was now empty. Commuters flowed past it
leaving its wood to cool. The television above the bench now displayed the
newscast as the time filled the bottom corner—7:09. The African-American
newscaster turned to the camera; the words “Breaking News” flashed in the
corner of the screen. The volume was turned up, but the chatter of humans
dwarfed the television’s 20-watt speakers. However, the closed captions were
enabled as the man’s words crawled across the screen. Still, no one seemed
interested in the story.
“…we’re getting this from the newswire.
Police are on the lookout for this man,” the newscaster started.
Suddenly, a picture filled the screen’s
pixels, transforming them in such a way as to reveal a man, a handsome man with
a devious smirk, the man who had sat under the television only moments before.
“…forty-three-year-old Trevor Malloy. He
is a suspect in the brutal murder of at least three individuals. Police ask
that if you see this man, please use extreme caution as he is considered armed
and dangerous.”