The Kill (15 page)

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Authors: Jonas Saul

Tags: #thriller

BOOK: The Kill
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“We’re in the south stairwell. I think we hit him. Two men down. I’m not hit. And where the fuck did he get a gun?”

 

He listened for a reply. After a few seconds, one came, muffled a little through static.

 

“Approach with caution. He is extremely dangerous. But I warn you, do not come back into my presence if you don’t kill him. Go now and finish the job.”

 

“On my way.”

 

Shit.

 

Darwin kept his eyes closed. He focused on being as still as possible. The man was still at the level below him, so he took one large breath and held it. Then he waited.

 

Waiting with bated breath,
he thought and had to suppress a giggle.
Really, in this moment I’m about to laugh. Have I lost my mind?

 

He knew it had more to do with a coping mechanism. This was like a big game. The smarter one would win. The one who stayed calm, thought things through and looked for a hole, a way in. He was that guy. Being irrational and crazy could work too, but this moment didn’t call for it.

 

He stayed completely immobile, his weapon in his right hand, his left shoulder screaming in pain now, and focused on the sounds the man’s shoes made as he neared.

 

As far as he could tell, the man was at or near the top stair. He waited for one more sound. It came, but it almost made him jump and scream.

 

It was the clicking of metal. The guy had readied his gun.

 

One, two, three.

 

Darwin opened his eyes, lifted his gun, screamed and squeezed the trigger, aimed directly at the man’s face.

 

But his gun didn’t fire. It was empty.

 

He looked at it, eyes wild. The man smiled and lowered his weapon until he aimed at Darwin’s chest.

 

As fast as he could move, Darwin lifted up off his back, supported by his elbows and kicked at the gun hand. It made direct contact as the weapon fired. He felt, as much as heard, the bullet race by his right ear. A solid thunk told him the bullet made a home in the wall behind his head.

 

The guy didn’t lose his grip on the gun.

 

When Darwin lifted his leg to kick again, it wasn’t aimed at the gun. He twisted his waist and kicked at the man’s chest. He made solid contact as the guy’s gun was coming around for him again.

 

The guy fell backwards, rolling down the stairs, at a weird, inverted angle.

 

Darwin used the railing to get to his feet, wailing at the pain in his shoulder. He had no time to inspect the injury. However bad it was, it was exactly that—bad. But it was something to deal with after he stayed alive.

 

He ran down the stairs, two at a time and jumped in the air, knees extended, toward the man struggling to get to his feet.

 

Darwin’s knees connected high in the man’s chest, part of his left knee jamming into the man’s throat. Darwin continued forward and bumped the wall with his good shoulder like he’d body checked another hockey player. He stayed upright, all his weight on the man below him.
 

 

The guy’s eyes widened. His hands came up and tried to push Darwin off. He couldn’t breathe. His hands flailed, his eyes wide, like a fish flapping on a dock after being pulled from water, mouth agape.

 

His face turned red and then a darker red, blood vessels in his eyes bursting.

 

Two weeks ago, Darwin would have been appalled at the violence. But today, something inside him felt good as the man under him succumbed.

 

“One less piece of shit,” Darwin whispered. He leaned closer and said, “I just made the world a better place and I’m going to keep doing it, one of you at a time.”

 

He turned and ripped the radio off the guy’s belt and grabbed his gun. He slipped it into the back of his pants and grabbed another gun off the floor.

 

He looked up the stairs to make sure there were no other surprises and then took a close look at his shoulder. The wound was exterior only. As far as he could tell, the bullet hadn’t entered his body.

 

He moved his jacket up off the wound and saw a gouge in his skin about the thickness of his finger. It was already clotting, but blood still seeped from the center of the wound. It was big enough to hurt like a bitch, but not big enough to stop him or kill him. Not by a long shot.

 

“Missed,” he said.

 

He slipped his jacket gently over his shoulder again and started up the stairs, the gun in his right hand aimed in front of him. At the top of the stairs, he put his ear to the door.

 

Nothing.

 

He clicked the radio and couple of times to see if he’d get a response.

 

Nothing.

 

Shit, open the door and have a group of men offering me a welcome under a hail of bullets, or do I find another way in?

 

There was no other way in. He was out of time. They knew he was here. He had no element of surprise. All he had were two guns, one of their radios and a love for Rosina that gave him more willpower than any man loyal to Fuccini.

 

Sure, they’d use deadly force, but so would he. The nice Canadian image was over. No more mister nice Canadian.

 

He twisted the knob, ripped open the door and dropped back down two steps to avoid being hit by anything coming through at him.

 

The door opened to its farthest point, and then slowly came back to shut.

 

No bullets hailed down on him. No men standing, waiting. Just dead silence, and Darwin in a stairwell opening doors.

 

He opened it a crack and peeked in at the corridor. Lights filled the hall. Darwin smiled at life’s little pleasures.

 

He opened the door even more. The hall was empty all the way to the end.

 

His gun was ready, the safety off. As carefully as he could, he edged around and looked down the hallway the other way.

 

No one.

 

Weren’t they expecting me?

 

He stepped into the hall, having no idea which way to go.

 

“In here,” someone said.

 

He jumped and fired his weapon, the bullet shot through a ceiling tile, bits of dust falling.

 

“Shit. My
fucking
nerves.”

 

“There’s no need for that. I’m unarmed,” the voice said.

 

“Where, dammit?”

 

“In here.”

 

He tracked the voice to the open door about five feet from him.

 

With every bit of caution he could muster, Darwin started for the door. He pressed himself along the wall, slowly peeked around the corner, using one eye to look in the room.

 

An old man stood with his hands in front of him, clasped together.

 

Darwin turned into the room a little farther. Another man, unshaven and disheveled looking, stood off to the side by some kind of electrical generator. He was smiling.

 

“Come on in,” the disheveled man said. He smiled so wide, Darwin thought he looked mad. It was the smile of a lunatic. “Nothing in here to hurt you. Look, we have no weapons.”

 

Disheveled man lifted his hands in the air. The old man unclasped his and lifted them up too.

 

“No weapons,” the old man said.

 

Darwin looked up and down the hallway to make sure he wasn’t about to be ambushed, and then stepped into the room.

 

That’s when he saw Rosina.

 

The urge to shoot and kill had never felt so good.

 

Darwin lifted his weapon and aimed it at the old man.

 

“Get her down or you die.”

 

He felt no pain at that moment. He felt steady, calm and ready to murder ten men. Everything in his mind was clear. Rosina hung suspended on chains, and these men had done that to his wife. Her face pale, eyes closed. Remnants of vomit stuck to her blouse.

 

What have these people done to you, baby?

 

“There’s no need for further violence,” the old man said.

 

He turned to the disheveled man and motioned with his finger. A moment later, Rosina was lowered until her feet rested on the ground.

 

The old man brought his attention back to Darwin. “She is merely unconscious. As you can see, she is unharmed. I can’t say the same for my son.”

 

A glint in the old man’s eye told Darwin everything he ever needed to know about how the old man, Vincenzo’a father, felt for him. He could see the old man hated him on every level. Deeper than Darwin hated his stepmother and she was already dead.

 

His arm grew heavy. It wavered a little and then he lowered the weapon.

 

“Let her go. My wife and I will walk away. This is over. You’re finished. There is nothing left between you and me.”

 

The old man stared at him and waited.

 

“What are you waiting for? Let her down or you’ll have another body murdered here. I’ll start with the asshole with the sick grin over there. What’s your answer?”

 

The disheveled man laughed, a violent, deep chuckle that spoke volumes of the deeply disturbed.

 

“We are not finished yet,” the old man said.

 

“What are you talking about?”

 

“You and me have business. There is a certain debt that is owed to me. I always collect a debt. It has been the way of my family since the beginning of time. I’m not about to make an exception with you.”

 

“What debt? What are you talking about?”

 

Darwin stepped closer to Rosina. If and when she woke from her drugged sleep, or whatever it was these men had done to her, he wanted to be near.

 

“A blood debt.”

 

“Blood debt? Are you fucked?”

 

“Actually no, I can’t say I’m fucked. I’d say you are.”

 

Darwin raised the gun again, aiming it at the old man in the center of the room. “And how’s that?”

 

“If you shoot me, it won’t end there. If you shoot my Harvester, it still won’t end there.”

 

Harvester? What the fuck?

 

“You’re talking in circles, old man. Start making sense.”

 

The old man nodded to the one he called the Harvester. “Show him.”

 

The Harvester raised his right hand and displayed a little box with a button on it. “If I push this button, your wife will be jolted with enough electrical volts to not just kill her instantly, but literally burn her on those chains. Her scorched skin will fall off in pieces, like the burned bark of a tree, seared forever.” He smiled that sick grin again. “Are you aware how
horrible
that would feel?” He said
horrible
like a child would ask for cotton candy at the fair: a certain childish glee. It almost made him hop on the spot.

 

“You’re sick. The both of you are fucking gone. But,” Darwin raised his hand to make a point, “if you did push that button, I would execute the both of you. So who walks out of here? Huh? Ask yourself the real question: do you want to die today?”

 

The old man shrugged. “I’m old. I’m already dying and since you killed my only boy, I’m dead on the inside. You have killed me, Darwin Athios Kostas.”

 

“Don’t!” Darwin snapped. “Don’t you ever say my name like that again. Do you hear me? Never, or this ends for all of us.”

 

His eyes were wild, he breathed in and out between his teeth, every fibre in his body begged him to shoot the old man in the eye. He said Rosina’s name and held the animal urges at bay.

 

“Fair enough. I will not use your name for the duration of this meeting.”

 

How the hell does the old man stay so fucking calm. It’s like he knows something. He’s got the look of someone who has already won. That’s it. He thinks he’s won. This is his end game.

 

“But I want something from you.”

 

“What?” Darwin asked, his teeth still tight together. He had to think. He had to keep them talking. Rosina’s safety was first. He had to end this on his terms and he had to do it fast.

 

“I want you to set your weapons down and kick them over to me. I am an honorable man. Do this and I will have your wife released from that machine’s chains. Do we have a deal?”

 

“Are you fucked?”

 

“No, I am not. Do we have a deal?”

 

Darwin tried to clear his head. Could he see any other way out of this? A button push could take place in under a second. If that happened, he couldn’t even touch his wife or he’d be electrocuted with her.

 

So what then? Shoot both men and hopefully have a perfect shot, each time?

 

They had him and they knew it.

 

“You will unhook her? You’ll keep your word?”

 

“It is all I have. My word.”

 

Darwin felt he was out of options. He leaned down, set one gun on the floor and then kicked it away.

 

“The other one too.”

 

How did he know about the gun in the back of my pants? Cameras in the stairwell?

 

“No. There’s two chains holding Rosina. Unhook one for one.”

 

The old man considered this and then turned and nodded to Harvester.

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