Cory Nelson waited for nightfall before stepping out of his motel room into the parking lot. A light rain fell, the dark wet asphalt reflecting a sheen of red and blue neon across the chemical green stains of radiator coolant and motor oil. He’d parked his Buick in one corner of the lot, away from the road traffic, passersby, hookers, and people coming and going in the motel. He looked around the lot, checked the time on his watch, opened the car door and got behind the wheel. He locked the doors.
Nelson turned the key in the ignition when he felt the Buick shift slightly, as if a person had bumped into the side of the car. When he looked into the side-view mirror, he sensed the hint of movement — something like a puff of air hitting his hair.
Someone in the backseat.
The garrote was around his neck. Someone pulling hard. No! The piano wire buried deep into Nelson’s flesh. He tried to get his fingers under the wire. He used one fist to flail at the attacker in the rear seat. The wire tightened. Nelson kicked the floorboard, gurgling inhuman sounds. Eyes bulging. Unable to draw air into his burning lungs. He thrashed with all his strength. The attacker was ruthless. The wire cutting into Nelson’s trachea. His carotid artery enlarged to the size of his small finger.
The attacker whispered. “You’re a liability. You will die first. Your insurance policy will go next.” He tightened the garrote, the wire tearing through the carotid artery, blood spraying across the dashboard.
Nelson thrashed, losing strength, looking into the rearview mirror. He felt warmth in his crotch, the odor of urine mixing with the coppery smell of blood. He could only see the man’s eyes. Emerald green eyes. Hard eyes that opened wider, pleased, as the kill became imminent. The man said, “I have the Civil War contract, and now I will have the diamond.”
Nelson stopped fighting. He felt like he was far away. He could hear his own heart beat faster. Faster. Remaining blood flowing out of his severed neck, a hand reaching into his coat pocket. Taking out the diamond. The whispered voice said, “I told you it was cursed. You kept it too long.”
Nelson’s head fell back against the car’s headrest. He stared at the eyes in the rearview mirror, heard the car door open and close, the mirror now reflecting the faraway headlights from the cars moving in the distance — tiny lights like small diamonds in the sky, stars twinkling in the darkest night Cory Nelson had ever seen.