Chapter 23

‘Alisha. Honey? Are you about done in there?’

Rickard used the tip of his knife to push open the door into the ladies’ restroom. He recalled his admonishment of the man on his apartment roof doing something similar with his gun, but this time it was different. Alisha was no threat to him, not in a physical sense.

He was in a short passage that led from the dining area, three doors all on the right-hand side. The first was the men’s room, the second the ladies’. The final door had proved to be a janitors’ closet. No exit. The air smelled of bleach and there was a sickly underlying aroma of urine and perfumed tissue paper.

Peering into the alien territory of a ladies’ room, he checked out the porcelain sinks, pot-pourri in little bowls on a shelf, two stalls with the doors closed tight. He walked further into the room, his shoes squeaking on terracotta tiles. ‘Alisha?’

No answer came. But this wasn’t uncommon. Often Alisha would play at being coy.

He crouched to scan the floor under each stall. One of them was definitely empty, and when he touched the knife to the door it swung inward silently. Next he tried the second door and it resisted him. He crouched again. ‘Alisha, honey…’

He straightened up.

He considered kicking open the door, but realised there was no need for that. Instead he went into the vacant stall and stepped up on to the toilet bowl. He looked over the dividing wall into an equally vacant space. No, not true: Alisha’s stiletto-heeled shoes were standing where she’d left them. Rickard grunted, looked at the narrow window where she must have crawled out. It had a security feature, a bar that allowed the window to open only partially. The gap was little more than ten inches wide. No way that a fully grown man could have squeezed through, but a slip like Alisha wouldn’t have had much difficulty.

He should have been enraged, but Rickard felt cool about it, mildly amused even. Alisha had actually pleased him by showing this resourceful side, although it meant she had escaped him. Her betrayal had already harmed him; running off didn’t make that much difference. He thought maybe this was even better. He had planned on murdering her right there in that stall, but that could have proved an inconvenience. It would be difficult getting out of the diner unnoticed if he was covered in her blood. Better then that he caught up with and killed her somewhere less public.

He stood down from the bowl, exited the stall and headed for the door. When he pulled it open he came face to face with the old man who’d taken too much interest in him earlier. The old man squinted at him, then at the sign on the door.

‘You know that’s for the girls, don’t you,’ he said.

By way of answer, Rickard dropped his left hand and gripped his own genitals. ‘Yeah, and so is this.’

The other wasn’t impressed by his lewdness. ‘I’ve been watching you, boy. I just knew you were a strange one.’

Rickard merely smiled.

The old man tried to peer past him inside the room. ‘That lady of yours, where’s she at?’

‘What’s it to you?’

‘You upset her, you did. I want to check she’s OK.’

Rickard moved aside, swung his left thumb over his shoulder. ‘Go on then. Check all you want.’

The old man frowned at him, placed a hand on Rickard’s chest to press him further out of the way. ‘Your posturing don’t frighten me none, boy. Now get outa my way.’

He rapped on the door as he peeked inside. From this angle the toes of Alisha’s shoes could be seen under the gap in the door. ‘Lady? You OK in there, lady?’

‘You think I’m strange?’

The old man turned and found Rickard standing directly behind him. Rickard had invaded his personal space and he took a half-step back.

Rickard said, ‘What I find strange is how the girls get sweet-smelling pot-pourri while us guys get nothing. Do they think they’re better than us?’

The man shook his head at the absurdity of Rickard’s comment. He glanced again at the closed door. ‘Lady?’

‘Something else that’s strange,’ Rickard said, ‘is how some senile old fool thinks he has the right to stick his nose into other people’s business.’

‘It became my business when I saw you hurting that lady. You’re a bully, but you don’t frighten me.’

‘Is that so?’

‘No, boy, you don’t. Not one bit.’ The old guy shoved at him, moving nearer the closed door. ‘Hey, lady? No need to be afraid of this one!’

‘You don’t happen to have a son by the name of Joe Hunter, do you?’ Rickard asked. ‘He’s a self-righteous prick just like you.’

Rickard grabbed the old man, spun him round and ran him at the sinks. The man’s hip jammed up against one of the porcelain bowls, but Rickard continued to force him backwards, his left hand clamped over his mouth, stifling his yell. Rickard’s right hand pistoned in and out, jamming his blade repeatedly in the man’s stomach and ribs. He hissed through his clamped teeth as he watched the light go out of the old man’s eyes. It wasn’t a quick death for him; more punishment.

The man slumped to the floor. Rickard reached into one of the bowls of pot-pourri and scattered some of the perfume-laden petals on the man’s dead body. It didn’t cover the rank smells of blood or the man’s voided bowel.

That done with Rickard finally peered at his reflection in the mirror above the sinks. For the most minuscule of moments he thought he saw a nimbus of light round him, but then it was gone. He leaned over the dead man so he could get closer to the mirror. Briefly he stared into his reflection, one eye at a time. The mirror was smeared by a hand print, the greasy stain giving the illusion of colour that wasn’t really there.

He looked down at his jacket. It was liberally splashed by the dead man’s blood. So much for not getting messy. Rickard shrugged out of the jacket, took it over to a sanitary wear disposal bin and shoved it through the flip lid. He wiped his blade and his hands on a perfumed tissue which he flushed down a toilet. He walked out of the room nonchalantly, making his way towards the exit. Behind him a woman got up and headed for the restroom. In seconds the screaming would start.

He tossed dollars on the table as he passed, didn’t want a cashier chasing him into the street. Then he was out the door and walking quickly away from the diner.

He heard a wail, not from someone discovering the dead guy, but the distant sound of emergency sirens. Across town something major was happening. Good, he thought, a diversion while he got away from here and took up the chase for Alisha.

He found his car and clambered inside, started the engine. About to pull into the street, he had to wait while a squad car rocketed by with its lights flashing, the cop lying heavily on the siren to clear a way through the traffic.

It looked like all available response vehicles were heading downtown.

On a whim, he followed.

His apartment was in the same vicinity that all the police cars were converging on. Alisha could wait for now; he wanted to know what was happening.

He wasn’t fully sure how he felt when he arrived at the scene.

It was still a couple blocks short of where his apartment was, but if his instincts had been correct this latest emergency was tied to him, only in a way that he couldn’t quite fathom at first.

Parking outside the cordon of police cars he watched in fascination as the officers jostled for covering positions behind their cars, circling the front of a diner similar to the one he’d just left. It was obvious that a gunfight had recently taken place, judging by the pockmarks in the front window of the diner, and the people scrambling outside and collapsing on the street in shock and dismay.

The glare of the morning sun made seeing through the diner’s windows impossible. The sounds of the gun battle had stopped and now only the faint cries of the injured could be heard. Distantly he caught the strident calls of other responding police cruisers. Or maybe they were ambulances for the injured. Should get out of here, he thought. But curiosity held him in place.

His decision to wait and see what transpired rewarded him within seconds. Three men walked outside, showing empty hands. Between them they dragged a fourth man who was unconscious or dead, whom they threw down at the feet of the police.

They were an unusual-looking trio: a giant Asian-American, a tall African-American and — in Rickard’s opinion — a walking dead man.

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