12

What I had to do had to be done at night.

So I waited.

And waited.

When the sun was down an hour, two, I was still waiting. Still thinking. I’d talked to Tommy, but I hadn’t told him what Louie told me. I was saving that until I was sure. I had to be sure this time. Tommy told me that Mikey Ryan had been undercover, following around bagmen who ran money for the Italians. The money was from gambling, prostitution, extortion. He was mapping out their haunts, their routes, how often they came and went. All in advance of a big raid by vice.

But now he was dead.

How did that factor in? I wasn’t sure just yet. I laid there in my rack, listening to the clock tick, traffic on the street below. I smoked and watched the neon from the bar downstairs light up my room, latticing me with sharp shadows.

That’s when I heard my door open.

Feet went pounding away. Very casually, I went for my. 45 on the nightstand. I didn’t know what to expect. The lights were off. Carefully, I turned the gooseneck lamp on the stand so when I clicked it on it would illuminate the intruder, temporarily blinding him. It would give me the edge.

Breath locked up tight in my lungs, I waited. A trickle of sweat ran down one temple like ants to a picnic. My finger was hot and damp against the trigger of my Browning. I caught a whiff of something sharp and pungent like spices, like age. I could hear the intruder moving through my living room, approaching my bedroom door.

The door swung in.

I saw a shadow…filmy, almost transparent.

I clicked on the light. And it could’ve been a lot of people standing there, arms outstretched. I could’ve given you a grocery list of sorry bastards who wanted me dead. But I never would have guessed this.

Helen was standing there.

Dead these two years, but shuffling forward all the same. She was a mummy. Nothing more. I still recognized the diamond choker around her withered throat. She was naked and her flesh was papery, shriveled, it clung to the skeleton beneath like wet decoupage. Except it wasn’t wet, but dry and rubbed with spices to keep it from crumbling away entirely. As she drifted towards me, stick arms extended and twig fingers clutching, she seemed to be disintegrating, flaking away. Motes of her danced in the shaft of light from the lamp.

Her skull-face attempted a grin but it was the grin of mortuaries and death houses, the grin of something long-buried beneath shifting Egyptian sands. Eyeless, her fine nose collapsed into the nasal channel of her skull, her teeth gone black, she attempted speech…but her vocal cords had long ago succumbed to worm and dust. What came out was a dry and hideous croaking.

My insides gone to sauce, funeral bells gonging in the drum of my skull, I sat forward and, letting out a piercing shriek, I put two slugs in her head. She folded up like a house of cards, shattering into dust and pitted bone and rags as she struck the floor.

My brain full of her stink, my mind full of an insane screeching, I fell next to her, sobbing.

This was their latest game.

But it hadn’t scared me off; it only made things personal.

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