Tuesday, January 22, 2019

One last job...



One last job...
By: Roger Alderman

Jack King’s seasoned crystal blue investigative eyes slowly opened to seek answers to the most obvious question, “Where the hell?” He pushed himself up from lying prone in a pool of his own blood and finally settling in a cross-legged sitting position. His old gray sears sucker suit clung to the floor because of the coagulated blood it had bonded with.

The near barren concrete floor of the cobweb-covered basement was illuminated by a low wattage yellowed bulb with heavy cob wells strung to it and the nearby wooden beams above.  The faint golden light did little to offer any of the rooms' secrets to the veteran private investigator. Dust fell from the floorboards above as they groaned under the weight of movement in the room above.

 Jack rotated his head side to side to ease the throbbing in his head and the aching pressure in his neck. He winced following a sudden pressure relieving cervical “POP.” His attention turned to the rusty, heavy chain and combination master lock attached to his left ankle as he tries to stand upright.

Jack lowered his head closing his eyes to focus on the details that brought him to this point. The darkness behind his eyes allowed his mind to draw at the facts as they unfolded around him. A flash of white followed by a trail of intertwined colors ending in the familiar smell of his favorite burnt office coffee.

Jack sat in his chair taking a deep long pull from his coffee cup at the dark roast inside. His glasses fogged quickly with the steam rising from the hot coffee inside. He looked to the smoke colored frosted glass of his office door as a brilliant yellow of a dress stopped outside his door.  

The woman in the hallway outside knocked twice, “Mr. King?” she asked aloud. Her voice rang with a touch of a southern accent. The closer she got to the frosted glass the more details shown through like her auburn hair and athletic frame. 

Jack rocked forward in his office chair placing his mug on the file cluttered desk in front of him, “Come in. It’s unlocked.” He took a second to shove most his old unsolved case files into the top desk drawer to conceal at least the mess there. 

The door opened allowing the woman to enter, but the intoxication scent of her perfume had already filled the small private investigator's office. Her physical beauty and elegance of movement were clear in her every motion. She closed the door and flowed across the room like the highly trained finishing school graduate she was. 

Jack could tell in her smaller movements that the poise and grace she carried were not her own, but a trained response to years of corrections. “How can I help?” Jack waited carefully studying her every word and action. He motioned for her to sit in the worn leather seat opposite him, “Please, Miss?”

“Janet, Janet Reigns,” she offered settling into the offered chair. The beautiful and smooth details of her face faded into a contorted visage of a mournful heartache, “Mr. King you’re my last option. I have spoken to countless other Private Investigators, but none will take the case. But each recommended you.”

Jack leaned forward on his elbows furrowing his brow at the revelation. “If everyone else passed on your case. Why would I take it?” he bluntly asked. He picked up his mug taking a long deep pull from the contents, “Besides I’m retiring.” He gestured to the large collection of boxes and containers half packed next to his old dark wooden desk.

Janet wiped at the tears causing her mascara rolling down her cheeks, “I wanted to come to you right from the beginning, but my attorney said to use someone else.” She could tell from his lack of reaction he had heard those words before, “beside your peers seem to think you’re not the type to retire. So, how about it one last case?”

Jack listened to her words, but could not stop himself from a raising an eyebrow in curiosity. He rocked back in his seat, “what is it you need from me?” He liked his coffee hot and got to the chase before it reached room temperature, ruining it. 

Janet had turned away to blow her nose, but hearing his words put a little glimmer of hope back into her eyes. She focused on him, “It’s Mark. My husband. He comes home late every night smelling of cheap perfume and liquor.” She pauses as Jack rocks forward and waves his hand for her to stop talking.

Jack exhales in agitation, “Why play games? Just divorce him. Save yourself the heartache.” He opens the wooden drawer and returns the file clutter to the desktop, “each of these women and men are devastated by learning the truth about their spouse’s infidelity.” He opens a file and removes a small stack of pictures. He fans the pictures of a man and woman in the embrace of passion, “fire me for doing the job they hired me for.”

Janet defiantly shakes her head, No. She takes a deep breath, “I have always known Mark was a lady killer. I thought I could change him, help him settle down, and make him a family man.” She removed a picture of Mark from her purse then placed it on the desktop.

The picture of Mark was a photo of his legal services. Dark-haired, handsome, tall, olive-skinned, and well-groomed in an expensive high-quality navy-blue tailored suit. His smile carried his obvious self-righteous conceit and over-inflated ego.

Jack palmed his face with both hands and exhaled loudly, “He’s a lawyer?” He peeked between his fingers at her reaction and sighed when she nodded in response, “I hate lawyers.” He threw up his hands overreacting to the revelation, “I can’t take your case. I’m sorry.”

Janet recoiled at the curt response of the veteran private investigator, “If it’s about the money. I can pay.” She paused as he waved off her words again. Her face told him everything he needed to know, but she still had to ask the obvious, “why?”

Jack lowered his head in shame at the words that followed, “Every time I go after an attorney. They weasel their way out of the evidence. I don’t need the headaches. In the end, you’ll be upset and my legacy takes another hit.”

Janet stood up shocked by his response, “Fine.” She stormed to the door looking back for a moment, “Keep the photo. If you change your mind. My number is on the back.” The door rattles for a long moment after she leaves slamming it behind her.

Jack rocks back in his chair relaxing his legs on his desktop. His eyes find their way to the photo of Mark. His eyes lock onto the smug expression of the lawyer. Jacks instincts tell him to not take the case, but his emotions and sense of right and wrong are blazing a different path. “Why cheat on her? Gotta be a power trip.” He picks up the photo and studies Mark, “Damn it!” 

Jack turns over the photo he looks at the number, “Jack, you know better.” He dials the number shaking his head the entire time, “Someone has to take this jerk down a peg.” The phone rings on the other end, “But why me?” The phone rings a second time, “If not me then who?” 

Janet picks up before the third ring of the phone and answers anxiously, “Hello?” Jack clears his throat, “I don’t know why I’m doing this, but I will take the case. Two hundred a day and meals?” Janet cannot hold back her happiness and relief that someone will help her, “Done. Thank you, Mr. King.”

“I will start right away. I will collect photos and video if possible. If he’s as bad as you believe then this could be over quickly,” Jack tells her straight to the point. He hangs up the phone, grabs his camera, and leaves in a hurry to catch up with Mark at this late hour of the day.

Jack crosses town, arriving in the parking lot across from Mark’s office. Relief fills his face as Mark leaves work laughing with a group of men. Jack immediately takes photos of Mark and his friends. He watches as they pile into Mark’s black SUV and speed off.

Jack knows how to tail a subject without getting noticed from his thirty years of experience. He captures a few images of Marks license plate to make sure he follows the correct car in the event they get separated. “I got you. You bastard,” Jack clenches a cigarette between his lips as he lights it.

The first stop, Todd’s Place, a new watering hole of white-collar privileged jack asses. Todd’s Place opened only a few years ago in answer to the growing taste for elitists who want mixed drinks and to brag about their next big job. Not the kind of place Jack would frequent. 

Jack captured a few pictures of the group entering, but then had to slip inside to gather more evidence. He hated to resort to his cellphone, but circumstances required “discreet observation.” He entered and sat across the bar pretending to play on his phone as he captured a few shots of Mark flirting with the bartender.

The group left once Mark was firmly shut down by the witty bartender. Jack chuckled to himself, “Good girl, send ‘em packing. Jack followed but left the bartender a large tip for her troubles.

Mark and his friends continued their course across town, but after each bar, another friend left the group to return to their home. By midnight, Mark’s friend had all left, Jack could tell he was far from finished. Jack yawned and studied his watch, “Crap… I’m too old to be out this late.” Jack slapped himself to remain awake, “Just go home, man. Your wife is waiting for you.”

Jack left the bar before Mark and flopped down into the driver's seat of his car. He buckled himself inside but noticed someone leaves the bar. He smiled seeing it was Mark arm in arm with a red hair in stilettos and a revealing black dress, “Bingo.”

Jack watches as the couple walk away from the bar rather than get into his car. “Hmm,” Jack lets slip, “must live nearby.” Jack follows at a distance taking many photos as the couple passionately embrace repeatedly along their path.

Jack follows the kissing couple to the front door of a two-story townhouse directly across the street from an open-air all organic market place closed for the night. He watches from just beyond sight as they enter her home laughing and touching one another. “Gotcha, you prick,” Jack announces as he steps out of his car. 

Jack smiles seeing they entered but did not close the door entirely, “Now for the juicy shots.” He silently moved inside careful to study each room before entering. It worried him as he noticed the eerie silence inside the townhouse. He knows this was the right place he could smell her cheap acidic perfume.

He stood in the entryway listening carefully. Then a smile crossed his face as he heard a door open upstairs. He moved quietly up the stairs to the second floor readying his camera for the coming batch of evidence that would nail the bastard.

Jack could see the light from the bedroom from the partially closed door. The sounds of a tired mattress and a clumsy headboard created what he imagined rough, aggressive sex between younger people these days. He moved his camera to the ready position as he prepared to throw open the door and catch them in the act.

 Jack held the doorknob in his left hand with the camera in his right. He mumbled low to himself, “3… 2…” In a swift motion, he threw open the door leveled the camera. Flash after flash and picture after picture was captured by the camera.

Jack froze in place confronted by the scene of pure horror before him. A nude woman bound and gagged on the top of the bed a look of terror locked on her gorgeous, but blood and gore covered face. Jack watched as the last of her color leaving her face and the life drain from her hazel eyes.

Mark kneeling above the woman’s corpse on the bed. His right hand deep within her abdomen slowly tearing flesh from her once gorgeous athletic body. He turned to face the interloper in the doorway drawn to the constant flashes of the camera. He released a low animalistic growl as half chewed flesh tumbled out of his mouth onto the bed. Jack spun rushing out of the door, but his world turned dark before he reached the stairwell. 

Jack King’s seasoned crystal blue investigative eyes slowly opened to seek answers to the most obvious question, “Where the hell?” He pushed himself up from lying prone in a pool of his own blood and finally settling in a cross-legged sitting position. His old gray sears sucker suit clung to the floor because of the coagulated blood it had bonded with.

The near barren concrete floor of the cobweb-covered basement was barely illuminated by a low wattage yellowed bulb with heavy cob wells strung to it and the nearby wooden beams above.  The faint golden light did little to offer any of the rooms' secrets to the veteran private investigator. Dust fell from the floorboards above as they groaned under the weight of movement in the room above.

 Jack rotated his head side to side to ease the throbbing in his head and the aching pressure in his neck. He winced following a sudden pressure relieving cervical “POP.” His attention turned to the rusty, heavy chain and combination master lock attached to his left ankle as he tries to stand upright.

The flimsy interior wooden door at the top of the stairs leading out of the sparse basement opened. Jack watched as Mark sauntered down the steps wiping away the pungent metallic smelling blood of the woman he had eaten. Her remains clung to his white cotton shirt as scraps of tissue and ligament.

Jack recoiled raising his right arm defensively as Mark stopped looming above the battered old private investigator. Mark knelt next to Jack just out of reach of the old man and poked at the chained old man with a baseball bat, “Janet hired you didn’t she.” Jack refused to answer, but the truth was obvious to Mark the Cannibal.  

“You don’t have to answer. I know the truth,” Mark stood upright and swung the bat around high above his head playfully. “You should feel privileged,” Mark coldly announced. Jack stared at Mark in growing confusion.

“I have always loved the tender flesh of a woman, but you. You’re my first man,” Mark face twisted demonically as the baseball bat arched high to low. Mark's grin widened as Jack skull too revealed its insides in an elegantly sickening scene of gore. 

Thursday, January 10, 2019

The Next Book

Getting ready to do more research on the mythology of an afterlife from various cultures. I really hope this next book will attract the attention of readers and maybe a literary agent. But mostly I just hope, as with each of my titles, that readers enjoy the journey.

Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Grand Ma





Grandma
By: Roger Alderman

Helen opened her eyes and glanced at the surface of the tabletop before her. Her eyes focusing on each card for a moment as the story someone asked her to tell revealed itself. She looked up at Jenny, “He is here and wants to explain what happened. Are you sure you want to hear this?”

Jenny shifted side to side in her seat trying to decide if her courage would last as the word came. She nodded for Helen to proceed, “Yes, please I have to know.” Her words carried the longing for her lost love. 

Helen closed her eyes and allowed the spirit to enter her body. He arrived like a summer breeze carrying the scent of wildflowers. She forced herself to “step aside” and allow him to tell his story. 

The violent coughing fits and fever have given me the day off work. I open my eyes through the fever induced haze the television tells me the next program is a game show. A smile turns up the corners of my mouth. 

The memories of my grandmother and I watching games shows together when we were much younger.  I draw strength from the memories and slowly slide upright on the cool leather of the worn-out brown sofa. The quilt my grandmother made me bunches up across my waist. I cherish this last quilt she made before moving into the nursing home. 

I cherish this last quilt she created before my mother and father moved her into the nursing home. “I really need to go visit her in the nursing home,” I think to myself. The sudden creaking of grandmothers rocking chair draws my attention as Ginger, my wife’s cat, drops to the floor. in the nursing home

I can’t help chuckle watching the overweight orange tabby waddle into the kitchen. Ginger seems to never stop eating these days. I can hear her pushing through the hard kibble in search of her next mouthful of delight.

I close my eyes and adjust the warming blue rubber ice pack resting against my forehead. The moist cool offers significant relief of the pain created by the burning behind my eyes. I exhale loud enough to pull the cat’s attention momentarily from her focus as the burning subsides. 

The televisions announcement of the start of the afternoon’s soap operas starting startles me. I must have fallen asleep and lost an entire hour. I shake my head in disbelief I had blacked out yet again. 

Something was different this time about the blackout my legs felt heavy and numb. I wiggle my toes and am happy to see the movement. The medicine makes me feel so odd. 

That’s when she walked in. to the living room from the kitchen. “Grand Ma?” I asked. She smiled and handed me a cup of hot tea. I closed my eyes allowing the scent of the honey and lemon to fill my sinuses with the first sip. 

“When did you get here?” I couldn’t help but ask the obvious questions. She sat on her rocking chair and was joined by Ginger, “Oh, a little while ago. You were asleep. So, I let myself in.” How could I argue with her arrival, after all, she and grandpa lived here their whole lives. She passed it down to Jenny and me as our very first home.

She paused stroking Ginger and rocked forward, “I could never leave my grandson on his own. Especially being so sick.” I nodded in understanding while taking a long draw from the honey and lemon tea. She offered a comforting smile and patted my knee, “Nothing more to worry about. Grand Ma is here to take care of you.” 

I returned to the prone position on the sofa after placing the tea on the old wooden coffee table between me and the television. “Did mom pick you up?” as I remembered that she had to surrender the privilege to drive before entering the nursing home. She rocked back in the chair as ginger stretched. 

She hummed a familiar song in an instant I found myself a small child hearing her song echo in my thoughts. The tune calmed my spirit instantly as it always had since I was in preschool. I hummed along with her and found peace in the moment. 

The coughing returned with a vengeance. It started with the sensation of a great weight bearing down on my chest. My breath left me and was resistant to returning. I gasped and tried to rise upright, but due to the damage inflicted by the fever and infection lacked the physical strength.

My legs trembled beyond my control and slowly the shaking made its way throughout my body. I forced my eyes wide open in desperation seeking help against the violent episode taking hold of me. The thick sputum choked and gag me. 

In a brutal thrust, I forced the heavy green, gray mucus from my throat and mouth. It didn’t travel far it landed and thinned and expand across my chest. It was then that grand ma’s song drifted back into the room from the kitchen. 

The calming effect sent me tumbling back into the black void of deep dreamless sleep.  In that dark place, all I could think about was waking up. I forced my eyes open one more time only to see the living room had grown dark with the arrival of the evening.

My body had grown heavy and weak I found I was unable to move. Thankfully my hearing was still intact along with a deep echo of sounds from the television. My sight remained, but the fever has left me with a haziness to everything I tried to look at. 

In the evening’s darkness, the only source of light came from the glow from the television. A glow that now seemed a spotlight blasting its brilliant illumination into my eyes. I wanted to blink against the light but was unable. 

Jenny entered through the front door with her loving smile and desire to be with me in our home. “Hey Baby,” she lovingly called out as she dropped her car keys onto the low table next to the front door. She spun and rushed to my side, “How was your day?” 

I tried to hold her, but could not move. I tried to tell her I loved her and about my grandmothers visit, but could not speak. I couldn’t do anything at all. I screamed for Jenny to help, but no words left my mouth.

Jenny paused, “Jeremy?” She sat up and turned on the old lamp next to the sofa. She covered her mouth and step away from me. I asked, What’s Wrong? But again, no words just me alone with thoughts. She cried out, “Oh GOD No!”

Time passed in a flurry of colors and motions around me. A constant blur of people arrived and left as time pressed on. Jenny watched as each tried in their own way to revive me, but none succeeded in their efforts. 

Amidst the cacophony of colorful people entered my grandmother she made her way to my side, “Jeremy… I know you can hear me.” She reached down and took my hand and helped me to my feet. She hugged me and together we looked back down at the husk that remained on the sofa. 

“What will happen to Jenny?” I asked. “She will recover and move on just as you now have too,” grandmas words carried the weight of truth. “I refuse to let you pass alone as I did in the nursing home,” she continued. 

“Can’t I stay with her?” I begged. “Sure, but when we don’t let go. We cause them greater heartache as we remain in their thoughts and emotions,” she spoke from a place of love and I knew it. “I would haunt her…” I lowered my head, “she does not deserve that.”

Grandma opened the front door and a brilliant light flooded into the room. I pulled away in fear, but she took my hand and together we entered the eternal. 

Helen began to cough and gag. “Are you okay?” Jenny rushed to her aide. Helen nodded an affirmative, yes. “He has left. I hope you got what you needed?” Helen asked Jenny as she sat down on her chair. 

Jenny wiped the tears and running mascara from her cheeks, “Yes, thank you.” Helen hugged her, “are you sure?” Jenny nodded, yes, “he wanted me to move on and find the happiness he felt I deserved.