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Optics (standard:mystery, 5611 words) | |||
Author: Das Tier | Added: Aug 09 2001 | Views/Reads: 3411/2341 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
A hired hitman with his arsenal of weapons and visual devices is confronted by his victim, who seems to know more about spotting targets. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story gone and he will be a black motionless bulk on the floor. A good and sound plan. The gallery made a sharp turn, and suddenly instead of the wide passage we seemed to be walking straight into a glass wall. My step halted, when suddenly I caught his reflection on the glass -- no doubt like he caught mine. He couldn't know who I was, couldn't know my face among dozens that were walking beside me, and still for a long moment his eyes were on me. He saw. And he noticed. It was time to act, before his subconsciousness delivers its subliminal warning and he starts to fret. I hurried to overtake him, manoeuvring between lazy walkers and earning an angry glance or two as I shoved some of them out of my way. His back was only a few steps away -- so vulnerable, so open. My finger found its place on the trigger. Soon I knew he was cornered -- the passage was a dead end, opening into a plaza-like circle of shops with only one way out. And you could bet I was in that way -- armed and deadly, as usual. He quickened his pace, aiming to dive into one of the shops, but I kept close behind, getting ready... and suddenly I was blind. The spotlight in the middle of the circle beamed into life with the merry chiming and jingling of bells, flooding the fountain with glow and lighting up a myriad of flecks on everything that could reflect its rays. Glass windows, that only seconds ago revealed the shop interiors, thickened into shields of quicksilver, the smooth amalgam that immediately turned the circle into a maze of directions that didn't lead anywhere. Blinking, I rushed forth, and dozens of glassy Gallos dashed along, scurrying about madly in the exact mirror of my confusion. Shielding my eyes from the fierce beam of the spotlight, I looked around, and ranks of my mirror doubles mimicked the move, as if suddenly I got a hundred heads looking in all directions at once. But even that would be of little help, because my target was nowhere to be found. He had disappeared, as if dissolving in this reflected transparency. _________________________ "What? Are you saying you missed him? You couldn't do so simple a task as to walk behind a man and get a bullet in his back?" "Blah-blah-blah. You weren't there. You ever been to a funhouse?" "You're saying you've been confused by noisemakers and eerie lightning? No, man, this won't be getting you anywhere. A job is a job, and you must do it even when the world crumbles around you." The pathetic voice was my pal and colleague, John Boom-Boom Monroe. He sat in a chair opposite me, his friend Boom-Boom S&W on his lap. No matter how I loathed the idea of admitting defeat, I had to ask him for help -- I had a strict schedule, and this task was quickly running out of control. "You know where he lives? Good, then we'll catch him unawares in his lair." Two barrels against empty hands, the man didn't stand a chance. We'll mesh him when he gets homey under his own vine and fig trees. "What's the deal, anyway? Anything urgent?" Arriving at the place, Monroe quickly scanned the area, and, having spotted no unwelcome witnesses, ushered me into the target's residence. I looked around. It was a standard, ordinary- looking two-room apartment. The scarce furnishing indicated its owner was used to spending most of his day in other places. Besides the few living essentials, the space accommodated an assortment of instruments and gadgets that betrayed the tenant's scientific devotion. Curious and puzzled, I gazed at various lenses, crystals and spheres arranged into an impressive collection of eye- cheats. "He's got an appointment for tomorrow. The bastard's selling the company's secrets to a foreign intelligence rat. I have to intercept him before midday." "Doesn't sound too difficult. Any special notes?" There was one thing, nothing really important, but it troubled me, like every thing that I can't understand does. "Just one: I must try to kill him indoors." Monroe shrugged philosophically. "Everybody's got his quirks, and you are paid for fulfilling them. We'll take it into consideration, but if it becomes a question of "do or fail", I'd prefer to do it regardless of any special requests." I nodded. He did a quick search of the apartment, making sure there was no back-door for the man to sneak through, while I looked out of the window, trying to find a lurking place across the street that would render the best view of the flat. I noticed a good one soon, and turned to look how Monroe was doing. Right in front of me was a huge, almost man-sized mirror. "Hard to miss, eh?" Monroe re-appeared from the bedroom and nodded at the looking glass. "The man's got to be an exhibitionist. He's got mirrors in every room. I never want to see a bigger part of me than the one I'm shaving every morning." He's a no-nonsense pragmatic, that John Boom-Boom Monroe guy. And I again felt glad I asked him to assist me in that business before my target gets a chance to demonstrate any of his optical F/X skills. ________________________ We were lying in wait. I had approximately 17 hours to remove my target -- more than enough with the two of us setting about it. Mr. Taut would have more chances to survive against a troop of commando than against the Gallo-Monroe tandem. The barrels of our guns, like teacher's pointers, aimed at the apartment's door. We breathed evenly, each with his eye glued to the oculars of our scopes. At 7.14 pm, Taut cracked the door open. His hand was feeble, his foot froze doubtful on the threshold. And still he entered, locking the door behind him, his ears pricked up. I heard Monroe cock the trigger of his Boom-Boom. "You can run, but you can't hide. Bingo, man." Our target seemed to hear that. He rushed to the window, drawing the curtains tight, and I caught his reflection in the mirror opposite it. Curtains or no curtains, the red dot of my laser was on his chest. A deadly mark of the sentence of death. "Come on, Phil, do it. After all, it's your mission." I started to count my heartbeats. I always wait for seven heartbeats before I shoot. Must be enough to make your last wish. "Damn! What is he doing?" Monroe was watching Taut with the infrared binoculars, and the red contour of his circulating blood would betray the location of our target wherever he went. For now he was floundering around the room, a fussy mockery of escape. "I can't cover him when he's jumping like a March hare!" I felt my eye, the one peering into the scope, watering, while the other was suddenly dry under the closed eyelid. "Wait... Wait... Now!" The jumping shadow in the room stopped short right behind the window, the curtains trembled and were flung open, and my finger pulled the trigger, as if set into motion by the same hand, the same will, oh the joy of pure reflex... "Where is he?" I lowered my gun, then raised it again to look into the scope. The room, naked behind the open curtains, was empty. The red laser dot reflected in the mirror and pointed back at me, denouncing my crime. "Perhaps he's on the floor?" I was already heading for the exit on my way to search the body for the stolen diskette. He was supposed to be lying right across the room. The window glass was still intact, held by the transparent adhesive tape we had stuck on it beforehand; the silencer had made the job soundless. The peace was unperturbed, and nothing stirred in the house. Nothing stirred in the room, but not because its tenant was dead. Dead or alive, he simply wasn't there to stir. "He's gone!" I didn't listen. Curious, I stepped up to the mirror -- it was positioned at an angle, reflecting both the street and... I went to the bedroom, its mirror was tilted likewise, at the same time catching the picture from the previous one and reflecting the far end of the street. I looked into it. Through the cobweb of scrapes and scratches, through the coat of dust, I saw the street and the black human silhouette running along it. _______________ Monroe was behind the wheel, me on the passenger seat. The supposed meeting with Taut's buyer of information was an hour away, and we were to use it for our advantage to be the first to arrive at the place. The night hours were lost, since our upstarted game could have gone anywhere in the city. We couldn't guess where he had spent his night, but we knew where he would show up in the morning. "Mirrors! Glass!" Monroe hit the wheel with an angry fist. "Look, even if you're right, one couldn't get out through the mirror -- it's not transparent. It's got thick amalgam at the back. His logic must be working against him!" "Perhaps so, but the amalgam was scratched." We were tossing these eerie remarks with a sceptical sneer in one corner of the mouth and a painful confusion in the other. "Whatever tricks he has, just remember, this Copperfield is made of flesh and blood. It's only a middle-aged academic highbrow who believes he has enough brains to outsmart his employer. He's not accustomed to be hunted, I bet he's already getting paranoid after a sleepless night. He's moving fast, but he hasn't the nerve to go on for long." I wished I could believe my own convinced voice, but every time I closed my eyes, I could see Taut, the lean, tallish man with a pair of spectacles on his nose, look down on the red dot on his chest, and then turn, nonchalantly exposing his back, turn to the mirror... and disappear. They were meeting in a bistro near a business centre downtown. I admired the clever choice of their rendezvous place: with lots of people around, it would give us a hell of trouble to come close enough and then get away unnoticed. Trusting my luck, I was hoping for the best, and the worst development would be to follow Taut to a less crowded spot after the deal, while Monroe would take care of the buyer. Either way, the day seemed to be labelled 'now or never'. Safe behind the incognito of the sunglasses, I surveyed the area and the crowds swarming under the warm spring sun. Looking at the watch, I realised it was almost noon, but I could see that by the sun standing as if right in the middle of the pale blue sky and the short, almost absent shades of things and people around me. It was lunchtime, and people streamed into several cafes, waving to the waiters and scrambling for chairs. Monroe and me kept the place under cross-observation, sifting out faces. We didn't know the buyer. It could be anyone in several dozens of Cola- drinking, hamburger-chewing diners, and they remained for us an anonymous crowd until the sign of Taut's presence would mark the right table. After ten minutes I spotted him. His gait seemed measured, but I could see a good deal of self- control behind this casual facade. His clothes looked disarrayed, and his spectacled eyes seemed to scan the place with X-ray penetration as he made his way towards a table in the rear end of the cafe. I signalled to Monroe to be on guard. A noisy family of five at the adjacent table made it clear we would have to stick to Plan B. I froze by the exit, while Monroe hid in the restroom in case our target should want the privacy of the WC. Time ticked away. At one moment, Taut, taking a stealthy glance around, shoved something across the table under the cover of an innocently white napkin. The other man capped the gift with his palm, and before I could notice the details, the black diskette disappeared in his pocket, and the napkin wiped away a drop of ketchup. For an unsuspecting eye his thankyou nod seemed to refer to this gesture of table etiquette, but I knew better. The man has just decided his fate. They rose to leave half an hour later, after Taut had stilled his hunger with a big sandwich and washed it down with two cups of coffee. The other man waited patiently, his knee against a small black suitcase under the table. When he stood up, his foot toed the suitcase towards my target. Taut's pay-packet has arrived. I dialled Monroe's mobile, and saw him emerge from the restroom. He marched across the room and drifted out in the wake of the buyer. I pretended to study a salad leaf on my sandwich and let my assignment near the exit before I followed. All was going smooth, and then that family with three kids decided to join us, the boys with three playful jumps blocking the door between Taut and myself. Their mother hurried to apply her pizza-enhanced authority, but three young spirits seemed too much to handle at once. I waited, helplessly watching Taut's back as he walked down the passage outside the building. I still could see him, and besides, Monroe was still out there, so I didn't worry at first. The door jam dissolved right in time, and I covered the distance in wide strides to see my target leave the building and appear on the large sun-lit square in front of it. He turned to look back, his awkward tall figure casting a long black shadow. 'Try to kill him indoors.' What the heck! Inside or outside, dead is dead. Somebody bumped into me, I mumbled a hurried sorry and manoeuvred outdoors. For a moment I panicked, blinking at the empty square ahead, but soon noticed the familiar tall black figure about to disappear behind the corner. He was moving fast, his now uncontrolled nervousness making his silhouette a flickering shadow. His contour was a clear black outline against the white wall, he seemed almost unreal in this exposure that was both careless and dangerously inviting. As if luring the possible pursuer to follow. And I bit the bait. He made a sidetracking turn into a by-street, and I followed several spaces behind. We were like a badger dog with a long invisible body between its two pairs of legs, one of which have already walked behind the corner, and the other are only coming to it. And just like with the real dog's limbs, one of us was bound to follow where the other goes. The lane was empty, and I couldn't risk waiting for a better opportunity. I did what I had been hired to do. Looking at the body in front of me lying face down, I heard the buzz of my phone. "Phil? Where are you?" Monroe's agitated voice hissed through the membrane. "I got the buyer, and..." "And I got our elusive friend." I came up to the body, registering all small details. The man seemed thin, almost exhausted, and his black suit did nothing to solidify his build. "You got him? And who the hell is the man that I just had here breathing into the muzzle of my Boom-Boom?" ___________________ "They wanted to keep their information secret? That's why I decided the buyer was the priority target with the diskette as hard proof." He was right. Taking care of one of the two was risky enough, and Monroe couldn't afford a blitz shooting session in the downtown centre in open daylight, trying to cover the other one. "Look, now without the software and documentation, he's got only his head to sell. And it will take him time to find a new buyer." I nodded. I checked the case of my rifle and pocketed an extra Browning. "Your outfit suggests you're embarking on a field operation," my friend remarked cautiously. I gave a sinister hum of agreement. Bruno Taut had really got me on the raw. In all those years my profession had made me trust my eyes. My eyesight was the key tool in my business, to which all other instruments and weapons were only accessories of application. If I can't rely on what I see, my reputation isn't worth a tinker's damn. In that lane, I was sure as sure can be that the man I had been following was the one, and a dozen yards' distance between us couldn't have deceived my eyes enough to misguide me after a wrong semblance. He looked a perfect double of Taut, at least from the back... Kill him indoors. Where there is no sun and where his long lean figure wouldn't hover like a sundial pole, casting a clear black contour that flickered and moved as if it were alive. "You were right to say it's my mission. I will track him down. It's my work, and he has only his nerves to keep him running." "And a sum with six zeroes to keep him company. It's really not that little to have." All true, but I can't admit defeat. If I do, if I fail to reach him in this duel of theoretical science against practical skill, my world will turn upside down. I've always been on the right end of the spyglass, and he's trying to turn it in my hands and look at me through the other end, where I will be a helplessly-- and harmlessly-- diminished cardboard toy. Driven by a sudden inspiration, I checked the timetables of all transports available to a hasty traveller. He knows he will be hunted after in this city, and with the money in his hands and the connection to his first bidder gone, nothing should stop him from leaving immediately. A pilgrim on a voyage for fame and glory. A late night train was the soonest to depart. I rushed to the railway station in the descending dusk and lazy spring drizzle. 'If you don't call me when you arrive next morning, I'll board the next plane and go to save your ass.' I knew the value of Monroe's promises, which was why I asked for a round- trip ticket. But I wasn't sure if I was just following his half-serious advice or tried in earnest to secure my own confidence. A pretence at a certainty which I sure didn't have. At the platform, I looked around. It's been a while since I just looked at what surrounded me, simply seeing things without making them mean something bigger than what I immediately perceived. I smiled looking at this full railway traveller kit, complete with porters, timetables, refreshments, newspapers and parting kisses. Here I trusted my eyes. I kept out of the way when the first few passengers got into the cars, when the few people became a steady stream, alarmed by the starting signal. The time on my watch and on the departure indicator had almost coincided when I spotted the familiar tall figure. He was among the last to get inside, and I jumped into the next carriage when the doors began to shut and the train started to pull off. It was late night, and I was right to guess most passengers would doze off, lulled by the subtle rattle of wheels and wet splashing of raindrops on the windows. I got comfortable in my seat and estimated the situation. I tried to be objective, but in this case it depended on the conditions of the objective at hand. Surprising, but this time I seemed to have fulfilled all conditions. Indoors. No sun. No mirrors but the small one above the seat, and almost no glass but the one in the window, opening into a dim landscape streaming past at express speed. This time we're going non-stop, mister. The window was turning from black to grey when I stood up and went down the corridor, pushed the sliding connecting door and crossed the shaky border between two carriages. This car was half-empty, and the open doors to unoccupied compartments made my elimination task a lot easier. He was alone, sitting by the window. The suitcase rested opposite him, and they both looked like faded daguerreo-type pictures against the window framing a pale rainy morning. I stepped inside, my feet were noiseless on the floor. He didn't move. "Bruno Taut?" He turned. His hands fumbled something, a small rectangular object that he balanced between the tips of his long careful fingers. "You're glad you found me?" He shrugged. "I guess that's what the hunter feels. Skilled harriers on a hunting ground. A business or a hobby?" "The first." I paused, then added, considering what I had experienced during my career: "For me." "It shouldn't be a matter of choice. You won't get anything when you're constantly sacrificing one for the sake of the other." I nodded at the cash suitcase. "And you're the ideal with your hobby that pays off very well?" Taut put away the thing he was holding and took off his spectacles. His short-sighted eyes drifted over me, while he wiped the lenses carefully. Then he moved the metal-rimmed glasses to me. "Isn't it great when you turn your drawbacks so that you can score an advantage? For years I've been wiping these pieces of glass, and every time it means a risk of getting into a world of indiscernible greyness. There are only grey spots crawling around. Sometimes I think if together with the dust on my lens I'm wiping away all things around me, as if they are a crust on the spectacles that mask my blindness. But without that risk, I would never know what a difference there is between looking and seeing." He peered at me through narrowed eyelids as if there were a mile between us, and not a short aisle between the rows of seats. Imagine you are looking through a spyglass... I knew what he was talking about, with my eyes accustomed to focus through the scope that seemed to focus my thoughts as well, limiting out everything that wasn't related to that only highlight at the other end of the tube. "How? All I want to know is how. How did you manage to escape in all those times?" The glasses saddled Taut's nose again, and his mope-eyed sight concentrated into keen shrewdness. "You came to kill me or to ask questions? It was all on that diskette -- surely you got it. After you killed my partner. You kill everybody, right?" "No." I was getting angry at him -- for being able to remain so calm, at myself -- for finding so much in common between the two of us. He just puzzles me, I kept telling myself. I had to foresee the state when my subconscious thoughts would burst in my mind, oozing through the gaps made by surprises and astonishment of the previous days. "But I'm thankful you're letting me talk about it -- to explain what it means to me. For others it was just an invention, an applicable piece of dry knowledge. But you know what can happen if you start to live by it." Suddenly he smiled, a kind of a shy smile that crept over his face to disappear into the nowhere it had come from. "But I hope you won't be using my theories in your practice?" I nodded, controlling an ironic sneer. He seemed to believe it enough to continue. "Most people see often with their mind and not with their eyes. Instead of colourful things they get ideas of things, they recognize the names and the shapes as they should be. Not as they are. You see a tall cube stretching high with glass-filled holes in its sides, and immediately you guess it's a house. A house! An animal! A man! A complex idea, a combination of qualities and traits. Whether it's stable or moving, your first recognition holds, you say, "it's a house/animal/man" before the retina of your eye will have a chance to prove otherwise. With words labelling the familiar shapes, you're as far from reality as you can ever get, and so little you know of real images and vision that you can claim 'this is beautiful' or' this is true' relying on just what you see." I frowned, confusion against scepticism. "Are you saying I saw you because I believed I should be seeing you?" "You're simplifying. But for most occasions, this is true." "But what about mirrors?" I remembered the trick in his apartment that had allowed him to escape... to evaporate instantly. "Ah... Mirrors!" Another slight, wry smile. His hand moved, and I tensed, but quickly relaxed realising he couldn't have any weapon near him but in the suitcase that was on my side of the aisle under my elbow. Instead he took the thing that he had been holding when I came in. It happened to be a mirror, small and narrow. To my surprise, he turned his back to the window and adjusted the mirror so that he could see in its reflection the landscape outside. "Mirrors. Colours. Light. The things we can't touch. We have the surface that reflects, but we can't hold the reflection. In the XVIIIth century, Isaac Newton said God was Light. They were so crazy about light and optics that now we call that century 'siecle de Lumieres'. This," he winked at the mirror in his hand, "was also an invention of that time. People believed a properly cultured eye shouldn't be offended by the crude swift changing of things around when you are moving fast. That's why travellers enjoyed views not directly but through the mirrors with a slightly darkened, brown amalgam. They believed it turns the messy wilderness into a neat painting." He stretched out his hand. "Care to try?" I hesitated. It all seemed... childish. And still, some inner voice whispered persistently that I shouldn't linger, that I should do what I had been hired to do, and not waste time chatting about history... I took the mirror and turned it the way my target instructed me. Instead of fresh greenery of spring, I stared at a combination of different shades of faded brown. Indeed, this way the speed didn't seem to affect the view, and I could see every detail as if fleshed out by a meticulous brush, fascinating in its unifying control over spontaneous outlines. "I didn't ask you name?" I glanced at Taut, but didn't take my eyes off the view in the mirror. "Phil Gallo. You're the first who asked." "You mean your clients?" I heard him sigh, a small suppressed sigh (fear? regret?), and felt his hand pull the mirror from my grip, claiming it back. Reluctantly I let it go, and the last thing I saw in it was my own puzzled and wistful reflection captured in brown colours, like a portrait in a frame darkened with age. I started, as if waking up from a daydream, and reached for my gun. "Sorry, Taut. It's my business." "Sure." He remained seated, the mirror balancing in his hands. The train rattled on, swaying and jumping slightly over rail joints. "Nothing personal." "Nothing personal." I raised my gun. He blinked at me behind his glasses. His fingers released the mirror, and it dropped on the floor, and hit the metal, and shattered. _______________ "...We're questioning all the passengers. So, you say your friend got on that train, but you think he wasn't on it when it arrived? His name? Phil Gallo? Ok, I got the photo. We're searching. Yes, mister, I said: we're searching." "...No, me and my wife didn't notice anything. No, we didn't see this man." "...It was late night, and I fell asleep at once. No, I'm afraid I can't help you, sergeant." Bruno Taut sat among several dozens of passengers awaiting police interrogation. He was the next but one in line. His suitcase was by his knee, like a faithful dog. "No, nothing out of hand. Oh, one thing, sergeant: when I was checking the compartments for the left luggage, I saw somebody had broken a mirror. Brings you seven years of bad luck, you know... eh... sorry, sergeant." He watched the woman from the staff leave, and then it was his turn. He looked at the photo and shook his head. "Who? Gallo? Never heard that name." THE END 5,609 words Tweet
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