Read Cross Country Murder Song Online

Authors: Philip Wilding

Cross Country Murder Song (19 page)

BOOK: Cross Country Murder Song
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From the playground it sounded as though a race had started on the highway. The boy stepped down from the tyre; it twirled slowly as he walked towards the road kicking a pebble before him. He came up past the restaurant, inside he could just make out the shape of his parents, his father hidden behind his newspaper, his mother's hand on the teaspoon in her cup; she was looking out of the window as if the noise had caught her attention too. He picked at the sesame seed between his teeth and looked out at the two cars, one red, one black, racing side by side down the highway. His mother saw them too and pulled gently at his father's newspaper.
Where's Alex? she asked.
Out the back, swinging on a tyre, said his father, he's playing, he's okay. His eyes hadn't left the page, he was holding on to a sentence, eager not to lose his place.
Back behind the wheel, the driver pulled away and began to breathe deeply like his therapist had shown him. He felt the air expanding in his chest as it came through the open window and his heart began to settle, he brushed the paint from his arms and then was suddenly thrown sideways as the car that had pulled up next to him, clipped his wing, paint cracked, the violent collision tearing his rearview mirror off. It spun into the air, the chrome catching the light and disappearing over his head. The driver of the Chrysler was a few feet away from him, screaming at him. The car came in close again and he steeled himself for the impact, his hands gripping the wheel.
His father was reading the paper, his mother standing in the playground at the rear of the restaurant gently pushing the empty tyre, calling his name. It was hot, she could feel the dust in her throat, she called out again. Then something happened behind her, a sound came from the road, something out of sight but forever in view.
He felt the car sliding out from under him, drifting almost peacefully to one side, the tarmac beneath him turned to sand and loose stones, the driver who had shunted him leant on his horn and sped away. He saw the diner rise up quickly before him and then a small blonde figure appeared and then was snatched away, folding in on itself and then gone.
The boy rolled in time with the wheels, spinning briefly in synchronicity and then bumped beneath the speeding car's body and was finally thrown out wildly like branches from a thresher, his body skipping along the surface of the highway, his T-shirt torn from him, one arm across his face as if shading his eyes from the sun. He slid to a halt in the sandy dirt at the side of the road, his small, broken frame raising a cloud of dust.
The driver felt something rattling beneath his feet and then just the rhythmic roll of the highway again as he regained control of the car and slowed as people rushed from the diner. Commotion, he muttered and pressed down hard on the accelerator, rushing towards the burning sun that waited for him beyond the ribbon of road he was on.
It was dusk by the time they got home; he wiped the crumbs from his shirt as they exited their car. Good lunch, he said, tugging at his ever-tightening waistband. They stood at the top of the stairs and looked in at their son's room, he walked in and sat on the bed and felt the hot flush of tears on his face. He held the pillow up to his face and imagined his son's scent there. He lay there with the pillow pulled up against him and remembered the mornings when he came in here and gently roused his son from his sleep, leaning down to kiss the straw-coloured crown of his head.
The sound of the shower came into life across the hallway. He stood up and crossed the room, placing the pillow back on the bed. He looked back at his son's room and quietly closed the door. He walked into the bathroom, admiring his wife's form wreathed in steam in the shower. The scars ran along her back and at her sides as if she'd been clawed by a wild animal. She sensed him there and turned to smile at him, her hair slick and brushed back from her face. He took off his shirt, the scars along his paunchy torso mirroring hers. He undressed and stood under the hot water next to her, both of them turning red, two mute embers standing side by side.
He sat in the living room in his robe, flicking listlessly between television channels. His wife came in, a towel wrapped around her; on one side, stark against the white cotton, was a small red bloom, she held something gently in her palm.
You should eat, she said, arm extended towards him.
He took the sliver of bloody flesh from her and placed it on his tongue and then quickly swallowed it. He undid his robe and took the knife from the table next to him and grabbed at the loose skin of his stomach.
Stop, she said, and he looked up at her, surprised.
She leant forward with the corner of the towel and dabbed at the blood around his lips. You made a mess, she said and then tightened the towel around her and waited for him to finish.
Chorus
The driver sat heavily down on the floor with a sigh. Despite the desert heat he pulled his shirt off and started wiping away the blood from the front of his Lexus. The grille was sticky with it and the headlight was red like a stop sign. He sat in the shade cast by his car and rested his head back against the door. He was parked up on a side road away from the highway, though he could hear it calling him over the low, dusty hills. He knew he'd have to ditch the car, but he was out here alone and he needed to keep moving, he was sure the police would want to talk to him about the boxes he'd left behind in Jersey and he'd hit something on the highway and he hadn't stopped. He still hoped his father would reappear in the car's passenger seat and help him to understand what was fact and what was fiction. He was still covered in flakes of dry paint and the Chrysler logo sat in the sand next to him. He picked it up and twirled it between his fingers in order to watch it catch the light and then he stood up walked back beyond the car towards the brow of the nearest hill and threw it as far as he could into the scrub.
When he turned to walk back, there was a police car parked next to his. It sat strangely mute, its lights pulsing in slowly drifting red circles. He was still holding the bloody shirt in his hand and he tightened his fingers around it to conceal the stains. The patrolman was squatting down examining the car's grille; he stood and turned as the driver came down the slope towards him.
You'll burn, said the patrolman, indicating the shirt in the driver's hand. He was standing very straight with one hand placed on his gun holster. He hadn't popped the button that opened it, but the driver knew it was only a matter of time.
Where you headed? asked the patrolman.
The coast, he said.
Family? asked the patrolman.
My father's out there, said the driver and for a moment he believed it himself. That he'd get out to the water and his father would be standing there on a white sand beach in shorts and a polo shirt waving him home as the sun was setting.
What brings you out here? Why'd you stop? said the patrolman, who was examining the dent in the bumper of the Lexus.
Got tired, he said. I just pulled off the road to sleep, I've been on the road for days. He indicated the generous back seat as if he'd only just woken there moments before.
What were you doing up there? said the patrolman and looked over at the slope that the driver had just descended.
Call of nature, smiled the driver. No law against it, right?
Not out here, I guess, said the patrolman. Got your paperwork? he said, his tone suddenly businesslike and brusque. The driver reached into the car and rooted around in his glove compartment while the Lexus pinged its annoyance at the open door. The patrolman stood very close to him, just beyond his shoulder. He turned around with his licence and registration in his hand and noticed the patrolman's holster was open. The patrolman took the papers from him and walked towards his car. Then he stopped and turned and looked at the driver and then down at the shirt clenched in his fist.
Why don't you put that on? said the patrolman. You'll be all blisters by tomorrow otherwise.
I'm good, said the driver, his free hand shading his eyes. I could do with some colour.
The patrolman was impassive behind his sunglasses, their dark green tint hiding his eyes.
Put it on, said the patrolman and he reached for his holster. The driver ran forward and threw the shirt into the patrolman's face, reaching for the knife in his back pocket as he lunged. The patrolman swept the shirt aside with a gasp, taking a step back as he did so; his hand was on his holster when the driver plunged the blade down into his fingers, catching the bone of his knuckle. The patrolman screamed and tried to step back, but the driver held him with his free hand and drew him closer as they fell backwards, driving his head into his face. They bounced off the bonnet of the patrol car and fell apart, the driver scrambling to his feet first, knife to hand, kicking his boot heel at the patrolman's wounded hand, causing the patrolman to reach across with his free hand to protect it and as he did so the driver forced the blade into the side of his neck. It went up to the hilt and he stepped back as the patrolman reached for the handle, his feet shuffling in the sand. He gasped again and blood gathered at his lips, then he shuddered as if he'd felt a sudden chill and was still. The driver pulled the knife from his neck and pulled the body up and over his shoulder. The blood from the wound ran down his bare back and into the waistband of his jeans. He removed the patrolman's shirt even though it had blood smeared over the shoulder and his gun and manoeuvred the body into the Lexus' trunk and then leant against the back of his car and lit a cigarette. His breath was coming in short, hard spurts and he felt sticky and his shoulders burnt. He drove the Lexus up over the hill where he'd tossed the Chrysler logo, parked it out of sight and walked back to the patrol car. The radio was chattering with life so he turned it off and sat down in the driver's seat. He found the keys still in the ignition, grabbed them and went to the trunk. It sprang open to reveal a high powered rifle and a clip of bullets, what looked like black army fatigues, two bottles of water and a nightstick. He bounced the latter against the ground and grinned as the telescopic arm shot out. Ha! He shouted, striking the sand repeatedly. Ha! Then he took the bloody shirt he'd been wearing, siphoned some gas from his own tank, soaked the top and walked back towards his car. He laid it on the back seat of the Lexus and built a small impromptu fire out of old unpaid parking tickets and scraps of paper next to the armrest. He threw his licence on top, knowing that he wouldn't need it again now. He lit the paper and whispered and blew onto the shirt, encouraging it to take as it smouldered indecisively. By the time he walked away from the car, black smoke was filling the back seat and he could smell the leather seats starting to burn. He hoped it would explode in a plume of smoke and flames before he'd driven too far away so that he could enjoy the show. He pushed the patrolman's shades on to his nose and pulled on his bloodied shirt. It was too big for his slight frame, but he tucked it in as tightly as it would go, sniffing at the blood on the shoulder as he made his way towards the patrol car.
He pulled back onto the highway and started to enjoy the impact he made; how oncoming cars slowed when they saw him approaching. He hit his lights a few times and drove past laughing when cars pulled over to stop. He made threatening gestures to a few drivers, wagging his finger sternly and enjoying the perplexed look on their faces. He hit his sirens briefly too and watched startled figures in front of him jump in their seats. They'd drift to the far lane and he'd gun his engine and sail past. He tried the lights and the siren and floored the accelerator as if chasing an adversary, watching happily as the traffic before him opened up like a theatre curtain. When he'd had enough of the game, he pulled off the highway and headed to the baked-looking hills that overlooked the road. He parked up the car and examined the patrolman's rifle. He had his revolver strapped to his hip, but he guessed the rifle was anything but regulation issue. It was a high-powered hunting rifle with a telescopic sight, the kind he remembered from watching the high-flyers hunt when he worked his summers in the Canadian resort.
Weekend Warrior cop, he muttered to himself. He found a vantage point to rest the barrel of the rifle on and lay down to survey the valley below through the powerful sight. It was quiet and he traced the silent cars below with the gun and imagined picking off the people below and watching the cars racing wildly out of control and into the steel barriers and concrete walls. It always amazed him, the carnage one bullet could bring. Then he saw a black Lexus racing through the traffic, its windows tinted, and he wondered briefly if someone had got to his car, smothered the flames and driven it away. He felt a stab of anger that someone might have stolen his car and his finger tightened on the trigger, and then he saw the patrol cars racing in its wake. The traffic up ahead was being pulled over and then the Lexus swerved wildly to one side, left the ground briefly – he saw sunlight and shadow on the road beneath its wheels – and hit the far wall, its wing crumpling on impact, it spun once and then stopped. The police appeared suddenly and yanked a man from the Lexus and threw him to the floor. He thrashed around as they tried to handcuff him, he was screaming something and one of the cops hit him with an open hand that flattened him back onto the tarmac. It was then that the driver realised that they thought it was him that they'd apprehended down on the highway. He looked at the black Lexus and back at the slowly inching traffic and then he started shooting.
Song 10: Bride
Her name was Sylvia and she twinkled back at him from her online picture. He read her profile, taking in every detail; she was born in Verkhoturye (when he tried to pronounce it out loud he couldn't help but add three or four extra consonants – it sounded like he was taking a long and complicated sneeze). The Russian Brides site said she was twenty-four, though he guessed she might be closer to thirty given the lines around her eyes and smile. She was a Pisces; he didn't know what that meant, but his dead wife had been a Pisces so he took that as a positive sign, some sort of approving nod from beyond the grave. She liked to travel and she liked herring. He had never eaten any and so bought some the first chance he got, tightly coiled in a jar, rolling around in a yellow mayonnaise sauce. He picked it gingerly out of its glass container and marvelled at its yielding, soft flesh. It was oily and raw-tasting, he briefly imagined it being yanked from the sea and held aloft, its flapping body slowing to meet its fate. He wrinkled his nose at the smell and its salty flesh, but ate it determinedly with his eyes closed as if that might ward off the taste and smell. The next time he wrote to her he made sure that he let her know that he liked herring too. At night, he'd trace her background and history over the internet; her town, the oldest in the South Ural region (when he said it he made it rhyme confidently with plural) had been cut off from the West for years, a shady military complex with huge mineralogical deposits, it had been an area for weaponry development and, he surmised from his research, a tough place to bring up children. Even the nearby monastery was inexplicably and heavily fortified while one of the biggest tourist attractions was a Museum of Nuclear Weapons. There was also a place where you could discover how the Russians developed the machinery for chemical warfare during the Cold War. He imagined Sylvia as a strident fiery bloom growing among the weeds of her empire's past. Before Russian Brides he'd written to women in a prison in Indiana, his friend had suggested it, and once he'd got past the names they'd adopted for their online profiles; Priestess, Black Widow, The Kat – he felt like he were writing to a biker gang – he began to enjoy their correspondence. Sometimes, the letters would be censored by black marker pen and he was dismayed when he found that Priestess, real name Penny (grand larceny, attempted manslaughter, affray), had added five years to her sentence when she'd attacked a prison guard in the laundry room with a sharpened clothes peg. He couldn't believe it, and fretted nervously the first time they'd talked on the phone (she was allowed one call a week as part of her privileges) as she told him that she'd kill for him if he'd wait for her. He sat mutely at home, the shadows lengthening across his living room and marvelled at the clanging of steel gates and the clamour of voices in the background that sometimes threatened to swamp her words. He'd thought of travelling to the heart of Indiana to the penitentiary set in its own acres of dry grassland, surrounded by floodlights and observation towers with their armed guards (he'd seen it online). To walk through the shuddering iron gates, each one closing noisily behind him, and into a room partitioned by a glass wall and small booths, set with their own red phones. He imagined his palm pressed against the glass, mirroring Priestess' actions across from him, both setting their phones forlornly down as the guard called time on the visiting session. Later he realised that all the images he'd imagined were drawn from films and TV dramas he'd seen, he had no idea of what the real interior of a prison might look like. He finally let those letters quietly drop but still panicked when an official-looking letter with the prison service crest came through the door. He imagined looking up and seeing the Black Widow standing in his garden, waving before breaking her way in to exact revenge for all the letters he'd promised but never sent. He was ashamed to admit he felt a thrill at the thought.
BOOK: Cross Country Murder Song
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