Read The Bannerman Effect (The Bannerman Series) Online
Authors: John R. Maxim
I'm stupid, right? I’ blind, too. You want to play? We'll
play.
He raised the machine pistol. He waggled it, letting them see that it was now aimed at the back of Billy McHugh's head. His left hand, with the broken thumb, had made a fist over Billy's belt.
The guards froze.
Thirty yards to the table. This was beautiful, he thought. No one there had even looked up.
“You see that, shit face?” He leaned toward Billy's ear. The one he would soon blow off. And then the arm. Off at the shoulder. If he had time, he'd make him eat it. “They're not going to shoot. You know why? You're their fucking hero, aren't you. They don't want to hit their king shit hero.”
Billy said nothing. Tucker shoved him forward.
He could not look at the table. Had to watch the guards. One was Kurt Weiss. Little prick. Last night he just stood there. Enjoying himself. And the one near him, the Jew girl who cleaned up the blood. Probably the one who threw the towel at him.
Twenty yards.
He'd get them too. But first Grassi and the chopper. Then make a fast pass. They'd still be running around. Chinese fire drill. Still afraid to shoot. He'd empty a clip into them.
Shit.
Weiss's gun was out. In both hands. The Jew girl too.
Tucker crouched and fired.
Janet stood, taking in the scene. She lowered the steel needle to her side.
Janet slipped out of her shoes, leaving them on the bedroom rug where they would not be stained. She stepped closer to the Englishman, assessing the damage that had been done. He was in shock, bleeding to death, but slowly. Blood oozed between his thighs. It dripped from both hands, each deeply slashed, now useless to him. As were his legs. She saw deep cuts, low on each calf, just above the ankle. The calves were flaccid, their musculature gone. Carla had sliced through both Achilles tendons, taking care, it seemed to Janet, to avoid the arteries nearby. Janet chewed her lip. Carla had played with him, all right. She certainly had.
“He tried,” Carla said. She took Janet's hand and guided it to the skin of her chest and shoulders. “But feel.”
Janet had already seen the slickness and the soreness. She looked as if she'd had a peel. Her skin was hot to the touch. It felt like an underdone fish. Try to grab her and she'd squirt away.
“It's not so bad.” Carla wet a finger and wiped at a smear of blood on her arm. “Most of this is Martin's.” What was not still seeped from her pores.
“It'll grow back,” Janet offered, “probably smoother than before.”
“Remind me to thank him.”
Janet moistened a hand towel. She dabbed with it, gently. “Let me do you before we leave,” she said. ”I have some Oil of Olay outside.”
“You've also got my blouse,” Carla noticed.
Janet made a face. “You wanted me to come in and ask first? It seemed a bad time.”
Martin Selly collapsed onto one side. Fetal position. His thighs tightly clamped. Although in deepening shock, he could hear all this. It drove him nearer the edge of madness. His mind now worked to deny what had happened to him. It could not have been done. Not by this tiny woman. And that thing she had held up, dripping, instantly deflating, could not have been . . .
No!
he screamed in his mind. Would they be sitting there? So calmly? Talking of skin-care treatments? Borrowed clothing?
The other woman. How could she be here? Where was Amal? Where was Erna? He screamed their names, this time aloud.
Janet patted Carla's knee.
“Let's finish up,” she said.
“SHOOT HIM,” Billy rasped. He meant anyone. All of them. Tucker clubbed him again.
No one fired.
Bannerman. Coming up the path. Making no sound. Gun ready. Sweeping the courtyard with it, assessing what he saw.
“LESKO!” Billy again. Their eyes had met. “SHOOT HIM.”
“LESKO? SHOOT THROUGH ME. NOW.”
He held his aim. But he could not.
Susan—
Tucker's cheek exploded.
And a part of Billy's neck.
The woman, the one with Kurt Weiss, ran toward them. Not breaking stride, she kicked at Tucker's weapon, then wedged herself between the two. Two muffled shots. Tucker's leg bucked once, then it was still.
She knelt close to him, elbows resting on the toilet seat. He had covered his face, more mewing sounds. She waited until one eye peeked between his fingers. She glanced over her shoulder, just once, in the direction of Janet Herzog. Then she leaned closer.
For the record,” she told him quietly, “we're not dikes/’
“Oh, for Pete's sake.” Janet threw up her hands.
“I'm just telling him.” She tossed her head self-consciously.
“Carla.” An admonishing tone. “Who cares?”
“Hey, Martin.” Janet waved a hand, craning her neck to see past Carla. “In case you're wondering, this is for Gary Russo.”
Carla turned. An angry glance. “Do you mind?”
“Do you? Can we get this show on the road, please?”
He blinked, still confused. These two, he now realized, were professionals. Specialists. Amal and Erna, surely dead. And what this one had done to him. So calmly. He'd known it then. But he'd thought, to the extent that he could think, that they must have been hired by a parent—a lover—of some other woman he had taken and bathed. That much he might have understood. But by the Brugg woman's family? It was only a job. Not personal. She's even still alive. Professionals simply do not do this. Work both sides of the street. They do not—
humiliate
each other. He heard himself saying that. Bawling it. Screaming it.
She cut him.
Her hand had barely moved. It was clean and quick, nearly painless. The Englishman winced, nothing more.
“Dr. Gary Russo.” She repeated the name. “He was in that car. He was my friend. You killed him.”
“No—I would never—the two outside, they—”
She touched a finger to his lips. He flinched, and he was silent.
“My name is Carla Benedict. Have you heard of me?”
His eyes showed recognition. But he shook his head, slowly, as if to deny her as he had denied what had been done to him.
She raised the knife to his eye. “Say my name.” A mock pleading tone. “Say that you know me.”
”C—Carla Benedict,” he managed. “With—Mama's Boy.”
A tiny smile. “That's good, Martin,” she told him. “It's good that you know who killed you.”
She gestured with her chin toward the cut she'd made. He could feel it now. It was throbbing. Pumping. He turned his head, in anguish, fearing what he knew he would see. Fresh blood, in rhythmic spurts, arcing onto his hip. Blood that would never reach his brain. He clamped a hand against its source. He made cat noises again.
“I'll go hang the towel,” Janet Herzog said.
-30-
The first Bell Jet Ranger rose from its pad. It hovered 100 feet above the beach. Urs Ðrugg, the pain in his side easing, one of the Israeli woman, named Tovah, feeling his pulse, looked down on the activity below him.
He could see the whole of the courtyard. As he watched, one man hosed blood from the stone. Two others walked about, picking up spent cartridges. Tucker's body was gone. It had been wrapped in a plastic tarpaulin and carried to the trunk of Grassi's Rolls. It would be taken to his boat where it would be suitably weighted, then disposed of in international waters.