tyler butler

November 28th

Chapter 28: Goodbye

Holly and Ned sat together in Ned’s dining room starling listlessly at the broken Walkman sitting in the center of the table. The discovery of the Walkman on the street had filled them with a sense of elation at having made some progress in their search, but it had been short-lived when they realized that its discovery ind icated Ernie was ind eed missing.

Holly ran her hand against the worn buttons and the faint scrawls in the back that spelled out Ernie’s name. She hoped he was okay.

Lavina bustled into the room with a fresh pot of coffee and a platter of pastries. She had not been pleased initially with Ned bringing Holly back with him, but he had taken her to the kitchen and shared with her the story Holly had told him outside St. Ives.

Even Lavina’s insecure jealousy was overcome by the sadness of the story, and she had set about making them all comfortable in the best way she knew how – by cooking for them. There had been no end to the del icious sweets produced in the kitchen, and the coffee seemed to be in infinite supply as well.

The silence was broken by the sudden stentorian ring of the telephone, sending Holly bolting upright in her chair in surprise at the sound. Ned picked up the call.

“Hello? Oh, hi Rhonda.” Holly craned her neck anxiously. Did she have news about Ernie?

“Really? Is he OK? Hmmmm. OK, Elston you say? Yeah, we’ll be over in a few minutes.” He slowly put down the phone. Holly asked impatiently, “Well, what did she say?”

“They found Ernie. He’s in pretty bad shape. They’ve got him up at Elston Memorial. The doctors aren’t sure if he’s gonna pull through.”

Holly’s eyes moistened again. “Well, we have to go see him.” She stood up purposefully and grabbed her coat from the rack in the corner. Ned pushed the front door open for her and smiled wryly at his wife as they stepped out into the cold again.


Ames and Cobb both brea thed a long sigh of relief as they sat down in their car and started the engine, waiting for the heater to kick in. Once their backup had arrived, the warehouse was a non-stop circus of detectives, beat- cops, and forensics experts. It seemed like Foster had called in the entire force to the scene.

Ambulances had arrived at the scene shortly after Ames had called them in, but were now all gone, hurtling towards hospitals as fast as they could go. The man that was shot, identified as Mike Turner by the license in his wallet, was declared dead on arrival by the paramedics, but the victim, whose name was still unknown, was barely clinging to life and had been sped away in an ambulance quickly.

Turner’s death came as no surprise – few men could survive five bullets to the chest from moderate range. The other man’s survival came as a surprise to both Ames and Cobb. He had been beaten badly, and both detectives had their doubts as to whether he’d make it through the night. Only time would tell.

Cobb and Ames had answered hundreds of questions already, and there were going to be plenty more tomorrow, especially about the shooting and their abandonment of the car accident. Questions would have to wait for now, though; both of them had agreed that they needed to go and check on the victims of the car accident. It was the least they could do after abandoning the scene.

“So did you hear about that guy, Turner?” Ames asked as he leaned back wearily against the headrest.

“No, what about him?” Cobb replied.

“Apparently, he killed his wife’s boyfriend earlier today after he found them in bed together. Beat him to a pulp with a baseball bat, and did a fair number on his wife, too.”

Cobb shook his head. “Well, I can’t say I’m sad to see him gone, then. Especially after seeing what he did to that poor guy.”

Ames nodded in agreement. “So where we heading? Were you able to find out where they took the car wreck people?”

Cobb replied as he looked over his shoulder to back out into the street, “Yeah, they all got taken to Elston Memorial.”

“Elston?” Ames exclaimed. “Wasn’t Schumann closer?”

“Yeah, but apparently some nut took a shotgun into the mall on Franklin and went crazy, so Schumann was full of gunshot victims.”

Ames chuckled wryly. “Well, nev er a dull day around here, huh?”

“No kidding. Well, they took the guy here to Elston as well, so we can check up on both of them, and let that Mendocino kid know what’s going on, all at the same time.

“Nothing like killing three birds with one stone,” Ames commented as they careened down the road.


Joel opened his eyes and noticed immediately that he was back in the strange room of his dreams. Directly in front of him was the old man, roll of cloth beside him, still looking intently at the mass of threads in his lap. He continued to ignore Joel.

Joel looked around slowly. The room was exactly as it had been the last time he had been here. The candle flickering on a low table, the infinitely long dark room stretching out behind him, light peeking in through a solitary window in the distance. Yes, this was definitely the room in which he’d found himself a few hours ago. What was he doing back here?

“Joel.” He started at the sound and stepped back as the speaker strode out from the shadows behind the old man.

“Don’t worry,” the man smiled warmly. “I’m not here to hurt you.”

Joel looked the man up and down. He was dressed in a long thin robe, a rich dark brown in color. His features were nothing special – he appeared to be an average middle-aged man in every respect. A thin black cord lined his neck, and his robe hung loosel over his broad shoulders.

His skin was dark, but seemed to shine strangely as well, and the air was filled with a pleasant freshness as he strode towards Joel and extended his hand towards him. Joel glanced in confusion at the old man, who sat, unperturbed by the strange man.

The man laughed. “Oh, don’t mind Qismah, he’s married to his work. He doesn’t pay attention to anything except those threads. Come, I have plenty to show you. I’m sure you have questions, and hopefully I can answer some of them for you. I am Hospes.”

Joel took his hand, marveling at the warmness exuded by it on his own chilled limb. Hospes led him beyond Qismah, to the back of the impossibly long room, talking as the went slowly.

“Well, Joel, you were supposed to have been here some time ago, but Qismah had to improvise a little when things didn’t go as planned with Mr. Turner.”

What was he talking about?

Hospes laughed again. “I suppose you’re a little confused, aren’t you? Well, welcome to the afterlife, Joel – or the gateway to it, anyway.”

Joel gaspe d in surprise. “You mean… I’m…”

“Dead? Yes… Or truly alive, depending on how you look at it.”

Joel was taken aback by his guide’s flippant attitude. If he really was dead, he didn’t think Hospes should be laughing about it.

“Oh, I’m sorry, Joel, but I think you’ll find that there are worse things than dying.” Hospes continued along past Qismah’s position.

“Like I said before, Joel, the last time you were here, I was supposed to greet you and give you ‘the talk,’ as we call it, but Qismah ended up putting you back out there, due to an unexpected development with Mr. Turner.” Hospes motioned to his right, and Joel saw, to his amazement, another bewildered man following another robed figure, just beyond a mysterious glass partition.

“We do our best to keep track of things around here, and Qismah does a fine job of keeping things running smoothly, but we’re far from fortune tellers, so every once in awhile something slips through that has to be dealt with, like what happened tonight. It makes things harder, for you especially, but I think you can handle it.” He stopped abruptly and turned to face Joel.

“Well here I am, prattling on… What about you? Do you have any questions?”

Joel had plenty. He was still unclear about where he was and what was going on. But where to begin?

“Ummm, well, what exactly does – Qismah – do?”

Hospes smiled. “Qismah is the weaver. You see, Joel, you interact with lots of different people. Your choices and your actions affect a lot of different things, even if you don’t see those effects first hand. Qismah is responsible for keeping the system sane, for making sure the knots get tied properly…” Hospes could tell he was losing Joel.

“Here, it might make more sense if you could see some things.” He motioned to the left wall, where Joel saw a window that he hadn’t noticed before. He peered out, looking over the lush jungle, but then it faded, replaced by a beaten man in a hospital bed.

“Joel, meet Ernie. You saved his life, but you didn’t even know it until now. In fact, that man you tried to save today when you were shot was a good friend of Ernie’s. But that’s beside the point right now.

“When Qismah retied your knot, you went and got in that car accident, but if you hadn’t, a police car carrying two detectives would have been hit by the speeding car instead, and Ernie would have died in the meantime. But now, thanks to you, he has a chance.”

“But will he be OK?”

“I don’t know. Like I said, we’re not fortune-tellers. But I do know if you hadn’t done what you did, he would have died. And here’s another interesting fact,” Hospes continued as the hospital scene faded, replaced by a scene that Joel recognized. He was standing on the train, holding the door for a man running towards the train.

“You held the train for Mike this morning, a man who would later kill his wife’s boyfriend and would try to kill Ernie, the man you ended up saving.”

“So I’m actually responsible for Ernie’s almost-death?” Joel asked.

Hospes nodded. “Sort of, but not really… It’s complicated. That’s the point. Your entire life s one big complicated knot of events and interactions. Most people don’t realize that, but I think you do, to some extent at least.”

Joel remembered some of the late-night conversations he’d had while in Asia . What Hospes was saying made sense in a lot of ways.

“So now I’m dead?”

“Yes. But your time had come anyway. You were supposed to die from an unexpected heart failure, which is what brought you here in the first place, but then, like I said, Qismah retied your knot. But he tied it in such a way that would bring you back here while fixing things. It’s not yet Ernie’s time – at least, we don’t think it is. Like I said before, this isn’t fortune- telling.”

“What is going to happen to that guy, Mike?” Joel motioned beyond the transparent partition to his right. Hospes shook his head.

“I don’t know, really. That’s all up to the judge. My job is to answer your questions. Do you have any more?”

Joel remembered suddenly that he was dead. What about his father? His mother?

“Can I see my parents?”

In response, an image of his mother, huddled by his father’s side in a hospital room, faded in the window.

“Your dad’s going to be all right. And your parents will grieve, to be sure, but they’ll move on eventually. And someday they’ll be having the exact same conversation we’re having now.”

Tears came to Joel’s eyes as he considered the finality of everything Hospes had told him. He was so young! He had so many things he had wanted to do, but now he wouldn’t get that chance!

Hospes wrapped his arm around Joel’s shoulder and walked him towards the door at the end of the room.

“It’s not so bad, Joel. I think you’ll like the eternal afterlife.”

“Am I going to heaven or hell?” Joel asked. It seemed the logical question. If he was going to be spending eternity somewhere, he wanted to know whether his tears were warranted.

Hospes chuckled. “I was waiting for that one. It’s a good question, but I don’t have the answer. It’s up to the judge. But if you want my opinion…” He opened the door and motioned for Joel to walk toward the streaming light the poured from the opening.

“I think your chances are pretty good.”


Three rooms from where Mr. and Mrs. Mendocino cried together over the loss of their son, tears of a different kind were being shed. Both Rhonda and Holly hugged Ernie close as he came to and uttered a few indecipherable words. He was going to be okay.

Out in the hall, Ames and Cobb listened incredulously as Heather explained that Joel Mendocino had been killed in the accident. It was a lot for two tired cops to take in, after all that had already occurred that day. Without Joel’s help with the tattoo, they’d never have found out about the fight club, and the poor other guy would probably be dead…

Ames and Cobb stopped by the Mendocino’s hospital room to express their condolences, then walked out to their cold car. It had been a long day.

November 24th-27th

So my server went down this weekend, hence I wasn’t able to post updates. Here’s what you’ve missed. I’ll update the PDF when I get a chance. I’ve passed the 45,000 word mark… Almost there!


Chapter 23: The Knot

Joel felt disoriented. Where was he? He glanced around the small, dimly-lit room in which he found himself, trying to remember how he’d gotten there. Light streamed in from a lone window to his left. Outside, the lush Sumatran jungle glistened with morning dew. But he didn’t remember this place from his travels. Where was he?

Standing up unsteadily, he looked down the length of room, searching for the exit. He found none. The room was of a short width, about 15 feet, but immensely long; it stretched out infinitesimally both in front and behind him. The only perceptible light was from the window beside him, and he suck his head out, peering around the landscape for signs of civilization.

The jungle stretched out for miles below him, and looking out either side of the window revealed a plain exterior that stretched out at least as far as the dark interior did. The building he was in was on a long plateau; looking down, he realized that there would be no escaping through the window. The plateau abruptly ended at the edge of the building and dropped straight down 30 or 40 meters. So much for that plan, he thought.

He stepped back into the dim inside of the building. Looking to his left, he now noticed a dim flicker of light. “Hello? Is anyone there?” his voice echoed eerily down the length of the room, but he received no response.

The flicker of light seemed to grow stronger, so he began to walk towards it. The light from the window faded behind him as he moved on, and he struggled to see anything around him. The light ahead seemed to be much steadier now, so he continued towards it, driven by burning curiosity and a strong desire to determine how he was going to get out of the room. Surely the source of the light would hold some answers for him.

He blinked his eyes in the darkness, attempting to force them to adjust to the near pitch-blackness of his surroundings, and when he opened them again, he noticed a window, similar, if not identical, to the one he had passed some time back. It hadn’t been there before… had it? How could he have missed it? He ran up to it and looked out of it towards the jungle and to either side of the building. The view was the same as before; the precipice below him, the plain smooth sides of the building on either side, stretching out towards infinity.

The cool breeze was refreshing against his skin, moistened by perspiration from his short hike through the stuffy interior of the building. He inhaled deeply, letting the clear, humid air clear his lungs and his mind. How he loved that feeling! The clear, warm air – such simple pleasures that you simply couldn’t get back home in the city.

He reluctantly remove his head from the window and continued his journey through the long room. The window’s light faded behind him, but then, unexpectedly, another appeared in front of him. The pattern continued as he journeyed endlessly on.

The flickering light grew more steady, but seemed to increase in size almost imperceptibly. It occurred to Joel unexpectedly that perhaps he wasn’t moving forward at all; the lack of substantial increase in the apparent size of the light source ahead was less than encouraging. Somehow, though, he felt that that light held the answer to his escape, so he pressed on towards it, despite his doubts.

He continued on for what seemed like miles. Window after window appeared and disappeared as he journeyed, but he ignored them, intent on making it to the light, to the answer.

Then, without warning, as the windows had appeared, he blinked and he was there. The light was coming from a solitary candle sitting on a low table. Behind the table, deep in the shadows, sat an elderly man with a strange looking cloth draped over his shoulder and in his lap. His features were barely visible in the candlelight, and Joel stepped closer to examine him.

His long grey hair was unkempt and hung in long strings around his head, further sheltering his face from Joel’s prying eyes. The man gazed intently at the cloth in his lap, and Joel noticed his fingers working with expert precision and the utmost care on the loose thin strings that spidered out from the cloth. To the man’s left, Joel saw a roll of finished cloth – the man was weaving it himself.

The pattern was intricate, and the thin strings the man handled shone with a sparkle that Joel had never seen before. He was overcome with a desire to touch the cloth, and he knelt down and placed his hand gently on the roll. It was tremendously soft, and seemed to radiate a soft warmth as well as a gentle shine. Joel longed to take the cloth and wrap himself in it’s comforting warmth, but he was interrupted by the man’s quiet voice.

“You’re not supposed to be here.” Joel started at the sound. He removed his hand from the cloth quickly and looked at the man. He did not look up; his gaze remained inextricably fastened to the work in front of him.

Joel gazed, transfixed, as the man reached back to the roll of cloth that Joel had though finished and pulled a loose thread from the center of the roll. He pulled it slowly and surely towards his lap; the thread seemed to grow longer and longer as necessary until it reached his lap, where, with quick indecipherable flicks of the wrist, he tied it to the strands he had been presently working on.

A small smile crossed his face as he completed the knotting of the collection of thin strings, and pushed the multicolored mass towards the nearly completed line of cloth he held in his lap, guiding it slowly along the black wire-like string to which they were all bound.

“You’re not supposed to be here,” he spoke again, still not breaking his steadfast gaze.

“I’m sorry. I don’t know how I got here…” Joel responded unsteadily. The man frowned as he grasped another two threads and tied a simple knot, binding them together.

“This isn’t right…”

“Again, I don’t really know how I got here. If you could just…”

The man interrupted before Joel could continue, “You’ll need to go…”

Joel sighed, perplexed. Was the man not hearing him, or was he simply ignoring him? “Well, if you’d just tell me how to get out, I’d gladly leave. Could you tell me where the exit is?”

The man continued staring at his lap, a look of utter vexation on his face. He pulled one of the threads from the collection that laid in front of him. As he pulled on it, the end broke unexpectedly off, and the man held in his hand a single thread unattached to the others. He raised his eyebrows and furrowed his brow. “This isn’t right.”

Joel was confused. The man seemed o be totally ignoring everything he had to say, totally engrossed in his own work. “What are you doing?” he asked. Perhaps a direct approach would be more effective.

“Knots,” the man mumbled under his breath. Was it a response, or the verbalization of a random thought by a crazy old man? It was clear to Joel that the man was tying knots – he didn’t need to be schooled in the obvious, he needed to be told how to get out of this endless room.

“Hmmm, yes, I’ll have to fix this…” the man continued mumbling under his breath. “What to do… What to do?” Joel sympathized. He also wondered what he should do.

Unexpectedly, the man started smiling down at the mass of threads. He grasped one of them by the end and pulled it up in front of his face, peering into the swirling colors and light that seemed to emanate from it.

Joel was enthralled by the string – what kind of cloth was it? As he peered more closely at the thread, he noticed pictures reflecting on the man’s face and the surrounding walls. The candlelight projected through the thread was producing swirling images all around. Upon closer inspection, Joel noticed himself in the pictures, which, he now noticed, were actually moving. They had a home video quality to them; the colors were washed out, the overall picture grainy, but his own image was unmistakable.

There he was at his sixth birthday party, when Afton Matthews had hit him after he called her a doodoo-head. In another, he was arguing with Sara over their breakup, pleading with her to reconsider. Then he was at St. Ig’s presenting his solution to the Math Club’s weekly mathematical brain twister, soaking in the incredulous looks of the other students at his mental faculties. And then, in another, he was lying in his hospital bed, doctors swarming over him, his parents standing outside, peering in the window frantically.

What was going on? He glanced back down at the man, who now held a small pair of scissors open, prepared to cut the thread at it’s base, severing it’s connection to the rest of the cloth. “Wait, what are you doing?” Joel cried out as the man deftly snipped the thread free.

“I’m sorry… this has to be done,” the man spoke softly. Joel felt a sudden emptiness overcome him, and he collapsed to his knees. Joel felt as if his body was disintegrating; he was wasting away rapidly. The pictures faded as the man moved the now solitary thread away from the candlelight.

Joel fell prostrate on the floor and struggled to turn, facing the man. “Why are you doing this?” he asked, aware that his own voice was uncharacteristically low and raspy.

The man picked up the thread he had previously examined, and, apparently finding what he was looking for, took the newly cut thread and tied them together in a complicated knot, then fastened them to another thin black thread that protruded out of the cloth, using an even more intricate joint.

Joel tried to cry out again, but no sound came. The man smiled broadly at his work. “There, that should do it.” Joel continued his attempts to cry out as everything disappeared from view.


“What happened?” Doctor Ross said as he entered the room.

“I don’t know,” Heather responded fearfully. “He just went into cardiac arrest – there was no forewarning. He was awake and talking, then this!”

“OK.” The doctor looked at the instruments along Joel’s bedside, then examined his chart quickly. Nothing seemed to fit. Two orderly’s wheeled in a portable defibrillator and heather ripped open the hospital gown covering Joel’s chest.

The doctor barked almost incomprehensible orders and the nurses and orderlies scrambled to fulfill them. As the defibrillator’s cold metal leads were placed on his chest, Joel shot up in his bed, shouting maniacally, “What are you doing?”

The hospital staff froze in confusion and amazement. Joel grabbed Heather’s arm tightly and looked fiercely into her eyes. “I have to go.”

Chapter 24: Search

“Holly, I don’t see him anywhere. We’ve been up and down every street I can think of and he’s just not here.”

“Well, we have to find him, Ned. We have to.”

Ned was frustrated. All Holly could say was “We have to find him,” but she had no ideas as to how to go about doing just that. She just wanted to continue driving around in circles until they stumbled upon him. At first, Ned had humored her, but he was now convinced they weren’t going to find Ernie this way. He wasn’t ready to give up – quite the opposite, in fact – but he wanted to go back to St. Ives and talk to Rhonda, and see if she had any ideas as to his whereabouts. Perhaps she knew some of the places Ernie went when he didn’t stay at St. Ives.

But Holly would hear none of it. She refused to go back to St. Ives with him; she wanted to stay out on the street – the whole night if they had to – to find Ernie. Ned was puzzled by her complete reluctance to go to St. Ives. She was not entirely without reason or logic, even in her excited state of mind, but she refused to even entertain the idea, no matter how many times he mentioned it.

But this was getting ridiculous. They weren’t getting anywhere, and something had to be done. “Holly, I am going to St. Ives to talk to Rhonda.”

“Ned,” Holly protested. “I don’t want to go to St. Ives. He’s probably just around the next alley… Come on, let’s check.”

She wasn’t going to get her way this time. “No. I am going to St. Ives, I’m going to talk to Rhonda, and then we’ll decide what to do.” He spoke definitively, and Holly turned her head and stared listlessly out the window at the passing grayness of the outside.

She remained quiet throughout the rest of the drive, and Ned wondered if he had permanently damaged their friendship. Still, it had to be done. Their goal had to be to find Ernie, not to merely look for him.

As the looming stone structure of St. Ives came into view, Holly turned her head away from the window and looked straight ahead. Her eyes closed as she bent down at the waist, placing her hands under her thighs and whimpering softly.

It occurred to Ned, as he sat there observing her, how like his youngest daughter she was acting. When his youngest didn’t get her way, she would often sit down, wrap her arms around her body, and pout. Ned shook his head. The difference between a three-year-old and a twenty-year-old weren’t that great after all.

He pulled the van to a stop along the side of the nearly empty street and prepared to get out, but as he opened the door, he noticed Holly was crying again softly. He closed thee driver side door again and touched her shoulder gently.

“What’s wrong, Holly?” Her body shook convulsively as her tears overwhelmed her. Ned kept his hand on her shoulder, and she gradually became calmer and stopped shaking so much.

She pulled her head up from it’s position on her forearm and looked at Ned, an expression of despair and immense pain on her face. “You know how I told you I grew up in McAllister Park ?” she asked.

Ned nodded. They had had this conversation. She had told him she was born and raised right here in this neighborhood. “Well, that’s not exactly true,” she continued. I did spend a lot of time here when I was younger, but I was really raised in a nice house out in the northwest suburbs.

“But when I was 8, my parents were in a car accident and both of them were killed – I told you that; that is true. And I did get put in a foster home, like I told you. Well, I actually got put in three or four different foster homes. I didn’t adjust well to my parents’ death, and I was a real wild child.

“When I was 16, I ran away fro my fourth foster family. I had planned to move out west and build myself a new life out there, but I only made it as far as McAllister Park .” She laughed hollowly. Ned looked intently at her and listened.

“Well, the neighborhood wasn’t too good, even back then, and things were tough for me. I lived on the street, but being a woman, and a young one at that, I dealt with a lot of shit. A kind old woman – Elsie was her name, I think – brought me here, to St. Ives, one especially cold night, and I liked it. It seemed to be perfect. Everyone was very friendly, they seemed to have plenty of food, and there were warm beds.

“I especially liked John, the director of the shelter. He would sit and tell me great stories, and he always listened to me when I talked. I honestly thought I was in heaven. I thought I could get back on my feet, then I could finish my trip out to California . Things were going to work out.

“I stayed there – or here, I guess – for a few days, and everything was fine. But then I began to notice John touching my shoulder while I ate, or rubbing his leg on mine while he sat next to me at mealtimes. He seemed to go out of his way to find me, and he often asked me to come see him in his office. Ordinarily, I wouldn’t have considered that a big deal, but the way he was touching me was making me feel extremely uncomfortable, so I always found an excuse, thankfully.” She paused, and Ned wondered if perhaps she wouldn’t be able to or want to continue.

“It’s all right if you don’t want to talk about it,” he said.

“No… I need to tell someone.” She took a deep breath, then continued. “Usually we were in rooms with at least another woman, but one night, the woman who I’d been staying with didn’t come back for the evening, so I was in the little room alone. John came in late that night. I was asleep, and the next thing I knew, I had a pillow over my head and somebody was groping at my panties. I tried to scream, but the pillow covered it, and made it hard to breathe…” She broke off, and Ned put his hand back on her shoulder. She continued haltingly, tears welling up in her eyes again.

“I don’t really know what happened – I think I tried to block it out. He was on top of me… raping me… and I couldn’t do anything. He took off the pillow because he ‘wanted to see my beautiful eyes,’ but even then I couldn’t do anything. Mentally, I wanted to scream and shout and twist and turn and scratch, but no matter what my brain said, my body just sat there. I can still remember the smell of the soup in the room, the muffled sound of the washing machines down the hall, the feeling as he…” She broke off again, and Ned strengthened his grip on her shoulder, hugging her shuddering body to him.

There they sat in silence for what seemed like hours, until Holly finally pushed herself away from him. “I’m sorry… but even now I can’t bear the thought of that place. I didn’t stay long after that night. John said if I ever told anybody, no one would believe me. I guess he’s gone now, but the memory’s still with me…”

Ned nodded. It made so much more sense now. He hated himself for bringing her here, when she had asked – begged, even! – him not to. He hated himself for recommending on a daily basis that she volunteer here, reminding her each day of that terrible experience. What an idiot he’d been!

“I’m sorry,” he spoke quietly. “I shouldn’t have made you come here.”

Holly smiled wistfully. “Honestly, it feels kind of nice to finally tell someone – someone who believes me that it happened – someone that cares. So don’t beat yourself up over it. You couldn’t have known.” She looked out the window at the large stone building.

“Well, since we’re here, you might as well go in and talk to Rhonda.”

Ned nodded and opened the driver door, stepping into the bitter cold of the night. When he entered St. Ives, he found Rhonda in the kitchen, on the telephone.

“Missin’ for 24 hours? Hell, he might be dead in 24 hours! There’s nothin' can be done? OK. Thank you.” She hung up the phone angrily. “Can’t report someone missin’ ‘til they’ve been missin’ 24 hours. Now that’s just stupid!”

She looked up, noticing Ned in the kitchen doorway. “Oh, sorry ‘bout that… what can I do for ye?” Ned walked in and explained the whole story of their search to her as she prepared them both a cup of tea.

“Wal, I’ve been feelin’ a little strange myself – this isn’t the firs’ time Ernie hasn’t come back, but this time it seems different. I mean, he was out last night, and I know that he wouldn’t let it happen two days in a row – he knows I’d lay into him for dat.” She sighed and took another sip of her tea. “But da police say dey can’t do anything yet. You say you’ve looked through all the streets and alleys ‘round here?”

Ned nodded. Holly had insisted that they leave no stone uncovered. “Wal, I don’t know then. I hope he’s all right. Give me your number. If I hear anything or he shows up, I’ll give you a call.”

Ned wrote his number on the pad she handed him, thanked her for the tea, and headed back out in the cold towards the van. Holly was staring anxiously out of the window at the stone building as he approached.

“Did she have any ideas?” she asked as Ned closed the door and started the engine.

“No, but she said she’d call us if she heard anything or he appeared there.” Holly looked disappointed, and Ned couldn’t blame her. He had hoped Rhonda would have some ideas as well.

“Where are you going?” Holly asked, as Ned turned back towards their main search area instead of going straight back towards his home.

“Well, I figured we owed it to Ernie to check one more time. Maybe we missed something.” Holly smiled.

The roads were as empty as they’d been during their previous search, and there was still no sign of Ernie along any of the streets or the narrow alleyways. They were disappointed, but neither of them had really expected to find anything. They were both tired – it was time to call it a night and hope for new developments in the morning.

“Ned, do you see that?” Holly asked, pointing up ahead at a shiny glint on the street curb.

“Yeah.”

“What is it?”

“I don’t know… Probably a plastic bag or a hubcap or something.”

“Stop for a sec.”

Ned obeyed and jumped as Holly threw the passenger door open and hopped out, running towards the glint up ahead. She returned a few seconds later, excited. “Look, Ned!” she exclaimed, thrusting the object in her hand at Ned’s face. It was Ernie’s Walkman.

Chapter 25: Fight

When Mike came to he was alone in a small maintenance closet. He was no longer tied to the chair, but the appearance of freedom was short lived. The door to the closet was closed, and a quick test revealed it was locked as well.

He sat down on the floor and waited, rubbing the back of his head gingerly. He felt the telltale rough surface of the scab on the back of his skull where the previous blows had broken the skin. His head was really taking a beating today. Between the bouts of unconsciousness earlier in the day – had that just been this morning? – and the more recent knocks given him by Angelo’s goons, it was a wonder he was still standing.

He was standing, though, unsteadily. He leaned against the door, balancing himself, waiting for the lightheadedness to pass. The swirling of his brain cells slowly stopped, and he began to feel like his old self again.

The slightly muffled sound of cheering could be heard beyond the door. He strained his hearing to focus on the sound, to pick up any specific sound that might tell him something about what Angelo had in mind.

A man was speaking, his voice Angelo didn’t recognize.

“Well, folks, we have a very special event tonight. You know, normally we try to encourage audience participation during the “battle,” as we like to call it…” The crowd cheered again, louder than before.

The man continued, speaking loudly over the din of the crowd. “But… BUT tonight, we have something special planned. I’d like to tell you about Mike – he’s a guy just like you. He had a job downtown, he had a nice house, a nice wife – things were great. But this morning, Mike got fired from his job…” The crowd booed.

“When he got home, he found his wife in bed with another man.” The crowd booed even more loudly, and Mike discerned several insults flying from their mouths. “That bitch!” “Whore!” “Cunt!”

“But Mike didn’t sit back and take that shit, no! He fought back! He picked up a baseball bat and beat the fucking shit out of that adulterous bastard, and did a nasty number on his wife, too!” The crowd cheered maniacally and some even clapped. Mike felt pretty good. He had done the right thing, after all. What else could he have done? Finally he was getting some recognition for the hard work he’d put in, for the talent that he had nurtured and developed over countless years.

The door to the closet opened unexpectedly, and Angelo stood there, backed by two large sullen-looking men. He looked Mike up and down, and smiled cryptically.

“Looking good, Mike. Have you heard what they’re saying about you? Mike, I’m telling you, this is the place for you. The guys here love you! Listen to ‘em!” He motioned down the hall where the sound of the crowd grew louder again. “Now let’s go and show ‘em why you’re king shit of fuck mountain.”

Mike hated Angelo, but the sound of that crowd was incredibly enticing. They were now shouting his name. “Mike… Mike… Mike…”

“You really want to see him? You want to see him fight some degenerate bastard?” The crowd cheered even more, and the chant of his name grew more powerful. Mike felt good. They wanted him. They needed him. The rage from the day’s events came rushing back, and he smashed his fist against the closet door impulsively.

“That’s right,” Angelo smirked. “Tap into that anger. You have a right to, after what those bastards have done to you. Go show ‘em all why you’re a bad- ass motherfucker.” Angelo stepped aside and motioned down the hall. Mike hadn’t heard him. He was focused on the chanting from the crowd.

He followed the noise into the large room. There must have been hundreds of men there, all shouting for him. The announcer glanced over his shoulder, and seeing Mike behind him, turned back to the raucous crowd and announced his arrival.

“Here he is, Mike Turner!” The crowd shouted in frenzied excitement, and Mike stepped forward confidently. He didn’t feel like himself – he felt more powerful. He felt like a hulking menace, a “bad-ass motherfucker,” as Angelo had termed it, and he was going to give these fans a show.

He stepped out in the center clearing and the announcer stepped back, allowing the circle of excited faces to close around him. Mike looked around at the faces. The men were mostly dressed in suits, and all looked to be about 30 or 40 years old. Their faces were tired, but a maniacal frenzy shone in their eyes, and they cheered, clapped and shouted as Mike raised his right hand above his head, fist closed defiantly. They were not unlike him – they were his peers. And he commanded their respect. Every man in that room wanted to be him at that moment, and the ceaseless applause confirmed it.

He turned around 360 degrees, hand still in the air, letting each and every member of the crowd survey their new god. Their look of awe was magnificently boosting his ego, and any qualms he had about participating in something Angelo had suggested and sanctioned were now only distant considerations. He had killed a man, and tonight, he’d kill another.

Much more than at any other point in his life, Mike knew that this was his destiny. This was his purpose, his reason for existence. Everything up until this night was preparation – the shaping of his temper, his nightly boxing workout to funnel away the constant anger he felt, the events of the past day – they had all prepared him to find himself. And when all was revealed, there was no sign of Mike Turner, the man. There was only Mike Turner, the _animal _.

He was primal, he was brutal, he was everything that Angelo had said he was. And this was his arena – his home. This battleground was the place where he would complete the transformation. But to do that, he would need an opponent. Where was the man these joker’s had found to fight him?

He wheeled around, searching for the man he would soon kill. The crowd parted, and a man was pushed roughly into the right side of the circle. He stood there unsteadily, peering out from behind thick glasses.

This was the man they had selected for Mike to fight? This was him, this scared, shaking man with geeky glasses? For a moment, Mike felt slighted. As psychotically driven as he was, he probably could kill a man twice his size, maybe even ten men, and they had found this little bastard.

The crowd’s shouting and cheering would not let him object, however; he’d have to fight the man, no matter how small or insignificant he was. This fight would be easy. He’d win their favor, then they’d send him someone greater, someone more powerful to fight the next time. But this man would need to be killed, of that Mike was certain.


Ernie was confused. He had been unconscious until his abductors had pulled him out of the car trunk and waved some strange-smelling stuff in front of his nose. They had pulled him roughly into some building and held him firmly in a small hallway. He could hear loud shouting ahead.

Then, without warning, the two men holding him pushed through a mass of bodies and threw him out into a large circle, facing another man who paced in a frenzy around the outside of the circle, his fist raised above his head.

His glasses were foggy from the warm humidity in the building, but he dared not remove them to wipe them off. He was frightened beyond reason, and he didn’t want to risk the blindness that would come with the removal of his glasses. He had to be able to see everything.

The man across from him lowered his arm when he noticed Ernie. His eyes were crazed and bloodthirsty, and Ernie got the distinct impression from his look that he was not in the mood to make friends.

The man sidestepped towards him slowly. Ernie was unsure what to do, but he didn’t want to get in the man’s way. All he wanted to do was get away. He turned and tried to get out through mass of bodies that now blocked the path through which he had entered the circle, but the men there laughed and grabbed him pushing him back into the center.

As he turned his head, his jaw met with the man’s fist, sending him sprawling to the floor. His glasses clattered on the concrete alongside him. The man towered over him menacingly, silently daring him to get up. Ernie didn’t want to, but the man’s fists were less damaging weapons than his feet, so against his will, he forced himself to stand again.


Mike had been right about his opponent. There was very little resistance. He had initially tried to turn and run, but the circle of fans had sportingly prevented that. Mike had taken the opportunity to run up behind him quickly, and planted his first punch squarely on the man’s jaw. It had been a clean punch, a powerful one, and the man had crumpled to the floor under his strength.

Mike grinned and stepped towards the man, raising his hand at the crowd again, proclaiming his strength. The man looked up fearfully, bleary-eyed without his glasses, tears streaming from his eyes.

Mike ignored him completely, and as the man struggled to stand again, on all fours, Mike planted a swift kick to his stomach, eliciting a gasp and low moan as the man went down again.

Mike diabolically repeated the cycle, following the man as he crawled around the circle, trying to find means of escape. Sometimes he’d let the man stand, then punch him down to the floor again, other times he’d kick viciously while the man stood moaning on the ground. Blood was now everywhere, and the sight of the maroon flow only increased the crowd’s agitation and Mike’s frenzy.

He was no longer himself. His sole purpose was to beat the pure existence out of this man. The crowd pulsated at every punch, every kick, and he drew power from their yells and shouted encouragement.

At one crowd member’s shouted suggestion, he kicked the man’s head, hard, while he lay on the ground. The neck whipped back with a satisfying crack, and the man’s body curled up, motionless. He made no attempt to rise this time. The crowd crooned approvingly.

Mike stood over the man’s limp, crumpled body, his bare muscled back glistening magnificently under the fluorescent lights of the warehouse. The circle of men chanted methodically. “Finish him… Finish him…” Mike looked up the faces around him. They were crying for finality, for annihilation, for blood, and he would give it to them. This was it. He had finally found it. This was his shining moment.

Chapter 26: Crash

“ Just where are we going, son?” Joel’s father seemed puzzled by his son’s strange request to leave the hospital and drive off somewhere, but he knew his son well enough to not ask too many questions; Joel wouldn’t flip out like he had about anything that wasn’t important.

Joel wished he could answer his dad, but he honestly didn’t know where they were going. He had woken up in the hospital with an uncontrollable urge to get up, leave the hospital, and drive somewhere, anywhere. His mother, not to mention the doctors, had all protested valiantly, but in the end his father, sensing the urgency that Joel was attempting to communicate, had volunteered to take his son where he felt he needed to go, and had successfully silenced the doctors.

But his faith in his son was thinning as they drove on aimlessly. Joel was unable to give any concrete information about their destination, instead giving last-second directions, forcing him to make hairpin turns and nearly flipping their old station wagon over several times. But the urgency on Joel’s face never wavered.

Joel looked intently out the window, waiting for the next spur of intuition that would prompt another turn. He thought back on the fading memory of the dream – is that what it was? – and of the man with the threads, weaving the cloth. What had it all meant? His father had told him that his heart had stopped suddenly in the hospital, for no apparent reason, but Joel felt fine now. In fact, the pain in his side was almost non-existent, though the bloody piece of gauze taped tightly to his side served as a reminder of his injury.

He had a suspicion that there was more to his dream than normal. Something about it felt final, like he was supposed to learn something from it. And the feeling of complete emptiness when the man had cut the thread… He glanced down as the memory of that feeling returned; no, there was no hole in his stomach, thank God.

He finally answered his father, “I don’t know, Dad.”

“What?”

“I don’t know where we’re going.”

“Ummm, OK… Well, just try to give me a little more warning with the turns, all right?”

Joel smiled. His dad hated driving anything more than the speed limit; their breakneck speed and last minute turns could not be good for his nerves. “Thanks for doing this, Dad.”

His father smiled wryly. “Well, it’s not like you gave me much…”

“Right! Turn right!” Joel shouted suddenly, bracing himself against his seat as his father complied. The tires screeched angrily, and the drivers behind them honked as they screamed by, seemingly balanced on two wheels.

“…choice. It’s not like you gave me much choice,” his father continued haltingly as they bounced along the narrow side street Joel had directed them onto.

“Sorry,” Joel said sheepishly. He didn’t even really know why he had yelled to turn – it just sort of came out. Well, hopefully it would all make sense once they arrived at their destination, where ever it was.


Cobb and Ames were on their way to Delome when the call came in over the radio. “Unit 402… Cobb, Ames , you there?”

It was Foster. Ames picked up the radio transmitter and responded. “Yeah, Foster, we’re here. What’s up?”

“There’s some trouble over on Delome… You guys are headed there, right?”

“Yeah, we’re on our way right now.”

“Well pick it up. There’s somethin’ wrong over there. OC called and said they can’t raise either of the blue and whites on the radio, and Mrs. Riley, the old woman that had been calling to complain, called in and said that the noise was louder than it had ever been before. He said it sounded like a war was goin’ on over there. You’re the closest unit we’ve got, so step on it. We’re sending backup – be careful.”

“You’ve got it, Lieutenant.” Ames hung up the radio receiver and looked at Cobb. “Well, you heard her partner. Let’s go.” Cobb flipped on the siren and lights, and, as instructed, floored the accelerator.


Neither Joel nor his father even saw the other car zooming into the intersection. They had heard the siren approaching behind them, and had pulled as far as possible to the right as the cop car passed them, speeding into the intersection.

Joel’s father, monitoring the fla shing lights in his left-side mirror, had not noticed the red light in the Franklin – Niles intersection until it was too late. Suddenly the left side of station wagon crumpled with a magnificent screeching sound, and the world was spinning around them.

Joel felt weightless for a moment, then felt searing pain in his legs as they were crushed in a mass of metal. His head bounced viciously against the top of the station wagon as the huge vehicle spun out of control, and finally came to a scrapping stop, upside down on the far side of the intersection. Joel looked over at his father, whose head was slumped back against the headrest, cuts and scrapes on his face and neck. He wasn’t moving.

Cold air rushed in from the windows, now free of glass. Joel tried to speak, but everything was silent. His ears were ringing; he couldn’t hear anything; the entire world seemed to move in silent slow motion, like a Charlie Chaplin film at half speed.

He became aware of movement outside the car. Strange upside-down people came running towards the car. Faces peered in both windows, shouting something at him, but he couldn’t hear them above the ringing in his ears.

His unexplainable sense of purpose, which had driven him to rise from the hospital bed and brought his father out here along with him, was now gone. He just wanted to sleep. Couldn’t these people see he just wanted to rest? With a wave of his hand, he dismissed the faces and closed his eyes, beckoning sleep to come as his door opened and strong hands pulled him out of the car.


Cobb sat dazed in the driver seat of the car as it came to a stop, having completed a full 360 degree spin, facing the direction it had initially been headed. “Holy shit!” he said under his brea th. He looked over at Ames , who was clutching the dashboard with white-knuckled hands, a breathing hard and looking straight ahead, wide-eyed.

“Holy shit is right…” Ames responded, peeling his hands from the dashboard and looking back over his shoulder at the wreckage behind them. The blue fla shing lights cast at eerie glow over the whole scene.

Cars on either side of the intersection had stopped, doors hanging open as motorists stepped out and ran towards the vehicles to offer what assistance they could.

Cobb and Ames now had a dilemma. Ordinarily, their purpose would have been clear; they would have exited their vehicle and gone back to the scene of the accident, offering whatever help they could. But in this case, there was also a developing situation down on Del ome that also required their attention. It was not immediately clear what they should do, and in fact, either choice would no doubt leave them with a disciplinary inquiry.

Ames decided that the other motorists had the accident covered. Ames ’ and Cobb’s presence would only add more confusion to the scene. He picked up the radio and motioned for the still-stunned Cobb to move on.

“Dispatch, this is unit 402, we’ve got an accident at the Franklin – Niles intersection. Looks pretty bad, send ambulances and road clearing equipment. Officers leaving the scene in pursuit of another possible crime.”

“Ten four, unit 402, ambulances are on their way.”

“Hope everybody’s all right,” Cobb muttered as he sped up again, continuing on towards the ind ustrial section of town.

“Not much else we could do. I have a feeling something is wrong with those blue and whites, and even if we’d stayed, the ambulances would have taken just as long to get there.”

“Yeah, I know, but it seems wrong to just leave them there, you know.”

“Yeah. Let’s hope whatever’s going on down here is worth it.”

**Chapter 27: Takedown **

Angelo had a problem. That bitch old woman from down the street had been calling the cops again, and not one, but two blue and whites were running along the street, looking for signs of trouble.

There was no way he could stop the fight now. The crowd was in too much of a frenzy, and Mike was doing a hell of a job beating this guy to a pulp. It was true magic, and if Angelo hadn’t been so preoccupied with dealing with the law enforcement threat, he would have enjoyed watching the fight himself.

But now, he stood pacing in front of four bound and gagged city cops, wondering what he should do. He had sent out several of his best men to grab the cops before they could call for backup, but he couldn’t be sure they had succeeded entirely, and even if they had, it wouldn’t be long until backup would show up anyway, since no one was responding to the radio calls.

Shit! Why tonight? Mike was giving them the show of a lifetime out there – he’d bring in at least double the normal attendance next week! But he’d probably have to stop the fight early. He couldn’t risk getting shut down at this point, and he had little doubt that more cops were on their way.

He motioned to the men who stood guard over the bound officers, and they all stepped out of the small closet room, closing and locking the door behind them.

“OK, here’s what I want you to do… Go around quietly to the outside of the fight circle and let people know cops are on their way. It won’t take long for word to get around. People’ll start clearin’ out on their own. I’m getting' out of here.”

“What about the guy?” one of the men asked, motioning towards the arena where Mike stood hunched over, delivering vicious blows to Ernie’s back and skull.

“Leave ‘im. We don’t have time to deal with ‘im right now.” It was a pity, really, since Mike had already shown such promise, but Angelo didn’t have much choice at this point. Mike was crazed – out of his mind – right now. It would take him too long to cool down enough to be lucid. Angelo couldn’t take the risk of being anywhere near here when the cops showed up.

His men ran off to follow his directions, and he turned, Marty close behind, towards the door where his car waited outside. He shot one glance back towards the arena, where Mike’s latest maneuver elicited another scream of approval from the frenzied crowd. _What a shame. _


As Cobb and Ames made the final turn towards the industrial section, they noticed several cars moving quickly towards the highway, headed the opposite direction. “Looks like we missed the party,” Ames commented, taking note of the frantic, frightened look on the face of one of the drivers as he passed by.

“Not quite,” Cobb responded. “Look.” He pointed ahead to a warehouse on the left side of the street. Faint light streamed from the windows, and men in business suits and loose ties poured out of the doors, scrambling over each other towards lots on either side of the building, where their cars sat, obscured behind overgrown weeds and shrubbery.

“Well, somethin’s been goin’ on,” Ames commented, drawing his gun from his waist and preparing to jump out of the car at a moment’s notice.

“I’m going to pull up to the back,” Cobb said, turning the steering wheel expertly to the left. “There’s no way we’re gonna take all these guys by ourselves. Let’s go in the back and see if we can find out what’s going on. There’s gotta be somethin’ going on in there.”

Ames nodded as he checked the barrel on his gun again. He was ready.

Cobb pulled the car to a screeching halt and the detectives threw both doors open, pumped out, and ran to the back door, one on either side of it, backs pressed against the wall. Ames nodded, and Cobb turned and kicked the door in with a crash. Ames followed him into the building, gun held ahead of him at the ready.

They moved quickly through the small labyrinth of office and maintenance rooms, checking for anyone or anything, but no one was there.

They eventually came to the small hallway which led to the main area of the warehouse. Light crept under the closed double doors leading into the room, and from their position they could hear echoic footsteps a man shouting. “Wait! Where are you going? What the hell do you think you’re doing? Get back here! You’re missing the fuckin’ grand finale!”

They stepped through the heavy doors and saw a man, bare-chested, covered in a sheen of perspiration and grit, standing over a bloody mess of a man, a crazed look in his eyes, shouting at the opposite side of the room, where the swinging doors indicated the last of the spectators had recently departed.

“Freeze! Police!”


Mike’s audience was gone. Out of the corner of his eye, he had seen the exodus begin. Someone had yelled, “The cops are coming!” With that, the entire room had turned into a stampede of suits, each one heading for the door as fast as he could.

Mike was surprised and annoyed that they were such pussies. The cops? What could they do to him? He was fuckin’ invincible! He could take a whole army of cops on himself, none of the men would have to worry at all – he could protect them.

He shouted at them to stay, to watch his finale, to observe his final crushing of the man beneath his foot, but his words fell on deaf ears. When the last of the men passed through the double doors to the cold night outside, he became aware of movement behind him.

“Freeze! Po lice!” He turned and eyed the two men warily. Were they serious? This was who’d been sent to take him on? They leveled their guns on him and repeated their warnings.

Mike looked down at the mess below him. He had done quite a job. Angelo had been right when he had called him an artist. The blood smeared across the cold, dusty concrete from his opponent’s escape attempts did remind him of a Jackson Pollack work.

He leveled his eyes with the two police officers in front of him. They continued to yell at him, but he ignored them. He was invincible, right? Fuck them! They’d pay, just like everyone else had.

With that thought he screamed his battle cry and ran towards them, sweat, blood, and dirt sliding off of him and landing in miniature puddles on the floor behind him. He was an ancient warrior, an animal, the personification of rage, brutality incarnate. None would stand in his way.

The first bullet struck him on his right side, and threw him slightly off balance, but the second bullet struck his left side, restoring his balance. Was this the best they could do? He barreled on, until the third, fourth, and fifth bullets whizzed through his chest. He was vaguely aware of the small explosions of blood that erupted as they pierced his skin, and he faltered. His mind willed his legs to continue their motion, their support of his body, but they refused.

He fell on the floor in front of the detectives, sliding forward as far as the force of his momentum would carry him, and ended in a heap of crumpled humanity at the feet of the detectives.

His chest heaved, and he willed himself to rise up, to destroy these bastards, but his body refused, and he exhaled once in final defeat before his body ceased to move at all.

Turducken!

I really should be writing my novel right now, since it is due in six days and I still have quite a bit to write, but this is just too cool. I heard about it on the radio yesterday, and I wish I’d heard about it sooner, because I would have ordered a turducken for Thanksgiving, instead of buying a bunch of fried chicken from Popeye’s, which is what I am probably going to do. What is a turducken, you ask? Only the coolest thing ever known to man: It’s a boneless chicken stuffed in a bonless duck, stuffed in a boneless turkey. The whole thing is stuffed with Cajun sausage, I believe. I should have known something this awesome would come from the Cajun culture. Anyway, you can actually purchase them online at CajunGrocer.com, which I plan to do as soon as the holiday is over. I’ll let you know how it goes. My mouth is watering already…

November 23rd

Chapter 21: The Mark

Ames and Cobb were excited. Joel had been able to give them a description, albeit a rather poor one, but he’d also been able to give them a rough sketch of the tattoo the man had on his hand, and that was something that they could look into.

They ignored the dagger-like stares of Joel’s parents as they stood up quickly, their movements taking on an almost frenzied speed, and rushed out of the room, murmuring thanks to Joel as they went. Joel was just glad to be rid of them. The pain had returned, and he was overcome with weakness again. Sleep overcame him as Karen wordlessly maneuvered the notebook from his hands and walked briskly out of the room, trying to catch up to Ames and Cobb.

Ames had a feeling that he had seen the mark before, but he couldn’t remember where. Maybe if he looked at it again… Wait, where was the sketch?

“Damn it, Cobb, we forgot the sketch.” They both turned and nearly bowled over a panting Karen, who thrust the note book at them. Cobb and Ames smiled. “Thanks Karen. See you back at the station.”

They turned and continued out of the hospital and on to their car. Ames took the passenger seat and examined the sketch more closely as Cobb started the engine and headed out of the parking lot, turning towards the station.

“Recognize something, Ames ? ” Cobb asked, amused at his partner’s look of complete perplexity as he peered at the sketch.

Ames sighed and reluctantly moved his eyes away from the sketch. “I dunno. It looks so familiar.” He shook his head. “But I can’t put my finger on it right now.” He rubbed his eyes and leaned his head back against the headrest.

“What a day. I’ll be glad when we can get some rest. What time is it, anyway?”

Cobb glanced at the green clock in the dash. “‘Bout 4:30,” he said. “No rest ‘til we get this thing straightened out though – I’ve got a feeling we’re on to something. We need to finish this out as soon as we can. This is a make-it- or-break-it case for us, you know?”

Ames gave a low snore as a response, and Cobb smiled. Might as well let him sleep for the few minutes it would take them to get to the station. It would hopefully clear his head enough to help him remember where he’d seen the tattoo before.

The station was clearing out when they arrived. It was quitting time for many of the administrative workers, and the parking lot was becoming deserted as they pulled in.

Their first stop was Foster’s office. She was on the phone when they entered.

“I understand that, Mrs. Mendocino. I will speak to them. Of course. If you have any other concerns, please just give me a call. I know… you’ll be the first to know. And if your son happens to think of anything else, please let us know. OK, you have a nice day, and I am sorry about your son… Bye bye.”

Foster exhaled slowly as she laid the handset down. “That was Joel Mendocino’s mother. She was upset because you stormed in and disturbed her son.” She looked up at them pleadingly. “Was it really necessary to barge in there like you did?”

“We ran into a complete dead end, Lieu. We figgered the kid could probably give us more information than he already had, and based on other things we were able to find out, we think this case may be bigger than just a simple mugging.”

“Really? What have you found?”

Both Cobb and Ames pulled out their notebooks, scanning the cluttered pages for reminders of the day’s conversations. “Well, we got confirmation that the dead victim is homeless. His name is Darryl; we weren’t able to get a last name. He’s in and out of St. Ives, a homeless shelter down around McAllister Park .”

Ames continued, “We went and talked to a number of homeless people in the area, especially down on 59 th , and they all told us stories of some ‘abductions,’ for lack of a better word, of homeless people these lat few weeks. Seems they all show up a day later, all beat up. Apparently it happened to Darryl, but no one we spoke to could tell us if it somehow related to his death.”

Ames paused, and Cobb interjected again. “Both of us feel like the abductions and Darryl’s death are related, but we’re not sure how yet…”

“But this,” Ames said, slamming the sketchbook down on Foster’s desk excitedly. “May be the link between everything. Joel Mendocino was able to sketch this for us. He said that the man who’d shot him had that symbol tattooed on his hand.”

Foster held the sketch up to the light, examining it more closely. She frowned. “You said there have been a lot of abductions lately?”

Ames nodded. “Is it possible that Darryl told someone a little too much about his experience and they had to have him killed?”

Cobb smiled. “That’s what we’re thinking.”

“Well, check with Organized Crime,” Foster said, handing the sketch back to Ames . “See if the sketch rings any bells with them. If these abductions are related, then there’s probably a kingpin involved somewhere along the line. OC might know something about it.”

Ames and Cobb nodded before turning and exiting the office, walking to their own desks in the main office. The station was still populated, but the usual bustle of the day had calmed down substantially since everyone had gone home.

Cobb picked up his phone and dialed the extension for the Organized Crime division as Ames headed back towards the records room. “Hi, this is Detective Cobb from Homicide. We got a victim over here, homeless man, possibly related to a rash of abductions and assaults that’s been happening recently in the McAllister Park area. One of the shooters had a mark on his hand. We’ve got a sketch, and we were wondering if you guys could take a look and see if you recognize it. Sure. OK, I’ll do it right now.”

He out down the receiver. “They want me to fax it over.” He walked over to the fax machine and fed the paper quickly through. Ames returned carrying a stack of folders and sat down, poring through them.

“These are reports from some of the other assaults that have been reported by hospitals recently. Most of them are from McAllister Park , which isn’t surprising in and of itself, but here’s something interesting. There are other reports of assault-like wounds from some middle-aged businessmen from the same day or the day following the same report from a homeless man. Coincidence?”

Cobb glanced over Ames ’ shoulder at the cluttered data in front of them. “So what are you thinking?”

“I dunno. But it seems strange to me that a bunch of businessmen get beat up, and a bunch of homeless men get beat up, all at the same time, and nobody wants to press charges or talk about it. Hell, a lot of them made excuses like, ‘I fell down the stairs,’ or some bullshit like that.”

The phone rang, shattering their contemplation. Cobb picked up. “This is Cobb. Uh-huh. Really? So soon, huh? Great. Yeah, fax it over. You say there’s a unit over in the area right now? OK, yeah, I’ll do that. OK, thanks a lot. Bye.”

Ames looked up from his reading excitedly.

“Well, we got a match,” Cobb said, walking over to the fax machine, where a copy of a police report was spitting out. “The OC guys said there’s an warehouse over on Delome that has been investigated by some blue and whites for the past couple of weeks. A woman has been calling to complain about noise coming from it for awhile, but by the time the blue and whites get out there, there’s nothing to be seen.”

“But how does this tie into the tattoo, and what does OC have to do with it? And furthermore, what’s a woman doing living down on Delome?”

Cobb chuckled. The old industrial section of the city centered around Delome Avenue , and it was generally considered to be one of the worst places in the city to live, but some residents refused to move.

“Well, OC started looking into it because there was a major OC-related drug bust around the area, and they’re thinking the entire area is probably used by gangs and whatnot for all kinds of nefarious activities. So they had a few of their guys look into it, and he remembers seeing a symbol sort of like the tattoo on the shooter’s hand etched into a door on one of the warehouses. They sent a blue and white out there tonight to keep an eye on things, and see if they could figure out what’s going on. What do you say we join ‘em.”

“Worth a shot, I guess. Strange that a mark like that would be etched in a door, but whatever. Thank God for small miracles, I suppose. Let’s go.”

Chapter 22: Disappearance

The silence that had followed James’ story was finally broken by Holly’s expression of thanks. She stood up slowly, reaching her hand towards the grizzled storyteller.

“Thank you, James, for telling us about this.”

“Wal, I figgered somebody oughtta know. Somethin’s got to be done, I think. I mean, most folks don’t seem to care too much about us down here, but still, it just ain’t right for us to get kidnapped and beat up like we do. Anyway, I hope maybe you all can tell the right people…”

Holly smiled as she released his hand. Ned nodded in acknowledgement and thanks as he and Holly turned around, looking for Ned and Ken. They weren’t sitting behind them where they had been initially. Where had they gone?

Holly glanced around frantically and began to call Ernie’s name. Ned calmed her down. “Holly… maybe they’ve just gone to the van… let’s just go and look.” He took her hand and led her towards the van. Holly wasn’t calm. The stress of the day was finally catching up to her. She needed a stiff drink – very stiff.

And now Ernie had disappeared! Her emotional side had taken over, leaving rationality by the wayside, and Ned’s confidence was not as comforting as it ordinarily was. She continued to look around as Ned dragged her towards the van, and called Ernie’s name at increasing volume even after they had left the bounds of the bridge community.

Ned, unlike Holly, still had a sense of rationality despite the straining and confusing events of the day. Perhaps it was the fact that he was an engineer, a professional, perhaps it was that he was male, but whatever the reason, he was dealing with the situation as calmly and coolly as could be expected.

Upon their arrival at the van, he peered around, looking for signs of Ernie and Ken both in and around the vehicle, but he found none. And Ken’s bike wasn’t in the back. His initial reason for going to the van was to see if the bike was still there, but upon inspection, he remembered that Ken had insisted that he remove it when they had arrived. Holly was growing increasingly agitated, allowing the worry of her maternal instinct get the best of her.

“Holly! Cal m down! I am going to go back and see if they went to the east side of the bridge. I’ll be back in a few minutes. You wait here in case they come back. OK?”

Holly nodded reluctantly in response. Ned made sure she was comfortable in the passenger seat of the van, then turned and walked back towards the bridge. He made his rounds, following roughly the same path that the quartet had made earlier in the day, but no one had seen Ernie or Ken for quite some time. Some people reported seeing them ride off on the bike about 45 minutes ago, so Ned’s suspicion that they had left of their own accord was satisfactorily answered.

He returned to the van and continued to try and calm Holly, reassuring her that both Ernie and Ken were not stupid, that they knew this area of town well, that they had most likely ridden home on their own; they were fine.

Holly didn’t seem to believe him, but she reluctantly calmed down and agreed that they should drive home. She could call St. Ives from home and make sure Ernie was back. Ned was glad when he finally spun the wheel and maneuvered his way back onto the road. He wanted to get home and have a stiff drink himself.

When he reached Holly’s small apartment, he debated whether or not to leave her alone. She had calmed down considerably during the trip, and assured him that she’d be fine. If she felt she needed anything, she’d call him and let him know. She exited the van and waved half-heartedly as she opened the door to her apartment building and entered.

Ned felt like he needed to calm his nerves, and driving had always been a good way to do that, so he decided to take the long route home. His mind wandered back to his homeland as he drove.

One of the core reasons that he and Lavina had emigrated to America was to escape the violence that had plagued their country. Thankfully, neither Ned nor Lavina had ever experienced the violence firsthand, but they had heard terrible stories of roving “death gangs” that would travel around, raping, beating and robbing anyone who got in their path. If they didn’t physically kill you, they’d do enough psychological damage that it was essen tially the same.

Ned shook his head. America was not the land of promise that he had hoped and dreamed it would be when he had contemplated the move from his European home. America was no better than the rest of the world – it had the same vices, the same violence and depravity, the same distaste for the less fortunate. No, America was not the land he had been promised.

He approached the small house that his family called home and parked the van on the street on the next block. His six children poured out of the front door of the house, the older ones smiling in warm welcome, the youngest running up to him and attaching themselves steadfastly to his legs. It had been an entire day! How had they ever gotten along without him?

He walked, children in tow, towards their home. Lavina stood in the doorway, a strange expression of disapproval on her round face. Ned entered the house and hugged her close, ignoring the children’s burst of laughter as he swept her back and kissed her fiercely on the lips. What a wonderful family they had created – together!

But it soon became apparent that Lavina was not in the mood to revel in the marvelous nature of their family. She pushed him away and said, “Someone is on the phone for you. Young and she sounds upset.”

Ned sighed. Lavina had so many astonishing qualities, but she was jealous. She thought that every young America n girl was on a personal mission to steal her husband away, and she fought fiercely for her man, though Ned knew that battle had been won long, long ago.

He walked into the small living room, sitting down heavily on the chair that was his. The children did try, on many occasions, to claim it for themselves, but it was well acknowledged among all members of the family that when Ned was home, the chair was his, and no one else’s.

He was looking forward to a few minutes of relaxation on the chair, then it would be time to do something really fun – work on the Jetta and get it up and running again. He grinned just at the thought of getting under the hood and immersing his hands in the greasy machinery.

He picked up the receiver and held it to his ear. “Hello?”

“Ned…” It was Holly, and she was crying. “I called St. Ives, and they said he isn’t there! He hasn’t come home yet! Ned, something’s wrong, I know it. I can’t explain it, but I know something isn’t right!”

“OK, what do you want to do?” Ned was tired, but he knew he couldn’t just let her sit in her apartment, by herself, and worry. No, he had an obligation, as both a friend and a man, to help her – to make sure she felt like she was helping the situation – if there even was a “situation.”

“Let’s go look for him. Maybe he’s hurt or something, you know, and if we could just…”

“Holly, he’s probably OK – the chances of something happening are just so…”

Dammit, Ned! I know he’s not OK!” she screamed into the phone, forcing Ned to move the handset away from his hear in a self-preserving reflex.

“OK, OK, we’ll go looking for him. I’ll be there in 20 minutes.”

“Thanks Ned.”

“OK. I’ll see you in a few minutes.”

“OK, bye.”

“Bye.”

He set the handset gently back on it’s rest, and laid his head back on the chair, closing his eyes blissfully for a few seconds. Well, rest, relaxation, and the Jetta would have to wait.

He stood up and called to Lavina. “I have to go out. Holly is worried about one of the homeless guys she knows, and I’m going to go help her look for him. I should be back in a couple of hours or so.”

Lavina met him in the hallway with yet another disapproving gaze. Out with a beautiful young woman, no doubt. Well, this one wouldn’t steal her husband away, oh no. She’d make sure of that.

Ned shook his head, knowing what she was thinking. “You needn’t worry, darling. You’re the only woman for me.” He reached for her but she pulled away. Oh well, someday she’d get over it.

“OK, well I will see you and the children when I get back. Children, be good, obey your mother, and I’ll be back soon.” A chorus of acknowledgments came from various corners of the house, and he turned, threw his jack over his shoulders, and stepped out into the darkness.

November 21st

**Chapter 20: Kidnapped **

Mike’s surrounding’s slowly faded into view as he came to. He had been unconscious twice today! It was starting to wear on his mind physically, not to mention his self-confidence.

He soon realized that he was tied, completely unable to move, to a chair in the center of Angelo’s office. The pieces of the broken coffee table still lay in front of the loveseat, though the girl was now gone. He struggled against the ropes that tied him down, but they were tight around his wrists and ankles, and the metal chair to which he was tied seemed too tough to break. It wouldn’t matter much, anyway. There was no way he’d make it out of the warehouse alive. He was more likely to rob a casino and run out of the front door unopposed than to get out of the warehouse with his skin intact.

He was, to be honest, a little surprised to find himself still alive anyway. It was very uncharacteristic of Angelo. But Angelo did have a bit of the James Bond villain in him, and Mike assumed that a delightfully painful death or maiming awaited him.

Angelo entered from the side door, smiling at Mike’s present consciousness. He was closely followed by Marty, the man whose blow from behind had created a lump on Mike’s head that still ached painfully.

“Well, Mike, it certainly is good to see you awake. It’s just not gentlemanly to come and visit someone, then fall asleep while they’re trying to be hospitable.” Mike ignored him as he paced around the chair to which Mike was tied, his hands held behind his back in their customary formation, a smile of supreme, gloating self-confidence written on his face.

“You may be wondering, Mike, why you are still alive after such an egregious breach of my rules, of the trust that you and I have built over these past months.” He paused, waiting for a response from Mike. There was none.

“And well you should. Ordinarily I would have killed you immediately – wouldn’t have blinked, wouldn’t have given you a second thought.” He paused again, ensuring Mike was listening.

“But I like you, Mike. I do. So I thought I’d give you a chance. You’ve always been one to stick to my rules in the past, Mike, which gave me reason to believe that something had happened to you. So, being the extremely generous individual that I am – I am a humanitarian at heart, Mike, you must believe me – I did a little sleuthing and discovered some very interesting things about you Mike.”

Mike bristled. What the hell had Angelo dug up on him? And how had he done it so quickly? Surely he hadn’t been out that long…

“Mike, I don’t know how to express to you my regret that Copeland saw fit to fire you today.” That son of a bitch! “But Mike, you have to understand the company’s position – you simply weren’t performing for them. You were a bad horse to bet on, Mike. And you know something about betting on bad horses, don’t you?” Angelo glanced at Mike, taking a perceptible pleasure in his discomfort at the enraging comments.

“But it didn’t stop there, Mike, and I can honestly say that I fully understand your actions in light of the new developments on the Turner home front. From what I hear, Mrs. Marie Turner has told the police all about her enraged husband who came home early and, in a fit of rage, brutally killed the man she called her ‘one, true love.’ Sad, really. You really need to learn to control your anger, Mike. Didn’t I warn you about that last time we discussed the races? Well, it doesn’t matter… it’s obvious you didn’t listen.” He raised his hands above his head in mock consternation.

“Why do I even try? It’s so obvious that no one ever takes my advice to heart!” Mike struggled violently against the ropes, causing the chair, and himself, to fall to the floor, crushing his immobile arm uncomfortably beneath him as he lay on his side.

Angelo knelt down, bringing his sweaty face within inches of Mike’s. His breath reeked of acrid smoke and stale coffee; his eyes were still bloodshot and spacey from the drugs. The toothpick he chewed in his mouth was crushed to fine fibers from hours of nervous chewing. “The police are crawling the city looking for you, Mike. It won’t be long before they find your wife’s SUV outside… and then, I’ll have no choice but to hand you over. After all, I am a law-abiding citizen – I don’t want to be party to a murder!”

He stood up, resuming his pacing. Mike remained on the floor, looking up at Angelo, whose body seemed oddly out of proportion from this strange angle. “I have a little surprise for you, Mike. A solution to all your problems. You see, I have the resources necessary to keep you from the pigs’ hands. I can keep you safe. And all I ask in return is a little…” He held his index finger and thumb slightly apart, illustrating just how little “a little” was. “…Cooperation. Just a little cooperation. And if this goes well, I may even be willing to forgive you that sizeable debt that you owe me. Now wouldn’t that be something?”

Angelo’s mock-friendliness was beginning to annoy Mike, and the lack of blood flow to his right arm was becoming extremely uncomfortable. He struggled again against the ropes, but he had even less mobility than when he had made his previous attempt, and his movements only confirmed the futility of his situation.

“Oh, Mike, forgive me, please! What a terrible host I am!” Angelo motioned to Marty, who stood Mike’s chair back on it’s four legs. Mike winced as the blood rushed back into his right arm, sending burning needles through its entire length.

“You must forgive me, Mike. Sometimes I just get so caught up in the moment that I forget my guests completely. It’s never intentional, I promise you.”

The phony act was really getting old. “You know what, Angelo, just cut the bullshit and get to the point.”

Angelo frowned. He was having fun. But business was business. “Fine,” he said. “Mike, you’re in deep shit. The cops are after you because of your little ‘indiscretion’ back at your house. So really, you don’t have much choice. You’re going to do what I tell you, or I turn you over to the cops. It’s that simple. Understand?”

Mike chose not to dignify the patronizing question with a response. Angelo continued anyway. “You really should see the pictures of the man you killed, Mike. It’s brilliant, the brutality of it, the unbridled primal passion of it all. It’s damn near a work of art! And that’s what I need – an artist – someone with a sense of the truly brutal, the truly primal. Someone like you, Mike.

“The organization I work with organizes a weekly ‘fight,’ of sorts, and you’re going to be the next prime attraction. You’re going to tap into that vicious side of yourself that you love to channel so much and beat some other guy to all hell. Or you’ll get beat to hell yourself. Either way, I win.”

He got close in to Mike’s face again. “Remember what I used to tell you, Mike. The house always wins.” He smiled eerily. “Tell you what, you think about it, and let us know.”

With that, a swift painless knock against his head brought on the blackness once again.


Ernie was walking alone along the nearly empty street, on his way back to St. Ives. He hadn’t lasted long when James had started telling his story. There were too many details, too many things to remember. Ernie liked his stories short and sweet, and happy too. That was the worst part about James' story – it had a sad ending.

He had grown bored and restless quickly, so he and Ken had left Ned and Holly and had continued around the area asking people about Darryl. But Ken had grown restless too, worried that his parents would be expecting him soon.

Ned and Holly were nowhere to be found, but fortunately, Ken had already claimed his bike from the back of Ned’s van, anticipating needing to leave before the others. 59th Street was within biking distance of Ken’s home, so he and Ernie set off towards the nice suburban neighborhood, Ernie riding on the rear pegs again.

The corner was empty as they passed by on Ken’s bike; the kids had all gone in for the evening. The sun was sinking low – night was almost upon them.

Ken had offered to let Ernie stay in the garage again, so that Ernie wouldn’t need to make the dangerous journey back to St. Ives, but Ernie had grown hungry again, and he longed for some of Rho nda’s soup and the warmth of his soft, familiar bed. So despite Ken’s protests and his own judgment, he had set off alone back towards St. Ives.

The light had steadily decreased as he had progressed on his trip, until the sun had dropped completely beyond the curvature of the earth, leaving nothing but the occasionally visible stars and moon and the flickering streetlamps to light the way.

Ernie wasn’t particularly nervous. He had made the trip plenty of times before, and even in the darkness, but the stories that he and Ken had been hearing throughout the day of mysterious abductions caused him to be more wary than normal.

There was nothing to give him concern, though. The street was quiet, except for the occasional rustle of a paper cup or newspaper blowing along the asphalt in the wind. Every so often, a car would round a corner and pass slowly by him, but for the most part, he had the entire quiet street to himself.

And so he walked on, not paying much attention to the car that passed by him, moving more slowly than the others, and not noticing that it was the same car that had passed him three ties now. It came to a stop at the curb a half block in front of Ernie, and the back door opened. A nice looking man stepped out, dressed in a suit and tie, wearing a fedora on his head, and smiling broadly at Ernie as he approached.

“Ernie!” he exclaimed as he approached, arms wide in greeting. “I thought it was you! I’m glad I stopped. No music today?”

Ernie didn’t recognize the man. How did he know his name? He stiffened as the man encompassed his body with his arms.

“I haven’t seen you in awhile! Hey, are you heading to St. Ives? How about a ride? It’s getting kind of chilly out here… I’m sure Rho nda would prefer it if you came in and got yourself something to eat. How about it?” He motioned to the still open back door of the car a few meters in front of them.

Ernie nodded. This man may know him, but Ernie didn’t recognize his face, and Rho nda had warned him nev er to get into strange cars with people he didn’t know. In fact, Rho nda had been clear that he shouldn’t even speak with those he didn’t know, but he wasn’t really brea king that particular rule; the other man was doing all the talking.

Ernie stepped around the man and continued on his way, but the man followed him and kept talking. “Oh, come on, Ernie,” he said, wrapping one arm around him as if they were pals. “I really have something I want to talk to you about! I know you have a lot of problems… you know, money problems, and problems remembering things, and stuff… I just want to help you out. Tell you what, get in the back of the car, and I’ll feel you in on my plan… I can solve all of your problems, I can get you out, Ernie, honest, but you need to get in the car.”

If a man ever comes to you, sayin’ he’s got da answer, dat he can get you out, you just gots to do one thing, don’t listen to ‘im. Darryl’s warning came flooding back to him, and he felt a sudden chill of fear. He wrenched his body away from the man’s arm and began to run down the street, but the man’s car was already pulling up ahead of him.

Two men stepped out and ran towards him. He attempted to turn and cross the street, but they were surprisingly quick, and headed him off in the middle of the street. They wrapped their strong arms around his body, and forced a strange-smelling rag in his face. He struggled briefly, and felt his Walkman slide from it’s customary position on his waistband and clatter on the floor. The men dragged him towards the car, and pushed him roughly into the trunk as he passed out.