those already. But this one was a woman. An old woman. She was about his age. Suffering from the haze like him, only not so dense yet. She goes out every night, finds somebody doing wrong, it could be a little thing, a little mean thing, somebody purse-snatching, shoplifting, whatever, not bad enough to kill somebody over, but she goes ahead and kills. That helps her sleep.
Something he should try.
He could use a good nightâs sleep.
He reads. Comes to a good part. The old woman bumps into a man her age. A retired killer. They talk, they have dinner, they walk on the city sidewalk, Manhattan maybe, they laugh about something. They look at the moon. They look at the stars. The two of them, theyâve got things in common. Killing is just one. They like pasta. They like to read. They got problems with their kids who want to stash them away somewhere, force feed them pills.
âIâm going to have to kill my daughter,â he tells her.
âYour own daughter? Thatâs extreme.â
âIs it?â
âYour own flesh and blood, hell yes, extremely extreme.â
âIf Iâm going to escape the home, be with you, thereâs only one choice. Sheâs got to go.â
âMaybe you could sneak out of the home.â
âI tried that. Theyâre always watching.â
âI could help you.â
âYouâd do that?â
âWhat else I have to do? Iâm tired of killing. Iâm ready to hang it up. I just been doing it to fill up the hours.â
âGiving up killing isnât as easy as you think. Killing becomes a way of life.â
They kissed. They went to bed. All of it described the way he liked it in books. None of this timid bullshit like they close the bedroom door and the reader is stuck out in the hallway, canât even hear them moaning. No, this woman writer showed everything. Not flinching at any of it, or being coy like how he hated some writers did it. That was one of his peeves. Not showing the real world. Like nobody ever took a dump in books. Dumps were important. You couldnât live without taking a dump. After the two old farts made love, both of them took dumps.
It was a good book.
He fell asleep.
Woke in the haze. Deep gray smog.
Javier was there with his sunnysides.
âYou have a good night, Mr. Connors?â
âYou ever screw an old lady, Javi?â
âNot that I recall.â
âYou having trouble with your memory, boy?â
Javier set the breakfast tray on his table. Little round thing by a window.
âEat your eggs, Mr. Connors. Drink that coffee while itâs hot.â
âWho do I have to kill to get out of here?â
âYouâre being funny again, Mr. Connors.â
âA regular Jack Benny,â he said. âKnow who that was?â
Javier was gone, leaving behind the eggs and coffee and unbuttered toast.
He spent the day with his book. The old lady serial killer and the retired hitman.
They caught a cab together, went downtown, way down to the bookstore where his daughter worked. They walked past the store, looked in the window, kept walking.
âSheâs pretty.â
âDark-haired like her mother.â
âOnly girl I saw was a blonde.â
âYeah, thatâs her.â
âWhatâs her name?â
âLike what, this is a test? I got to remember everybodyâs name?â
âDonât get huffy.â
âThat was huffy? You havenât seen huffy.â
Their first big fight.
They walk for a while without talking. Sheâs mad. Heâs mad too and hurt.
At a corner, itâs down near Soho, she hails a cab, gets in, drives away. Doesnât look back.
âShit,â he said. âLeft me standing in the cold, not sure where I am. Shit.â
He threw the book at the door.
Javier is there to check on him. Wondering why thereâs noise. Why the bookâs sprawled on the floor.
âIâm fine. Itâs the
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