He noticed her as soon as he walked into the bar. She
was sitting with another girl, a blond; pretty, he
supposed, but his attention was riveted on the
dark-haired one. He ordered a beer and took a table in
the far corner where he had a good view, while he
himself was safe from watchful eyes. She had satiny hair
to her shoulders, high cheekbones, was slender in a silk
print top, black slacks, like a woman on the cover of a
magazine. She was laughing at something the blond said,
flashing perfect white teeth and his heart tripped.
She's the one, the voice told him. Excitement surged
through him as he recast her in the movie that for years
now, replayed endlessly on the screen of his mind.
When the two women rose to leave, he left his unfinished
beer on the table and casually, so as not to draw
attention to himself, followed them outside. She had put
on a jacket and it shone bright white in the lights from
the parking lot.
After chatting briefly, the two girls gave each other a
quick hug, then parted and went to their respective
cars, parked a good distance from one another. There was
a rightness to it. They might just as easily have come
in one car, or parked closer to one another. But they
did not. The stars were finally lining up in his favor.
He came up behind her as she was fitting the key in the
lock of the red Corvair. "I'm Buddy," he said softly, so
as not to frighten her. Despite his best intention, she
whirled around, eyes wide. "Jesus, you scared the shit
out of me. What do you want?"
He felt the smile on his face falter. A mask, crumbling.
"I just want to talk to you."
"Fuck off, okay? I'm not interested."
With those words, her beauty vanished, as if he'd
imagined it. Her mouth was twisted and ugly.
Disappointment weighed heavy on him. Anger boiled up
from his depths.
"That was wrong of you to say that to me," he said,
still speaking quietly.
Belying the softness of his voice, she saw something in
his eyes then and he saw that she did, and when she
opened her mouth to scream, he stuck her full in the
face with his fist.
She slid down the side of the car as if boneless. He
caught her before she hit the ground, then dragged her
around to the other side of the car, blocking her with
his own body in case someone saw them. Not that he was
too concerned. If anyone did see them they would just
figure she was his girlfriend and that she'd had one too
many. But there was no one in the lot. Even her friend
had already driven off.
He lowered her limp form to the ground while he hurried
round to the driver's side and got the key out of the
door. He put on his gloves, and opened the passenger
door. After propping her up in the seat, he went back
around and slid into the driver's side. Then he turned
on the ignition and the car hummed to life.
Shifting the car into reverse, he backed out of the
parking spot. He gave the wheel a hard turn and she fell
against him, her hair brushing his face and filling his
senses with her shampoo, something with a hint of
raspberry. He pushed her off him and her head thunked
against the passenger window. A soft moan escaped her,
but she didn't wake.
He drove several miles out of the city, then turned left
onto a rutted dirt road and stayed on it for a good ten
minutes. Spotting a clearing leading into the woods, an
old logging road no longer used, he eased the car in,
bumping over dips and tangled roots. He went in just far
enough not to be seen from the road on the off-chance
someone drove by, but also taking care he wouldn't get
stuck in here. The headlights picked out the white
trunks of spruce trees, spot-lighting the leaves that
seconds later receded into blackness, as if this were
merely a stage set.
Beside him, the woman moaned again then whimpered, her
hand moving to her face where he had struck her. Blood
trickled darkly down one corner of her mouth and her
eyes fluttered open. He knew the instant she sensed him
there beside her, like the bogeyman in a nightmare.
Except she was awake now. When she turned to look at him
he felt her stiffen, could see in her eyes that she knew
she was in big trouble. He almost felt sorry for her.
Almost.
"Who are you?" she croaked, more blood leaking from the
corner of her mouth, eyes wet with tears.
"What does it matter?"
"Please…please don't hurt me. I'm—I'm sorry for what I
said to you. I shouldn't have. If you want to… I mean,
it's okay. You don't have to hurt…"
His fury was like lava from a volcano and his hand shot
out, the back of it shutting off her words in
mid-sentence. "Shut up, whore."
She was crying hard now, heavy, hiccupy sobs, helpless,
terrified. But her tears meant nothing to him. She was
right to be afraid. He slid the knife from its sheath
that hung on his belt and let her see it.
"Oh, God, no please…" She was choking on her tears,
wriggling away from him, trapped, like a butterfly on
the head of a pin. He smiled when she reached for the
door handle on her side, and then drove the knife into
her upper arm. She screamed and he wound his fingers
into her hair. "Be quiet," he said, while she held her
arm with her other hand and wept like a child.
As he had wept. As he wept still.
"You can't get away," he said. "There's no place to go."