The Killing Room (Richard Montanari) - By Richard Montanari Page 0,1

do. In this moment she can all but hear the wheels turning, the fevered reasoning in his mind. In the end they remember, because this is the one vow they all know will one day be recalled. A single tear rivers down his scalded cheek.

‘Yes.’

She glances down, notices a dark stain blossoming on the front of his trousers. He is wetting himself. She has seen this before, too. The release.

‘Come with me,’ she says. ‘I will show you what you need to do.’

The young man steps forward on unsteady legs. She helps him. He seems to possess no weight at all, as if he were sculpted of steam.

At the mouth of the alley she stops, turns the young man to face her fully. ‘He will need to hear your words. Your exact words.’

His lips begin to tremble. ‘Can’t I tell just you instead?’

‘No,’ she says. ‘Your contract was with him, not me.’

The young man wipes his eyes with the back of his hand. ‘Then he is real after all.’

‘Oh, my, yes.’ She points to the dark niche at the end of the alley. ‘Would you meet him now?’

The young man shakes his head. ‘No. I’m afraid.’

She meets his gaze in silence. A few moments pass.

‘May I ask a question?’

‘Of course,’ she says.

He takes a deep breath, exhales. His breath is warm and vaporous and sour. ‘What do I call you?’

There are many answers to this. At one time she would have been called Magdalene. At another, Babylon. At one time, indeed, Legion.

Instead of answering the question she takes his arm. She thinks about the approaching days, the end days, and what they are about to do. Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamos. There is an order to it all. If there was no order she would surely go mad, and then she would live among the low people: the wicked, the dispossessed, the forsaken.

They dissolve into the city, followed by a long and solitary shadow. Around them the winter winds swirl, but she no longer feels the cold.

It has begun.

Seed, flesh, bone, dust.

Order.

TWO

The kid looked doomed.

Detective Kevin Francis Byrne had seen it many times before – the blank stare, the knotted shoulders, the hands loosely held, ready to become fists at the slightest provocation. The tension, Byrne knew, was institutional, a twisted wire in the middle of the back that never uncoiled, never relented. Sadness haunted the eyes. Fear was carried on the shoulders.

For this kid, and the millions like him, there were enemies around every corner, dangers in every noise, whispers in the night that said:

What’s mine is mine, what’s yours is mine – you just don’t know it yet.

The boy was eleven, but his eyes were an old man’s eyes. He wore a dark blue hoodie, frayed at the cuffs, low-slung jeans, at least two fads out of date. His rust-colored Timberlands were scuffed and rutted, too large for his feet. Byrne noticed that the boots were tied with different type laces; rawhide on one boot, nylon on the other. He wondered if this was a fashion statement, or done out of necessity. The kid leaned against the dirty redbrick wall, waiting, watching, another ghost haunting the city of Philadelphia.

As Byrne crossed Twelfth Street, bunching his collar to the raw February wind, he considered what he was about to do. He had recently signed up for a mentoring program called Philly Brothers, a group loosely patterned on Big Brothers Big Sisters. This was his first meeting with the boy.

In his time on the force Kevin Byrne had taken down some of the darkest souls ever to walk the streets of his city, but this encounter scared the hell out of him. And he knew why. This was more than just a man reaching out to an at-risk kid. Much more.

‘Are you Gabriel?’ Byrne asked. He had a picture of the boy in his jacket pocket, a school photo from two years earlier. He decided not to take it out. If he did it would probably only embarrass the kid.

As he got closer Byrne noticed that whatever tension was in the boy’s shoulders ratcheted up a notch. The kid raised his eyes, but did not look into Byrne’s eyes. He aimed his gaze, instead, to a place somewhere in the middle of Byrne’s forehead. It was an old salesman’s trick, and Byrne wondered where this kid had picked it up, or if he even knew he was doing it.

‘They call me G-Flash,’ the boy said softly, shifting his weight from one foot