Monday 20 October 2014

Mr. Blow Kills Again

“Aaand we’re back! If you’re just joining us, I have here on the show with me, Steven Pee-ri! I finally got it right, didn’t I?”
“Hehe, yes, you did.”
“I mean, your name isn’t the easiest to pronounce! Well, it is, but reading it you’d think it’s pronounced, Firi! Because, you know, it’s spelt, P-H-I-R-I.”
“Don’t worry about it, Mike. I have been getting that a lot since I started travelling around Europe and America,” replied Steven in his Zambian accent.
Mike Stone turned to camera one and spoke to the audience at home, “If you’ve been living under a rock for the last three years or so, Steven is the bestselling author of, Assassin Rising.  A page turner of a book about a brutal freelance assassin, who in his spare time, is a friggin’ aspiring author!”
Steven Smiled.
“How ever did you come up with a concept like that, Stevie? Mind if I call you, Stevie?”
“Not at all,” said Steven shifting in the couch next to the host’s desk, “I quite literally stumbled upon it. I think it was the Italian artist, Michelangelo that said about his stone sculptures, ‘Every block of stone has a statue inside it and it is the task of the sculptor to discover it.’ I found this unfortunate scene at the hotel and I saw a potential story in it.”

Steven Phiri had literally stumbled upon his now world famous story. He had been a cleaner at a five star hotel in the backyard of high society’s streets. It didn’t pay much, but it helped him fund his education at a local college. He went about his work in the same half-assed manner millennials at the older end of the scale carry out their mundane tasks. But sometimes, on a good day, he would come across something valuable on the floors or in the crevices of the overly priced hotel rooms.
The occasional hundred dollar bill, used condoms, traces of cocaine or marijuana, gold chains and sometimes even semi-new clothes were some of the items he would find. He and the other cleaners would fight regularly to take on recently vacated plush hotel suites because they knew there could be hidden treasures within them. You could say Steven found a diamond in the rough.
“So you found this bloody scene in a hotel room you were cleaning, and you were inspired to write a book based on it,” Mike Stone asked, fingertips touching and elbows resting on his desk, “most people would be horrified by such a thing!”
“For a while I was truly horrified,” replied Steven. This probably being the only true statement he would make on the Stone Cold Show that night. “But people deal with trauma in different ways. My process was through story telling. I thought,” he said with his eyes looking up at the studio ceiling, as if the perfect lie or quotable were written there in bold, “How can I turn this tragedy...into triumph?”
“Admirable!” said Mike in that vaguely sarcastic tone late night TV show hosts employ. “Isn’t that absolutely admirable, folks?”
The studio’s ‘APPLAUSE’ light box lit up and the audience obliged enthusiastically.

On that fateful day at the hotel, Steven had rolled in the hand trolley with his cleaning supplies like he always did. He was playing soft music in his earphones like he always did, and he set out to raid the room of misplaced valuables like he always did. Because Lost and Found be damned, he figured. Once a suite was vacated, the area became his domain for the duration of his cleaning process and whatever he found was rightly his. He felt the universe owed him something for all the nasty messes he had to clean and wipe up. But no pot pourri scented multi-surface cleaner would have been enough to clean and wipe up the nasty mess he came across that day.
“I’m sure the people in the audience and the folks at home are just dying to hear you read an exciting excerpt from your book! Why don’t you grace us with a little something, Stevie?”
“It would be my pleasure,” Steven smiled, leafed through a copy of Assassin Rising and cleared his throat:

Roman was the type of mark I actually relished killing. I’d told myself long ago not to derive pleasure from my work, but there was a certain satisfaction that came with stopping the pulse of a fat parasite like him. I felt that I was doing society a favour.
I’d watched his place for weeks and knew his routine like the back of my glove. In my profession, even though you always showed up unannounced, you still had to set an appointment. And even though the party on the other end of that appointment didn’t know you would be visiting, you wanted them there when you arrived.
I could have used a muzzled 9mm pistol, a knife or even poisoned the burley leach, but I wanted to hear the saliva curdle in his throat while I choked the air out of his clogged lungs with my wire. I wanted his end to come slow and painfully. I wanted to rob him of his life the same way he robbed so many poor bastards just trying to make an honest living.
Roman didn’t see me coming. I was death in the flesh. He had collected millions in racketeering and ‘protection’ dollars, and now I had collected from him too. I had collected on his life.

Steven rummaged through the room carefully and methodically, turning over each pillow and throw, patting down the sheets of the queen-sized bed. He scanned the carpet for any tiny jewellery and checked the room’s closet for anything remotely valuable. He picked up a thick manuscript from the bedside table and tucked it under his trolley, naive to the fact that what he had just tucked away would propel him to superstardom and overrated bestseller lists.
He almost gagged when he walked into the bathroom to find a very hairy man sprawled naked in a tub of blood. Steven froze at the entrance in disbelief, staring at the blood smeared hand prints on the tiled wall and little puddles of blood-water on the floor. He’d seen dead bodies before, but they hadn’t been ragdoll contorted and this gruesome. Before he knew what he was doing, he was lifting the furry dead man’s hands and checking for rings. The thud from the lifeless arm dropping on the side of the bathtub sent him flying toward the toilet bowl and heaving his noodle breakfast.
The police questioned him for weeks and he was in therapy for about the same period. Every so often he would have a nightmare about the dead man coming alive and pulling him into the bloody abyss of the tub. He had almost forgotten about the manuscript he had found at the crime scene. Handing it to the police was out of the question. Unless he wanted to be grilled further and raise his prospects of being a murder suspect.
“That made the hairs on the back of my neck stand! You can actually FEEL the assassin’s emotion!” shouted Mike Stone. One could never tell if he was genuinely excited or he was just faking his enthusiasm.
“That is what I was going for,” said Steven, “I wanted to convey the same depth of emotion that I had felt when I found that body, except repackaged in a different form.”

The manuscript was filled with post-its and annotations on almost all its pages. Little notes were made by its author to remind him to change some bits to make his ties to the gruesome tales inside less obvious. How a world class professional assassin had left this gem lying around at a crime scene was unfathomable. This book was no work of fiction, it read like a chapter by chapter confession of a hired assassin. Fake passports, disguises and stakeouts had never seemed so real. The world had to see this.
Steven read it cover to cover multiple times before finally pitching it to a few publishing houses. Of course a number of them turned him down, but one of them was bound to take the book on. He worked with several editors and made various changes and grammatical corrections, but essentially it remained the same. As soon as Assassin Rising hit the book shelves, Steven feared for his life.
He didn’t make any public appearances when the book was propelled to the New York Times bestseller list for months on end. He instead went into a paranoid spiral and surrounded himself with a security team and even food tasters. For a whole year, his dread of the author whose original story he had stolen added to his mystique and the book only sold more copies. People were intrigued by this man from Africa that had written a literally heart stopping book and chose to remain out of the public eye. He only began to feel safe after roughly two years had gone by.
He still suspected it would all come crashing down on him. He thought maybe the assassin would come forward and confess his murders, telling the world what a fraud Steven Phiri was and that the balance of the universe would finally teeter against him. So he occasionally made large donations to charities, giving him a false sense of the universe starting to totter in his favour.

“The big question now is: what’s next for Stevie Pee-ri?” Mike Stone said excitedly.
Steven smiled and crossed his legs, “I can’t speak on it just yet, but I have a new book in the works. People will just have to wait and see.”
“I can hardly wait! Well ladies and gentlemen, that’s all from us today! Look up Assassin Rising on Amazon, do yourself a favour and buy yourself a friggin’ copy! It’s to die for! Good night!”
The audience applauded and the studio lights dimmed as the credits rolled on the screens of the viewers at home. Steven made some small talk with Mike Stone and then made his way to his dressing room with no bodyguard or security in tow. He’d began to feel a lot safer after three years.

“I guess I really should be thanking you. You got my book to number one and that’s really something.”
Steven wished he still had an army of bodyguards standing outside the dressing room. He had never heard that voice before, but he knew without a shred of doubt that the universe was cashing its cheque.
“I’d tried for ages to get my work to a willing publisher, but they all thought my story wasn’t real enough. Ironic, isn’t it?”
“...I—listen –I – I’m terribly sorry... things just got out of control,” Steven wept.
“You stole from me,” the assassin said.
“....”
“I suppose there was nothing you could do. It’s not like I had left a number that you could reach me on, ‘Hey! I made millions of dollars off your work, I just thought you might like to share some of this money!’ My fault really, I shouldn't have been carrying my manuscript with me.”
“I cou—I could write you a cheque right now!” Steven sobbed.
“I don’t want your money,” the assassin said tearing a few pages from what originally was his book. He wore a black suit and tie that were so dark they absorbed any light in the room and complimented the emotionless look he had on his face.
“I’ve been waiting for the right moment,” the assassin said stuffing a page down Steven’s throat, “Patiently stalking the shadows and waiting for you to let your guard down. Patience is such a virtue,” another page. And another page. And another. Soon Steven had half-swallowed a whole chapter and his eyes had rolled back in his head, tears and mucus streaming down his face.
The assassin turned and left the room. He still had a page in one hand and he let it fall to the floor. It read:

As dark as the contents of this book are, it is still my wish that they should see the light of day. Death and murder are not matters that should be taken lightly, nor matters that the world would receive with open arms. But it is my twisted, and yet sincere hope that people will read about the good I have done; that they will look upon my work not as evil, but as a service to humanity. I hope that they will see that even though I am death in the flesh, I am an agent of the universe, restoring order and balance.


THE END


Benny Blow is a retired assassin with a penchant for fiction and offing publishers that reject his work. Follow him on Twitter, @Benny_blow.