By Camelia K.
"The fact that I’m afraid makes me more afraid.”
She brushed her forehead with the back of her hand.
The hand got wet and warm.
“Makes me sweat,” she continued, rubbing her wet
hand against her leg.
At the opposite end of the table sat a man dressed
in a black leather jacket, wearing a black baseball cap, drinking from a small
glass. He took two sips, one after another, finishing the drink. He shoved the
glass aside, then slid his hand into the inside pocket of his black jacket, the
one by the heart. He kept it there for a long time. The bartender, who was watching
the two of them from behind the counter, wondered if the man was going to pull
out a gun.
“Get over it!” the man commanded to the woman, and
turning to the bartender, he said, “One more for me.” Then he pulled out the
hand from the inner pocket of his jacket. He was holding a wallet that he
opened and, taking a bill out of it, put it by the empty glass.
The bartender came and replaced the empty glass with
a full one. He tried to see the man’s face, but it was dark and smoky inside the
room, and the brim of the hat was concealing the eyes, throwing odd shadows on
the man’s figure. He just took the bill and walked away.
The woman looked over the man’s head towards the
door across the room. The bartender thought that she might want to leave. Her
glass was empty, but she didn’t seem to mind. Her hand gripped the purse
resting on the tabletop. She was an attractive female in her thirties, no
scruples, easygoing, red hair, and a helpless look in her eyes - the kind of
woman the bartender would bring home for a night to make her feel better. But
he wanted her gone. The man she was with seemed to make her suffer.
“Would you, guys, be around then?” she asked,
leaning towards her partner. He looked up at her from under his hat’s brim, pulled
down to escape her annoying eyes.
“We’ll watch you,” he said, pushing the brim a
little higher with a stroke of his knuckles. The light shone on his face.
Peaking from behind the spirit bottles, the
bartender saw a good-looking man about her age, two deep wrinkles around his
tight lips. No wonder she’s hooked,
he thought.
“You have to make up your mind, quick,” said the
man, emptying the glass with one sip. “I won’t be waiting forever,” he added,
setting the glass back on the table. The noise of the glass on the wood made
the woman shiver.
“What about her?” she asked, her soft voice
disappearing in a shallow breath.
“Her…. After,” he said.
“No. Can’t be. You promised.”
The bartender saw panic in her eyes.
“No, it can’t be after, please,” she insisted.
“You do the job, we’ll give her back. After.”
The woman moaned. She reached for her glass. The man
grabbed her hand and pushed it hard against the table.
“Let’s go!” he said.
The woman fought to free her hand, but he didn’t let
go. She looked around.
The room was empty. Even the bartender was gone. He
was watching them from behind the kitchen window. He saw the man standing up
and dragging the woman while she was trying to free herself.
“No,” she said, “I need to see her first, speak with
her,” she cried.
The man put a hand over her mouth and kept dragging
her. The door was a few steps away. She struggled. She was strong. The man in
the black leather jacket lost his grip for a moment. Then he raised his right
hand above. “Don’t make me!” he sneered and slapped her face so hard that she
lost her balance for a second. Her purse dropped open, spilling over a handful
of little white plastic packs, which the bartender, just coming out of the
kitchen, recognized right away.
The man in the black leather jacket froze for one
short moment, eyes fixed on the poor bartender.
“Pick ’em up!” he said, pushing her on the floor.
“Hurry!”
Then he reached inside the interior pocket of his
leather jacket, by the heart. The bartender thought that was kind of funny
because the man had already paid for his drinks. The second it took him to
realize that something else may be hiding there, he saw the man pulling out a
small pistol.
A short noise cracked the night.
The bartender felt a little pinch in the stomach before
he understood what had just happened. The pinch became a burn, a flame, and a
breathtaking pain spreading like a plague through his body. Falling, he saw the
woman crying while picking up her white plastic packs. He still thought he
could do something to help her and, maybe, take her home one day if he got
lucky. But he heard another short noise and felt a second pinch somewhere
between his ribs.
So
much for being lucky, he thought, while his head hit the
hard wooden floor. He didn’t hear the police sirens screaming, nor the woman
shouting: “Don’t shoot, he has my daughter…please, don’t shoot…” her
lamentation mixed with the bursts of gunfire.
Soon, everything was over.
“What a pity, he was our best informer,” said an old
police officer zipping the black sack over the bartender’s body.
The End

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