Detective Ackermann slowly walked out the entrance door of the victim’s house, with both his hands tucked firmly in his harem trousers. He took a few steps away from the crime scene and headed towards the deacon’s bench across the roadside. He realized the bench was as dusty as it could get but he still slumped into it without care.
He leaned forward, placed his head in his hands, and groaned. Huge body-shaking sobs racked his body, each coming in a wave, he let out a low whimper. “When is this atrocity ever going to end?” He ran his left hand through his black messy hair repeatedly and reached out for his mobile phone with the other hand. He got into his contacts list and started scrolling down hastily with his thumb. He eventually stopped at the “S” column and phoned the first contact. The call got answered on the first ring.
“Hello, Ackermann.” Said the called party.
Detective Ackermann: How far away are you? We need to turn off the flashers; it’s still sleeping time for the neighborhood.
“Oh- I’m just around the corner” ----- hangs up!
Detective Ackermann sighed hard and started caressing his eyes. It was two fifteen in the morning and he had not slept a wink. He closed from work rather later than usual, filing a report on a particular case. He got home twenty after one and the moment he untied his shoes, a call came in, following a homicide. Not just any homicide, one from the one who called himself THE ANGEL OF DEATH. Detective Ackermann was extremely irritated after the call came in; not because he was fatigued after the long day’s work, nor because he was especially sleepy. He was vexed about the call since the perpetrator was the one person he’s investigated for years but hasn’t found a grain of clue on him.
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Special agent Shirley arrived about three and a half minutes after talking over the phone with Detective Ackermann. She parked her twenty-sixteen Ford Mustang across the road, right in front of the rugged deacon’s bench where Ackermann was seated.
“Sorry for the lateness” – She sang immediately as she dived out of her ride. "You look like shit..." She added.
He nodded and started walking in the direction of the house.
"I feel like shit...! Shall we?” ---
“I’m right behind you”
“He enters the house from the backdoor into the kitchen; He glares at the victim for a while as she dances to the loud music in her ears whiles she washes the dishes in the cinque. He walks up behind her, and without wasting time, he forcefully pulls her head back to expose her neck. He slits her throat from under her right ear across her windpipe with his sharp dagger.
The victim first falls, she feels warmth coming down her throat all of a sudden. She looks down and realizes her clothes are soaked with loads of her blood. She gets confused because she feels no pain. She gets on her feet and turns around to see who held her head earlier --- she immediately understands what's indeed going on. She starts feeling a great amount of pain in her neck, and the inability to breathe -- she tries to escape from him. She takes a walk into the living room with her hands over her throat, trying to stop the blood from oozing out. The Killer followed slowly behind her, knowing she had no chance of escaping. She crashes into the glass table in front of her couch and shatters it. She lay her back over the shattered glass, her hands still fixated on her gushing throat.
The killer stares down at her with a massive grin on his face. The victim tries hard to let out a good scream, but instead, she hurt herself – chokes on her own blood. She covers her slit throat with her left hand and stretches out the right to reach the Killer. Even though she knows he’s the reason for her pain and suffering, she still stretches her arm to him for help. He laughs at her helplessness.
The killer, whiles she’s still alive and in pain, starts dissecting her, in search of his trophy; her heart. The victim dies a few seconds after her heart had been ripped out.
He paints his favorite phrase on the wall with her blood.”
Special agent Shirley narrated after several minutes of studying the crime scene. “I’m always amazed every time you do this, Shirley...”, detective Ackermann stated.
“Yeah… What do we know about her?”
“Well, her name is Matilda Amber, 36. She works at--- worked at “MARCO’S”, the Grocery store down the street.”
“I see. Who called it in?”
"Her neighbor across the street… She made the call even before the victim was attacked; I haven’t yet talked to her so I think you should head over there.”
Shirley gaped wildly.
"Before she was attacked....? Does -- that mean..."
"It's looking that way."
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The cold and heavy air of the dejected night rushed angrily into her eyes the moment she came out of the house. She unhooked the red scarf around her neck and caressed her eyes with it. HER RED SCARF – which she'd never left behind since it was handed down to her by her grandmother on her death bed. “This… has been in our family for generations. Take good care of it and pass it on when you have to.” Shirley had just turned eight the day her grandmother passed.
Thinking that was the worst thing that could ever happen on a birthday, the universe showed her there was something more inauspicious in line for her. Shirley’s heart randomly decided to stop beating a few hours after an ambulance had transported her granny’s corpse to the morgue. She knew her grandmother was gone, and, she wouldn’t see her again; she was downhearted --- but only that wasn’t enough a reason for her heart to stop beating. Her parents rushed her to the hospital, but that didn’t make any difference.
“I’m very sorry Mr. and Mrs. Odoi, there was nothing we could do. Your daughter passed even before she touched the ground.”
Her mother shook her head and smiled.
To her, this was just a bad dream that she knew would be over soon, when she woke up. It just wasn’t possible in her point of view --- to have both the eldest and the youngest of the family, die on the same day.
Just wasn't possible.
That day was the worst in the history of the worst days of their family.
The father, on the other hand, knew this was reality. And, even though he was grieving and hurting on the inside, he had already accepted the reality and the depth of the matter. “Things happen, good and bad --- We have no control over it” -- That was his everyday quote, passed down to him by his father when he was still in his teens, after the death of his beloved mother. An unexplainable miracle or somewhat happened though. A nurse rushed into the doctor’s office during the time he was with Mr. and Mrs. Odoi.
The nurse bashed the door open: “She is… She’s not dead!” The nurse’s statement echoed repeatedly in the girl’s father’s ear; at first, he didn’t realize the meaning of that statement: "She’s not dead." Or perhaps he did know what it meant, but it just sounded so unreal that his mind had to replay it to him repeatedly. He got on his heels and raced as hard and as fast as he could, with the mother and the doctor, and the nurse pacing behind him. He entered the room hastily and found his daughter who'd just defied the odds of death, jumping playfully on her bed with no grain of care or somewhat, with the red scarf tied around her neck. The man broke down in tears the moment he laid eyes on his daughter. Her happiness, while she was playing, was so peaceful, and her smiles, so genuine, lightened her father's grieving heart. The mother walked in hurriedly and took Shirley into her arms. “I knew nothing could happen to you, my baby...!”, She said as she wept.
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It didn’t take too long for the two to notice the significant change that their daughter had undergone, following the miracle.
It’s only natural for someone to change after he or she comes back from the dead, but they weren’t dealing with that kind of change --- this was more of a physical appearance kind of change. Shirley’s previously short platinum black hair had inexplicably become very long, almost reaching her tailbone, and the color had turned pure silver. Her eyebrows and lashes had also mimicked the coloring of her hair and had also changed.
The girl’s parents weren't bothered with that at all, they were just glad their daughter didn't cross over to the other side.
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Agent Shirley landed a light half-knock on the door of the supposed witness's house, directly opposite the victim's. A chime from her mobile phone announced the arrival of a new “W******p” text message.
It was from Gehrig;
The night is so lonely without you sweetheart --- I miss you. She smiled lightly and hit the reply button, but the audible clicking sound from the door unnerved her. She slid the phone back into her jacket pocket.
“He… Hello…?”
“Hi there. I’m Special Agent Shirley, investigating the homicide that just took place; the one you called in.”Shirley stated as she revealed the badge to her.
“Oh—um, okay…” the woman said hesitantly after taking a thorough look at Shirley’s hair and the four corners of her face. “I want to ask you about exactly what you saw. And, please, don’t mind my looks” --- said Shirley with a light smile. The woman smiled back at her, but it was as fake as a politician promising authenticism.
Shirley immediately spotted the weightlessness of the smile but didn't take it to heart. That wouldn't be the first, and it was far from being the last. Everywhere she'd gone--- and almost everyone she'd met for the first time, took a second look at her, and tried to figure her out. Everyone thought it was a deficiency or somewhat, but it didn’t bother her when she was eight; it surely didn’t bother her in the latter.
More importantly, she deemed it a gift from her grandmother, following a dream she had had when she was still lifeless— a gift, alongside the red scarf which was already in her possession.
“Okay, so I came out to get something from my car, and that’s when I saw him,” said the woman.
“You saw him? What did he look like…? Would you be able to recognize him?”
“Well, I didn't see his face…"
“hmm?”
“How do I explain this? So I saw someone standing right there, glaring steadily at Matilda’s house, and it felt strange immediately. I rushed inside to phone her but she didn’t answer – then I called 911 instead. After the call, I came back out to check if he was still there, but he was already gone.”
“I see--- thank you. Call us when you remember anything else.” Shirley spun around and walked away. Normally, there were questions she would have asked a witness about the victim; something about if the victim had problems with someone that might have led to the murder, but here, she already knew who the perpetrator was, and those questions were especially unnecessary here. She knew what she had to do though; to retrace each step the victim on that day, every corner the victim passed, to find out if she was followed, or other clues for that matter. This... she’d done with every victim, and the factuality of the matter was that Shirley never missed anything; she never left a stone unturned, yet, she found no relation between the victims and the angel of death. But she remained as determined as ever. Every murder gave her extra motivation to bring down the so-called angel of death.
Hi, comment what you think about I-shirley -- thank you
The piercing ring tone from her mobile phone made her jump, stubbing her toe against the glass table right in front of the couch she had fallen asleep in. She looked around hesitantly, confused about how she got on the couch, how she was still in her working clothes, and why her phone sounded so utterly violent in her ears. She felt the immediate ache in her head, something she was used to waking up to, but the pain she felt at the time threatened to split her head. She put her hands on both sides of her head and squeezed her eyes shut. She answered the call. "Hey, kiddo, what’s up?" --- "Hi...umm, Chief Tador is asking for you, and he’s boiling with rage". --- "Huh? Why?" "There's been yet another... Angel of Death" incident." "Huh? Wait... what? Already?" "Hmm... yes." "Alright. Text me the location" "Oh-don’t worry about that; I’m parked right in front of your house" --- hangs up. Shirley dropped the phone and sighed hard. She stood up and knocked over an empty wine bottle
Shirley sat at the other side of the apartment, silently and attentively watching the horrific scene. She’d been completely lost in thought for several minutes that she didn’t realize that all her colleagues had cleared the room. The strong vibration from her ringing phone made her snap right out of it. She took a hesitant look around the room and then realized shortly after that she was alone. She chuckled. Shirley: Hey! Thanks for bringing me back. Everyone else left without notice. Ackermann: Wait… Huh? Shirley: Oh, never mind. What’s up? Ackermann: Well, I just woke up and, heard the news… He really killed a baby…? Shirley: Hmph… We need to put an end to this. I want to say “before this gets out of hand”, but it’s already gotten out of hand. Ackermann: I know right? Anyways I’m sure you didn’t get any sleep last night, so um, after you’re done there, direct Azriel to me then you go get some sleep, okay? Shirley: Yeah, alright. Sounds good. Shirley hopped out of the chair almost imm
Shirley drove home with Azriel at her side. The entire ride was so quiet. Both of them lost in their own thoughts. Shirley couldn't believe what she'd just seen, and Azriel, too, freaked out to the bones even though she when hadn't seen the footage yet. Shirley wouldn't show it to her for some reason. "I can't show it to you, you can't see it. Not yet at least; not while you are in this state". Azriel turned her face to her side of the car, thinking hard about what happened to her earlier. It's never happened. At least not while she was still awake, and that's what made it even worse. When you're in a nightmare, it feels genuinely authentic, but then at the same time, it doesn't because you're asleep. Azriel's was a different story. She was fully awake. She could feel the wind rubbing her cheeks and blowing her hair from one direction to the other. So when she found herself in that situation, she was completely freaked. It all started with Shirley's description of how the homicide to
I-Shirley Chapter 5 Shirley went into the kitchen to get herself a glass of water. She’d worn her hair up, smeared a good amount of Aloe Vera on her face, but kept the region around her eyes dry for the blindfold. Drinking water before bed was something Shirley had done almost all her life, though she only found out about the health benefits a few years ago. Throughout the years, she knew it was a good practice to drink a glass of warm water before going to bed; at least, that’s what her mother told her when she was still a little girl. The woman would bring her a glass of water, make her gulp everything and then send her to sleep. Sometimes if Shirley goes to sleep without drinking, it wouldn’t make a difference to the mother because she’d wake her daughter up and hand her the glass, and Shirley would always be annoyed with her for waking her up, but the mother wouldn’t mind. After some time, Shirley would get a glass of water, stand in front of the mother, and finish it to avoid an
I-ShirleyChapter 6"So are you going to tell me what that w
REBEKAH MECEDA Rebekah had come across many villages even before she turned 21. The young woman had been on the road for over four years. She could have settled in either of the villages, but she refused to. She would say she didn't appreciate how this village smelled, and the next town she would say gave her a weird vibe, and she didn't like it. Every person in either of the villages wanted her to stay. Rebekah Maceda was a good "medicine woman" who had at least a piece of idea of every sickness and what kind of leaves or medicine could cure or control it. She left a mark on every village she passed through because she would attend to the sick and heal them. "You need to find a place to settle. These times of war aren't good, especially for young women like yourself." They would tell her and try to lure her to stay and take refuge in their village, but she wouldn't. Rebekah knew they wanted to scare her and make her stay, but she also knew they spoke true. The kind of world they w
Chief Tador shook his head vigorously in disapproval. He wouldn’t put his entire force on a ghost hunt and definitely wouldn’t waste time searching for whole bloodlines because one of his agents believed in ghosts. “Not only do you want to become ghost busters, but you also want us to find out about each and every victim’s progenitors? Are you aware of how many victims there are?” Spat Chief Tador. What Azriel suggested they do was simply over the bar, and the Chief wouldn’t climb that high, not while the Angel of death was still on the loose. Chief Tador was a straightforward fundamental man who appreciated facts. He wouldn’t go ahead with any decision if he felt a grain of dissatisfaction with it. He didn’t believe in ghosts; he didn’t believe in demons. And even if the shadowed man from the video told him he was either of the two, Chief Tador wouldn’t believe it and would still want to put cuffs on his hands. The Chief deemed Azriel’s idea simply unworthy of their time. “Th
Shirley and Azriel arrived at May's house fast. A drive that was supposed to take longer was shortened to about ten minutes. Luckily for them, there was no traffic, and Azriel herself was a fast driver. Watching her drive on a good day would make you feel like a formula one racing competition spectator. Shirley would tell her to relax behind the wheel; that is when Azriel is driving and alone in the car. But when Shirley's with her, she would ask her to feel free and operate the vehicle how she felt. Shirley enjoyed sitting beside Azriel when she was speeding, and she wouldn't get scared or anything – but when Azriel is driving alone, she gets worried for her. Weird really! Shirley untied the rubber band, released her hair, and made it run loose when they hopped out of the car. The vital air jiggled her hair slightly as she reached for her glasses and folded both temples around the middle of her blouse. Azriel drew closer to her, glared in her face from the side, and kept smiling sh
Shirley had waited for Azriel for hours and finally given up, after getting no response from her in text. Shirley felt like something was wrong at first but shook out the negative ideas from her head. The robbery staged case didn’t even take half a day to break. It might have been that easy, but Shirley was that good as well; she needs to be acknowledged. Who would have found out the apartment manager had something to do with the incident… yet, Shirley did; quite easily for that matter. Shirley rushed to the airport right after cracking the case, to pick up Azriel, who was supposed to have arrived 45 minutes ago, at 14:00. The thought of her missing her flight didn’t cross Shirley’s mind, because Azriel had confirmed earlier about joining the flight. Shirley went on home.Azriel didn’t miss the flight… She actually took it, saw Shirley at the airport and avoided her. She had her reasons though. She had found the identity of the angel of death, and that saddened her. Professor Wake tex
Frazier clapped his hands together in triumph and yelled,"Two birds with one fucking stone! Thank you, Lord!" Hestarted thinking. "Any outbound calls? How's she passin8the info?""No calls from her home line or her cell since ths oneOkay, she's in Georgetown, right? Get a bead on allpublic phones in a two-mile radius of where she lives andcheck them for recent calls to other pay phones or prepaidcells. And find out if she has a roommate or a boyfriend andget their numbers and call logs. I want to see a crosshair overPiper's forehead"It was evening in Los Angeles and the heat was starting todissipate. Mark remained in his bungalow all day with a DoNot Disturb sign on the door. He vowed to do penance forKerry by fasting but got light-headed in the afternoon andbroke into the assortment of salty snacks and cookies at thebar. In any event, he reasoned, what happened to her wasmeant to happen, so he wasn't really to blame, was he? Thethought made him feel a little better,
Marilyn Monroe had stayed there, and Liz Taylor, FredAstaire, Jack Nicholson, Nicole Kidman, Brad Pitt,Johnny Depp, and others whom he forgot because he wasn'tpaying attention to the bellman, who could see he wanted tobe alone and watched him leave quickly without the custom-ary grand tour.To the bellman, the guest looked confused and disheveled.His only bag was a briefcase. But they got all types of richdruggies and eccentrics, and for a tip, the mumbling fellowhad stripped a hundred off a wad so it was all good.Mark woke up, disoriented after a deep sleep, but despitethe cannon fire in his head, he quickly snapped to realityand closed his eyes again in despair. He was aware of a fewsounds: the low hum of an air conditioner, a bird chirpingoutside the window, his hair rubbing between the cottonsheets and his ear. He felt the downward draft from a ceilingfan. His mouth was so desiccated, there didn't seem to be amolecule of moisture to lubricate his tongue.It was the
The heavy, sweating animal between his legs warmed hisbody against the crisp chill of the mid-December day. Hewas not a good rider. Stonecutters were used to slow speedsin an ox-drawn cart. He gripped the reins tightly, pressed hisknees against the belly of the beast and held on as best hecould. The horse was a healthy animal that the monasterykept stabled on the mainland, just for this kind of purpose.A ferryman had rowed Ubertus from the shingled beach ofVectis to the Wessex shore. Josephus had instructed him tomake haste and return within two days, which meant thehorse must be made to canter.As the day wore on the sky turned slate gray, a hy.to the rocky face of the coastal undercliffs. He rodethrough a frosty countryside of fallow fields Pacewalls, and tiny villages, much like his own. Occasionallyakinde at pace stonehe passed dull-looking peasants, trudging on foot or ridtlethargic mules. He was mindful of thieves but in truth h:only possessions of value were t
It was harvest time, perhaps Josephus's favorite season.when the days were pleasantly warm, the nights cool andcomfortable, and the air was filled with the earthy smells ofnewly scythed wheat and barley and fresh apples. He gavethanks for the bountiful proceeds from the fields surrounding the abbey walls. The brothers would be able to restockthe dwindling stores in the granary and fill their oakenbarrels with fresh ale. While he abhorred gluttony, he be-grudged the rationing of beer that inevitably occurred bymidsummer.The conversion of the church from wood to stone wasthree years complete. The square, tapering tower rose uphigh enough for boats and ships approaching the island touse as a navigational aide. The squared-off chancel at theeastern end had low, triangular windows that beautifully illuminated the sanctuary during the Offices of the day. Thenave was long enough not only for the present community,but the monastery would be able to accommodate a greaternumber
Luis had looked at it and had told him it was probablypolice? He hadn't. He was too frightened. They had arguedwith a postcard pinched betweenl his fingers. It's a Doomsdayostcard, Asshole, with my name on it and today's date!a sick joke. Maybe the idiot clerk John had recently firedvetting back at him. And anyway, had John called thewasack and forth for a while until Luis's cellphone had goneoff on the hall table with its campy "Oops I Did it Again"ring tone. John had leapt for it and had cried out, Who thefuck is Phil? Answer, truth be told, was the guy from SuttonPlace, but Luis had dodged the truth unconvincingly.John's emotions had red-lined and, according to Luis, thenormally mild-mannered fellow had lost it, grabbing thealuminum softball bat that he had abandoned by the frontdoor a decade earlier after tearing an Achilles tendon inan adult-league game in Pelham. John had wielded it likea lance, pushing the end into Luis's shoulders, screamingobscenities. Luis
When Martin was young, his father would take him fishing, because that's what fathers were supposed to do.He'd be woken before dawn with a poke on his shoulder.throw on clothes and climb into the pick-up truck for thedrive from the panhandle town of Quincy down to PanamaCity. His father would hire a 26-footer by the hour from aworking-class marina and chug south about ten miles intothe Gulf. The journey, from his dark bedroom to the spar-kling fishing grounds would occur with scant exchange ofwords. He would watch him pilot the boat, his bulky frametinged orange by the rising sun and wonder why even thenatural beauty of a warm morning boat ride on calm shim-mering waters did not bring joy to the man's face. Eventu-ally, his father would stub out a cigarette and say somethinglike, "Okay, let's get these lines baited up," then lapse intosullen silence for hours at a time until a snapper or a wahoohit the tackle and orders had to be barked.Crossing City Island Bridge and
At the end of the day, they went back through buck nakedSince scanners couldn't detect paper. Underground was ster-Building 34 vas the most sterile complex in the Unitedby a cadre of Department of Defense recruiters who didn'tlie ground. Nothing came in, nothing came out.States. It was staffed by employees who had been selectedhave the slightest clue about the nature of the work for whichthey were recruiting. They only knew d the of skill interviews set that they wwere allowed to reveal that the job involved Area 51, athen only with the permission of their superiors. Inevitablthat wasrequired. At the second or third round of inter51, andInevitablylace theyed replyinstallationall that cansful applicantment employeesathe recruiters were then asked, "You mean the place theykeep aliens and UFOS?" to which their authorized renlwas, "This is a highly classified government installaidoing critical work on national defense. That is all thatbe disclosed at this time. Ho
The man was thin but extremely muscular, clean-shavenman said.to me?" he asked.all over, you know what I mean?"each other, having a jolly time."Maybe not. I'm just saying what I would have done."and black-haired, with soft fleshy lips and oily skin the colorof hazelnuts. He was Puerto Rican with a strong islandaccent, casually dressed in black slackS and loose-fittingtropical shirt open to the breastbone. He had long mani-cured fingers, a square gold ring on each hand, and shinygold chains around his neck. At most he was thirty-five. Heextended a hand, and Mark had to grab it out of politeness.The ring seemed to weigh as much as the appendage. "LuISCamacho," the man said. How you doin' ?"Peter Benedict," Mark replied. "I'm doing okay"Luis pointed emphatically at the floor. "When I'm in towthis is my favorite place. I love the Luxor, man"ed sipped his beer. There was never a good time foremall talk, especially tonight. A blender whirred loudly.JIndeterred, Luis cont