Colour monkey supreme
Gender: None specified
Location: Markham, Ontario
Rank: Medium-in-training
Joined: Sat Jul 07, 2007 2:00 pm
Posts: 472
CHAPTER THREE~!
Hopefully you guys will dig this one better than the others @_@;;;;
I'll get started on another chapter next month ^^.
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In a secluded apartment halfway around the world, the pacing footsteps of a lone figure pondering the fate of an incapacitated intruder could be heard echoing faintly on old wooden flooring.
A professional assassin codenamed Shelly de Killer was mildly irritated by the manner today's subject had demonstrated signs of retaliation. Those who found themselves in such an unfortunate position would usually be frozen stiff to the core at what could be perceived as the sound of someone trampling on their graves.
Twice his frightened assailant had attempted to claw or bite at the stitches on his face, and was subsequently placed in a small cage to calm down. Never taking his eyes away from the creature who stared back at him, de Killer slowly stalked back and forth in deep thought. He cursed himself for failing to dispose of it earlier while being chased by the authorities after performing a hit for some young rising actor.
The troublesome task of getting out of the country unnoticed apparently took so much priority in his mind he simply forgot. What an abominably inopportune time for his age to show.
Traveling with an animal also limited his range of disguises; he had to keep it tranquilized constantly until he reached one of his safehouses without incident.
Then there was also the matter of finding a successor.
De Killer's competitors were grievously proving themselves incapable of earning his namesake; he spent the last week eliminating the more zealous assassins who intercepted him in London, Munich, Vienna, Budapest, and Rome. Nothing a coil of piano wire and a silenced Luger couldn't handle.
De Killer was severely disappointed they couldn't spare him the displeasure of handpicking one himself.
A new candidate had to be trained from an extremely early age. Simply choosing a random child from an orphanage was not sufficient. The child must be in relatively peak physical condition, of a sound and nimble mind, and most importantly, possessed no emotional attachments. It was a long and tedious process that bore no guarantees the child would surpass him in ability. Or so his predecessor once told him long ago.
Although there was plenty of time until the end of his self-imposed tenure, it was an inconvenience he would have to overlook for now in light of his more immediate priorities.
His slit-like eyes ripped away from the cage and stared at the photos on the wall, most of which were candid shots of his clients and his victims with plenty of stick-it notes dangling around each one. De Killer made it a habit of his to enlarge the photos of those who deserved his special attention; naturally he focused on the largest one and recalled a particularly bitter memory.
The one thing de Killer valued most in his cloak and dagger world was the trust between himself and his client, the kind of trust inspired through a reputation for quick clean work. For years he prided himself on earning his clients' confidence and ensured their safety by leaving his calling card beside each victim as part of his "aftercare" service. Finding a traitorous client or two in his line of work wasn't surprising but certainly very disappointing.
Recently in a much publicized news report, de Killer's last client had dealt a low blow to his dignity by revealing an intention to blackmail him with a videotape taken while he was "on the job".
Never mind the lengths de Killer took to protect his client's identity: coercing a defense attorney's co-operation by kidnapping his assistant, protecting incriminating evidence, and giving false testimony in court through a radio transceiver to frame a civilian. The fact still remained that de Killer had failed in his duty in many respects; voiding his contract with the client would not change it.
By being humiliated on national television for all his associates to see, the de Killer name had soon become the laughing stock of the underworld. Shelly de Killer would preserve his reputation and prove his competence by killing Matt Engarde.
He had been in the middle of planning the details for his next hit when a blurry object flew in his face like a jumping landmine.
Hands, feet and paws waved frantically in the air as one fought the other for control of this most amusing situation. The scuffle did not last long and soon de Killer had the kitten hanging passively by the scruff of its collar. Thankfully his face was relatively unharmed. Lucky cat, had it been a human assailant, de Killer would've been holding a torn larynx in his hand instead.
Adjusting his grip ever so slightly between his index and his thumb, he raised the kitten to his face just away from its reach. Upon a much closer inspection of the feline, it was much thinner than he expected underneath all that fur, but what were most peculiar were its front paws.
They showed signs of being declawed where the bones had grown back into short nubs, the result of an incorrectly performed operation no doubt.
Shelly de Killer recalled the kitten's display of vigilance during his visit at the Engarde mansion and mused how fortunate it was to still be able to run and jump on its feet with little difficulty.
During a previous car chase with the highway patrol, he entertained the idea of throwing it out of his Volkswagen as a distraction; he'd have done so had he the opportunity to reach into the backseat. As he watched the animal in its new cage, a rare grin played upon his lips as a few dozen other macabre thoughts emerged and clicked in his mind before he chided himself for his lack of hospitality.
This kitten was a guest in his humble abode, it was only fair that he ensure it was well taken care of.
At that, de Killer's gaze returned to the wall and he began to plot.
...
Now that he wasn't in the mansion anymore, Shoe was absolutely terrified of the new surroundings he found himself after he awoke from what felt like the longest slumber of his life. Scouring for openings left and right, he had no way of escaping the room at all: the windows and the door knobs were too high up to reach and there was nothing that could be used to climb up towards them.
Even trying to scare the old man into throwing him out the door didn't work out very well now that he was stuck in a cage.
Looking carefully through the metal bars, he knew he must be very far away from the colours and textures he once called home. Wherever this place was, it didn't matter. He was all alone now. With nothing else to do but shiver from the cold, Shoe curled up into a little ball and tried to fall asleep.
The sunlight faded behind dirty windows and before long, night had settled in.
Shoe's fur prickled at the sensation of warmth enveloping his body, a welcome relief for his heat-starved skin. Snuggling closer to his tail, he felt something soft and fuzzy underneath while he heard the faint scratching of metal and the sizzling of oil from the next room. His eyes didn't snap awake until the smell of tuna steak seduced his nostrils, turning his head towards a table on the other side of the room where the old man sat.
Instinct took over and before Shoe knew it, his paws were acting on their own accord. Hunger had apparently obliterated the revelation that he was outside his cage sleeping on a towel by the radiator.
Padding cautiously towards the table, he stopped and sat on his haunches, staring longingly at the dish the man was devouring.
...
De Killer noticed the kitten in the corner of his monocle and cracked a grin; that pleading expression the animal wore was simply too endearing to ignore the way it began pacing back and forth so quickly, licking its lips like a born predator. In the same manner he strangled a false priest in Rome, he slowly continued savoring every bite of his meal until he was finished.
By then the feline had sunk its little head onto the floor, unable to bear its hunger pangs.
With a chuckle that could give Santa Claus a run for his money, de Killer decided he was done his little revenge with the kitten and reached over the table to reward its patience. It practically jumped on all four feet when he set down a large steaming plate of tuna steak in front of its delirious eyes.
Seeing it pounce on the meat with such vigour was much more satisfying than the canned tuna with lima beans he just ate.
As soon as it finished, de Killer extended a hand towards the kitten, half-expecting it to bite his digits. Obligated to make a greeting, Shoe stepped forward and sniffed at the fingers pointed his way and noted the strangely clean scent of lemon and steel before backing away to lick the plate clean.
Now that a truce had been called, this might just be the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
...
For what seemed like a very long time, Shoe's initial discomfort had melted away like winter snow as he began growing more comfortable living with the old man.
With a little help from the juicy slabs of tuna steak of course.
Their friendship grew just a tiny bit closer when Shoe noticed how little de Killer was eating one evening and nudged a plate of half eaten tuna his way. In a polite gesture of gratitude, the old man carefully cut off a portion with the kitten's teeth marks and ate the rest, much to Shoe's delight.
The both of them often slept beside each other; the old man took the thin, worn out mattress while Shoe had the towel by the radiator. Whenever the man left the apartment, he was never gone for long and always came back with food and other strange objects.
...
One thing Shoe liked about the man was how often they got to play together. They played catch with tiny rubber balls that ricocheted around their room, chased mice on the end of a string, wrestled on the floor, and his favourite, hide and go seek. The both of them were quite mischievous around each other and would always find ways to surprise the other at home. The apartment didn't have many pieces of furniture to hide behind but it allowed them get creative. The best part was all the exercise made every meal they shared more enjoyable than the last.
Sometimes the old man would take out a round disk that made this tic-toc sound and swing it round and a round on a chain which was really fun to look at, but trying to keep up with the speed always made Shoe dizzy and drowsy. When he woke up afterwards, his body felt really heavy like he spent too much time pouncing on cockroaches. He didn't mind it much since the old man took the time to massage the knots out of his muscles with those long, gentle fingertips.
Shoe was getting much better at running and jumping these days. Although he could easily touch the edge of the window sill and climb up if he wanted, it was too icy cold for him to stay up there for long. One time he found his way into the ceiling by crawling through a small hole in the wall and up the wooden planks and metal pipes. He didn't notice he was so high up that when his curiosity drew him to a tiny column of light off to the side, the surface gave way and he landed on a couch right onto the man's lap.
The old man was rather expressionless at the surprise yet it took him a few moments to register what just happened and resumed reading his morning paper. The kitten was so terrified his four feet remained stuck on the man's thigh until he fell over on his side.
One day Shoe found himself on the old man's work bench with the glowing screen and a wall full of flat people. He saw a picture of his old master and hissed at it until he grew bored and moved onto the ones beside it. Some of the pictures couldn't be seen clearly since there were giant black squiggle marks in front of their faces, marring their features. He was reminded of the black bars and cubes that occasionally show up on television when the news channel was on. They were all quite fascinating for the kitten to try imagining what those marks really meant.
...
De Killer arrived home quietly with some groceries and a few boxes of ammunition when he heard some muffled noises coming from his room. Placing his items on the floor carefully, he silently walked over to the edge of the door with practiced ease and pressed his ear against the wall as he watched the floor for moving shadows. He reached for the comforting grip of his Luger and carefully opened the door a crack with his free hand to scan the surroundings.
Instinctively sensing no danger at last, he relaxed and walked towards the kitten who was curiously mewling and pawing affectionately at one of the larger photos on the wall. Following its gaze towards the center of its attention, he felt another one of his rare grins stretch across his solemn face.
Adrian Andrews.
Giving the tiny creature a lingering scratch behind the ears, De Killer plucked the picture from the wall to give it a closer look. The kitten was all too eager to nudge and nuzzle at its newfound treasure, he could easily tell she won its heart just as he had. He nodded in approval, she was certainly exceptional indeed.
In fact that woman was an especially rare case where he was still debating his decision whether or not to eliminate her.
Since he didn't have the opportunity to take her photograph, he settled for a television screen capture of her on the witness stand during her trial. She had the look of one who had nothing more to regret in this life after what she had been put through. Her delicately fine features were never lost on the assassin; appearances were certainly decieving.
Having looked through her background, he could only shake his head in profound amazement. The gall it took for her to desecrate a male corpse by plunging a blunt dinner knife halfway into the chest area, through the thick layers of clothing no less, for the sole purpose of implicating his now former client for murder. He should have taken her under his wing when she was much younger, she would have made a fine de Killer.
However due to her involvement in the court proceedings, she was to some degree the initial cause for putting his reputation at risk. On the other hand, if it weren't for her he would never have discovered the truth and be forever denied the sadistic pleasure of invoking a great traumatic fear inside the heart of a traitor with an audience listening in.
De Killer felt his jaw tighten and rebuked himself for such idealistically foolish thoughts. He was a professional assassin. Cunning, ruthless, unforgiving. As long as he carried that name, he would continue to commit many unpardonable deeds. Even if he was slowly growing senile, he noted to himself.
Looking back down at the kitten, that dreadfully adorable creature toying with a photo in its grasp, the assassin briefly felt something resembling pity towards the feline.
If it weren't for the factory noises outside and the kitten meowing in content, anyone in the vicinity could hear him bristle.
Not even the hooded man who slipped in the apartment with a gun behind De Killer's head at point blank range.
The tiny strains of metal coil constricting together as the trigger was being pulled became the prelude to the explosion that reverberated throughout the entire room followed by a blood-curdling scream of pain.
...
Droplets of crimson flew upon the floor where a pair of hands gripped and twisted the gunman's arm free from its socket before a steel-toed shoe had pierced deep into his side. The weapon now cast aside, de Killer proceeded to wrestle with the wounded man around the room as the battered floor groaned in protest underneath their weight.
Between gritted teeth he uttered two words only the kitten cowering in the corner could hear.
His mind turning white with adrenaline, Shoe jolted to attention and raced towards his friend's attacker to place a well-deserved bite on the nose. Desperate to keep his balance, he relentlessly clung and clawed onto the gunman's face until de Killer threw the unwanted guest out the window and onto the cold pavement below.
With some urging from the old man, the excitement rushing through the kitten's veins suddenly came to a halt and he slowly returned to his shyly inquisitive self.
That was simply too close.
De Killer wiped the blood off his shoe with a handkerchief before he cleaned and wrapped the wound on the side of his hand with some spare gauze he carried in his back pocket. His old age was starting to show in his dulling reflexes. At that distance he had been extremely lucky to catch the sound of a pulled trigger before it was fired and reacted instinctively. He would have been a lot worse off if that gunman stood farther away to make the shot.
It was the first time in a while Shelly de Killer had allowed someone to sneak up on him. In those split seconds his nerves finally decided that he'd much rather be killed by someone who had much more class in their methods than doing something as vulgar as shooting an unsuspecting head from behind at such close range.
Why not use piano wire for goodness sake? It's a far more elegant tool for professional assassins!
"Professional assassin indeed," he digressed. De Killer would have to abandon this safehouse now that he had stupidly called attention to himself like this.
Gathering his most important belongings into a black duffel bag and burning the rest, he tucked the shivering kitten in the crook of his arm and made sure its precious photo was safely inserted into his breast pocket. Checking and double checking that he didn't leave anything behind, he strode into the kitchen and turned on the gas stove while he shoved a coke can into a microwave and timed it to the precise second they could escape safely.
Racing down the fire escape and slipping into the alleyways, a deafening explosion erupted behind them like Mt. Vesuvius. One safehouse down.
...
Shoe was beginning to learn more new things these days. First, as inexplicable and harrowing these sudden changes in events were for the kitten, he could clearly tell he had lost another home. Second, his body felt heavy again, possibly from the fear of having watched the giants engaged in wrestling match in the room earlier. Last but not least, today he understood the reason for his friend's distinct scent of lemon and steel; he realized the old man didn't like the smell of blood on his hands and washed them frequently. His friend must get into fights like that pretty often.
Shoe craned his neck to watch the burning building come alive in fire and smoke, half-wondering if he'd have to keep having to move from house to house like that. He looked back at his friend's calm face breathing warm puffs of air in the cold afternoon, and snuggled back into the scarf he was wrapped with.
One thing was certain, he wasn't traveling alone.
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Last edited by axl99 on Tue Sep 18, 2007 10:36 pm, edited 9 times in total.