By J. R.
Lindermuth
The scrape of footsteps on the cobbles behind him quickened
his pace. Fright had replaced his usual confidence earlier when he first became aware of
his pursuer and now his anxiety increased with the realization he hadn't eluded his shadow.
The big clock
in a nearby church steeple chimed the midnight hour just moments ago, though it
meant nothing to the man known only as Hook for he could not tell time any more than he
could read or write. Still, he knew it was long past the hour for ordinary citizens to
be abroad on a weekday night.
Hook
broke into a run, turned a corner, then another before
ducking into a dark opening between two buildings. He stood, chest heaving with the exertion,
his exhalations forming a hazy cloud in the damp air, as he strained to hear the approach
of his unknown follower. Silence. I've evaded him, he thought. Yet, he decided it
best to wait a bit longer to be sure. Sweat burned in his eyes and dampened his armpits
as he waited.
The lack of lamps
on this street pleased him. The moon above was in its final phase and the dark of the night
gave him solace. His breathing and the erratic beat of his heart became more normal as
he leaned against the moist brick wall of one of the buildings. Bats swooped above him
in pursuit of insects and the only sound he detected was the lonely wail of the horn of
a tug out on the bay.
At length, Hook moved on. He was late. The doctor would
be angry.
Arriving at his
destination, Hook paused to glance warily up and down the street. Detecting no movement,
he quickly opened the gate, entered the yard, and darted down the stairs to the below-ground
lair where he'd regularly delivered his product in recent weeks. The doctor worked in a
lab of his creation here rather than at the hospitals like others of his kind.
"You're late," the doctor barked as he entered the room.
"I thought someone was following me."
"You led them here?" Anxiety was obvious in the tone
of the doctor's voice.
"No," Hook assured him. "I was careful. I eluded him."
His only employer at the moment peered at him, his dark
eyes a mix of anxiety and disgust. Hook stared back at him. His adversary was a short,
stout man, balding, and with long-fingered white hands. Hook didn't even know the man's
name. They'd been introduced by a surgeon who no longer sought Hook's assistance.
"You
haven't brought me anything," he said. "How am I to continue my work if you can't supply
me what I need? I hope you're not expecting to be paid tonight."
Hook exhaled a long
breath. "It's becoming increasingly difficult to procure product. There was another protest
at the hospital this morning. It got nasty. It's bad enough when you have to watch out
for the police. With the people riled up--well, it's dangerous to go poking about even
in the poorest of cemeteries."
"You
don't need to tell me about the protest," the doctor snapped. "I was there.
It's bad enough when the fools are shouting insults. This morning some of them were hurling
bricks. A colleague was struck and severely injured.”
"But, as I've told you before, my needs are different
from the vivisectionists you're accustomed to dealing with. I don't require bodies for
students to dissect. I need specimens to conduct my medical research. And I particularly
don't want decaying trash like you brought me last time. That body was so putrid I could
barely stand to be in the same room with it. I require fresh corpses."
"Look," Hook responded,
his anger building, "it's difficult enough to find bodies with all the competition. Are
you expecting me to kill people to provide you with merchandise ripe enough to suit your
needs?"
"Yes. I'm
willing to pay a premium if you can provide what I need. If you can't, I'll look for someone
who can."
"I'm the best
in the business. But I draw the line at murdering people. I'm a resurrectionist, not a
murderer."
"I'll pay
double—no, triple the normal price."
This
admission stunned Hook. Though he wasn't about to admit to this man or any other that
he'd murdered in the past. Triple the price. It was intriguing. The common practice of
digging up bodies from a cemetery was becoming increasingly fraught with danger. There
were armed guards in the cemeteries of the wealthy and family members were standing watch
now in those used by the lower classes. Luring a drunken sailor or a street whore into
a darkened alley, though—that had possibilities. The disappearance of such street
trash wouldn't raise a ripple of interest from the police.
"You'll guarantee the price?"
"I give you my word. But they must be fresh."
"Male or female? Young or old?"
"Fresh is my main concern."
Hook thrust out a
hand. "You got a deal. I'll need to scout around. But I should be able to deliver in a
day or two."
"Make it a
day. My need is pressing."
In
debating with his client Hook had dismissed the thought of his earlier fears of being
followed. Now, as he headed home, it came to mind again. Was it merely a figment of his
imagination? Possibly. Though the streets in the area were the realm of some dangerous
characters. There were pickpockets aplenty as well as those who'd slit the throat of another
for pennies. He'd need to be more careful in the future.
Hook had been procuring for the doctor for a little
over a month and it had been profitable before the recent increase in security at the burial
places. The idea of their new arrangement gave hope the profitability would increase once
more. And with less risk.
****
The lure of increased money brought Hook out the following
night. It was a chilly night made worse by a drizzling rain that soon soaked his clothing
and soured his mood. Still, he kept on, though hours of hunting passed with no sign of
quarry. He sighed. It was a dismal evening that kept even the worst of people indoors nursing
toddies by warm fires. Hook was about to give up and seek his comfort when a dark
figure moved out of the shadows and crossed his path.
Elated,
Hook hastened to catch up.
He
didn't need to have hurried. He was surprised to see
the person halt and turn to await his approach. Fate was providing him with a willing victim.
Hook smiled in anticipation. Such luck was unexpected. He slipped a hand into the pocket
of his overcoat and gripped the handle of his sap, a lead ball enclosed in
leather, a weapon capable of putting any target quickly out of action.
His fingers relaxed when
he saw the person awaiting him was a young woman. A streetwalker who could be easily enticed
to go the short distance to where the doctor awaited them. "Hello, sweetheart," he said,
"Have you been waiting long for me? It's a nasty night, but I know a nice warm place
nearby."
"I knew you'd
be along," she responded with a smile.
She
was better-looking than he would have suspected. Her figure was concealed by a sodden cape,
but she had a pretty face and the white teeth displayed by her smile were
surprisingly even and without gaps. He seized her arm. "Shall we go along, then?"
The girl didn't resist, though she asked him to loosen
his grip on her arm. "Your strong fingers are bruising my poor flesh," she told him.
"I will if you promise not to scream or runoff."
"Why would I want to do that? I want to go with you."
"Very well then." He relaxed his hold, throwing his
arm around her shoulders instead and hurrying her along to their destination. This was
easier than anticipated.
The
girl was quiet as they continued on and Hook was occupied
with the thought of the easy money he was about to make. The doctor would be pleased with
this lively specimen for those experiments of his, whatever they might entail.
He opened the gate
and allowed her to precede him down the steps. He knocked at the door and the doctor flung
it open. "What?" he stepped back in surprise. "Who is this?"
Hook laughed, shoving the girl ahead of him into the
room. "You asked for fresh flesh and here it is. Look at her—a fine figure of a young
woman. Isn't she better than some rotting corpse dug up from the ground?"
The doctor was stunned. "I didn't expect you to bring
a live person."
The girl staggered
a bit as he released her. Hook noticed her forehead was dotted with perspiration and her
face looked oddly white in the glow of the lamp on the wall beside her. He thought it must
be fear of what lay ahead.
"What difference does it make?" Hook drew his sap from
his pocket and held it aloft. "I can put her out of her misery soon enough." He grinned.
"Do you have my money? If you don't want her I'll take my pleasure and dispose of her on
the streets. It's up to you."
He
caught a flash of movement beside him as the girl darted a hand out from under her cape
and spun toward him. Hook felt a sharp pain before realizing she had stabbed him in
the belly with a short dagger. Before he had a chance to react, she slashed the blade across
his thigh. He screamed and dropped the sap as he felt his warm blood running down his leg.
"You bitch," he screamed, moving toward her.
The girl stepped back, the knife held before her. "Come
on," she urged, "Come ahead and next time I'll slit your dirty throat."
The doctor was cowering at the back of the room, a table
between him and the crazy woman. "I haven't done anything to you," he cried. "Go. Run away.
I'll make sure he doesn't come after you."
"I'll go when I'm ready," she said, keeping her gaze
fixed on Hook. "I'd like to stay and watch you both suffer. There isn't time. I'll be dead
before the wages of your sin catch up to you. I'll need to be content with the horror I
see on your faces when you hear what awaits you."
"What are you talking about, you lunatic?"
The girl smiled again. "You, you bastard," she said
to Hook, "I watched you dig up my husband's body from his grave and bring it up here for
this maniac who calls himself a doctor. I've been following you since then, waiting for
a chance for my revenge. I wanted to stab you with my knife and laugh as you
died. Then I discovered I'm suffering from the same pox whatever it may be that took my
husband from my loving arms."
Hook
glanced from her to the doctor. "Are you gonna help
me before I bleed you death?"
The girl laughed. "You're not going to die from those
little cuts. They were just a sample of the pain you're going to feel soon."
"What?"
"You've
both been exposed. First from my husband's corpse and now from me. We've gifted you
death. May it take you slowly and painfully."
END