Marco V Muzzi
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marcomuzzi
marcomuzzi January 9, 2021
Short Story fiction, italy, rome, spy thriller, world war 2

Roman Affair

“What are you doing?” She asked. Groggy.

He brooded out the sunlit window.  

“Cosa fai?” She repeated, louder, and in his native Italian tongue.

The thin edges of his lips bristled. Green eyes narrowed. His hand—forced against the windowpane ahead of the olive arm into which his taught, naked body leaned—flexed at the fingers.

“Waiting.” The young man’s voice sliced across the room—deep and irritated.

She sharpened. The young woman slid the blankets up the curves of her long, bare body. The rays of morning sun—slicing through the red, tasselled drapes—ran themselves across the white, wrinkled linens and up her golden arms and chest. She squinted past them, over the burgundy leather loveseat and matching high-back chair, and towards the oak door tucked behind where he stood. She swallowed. Looked fretful. Then, from the room’s single exit, traced her gaze back over the green walls lousy with artful, embossed floral patterns until arriving at the side of the bed. Once there, her cream-coloured handbag—abandoned and gaping against a sideways bottle of champagne atop the nearest gold-plated nightstand—looked up at her. She bit her lip. Slid over.

“It’s not there.” He snapped. 

She pulled back. The focus of her eyes faded. Vacant and wide they bounced between the tousled strands of auburn draping the front of her long, freckled face.

Four stories down the muffled sounds of Rome wandered into the room. People babbled. Birds sang. Cars rushed.

She bit harder into her lip. Looked to him.

“The ambassador!” She gasped.

She clamoured from the sheets and threw herself through the sheens of the nearest window. She scoured the elbow-like bend of Via Veneto, the road separating the canary-yellow stucco of their Hotel Majestic from the drab, beige stones of the Ministry of Economic Development on the curb opposite. She slapped her hands against the glass. Ripped a furious stare to the naked man lurking two windows to her right.

He bent further towards the glass—curly, chestnut hair and broad, clean-shaven jaw awash in sunlight—hunger lurking in his eyes. He smiled. But not at her. No, this arrogant indulgence was reserved for the black Fiat 1500 pulling around the bend towards the marble-laden ministry doorway.

She turned to the car. Watched the curved lines glimmer beneath the rising light of day. A pair of small American flags—fastened on either side of the hood—ripple in the wind. Tires roll to a gentle stop. Men in blue suits within smile and nod at each other in their polite game of who-leaves-first. The driver thrust out and towards the back door with short, efficient motions. His hand grip the latch.

And the car explode.

Her breath fogged the glass as it rushed from her staggered body. In time, the smell of smoke billowing from the burning wreckage snuck through the seams of the windows and wrapped itself around her neck. But she didn’t turn away. She watched them burn, lost in thought, until the clicking of a gun snapped her back to alertness.

She turned, incredulous and motioning to the bed. “Just to distract me from your little plot? From protecting my ambassador and doing my job?”

He sat in the lounger. Smug. Her small, black gun in one hand. Eyes wicked.

“I can help—” she began, resentful.

“You American agents always say that.” His voice was quiet and fast. The grip of his gun tightened. “You never do.”

“I can—”

“You see,” he started, as if speaking to a child, “two OVRA agents are going to come through that door.” He gestured with the gun. “If you’re breathing, I won’t be.”

She looked to the floor. Back to him. Straightened. “I know where they’re keeping your family.”

His eyes widened. Jaw, flexed. The gun drifted off her for a second, then it was regripped and refocused.

“Last night—the dancing, the wine, the love—was it a test?” He snarled. “How do I know you’re not OVRA—not the secret police?”

“You think Mussolini hires American spies?”

He scathed her with his glare.

“Your family can be in New York by week’s end.” There was only business in her voice. It was as if a briefcase had open and shut before him. A choice pushed across the cherrywood floor.

He sat back. Ground his jaw. He exhaled long and slow, as one does when chewing on a heavy thought.

The metallic doorhandle jiggled. Opened.

Neither of them breathed.

But the gun spoke.

Twice.

While their ears rang they watched the bodies of two flat-faced Italian men dressed in grey tweed suits tumble through the half-open, bullet-pierced door.

“There’s a safe house.” She rasped, blurting the address. “They’ll ask about the weather—say ‘it’s not like Virginia’.”

He rose. Swiped at the floor for a pastel blue, short-sleeve collared shirt along with a pair of beige, high-waisted slacks. Rushed them on. Then he scoured the nightstand, thrusting a silver cigarette case, holder and square-shaped lighter into his pocket.

She dressed and waited by the door wearing an uncertain face and a navy-blue swing dress with collar cap sleeves.

He approached. Caressed her ensemble with his eyes. Grabbed her elbow.

Stepping over the bleeding corpses, the pair slithered down the short hallway lined with chiffon walls and ranch oak doors. Behind one such doorway, a wrought-iron staircase was reached. Descended. A main-floor door then snuck them into an alley cloaked by the dewy shadow of early morning.

A poppy red Alfa Romeo 6C 1900—with its wide face and slight curves—beckoned with two exposed leather seats.

He rushed her to the passenger side. Opened her door. Led her in. He then whisked himself around and slid into the driver’s chair. Pulled two black driving gloves from the glovebox. Placed the gun on her warm, bare thigh. “They tell me you know how to use this,” he grunted. The gloves were slipped on.

The car rumbled to life.

A man in a grey suit burst from the hotel door. Gun drawn. Murder in his eyes.

The woman threw her herself into the driver’s lap and shot the suited man through the forehead. Squealing tires and the whistling of wind over chrome muffled his collapse. She slid into the supple passenger seat. Smirking. “They were right.”

The driver wrung a hand on the wheel and sent another to the shifter. He threw the round knob backward. The car lurched ahead, surging from the alley onto open road. Without blinking he threw the Alfa left and right down several side streets until Via del Quirinale, where he flattened the gas and wove through the morning rush hour at a dizzying pace.

She gripped the cool door and held her dancing hair. Looked behind them. Released her hair. Readied her gun.

A black Alfa Romeo 6C 1750 seared towards them with its three angry headlamps snarling through the wake of cars between them. The OVRA agent behind the wheel—dressed like the others and looking offended—perched his own weapon over the low, topless windshield.

“They don’t do well with goodbyes.” The driver said, jerking the red car left and due west to the glistening waters of the River Tiber.

The OVRA agent fired his gun—missing wide into the back tire of a frumpy blue Peugeot 201 that promptly skid onto the empty sidewalk.

Her weapon spat its own errant reply.

The red Alfa raced towards a t-shaped intersection lined on the river’s side by a simple, stone boardwalk. The driver flexed his arms, preparing to swing the turn at the last minute, hoping the black car would guess wrong.

But there was another gunshot.

She crashed hard and sloppy into his shoulder.

He lost the wheel.

The red Alfa slipped. Veered right. Caught a curb. The gleaming sportscar spun and flipped. Its passengers spilt violently onto the road to a chorus of squealing tires, far away screams and shattering glass. He rolled to a stop against the boardwalk wall. She flopped lifeless onto her back an arm’s length away—a hole etched into her left chest.

The driver—bleeding and bruised—reached for her.

At that moment the black car screeched to a halt. The OVRA agent emerged. Gun in hand.

The driver brushed the tousled reams of auburn from her vacant eyes. Scowled. And felt the hollowness of failure. The burning burden of having perhaps—by his own opportunistic hand—sentenced those he loved to death.

With a series of haggard barks the OVRA agent scolded the onlookers who had emerged from their cars and homes, then made his way towards the bodies on the road.

The driver rolled away from the agent, fiddling in his pockets.

The OVRA agent said something harsh and urgent.

The driver looked over his shoulder. Cursed. His hands made three, crisp maneuvers on the hidden side of his trunk.   

Stopping a stride before the driver, the OVRA agent pointed his gun at the spine of the blue shirt.

The driver lifted one hand. “Basta. Enough.”

The agent eased.

Then the driver hurled himself around and fired a bullet from the silver barrel of his gun.

Rushing to his feet as the OVRA agent splattered against the road, the driver quickly pulled the pieces of his weapon apart—stuffing the cigarette case, holder and square-shaped lighter back into his pocket—before throwing himself towards the purring engine of the black Alfa.   

*

Midday sun carved hot and sharp into the cuts and scrapes on his face and neck. He snuck the black Alfa down yet another sequence of side streets parting the tall, sun-bleached buildings that circle the Piazza di Spagna.

He kept thinking of her. The sweetness of her lips. How she lured him. How he deceived her in turn. And how she died so he could live.

The jostling of the cobblestones jerked him from his reverie. His eyes scrambled through the hordes of smiling tourists lining the sidewalk. He felt the heat of their eyes—the prickling of risk rushing up his limbs.

He led the car down Via dei Condotti. Parked. Got out.

Crossing the road he slunk under the modest awning of Antico Caffe Greco. Through its sunken wood doors. Into the welcoming arms of the scent of fresh pastry and hot espresso—slumping into the nearest empty table. For a while he watched the narrow café bustle gayly—patrons perched on the red cushions of black chairs oblivious to the game of death unfolding at their backs—until a waiter with cropped black hair and an arrogant smile approached. “Buongiorno, welcome. How may I serve you?”

The Italian looked up. Expectant. Uncertain.

“Funny weather.” A throaty American voice grumbled around the waiters back ahead of a man with white hair, one eye and a silver cane throwing himself into the seat opposite.

The Italian scoured his damp, leather-like skin and black eyepatch. He found the purple shadows beneath the single eye deep and long. The blue, pinstriped suit over his pointed shoulders well tailored.

“It’s not like Virginia.” The Italian said.

The waiter marched off with a huff.

“So, you’re Agent Pagliaro, Italian Special Forces.” The lone brown eye studied him while the red lips below saddled his name with a disingenuous Italian accent. “Amber told us everything about you. I was starting think—that was, until you managed to distract her from halting your efforts to incinerate our ambassador—she was about to turn you. Shame she couldn’t make it.”

Pagliaro grimaced. Looked out one of the tall windows. Erupted in cold sweat. Two OVRA agents with searching eyes and his photo wandered through the crowd out front. He squeezed the round, brown table. “Did she mention I’m fighting a war I don’t believe in, for a country I love that’s run by a gang of criminals—all because they stole my family?”

The man with one eye tapped a slow tune onto the golden handle of his cane. “I can no longer guarantee their escape.”

Pagliaro reddened.

“You complicated it.” The American man said, softly. “I had an ambassador to protect. And you made a very brash exit.” He tilted his head to the window. “I can only imagine how hard the OVRA would look for a defective Italian agent. I mean, you hear things, in our line of work—but you never know what of it is just fabricated nonsense and what of it is horrific fact.”

Pagliaro leaned across the table with strain billowing behind his eyes, the knife of truth wedged in the meat of his heart.

The American went on: “So now the game is: help us find something, first, and we’ll do our best. Or, try your luck on the streets. But decide fast, we don’t know how long—”

“I’ll do it.”

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marcomuzzi
marcomuzzi October 16, 2020
Short Story fiction, flash fiction, short story

Something Lost

The following is a piece of flash fiction written as part of a course I’m currently taking at the University of Guelph. (Online, of course.) This has not been professionally edited.


He sprinted. 

Down the empty streets. Across the abandoned square. Through the lobbies of the buildings devoid of life. 

He sprinted. Gasping. Lunging. Reaching. 

“WHERE ARE YOU?!” He cried in his most desperate voice—the tenor tilted with terror. “WHERE ARE YOU?!”

He dared not look behind him. He didn’t have to. He felt it coming. Beneath the heat of the low sun and the sting of the dry air he felt it nipping at his shadow. Tugging at his collar. Clipping his heels. 

“Come on!” He shouted to the emptiness. His feet pushed faster. Lungs blew harder. He looked around the corner of a grey-bricked building. “Don’t go!” 

Then it hit him. Hard and fast and from the side of his body he wasn’t watching—it levelled him. Thick, gelatinous heat crawled up his legs. He screamed. Loud. 

The boy fluttered out into the road. 

“WAIT!” He called for it with an outstretched hand and eyes that screamed louder than his struggling voice. “Please, wait…”

He pulled at the road. The scorching concrete sizzled into his flesh, burning hotter than the sludge sliding up his back. 

The child turned to him. A toy soldier was lifted and swung through the air. The sounds of make-believe dribbled from his lips. The boy didn’t so much as glance at the man. 

And so the man screamed. “I NEED YOU! P-please… I’m, I’m sorry…”

The sludge was at his shoulders now. Searing and unbearable. Oppressive and pungent. He heard his ribs crack. Another curt yell was garbled.

The boy looked over with the eyes that were his. 

“Did you run out of time?”

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marcomuzzi
marcomuzzi May 22, 2019
Short Story fiction, memoir, micro story

The Fire

The fire danced towards the night sky.

The reds flirted with the yellows. Orange sparks reached into fresh, southern air. Glowing embers seared my gaze. I can still see the blaze before me – its heat licking the soles of my sandaled feet perched against the pit’s rim – pressing itself higher. Reaching for the stars.

I remember being lost. The sense of crushing failure filling my lungs along with the scent of charred wood. I heard laughter grow in the background – the party I escaped spilling towards me; engulfing me despite my reluctance. 

I remember feeling helpless to the night. Wishing I was both anywhere else, and right where I was. I remember thinking, in that moment – as a log bursting from the heat sent a spray of flames prancing into the sky – I deserve more. I need more.

I was meant for more. 

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marcomuzzi
marcomuzzi May 21, 2019
Poem fiction, poem

[Poem] These are the last blues I’m ever going to have

A mind is never quiet. At least,
Mine isn’t. It makes sleep elusive,
Inner peace moreso. I’m great
At starting, or, even, starting over.
But inevitably you’ll tire of it.
The bravado, the tortured looks, the hopeful voice, and those restless nights.
The look in your eye,
Will fade to black.
Much like I do.
In the end,
You’ll see I’m always a stitch away from making it,
And a scar away from falling apart.

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marcomuzzi
marcomuzzi May 21, 2019
Short Story loss, love, romance, short story

Left Behind

Warning: This story contains content which may be emotionally triggering to some readers.
This will take roughly 4 minutes to read.

—

“I want you to stay.”

His jaw quivered.

“I need you to stay.”

“I can’t.” She placed the words gently into the evening breeze. They drifted to him like puffs of smoke from a graying ember – feeble, slender, defiant. For a moment he remembered when her words were sweet. But the memory was stolen with haste by the echoes of laughter, singing, and playful screams rushing past them from behind. His favorite song interrupted.

“I…” he started with a sigh, the man’s sharp chin whispering into to the collar of his black jacket. Her small, fragile hand landed atop his own, much larger one; gentle as a bird on a branch. His jaw resumed its tremble. A hard swallow forced his damp eyes from the white sand at their feet to the horizon. The wooden bench beneath him felt stiffer somehow. He felt stiffer somehow.

“I-I need you,” he stammered, nodding, and with a slouch of his burly shoulders.

“You don’t.” He heard her smile. “The last thing you’ve ever needed was- ”

“But, I chose you.” His green eyes fell to the sands, away from the orange glow of the setting sun as it dipped behind the ocean’s choppy, black-blue surface. Like the small waves fighting to crest beyond their meager fate, every word he yearned to speak billowed and collapsed beneath his lips. In their absence, the uncomfortable fog of unspoken truth settled around them.

The jovial sounds of laughter, music, and playful screams interjected from behind once more. His lips wrestled themselves beneath a white, neatly shaped moustache while his mind wandered. The aroma of fresh popcorn, cotton candy, and baked goods drifted from the carnival stands at their backs. His broad jaw clenched itself still. It was all music from another time.

Her head found his shoulder. His eyes closed. He came to remember the scent of her hair. Cinnamon. Lavender. Happiness. His thick brows furrowed against the knot in his throat. The man’s soul scoured his mind – each mistake of his life under inspection – begging for a reason to have been broken again, yearning for a cause to his pain, desperate for a wrong to right. She drew a slow, satisfying breath. He raged in silence. Darkness fell.

“Was it there?”

He felt her motion a shivering arm forward. Peeling his eyes open the man glanced past her hospital bracelet and down towards the end of her wrinkled fingertip. In the growing darkness of night – painted at the edges by the faint glow of neon shadows cast from the boardwalk – rested a modest pier. At its tip a lone flood lamp bathed a single wooden bench in unnatural whiteness.

“It was there.” The man spoke with the resignation of a steam engine coming to halt. He rose to stand. The softest of pulls against the pocket of his wool slacks threatened to draw his gaze to her. But he refused to look.

Her request became curt: “Take me. I want to go back to where it began. One last time.”

Chills rushed up the man’s arms as his palms found the handles of her chair. Each of his measured, limping steps into the blackness took them farther from the tourists petulant cries. Groans emerged from the boardwalk beneath. The knot in his throat tightened. The scent of salt on the evening wind coaxed tears from behind his weary eyes. Waves lapping against the support beams pricked his ears. A memory of walking beside her along that very path, decades earlier – nervous, well-groomed, and hungry for her embrace – flooded his mind:

He saw her fair skin. The straight, golden hair. Her blue eyes shimmering in the moonlight. His hand on the small of her back. Hers on his shoulder. His head, leaning forwards. Her subtle smirk. The bliss of her lips against his own. A taste he knew he couldn’t live without.

“What do you think happens?”

Her words ripped the vision from him.

“I’m not sure,” the back of his hand dried the man’s wrinkled, liver-spotted cheeks. “I figure it’s like falling asleep. But don’t – ”

“Think we dream?” Child-like hope laced her voice for only a moment, until her tone rescinded to doubt as he placed her just before the white railing which lined the edge of the pier. “I hope we dream.”

Before slumping into the bench at her side, he took great care to adjust the floral blanket swaddled around her boney chest. Then made sure the scarf around her naked scalp was secure. But all the while ensured their eyes never met.

“Why?” He gasped. Rhetorically.

“Maybe I’ll see him again. Maybe cradle him again. Maybe I can kiss him one last time, even if just in a dream.” She threw her words with great desperation. “Think he’ll be there? Think I’ll see him again?”

He felt her stare. His hand found hers. The waves lapped on.

“I hope so.”

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marcomuzzi
marcomuzzi May 20, 2019
Short Story crime, fiction, mystery, prologue, short story, the restless night

The Runner Part 2: House of God

Warning: This short fictitious story contains mature content. It is neither intended for young readers or to offend anyone.
This will take roughly 5 minutes to read.

—

“God can’t save everyone.”

The old priest’s words survived the clicking of his heels atop the wood floor. But they burned his parishioner’s ears.

“… but I, should’ve saved her from them.”

The younger man’s resentful whisper tumbled from his lips.

The pew groaned as he leaned forwards like something heavy hung from his stout neck. His square head, draped with feathered, greying locks, sank into the burly arms beneath his navy sports coat. His elbows rested on the weathered wood. An exhausted sigh escaped him.

“Pain has purpose, Peter,” the plump priest wheezed, slowly sitting beside him. “And you don’t know she’s gone. Save your mourning for the dead.”

The dimly-lit chapel fell silent. Only the occasional flicker of crimson alter candles broke the stale air.

“It’s late…” the priest leaned closer, lowering his voice; Peter winced as a gentle hand found his shoulder, “and there’s scotch with my name on it at Sister Anna’s.”

“You love that joke,” Peter spoke with a fleeting smile. “So did she.”

The priest pursed his lips, then shook his head softly. “Peter, they stole your daughter, like so many young women in the last decade, but – ”

BANG!

Peter snapped upwards. A muffled scream slipped under the tall, red doors behind the two men. The priest’s panicked, bearded mouth fell open.

“Father, get your gun.”

Peter pushed past the old man and strode with purpose down the narrow aisle towards the doors. His brow furrowed at the stifled, growing sound of an engine. His brown eyes grew as white light snuck under the doors. Peter tilted his head – an arm’s length from a set of brass, circular handles – as faint footsteps rushed the opposite side of the door. With a grunt he thrust the doors open. But no sooner did the evening wind lick his lips than a flood of light forced his eyes shut, and the impact of a small, boney shoulder sent him hard to the ground. His arms wrapped the person against his chest. The engine’s cry thundered closer. The floor began to rumble. Hot, frantic breaths tickled his chin. The light grew brighter. A woman’s scream erupted from against his breast.

CRASH!

A black sedan exploded through the doorway – shards of brick, wood, and glass filled the air. Peter rolled left with the trembling young woman before the sound of squealing tires rushed an inch past his head. The sedan came to a booming halt in the centre of the church, visibly broken and shrouded in dislodged and disfigured pews. The stench of gasoline assaulted the air.

Heaving, Peter pushed the pale woman into a confessional resting against the remains of the south-facing wall. His hopeful eyes bore into the petrified green ones quivering towards him from the wooden hideaway. And then disappointment rocked his bones.

“You’re not Sophia…'”

Crunching glass ripped Peter’s attention to the car behind him. A lanky, bloodied man wearing a glossy black suit emerged from the driver’s door with sloppy motions. Flopping against the warped hood, a silver revolver in his hand and a gold, coin-shaped cuff link caught the remaining candlelight.

‘STAY HERE.’

Peter turned towards the shoeless, blood-soaked woman and mouthed his directions with urgency before a gunshot’s eruption forced him to throw the confessional drapes shut and launch himself against a nearby pew. As nervous silence settled in, he slowly lifted his eyes above the backing.

The priest stood at the alter – black robes swaying in the passing wind – smoking shotgun pointed towards the driver. The driver stood beside the car, pistol aimed at the priest’s sweaty brow.

Peter crept towards the wreckage.

“Where’s the girl?” Barked the driver.

The shotgun rattled in meek response, bouncing inside the priests shaking hands. The standing men wheezed beneath their glares – one full of bewilderment, the other annoyance. Peter came to silent rest against the sedan’s driver-side door, then reached to the ground for a length of splintered pew.

“WHERE. IS. SHE?”

BOOM!

The remaining windshield exploded from the priest’s blast.

BANG!

The priest’s face burst like a balloon.

THUNK!

Blood splashed Peter’s face as his makeshift baton chewed into the driver’s skull. The driver crumpled to the floor – his gun tumbling against the base of a nearby pew. Then, like a hunter assessing his prize, Peter came to stand over his victim. His breaths blasted outwards from the depths of his lungs.

“WHERE’S MY DAUGHTER?”

The writhing driver responded with a defiant, narrow stare. Peter stabbed the sharp edge of the wood into the man’s thigh. A soul-crushing shriek, accompanied by the sound of wood grinding bone, reached the heavens.

“Y-you’re… the old police chief…” the oval-faced driver spoke in a frenzy parted only by his rushed breaths, “I r-remember h-her…”

Peter’s heart skipped.

“W-we m-made… a mint… off her…”

The wood bit Peter’s palm as he squeezed out his fury, twisting the shard deeper. The driver howled. Peter snarled.

“Where – ”

“G-give me… this g-girl… and… I’ll tell you…”

Peter dismissed the piece of broken wood towards the gold-leafed wall at his back. The driver gasped his relief. The retired officer stepped backwards, turned, and walked towards the alter. His searching eyes came to linger briefly upon the crucifix perched against the wall at the front of the chapel.

For a moment he felt the warmth of her embrace. Basked in the glow of her toothy smile. Melted at her soothing voice.

Then lunged for the shotgun.

BANG!

Something hot erupted through his chest, sending blood and flesh across the white alter dressings. He swung around regardless.

BOOM!

Peter’s blast ripped through the kneeling driver’s neck, splattering the nearby pews in crimson. The revolver spilt to the ground as both the driver’s hands pressed the gaping wound in his throat. His rage-filled eyes screamed at Peter above the gurgles bubbling between his flexed fingers. After several glaring moments, and with a series of violent shudders, the suited man collapsed to the floor. A smirk twitched across Peter’s lips.

The sound of small, cautious footsteps drifted towards him as he felt the blood drain from his skull. Staggering forward, he thrust a bloody hand into the breast pocket of his coat. Muffled words called to him. His fingers found a small, wrinkled photograph just before he crumpled to the ground. The footsteps grew louder. Everything faded to black.

And then, a set of delicate, warm hands pressed themselves over the wound in his chest. He slid the photo towards them.

“Run…” he choked.

“…triangle house… the beach.”

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marcomuzzi
marcomuzzi May 2, 2019
Short Story crime, fiction, mystery, prologue, short story, the restless night, thriller

The Runner Part 1: The Cookie Jar

Warning: This short fictitious story contains mature content. It is neither intended for young readers or to offend anyone.
This will take roughly 7 minutes to read.

—

“But my husband is dead.”

The woman’s thin voice echoed into the dark summer night lingering beyond her porch. 

“Open it Katie.”

Her tall, well-groomed visitor bristled as the words left him, his tone urgent. The floorboards groaned beneath his shifting weight as he lifted an envelope towards her. Katie’s green eyes – draped with ruined mascara – voiced the confusion her lips couldn’t utter. Her hesitant hand plucked the parcel from its messenger.

“Look,” the man’s defeated gaze floated downwards, a length of wavy, auburn hair dangled before his sun kissed face, “I was his business partner for 20 years. We were… almost inseparable… but that envelope, with your name on it, is all he willed me…”

Her slender fingers fumbled to cut the slit while he spoke. Her clouded mind raced. Her chest knotted. She hadn’t heard a word. And neither of them heard the car parking across the street. 

When Katie’s trembling hand produced a sheet of paper, her hungry eyes scanned every inch with haste. Her heart thundered at the recollection of her husbands jagged blue pen strokes: 

“I loved your cookies.” 

The letter slipped from her quivering palm like a leaf falling to earth. Her bewildered expression jolted to the man before her. A car door slammed shut in the distance.

“Tom,” she gasped, “I never bake – ”

BOOM!

The ringing in Katie’s ears drowned her scream as Tom’s chest exploded onto her pale face; the warmth of his blood draped her like a wet blanket. The corpse lunged at her – eyes frozen open – throwing the petite woman hard against the porch floor. 

“DON’T MOVE,” a gruff voice barked from the lawn.

Menacing footsteps thudded up her stairs. Tom’s innards oozed through her black sweater. The metallic scent of blood made her choke. Desperation made her squirm.

“STOP!”

Katie slithered from beneath Tom, jumped to her feet, and scrambled inside towards her dark, narrow hallway. Her frantic breaths masked the footsteps rumbling behind her. The yellow glow of her kitchen lights took her in seconds before a set of long, chipped fingernails dug into her blonde hair and forced her to the floor. The hard, grey tile cracked her spine.

THOMP! 

Stars filled her vision as hairy knuckles pushed into her teeth.

“DON’T YOU FUCKING RUN!” His words seemed to come from another room.

She writhed breathlessly. Her head spun. Her mouth burned. Warmth dribbled from the corner of her lips. Katie whimpered.

THWACK!

Her stomach erupted in pain as the attacker’s pointed dress shoe thrust her across the floor. The woman’s cabinets announced her arrival with a displeasing crack. Without a thought Katie flipped around and tried to pull herself upwards, yet her nails merely carved into the smooth wood. 

THWACK!

Her forehead bounced from the door’s sharp edge. She blinked away something thick and warm from her eyes as her torso slapped the ground. Flopping onto her back, she stared up at him through blood-soaked, blurry eyes. The round-faced man, in a glossy black suit, heaved above her. Rushed, shallow breaths ran through her cracked lips. 

Silent tension hung in the air like fog. 

“W-what… d-do… you want?” The words floated from her lips with the delicateness of candle smoke while the kitchen swirled around her beaten, slender face.  

“You.”

Her chest caved in.

“We did business with your husband for years…” he oozed, inching towards her, “he never took a dime… all so we wouldn’t touch you.”

Katie wheezed like an old car.

“That was then…”

She screamed as he leaned in – his rancid breath hot on her lips.

“Now we’re going to make a mint off you…”

Katie rolled over, thrust her hands onto the edges of the door, and pulled with all her strength. Her skin boiled as his hands calmly wrapped around her ankles. Then the sound of wood against bone filled her ears as the door exploded from its hinges and planted itself into her nose. She broke into soundless, gasping sobs. Her stinging head came to rest on her shoulder while she slumped to the floor. 

It wasn’t long before the cold tiles began to move beneath her. The rough fingernails bit her skin as he pulled her towards the hallway. Her empty eyes fell on the gaping, overstuffed cupboard. And then she saw it.

Katie thrashed her feet – his grip loosened for a fleeting moment – then shoved herself towards the open cabinet with a growl. Before his hands returned to her ankles, her fingers grasped the white porcelain jar labelled “Cookies” in black marker. He tugged hard against her tender skin, forcing the rectangular container from her hands. 

Surprise froze him as it shattered against the floor. Shock stripped the breath from her lungs. 

Amongst the wreckage lay a black handgun. 

She lunged for the weapon. His hands scrambled up the back of her sweater. Hers clutched the grip. She turned. 

“WAIT!”

BANG!

The man’s blood fell like rain. What was left of his face splashed onto the ground. Despite the contents of her stomach surging up her throat, Katie slipped from beneath him and raced for the door. 

The crisp night air took her in. The sound of a car sputtering to life cut the silence as she sprinted down the sidewalk. A church’s illuminated crucifix – some hundred meters ahead – caught her eyes. The glow of approaching headlights stretched her shadow forward. Cool wind stung the wounds on her face. The nearing engine’s roar filled her ears. Concrete nipped her bare feet.

And the church doors opened.


Read The Runner Part 2: House of God here!

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Copyright © 2021 Marco Muzzi. All Rights Reserved.