Read How To Kill Friends And Implicate People Online
Authors: Jay Stringer
TWENTY-THREE
FERGUS
19:33
My parents live in a modern house in Barrowfield Street, in the East End. Celtic Park sits at the end of the road, which is kind of funny because my old man, Ronnie, is a Rangers fan. I didn’t follow him into that faith, which is just one of the many small acts of rebellion I’ve carried out over the years.
I’m not sure where he’d sit on the whole ‘killing people for money’ thing.
That’s not true. I do know. It’s why I don’t tell him.
Sometimes I think I should feel guilty for lying to my parents about what I do for a living. But my best mate is thirty years old and still hides the fact that he smokes from his mum, so I reckon I’m probably doing the right thing.
My folks used to live in Shawlands, on the Southside, which is where I grew up. They moved to Barrowfield Street for my sister, Zoe. She has cerebral palsy, and they got a grant from the Scottish government to make some renovations to the old house for wheelchair access, but it was easier to convert this newer build. The move also put them within walking distance of the new Emirates Arena, and the council gym there has exercise programmes specifically for disabled people, so my sister is getting to have more fun these days.
I earn enough that I could have paid for the renovations myself, but my parents refuse to take any money from me. Joke’s on them, really, because I’ve been topping up their pension payments for years and they’ve not noticed.
I park out front and let myself in. I’ve got a key, but the door isn’t locked. I keep telling them about that. Anybody can walk in off the street. And they do, but usually for a coffee or a bottle of beer. The Fletcher household has always been an open door to people who want to drop by. My old man used to be a union leader back in the old days, and people across the Southside always knew they could drop by at any hour of the day and Ronnie or Irene Fletcher would make sure they had a drink and some food.
These days it’s mostly people my parents’ age, pensioners who drop in for a coffee and some warm nostalgia.
I find them out in the back garden, sat on the new patio enjoying the evening heat. Heatwaves might be rare in Glasgow, but we have that shit down. The minute the sun comes out, we’re in a garden or a field, layering on the suncream and looking for the nearest raincloud to judge whether we’ve got time to get a barbecue on the go.
True to form, my folks have a barbecue on the go.
Dad greets me with a handshake; then his attention goes back to the meat on the grill. Blackened sausages and a couple of burgers that are heading in the same direction. They smell great, but they’ll taste like arse. Their version of a barbecue is just old-school British grilling: stick some meat on a grill and cook until black, then cover with red or brown sauce and some bread. The taste, and smell, of summer.
‘Grab yersel’ a beer, son,’ Dad says, in his croaky old voice. ‘Plenty in the fridge.’
Mum’s sat in a folding lounger, reading a book. There’s no sign of my sister.
‘Where’s Zoe?’
Mum doesn’t even look up from her book. Must be a good one. ‘She’s up the gym,’ she says. ‘Her club’s got a special night on tonight, Olympics theme.’
‘She liking it there?’
Dad answers without looking up. ‘Aye. Course. But you know Zoe, she has to pretend like it’s a chore. We see her smile, though, right enough.’
He hands me a hot dog. The sausage is buried in sauce. I haven’t got the heart to tell him I’ve already eaten. Besides, what kind of idiot says no to a hot dog? I bite into it, squirting sauce across the patio floor, and start to chew my way through the layer of charcoal.
I look down at the book my mum’s reading.
Girl Meets Boy on a Crime Spree,
by A.N. Smith. It’s the one everyone’s talking about on the TV. ‘Any good?’
She shuts the book, with her thumb pressed between the pages to keep her place. ‘Don’t know, do I? Someone just stopped me reading it.’ She waits for my smile before carrying on. ‘It’s good, aye. Too much swearing, but that’s just the way now. Like on the telly.’
‘What’s it about?’
‘I’m not really sure. Mostly about house-cleaning so far. I think she’s got some dark secret, and she doesn’t like her husband. It’s part of a series, they were all on display in the shop. This girl, she gets trains, has tattoos, kicks things, all sorts.’
‘I don’t think it’s a series, Mum. They just call all books the same thing now.’
‘Like you’re the expert on reading, all of a sudden?’ Dad comes and sits on the empty lounger next to Mum. He hands me an open bottle of beer, and mumbles about me being too lazy to get one myself.
‘I’ve read whole books,’ I say, a little too defensively.
Dad smiles and bends down to pick up his own book from beneath the chair. It’s a biography of Leon Trotsky. I half expect it to be called
The Girl Who Met The Revolutionary.
My phone goes. My real one, the contract in my name. It’s a text message from Alex Pennan.
I didn’t give him my real number.
What the hell?
TWENTY-FOUR
ALEX
20:40
‘How did you get my number?’
Fergus, who had given his name to Alex as Ross Douglas, sat down at the bar. Alex had arranged to meet him at a small place just under a mile from the house, somewhere he could walk to, without bringing Fergus too close to his home patch.
As Fergus sat down, Alex noticed a small blotch of ketchup on the guy’s T-shirt. An extra little humanising detail that helped take the edge off the first impression. Alex wasn’t scared of this guy now.
‘That’s not important, Fergus.’ Alex smiled. He watched as it registered across the prick’s face that Alex knew his real name. ‘What
does
matter is that I have it. And your address. And your parents’.’
Fergus leaned in close. He smelled of charcoal. ‘You think it’s a good idea to threaten someone in my line of work?’
Alex nodded, raised his pint in a mock salute. ‘It’s your line of work that means I can threaten you. All I’m asking is that you do this job for me. And I’m offering you your usual going rate. But if you don’t, and I have to get someone else to do the job, I might give him a few extra hits to carry out. Real ones. Or maybe I’ll be nice, and just let the cops and press know what you do for a living.’
Alex had found out about Fergus by accident.
While he’d been following the trails of money that didn’t exist, and working out how much of it could easily
not exist
in his own bank account, he started to notice who his clients were paying money
to.
It didn’t take much to figure out what some of those payments were for. Once he accepted that he was working for criminals, well, it didn’t take much to figure out what kind of people they would be paying.
He had a file on his hard drive full of the contact details for the businesses, private contractors and ‘consultants’ that money was sent to. He’d noticed one particular insurance firm received payments from more than half of his clients, always in multiples of five grand. Joe Pepper had made payments a number of times recently. The real kicker was when he found payments going from a company that had been set up for Asma Khan. It was a small investment firm on paper, but in reality it was a way for Khan to pay people quickly and quietly.
A quick check with Companies House down in London also confirmed that the insurance firm itself was clearly a front. But it was easy to follow the trail. Alex pulled on the thread, and it led right back to a small security firm in Glasgow. There were three board members, and two of them had the same surname. Fletcher.
One other bolt of inspiration had struck Alex as he looked at all of this information. He checked the dates of the payments, and then started searching the news in internet caches. Newspapers, Google, the BBC.
People died around those dates.
Some of the names were famous, some were nobodies. Some had been found dead, some had never been found at all. Khan had made a number of payments all around the same time, the previous summer. Alex remembered there had been a local gang war around then, triggered when a detective had gained fifteen minutes of fame and uncovered an arson scam that most of the old guard had been in on.
Holy shit.
This guy was a hit man.
A real life, bona fide, hit man.
Like in the movies.
That was when Alex had known he could make off with the money. And the perfect guy to help him do it. Now the hit man was sitting next to Alex at the bar, slumping in his seat, and caving in.
‘Okay. So, I’m going to kill you. And you don’t want to know where, and you don’t want to know when, or even how. And you don’t want me to actually kill you.’
‘Well, I suppose—’
‘What?’
‘I suppose I’ve always wanted to go out with a bang. Something big. A death that makes people wonder how well the guy lived. You know, like if I was given an hour to live, I’d love to get absolutely loaded on drink or drugs. Get an absolute skinful of all the things you’re too scared to take normally. Then, I think, get in a car and drive. Really go for it.’
Alex liked that. Hell, maybe someone would make a film about it. Or a TV movie, at least. And the best thing? He’d be able to watch it.
‘Car explosion,’ Fergus said. ‘Easy enough.’
‘Don’t tell me
.
’ Wait, there was something else. ‘Oh, and nobody can know about this.’
Fergus gave him a
No shit, Sherlock
look. ‘I had assumed that.’
‘Yeah, of course. No. Um. What I mean is my wife can’t know. Not until afterwards.’
‘And are you sure you can trust her?’
Wait, what?
‘Wait, what?’
Fergus leaned back and smiled. His anger and nerves had gone. ‘Well, let’s be honest. We both know you’re stealing from some
very
rich people. I assume you’ve got accounts ready. If you’re technically dead, all of your money belongs to her. Are you sure she’ll share it with you, once you’re dead?’
That hung in the air for a while. Alex knew Fergus was just messing with him. Fighting to regain a little control. Fuck him. Kara was his rock. She’d own all of his public money. The life insurance and the house. But she didn’t know about his
real
reserves. The money he’d been stealing. And she wouldn’t mess him about when her told her. Sure, she’d be pissed at him for lying, for not letting her in on the plan. But once she calmed down, she’d be golden.
Fergus smiled again, and Alex got a bad feeling. ‘Your other problem,’ Fergus said, ‘is that if you
did
try and expose me to the press, or the cops, then you’d be selling yourself out, too. Because the obvious question would be, why were you having business dealings with a hit man?’
Alex tried a bluff. ‘I’ve been recording our conversations. I can just say it was a sting, that I was leading you on in order to get a confession on tape. Besides—’ He was thinking on his feet, but his voice got stronger, he was sure he had the winning hand now. ‘What would they try and get me on? I’m hiring you to
not
kill me.’
‘Aye.’ Fergus shrugged. ‘Maybe. Maybe you’d skate on that, if they overlooked the whole conspiracy to commit fraud. But even still, you’d have a bigger problem than that. Whatever it is, this thing you’ve got planned, the pay-out you’re looking for, you wouldn’t be able to do it. Selling me out would ruin whatever you’ve got cooking.’ Fergus paused. Scratched his nose slowly. Easy. Letting Alex know he was in charge again, just like the last meeting. ‘But I tell you what. I’m interested in this now. And even if it’s just to shut you up, I’ll take the job. But I’m charging double. And you’re paying me up front.’ He stood up to leave. ‘I’ll be in touch.’
As Fergus turned to leave, Alex got the urge to get the last word in.
He pointed at Fergus’s T-shirt. ‘You’ve got ketchup on you.’
TWENTY-FIVE
FERGUS
22:10
I get home and change my T-shirt. Sauce all down it. It’s almost embarrassing that it had to be Alex who pointed it out, but I don’t care what he thinks, so it doesn’t quite sting.
It’s going to be a pleasure, not killing him.
I know the broad strokes of how I’m going to do it, but there are some things to set up first. I’m going to need a spare body. Someone fresh. Within a few hours of Alex’s fake death.
I need another job, and fast.
The thought of the next job, though? My hands shake a little. That’s a new thing. I don’t get guilty about what I do. I’m an atheist, so I don’t worry about heaven or hell, and I don’t need redemption. And yet, right now, I’m feeling—
I don’t know.
I can’t describe it.
Fuck it. Stop being a wee pussy, Fergus.
I take a couple of beta blockers to numb whatever this crap is, and then call my agent. Yes, hit men have agents. Of course we do. We’re not in a profession that demands high interpersonal skills. We need someone else to do all the nicey-nice stuff.
There are a few agencies around the world. Most pros who go into my job, at the serious level, do it after stints in intelligence or the military. The agencies have scouts who spot good talent and hook them up with steady work. I first went professional in New York, and I’ve stayed with the agency that first spotted me. I work with Stan Decker at the Hit List. They were the best team to be with in the States, and the geek in me just likes having a business card with a Manhattan address on it.
Stan answers on the fifth ring. It’s not until he says hello that I bother to check the time. The East Coast of America is five hours behind Glasgow, putting it at a little after 5 p.m. over there. The truth is, agents have their phones surgically attached to their hands. It doesn’t matter what time you call, they’ll answer.
‘Hey,’ he says.
He sounds a little out of breath. I can hear just the edge of a pant through the words, and there’s a distant sound to his voice, like the phone’s not held to his ear.
‘Are you, Stan, are you
running
?’
‘Yeah. I’m at the gym.’
‘So, the Mitchell job went a bit tits up.’ I push on past the whole
gym
thing. I hate them. I love running, but out in the real world, not on a machine. ‘I dropped an extra package, and had to do some of the cleaning up out of my own pocket.’
‘Yeah, I heard,’ Stan says. ‘These things happen, though, right? I wouldn’t worry about it.’
‘Yeah, I dunno.’ I leave that hanging there.
Truth is I don’t even know what I’m trying to say. I think back to the small mistakes I made today. To the bigger ones on the previous job. When I take a longer view, I can see my work has been getting sloppy for a while now. Since I came home to Glasgow. I had a couple gigs last summer that I almost ballsed up completely, but nobody saw it so I hadn’t mentioned the mistakes. If I was a footballer, people might say I was out of form. In a slump. But can people in my line of work afford to hit a bad streak?
My hand starts to shake, making the phone wobble at my ear.
Even through the pills, I was jittery.
What the fuck?
Stan can hear something in my voice, or maybe in my pauses. ‘What’s wrong?’
‘Stan, do you ever see people get burned out on this?’
Stan doesn’t answer straight away. When he does, his tone’s changed a little. He’s still upbeat, but I can hear the effort that’s going into it. ‘Hey, everyone goes through a slump sometimes. Happens to the best. Have you started shaking?’
‘No,’ I lie.
‘Then you’re okay,’ he says. ‘You just need a break. It’s only if you start to get things like shakes or blackouts that you need to worry, that’s the time to get out.’
‘People can become blackout killers?’
‘You’d be surprised. Listen, you know, yeah. It’s okay if you want to take a break. Have the rest of the summer off. Christmas is when things get busy again, and you know there’ll be some work lined up for you then, so just take it easy for a while.’
‘And what if it’s more than a break?’
‘You have the shakes, don’t you?’
‘Maybe. I’m feeling like this isn’t me anymore.’
‘Well,’ there’s a pause, and I hear a loud noise and a sigh. Then when Stan speaks again it’s calmer and he’s no longer running. ‘You’ve got investments. Savings. Plus, we’ll be getting royalties on that coup in Cambodia for a while. You’re in a good spot. People like you can usually retire with no problems.’
‘And the ones who don’t?’
‘Well, it’s not a great job if you don’t want to make some enemies. Especially the Cambodia thing.’ He pauses, and comes back with the optimism high-beam back in place. ‘But that’s not going to be you. Maybe you just need a break. You’ve been hitting it really hard this year.’
Hitting
it. ‘Nice, well done.’
On the table in front of me, I hear my computer beep. The screen is flashing something up, but I ignore it. I need to stay focused on this conversation. Letting my mind drift has been causing too many problems already.
I’ve got to find one more body. ‘Well, first things first, I’ve got a weird one on.’
‘That business guy? Yeah, he sounded weird. Taking the job? He hasn’t got back to me to arrange anything. I could chase him down?’
‘He knows who I am. Called me on my own cell.’ I always unconsciously switch into US terms when speaking to Stan. ‘And he tried blackmailing me.’
‘What? Like, you said no, right?’
‘I’ve taken it on, but I’m charging double. Make sure that’s what comes through. No pay, no job.’ It’s time to start getting the details of the job lined up. ‘I’m going to need another body, though. Part of his thing. He wants me to fake his death.’
‘Why would anybody hire a hit man to not kill them?’
‘Aye, right? I know. Anyway. So I need a fresh body, tonight or tomorrow morning probably. I could ask around at the morgue, but I’d prefer to have control over it all myself. You got anything I could take on?’
‘I’ll have a look.’
‘Make it a scumbag,’ I say. ‘A real arse. Someone who really has it coming.’
‘They all have it coming, Fergus.’
For the first time I’m wondering,
What do I have coming?
‘Oh, Stan? Joe has another contractor. Could you ask around, see who else is working Glasgow? I don’t want any surprises.’
My computer beeps again. I put the phone down and look at the screen.
Holy shit.
Sam has liked me back. The website now loads up a new screen, a private messenger app. It shows my face on one side, and Sam’s on another, next to a little bubble that’s flashing to say that she’s typing me a message.
My stomach turns over.
The shakes stop.