Killing is a serious matter, and K42 knows it well. He's been calling himself that since he quit bank robberies to become a full-time hitman. K stands for killer.
They tighten.
Surrounded by a deep wine-red hue that matches the swelling of the arteries, two taut cords beneath the skin stretch across the entire neck. The air is cut off, the beautiful lips contort into an unrecognizable shape, and saliva foams between clenched teeth, trickling down in thin, milky rivulets. Arms, legs, the entire body convulses in erratic spasms. Then the eye sockets flood with blood, and only a faint, imperceptible thread of air scrapes through the throat. Suddenly, the strength drains from the legs, and the blonde—who once made the sea waves halt and stole the breath of men on the beach—collapses onto the bedroom floor. Her legs cross over each other as if in a yoga pose, palms facing upward in silent surrender. Her final gaze locks onto the ceiling.
K42 nudges the pistol away with his foot, crouches down, and presses his ear to her lips. The last breath is trapped within her lungs.
He needs to catch his breath, wait for his heart to stop thrashing inside his ribcage. Then clean up. Scatter false clues. Disappear. A failed job is a stain not easily erased, but if his career is at risk, his life might still be salvageable.
He must take the body and hide it somewhere safe.
Even if his killer’s hands were gloved, the thousands of microscopic saliva bubbles she expelled in her struggle must have landed everywhere—in her hair, in the fibers of her clothes, on her skin. In the carpet beneath the rocking chair. The virus of murder is everywhere, ready to be placed under a microscope, ready to speak. Ready to name names.
His plan is simple. He’ll get on the bicycle, retrieve the car from the city, return, and load the body—all before one of the Elianis comes home. He’ll figure out the rest along the way.
The hallway, the mirror, the print of Chagall’s Dream of Love. The spacious living room with leather sofas and a massive table.
The twilight has melted into darkness.
The sliding door moves smoothly, and outside, the air is fresh. The garden, still in progress, is strewn with scattered tools, heaps of clippings piled here and there, and mole-repelling devices. There’s the Roswell crash UFO. The cigar-shaped one. And the moon. It casts a bluish light over the landscape, spreading like a shroud over a corpse.
He fumbles in his pocket and finds the key to the outer gate, built from construction iron. The welded inscription on the architrave reads CONIUGI ELIANI, but seen from behind, it looks like an alien mantra: INAILE IGUINOC.
And that’s when K42 feels the breath of death.
The shot comes from the spaceship in Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
The bullet zips through the row of lights along the hull, strikes his ribs, tears through his back, and exits his abdomen, carrying with it a piece of him—flabby, red, and stringy. His legs give out. He falls to his knees, then crumples. His hand pressing against his stomach does nothing to stop the blood from gushing out. His curses spill out incoherent, shredded by pain.
A pair of long legs, still toned despite age, descend from the craft with practiced agility. A woman in a gray-silver tracksuit strides toward him, gripping an automatic pistol.
K42 thinks that Mrs. Eliani looks even better in person than in photographs—and that her husband is even more imposing than that burly man standing beside her in the seaside snapshot.
They both watch him writhe in the dirt. Then, without ceremony, she grabs him by the feet and drags him a few meters away. She lets him roll into the pit dug in the garden. The impact rattles his organs, and a fresh spray of blood spurts from the wound.
From down here, Mrs. Eliani looks even taller.
Two powerful floodlights mounted on the house’s facade blaze to life, cutting through the dark like a blade.
"Darling, will you take care of the sign?"
Her husband’s voice is deep, perfectly suited to his stature.
"I’ll do it after I fetch the other one," he replies, and K42 watches his shadow disappear from the edge of the pit.
His stomach acid rises, scraping his throat like a sea urchin. Mrs. Eliani conceals her sadistic grin among the folds of her wrinkles. Out of spite, she kicks dirt into the grave. He can do nothing to stop himself from swallowing it.
"Wha… what did I do?" Every word costs him agony, and the pain is unbearable. His blood has soaked his pants up to his knees. The crowbar grins its jagged teeth at his shoulder blade. The pistol lies useless and cold at the bottom of his backpack.
Another kick of dirt. This time, it clogs his nostrils.
"You pulled one heist too many, bastard!" she sneers, then walks away. Soon, the lanky shadow vanishes as well, leaving him alone to fill a grave that reeks of labor—calluses, sweat, exhaustion.
He thinks of his robberies. The boss, always in disguise, who orchestrated them. The gang that gathered in an abandoned warehouse to discuss details. They all wore masks, all used voice modulators. There was Bugs Bunny, Pluto, Popeye, and even Andreotti. He himself always wore a plastic Bill Clinton mask—the 42nd president of the United States. That’s why he had chosen the number 42 for himself.
And through all those heists, only one person had died: Ettore Foiano, a young, foolish bank clerk who had tried to play hero. He and the Queen of England had to shoot him together.
And then—
The blonde’s weight slams onto him like a meteorite, and the shock forces him to vomit blood. Darkness swallows his vision. Deafness dulls the world. A vibration of shattered bones hums through the earth.
He faints.
Then wakes immediately. But he can no longer feel his legs.
It seems as if his belly is full of liquid, sloshing like gasoline in the bottom of a canister. And then…
Mrs. Eliani reappears, this time holding a shovel.
She laughs.
"The Queen of England will keep you company."
"Bitch," he snarls, hoping to scream. But his voice is feeble, a mere shadow of a rage too weak to manifest.
"You shot her in cold blood, and now my husband and I will rewatch the video at our leisure. Remember the porcelain cat? It was a camera. Would you have ever guessed? You and that whore—what a show you put on!" she cackles as the first shovelful of dirt—heavy with sharp stones—falls over the lifeless blonde, over the Queen of England.
The second mound of earth mingles with his blood. And the robbery scene blazes before his eyes, a film projected onto the darkness.
Three customers stood in line.
One wore wide-wale corduroy pants, a little frayed. Another had on a windbreaker, too cautious for the season shifting into spring. The last—a twenty-year-old blonde, full of hope—was polished and pristine, like a mannequin in a storefront.
The guard was being held by his colleague, the one wearing a Scalfaro mask—gripping his hair, pressing a gun to his temple.
The first teller had her hands up, jeans soaked in urine. The second had shut off her emotions, a statue of salt.
Then there was Ettore Foiano.
First, he had tried to press the alarm. Then, he made the fatal mistake of reaching into his leather bag for his personal weapon. And so he—Bill Clinton—and at the same time, she—the Queen of England—had fired through the glass.
Bang—one shot to the chest.
Bang—one to the base of the neck.
Bang.
The third bullet had taken half his cheekbone.
Ettore Foiano had died a fool.
Mrs. Eliani is cruel.
She takes her time. A shovelful of dirt at a time.
And as the last red-hot iron bar completes the inscription, as the earth begins to press on his neck, K42 understands.
He doesn’t need to see Mr. Eliani forge the final letter.
He knows.
And as his breath is replaced by soil, he watches the welding sparks divide into a thousand falling stars.
And the scent of smoke, molten metal, earth, and sweat takes him back—back to when he was just a boy.