Read Broken Piano for President Online

Authors: Patrick Wensink

Tags: #Fiction, #Satire

Broken Piano for President (21 page)

“To die?”

“Well, to suffer. Ground’s cold, man.”

“You don’t look that bad, really,” Henry says, hoping to make up for the beating he secretly takes responsibility for. “I mean if we wash the blood off, you can hardly tell your eye is doing that thing. You’ll be cool.”

Dean grunts and lies on the couch. “Forget it. Not the first time, not the last, right?” He grabs Hamler’s pack of smokes and lights up. “Why are you so dressed up? Are you still working that temp job?”

Hamler sucks in a freezing cold breath. It stings the teeth. “Yeah, but it’s my last day.” His shattered insides reform and sour at the thought of using the poison gun and never seeing Martin again. He unwraps melty Hershey’s Miniatures from a pocket and turns toward the door. “Gotta run.”

Morning holds an ancient quiet at Bust-A-Gut. The World Headquarters is a haunted library at the bottom of the ocean—nobody is home.

Hamler needs to throw up. He also craves a Snickers, but needs to throw up worse. The old ghost of Christopher Winters’ bald, dying head blows raspberries on his stomach. A record-setting queasiness burrows deep. Henry thinks about having to give Martin a resignation letter. Add a murder to the To-Do list and it all shades that gut an ugly green.

Hamler weaves around a maze of cubicle walls looking for a bathroom. Each partition painted company colors—blue and yellow, blue and yellow, blue and yellow. The men’s and women’s rooms are down a long hallway directly next to one another.

A meteor shower falls in Henry’s belly. The reality of unrolling that cufflink and wrapping it around Malinta’s neck is repetitive and punishing. Hamler’s knee joints go Jell-O.

Ten paces from the restroom and vomit freedom, he rounds the final corner and a stick of dysentery TNT explodes within.

“Henry, I’ve got some stuff to talk to you about today. There might be an opening in our department…full time! If you’re interested, I mean,” Malinta says. She has a small band-aid over that old head wound. She stares down at Hamler from white high heels and a matching dress. His throat ties into a knot and his bowels go granite. She flies toward the women’s room and turns around at the door. “Oh, and good morning. You look really handsome today.”

His cufflinks burn holes at the wrists. The spider-bite contraption is a ball and chain. Hamler’s heart rate punches while the white noise of the office explodes through his ears.

The innocent liver spots on Christopher Winters’ scalp come back. He pictures tiny white kitten whiskers sprouting from America’s hero’s head. It reminds Hamler of the pink scar soon to be around Malinta’s neck.

He stops thinking about death and his breathing returns. A fresh memory buzzes loud in Hamler’s head. Sensations of accomplishment are dusted off and spit-shined. His stomachache is gone, recalling that brief electric zap of success after they moved Christopher Winters’ body to the couch. The look of approval on Tony’s face leaving Winters’ estate was a thrill that, until now, Henry pushed into the dark.
It wasn’t that bad
, he thinks.
Actually, it was kind of cool. Easy, in fact
.

Stop being such a chicken and do this
.
Just like the other night with Martin
, he swallows dry,
just jump into the fun.

By the time Henry starts paying attention, his feet are floating across the women’s room tiles. Malinta quietly pisses. He sees bone white heels under the stall. Hamler’s training has conditioned him to mentally simulate several angles at once.

 
  • He can quickly slide beneath the toilet wall and spider bite her ankle. Though, Tony harped on the importance of plunging the tiny gun near the heart.

 

 
  • He can jump over the stall and wrap the wire around her head while she sits. This, too, requires some gymnastics.

 

 
  • Hamler can play possum and walk into the stall nearest her and wait. When Malinta finishes, he can exit behind her and choose the cufflinks or the little pistol.

 

 

Option three sounds best and he walks slowly to the toilet, trying not to make a sound. The door is cold against the pumping blood in Hamler’s fingers. Before he twists the knob, Malinta’s toilet flushes and her door swings open. Close enough to smell each other’s breakfast, those green marble eyes lock onto Hamler’s face.

Oh, shit.
Henry’s courage fizzles, now his stomach is full of Pop Rocks and Pepsi—throwing up sounds like a great idea again.

Malinta slowly shakes her head with a hint of a grin. Hamler’s training manual taught him to assess this situation, as well. It is possible one of three things can happen:

 

 

 
  • She thinks you are a pervert and will scream.

 

 
  • She knows you are a murderer and will scream.

 

 
  • She thinks you are a perverted murderer and will scream.

 

 

Her warm breath and the sting of perfume floods Henry’s face as her mouth opens in slow motion, teeth shine in the dull light. “
In
-appropriate,” she purrs. “Mister Holgate.”

Henry fumbles with the cufflink. It won’t slip through its hole. He gently pulls so as not to frighten his prey. But those fingers are stiff.

“What the bleep would your boyfriend say?” she asks. Henry’s mouth cracks open, lips dry. Malinta swoops down, dive bombing Henry’s face. The kiss stops all wrist fidgeting. Malinta’s mouth is odd. It reminds Hamler of kissing Grandma.

“I want a baby, but not this bad,” Malinta grins.

“N-nnn,” the dictionary in Henry’s head is filled with blank sheets. “No-ooooo.”

“I won’t tell,” she says with a wink.

Henry watches Malinta and her tight white dress walk out the door. The cufflink pops impotently from his wrist in a dental floss dangle.

He gathers it up, stuffs the metal thread in a pocket and walks into the men’s room. Henry’s throat is wrung tight and scratchy. He’s disappointed and relieved about the failed execution. More disappointed than relieved, he realizes. That scares him cold.

Henry turns on the faucet and watches shiny water disappear.

What is wrong with you?

What is wrong with you?

What is wrong with you?

Hamler’s cell phone rings before water splashes his face. “Have you taken care of our problem yet?” Tony says. There is a pause as Hamler debates taking a drink. “Hello? Did you hear me, Henry?”

“I didn’t get a chance yet, sorry.” He palms water to his mouth.

“Perfect.”

Embarrassed, he repeats, “I’m sorry.”

“No, really, it’s perfect. Your mission objectives have changed. Drastically. Get the hell out of there. Don’t kill
anyone
, don’t swat a bug…don’t even clean up your desk. Hear me?”

“Y-yeah, sure. But—”

“Just move. We obtained some files last night. That bitch, Malinta, lied to you. Bust-A-Gut isn’t planning a smear campaign. I don’t know where she got off telling you that,” Tony chirps out a laugh. “God, we need some drug addicts. Drunks are unreliable informants. Never thought I’d miss cokeheads.”

Henry walks toward the door, phone between shoulder and ear. “So what’s going on, then?” All disappointment has vanished. Henry realizes he was lying to himself. Being a murderer is not who he is.

“Okay, I’ll fill you in more when you get here. But Mister Winters personally asked me to set this up. It’s big.”

“What?”

“Have you ever babysat before?”

“No.”

“Do you want to travel?”

He thinks about Martin’s scruffy chin and the chance of rescuing their infant relationship from the fire: “No.”

“You speak Russian, right?”

“Tony, seriously.”

“I’ll see you in an hour. You’re doing great work, Henry. People are paying attention.”

“Tony,” he whines.

“Bring your translation dictionary.” Tony hangs up.

The office remains silent. His feet against thin carpet are the loudest thing imaginable. Henry hits the elevator down arrow and waits. Adrenaline and bile pedal through his body, mute compared to a few minutes ago, but constantly rearranging themselves.

The bell plings and metal doors slide apart. A crush of young executives squeeze out. When it clears, Martin stands across from Henry. His brown skin has a tanning lotion sheen and his perfect black hair gives off a dry warmth. Oddly, he has a huge bandage across his nose.

“Just the guy I wanted to see.”

“Hey.”

“What’s up, Henry? You feeling okay?”

“What happened to your face?”

Martin smiles. His teeth are distractingly straight. Henry’s seasickness sloshes back with love. “You aren’t leaving me, are you?” Martin says with a laugh.

“Hello,” a woman’s voice says on the other end. “Is this Mister Dean?”

The phone’s hard plastic is an icicle against the Cliff Drinker’s ear. Buried under a quilt, he’s just drifted to sleep after three cigarettes and a few specks of Vicodin. His face throbs raw and sore.

“Yep, yeah, who’s this?”

“Hi, sir, this is Deb, Mister Winters’ assistant. Roland wants to confirm that you two are still on for lunch today.”

“Oh, shit, um.” He releases a lungful of air and feels the swollen eye bulge. “Okay, sure, where?”

“Twelve-thirty at the Club.”

“Should’ve guessed. What time is it now?”

“It’s eleven-fifty-two, sir. Sorry I didn’t confirm earlier.”

Deshler hangs up and digs through a pile of shirts. The room is stale with unwashed clothes and dead circulation. He pulls out a pair of wrinkled jeans and a stained sweater.

Dean daydreams about Malinta while brushing his teeth. He wants to kiss her with these clean lips. He wants to nibble her ear. He can’t remember entirely, but is kind of sure they didn’t part on the best terms last night.

Henry is right
, Dean thinks after washing blood from his face.
I don’t look horrible
. The eye is a balloon and his chin is stenciled like a quarterback’s jersey.

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