Read Experiment in Terror 05 On Demon Wings Online
Authors: Karina Halle
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #Romance, #Adult, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Goodreads 2012 Horror
you pretend to forget a lot of people.
I pause in front of Joe’s office. Marilyn sits to the right of
the door, eyebrows furrowed as she types furiously at her
computer.
I reckon Marilyn would have been quite a stunner back in
the day. For someone in her 60s, she’s quite a stunner
now. She’s gained a few kg over the years I’ve known her,
but the weight keeps her looking youthful and smoothes out
the “beak-face” older women get when their noses get
longer but they pul their cheeks back with plastic surgery.
Marilyn just has a warm, if somewhat anxious, visage, with
friendly eyes that she denies behind cat-eyed glasses. She
keeps her grey hair a rich brown and dresses in thick
materials that seem opulent and itchy at the same time.
She pauses in mid “clackity clack” and glances up at me
with a stern, motherly face.
“You done?”
“Just emailed it to him.”
“You know you’re late.”
“One minute late.”
“Two minutes late. You know Joe wants it printed out.”
I sigh and look back at my computer. I know he wants our
work printed out and handed to him, the old-fashioned way.
But it seems like a waste of time when he can just read it
on the computer. You know, like the rest of the planet.
“Joe can print it out himself if he needs to.”
She rol s her eyes and resumes her symphony of
keyboard sounds.
“No, he can’t. I’l be the one printing it out for him.”
“I just don’t understand why you’ve figured out how the
printer works and he hasn’t. Weren’t you both born around
the same time? World War One?”
I grin at her and scoot over to Joe’s door before she has
a chance to whack me with her hand. Her nails are fake
and sharp. I’ve learned the hard way.
I raise my hand and am about to knock on the door just
beneath the gleaming plate that reads JOE BRADLEY –
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF when he barks from the other side. I’m
sure there were words attached to the noise, but to me he
just sounds like a dog more often than not.
I open the door cautiously and poke my head in. As
usual, Joe’s office looks like a bomb went off in it. The desk
is piled high with folders and files that I haven’t ever seen
him move, and his blinds are so jumbled that it gives one
the impression he spends half his time peering out of them
with keen paranoia. Perhaps Joe’s been in the Witness
Protection Program. Would explain a lot.
Everything is just so
grey
in here. The skies outside the
messy window are grey (even at night, it’s a deep
charcoal), the coffee in Joe’s cup looks grey (expired
Coffee Mate wil do that), Joe’s col ared shirt is grey (was
white once, I’m sure), his hair is grey and Joe’s face is
grey. The expression on his face is grey. I do that to him.
“Chris!” he barks, now making legible words. “Get your
skinny British ass in here.”
I quickly close the door and stand nervously by his desk.
Joe’s an American. He believes al British men have
abnormal y smal behinds. I haven’t looked around enough
to figure out if it’s true or not.
“Where’s the article?” he narrows his eyes at me. “It’s
late.”
“I emailed it to –“
Joe sighs. Loudly. Enough that the grey coffee wavers in
the cup.
“Whatever, whatever,” he says with a wave, and then
rests his head in his hands. He doesn’t move or make
another sound. For a brief instant I wonder if he’s been a
robot this entire time and he’s final y ran out of batteries. A
robot in the Witness Protection Program – now that’s a
story.
“Sir?” I ask, and step a smidge closer to him. I can see
the liver spots on the top of his balding head and I
instinctively run my hand through my own dark, thick hair. At
least I have that stil going for me.
Final y, a tired little sigh fal s out of him like a fluttering
leaf.
“What am I going to do with you, Chris?” he says, his
voice low and muffled.
This isn’t an unusual question but I never seem to have
the right answer. Fact is, I don’t know.
“What are we going to do?” he continues, his pitch
rising. I can almost hear a pinch in his words. This is a new
question. New questions scare me.
“I’m not sure what you mean, Sir,” I tel him honestly. I
look down at my cufflinks and make sure they are evenly
polished. There is a weird tension in the room that makes
me feel awkward, like I should be adjusting my clothing.
Another sigh and Joe looks up, his cheeks smooshed up
by his hands like a droopy-faced dog. His eyes avoid mine
and stare straight forward into grey space.
“When are we going to have to write an article about the
fal of The London Herald?” he asks in a weary, dreamy
way. “Or wil we read it on the Sun’s website?”
Sun’s website, natural y, via everyone’s iPad or iPhone.
But I keep my mouth shut. When Joe admits fears and
failure, you know something is seriously wrong.
His eyes flit to me briefly before he straightens up in his
chair and his “harrumph” expression returns to his face. It’s
almost a relief to see it.
“I hope you realize how much is riding on your trip
tomorrow,” he says, clearing his throat dramatical y. “This
isn’t about you and your girlfriend.”
“I know, Sir.”
“Do you? You need to interview that Cooper woman.
You need to convince her to write for us. If we don’t get
some fresh blood soon, we’re al out of a job. You
especial y. And I don’t care what your mother says.”
I sniff and tug at my hair again. Seems to be what I do
whenever my mother is mentioned. And Joe mentions her a
lot. She’s real y the whole reason I stil have a job.
And, yes, the real reason for the trip to Gibraltar isn’t
because I wanted to take Alexa on a romantic escapade.
OK, it is. But saving up for a ring can leave you broke,
especial y on my salary, so when Joe ordered me to
interview this travel writer down in Gibraltar, I jumped at the
chance. At first, I thought he just wanted a story but over the
past few days, I learned that not only am I supposed to write
up a big piece about this woman, but I was to convince her
to write for the Herald. Not exactly a smal order.
In fact, the whole ordeal makes me feel uneasy. I don’t
real y understand why I have to go to Gibraltar to interview
Jamie Cooper (wouldn’t a phone cal with Human
Resources suffice?) and I don’t understand why she’s
needed so badly. I looked at a few samples of her writing.
It’s fun and a bit kooky, but without sounding immodest, I’m
a far more talented writer than she is. But I don’t want to
analyze it too much. This is a free trip to the Mediterranean
and the one thing I’ve been looking forward to for a very
long time. Alexa and I need it.
“What do the other papers have that we don’t?” Joe
asks, interrupting my thoughts before I started brooding
about my relationship.
“Online versions? A friendly boss? Better coffee?”
“They have sex appeal. They have the youthful slant. No
offense, Chris, but you’re not exactly a spring chicken.”
“I’m thirty-five and girls tel me I look like David Tennant,”
I reply. “I’m a big hit with the tardis set.”
“Re-tardis set, if you ask me,” he scoffs and leans
forward. “Listen, this woman has a large fol owing and she
has yet to commit to a regular column anywhere. I think if
we got a contract with her, she would help us out a lot.
People don’t want to read about the economy anymore.
They don’t want the doom and gloom. They want to escape
from their problems. They want to travel but can’t afford it.
That is where travel writing comes in. Armchair travel for the
broke and despondent.”
A newspaper that wants to focus on the good news? I
think I’ve heard it al .
“Get that interview first. Then convince her that writing for
the London Herald would be the best thing for her career.
Emphasize stability. Everyone likes that in this climate,
especial y an American like her. Do that first and then you
can go relax…or whatever it is that you do when you’re not
here.”
I give him a weary smile and then hustle myself out of the
office as quickly as possible, blowing Marilyn a kiss, which
she pretends not to notice. Outside, the air is strangely cold
for a June night and peppered with exhaust and grime. I
walk to the tube dreaming of the Mediterranean shining
bold and blue before me. First I’l get the travel writer out of
my way – I’l try my best, or maybe I won’t. Then it’s just me
and Alexa, sunshine and ignorance as far as the eye can
see.
3
JAMIE
June 20th
I’m behind my deadline again. Hildy has been calling
the hotel nonstop, threatening me with the same old “Your
book will never get published at this rate” and “You’re
making me look like a bad agent.” WELL I’M SORRY,
HILDY. YOU ARE A BAD AGENT! There, I said it. And
one day I’ll say it to her face. I know that publishers are
under the gun these day,s especially with the advent of
those e-books and all (horrible things, should be
abolished along with cell phones) but COME THE FUCK
ON, a $5000 advance on a book? What happened to
authors making money? Or does that not happen
anymore? I almost make that much after a few months of
freelancing. WHAT THE HELL ARE THEY THINKING?!
OK, enough ranty rants from moi. I know I shouldn’t
complain and I don’t normally … much… other than here.
But it seriously demotivates me and I’m having enough
writer’s block as it is. I mean, Morrocco. What is there to
say about it that hasn’t already been said? I said it all
myself when I was here three years ago. Where’s the
story? There is no story. I got hit by a rickshaw, that’s
really the only story I’m limping away from. Speaking of,
I’m dying for a drink once I hit Gibraltar. These pain meds
just don’t cut it anymore and are making the right half of
my face twitch. I’m a limping, frazzle-haired twitching writer
and I don’t like it. I miss Greece. I miss Crete. I miss Nico
and his pecs and his dick and his pronunciation of the
word avocado. I miss happy, smiling, sexy Jamie, part-
time writer, part-time huntress of foreign men who are
dumber than they look. The frazzle-hair never leaves me
but I know I look better when my eyes are twinkling.
Maybe it’s Northern Africa, though. Maybe it’s that you
can’t let your guard down here (not that I do anyway), and
that being a female isn’t exactly embraced. Maybe
Gibraltar will be better. Aside from the drinks and the
British charm, there’s the interview. Maybe having some
dopey newspaper reporter ask me questions will make me
feel better about myself. Motivate me. Get my ass in gear
for Lisbon (or Grasse, France, I haven’t decided yet) and
when the damn jaunt is over, I can sort out this diary and
get a manuscript in order. Then maybe, just maybe I’ll
finally see my name on a book and I’ll make back that
$5000.
And maybe I’ll find a new victim too. Did I say victim? I
meant Nico. Same difference.
4
CHRIS
Hot.
Hot.
I’m so damn hot.
And tired. My brain feels like a wad of chewing gum. And
the glare off the water and whitewashed buildings is so
strong that my imitation Ray-Bans can’t handle the UV rays.
This is my impression of Tangier and I can’t wait to
leave.
Granted, we aren’t here for very long. The cheapest way
to Gibraltar was actual y to fly out of Gatwick to Tangier and
then take the ferry across to Gibraltar. I original y didn’t
mind that Joe booked this more exotic route, thinking Alexa
might find it al uring (and it was one of the few places she
hadn’t been to).
But she’s glaring at me and it’s not because of the
sunshine (no, her Gucci shades are real).
I loosen my col ar, feeling the beads of sweat evaporate,
wondering why I didn’t dress for the occasion and give her
an innocent smile.
“Something wrong, sweetie?” I ask her.