Blackmane
Sir
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2024
Missing Without A Trail
with
Adam Reynolds
37, 6'4
and
Alex Harper
22, 5'5
People underestimate how easily someone can just disappear without a trace. Vanish from existence, without a trail to follow, their fates forever unknown, or perhaps until decades later when those who cared have long since moved on. He'd seen it happen all too often at his job.
Tonight was no different. The fog was thick, and the light overhead lit the bloody scene with stark shadows. Amidst the splashes of guts and innards, her eyes stood out to him. No, they called out to him.
"Sir, what do we do with this?" A man asked, right next to him with shaking nerves and eyes lacking any sort of character or integrity. People who kept quiet and did what they were told. A dime a dozen, but valuable, nonetheless.
"Call reinforcements and a cleanup crew."
He stared at the vehicle still running in front of them. An old mustang, a classic case of a good ride falling apart after going through a dozen owners each less careful than the last, the bumper was falling off, that was enough grounds to do a pullover. Not quite enough to empty a magazine of 9mm bullets on the poor sod.
Wrong place, wrong time.
Jonas Jose de la Guaira, 26. He was a small-time drug dealer in a small town in North Carolina. Hardly someone the DA would pay attention to. He sold weed and ecstasy, and maybe a pound or two of cocaine. The trial alone would have costed more than what he pulled with a month's worth of sales.
His eyes turned over to his terrified companion still sitting in the car, told to stay put and not to move a few moments ago while in the background his second officer made the calls as ordered.
Nothing personal, the boy had just stepped out of line. He shouldn't have started selling in a turf that wasn't his. Certain cartels wanted him dead, and there was no better way to push the issue under the rug than to have an officer do it. His hand still felt the recoil of each gunshot. The first three were quick. Two to the chest, one to the head. The last nine were slow and unemotional. Shot after shot she'd have seen her long dead boyfriend's chest shake with the impact until the hammer on his pistol jammed and the magazine emptied. Blood splattered all over the place, ruining the crumbling car that was already on its last legs. Like its owner, it would get a quick and unceremonious funeral at the scrapyard.
This was nothing new. Officer Adam Reynolds did this kind of dirty work more often than he did anything legitimate. The police department was mostly in on it. After all, drug dealers were still being removed from the streets. Who cared in what order? The ones who paid were put last on the list, and the ones who paid even more could even suggest who'd get put away first.
"Get the goods, I'll take care of the girl." He said, stepping closer to the car after putting away his gun. He didn't need it, he knew she wouldn't try to pull anything.
She was one of those.
A ghost, someone who under the right circumstances could completely disappear. There was no need to get violent, she'd just as well become the plaything of some big wig after being pronounced missing and later dead. He'd "processed" a few people that way before. But this time, looking at her, he had a whim.
Maybe he should just keep her for himself.
"John, do me a favor." He said, the young man hurrying over with a few plastic bags. He took the one with colored pills off his hands.
"Yes, sir."
"There was only one person in the car, the driver. Unless you want to be the found collapsed over a mustang's hood as a shootout casualty."
The young man went pale, his gulp almost audible. "Yes, sir."
"And while we're at it, we only found cocaine and weed." He said, stuffing the ecstasy pills in his pocket. They would come in handy. "Girl, step out of the vehicle, nice and slow. Hands up in the air, don't try anything funny."
Adam walked over to the passenger door and opened it. Were she to take longer than a second to obey, he would pull her out himself. Out of caution, he made sure to handcuff her hands behind her back, where they wouldn't cause any trouble. The hefty steel cuffs were unusually polished, as if he cherished them. His hand tangled with her hair as he ran it up her head, squeezing it into a tight fistful before escorting her straight to his car.
Not the police vehicle parked in front, but the high end german luxury sedan parked behind. She wouldn't be going to the station, after all.
She would be going home.