High Life

Home > Other > High Life > Page 37
High Life Page 37

by Matthew Stokoe


  I went carefully with the garage rolladoor, levering it up an inch at a time with the long handle of my hammer until I could see through the gap that there were no cars inside. Bella might have been there, checking on her instruments, maybe even working on a donor. Without Powell or me to scout for her the possibility was slim, and I couldn’t see Lorn taking over the role, but it had been something to factor in nevertheless. The absence of the 850ci meant I’d have free run of the place and I felt vindictively gleeful forcing the door until the mechanism broke and let the jointed metal roll up the rest of the way nice and smooth.

  The door into the house proper had been replaced since my last visit. It had a couple of locks on it and a thicker sheet of steel. But my hammer and I had expected something like that and we went to work confident that a little sweat would be rewarded. It was, but I felt light-headed by the end of it.

  Powell had said a fridge, so at least I knew what I was looking for—kind of. There was one in the operating room, I’d seen it before and it seemed as good a place as any to start. I was planning on a quick professional search, but when I pushed through the swing doors from the pre-op area I couldn’t help taking a few moments for myself. All the hard edges and the glittering steel gave me the start of a hard-on. It wasn’t because I was remembering what Bella did to herself there. It had more to do with the alien starkness of the place, a place without the usual sympathies humans demand from their environments. I turned on the cluster light that hung like a great inquiring head on its swing arm. It didn’t let anything hide. Under its harsh mercury limning the vinyl surface of the table shone almost silver.

  The fridge stood against one wall and looked like something you’d find in an undersized kitchen. The stuff in it didn’t mean anything to me—just vials of drugs I didn’t recognize waiting to be sucked into syringes. If Powell had been hinting at something in here, his dying breath had been wasted. But I knew his junkie condescension would have placed me somewhere close to the bottom of the brain-power league and I figured whatever it was I was searching for had to be at least halfway obvious. So I kept looking. I checked every room in the basement, even those I was sure didn’t have fridges. After a while I found a storeroom—shelves of disposables: gloves, gowns, scalpels, dressings, along with more reusable-looking equipment made from cream-colored plastic and chrome steel. And, in one corner, a fridge humming away to itself. Only it wasn’t your average cooling unit. It was round and orange and looked like a scaled-down version of something you’d go to the bottom of the ocean in. Pipes and warning stickers cluttered up the sides and instead of a door it had a kind of plug thing recessed into the top, about a foot across.

  A long pair of heavily insulated gloves and a set of tongs hung from a hook on the wall next to it. It was pretty obvious what they were supposed to be used for, so I did.

  Inside, once a load of vapor cleared, the first thing I saw was a stack of frozen blood in wrinkled plastic slabs. I used the tongs to lift them out one by one. They felt hard enough to shatter. Unless it was all Karen’s, it didn’t mean much. I couldn’t see even fuck-ups like Powell and Bella draining someone. More likely it was just stock to be used in transfusions during the kidney operations. But the fridge held one or two other things as well. Down at the bottom, under the last slab, I found a couple of small plastic packets with creamy liquid frozen inside. And something else, very flat and thin, wrapped in cling film. I put the blood back and closed up the fridge. I took the other things upstairs to the lounge and sat around waiting for them to thaw.

  It didn’t take long—I wasn’t defrosting a chicken, after all. I squished the pale liquid around. It felt slimy under the plastic and it didn’t take a major leap to figure it for semen. Or work out whose it was—somehow Bella had managed to stash a few spurts from her fuck sessions with Powell. I felt a thrill of elation. Finding it here removed Bella’s best protection against being marked the killer—the impossibility of her spunking up into Karen’s guts. Now it was obvious all she had had to do was empty one of little these packets into the body.

  Of course there might have been other explanations. Powell could have been storing the semen in the freezer himself, or it could have come from one of Bella’s male donors. But I was pretty sure that that wasn’t the case. Powell didn’t strike me as a guy who had any great desire to preserve his genes for the benefit of mankind, and there was no reason at all why Bella would want to save jism from any of the losers they’d dragged in off the street.

  I figured I had Bella pretty well fucked, what with the video and an explanation for the goo inside Karen. And when I unwrapped the thing in clingfilm, I was certain of it—a square of skin with an Egyptian scarab tattooed onto it in black ink. The square of skin that had been missing from Karen’s shoulder blade when they found her in the park. Not a thing Powell would want to hang onto, coming as it did from someone he loathed. But definitely something Bella might treasure.

  I put the bags of semen and the tattoo on a coffee table in front of me and lit a cigarette. I thought about Powell. His last words had led me to this haul. That he’d known it was here had to mean he’d known about the murder, about its incriminating specifics. And knowing these specifics he could not have avoided the conclusion that Bella had been planning to frame him for it. But the poor fuck had been so hung up on her he hadn’t let on, even to save himself until right at the end when his guts were in his lap. And, looking back on it, remembering the tone of his voice at the time, it occurred to me that even then he hadn’t been trying to destroy his daughter, but to rob me of my self-righteousness, my self-generated certainty that he was guilty. He’d known I’d wanted it to be him, that I’d blinkered myself to anything that might have forced me to confront the possibility that Bella was a killer. And he hadn’t been about to allow me the comfort of maintaining that illusion.

  If Bella and Powell had been co-killers, everything was cool. Powell had deserved his death and I had something to threaten Bella with. On the other hand, if it had been Bella by herself—and if I was truthful with myself, that was what I now believed—then the semen as evidence would still function, but Powell had died without reason. And that meant I’d helped kill an innocent man, or at least a man innocent of Karen’s murder.

  I forced myself to relive that night, to bring up again the image of the blood-soaked car interior, Powell’s belly bursting open, the smell of his insides. I tried to feel bad about it. I tried to feel angry with myself for doing it, with Bella for manipulating me into it. But dredging up those kind of emotions right then was a nonstarter. I was too busy basking in the knowledge that before me on the coffee table I had the means to force a return to my preferred lifestyle.

  Chapter Forty-Eight

  I connected with Bella through her machine. She hadn’t returned any of the messages I’d left since she took 28 FPS away from me, but I recorded a few lines about wanting to discuss something Ryan had told me the last time I saw him alive, and she was on the line before midday.

  We sat in her video suite, the obvious place. Bella had her hair tied back and was wearing a robe with nothing on underneath. As she shifted position in her chair the silky material slipped open to show her cunt. She didn’t bother to cover herself and I caught the scent of fish.

  I played my cassette and explained how there should have been stitches on Karen’s belly. Bella spent more time watching me than the screen and the satisfied look on her face gave me a bad feeling that right from the start things weren’t going to go quite as well as I’d hoped. For an absurd moment the whole purpose of the meeting seemed to have been reversed, that rather than accusing her of murder, I was there to admit my guilt at being in possession of something dangerous to her. I did my best to fight it down, but I knew my voice sounded weak.

  “Ryan had it figured the night you killed him, it took me a little longer. What did you think, we weren’t going to see it?”

  “Oh, I thought you’d see it all right. But I was quite sure you’d be relucta
nt to recognize it.”

  “Because of your money?”

  “You and Ryan were very similar. You see money as life’s ultimate validation. It makes you easy to predict.”

  “Powell didn’t kill Karen.”

  “No, he didn’t.”

  “You made this tape. You knew he’d take a copy and that sooner or later we’d find it. And you knew how we’d read it.”

  “I knew how you’d want to read it.”

  “How long had you been planning it?”

  “Killing Karen? I didn’t really plan it at all.”

  “But the tape was made before you took her kidney out.”

  “The tape was just one I had, it wasn’t part of any plan, at least not until later. I shot it in Powell’s apartment to hurt him, to rub salt in the wound, so to speak. That’s all. The planning only came after I realized what it could be used for. Erase my copy, make up a story about the bracelet … Almost too easy.”

  “Why did you kill her?”

  “Do you care?”

  I didn’t say anything. Bella shrugged, rewound the tape, and started it playing again slow motion. She watched it as she spoke.

  “Karen came back much sooner than I’d expected. We hadn’t planned to meet again for a couple of weeks after she’d recovered from her operation, but she had some trouble at home. The man she was living with threw her out and she had nowhere to go. I let her stay, of course. But knowing she was accessible, that she was a woman who had no real prohibitions against selling parts of herself, was a constant temptation. The door had already been opened, you see, and I wanted to go back. After a week I offered to buy her appendix and she agreed.”

  “Only you didn’t stop with her appendix.”

  “No. It’s a much simpler operation to perform so I was working without Powell. I hadn’t planned to do anything other than what I’d paid for. But being there alone, with her laid out on the table so … available, it seemed cowardly to limit myself once I’d started. I took out almost everything she had.”

  “But why?”

  “I’ve told you before, the operations are a test, even with outcasts they require an effort of will. With Karen, when I took her kidney, I moved to another level. She wasn’t anonymous. She was my lover, I felt a great deal for her. And to damage her, even surgically, required proportionally more from me. The second time the challenge was even greater.”

  “But you rose to it valiantly.”

  “We only achieve self-mastery by testing ourselves, Jack. It’s the only way to become more than we are. But I don’t expect you to understand.”

  “What about Powell, did he understand?”

  Bella laughed.

  “Hardly, he wanted to leave the countr y. He was so fright-ened he removed her kidney scar, he thought it could be used to trace us. I thought he was being ridiculous, but I suppose Ryan proved me wrong in that respect. I wouldn’t have involved Powell at all, but I needed his help getting rid of the body.”

  “And his thanks was that you decided to frame him. To kill him.”

  “I couldn’t allow him to have something like that to hold over me.”

  “He would never have told anyone.”

  “Perhaps not. But it changed the dynamic of our relationship. He came to feel that he could make demands of me. And that wasn’t something I could tolerate. Besides, it would have been stupid not to take what steps I could to protect myself against the possibility of investigation.”

  “But he was innocent. He didn’t do anything.”

  “Can you imagine what it feels like to clean your father’s come from between your legs?”

  Bella stopped the tape and turned toward me.

  “If Powell means so much to you, perhaps you should think about this—he only died because Ryan came to Malibu. And Ryan only came to Malibu because you brought him here. Without you, Jack, Powell would still be alive.”

  “I’m not buying it. I want my life back.”

  “You still have your life.”

  “My house, the car, the show, all of it. I want it back.”

  “But you told Lorn I was dangerous. That was … indiscreet.”

  “Either make things the way they were, or this tape is going to the police.”

  “Oh, Jack, I really hoped you wouldn’t do this. It was so much nicer when I could pretend you loved me.”

  “I’m serious.”

  “What does the tape really show? A girl masturbating. It shows I had contact with her, I suppose. But she was a prostitute and there’s nothing to say I ever saw her again. It certainly won’t support an accusation of murder. What’s to say I didn’t find it on the street, even?”

  “Your other tape, the one with the donors. She’s on that too.”

  “Already erased. And you’ve forgotten the semen in her body. A little hard to lay that at my door, don’t you think?”

  I took the tattoo and one of the bags of come out of my jacket and dropped them on the console in front of her. She didn’t move to touch them.

  “Powell’s last laugh, I presume.”

  “Right at the end your attraction for him kinda lost its hold. I guess being setup to be killed does that to a guy.”

  “An event in which you played such an integral role.”

  “What’s with the tattoo? Was she so disposable you thought you’d forget her if you didn’t keep a piece of her?”

  “I’m not going to forget her, Jack. We had them done together, at the same place, on the same day. It’s an unusual design and there was a slim possibility it might have connected us. It had to be removed. I probably shouldn’t have kept it, but I have a sentimental side.”

  I snorted and pointed to the packet of semen.

  “Cute idea.”

  “Effective, at least.”

  “You must have been over the moon when you figured blackmail wasn’t Ryan’s only bag. He was ready-made. You got to get rid of Powell without any of that nasty fuss an investigation would have involved.”

  “I got something else as well. I got to link you to Powell’s death. Funny how one thing leads to another.”

  “It was Ryan who forced me into that, not you.”

  “Who do you think persuaded him it was so important in the first place?”

  “Bullshit.”

  “I’m not going to argue about it. The fact is, even if you can explain the semen, you won’t go to the police. You’re too heavily implicated yourself. Now that Ryan’s not here they’d probably hold you solely responsible.”

  “There’s nothing to prove I had anything to do with it.”

  “Actually, there is.”

  Bella popped out the tape of Karen, chose another from the cupboard, and ran it. The screen showed a pair of kitchen gloves covered with blood, lying on a sheet of newspaper.

  “From Ryan. They have your fingerprints inside, I believe.”

  “I don’t fucking believe this! You set me up!”

  She ejected the tape and put it away.

  “I bought some insurance. I hope I don’t have to use it.”

  A high-speed about-face seemed the only possible course of action given this less-than-encouraging development. I put a lot of effort into it.

  “Look, I wasn’t really going to show that stuff to the police. I was just trying to get my life back. I mean, I can’t take it, Bella. Don’t you understand?”

  “You shouldn’t have said what you did to Lorn.”

  “I know. Jesus, isn’t there anything I can do?”

  I took the tape of Karen, put it in the machine, and erased it.

  “There, I was just bullshitting. I’d never have gone to the police. You know I’d never do anything like that. Don’t you feel anything for me anymore?”

  “This isn’t about feeling, it’s about safety.”

  “But you are safe. Keep the tattoo and the semen. I can’t do anything without them.”

  “There was another packet.”

  “Yeah, sure, here.”

 
; I took the second wrap of semen out of my pocket and handed it to her.

  “Now you’ve got everything. Please, Bella, I’m begging you. Will you give me the show back, at least?”

  Bella weighed the semen in her hand for a moment, then reached out and killed the power to the video console.

  “Give me your number. I’ll consider it.”

  “Excellent!”

  I passed her one of the Palm Grove cards, hoping to see her smile a little and let me know things were okay between us again. But she didn’t. She just looked coolly at me and pulled her robe closed.

  “I’m not promising I’ll call, Jack.”

  The drive back to the motel wasn’t pleasant. The ocean looked cold and unfriendly under a half moon and I couldn’t stop thinking what a pathetic shit I was. My grand plan of making Bella give me what I wanted had come to nothing, had crumbled to dust against the force of her will. I’d gone in with evidence that should have destroyed her and I’d come out with nothing.

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  TV, TV, TV. It made me mad with wanting. I watched it nonstop. Days had passed and Bella hadn’t called and it was getting harder to keep a lid on the feeling that it was never going to happen, that I was going to be left forever in this nightmare world of cheap motels and nonidentity.

  Sometimes I went outside, mostly to look at the colors in the sky near evening. I walked up and down the street in front of the motel trying to feel connected to the city. But everything was foreign to me, like I was lost in some Asian city where I couldn’t understand the language or recognize even the most fundamental patterns of behavior.

  I had the management hook up a VCR and I watched the jewelry-shop raiders fuck the young cleaner to death. I watched it over and over and wanked endlessly, trying to expel my growing anxiety. I bought a second TV set so Melrose and Baywatch and 90210 could run at the same time. But nothing worked, and each time I shot my load over the carpet I was left in a state of dissatisfaction that bordered on rage.

 

‹ Prev