home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
-
- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO oOOOO OOOO. OOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO" .OOOOOO OOOOOo OOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
- OOOO oOOOOOOO OOOOOOO. OOOO oOOOO
- OOOO .OOOO OOOO OOOOOOOOo OOOO OOOO"
- OOOO oOOOO OOOO OOOO "OOOO. OOOO OOOOo .OOOO'
- OOOO .OOOO" OOOO OOOO OOOOoOOOO "OOOO. oOOOO
- OOOO oOOOOOOO..OOOO OOOO "OOOOOOO OOOOoOOOO"
- OOOO .OOOO"""OOOOOOOO OOOO OOOOOO "OOOOOOO'
- OOOO oOOOO ""OOOO OOOO "OOOO OOOOOO
-
- |---------------------------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | There Ain't No Justice |
- | |
- | #85 |
- | |
- |---------------------------------------------------------------------------|
- Live and Let Die
- - by Arifel -
-
- `Fantasy is the ultimate reality, to which we all
- retreat at some stage.'
- - Black Rose, from the
- Hallway Whiteboard
-
- `I can already tell that it's going to be a
- characteristically useless, senseless death,
- but then I'm used to the horror. It seems
- distilled, even now it fails to upset or bother me.'
-
- - Brett Easton Ellis, from
- `American Psycho'
-
-
-
- We, personally, are usually quite content to live and let live; if
- a total stranger came up to us on the street and tried to pick a
- fight, we'd more than likely try to ignore or avoid him, cross the
- street. But this had been going on for almost four years, now! He
- wanted us to stop seeing his ex-girlfriend; we did so, and yet he
- still subjected us to harassment, phone calls late at night,
- following us, calling bulleting boards that we called and filing
- copies of messages we'd written (we knew he did this, because some of
- them later appeared in affidavits). He was obviously some kind of
- monomaniac.
-
- Even though we'd never met him in the flesh, we knew him, possibly
- better than he would have liked. Something else he wouldn't have
- liked is just how linear, how predictable he appeared to us. Knowing
- him this way, we decided rather than go out and find him, we'd lay a
- trap for him, have him come to us. It wasn't hard; we simply parked
- the car a few streets away, went back to the flat, turned all the
- lights off and waited. He came by our flat regularly, and if he saw
- that no-one was home, he would try to break in and steal any
- documents he saw lying around. We knew that he'd broken in once
- before and had stolen the phone-number file from our terminal
- program, along with the passwords to the local systems we called. It
- might take a few days, but he would pay us a visit. He couldn't help
- himself.
-
- We were sitting in a corner of the bedroom, out of view of the
- window, the blinds raised slightly to expose twenty centimetres of
- evening sky. We'd been sitting here for three days, listening, not
- answering the phone, not sleeping, visiting the toilet to eliminate
- liquids every thirty hours or so. No lights were on, no sign that
- anyone had been home for some time, and we were beginning to wonder
- if he was going to disappoint us just as a faint scratching sound
- came from the window-ledge. It stopped, and came back louder a few
- seconds later, followed by a pinging sound as he filed through the
- hinge. The window half-fell in, and seconds later a tall, thin
- figure eased in silently, pointing a pencil-torch beam around the
- room. The light passed right over us, huddled inside what we called
- our Someone Else's Problem field; he didn't see a thing. He stalked
- out of the room, the light darting about, and silently, we rose from
- where we crouched and followed him, a six-inch length of broom-handle
- in one hand. It was connected to a similar piece of wood in our
- other hand by a low E acoustic guitar string, a metal-wound piece of
- nylon about a millimetre thick.
-
- We followed him into the kitchen, one step behind him; he bent down
- to pick up a sheet of paper, and when he straightened, we slipped a
- loop of guitar string over his head, down around his neck and pulled
- back hard, our knee in his back. He threw himself backwards
- violently, pushing us up against the kitchen door; thrashed about,
- trying to kick us in the shins, but bent over backwards over our knee
- as he was, he couldn't quite reach. His hands tugged at the wire as
- it bit into his throat, no sound coming from him, his head moving
- from side to side; he slipped down to his knees, and our knee was
- pushing between his shoulderblades when he slumped down. He had been
- without oxygen for little more than a minute; we waited, the broom-
- handles pulled back behind his ears and sure enough, almost two
- minutes later, he gave another violent shove, as if realising that we
- wouldn't fall for his playing possum. We waited for another six
- minutes and decided it was safe to release the wire only after his
- bladder released. He dropped to the kitchen floor with a hollow
- thump.
-
- Feeling his neck, we detected a very faint pulse, so we turned him
- over and wrapped the guitar-string tightly around his wrists, binding
- his hands together. We lifted him off the floor by his hands, his
- arms bending back at the shoulders with sufficient pain to revive him
- slightly, a weak, wet cough signalling the restarting of his
- interrupted respiratory cycle. We lifted and dropped a him few
- centimetres, making him squawk with pain. Before he recovered
- sufficiently to start kicking again, we tied his shoelaces together
- then dragged him into the bathroom and dropped him, face up, in the
- tub, sprawled awkwardly on his bound hands. We lit a candle that
- stood on the sink and regarded him as he slowly worked his way back
- to full consciousness.
-
- `You can scream as much as you like. No-one is going to hear you.'
- we remarked, the unemotional rasp in our voice making us think of
- Hannibal Lector and Patrick Bateman, of John Wayne Gacy and Ed Gein;
- then we remembered that we didn't do this for fun. It was more like
- debugging a program. We weren't restraining this person because we
- got off on that sort of thing; we were correcting a social error. He
- gulped, cleared his throat, licked his dry lips then croaked,
-
- `You won't get away with this.' We inclined our head slightly, and
- replied,
-
- `Possibly. But by the time we're finished with you, it won't make
- any difference.' We reached up, found the razor that was sitting
- next to the candle, swung it open, lifted his head up by his long
- hair and, no anger, no memory of the way he'd made a mess of our
- life, no recollection of the emotional anguish he'd caused, we
- reached down with the intention of carving a deep V in the front of
- his throat. Something stopped our hand bare millimetres from his
- slowly pulsing jugular. We felt that strange body-within-our-own
- feeling that we ordinarily associated with out of body experiences;
- one of the others wanted control. After a brief moment's reflection,
- we allowed it; surprisingly, it was one of the quiet, normally
- reticent female segments. She put the razor back, her hand shaking
- with repressed rage, and went to the bedroom. She came back with an
- armful of devices from our `toy-box', but she stopped short, as
- another of the collective requested control and gained it. This one
- was more direct; not bothering with the cattle-prod, it found an old
- electric shaver cable, sliced it open with the razor and exposed the
- wires. We watched idly as our hands plugged the cable in, turned it
- on and brushed it against his neck. The reaction was extreme; he
- bucked and screamed, almost throwing his bound body out of the tub.
- We felt the muscles in our face arrange themselves in a tight, rigid
- smile, and our hand jabbed the wires at him again and again, playing
- him like a fish, briefly experimenting with sending jolts of
- electricity through the wet patch in the crotch of his pants, which
- lent a shrill kind of desperation to his screams. Our hands turned
- the power off and tugged at the ends of the wires, pulling the
- plastic-coated strands apart until there was about a metre of give
- between the ends. The power was switched back on and we spend an
- entertaining ten minutes running current between his crotch and his
- mouth, touching the wires to his shaking body in rhythms, jerking him
- into the air and allowing him to almost relax before hitting him
- again. Towards the end, he was held there, back arched like a
- bridge, the current bending him over backwards in tight spasms. He
- grunted as we released him, and this sound triggered something deep
- inside us; another portion surged to the fore and took control,
- laying down the wires and fetching a tape recorder. We examined the
- cassette, labelled `Throbbing Gristle: Mission of Dead Souls', wadded
- some tissue paper and stuffed it into the no-recording tab. We
- propped the machine up on the sink, picked up the wires and a soft,
- feminine voice spoke from our mouth:
-
- `Scream for me.' The wires went up his nose and he howled like a
- demon. A few minutes of this was enough; when he'd run out of breath
- to scream, we stopped the tape. We could sample those sounds, later;
- maybe even include them in a MOD file.
-
- Enough playing. Resuming control, we retrieved the razor and with
- one motion, opened up his throat. He bucked like someone undergoing
- electroshock therapy, his blood - black in the half-light - spraying
- over his shirt. We let his drop back into the bath; he choked,
- gurgled and made bubbles for almost two minutes. We believed that he
- was till alive when we turned the light on and began slicing his
- clothes off in long strips. The bloodstained clothing went into a
- grabage bag; his watch, wallet and pouch of house-breaking tools went
- into the sink. We'd throw them down a drain in the city, later.
-
- Using the straight razor, we hacked slices from his neck until we
- reached the vertebra. As the muscles and tendons were severed, his
- head flopped from one side to the other, fluids oozing from various
- tubes until we could lift his head free of his body, surprisingly
- light. We set this aside for later, ignoring random thoughts from
- the peanut gallery in the background - `aren't you going to squick
- him?' `hey, remember that scene in "American Psycho", where Bateman
- stuck his erection up the wind-pipe of the victim's severed head?'
- `don't eat his brains - you could catch some terrible disease'...
-
- `Quiet, please.' We murmured, carefully slashing strips of flesh
- from his naked body, separating his arms and legs from his torso,
- slicing open his stomach and trying to ignore the smell of his
- intestines, the result of a vegetarian diet. Working through the
- night, we divided him up into dozens of small pieces, the rank fluids
- draining into the plug-hole. We fetched a pile of newspapers and
- began wrapping the pieces, placing them in garbage bags, half-filling
- each one. The morning sunlight was shining through the window as we
- washed the last of the blood down the drain and lifted the head up to
- the mirror, smiling as we held up the camera and took a photograph.
- Seconds later, the camera spat out the photo; we wrapped the head in
- newspaper and placed it in a separate bag, well padded with
- scrunched-up paper to disguise the shape.
-
- We examined the photo; us and the head, us smiling amiably, he
- staring in two different directions, his tongue protruding slightly.
- We thought for a second, then unwrapped the head, forced the jaws
- open and hacked out the tongue. We wrapped it in cling-wrap, placed
- it in a padded postage pouch with the photo, addressed it to a
- certain post-office box. She'd know who it was from, and she
- wouldn't tell anyone.
-
- We spent the morning driving from one municipal tip to another,
- dumping two garbage bags at each. The remains would vanish with the
- rest of the rubbish. It was mid-afternoon before we'd finished, and
- we could find a public phone box. We consulted a list of phone-
- numbers; her number wasn't listed, but could be extracted from the
- fifth digit of seven of the numbers on the list. The voice that
- answered was faint and hesitant. We put on a cheery air;
-
- `Good afternoon. You can rest easy, now.'
-
- `What do you mean?'
-
- `We killed him.'
-
- `Who?' We laughed.
-
- `You know who. You don't have to worry about him tapping your phone
- any more, or about him finding you. He's incapable of harming
- anyone... being chopped up and stuck in garbage bags will do that for
- a person. Probably'll give him a new perspective on things. Heh.'
-
- `You're kidding. You wouldn't dare.' We allowed that early-morning
- Cenobite rasp back into our voice.
-
- `How much would you care to bet on that?'
-
- And there was silence.
-
- . . .
-
-
- · ∙■ ·
- █████▄▄▄▄■▄▄▄▄ · ∙ ·
- ▒▒▒▒███▀█▓▌█▌██▌■ ▄·
- ▒▒▒▒▓▓▓▓▓███████▄■·▌ ∙
- ▒▒▓▓▓▓██▀▀█▀▌█████▌▄·■
- ▓▓▓▓▓█▀ ■·▀▐■▀■■▄∙■
- ▓▓▓▓█▀ · ∙
- ▓▓▓█▌
- ▓▓▓█▄ Phoenix Modernz Systems: 908/830-TANJ
- ▒▓▓▓█▌ The Syndicate: 908/506-6892
- ▒▒▓▓▓█▄▄▄ VapourWare BBS: 61/3-429-8510
- ▒▒▒▓▓▓▓▓▓█▄ Yellow Submarine: 404/552-5336
- ██▒▒▒▒▒▒▓▓▓█ Urban Discipline / VaS World HQ : 313/464-1470
- ██▒▒▒▒▒▒▓▓▓█ RipCo ][: 312/528-5020
- ▒▒▒▓▓▓▓▓▓█▄
- ▒▒▓▓▓█▄▄▄
- ▒▓▓▓█▌
- ▓▓▓█▄
- ▓▓▓█▌ ╒══════════════════════╕
- ▓▓▓▓█▀ · ∙ │ TANJ Mailing Address │
- ▓▓▓▓▓█▀ ■·▀▐■▀■■▄∙■ │ PO Box 174 │
- ▒▒▓▓▓▓██▀▀█▀▌█████▌▄·■ │ Seaside Hts, NJ │
- ▒▒▒▒▓▓▓▓▓███████▄■·▌ ∙ │ 08751 │
- ▒▒▒▒███▀█▓▌█▌██▌■ ▄· ╘══════════════════════╛
- █████▄▄▄▄■▄▄▄▄ · ∙ · tanj@pms.metronj.com
-
-