#47 - Ghost of the Present



         ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Chapter Five~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


     Billy looked down at Jen sleeping next to him.  She 
looked as innocent as she had when he had first met her 
that day at college.  They had been in their sophomore 
year.  Billy had just transferred in, and he was wandering 
around campus when...
     he spotted her.  She was sitting in the middle of a 
nearby field, talking to someone or something.  He stepped 
closer, and he saw what the girl was doing, she was 
comforting a wounded fawn.  It was amazing enough that she 
was able to get close to it, but the fawn seemed to trust 
her enough to snuggle against her when it spotted him.  
She turned and looked, and upon seeing Billy, she had sent 
him for help. When he returned, the fawn was asleep in her 
arms, and he knew he was in love.
     That fawn was what she reminded him of now, innocent 
and trusting, if a little wary.  He brushed a strand of 
hair out of her eyes.
     Billy regretted that his boss wanted her dead.  Jen 
had always been strong-willed and law abiding, and her few 
months as assistant D.A. had won her some powerful enemies, 
his boss amongst them.  She’d sent him to prison, and it 
was up to Billy to take his revenge.  And that was the last 
thing he wanted to do.  Not then, and especially not now.
     He wanted desperately to get out of the game, and if 
he could, he’d take Jen with him.  His boss would just get 
more hitmen, but he could protect Jen.  They could be like 
Bonnie and Clyde, only without the crime spree.  They’d 
have to lay low, maybe change their whole identities.  But 
it would be worth it.
	*		*		*
     When Jen opened her eyes the next morning, sunlight 
was streaming into her window.  Looking around, she spotted 
Billy dressing on the other side of the room.
     "Oh," Jen groaned closing her eyes again.  "Bright 
light!"  She buried her head under the covers.
     "Good morning, beautiful," Billy called out cheerfully.
     Jen popped her head back out.  "Is it morning already?"

     Billy walked over, sat down next to Jen, 
and kissed her.  Jen snuggled into his arms.
     "I’m afraid so," Billy confirmed.  "And 
if I don’t leave soon, I’m going to be late 
for my meeting."
     "What meeting?" Jen asked groggily.
     "Just business," Billy answered.  He 
kissed her forehead.  "And I’m going to be late if I don’t 
finish getting around."
     Jen sighed, thinking about a day four years before when 
Billy had said something quite similar.
     "I will be back," Billy said, reading Jen’s mind.
     "Don’t go making promises you can’t keep," Jen told 
him, grabbing her bathrobe from the floor and heading to the 
bathroom.
     Billy followed, but Jen slammed the door in his face. 
He sighed, knowing that nothing he could say would convince 
her otherwise.  He’d have to prove her wrong through his 
deeds.  If that was even possible anymore.
	*		*		*
     Jen pulled up to the curb behind Trent’s ‘Vette and 
stared at Thunder Karate in dismay.  The front window had 
been broken outward, and the interior looked to be a mess, 
as well!
     Climbing out of her Mustang, she went inside to find 
Trent, who, along with his students, was picking up the mess.
     "Trent, what happened?" Jen asked, wandering over to him.
     Trent spun around, startled, and not at all happy.
     "Your friend decided to do some redecorating last night," 
he told her, picking up a broken trophy.
     "My friend?" Jen asked, puzzled.
     "Billy Bowen," Trent answered, picking up another damaged 
trophy.  He set the pieces in a box.
     "Billy?" Jen questioned.  "Trent, that’s impossible!  
Billy was with me all--" She stopped, suddenly uncomfortable.
     Trent glared at Jen.  His sour mood was infectious.
     "What, Trent?" Jen asked angrily, feeling no need to 
explain her actions.  "I know Billy didn’t do this!"
     Trent didn’t answer.  Ignoring Jen, he packed his broken 
memories away.
     "Don’t you have any other suspects?" Jen asked.  When 
Trent continued to ignore her, Jen went on. "You’re a private 
investigator, Trent.  This is what you do best!"
     "What I do best," Trent snarled, "is work alone."
     Jen, startled and hurt, fought to keep the tears out of 
her voice.
     "If that’s the way you feel, Trent, then I quit," she 
told him icily.  She turned and walked back out of Thunder 
Karate.
	*		*		*
     "It’s about time, Bowen," the gray-haired man Billy knew 
as Vernon Kydon greeted him as he walked in the door.  "Is it 
done?"
     Billy, studying the two big men standing to either side 
of Kydon, shook his head.  "Not yet."
     "And why is that, Bowen?" Kydon asked, eerily calm. "Why 
is this girl different from the rest?"
     Billy could give him a hundred reasons, but he knew better 
than to say any of them.

     "She didn’t sleep last night," he told 
Kydon.  "She was really hyper, and she talked 
and talked.  And she knows how to take care of 
herself.  I thought it best to wait until her 
guard is down."
     Kydon nodded.  "I know about your feelings 
for this girl, Bowen.  If you do anything stupid, 
like even think about running out on this contract, we’ll kill
you.  And we’ll kill her first and make you watch."
	*		*		*
     "Trent, what did you say to Jen?" Tommy asked, stepping up 
behind his brother with an empty box.
     "She just quit," Trent answered tersely.
     "Quit?" Tommy asked, surprised.  "You can’t let her quit! 
If she doesn’t have a reason to stay in Dallas, she might move 
away, and we’ll never see her again!"
     "Some things can’t be helped, Tommy," Trent answered.  
"And I don’t want to talk about it."
     "Don’t want to talk about what?"
     Trent turned to find Carlos in the doorway.  He’d been 
there earlier, when Trent had first reported the vandalism.
     "I’ve got more info on that Bowen guy you asked about 
earlier," Carlos said.
     Trent grabbed a broom and started sweeping up the floor.  
"I don’t want to hear it, Carlos."
     "You don’t want to know that Jen’s friend Billy is a 
professional hitman?" Carlos asked.  That got Trent’s 
attention. Trent stopped sweeping and looked at his friend.
     "He’s what’s known as a ladykiller," Carlos continued. 
"He introduces himself to his "hits," seduces them, and then 
kills them while they sleep."
     "My God," Trent said, his anger with Jen turning to 
concern.
     "Bowen dated Jen for three and a half years," Carlos 
added.  "He walked away one day four years ago, and straight 
into a life of crime.  He now freelances, but he was recently 
hired by Don Giorma."
     Trent thought for a moment.  "Wasn’t that the...?"
     "Mob kingpin Jen sent away for murder?" Carlos finished.  
"Want to lay odds on who the next "hit" is supposed to be?"
     Trent paled as understanding arrived.  He shoved the 
broom into Tommy’s hands and raced out of Thunder Karate, with 
Carlos at his heels.



[Chapter Four] [Chapter Six]



Thunder Karate No Frames "Ghost of the Present" Chapter Five



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