I waited for light.
Any light.
Something to rip open the darkness and reveal the face of my watcher. Nothing came. When we did enter a well-lit suburb, I stayed back, following him on the other side of the street, close enough to watch but far enough to stay hidden. I couldn't see his face, so I watched his back, waiting for him to turn around or make a wrong turn to someplace darker, someplace where I could corner him.
Unfortunately, he didn't. Instead, the watcher charged forward, his stride seeming confident, but I saw the caution in his step. I watched the way he moved, studied his muscles and his joints and his hands. I wasn't as fortunate as Benjamin, who could simply feel what was happening. I had to look closely, analyse every movement; a task most people couldn't do.
The watcher's shoulders tensed. I ducked into somebody's well-kept garden before he could spot me, hiding behind a wall of trimmed pine trees. He knew I was here, hiding away. I could hear it in his voice.
"Hello?" He ventured.
Silence followed for the longest moment. I stayed perfectly still, back to the thick pines, breathing ever so quietly. I waited for his footsteps to echo through the quiet street as they retreated, but they didn't. I frowned. Why wasn't he moving?
From the safety of the pine, I turned, and finally laid eyes on the watcher's face –
– and he was staring straight back at me.
© A.G. Trave
YOU ARE READING
Charade
General FictionDo you think good people are capable of bad things? Vic and Benjamin think so... Victor Langley loves his daughter with all his heart, so when she's diagnosed with cancer, he knows he has to do everything to save her. He makes a deal with a rogue do...