YASSER / LIVERPOOL

 

      Yasser and Yasmine parked the Honda Blackbird next to a metal railing in front of a four storey Victorian town house in Anfield, Liverpool. They had travelled without incident along the M62 Motorway from Warrington. The town house was part of a terraced row of similar buildings. There were four large stone steps leading up to a huge wooden front door. The ancient gloss paint was cracked and peeling exposing the layers beneath. The steps themselves had ornate iron railings on either side of them. The railings were cracked and rusted. Another set of stone steps went down to a dingy basement apartment whose door was beneath the stairs above. The building was old and covered in green moss. The paintwork on the window frames was cracked and peeling. The wide arched windows were covered from the insides with blankets and dirty net curtains that belonged in a skip. Either side of the tall house the properties were boarded up ready for renovation or more likely demolition.

           This part of the city was not a desirable area to live in any more. Unlike the days when the port of Liverpool was in its heyday, merchant ship men would have owned these once ornate Victorian buildings, but now they belonged to the drug addicts and prostitutes that infested the area. The area was rife with crime. Yasmine fastened a thick safety chain around the motorbike and locked it to the rusty metal railings.

           Yasser led the way down the dark slippery stone steps to the small door at the bottom. The steps and the area below were littered with old fast food cartons and empty beer bottles. The whole area smelled of rotting food and garbage. He opened the door and went inside shutting the door behind them.  Yasmine was surprised when he switched on the light how deceiving outside appearances could be. The basement apartment had two bedrooms that led off the living area and an open plan kitchen. Two big black sofas dominated the room. The laminate wooden floors had sheepskin rugs scattered randomly about making the flat feel warm and comfortable. It smelled of saffron and spices.

         Yasser took a mobile phone from a worktop in the kitchen and switched it on. It started to vibrate in his hand and beeped noisily. He opened the text messages and read them. They were from one of his affiliates Nassir. Nassir was the Egyptian pillion rider that had escaped the police in Warrington after shooting one of them dead. Yasser rang him immediately.

         Nassir informed Yasser of the evening`s events, the distribution centre shooting and the raid on the mosque. They were of little concern to him. The warehouse containing the ice-cream vans was undetected, and none of the men who knew of its existence had been taken in for questioning. Not alive anyway. Yasser was amused by the fact that the police had raided a mosque with armed police. Actions of this nature just widened the gap between Christians and Muslims. The old cleric that had been arrested knew nothing of his whereabouts or his plans. The man they had used from the mosque, Tariq was dead. Yasser had slit his throat himself. His body had been weighted down and dumped into the River Mersey with the hands and head removed, to hamper any efforts to identify him should he be found. Nassir had escaped with his life, which was also good, because Nassir was his Scuba diver. He was making his way to him now by train, to Lime St. Station in the city centre. It was a short taxi ride from there to Anfield. 

           Everything was still going to plan, except that was, for his property owner. Members of his group Axe had rented the apartment for two years. Several fugitives from the law had sheltered behind its inconspicuous facade. The problem was that property values in the Anfield area had doubled when Liverpool was awarded City of Culture status. It entitled the city`s property owners to apply for a whole raft of grants that were now available. They could be used to demolish and renovate run down parts of the city. Yasser`s landlord owned the whole block that was above him. He wanted them to vacate the basement, so that he could demolish the ramshackle buildings and build new, more lucrative ones in their place. The rental agreement had now expired and the landlord had threatened legal action to evict them from the apartment. He had threatened to call the police in if they did not vacate.

          Yasser needed this location for his plans to work. He could not risk a visit from the police at any costs. In a last ditch effort to keep the property, Yasser had offered to buy the whole block from the landlord at an inflated price. Yasser did not intend to complete the deal he was just stalling for time. Yasser had arranged to meet his landlord at the apartment tonight, to talk business. There was a knock on the door.

          Yasmine opened the door and a little weasel of a man stepped in wearing a crooked grin and a cheap black suit. His suit trousers were too short so they exposed the soiled white socks that he was wearing with his slip on loafer shoes. His name was Paul Tomas. Tomas, who was originally from London, had been a crook and a fraudster all his life. Even as a schoolboy he made money from his fellow pupils by wheeling and dealing. He would sell anything that he could get his sticky little hands on. Out of date potato crisps, second hand porn magazines, single cigarettes. As he got older he progressed to drugs and stolen property, but he crossed some dangerous men along the way and had to leave London in a hurry. He moved north to Kingston upon Tyne and started up a franchise business. He called it Cleani-Kingdom. He invested a great deal of time making sure the advertising was glossy and slick.  The advertising made it look like a genuine business venture and it persuaded people to invest huge sums of money into cleaning contracts that were unprofitable and useless. He was responsible for hundreds of financially ruined lives.

            With his ill-gotten gains he had started buying properties around the Liverpool area. He was taking the gamble that the prices would boom if the city won the culture awards. It had worked, the city won its valued award and his portfolio of property would eventually make him a millionaire.

           He was an odd-looking little man. He had started to go bald at an early age, which made him look much older than his years. In the early 1990`s he taken out a bank loan to pay for what was then, a pioneering hair transplant. The surgeons had removed plugs of his own hair from the back of his head and transplanted them to the top. It had left him with a wide ugly scar on the back of his scalp were the hair plugs had been removed. He looked as if he had been hit with an axe from the rear view. His new transplanted hair had the appearance of a child`s doll, the clumps of transplanted hair looking ridiculous on his bald head. Yasmine disliked the grinning little weasel instantly.

           Yasser put on a warm coat and walked toward Tomas, ushering him back out of the door.

          “I thought that you could show me the condition of the surrounding properties. I am intending to renovate and restore them rather than demolishing them,” Yasser lied convincingly.

          Paul Tomas looked disappointed. The buildings were just empty shells that had been boarded up to keep the junkies out. He did not really feel like playing at estate agents in the dark. The problem he had was that this Arabian man, Yasser someone, had offered twice the asking price for the whole block.  He also remembered that when Yasser`s affiliates had signed the original two year rental agreement; they paid the whole amount in cash up front.` Wherever there is oil there is money`, he thought. He sighed and walked back up the dark steps to his car. He opened the trunk and took out a flashlight and a large bunch of keys.

          Yasser walked toward the far end of the terrace and stood expectantly in front of the building. Tomas fiddled around with a large bunch of shiny silver keys, finally coming up with the correct one. He fumbled with the lock and opened the metal grill that covered the entrance. The original wooden door was long gone. Yasser moved in front of Tomas and headed straight up the rotten staircase, the property owner tried to keep up with him, the flashlight cast dark shadows in the dank building. Yasser could smell damp and vermin, the stench was overpowering but he turned the corner and climbed up the second flight of stairs anyway.

          “Listen, Mr. Yasser we really shouldn’t be using these staircases. I am sure you can get a reasonable idea of the condition of the buildings from what you have seen so far.” The weasel landlord shone the beam around the room at the top of the stairs, but Yasser was gone. He thought that he must have taken the third flight up to the top floor, so he shone the beam up the stairs into the pitch-blackness. No daylight at all could penetrate the boarded windows; the darkness beyond his torch beam seemed almost solid.

          Yasser stepped out from an empty bedroom further down the corridor, making the little man jump with fright.

          “I am sorry to keep you, Mr. Tomas, but I need to be certain in my own mind that the properties are reparable. Am I keeping you from your wife and family?” Yasser enquired, his answer would dictate which direction this encounter would take.

         “No, the bitch left me last year and took the kids with her. They moved back to London. I am living the bachelor life again, I`ve never been happier. I have a different woman every night.” Paul Tomas didn’t realise he had signed his own death warrant.

         “I am sure that you have to pay for the women to be with you. They would not do it freely I am certain.” Yasser goaded the weasel. Paul Tomas looked offended and a bit confused; he couldn’t understand why this Arabian man had suddenly decided to insult him.

         Yasser moved quickly and his hands were imperceptible in the torchlight. He stabbed his middle and index fingers into the landlord`s eyes blinding him. Paul Tomas dropped to his knees; his hands instinctively covered his throbbing eyeballs.  Yasser stepped behind the little bald man and slit his throat with the box cutter blade that he always kept hidden up his sleeve. The jugular vein was severed completely and Yasser could smell warm blood as it sprayed from the artery. Tomas opened his eyes in total bewilderment as all the years of defrauding people flashed before him. He clutched at the massive gash in his throat and his blood soaked into his cheap suit and ran down his arms. Paul Tomas fell to the floor and thrashed about for a few minutes as he bled to death. All he could think about as he choked on his own blood was the people he had ruined and the overpowering smell of rat urine.

           The blood seemed to disappear into rotten wooden floorboards as Yasser pulled Tomas`s body by the legs into the bedroom he been in earlier. Someone had pulled up the floorboards to salvage the copper central heating pipes that once warmed the house. Yasser stuffed the body down into the void between floors, and hurriedly placed the rotten floorboards over him. He had taken his wallet, cell phone and car keys from the body already. By the time the body was ever discovered the rats would have made him unidentifiable. Yasser doubted that anyone would report the nasty little man missing for weeks. By that time, the building would have served its purpose and Yasser would be gone. Yasser would have the dead man`s vehicle hidden for now. The little fraudster had finally been shafted himself, permanently.

                                      

              

Soft Target
titlepage.xhtml
Soft_Target_split_000.html
Soft_Target_split_001.html
Soft_Target_split_002.html
Soft_Target_split_003.html
Soft_Target_split_004.html
Soft_Target_split_005.html
Soft_Target_split_006.html
Soft_Target_split_007.html
Soft_Target_split_008.html
Soft_Target_split_009.html
Soft_Target_split_010.html
Soft_Target_split_011.html
Soft_Target_split_012.html
Soft_Target_split_013.html
Soft_Target_split_014.html
Soft_Target_split_015.html
Soft_Target_split_016.html
Soft_Target_split_017.html
Soft_Target_split_018.html
Soft_Target_split_019.html
Soft_Target_split_020.html
Soft_Target_split_021.html
Soft_Target_split_022.html
Soft_Target_split_023.html
Soft_Target_split_024.html
Soft_Target_split_025.html
Soft_Target_split_026.html
Soft_Target_split_027.html
Soft_Target_split_028.html
Soft_Target_split_029.html
Soft_Target_split_030.html
Soft_Target_split_031.html
Soft_Target_split_032.html
Soft_Target_split_033.html
Soft_Target_split_034.html
Soft_Target_split_035.html
Soft_Target_split_036.html
Soft_Target_split_037.html
Soft_Target_split_038.html
Soft_Target_split_039.html
Soft_Target_split_040.html
Soft_Target_split_041.html
Soft_Target_split_042.html
Soft_Target_split_043.html
Soft_Target_split_044.html
Soft_Target_split_045.html
Soft_Target_split_046.html
Soft_Target_split_047.html
Soft_Target_split_048.html
Soft_Target_split_049.html
Soft_Target_split_050.html
Soft_Target_split_051.html
Soft_Target_split_052.html
Soft_Target_split_053.html
Soft_Target_split_054.html
Soft_Target_split_055.html
Soft_Target_split_056.html
Soft_Target_split_057.html
Soft_Target_split_058.html
Soft_Target_split_059.html
Soft_Target_split_060.html
Soft_Target_split_061.html
Soft_Target_split_062.html
Soft_Target_split_063.html
Soft_Target_split_064.html
Soft_Target_split_065.html
Soft_Target_split_066.html
Soft_Target_split_067.html
Soft_Target_split_068.html
Soft_Target_split_069.html
Soft_Target_split_070.html
Soft_Target_split_071.html
Soft_Target_split_072.html
Soft_Target_split_073.html
Soft_Target_split_074.html
Soft_Target_split_075.html
Soft_Target_split_076.html
Soft_Target_split_077.html
Soft_Target_split_078.html
Soft_Target_split_079.html
Soft_Target_split_080.html
Soft_Target_split_081.html
Soft_Target_split_082.html
Soft_Target_split_083.html
Soft_Target_split_084.html
Soft_Target_split_085.html
Soft_Target_split_086.html
Soft_Target_split_087.html
Soft_Target_split_088.html
Soft_Target_split_089.html
Soft_Target_split_090.html
Soft_Target_split_091.html
Soft_Target_split_092.html
Soft_Target_split_093.html
Soft_Target_split_094.html
Soft_Target_split_095.html
Soft_Target_split_096.html
Soft_Target_split_097.html
Soft_Target_split_098.html
Soft_Target_split_099.html
Soft_Target_split_100.html
Soft_Target_split_101.html
Soft_Target_split_102.html
Soft_Target_split_103.html
Soft_Target_split_104.html
Soft_Target_split_105.html
Soft_Target_split_106.html