by Henry Lewi
New Orleans iced coffee
He stood watching in the corner of the
square, the dawn was slowly breaking and the hot moist night turned into an
even hotter humid day. The mist rose lazily from the river obscuring his view
of Algiers. The match flared as he lit yet another cigarette and silently and
still, he watched and waited.
The heat became oppressive and sweat trickled
down his back soaking through his crumpled linen shirt, in the heat, mosquitoes
and fat flies buzzed around, but still he watched and waited.
The quiet of the early morning was broken by
the sound of the first tram of the day as it clattered and clanged its way
along the riverbank pausing at the far end of the square to disgorge it
passengers. He could hear but not see the sound of the first ferry of the day
lazily crossing the river to the island.
The hot sun continued to rise bathing the old
square in bright sunshine, and more people began to arrive, seeking shelter
along it’s shaded edges and a few brave vendors began to set up their stalls in
the square.
The
match flared briefly, he took a long draw of yet another cigarette and in the
heat of the day he silently watched.
The scream broke the silence and very soon he
heard the wail of the sirens and he knew that they had found his latest victim.
He felt no regret, no remorse just sadness.
He
remembered his time at the Conservatoire, the beauty of simple notes, of
harmony, the strictness of the regime, the path towards the perfect chord. He’d
tried to fulfill his quest as both pupil and teacher. Smiling to himself he
ground out his cigarette, wiped the sweat from his forehead.
He turned on his heels slowly walking back out
of the square to the roads behind, filled with clubs, absinthe and bourbon bars
and restaurants. The music began to play and he wandered from bar to bar, club
to club, carefully listening to the notes played by the musicians blowing their
saxes, cornets and trumpets. He sat. He listened. He smoked. He sipped his
bourbon, and then he heard it, a series of wrong notes, he stood silently,
watched the musician responsible, and he knew in the heat of the day he had
found his next victim.
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