Decameron 2020: The Headsman
EDITORโS NOTE: I wrote this story in 1995, at the age of 19, for my creative writing class in college. At the time, the term โfan fictionโ hadnโt been coined. And, you couldnโt turn on the TV or go to the movies without a serial killer somewhere in the story. Iโve been downsizing my life a lot lately, as I settle into a new house with my fiancรฉe. Yet, when I found this old story, it made me laugh, and I thought you might get a kick out of it, too. Iโve always been a little off kilter.
This moonrise over the Rhode Island shoreline has nothing to do with this story, but it is a pretty photo.
Tedโs muscular six-two frame hovered over an unconscious, naked brunette who was lying on a floor covered in newspapers. After taking a minute to appreciate the shine on his new hacksaw blade, he knelt down beside the womanโs neck.
Leveling the blade on the center of her throat, he began to cut, squirting blood into his graying hair. As he hit her spinal chord, his mother walked into the roomโinterrupting his insidious laughter.
โTheodore J. Greelak!โ she yelled. โWhat in tarnation do you think you are doing?!โ
Ted looked dumbfounded at her with his puppy-dog brown eyes.
โHow many times do I have to tell you? No decapitating women in the living room! Hell! I bet youโve only got one or two layers of newspapers to soak up the blood, too.โ
โBut, Ma, I thought it would be enough. Besides, Iโm thirty-nine years old. Donโt you think I know what Iโm doing by now?โ
โDonโt, โBut, Ma,โ me. Whoโs going to clean up that wall with all that spattered blood?!โ
โIโll clean it up like always, Mothhhhher,โ Ted hissed, trying to keep his temper.
The pudgy, short woman in her sixties just stood there in her fuzzy pink bathrobe, with her white-gray hair up in soup-can curlers, looking very indignantly at her son.
โOkay, okay,โ Ted relented. โIโm sorry, Ma. I wonโt behead anymore women in the living room. But wonโt this one make a great addition to our collection of heads in the โfridge? You know, right next to the pickle jar.โ
โApology accepted,โ she said, and then with tears of pride, โOh, Teddy, you make your mother so proud. If only your father could be here to see this. Bless his soul. Yes, sheโd be perfect next to the pickle jar.โ
Ted smiled. He always wished his father, The Zodiac Killer, could have seen his great accomplishments before he died. He hoped his father was watching from wherever he was.
โThis time, donโt hide the body so close to your work,โ Tedโs mother advised. โThe cops might be suspecting you. In fact, I think I heard on TV that they had a new suspect in โThe Headsmanโ case.โ
โOkay, Ma. Iโll start watching my back a little more closely.โ
โขโขโข
Sunset at Uncas Falls is pretty, but it also has nothing to do with this story. Just wanted to share some photographic art with you.
Ted lit up another Marlboro and took a swig from his beer. As he looked up at his friend Ron, he asked, โDo you ever have doubts about the integrity of what weโre doinโ?โ
โWhat do ya mean?โ his younger friend inquired.
โWell, I mean, in all of your years of strangling, disemboweling and necrophilia, do you ever stop to wonder why? Why bother?โ
โNaww, man. This is the โ80s, and weโre alpha predators at the top of the food chain. This is the life,โ Ron declared. โYou know what your problem is? You never have sex with the women you behead. Thatโs half the fun of it.โ
โYuck, man, theyโre dead,โ Ted stated in disgust before asking, โWhatโs it like, anyhow?โ
โHavenโt had any complaints,โ Ron dryly quipped.
They had a long, hard laugh, and Ted ordered another round.
Ted then turned somber. โYa know, Iโm thinkinโ of turning in the olโ hacksaw and movinโ on.โ
Ron looked at his friend with concern. โYouโre serious, arenโt you? You really think you could give it up?โ
โItโs just losing its spark. I mean, picking up a woman at a bar, clubbing her unconscious, ripping off her clothes and cutting off her head just doesnโt do it for me any more,โ admitted the disgruntled serial killer.
โYeah, but, youโve held this town under a 20-year reign of terror. EVERYONE fears โTHE HEADSMAN.โ No one can utter your name without somebody shuddering. You can give all that up, just like that?โ Ron snapped his fingers to emphasize his point.
Downing half his beer, Ted tried explaining the situation further, โItโs like this, Ron. Iโm about to turn forty, still live at home, have a go-nowhere job at the train station and have killed 125 women with no positive recognition. No dinner at the mayorโs. No parades in my honor. No accolades. The only respect I get is from the killer community. Hell. Iโm not even the FBIโs most wanted.โ
โI hear ya, but what about the integrity of your art form?โ Ron lamented. โNo one can saw off a human head the way you can.โ
With a determined look on his slowly aging face, The Headsman knocked off the rest of his beer and made a decision. โThatโs it. Tomorrow, Iโm packing my trusty hacksaw in mothballs, quitting my job and moving toooooโฆBaltimore.
โYou are my best and only friend in this town, Ron, and I will miss you a lot, but this is something that I just have to explore.โ
โOkay, but why on earth would you want to go to Baltimore?โ Ron asked, with a befuddled look on this face.
โIโve been pondering this one, myself,โ Ted settled into a story. โIโm beginning to believe that fate sometimes just steps in and takes your hand. You see, this whole retirement from killing has been playing on my mind for quite some time, and then Mary-Kate, my last victim, helped me decide.โ
โWhy,โ Ron asked. โWas it before she realized youโd kill her?โ
โOh no. She was already dead when she helped me,โ Ted explained. โI was picking up her headless body, about to carry it into the bathroom to let her drain into the tub, when I noticed a peculiar ring of blood around a job listing for a sales job in Baltimore.
โSince I studied sales and marketing in college, I gave them a call. After a couple interviews over the phone, they gave me the job!โ
โCongrats,โ Ron offered. โBut I wish you would stay. Death, murder and mayhem in this town wonโt be the same anymore without you.โ
โIโm sorry,โ Ted said. โA serial killer has got to do what a serial killer has got to do. In my case, that is to grow up.โ
ONE YEAR LATER AT A POWER LUNCH WITH HIS BOSS
The site of the former Mohegan Campgrounds on the Yantic River. This, too, has nothing to do with the story.
โYou know, Ted, it looks as though you are going to be the salesman of the month for the third time in a row,โ congratulated Tedโs boss, a polished young man in an expensive suit. โYouโre a real cut above the rest, Mr. Greelak. You have a killer instinct that I have never encountered in our other salesmen. We are considering making you a junior partner, if you keep up this good work.โ
โThank you, Mr. Morrison,โ Ted said, a little awestruck. โThat would be very generous of you and the company. I would appreciate that very much.โ
โJust keep it up, and you will have earned it,โ Mr. Morrison explained. โMay I ask you personal question?โ
โSure.โ
โWhy did such a cut-throat salesman, such as yourself, wait so long to get into this business?โ Mr. Morrison asked, taking a sip of his scotch. โIf you had started fifteen years ago, at your rate, you would be running the company by now.โ
โYou really think so?โ
โYes, I do.โ
โAlthough I am ashamed to admit it,โ Ted confessed, โI was sort of obsessed with women.โ
His boss gave him a knowing smile and leaned back in his chair. With admiration in his voice he said, โAhhh. A sales shark and a lady killer.โ
โI guess you could say that,โ Ted smiled before changing the conversation. โIโm also a little embarrassed to ask, but, does our insurance cover any psychological assistance?โ
โYes, why? Is everything all right?โ
โOh, its nothing really,โ Ted half lied. โIt is just that Iโve met this really special girl, and I am concerned about juggling the stress of an important career and a relationship.โ
โNo problem,โ Mr. Morrison said with a devilish grin. โI will see to it personally that you get the best psychiatrist in town. Canโt let my best salesman get avalanched with stress. Iโll have the number on your desk by morning.โ
โThank you, sir.โ
ONE WEEK LATER
โYa know, Doc,โ Ted explained while lying on a psychiatristโs couch. โFor a while there, I thought I had it licked.โ
โPlease tell me more about it,โ instructed the doctor in his late 50s.
โLetโs see. I guess I didnโt start killing for about seven months. I was and still am rising through the corporate ranks, in spite of my late start and cross-country move. Then one day it just happened.โ
โGo on,โ encouraged the doctor. โWhat, โjust happenedโ?โ
โI met this fox of a woman named Joanne in a bar,โ Ted relived the moment of attraction. โShe had thick red hair in one of those chic short haircuts and brilliant blue eyes. Her lips were bright red contrasting perfectly against her pale white skin. I would have killed for her.โ
โAnd you did.โ
โYes,โ Ted enthused. โI started telling her I was a serial killer and about my deranged obsessions like it was a strange pick-up line. She fell for it. Pretty soon I got her back to my place and began a new head collection in my fridge. Sheโs still there in my most honored greens and vegetables drawer.โ
โBut donโt you think you are regressing back to the way your life was when you were originally killing?โ the doctor asked.
โNo, no. Itโs different now,โ Ted elaborated. โThen I felt as though I had to continue my fatherโs legacy. Now Iโm at one with myself. Iโm living on my own and am becoming an important business man. Iโve established my own person. My murdering is now for my own personal pleasure.โ
โYouโre a very fascinating man, Theodore,โ the psychiatrist acknowledged. โI would be interested in getting to know you more personally. Why donโt join me this Friday night for dinner? We would be having liver with some fava beans and a nice chianti.โ
โYummm. Dr. Lecter, that sounds delicious. Iโd love to join you.โ
The End?
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01/01/1970
I'd hate to look in your refrigerator!