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Chasing the Headhunter
© by Gary Morton
3000 words
 
Russ Jameson looked across the city from the steps of
the reference library. It was late spring 2020 and the heart of
Toronto rose up from a vibrant green landscape. Domes and the
cubes and rectangles of high-rises followed an incline to the
lake. The sight was as nice as the fresh air. Russ preferred his
hometown to all other atmospheres, even though he was a well-traveled
person.
 
Reaching the bottom of the steps, Russ flipped his red spring
jacket over his shoulder and strolled down the asphalt footpath,
feeling quite carefree as he unconsciously followed one of his
shortcuts across the green-belt center of the city. He felt carefree
because this was the first day of his spring break, although it
wasn't an official break since he was living off a grant and advance
he'd received to research and write a scholarly book. The work
wouldn't make him wealthy so soon he'd have to decide whether
to return to teaching or propose another book -- preferably a
book that would involve some travel.
 
The walk added a rosy hue to Russ' face, he stopped and looked
up at a corporate tower. A thick-lipped smile betrayed his wandering
thoughts. He knew little about the real world of business and
labor, and for all of his travels he knew little about the modern
world. Most of his intellectual life and best thoughts belonged
to the dusty pages of the past. He lived in two worlds and the
one he walked in was certainly an uglier ball of confusion than
he understood it to be. The greening of the city and the ultra-modern
beauty of its unique designs were all it took to convince him
that things were on track.
 
He approached Bain Meadows inhaling fragrances that seemed to
be the sweetness of life itself. A feeling of exhilaration swept
over him and he broke into a run, following a path that snaked
through a wooded area of the park before cutting a long curve
across the wide meadow. Russ felt wonderful, like he was on top
of the world with a second wind, drawn on to the future by a silver
cord of power. He watched his feet race through pools of light
and shadow on the hard earth path, then he raised his arms as
though crossing a finish line victorious, looked up and let the
leafy boughs of the trees sweep his mind like a fast motion picture.
 
One of the shadows unexpectedly turned to mud, he slid and tumbled
on the path, and before he could rise he heard a piercing scream
 
Jumping to his feet he turned to the sound. A grassy dune rose
up out of some tangled underbrush and two blurry forms were struggling
in the sunlight at the crest. Russ had given his head a bad knock.
He squinted, trying to see better. The smaller person, a young
woman with long dark hair, had fallen to the grass. Twinklings
of bright light like those from a signal mirror were rotating
in a circular pattern around the aggressor. Russ' head cleared
some and he saw that the reflections were from a polished knife
a tall man was swinging round and round. Splinters of silver jabbed
at Russ' eyes again and again as the man arced the blade and viciously
struck the woman.
 
It was too late to save her but Russ still stumbled through the
brush and up the side of the dune, ready to grapple with the killer.
His eyesight returned, but a hot flash came with it and he fell
to his knees. He got a momentary look at the killer's face and
an object swinging on his belt, then he saw spots of liquid silver
as his thoughts fell away into the darkness.
 
 
Russ' eyes opened, he was on his back staring up at an
enormous dark cloud. He recalled what had happened and jumped
up. He looked around quickly, fearing he would be jumped by the
killer. But no one was around. He figured that he must've surprised
him and scared him off. The body of the girl was sprawled in the
grass at the top of the dune. He didn't have to examine her to
know she was dead. She'd been mutilated. Stepping closer he noted
that she was wearing an open brown sweater and a halter dress.
She'd been very beautiful, her death made him sad. He turned his
gaze away and shook his head, he couldn't bear to look at her
any longer. The knife was beside her in some weeds; a fancy hunting
knife with a marbled hilt.
 
Sitting down in the grass he thought things over, finding thinking
difficult when his mind was overloaded from work and shock. If
the body and knife weren't in front of him he would've believed
it all to be a stroke and accompanying hallucinations. It occurred
to him that it wouldn't look good if he went to the police with
a hazy description of a killer about his own size, age and height.
They'd note the scrapes from his fall and think he was guilty.
 
He could show them the knife. It would have prints on it and
prove his innocence - unless? Unless, and a scary thought dawned
in Russ' mind. Unless the killer had wiped it clean and left it
there to frame him. After all, he could've killed him while he
was unconscious. Maybe he had left him alive so he could take
the rap.
 
The more he thought it over the more he was sure that was it,
and it meant his only option was to take the knife and track the
killer on his own. A gut feeling told him there was no other way.
 
The whole thing had him spooked and more than a little frightened.
He made his way out of the area cautiously, keeping off the path
and in the bushes to make sure he wasn't seen. Reaching the meadow
he peeked from the underbrush and saw a sprinkling of people strolling
in the field, enjoying the last days of what had been a poet's
spring.
 
Keeping to the southern edge he paced through a carpet of grass
and wildflowers that hummed and chirped with life. It was a short
walk to the university grounds and he got there without encountering
anyone. He was sure he hadn't been noticed. Stopping beneath a
maple tree he shuffled from heel to heel and studied the ivied
buildings. Finally he decided to phone in a tip on the whereabouts
of the body and go home. He had no real strategy and something
seemed amiss.
 
Still dazed and haunted by thoughts of the body, Russ
gazed out the front window of his house on Bedford Road. Orange
light and cirrus clouds brushstroked the evening sky. On the sill
a framed photograph of his ex-wife Marla sat next to a miniature
replica of a dinosaur skeleton. Musty odors of home made for false
security, his thoughts drifted away to better memories and then
returned with a clearer view of the killing. The butcher rose
up from a dark grave and loomed over him, seeming as near as the
shadows on the wall. Russ became quite sure that this murderer
resembled another member of the university teaching staff. "Paleontologist?"
he thought as he stared at the skeleton. "No . . . anthropologist,
that's it. He works in the anthropology building and I think his
first name is Sheldon." Russ took his thoughts back to a
time when he'd been in the anthropology building for a meeting
of the staff association. Sheldon had been there and had come
across as a well-mannered, handsome fellow who was doing some
work on African tribal societies. Sheldon could be the murderer,
he wasn't certain. What he needed was a closer look. He decided
to check it out in the morning.
 
 
Russ was furious, he'd slept in and it was now one p.m.
His sleep had been dreamless, so he'd floated through the morning
like a log, without waking. The radio was on and as he made a
coffee the news station began a fresh hour with the details of
the killing. It was the first of its kind in the area and the
victim was a student named Angela Wandsley. Speculation was that
the killer was a strong male, young and with a high testosterone
level and previous history of violence.
 
Splashing cold water on his face, Russ tossed on casual clothes,
then he phoned university information. His man turned out to be
Sheldon Jameson by name and he still had an office in the anthropology
building. Jameson was his own last name, and the thought that
the killer could be a distant relative was chilling. It gave him
a real case of the creeps.
 
He hurried out, slamming the door, and he looked like a man on
a mission as he paced toward the university grounds. The streets
were moist and spattered with mud from a strong rain. It was windy
and everything that could blow in the wind was blowing in the
wind. Once on the grounds he followed an asphalt path to the anthropology
building, hearing a bell toll three times as he reached the Plexiglas
doors at the front. He knew the building fairly well, it was four
stories high and shaped as a half-circle. A garden and patio were
enclosed at the rear.
 
Stepping inside Russ checked the info terminal and read Sheldon's
office as number 113. The odd numbers ran along the west side
of the corridor and that placed the office at the rear of the
building. He decided to pop around back and see if he could look
in from the garden.
 
The wind and wet had kept the back garden clear of people. Russ
slipped soundlessly over the interlocking stones of the patio.
Vaulting a sculpted bench he looked through a hedge and into Sheldon's
window. The curtains were richly embroidered and open and he was
drawn forward. Keeping to the side of the window he leaned over
for a good look. He didn't spot Sheldon at first, but the rest
of what he saw startled him. The office was set up like a weird
bachelor pad with colorful pillows and throw rugs scattered over
the floor. The walls were hung with tapestries, devilish masks,
shrunken heads, decorative hunting knives and bookshelves.
 
He was wide-eyed at what he saw and he jumped when he suddenly
spotted Sheldon. The office was a bit below ground level and Sheldon
was sitting cross-legged on a rug, right below the window. He
was nodding his head slowly and he held a black shrunken head
in his palms.
 
Russ stayed by the window, held there by morbid fascination.
Sheldon's tangled curls shook as he spoke to the head. The window
was ajar so Russ heard him clearly.
 
"You've got to come to terms with it," Sheldon said,
sending a chill up Russ' spine. "Then you'll realize that
I'm the headhunter and you're the prize."
 
Russ' memory returned like a cloudy sky and he relived the killing.
What had been a blur was now a shrunken head swinging from the
killer's belt. He leaned away from the window. His head was swirling
with dark thoughts. The world, even his existence in it, seemed
uncertain.
 
A door banged shut and Russ peeked back in the window. Sheldon
was gone and he wondered what to do. Then the answer came to him,
a voice in his head. "You must chase the headhunter, until
it ends."
 
Jumping the garden fence Russ dashed through the bushes and flowers
and around the side of the building. He stopped dead in his tracks
by some sumac bushes and watched for Sheldon leaving by way of
the front walk.
 
Sheldon's tall, slim figure appeared on the walk. He was striding
along confidently, the fringes of his thigh-length jacket and
high moccasins streamed in the wind. Outwardly he looked like
a handsome young teacher, inwardly his heart had to be as black
as coal. Russ stayed by the bushes; he was riveted to the spot.
A strong feeling of deja vu was sweeping through him with the
wind, and he knew that when he put a foot forward to follow Sheldon
he'd be repeating acts he'd carried out many times, so many times
they were the pattern of the ritual he had become. A calm feeling
entered him; it was like the calm that possesses a wounded animal
when it surrenders itself to the fact it is being devoured.
 
A ways ahead Sheldon turned sharply and strode on into the strengthening
wind, heading down a narrow path toward a stand of poplar trees
and a mountain range of dark slate clouds that had risen on the
horizon.
 
Russ' calm mood slowly faded, a strong gust of wind pushed him
from behind and he raced off over the field in pursuit of Sheldon.
The day had grown very dim and the trees were leaning in the wind,
their leaves rushing like a surf of sound. Running with the gusts,
he felt like an eagle, pulled on by an unseen updraft from the
wings of the sky. Drawn to his fate by an evil power no man could
resist.
 
Sheldon had gone out of sight in the distance, but Russ homed
in on him without seeing him. Before long he reappeared, and he
was sprinting as fast as he could, halfway up one of the grassy
hills that ran between the north downtown area and the summer
exhibition grounds.
 
Sheldon made it to the top of the hill in almost no time. Digging
in hard and lowering his head, Russ picked up speed, hoping he
could get to him before he disappeared in the exhibition grounds.
Reaching the bottom of the hill, Russ glanced up and stopped
to catch his breath. Sheldon stood at the top in wind-ruffled
ragweed. His arms were outstretched to the dark slate sky. In
one hand he held a shrunken head, and in the other he held a long
piece of fluted bone.
 
Russ was winded, his lungs burned as he sucked in air and the
scene before him became more and more hallucinatory. The effect
was hypnotic, he was drawn slowly up the hillside. At the halfway
point he stopped and waited.
 
Sheldon lowered his arms and looked down; his eyes were shimmering
gold behind blowing curls and a pale face. His deep voice traveled
on the wind. "Russ, dear brother! I took your head in Africa,
to gain the power of your soul only! Now how can I work with your
ghost always interfering! We are leaving this city! Your wretched
spirit is too strong here at home! So come along Russ, it's time
you came to terms with death!"
 
Sheldon lifted the piece of bone to his lips and blew. A deep,
distant, hollow sound filled Russ' being and grew in strength
like an earthquake. All he could see was the shrunken head, which
was his own head, and stormy darkness. Then the bone began tapping
against the head.
 
Russ knew it now, he was a ghost, he was incomplete in every
way, and he wished to be either whole or dead. The latter wish
was the only one really left, so he didn't resist as he was pulled
to the top of the hill, the shrunken head, and what was sure to
be an evil end.
 
The head grew before him, large as a balloon, begging to be touched.
Without knowing why, he began to tap a finger on its desiccated
cheek, and the result was black magic -- its mouth opened, the
jaws of a monster, ready to devour him whole. He could only cower
as it inhaled to suck him down.
 
Then he heard the voice again, telling him to chase the headhunter
until the end. It was his own voice and it filled him with strength.
Throwing his body into motion he forced the jaws open wide and
leapt like a tiger, straight down the throat of the beast.
 
Brilliant daylight arrived with the force of an exploding star.
Russ stood at the top of the hill with Sheldon, and he felt whole
once again. A blazing shield of sun shone in the southeast, and
under the sun like a mirage were the steamy jungles of deepest
Africa.
 
"Until it ends," Russ said, and Sheldon seemed to understand.
His mouth was agape as he watched the head crumble in his hands
 
"You're only flesh and blood, Sheldon. You can't fight a
ghost."
 
But Sheldon was determined to try. He drew his hunting knife
and struck a blow to Russ' heart that cut into nothing.
 
Still holding the knife, Sheldon fell to his knees and ran the
blade across his palm, like he couldn't believe it hadn't worked.
Blood welled in the cut, causing Russ to laugh for a moment before
he opened his palm and revealed his own weapon. It was a weapon
that Sheldon had heard of but had never seen. It was the deadliest
weapon of all.
 
Sheldon's cries rang out on the hill, and traveled like ghosts
on the wind. A haunted howling that could only be the voice of
a dying headhunter.
 
It was over and Russ Jameson was running, a shimmering
ghost in the field. He raised his arms to freedom and victory.
Behind him on the hilltop a wisp of smoke lifted from a shriveled
doll in the weeds.
 
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