Blood Men: A Thriller

“Take his cuffs and use them on him.”


Edward reaches into Schroder’s pockets and finds the cuffs and latches them around Schroder’s wrists.

“Drown him.”

“What?” Edward says, and Schroder is thinking the same thing.

“Put his head in the bath and drown him.”

“Wait,” both Schroder and Edward say in unison.

“You heard me. Drown him or your daughter doesn’t see tomorrow.”

Schroder tries to get up but doesn’t get far before his chest hits the edge of the bathtub. All of Edward’s weight goes on top of him, pushing his face right down to the water.

“I can’t,” Edward says.

“Now. Do it. Do it now!” Tattoo Man says.

“I can’t.”

“You can if you want to save your daughter.”

“Edward . . . ,” Schroder says, but he doesn’t know how to follow it up. There’s nothing. He knows what’s coming and he takes a deep breath.

“I’m sorry,” Edward whispers before pushing his head into the water.





chapter thirty-eight


Schroder’s cuffed arms make it impossible for him to fight his way out, though he seems to think differently. If I were any lighter he’d probably make it too. His head bangs against the bottom of the tub and the water turns a very pale shade of red. I pull more of his body from outside the tub and stuff it under the water. I hold him by the back of his neck, pushing hard, his muscles tightening—it’s like holding down a mechanical bull. His feet thrash against the floor, the tips of his shoes draw black lines across the tiles. Water is splashing all up the walls and I’m already half soaked. The bandage on my hand is waterlogged and starts slipping off. I try to imagine that I’m drowning a dog, not a person—that mangy mutt from twenty years back—and imagining that actually helps, not much, but enough to stop me from letting him up. Schroder slows down. His feet stop hitting the floor. More of him slides into the tub.

“Keep holding him.”

I keep holding him. A couple of bubbles break the surface. Schroder’s legs stop moving but he’s still moving his head, still fighting, still desperate to survive. The seconds keep ticking away. Five more. Another five. The bubbles stop. There is one final shudder and then Schroder no longer struggles. I let go of him and he stays in the water, makes no effort to get up. I turn around. My hands are shaking and I drop to my knees and start to dry-retch.

“No time for this shit,” the man says. “Get me the money.”

I cough like I’m the one with lungs full of water. “Where, where are they? My, my daughter and in-laws?”

“The money,” he says. “Then we talk.”

“The money is here.”

“Where?”

One more cough and I’m done. I slowly get to my feet, holding on to the side of the bath, careful not to touch Schroder. The guy with the gun isn’t wearing a balaclava. He looks like he did this afternoon. He probably hasn’t changed his clothes, or his gun. I doubt he’s used it tonight because it’s too noisy. I bet the policeman outside was killed a different way. I wonder how badly he wants to avoid using it.

“You’ll kill me once you have it.”

“You got this all wrong, boy. I am going to kill you. What you’re doing now is you’re buying your daughter’s life.”

“How do I know you’ll let her go?”

“She doesn’t know who we are. We got no reason to keep her. Now where’s the goddamn money?”

“Living room,” I say.

“Lead the way,” he says, and he backs out of the bathroom.

I lead him down the hallway. We reach the living room. “At the end of the couch,” I say, “against the wall.”

“Grab it.”

I reach down and grab the bag, trying to keep my injured leg as straight as I can. The bag is full of crayons and coloring pencils and some drawing books for Sam and is nowhere near big enough to hold all the money I saw last night. As usual it’s open. I zip it closed, pick it up, and toss it at his feet.

“What the . . . ?” he says, and he looks down at it and . . .

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