Author: J.B. Draper
When you’re a Stopper, you tone out the background noise. You live in the silence.
That’s what Badger told me when I got in the game, but I never thought I’d enjoy the quiet so much. Here, on the corner of a dingy street, the traffic roars and people chatter. I’m staring into the window of an electronics store, making out that I’m watching a colour television behind the rain-streaked glass. A woman in a smart suit is reporting on the news that the world is slowly dying from something called climate change. Really, I’m just waiting.
I fish for the crumpled note in my pocket: Cnr Market Street and Smith. 2 PM.
Badger’s info is great, he always knows when and where someone’s going to be. Best boss I ever had, Badger. There’s a digital clock in the window. The time on it reads 1:58 PM.
The target is an ex-Stopper. A Stopper is a person who murders people for money using a temporal reality device which creates pocket dimensions. I call it a stopwatch. It’s the colour of bone, fits in the pocket of my jeans, and has one button. Even an idiot could work it. The Stopper and the target are the only two transported into the quiet facsimile world. The Stopper returns, the body does not.
I’ve never met an ex-stopper, likely because there are none. It’s a game you don’t get out of, unless you mess up real bad. And I mean real bad. For instance, I was on this job just last week; somehow the guy got the jump on me and must’ve bumped the stopwatch, because we both ended up back in normal time. If Badger can forget that, I’d hate to know what this guy did.
I comb my hair in the reflection of the store window. The TV flickers. The clock reads 1:58 PM, and the streets are silent.