She awoke lying on her back, and slowly began to become aware of her surroundings. Rain was pouring down outside, bouncing off the corrugated iron roof she could see high above her, supported by ugly concrete columns. She deduced that she must be in one of the old abandoned warehouses dotted through the deprived parts of the city. But how? And why? There was a dull ache in her head, her body hurt all over. She could feel a length of rough rope binding her wrists together. Whatever was going on, it wasn't good.
Dragging herself off of the cold floor, she noticed that the ground was covered in deep red stains, and dusted with old rubble and bits of broken glass.
"Fuck," she cursed aloud, "this isn't good at all."
As she tried to stand, she slammed her head against something, a metallic ring reverberating around the seemingly empty building. She was in a cage. How had it taken her so long to notice? Panicking, she pulled at the bars, beginning to hyperventilate.
"Fuck, help, someone please, fuck!" she screamed with a raspy, dry breath. She tried to remember how she got here, was she on a night out? She looked at her outfit: yes, a strappy black dress, tight against her curves and breasts, showing off Her tattooed arms... but her heels were missing. She remembered putting it on and heading out. She remembered it getting plenty of attention, plenty of drinks... a muscled man with a stubbly face and a purple shirt... What did he say his name was? She also realised her jewellery was missing, and her bag.
Racking her brain, she tried to remember anything that had happened. All she could remember was leaving the club early and taking a short cut to the taxi rank. Was it a fun night? Why did she leave early again and why did she go alone? Fuck. Fuck fuck.
She glanced around her tiny cage, hunting for something to cut her wrists free of break the door off the cage. There was only broken glass and...those dark brown stains...
"Fuck it the glass will do," she told herself.
She reached out the bars to the nearest big shard and clasped it in her thin fingers. It was sharp and jagged, almost impossible to hold without it slicing into her. But it worked, sawing back and forth, it sliced through the old rope easily, freeing her hands. But, as she looked down at them, they were dripping with blood.
A neat slit along four fingers dripped blood down onto her scarred thighs. Panicking, she tried to wrap it in the fabric of her dress, but the fabric was too tight to go round her hand. No... no... helplessness started to seep in when she heard a cackle from the gloom.
"Oh little one, look at the mess you're making."
She stared out but couldn't see anyone in the gloom, so she wiped her hand on her dress quickly, clasping the bars with both hands and pressing her pretty, dolled up face against them to see better, her glasses clanking off the metal.
"Let me out, please," she begged, trying the sympathy act, "I'll pay you, my parents will pay you, please, I'll do anything," she heard another cackle, deep and low.
"Oh little bird," he steps out the gloom, "I know you will."
Oh shit. It was him.
Everyone in the city knew that face by now. It seemed he was on TV almost every week these days, normally for murdering whole bunches of people. In an instant she recoiled away from him, groaning as she slammed into the bars on the opposite side of the tiny cage.
"Tsk tsk tsk. Careful, little bird. You'll hurt yourself flapping around like that." As he stepped into a shaft of light she could see he was in his trademark 3-piece suit, hands tucked messily into the pockets. "What's the matter? Are you afraid of little old me?"
She'd heard the stories, the killings, the creative and extravagant murders from the flamboyant, dangerous and well dressed don of the docks. No one knew anything about him, not really, he'd just appeared one day, never to be forgotten. She looked at his pale face, his trademark red grin dramatically up his face, he had eyeliner neatly under his eyes and his black hair was loose but pulled back. As He stepped forward, she noticed how elaborate his suit really was. The navy fabric was pinstriped with golden threads, a crisp white shirt beneath it all.
Her mind raced and she couldn't speak, why was she here? Why her? It didn't seem his style to prey on individual women, certainly not broke ones like her.His plans were usually on a much grader scale. Unles... The papers had mentioned an increase in disappearances of young women but the police put it down to petty criminals, they'd never been able to link the crimes together. She was too busy thinking to realise he was kneeling by her cage, eyeing her up. For all he was cheery, she knew he was dangerous and could switch in an instant.
"What do you want with me?" Her voice was but a shaky whisper. She leaned back against the bars as far as she could, trying to get away from him. Her hand was still leaking blood from the glass cut, it was dripping near his feet but he seemed unphased. Her body ached.
"What do I want with you? C'mon now, do you really think I don't know who you are? What you've been doing? I've seen you snooping around here on the old pier with your friend and your cameras. It seems you've been looking for me. And now... You've found me." His voice had suddenly dropped an octave and switched instantly from playful to raw evil.
"No! What? No! I just came down here with him to take photos for my Instagram!" She insisted, wide eyed and terrified. "I like the aesthetic. Please, I'm not spying on you or anything, I promise!"
"You like the aesthetic? Why, I'm flattered! I have been... Dolling the place up a bit." With a laugh he grabbed the head of an old fairground ornament in the shape of a giant child's doll. "But I don't buy it. Why would a pretty girl like you come down here for a photo shoot, right where all those other girls have been going missing?"
"I guess... I guess I just never thought it would happen to me. I was careful, I always brought someone with me... I guess I was wrong. Wait that was you, who made those people disappear?"