He gripped the collar of his coat and pulled it tightly against his neck. His shoulders were already soaked with rain. He shivered and made his way across the parking lot of Hank's Quick 'n' Easy.
He exposed one hand just long enough to grip the front door. His frozen knuckles ached red and raw. The door gave way and he entered, sliding his tender hand back into his coat pocket.
"Sal," greeted Janette, Hank's overnight cashier.
"How's business tonight?" Sal asked, squinting against the brightness of being inside.
"Awful, nobody wants to get out in this shit." She answered back.
Sal nodded in agreement and made his way over to the batteries. He snatched a pack of double A's and went over to the coffee station.
"Just made a fresh pot." Janette said
Sal smiled, grabbed a styrofoam cup and said, "Janette, you're a goddamned angel."
Wisps of steam rolled off of the rim of his cup as Sal filled it to the brim. He was so cold and so drained that he didn't bother with sugar. He picked the cup up with both hands and set the cup to his face. The steam melted away the chill from his face long before he took his first sip. In a moment, he would have to venture back out into that dismal night.
"Tough case?" Janette asked when Sal finally dragged himself to the register.
"You really wanna know?" Sal replied.
He set his money on the counter, she took it, gave him a knowing look and said, "just the juicy parts, then."
"Elections are three weeks away. Mayor Kern's bid for senate hinges on his family first stance."
"Yeah, when the guy isn't kissing babies, he's handing out soup or building houses." Janette said handing Sal his change.
"Well, when his daughter isn't at class, she's snorting blow or getting trains run on her." Sal stated. He slipped a camera from his coat and popped open the battery compartment.
"You're joking." Janette said, but she knew he wasn't, she just refused to believe it.
Sal grinned while he ejected the old batteries and replaced them with the fresh ones that he had purchased. Janette pitched the old ones for him and then waited for him to fire up his camera.
"Sweet, little Ashley, from daddy's campaign ads, was just caught sucking her English professor's cock while his T.A. fucked her from behind. Of course, he did a line of coke off her ass first." Sal explained as he thumbed through his photos. He found the one he was looking for and slid the camera over to Janette.
Clear as day, in glorious HD, was Ashley Kern naked and double stuffed. She was on all fours in what looked like a college classroom. Behind her, the hunched form of a man was mid thrust into her wanton cunt. In front of her sat her professor, cock out. His hand was pulling on Ashley's hair giving the camera a full profile shot of her face as she throated his cock.
"That's gonna be a hard one to explain," She said, "was it Jameson that hired you then?"
Sal took the camera back and put it back in his coat. Roger Jameson was the opposing senatorial candidate. Sal had a hunch that someone from his staff did hire him, but he wasn't one hundred percent sure, so he said, "Probably. I'm about to find out, meeting place is the power plant down on Industrial."
"By the canal?" She asked.
Sal nodded and left. That was the bad part of town. Every city had one, that few blocks of 'anything goes'. Where a cop cuffing a hooker is part of the kink and a gunshot doesn't get noticed. There were a million and one ways for shit to go south from here for Sal and he knew it.
The chill had gotten worse. The rain had picked up and it only took a second to cool Sal's coffee from hot to tepid. He fought off the blur in his eyes and hurried back to his sedan. He didn't remember the Mercedes being parked there before, but it was there now right beside his car. He felt another chill, but this one came from within.
HE eyed the luxury model in the space beside his car, nobody appeared inside. Nevertheless, he entered his car and locked himself in quickly. He set his coffee in the cup holder while he started the engine. His car purred to life, spewing hot air from the vents. It melted the chill from his bones and put him at ease as he pulled out of the lot.
Something was off. Beside the smell of stale air that pumped through the car, Sal caught a whiff of lilac. He looked down at the long since cooled coffee, but that couldn't be the source. He glanced up at the rearview mirror and directly into a pair of eyes looking back at him. Then there was a click.
"Keep driving." She said.