Submitted by ByfelsDisciple t3_yggr67 in nosleep

I’m trained to kill people. If you think that’s an obsolete skill in 2022, it’s because we’re better at our jobs than anyone ever has been.

Every part of your history book – colonization, Western expansion, human migration in general – is the story of people killing each other. That story will continue as long as our species infests this planet.

It’s my job to hide that fact well enough for the rest of you to believe that you’re above it.

I enlisted in the Marines after high school, because my dad said he’d disown me if I went to the Navy or Air Force. I ended up joining the Raiders, and as a result, am not allowed to divulge anything more about my life with the Marines.

When I was discharged at age 27, I was restless and used to combat. I tried an office job, but quit after 31 minutes and 53 seconds. On the way out, my now-former boss told me that I was unfit for a traditional human environment.

What can I say? He was a dick, but he was right.

“The target is Laney Vesely, six years old. Her family was vacationing in Jolo, in the Philippines, when their car was ambushed. Two security guards were executed on site, and Mom was left alive to send a message.”

I leaned against the airplane’s window, staring out at the dark Pacific as Data read the description. I always thought that was a strange nickname, but he got it from some Star Wars character, and said it made him feel detached enough from the situation to keep things logical and focused. He was an odd duck, one of those skinny, twitchy types, but Data knew his shit and knew it well.

“Mom has the money for an exchange?” I asked. I continued to gaze out across the ocean.

“No,” Data answered, more nervous than usual. “This isn’t the usual ransom demand.”

I raised my eyebrows, but still didn’t face him. “The kidnappers aren’t looking for cash?”

“They are,” his voice came back, “but the parents know the kidnappers. They’re confident the girl’s going to be executed as revenge for some perceived insult. The cash is just salt in the wound.” He cleared his throat. “They’ve advised us to eliminate the kidnapper on sight, because he’ll do the same to us if given a chance.”

I let a moment of silence pass before answering. “They know that’ll cost them a 100K per day before expenses, right?”

“They know,” Data answered.

I still didn’t turn away from the window.

You don’t have to go through customs if your flight is unregistered, and your flight needs to be unregistered if you’re carrying a critical threshold of assault rifles across international borders in the middle of the night. Cash has a way of calming most disagreements, though, so we were driving down the streets of Jolo within three minutes of landing.

“They’re sure the girl’s being held at this address?” I asked as I steered through the darkened streets.

Data sensed the skepticism in my voice. “There was no attempt to hide the location. The clients insist that this won’t be a normal hostage retrieval situation, though. Low negotiation, high risk.”

“Any local cops involved?”

I was surprised to hear Big Mike speak up from the back seat. He was normally silent through all of our briefings, which mostly consisted of Data telling me everything I needed to know.

“No,” Data answered. He fidgeted in the passenger seat beside me. “Apparently, there would be nothing that police could contribute. The clients kept insisting that we’ve never had a case like this.”

I have a love/hate relationship with the Philippines. The steamy air over endless stretches of white-sand beaches let my mind unfold in ways that let me forget myself, if even for a few seconds. But there are just so many goddamn people that I’m on edge in any city street. I can handle fighting with people, but spending idle time with them is torture.

The Philippines used to have this controversial president by the name of Duterte. Supposedly, he would throw drug kingpins out of helicopters. He ruffled a lot of feathers, but I liked his style.

He couldn’t scare every dickhole in the country off, though, which is how I found myself outside some shitty three-story house just before dawn.

“If they expected a combat situation,” I asked Data as he leaned beside me against the exterior wall, “why’d they hire a retrieval team with just three people?”

“Because anyone short of the best was going to make things worse,” Data answered, his voice curt. “This window will be unlocked. Laney will be on the central room of the third floor.”

“How many people should we expect?” I asked, giving my M4 a final check.

“One.”

I stared at his silhouette. “One?”

“One,” he answered. “Be ready for anything,”

I shook my head. “Okay, boys, showtime. I’ll run point, Big Mike’s got my six. Data, stick in between.”

The window was unlocked.

The first floor was empty.

The stairs were unguarded.

The second floor was empty.

When we met no resistance on the second staircase, I was more scared than I ever had been on a hostage retrieval – even the one with the goddamn rhinoceros. It just didn’t make sense.

I was actually relieved when I crested the stairs and found a man standing in the middle of the room. He was unarmed and alone, with nothing in his hands. His dark clothing made his profile melt into the shadows, but he was still distinguishable. His pale face and hands were the only skin visible as he faced me, head bowed. Both hands were empty, and nothing nearby looked useful as a potential weapon. The girl was in the corner, bound and gagged, sitting with her knees pulled up to her chin. She’d been crying, but looked unhurt. Three doors led off of this room, and two windows let in moonlight, including one by the stairs just above my shoulders. That window provided most of the light in a space that seemed to lack electricity.

I absorbed this information in half a second as I aimed the M4 at the man and pulled the trigger.

The first bullet hit below his right shoulder, and the second went through the neck. I sprinted into the room, Data and Big Mike behind me, as he stumbled back against a wall. This is the point where the target usually slumps against the floor.

He didn’t do that. Instead, Pale Man just moaned for a couple of seconds before standing upright again.

Data reacted before I did, and we got half a dozen rounds in him before he stumbled back once more.

And again, he didn’t fall over.

I was gearing up for a third round of bullets when he jumped. I use the word “jumped” because I don’t know what else to call it; he moved with the speed and silence of a shadow beneath a streetlight as he flew face-first into us, colliding with Data. Data roared as the man sank six-inch long teeth into his shoulder. I could hear his collarbone snap as blood cascaded from the wound.

All of this happened in the time it took to turn my head.

“Mike, GET THE GIRL!” I yelled as my brain adapted to the impossible information it was receiving.

I actually find peace in high-intensity, dangerous moments. I’ve often wondered if I’m a psychopath, but in the end, it doesn’t matter: the trait helps me do my job. The seconds slow down as information forms itself in my head.

Mike would get the girl. Data needed me. I could not help either one until eliminating the Pale Man. Previously known methods of elimination did not seem to work; ergo, he must not be human. In this new world order, all assumed beliefs had become suspect, as evidenced by a lack of death from bullets to the neck. I could therefore discard an assumed disbelief of mythological creatures. Since the Pale Man had enormous teeth and could fly, he was a likely candidate for a vampire.

I looked up at the window as Data’s scream faded.

What happened next didn’t make sense, but I had to act.

I stepped behind Pale Man’s back and wrapped my arms around his chest, pulling his hands away before grabbing his forehead from behind. I squeezed his ribs with my right arm while pulling his head back in my left, forcing him to release Data. He reached back and grabbed my elbows; he was a strong motherfucker and wasn’t happy with my behavior. Adrenaline flowed through my chest as he snapped his ridiculously long and sharp teeth, trying to rip the skin off my bones.

I placed one boot on the bannister, bent both knees, and launched backwards.

I nearly vomited as the two of us crashed through the window, glass tinkling in every direction as we flew three stories above the ground.

I’ve been skydiving dozens of times, but this was different.

Because in skydiving, you usually fall straight down.

We hovered in open air. While I avoided his snapping jaws, the fear finally bit into me and held fast. My heart jackhammered as we kicked our legs against empty space, tiny shards of glass tinkling in the sun’s first rays.

Pale Man finally turned around and looked at me eye-to-eye.

I wish he hadn’t.

Everything about his face was wrong. Pale, pink eyes had white circles in the center. They dominated a countenance that looked like a Stephen Gammell drawing: every feature was crisply imbalanced in a drippy smudge that looked too dreamlike for earthly existence.

I leaned back as he swiped his fangs at my neck, tearing the edge of my vest by catching a corner of it. I couldn’t pull too far away, though, because I’d fall if I slipped out of his hands.

Pale Man leaned back, his mouth open a horrifying 180 degrees, as he prepared to strike.

He yelped. Then he screamed.

Then his fucking head caught on fire.

Morning light slid across the city, casting the first dark shadows on the nearby house.

Pale Man spun us around like we were on the fucking Disneyland Teacups as the fire spread. I tried to pull away while grasping his arms, but the flames were quickly spreading toward me.

I would either crash or burn.

Yanking one hand away, I leaned as far back as I could. Holy shit, did the Pale Man scream. At least I think that’s what it was. I’ve heard gibbons scream at the zoo, and the closest comparison I could imagine is if a gibbon snatched his nuts in mousetrap while receiving an involuntary enema of boiling sewage.

Then his head exploded. The morning light had cut between two houses and spilled across us. I covered my face and prepared for the fall.

That’s how I discovered that we’d spiraled almost all the way back to the ground. I fell the final two feet and collapsed onto the sidewalk.

Most people would want to curl up and have a good cry at this point, but I didn’t have time for such shittery. Avoiding as much broken glass as possible, I got to my feet and jumped back in through the window. Data needed me, I didn’t know what happened to Big Mike and the girl, and apparently there were vampires in the world, I guess.

People like me aren’t trained to stop being afraid. We’re trained to live with it.

Obviously I made it out alive, but not everyone was so lucky. I didn’t know that at the time, though; the only thing on my mind was that I had to get back upstairs.


What happened next


BD

W

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Comments

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Standard_Incident_26 t1_iu8k04d wrote

I've been in some life or death situations on construction sites, not nearly the same as what you go through I know. However, my mind does a very similar thing during these times, where it feels like time slows and I can see everything and process much faster.

I've been told by professionals its adhd, and I'm definitely not a psychopath. Judging from your descriptions, and your spatial awareness and reactions, I'd say you might want to look into that. Sure, you come across a bit coldly logical, but that's the job. You don't come across as emotionless, just controlled and focused.

Knowing the ins and outs of your most powerful weapon is important. You've obviously found a job that suits you, but knowing just how far and why you can push yourself would be handy especially against previously unknown enemies.

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lokisown t1_iu8o0d3 wrote

Now you know. Have seen. Been seen. You were just another killer following humanity and historical rule, but now? You crossed that line friend. Monsters aren't all mindless beasts after all. In truth I really doubt that you would be surprised how often it is money that causes discovery. Keep your head and ass down, watch your six, and explosives are your friend.

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tessa1950 t1_iu8t8ro wrote

Fascinating line of work you have. Perhaps you can disclose other instances of your professional expertise at a later date?

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Soapycreek t1_iu8yumf wrote

My business is killing and business is good

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D33ber t1_iu98eip wrote

They just call them civilian contractors these days instead of mercenaries or assassins.

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Starshapedsand t1_iu9dou1 wrote

Star Wars. Love it!

Don’t worry about being a psychopath. That’s a very normal trait for people who last in these sorts of jobs, including fire and emergency medicine. It’s all about putting it to worthwhile use.

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mike8596 t1_iu9g3nu wrote

Holy shit human bad guys are bad enough, but now I find out that there are supernatural bad guys too.

Uggggg!

It's really cool the way you take all of this in stride. Sounds like you've see a lot.

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LushBronze13 t1_iu9kmdj wrote

Holy shit, what a wild fucking ride that was! Glad to hear you made it out ok and all, but where is the rest of your crew, plus the girl? Cmon don’t leave us hangin!

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Binky-Answer896 t1_iua5ovr wrote

Loved this story OP. Glad you escaped so hopefully you can tell us more later. If you expanded this into a book, I would pay real actual money to read it.

P.S. — you would be a great candidate for those beer commercials with “the most interesting man in the world.” Assuming you’re a man.

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DustBunny132 t1_iua8sq3 wrote

I’d love to hear more stories about your job. Though their dark they sound pretty cool

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jamiec514 t1_iua9ox4 wrote

Dude, you left us hanging way more than that vampire did to you when you threw both of y'all out the window!!!! You've gotta let us know what happened with the rest of the job and you can't just drop in a bomb about a rhinoceros and not expound on it more!!!!

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BryKKan t1_iuacpd4 wrote

How'd you get back in through the 3rd story window?

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luckystrikes23 t1_iuafh6j wrote

Thanks for telling us how it's legal. Back to just dreaming.

3

Jkd212 t1_iuakqfy wrote

A literal baptism of fire in Philippine mythos. Who knew Aswangs could be recruited.

8

Wazzaaa123 t1_iuapq5i wrote

Who goes to Jolo for a vacation? That’s like Pochinki from PUBG lol

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Pretender381 t1_iub00x4 wrote

History of world is history of violence.

2

SuspectedLumber t1_iuba57x wrote

Ok so the mercenary guy fought the vampire guy, got it.

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Na_Zero t1_iubct2l wrote

Ah ASEAN. The home of some horrified black magics practitioners.

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filledalot t1_iubqoqz wrote

Bussiness seems to be very booming.

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YoungLabel t1_iubs87w wrote

Well damn fam you had a shit morning.

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shifty_mcG33 t1_iubvwam wrote

Dude, you got so incredibly lucky you got to the ground safely. Glad you're out there protecting..... well, maybe not us, but people! Psychopath or not, I salute you. 🫡

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Wishiwashome t1_iuc3or3 wrote

I think the people that hired you had to know there was something more with this captor? Was he hired to guard/ abduct the girl? Was he the one that was slighted? I know you wouldn’t have believed “a vampire is guarding my kidnapped daughter” but I think they could have said something more? Would love to hear more about your work!

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Scubamonster t1_iuciphs wrote

Like Liam Neeson I reckon you’re all talk

3

publicanofbatch20 t1_iucm3hh wrote

You’re in the Philippines, that is most likely some folklore vampire. From the way you were describing it I thought it might have been a mananangal or pennangalan (first one separates at the torso, second one at the head when they hunt at night)

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PracticalShoulder916 t1_iucwa6z wrote

Anyone who says Data is from Star Wars is obviously a psychopath, but I have an important question.

How much do you charge for assassination of heads of states?

Hypothetically of course.

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criticallycrafty t1_iucz452 wrote

I doubt there’s anyone reading this who would be surprised to find out the US government trains and hires people to kill specific people. They’re already doing that on a mass scale, without specific individual targets, with the military.

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criticallycrafty t1_iucz9oq wrote

Just like the funeral/burial industry is always solid because people always die, the murderer business is also always solid. There’s always someone out there who needs to be killed.

NOTE TO FBI: I do not murder people or condone it. I’m simply saying there will always be people killing people, ok?

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happycamper87 t1_iuertgf wrote

Always assumed Siquijor was the breeding ground for the supernatural. Never thought Jolo had its fair share (I've only been there once so I must've missed it).

Also a bit of trivia for everyone: Duterte loves offing "drug kingpins" simply because he hates the competition lol.

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