It has a wonderful kick. Not hard, but definite. A loaded gun in your hand gives you an indefinable sense of power. I felt more exhilarated than I have in months when the stock jolted back against my palm each time I squeezed the trigger.
Mary was a little cross when she learned I’d gone for an afternoon ride without her.
“I thought you were studying,” she complained.
“I just felt like a little air,” I said.
I didn’t tell her I had been target practicing.
The voices have given me my complete mission finally. I know now what God wants me to do.
I am to kill sinners.
It gave me a warm sense of confidence to sit there in church and feel the pressure of my revolver under my belt and beneath my shirt.
I’m learning to read minds, though, and before long I should be able to read yours.
I find already I can sometimes divine Mary’s secret thoughts.
So I walked and I tried to penetrate the minds of those I saw on the streets.
At two A.M. I had my first opportunity to serve the Lord, and I failed. But even as I failed I knew I was forgiven, for the voices came to me soothingly rather than in anger. Maybe I was made to fail on purpose, as some kind of test.
I knew the instant I passed the couple in the parked car that I’d found the first sinner I was appointed to kill. He had a girl in his arms and was kissing her in such a sickeningly passionate manner, the sight nearly made me ill.
Sins of the flesh are the evilest of all sins.
Neither paid any attention to me as I walked quietly by, being too preoccupied with each other. A few yards beyond I faded into the deep shadow of a large elm and simply waited.
After a time the couple got out of the car and went up the steps to a porch. It was too dark to see what either looked like, but I got an impression they were both young. Perhaps college students like myself.
Their figures merged on the porch, then separated and I heard a soft goodnight from the girl and a deeper-toned reply from the man. Then her front door opened and closed, and the man came briskly down the steps.
The gun was in my hand, steadied against the bole of the elm, and a great feeling of elation built within me. As he reached the sidewalk only ten feet from where I stood, I began to squeeze the trigger.
But something happened to distract me. The night was overcast, but just for a moment the clouds shifted enough to let bright moonlight shaft downward. And as the unexpected light struck the face of the man I was on the verge of killing, I recognized him.
He was George Haber, who sits in front of me in my class on criminal jurisprudence.
Of course the mere fact that I knew the man shouldn’t have changed my purpose. A sinner’s a sinner, regardless of name, and George Haber should have died. But recognizing him startled me enough to make me relax pressure on the trigger, and then it was too late. Haber was in his car, the motor was running and he was pulling away from the curb.
I wasn’t confident enough of my marksmanship to risk a shot at such a rapidly moving target.
But the voices assured me there would be future opportunity to kill George Haber.
I’ve always thought of Mary as a clean, fresh girl incapable of anything evil. But when she talks of our future marriage and how happy we’ll be, I’m shocked to discover part of her thoughts are on the wedding night. She actually looks forward with a kind of frightened but pleasurable anticipation to being in bed with me.