Friday, June 18, 2021

The Copperhead Affair

Illustration by Ed Catto
This short story was published in AHOY Comics' Second Coming: Only Begotten Son # 1 in December of 2020. It is in the same continuity as "The Last Ride Of The Copperhead Kid" and "The Copperhead Strikes!"

THE COPPERHEAD AFFAIR
by Carl Cafarelli

Secret agents are not prone to introspection. But this New Year's Eve, as 1965 prepared to slip into the abyss of history, the covert operative codenamed Copperhead reflected on the year about to pass. He had worked. He had fought. He had loved. He had saved the entire world once in '65, and saved the country three times more than that. All in secret. All for the common good. And all without breaking his own code. He had a license to kill. He had never used it. He always found another way.

Loud music, playing in a more public part of the restaurant, reached his ears. Everywhere a secret agent went nowadays, the bounce and sway of nightclub jazz seemed the inevitable accompaniment. Copperhead had grown accustomed to the sound. Hell, he'd even stopped joking about needing earmuffs to listen to The Beatles. He gave a silent chuckle as he finished his drink. 1965 had changed him.

Copperhead's hand, wrapped in snakeskin glove, set down his empty martini glass. At 5' 6", he knew he was shorter than most would expect of a secret agent. 
We can't all be Bond, or Napoleon Solo, he quipped. He was 39 years old, his red hair as yet untouched by gray. Not an old man. Not a young one either, not in this business. When the ball dropped at midnight, he would accept the fact of his 40th birthday descending upon him as well.

If he lived that long.

Director Morgan--Copperhead's superior at the clandestine agency--settled his large frame into a too-small chair to sit across the table from Copperhead. Morgan was flanked by a half dozen humorless security men, three of whom took their place behind Copperhead. Copperhead smiled politely and without warmth. "Director," Copperhead said in greeting. "I took the liberty of ordering you a martini."

Morgan picked up his martini glass and threw its contents in Copperhead's face. "A drugged drink?," the director sneered. "Surely you don't underestimate me to that degree, Copperhead."

Copperhead's smile did not change as he wiped the spilled liquid from his face. "I don't estimate you at all, Director. You're a traitor, and I'll be simply delighted to end your treasonous criminal career right now."

Morgan wasn't sure whether to laugh or sneer. "Your overconfidence is your undoing, you idiot." Copperhead interrupted: "Perhaps. Though the evidence I've gathered against you should more than compensate."

"Evidence...?" Morgan somehow refrained from sputtering. "Oh yes," Copperhead continued in earnest. "Photographs, documents, banking ledgers, many from secret overseas accounts. Incriminating correspondence. That sort of thing. Evidence of you working with the Chinese 
and the Russians, both ends against the middle, all of them in betrayal of your own country's interests. Some ex-Nazis, too. I can't imagine your soon-to-be-former comrades in the Kremlin will be happy with the dossiers they've received from...well, let's say from a concerned citizen." Copperhead's smile flashed more widely. "American authorities should be on their way here," Copperhead checked his watch,"ah yes, any minute now."

Morgan's face reddened with fury. "'Concerned citizen,' my ass. That slut Betty...!"

Copperhead's facade of congeniality disappeared. "Your 
wife, Director. The wife you ignored except when you insulted her, or beat her. I hate bullies. She's safe from you now."

"Safe in 
your arms, no doubt." Morgan turned to his thugs. "We have time to escape. Kill him quickly."

Before those words had finished leaving Morgan's scowling lips, Copperhead had already dropped to the floor, kicked, and permanently crippled two of his would-be assailants. Copperhead smashed a third foe's head into the wall. The three thugs at Morgan's side drew their weapons as Copperhead leaped across the table, tackling them all at once. One shot himself in the gut, and now writhed on the floor in agony. The other two saw their guns fly from their grasp as blows from Copperhead sent both of them far away from the conscious world. 

Morgan was still seated. He aimed his Luger at Copperhead, but found himself frozen stiff in place, even as he tried to pull the trigger. The director's voice could only manage a croaked "What did you do...?!"

Copperhead's smile was now genuine, if no less cold-blooded. "Neurotoxin. Old family recipe, actually. It was on the stem of your martini glass. Nasty stuff to touch." The now-silent director looked with dismay at Copperhead's gloved hands, and understood. "It won't kill you. You'll never move a finger, nor a leg, nor anything. You'll never be able to speak. And you'll never hurt anyone again."

Copperhead kicked the chair out from under Morgan's bloated carcass.

"And I don't give a damn what the Russians do to you." 

As Morgan fell helplessly to the floor, Copperhead stepped over the prone figures of his enemies. They never see it coming, never expect Copperhead to strike, he mused. Must be because I'm short.

Morgan's wife Betty was waiting for Copperhead downstairs. They embraced and exited the restaurant as police arrived. The Russians were coming, too. Whatever happened next was no longer Copperhead's affair.

Affair. It had started off as just another affair, and he'd had many of those before. But Copperhead hated bullies. And he had fallen in love with Betty.

Betty glowed in Copperhead's presence. She wasn't showing yet, but they both knew. The secret agent game was no job for a father. As the ball dropped to welcome 1966, Copperhead would spy no more. 40 years old. He wasn't a young man. He wasn't an old one either. His license to kill would not be renewed. He'd never used it anyway.

NOTE: I recently completed "Chaos At The Copperhead Club," which is the next short story in this sequence. I'll let you know if the good folks at AHOY choose to buy that one, too.

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2 comments:

  1. Brilliant! I loved it, and can't wait to read more!

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    Replies
    1. Thanks! These are fun to write. The next chapter (set in a punk rock club in 1983) is done, and its fate is in the hands of the editors.

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