His name was Jimmie Prescott and he
is thirty-one years of age. Five foot ten. Slight build.
He’s a loner. A sniper. A
killer. The sort of sniper who sets up over a busy city street and randomly
chooses a target. A victim. It is the spontaneity that thrills him, and, by his
own reckoning, he is the best. The best because he has 41 notches on his rifle,
and, while there have been a few close calls, he has no real fear of capture.
“A Real Nice Guy” is a
stylish crime story written by William F. Nolan, a favorite short story writer
of mine, originally published in the April 1980 issue of Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine. It is something of a battle of
sociopaths—both bad, of course—and while the ending is less than surprising the
journey is ideal. The prose is smooth and, especially the non-dialogue
narrative, is something like a brassy jazz riff—
He was a master. He never missed a
target, never wasted a shot. He was cool and nerveless and smooth, and totally
without conscience.
It’s short. Third
person, and very much worth seeking out. But, in the interest of fairness, that
is exactly what I think of all Nolan’s short work.
I read “A Real Nice Guy”
in The New Mammoth Book of Pulp Fiction,
published in 2013 by Running Press, and edited by Maxim Jakubowski.
Brassy jazz riff indeed. Enjoyed the review!
ReplyDelete