The Endmakers

Note: The characters in this story bear no intentional resemblance to any person living or dead.

For most of us, life is precious and death comes far too quickly, but in the Lifemaster Nursing Home, today is Mrs Klein's 138th birthday. However, no one is celebrating the special event as the old lady is hooked up to a life support machine, and none of her family are there with her. Standing by her bed, wearing masks, are two insurance company accountants. They are talking with the old lady's doctor. 'Another successful year Doctor. We must offer our congratulations. We at the company very much appreciate your team's hard work and commitment. We can assure you that we will continue to send all of our clients to your excellent facility. You have done a first-class job in keeping Mrs. Klien alive and protecting the company's profits. If she were to die tomorrow, we would have to pay her family in excess of four hundred million dollars.'
'Gentleman,' says the doctor, 'with recent advances in medical care, and improvements in transplant surgery, it is possible that we can keep Mrs. Klien alive indefinitely. She will, of course, never regain consciousness, but she will never die. We at the nursing home would like to thank you for your continued support, and we look forward to a long and profitable arrangement. Now let's take a look at Mr Garcia, his 127th birthday is next month and is doing well. Last month we replaced his liver.'

The year is 2068 and for some unfortunate people, death is a luxury that they cannot afford. Years ago they took out enormous life insurance policies, and now the insurance companies prevent them from dying in order to save paying out millions of dollars or euros to their families. The families spend long years in and out of law courts trying to persuade judges to order the doctors to switch off the life-support machines that keep the old people alive, but the insurance companies have unlimited resources and their lawyers always win every appeal. With each passing year medical science becomes even more advanced and the families lose all hope. But now the Endmakers have appeared.

John Klein is Mrs Klein's great-great-grandson and a few months ago he learned of a secret group of people who provide death for a fee. For a while their existance was only rumoured but John has spent these last months opening a path to them through the web. They are assassins, but these killers have mercy in their hearts. They design and produce lethal viruses that are guaranteed to kill. It is rumoured that so far, they have ended the lives of over thirty people. Finally, John has made contact with one of their representatives. Using encrypted messages he has arranged for a virus to be designed to kill Mrs Klein. The Endmakers have asked for 5% of the insurance policy payout, which is in excess of twenty million dollars. It is a high price to pay but this is a dangerous job for them. The insurance companies want them dead and have tried to trick them many times with fake contacts and ambushes.

The Lifemaster Nursing Home is built like a fortress with 24-hour armed security guards and a sophisticated surveillance system. Mr Gabriel and Mr Uriel must enter and leave without being seen. They must infect Mrs Klein but leave no trace because if there is any evidence of their visit then her death will be seen as suspicious and the insurance company will refuse to pay the Klein family anything. Mr Gabriel and Mr Uriel are both middle-aged Japanese and spent all their lives training to be masters at what they do: they are professional ninja. Their work for the Endmakers is the ultimate test of their training.

On a moonless night, at exactly 2.39am they jump from a small plane several kilometres from the nursing home. Using wingsuits they glide silently through the night sky before opening their parachutes and landing on the roof of the home at 2.57am. Advanced electronic devices allow them to gain access into the building like high-technology ghosts, and at 3am they are standing at Mrs Klein's bedside. Mr Uriel opens a small pouch and touches the corner of Mrs Klein's eye with a tiny needle. There is no mark, no blood, no sign that she has just been given a deadly virus. The two men leave the building through the sewer system.

By 5am Mrs Klein is dead. The emergency team of doctors failed to revive her, she died so quickly. The medical staff at the nursing home are confused and suspicious but the virus has already left her body and so they reluctantly sign her death certificate. The insurance company executives are furious but are forced to pay the Klein family the full insurance amount of 424 million dollars.

Copyright: Sean Anderson Jul 1st 2009. All rights reserved.
http://www.offthecompass.com/