"Not Part of the Plan"
Paul Taylor.
That was the name he was using this job. The assassin typically adopted a new name with each new assignment, but this job was different from anything he'd ever done before. He wasn't studying a single person this time around, learning his habits, his routine, and his vulnerabilities before knocking him off. No, this time Paul had been contracted to wipe out an entire criminal syndicate, and that was going to require him to become an entirely new person ... and believe that he was that entirely new person, until the job was done and he could escape this life of death and destruction.
Paul had spent the last nine month diving into his new identity, creating and establishing a realistic background that would hold up to even the deepest scrutiny. His employer was a shadowy organization of wealthy business owners who were in league with very well placed individuals spread across all branches of government and the relevant law enforcement agencies; so when Paul needed an air tight identity, all he had to do was ask.
Ironically, his job this time around was to eliminate another shadowy organization of wealthy business owners who were in league with very well placed individuals spread across all branches of government and the relevant law enforcement agencies. Well, shadowy might not apply in the same fashion to this second group. It was called the Greater Boston Benevolence Society, and for more than 150 years its well-to-do members had been helping the less fortunate of the Greater Boston area escape poverty by providing employment and education opportunities that might not otherwise be attainable.
Of course, that was what the public saw of The Society, to which it was often referred. What the public didn't see was the murder, the extortion, the arson, the kidnappings, the thefts, and the other criminal and often violent acts that were and had been the basis of the Society's continuing control for generations of members.
Paul couldn't help but smirk at the fact that he was being paid by one corrupt organization to wipe out the hierarchy of a second one for -- their words not his -- the good of the people of Boston. But then, he didn't often question his employers' motivations. The only questions he typically had for those paying him was Who am I killing and How much does it pay? But then, this wasn't a typical job: he had 14 primary targets for which he would be paid $1 million dollars each plus a bonus of $14 million dollars if he got them all; and he had 27 secondary targets for whom he earned a sliding scale fee: the first of them killed fetched Paul $5,000, the second $10,000, the third $15,000, and so on.
In all, if Paul was able to sweep through his targets as assigned, he'd be walking away from this life of death and mayhem with enough money to buy a small island in the South Pacific and stock it with all the beer, burgers, and boobs he'd ever want or need. Retirement: it wasn't a word Paul had every seriously considered, but after this job he was finished. Even as he'd been establishing his new identity to do the job, he'd been planning a second one -- concealed from his employers, obviously -- to slip away from the assignment and disappear forever.
Paul stepped over to the windows of his new apartment, located in a corner of the 12th floor such that he could see water below him over a 270 degree arc. He loved the water; loved the sea. His island was waiting for him out there somewhere. All he had to do was complete this assignment without hitting any snags, for the greatest impediment to an assassin's job was anything -- or anyone -- who wasn't part of the plan.