Authors: Dennis Larsen
central portion of the sectional doors. His
breathing increased and he realized there
was a very real possibility that he would
hyperventilate. The thief momentarily
closed his eyes and tried to calm his fight
or flight response that was screaming for
him to fly. Movement could be heard on
the floor just up the first few stairs.
“No
speaking,
just
walking.
Whoever it is they must be alone,” he
thought.
The gun felt cold in his palm, but
there was no doubt he knew how to use it,
and the pepper spray, damn..., the pepper
spray! He had meant to test it that morning
before heading out, but had forgotten in the
rush to get this job over with. Hopefully it
would function normally. The gun really
had to be a last resort, but he could not
allow anyone to identify him regardless of
the cost.
More movement, then the delicate
sound of scraping on the hardwood floor
above, followed by a dog whining. “Oh
no, this can’t be happening!” he thought,
trying desperately to keep from peeing his
pants. He could hear the dog moving
about, growling lowly, panting and letting
out the occasional little bark. At least it
didn’t sound like a big dog; perhaps he’d
be able to handle it if it were pint sized.
“Rascal, what are you doing in
there? Come here, come to mommy,” a
woman could be heard saying.
“Maybe she’ll go shopping or
something before she notices what’s going
on,” Lester thought. Then he realized that
when she went from the kitchen to the car,
it will be obvious that they’d been broken
into. “Oh please, just go into your
bedroom, close the door and have a nap.”
The dog continued to run about on
the main floor, making some disturbing
sounds but not going into full pursuit
mode. “Rascal, for heaven’s sake, come to
mommy. Wanna treat, wanna treat?
Mommy's got a treat for you. Come on
boy, come and get it,” she said, trying to
convince the animal to join her on the
upper level.
“What is she doing up there?”
He listened ever so closely for
anything that would give him a clue.
Nothing came, other than her footsteps
directly above him and the sound of the
dog finally joining her for his treat.
“Good boy, good boy,” she
exclaimed, in a strange baby like voice.
Whatever she was doing, the
noises he was hearing drifting down from
the upper level led him to believe that she
was going from room to room. But why,
and finally he could hear her making her
way down the upper stairs, stopping
briefly on the main level. He readied the
spray and the gun, his left foot flat on the
floor and his right knee down, foot back,
ready to push him forward in an attack
posture. The sound of her steps could be
heard coming down the stairs directly at
him, the dog leading the way. He held his
breath, suddenly realizing that he needed
something to disguise his face. On the
floor scattered among the few dirty
clothing items was a pair of women’s
underwear. He looked for something more
suitable but there was no time, it would be
a second before the dog was at the door.
He moved the spray to the right hand,
along with the gun, holding them
awkwardly while he stretched the granny
panties over his head, leaving one eye
exposed so he could see where he was
shooting or running. The spray was
quickly returned to the left hand and he
assumed the previous posture again.
“Rascal, what has gotten into you
today? You little monster,” she teasingly
said.
The dog stopped at the door
behind which he knelt. He could see the
mutt through the slats in the dim light of
the basement. Rascal tilted his head and
lifted his nose into the air, letting out a
bark before moving to the door, and
smelling along the small gap at the bottom.
“Rascal, I know what’s in there,
and no, you can’t chew up another pair of
mommy’s panties. You’ve already ruined
two pair this week.”
He could now see the slender
woman standing behind the dog, a laundry
basket held with one hand, pressing the
edge of the basket against her hip to hold
it in place. “Come on, get out of the way
so I can get this stuff in the wash,” she
insisted.
Lester slowly moved his position
as far to his left as possible without
making a sound. He kept his eyes on the
woman and could see her set the basket
down to her right and reach for the bi-fold
handle that would uncover the appliances.
He tried to make himself invisible,
lowering himself as close to the floor as
possible, without losing his ability to
strike. Suddenly the door slid open,
exposing the washer and dryer, but
leaving him somewhat in the dark. Rascal
was protesting loudly now and the woman
continued to explain why he couldn’t get
at her panties.
“If only she knew.” He couldn’t
help but find some humor in what this must
look like from the dog’s perspective.
The panty covered thief held his
breath, watching her load the washer
inches away from the gun pointed at her,
just behind the closed door. Suddenly, the
woman reached through the narrow
opening, to the side of the dryer, in an
effort to pull the detergent from the shelf
above Lester. Her elbow was mere inches
from his shoulder but he remained stone
still, she was unable to reach, and she
retracted her arm, pushing the small dog
out of the way with her foot in the same
instant. He could see her body moving to
his left, placing her directly in front of
him, her hand reaching for the knob that
would expose his hiding place. Never
before had he felt so alive. Every muscle
taut, nerves raw, his senses in overdrive
and his fingers tight against the triggers.
Rascal continued to whine and yap,
snapping at her slipper covered feet. She
momentarily withdrew her hand from the
knob and scooped up the small dog in her
right, cuddling him close to her breast, and
pulled the door open with her left.
Lester burst from the closet, panty
on his head, screaming like a madman and
pulling the trigger at point blank range on
both the woman and Rascal. The woman
fell backwards, landing in a heap in the
laundry basket, the dog firmly pulled to
her chest, pepper spray burning their eyes,
nasal passages and mouth, making it
difficult to breath but not keeping her from
screaming at the top of her lungs. The
sprayer leaned in closer to make sure he
gave them both a liberal application of the
pepper mixture, covering his own face
with a bent inner arm in an attempt to
avoid himself being overcome. The
woman remained in the basket, her legs
kicking wildly, hoping to take the
attackers feet out from underneath him but
being ineffective. With her free left hand
she swung at Lester, her eyes squeezed
shut, and unable to connect with any of the
pathetic blows.
Satisfied that they were out of
commission for a few minutes, he issued a
verbal
warning,
“Don’t
leave
the
basement for 10 minutes or I’ll come back
and finish the job!” He repeated it a
second time, screaming above her
hysteria, to get his point across.
He ran up the stairs, also feeling
some of the effects of the spray that had
drifted into his own eyes. Fighting to see
his way out the back, he grabbed the
pillowcase and backpack, stuffing the gun
and pepper spray into the open mouth of
the bag, and dashed for the fence and the
motorcycle beyond. At first he ran in the
wrong direction, the sounds of the woman
still fresh in his ears and unsure if it was
his memory or if she was still screaming
that loudly. He stopped, knelt down and
looked around to get his bearings, wiping
his eyes with the sleeve of his shirt.
Remembering where the Yamaha was
hidden, he ran for it, jumping over the low
brush and pulling the backpack around his
shoulders as he went. Upon reaching the
bike he undid a couple of buttons at the
top of his shirt, stuffed the few items and
the pillowcase inside, slammed the helmet
down on his head and lifted the bike from
the dirt. A quick kick of the starter and he
was on his way back down the tracks and
the path to a paved road.
“Faster, faster!” he told himself,
“she’ll be on the phone by now, faster,
faster!”
He rode like Steve McQueen, in a
race for his life, until he got to the
blacktop where he knew he would have to
regain his cool and not draw attention to
himself. In the distance he could hear
sirens screaming toward him, but he
fought the urge to accelerate and start
going cross-country. Alternating red and
blue lights were flashing dead ahead and
coming at a breakneck speed.
“Keep it together! Damn it Lester,
keep it together!” He commanded himself,
his right hand itching to crank up the
rpm’s.
The Sheriff’s vehicle raced past
him, not giving him a second look, he spun
his head around and watched the lights
become smaller as the car hurled down
the road. Lester saw before he heard it,
the brake lights on the squad car suddenly
lit up, the screeching of the tires barely
audible over the sound of his own bike,
but undeniable that he’d been made. The
Sheriff’s unit desperately tried to stop and
turn around, sending the vehicle into a
broad slide and landing it in a ditch, dust
and smoke covering the scene and for a
moment blinding the driver. Breland
cussed, rocking the transmission from
reverse to drive, and back again, in an
effort to work the car out of the
predicament he’d put it in.
Lester didn’t wait around to see if
the deputy was really after him or not. He
downshifted, increased the torque and left
a trail of rubber, as he high tailed it for
home and the safety it would provide.
“Felix better be pretty damn
happy,” he said, thinking of the .38 in his
pack and how much he’d love to use it on
the Chicago gangster right about now.
CHAPTER TWENTY
Iggy pulled his sunglasses down
on the end of his nose, peering over the
top to see if it improved his ability to see
down the country lane. He looked at his
watch, having to extend his arm as far as
he could to read the time.
“Should have spent the few extra
bucks and got the bifocal,” he said, to
himself. “Where are these guys? I’ve got
to be back at the office in a couple of
hours.”
At the conclusion of their last
clandestine meeting they had agreed to
meet one final time before sending their
hired thief in for his ultimate mission.
With the past outings paying off better than
they had anticipated, it was time to move
their agenda along. Iggy had waited a long
time to get his hands on some big money;
the eight years had eaten away at him,
slowly killing him inside with nothing
really to show for it, other than less hair
and more fat. He had to admit that Jeremy
had been good to him, advancing him a
little here and a little there, but not any of
the big money that had been promised him
from the outset.
“That stupid, greedy Beverly
Davis,” the thought repeated itself in his
mind in various slurs and slanders. “If
she’d only been reasonable at the outset,
I’d be laying on the beach, margarita in