Authors: Dennis Larsen
to get him out of this hellhole. He was
anxious to do his own investigation.
Throughout the night, as he drifted in and
out of slumber, he saw faces and places
but he kept coming back to the man in the
locker room, how unusual it had been that
he retained his sunglasses as he stood at
the end of their aisle.
At the time he had not cared or
paid much attention to it. Some students
just wore their glasses all the time,
perhaps his were the type that changed and
he was waiting for them to clear. He
wished that he had paid closer attention to
him. In his mind he could see him
observing the conversation he was having
with his friend, he remembered movement
and he sat behind him and opened a
locker. Seymour had not turned and
looked at the man, but he noted as he left
for the showers that the man was reading,
his backpack in the open locker and his
shoes on the floor. It seemed odd to him
now. Why had he not undressed and
changed, what was he waiting for? Then it
struck him; he was waiting for the locker
to be unattended so he could plant the gun.
Why had he not realized that a day before?
“Deputy, Deputy Breland, I need
to speak with Sheriff Lupo right away.
I’ve remembered something!” he said,
both hands on the bars speaking excitedly.
* * *
Noon rolled around and still
nobody arrived from the bank, Lillian’s
patience was wearing thin and the anger
she’d felt on Monday was making a repeat
appearance. She picked up the phone and
dialed the bank, asking to speak with the
manager. As she waited, listening to the
annoying audio commercial and then the
elevator music for more than two minutes,
a distinct rap brought her attention to the
front door.
She hollered from the kitchen,
“I’m on the phone, if you’re a reporter get
lost! I’m not making any statements.”
“Mrs. Wood, it’s Marc from the
bank. I think you are expecting me.”
Lillian dropped the phone onto the
mount and hurriedly went to the door,
greeting the young man and putting her
best foot forward.
“Thank you for coming, I’ve been
anxiously waiting for you this morning.
It’s very important that I get this taken care
of so I can get my son home.”
“I understand and I’ll work as fast
as I’m able but be aware these kinds of
things take time. After all it’s a lot of
money we’re talking about,” the preppy
young man said.
“Oh, I know, I’m just anxious.
What do I need to do?”
“Nothing really, I’ll just take a
look at the house and the property. I’ve
already looked over the legal description;
the title and I know the size of your farm.
It’s going to be close.”
“Close? I can’t tell you how
important it is that I get that money. You’ll
get it all back and with interest, my boy’s
not guilty and he’s not going to run.”
“I’m sure Mrs. Wood, but we at
the bank need to be careful, you
understand.”
She did not understand, she just
wanted this pencil pusher to clear the way
for her to get her son out of the county jail.
“Well, if you need anything I’ll be
in the kitchen.”
“Oh, I’m sure I’ll find everything. I
won’t bother you when I leave but you
should get a call later this afternoon from
our manager, thanks.”
* * *
Blanche had not seen Marcus all
morning and wondered where he was
keeping himself. Mrs. Anderson had
cruised through the foyer multiple times,
just checking up on things. She stopped by
earlier and complimented Blanche on her
attire and thanked her for keeping her
‘headlights’ under wraps. The young
librarian had a difficult time focusing on
her job, she’d not even looked in her
organized boxes and she kept thinking
back to the night on the hillside. The
pleasant thoughts were always pushed
aside by the vision of Jasper squirming
about in his own blood, calling for help,
then the sight of Seymour standing behind
bars, dressed in orange and the tears in his
eyes. She was so torn and confused, but
her heart spoke to her, giving her hope and
assurance that all would be well.
At 1:00 p.m. she sat at the main
desk eating the banana she’d brought and
finally saw Mr. Marcus waltz through the
front doors. He carried a ladder and his
tool belt slung low around his waist.
“What are you doing? I thought
everything was fixed and ready for the
inspection?” Blanche asked, looking to
see if Ester was within earshot.
“I thought so too, but remember the
emergency door upstairs?”
“Yeah, what about it?”
“The part still hasn’t come and
Mrs. Anderson wants me to take another
look at it, see if there's something I can do
to get us by the inspection. I already told
her if there was something I could have
done I would have already, but she’s
insisting, so here I am,” he said shrugging
his shoulders under the weight of the
aluminum ladder.
“I see. What should we do if they
show up while you’re up there?”
“I hadn’t thought of that, you’ll just
have to come give me a heads up and I’ll
get out of here.”
“Sounds good, I’ll just come pull
the ladder out from underneath you and
you can dangle there as the alarm. That
should get us past the inspection, don’t
you think?” she joked.
“Very funny. How’s our boy
doing? You doing okay?” he genuinely
asked.
“I’m okay, didn’t sleep much, but I
can’t imagine what kind of a night
Seymour must have had. His mom is
working to get the bail money today so he
can go home.”
“Wish there was more we could
do,” he said.
“Me too,” she said, waving as he
made his way up the stairs, being careful
not to mar the handrails.
Fifteen minutes later the doors
opened again and a mother with three
small children entered, followed by a man
that she recognized but could not place.
He strode directly toward her, smiling as
if they knew one another. She desperately
tried to draw a name from her memory but
could not.
“Hello Blanche, how are you
today?” he said, extending his hand and
shaking hers with vigor.
“I’m good and you?”
“I’m good, thanks for asking. Sorry
I’ve not been able to get back here since
we talked last week,” Lester said a bit
annoyed. Looking into the woman’s eyes
he could tell she was drawing a blank.
“Oh, that’s okay, I’ve been busy
with my library stuff,” Blanche said,
trying to give herself the time she needed
to remember his name.
“Yeah, me too, been real busy
getting ready for a big event tomorrow
night. Looks like I’ll be moving away
from Valdosta. Thinking maybe of
relocating to California, got to convince
my girl between now and then to come
with me,” he said, teasing the woman in
his own way.
“I’m sure you’ll be able to, seems
like you’re the convincing type,” she said,
still searching.
“That’s for sure; I suspect she’ll
come around to my way of thinking.”
He was having fun watching her
try to remember his previous visit but the
fact that she could not was also causing a
seething storm to grow inside him. He
looked around to see who else was
working. She appeared to be alone.
“You working on your own today?
Must be hard to keep up when you’re the
only one running the place,” he said,
fishing for information.
“No, everybody is here just off
doing other things.” Why could she not
remember
his
name?
She
vaguely
remembered talking to him and if she
didn’t have Seymour at the forefront of her
mind she probably could recall who he
was.
“Do you remember the books you
helped me find last week?” he prompted.
“Ah, was it travel related?” she
said, hoping he would throw her a bone.
“Mmmm nope, I’m surprised you
don’t recall, you said you didn’t
remember the last time someone asked for
that topic.”
Suddenly her mind was clear.
“Voodoo, right?” she said, knowing she
was correct.
He was pleased to see that her
memory had been jogged and she
remembered the visit.
“So Rob, what brings you back to
the library this afternoon?” she said, so
pleased that she had finally remembered.
“You mean other than you?” he
said.
She could tell that he was dead
serious and it concerned her. “Don’t tease
me, what would your girl say? Really,
what can I do for you today?”
“Okay, you called me on it. I just
wanted to do a bit more reading and I was
interested in looking up some stuff on
violent crimes. This recent crime wave
has got me curious and I had a few
minutes today, so here I am,” he said,
smiling and trying to put her at ease.
“Well, I can certainly help you
with that. Very popular lately, can’t seem
to keep them on the shelf. They’re up and
….”
He cut her off. “I know where they
are, but thanks, I’ll find them just fine.”
“Okay Rob, it was good seeing
you again. Let us know how we can help
you further. Good luck convincing that
girlfriend to go with you.”
“I really don’t think she’ll have a
choice when it comes right down to it,” he
said, trying to hide the malevolent intent in
his voice.
She watched him walk up the
stairs to the second floor. She thought of
his words and the strange conversation
she’d just had.
“Why was it that the weirdo’s
always seem to come her way, glad this
one’s moving to California,” she thought,
and in her next brief moment she realized
how fortunate she was to have a man like
Seymour in her life.
Lester’s anger peaked as he
reached the second floor. How could she
not have remembered who he was! He
thought there was a spark, a connection
that she had seen as well as he. It was the
influence of Jasper and Seymour but that
wouldn’t last for long. After tomorrow,
they’d be past history and she’d learn to
love him the way Virginia May had, when
they first united their souls. They’d be one
and he knew it was only a matter of time.
An older guy stood on a ladder
near the emergency door. He was afraid of
that. Good thing he decided to make this
impromptu visit. He watched the worker
for a moment before he approached him.
“Do you need some help?” Lester
asked.
Marcus looked down from his
perch on the ladder, a small electronic
device in his hand, “No thanks, think I’ve
got it.”
“What you working on there?” the
curious patron asked.
“Oh, the stupid alarm on this door
is broken and we’ve got to have it fixed
by today or my butts in a sling.”
“How so?”
“We have an inspection this
afternoon and this door is supposed to set
off an alarm when opened. Somebody
messed with it last week and it won’t
work, so here I am. Got one on order but
won’t be here ‘til Friday.”
Lester was relieved to hear it,
“Think you can fix it?”
“Nope, just trying to appease the
director. Known my butt was going to be
in trouble for a couple days but nothing I
can do about it.”
“That’s too bad, wish I could help
but
don’t
know
anything
about
electronics,” he lied.
The stranger turned and walked to
the shelves housing the true crime, took
down a book and sat at a table and read
waiting for the custodian to finish his
work. A quarter of an hour passed before