Authors: Dennis Larsen
woman, returned the camera and knife to
their places and slipped out the door,
carefully closing and latching it behind
him.
Lester made it back to his van in
the early morning hours and climbed
behind the wheel for the drive home. The
packet he was anticipating should be there
and he could make the final plans for his
departure the following day. He removed
the key from his front pocket and inserted
it into the ignition, starting the car with the
help of some pressure on the accelerator.
He grasped the wheel with both hands,
expecting to see both covered with a
glove, but only the right was thusly
encased. His mind dashed back through
the last few minutes and remembered that
he had stuck the glove in his front pocket
when he had felt Blanche’s breath. He
reached down to secure the glove and put
it with the other in the van. It was gone!
Lester scrambled from the idling van and
looked on the ground but it was nowhere
in sight. Again he ran his hands through his
pockets, front and back, it was definitely
gone.
Now sitting safely in his own
drive, he continued to berate himself for
being so careless, however, he would
soon be gone and the glove would provide
the authorities with only the smallest of
advantages. Exhausted and needing to get
to bed, he made the walk back to the
distressed mailbox one last time. His
steps were plodding, fatigue setting in, but
he wanted to see if the parcel was there.
He opened the latch as he had done now
for the third time in as many weeks and
saw the familiar manila envelope inside.
He withdrew it but it was heavier than he
had expected.
Inside the house, with the kitchen
light on, he opened the envelope and
inspected the contents. A woman’s picture
slid out first, followed by a newly cut key.
The woman was attractive, a bit heavy set
perhaps but pretty features. He tipped the
enclosure higher and a stack of worn
twenties landed on the table with a mild
thud.
“That’s nice!” he said.
Lastly a stack of documents with a
cover letter slid from the envelope, an
explanation given just as Jeremy had given
it to Iggy. The ‘outing’ must take place
tonight at 8:00 p.m., he would have the
house to himself for a few hours to tear it
apart. The remaining information was
similar to that previously provided,
address, general information about the
owner, the layout of the home and a few
odds and ends. Sounded easy enough, the
money was a bonus for a job well done.
“At
least
they
appreciate
excellence when they see it,” he again
said aloud.
Lester Cummings was about to
retire and he was tired but exhilarated
knowing that the end of one life was in
sight and the beginning of another within
his reach.
He spoke to the picture of the
woman, “Well, Ms. Beverly Davis, looks
like you’re my ticket to paradise.”
* * *
Thursday morning Sheriff Angelo
Lupo sat in his office, facing three of his
subordinates,
looking
for
answers.
Deputies Guest and Breland sat with their
hats in their hands, Ricky Dean held a
ream of documents on his lap using them
as a platform for his notebook computer,
which he had on and opened. The group
had been in conference for over an hour,
bringing the Sheriff up to date on the
progress with The Stalker case. The
Sheriff did not look happy.
“I get the feeling people, that once
Mr. Wood was taken into custody we let
our guard down. Granted there have been
no further break-ins since his arrest but my
gut tells me we’ve got the wrong guy
sitting back there,” he said, motioning to
the cell area.
Ricky Dean nodded his head in
agreement. He had been the hero last week
but lately his department had been under
the gun to provide something that would
break the case open. That lingering bit of
information had yet to be uncovered. For
the past hour he had gone over the reasons
why it was highly unlikely that Seymour
was The Stalker but could not rule him out
as the shooter in the Jackson shooting.
“Okay Ricky, let me run this back
and you tell me if I’ve got it,” the Sheriff
said. “The fibers collected at the Wood
residence do not match any of the fiber
evidence you’ve collected at any of the
crime scenes, and the castings made of
Seymour’s foot do not match the Nike’s
we’ve processed at the scenes either.
Have I got it right so far?”
“Yup, sure ‘nough Sheriff,” Ricky
agreed. “His feet are at least two shoe
sizes bigger.”
“So what you are saying, and
listen up you two,” he said, looking at his
deputies. “There’s no way, based on the
evidence alone, that Seymour Wood can
be The Stalker!” again Ricky expressed
his agreement.
“Then tell me you three, how did
Seymour wind up with a gun stolen from
our third crime scene and used in a
shooting of a black man on the other side
of town. I’m inclined to believe every
word that has come out of Mr. Woods’s
mouth. There doesn’t seem to me to be any
plausible explanation other than he’s
being set-up. I want to know who and why
and I want to know it yesterday! You got
me,” he said, his voice rising with each
syllable. “Where do we stand with our
other leads?”
Deputy Breland spoke up first.
“I’ve been able to get to 80% of the
witnesses at the diner and they have each
ruled out Seymour’s glasses and conclude
that it’s one of the two wire frames with
the tear drop style lenses. One of the
witnesses pegged the Ray Bans right
away, said she used to work in an optical
store and recognized the style. She was
apologetic that she didn’t bring that to our
attention before but didn’t think she
needed to be that specific. I’ll get to the
remaining witnesses this morning. The
Delaney woman also ruled out Seymour’s
before I let her speak to him.”
“Good Breland, I’m inclined to
believe our shooter is wearing the Ray
Ban sunglasses. I want you to get a hold of
the distributor and find out which shops
sell them and if they carry that specific
style. You’d also said that Mrs. Wood
was able to come up with the bail money,
is that right?”
“Yeah, Blanche Delaney told me
that last night when she dropped by,”
Breland confirmed.
“I can’t help but think that the
Delaney woman is involved in this
somehow.
Have
we
explored
old
boyfriends, jilted lovers, anybody that
may have a thing for her?”
It was Natalie’s turn to take a run
with the ball. “Sheriff, I went over her
past pretty carefully with her. She’s only
ever been in one serious relationship. He
turned out to be gay and she left him in
Arizona. I personally don’t think it’s
related. Since she’s been here she’s had
no flings or one night stands. A pretty
conservative woman that does her job and
stays to herself. Isn’t into the bar scene,
stays at Caroline’s Bed and Breakfast and
doesn’t get out much. She randomly met
Jasper and has a friendship but nothing
sexual, and with Seymour there is a
budding romance but they are not involved
sexually either. I tried to get her to identify
anyone that has struck her as strange but
she didn’t come up with anybody, at least
when I talked with her last.”
“How about the students from the
school, did you get over there this
morning?”
“I did, that’s where I was just
before we started this meeting. I found the
students from the racquetball class and
nobody remembered anything about a man
in sunglasses and baseball hat, except for
a couple of girls that said they spoke to a
man matching that description at the end of
their match on Monday morning. And get
this, he was asking where he could find
Seymour Wood.”
“Excellent. Were they able to
expand on the description we have to
date?” Ricky interjected.
“I think so, but they have agreed to
come in this afternoon and have a sketch
done with our artist,” Guest explained.
“Now
we’re
finally
getting
somewhere, those two girls have probably
got the best chance to identify him. Have
them go through the photo listing of known
burglars,” the Sheriff instructed.
The three wrote down notes
making sure that they didn’t miss anything
they
were
directed
to
do.
The
investigation was taking a sudden left turn,
just after they thought they had it solved
with the arrest of Mr. Wood. Apparently
he would be walking out on bail for now
but maybe for good based on the
discussion of the morning.
“You got anything else Guest?” the
Sheriff asked.
“I’ve got an appointment with that
couple from the farm community I spoke
with the other day that phoned back with
some information. It’s been difficult to
nail him down but his wife has promised
they will be home this afternoon and I can
go and get a statement. I’ll let you know
what I find out, it has something to do with
the motorcycle.”
“That sounds fine, what else have
you got to work on?” Lupo asked,
dropping his hand to scratch Otis behind
the ears.
“Remember the guy I talked with
you about before we all thought Seymour
was our man? His name is Lester
Cummings.”
“Yes, have you done any follow-
up?” Sheriff Lupo said leaning across his
desk to write down a note.
“I did but didn’t come up with
much. He has no priors, not even a parking
ticket. Clean as a whistle, almost too
clean. One thing of interest, the van is
registered in his name and is legit, but he
also has a motorcycle registered in his
name, color identified as yellow and I’m
sure, I could swear it, that I asked him
about a motorcycle and he denied having
one. But I can’t be sure, I didn’t write it
down. Was just before I got called back to
the station.”
“Okay, that’s a good start. I like
this guy as a possible suspect, let’s follow
your hunch and get a warrant. Get the ball
rolling before you head out for that
interview but I want you to present the
documentation we need to the judge
before the end of the day. I want to be able
to surprise him first thing tomorrow
morning with a raid. Is that understood?
Breland, Ricky, you two help her as she
needs ya.”
The three looked back and forth
between them and assured the others that
they would be on call to assist as needed
and able.
“If you can’t think of anything else,
I’m going to go home for a few minutes,
catch a few Z’s, shower, eat something
other than a Twinkie and then I’ll be back.
If you need me patch it through Arlene,”
the large man declared.
* * *
Just before noon a determined
Mrs. Lillian Wood, accompanied by Ms.
Blanche Delaney and their driver, Mr.
Marcus, entered the foyer area of the
Sheriff’s office. A notice and receipt in
hand from the Lowndes County Court
instructing the Sheriff’s Department to
release Seymour into the care of his
mother. The reunion was sweet, Seymour
more than happy to be out of the jail
issued coveralls and back in his jeans.
The foursome was on their way out the