Authors: Dennis Larsen
working to bring things back into
perspective. His head ached and he could
see dried blood on his hands and the area
where his head had lain. He tried to
recreate what had happened but could not
remember the events, just the sudden
incredible pain not once, but twice, and
then nothing. He tried to stand up but
wobbled, crashed into a bookshelf that
gave way and almost tipped over before it
supported his weight. He brought his hand
to his head, he could feel his scalp matted
with blood but his eyes were coming
around and the fuzziness in his brain was
clearing.
“Blanche. Where is Blanche?” he
said, looking at his watch, almost
midnight.
He looked around and realized he
was alone. The library lights were still on
but no patrons. He went to the lower floor
and found the same thing. Seymour looked
for Blanche’s things and found her purse
behind the counter on the shelf where she
always left it. It became readily apparent
to Seymour, even in his confused state,
that whoever had busted his skull had
taken his love.
“9-1-1, what is the nature of your
emergency?” the operator at the Valdosta
Police Station asked.
“My
girlfriend’s
gone,
somebody’s taken her!”
“Where are you and who has taken
her?”
“I’m at the library but they’re
gone! He’s taken her!” he said, still having
trouble filtering information through his
aching head.
“Sir, it’s midnight, I suspect the
library has been closed for hours. You’re
not making much sense. Who is missing?
Can you give me a name?”
“Yeah, Blanche, her name is
Blanche. I don’t know where he’s taken
her.”
“Last name, can you give me a last
name?”
He was having a difficult time
staying focused and the pain was ebbing
and returning making it hard to think
clearly. Seymour searched but could not
pull Blanche’s last name from his
memory. He could see it plainly but could
not speak it.
“Excuse me sir, is this a joke or
something? This is an emergency service
and you can be arrested for misusing it,”
she warned.
“No, I know. She is missing I just
can’t think of her name. It’s Blanche D.
D.... or something like that, I got hit on the
head and I can’t remember. You’ve got to
believe me!”
“Okay, so your girlfriend is
Blanche DD and you can’t remember it
cause you got hit on the head, is that
right?”
“Yes exactly.”
“K, I’ll play along, and your
name?” she asked.
“Seymour, ah ah Wood,” he finally
got out.
“What did I tell you?” she said
authoritatively. “This is not a service for
pranksters. My heavens, Seymour Wood
and your girlfriend is Blanche Double D?
Couldn’t you be a little more creative than
that?”
“I’m telling the truth, my head is
killing me, I’m just not thinking clearly.
Call the Sheriff; he’ll vouch for me.
You’ve got to send help, there’s no one
else I can call!” he said, emphasizing his
need for help.
The operator knew that Seymour
Wood had been arrested earlier in the
week and, was indeed, sitting in the
county lockup as they spoke. She would
confirm that with the Sheriff’s Office
when she had time and she wrote a quick
reminder on a sticky note and sat it aside.
“Oh, I’ll confirm it alright but I’ll
caution you again, this is not a line for fun
and games.”
The line suddenly went dead when
the dispatcher got tired of the caller’s
antics and hung up.
“Crap, now what do I do?” he
questioned himself. “Look for clues.”
The things he’d learned in his
hours in classes were pulled involuntarily
from his memory. His strength somewhat
rejuvenated he returned to the second
floor and the blood spot where he had
lain. He opened the nearby emergency
door, noted that the alarm did not sound,
and looked to the ground. Nothing there
but his old truck parked in the lot and no
Blanche to be seen. He turned his attention
back to the library and the items on the
floor. A cane with blood and hair on it, as
well as a spectacle case, rested on the
ground near where he woke up. He
followed a trail of blood from the spot
near the exit, across the floor that led him
to the table where he had been shelving
books. His memory was coming back, he
remembered conversing with the vet, put
some books away, then ‘crack’, the first
blow to his head. He had turned to see his
attacker, the veteran directly in front of
him before ‘crack’, the second blow to his
head and lights out. The Gulf War Vet,
who was he and how could he find him?
The authorities would obviously be no
help tonight. He would find her on his
own. If it was the last thing he did, he
would find Blanche and rescue her from
the cane wielding maniac!
Seymour picked up the wooden
cane and inspected it closely. It appeared
to have been hand carved from a piece of
natural wood, the grain ran the length of
the medical device, alternating dark and
light bands of wood fibers. There were no
plaques or identifying marks, it would be
no help. His own blood and head had
marred the workmanship, along with a
crack in the material near the impact point.
"Hit me pretty damn hard, jerk!"
Seymour said.
He laid the cane aside being
careful not to handle it too much in case
some fingerprints could be raised from it
later, if needed. He next picked up the
spectacle case, opened it and inspected
the contents. The glasses were single
vision, of the convex variety, meaning the
lenses were thicker in the middle and
thinner towards the edge. The frame itself
appeared to be older with some wear
marks on the metal and the lenses slightly
scratched. He remembered seeing the
frame on the disguised veteran earlier in
the night. Seymour put the glasses back in
the clamshell style case and slipped it into
his pocket but just as he did something
caught his eye.
He opened the case again and in
very faint gold lettering on the blue lining
of the case there was some text. He
strained to see the print but could not
make it out completely, only a letter here
and there but nothing that made any sense.
Seymour moved to where the lighting was
brighter and tipped the case back and forth
but could still not read the emblem. It
occurred to him that the glasses inside the
case would possibly help, convex lenses
should magnify the image, he remembered
from his high school science course. The
glasses, once on his nose, caused
everything across the library to blur and
distort, but when he looked back to the
case the smallest details were brought into
view. The very fibers of the backing were
visible and the gold that clung to them.
Straining to make it out he managed to
identify the words Dr. D Camp, and under
that, Optometrist. An address was listed
below, in much smaller print, that was
completely faded away and he could not
read it.
His mind raced. What could he do
with the information he'd gleaned from the
only items available? The phone book
was down under the counter next to
Blanche's purse. He flipped to the yellow
pages and found a listing for a Dr. D.
Camp located just a few blocks from the
library but the home address was not
shown, however, he was able to find a
local listing in the white pages. Seymour
ripped the page from the book, galloped
up the stairs and exited the library the
same way Blanche and Lester had a few
hours before, sliding down the escape
chute to the parking lot below.
The college student was familiar
with the area where Dr. Camp lived, as it
bordered the university and he'd passed
the street often on the way to school. The
old truck roared to life and he slammed
through the gears, ignoring the lights and
signs, hoping that a cop would show up to
give him a hand, but as was usually the
case, never one around when you really
needed one. He pulled up to the
immaculate home, not quite sure what he
would do but knew he had to try
something. With the case in his hand he
approached the door of the two-story
home. A new Lexus was parked in the
driveway and the yard was well
maintained with mature trees and beautiful
rose bushes lining the walk from the curb
to the front door.
Seymour stood at the front door,
case in hand, and knocked. He waited, but
his patience was non-existent so he
rapped and kept knocking until a
disheveled man swung the door open and
grabbed the young man by the collar,
shaking him violently.
"What do you think you're doing,
you dipstick? Are you insane?" the
agitated doctor said.
Seymour stared into the eyes of a
man pulled from his bed in the middle of
the night, bloodshot, and full of anger. Dr.
Camp stood a few inches taller than
Seymour even in his bare feet. His blonde
hair was graying at the temples but
retained its youthful color even though he
was well into his fifties. He wore a
housecoat, which he had failed to do up,
his undershirt and boxers visible, the
undershirt pulled tight from too many
dinners out and nights snacking on peanuts
and M&M's in front of the television. The
mature man shook the younger and once
convinced he'd shaken some sense into
him allowed Seymour to answer his
question.
"I'm Seymour Wood and I need
your help."
"Are you a moron? Do you know
what time it is?"
"I'm sorry, but my girlfriend has
been taken by a madman and all I could
find that might lead me to her is this case
of yours."
Somewhat
calmed
from
his
original disposition the doctor told
Seymour to show up at the office first
thing in the morning and he'd be happy to
help him with his problem, but for now he
better be on his way before he called the
police. He released the younger man and
slammed the door in his face before
Seymour could say anything more.
Undeterred and with blood crusted
to his face and hands, Seymour returned to
the truck, pulled the Sharps rifle from
behind the seat, leaned through the
passenger window and took a cartridge
from the glove box and loaded the
weapon. The long, powerful shell slid into
the chamber with a solid sheathing of the
brass and a finality that came when the
chamber was locked closed. Seymour
made the walk back to the door and
rapped loudly again. The doctor answered
more quickly this time but was startled to
see the young man standing with a large
bored rifle pointed at his chest.
"Hate to do this to you but you've
really left me no choice. You're coming
with me, now!"
"But I'm not even dressed."
"There's no time, I need you to
look up a prescription on these glasses
and tell me whom they belong to. Is that
possible?" Seymour asked.
"You sure you want to do this son,
you're going to be in a world of trouble
come tomorrow morning."
"I'm sure."
"Then yes, I can figure out whose
glasses those are but it'll take some time.
Let me get my pants and keys but I’d be a
lot more inclined to help if you’d put the
gun away."
"You promise you'll give me an
hour before you call the cops?" he said,
the gun still pointed at his chest.