Authors: Dennis Larsen
"Do I have a choice?"
"No, I'm afraid you don't."
"That's what I thought, I'll get my
keys."
Minutes later the doctor returned,
the robe gone and his pants on, Seymour
slid the rifle behind the seat and started
the old pickup.
"Hang on Blanche, I'm coming, just
hang on a little longer," he thought, as they
raced through the streets of Valdosta
headed to Dr. Camp's Optometric office.
* * *
A
constant,
droning
hum,
originating somewhere underneath her,
was all that Blanche could make out
through the fog that was her welcome back
to reality. Her shoulders and knees ached;
laying on her side the realization that her
wrists and ankles were bound brought her
cognition to full alert. Waves of nausea
swept over her. She closed her eyes and
tried to focus on what had happened.
Seymour...Seymour lying on the floor, his
head bleeding; a man, 'Rob', no, the War
Vet wrapping her in his arms was her last
memory. What had happened? Where was
she! The taste of duct tape did nothing to
reduce her need to vomit. Sheer will alone
prevented bile and her dinner from
spewing from her nostrils.
The sound of the tires spinning and
the rocking of the van provided a false
sense of security to the wounded Stalker.
His perforated side continued to ooze
blood from the smaller entrance wound as
well as the wider exit hole. The gauze,
that had previously helped to staunch the
trickle of blood, was saturated, the
metallic smell of blood mixed with
adrenalin driven sweat filled the van.
Although light headed, Lester was
euphoric. He'd done it! There had been
obstacles but he'd managed to overcome
them all, with a wonderful package
wrapped up in the back, just waiting for
him to unwrap it.
"Mmph, mmph!" Blanche grunted
through the tape that pressed her lips
firmly against her perfectly straight teeth.
She could see the dark interior of the van,
no upholstery, just the metal sidewalls and
cold floor. A pair of doors blocked her
escape as she contemplated her options.
Her mind raced through the extensive
volume of romance thrillers that made up
her cerebral library. Surely, somewhere
she'd seen a heroin escape from a similar
predicament. The thought of Seymour
lying in a pool of blood swirled in her
mind causing her to retch, a small acidic
trail of yellow liquid ran from her nose
and over the silver duct tape.
"You awake back there?" The
Stalker asked.
Blanche suddenly heard the voice
of her assailant coming from the front seat.
She held her breath and prayed that it
would just go away. The stinging in her
nose caused her eyes to water as she
fought
back
the
tears
and
the
overwhelming need to breakdown.
"Play dead! Be quiet and pretend
to be asleep," she told herself. "Seymour
will come. Seymour will come! He has to!
"I know you're awake, Blanche."
There was silence as he waited for a reply
from the frightened librarian. "Don't be
afraid. This is going to be great, believe
me. This is just the beginning of something
meaningful for both of us. I know you feel
it the same way I do. I've seen it in your
eyes. You need me as much as I need
you." Again he waited for some
recognition from the cargo space of the
van.
The foreboding reality of her
situation finally hit home and she sobbed
through the gag, tears spilling down her
face and liquid running from her nose.
"Believe me Blanche, this is going
to go much better for you if you just give
yourself to me, completely and without
hesitation. I don't see this playing out well
for you if you don't."
"What is he talking about? What
does he mean?" she thought, between the
sobs and restricted intakes of air.
"I can tell you one thing, and you
better listen up, I will not be dealt the
same hand Virginia May dished out. You
hear me? Do you hear me!" he hissed
through clenched teeth, as the pain in his
side shot up and into his brain.
"Virginia May? What the hell was
he talking about? I've got to get away and
now!"
She looked around, everything
appearing distorted, as the tears deflected
the light entering her crystal blue eyes.
The door handle was not beyond her reach
as she lay on her back. Quietly she raised
both feet and attempted to pull the handle
downward, opening the way to her
escape. Her lack of coordination, a
combination of the ether and fear,
prevented her from accomplishing the
task. However, the band that held her
ankles together looped around the door
handle, tying her up like a prized halibut
in a fishing souvenir photo. Panic set in!
She thrashed about, just like the catch
would, prior to getting pulled into the boat
and its' death.
The van suddenly slowed and
made a deliberate left turn onto what must
have been a dirt road. The sound was
much different now. The vehicle jostled
and pitched, moving down the uneven
surface, slamming her shoulder blades
against the metallic floor of what she
thought would be her coffin. She continued
desperately to free herself from the handle
that held her captive but to no avail.
Momentarily the rocking and bumping of
the trip came to a crawl and she sensed
the van making a right and coming to a
stop. The librarian froze, overcome with
anxiety and horror. The driver exited the
cab, slamming the door behind him, an
audible grunt escaping his lips.
A second later the rear doors of
the van were yanked open, pulling
Blanche across the last few feet of the van
floor and onto her neck and head, still
suspended by her feet from the door
handle.
"Now ain't that a pretty picture,"
Lester said. "If we weren't in such a hurry,
I'd snap off a couple just as a little
reminder for ya."
Lester reached into the back of the
van, retrieved the rag and bottle of ether.
He liberally soaked the rag again before
kneeling down to the side of the thrashing
woman, cradled her head against his shin
and forced the rag over her nose. She
drifted off to slumber-land but not before
a torrent of vomit rushed from her nostrils,
covering her captor's shoe.
* * *
Seymour
talked
and
the
optometrist listened as they steered their
way through the quiet streets, again
ignoring all traffic laws. By the time they
got to the office Dr. Camp was much more
sympathetic to the young man’s cause and
was anxious to see what could be done.
The office was configured into a small
strip mall between a women’s high-end
clothing boutique and an expensive
children’s store. A large sign illuminated
the area in front where the work truck
squealed to a stop, Valdosta Eye Care in
large letters and Optometrist underneath.
The two entered the establishment after
Dr. Camp fumbled with the keys for a
moment, having a difficult time finding the
proper key. A dim light illuminated the
foyer and reception area, a bank of
switches was mounted on the wall behind
the desk. The doctor moved to the wall
and flicked two of the switches, bringing
the entire front half of the office into the
light.
“Give me the glasses, Seymour,”
he said.
A visibly anxious Seymour handed
over the case and followed the older man
into an area surrounded on all walls with
spectacle display cases. Hundreds of
bright, shiny new frames with blank lenses
graced the walls. A small table with a
chair on either side sat in the center of the
room, a black device rested on the table
that looked like a microscope. Dr. Camp
sat at the desk and placed the glasses in
the middle of the device and locked them
in place with a spring-hinged clamp.
“What are you doing?” Seymour
asked.
“This thing is a lensometer, I’ll be
able to get a reading off the glasses and
determine the prescription with it, then we
can input that into the computer system and
see if we get a match.”
With each hand on a dial he
ratcheted them back and forth until he was
satisfied that he had the correct reading.
He pulled his head away, adjusted his
own glasses so he could read the hash
marks on the dials, and then wrote down a
series of numbers on a pad next to the
lensometer, +4.25-1.25x170. The glasses
were shifted over and the focusing conical
was brought down on the other lens and
the procedure was repeated, +3.75-
0.75x010. He ripped the paper free and
moved to the front desk with Seymour in
tow.
Sitting at the desk in front of the
main computer, Dr. Camp pressed the
spacebar and waited for it to come to life.
A password was required, which he
quickly entered, again waited a moment
before finding the search field in the
database
program
and
entered
the
prescription generated from the device
and pressed enter.
“This is a long shot, son,” he
explained. “We haven’t used these old
cases, like what you’ve got here, for quite
a few years. When we got the computers
back in 2000 after Y2K, we entered most
of the old patient files but didn’t get them
all. If we’re lucky the guy you’re looking
for was one of the old files that got
inputted.”
The two listened as the whir of the
hard drive searched through thousands of
patient files looking for an exact match to
the numbers entered. In a matter of minutes
the sound subsided and the monitor
presented a pair of names up on the
screen. Seymour stepped around the desk
to get a better look, along with the doctor.
“Well, let’s see what we’ve got.
The frame is a mans and I’m pretty sure
it’s a ‘reading only’ Rx but I could be
wrong.” He looked back at the bloodied
student and shook his head. “Isn’t going to
be either one of these, both women. Let’s
try expanding the search parameters and
see what that gives us.”
Seymour paced, wringing his
hands, running scenarios through his head
of what the fiend was doing with Blanche.
They were not encouraging. The doctor
entered the numbers again but expanded
the parameters slightly to bring more
suspects into the queue. Again the hard
drive spun and they waited for the list to
be generated. This time a longer list and
some men’s names appeared on the screen
before them. Dr. Camp pressed the print
key on the keyboard as the printer hummed
to life and a single sheet, with ten names
on it, dropped in the tray beside them. The
two men perused the list, pointing at
names to be scratched and lined through.
The result of the exercise left three names:
Archibald Alexander
Spencer Cummings
Ronald Philips
Seymour was disappointed that he
did not see the name ‘Rob’ in the list;
apparently he was a thief, a kidnapper and
a liar. The optometrist typed the first name
into the database program that streamlined
their office and looked at the results. They
were indeed reading glasses. Archibald
was 54 years of age and lived in Valdosta.
“Can’t be him, the guy that took
Blanche looks to be in his thirties. This
guy is too old.”
“Okay, let’s look at the next one.”
He pulled up Spencer and a note flashed
in the header next to his name -