Authors: Dennis Larsen
for your patience, we have a winner. Join
me in awarding the title of Mr. Muscle to
Jasper Jackson of Valdosta, Georgia. He
jumped and thrust his hand into the air
before giving the audience a few more
muscle crunching moves. Blanche and
Rufus jumped up and down, and hugged,
seemed like the natural thing to do. A
moment later Jasper jumped from the
stage, took the librarian in his arms,
picked her up, smearing her clothing with
body oil and spun her around in a
triumphant dance of celebration. She
didn’t quite know how to react but gave
him a kiss on the cheek and congratulated
the hulking giant for his win. He placed
the little woman down and picked up
Rufus in a monster bear hug and repeated
the same happy dance.
“Can’t believe I won. I really
won! Thanks so much for comin' Blanche.
You were my inspiration tonight, could
notta done it without ya cheerin' me on,”
Jasper said, trying to catch his breath.
“I don’t know how true that is, I
think the whole crowd had your back
tonight, but I’m so glad I came. It was a lot
of fun,” she sincerely responded.
“Ya sho nuff kicked der ass ta
night son,” Rufus threw in, still pumping
his fist in a celebratory fashion.
“You gonna stick around till I get
cleaned up?” the bodybuilder asked.
Blanche looked down at herself
and her now almost see through blouse,
“Under the circumstances, I think I better
get home and get these things in some cold
water before they stain.” She could tell he
was disappointed so she continued, “But,
how about we get together this weekend
for a celebration, like an ice cream
Sunday or something really unhealthy?”
His smile returned to his face.
“That would be awesome. I’d like
that a lot,” Jasper replied.
“Yup, dat sounds like fun, where
should we go?” Rufus interjected.
“I don’t think she was including
you pops,” the nearly naked man clarified.
“Sho she was, why ya think des
good lookin’ women always jus intrested
in you? I still got what it takes.” Putting
his hands on his hips, mimicking what
Jasper had done on stage, and flexed his
groin forward. “Tode ya so.”
“Listen you two, I’ll let you sort
out the details and I’m happy with one or
both of you coming, but I should run. Why
don’t you pick me up around 6:30 on
Saturday night?” She registered the day in
her head, remembering that it was now
Wednesday.
“It’s a date,” Rufus said, as Jasper
shrugged his shoulder and winked at
Blanche.
“See you then,” Jasper whispered,
without making a sound.
Blanche found the same cab she’d
taken to the event and lazily enjoyed the
ride back to her room, running the image
of Rufus doing the ‘bump and grind’
through her head, bringing a smile to her
face each time she imagined the old guy
shaking his groove thing.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
‘Rob’
left
the
Mr.
Muscle
competition angry that he’d not had a
greater
opportunity
to
photograph
Blanche. Frustration, and the pressure
from his employers to get two more
outings in before the weekend, had set him
on edge and he knew he needed some
release. A house in an estate area, with
plenty of valuables, would ease his
tension. He cautioned himself that working
out of impulse and rage could lead to
sloppy work, and the possibility of
leaving unwanted clues, or even capture.
Pulling the van to the side of a lonely
road, he took a couple of deep breaths,
closed his eyes, and focused on the job at
hand. His pulse reacted, slowing, 80 bpm
- 70 - 60 and stable, his breathing also
more shallow, more controlled, his mind
more clear, as he meditated and drew his
attention away from the librarian and saw
within his mind’s eye the house he
intended to invade.
Months ago, he had almost burgled
the home he saw now, but the owners had
come home unexpectedly, just as he was
climbing the back fence and he had
aborted the mission. It was a large brick
home, four-car garage, with at least one
Porsche, but best of all, no security
system. He’d noted the signs in the
windows and the placard displayed
prominently near the front door, indicating
that a security system was in place.
Normally, he would simply bypass such a
house but this was too perfect, too good a
score to just let it slide. Two months ago,
he’d donned a pair of coveralls, complete
with sunglasses, hat, and clipboard and
had walked the neighborhood pretending
to read the meters on the side of each
home. When he had arrived at the house in
question, he had carefully examined the
wiring leading into the home, as well as
the casement around the windows, for
signs of a security system. Nothing. He
also had managed to get a view through a
window to the entryway, no control panel,
nothing that would point to a security
system in place.
“Cheap bastard,” he’d thought.
Could afford the bogus signs but not the
actual system, he would pay for that
greedy decision.
He’d gazed into the interior of the
home,
marble
floors,
expensive
furnishings, and limited edition paintings
hanging on the walls. He could not help
but wonder what it would be like to have
such wealth and power. Soon though, he’d
have it all! The house, the car, the hot
women, finish this job and he’d be set.
His initial impulse was to drive by
the home and see if any lights were on,
however, 10:45 p.m. was really too early
to do the kind of work that needed to be
done here. He could just see the police,
going door to door, after they discovered
his crime, “Did you see any suspicious
vehicles in the area? Any that looked like
they didn’t belong?”
“Officer, there was an ugly, gray
van that slowly rolled down the street
before the break in,” some woman with
curlers in her hair and a scarf wrapped
around her head would say, standing at her
front door, dressed in a bathrobe. Not a
good idea after all.
He drove the ugly, gray van down
Bemiss Road trying to remember where
he’d seen a small church that would act as
a shield for the van. He passed several
streets that looked familiar, then as he
approached Lori Street, he could see some
floodlights to the left that he was sure
were at the church site. He pulled to a
complete stop at the light, being careful to
obey all traffic laws. Getting pulled over
tonight would be more than inconvenient.
A few blocks down on the left was a
country church. The parking lot and front
of the chapel were flooded in light, but no
cars were present. He drove past the
church to see if anyone was out walking
their dog, or any other activity, none was
evident. A mile past the church he flipped
around and returned to the chapel, pulling
to the rear of the building where it was
dark and a small shed stood. It was
probably used to store the yard care
equipment and would block the van from
the street if a patrol car were to cruise by.
He sat his backpack, full of the tools of his
trade, on the seat next to him, inspected
each pocket to make sure everything was
in its place, including the black face paint
that he would need to apply when he was
closer to the house. There was no sense
alarming someone that may see him
walking down the street.
For now he was a college student
that had missed the bus and was walking
home. Leaving the back of the church, he
cut through an empty field full of knee high
weeds and found a road that would cut
across Bemiss Road, and into the vicinity
of the target. He’d seen the couple that
lived there a few times, as he’d prepared
to rob them before. Didn’t think they’d be
any trouble if he was confronted, but as a
precaution he still had the pepper spray,
and had thrown a seven-inch hunting knife
into the bag in case his life was
threatened. The burglar knew how to use a
gun. He was quite proficient with the semi
automatic Beretta his father had bought
him on his 18th birthday, but it could get
him many more years in prison if he were
ever caught in the act and had the pistol on
him.
He lay in a ditch paralleling the
main road, waited for a lone pickup truck
to
roar
by
before
kneeling,
then
scampering across the road, in a low
crouch. The black paint, now covered his
face, and his dark clothing helped to hide
his location even though there were dim
lights from homes and streetlights not far
off. The moon was in his favor, with only
a sliver emitting light over the expanse
before him. Alternating walking hunched
over, and crawling, he found the orchard
that the homes of the upper end sub
division backed onto. The pecan trees
rustled very gently in the wind as he
moved from trunk to trunk, concealing
himself and his movements, the best he
could. The Stalker reached the back of the
home he had in mind, recognized the area
where he’d waited before, in his first
attempt. No lights were visible, including
the porch light. His watch read 11:45, still
earlier than he’d like. Some of the houses
down the row had numerous lights on
casting beams and shadows into the yards
and orchard. ‘Rob’ concluded to wait an
hour before proceeding. He needed more
of the neighbors to get shut down for the
night to reduce his risk.
The minutes sluggishly ticked off,
60 seconds at a time, providing him an
opportunity to contemplate his situation
and what he must do. “Don’t get
overconfident, don’t screw up,” he
reminded himself. The job that lay before
him had too much uncertainty; the first two
had been a breeze; keys, single women, a
set of instructions, but not this time. He
had done some prep, but that was months
ago, and there were variables he had no
control over. Something felt wrong but he
couldn’t put his finger on it. He expected
no 'gimmies' here; only luck would
provide an unlocked door or an empty
house. His employers would be pissed, if
he screwed up this early in the plot, and
they were out of an experienced ‘night
crawler’. A sudden flash of light from his
right brought all of his senses to full alert.
He slowly rotated his head in the direction
of the random light. Three houses down,
someone had turned on the back porch
light, he waited, listening, squinting his
eyes to make out any movement, and then
as quickly as it was switched on it was
extinguished.
“Must have put the dog out to
crap,” he postulated. The watch on his
wrist now read 12:39, there had been no
lights or any change in the house in front
of him. “It’s go time,” he whispered.
He crept to the fence, keeping a
low profile, lifted the backpack over the
fence and hung it from the top, dangling on
the other side. Carefully and quietly, he
overcame his first obstacle, pulled the
backpack from the fence and moved to a
black, shadowed area of the yard. He
waited and listened; his best defense now
would be his keen senses. Nothing. He
moved to the back door. No screen, but a
dead bolt. A decorative glass inset
occupied the top one third of the door; he
brought his eye as close as he could to the
glass, finding a place where the inside