Authors: Dennis Larsen
could be viewed with the least amount of
distortion. No movement, no lights, no
people, so far so good. He sat for a
moment on the raised cement landing,
adjacent to the door, removed his newly
altered Nike’s and opened a zippered
compartment in his backpack that held the
glass cutter.
Returning to the door, he began
etching the glass in a small rectangle that
would be big enough for his hand and arm
to pass through. He ran the diamond bit
over the same spot repeatedly, until he felt
he was almost there, took a small suction
cup from his pocket and applied it to the
center of the rectangle. The pro continued
to cut, holding the suction device with his
left and etching the glass with his right. He
suddenly felt the slightest degree of give
with his left hand. He stopped cutting, and
gently, very gently, moved the suction cup
right and left, back and forth, seeing the
tiny slivers of glass give way as the
opening was created. Finally, the piece
lifted out and he sat it aside on the
concrete far enough away that he wouldn’t
step on it if he were in a hurry to get out.
He returned the cup and cutter to the
backpack but did not immediately extend
his hand into the freshly cut opening. He
waited for any indication of sound or
movement, just in case he’d been wrong
about the alarm.
Relieved that nothing happened, he
cautiously inserted his gloved hand
through the small opening until his elbow
was at the door, bent his hand down and
quietly spun the dead bolt. Once done, he
reached to the handle and unlocked it as
well.
“Obstacle two breached,” he
thought.
The thief was in. It appeared the
only light on in the entire two-story
structure was the small hood lamp over
the stove. His entry from the back door
had placed him in the kitchen, with a
sunken media room to his right. He
removed a small LED light from his
pocket and turned it onto the lowest
setting. Light filled the room, much more
than he’d expected, and he wrapped his
hand around the end of the small device to
mute the display. He held it in this fashion
as he moved throughout the lower level.
There was nothing unusual, only living
space, with no bedrooms. Before he
ventured up the stairs, he returned to the
pack sitting near the back door and
removed the pepper spray and hunting
blade, snapping the latter to his belt just in
case.
Flicking the light on again, this
time his hand already in place, he moved
to the stairs. His new socks slid quietly on
the tiled kitchen floor, the carpet on the
stairs was plush and would mask any
noise from his steps. He moved a stair at a
time, waiting a few seconds between each
step; this was painstaking work and
required the utmost patience. Finally, he
stood at the top of the staircase, a long
hallway before him, with doors on either
side, none of them were closed, but one.
He crouched low, keeping the light from
the LED showing the way, but just barely.
The first room to his right was what his
mother would have called a craft room,
pieces of fabric covered tables, with a
sewing machine and ironing board taking
up space, nothing of interest to him there.
He stepped to the other side of the
hallway, another open door, a computer
room with a large desk, leather chair and
bookshelves lining the walls.
“Possibly worth a look,” he
thought, but moved on.
Each room of the upper floor was
investigated and evaluated for possible
objects of value. Ultimately, he came to
the room he was looking for, the last room
at the end of the hallway. The door was
shut and no light could be seen underneath.
He held his ear close to the door for any
telltale signs of breathing, snoring, sex or
the like. ‘Rob’ was pleased to hear
nothing, but this brought some degree of
concern. Had he been lucky enough to hit a
night when the owners were away, or
were they expected home at any minute? A
small degree of panic set in and he looked
at his watch.
“Hold it together, stay cool, stay
cool!” Ran through his mind.
He turned off the light and placed
the small device in his pocket, took the
pepper spray in his left hand and slowly
turned the doorknob with his right. The
sound of the latch moving against the
metal of the jam made him stop and listen;
he could hear nothing, so he forged on. A
moment later the two disengaged and the
door pivoted inward, an inch, then two, as
he applied enough force to soundlessly
open the door. Again, he paused, before
entering the darkened space. Still nothing.
Making him as thin as possible he moved
through the opening. Ghostly shadows
danced on the walls as large windows
allowed moonlight into the bedroom,
slipping through angular tree branches
swaying easily in the wind. The bed
appeared to be unoccupied and no other
sign of life, with greater confidence; he
took the light in hand and turned it on.
“Yes!” he said, making a fist and
pumping it forward in a crouched position
like he’d just scored the winning goal of
the Stanley Cup Final. “Nobody here but
us would be millionaires.”
He wasted no time, knowing
exactly where most people kept their most
valuable possessions. He scoured the
room looking for gold, silver, anything
that he could sell easily. Pulling the casing
from one of the bed pillows he collected
his bounty, quite happy with what he was
finding. The woman obviously had
remarkable taste in only the finest of
jewelry, which pleased him, as he stuffed
her items into the bag. Satisfied that
everything he wanted or needed was
cleared from the bedroom, he trotted
down the hall to the office. Again, he
looked through the drawers, cupboards,
closet, until he found a .38 caliber
handgun hidden in the bottom drawer of
the desk, sitting atop a strongbox,
designed to be screwed-down to a
concrete floor, but this one was free
floating.
“Either new, or the jerk is too lazy
to take care of his shit,” ‘Rob’ thought.
“His loss is my gain.”
Unfortunately, it was locked, but
not so heavy that he couldn’t just take the
whole thing, which he did. He was
surprised that the owner had not foreseen
this. He also included the gun, tossing it in
with the other items collected from the
bedroom.
"Now to the business of scaring
the shit out of the neighborhood."
The intruder returned to the
kitchen, with his booty in tow, placed the
pillowcase on the table before stuffing the
lockbox into the backpack for later
discovery. He surveyed the kitchen
looking for two important items, a large
butcher knife and a carving fork. Finding
both, he removed a can of spray paint
from another pocket in the pack, the same
red that was used to write, ‘We’re Back’,
in the Criddle home. Then he bounded up
the stairs, two at a time, to finish his work.
In the bedroom he had previously noted a
picture of the loving couple standing at the
back of a chartered fishing vessel, a large
fish, most likely a tuna or halibut, hanging
from the rear fin and the couple smiling
broadly, standing on either side, fishing
poles in hand. Next to this picture was a
14x11” studio styled portrait of the man of
the house, and on the other side of the
fishing picture, a similar sized photo of
the wife. Taking both pictures he smashed
the frames on the side of the end table and
removed the picture of the man first. He
looked it over carefully before positioning
it above the headboard of the bed, and
drove the carving fork through his face,
embedding the tongs in the drywall. With
the man symbolically murdered, he turned
his twisted attention to the female portrait.
Positioning the picture symmetrically
above the headboard, he drove the knife a
good 6 inches through her face and into the
wall. He stood back at the end of the bed
and studied his work.
“Perfect! Time for the artwork,”
he thought. He shook the paint can,
listening to the ball bearing moving
throughout the can, mixing the paint.
Aiming the nozzle at the wall he began to
spray. Large ten-inch letters began to fill
the space on the wall between the
pictures, “DEATH TO RICH PIGS”,
again he examined his handiwork and was
pleased with the results.
A moment later he was standing at
the kitchen table collecting his thoughts
and his things, when he heard the sound of
a garage door opening. He looked toward
the front door to see headlights fill the
large windows and scan the walls moving
from right to left. Sheer panic gripped
him. No time, no time! He slung the
backpack over his shoulders, took the
pillowcase in hand, just as he heard car
doors slam. ‘Rob’ swung the back door
open, exited quickly, but took the time to
close the door behind him. He ran for his
freedom, with the pillowcase in the right
and shoes in his left. Reaching the fence
he tossed both over, sensing lights being
turned on behind him. Climbing the
obstacle was much tougher without shoes
on but he managed just as the kitchen light
came on, then the back porch light. He
found his shoes, slipped them on without
tying the laces, and at a dead run weaved
his way through the pecan trees, headed
back towards the church. He’d covered
about 50 feet when he heard the first
blood-curdling scream from the bedroom,
followed by another, and another.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Thursday morning Beverly Davis
sat at her kitchen table enjoying a cup of
her favorite coffee, she’d had another
sleepless night. The loss of her husband
eight years ago and the ongoing battle with
his stepson, Jeremy, was adding pounds
and wrinkles to the middle-aged woman.
Her Day-Timer was open before her,
nothing too pressing, needed to talk with
Blanche Delaney about a couple of condos
that just went on the market in the new
area south of the base, also needed to
check the status of the estate sale. She was
anxious to get her hands on the money
after so many years of legal battles but she
was certain the war was not over. The
coffee was just what she needed to get
going this morning. Taking another drink
she let it swirl around in her mouth before
swallowing it down.
“Wish I had a donut to dunk in
this,” she thought.
Her cell phone rang and ‘Dixie’
played, she flipped it open, “Good
mornin’, this is Bev,” in her sweetest,
what the hell do you want already this
morning, accent.
“Morning Beverly, this is Earl
Tidball, I’m calling on behalf of the Okala
Development Group.”
Her ears perked up. This was the
group that had been in negotiations in
regards to a large tract of land, that she
had the realty rights to, a few miles from
Moody Air Force Base. She was sure it
was a done deal and was waiting for the
finalization of some paperwork, title
searches and such.
“Yes, Mr. Tidball, I’m well aware
of who you are. How are you this
morning? I was hoping we might wind
things up this week and get that property
transferred to your group.” She always
tried to put a positive spin on every deal,
even if it wasn’t a firm offer yet.
“Yes, well, that’s why I’m calling.
We, or shall I say, the purchasing