Authors: Dennis Larsen
parked on the street. He left the van, being
sure to lock it, pulled a dark hoodie over
his head and placed the pistol in the right
front pocket of the jacket, a string of
firecrackers, and a lighter went into the
left. A baseball cap was tucked under the
hoodie, the brim protruding, shadowing
his face. Sunglasses hid his shifting eyes
and he walked, looking down at the
ground, with both hands holding the
concealed items. The walk to the diner
took only a minute and he tried to estimate
how long it would take to get back to the
van after the hammer dropped.
He walked past the outside of the
diner, looking in, to gauge the crowd and
the location of the couple. A dozen tables
were
scattered
about,
with
half
surrounded by youth, young families and
his obsession. The parking lot offered a
fairly good vantage point to see into the
brightly lit eatery, as he stood behind a
cement barrier, which surrounded the fire
hydrant on three sides. From his newly
found perch he could see the events of the
next 5 minutes unfold before him. He ran it
through
his
mind,
the
entry,
the
firecrackers, the panic, and finally the
shot.
Jasper carried two banana splits
across the space from the counter, to the
table, where his lovely date was anxiously
awaiting her treat. She gave him two
thumbs up as he approached and he
laughed a deep, growling laugh that made
heads turn to see where it was coming
from. They sat at a small, round table with
metal chairs, padded with red leather
seats. A jukebox thumped out a rap tune
that Blanche was not familiar with, but the
kids in the diner were singing along, and
shaking their behinds as they downed their
ice cream sundaes. No one paid much
attention to the stranger, hiding his face
with a hoodie and sunglasses, that walked
in the front door, moved through the small
crowd, away from the counter, to the
bathroom on the opposite side of the diner
from the couple with the splits.
A moment later, the same cloaked
character stepped from the bathroom,
sliding a round, metallic garbage can out
of the door with his foot, leaving it sitting
in the short hallway against the wall. A
wad of paper towel lay across the top of
the can making it difficult to see into its
contents. He moved quickly across the
diner floor, between a couple of tables,
and out the front door without making eye
contact with anyone. As far as he could
tell, no one had really noticed or cared
that he had gone in, used the bathroom,
and left.
Crouched behind the concrete in
the parking lot he waited for the fireworks
to begin. He didn’t have to wait long.
When the first ‘Black Cat’ exploded, he
had the attention of everyone in the diner
and then the panic set in as 49 more went
off in rapid succession. Bang, bang, bang!
The sound echoing in the can, shooting
shredded paper into the air. Parents
scrambled to protect their children,
people dove under chairs, and the huge
Jasper pulled Blanche by the hand, half
dragging - half carrying her from the diner.
Lester knelt along the side of the concrete,
hidden from the lighting that flooded the
other half of the lot. He brought the .38
Special up in his right hand, supporting his
arm with the left, pressing his left elbow
into his bent left leg, his right knee ground
into the pavement.
Jasper pushed the door open with
his back, his hands wrapped around
Blanche in an effort to shield her with his
massive arms. Once free of the door, he
pushed Blanche ahead in the direction of
the Datsun, and then looked back into the
diner to see if there was anyone else he
could assist.
In that instant, the gunman had a
stationary target, his back turned to him,
the light of the diner illuminating Jasper.
“Thank you God. Here you go, hero.”
He pulled the trigger only once,
one final bang to complete the evening.
The smoke from the barrel wafted into the
air, recoil from the revolver brought the
gun back a few inches before he rammed it
back into his right front pocket. He didn’t
need to stick around to see the aftermath;
he knew the bullet had reached its target.
The large man staggered, and then
dropped, a split second after the slug left
the barrel. Lester imagined him writhing
about, swimming in his own blood, as he
walked quickly, but with control back to
the waiting van.
A smile crossed his lips, which
led to a laugh, the sound of Blanche’s
screams filling the stagnant night air.
CHAPTER TWENTY THREE
In his office, 'The Wolf' sat behind
the expansive oak desk, cowboy boots
crossed at the ankles under the seat, his
chin rested snugly in his hands, elbows
firmly against the desktop for support. A
stack of files before him, the top one
opened to his scrutinizing view. Four
break-ins within the span of a couple of
weeks, each with a degree of escalation
that was without question, the work of one
man. His office had been working around
the clock, deputies forgoing their days off,
conducting interviews, even going door to
door in the rural areas trying to drum up
any possible leads. Forensics, led by
Ricky Dean, were doing their best with
the crime scenes and firing information as
they assimilated it back to the Sheriff.
The latest incident troubled Lupo.
His witness, although pepper sprayed,
was sure she had seen a gun in the
assailant’s hand.
“You don’t take a gun to a break-in
unless you’re willing to use it”, he
thought, reading through the final report
one more time.
Arlene stuck her head in the door
of his office, “Sheriff, did you even go
home last night? You’re going to kill
yourself if you don’t start eating and
getting some sleep. This office can’t run
the way it needs to it you’re in the
hospital.”
“You’re sounding more like my
wife than my secretary. I caught a few
hours on the couch, I’ll be okay,” the
stubborn man responded.
“Well, you look a mess, if you ask
me, you should at least grab a shower and
a clean shirt. Did you see anything on that
shooting over at The Dixie Diner? Not our
jurisdiction but thought you might want to
hear about it.”
“Yeah, I caught that over the
scanner, some big black guy shot, no
apparent motive and no suspects. I’ve got
enough to worry about, I’ll let the police
department take care of that one,” the
Sheriff
grumbled,
returning
his
concentration to the papers before him.
“Any possibility it’s connected to
our case?” Arlene asked.
“Not likely. Wrong part of town,
probably a drug deal gone wrong or a
payback shooting,” he responded, again
trying to get his focus back to his own
case and dismissing his secretary without
saying a word. She turned to walk away,
but he called after her, “Hey Arlene, do
me a favor and send Deputy Guest in here
when she shows up will ya?”
“Sure Sheriff, no problem.”
Officer Guest arrived twenty
minutes later, with Otis in tow, his tongue
hanging out the side of his mouth and his
tail curled up over his rear end, swinging
happily side-to-side. The big shepherd
tugged at the leash when he saw the
Sheriff.
“Come here you knucklehead.
Come here Otis,” Sheriff Lupo called,
taking the big dog between his hands and
rubbing his neck and ears. Otis responded
by extending his long tongue in an attempt
to lick the Sheriff’s face. “You being a
good boy, huh, you gonna catch the bad
guy?”
“You wanted to see me?” Guest
inquired.
“Yeah, a friend of mine that
teaches over at the University wanted me
to speak to one of her classes, but with
this investigation ongoing, I just can’t free
up any time. I’d like you to take my spot
and address the class on my behalf.”
“Me. Why me? I’m no speaker.
What would I say? I wouldn’t even know
where to begin. Why don’t you send
Breland, he likes to talk.”
“I’ve already made up my mind
and you can take Otis with you. You’ll
need to be there tomorrow morning and
tell Mrs. Wild I said hello. Arlene will
give you the particulars and don’t screw
up. I don’t care if you talk about this
stalker investigation but you know what’s
classified and what’s not. Use your head.
You’re smart. That’s why you’re going
and Breland is not,” the Sheriff instructed
his youngest recruit.
“Just use your head,” she said,
under her breath, on the way to Arlene’s
desk. “Just wonderful. Just absolutely
wonderful!”
“What was that Deputy Guest?”
Arlene asked.
“Oh, the Sheriff wants me to cover
his butt tomorrow over at the University,
some speaking assignment. You got the
location and time?”
“Sure do,” handing a slip of paper
to the young officer. “It’ll be fine. Good
looks, a way with people, eager to
please,” she said petting Otis on the head.
“And of course you’ve got some good
qualities too Natalie, so don’t sweat it.”
“You’re too kind, thanks. I guess
Otis and I will hit that section out by the
river this morning, bunch of little farms
and country homes. Thought we’d do some
more interviews and see if the folks out
that way know anybody with a bike that
matches the description Deputy Breland
gave us.”
“You be careful out there and
report in regularly, okay?”
“I got Otis here, he’ll take care of
me,” Natalie said, feeling her K-9 friend
rubbing his side along her lower thigh.
Deputy Guest, with Otis, parked
their unit just off of Knight Academy Road
in the northeast section of the county. A
number of side roads led off of this main
blacktop that accessed small acreages,
farms and country homes. Her intent was
to walk as many of these rural
subsidiaries as she could fit into the day,
interviewing the locals, hoping for a lucky
break.
With only a short time under her
belt with the Sheriff’s office, she had
learned that the work was 95% blood,
sweat and tears and 5% luck. Today she
knew that the same would hold true. Otis’
excitement showed as they started their
walk to the first hidden driveway. Natalie
knew it was bad form to let him just run,
but on these long, hot walks, with only a
few homes in a one mile stretch, she let
him off the leash so he could explore and
work his talented snout.
The young officer clicked the mic
on her shoulder and checked in with
headquarters, giving her location and
intent, confirming that she’d report in at
the end of each dirt road. Her companion
zigzagged in and out of the burrow pit on
either side of the road, his nose locked to
the ground.
“Otis come!” she commanded. No
response from the dog, but she could see
him stopped in the ditch, tail wagging.
“Otis come!” she again commanded. Otis
pounced forward into the brush and a half
dozen grouse lifted into the air, wings
flapping wildly as their bodies wobbled
through the air, landing in the same ditch a
few hundred yards down the road.”
Satisfied with the job he was
doing, Otis ran back to Natalie expecting a
treat for a job well done, there was none.
The two walked down the road, taking in