A Sniper in the Tower (29 page)

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Authors: Gary M. Lavergne

Tags: #History, #United States, #General, #State & Local, #Southwest (AZ; NM; OK; TX), #True Crime, #Murder, #test

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Page 86
Johnnie Mike, Kathy, and Charlie
Whitman during Johnnie's visit to Austin. 
Austin
Police Department Files, from film left in one of
Whitman's cameras.
Whitman's friends would not have
been surprised to see him do juvenile
thingseven at the age of twenty-five. Pictured
here atop the Alamo Monument in
San Antonio. 
Austin Police Department Files,
from film left in one of Whitman's cameras.
Charlie and Kathy Whitman
posed for this picture during
their visit to the historic
Alamo in San Antonio, Texas.
Two weeks later he murdered
her as she slept. 
Austin Police
Department Files, from film left
in one of Whitman's cameras.
 
Page 87
III
Still believing that Charlie could and would be willing to influence Margaret into returning to Lake Worth, Florida, C. A. Whitman persisted in his phone calls. The last occurred on Monday, 18 June 1966. According to the elder Whitman: "I told him he was working too hard and he ought to slow down. He was trying to do the impossible, but he didn't hear me. At times Charles did get angry with me for telling him he was working too hard."
11
Charlie's friend, Larry Fuess, agreed. Larry could not understand why Charlie insisted on such heavy loads of very difficult classes, especially since he was not much of an engineer. Fuess, a gifted student, stood ready to help, especially since Charlie was enrolled in courses Fuess had already taken. But Charlie never asked for any help.
12
Clearly, he was trying to do too much. Fourteen semester hours for a summer session, in addition to a job, were more than he could handle. Why he insisted on such a heavy schedule while dealing with such turbulent personal problems can only be explained through his convoluted definitions of achievement and success: money and influence. The reality of Kathy being the major provider in their household genuinely galled Charlie.
In late July, 1966, Charlie resurrected a "poem" he had written two years earlier while in the brig at Camp Lejeune. In a neat print, in all capital letters, he wrote:
To maintain sensibility is the greatest effort required.
To slip would be so easy. It would be accomplished with
     little effort.
Yet, to maintain is necessary in order to benefit from the
     future.
Of what benefit?
Will benefit be derived from the future?
To burden others with your problemsare they problems
     is not right.
However, to carry them is akin to carrying a fused bomb.
I wonder if the fuse can be doused.
If it is doused, what will be gained?
Will the gain be worth the effort put forth?
 
Page 88
But should one who considers himself strong surrender to
     enemies so trivial and despicable?
When is tomorrow, tomorrow is when, when is the future,
     the future is tomorrowis when, tomorrow? Is tomorrow,
     when? Is the future, tomorrowIs tomorrow
     worth it?
What is worth? What is it?It is worth, worth is value, value
     is effort, effort is wortheffort is work, is work . . .
13
Paralleling his life, the theme of his writings became more hopeless and pathetic. Metaphorically, he had been ''dousing the fuse" for the past few years; no longer strong, he would soon surrender to "enemies."
Charlie's penmanship usually mirrored his mood. He neatly printed thoughtful and happy or indifferent musings, while anger and frustrations usually produced a scripted scrawl or were typed. Nearly all of his writings took the form of lists, pathetic attempts at self-help:
Whitman
1. Grow up (Thinkdon't be so ready with an excuse)
2. Conduct with superiors (Time and place for everything)
3. Know your status and position and conduct yourself accordingly

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