Authors: Dennis Larsen
into place. I just can’t seem to keep up
with it all. Thank goodness we’ve got
Blanche to look after the library for us.
Heavens dear, you trying to attract every
man within a ten mile radius?” Ester
inquired
sarcastically,
eyeing
the
curvaceous, young librarian.
“I hope it’s not too much,”
Blanche squeaked out, crossing her arms
over her bosom.
“Perhaps we should endeavor to
keep your assets a bit more under wraps
in the future or we’ll never get these high
school students to stop talking about you,”
the director smiled politely, turned on her
heels to walk away but said over her
shoulder. “On second thought maybe we
need to put the donation sign on the desk
right in front of you today, dear, might be
the best day we’ve had in years. See what
you can do with that, will you?” And with
that she was gone, calling for Mr. Marcus
to follow her without turning to address
him directly.
* * *
Blanche
sat
on
the
bench
immediately in front of the library under a
large magnolia tree, its glossy leaves
providing a haven of shade from the
afternoon sun. It had rained for about 30
minutes an hour prior but now the sun was
shining and the rainfall had given
everything around her a brilliant, clean
luster that accentuated the shrubbery and
flowers. She did love it here, the city
itself was beautiful, the people in general
so genuine and caring, her job was a
breeze and she loved the people she
worked with but most of all she was
content.
The poor night's sleep seemed less
significant as she sat and looked around at
the pretty little square and the laid back
atmosphere that seemed to encompass the
town and the South in general. The worry
of finding a place to live, for whatever
reason, seemed less important at this very
moment. She was feeling something she
hadn’t felt for quite some time, happiness.
“Yes, that was it!” she thought,
reflecting on the past few weeks. She had
not been able to quite put her finger on it
this afternoon but she was sure that this is
what true happiness must feel like. Being
able to look beyond the events of the day
it was interesting to her that such an
epiphany was possible, but there it was
right in the middle of her chest, that
burning sensation that speaks to one’s soul
that all is well and life is good.
As she was basking in her new
found
realization
Blanche
noted
a
gentleman approaching the steps of the
library, cane in his right hand and a bit
slumped over, but she thought he seemed
awfully young to be walking with a cane
and hunched over in that manner. She
watched as he reached the steps,
straightened up slightly, and looked
around as if expecting to meet someone.
Blanche noted that rather than looking
through his glasses, he tended to tip his
head so he could see over them.
It was what happened on the steps
that struck her as odd. He seemed to be
having a hard time judging the distance to
each step. He would take a step, pull his
glasses down his nose, look over them
then take the next step. On the final step he
failed to perform the same operation and
tripped sending him falling. Rather than
hitting the concrete as expected, he
reacted with cat like reflexes, regained his
balance without the use of the cane. Once
secure that he was steady, he put his
weight back on the cane, bent over and
proceeded through the main doors.
The incident hung in her thoughts
for only a minute or two chalking it up to
her father’s favorite saying, ‘It takes all
kinds’, before her thoughts returned to the
beauty of the day and the happiness she
was feeling. She wanted to remember the
way she felt right at that moment, capture
it, bottle it up along with the sunshine’s
comforting rays before she had to return to
her duties inside.
* * *
Earlier in the day the burglar had
tossed numerous ideas around. Perhaps he
should just use the Internet to help him
hone his ideas and provide new ones,
after all he’d been told to be creative,
however, ‘creative’ was not on his
resume. Breaking into a home without
detection, yes it was on there, not getting
caught was on there, but breaking into a
home, not getting caught and making a
statement for all to see, that was definitely
not included in his skill set. He’d had
second thoughts about using the Internet; it
would be traceable. All they’d need was
his list of searches in conjunction with his
IP address and they’d be knocking on his
door. He’d seen it happen before and
didn’t want to be a part of that.
Most of the morning he wrote list
after list of what he thought were good
ideas only to come full circle with the
understanding that most of the schemes
sucked. After the press and the police had
turned his first outing into a bit of a
laughing matter, giving some phantom
college student the credit for his well
orchestrated crime, he needed something
with some pizzazz. Something that says
‘Holy Shit’ to the unsuspecting public,
something that will really get their
attention without drawing undue attention
to himself or the ultimate goal. He
obviously needed some help and he knew
the trip he’d planned for the library must
take place, however, he didn’t want to go
as himself just in case they had security
cams scattered about. It had been years
since he’d visited a public library and he
had no idea what to expect, except for an
old maid behind the counter and dusty
books on the shelf.
Several options for a makeshift
disguise presented themselves but he
settled on a Gulf War vet with a back
injury. His father’s old cane would suffice
as a prop and an old baggy, green army
issue jacket would complete the ruse. To
enhance the look he filled his hands with
hair gel and smoothed it through his
straight black hair, pulling it back,
exposing his forehead and uncovering his
ears in the process. Perfect, he had
thought, looking in the mirror, and to top it
off he pulled a pinch of chewing tobacco
from a tin his father had left behind and
put it between his cheek and gum.
“Not so bad,” he thought, as the
juices filled his mouth and he swallowed.
Big mistake! He couldn’t get to the
toilet fast enough and he’d spewed
tobacco and his breakfast all over the
bathroom floor. It had taken him until
almost noon to get things cleaned up and
his disguise completed again minus the
tobacco. Instead he settled on an old pair
of glasses, also left behind by his father,
who used them for reading in his later
years. They made his eyes look funny in
the mirror, kind of magnified and larger
than life but he could manage to see
through them well enough to get around.
The distance vision was poor so he
wouldn’t be able to drive with them on but
the near acuity was acceptable so he
shouldn’t draw any undue attention to
himself, especially in a place where
everyone would be reading. Before
leaving on the appointed mission he stood
in front of the mirror admiring the work
he’d done.
“Me own mum wouldn’t recognize
me,” he uttered under his breath in a funny
little accent, and with cane in hand he had
headed for the Valdosta Public Library.
* * *
Blanche returned to the main lobby
of the library to find a donation sign
positioned squarely in the middle of the
desk with a canister nearby to accept cash
and coins. She chuckled lightly before
addressing the items filling her ‘to do’
boxes. Seated at the desk she could see a
fair portion of the library but failed to see
where the green clad fellow had gone.
“Must be upstairs. Hope he didn’t
hurt himself,” she thought, returning her
attention to the damaged books she was
mending with strapping tape on the
counter with the assistance of one of the
young men from the school program.
She noted that he was having a
very difficult time focusing on the project
at hand and made a mental note not to
wear this sweater again. Too distracting at
work but would possibly work wonders
under the right circumstances. Once the
few mending jobs were completed she
excused the young man with the wandering
eyes and made her way around the library,
checking on the facility and making sure
that all was well. The later afternoon
patrons tended to be younger and that was
the case today. In the far, back corner of
the lower level a group of college students
were huddled together working on term
papers.
Must have been a group project as
each appeared to be throwing his or her
own ideas into the ring and a cute young
redhead
was
moderating.
Blanche
approached the group surrounding one of
the longer tables, stood at the shorter end
and tried to get their attention to no avail.
Placing both hands on the flat surface she
leaned forward extending her torso closer
to the cluster of youth and drummed her
nails on the tabletop until they all looked
in her direction and stopped talking.
She quietly whispered in a hushed
tone, “I know you’re working on
something as a group but we’ll need you
to keep it down just a bit more than you
are now, okay.”
The students responded with a
flurry of responses indicating that they
understood and would be quieter. A good
looking guy sitting next to the redhead
must have paid too much attention to the
shapely librarian and as Blanche turned to
walk away, the redhead gave him a swift
elbow in the ribs and a look of scorn for
good measure.
Working her way up to the second
floor it appeared to be deserted except for
a lone patron wearing a green army jacket
seated in front of a computer monitor and
a stack of books scattered on the table
beside him. Blanche's curiosity was
peaked so she wandered through the upper
level appearing to be busy with adjusting
books on shelves, straightening things up
as she went, gradually working her way
closer to the unusual stranger.
He seemed intent on what he was
reading, both on the screen and the books,
as he thumbed through them. The curious
librarian eventually found herself directly
behind him only separated by a bookshelf
with his back to her. She quietly slid a
handful of books aside and removed a few
others to clear a path so that she could see
what he was doing. He wouldn’t be the
first that they’d had to reprimand for
viewing illicit content with a library
computer but that was not the case here.
She could see the books stacked near him
and each appeared to be crime related,
Helter Skelter
,
The Stranger Beside Me
,
and other popular true crime novels, each
with torn pieces of paper holding place
throughout the titles.
The individual was also working
with a notepad he held on his lap,
periodically making notes then returning
the pad, out of the view of others that may
be passing by. It did not appear he had any
idea that Blanche was behind him as he
googled ‘bizarre crime stories’ and
‘shocking crime stories’.
“Must be a lover of non-fiction
crime genre,” Blanche thought. “I wonder