Authors: Dennis Larsen
Lester.
“Officer, I’ve got an appointment
in town and need to be on my way. Is there
anything else I can do for you before you
have to leave?” The pressure of the gun
made him feel powerful and able to
dominate the situation.
“I’d like to take a look in the
house, and barn as well, if that’s okay
with you.”
“Actually, it’s not. I do have to run
and I just don’t have time to show you
around everywhere, perhaps you could
make an appointment and we could do it
in the next day or two.”
She knew he was up to something
and had been lying from the minute she
met him, but was unsure of what to make
of his behavior. “So let me get this
straight. You are denying me access to
your house and barn, is that correct?”
“Don’t you have to have a warrant
or something? I mean this is private
property and you can’t just go around
searching people’s homes without some
kind of an affidavit. Isn’t that right?” he
said, once again moving his hand to his
waistline.
“You are right there, but if you
give me verbal permission we can avoid
the hassle of a warrant, so if you’ll just
consent to that I’ll take a look in the barn.”
She took a couple of steps towards the
barn.
Lester jumped from his position on
the porch and cut her off. Otis lurched at
him, growling and barking. Natalie
restrained him but did put her hand on her
service weapon.
“Whoa, whoa take it easy. I think
I’m within my rights to ask you to leave if
you don’t have a warrant. I’ve been
cooperative and let’s leave it at that. If
you want to come back later with a
warrant, I’d be happy to let you look in
every nook and cranny there is, but not
without that warrant. This is my private
stuff and you are violating my privacy, so
I’m going to ask you to leave one more
time.”
“Deputy Guest respond, over,” her
portable unit squawked.
She took her hand off the weapon
and keyed the mic, “Guest here, over.”
“Natalie, Sheriff Lupo wants you
to respond to a call from an old guy that
you spoke with earlier in the day. Says
he’s got some information you may need,
something about some questions you asked
him earlier. Could hardly make him out
when he called, but there’s a message on
your voicemail, can listen to it when
you’re back at your unit. You got that?”
“Roger, will see what it is and let
you know.”
“Alright, Mr. Cummings, we’ll be
leaving for now, but I don’t doubt we’ll
be back to take a closer look with a
warrant.”
“I’ll anxiously await your return,”
he said sarcastically, and watched the two
walk down the dirt driveway, taking a left,
heading back to the service road, his hand
caressing the cold grip of the Beretta.
Lester waited a few minutes
before he leisurely walked to the end of
his drive, stepped out beyond the mailbox
to get a better look down the range road,
and confirmed that the curious deputy was
gone. Her random visit sent a jolt of
reality through the thief, his mind active as
he ran to the barn. Evidence? What
evidence did he have that she may have
seen? He was careful the other day to fill
his pockets with the spent brass from the
.38, should have only been 9mm at the
range. He knew he had the paperwork on
the Beretta, so there was nothing they
could do with those shell casings. He
wondered if she’d taken the time to call in
the plate on his van, again legally owned,
but he didn’t know if it had been reported
as a suspicious vehicle. There was one
thing he did know, however, the
motorcycle had to go. He had plenty of
cash to replace it with a newer, bigger
one, but there was a degree of
sentimentality to the old bike that almost
brought him to tears as he wheeled it out
from the barn, pushed it up a plank, and
into the back of the van.
Tomorrow morning would not
come soon enough. It was time to get
somebody else in the crosshairs and wrap
up this little adventure, and then take the
money and run.
CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR
The parlor, now quiet following a
rousing bit of discussion about the recent
crime wave, still, except for Felix, who
especially enjoyed the discussion, knew
who and what he did. A large portrait
above the ornate fireplace caught his
attention as he thumbed through his Day-
Timer looking for Ms. Beverly Davis’
phone number. Being Sunday, he had
hoped to spend some quality time with the
librarian, before having to put in his
obligatory visit to the realtor. He found
the slim and stacked, more appealing than
the round and short, but a true soldier; he
would do his duty and earn his pay, then
rub it in the face of that weasel, Iggy.
He dialed the number from the
phone in the parlor; it rang only once
before she picked up. The over-the-top
approach usually worked well with single
women, especially of the widowed
variety, and he started there, explaining
that he was an entrepreneur representing a
small land developer that had heard
through the real estate grapevine, that she
had a property that they’d like to look at.
He could tell through the line that she was
more than excited about the prospects of
showing the land in question. Ms. Davis
explained that the parcel had all but been
sold a few days ago, the seller was
motivated and the price was right. She
hadn’t told him anything he didn’t already
know. The business woman took his name,
Felix Unger, which drew a silent snicker,
as it always did from the over 50 crowd,
and some particulars about the client,
what they were looking for, what they
wanted to develop and on and on. Felix
tried to stay engaged and interested, but
work was work, even for a wise guy.
They made an appointment for
later that afternoon, she normally didn’t
work or do showings on Sunday, but for
the charming Felix, she was willing to
make an exception. He would swing by
and meet her at the office and they could
drive together to the lot south of Moody
Air Force Base. He wrote the time into his
Day-Timer. Jeremy had stressed how
important keeping accurate notes would
be when the shit hit the fan. With the work
of the morning done, he stretched out on
the couch, crossed his legs at the ankles,
his arms over his chest, and was asleep
before the thought of prostituting himself
for a few million dollars floated out of his
mind.
* * *
Across town Otis was lying on his
back, his tail still going, as Angelo rubbed
the dog’s belly with his cowboy boot.
Deputy Guest had just finished filling her
boss in on her encounter with Lester
Cummings, anticipating that they would
call in the posse, mount up, and ride out to
arrest the varmint. The Sheriff was
interested, but had seen too many
investigations to know that the first
subject, regardless of how perfectly they
fit the profile, was often the wrong guy.
He wanted to proceed with caution and
not scare the suspect off. Lester Cummings
could very well be just a recluse who
valued his privacy. She emphasized the
vehicle, a van perfect for a burglar, a
shooting range with lots of spent ammo,
and a barn for hiding items like a
motorcycle.
“But Sheriff, you should have seen
the look in his eyes when I made a move
toward the barn. I thought Otis there was
gonna take his leg off. It was a good thing
I had a tight hold on him,” the deputy
explained, trying to recreate the look
Lester had given her.
Lupo had a hard time not laughing
at the antics of the junior officer, but kept
it to a smile only. “Okay, bottom line is
this, is there enough evidence that we
could get the judge to issue a search
warrant? Are there any witnesses that put
him, or his vehicle, at the scene of any of
the crimes? As far as we know, is he in
possession of any stolen property? Does
he have a motorcycle registered in his
name or at that address? Is this Lester a
perp with a prior record?
To each of the questions, Natalie
sadly had to answer, “no”, or at best, “I
don’t know.”
“It sounds to me like you’ve got a
bunch of work to do then. Find out the
answers to all of those questions and we
can go from there, but hitting up the judge
now for a warrant, will be a waste of time
for us, and an embarrassment for the
department.”
“Yes sir, I get your point, I just
thought... you know...I had this feeling that
he was our guy. You’ve had it before,
right in the pit of your stomach, that you
just know,” she expressed with all the
energy of her soul.
“Don’t get me wrong deputy. I
think you’ve done some damn fine work
this morning, may break this whole
investigation wide open, but there’s some
homework that needs to be done before
we can go any further. Got that?” he said,
pulling at Otis’ collar and lifting his head
to his lap so he could give him some
attention.
“Yeah, I better do some checking
and I’ll keep you posted. Guess I’ll start
with a background check on him and his
vehicle.”
She
whistled
and
Otis
begrudgingly left the Sheriff and joined
her at the door. “Come on boy, we’ve got
some work to do.”
Angelo called after her, “Natalie,
don’t get discouraged. Your instincts are
good always listen to them. It could save
your life someday.”
“Thanks Sheriff, I will.”
The balance of the young deputy’s
Sunday was spent submitting data to the
computer system, filling out activity
reports of the morning, and trying to put
some notes together for the unwanted, and
unsolicited, presentation before Mrs.
Wild’s class tomorrow. She tried to be
detailed but succinct, nothing she hated
more than filling out forms and sitting in
front of the computer. She’d joined the
Sheriff’s Office to be on the line, out with
the public doing ‘real’ police work, at
least she had Otis and did get out much
more than the other officers. The voice
message she’d received while speaking
with Mr. Cummings was all but
incoherent. She knew it was the old
farmer she’d seen on the tractor earlier in
the day but the message did not come
through. She had tried a number of times
to phone him back but was unsuccessful.
Tomorrow after her presentation, she’d
run out that way and see if she could track
him down. She hoped by then maybe
they’d have a better idea who Lester
really was and if he was a viable suspect.
* * *
The day of rest for Blanche
Delaney had been anything but that; the
frantic ride to the hospital following the
shooting had been harrowing. She now sat
in the General Hospital’s waiting room,
there had been no word on Jasper’s
condition since they arrived. He was taken
immediately to surgery and that’s the last
she saw of him or the doctors. Police at
the scene had already questioned her, but
she knew another round would be coming
her way, when she saw a runty sized
officer walk through the doors, as if he
were looking for something. He looked to
be about sixteen but she knew that could
not be the case, fair complexion, narrow
eyes and face with a poor excuse of a