Authors: Dennis Larsen
and he wanted to get a feel for who he
was dealing with before they filed formal
charges. For now he was being held on a
single charge, more evidence would be
necessary before the additional charges
could be laid by the district attorney.
Deputy Breland brought Seymour
to the office, his hands still cuffed behind
his back.
Sheriff Lupo greeted the two men
with a nod, "Deputy, I think we can
dispense with the cuffs."
The officer quickly removed the
cuffs allowing Seymour to rub the
soreness from his wrists, and Breland left
the office. The two men stood, sizing each
other up. The Sheriff spoke first, "Have a
seat Seymour, I wanted to have a chance
to talk with you before your mom and
friends have access to you."
"Is my mom here? How is she
doing? She's probably not taking this very
well. When will I get to see her?" The
questions came in a torrent. It had been
hours since he had talked to anyone that
would respond, and he had more questions
than answers.
"Slow down there a minute fella.
Let's take it a bit slower and I'll help you
out if you're willing to help me," he said,
keeping his voice soothing and even.
"Your mom is angry, as you can imagine, I
don't blame her, but she seems to be a
strong woman and will be okay. She's
given us permission to search your home
and farm. You okay with that?" The
Sheriff watched his eyes carefully for any
hint of deceit. There was none.
"Fine. I have nothing to hide; I've
tried to tell your people. I'm being set-up.
I have no idea where that gun came from."
"You've been read your rights, is
that correct?" Seymour nodded, he had.
"Fine, and you understand them?" Again a
nod, "They tell me you don't want an
attorney. If it's a matter of money we can
have a public defender assigned to you."
Seymour’s head hung low, looking
at his feet. "We don't have much money,
but it’s not a matter of money, it's a matter
of truth and innocence."
"Would
you
answer
some
questions for me and I have to tell you, I
will be recording our conversation,
okay?" the Sheriff asked, taking a pen and
preparing to take notes.
"Let's start with this past weekend.
Your mom says you were doing some
chores around the farm. Tell me what you
were doing and when, be specific as you
can."
"Well, I spent most of Saturday
with mom, like she said doing chores. In
the morning we did some weeding in the
garden by the house, then in the afternoon
and into the evening we took care of the
hay. You know, moving the bales to the
barn and storing the rest along side the
barn and covered it with tarps. We
finished after dark, had dinner, and
watched TV for a bit then went to bed.
Sunday we went to services in the
morning, and had lunch with some
neighbor friends. The rest of Sunday I did
homework and got ready for my school
week."
"That's fine; we can confirm much
of that. What did you have to eat Saturday
night?"
"Is that important?” Seymour
asked.
"It could be, your mom was
specific and I'd like to know if you can
remember as she did."
"Okay, let’s see. I know Sunday
night we were pretty full with the late
lunch with those friends and I think we
had soup, but Saturday after we cleaned
up from doing the hay we had pork and
beans. I remember cause I fried up the
bacon while momma got the rest together.
Is that right, is that what she said?"
"And what time do you think that
was?" the Sheriff continued.
"It was dark so I think about 7:00
or 7:30, thereabouts."
Lupo had seen liars and truth
tellers his entire career and prided himself
on being able to tell the difference. From
the few questions and responses he'd
reviewed with Seymour, he could tell he
had an honest man seated before him. He
looked him in the eyes, was forthright with
his answers, did not look to the ceiling to
retrieve lost information, and spoke with
conviction.
"Seymour, for a moment let's
suppose that you're not The Stalker and
you didn't shoot Jasper Jackson. Do you
have any enemies that would want to lay
this on you? Do you have any explanation
for that gun being in your locker?"
"That's the strange thing, Sheriff; I
get along with most everybody. I don't
hang out much with the other students but I
think I've got friends. Everybody at work
is great, never had any trouble there, and I
didn't even know this Jasper guy until
Blanche said you thought I shot him."
"Back up there a minute. Blanche
told you that we thought you had shot
Jasper?" he asked.
"And who is Blanche and how
does....wait a minute, I read a report with
her name attached. She's the young lady
that was with Jasper at the time of the
shooting. How are you involved with
her?"
Seymour was not quite sure how to
respond to the question but gave it his best
try, "Well, I work with her and I think
she's kind of my girlfriend."
"Could you be a bit more specific,
how is she kind of your girlfriend?"
"We've been friends since she
moved here from Arizona. We both work
at the library, anyway, last Friday night
we finally had a date and I think she likes
me as much as I like her," he declared.
"So let me get this straight, you
take this woman out on Friday, then she
goes out with another guy on Saturday, but
that guy ends up getting shot by a white
guy in a hoodie with sunglasses and a
baseball hat on," he was speaking more to
himself than Seymour.
"I guess, I haven't heard that much
about it except that I supposedly did it," he
smirked.
Lupo again keyed the intercom on
his desk, "Arlene, send Breland back in
here will ya."
A minute later the deputy stuck his
head in after opening the door, "Yup
Sheriff."
"Mrs.
Wood
has
given
us
permission to search their place, secure
her keys from her over in the conference
area and take Deputy Firth with you and
do a thorough search of the place. Take
Ricky with you and his forensics gear, tag
and bag anything that looks important. You
know what we're looking for from the
crime scenes. Have Arlene give you that
list I made up so you don't overlook
anything. Get out there asap and phone me
with what you find."
"Sure Sheriff, we're on it."
"And Breland, these are nice folks;
you take care not to damage any of their
belongings. You got that?" Angelo
confirmed.
"Thanks Sheriff. They aren't going
find anything cause I didn't do it,"
Seymour said, feeling the stress of the day
catching up to him, his energy all but gone.
Sheriff Lupo noticed the fatigue
setting in and stepped to his door,
"Arlene, fetch Seymour and myself a
sandwich and a coffee would ya?”
"Seymour, we still got the problem
of this gun. We can't let you just walk until
we, or you, can explain how a stolen gun
got into your possession. You say you
don't have any enemies, nobody that wants
to give you a hard time, but then why and
how?"
The accused had been searching
his memory all afternoon and could think
of no one specifically that would want to
set him up. He ran through his day prior to
them finding the gun and had no answers.
He shook his head side to side and raised
his hands indicating that he could be no
help. The two talked, Lupo taking notes
until the food arrived. They ate and talked,
Seymour giving the Sheriff as many details
as he could about the past month. What he
had done, what days he had worked, who
had he seen and when. The list was
extensive, giving the Sheriff a good idea
of who he was dealing with, and having
enough specifics that they could either
confirm he had alibis or put his neck
further into the noose.
At the end of what seemed like
hours to Seymour he was returned to his
cell and his visitors were allowed in.
Seymour stood close to the bars, his face
pressed between them so that he could
kiss, first his mom, then Blanche. Marcus
also leaned in for a kiss making Seymour
pull away and laugh, momentarily taking
his mind off his worries. Lillian cried as
Blanche held her close, her arm around
the woman's shoulders and comforting her
as much as she was able.
"We gave statements to that nice
young Deputy Guest, I think she's cute,"
his mom said.
"Yeah, how did it go?" her son
asked.
"We don't have anything to hide,
the truth will come out and quickly we
hope," she said.
"The Sheriff said they will have to
confirm my alibis so I can't go anywhere
until they know how I got the gun, or I
mean how the gun got in my locker," he
quickly corrected himself. "I guess I go
before the judge tomorrow around noon.
Will you be there?" he said to his mom,
noting that both women nodded in the
affirmative.
They spoke for the full hour
allotted them; a deputy broke up the
exchange around 8:00 p.m. Marcus agreed
to take both women home, dropping
Lillian off first, but they found her home
invaded by numerous sheriff vehicles and
personnel going through everything and
everywhere.
"Mrs. Wood, you can't stay here,"
Blanche said. "Go in, gather up what you
need for the night and come and stay with
me. I can make room and we can spend the
night consoling one another. How does
that sound?"
"Well, I would rather not be alone
tonight. Are you sure it's not too much
trouble? I hate to put you out," the older
woman spoke again on the verge of tears.
She ducked into the home for only
a few minutes before returning with an
overnight bag and her purse. Marcus
drove the pair to Caroline's Bed and
Breakfast with a promise to take care of
everything at the library, at least for
Tuesday, and anything beyond that would
have to be worked out between Blanche
and Mrs. Anderson. They exchanged
goodbyes and thank you's as he drove off
for home.
At
midnight
the
Sheriff's
Department was finally quiet. Lupo sat in
his office looking over the statements of
each of the four taken that afternoon. He
compared the dates and times of the
break-ins and assault with the sheets
before him, nothing seemed to come
together for him, no pattern, no clear
indication that Seymour could have done
the crimes. The prospect that perhaps he
was not working alone entered his mind
but the forensics did not support that.
Ricky would be taking a casting of
Seymour's foot in the morning and DNA
samples as well. Seymour had agreed to
both. On paper, face-to-face, on the
evidence and in his heart, 'The Wolf' knew
Seymour was innocent, which left a rather
sinister question. Who and for what
reason? Who else could be in danger,
perhaps Jasper was only the beginning.
As the Sheriff sat sipping his
eighth cup of coffee of the day, the phone
on his desk rang. He retrieved the portable
from the cradle and spoke, "Yeah, Lupo
here."
"Sheriff, Breland out at the Wood
house. Let me start by what we do have, a
motorcycle and it's a dirt bike, lime green
250cc Suzuki, older model. We also found
an old single shot hunting rifle and a few