Authors: Dennis Larsen
“What’s this all about anyway?
What are you doing here and ….,” Lester
asked, trying to think of a way to get out of
this with his life.
“You poor guy, I really do feel
bad about this, you’ve been so willing to
put yourself out there for us and this is the
way we repay you. Must really piss you
off!” Felix prodded.
“What do you think, smart ass?”
“Let me just say that you’ve
opened the way for me and my friends to
be very rich....I like the way that sounds
verrryyyy rrrriiicchhh,” he said again,
very slowly.
“Asshole, shoot me and get it over
with.”
“Not so quick. Aren’t you anxious
to meet the lady of the house?” the killer
asked.
“She still here? Thought she would
be out for the night.”
“You really are clueless aren’t you
Lester. Wish I had time to explain it all to
you but some other time. Oh wait a minute,
you won’t have another time, will you?”
and he laughed, mocking him. “Let’s go
talk to Bev.”
The two walked up the stairs,
Lester leading the way, the 32 pointed at
his back. Once in the bedroom Felix
turned on the main light, illuminating
Beverly sitting up in the bed, a red rubber
ball in her mouth attached to a black strap
pulled around her head. She was silent,
saliva dripped from her chin, a look of
wild panic in her eyes. Her hands and feet
were bound with plastic, pull-tight strips
with a towel between the skin and plastic
as not to leave any marks. She grunted
ever so softly, trying to get enough air
without choking.
“See how I’ve got her all wrapped
up for you tonight. Saved you the trouble
of doing it yourself. We really did
consider bringing you in at one point and
letting you ‘off’ the fatty on your own but
you were just one more loose end we had
to take care of. You know, give us peace
of mind so we could sleep better at night.
You’ll go to your grave knowing you
served a higher purpose.”
“You really are a cold, heartless
son of a bitch aren’t you?” Lester asked.
“Yes, I’d have to agree with you
there but you left out rich; a rich, cold,
heartless son of a bitch. Kind of has a ring
to it. What do you think?” He did like to
remain upbeat even in the face of crisis.
“Well, Bev dear, I’m going to
need your help with this next part. If you’ll
cooperate I promise I’ll make it quick for
you. Believe me you’ll thank me rather
than enduring the opposite.” He looked
into her eyes and had a fleeting bit of
compassion for the woman that was
quickly replaced with dollar signs. No
mercy tonight, cold hard cash would rule
the day.
“Lester if you would be so kind as
to stand just there at the end of the bed.
Perfect, I’d hate to have you move around
too much. Could get messy if Bev here has
to pump the entire clip into you.” He
looked back at Bev briefly. “Oh, don’t
worry my dear, I’ll help you aim but don’t
piss me off or I’ll put the first slug through
your scheming little brain. Do you
understand?” He looked back at her, she
did not move.
Again he said with more authority,
“Do you understand Beverly?”
She immediately shook her head in
agreement, tears spilling down her face
and on the sheets covering her body.
“Fine. Lester, don’t get any stupid
ideas, trust me this is not my first
‘outing,’” he said, drawing Lester’s
Beretta from his waist with his left hand
and leveling it at The Stalker’s head. This
could get very messy, very fast, so do as
you’re told!”
Lester stood motionless at the end
of the bed, the edge of the mattress just
above the height of his knee. With all the
concentration he could muster he brought
his right foot up, bringing his leg to a 90-
degree angle, allowing him to almost
reach his calf. He stood motionless like
that for the time being, confirming that
Felix could not see what he was doing.
For all visual purposes he was still
standing with both feet on the floor, his
balance perfect and his concentration
precise.
“Okay Bev, this is the tricky part,
I’m going to undo your hands but you have
to promise me that you will not fight or
I’ll drill you with this baby,” he said, still
holding the 9mm in his left hand and
placing the muzzle against her head.
Laying
the
32
cal.
aside
momentarily, he cut the strap that held her
wrists, allowing her hands to spring free
and rest in her lap. Felix sat on the bed
next to her, wrapped his left arm around
her shoulder and aimed Lester’s gun
directly at her left temple. With the right,
he retrieved the longer, silenced 32,
forcing her to bring her hand up to hold the
grip on her own pistol. He carefully
watched Lester with his peripheral vision
while instructing Bev on what he wanted
her to do.
“I’m going to hold this for you so
you don’t miss and just squeeze off a
couple rounds. He’s just a few feet away.”
He quickly looked back at Lester to make
sure he was not moving. He was not.
“Okay, let’s give this a try, shall we
gang.”
In that very moment Lester saw it
in Bev’s eyes and knew it was now or
never. She pushed with all the energy she
had, forcing Felix off the mattress,
accidentally firing the 32 at Lester
standing at the end of the bed. The round
found its mark, ripping through his lower
right abdomen but blasting cleanly through
the flesh, not hitting any bones or vital
organs. Felix ripped the pistol away from
Bev and in that brief struggle gave Lester
the second he needed to respond.
Reaching his right calf he slid the pant leg
up enough to pull the 7-inch blade from
the sheath, which was taped to his calf,
handle end down. Felix looked up as
Lester released the blade, could see it
tumbling toward him but there was no
time. He fired a wild shot into the side of
the bed then fell back, the hunting knife
buried in his skull. It had entered through
his right eye, crushed the orbit, and lodged
the tip deeply within Felix’s visual cortex
at the back of his head. He was dead
before he hit the ground.
Bev was still unable to scream but
she desperately was trying to. Her hands
flailed in an attempt to protect herself
from Lester who walked over to Felix, put
his foot on his forehead for leverage and
pulled his knife from the skull. He
casually wiped the blood and brain matter
from the blade on Felix’s Armani suit. He
replaced the blade, and then took the
towel that had been around Bev’s hands
and held it to his bleeding side.
“Now what the hell am I’m going
to do with you?” he asked, looking at the
pleading woman. “Don’t worry, I’m not
going to kill you.” She breathed a
noticeable sigh of relief.
“But I can’t have you calling the
police in the next ten minutes either, can
I?”
With that he took his Beretta from
Felix’s hand and struck Bev about as hard
as he dared to the side of her head. Her
eyes rolled back and she slumped forward
and fell to her side on the bloodied sheets.
Lester felt for a pulse, and finding one,
bound her hands once again and left her on
the bed.
He looked through her bathroom
and found the items he needed to slow the
flow of blood from his ‘through and
through’ wound. Checked her again to
make sure she had not stopped breathing
and left the house. Time was against him
now and he knew it. He would have to fly
if he was to take care of business at the
library before it closed.
CHAPTER THIRTY
The dashed white lines danced
before him, undulated, then snapped back
to their original linear shape. The pain,
though initially localized in his lower
right abdomen, was now radiating
throughout his entire torso, overloading
his nervous system and affecting his sight
and motor skills. He was glad that he had
taken the few minutes at Bev’s to staunch
the flow of blood with some rolled up
gauze stuffed in both the entrance and exit
wounds. The holes were smaller than he
expected, good thing the wayward bullet
was fired from a small caliber pistol. As
he drove he periodically looked down to
the spot of the injury, a slowly expanding
red circle appeared on the bandage that he
had wrapped around his waist, covering
the gauze filled holes both front and back.
The painkillers he’d taken should start to
have some beneficial effect at any minute
but he was struggling to stay focused on
the task before him.
Arriving at the library he parked at
the rear, near the end of the open chute that
originated on the second floor. By the time
he crawled into the back of the van, put on
the hat, camouflaged jacket and slipped
his father’s spectacle case into his pocket,
the pills had started to numb the throbbing
in his side. Into the other pocket of the
military issue jacket he put the bottle of
ether and wool cloth. Lester inspected
himself in the passenger side mirror,
taking note to walk a bit hunched over,
using the cane in his right hand and
limping with the left leg. Each step sent a
bolt of pain shooting through his central
nervous system. He gritted his teeth and
moved on, no time to waste, had to get to
Blanche and then home. Before he walked
around to the front entrance of the library
he stopped in the shadows at the corner of
the building, pulled his father’s old
prescription glasses from their case and
put them on. The Stalker allowed his eyes
to adjust for a moment, returned the case
to the jacket pocket and proceeded toward
the front steps. It annoyed him that he had
to look over the lenses to see very well
far away but knew that Blanche would
recognize him for sure without them on.
The first time around with the Gulf
War Vet disguise he had trouble
negotiating the steps, so he took his time,
looked over the glasses as he needed and
managed the steps, with cane in hand,
without the same acrobatics as before.
Alone on the concrete outside the main
doors Lester took a few deep breaths,
checked the wound again to see how much
blood had soaked into the bandages and
touched the Beretta tucked in at the small
of his back. It was time and he was ready,
willing, but was unsure of just how able
he was. A patron stepped from the main
entrance and down the steps next to him
without giving him a second look. He put
his weight on the cane, bent over slightly
and moved through the same door the
gentleman had just used to exit the library.
The foyer was brightly lit, a
number of people gathered around the
main desk speaking with Blanche. He was
pleased that she was distracted and would
not pay much attention to him as he moved
to the stairs. With the injury to his side it
was much easier to use the cane, almost
came natural this time around as he
hobbled and ambled up the stairs,
concentrating not to look at the librarian
for fear she might recognize him. Half way
up the stairs the sight of Seymour coming
down startled him. He momentarily lost
his balance and almost tumbled to the
floor below, but the agile Seymour caught
the crippled vet, helped him regain his
balance and made sure he got to the
second floor. Lester hoped his nemesis
had not felt the gun hugging his spine.
“Looks like your friend is back,”