Authors: Dennis Larsen
DECEASED. “Can’t be him unless you’re
battling a ghost. Must be the last one,” he
said, as he entered the search field with
Ronald Philip’s name.
Seymour was hopeful that they
finally had their man, the thought of where
he would go from here and how he would
rescue Blanche still very fuzzy in his head.
Would sort that out once he found where
he had taken her. Information for Ronald
filled the screen.
“How old is he?” Seymour
anxiously asked.
“Looks to be 68, sorry Seymour.
Looks like we’re striking out,” he said,
slumping back in the chair and staring at
the younger man with disappointment
written on his face.
They sat together thinking of what
they could do. The information had to be
there they just weren’t finding it.
Something was barely beyond their
fingertips but they couldn’t see it.
“Bring
up
their
addresses,”
Seymour said. “The Sheriff’s Office thinks
the guy was raised on a farm or still lives
on a farm now.”
Dr. Camp did what he was asked,
the printer hummed again and a page
printed, this time with three names and
addresses. The amateur sleuth looked the
page over, only one had a rural address
but he was deceased. A flash of
inspiration hit Seymour like a bolt of
lightning bringing a smile to his face.
“What if The Stalker is Spencer’s
son? What if the glasses are his but his son
was using them as part of his disguise?
That’s the only thing that makes sense. Do
you have a way to see if you’ve ever seen
any of this dead guy’s family?”
“Sure, I’ll just input Spencer
Cummings as ‘head of household’ and it’ll
print out anybody linked to his account,”
the excited doctor said, as he punched the
keyboard one more time. “Lester and
Maureen Cummings have both been
patients here. This Lester must be the guy,
let’s see what his chart shows.”
“Lester Cummings. I’ve got you
now you piece of crap!” Seymour hissed,
his jaw clenched in anger.
“Lester Cummings has not been
here for about ten years but he’s now in
his thirties and does not wear prescription
glasses based on our last exam. This pair
has to be his dad’s,” Dr. Camp declared
with a sense of accomplishment, lifting the
pair in question and returning them to
Seymour.
“Do you know where this address
is or can you bring a map up on the
computer?” he asked the doctor.
He was typing before the young
man finished the thought. A moment later
the printer was brought back to life,
printing a detailed map of the Valdosta
area, with a purple line that ran from the
doctor’s location to the address on the list
of names. Seymour looked it over and
moved quickly to the door with the doctor
looking on.
“Thanks so much Dr. Camp, you
may have saved a life tonight. Call the
Sheriff’s Office and tell them what we’ve
found and that I’m on my way to
Cummings’ place. If I beat them there I’m
going for Blanche, tell ‘em not to shoot
me.”
“Will do, good luck son,” he
replied.
* * *
Beverly Davis slowly struggled to
clear the fog from her head, the events of
the past few hours lost from her mind until
she saw the body of Felix lying on the
floor near her bed. The ball still firmly
stuffed in her mouth prevented her from
screaming, yet she tried, her eyes filling
with tears and searching the room for
signs of the other man. The clock next to
the bed read 1:11 a.m., she’d been out for
a few hours, and the area of her head
where she had taken the blow, still
throbbing and sore but her memory was
bright. She struggled with the restraints on
both her wrists and ankles but was unable
to free herself. The phone sat in a charging
cradle near the bed on a nightstand. She
wormed her way to the table and tried to
pick the phone up with her hands bound
behind her, in the process the restrained
woman knocked the table, sending the
phone skidding across the floor, coming to
rest against the dead body of her lover.
With the frustration and anger
rising in her chest, she closed her eyes and
tried to think of what she could do. The
thought of crawling to the neighbors
entered her mind but it was a long way,
the phone was still her best option. She
eased herself onto her feet, then her knees
and finally onto her front, her head facing
the phone and the deceased Felix. She
scooted and shimmied until her face was
directly over the phone, thankfully it had
landed keys up. With her nose she tried to
depress the ‘on’ symbol but missed and hit
the ‘speaker’ button instead. Again she
tried with her nose and could suddenly
hear a dial tone coming through the small
speaker of the portable phone.
“Good,” she thought, “halfway
there.”
With her nose as a battering ram
Bev tried to dial 911 with repeated
failures. Each time having to start over
again with the sequence of, on, three
numbers, then off and over again. On the
eighth try she finally managed to get 911
dialed correctly.
Living outside the Valdosta city
limits her emergency call rang through to
the Sheriff’s Dispatch where the young
woman had been enjoying a quiet night
chatting with Deputy Guest and watching
Otis wrestle with a towel from the locker
room, eventually tearing it to shreds.
“9-1-1, what is the nature of your
emergency?” Bev heard clearly through
the phone.
The gag made it impossible to
utter any recognizable words so she
simply grunted into the phone, her cheeks
puffing in and out as she tried to be heard.
“I’m sorry I can’t make that out, do
you have an emergency?”
Bev grunted once, and then
stopped. It occurred to the woman
manning the phone that it was possible that
a mute was on the line so she reverted to
an auxiliary training procedure she’d
received some time ago.
“If you can understand what I am
saying I want you to grunt once. Go
ahead,” she said.
Beverly did as she was instructed
and grunted once. To confirm that they
were actually communicating she asked
Beverly to grunt twice when she heard the
word dog. The operator then listed a
number of random words, Bev was silent
until she heard ‘dog’, and then she grunted
twice as loudly as she could. By this time
the operator had pulled up the details of
the home where the call was coming from.
“Okay, I want you to use one grunt
for yes and two for no, do you
understand?”
Ms. Davis grunted once.
“Fine, am I speaking with Ms.
Beverly Davis?”
One Grunt
“Are you hurt?”
One Grunt
“Do you need us to send an
ambulance?”
One Grunt
“Do you need a Sheriff Unit
dispatched to your location?”
One Grunt
“Are you safe?” the operator
asked, her nerves on edge.
Two Grunts
“Deputy Guest, need your help
over here!” she said, calling for Natalie to
join her at the station.
“What’s up?” Guest asked.
“I’ve got a situation. A Beverly
Davis is on the line and unable to
communicate verbally other than grunts
and I can hear her breathing heavily, not
sure if she’s injured and can’t speak or is
bound and gagged. I’m sending an
ambulance right away but I’ll need you or
the Sheriff to run out there as well. You
two are all I’ve got tonight.”
“Shit, better not be due to us
releasing Wood this afternoon. I’ll see
what the Sheriff wants to do.”
“Ms. Davis, help is on the way.
Are you unable to speak because of an
injury?”
Two Grunts
“Are you gagged?”
One Grunt
“Natalie, she’s gagged, we need to
respond asap. Apparent intruder!” the
operator yelled across the office.
'The Wolf' had his service belt and
Glock 9mm on in a matter of seconds and
was running for his squad car.
He hollered back over his
shoulder, “Natalie stay with her and keep
me appraised, I’m on my way.”
The operator continued to ask
‘yes’ and ‘no’ questions to Beverly to let
her know they were still there and would
stay on the line until help arrived.
As the two women listened to the
grunts coming through the sound system
mounted on the desk the phone at the main
reception rang. Deputy Guest hustled to
the phone.
“Lowndes County Sheriff’s Office,
Deputy Guest.”
“Deputy Guest, this is Dr. Camp,
you don’t know me but I suspect you know
a Seymour Wood,” the optometrist said.
“We do, what’s he done?” she
said, expecting the worst.
“He dragged me out of bed tonight
and brought me to my office saying that
The Stalker had kidnapped his girlfriend, I
think her name was Blanche but I can’t be
sure. Anyway, he found some glasses and
long story short, we think we identified
The Stalker and Seymour’s on his way
there to help Blanche.”
“Damn it! Okay doctor, give me
the name and the location where Seymour
is headed.”
“The guy is Lester Cummings …..”
“How in the hell...never mind, I
know the location,” she said, cutting him
off. “Where are you now doctor and are
you safe?”
“I’m at my office and I’m fine.
That boys going to need some help, send
somebody as quickly as you can but
Seymour said to be careful and not to
shoot him.”
“Will do doctor, thanks for the
call,” Natalie said trying to decide what to
do next.
She called to the dispatcher, “I’ve
got to get out to Lester Cummings’ place
asap, can’t wait for anybody else to come
in. Get on the horn and get some officers
out of bed, send half to 'The Wolf’s
location and half to mine. The name again
is Lester Cummings - he’s The Stalker.
Make it happen! I’m on my way! Come on
Otis!” she said, running for the doors.
* * *
Seymour pulled the rusted-out
pickup within twenty feet of the drive that
led to the Cummings’ home. He could see
where the dirt lane cut through the trees
and weeds that would lead to the house.
The gun behind the seat offered some
comfort but the young man was scared to
death, the thought of Blanche being
harmed was the only thing that forced him
from the truck. He filled a pocket with the
shells from the glove box and slid the
heavy rifle from the hiding place, the ten
pounds now feeling like twenty. He
opened the breach to confirm that a shell
was still in place and slowly approached
the drive. Seymour knelt next to the
mailbox and looked down the lane. A
single light was on in the house and a
silver van was parked in the lane at the
side of the structure. He listened but could
hear nothing, just crickets and the
nocturnal country sounds that he was so
familiar with.
He crept slowly up the drive,
moving his eyes right and left to prevent a
flanking attack, his finger on the trigger.
Reaching the rear of the van he opened it
as quietly as he was able and examined
the interior. No Blanche. A camouflaged
hat and jacket thrown to one side, a bottle
of ether resting on top of the coat along
with a white rag but nothing that would
assist in his rescue of the woman.
Seymour slipped around the back of the
van and stood between the house and the
side of the vehicle, a window to his right
allowed him a view into the home.
Cautiously he peered through the lightly
curtained window and into the house. He