Wednesday, October 5, 2011

A Missing lion and A Meeting In The Dark

The next morning, Alistair woke to a surprise. At first, everything seemed normal, the light shined through the shutters, the heat filtered in, but at Jack’s Jems didn’t feel quite right. As soon as he walked up the steps, he saw it. Someone had broken in and stolen his prized lion statue. The statue was over 500 years old. The thief had done their work well. An average person may never have noticed, but Alistair was not an average person. Yes, the statue was gone. He mumbled something to himself, and got ready for his morning walk.
Today, he felt like a change of pace. “I’ll go down through the middle of town”, he thought. As he turned on Poplar, he heard in the distance the iconic croaking of Bob Dylan. “Who would blast music this early?” He pondered. As the clinic approached, he realized that the music was coming from a boom box sitting beside a homeless man on the side of the road. Being a normally out of work private detective, Alistair had a soft spot for the homeless. As he walked by, he tossed a bit of spare change that he had in the pocket of his overcoat into the homeless man’s dented money bowl. Had he turned his head, he would have noticed that the homeless man was blind, but he was occupied thinking about today’s dilemma. He kept walking. Alistair had all but forgotten about the man when he heard a voice behind him say, “What will come will come. Even if I shroud it all in silence." Alistair turned around, but the man was asleep. “That’s it!,” Alistair thought, “I have a plan!” He ran back to his shop shouting thanks at the sleeping blind man all the way there.
Alistair spent the entire rest of the day devising his plan, and setting up the shop. He cleared out the middle of the shop and set up a table with a piece of paper, a pen, and a lamp. He was ready. Alistair turned off all the lights except the lamp at the table. He remembered what the old man had said. “What will come will come.” He hoped it was true. After hours of standing till in the dark, there was a creak at the window. A man in black climbed through slowly. The intruder stared at the illuminated table, and approached it slowly. He stared at the words on the page for a good five minutes. He picked up the pen, scribbled something, and left swiftly the way he came. Once it was safe to come out, Alistair looked down at the paper. It read

“Judging by the skill with witch you stole my lion statue last night, it appears that you have practiced the art of stealing in a disciplined manner. It is this that leads me to believe that we are somewhat similar men. We both have too much time on our hands, and a passion that the world of today is not letting us fulfill. Essentially we are both out of work. I’d be interested in meeting with you face to face to discuss a job offer. If your interested, sign you name here, and meet me in the alley behind Casa D’ Waffles tomorrow night at 12:00 am.”

Sincerely,
Alistair Stratford Oxley, “The Detective”

Beneath which was only a scrawled signature reading, “Syrius Hawkins. I accept.”

8 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. After spending the whole day exploring the city and every alleyway, every building and even a bit of the park, Syrius was satisfied with the mental map in his head of the city. And he had found a most likely target for amusement in the existence of a small little shop known as Jack's Jems. JJ's, while not the fanciest place he had ever seen, took a note from his own book: to be subtle. Bad appearance outside, looking shabby and ill-used... But within, laid a treasure. Multiple ones in fact, but only one caught his eye. A shiny lion statue of the most unusual, yet familiar, making. With that in mind, he disappeared home to prepare for later.

    And later surprisingly came and went pretty quickly. And with it, a twinge of something not right. Stashing away the statue and sleeping a bit, Syrius dressed once more in his outfit and returned to the same shop. Pitch blackness greeted him everywhere except for a lone lamp in the middle of the room as he slipped through the window. While his brain screamed tis was a trap, Syrius' instincts screamed in the opposite way. It was a opportunity, and a fun one too. Signing the paper with a simple reply and his name, Syrius disappeared back into the night, leaving behind the paper and the occupant within the room he had sensed somewhere in the room.

    The next day didn't come quickly enough. Nor did it pass quickly either, despite his best attempts to sleep through most of it like a child would before his birthday or Christmas Day in their hopes of the next day coming sooner. Why must time hate me? ... Wait, I know that answer already. Eventually though, the time came. 11:40 PM and he was on his way. 11:50 PM and he was waiting already for his potential business partner. 12:00 AM and he tensed in anticipation of a new arrival any moment, watching from above on the roof and hidden better then a shadow in night was. Thinking to himself randomly, Syrius wondered if this "Detective" liked to play hide-and-go-seek. It would be most interesting if he did...

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  3. My route remained uneventful until I got to the coffee shop. I had an envelope to deliver. Apparently, 24-hour just doesn't mean anything anymore, since several people were waiting outside the closed building. The group was mostly adult men, but there were a couple of teenage girls, too. Most of them looked pretty reserved and sullen, but a couple of people were talking. They stopped and stared at me. "Uh, hi," I said. "Is the shop closed?"
    One of the girls finally responded, "Yeah. Why?"
    "I've got mail for the people who run the place. Could one of you possibly give it to them when they finally open up?"
    No one said anything. They all just stared at me. Me with my obnoxious shopping cart full of mail.
    Cool, guys.
    "Well, alright then," I said, and pushed through to stuff the envelope under the door.
    The staring was getting to me now; it was just a tad too much like my nightmare.
    I started walking away down the street, and broke into a run after just a few yards.

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