SEEDLINGS by Aaron Paul Lazar


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Aaron Paul Lazar is an engineer by day, but his passion lies in writing. The first book in the LeGarde Mystery series, Double Forté, is an absorbing tale of love, intrigue, and murder; “a feast for the senses that will leave you breathless.” Upstaged, the second book in the series, features a disturbed stage mother, a deviant predator, and a twisted saboteur who lurks backstage, terrorizing the drama club with deadly, psychotic games. “Lush, vibrant, and delicious.” Lazar’s latest book, Tremolo: cry of the loon, a literary coming-of-age mystery, is available through Twilight Times Books.

Lazar has written a second series featuring paranormal mysteries with Sam and Rachel Moore, a retired country doctor and his wife who suffers from multiple sclerosis. Watch for The Green Marble, coming in 2007 from Twilight Times Books.

Lazar’s monthly columns are featured in the Futures Mystery Anthology Magazine and the Voice in the Dark mysteryfiction.net newsletter, and his writing advice articles have been often published in Absolute Write. He lives in Upstate NY with his extended family. Visit his websites at www.legardemysteries.com; www.mooremysteries.com, and his blog: www.aaronlazar.blogspot.com.


August 2008

 

The Escape

Victor slumped on the metal café chair beside the canal. Muddy water eddied along the breakwall, propelling filmy bubbles of yellow pollen in tiny whirpools. A blue heron soared overhead. Without warning, envy sliced through him – insidious in its intensity. The bird disappeared over the treeline, descending into the swamp.

He’s free. Unlike me.

The thoughts hit him hard and then the blackness descended, pitching unquenchable desire.

I want out. I need out.

Tobias, his Secret Service agent, sweated bedside him and swatted at a fly buzzing persistantly around his face.

“Hot one,” he drawled, mopping at the perspiration with his shirt sleeve.

Victor shifted in his seat, suddenly uncomfortable. Something was about to happen. He could feel it. Trying hard to squelch the bizarre desire, his hand tightened on the glass of lemonade, shaking like palsey.

I can’t. I mustn’t.

Without warning, he splashed his drink against Tobias’s shirt front and onto his holster that sweated against his armpit like a hairy girth on a horse. The big man spluttered and stood suddenly, shocked out of his lethargy.

“You said you were hot,” Victor chuckled.

Tobias stripped off his hoster, threw it on the table, and began mopping at his shirt with a handful of paper napkins.

“Mr. President. Why in the world…”

Victor grabbed the gun. The agent hissed with annoyance and tried to grab it.

“Mr. President. Please.”

Victor laughed, pretended to relent, then smashed the weapon against Tobias’s temple.

Swaying, Tobias touched his forehead, palpating the cut with bloody fingers. He looked at his hand in disbelief, then back at the President. His eyes rolled in their sockets and in one lumbering crash, the behemoth agent toppled to the ground.

Victor’s eyes raked the property.

Had anyone been watching?

The rolling hills of the private sanitorium were green, fed with underground sprinklers that popped up each morning with monotonous regularity. In the distance, the buildings loomed. Gorgeous architecture festooned the porch and patios. Marble statues guarded the walkways lined with pop-up book yellow maples. Visitors oohed and ahhed over the trappings. But Victor abhorred the place, ever since he’d been incarcerated last year. That’s when the voices started. Freddie. Clive. Even Millie. They’d been relentless for the past ten years, rattling their chains and shaking their prison bars until he’d finally given in and let them out.

The sitting area near the canal was one of Victor’s favorite spots. Clusters of wrought iron glass-topped tables and chairs were carefully arranged to resemble normalcy. Errant clumps of buttercups defied the best intentions of the groundskeeper, popping up between the paving stones.

Usually he relaxed here, soaked in the sun, took comfort in being outdoors. But today he found no refuge. Something broke inside. He needed out. And fast. Freddie insisted, convincing Victor he needed to fly far away from the loonies. Away from the mammoth nurses with man-faces and bobbed hair. Away from the…rules.

He shaded his eyes against the strong August sun and peered down the length of the canal. A boat churned around the bend.

Without hesitation, he ran along the shore, waving his arms.

“Help!” he screamed. “Help us!”

He gestured wildly at Tobias’s prone body. The big man’s chest rose up and down. The fly landed on his hand, nestling into a patch of thick black hair. Blood had trickled down his temples and pooled on the ground, mixing with the carefully coiffed lawn. In the distance, the doors of the sanitorium burst open. Figures in white coats streamed toward him, legs pummeling and arms flapping.

The boat pilot spun the wheel rapidly in the direction of shore, pulling close to the bumpers on the dock. It was vintage. Wooden. Freshly painted. His ticket out.

Freddie urged him to put on his best campaign smile to lure the man closer.

Don’t forget to look worried. Frown a little.

Sandy-haired, about thirty, the sailor jumped over the side, secured his boat to a mooring, and raced to Victor’s side.

“What happened?” he asked. His eyes widened as he recognized Victor, darting rapidly between Tobias and the President.

Hiding the gun behind his back, Victor pointed to Tobias.
“Can you help him?” he asked.

The boater leaned down. Victor smashed the butt of the gun against the back of his neck. Instantly, the man crumpled atop the agent.

What a twit. Didn’t even see it coming.

With Freddie, Clive, and Millie shouting encouragement, The President leapt over the bodies, dashed to the boat, freed it, and headed up the river as three orderlies reached the shore. He shoved the throttle to high and saluted them. The craft roared to life, zigzagging along the canal as it sped toward freedom.

There was something he wanted. Something he remembered… but it eluded him, playing around the edges of his brain.

What was it?

Tea with the Russian Ambassador?

No. That wasn’t it. He pictured Yuri and chuckled. He sure was a stuffed shirt. The thoughts niggled at him again as he churned up the waterway.

Something to do with a dark-haired girl in a blue dress?

He shook his head. Nope. Wrong again.

A conference at Camp David?

Millie piped up, dwarfing the cacaphony of voices that screamed inside his head.

Fudge ripple. We want ice cream.

Victor smiled, relieved to have pinned the thought to his mental corkboard.

Right. That’s it. Ice cream. Okay, troops, let’s go!

 

Aaron Paul Lazar
www.legardemysteries.com


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