Kaleidoscope Eyes, Pt.1 by Flavian
Copyright © 2020 by Flavian
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Any references to sex by characters in this story involve ONLY persons 18 years of age or older. Warning! There is reference to Non-Consensual sex—if that is not to your liking, then feel free to pass on this story; I will understand. Also, there are some mild racial references that are not necessarily PC, but, unfortunately, reflect attitudes that still exist in rural Virginia.
I wish to express my deepest gratitude to blackrandl1958 and her crew, including Qhml1, Stev2244, DFWBeast, Laptopwriter, HDK, Girlinthemoon, and SleeperyJim, for giving my initial draft of this story a thorough review
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and a very-well-deserved slicing-and-dicing. Thanks to all of you; but especially Randi for inviting me along on this adventure and for being honest with me. She really insists on trying to make me a better writer and I appreciate it. ~ Flavian.
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"License, registration, and proof of insurance, please."
The Deputy said this almost nonchalantly, with a sound of boredom that I am sure he felt at having me pulled over for a routine traffic stop; just one more miscreant in a—no doubt—steady stream on any given day. He was probably flipping a mental coin as to whether I was going to be one of those who argued with him at the indignity of being pulled over; especially since my rental was sporting out-of-state plates: Pennsylvania, in this case.
Well, I HAD been doing a bit over the speed limit, employing my usual "Interstate-plus-seven; surface-plus-four" rule when I had set my cruise control. I guess four miles over the speed limit of fifty-five in this stretch of U.S. Highway 58 in Virginia, a divided four-lane of pretty good quality, was just a bit too much to tolerate here in Greensville County (I had seen the sign in the median when I had entered the county a few miles back).
Anyway, he had been waiting for me, or someone like me, to be speeding along in his part of the road; in a median cross-over just behind a big enough mound to hide him from long-range view on this hilly section of the east-west highway. When he had pulled out and "lit me up," I had done my civic duty by giving the appropriate turn signal, but I had continued for another few hundred meters and turned into the parking lot of a convenience store before actually stopping. I wanted to show him that I was safety-conscious by getting us both out of the almost continuous flow of cars, pickup trucks, and semis on the highway.
After taking my documentation, the young Deputy spent the next few minutes filling out the paperwork on his portable lap-desk. He returned to my driver's side window and handed me back my license, corporate insurance card that my company uses with rentals, and my rental agreement for the Toyota RAV-4 that I was driving.
The Deputy then began reciting an obviously well-learned litany about how Virginia has a Commonwealth-wide web site ("The URL is at the bottom of your summons, Sir") where the "alleged" violator can see the court date (hopefully matching what the Deputy had scrawled on the citation) and elect to attend or waive court, but paying the court fees, along with the fine, in either case. One could even use a credit card.
"Mister Holloway," warned the Deputy, "please drive at or below the posted speed limits from now on; it's for everyone's safety," he concluded perfunctorily. He looked a little more closely at my face for the first time. I was partially shielded from clear view by the shadow caused by the SUV's roof; coupled with the fact that I had on sunglasses.
"Sir, have we met before?" he asked, but without any really discernable emotion that might indicate his concern, one way or another. Must be bored, I thought.
I looked at the thin metal name plate that he wore across the left pocket flap of his uniform shirt, and my jaw tightened.
Samuel D. Chaves.
"Well, Deputy Shah-Vez," I said, deliberately mispronouncing his name, "this is not my usual neck of the woods. But, the world is a small place..." and I let the sentence trail off. I also kept my sunglasses on, deliberately, now that I had seen his name.
"It's pronounced CHAY-Viss, Sir," he said with mild annoyance. "You be safe now; you heah?" With that, he tapped once lightly on my roof, turned, and returned to his Dodge Charger Deputy Sherriff's Interceptor. I could see the livery of the Greensville County Sherriff's Department on the side as he pulled out, paused for a break in the traffic, and turned to head back to his speed trap nest.
I had not wanted to voice any recognition to him. But, in my mind, I was saying, "You bet your country ass I remember you, Sam Chaves, and five years has not cooled my anger one little bit, either!'
I simply needed to let it pass. I was still scheduled to meet with my mother, who was also my boss, for dinner in about three hours, and I needed to be practical. I could not get into a personal beef, and with a law enforcement official, at that, and expect not to be detained in this part of Virginia, a place where I'd had no interest in returning since...
Well, anyway; no sense getting into a dust-up after five years. Right then, I just wanted to take a leak, suck down some Diet Coke, maybe have some munchies, and hit the road again, maintaining the speed limit, of course, for the next two hours, as I envisioned my last leg of the drive into Norfolk.
****
As it turned out, I would have had to go inside the 58-2-Go Mart, anyway. The sign on the pump said that I needed to see the clerk to get a receipt for gas, and I definitely needed that receipt for my expense report following my site visit to Fort Campbell, Kentucky. So, after topping off my tank, I pulled up to park next to a big black Cadillac Escalade.
The inside of the store was not quite empty. Along with the store clerk, who looked—unsurprisingly, these days—either Indian-American or of some sort of genetic extraction from somewhere else in South Asia; there were three others inside.
The most prominent of the three was the huge, six-foot-four, at least, over-220-pounds, stern-but-bored-looking guy with the buzz cut and an exposed-carry Sig Sauer P320 (based on my initial quick examination). The other two, female, appeared to be his charges. I mean, he had 'bodyguard' or 'some other type of guard' written all over him.
The younger of the two females could not have been more than four or five years old. She was also as cute as could be: red-brown hair, slender, dressed for summer and with the most prominent dimples one could imagine. Yeah, I could see her daddy keeping a shotgun by the door when she hit puberty.
The question concerning the status of the older woman was answered when the young girl called her 'Grandma' as they were speaking.
'Wow! This was a pretty hot-looking grandma,' I thought to myself upon first examination. She appeared to be dressed nicely in a conservative knit top and comfortably snug, but not tight, jeans. Here hair was still brownish, but showed individual silver strands in and among her tresses.
This woman, however, even though very attractive, appeared to be worn down by life. I could see that she was slender and, even though she was probably in her mid-to-late forties; her eyes appeared to be those of a woman in her seventies.
She also appeared to be totally dedicated to her granddaughter and the young girl's needs and moods. There also seemed to be a vibe of discomfort, almost a tangible trace of fear, emanating from the woman toward the big guy with them.
"Can I have the push-pop, too, Grandma?" the little one pleaded. She was turning quickly and dropped one item of candy that rolled right up against my left foot. I bent to get it for her, stayed knelt and smiled as she approached.
Whatever her grandmother said in response, I completely missed. I was startled into speechlessness as I looked into the little girl's smiling face, now showing visible doubt about interacting with a stranger.
Those eyes!
This beautiful little girl had what geneticists called central heterochromia. Most of the time, heterochromia is simply the result of genetics and caused by a benign mutation affecting the way pigment develops in the irises.
There are variations in how this shows up. One could be 'complete', where the two irises are different colors, or 'segmental', where a patch of a different color appears in one iris. But this little girl's irises were 'central', where the irises matched, but each had a ring of color, different from the irises around the pupils.
She had dark, dark brown eyes with golden flecks, but each eye had a purple ring to it, with slightly less than an eighth of an inch of purple around the pupils, but inside the outer layer of the gold-flecked dark brown irises.
I took pity on her hesitancy to speak to me and simply held out the treat to her and said softly, "Here ya go, Sweetheart."
She snatched the colorfully-wrapped sucker from me; and, with a soft, "Thank you," she ran back to her grandmother; who looked at me—or through me, but not really noticing me—and smiled with her lips, but not the rest of her face.