Copyright Β© 2019
Forward: First, let me thank blackrandI1958 for inviting me to take part in the "Wine and Old Lace," story theme. Second, let me thank her again for her editing skills.
I hope you enjoy my story and as always, I look forward to your comments.
***
I was on my way to photograph three members of the Cal-Town Women's Club making decorations for an upcoming charity bazaar. What can I say, not all newspaper photography is exciting. I got the job right after graduating high school in 1960 and had now been a
Morning Star
, staff photographer for four years. Even though taking photos of three elderly ladies making streamers wasn't my idea of thrilling, overall I loved the job and it did have its exciting moments.
I had only been working there a little over a year when I was sent on a raid with the Indiana State Police. A gun battle broke out and a bullet passed so close to my ear it sounded like an angry giant hornet. I felt so helpless while bullets were flying all around that as soon as I was old enough I applied for a concealed carry permit, and from then on, wore my Beretta three-eighty under my sport coat. Since then I'd been on countless police raids but never had to draw my gun...thank goodness.
I was only a couple miles from the women's club assignment when my pager went off. Those things were a two edged sword. The paper bought a slew of them and gave one to all the reporters and photographers. We had to wear them during working hours and off hours if we were on-call. Sometimes it was nice. An assignment would get cancelled or changed for some reason and the news room could let us know so we didn't show up to a locked door. Other times I'd be out with my wife and get called out to a fire or accident. That wasn't so nice. Sheri, my wife, didn't mind that as much as she did when the damn thing would start buzzing at two or three o'clock in the morning.
I looked at the display. All it read was, "call off." I pulled into the first gas station and up to the outdoor phone booth. The paper had a general phone number that went through a switchboard. Marge was the operator who would then connect the caller to the proper department.
"Hi, Marge, Clint just paged me." Clint Wilkenson was our city editor.
"Okay, Dylan, here you go."
"City desk," he answered, as usual.
"Clint, it's me. You paged?"
"Yeah, forget the three bag ladies." Clint was a sarcastic cuss. "We'll reschedule it. Get over to South Chicago, around a hundred and sixty-fifth and Kennedy. Some woman was beaten up and raped in her own back yard. The guy took off on foot so half the police force is pounding the pavement, looking for the jackass. Get a couple shots of the cops peeking around a corner or beating the bushes or something. I'm just looking for some general art."
"All right, on my way," I told him. I wasted no time getting to the intersection but saw no cops anywhere. I figured they were probably searching the alleys and back yards so I parked the car, grabbed my Nikon and took off in pursuit of a couple of blue uniforms. I wandered along streets and through the alleyways until I finally spotted a couple of boys in blue. I knew one of them and we talked after I got my shots. I was curious about what happened.
"Dylan, I feel so sorry for the poor girl. She lives with her mother and has a three year old daughter. I think the father deserted her. Anyway, she was hanging laundry up in the back yard when this creep rushed her from the sidewalk, knocked her down with a punch to the face, and then jumped on top and raped her."
"Jesus, Tom," I replied. "It's broad daylight. The guy's got to be out of his mind."
"Yeah, the victim said she thought he was high on something. A couple of the neighbors heard her scream and called us but we didn't have any squads in the area. By the time we got here he took off. We'll find him though. We have a good description and all the neighboring forces have been notified to keep an eye out."
"What's the description, just in case I see him?"
"Long, dark brown hair, scruffy beard, dirty white T-shirt, and baggy levis," Tom answered. "If you do see him, be careful, he's got a knife. He threatened the girl with it when she wouldn't stop screaming."
I told him I'd be careful and thanked them both for the photos. Of course they were thrilled knowing their pictures would be in the paper. As I started back to my car, I realized, while wandering around looking for cops, I had strayed a mile or more from where I was parked, so I started taking shortcuts.
I was walking through a blacktop alley with homes on both sides and was within a couple blocks of my car when I heard something. At first I figured it was a dog but wasn't too worried since there was a five foot tall, cyclone fence between me and the noise. I looked at a bunch of wild bushes growing between the fence and the back of a garage on the other side of it. He was all crouched down and pretty well hidden but I could see parts of the white T-shirt.
Son of a bitch, I thought, I got him. I drew my gun and attempted to get to the other side of the fence through the gate but it was locked with a padlock. Shit. I was pretty sure he knew he'd been discovered, so if I went to the end of the block and all the way around to the front of the yard, he'd be gone by the time I got there.
I figured he knew I couldn't get to him and was afraid he'd bolt on me, so I made sure he saw my gun and told him to lie flat on the ground and throw the knife into the yard. To my relief, he obeyed but I thought; what now? I had him covered but I still had a five foot fence between us.
I did the only thing I could think of and started hollering HELP at the top of my lungs. I was hoping for one of the cops to be close enough to hear me. "HELPβPOLICE, HELP! HELP! HELP!" Nothing! I kept it up and kept it up, thinking sooner or later somebody would hear me, but my voice was starting to get weaker and weaker. I was starting to lose it completely but what else could I do? "SOMEONE PLEASE CALL THE COPS AND TELL THEM I HAVE THE RAPIST!" Still nothing and I was now straining to raise my voice above a couple decibels.
Just as I was about to give up, I heard someone. "What's going on?"
"Please get the police," I croaked. "I've caught a rapist they're looking for."
"We are the police," one said as two cops came around the corner of another house. When they both got next to me, their eyes followed down my gun barrel until they saw what it was aimed at.
"Jesus Christ, that's him," one of them exclaimed.
Suddenly they both became animated, trying to figure out how they were going to get to him. Neither one looked like they could climb the fence. "Can you keep him covered while we go around to the front?" one asked.
"Yes, but please hurry. I've been standing here for about twenty minutes and I'm getting tired," I managed to say with my horse throat.
The two cops walked to the end of the alley then disappeared behind some houses as they made a right turn. I didn't see them again for a couple of minutes until I saw them searching for the right yard. I started waving my arm until they spotted me. By that time, they had called for back-up and I got photos of several cops cuffing the jackass and throwing him into the back of a squad car. I also got shots of the knife.
I was excited as hell by the time I got back to my car. Not only did I get some great shots of the cops taking the rapist into custody, but I was the one who captured him. In the years I'd been with the paper, my name had appeared on hundreds of my photos but I'd never been the subject of the story before. In spite of my sore throat, I couldn't stop grinning. I looked at my watch and saw I still had time to make my last assignment before going into the office. I was taking pictures of a woman on her one-hundredth birthday. To my way of thinking, if someone can last a hundred years, they deserve to have their picture in the paper.
I stopped at a drug store on the way and got a couple boxes or cough drops for my sore throat.
When I got to the location, I asked if I could use their phone. I called in and told Clint what happened so they knew to hold more space open for the photos.
The end of the day was the only part of the job that I considered to be work. We had to develop all our own film and make our own prints. They were clipped to the day's assignment sheets and numbered to coincide with our notes and identifications for each shot. We were normally given a couple hours for all this, but if we had a busy day that wasn't always enough time.
When I was done, I ran my work up to the newsroom and handed it in to Lyle, the photo editor. Clint saw me and walked up.
"Lyle, where's the art from the rape?"
Lyle thumbed through everything and pulled them out. "Here you go."
Rarely did anyone see Clint smile but a big grin stretched across his face. "These are great, Dylan. What a story. Busey's writing it. Go sit down with him and give him your version." He threw the photos back down on Lyle's desks and walked away. "I love it," he chuckled to himself.
I sat down with Rich Busey, and told him everything that had happened. When I was done, I had a question.
"Any word on the girl?"
"Yeah, I just got off the phone with her mother," he replied. "She's got a broken nose and cheek bone. She also tore some cartilage in her shoulder while she was struggling. Her mom sounded like she was more worried about the psychological trauma than the physical injuries, though. I guess her daughter's been through quite a lot over the last couple years. She's at Mercy Hospital.
"You should stop on your way home. I'll bet they'd like to meet the man who captured that asshole."
"Nah, I've got to get home," I responded. I was actually anxious to tell Sheri about my day.
I felt sorry for the girl, but even so, I couldn't stop grinning from ear to ear on the drive home. At twenty-two years old, I felt like I had the world by the tail.
Two years prior, I married Sheri, the love of my life, my high school sweetheart and former captain of the varsity cheerleaders, no less. Every guy in school was after her, but she picked me.
We wanted to get married right out of high school but our folks were dead set against it, saying we were too young. Two years later they gave up. They still thought we were too young but they could see we were truly in love, so they gave us their blessing.
Since then, not a day had gone by that I hadn't felt like the luckiest guy on earth. On top of being married to my dream girl, I had a job I loved and paid well to boot. We had a nice apartment, two decent cars, and could even afford to go out on the town now and then as long as we didn't go overboard.
I could hear my lovely bride slaving over a hot stove in the kitchen as I walked in. "Guess what?" was my lead in just before getting my welcome home kiss.
"They doubled your salary," she sarcastically replied as soon as our lips parted.
"No, you just kissed a hero," I responded. "You can read all about it in tomorrow's paper."
"Like I'm going to wait until tomorrow, you'll tell me now or there'll be no nookie for you tonight."
"Well, since you put it that way," I said with a grin. She knew damn well I couldn't wait to tell her. I poured myself a cup a coffee then sat down at the table as I launched into my adventure.