Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 46

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 46

Friday morning, we left the Hilton Garden Hotel in a rush.  We wanted to be home by noon if possible.  We had packed our bags last night.  All we had to do this morning was pull on our clothes and brush our teeth.  Regina grabbed us a cup of coffee as I checked out and paid our bill.  We tossed our bags in the back of the truck under the camper shell and were on I-75 North by 5:15 a.m.  It was not until nearly 7:00 a.m., as we took Exit 186 in Forsyth headed to a Waffle House for breakfast, that Regina pulled today’s Atlanta Constitution from her travel bag.  She nearly screamed, “Kyle Turner has been murdered.” 

On her lap, I saw the front page and the above-the-fold article.  It looked like a lakeside photo.  “I can’t believe you didn’t notice this when you picked up the newspaper as we were leaving the room.”  I said turning left onto Juliette Road.  My words lingered as Regina sat silent.  Passing under the Interstate over-path I could see the Waffle House just ahead on the right.

“There were a couple of flyers on top of the newspaper and I just picked the whole stack up and shoved them into my bag.  We were in such a hurry I didn’t even glance at the paper.”

“What does it say?  How did it happen?  Where and when did it happen?”  I said.

“Hold on, let me read a little.”  I parked in the last spot in the parking lot.  The place was packed.

Regina read for several minutes, opening the paper two times to complete the article and re-glance at the ending on another page inside.  “He and his brother-in-law went fishing at the Paradise Fishing Area.  Right in the area we had gone Tuesday and Thursday.  You remember the Carrington’s talking about the big Lake right behind them, through the woods. Seems like Kyle, the two of them, have had a standing trip to Lake Patrick, that lake is kind of to the west of Lake Bobben, that’s it, the lake closest to the Carrington’s.  Both their bodies were found a little before dark yesterday afternoon.  The article doesn’t say how they were killed.  It listed all the law enforcement agencies, obviously including the FBI, who were to start a search beginning at daylight this morning.”

We walked inside the Waffle House and waited as a waitress was cleaning off the only available table.  “This is getting very troubling.  Three murders now of U.S. Congressmen.  All I can think about is the backlash Mr. Turner endured as he tried to wrap up his speech at Fulwood Park Wednesday afternoon.”  I said sitting down at the booth and glancing at the Menu.

“I don’t buy it.  This sure doesn’t seem like a spontaneous killing.  Somebody from the Fourth of July rally and celebration just happened upon Kyle and his brother-in-law the next day, yesterday, at Lake Patrick?  No, this was a carefully planned assassination.  I just feel it.”  Regina said, again turning and folding the newspaper to an inside page.

“Now that I’ve thought about it, I see what you’re saying.  Somewhere, someone, some group of folks are planning and executing a sinister plot.  A plot to empower President Kane to truly have control of the U.S. government.  You do see that every one of the three murdered Congressmen were enemies of Kane?”

“I do.” Regina said as we gave our orders to a frazzled waitress who was simultaneously jotting down our orders, pouring coffee for the man sitting directly behind Regina at the end of the bar, and saying goodbye to two heavily tattooed men walking away from the booth across the aisle.  

As the waitress walked away I said, “what do you keep looking at. 

That’s three times you’ve read the second page of the article.”

“It’s just so sad.  The reporter said that Kyle and his wife were high school sweethearts and would have celebrated their thirtieth wedding anniversary next week.  I guess I just was a little jealous.”  Regina said wiping tears from her eyes.

“Heartbreaking.  How quickly life can change.  By the way,” I said reaching for Regina’s hand, “I wish with all my heart that you and I were celebrating forty-five years of marriage.  Unfortunately, because of my stupidity, we’re not.  But, we are here now.  All I can do, my once in life love, is give you all my love now.  I’m so very thankful that you are in my life.”  I almost felt like an over-the-top romantic.  Until I saw Regina’s reaction.

“Having you, now, in my life, I am the happiest woman in the world.  Walt Shepherd, thanks for bringing me with you to Tifton.”

We spent the next thirty minutes eating waffles and bacon, not saying a single word, just exchanging glances and smiles.  In fact, we didn’t talk much during the entire drive home.

At 12:30 p.m., we drove into Shepherd’s Cove, pulled around to the back porch, and unloaded our luggage from under the camper shell.  After Regina went inside to pee she hugged my neck, thanked me again for inviting her, said she loved me, and drove off to the Sand Mountain Reporter.  I walked around to the back of the trailer and lowered the walk-on gate to allow the furniture a little breathing room.  My cell phone vibrated in my pocket just I was walking up the back-porch stairs.

“Hello.”

“Where are you?”  Vann said.  I could hear someone in the background, above a multitude of noises, say, ‘that’ll be eight dollars and forty-four cents.’”

“I’m at home.  We just got back.”

“Can I run by?  I have something to tell you.”  Vann said.

“Can it wait.  I’m tired and I have a depo job at 3:00.  It might be 3:30.”

“What about afterwards? I could bring a pizza.”

“That sounds good.  Also, how about bringing your grandson or someone to help unload some furniture?”  I said sitting down in my lounge chair.

 “Furniture?  I thought you and Regina had been to Tifton for a little vacation.”

“We have.  It’s a long story.  We rented a trailer and brought back a new bedroom suite.  Antique.  Expensive.”

“Oh boy.  Walt, my friend, you are now officially a slave.  You do know that when you agree with a woman to buy a bed, it’s all over.” “Shut up.  Come around six-thirty.  Bring Deb if you want. 

Regina will probably be back by 7:00 or so.  I’ve got to go.” 

“Will do.  See you before 7:00, and I’ll bring some help.”  Vann said.


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Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 45

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 45

At midnight, and as Walt and Regina were leaving The Pub, Semyon Ivankov was driving I-75 South through Macon.  He was Eric Chandler, or at least, that’s what his Driver’s License and Passport claimed.  His plane from Dallas, Texas had landed at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport at 8:45 p.m.  He had picked up his luggage and the waiting rental car and driven to Tortas Ahogadas Jalisco in Forest Park for his favorite Mexican food, pozole.  He was tired, for he had been traveling nonstop for nearly a week.  And, he was a day behind schedule.  Semyon didn’t like surprises.  The initial plan had been for him to enter the country stowed away in Gustav Neilson’s King Air from Toronto.  But, that plan had been ditched by Thaddeus Colburn early last week.

Last Friday, June 29th, Semyon had driven a car, along with his brother Sergei, from Toronto, Ontario, Canada to New York City.  There, at Reagan International Airport, Semyon had boarded a flight to Salt Lake City, Utah.  From there he took a twelve-hour ride on a Greyhound bus to Denver, Colorado.  Early Monday morning he had flown from Denver International Airport to Seattle, Washington.  Then, by air to Los Angeles.  Two short flights separated by an overnight stay in Phoenix landed him in Dallas at noon yesterday the Fourth.  His last flight departed Dallas at 7:00 p.m.  At each ticket counter, car rental agency, and departure, whether by car, bus, or plane, Semyon changed identities and disguises, and paid with a different prepaid debit card.  

After two bowls of pozole, Semyon realized he had allowed his hunger instead of his reason to direct his steps.  He had driven south ten minutes out of the way to Old Dixie Highway and the Mexican restaurant. Now, he had to backtrack.   Oh well, only half an hour wasted.  Seymon drove to Cubesmart Storage Lockers at 4560 Frontage Road and retrieved the long package that Marc Anderson and George Perrot had deposited last Monday.  Semyon then drove to the Shell Station on Falcon Drive and changed clothes.  Finally, he was back to himself.  A sleeveless tee shirt, cut-off bluejeans, and a pair of new Nike Men’s Air Monarchs Mr. Perrot had promised to enclose in the long package.  No more wig, mustache, glasses, and peel-on scars.  He could relax and drive.

At ten minutes past two, Semyon took Exit 62 in Tifton and drove West on US-82/GA-520.  Driving below the speed limit, he arrived at Paradise Fishing Area at 2:30 a.m.  He turned right, across from Paradise Drive, along the edge of a large field of soybeans and into a grove of trees.  He retrieved the long bag and his duffle from the trunk and abandoned the rental car.  Semyon walked over a mile eastward along Paradise Drive, across the southern dam of Lake Patrick, and onto a dirt path northward to a hidden spot along the lake’s edge five hundred yards from a small island out in the middle of the lake.  He would sleep fitfully until dawn. 

Thursday morning, July 5th, Walt and Regina awoke at 9:30, showered separately, took the elevator downstairs, and ate wholeheartedly from the continental breakfast.  They then drove to Guffey’s, an old-fashioned service station to rent a 14-foot U-Haul trailer.  They returned to the Hilton Garden Inn and stayed beside the pool until 3:00 p.m.  Their drive to Wilma and Carl Carrington’s took twenty minutes.  It took Walt three attempts to position the trailer for the easiest loading of the four pieces of heavy furniture.  Carl and the two boys with him, both short and beefy boys probably still in high school, laughed and snickered as they watched.

By 4:00 p.m., the four men had loaded the chest of drawers, the combo desk & bookcase, and the four-poster bedstead.  Also, the armoire Regina had spotted on Tuesday, and a curio cabinet that Wilma suggested would “work nicely, even in a den.”  These last two pieces cost only an additional thousand dollars.  He was thankful Wilma accepted his personal check.  Walt was elated.  After fifteen minutes of additional wrapping and strapping, the furniture was secure for the trip.  The four men left the trailer open and went inside to wash up and for refreshments before Walt and Regina left.

At 4:25 p.m., Semyon Ivankov exited the Carrington’s barn, entered the open door of the U-Haul trailer, and burrowed himself in between the desk/bookshelf combo, and the large armoire.  He was exhausted but relieved.  More than anything, he was proud of his performance.  His two shots had been perfect.

At 5:00 a.m. this morning, just like the previous six years, Kyle Turner and his brother-in-law Sean, arrived at the main pier at Lake Patrick and launched Kyle’s Sea Born NX23 fishing boat.  As was their custom, Sean would drive them to the sole island in the middle of the lake.  Six years ago, they had discovered this spot, landing fifteen large-mouth bass before 8:30 a.m.  Each year since, they had returned with similar results.  This morning, they tied off the boat, retrieved their fishing gear, exited the boat, and walked to the east side of the island.  Ten minutes after sunrise, around 6:35, Semyon’s first shot centered Kyle Turner’s forehead.  Three seconds later, the second shot passed through Sean’s head entering from his left temple.  Because of the weather, overcast with a light fog and misting rain, and how the brush and the boat concealed the bodies, they would not be discovered until nearly dusk. There had been no cause for alarm by the men’s families.  As was their tradition, they would spend the entire day on Lake Patrick.

By 7:15 a.m., Semyon had hiked the three-quarters of a mile around the southern edge of Lake Bobben and through the woods to the western edge of Wilma and Carl’s property on Richard’s Drive.  The barn had been scouted three weeks ago by a man posing to be a game warden with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, under the ruse of inspecting for an American Peregrine Falcon that had gone missing from the Tallulah Gorge State Park and whose tracking device had led to this area.  Semyon hid in the barn’s loft, nestled in the soft fescue hay, all day awaiting the arrival of Walt Shepherd and Regina Gillan. 

At 4:45 p.m., Walt and Regina exited the Carrington house, closed and latched the trailer door, and drove to the Hilton Garden Inn for one more night before heading home to Boaz in the morning.


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Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 44

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 44

Wednesday, the Fourth of July.  An important day for all Americans.  Other than a quick run to the Ferguson National Bank to purchase an $8,000 cashier’s check, Regina and I either sat around the pool or in our room entranced in our novels.

At 3:30 p.m., we drove to Fulwood Park. This morning there had been a flyer left outside our front door, along with today’s edition of the Atlanta Constitution.  The flyer was an invitation to attend the annual Independence Day Celebration at the Park.  When we turned left on Love Avenue we saw two long rows of folks standing and walking along the sidewalks along both sides of the streets.  The traffic wasn’t heavy, but we crawled along anyway.  After we had a few minutes to observe, we concluded that there were two groups of protestors.  The group on the left sidewalk was clearly the Ku Klux Klan or a look-a-like group.  Many of them were wearing the typical garb, also known at the glory suit.  It consisted of a floor-length, solid-white robe, and a white, sharply pointed hat that included a full-faced cloth mask with eyeholds.  I could tell several of the men’s (women’s?) suits were decorated with a round badge bearing an insignia with a cross.  About half were carrying signs.  The one that caught my attention said, “God is white.”  The other side of the street were the counter-protesters no doubt.  This would have been my team if I had had to choose.  They looked like normal folks, dressed casually.  They too toted signs.  I saw, “God is colorblind,” and “Choose Love, not Hate.”  

As we drove on we saw law enforcement personnel interspersed among the crowds on both sides of the street.  When we turned east on 8th Street we were met with a police roadblock that checked our IDs.

When we were released, we were directed to a parking spot across the street from the Park.  We grabbed our lawn chairs and ten minutes later were enjoying some blue-grass, some gospel, and some country music, sitting less than a hundred feet from the huge stage that had been assembled at the back side of the Park.

After nearly two hours of listening and watching singers of all ages and varying degrees of talent, Tifton’s mayor took the stage, welcomed everyone, and introduced Kyle Turner, the current U.S. Representative for Tifton and the surrounding District.  The Mayor also said Turner’s challenger in the upcoming election, a Mark Wilford, would address the crowd after Turner’s speech.

Representative Kyle Turner gave the crowd a brief biography of his time in the U.S. Congress.  He had been elected as a Republican to the House of Representatives in 2002.  For his first six terms (12 years) he said he never crossed the aisle, always voted straight Republican.  He stated that he now realized that strategy was and is short-sighted.  He described how, in 2015, he voted with his fellow Democrats for increased spending to fund President Obama’s decision to increase troop deployment to Afghanistan.  And, in 2017, he had voted against President Kane’s legislation to repeal Obama Care. 

By now, I was feeling sorry for Turner.  The crowd was turning against him.  They virtually threw tomatoes at him when he said, “I know many of you are diehard fans of President Kane, but many Republican representatives and senators are deeply concerned this nation is in deep trouble unless we return to the core principals of the Republican party.  Kane is leading us off the cliff.  It is bad enough to watch his selfish, egotistical, often crude and nasty conduct. 

But, what is worse, is how he is dividing our Nation.  In my nearly eight terms in Congress I have never seen such hatred spawning between conservatives and liberals.  My dear fellow citizens.  If we don’t return to honesty, kindness, respect, and rationality, America is going to fall just like the Roman Empire did two thousand years ago.”  I was glad to see Mr. Turner escorted off the stage by two burly security guards.  Alone, the crowd would have devoured him.  I could barely hear the last few sentences of his speech, the crowd was in such an outcry.

According to an older couple who were sitting next to us, a couple, by the way, who had not engaged in the shouting against Representative Turner, gave us the run down on Wilford, as the Mayor reappeared and quieted the crowd.  Mark Wilford was from outside Macon, a little town called Rock Hills.  He had never run for public office but owned and operated a successful construction company, a paving company that worked both state and federal highway projects.  Wilford had become known in and around Macon because of his support for Kane, having run ads in the Macon Times Newspaper ever since Kane announced his candidacy.  Wilford, at least once a month, had run a half-page ad with accompanying diatribe of sorts castigating the existing Republican Party.  Our neighbors said Wilford knew as much about government as Kane did.  They predicted he would likely lose the upcoming election but might have a chance in 2020 if he hung around.

I give it to Mark Wilford.  He knew how to play a crowd.  He was a spitting image of Kane.  Not so much in looks but how brass he was.  If I had kept my eyes closed I would have thought I was listening to President Kane at one of his rallies.  Wilford said that Kyle Turner was the perfect example of what was wrong with the Republican Party.  It was men like him who had kowtowed to the Democrats for all eight years of the Obama administration.  Wilford also compared Turner to the same old politics of George Bush, detailed how all politicians for the past forty to fifty years were career politicians who had sold this country down the river.  Wilford asked the crowd, “do you think if we keep going in debt like we’ve been doing the last fifty years that we will have an America in ten years from now?”  The crowd screamed, “No, No, No.” 

Wilford cited example after example of how America was a kick-ass Christian nation that had been appointed by God to provide hope and freedom to a Communist and Fascist world.  Three or four minutes following this rabbit had me thoroughly confused, but the crowd was far more adept at discerning Mark Wilford’s reasoning than me.  He ended his speech by asking the crowd to vote for him on November 6th for U.S. Republican Representative for the Sixth District of Georgia. 

After the political speeches, the youth from two local churches presented skits illustrating the signing of the Declaration of Independence.  At 7:30 p.m., we enjoyed a spectacular firework show that left us both patriotic and hungry.  After asking our friendly neighbors for a referral to a place in Tifton to eat a great steak we drove to The Pub on 18th Street right off Highway 41.  It was a converted warehouse that touted wood-smoked rib-eyes and Suds, a local brewed beer.  We avoided the beer but enjoyed as good a steak as either of us had ever eaten.  At 9:30 p.m., we were enjoying a very good local band when Regina left for the restroom.  When she returned she introduced me to Tricia Mooney from Valdosta.  It seems her and Regina were college friends and, out-of-the-blue, or as fate would have it, placed them both in the same bathroom over forty years since they had last seen each other.  Tricia joined us, and for the next two hours the two of them talked non-stop as I sat and listened to what the band described as bluegrass country.


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Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 43

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 43

We spent the rest of the afternoon at the pool.  Other than the time Regina and I went on our midnight skinny-dipping venture in the waters of my grandfather’s spring, we had never been in the water together.  Assuming, you didn’t count the seven times over the past few weeks that we had slipped into the shower together.  By 6:30 p.m., we were both exhausted from diving for quarters in the deep end of the pool.  We went up to our room, shared an eighth shower, dressed, and found a romantic little bistro on Canal Street that served the best scallops in the world.  At least, that’s what the menu said.  Neither Regina or I had ever eaten them.

It was now Tuesday morning.  We both spent the last two hours stretched out in two lounging chairs, each with a novel, and a tall cup of coffee.  Today, according to Regina, is dedicated to finding an antique bedroom suite.  She has refused to listen to all my arguments against buying furniture so far from home, and for either looking at the many antique stores in and around Boaz or simply forsaking the idea and continuing to use the still-strong suit my ex-father-in-law gave Jennifer and me when we were living in Charlottesville, Virginia.  Regina countered my argument with, “this bed is too tempting for you to think of all the wild and crazy times you and the tall sexy Jennifer had.”  I have reminded her that Jennifer wasn’t that tall.

Before we left the hotel, we found a few prospective stores on Google.  First, we drove to Southern Pickers on South Main Street.  This older man and much younger woman team were nice enough but all they had was one 19th century bedroom suite.  It was mahogany.  For a reason unknown to me, Regina had her mind set on walnut, and hopefully, early 19th century, preferably late 18th century.  What the couple lacked in furniture, they made up in local knowledge.  As we were leaving, the woman, Claire, said, “You might check with Kim Carey over at Carey Antiques & Furniture.  She is Wilma Carrington’s niece.  Wilma and Carl, her husband, have an old plantation home out on Horseshoe Loop in the Paradise Public Fishing Area.  It is completely furnished with the type of furniture you are looking for.”  We thanked Claire for the lead, wrote down the address for Carey’s place and decided to walk.  Before we had left the hotel, we had indulged ourselves with the grand continental breakfast.  Of course, Regina had pancakes, two stacks, and I ate three biscuits smothered in sausage-gravy.  It was only a couple of blocks.

Kim Carey and Lenna Tucker were sisters-in-law.  They had introduced themselves the moment we walked in.  We told them what we were looking for and that Claire from Southern Pickers had referred us.  At first, Kim seemed reluctant to even talk about her aunt and uncle, saying their health wasn’t good and they rarely entertained, as she put it.  Regina pulled Lenna away to show her an Armoire over in front of the far windows alongside a row of roll-top desks.  I told Kim I would pay her $200.00 if she would introduce us to her relatives.  I shared how dead-set Regina was and how I didn’t want to spend the next three days wandering around looking for old furniture.  She countered with $300.00 and I reluctantly parted with most of the money I had earned yesterday. Thirty minutes later we were back in my truck headed east to Carrington Place, a real 19th century plantation that, according to Lenna, Carl’s great-grandfather had purchased in the early 1840’s and developed into one of the largest cotton-producing operations in South Georgia, all with the help of nearly 200 slaves.  Kim had drawn us a map.  It took nearly 45 minutes, including the time it took to drive halfway around Lake Patrick after I missed the right-hand turn onto Horseshoe Loop.

Wilma and Carl were not anything like I had imagined.  They both looked healthy as a horse and much younger than Kim had described.  I had to admit that when I was much younger, say in my 20’s and 30’s, fifty-five and sixty-year-old folks looked ancient.  For the next hour we toured the two-story home that exactly mirrored my idea of what a Southern Plantation home would be.  It had six huge white columns across the two-story front.  The only difference was this giant of a home was brick, white-washed brick.  I had assumed that it would have been clapper-board-sided.  During our tour, we inspected four large bedrooms upstairs, all exquisitely furnished.  All were built of either cherry, maple, or oak wood.  When Regina re-emphasized, she was looking for walnut, Wilma said, “I heard you the first time dear.  I was saving that for last.  Mine and Carl’s bedroom suite on the first floor will, no doubt, be what you want.”

“I know you wouldn’t sell that.”  Regina responded.

“I would.  For the right price.  Anyway, Carl and I are moving to Destin, Florida this Fall, and my son and his wife are taking over the plantation.”

After we listened to Carl and Wilma explain their reasoning for the big life change they had planned, she lead us downstairs.  The first moment Regina walked through the door and saw walnut wood everywhere, I knew my pocketbook was in deep trouble.  Wilma immediately spouted out, in detail, the inventory that was before us: “we have a Chippendale Walnut Pennsylvania Chest (circa 1780), an early 19th century Chippendale Walnut chest of drawers, an early 19th century Federal inlaid walnut desk & bookcase. My favorite is the desk, it has two inlaid doors opening to a fitted interior with walnut dividers, with long drawers with original brasses flanked by inlaid quarter columns and straight bracket feet.  The bed is an American four-poster with spare, understated lines that characterize 19th-century early American furnishings.  It was crafted of walnut and featured gracefully turned corner posts, an upholstered camelback headboard and ball feet.”

An hour and a half later, Regina and I were driving back to the Hilton Garden Inn.  The two women had negotiated the transaction.  I would pay $8,000 to Wilma, certified funds only, or cash.  Carl would secure the help needed to load the furniture on to a 14-foot U-Haul trailer that we would bring with us Thursday at 3:30 p.m.  Wilma insisted that I write her a $5,000 check as a deposit, promising to exchange it for my larger cashier’s check on Thursday.  “Young man, this gives you the motivation to rent that trailer.”  Wilma said as we walked down the brick steps off the grand and glorious front porch.

When we returned to our room I lay across the king-sized bed and asked Regina, “do you think we could move mine and Jennifer’s bed downstairs in the guest room.  I hate to part with it.  I feel it will be a valuable antique someday.”  She just looked at me and said, “I don’t mind at all.  You know your new bed is much smaller.  It will only be comfortable for one person.  You can sleep with Jennifer downstairs and I’ll sleep upstairs on the four-poster.  No, I don’t mind at all.” It took me an hour to lure Regina away from her novel. 

“Seriously dear, I do love your talent for spotting beautiful furniture.  I’m glad I brought you along.”

“Walt, I love the furniture too, but what I love most was what we did today is all about us, me and you, our lives as one.  This thrills my heart.”

“I love you Regina.” I said pulling her on top of me, clothes and all.  This activity, and a host of others, all without our clothes, consumed the remaining hours of a perfect July day in South Georgia.


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Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 42

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 42

We didn’t return for our luggage until nearly midnight.   The king size bed was simply too comfortable.  Around 7:30 we thought about a food run but decided against the remaining fried chicken and horseradish salad in the cooler in the back of the truck.  Instead we opted for room service. A huge chef’s salad we shared, along with a double serving of homemade black walnut ice-cream.

Monday morning came too quickly.  I wish now I hadn’t watched Nicolas Sparks’ movie, “The Best of You.”  The bittersweet feeling, I had gone to sleep with was still lodged in the center of my subconscious.  It amplified as I took the elevator down to the lobby and out to the truck for our luggage.  By the time I finished my shower and dressed, my thoughts of how love and tragedy seemed to travel together, needed a break.  It came with today’s stenography assignment.

I arrived at Cushions, Bankston, and Livingston at 8:30 a.m. sharp.  I had hoped it would be a thirty-minute drive but should have realized that unlikely given the size of Tifton.  A young receptionist, maybe a year out of high school, led me to the conference room where I met Charles Bankston pouring a cup of coffee from a table that appeared to have been brought in for today’s occasion.  I chose a Diet Coke over ice instead of coffee.

Bankston and his firm were defending head football coach Keith Coles, and Tift County High School against a lawsuit brought by Jay Brulinski of the American Center for Constitutional Allegiance, a public interest law firm based in Chicago.  The Plaintiffs were Grant Randolph and his son Tyler who is a football star at Tift County High School.  His father, Dr. Grant Randolph, is the Director of Graduate Studies in Plant Breeding, Genetics & Genomics at the Tifton branch of the University of Georgia’s College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences.  

Dr. Randolph, on Tyler’s behalf, had sued the high school and Coach Coles for violating the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment prohibition against the establishment of religion.  Coles has a long-time practice of proselytizing and praying with his players and assistant coaches.  The lawsuit was filed last Fall, but the case had stalled when it was dismissed by an Atlanta Federal District Court.  It took nearly six months for the Appellate Court to issue its ruling overturning the District Court and reinstating the lawsuit.

By 9:00 a.m., all parties were present.  Only Attorney Jay Brulinski was absent.  Shortly after I arrived, Bankston had received a call from Brulinski saying he was running thirty minutes behind.  Something about a mix-up in his rental car at Hartsfield International Airport.  One would think the attorney could have arrived late yesterday afternoon to be on time this morning.

As we waited, Bankston and Coach Coles left the conference room and I talked with Dr. Randolph and his son.   They both were pleasant, cordial, professional, and respectful.  I was particularly impressed with Tyler who had nothing but praise for Coach Coles, except for “his religion.”  Tyler said, “It’s like Coach carries two completely different people around with him.  He can be pure coach for two hours during practice but turn into pure preacher on the way back into the field house.  I’m there to play football and hopefully earn a scholarship.  If I want church, I can go to church.”

It was nearly 10:00 before Brulinski arrived.  He was a tall and thin middle-aged man with thick and curly black hair.  He was impeccably dressed in a dark woolen suit.  Apparently, he had never been to Tifton, Georgia in the middle of summer.  He quickly shed his suit coat and asked if he could have a few minutes with his clients.  I exited the room and walked back to the front desk to chat with Angie the receptionist.  She had graduated last year from Tyler’s high school and only knew him as a super football player in the tenth grade, now eleventh grade.  Angie said, “I don’t know what’s the big deal.  Everyone around here is a Christian.  I wouldn’t think the Randolph’s need money.  I don’t see the point.”

Finally, at 10:20, the depositions started.  First up was Coach Coles.  Attorney Brulinski spent nearly half an hour asking background questions: where he grew up, his schooling including college, his work history, including teaching and coaching, and his religion.  Brulinski camped out with Coles’ religion for the next hour, blending his questions with inquiries about his relationships with his players at Tift County High School and how he conducts his practices.  

Coach Coles had been a Christian all his life.  He grew up in Southern Baptist Churches all over South Georgia.  He believed the Bible was written by God through men inspired by the Holy Ghost.  Coles had no doubt that it was his job to spread the gospel, to evangelize every player, “God placed in his care.”  Brulinski spent his final twenty minutes quizzing Coles about the U.S. Constitution.  It was clear he had little interest in the law.  In response to Brulinski’s question on how he, the coach, would feel if his son played for a Muslim coach who preached Islam to his parents, Coles responded, “that’ll never happen in the South, so I don’t have to worry about that.”

Since we were running behind, Attorney Bankston had sandwiches brought in and we took only a fifteen-minute lunch break.  It also seemed like we made up some time when Bankston had only a few questions for his client.  Coles stated that he never pressured any of his players to agree with him.  He said that at the beginning of each school year he had his players sign a waiver of sorts, a document he described as an acknowledgment that I am a Christian and that you agree you don’t have to play for me.  Coach emphasized that he cared for each one of his players and wanted only what was best for them.

Next up was Tyler Randolph.  He told Brulinski that he was shocked two years ago when he and his family moved to Tifton from Boston.  His father, a scientist and educator, had accepted the job with the University of Georgia to work in Athens, but at the last minute, the former director at the Tifton Center quit after a pancreatic cancer diagnosis.  What shocked Tyler was how infected, that was his actual word, how infected the whole community was with Christianity.  Tyler went on to say that almost every teacher at the high school is pretty much like Coach Coles.  They inject God and Christ into everything, including examples they use in class.  Tyler said if he had wanted to go to a Christian school then that’s what he would have done.  Tyler, very bright, was persuasive in sharing how he wanted to learn about reality.  He, no doubt influenced by his father, was curious, and wanted the truth, no matter where it led.

Attorney Bankston spent nearly an hour cross-examining Tyler.  Why he spent most of his time on Tyler’s religious background I’m not sure.  It seemed to me Bankston knew his clients were in trouble and simply had to go through the motions of conducting an acceptable deposition.  However, he didn’t have any questions for Dr. Randolph, apparently accepting the answers he provided to fifty minutes of questioning by Jay Brulinski.

Before Bankston informed Brulinski that he didn’t have any questions, he called for a break and left the conference room with Coach Coles.  They didn’t return for nearly thirty minutes.  During this time, the Randolph’s stood and walked to the far end of the conference room and chatted quietly.  I poured another Diet Coke and sat back down.  It dawned on me that what I perceived was happening in Alabama, particularly Boaz, was happening here in Tifton, and most likely, all over the South, maybe this ‘infection,’ as Tyler called it, was engulfing the clear majority throughout the entire country.  It seemed the problem was Christianity.  I couldn’t help but feel a great sense of pride in my teenage decision to abandon the religion of my father, my family, and my friends.  I believed I was a better person for it.  But, that didn’t mean all Christians were bad people.  Most were not.  Most were good, decent, hard-working folks.  How on earth could these people not question their faith?  They seemingly were smart and skeptical in every other area of life.  What made them swallow the Bible and the preaching without question?  

Did they really want a theocracy?  Did they realize what that meant?  What if America became a Muslim theocracy?  Christians would fight to the death to prevent that from happening.  A Civil War of untold proportions would break out if our Congressmen leaned one degree in that direction.  Christians were 100% sold that they possessed the truth, the only truth from all the thousands of religions.  They rejected (probably without even knowing the basic claims) the Hindu, the Muslim, the Buddist, and on and on, yet they believed Christ was born of a virgin, was crucified, and was resurrected to life three days later.  They believed this without any real evidence, other than the Bible, which, once one looks under the hood, it falls to shreds because it is man-made.

I was glad Ginger had given me this assignment.  It would be good evidence for my book.  I now was convinced that Christianity and Kane were made for each other.  Why?  The very life blood of both depended, in full, on lies, and their followers believing a train load of lies.  Now, more clearly than at any time, I could see why Evangelicals voted overwhelmingly for Kane.  And, why most of them said he was God’s man, a man who had been put in the White House by God himself.  I think I will start referring to President Kane as Moses.  The man who will lead God’s chosen people to the promised land.

Coach Coles and Bankston returned with him announcing he had no questions for Dr. Randolph.  The depositions were over.  Mine and Regina’s vacation could begin.

I drove back to the Hilton Garden Inn and found Regina’s note on the bed that she was at the pool.  I changed into my swim trunks, glad I had lost that argument, and took the stairs to the ground floor.  I have never in my life seen a more beautiful woman.  She looked wonderful in pink.  I’m blessed that she loves pink and dislikes one-piece bathing suits.


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Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 41

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 41

We had packed for our Tifton trip the night before.  Sunday morning, July 1st, was the first day of the second half of 2018.  Last night, before going to bed, Regina and I had toasted our sixth month anniversary.  We both were surprised how much each of our lives had changed since we saw each other last December at the Boaz Walmart.  In a way, it seemed like we had been together all our lives, and that the nearly fifty years since high school, and us being apart, had never occurred.  

At 9:50 a.m., we pulled away from Shepherd’s Cove in my trusty 2007 Ford F150 with our luggage in the truck’s bed under a nearly new camper shell.  I hadn’t removed the standard stuff I kept back there, including my tool-box and a chain saw.  But, we had added a few extra things, such as lawn chairs and a cooler filled with a traditional Southern picnic.  Regina, not wanting to appear as a cocky and sophisticated Chicagoan, spent over three hours last night frying chicken and making potato salad that I hoped I someway could avoid. Surprisingly, her baked beans turned out well.  I won’t say anything about her homemade rolls fearing she might read my mind.  I will say, to my regret, Regina wholly failed to acquire the cooking skills her mother had had all through Regina’s growing up years.

During the first leg of our drive. we didn’t talk much.  I drove us to Anniston just enjoying the sweet smell of Regina’s Flowerbomb perfume I had bought her at Nordstrom’s at Riverchase Galleria in Birmingham.  We almost stopped at Books a Million on South Quintard in Oxford but we both agreed if we yielded to the temptation it would consume us for hours.  We resisted.  As soon as we headed east on I-20, Regina turned on the radio and found a local NPR station.  We learned how one family in Brady, Virginia had experienced three generations of coal mining.  It was depressing to hear how a grandfather, his son, and his grandson, three generations of Dickson’s, had died from coal dust.  It wasn’t until we passed through Villa Rica, Georgia that Regina asked about my picnic plans.

Twenty miles later we exited at Lithia Springs, Georgia and drove south to the Sweetwater Creek State Park.  Last night I had researched a place for our picnic.  Online, this appeared to be a private, well-kept park centered around the George H. Sparks Reservoir.  The Park’s bait shop also served as an information center, so we found it first and were directed to a sandy area just north of the parking lot that contained four picnic tables surrounded by a grove of loblolly pines. We were not disappointed with the Park.  We were the only ones using the picnic area.  We enjoyed a quiet lunch and I was doubly surprised that Regina’s potato salad had someway transformed during the night and the drive to the Park.  After eating, we strolled around the marina for a half hour dreaming of owing a thirty-foot schooner and sailing from Gulf Shores to the coast of Maine and back.  We ditched that idea when Regina reminded me of the time we took my father’s canoe out on our own pond, lake as he called it, and I tipped us over at the deep end.  The hot sun drove away our memories and dreams and lured us back to my truck and air-conditioning.  We drove away agreeing that we would come back some day and rent one of the cabins the nice lady in the bait shop had told us about.

From Lithia Springs to just north of College Park, south of Atlanta on I-85, we talked about Felicia and Emma.  Regina had brought up the subject saying Felicia had mentioned mine and her talk the other night after our stenography class.  I now felt a little ashamed that I had not conducted any research that I had promised Felicia.  I shared this with Regina and she said, “what little Conner has experienced has to be inherited, the way he was born.  Sorry, I meant Emma.  It’s still hard for me to call him, her, Emma.”  

“I’m sure it is, but you need to be consistent in what you call Emma, don’t call him Conner.”  I said.

“I agree.  You know, it truly pisses me off that society gets so bent out of shape over these biological issues, including homosexuality.”  Regina said, turning off the radio.

“For most Americans, and probably ninety percent of Southerners, it’s not about biology at all.  You know that.  They think it’s simply a matter of sin.”  

“You’re right, but that makes me want to support Felicia that much more.  Maybe we could tease out a column on this.”

“Sounds good.  Look.  The plane, the plane.”  I said pointing to a huge 747 crossing in front of us heading to Hartsfeld International Airport.  I was trying to imitate Tatoo from the 1970’s TV program, Fantasy Island.

“I see.  I see.  Gosh, I haven’t thought of that since, forever.  I never really liked it.  The program made me think of you.  I knew that my fantasy, being with you, could never happen.  I knew even if Mr. Roarke could make it happen that I couldn’t afford it.”  Regina said, our eyes meeting at a glance.  I could tell she was genuinely sad.

“Baby, I think you know that if I could unbreak your heart that I would.  But, I can’t.  What I can do is love you today, in every way, even tell you how much I enjoyed your potato salad.”

“I knew it.  I could tell last night you didn’t understand or appreciate my knowledge of cider vinegar, lemon juice, pickle juice, horseradish, paprika, hot pepper sauce, and Dijon mustard.”

“I think you used too much horseradish.  I hate that stuff.”  I said trying to gently but honestly mend a beautiful heart.

“The hotel.  The hotel.”  Regina said sliding over next to me.

“I see.  I see.  It is ahead.  Two hours at least.  I see my favorite fantasy.”

“It is me or your dinner will be my potato salad.”

“Don’t worry, you are my dream come true.”

“That’s right Fido.”

For the next two hours we returned to a discussion of Regina’s article, “Russian Suspect Kills Kip Brewer?”  After it had been published we had talked briefly about it, but the discussion hadn’t ended well.  Regina thought I was attacking her journalistic integrity when I relayed my opinion that a lot of reporters seem to hide behind an anonymous tip or source.  Today, she brought it up and was more pleasant, but I stayed away from my opinion.  Regina didn’t.  She shared how she believed that Pastor Warren, Justin Adams, and all of Club Eden was up to something.  She said she feared they were directly tied to President Kane’s yet undiscovered connections to the Russians.  

“I don’t think the special prosecutor will ever complete his task. 

He has been investigating since early 2017 and hasn’t found anything yet.  Or, at least he hasn’t disclosed any discoveries.”  I said turning down the temperature on the air-conditioning feeling a little hot from Regina’s bare leg pressed against mine.

“What else can it be?  You saw my photograph of the Russian guy.  He was at Club Eden.  He was shooting targets with the very rifle that killed Kip Brewer.  I don’t see how anyone could conclude that Club Eden had nothing to do with that.”  Regina said, removing her left hand from my leg and turning down the air-conditioning three more degrees.

“Might not be so simple.  Most things are usually not what they seem on the surface.”

We bantered back and forth during the remainder of our drive.  The only thing we both totally agreed on was the next four months until the mid-term elections, was going to be interesting and intriguing, possibly even more deadly than the past few months.  At 4:35 p.m., we pulled into the parking lot of the Hilton Garden Inn.  

“Let’s go check out our room.  We can come back later for our luggage.”  I said pulling into the nearest parking spot next to the front doors.

“Sounds good.  I’m feeling like a massage.”  Regina said elbowing me and pushing me out my door.

“Always glad to be of service.”


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Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 40

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 40

Saturday morning was the perfect day to stay in bed.  It was raining outside, pouring buckets.  It was romantic inside.  Regina had stayed over, and we had been awake since a little before three.  The power had gone off, along with the steady hum of a floor fan that I had been addicted to since my college days.  Like any heart-connected couple who was weeks into ‘going steady,’ we took advantage of the early hour by making love.  

The power had come back on just as the post-play was running out of ideas.  Instead of dozing back off, Regina got up, took a shower, and went downstairs.  At 7:30, I attempted to join her but all I found was a note on the bar: “something came up at the Reporter.  Will call later. 

Read paper.  Sorry I’ve kept mum.”

I hadn’t noticed that her note was laying on top of today’s Sand Mountain Reporter.  Regina must have driven to town to buy a copy. 

Mine, in the mailbox, wouldn’t arrive for another four or five hours.

I poured a cup of coffee and retired to my chair in the den.  The subject article was easy to find.  It was on the front page, above the fold.  “Russian Suspect Kills Kip Brewer?”  The title did its job, although the writer, Regina Gillan, was a draw.  I had no choice but to dive in. 

Just as I started to read, my phone vibrated on the end table beside my chair.  It was Ginger.

“Good morning.  I hope I’m not calling too early on a Saturday.” “Not at all.”

“I just wanted to confirm your trip to Tifton, Georgia for the Connor deposition.”

“I think you said it was on Monday, July 2nd.  Right?”  I said sipping my coffee.

“That’s correct.  I’m about to email you the details.  I figure you and Regina will drive down on Sunday.  You spend Monday morning at work, and then you guys rest, relax, and kick around Tifton for a few days.  At least until Thursday, Friday morning at the latest.  By the way, I may have you a quick job for Friday afternoon, but it’s in Albertville, at 3:30, just a single, short deposition in a little fender-bender auto accident.

So, you gotta be back before then.”

“Ginger.  Regina and I really do appreciate this, but I don’t think I deserve such an extra benefit no longer than I’ve been on board.”

“Ridiculous.  It’s already a done deal.  You have reservations beginning Sunday, July 1st, at the Hilton Garden Inn in Tifton.  They are booked through Thursday.”  Ginger said as I heard her typing on a keyboard.

“Regina is excited about getting away.  It’s our first trip together.  Actually, I think she’s more excited about some furniture shopping than anything.”

“Is she looking for anything in particular?”

“Possibly a bedroom suite.  For me.”

“Tell her there are several great antique furniture stores right off the square.  I’ve walked through most of them, even bought a little curio cabinet in the one on the corner of Main and something, I can’t remember.  Listen, I must run.  If you have any questions after reading my email, just give me a buzz.  Thanks Walt.”

“You’re welcome.  Have a nice day.”  

“You too.”

After we hung up I wondered why Ginger had been in Tifton but realized she hadn’t said when she was there.  It might have been twenty or thirty years ago.”

I took another sip of coffee and returned my gaze to the Sand Mountain Reporter.  Regina started off stating that there appears to be an explanation why Frankie Olinger’s fingerprints were on the murder weapon, the Springfield 30-06.  He, along with Warren Tillman, Justin Adams, Ryan Radford, Fulton Billingsley, Danny Ericson, and an unidentified Russian, had met at Club Eden on Aurora Lake two weeks before Kip Brewer was murdered.  Frankie had brought the 30-06 to participate in target shooting, and had left the gun there, inside the cabin.  He was unclear as how the rifle had made its way back to the gun case in his house.  Regina also said that she had learned, from an anonymous source, that the FBI’s crime lab had discovered a second set of fingerprints on the rifle but had been unable to connect them with a suspect.

The heart of the article was, of course, the Russian mystery man. 

Regina had included a grainy photograph of a man caught on camera.  She described him as around six feet tall and weighing around 175 pounds.  Regina confessed the photo was from a service station and convenience store security camera in Snead, Alabama.  She didn’t say how she had discovered the photo.  A closer inspection of the photo appeared to show the man had a long scar across his right cheek, stretching from the corner of his mouth up towards his right ear.  But, the more I looked, the more I thought it might be an illusion since the quality of the photo was rather poor.

Regina bolstered her case when she disclosed information she had obtained from Frankie Olinger.  He stated that the unidentified man at Club Eden two weeks before the murder appeared to be the same man in the photo.  Frankie had stated that he didn’t talk to the man but had watched him shoot across the lake.  Apparently, the only place to practice long shots at Club Eden is to set up a target on the dam, a foot or so below the top, to have a backstop for the bullets.  Frankie said the seven men had each taken turns laying on the ground on the east end of the lake and shooting west to the dam over a half-mile away.  ‘Dead-aim, never missed his target’ as Frankie recalled how Justin Adams described him.  In fact, every shot, no matter which gun he was using, centered the target and layered bullet after bullet on top of the previous one.  Frankie stated that ‘Dead-aim’ had shot his 30-06 several times and had described it as, “bloody reliable.”  

Regina ended her article with a short paragraph about Kip Brewer and a meeting he had had just a few days before he and his wife Darla had gone on their two-week Town Hall journey right before he was shot.  Another anonymous source had told Regina that Kip had his own unnamed source.  This genderless person worked at the White House but was no friend of the President.  It seems X (how Regina identified this person) had described to Kip that there are rumblings around the White House that Kane is looking for a diversionary opportunity, something to distract Americans from all the bad publicity he is experiencing.  X indicated that a confrontation with North Korea or a series of terrorist attacks on American soil are the two things being considered.  Finally, X shared that it appeared likely that someone from the White House staff had met with Russian operatives, Putin’s men, during the recent G-7 Summit in Italy.  Regina ended, stating that Kip Brewer had met with the Senate Judiciary Committee before leaving town in early February.

Some readers might conclude Regina’s article was simply a show of support for her brother-in-law Frankie Olinger.  I read it differently.  After two detailed readings, I, at first, was a little angry at Regina for not confiding in me about what she was working on.  My second cup of coffee helped.  I pondered that she may have thought I might have said something, even something innocuous to say, that might have discouraged her from taking her information public.

By now Sandi kept nudging my left arm wanting me to take her out for a walk.  Before we were both off the porch, a perplexing thought raced into my mind.  How on earth had Regina discovered all this?  This article was the type that almost always originates in the New York Times or the Washington Post.  Before we reached the end of the pier I had my answer.  Regina was just as much a big-league reporter as anyone working for a national paper.  Duh, she had spent almost forty years with the Chicago Tribune.

I was proud of Regina and couldn’t wait to see her and her expression as I bragged on the quality of “Russian Suspect Kills Kip Brewer?”

 

 

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 39

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 39

I hadn’t seen DeeDee since Mother’s funeral.  We had talked twice on the phone.  The first time was the day after President Kane told the world what an unpatriotic coward I was.  She had been only mildly sympathetic, saying I had always had a way of being on the opposite side of the majority.  Our second conversation was yesterday afternoon when she called and asked if she could drop by this morning around 11:00.

Sandi and I had just returned from two laps around the pond and were sitting on the back-porch steps when DeeDee drove up.  She was driving what looked like a brand-new Buick.  

“Don’t ask how much it cost.  It’s not mine.”  She said from beyond a lowered passenger side window.  

“How much did it cost?”  I said standing up and walking around the rear of the car and on towards her opened door.  I noted the shiny red vehicle was a Buick Lacrosse.

“The list price on the window sticker was thirty-two thousand and sixty-five dollars.  I just peeled it off yesterday.

“Why are you driving it if it’s not yours?”

“That’s why I wanted to see you.”  DeeDee said fumbling with her iPhone and reaching back onto the front passenger seat for a shoe box.

“I have a new job.  The car is furnished.”

“Okay.  Merck or Pfizer?”

“Neither.  I am working for Justin Adams’ gubernatorial campaign.

“What?  Are you crazy?  He’s a crook.  And, his father is no doubt headed to a federal prison.  Finally, he is President Kane’s twin brother.  Tell me you are joking.”  I said pulling Sandi away from DeeDee.  I couldn’t help but notice her expensive pants suit.

“Justin is not his father.  I’m surprised you of all people would condemn him by association.”

“As they say, ‘the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.’”  

“Walton, you can think anything you want.  I’m excited about what Justin is going to do for Alabama.”

“I’m not even going to ask how you got involved.  You asked to see me.  What’s up?”  I said taking the shoe box from DeeDee and motioning for us to go inside.

“First, I have a message for you.  Frankie will be released from jail sometime today.”  DeeDee said laying her cell phone on the counter, removing her suit jacket, and walking towards the half-bath right off the kitchen.  “Give me a minute.”

When she returned she said, “Justin said Warren had spoken with Vann about the meeting the two of you had with Frankie.  Seems things have moved rather fast.  The Judge set a bond.”

“It sure pays to have friends in high places.  Also, it sure sounds like you are an insider.  What role are you playing in the campaign?”  I asked.

“Campaign manager of course.  What else would I be doing?”  DeeDee said rolling her eyes as though any idiot would know this.

“Sorry, I forgot it’s been, what, nearly twenty years since you comanaged Bob Riley’s campaign?  That was in 2002, right?”

“Yes, and 2003 until the election that November.”

“Oh sister, sister.  If you needed a job why didn’t you just go back to selling drugs?”  I asked, pouring out the rest of the coffee after DeeDee declined.

“Not much future in that.  The competition is too intense for this stage of my life.”

“So, the governor’s race is going to be a piece of cake, no competition there no doubt.”

“Walt, this could be my time.  Even though Kevin and I would enjoy camping and fishing if he retired.  He’ll be sixty-six in January.  However, he’s making more money than ever before.  I see him staying on with Caterpillar for another ten years.  You probably don’t know but they’ve made him Sales Manager for the entire Southeast.  He’s traveling every week.  So, I needed something to do.”

“What did you mean, ‘this could be my time.?”

“I see Justin winning the election.  He has the deep pockets behind him.  Stuart Tinsley from Selma is Justin’s strongest competitor, but he is tainted, or will be when the news hits the streets.”

“I assume you have some inside scoop?”

“Yes, and you’re not hearing it from me.  Back to me. Justin will have a couple of years under his belt in 2020 when Kane wins re-election.  Obviously, you know how tight these two guys are.  I think it’s only natural that Justin move on up.”

“Like George and Louise on the Jefferson’s?

“I hadn’t thought of them in a while.”

“That show was hilarious.  Just like the Justin Adams show will be.”  I said.

“Again Walt, you have this uncanny ability to pick the wrong side.”  DeeDee said removing the lid on the old shoe box she had brought.

“‘Even if you are a minority of one, the truth is the truth.’  Gandhi.”  I said standing straight and saluting DeeDee.

“I get it.  I won’t ever change your mind.”

“And, me yours.  So, what’s in the shoe box?”  I asked.

“Letters, Mother’s.  I found this box in her grandmother’s trunk she had since she was 16.  The trunk was in her closet at Brookdale.”  DeeDee said wiping a tear.

“Letters.  From who?”

“Mostly from you, while you were in college, a few from your days teaching in Maryland.  There’s also a couple she wrote, apparently never mailed.”

“Did you read them?”  I asked.

“Not really, just scanned the envelopes.  Maybe glanced at one or two.”

“Okay, what’s the smoking gun?”

“Not one from what I saw.  I’ll leave it to you to find the keg of TNT.”  DeeDee said reading a text she just received.

“Is that our boss?”

“Yes, and I have to go.  Late lunch at the State Park.  I’ll let Pastor Warren know I told you about Frankie.”

“Sis, I think you’re making a mistake but what in hell do I know?”

“Right, see you little brother.  Take care.”  DeeDee said typing a response to the text.

She walked around to the kitchen side of the bar, pulled her suit jacket from the back of a bar stool, hugged my neck, and walked out the back door.

For the next hour I walked back in time, back forty-plus years.  The last letter I read was dated January 18, 1973.  The envelope was addressed to me.  It contained a five-cent stamp but had never been mailed.  The letter inside was written by my dear mother.  She told of being in Guntersville that morning.  She described the feeling she had, a ‘spirit pulling me,’ she called it.  She had gone to Guntersville to shop at Hammer’s Department Store.  They were having a big sale all week long.  While there she overheard a group of ladies talking about the Micaden Lewis Tanner trial going on in the courthouse.  

Mother knew one of the ladies.  She was ‘high society in Albertville,’ Mother wrote.  The spirit pulled Mother, and apparently the group of women, to go sit in on the trial.  It so happened that it was Friday and almost as soon as they sat down, right behind Sara Adams, according to Mother’s letter, the jury foreman was announcing they were hopelessly deadlocked.  The letter went on to describe how distraught Mrs. Adams was, quoting her as saying, ‘oh my, oh my dear James.’  Mother ended her letter describing the feeling, she said, ‘God spoke to me,’ that she ‘caught’ about Micaden.  

Mother wrote, “‘I was able to see him after the Judge ordered a mistrial.  Micaden and attorney Matt Bearden were hugging each other.  I couldn’t hear the words but Micaden, I know since I had lots of experience reading the lips of your deaf grandmother, I know Micaden said, ‘the Flaming Five are evil.  They are just like their fathers.  And, if they have sons of their own they will not have a chance.’”

I don’t know why Mother wrote me this letter.  Nor, do I know why she wrote her post script, “Walt, I know you went to school with Micaden.  Maybe the two of you someday can get to know each other.  I think you would like him.’”

A few minutes before 2:00, Regina called and said that Delton, her crime reporter, had sent her a text, ‘Frankie Olinger has been released.’

 

 

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 38

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 38

For some strange reason Snead State’s maintenance crew had chosen tonight to paint my classroom.  Dean Naylor had left a message with Melvin, the lead painter, that I could hold my class on the stage in the Auditorium.  Since our stenographic machines were locked in a storage closet across the hall I decided we would do something a little different tonight.

After everyone arrived, we walked down the long hallway to the Auditorium.  It had become harder and harder over the semester to keep a clear line between me as the teacher and the six wonderful students I had grown to love.  Each of them seemed to be in a battle, none of their own choosing.  Tonight, I needed to show them how much I cared about what they were going through and to reinforce what I had tried to communicate all semester.  They could talk to me about anything and I would listen.

We walked into the auditorium and down the side aisle to the steps up to the stage.  “Joshua, see if there are any chairs back stage.”

There were none. “Why don’t we sit out in the auditorium and you stand up here behind the podium, give us one of your long and rambling fishing stories, and we’ll take notes.”  Michael said.

“I like your idea but let’s tweak it just a little.  We could all give a talk.  Since we’re not having moot court tonight, we’ll do something different, but it will help develop the primary skills needed to become a great stenographer: excellent concentration, detail oriented, listening, and writing.”

“I don’t want to give a speech.” Felicia said.  “All I could think of talking about would be my problems.  No one wants to hear that.” “I do.”  Valentina said.

“Me too.”  Chimed in Amanda.

“It’s not like there’s any big secrets among us.  Is there?”  Joshua asked.

“You all know my story.”  Christopher said as we all moved down to the floor of the Auditorium in front of the stage.

“Okay, this is what we’re going to do.  One of you will start us off with a short talk, just tell us a story.  The rest of us will take notes.  Of course, using our best shorthand.  Then, I’ll call on a listener to go onstage and retell that story.  We can do this until everyone has both told and retold a story.  Also, one other thing, at the end of the class, you can vote on two winners.  The one who told the most interesting story and the one who best retold a story.”  I said.

I could tell by Michael’s body language he wasn’t thrilled over my lesson plan.  “This isn’t speech class.  This is note-taking.”

“Michael, you are the best storyteller here.  Now, get up there and spin out one of your fantasy yarns.”  Amanda said.

“No way.”  Michael responded.  I knew something serious must be on his mind.  He normally was the clown of the class, always, seemingly happy.

“I’ll go first, Valentina said, getting up and walking to the podium.

For nearly five minutes she shared how Stella Gilham had rescued her from a deep depression and near suicide when her cousin was kidnapped and later died trying to escape.   It was as though Valentina had a purpose, a life lesson to share.  She ended her talk with, “We each have the power to help transform a life, but we must get our hands dirty, we must live our lives in humanity’s trenches.”

Christopher did an excellent job retelling Valentina’s story, although he cut it down to under two minutes.

Over the next ninety minutes I heard five more inspirational stories, all couched within lives who were all struggling in ways I had never faced.  And some way, either through the original story or the retelling, hope emerged, sometimes in awkwardly funny ways.

Amanda told how she worked two part-time jobs to feed her alcoholic mother and three younger siblings.  She described her typical day that included less than five hours sleep every night.  She shared how her mother had given up after her husband, Amanda’s father, had been murdered three years ago.  If it were not for her paternal grandparents, Amanda and her family wouldn’t have a place to live.

Christopher told a story of how he had been ridiculed all his life by his father and his two brothers.  They made fun of him because he loved to read and didn’t like an outdoors life of hunting and fishing.  Christopher had praise for his mother who whispered encouragement although she lived a life of fear from domestic abuse that could arise at any time.

Michael finally acquiesced and shared a short but powerful story about his lifelong battle with diabetes. He shared incident after incident of the problems he had faced from excessive thirst to the frequent need to urinate.  He encouraged the rest of us who were healthy to be, as he put it, “excessively thankful every day.”  

Joshua piggy-backed onto Michael’s story, relating how his father was a diabetic and suffered from fatigue, dizziness, weight loss, blurred vision, and slow wound healing.  Joshua told a funny story of how when he was ten years old he and his father went fishing below the Guntersville Dam.  He described how his father became disoriented and how a rather large woman led him to the back of her van that had a dog cage with two large collies.  The dogs were adorable, and the woman made Joshua’s father ride inside the cage with the dogs as she drove them all the way home to Douglas.  What made the story so funny was Joshua’s facial and body expression he made to depict how confused his father was over being “kidnapped by the giant woman whose children were collies.”

I was beginning to think that Felicia wasn’t going to participate.  With less than fifteen minutes left in class, she reluctantly walked to the podium.  Her story was shocking.

To my surprise, Felicia confessed she had a six-year-old child.  She spoke of how she had shown her what real love is.  And, she told of how young Emma had opened her eyes to the ignorance and bigotry of Christianity.

Emma was now in Kindergarten at Boaz Elementary School.  The shock came when Felicia told us that Emma was born as Colton, a precious little boy.  Sometime around his third birthday he began expressing himself as a girl.  Felicia said Colton had always loved dolls and girly type clothes, but it wasn’t until he was three years old that he began to verbalize that he was a girl.  

Felicia described the horrible issues confronting her and Emma as she started school.  Her kindergarten teacher and the principal, at first, ignored the problem of Emma wanting to use the girl’s bathroom.  They simply ordered Emma to use the boy’s bathroom, accusing her of playing a silly game.  When Felicia learned of the ridicule Emma was facing she confronted the teacher and the principal.  It had taken a multitude of meetings and a stern letter from a Birmingham lawyer to finally persuade the school to develop a special ‘bathroom’ plan for Emma.

Unsurprising to me, Felicia shared how she had gone for counseling and consultation with Pastor Warren at First Baptist Church.  She said, with her face turning red from what I suspect was rage, “Felicia dear, for parents to think a 3-year-old is old enough to make life changing decisions is mind blowing.  This entire transgender debate is a revolt against the sovereignty of God because He and He alone gets to decide what sex we are.”  As Felicia stopped speaking she walked back down from the stage.  Just as she was about to take her seat, she said, “I forgot to say, what Pastor Warren said was exactly what he had to say.  All my life I have bought into his God and Bible talk, but now, dealing with this very real issue, I believe there has to be real answers for why this is happening to my little Emma.”

We stayed ten minutes over because everybody wanted to know who won.  I think that was because, as motivation, I had promised twenty-five-dollar prizes to the two winners.  It was perfectly fitting that Felicia Shea won the best story award, and Christopher Minor won the second prize for a hilarious re-telling of Joshua Boggs’ kidnapped by collie dog story. 

Felicia, as was becoming routine, lingered after everyone else had left.  I could tell she wanted to engage me in conversation, but I had planned on meeting Regina for a late supper.  Before I could explain why I had to leave she asked me, “Mr. Shepherd, I trust your judgment.  Why is it that fundamentalist Christians never have an answer other than God is in control or something like that?”

“To me, it reflects their worldview and their disinterest in researching.  Probably includes their fear they will learn something that directly conflicts with the Bible and their beliefs.”  I said, closing my briefcase.

“Can I ask you a favor?”  Felicia said.

“Sure, as always, ask me anything.”

“Would you try to find out what researchers have found out about transgender children?”

“Felicia, you are more than capable of finding this out on your own.”

“I know, but I want to hear it from you.  I trust you.  And, you surely have more time than I do.”  She said with a smile that reminded me of how Regina looked as a teenager nearly fifty years ago.

“Okay, I’ll consider it as soon as I can.  Sorry, but right now I must go.  You take care and I’ll see you next week.”  I said.

“Got a hot date with my auntie?”

“Something like that.  You know how she hates someone being late.”

“Have fun and don’t let her baby blues put you in a trance.” “Ha. Ha.”  I said as we walked out of the auditorium. 

 

 

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 37

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 37

I had just made mine and Regina’s reservations with the Hilton Garden Inn in Tifton when Vann walked in.  As usual, without knocking.  It was Monday morning.  Last week we had decided to change our routine from a Saturday session to a Monday session.  I was simply too tempted on Saturday mornings to be with Regina, especially if she had spent the night.

“Pastor Warren sends his greetings.”  Walt said, sitting his briefcase down on the bar before walking over to the coffee pot.

“You two are getting pretty tight, aren’t you?”

“Nothing new.  Been this way since Warren was in high school and found out I wasn’t his typical Christian teacher.  I think he always appreciated my contrarian attitude.”

“Glad you like him.  He’s too much of a Christian opportunist for me.”  I said.

“If you only knew what he’s up to.”

“Okay, are you going to tell me or just bring this up and drop it?”

“Warren and I had breakfast early this morning.  Normally, we meet on Sunday mornings, but he called yesterday to reschedule.  He asked me to assist him in a project.”

“Oh lord.  This can’t be good.”  I said, filling the dishwasher dispenser with detergent.

“I should have known this but him and Justin Adams hold the two top positions in Kane Tribe.”

“Clarify for me, what exactly is Kane Tribe?”

“I thought we had talked about this.  Anyway, it began as a grassroots organization, totally disjointed, when President Kane’s campaign started showing a little promise.  After he was elected, Kane’s son, Andrew, Jr., was enlisted by the President to create a formal structure.  You recall Frankie mentioning a meeting he attended, along with Warren and Justin, during the Inauguration weekend.”  Vann said.

“What’s formal about it?”

“It now has fifty chapters, one for each state, and each chapter has county delegates.  Each chapter obviously has leaders.  That’s what I meant when I said Warren and Justin were the leaders.  Warren is president of religion and Justin is president of politics.”

“So, each chapter is focused on religion and politics?”  I asked.

“Yep.  What else would they be interested in?”

“Deceiving the American people come to mind.”

“Old boy, that’s why Warren sends his greetings.  He knows you and I are best friends.  After he enlisted my help, he said he hoped I could persuade you to attend a local meeting and maybe join the Tribe at some point.”  Walt said.

“Only if I could replace Justin and head up the politics division.”

“I’ll pass that along.”

“So, what is Warren wanting you to do?”  I asked.

“Two things.  Help him with communications and be a sounding board.”

“Communications with who?”

“Just as you would expect, Kane Tribe has an agenda.  On the religion side, Warren is only one of fifty pastors who President Kane has personally selected to mentor him.  One from every state.  I know you recall that Kane stayed with Pastor Warren the night of Justin’s campaign kick-off.”

“How could I forget.”  I said.

“The religion division of Kane Tribe has one main objective between now and the 2020 election.  To motivate citizens in each state to support the pre-selected Republican candidates.”

“What do you mean by pre-selected?”

“Here’s the big picture.  Kane Tribe wants to win re-election, but that’s not all.  It wants to posture and empower the states for a constitutional convention.”

“Oh, so it can amend the constitution?”

“Absolutely.  Warren wouldn’t say what type amendments the convention would propose.  He said that is premature.  He did say that Kane Tribe, obviously a mouth-piece for Kane himself, sees this objective as wholly achievable by 2020.  Of course, the first goal is to win big in the mid-terms.”

“Win big means have Kane type Republicans elected to Congress, both state and federal?”  I asked.

“Yes.  Did you know that currently there are 33 Republican governors and only 18 states where Democrats control at least one house of congress?”

“I know Alabama has a Republican governor and both houses of congress are Republican controlled.  What are the numbers?  How is the control divided in our state?”

“Out of 35 Alabama Senators, there’s only 8 Democrats, and out of 105 Alabama House of Representatives, there are only 33 Democrats.”

“I think I recall that it takes two-thirds of the legislators to vote for a Constitutional Convention.”  I said.  “Let’s see.”  I grabbed a pencil and sheet of paper and started figuring.  “It will take 33 State legislatures to call for the Convention, and 38 to ratify the amendments it proposes.  In Alabama, it will take 70 Representatives and 24 Senators.  Let’s see, there are already 72 Republican Representatives and 27 Republican Senators.  So, Alabama already has enough to both call for a Convention, and to ratify its proposed Amendments.”  I said.

“Yes, assuming all Republicans voted for it.  And, that’s the rub.  As you know, not all Republicans are in Kane’s camp.  Not yet.  But, this is the purpose of Kane Tribe, especially the state chapters.  Warren and the other 49 directors of the Religion Division, are coordinating a plan to minister to all the Republican representatives and senators in every state, including all the new candidates.”

“I figure that Justin and his 49 Politics Division colleagues have a plan to locate, educate, and present candidates that bleed Kane blood?”  I asked.

“Walt, you are a fast learner.  The bottom line for Warren is, as he says, ‘Vann, it’s simple really.  All I must do is share the gospel.  The Holy Spirit will do the rest.’  I assume you have heard that Warren fully believes that President Kane is God’s man, that God himself has chosen Kane to lead American back to its Christian roots.”

“Vann, do me a favor.  Call Pastor Warren and tell him I surrender, that I am willing to do all I can to support his efforts.”  I said with my best sarcasm, but also with my stomach beginning to feel sick and nauseous.

“I’ll let him know Wednesday night at prayer meeting.  Now, we must focus on our book.  “Last week, our homework was to brainstorm a title for our magnum opus.  What say you?”  Vann said, removing his notepad from his briefcase.

For the next two hours I let Vann do most of the talking.  I couldn’t concentrate.  The only thing I learned was that next week, during our book session, we would get right to work after Vann arrived. 

We would not discuss anything beforehand.  

After Vann left, I sat back down at the bar and noticed he had left his notes.  It contained twelve suggested titles for our book.  One was circled.  The Coming Civil War.  I hadn’t even heard Vann suggest it out loud.  Maybe he hadn’t.  Maybe he had simply written it down.  Either way, I found it a satisfying name.  It exactly encapsulated my feelings for what lay ahead.