Town Bids Goodbye To
Favourite Son With Dark Secret
Bedford, Iowa (AP) This quiet town is the county seat of
Taylor County, a quiet place that seems to exude small town America. Norman
Rockwell would have been at home here depicting scenes of domestic tranquility,
rural occasions, and whimsy. Supposedly named after a rider of the short lived
Pony Express in the 19th century, the townspeople seem content to
let the world pass them by, living a life of apple pies cooling on the kitchen
window sill, church on Sunday morning, and football games at the local high
school in the fall.
And so it was a shock recently for one of their own to have
been killed in what turned out to be a workplace incident- a shock made all the
more perplexing by where he worked and secrets that have come out about him
since. Timothy Lennox grew up in Taylor County, born in 1971 to Alan and
Heather Lennox, their pride and joy as their only child. Lennox was by all
counts a typical American boy growing up, blond haired and blue eyed, getting
into the usual mischief, distinguishing himself in athletics, favouring
baseball and football. In high school, he grew to lead his team to state
championships in football. The boy who’d been a pride and joy to his parents
became the pride and joy of a town and county. College scholarships and perhaps
a career in the NFL were beckoning.
And then came the accident.
Three days after graduating from high school, Lennox was
crossing the street to meet friends at Pop Tatum’s ice cream shop. He was run
down by local resident Frank “Oz” Oswald, whose reputation in the county is
that of a troublemaker, ne’er do well, and drunk. Oswald was arrested for drunk
driving and hit and run, criminal charges that were just the latest in a long
line of criminal charges. Twenty seven years later, that list of charges and
convictions has continued to grow, and Oswald is currently a guest of the state
at the Iowa State Penitentiary. “There was always something wrong about that boy,” local retiree and
gossip Edgar Gaines told reporters recently when asked about Oswald. “You know
how it is. Some people, they’re just messed up right from the start. Little did
we know that the youngster we were all proud of, the one Oswald hurt... would
end up... well, doing what he did."
Lennox was hurt in the incident, suffering a broken leg and
other injuries that put an end to his football ambitions. He seemed to take it
all in stride, heading off to college anyway, but friends noticed that he had
seemed to withdraw in many ways. “He seemed to be mourning missed chances,”
longtime friend and local farmer Alex Ridgeway told reporters this week. “He’d
come home for breaks, but that spark seemed to be gone. Whatever you want to
call it, it just wasn’t there anymore.”
Another more serious blow came in his final college year
with the deaths of his parents- caused by drunk driver and local ne’er do well
Frank “Oz” Oswald, who did ten years in prison for that particular offence for
drunk driving causing death. At the trial, Oswald swore up and down that he was
still capable of driving, even after consuming ten bottles of vodka in a single
evening. “It wasn’t my fault! They got in my way! I was just defendin’ myself!”
Oswald claimed in court in a trial that ended with a very quick jury decision.
Lennox was even more stunned and withdrawn after the deaths
of his parents, listless and subdued through the trial. He graduated from
college, came back to Bedford, and settled in quietly. He wouldn’t talk about
work- his friends only knew he was a consultant, a job that kept him on the
road frequently, and he wouldn’t talk shop. He wasn’t terribly social- there
were the occasional girlfriends, but nothing serious. Still, he was engaged in
the community, attending games, fall fairs, and the annual pie festival.
And then came the recent news of his death.
Federal agents
confirmed that Lennox was killed in a freak accident at his real workplace- a
division headquarters of the outlaw anarchist organization known as SPITE,
severed in half by what has been called an “Nukeifier 4000”, a field artillery
weapon the organization had been developing to further its mission to “conquer
the world, subject all to our will, and find out the secret of the Caramilk
bar”. The terrorist group has operated from the shadows all over the world, led
by the elusive individual known until recently only as Lord Nefarious.
How does an all around American boy end up being a henchman
for a supervillain? That’s the question on many minds in Bedford these days, as
locals wonder what might have drawn him to the organization. “All- American!
Apple pie and football!” Gaines remarked, shaking his head with dismay. “And he
ends up becoming some anarchist henchmen wearing an identical costume to every
other anarchist henchman. It just doesn’t make sense.”
The organization itself has ended up on the run, with
multiple intelligence agencies and military units across the world seeking them
out- all as a result of the freak accident, which as it turns out couldn’t have
been covered up. Even Lord Nefarious has been exposed; the founder of the
organization has been identified as Geoffrey Walden, the bored third son of an
Ivy League blue blood family from Boston. “This is an outrage!” his father,
Godfrey Walden- the CEO of Walden Incorporated- told reporters who showed up at his
mansion on Cape Cod. “You lowly vultures
have no right to question the loyalties of a Walden! Leave or I’ll have my
personal bodyguards beat you soundly!”
The last word belongs
to the deceased. Simon Cade, an attorney in Bedford, spoke to reporters who
turned up at his office. As personal attorney to Lennox, the lawyer explained
that a personal letter had been added to his will six months ago, a letter that
helped identify Lord Nefarious. “It was three sentences,” Cade explained. While
the letter itself is in the hands of the authorities, Cade wrote them down for
his own reference. “And it was as follows: to
the world at large, Lord Nefarious of SPITE is actually that snivelling little
gutless coward Geoffrey Walden. And to Geoffrey Walden, if you’re wondering
what happened to that three hundred million dollars the organization’s missing,
I have just two things to say. First, you’ll never find it, and second.... nyah
nyah nyah nyah!”
Sometimes, I start reading your posts and find myself wondering if it might be real!
ReplyDeleteI thought it was real up until Lord Nefarious. lol
ReplyDeleteLike Norma and Diane, I thought this was real for a while. LOL
ReplyDeleteThis is awesome! Very realistic (well, you know), and lots of fun to read!
ReplyDeleteNice little fantasy, but the ending really rather childish. Of course. I have my own ideas for an ending.
ReplyDelete@Norma: that was the idea!
ReplyDelete@Diane: it seemed a good name.
@Kelly: thanks!
@Meradeth: thank you.
@Mari: oddly the ending came to me first.
Real = really good. But you know me, I always like the pictures. "Birth of a supervillain" made me laugh.
ReplyDelete