Well, for a girl who
didn’t get out much—at all, practically—there was only one way for Auburn to
learn about this “club” everyone seemed to know about, and that was the local
newspaper. Blackwell was too small to
have a TV station, and newspaper websites were often pricey or hard to
navigate. That left the Blackwell Journal-Tribune, a
twice-a-week paper that was always ending up in the Reynolds’s bushes. Whoever the paperboy was, he had a bad aim.
Auburn wasn’t a newspaper
reader, and she generally ignored this one when it came. Fortunately, the Reynolds’ were one of those
families that stockpiled old newspapers.
It’s not that they collected them; it’s that they rarely threw any of
them away. Mr. Reynolds would leave the
paper lying wherever he happened to be reading it—next to his seat in the
kitchen, on the sofa in the den, in the hallway by the phone, on the tool table
in the garage (though that one was usually too greasy to read). This caused the Reynolds house to be very
messy, but it gave Auburn quite an archive to draw from.
And draw from it she did. The papers weren’t very thick, which made it
easy to go through them. It didn’t take
long for her to find what she was looking for.
Nearly every edition carried an article about the Brotherhood Club,
usually the front page one. “BROTHERHOOD
CLUB FIXING HOMES, CHARACTER,” one headline read. “BROTHERHOOD CLUB CONCERNED WITH INSIDE AND
OUTSIDE” read another, discussing the repainting of the Central National Bank
& Trust downtown. “NOT JUST THE
BOYS—SISTERS THRIVING IN BROTHERHOOD CLUB,” “BROTHERHOOD CLUB’S GOT YOUR BAG,”
“BROTHERHOOD CLUB AN INSPIRATION TO COMMUNITY”—headline after headline after
headline. All speaking quite positively of
the club.
Auburn sifted through
them, struggling to pick which one to read.
She finally settled on one from about two weeks prior: “BROTHERLY LOVE
IN BLACKWELL—PHILADELPHIA BEGINNINGS SHAPED LIFE OF CLUB PRESIDENT.”
Blackwell, Oklahoma—Jack
Richards knows the struggles children face.
Growing up in Northwood, the
young Richards faced many of them himself.
“It was a rough life,”
Richards said. “My fellow schoolmates
were doing drugs, running with gangs, going crazy at parties. The wrong type of crowd was in vogue at my
school. It was far too easy to get
involved.”
That’s why Richards, a local accountant,
wants to make sure Blackwell’s youth have a safe option after school.
“A lot of people, when I tell
them what I want to do, say, ‘Oh, you don’t need that here. Blackwell’s not Philadelphia.’ It’s been my experience, however, that kids,
no matter where they are, need support as they journey from youth to
adulthood. Having lived in both places,
I would say that Blackwell has many of the same problems Philadelphia has. School-age kids devoid of parental
supervision find themselves with too much time on their hands and make bad
choices. In a big city, these problems
are much tougher to fix, but that doesn’t make little towns exempt.”
In fact, the lack of awareness
of small-town problems is what inspired Richards to come to Blackwell.
[Continued on page 3]
Auburn turned the page
and kept reading.
then used briefly as a
warehouse for Toy Mart before the chain went out of business. Janet Long, who worked for Toy Mart, says the
place is still full of toys.
“The owners wanted to shut
down the stores as fast as possible, so they left most of the undelivered
inventory at the hotel. I haven’t been
there in five years, but I’d imagine they’re still there.”
Auburn checked the
heading. Oops, that was the wrong
article. This was a continuation of
another story from the front page, about an abandoned hotel somewhere in the
downtown area. Auburn checked the page a
little more carefully, this time coming up with the correct article.
“New York City, Philadelphia,
Dallas, Houston—places like these have seen a strong resurgence in community
service organizations designed to promote children’s well-being. The smaller cities, however, have not seen as
many organizations devoted to this end.
I’m one of those people who get a big kick out of doing something no one
has ever done before, and I realized, by helping out a small town, I’d give
myself that added zest needed to do a great job. Before I came here, I lived in Washington,
Indiana. While there, I did the exact
same thing I did here, and in the five years I spent in the town, I saw a
tremendous transformation in the lives of young people, ages 10-18. I try not to judge my own success, but the
testimonials from parents, the smiles on the faces of formerly challenged youth,
the happiness in the community—those were the signs which told me that I had
done my part. The hardest thing I ever
did was leave Washington, and it was only with the assurance that another—a
teen I had personally mentored through the program—could step in and continue
my role.”
Now, Richards’s Brotherhood
Club in Blackwell is well on its way to becoming a role model for other towns
across the nation.
“I don’t want to say that
everyone has an obligation to start one of these,” said Richards. “In fact, I don’t even see it as an
obligation. It’s something I wanted to
do for the community, a way I could give back.
Some might not have a desire to give back, and those people are entitled
to make their own decisions. But I’ve
always found that when you give back,
you’re the one who receives the
most.”
Naomi Wells
can be reached at (580)617-4241. The
Associated Press did not contribute to this report.
Auburn’s interest was
gone after the first couple paragraphs, but she didn’t like to leave things
unfinished, so she read the entire article anyway. Perhaps it was because she’d never belonged
to any, but she was always skeptical of clubs like this one. Other towns she’d lived in had their own
versions, but their influence seemed negligible to Auburn. Juveniles still found themselves in detention
centers—not most, of course, but more than would be expected if the
organization was really keeping kids out of trouble. Districts with crime problems saw no
lessening in the intensity of criminal activity. Places unsafe at night were still unsafe at
night.
However, as Auburn
continued reading, something began to bother her about the article. She wasn’t sure what it was, so she forced
herself to go back over it, scrutinizing each word for anything out of the
ordinary. Some part of her brain had
detected it, but it wasn’t the part that could tell her what it was. When a thorough review of the article proved
fruitless, Auburn decided she had to read some more.
She was reading the one
about the club painting the bank when she finally figured it out. The article quoted Richards, the bank
president, and a Mrs. Joanna Ashcroft, whose son was in the club. Nowhere did it quote anyone who was actually
in the club. In fact, none of the
articles had a single quote from someone in the organization, except for
Richards.
The reason seemed all too
painfully obvious to Auburn after her encounter with Brittany earlier that
day. Those
kids don’t like the club, she thought to herself. They
don’t like Mr. Richards. I wonder what
the reason is.
Immediately, the dollar
bill incident from earlier popped into her mind. That
wasn’t very nice, she thought, but
it’s not the reason—or maybe it’s part of it! The dollar bill incident was just a little
thing, but perhaps, just perhaps, it was an insight into Richards’s character. Maybe, just maybe, he wasn’t the nice guy he
seemed on the surface. Maybe, just
maybe, he had some deep, dark secret.
If he did, though, it was
a secret, and Auburn couldn’t figure it out right now. She stuffed all the newspapers into a paper bag,
not bothering to organize them. Once
finished, she was tempted to throw them out, but decided against it. It
would be just like Mom to take interest in them once they were gone.
She reached into her
pocket and realized suddenly that she still had the change from earlier when
she’d bought the soda. Two quarters. She trotted straight to her room, pulled out
the coins, and plopped them into her bank, watching them fall on the stack of
coins below.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tuesday,
at 5:00
The first inkling of
trouble for Arnold Goldsworthy, president of the Central National Bank &
Trust, came just after the last employee left.
Goldsworthy often stayed late, going over the accounts. Two years ago, an employee’s taste for
jewelry had left the bank several hundred dollars short. It hadn’t been the biggest tragedy of all time,
but Goldsworthy was a perfectionist, and he’d worked since then to make sure no
one messed with the funds.
What he wasn’t expecting
after he locked the door was to turn around and find a masked midget staring at
him. The figure was dressed normally
enough—plaid button-down shirt, jeans, sneakers—except for the ski mask pulled
over his/her face. The gun in the
figure’s right hand confirmed that this was not just a social call.
“In the vault,
please.” The voice was very squeaky,
obviously not the figure’s normal tone.
“Now, just a minute!”
Goldsworthy held up his hands. “I’m not
going to argue with a gun, but we have a time-safe. It can only be opened at six o’clock in the morning.”
“I happen to know you
never close it,” the pint-sized burglar retorted. The statement was not delivered crossly, nor
lightly, but somberly.
Unfortunately, it was
true, and Goldsworthy knew when he’d met his match. “Follow me,” he said, leading the way to the
door to the back room. He punched in a
code and swung it open.
To his surprise, the
lights (which had been turned off at closing) were back on, and there were two
other pint-sized burglars in the room, about the same height as the first. They stood silently to the left of the door,
staring across at the open vault door.
“Don’t try anything,” the
first spoke. “The rest of us will have
you covered while…”
The burglar failed to
finish the sentence, not so much because the rest was understood, but more out
of a reluctance to continue. If
Goldsworthy hadn’t been so scared, he might have noticed this, but the man was
too frightened to pay any attention.
Slowly, he walked across
the room to the vault, in order to open the door. Like many banks, this vault had two doors—the
heavy outer one and a light inner one that looks more like a door to a prison
cell. Blackwell’s bank was in the habit
of leaving the outer one open so they could access the vault during the day,
and the employees were always a little tardy about closing it. This was why, even though the heavy door was
open, the thieves still needed Goldsworthy to open the other door.
Pulling out his key,
Goldsworthy hoped that someone would walk in and distract the criminals. He knew this was wishful thinking. The bank was closed, and no one ever came
back after closing hours. No one
friendly, that is. Except—Mrs. Mullins! She had a habit of leaving her umbrella
behind and returning to pound on the door—
But that was on rainy
days. Even if today had been rainy,
which it wasn’t, what could Mrs. Mullins do against three armed robbers? The other two individuals had guns too—Goldsworthy
had spotted this right as he entered the room.
He now wondered, as he turned the key in the lock, what would come
next. The burglars probably wouldn’t
want to risk taking a murder rap, but didn’t criminals often clobber their
victims over the head, to keep them from trying to escape?
Goldsworthy swung open
the door and braced himself for a blow.
“Back against the wall,”
barked the first burglar, still the only one to speak. Motioning to the other two, the first kept
the president covered as the other two wandered into the vault with sacks.
A faint smile sought its
way onto Goldsworthy’s mouth, but he suppressed it. Bank vaults don’t just have money lying
around all over the place. They’ve got
safe deposit boxes, drawers, and other compartments, all locked. If these criminals expected to just waltz in
and stuff their bags, they had a big disappointment coming…
The jingle of keys echoed
out of the vault. Then, there was the
sound of a drawer being opened, and something was dumped into a sack. Another sound of keys, and another, and another,
and…Goldsworthy didn’t have to bother to hide the smile anymore. It wasn’t there at all.
In the most torturous
minutes of his life, he listened as the thieves went through a good chunk of
the safe, emptying anything they opened into their sacks. When they finally wandered back out, both
sacks were bulging.
The first one motioned to
the other two to head out the door, which he then started backing towards. “Don’t try to follow us,” he told
Goldsworthy. “We know what your car
looks like, and we won’t hesitate to shoot.”
Goldsworthy wasn’t
planning on it. He could see that these
individuals meant business. Instead, he
remained rooted in place until the door swung shut.
Now, the dilemma. Should
I try to see their car, Goldsworthy wondered, or should I wait here? The
minute spent deciding was worse in some ways than the minutes spent watching
the thieves plunder the vault. Finally,
Goldsworthy decided to be bold. He ran
for the door and slid it open, just in time to hear the back door closing.
Quickly, he ran towards
the back of the bank. As he was almost
at the door, he heard a car speed away from the curb. He slipped open the door, eager to get a
look…
But all he saw were three
cars, calmly following a twenty-five mile per hour speed limit, driving down
the road close together. A white Chevy
Silverado, a blue Toyota Camry, and a silver Ford Focus. Only one was the bank robbers’ car, and
Goldsworthy had no idea which it was.
Before he could decide which one to remember, the cars were too far off
to see.
Slamming the door,
Goldsworthy rushed for the phone and dialed the police.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
News of the robbery
reached the Reynolds’s the next day, as Mrs. Reynolds was listening to the
radio and having breakfast. It was a
Wichita music station, but they always had news on the half hour, and the news
covered a wide area. Blackwell was close
enough to Kansas to be included on the news report, so there it was.
“Authorities are
investigating after three midgets held up the Central National Bank & Trust
in downtown Blackwell yesterday afternoon.
Arnold Goldsworthy, the president, was just finishing up for the day
when a midget-sized gunman forced him to open the vault, where two other
midget-sized robbers emptied the safe.
Chief of Police Wilbur Morris says the police are baffled as to how the
subjects entered the building.
“‘The cameras at the bank
don’t show the robbers ever entering the building. Our first look at them came when their leader
flicked on the lights in the vault room and went to get the president.’
“Anyone with knowledge
about the crime is encouraged to call the police. The incident occurred just after five o’clock
yesterday afternoon. I’m Paula Shanlon.”
“Now, back to Dave and Brenda’s
Hits of the Late—”
Crash!
Mrs. Reynolds looked up
in surprise, only to see that the noise had come from a mug that had fallen
from her daughter’s hand. “Five
o’clock!” said Auburn. “Did he say five
o’clock?”
“Uh, I think so,” said
Mrs. Reynolds, looking worried. “Are you
about to have another—”
“Dad wasn’t home from
work yet!” said Auburn. “He didn’t get
back until 7:30! What if the police
think he—”
“Auburn! Didn’t you hear the report? The bank robbers were all really short. Your dad’s six-foot three! They’re not going to suspect him!”
“They’re short?” said
Auburn. “Oh. Ohhhhhh!”
She laughed, a little stiffly. “I
guess there’s nothing to worry about, then, is there?”
Mrs. Reynolds smiled in
relief at her daughter. “Don’t worry,”
she said. “You’ve got to work on your emotions.”
“I’ll try,” said Auburn,
smiling at her mom. “Have a good time at
the insurance agency.”
“Hah!” Mrs. Reynolds
laughed. “After Nelson’s tirade
yesterday? I’ll do my best, but you’re
asking a lot—”
“You try to have a good
time, Mom,” said Auburn, “and I’ll try not to worry.” She gave her mother a hug and a kiss before
heading down the hall to her room. Once
there, she closed the door and breathed a deep sigh of relief.
You see, Auburn hadn’t
been the least bit worried about her dad.
She was really good at cover-ups, when she needed them. That five o’clock time hadn’t set her off
because her dad had been away. It had
set her off because she knew someone who’d had something going on at five that
day. Someone who’d seemed extremely
worried about something.
Someone who Auburn was
going to visit that afternoon.
Hey, she forgot to clean up the remnants of the mug!
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm not going to help!
Let's hope it was empty...