Theo of Golden: A Novel by Allen Levi - 55

  1. Home
  2. Theo of Golden: A Novel by Allen Levi
  3. 55
Prev
Next

At first, Theo thought it was a bad dream. It was well after midnight, and most of the weeknight revelers had retreated home, leaving Broadway to its slowly gathering silence. He had gone to bed shortly after the party for Simone, had slept soundly for several hours, and had then awakened for no app...

At first, Theo thought it was a bad dream.

It was well after midnight, and most of the weeknight revelers had retreated home, leaving Broadway to its slowly gathering silence. He had gone to bed shortly after the party for Simone, had slept soundly for several hours, and had then awakened for no apparent reason. Perhaps the adrenaline and the afterglow of Simone’s recital were still at work in his body and mind.

He put on his robe, walked to the front of the apartment, and opened the balcony doors for fresh air. Then he returned to the kitchen for a drink, chose a book to read, and settled into his easy chair in the front room. The last intermittent bits of late-night noise — voices, car doors, engines rumbling — floated in from outside. Theo sat and turned a few pages, but as the clock approached two o’clock, he struggled to keep his eyes open. He finally gave way to sleep, his head rolling to the right and resting on the chair back.

If he had been on the balcony, awake, he might have seen Ellen on her bench at the Fedder. He might have heard her singing. She was wearing her hat, sitting with her hands in her lap, the Noble Invention parked within arm’s reach. It was the same tranquil scene Theo had witnessed several times before.

The same, that is, until the athletic figures of three boisterous young men, moving southward down the median, approached the fountain. They were unsteady on their feet, bantering and laughing too loudly for that hour of night, pushing and jostling each other as friendly drunks sometimes do.

Their sort of joviality was a familiar sight along the Promenade —partygoers and bar crawlers ending the night with a final blast of noise and energy, annoying to residents who lived along the Promenade but otherwise harmless. Theo had been told that brawls sometimes occurred, usually incited by too much drink, and that revelers frequently ended up in the fountain, but he had never witnessed any such incidents.

The street lamps and store lights had long since gone dark as the three men ambled toward the Fedder. Aside from their indistinct voices, an eerie silence prevailed. There was no one else on the Promenade.

When they saw Ellen on the bench — the odd little woman apparently oblivious to their presence — their attention turned away from one another and toward her gaudy hat. It became an object of inspiration to them, a prize to be captured, a trophy to be taken. The pranksters, thinking her to be as drunk as they were — why else would she be sitting there talking to herself? — deemed her fair game for a bit of fun. And why not end the evening with some pointless bravado?

“I dare you,” one whispered to another. “Get the hat, and I pay for breakfast.”

The other smirked. “Done. One ugly-as-hell hat coming right up.”

Their banter ceased as they drew near the fountain. Ellen was either unaware of or chose not to acknowledge them with so much as a turn of her head. She was, after all, accustomed to the sight and sound of rowdies and mischief-makers. She had learned it was best to ignore and avoid them.

The daretaker gave a thumbs-up to his friends, crept up on Ellen from behind, snatched the hat, and began to run. He had pulled Ellen’s hair in the process, which both pained and startled her. In an instant, she was on her feet, swearing and fearlessly chasing the thief.

It was an awkward, hopeless pursuit.

She could not possibly match the young man’s speed and had only taken a few clumsy strides when she heard a voice behind her.

One of the other two hooligans, the largest of the three, seeing her bicycle unguarded, had grabbed it with a shout and wheeled it toward the fountain. Ellen turned, realized what he intended to do, and sprinted, as best she could, to stop him. He was lifting the bike to heave it into the Fedder when Ellen reached him from behind. She grabbed his hair, screaming and swinging furiously, scratching, gouging, and slapping the man’s face.

She fought like one who had done so before, flailing with an energy and agility that were relentless and feline. She was a creature out of control. Her shrill voice knifed into the silence of the Promenade, more a war cry than a call for help, but her words were unintelligible, if, in fact, she was speaking words at all.

The bike vandal quickly abandoned his intention of drowning the Noble Invention. His one thought became self-defense as blood filled his right eye and ran down his cheek. Ellen had jumped onto his back, wrapped her legs around his waist, and was clawing viciously at his face as he struggled for balance. He feared she might have a blade in her hand.

Their voices were a cacophony of howls and profanity.

The young man dropped the bike, eventually forced Ellen’s arms from his neck, and freed himself from her grip. All the while, she slapped, clawed, scratched, and kicked as if her life was at stake. When he was finally able to put an arm’s length between them, he grabbed the collar of her dress, bellowed an incoherent roar, and swung full force, striking her with a solid, sickening blow to the face.

And then another. And a third.

The sound of fist on bone and the sight of skin breaking into a scarlet stream aroused an animal fury in the man. He was an instrument of unbridled rage as he drew back to strike her again.

Before he could do so, she fell to the ground in a heap, dazed and unsteady. Blood poured from her nose, her mouth, and a gash over her eye. She gagged on broken teeth and lay barely conscious at her attacker’s feet.

But he was not yet satisfied. The sight of blood, his and hers, had made a beast of him. He was poised to kick Ellen when, out of the shadows, Simone charged, head down, cello on his back, and knocked him to the ground.

Theo was baffled when he first heard the voices.

When he walked through the open doors of the balcony, still disoriented from the stupor of sleep, it took some effort to make sense of the scrum in the median.

A woman on the ground?

A bicycle beside the fountain lying on its side? Ellen?

“No, please. No, stop. Please,” Theo begged, in a voice hardly more than a whisper. He might as well have been talking to himself.

He saw what he believed to be a cello case on the ground near Ellen’s bench as it slowly dawned on him that Simone, too, was involved in the melee.

The breathless old man watched dumbstruck as two of the strangers held Simone while the third struck him repeatedly. When they finally threw him to the ground, one of the assailants slammed a heavy boot, full force, onto the back of his hand.

Simone heard and felt the breaking of his bones. He tried to scream but his depleted lungs could muster little more than a ragged gasp.

The trio concluded their brutality by heaving the gentle young cellist into the fountain.

Throughout the attack, they had spewed a steady stream of curses and slurs. They could not hear Theo over their own voices and mistakenly assumed no one was witness to their violence .

Fueled by conquest, still angry at the old woman’s attempt to defend herself, and emboldened by the absence of any other people, one of the three ruffians opened Simone’s case and removed the cello with another string of invective.

“Stop! Please, please, stop!” Theo shouted with both arms outstretched, his body leaning dangerously across the low balcony rail. Two faces turned to look up just as the third raised the cello over his head. He shattered it against the bench, then threw the remaining shards into the water.

Theo leaned forward to utter a final plea. “Oh, please no! Please no!”

At that, the threesome sprinted away into the shadows, leaving behind a bleeding woman, a battered musician, a splintered cello, and a dented bicycle.

Simone and Ellen were not aware that Theo had witnessed the incident. They were stunned, bloody, and delirious from the attack they had just endured. Simone managed to crawl out of the pool and was simultaneously trying to help Ellen and find his phone — difficult to do with a broken hand and a swollen eye — when they heard a woman scream at the front door of Ponder House.

A young couple, college students, had been walking home from work. Now the girl stood motionless, one arm extended rigidly at her side and the other raised to her face. Her mouth was open but silent after the one scream. Her companion was bent at the waist, looking down with caution at something on the sidewalk, as if the object at his feet might bite or lash out at him. He straightened up, stepped back, reached into his pocket, and pulled out his phone.

Simone had enough presence of mind to know that Ellen was critically injured and needed medical help. He was not able to find his phone, so he looked to the young couple as his best hope for assistance. He would ask them to call the police and an ambulance. He left Ellen at the bench and staggered across the street to where the couple was standing on the sidewalk. The young man was on his phone, speaking urgently. The girl remained speechless, hand to face, mouth still open.

Simone looked down, saw a crumpled form beneath the splayed fabric of a robe, and noticed a small pool of blood spreading outward on the pavement. He knelt, leaned close, turned the body gently, and gasped.

He felt himself going faint.

Theo.

Continue Reading →
Prev
Next

Comments for chapter "55"

BOOK DISCUSSION

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

*

All Genres
  • 20th Century History of the U.S. (1)
  • Action (1)
  • Adult (12)
  • Adult Fiction (6)
  • Adventure (4)
  • Audiobook (6)
  • Autobiography (1)
  • Banks & Banking (1)
  • Billionaires & Millionaires Romance (1)
  • Biographical & Autofiction (1)
  • Biographical Fiction (1)
  • Biography (1)
  • Business (1)
  • Christmas (2)
  • City Life Fiction (1)
  • Coming of Age Fiction (1)
  • Communism & Socialism (1)
  • Conspiracy Fiction (1)
  • Contemporary (11)
  • Contemporary Fiction (3)
  • Contemporary fiction (1)
  • Contemporary Romance (4)
  • Contemporary Romance (6)
  • Contemporary Romance Fiction (4)
  • Contemporary Romance Fiction (1)
  • Cozy (1)
  • Cozy Mystery (1)
  • crime (2)
  • Crime Fiction (1)
  • Cultural Studies (1)
  • Dark (2)
  • Dark Academia (1)
  • Dark Fantasy (1)
  • Dark Romance (5)
  • Dram (0)
  • Drama (2)
  • Drame (1)
  • Dystopia (1)
  • Economic History (1)
  • Emotional Drama (1)
  • Enemies To Lovers (2)
  • Epistolary Fiction (1)
  • European Politics Books (1)
  • Family (0)
  • Family & Relationships (1)
  • Fantasy (21)
  • Fantasy Fiction (1)
  • Fantasy Romance (1)
  • Fiction (52)
  • Financial History (1)
  • Friends To Lovers (1)
  • Friendship (1)
  • Friendship Fiction (1)
  • Gothic (1)
  • Hard Science Fiction (1)
  • Historical (1)
  • Historical European Fiction (1)
  • Historical Fiction (3)
  • Historical fiction (1)
  • Historical World War II Fiction (1)
  • History (1)
  • History of Russia eBooks (1)
  • Holiday (2)
  • Horror (7)
  • Humorous Literary Fiction (1)
  • Inspirational Fiction (1)
  • Kidnapping Crime Fiction (1)
  • Kidnapping Thrillers (1)
  • Leadership (1)
  • Literary Fiction (8)
  • Literary Sagas (1)
  • Mafia Romance (1)
  • Magic (4)
  • Memoir (3)
  • Military Fantasy (1)
  • Mothers & Children Fiction (1)
  • Motivational Nonfiction (1)
  • Mystery (14)
  • Mystery Romance (1)
  • Mystery Thriller (2)
  • Mythology (1)
  • New Adult (1)
  • Non Fiction (7)
  • One-Hour Literature & Fiction Short Reads (1)
  • Paranormal (1)
  • Paranormal Vampire Romance (1)
  • Parenting (1)
  • Personal Development (1)
  • Personal Essays (2)
  • Philosophy (1)
  • Political History (1)
  • Psychological Fiction (1)
  • Psychological Thrillers (2)
  • Psychology (1)
  • Rockstar Romance (1)
  • Romance (32)
  • Romance Literary Fiction (1)
  • Romantasy (14)
  • Romantic Comedy (1)
  • Romantic Suspense (1)
  • Rural Fiction (1)
  • Satire (1)
  • Science Fiction (4)
  • Science Fiction Adventures (1)
  • Self Help (1)
  • Self-Help (1)
  • Sibling Fiction (1)
  • Sisters Fiction (1)
  • Small Town & Rural Fiction (1)
  • Small Town Romance (1)
  • Socio-Political Analysis (1)
  • Southern Fiction (1)
  • Speculative Fiction (1)
  • Spicy Romance (1)
  • Sports (1)
  • Sports Romance (2)
  • Suspense (4)
  • Suspense Action Fiction (1)
  • Suspense Thrillers (1)
  • Suspense Thrillers (2)
  • Technothrillers (1)
  • Thriller (11)
  • Time Travel Science Fiction (1)
  • True Crime (1)
  • United States History (1)
  • Vampires (2)
  • Voyage temporel (1)
  • Witches (1)
  • Women's Friendship Fiction (1)
  • Women's Literary Fiction (1)
  • Women's Romance Fiction (1)
  • Workplace Romance (1)
  • Young Adult (1)
  • Zombies (1)

© 2025 Librarino Inc. All rights reserved