by Cylin Busby
Falmouth was a lot like many other small towns, I imagine. I never worked as a cop anywhere else, so I have no proof. Just a feeling there’s politics, untouchables, bad guys, and assholes in all towns, no matter what size. And then there are power bases built by certain people, the kind of people who like to be in charge and have folks working under them, who run the big-time scams, not just petty crimes. Who bring in the city contracts, bid rigging, construction deals, plus a few legit businesses to clean the profits made elsewhere. Our town was small enough that we had only one guy running a game like that. And that guy was Raymond Meyer.
chapter 11
CYLIN
WHEN we got back into Uncle Joe’s car to drive to the hospital, Mom turned around and looked at the three of us in the backseat. “Some of your dad’s friends from the force will probably be at the hospital today,” she said. “If they ask you where we’re staying, don’t tell them.” Then she turned back around in her seat.
“Why?” Shawn asked.
“We just don’t want anyone to know where we’re staying . . .” Mom started to explain.
“It’s nobody’s business,” Uncle Joe said in a gruff voice. He sounded mad, but I didn’t understand who he was mad at.
“What about Don, or Arthur, what if they ask us?” Shawn said, mentioning two of Dad’s best friends on the force.
“I don’t know,” Mom said, and looked over at Uncle Joe. He shook his head. “Let’s just keep it to ourselves for now, from everyone. It’s just easier that way,” she finally said.
We parked the car in an underground lot, then took a series of elevators to get to the floor where Dad was staying. Mom and Uncle Joe seemed to know the hospital pretty well—where all the elevators were and exactly where we needed to go. We rounded a corner and saw a guy in a Falmouth Police uniform sitting on a folding chair in the hallway. It felt funny to see someone in that uniform, the same one Dad always wore. “Polly,” the man said, standing up. “He’s gonna be happy to see these guys!” He gave me and Eric and Shawn a huge grin, then grabbed a clipboard from a hook on the wall and started writing something on it.
We walked into the room, and there was a man lying on a big white bed. Around him on both sides were lots of machines and poles with plastic bags hanging from them. There were cards and flowers all over the room. The man on the bed did not look like Dad. His head looked funny; it was all wrapped up in gauze, like a mummy’s. And it looked smaller; his head didn’t look right, like his eyes were in the wrong place or his face was shorter. Maybe they had just wrapped him up too tightly, I thought. The guy in the bed lifted one hand and gave us a thumb’s-up sign. Mom went over and kissed him on the forehead, then held up a clipboard for him. He had a tube going into the back of his hand, which was held in place with a big piece of white tape. He wrote, “Thanks for the cards.” It did look like Dad’s small, angular writing. I was trying really hard to believe that this person in the bed was him, but I just couldn’t.
“Do you want to say anything to your dad?” Mom asked us.
“That’s not my dad,” I heard myself say quietly, before I could stop it from coming out of my mouth. Then Shawn turned and darted from the room before Uncle Joe could grab him. I heard his sneakers screech as he tore down the tiled hallway. Uncle Joe took off after him while Eric and I just stood there.
Mom let out a weak laugh. “This is your dad, he’s just bandaged up right now. I told you that, remember?”
Dad waved me over to show me the board. “I love you. I’m OKAY,” he had written in capital letters. Once I read it, he motioned to Mom. “I’m scaring them. Do I look that bad?” he wrote, and looked at her. I took the bag of M&M’S out of my pocket and put it on the table next to his bed without a word. Uncle Joe walked in with Shawn, who looked like he had been crying. That made me start crying. Eric just stood at the foot of the bed; his face was blank but I could tell he was chewing the inside of his mouth like he did when he was really mad.
“I think it’s time to get these kids some lunch,” Uncle Joe announced, and I saw Mom nod. “Let’s go, you guys. Say goodbye to your dad.”
“Bye,” I said, but I didn’t look up from the floor. I didn’t want to look at whoever that was in the bed, even if it was my dad. We walked out of the room and made our way back to the elevator.
“Oh, aren’t you pretty. Look at that hair, would you?” I heard one nurse say to another about my long honey blond hair as we walked by them.
“Wow, I’d love to have hair like that,” the other nurse said, trying to meet my eyes.
I wondered if they were just being nice to me because they felt sorry for me, so I kept walking.
“You should say thank you,” Uncle Joe reminded me, then murmured under his breath, “Aw, who gives a damn, right?” He had his pack of cigarettes out as we got into the elevator and lit one up the second we reached the parking garage.
“Your dad isn’t like Baretta, you know,” Uncle Joe said, blowing out some cigarette smoke. “That guy gets shot up one week and he’s back the next week. That’s fake. When you get shot, it takes time to get better. Your dad is going to need some time.”
We were silent as we walked over to the car. The three of us climbed into the backseat together, even though one of us could have sat in the front.
When Uncle Joe started the car, Shawn turned to me. “I don’t think that was actually Dad, do you?” he asked.
I shook my head. But part of me knew the truth: that was Dad. That was how Dad looked now. I couldn’t even imagine a time when he wouldn’t be lying in that bed attached to all those machines. How could he come home again, go to work again, go to the beach with us? And what was wrong with his face under all those bandages? I didn’t want to think about it, how his head looked too small.
When we got home, Lauren and Cassie were still at school, so Uncle Joe made us some sandwiches and told us we could go swimming if we wanted to. He sat outside by the pool and drank a Tab and smoked another cigarette. We took our sandwiches into the den and put on the TV, but there wasn’t a lot on, just soap operas and some dumb science fiction movie that was in black and white.
“Do you think Mom will remember to give him the OMNI?” Eric asked suddenly, eating some potato chips. I had forgotten all about our gifts. I hoped that Mom would remember it—she had been carrying the bag. It made me sad to think that we wouldn’t get to see Dad’s face when he opened the present, but then I realized that even if we had been there, it would have been hard to tell what was going on under all those bandages, so what did it matter?
Lauren and Cassie came home from school, and then Aunt Kate came back too. Uncle Joe left to pick up Mom from the hospital. Even though they got back in time to eat dinner with us, Mom went straight up to the guest bedroom and went to sleep without seeing us. I wondered if she was mad about what I’d said at the hospital, about that not being Dad. Uncle Joe said she didn’t feel well, and we should try to keep it down.
I had been in Mom’s room earlier that day, and it was very messy—clothes that she had borrowed from Aunt Kate were all over the place, and an old bra was hanging over the back of the chair. By the bed was a beautiful crystal vase with one perfect red rose in it. The rose was a few days old now; Uncle Joe had bought it for her over the weekend. The tips of the petals were turning a little bit brown, but they were still velvety soft.
That night, Aunt Kate made something for dinner that smelled horrible. “You like meatballs in spaghetti, right?” she said to me. “This is just like a meatball, a big meatball,” she explained, putting some on my plate. It was meat and some kind of a red sauce. The meat had all kinds of things in it, like ground up leaves or something. Everyone else was eating it, but even the smell made me feel sick.
“Oh, Cylin, you’re skin and bones. Eat something,” Aunt Kate finally said.
I looked over at Eric and Shawn and saw them happily eating the meat and pasta on their plates. I put my fork down and sat quietly, trying not to breathe through
my nose. “How about a bowl of cereal?” Uncle Joe asked, and I nodded. As he got up to fix my cereal, Lauren said, “That’s not fair! Why does she get to eat Cocoa Puffs?”
“She had to see her dad in the hospital today. Leave her alone!” Uncle Joe snapped. But I didn’t want cereal because of Dad—I wasn’t even thinking about him. I just hated my aunt’s cooking. Still, it made me feel special that I was getting my way without even trying.
After dinner, I helped Aunt Kate clean up and load the dishwasher, just like I always did at home. I liked cleaning up; I got some satisfaction from scraping the leftovers into the garbage, where they belonged. I was glad the battle over this meal was done. When I was finished helping my aunt, I went into the TV room where Lauren and Cassie were watching TV with my brothers. “Your mother has had a nervous breakdown,” I heard Lauren tell Shawn.
“I know,” Shawn said. He looked very serious. We had a priest at our church back on the Cape named Father Mark. He was my favorite—he was everyone’s favorite. When he first came to Saint Patrick’s, it was like he woke the place up. Sunday was no longer boring. He would ask the kids to all come and sit up front during Mass. He really talked to us about God and Jesus and religion and made it seem like it was actually something to care about. He had a nice face, but he wasn’t so handsome that you were scared of him—brown eyes, dark hair, a trimmed dark beard. And sometimes, when it wasn’t Sunday, we would see him in town wearing jeans with his shirt and collar. This was totally unheard of for the other priests at our church. Dad liked Father Mark too, and he especially liked that we now had doughnuts and coffee after church in the basement—Father Mark’s idea of “building community.”
We all came to count on Father Mark for a lot. Then one day, he just wasn’t there. Everyone in the congregation was whispering about him. “Where’s Father Mark?” I asked Dad.
“He’s sick,” Dad said. But when we got home, he told Mom a different story. Father Mark had had a “nervous breakdown,” and according to some folks in the church, it wasn’t the first time. There was something wrong with him, and he had to go away to get better. I asked about him every Sunday for a few weeks after that. The old priest who took his place was crusty and dull, and he quickly did away with the coffee and doughnuts, saying that it was too expensive. After a while, we just stopped going to church.
The next morning when we got up, Mom was sitting at the kitchen table and she looked fine. She had taken a shower and put on a clean pair of jeans that she borrowed from Aunt Kate. She hadn’t had a nervous breakdown! I couldn’t wait for the chance to tell Lauren that she had been wrong.
I went into the den while everyone else was still eating breakfast and got out some art supplies to make another card for Dad. I pictured the man lying in the hospital bed and how he had written “I love you.” I drew a big red heart, then put a happy face on it and arms and legs. Then I added some running shoes and some flowing hair. It was a jogging heart. I thought it was pretty creative, especially since Dad liked to go jogging. “I love you, too,” I wrote over the heart. “Get well soon,” I wrote under it.
chapter 12
JOHN
THE kids came for a visit and were terrified of me. Eric was stone-faced the whole ten minutes, Cee cried, Shawn couldn’t even stay in the room and instead ran up and down the hallway until Joe grabbed him. I could tell from the look on Joe’s face that there was no way he would bring his daughters here to see me; he seemed to think the whole thing was a huge mistake. But Polly had been saying that the kids thought I was dead, or about to die, and she wanted them to see that wasn’t the case. I don’t know if her plan worked exactly; now the three of them were in shock after seeing their dear old dad hooked up like Frankenstein. I didn’t expect they’d be back anytime soon.
About five days after the shooting, the pain level dropped markedly. I was suddenly more aware, could stay awake for longer periods, understand what people were saying, and actually remember conversations. My blood oxygen level was returning to normal after all the blood I’d lost, and that was helping me to get my bearings and feel more like myself.
Around this time I had a visit from Joe Urcini, a guy I went to high school with, who was working in the ballistics lab of the Mass State Police. He came in one afternoon and held up a small plastic bag that contained a shotgun round. “Dug this out of the house across the street from where you were shot,” Joe explained. The slugs went through me, out the passenger side of the car, and straight into the side of a house across the street.
“It’s double-O,” Joe went on. “Impossible to trace. I’m sorry, John.” He looked pretty glum, but I didn’t need ballistic evidence to know whose weapon of choice that was.
A few years back, I’d heard a story from a fellow officer—a good buddy of mine, someone I trusted. He was in the east on the four to one shift one night and had picked up a kid—around sixteen or seventeen years old—for loitering. He was talking to the kid in the cruiser when a truck from Ray’s garbage company rolled by. Suddenly, the kid hit the floor, hiding under the dash, scared shitless. My buddy wanted to know what was up. The kid told him that he was afraid of Ray and said that if Ray got his hands on him, he would be dead. “Did he threaten you?” my friend asked. The kid said yes, then said no, and generally looked terrified. He probably knew that Meyer had some guys on the police force under his sway, and wondered if this cop could even be trusted. Finally the kid admitted that he had just heard some stuff through the grapevine, innuendo, that Meyer didn’t like him. My friend told the kid to either get things straightened out with Ray or split to somewhere else, somewhere he’d be safe. But the kid did neither and was found floating facedown in the cranberry bogs across the street from Meyer’s house not long after.
The kid’s name was Jeff Flanagan, and when his body was pulled out of the bogs, it appeared that he had been shot at point-blank range, execution-style. From the autopsy, it was clear that the bullets had entered his head at the right cheek and exited from his upper back, severing his spinal cord and killing him instantly. A 20-gauge shotgun had been used, the ammo untraceable.
In his final hours, Jeff had gone to a movie with some friends. He was last seen getting into a car with Raymond Meyer and Laverne Linton, who were giving him a ride home. According to Jeff’s mom, the boy had been dating Laverne. He had even given her his class ring. At the time of his death, Jeff was sixteen years old, just a few days away from his seventeenth birthday.
Meyer was obviously the chief suspect, but there were no witnesses, no evidence. The day police found Jeff’s body in the bogs, Raymond’s girlfriend, Laverne, had been seen in the yard thoroughly cleaning his Cadillac, inside and out.
About a week after my shooting, I noticed that people stopped referring to it as an “accident”—even the staff of the hospital. It had become clear to everyone there, especially with the heavy police presence, that something bad was up. The nurses and doctors treating me had caught up with the stories in the Boston and Falmouth newspapers. The staff of the hospital had been put on notice to look out for any suspicious activity or unusual visitors. I had survived the shooting, and that was bad news for somebody—whoever had wanted me dead. The questions that remained were: How badly did they want to kill me? Would they be back? And when?
As I slowly stabilized, I was able to see more visitors. Friends and family alike stopped in as soon as they were approved by the two officers on security detail. It was tiring trying to converse by writing—I found myself just skipping a lot of details and cutting right to the point. And I couldn’t count the number of times someone took my pad and wrote their responses back to me. I had to constantly point out that while I couldn’t speak, I could hear just fine.
The note writing was also a pain in the ass for the hospital staff, I’m sure. All of my interaction with doctors and nurses had to take place in writing, even the small stuff like changing the sheets and bed pan—everything. This only became a major issue, though, during medical procedures, li
ke when they changed my heparin locks. These were the IV locks that my meds were pushed through, and they would reach a point where the vein started to close up and they had to be changed. A pretty simple but still painful process—a new vein was selected and the IV lock was pushed in. It wasn’t fun for two reasons: one, getting a needle pulled out of one vein just meant it was going to be pushed into another one, and two, since the locks were held down with adhesive tape, I lost lots of arm hair every time they ripped them off. I was getting my locks changed every couple of days at that point, and to say I didn’t look forward to it would be a massive understatement.
A member of the IV team came in at one point to put in a new series of locks. She put a rubber band around one upper arm and selected a candidate vein, then stuck the needle in. “Oops, went right through that one!” I heard her say as she pulled it back out. She tried again. And again. And again. She finally got it on the fifth try. “Thanks for being so patient with me,” she said when she was taping the new needle down. “Most people start bitching if you miss once or twice.” I guess she didn’t notice that I was a neck breather and couldn’t say shit if my life depended on it.
About ten days later, this same IV nurse was back again, looking to change my locks. I’d removed my hospital wristband ID because it was bothering me. ‘Are you Busby?” she asked me, looking at my arms for ID. She was about to rip the tape off my arm when I grabbed my pad and quickly wrote, “He died and was removed.”
“Oh,” she said, looking at her paperwork. “I’m here to see Busby, so let me find out what is going on.” She put down her Little Red Riding Hood basket of pain tools and went out to the nurses’ station. When I knew she was gone, I took her basket and hid it under the bed. A few minutes later, the head nurse came back in with her and ID’d me as Busby. So the Stabber started looking around for her needle cart. “Now where did I put that?” she said to herself, wandering around. She went back to the nurses’ station to look for it. Then back into my room. Then down the hall into the room of the last patient she’d stuck. Then back into my room. Then back down to the nurses’ station.