by Frank Zafiro
“I think so,” Katie said, her voice wavering.
“You shot a rat?” Battaglia marveled.
“Shut up, Batts,” Sully said. He put his hand on Katie’s shoulder. “Are you okay?”
Katie swallowed and nodded. As the adrenaline and fear dripped away, she felt a sense of shame seeping in. Sully’s warm hand on her shoulder did little to comfort her, even when he gave her a reassuring squeeze.
Battaglia’s sweeping flashlight beam came to a stop at the base of the wall. “Found it.”
Katie looked at the small brown form under the cone of light. Her feeling of shame and embarrassment stopped seeping and started gushing.
“Jesus, MacLeod,” Battaglia said in amazement. “You ten-ringed the little fucker.”
2141 hours
“Code 4,” squawked Tower’s radio just as he burst from the base of the clock tower and sprinted toward the underpass. He slowed to a mild run, and pulled up to a stop once he saw the three shadowy figures underneath the bridge.
“What happened?” he asked, his breath labored.
No one answered.
“What happened?” he repeated, this time with a little more urgency.
“Uh…” Battaglia said.
Sully stepped forward and explained.
Tower listened, his lips pressed together. His first reaction was a surge of frustration, but it was his second reaction that won the day.
He burst into laughter.
Katie, Sully and Battaglia did not join in. The three patrol officers stood watching him while he laughed for several long moments. Apparently, they’d had their chance to laugh already. He didn’t care. He thought it was funny.
“Well,” he said, “At least it was a bulls-eye shot. I imagine that Sergeant Morgan would be proud of you, MacLeod.”
None of the officers replied.
Tower wiped his forehead again, his laughter fading into a light chuckle. Sergeant Morgan, the grizzled range master, was famous for his oft-repeated words of advice such as ‘focus on the front sight’ and ‘you can’t miss fast enough.’ He warned every officer and detective that they never knew when they could end up in a gunfight. Somehow, Tower found his pearls of wisdom hilarious when applied to this particular moment.
“Glad you’re amused, chucklehead,” Sully finally broke in. “But now what do we do?”
Tower paused. “Do?”
The patrol officers exchanged glances.
“Asshole,” muttered Battaglia.
Tower shot him a glare, but before he could answer, Katie responded.
“We have to call a sergeant. It’s an A.D.”
Tower frowned, his mind whirring. An accidental discharge was a serious matter. The last officer that had one was suspended for a week. Of course, it had been his second incident, but still…
“If we call a sergeant, Katie gets suspended,” Battaglia said. “It’s that simple.”
“And if we don’t,” Sully said in a glum tone, “and someone finds out about this, we all get fired.”
“Call a sergeant,” Katie said. “I messed up. I’ll deal with it.”
“No way,” Battaglia said. “I’m not hanging you out.”
“Me, either,” Sully said. “I’m just making sure we all know the risk.”
“There’s no risk,” Katie said. “Call the sergeant.”
“You’ll get a day off,” Battaglia said. “At least. And if Hart gets his teeth into it-”
“I’ll take my chances.”
“Look, there’s no harm here,” Battaglia argued. “No one got hurt.”
“That’s not the point.”
“It is the point,” Battaglia told her. “You thought you saw something, you cranked off a round. Big deal.”
“I’m not saying it’s a big deal,” Katie said. “But I had an A.D. And we have to report it.”
“Why should you get suspended a day for something this stupid? I mean, it’s a dead rat. That’s all.”
“He’s right, Katie,” Sully said.
Katie shook her head at both of them. “Well, while we’re at it, why don’t we just throw down a little rat gun next to the corpse? Then we can claim he drew first and I had to shoot him in self-defense. How would that be?”
Tower listened to the discussion, his lips pursed. He was tempted to go with Battaglia on this one. Aside from the dead rodent, this really was a no-harm, no-foul situation. And he worried about negative press that might come out of the event, both with the department brass and the actual press.
They could probably get away with it, he knew. Toss the rat in the trash. Find the expended brass that was ejected when Katie fired the round. It’d be easy for her to switch the magazine in her gun with another of her full magazines she routinely carried on her gun belt. Even getting her a replacement round for the fired one wouldn’t be difficult.
Then all four of them would have to agree not to say a word.
Five of them, he corrected. Hiero was up in the tower.
Five people would have to keep quiet about it. That meant no storytelling, no playful ribbing.
It meant withstanding any questions that might come from a sergeant.
Or from Lieutenant Hart.
If it came to Hart, that meant sitting in Internal Affairs. Being tape-recorded. Being asked very specific questions.
Lying. That’s what it really meant, Tower realized. It meant lying.
Tower flashed back to his academy days, remembering the words of the training officer, Sergeant DeMarcus. He’d said a lot of things, but there were a couple of things he repeated over and over again. Chief among them was, “Integrity is the coin of our trade. Never sacrifice your integrity, because you’re worthless without it.”
Still, Battaglia had a point. No one had been hurt. Katie was a good troop. And he didn’t want anything to affect his task force. Catching the Rainy Day Rapist was the most important thing here, not some policy violation.
Tower considered a moment longer, then made his decision. He cleared his throat. “We’re not calling a sergeant.”
All three patrol officers swung their heads toward him.
“Excuse me?” Katie said.
“This is my investigation,” Tower said. “And this is an investigative operation, not a patrol operation.”
“How do you figure that?” Sully asked. “There’s five of us out here and four of us are patrol officers.”
Tower shook his head. “Irrelevant. This is an investigative task force. All of you are on loan.”
“Whatever,” Katie said. “We’re not covering this up. I’m the one who-”
“I didn’t say we were covering it up,” Tower interrupted. “But we’re not calling a sergeant about it.”
“What, then?”
Tower pointed at Sully. “Find the ejected casing.”
Sully hesitated.
“Trust me,” Tower said.
Sully reluctantly pulled his flashlight from his back pocket without a word. He clicked it on and began to sweep the ground with the light beam.
Tower turned to Battaglia. “Toss the rat in a garbage can. Use a pair of rubber gloves.”
“What?” Battaglia protested. “Why am I on rat duty?”
“Just do it, please.”
“I don’t even have any gloves on me,” the officer complained.
Tower reached inside his jacket pocket and removed a pair of forensic gloves. He tossed them to Battaglia. They struck him on the chest and fell to the ground at his feet.
Battaglia sighed. “Well, they’re dirty now.”
Tower ignored him. He turned to Katie. “Walk with me,” he said.
The two walked out of the underpass, back toward the clock tower. Once they were under a streetlight, Tower stopped. He looked into Katie’s eyes and said nothing. The officer returned his gaze evenly, her jaw set. But he saw something in her eyes, a flicker behind her anger that he couldn’t quite identify.
After a few moments, she broke the silence. “I�
��m not sweeping this under the rug, Detective.”
“Neither am I.”
“It sure looks that way.”
Tower shook his head. “Don’t worry about it. I’ll make a report to my Lieutenant in the morning. If I know him, he’ll make a report directly to the Patrol Captain.”
Katie narrowed her eyes. “What about IA?”
Tower shrugged. “That’ll be the Captain’s decision, won’t it?”
Katie stared at him. Tower could see her mind working behind the stare. He knew she was wondering if this was tantamount to covering it up or not. He knew it wasn’t. He knew that someone, either Crawford or Reott, was going to have MacLeod standing tall in the office for an ass-chewing. Whether they decided to go to IA or not was up to them. He’d satisfied his responsibility by reporting the incident.
“Are you sure?” Katie finally asked. “Is that above board?”
“Reporting an A.D. to the Captain of Patrol? Are you really asking me if that’s above board or not?”
Katie considered, then shook her head. “I suppose not.”
“You’ll get your ass chewed,” Tower told her.
“I deserve it.”
“Maybe,” Tower conceded.
“Definitely.”
“Either way,” Tower said, “I’m more concerned with this: are you okay to do this decoy job?”
Katie swallowed. Tower watched her eyes for the flicker he’d seen before.
“I’m fine,” Katie told him.
“You sure?” Tower asked.
“Positive.”
Tower searched her eyes. He saw nothing but resolve.
“All right,” he said. He reached out and clapped her lightly on the shoulder. “Let’s go try a different park, then. I want to catch this son of a bitch.”
ELEVEN
Sunday, April 21st
0316 hours
The four police officers sat tiredly at the all-night diner. Katie picked at her English muffin, tearing off small pieces and nibbling them. She washed every bite down with ice water. Sully and Battaglia each nursed their own cup of coffee but Tower drank cup after cup, refilled by Lauren, a buxom and flirtatious waitress. She poured for Tower but leaned near Sully to reach across the table and fill the cup.
“She likes you,” Tower commented to Sully after the waitress bounded away with an energetic bounce.
Sully grunted but Katie saw that he was hiding a small smile.
Battaglia glanced up from his cup. He followed her descending frame with his gaze, then shrugged. “She likes everybody with a badge,” he said. “She gets around, from what I hear.”
“You listen to Kahn too much,” Sully said, a little defensively.
“As a matter of fact, that was the particular skirt chaser who gave me the scoop on this one,” Battaglia said.
Typical, Katie thought. Kahn or Giovanni chases after any woman with a pulse and the guys figure them for a stud. This waitress may or may not be just as promiscuous and she’s somehow a slut. Nice double standard.
“Kahn’s an asshole,” Tower muttered.
“Which kind of asshole?” Sully asked.
“Shut up with that,” Battaglia told him. He turned to Tower. “He ain’t an asshole. He’s our platoon mate.”
“Maybe so,” Tower said, sipping his fresh coffee, “but he’s an asshole.”
“Really? And why’s that?”
“He’d fuck a catcher’s mitt, for starters,” Tower told him. “On top of that, he treats women like shit.”
Amen, Katie voiced silently.
Battaglia thought about it for a minute. Then he said, “I’ll give you the catcher’s mitt thing. But he’s no different than Gio on day shift. Who are we to tell him not to love ‘em and leave ‘em?”
“We’re nobody,” Tower said. “I didn’t say he should change. I just said he’s an asshole for being that way. He’s an asshole because he tells women lies to get them into bed and then he dumps them.”
“How do you know?”
“I know. He did it to a friend of Stephanie’s.”
“Well, maybe your wife’s friend was a bitch,” Battaglia suggested.
“Stephanie is my girlfriend, not my wife,” Tower corrected, “and her friend is a sweet kid who got caught up in the badge and promises Kahn made. Anyway, it doesn’t matter. I’m just saying that your asshole platoon mate might just be saying this waitress is a slut because she wouldn’t go out with him.”
“Maybe he knows because he banged her,” Battaglia countered.
“Then he’s got no class,” Tower said.
Battaglia sighed. “Well, I can’t argue that one.” He looked around the table at Sully and Katie. “Thanks for standing up for our platoon mate, guys.”
Katie shrugged. “Face it, Batts. Kahn is an asshole.”
Sully nodded in agreement. “She’s right. I’d drive ninety miles an hour on winter roads and fight a dozen pissed off bad guys to save his neck, but that doesn’t change the fact that he’s an asshole.” He thought about it for a moment, then added, “West Coast.”
Katie looked askance at him, but he shook his head at her.
Whatever, she thought to herself. Those two had so many inside jokes between them that it was like their own little language or something.
“If that’s settled, let’s debrief tonight’s events,” Tower said, his voice dropping into a slightly more official tone. “Aside from the incident under the bridge, what’s your input?”
No one answered right away. When Katie looked up, she realized everyone was looking at her. She reached for water glass and took a drink.
“Do you feel safe, MacLeod?” Tower asked her.
A surge of anger spiked in her chest at his question. “As safe as any police operation,” she said coolly. “Listen, guys. I’m sorry about the bridge thing. I guess I was a little jumpy, but I’m fine now.” She looked around at each of them. “Really.”
Sully and Battaglia nodded. She could tell they believed her. That was expected. They’d worked with her for over a year now. They knew how she handled herself on the job.
Tower didn’t respond to her statement. He merely watched her, his eyes appraising her constantly while he sipped his coffee. It made Katie nervous and angry at the same time.
“There is something I’d change, though,” she said, moving the conversation away from her feelings and to something more concrete.
“What?” Tower asked.
“This,” she said, setting the brick-shaped transmitter and all its wires on the table in front of him.
“You don’t want to be wired?”
“Not with this. It’s awkward and probably visible, even through my clothes. Plus, if our guy spots it on me, he won’t take the bait.”
Tower sipped his coffee, then shrugged. “Sorry, MacLeod. We’re not the FBI. We don’t have the latest and greatest equipment. We’re River City PD, which means-”
“Which means we’ve got crap,” Battaglia finished.
Tower didn’t argue. “We’ve got what we got.”
“Can you give it to the tech guy and see if he can rig it to look like a walkman?” Katie asked. “Then I can wear jogging clothes and it’ll look like I’m listening to music.”
“What about your gun and other gear?”
“I have a fanny pack that’ll work.”
Tower nodded. “Okay, I’ll drop it off this morning and see what they can do. Anything else?”
“Yeah,” Katie said. “Can I get some new back up other than these two clowns?”
Tower chuckled. “Nice.”
Battaglia and Sully exchanged a glance.
Katie used the moment of silence, which she knew was the calm before the storm, to sip her water and lean back in her chair. She knew that the exaggerated Irish and Italian accents would come out next, that the insults would fly, that the waitress would be back to flirt with Sully some more and that when it was all finished, she would be ready to go home and sleep.
T
hings were once again as they were supposed to be.
0756 hours
Heather Torin rose from a night of broken sleep and drifted into the kitchen. She rummaged around for a coffee filter in the cupboard. Suppressing a yawn, she slipped the filter into the coffee-maker, dumped in some coffee and poured water. Then she hit the start button. The ritual had become such second nature that she sometimes barely remembered being awake for it.
She opened her front door. Outside, heavy droplets of rain cascaded downward, thumping loudly on the plastic-covered newspaper. She retrieved the paper, shook off the excess water and went back inside. The cool, wet air served to wake her up. As she unwrapped the River City Herald and threw away the plastic wrapping around it, the smell of brewing coffee brought her some familiar comfort.
Routine was how she’d battled her depression in the past two months. The security she had known her entire life living in a city that was once voted as an “All-American City” had been shattered on that wet day early in March. Since then, she’d kept to her routine, clinging to it with urgency. She rose from bed. She drank her coffee and read the paper. She ate breakfast. She went to work, ate lunch, came home. In the evening, she watched mindless drivel on television — situational comedies, for the most part — and kept her brain from having to revisit those frightening moments in Clemons Park.
It seemed to work.
Most of the time.
Most of the time, she was so busy focused on the task or activity at hand, her mind didn’t have the opportunity to wander. That focus, coupled with her familiar routine, kept the rising panic in her chest at bay, even though she sometimes still jumped at sounds in her office. Even though she still viewed every man who walked past her with fear and suspicion. Despite all of that, she kept it under control.
Most of the time.
But not at night.
It was her dreams that had her at a disadvantage. She couldn’t push them aside with routine or busying about some task. She was vulnerable to whatever dreams may come, and those that came seemed bent on some sort of emotional revenge for having been suppressed during her waking hours. In vivid detail, she heard the sound of her own pounding feet through the wooded area. She felt him knock her to the ground. She smelled the damp earth. She saw her own vision blur with tears.