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Tin Man

Page 11

by Dale Brown

can take this to the bank: There is nothing that feels

  better, except maybe for some big-titted brunette

  sitting naked on your lap, than seeing a squad car

  pull up to your scene. Even if you're Code Four and

  didn't ask for backup and are completely in control

  of your situation, it feels darnn good to see another

  cop out there with you. Same goes for sheriff's deputies

  , security guards, ambulance drivers, street

  sweepers, waitresses, and convenience store clerks,

  anyone who has to work the graveyard shift . . ."

  "But how can you do that? You can't be everywhere

  . . ."

  "You listen and you observe and you pay attention

  to everything," LaFortier said. "First of all,

  when you hear it on the radio, you should pay attention-since

  we do most of our communicating on

  the A4DT nowadays, a guy using the radio is away

  from his car, on foot, and usually confronting a suspect

  , so if you're available and nearby, swing on

  over to his location. Listen to the cop's voice, his

  -that speak louder than his words. Listen to

  tone s

  background noises-if you hear lots of voices in the

  background, shouting or crying or screaming, the

  cop might be outnumbered or up to his eyeballs,

  and he sure as shit wants a little backup even

  though he might forget to ask for it, or he might be

  too afraid of the crowd's reaction if he calls for help.

  When you see a cop on the street confronting someone

  , even if it's one-on-one, check it out. Let him

  Code Four you on your way if he doesn't need help.

  "You'll understand all this soon, especially after

  your probationary period, when you're on the street

  by yourself," LaFortier went on. "This little city

  can seem awful big and lonely at night, even for the

  toughest veteran cops. Rusty'll probably ream us

  out for wasting our time snooping on him, but take

  my word for it, everyone appreciates the swing-by."

  T

  he obstetrician strode quickly into the room and

  went directly to Wendy's bedside, checking the

  readouts on the vital-sign monitors, then beginning

  a digital exam. Wendy didn't seem to notice him;

  her head lolled to the side and her dry lips were

  parted slightly. An extra blanket covered her up to

  the chin, but she still shivered occasionally.

  Although he didn't show it, Patrick was a frazzled

  mess inside. An alarm on the fetal monitor

  kept going off, and a nurse would come in, hit the

  quiet button, and leave. He didn't know whether

  she was taking any real notice, because it had been

  going off regularly for at least half an hour and he

  was afraid she'd gotten desensitized to it by now.

  He could do little for Wendy. An hour ago an anesthesiologist

  had finally installed an epidural line

  into Wendy's spine-it was the only procedure that

  Patrick was told to leave the room for-so she was

  no longer in body-numbing pain. Unfortunately, she

  was also not very responsive. The oxytocin had

  taken over her contractions now, and she was being

  racked with one every two or three minutes. There

  were so many tubes and wires hooked up to her and

  the baby that she looked like some weird science

  experiment. This was definitely not the way they

  wanted to deliver this child.

  "What's going on, Doctor?" Patrick asked when

  the obstetrician had finished his exam.

  "It's time to act. The baby's pulse rate is high

  now and his blood oxygen level is low, and it looks

  like his head is banging right up against the cervixbut

  she's still dilated only five centimeters. I'm

  afraid we don't have any choice-we need to do a

  cesarean."

  "We talked about that already," Patrick said angrily

  . "Wendy can't do a cesarean, because of her

  injuries . . ."

  "We don't have any choice in the matter, Mr.

  McLanahan," the doctor said. "You're going to lose

  the baby if this keeps up. We can't increase the oxytocin

  any further. We're coming up on twenty-four

  hours since her water broke, so the chance of infection

  is climbing. Any more delay, and we could lose

  both of them."

  "Then . . ."-Patrick couldn't believe he was

  going to say this, but he had to-". . . if the surgery

  is too risky, we should . . . we have to abort the

  delivery."

  "I've been speaking to Dr. Linus since you gave

  me permission to get details on Wendy's injuries,"

  the obstetrician said. "I think she's strong enough

  to handle a cesarean. Dr. Linus and I disagree . . .

  "Then we should go with Dr. Linus's recommendation

  ."

  the attending physician now, and I'm here

  and he's not," the obstetrician said firmly. "And I'm

  the one responsible. I don't know the extent of her

  injuries, but I don't think Dr. Linus does eitherapparently

  you've been playing this secrecy game

  with him too." Patrick averted his eyes. It was obvious

  that he felt the awful pain of having to choose

  between maintaining some government secret and

  the health and well-being of his family, and was

  now discovering that he might have made the

  wrong choice. Sometimes, the obstetrician thought,

  these guys play the loyal little tin soldier routine

  too seriously, forgetting that there are real lives at

  stake.

  "Frankly speaking," the doctor went on, "you

  two took an awful risk by continuing this pregnancy

  , with the horrendous medical history Wendy

  has. The chances of mother and baby coming out of

  this pregnancy in good health were never better

  than fifty-fifty. You should have been advised of

  that

  "We were," Patrick admitted. "But it was a miracle

  Wendy got pregnant at all, so we decided to go

  ahead with it."

  The doctor gave Patrick a faint smile. "Well, sir,

  e all have to live with the consequences of

  now w

  that decision. It's a tribute to her that she stayed in

  such good health through this pregnancy, and that

  is a definite plus in her favor-but we're in trouble

  now. The worst has come true. You need to make a

  decision, Patrick."

  "All right," Patrick said, reaching over and taking

  Wendy's hand. She stirred but did not return his

  gentle squeeze. "What are my options?"

  "The only way for us to ensure that we'll deliver

  a healthy baby at this point is to do a cesarean right

  now," the obstetrician said. "The only way to ensure

  Wendy's health is to terminate the pregnancy.

  We can wait and hope that Wendy dilates to ten, but

  we risk injury or death to your baby because his

  head is pounding against her cervix and he's showing

  obvious signs of distress, and we also risk the

  chance of infection for both mother and baby. We

  can go ahead with a C-section and risk Wendy's

  health, although I'm fair
ly confident that she can

  come out of it all right. Or we terminate the pregnancy

  to save'Wendy. That's about it."

  Patrick looked at his wife, but she was out of it.

  You have got to help me on this one, sweetie, he

  told her silently. I can't make this decision on my

  own.

  As if in reply, she opened her eyes and managed a

  weak smile. She swallowed, took a ragged breath,

  and said in a low voice, "You are going to make a

  great father, lover."

  "Wendy, listen to me. I have to ask you-the

  baby's in trouble, you're in trouble. I think we need

  to . . . to abort it, sweetheart."

  Wendy's expression never changed but she raised

  her chin confidently. "You won't do that, Patrick,"

  she said.

  "I can't risk your life, Wendy

  "I've had my life already, Patrick," Wendy said.

  "You'd be denying a new life. You won't do that."

  "But we have other options, Wendy," Patrick

  said, pleading with her. "We can adopt. I can't risk

  losing you . . . " z

  "Patrick, sweetheart, we have a life right here,

  right now, that we must decide about," Wendy said.

  "There are no other options. It's us three right now.

  You know what you have to do."

  Wendy's smile never dimmed as Patrick's eyes

  filled with tears. He reached down, kissed her on

  the forehead, pressed her hand, and nodded. She

  nodded in reply and closed her eyes as another wave

  of contractions, more painful than the last even

  through the epidural, washed over her.

  Patrick turned to the obstetrician and said,

  "Cesarean."

  "All right, let's go," the doctor said. Nurses came

  in to get Wendy ready to move to the pre-op area.

  "I want to be there," Patrick said emphatically.

  "I want to be with Wendy. I'm not leaving her side."

  "You'll be there," the doctor said. Patrick was

  handed a package with a thin plastic surgical gown,

  cap, and shoe covers. "Put those on. We'll have you

  wait outside the pre-op area until she's been taken

  into surgery, and then we'll bring you in. Don't

  worry.

  The speed at which the nurses and doctor were

  working told Patrick that the greatest battle of their

  lives was just beginning.

  L

  aFortier drove past the main entrance to Sacramento

  Live!, then parked the car across the street

  half a block down. LaFortier put the car in park but

  did not shut off the engine. He sat thinking. "Why

  don't we just give the guy a call on the radio and

  have him let us in?" Paul McLanahan asked.

  "It's dark inside," LaFortier said.

  "They had a power failure, Cargo."

  "But the battery-powered emergency lights are

  off too," LaFortier pointed out. "One or two lights

  out, I can understand-but afl of the emergency

  lights malfunctioning at the same time?

  "What are you thinking?"

  "I'm thinking that Rusty's probably pretty pissed

  off right now," LaFortier said. He picked up the radio

  . "Security One-Seven, One John Twenty-One."

  No reply. LaFortier tried again; still no reply. "I'll

  get Dispatch to beep him. He might be in the can or

  something." LaFortier swung the Mobile Data Terminal

  toward him and typed, IJN21 TO PON REQ PLZ

  BEEP SECURITY 17, a request to activate the beeper on

  the off-duty officer's radio, a loud tone signaling the

  officer to check in right away.

  "Should we get some backup?" McLanahan

  asked.

  "Not just ' yet-let's see if Rusty checks in,"

  LaFortier replied. He put the car in drive and rolled

  farther down the block, out of sight of the front of

  the building.

  Er bewegt sich in ndrdlicher Richtung auf der Seventh

  Street," the lookout reported. A gunman,

  fully outfitted with body armor, helmet, and several

  heavy automatic weapons, was stationed at each entrance

  , monitoring the outside with night-vision

  goggles.

  "Verstanden," said the one in the staircase.

  Three others were taking cover in the staircase, hidden

  behind the half-open door. Still another was just

  dragging the body of the off-duty police officer away

  from the security desk, out of sight of the cash room

  located just opposite the security desk. The gunport

  in the door of the cash room was still closed-apparently

  the men inside hadn't heard the commotion

  outside yet.

  "What is the procedure when they open the door,

  Mullins?" one of the gunmen asked in heavily accented

  English.

  "They'll call out first on the phone, Major," said

  a man in a security guard's outfit. "Then they'll

  look out the gunport. The security chief is supposed

  to stand in plain sight before the door is opened.

  Then they'll just then, a loud beeping sound

  came from the security desk.

  "Is that the call?" asked the gunman identified as

  the Major, obviously the leader of the group. He was

  clad in thick Class Three bulletproof Kevlar armor

  protecting every part of his body except his head;

  his ballistic Kevlar infantry helmet, which had an

  integral communications headset, red-lens protective

  goggles, and a gas mask, was in his hand. His

  combat harness was arrayed with ammo pouches,

  grenades, and a large-caliber automatic pistol in a

  combat thigh rig. He scared the hell out of the security

  guard.

  "No-that's the cop's radio," the guard replied.

  "Dispatch is asking him to check in."

  "Do you know their procedures?" the Major

  asked. "Can you respond for the policeman?"

  Mullins, the Judas security guard, hesitated. It

  had been two years since he was kicked off the Oakland

  police force, caught stealing drugs and guns out

  of police property rooms. He couldn't get a decent

  job anywhere in the Bay Area, although he had

  never been charged with any crime because the department

  wanted the incident kept quiet. He finally

  found a job with a private security company in Sacramento

  . But he was unable to get a gun permit and

  make the big bucks of an armed security guard, so

  he made minimum wage as a seasonal-hire watchman

  at Sacramento Live! and other locations

  around town. He lived in a filthy fifty-dollar-a-week

  hotel room near the Greyhound bus terminal in the

  downtown area.

  But Mullins now had additional sources of income

  . He had always loved motorcycles, and when

  he got kicked off the Oakland force, this passion

  turned in a dark direction: He became a Satan's

  Brotherhood recruit. The Brotherhood paid him

  well to simply look the other way when the gang

  wanted to steal some fuel from a refinery, chemi-

  cals from a warehouse, or pharmaceuticals from a

  medical supply store.

  His conspiracy activities were no longer for

  the benefit of Satan's Brotherhood, however.
Two

  weeks ago, a couple of paramilitary guys with German

  accents had approached him and offered almost

  a half-year's worth of wages for one night's

  work. He readily agreed. All he had to do was brief

  the head of the group on the security procedures

  when the cash boxes were being moved, and open a

  door when instructed. He'd make five thousand

  dollars on the spot.

  But he never expected these guys to be so bloodthirsty

  . Every private security officer had been executed

  on the spot, even the unarmed watchmen.

  And now, instead of being given his money and let

  go, he had been dragged upstairs by one of the Germans

  to explain the cash room routine. He hesitated

  "Go, Mullins. Answer them. Now!"

  "But I don't know this department's codes or procedures

  It must be answered. Tell them everything

  is okay."

  Mullins walked up to the security desk and

  picked up the beeping police radio. Hesitantly, he

  keyed the mike button. "Security One-Seven, go

  ahead."

  "Security One-Seven, roger, One John Two-One

  is requesting a 940 at your 925."

  Oh shit, he thought-Sacramento uses nmecodes

  instead of ten-codes. It had been ages since

  he'd used any radio codes at all. He figured that 925

  meant "location," but he had no idea what a 940

  was. Probably some sort of meeting. "Ah . . .

  roger, tell One John Twenty-One that I'll be done

  here in thirty minutes and I'll meet him at

  he remembered that the county jail was only about

  three blocks away---". at the jail. Out."

  "Roger, Security One-Seven. KMA clear."

  That was not Rusty Caruthers," LaFortier said

  grimly. Paul could see his partner's mind racing,

  and possibilities and explanations

  over and over in his head. But after several long moments

  all he said was, "Shit."

  Maybe it was one of the private security guys,

  answering Caruthers's radio," Paul McLanahan offered

  "Then why didn't he say so? Why didn't he say,

  'The cop's in the bathroom, I'll tell him you want

  him to call in ASAP/ or something," LaFortier said.

  "No. This guy tried to answer the radio as if he was

  Rusty. Something's going on." He put the car m

  gear and pulled back onto the street. "Let's cruise

  around the complex and take a look."

  in Polizeiwagen kommt durch die Seventh

 

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