Chapter 11
The Last Tango
The officer and Detective Callahan appeared at the gate to
Gary's cell about 2:00 o'clock that afternoon. "Time to go
Shipley." Callahan announced. "You'll get one last chance to
modify your statement before you're arraigned, then it's off to
Baltimore. Any questions?"
"Just one."
"Shoot."
"Is it possible for you to get any dumber than you already are?"
Gary asked and smirked at the detective.
"It's nice to see that some things never change." Callahan said
as he stepped in and cuffed Gary. Gary's face was bruised and
cut in places with minor abrasions. He was hustled out and down
the hall of the old precinct house as they crossed in front of
the small passageway to the waiting area Gary spared a glance at
the old-style bench the day officer of two hundred years ago
might have sat behind. Tall and imposing, it dominated the room.
It was designed to make the officer that sat there seem larger
than life. It was surprising to him that it had remained
unchanged during the passage of all these years since it had
been placed there back in the late 1800's. It was however out
there where he could not get. He was almost in the system at
this point.
As he cleared the door way and lost sight of the bench he could
just see a ladies foot and leg come in to view. Gary was jerked
around the corner and down the hall before the woman came
completely into view. "I'm here to see my husband. I believe
you're holding him here," he heard the voice say softly. The
sound of it drifted out of earshot as they continued down the
hall. It sounded surprisingly like Michelle's voice but Gary
knew in his heart that was impossible.
My mind is playing tricks on me. It was a phenomenon that
Terrence Michales could have tutored Gary well in. He shook his
head to clear his head of the sad sound of that woman voice. It
threatened to send him back to that black place where he had
been after Beth and Randy had left that night. He couldn't go
back there. He had to think of a way to get himself out of this
mess so he could care for his children, so he could get William
out of the country before they found out he was a user.
He marched on and was guided on toward interrogation room #3.
The door was unlocked and he was placed inside with his wrists
secured to the table. Behind him, Gary could hear the door close
and lock. He sat and waited calmly for the inevitable to come,
wishing in vane he could hug his kids one more time. He sat and
allowed himself one tear of grief for his whole family.
-*-
The lawyer and the stunning beautiful woman strolled in to the
prescient house with all the confidence of the President of the
Federal United States. As she approached the bench she glanced
to her left down a short, narrow hall that was blocked by a
steel cage gate. She saw an officer escorting a man down another
hall; she only caught the shoe of the prisoner as it vanished
down the hall. She was grateful that she didn't have to look
into the faces of the men back there. They were the lost angry
souls of dangerous men locked up with her gentle, loving
husband. Yes she was very grateful she didn't have to see what
Gary was seeing now.
She walked up the risers of the podium and faced the officer at
the bench who refused to look at her. She waited for an
acknowledgment. The cop sat shoving mouthfuls of mayonnaise-
laden ham sandwich into his mouth and said nothing. So the lady
volunteered, "I'm here to see my husband. I believe you're
holding him here."
"Yeah? Look lady, whoever you are, have a seat and I'll call you
when I'm done with my sandwich," the cop said, still not turning
away from his greasy ham sandwich.
"Whoever I am is Michelle Shipley. Does that mean anything to
you?" she stood arms crossed waiting for a reaction. And she got
one.
The cop gasped, drawing down a huge bite of sandwich into his
neck. He looked up coughing and gagging to see the face of the
woman before him. She was even more beautiful than any picture
could have told. Her body and face were of perfect goddess
quality. She was dressed in a red silk 1940's woman's suit; her
hair was pulled up and it framed her gorgeous face and creamy
skin. In her hand she held a small dark box about the size of a
large brick. She looked pissed off.
"God-damn!" croaked around a mouth-full sticky white bread and
smelly ham with inspired recognition. The recognition only
worsened his choking. Michelle was pleased to see the startled
and concerned reaction of the man. It meant she had leverage
The cop was now beet red and appeared to be dying. He heaved and
gacked trying to dislodge ham and sticky white sandwich bread
from his throat. He bent, forcing his huge belly up and down
against the tops of his thighs trying to free trapped carbon
dioxide from his lungs and out of his blocked airway. He rose up
in the chair and started pointing over his shoulder to his back.
Michelle understood and waited for the man to bend back down.
When he did she smacked him, open handed, several times until a
wet and partially chewed lump of ham and bread hit with a wet
smack at her feet. Part of it landed on her shiny high heel
shoes.
"How sweet," she mocked him. "Sharing your lunch with me. But
I've already eaten. My husband if you don't mind." She finished
sternly.
"He's..." Cough "He's..." Cough Cough "...not" Cough "...here."
he choked out and then went into a new volley of hacks and
coughs.
Then Matt Quinn who had accompanied her here, one of three of
the family's lawyers spoke up. "Then I suggest you get him back
here, in ah... oh let's give them 10 minutes. How's that Mrs.
Shipley?"
"Five; fully dressed and ready to walk out the door," she said
while turning her attention from her lawyer to the choking cop.
At last the coughing stopped and the cop protested. "Now look
here. Mr. Shipley can't just be released. He has to be
processed. He's been arrested..."
"Falsely!" stated the lawyer.
"There may have been a mistake..." the cop continued, "But he
still has to finishing processing and booking."
"Not according to this Writ," the lawyer handed the cop the
court order of immediate release.
The officer read the highlighted elements of the document. Fear
began to darken his features. "You have to give us time..." the
cop said.
The lawyer shook his head and dialed the circuit court's number.
Michelle was quiet. "Yes, it's me your Honor... No, they say
processing... Yes sir." The lawyer handed the phone to the cop,
"He wants to speak to you," Quinn said with a slight grin.
The cop took the WristVID, looking first from Michelle to the
lawyer and then back to Michelle again. Michelle raised her
eyebrows in an encouraging manner to suggest, Go on... take the
call, it won't hurt long!
"Yes?" the cop asked. There as an angry buzzing from the VID.
"Officer Hammock, Sir." More buzzing. "Sergeant, Sir, and yes, I
like my job very much Sir." More buzzing, then louder buzzing.
"Beat cop? But Sir!" The buzzing took on a screaming quality!
"OK, OK... Don't have a stroke!" More loud buzzing. "No Sir, no
disrespect Sir. I'm getting him now. Yes Sir, thank you Sir."
The cop handed the hand VID back to the grinning lawyer.
"Don't you say a fucking word." the cop warned and the lawyer
held up his hands in a 'Who? Little ole' me?' gesture that made
Michelle smile.
The desk Sergeant was on the Closed VID trying to raise any one
back in the cellblock he could. "Five minutes you said?" he
asked Michelle and she nodded. "I'll need more time than that,
OK?"
"Tough!" she spat out at him.
From the VID came a voice, "What the hell do you want? Oh Sarge
what's up?"
"Get Shipley out here on the double, dressed in his street
clothes and ready to go."
"Can't Sarge."
"Wrong answer!." Sergeant Hammock said.
"But we can't, Callahan took him to Baltimore, he was VID
arraigned today. He's in the system now."
"I need him NOW! Court Order."
"Court Order? But..?"
"Jacobs, go find him or we're all cooked!" pleaded Hammock.
"Why didn't you say so Sarge?" The officer turned away from the
VID screen and shouted back in to the cell block, "Any one seen
Shipley hanin' around? He's wanted up front." The sound of the
other inmates laughing at the joke made Michelle cringe.
"Corporal, Mrs. Shipley is standing right here listening to
everything you're saying!" warned the Day Officer.
"Mrs. Shipley? Isn't she dead?" the guard asked turning back to
the screen now visibly confused.
Michelle had had all she could take. She pushed her way in front
of the VID and shouted, "Look you pathetic little snot, my
lawyer is here and is taking notes; and unless you want to see
your disregard for the feelings of the family members of
prisoners falsely accused and wrongfully jailed on some
nationally aired, night time documentary then I suggest you
learn pretty damn fast to act as a professional and GET MY
HUSBAND OUT HERE RIGHT NOW!"
The Sergeant stepped back in front of the screen, "Any
questions? We're down to..." the cop looked at Michelle who held
up two fingers, "two minutes to get this thing done." Michelle
could hear the cop on the other end scream "WHAT?" from both out
in the blockhouse and over the VID. "Just do it son or we're all
going to be looking for work, not just Callahan."
The cop turned off the VID. "Can I offer you a seat?" the cop
offered kindly.
"I'll stand thank you," Michelle replied coldly.
"Bitch!" the cop said to himself.
Worthless bastard! Michelle thought to herself.
Both would have been pleased to find they held each other in the
same high regard.
-*-
Gary could hear the commotion outside the door but could not see
out the two-way glass. He hoped vaguely that the building was
not on fire. If it was, what were the chances of someone
remembering he was locked in this isolated little room? He
didn't want to burn to death with his wrists locked to the
table. An image came to his mind. Once, when he had been seven
he and his mother had gone to the closing of an old discount
store. His mother, being the pack rat that she was, saw and
opportunity to stock up frequently needed cleaning items and a
few dish towels and whatever else she could find to stockpile in
the subterranean floors of their ranch style home. On one of the
shelves he found a plastic horror model called The Forgotten
Prisoner. It showed a skeleton seated with it's back resting on
a stone wall. It was a cutaway section of a dungeon room. The
prisoner had its wrists chained above its skull, ankles chained
to the floor in front of him. He was dressed in beggar's rags
next to him on is left had been a rotting uneaten bowl of food
on the other, at the base of the wall was a small arched and
heavily barred window too narrow to crawl through if it hadn't
been barred. It struck at the core fear of Gary's. He begged his
mother to buy it for him. He wanted to assemble it and see if it
was as terrifying as it seemed to be.
It had been. Once assembled, the image of it plagued him with
nightmares that grew in intensity until his father finally had
thrown the model way. Now, if something was happening out side
the door that might cause those in authority to forget he was
here, he had no hope of getting his hands free of the manacles
that held his wrists attached to the metal table in front of
him. He could almost envision him still confined to the table
once the fire was out; he had all but convinced himself that was
what was going on. They would find him here, a blackened,
charred and smoking corpse, still sitting here waiting for a
rescue that come too late.
Jail was indeed a different place from the comfort of his normal
life. This was an experience that would make him appreciate,
everyday that he had apparently taken for granted. Never more in
his life did he want just the freedom to simply scratch his
nose. Maybe it was fitting that this had happened to him. He had
failed as a father; leaving his children to fend for themselves
in a world where it was much more like a jungle than in any of
the remaining forest habitats left in the world. It was an easy
thing to die out there from inexperience or want.
He had not protected his family. He had let grief get in and
cloud his judgment; but oh what a black, suffocating cloud it
had been that had swallowed him and stymied his brain. It hung
over him now. It threatened to never leave him. How was he
expected to live now? You're doing it again. Your children need
you and you're wallowing in a pool of self-pity. Snap out of it
and be a fucking man for God's sake.
He had to think of a way to get out of here and meet up with his
children.
He was nearly 'in the system' as they say. It was a system that
had eliminated the bonding of prisoners since the Anti-Terrorist
Act of 2004. No one accused of a capital crime could seek or
would be granted bond release. A measure put in place to make
sure that suspects stayed where the authorities could find them
rather than letting them run out on major charges. Once in the
system you waited for trial. One didn't get out until one's
trial. If there was evidence that might exonerate a suspect,
that evidence was expected to be presented at trial.
The system was (for want of a better phrase) secure. Once he was
in any hope of getting to his children was remote at best.
The noise outside was becoming fierce. People were shouting.
There were footfalls racing up and down the corridor. Maybe the
place was on fire. He wanted to get free of this table he was
locked to. Panic was beginning to rise in his throat, like sour
bile He kicked the chair away from the table and was about to
shout for help. He heard a key in a lock on the other side of
the door. The door swung open and there stood an officer, his
hand on his F-Tazor, "Mr. Shipley?"
"Mr.?" He asked with some surprise.
The officer called down the hall. "I've got him here!" The
officer removed his hands from the Tazor but Gary had the
distinct feeling they were simply going to execute him right
then and there. He started to back into a corner, dragging the
table he was cuffed to along with him.
"Hey, where ya going? Look, no one's going to hurt you." The
officer reached outside and unhooked something from the wall.
"Here," the officer moved to the table and electronically
unlocked the manacles on the table. "Put this on; and hurry." He
laid the suit Gary had been brought in to the station wearing on
the table before him. It had been cleaned and pressed and was
free of the horrible filth they had found him in.
"What's going on here?" Gary asked as he rubbed the soreness
from his wrists
"You need to put these on in a hurry, don't argue just do it."
"Wha..."
"No questions... Just do it. You're going home."
Gary was flabbergasted. "Home? What do you mean?" Gary shed is
convict grays and started putting on his own clothes there in
the interrogation room.
"I think you know perfectly well what I mean, everything you
said turned out to be true. Now we're in CYA mode. I'm sure as
hell sorry all this happened Mr. Shipley. I hope when the
investigation into this starts, you'll remember that I was nice
to you. Always nice to you Mr. Shipley."
"Sure, sure I will! What do you mean true?" he asked as he
finished dressing
"Done? Good! Let's go!"
"No wait..." he said but was rushed along to the short hall that
led to the Day desk in the lobby.
"Got him right here. He hadn't been arraigned yet." The young
guard shouted through the bars, "Hey open up. I've got Shipley
right here."
-*-
Michelle could hear the voice of a young male guard shout, "Got
him right here. He hadn't been arraigned yet. Hey open up. I've
got Shipley right here." At the sound of those words she felt
she might faint. She could feel her love for him rocket to the
sky, it hovered there waiting to pounce on him, waiting to see
him for the first time in what seemed like a thousand life
times.
"Gary?" Michelle rushed to the barred door. There were two
guards between Gary and the locked gate of the cell and
interrogation area of the old city jail, now not much more than
a holding center for the Rouston Processing Center and Federal
Prison
She was dimly aware that she felt good to be herself again, to
be in love with Gary and to almost have him back. Not yet,
almost but not yet. Any minute now you'll be a complete person
again, she told herself. The anticipation was about to drive her
wild.
"Let him out of there!" she was shouting. Everyone seemed to be
moving in slow motion. "Please!"
"Michelle?" It was Gary and he sounded great but surprised.
"Gary! Oh someone let him out of there!." she pleaded. "I'm
here Gary." She tried to see over the head and shoulders of the
guards but she was too short to see him standing, fidgeting
nervously behind them "Gary? I can't see you."
"I'm here!" he shouted. A hand slithered out between the two men
and she knew it was his. There, on the third finger was his
wedding ring. She grasped it and knelt, she moved her face in
close and brought her lips to his fingers. Michelle kissed the
hand and the fingers caressed her lips. She felt she might faint
dead away.
"I'm here, Love," he reassured her. "I'm here."
"Yes, I can see. Oh God, let me hold you." She made no attempt
to hide the desperation in her voice.
Still the guards fumbled with the lock. Finally the door opened
and Gary pushed past the guards and Michelle sprang in to his
arms. She realized that she had never been separated from him
for so long. Not since that first weekend as Michelle. Not even
when she had alienated him had they been separated like this.
They had never spent more than 10 or 12 hours apart from each
other.
He stammered in stunned surprise. "God... What? ... How?" His
hands were shaking badly and his eyes were bloodshot. That was
not the worst of it as Michelle could now see. One eye was black
and blue for a radius of almost two inches and was nearly closed
from swelling. Michelle counted three cuts on his face. Not
minor abrasions but deep cuts, one of which should have stitches
at this point. They looked to have been cleaned but not
professionally. He didn't seem to notice the cuts that must
have been very painful. There was a bruise on his chin and neck
like someone may have kicked him just under the chin. She wanted
to look more closely, horrified by what she was seeing. He
refused her to examine the wounds however instead; he pulled her
close to his face and smelled her hair. It was one of his most
favorite things. He had always loved the smell of her. She could
hear him whispering in a shaky voice somewhere very close but
out of sight, "I thought... I could have sworn. He was unable to
finish. As if completing the combination might unlock some
terrible Pandora's Box and set free that which he truly feared
had happened. Making his a self-fulfilling prophecy.
"I'm back!" she confirmed in his ear, for him before he said
something they both regretted. "I'm back and I'm never leaving
you again. Not for five minutes. You're stuck with me now."
Both were on the edge of hysterics. Neither could believe they
had pulled it off. Neither could believe that the other was
actually there. The combined knowledge they shared had told them
both that this meeting would never take place and yet here they
were, back in each other arms and more in love than ever before.
The emotion of the moment was almost more than either one could
bear.
"Oh good." He breathed a sigh of relief. "I thought since you
brought the lawyer here you were going to serve me with divorce
papers." With that everyone in the station house laughed and the
tension of the last six minutes began to abate.
The two kissed hard and long. Gary smothered his wife in his
arms saturating her with wet passionate kisses. The desperation
and need of her was plain to all and her heart sung with the joy
that was Gary. She was once again a whole person. Michelle tired
to force her body to meld with his refusing to let him go. Gary
on the other hand gripped her, ran his long arms around her and
pulled her in close and held her firm. He wanted to never let
her go again. It was more than a dream; she had been resurrected
it was a miracle. His wife, his love was back from the dead.
The two tangled while others looked on. It was as if, to those
around them, the two had been separated by a gulf of time and
space rather than an ocean and a continent. It was confusing to
some but sweet and romantic to others, and most looked on with
the fondest of memories of their own great loves, some of which
had not lasted for this reason or that, some of which had been
shattered for sacrifice of money or status, some still intact.
The two professed their undying love to each other, mumbled
incoherencies and broken phrases like "I thought I'd never..."
and "Oh God you can't imagine..." and "I'll never leave..." and
"Not now... kiss me please, just kiss me..."
The two unlocked their lips and heaved heavy oxygen deprived
breaths, smiling at one another, foreheads touching nearly drunk
with giddiness. They attacked each other's faces again and
continued until the two could no longer exist without a breath.
Again with arms locked tightly around one another, smiling,
nearly laughing the two enjoyed a new found passion for one
another.
His fingers plunged deep into her hair and gripped it. He did
not hurt her, but she could sense his desperation. She flung her
arms around him and pulled him in to her. At last she reached
for one of his hands. She pulled it around to her face and she
kissed it gently. For the longest time it seemed, they were
alone, the world had disappeared. There were no outside sounds,
no interruptions. If the building had been on fire, as Gary had
first feared it might be, they would have perished in the blaze.
Michelle noticed cuts and scabs on Gary's wrists and pulled her
head back just a bit to examine his face again. Gary tried to
avoid this, knowing how he must look but not caring. At last he
relented and looked at her with as peaceful a look as he could
manage. He was happy again. Damn is selfishness, it had almost
cost him everything he had left, *but he could not help himself.
He could only hope Michelle and his children would forgive him.
Michelle said softly. "Oh baby." She moaned as she gingerly
touched one cut then another. He winced a bit, sometimes more
than others depending what and where she touched but he tried to
keep up a brave front. He was not accustomed, however, to such
injuries and hiding the pain was taxing. "What did they do to
you?" She kissed one of the cuts, one on his lower lip and drew
back again.
"It's noting. Please, I don't want to talk about this right now.
I just want to hold you."
"Mr. Shipley!" one of the officers shouted. "If we could get you
to sign these release forms."
Then Quinn spoke up. "I'll look at those before he signs them."
"I assure they are the standard..." the officer started.
"I'll still look at them or he won't be signing them."
In the center of the room, Gary and Michelle had taken no notice
of the power struggle going on behind them. One way or another
Gary was leaving this building now. Michelle was not worried
about him having to be confined here any longer. When they got
home, she would agree to leave. Their home here, her nest as
Gary liked to call it didn't have so much meaning anymore.
Without her family she was nothing. Not all the money in the
world or all the possessions she had would ever change who her
family had made her. She would leave and be happy to do so. It
would be another adventure with her best friend, and why not?
She had missed so many with him because of her stubborn streak
before she had changed then afterward too she could see. She
would go on any adventure he wished her to join him on from now
on. She would never say no to him again. Just so long as she
didn't lose her family again.
"We need to get you home, I'll take care of these for you...
make you all better." She cooed to him softly. "Then I'll make
me all better." She smiled at him knowingly.
"If I get to do any of it with you, then my wish has been
granted. I'll be happy," Gary confessed.
"Come on, let's get out of here."
Gary pulled her up short as she began to walk to the Day
Sergeants podium. "How..." Gary started and Michelle cut him off
again with delicate fingers to his lips. He kissed them one at a
time tasting his wife as he did. Exuding love and joy for her
and she soaked up every ounce of it as he did.
"I heard about what was going on. I called to let everyone know
that I had found William but no one was home. I got here as soon
as I could."
"William?" he asked hopefully. Michelle knew what he wanted to
know and decided that the best answer would be to just say no.
"No Honey," she said, and handed him the box she had been
carrying.
"No...." he whispered. True pain hit him with the force of a run
away train. He knew his son, that male child he loved so much
was not coming home. He had a daughter in William's place now he
would love just as much as any son he could ever have, but still
he grieved. Lost were any more father/son moments they might
have shared. Gone were the spontaneous wrestling matches that
had broken out almost every night on the living room floor. He
grieved for what his son had lost as well. How might he handle
all this they called life now?
Gary cried silent tears on the box that was supposed to be the
remains of his dead son. Once again he was going to bury someone
that wasn't truly dead and the idea hurt beyond measure. As
those in the room watched all got the sense that a horrible
mistake had been made and this poor man had been made to suffer
because of it. It was exactly the effect Michelle had wanted.
The deal was struck, the devil had been paid it was time to go
home.
-*-
"I tell you something Williams," Callahan said as he strolled
down the hall towards the bank of duty officers that were in
charge of the holding area. "Sometimes life is very good to me."
Williams was neither impressed nor pleased to have this
particular baby-sitting job. He and Callahan had just come from
the rest rooms before getting the paperwork to be delivered to
the Federal system in Baltimore that would put Mr. Shipley in
the system for God knew how long. Officer Parker Williams, age
33 and first in line for Callahan's job when he quit, retired,
died, committed suicide from years of shame wrought upon his
family name, whatever, wanted to be rid of this responsibility.
Callihan was a stone; a thing that he could not fly with, like
an albatross with it's big heavy bulky body. Callihan was
weighing him down.
The method in which he rid himself of the problem mattered
little to Williams. He felt that this man Shipley was being
badly abused and his Captain was allowing it to happen out of
misplaced loyalties. The times had changed more than a while
ago. The state-run police systems were gone and free of local
politics. Hell, Police Services of Pennsylvania was projected to
earn over 16 billion by the end of the year. That was clear and
away profit above expenses. But it wouldn't last if these 'old
guard' bastards had their way; the system would collapse just as
it had fifty years ago from corruption and scandal.
If the company could just hold on until these old bastards died
off they would be fine. To Williams it felt this is what it mush
have been like when the mammals began to take over the planet
shortly before the extinction of the dinosaurs. He was waiting
for the comet that would mercifully take out the last remaining
dinosaurs and finally let the police become the law enforcing
agency it had always meant to be, not the good ol' boy system of
favors, kickbacks and bribes it had always been.
He had to admit Martin was one of the better "old cops" the
force had seen though. The trained labor had to come from
someplace. When police stations shut down during the cloning
riots of the '59 and '60 in protest to violence, directed in a
large degree to the officers for protecting the scientists
responsible for breaking the anti-cloning laws, municipalities
all over America were plunged into chaos. Politicians were
reluctant to give the police the green light to harm protesters,
voters, constituents that might pull them from office during the
next election The result was cities all over America pleaded
with a company that had proposed to many cities a privatization
of the police industry to do what they felt they could and prove
themselves in time of crisis. What was offered was a clear
contract. If a law was suspected of being violated, action would
be taken without interference from politicians. The case would
be remanded to a judge of the state and the evidence submitted
for judgment. End of issue. That's how it would work, clear-cut
and as it had been meant to be. Let the lawyers hash the details
out at trial time. There would be no pleading to a lesser
charge. No favors of reduced time that would put cut throats and
puss-bags back out on the street to screw someone else a day or
two later. The city leaders, desperate for control, agreed.
Officers were fired and then rehired, more contracts were
signed, protection from the crowds guaranteed and the framework
was set.
First the scientists were arrested. Not placed in protective
custody. The announcement was made that they would stand trial
and that anyone interfering with the functions of transporting,
arresting or detaining prisoners suspected of unlawful acts
would be shot, first to wound and apprehend, if necessary to
kill.
To the dismay of the politicians it did nothing to reduce the
backlash of angry voters at the poles, what it did do however,
once peace was restored, was render the city governments
powerless over law enforce*ment. Cities all over the country
tried and failed to reestablish city controlled law enforcement
departments once its citizens were at peace, but their efforts
failed. None of the police would come back to state run forces
and organizations. The new system was much more attractive to
officers used to years of low wages and abuse at the hands of
city officials. Benefits and pay had been tripled for most with
the stroke of a pen. No unions or strikes had been necessary. If
the force made money, so would the cops. Police Services had
wrangled the power away from the cities in a political coup
designed by the politicians themselves.
However with enough public persuasion they might lose that
chance keep things safe, and it was assholes like Callahan and
his sympathetic buds on the force that could end up bringing the
whole thing down.
"Well?"
"Well what Williams?"
"Are you going to drop the other shoe?" Williams asked.
Callahan grinned. "I know you hate my fucking guts you officious
little snot. Further more, I don't care. You and I ain't
buddies, we ain't partners and ... hell you know the rest. I
won't even bother waste my breath on you. You want to know what
makes me feel good? You want to know why I'm so fucking happy?"
sparkled Callahan in surprisingly good sprits.
"No."
"Well then, I'll fucking tell you." Callahan exclaimed with
glee, and Williams groaned. "What makes me happy is this: That
little cocksucker Shipley is gone. Even if he doesn't pay for
murdering his buddy Vello, which he did by the way; even if he
never pays for any of that. Hell I don't care if he confesses.
Little bastard will be so far in the system by this time
tomorrow, he'll never get out."
"What if he's really innocent? Did you ever think of that?"
"Nope!"
"So even if someone else is out there killing these people, if
any of them are dead at all..." Williams began.
"Oh, they're dead, Son," Callahan assured him.
"So if any of them show up, any of them, what then?"
"I don't give a fuck," Callahan answered cheerfully.
"He shouldn't pay..." Callahan suddenly grabbed Williams by his
uniformed shirt. Williams was surprised and shocked at the speed
and strength of this old man. He felt his toes leave the floor
of the hall. Then without warning his back was slammed into the
adjacent wall.
"God-damn! Son. If I didn't know any better, I'd say you were
trying to spoil the mood of my fucking victory."
"It's not about a victory," croaked Williams
Callahan leaned in with forearm, elbow on Williams' neck,
cutting of the officer's wind. "Yes it is!" Callahan growled in
a deep low and menacing growl. Williams was faintly aware he was
frightened.
"Why?" the question was barely above a whisper.
"Because I hate him. I hate him and that's good enough for me."
Callahan saw that the officer was turning blue and leaned back
off the man's airway. "If I hate someone I do my best to take
them out of the picture."
William felt the breath being externally regulated. He was
afraid that if he didn't get more air he was going to pass out.
He carefully attempted to remove his FTazor from its holster in
the midst of his thrashing. He didn't care if he stunned or
killed the old man. He believed that his life was now at a
critical point. If he didn't act to save it, it was going to
end. Maybe not this minute, but Callahan now saw him as a
threat.
"Why not just kill Shipley?" whispered Williams stalling for
time.
"You mean like this?"
Before Williams knew what had happened, Callahan shoved his
elbow into the officer's neck. There was a brief snap as the
man's trachea shattered, forever blocking his airway. The man
went into convulsions for a few seconds and shook and thrashed
from the pain of the injury, the pain of not being able to draw
a breath and the surprise of this unexpected twist in his
quickly shortening life. As he thrashed, Callahan held him
neatly to the wall without much effort or strain. He heard
Callahan ask, "You look surprised! Huh? Huh? Well, are ya?"
Callahan slapped Williams on the face and the officer seemed to
become a bit more alert. "I warned you about omelets, Son. When
someone is making omelets, it's best if you try not to do you
best impression of an egg head."
They were the last words Williams would ever hear.
Callahan let the officer's body slide to the floor. "Well, I'd
dare say, this complicates matters just a bit." In Callahan's
pants, an enormous erection was building.
-*-
The old scientist in the young man's body stood hunched over the
homemade computer panel. It was a small thing no bigger than
what he might as called a notebook since they had them when he
was in school. About 12 inches high and 10 inches wide it was
wired to an open panel on the systems main control board.
"Please God... Please. She said this vould vork." He reached up
and turned a dial slowly to the left. A series of small clicks
announced to Terrance to what degree the dial had been turned.
"Please?" he whispered.
On the floor was an empty SKIN. No geo-genetic programming
installed in the twenty-six thousand, eight hundred and ninety-
six miles of filament wire and nano-conductors that were milled
in to each bond-flesh unit.
Attached to the chrome connectors that active the SKIN were two
small electronic leads. This was all there was to pass the
billions of pieces of information necessary to make sure that a
SKIN turned one human into a perfectly programmed and fully
functional imitation of either someone's ideal or a copy of an
already living human. Not the customary interface for such a
piece of technology. This SKIN was different. It wouldn't have
the all the pre-programmed genetic information of someone else's
body stuffed into this flesh bond unit's bubble memory. There
were blanks in the sequencing that would conform to the
corresponding genetic codes found in the body of the wearer.
What was been added was the genetic hit men that would irradiate
each wearers aging sequence and enhance their healing abilities
to a factor of some where five thousand times a persons normal
ability. Each a genetic time bomb if he failed to set the
sequencing just right. Failure could cause immediate death or
instant aging, the latter a particularly gruesome way to perish
in Michales mind. He shuddered and thought about what it would
be like to age and rot in ten minutes. To experience the effects
of decay with your body not yet truly dead would be a horrible
way to die. He felt he could make it work however, and the trade
off would more than compensation for the degradation of
information between his body and the system. If he wasn't able
to, he was afraid his deal was off.
A red sensor lit up on the smaller of the two consoles. "Shit!
SHIT!" he shouted and then gathered himself to think. He looked
at small patch of flesh on his arm. There was a small rivulet
blood trickling down his arm. He swallowed hard and picked up
the scalpel that sat on the workbench next to him. "God give me
strength." He picked up the knife and sliced off a three-
centimeter square of skin from his arm next to the spot from
where the blood was flowing.
"Is this how you plan to kill me? One patch of skin at a time?"
He asked of no one and no one answered back.
"A little help would be appreciated. I fear I'm running out of
time." He did not attempted to hide the desperation in his
voice.
"You'll get it," answered the quiet musical voice of a young
girl.
The voice startled him. He spun around and searched the room. It
had sounded as if it were right here with him, in the same
space. "Where are you my new friend?" He asked as politely as he
new how.
"Behind you," said the girl.
He turned and there, not much more than a reflection in the
glass of the chamber was Erin Vello. She stood in a confident
posture wearing what she had always considered her favorite
outfit. A one-piece dress, with shorts sewn in so they couldn't
be seen, it was an outfit she had used to mentally prepare her
brother for the road that lay a head of him. Erin had been a
lovely girl when she lived. She had mid-length brown hair and a
beautiful tanned complexion that came from her father's
Mediterranean heritage. She had been more slender than most
girls, smallish breasts and thin model like figure that was
attractive but slight and lean. Her fingers were delicate and
thin. They had grown longish as she aged and were perfect for
playing stringed and keyed instruments by virtue of their
natural reach. Erin's face was perhaps her most striking
characteristic. She had a trim, slender V shaped face; high
cheekbones marked a thin tapered nose. Her eyes were almost cat-
like in their shape and her mouth was full-lipped and beautiful.
She had been built to be a star.
Frightened just a bit to be in the presence of a ghost, Terrance
trembled..
"There is no reason to fear me," she said in a sweet voice
holding up one semi-transparent hand.
"No, I know of this. You have come to answer my prayer."
"Not I. I cannot answer your prayers. I am sent to tell you your
prayers will be answered." Erin said.
"What's the difference?" Terrance asked.
"Much!" Erin assured. "You must make three, then return here as
Ziven and wait. Do not return to being Terrance."
"Yes... I understand, but this is so painful. Can you help? Time
is short." Terrance pleaded.
"You are ready to move. Do what you must. We will be waiting,"
Erin said as her reflection faded to nothing. Only the chamber
beyond the glass was visible.
Terrence sighed a heavy sigh and then said, "I hope I can make
you're deadline my little friend." He turned back to his work.
The freshly harvested square wafer of skin sat in the thistle
tube. A ribbon of blood sank to the bottom and down the shaft of
the tube where evidence of three other attempts had been made.
His arm ached and stung. Not for long, hang in dhere old man,
you're goink home.
He doused the genetic sample with Ethanol then with another
liquid that steamed and hissed and evaporated almost
immediately. Once the liquid nitrogen had done it's dirty work
Terrence then broke the sample into piece with a sterile glass
rod. The sample fell apart neatly. He then bathed it once again
in Ethanol washing most of the sample down the thistle. These
were hardly laboratory conditions but he had no time to even
consider wasting. If his friend was right, he had only today and
tomorrow to finish and deliver these "Blanks".
One thing that concerned him the most was whether or not he
could live through the matrix shift. He might die delivering
the SKIN's. So what you old fool, you're doing this for that
very reason! Dead is still with your family isn't it? But
Terrence wasn't sure. He felt he had a pretty good grasp of the
dynamics of this situation. He didn't understand what might
happen if he failed by dying before his mission was complete.
Old man! You would not have been tasked with this if you were
going to perish before you were done. He scolded himself.
Might they have the power to keep him from his family? If this
was the only thing, the only task that could restore him to his
family and he should fail by dying, he could not recover from
that. That was as permanent as what he was about to do to these
fine people. As soon as his own matrix was shifted forward,
they, that is, the woman known as Michelle Shipley, and her
daughter Beth would be trapped forever. No technology he could
foresee would free them at that point. With Ziven dead, his
matrix could never be moved back again. Further, he was forced
to program the "Blanks" using the same methods used to build
those intended for his wife and daughter. They would all be
connected to the same damaged matrix. None could ever be free
again.
"Perhaps!" said Terrence to no one. "But the this time, those
new to this vill at least be demselves!" Again, no one answered.
-*-
Callahan emerged from the closet at the end of the hall where he
had just killed fellow officer Parker Williams. He looked
briefly about but didn't waste too much time determining if he
had been seen exiting the utility room or not. He held the door
open with force, Williams's body was lodged behind the door and
its bulk was attempting to push the door closed. Callahan had
one more task before he would allow that to happen.
He stuck his head back in and found the keypad to the security
lock. All doors in the precinct house had electronic locks that
could be accessed from either side of the door so prisoners
attempting to escape could not lock a door from the inside that
an officer couldn't unlock from the outside. They had another
special adaptation. If a lock were disabled on one side, it
prevented entry from both sides. This was configured in such a
way to prevent potential escapees from hiding in locked closets
that officers had trouble getting into or out of if locked from
the outside.
Callahan shoved his meaty paw into the keyboard of the lock
system on the inside of the utility closet where the damage
wouldn't be noticed for a while. The room was empty except for
boxes of papers that, from Callahan's view hadn't seen the light
of day in years. The place where he had broken the keypad arched
and sparked and dimly lit the room, now the tomb of Parker
Williams. Callahan withdrew from the room and shut the door. The
system beeped softly one chime to indicate the door was secure
and was then silent. Parker Williams' body would not be found
for over 76 hours. By then, Callahan would be dead.
Callahan smiled and fondled himself with one hand that was
thrust into the pocket of his pants. He hummed an unidentifiable
tune as he strolled casually down the center hall of the
prisoner integration area.
As he progressed he would glance left and right into the rooms
to see the activity there, if any. There were empty rooms, but
occasionally there would be a room with a single prisoner or one
with a lawyer and his client or one with an interrogator and two
others.
Every once in a while he would slam his hand against the wall
making the already nervous occupants the select room jump in
surprise. Callahan would chuckle to himself, as he would watch
the reactions of those inside through the one-way glass secure
in the knowledge they could not see him.
The construct of the interrogation center was thus: three
parallel hallways separated from each other by rows of rooms,
small and blockish the back walls of the rooms in the center all
were all one-way glass. The doors to each of the rooms were on
the halls that ran parallel to the center hall. Each hall was
connected to the center by shorter passages that also acted as a
sound buffer that separated each room from the next; preventing
the walls of any room from touching that of it's neighbor.
Callahan had killed Williams at the opposite end of the hall
where there were sixteen rooms. As he approached room #3 he
could tell right away something was off-kilter. The tables of
all these rooms were in the same place, the center of the room.
Callahan had been up and down these halls often enough to know
when to expect certain elements to appear in his field of
vision. When the corner of the table didn't materialize he
reached for his pistol.
Callahan was a cop of the old school. He carried a pistol, a
Ruger .44 Redhawk that had belonged to his grandfather. He was
not supposed to. And in fact, he had not used this pistol in
many years. Not on the job anyway. Today would be different. All
he needed was time enough to get to Shipley, get him halfway to
Baltimore and Shipley would be shot like so many others trying
to escape. He would have Callahan FTazor in his clutches, and
just thank God he had put his pistol in the boot of his HOV a
month ago. That's all he would have to say about that, just
thank God.
But now something in that room was not right. He slammed himself
noiselessly against the wall to think about this situation for
just a second. If Shipley was trying to escape right now, he
could shoot him here and eliminate any questioning there might
be of his motives or of suspicious circumstances. Callahan said
a little prayer and then stepped round the in front of the one-
way glass and bore the sights of the gun down.
Callahan began to boil. Shipley had really escaped. He gave a
little grunt and holstered his gun. That's when he realized
there was a commotion down one of the other halls. Thinking the
other officers may have already found Williams; Callahan hung
back, then he grinned, He could always blame Shipley if they had
found the body already.
-*-
The noise that Callahan heard from the hallway was applause and
cheering. There was not a soul that was not moved by the
emotional display of Gary and Michelle. This man, who had not
aged nearly as gracefully as his wife but was still handsome and
strong and still quite young and this woman who showed such
desperate devotion and longing for him seemed to have been
distanced and reunited before. This was not new to her but
still, the separation seemed to be a fresh and unpleasant memory
for her vanquished by her reunion with her lover. They cherished
the moment of reunion and the people gathered there, perhaps
fifteen or so, could feel it.
When the applause broke, they paid no attention to it. Instead
they held each other's faces and swam in the depths of one
another's eyes. It was an expression of emotion that few of
these people had ever seen.
Many watching thought of their wives, husbands, girlfriend or
boyfriends at work or at home and longed for this same emotion
that these two seemed to share. It was no secret that these two
had been married sometime and now, it was apparent that they
were still very much in love with each other. There were
officers and visitors milling in and out of the lobby area. Many
stopped to observe the celebrities out of curiosity as they
embraced. Most that were there stayed to watch because they were
deeply touched by the tenderness of their touch. Many of the
bystanders were now thinking of knocking off early and perhaps
bringing home a surprise bottle of wine or some cloned roses to
that special person at home.
Michelle touched Gary's scarred and battered face and soothed
him with tender whispers that none of the others could hear.
Gary would smile, wipe a tear from his eye and shake his head; a
gesture that he was all right, and then shook it no. They spoke
in whispered tones no one else could hear but only speculate on.
They were in love and reunited. No one in the room saw Detective
Callahan slip in from the door behind the Day Officer's podium.
Callahan broke between the bodies of watching officers and saw
Gary with his back to him standing in the middle of the lobby.
"What the fuck is going on here?" Callahan looked around the
room and saw that Gary had somehow escaped the interrogation
room and was now standing in the middle of the room with the
other loser officers of this precinct looking on as if he were
Marcus Sharp or some other fucking hero or something.
"Hold it RIGHT there Shipley!" Callahan exclaimed. He suddenly
pulled a pistol from his belt and bore the sights down on Gary's
forehead. Callahan pulled the hammer back and prepared to fire.
In his own mind, Detective Callahan had practiced for this
moment for the last 20 years. He had dreamt but never actually
believed that Shipley would find the resources or the balls to
escape, but his dream had come true and he would shoot him and
end this entire embarrassing fracas forever. His name would be
cleared and he would live vindicated until retirement.
"No, Gary! Oh God!" Michelle screamed when she saw the gun.
Callahan recognized the voice and turned to see Michelle Shipley
standing there in his precinct house.
"Impossible!" he shrieked. "You're DEAD!" Callahan demanded.
"Please..." Michelle pleaded, "It's all just been a mistake."
"Callahan?" Captain Martin slowly walked out of the wide doorway
behind the Day desk. "I know what this may look like on the
surface," he said in a soothing voice. "But let me assure you
that I just got off the phone with the commissioner and all of
this is above board, Son."
"No! He killed Mike Vello. Where's their son? Ask them that!"
Everyone else in the room went dead silent. "Well, ask them. If
she's not dead then she's part of it", shrieked Callahan
pointing the barrel of the gun gesturing to Michelle. His
fantasy of showing her what a real man might have been long gone
from his mind. If she was collaborating with his hated enemy
then she could never trusted. It had never occurred to him that
one so beautiful might be guilty of the same crimes as his
nemesis. Callahan's eyes opened wide at the revelation. He
thought about the pictures in his desk drawer. "She may have
even had something to do with his Vello's death." Callahan was
nearly crazed.
The Day Sergeant leaned in and whispered to his Captain. The
Captain then spoke to Gary very gently. "Mr. Shipley?" The man
walked forward and stepped between Callahan and the detective's
target and at the same time gently guided Michelle out of the
range of fire with his left arm fully extended. "I'm sorry to
hear about your loss," Captain Martin said offering his right
hand, "and I'm sorry about all this trouble. Your name is not
unknown in the town as you might well be aware."
Gary, still red eyes from crying at the joy of seeing his wife,
nodded and he expressed his thanks at the Captain's regrets. The
Captain continued in a whisper. "I want you to stand right here,
don't move. If he shoots someone it will have to be through me
first then you, do you understand?"
"Yes." Gary said but felt funny about letting an innocent stand
between himself and an attacker.
Then the Captain said louder, "Could you let me have that box
you're holding please?" Gary looked down at the box that had the
time and date of death and the place and circumstances of the
death labeled in German and the name of his son written in plan
English. Gary slowly handed the box over to the Captain.
"Thank you Mr. Shipley. I'll get this right back to you. And
again, I'm sorry for all of this." He turned, saw Michelle
standing there but made no move to go to her. He was a shield,
he could not move now. "Mrs. Shipley. My condolences."
Michelle who had gone ghost white, simply said, "Thank you, Sir"
and was quite again. It was more than just a thank you for his
sentiment. She didn't want to lose Gary again after only now
just getting him back, then that policeman that had come in; had
taken a place between Gary and Callahan, and had seemed to fill
the station house with his presence. He was truly larger than
life, and she was in grateful awe of him. She would accept his
sacrifice if she had to, to save Gary. Not willingly but she
would accept it.
Captain Martin then faced Callahan. "You should see this." He
slowly handed the box over to Callahan. Confused he took the box
and looked at it.
"It's a casket." He tone was flat.
"Correct! From a crematory in Germany. Read the name on it."
Callahan took the box, pistol still pointed at Captain Martin
and read the label. Confusion spread over his features.
"William... Shipley? What the fuck is this?"
"Their son died three days ago in Germany after a skiing
accident. I've confirmed it with German officials. That's about
the time Mrs. Shipley went missing. More importantly it matches
their story prior to verification. Not only that, Callahan, but
these two haven't had a chance to get together and corroborate
stories and they have a body. I think they're in the clear
Callahan. Why don't you just give me the gun?" Martin reached
out and Callahan started to lower the pistol in to the Captain's
hand.
Callahan looked around in disbelief. To those around him it was
the look of a man who just woke up from a long and nasty dream.
One in which he held a knife and there was a body on the floor.
The sleepwalker not knowing if he had found a victim and pulled
a knife out or found a victim and shoved the blade in. "I'm
sorry." Callahan suddenly started saying. "I'm sorry, I didn't
know." He was close to blubbering. Michelle felt sudden pity for
the man. He seemed so confused and lost. Even Gary felt a spark
of compassion for the man as he slowly lowered the gun that had,
only minutes before, been leveled at his head, slowly in to the
hand of his superior officer.
Callahan was blubbering now, repeating over and over again how
sorry he was. The staff and other officers were moving in
slowly, sympathetically to help their confused comrade. Callahan
hung his head and tears began to flow. Gary watched this strong
man, one he had known as strong for so long fall completely
apart before his very eyes.
The box that Callahan had been holding, the casket of ashes
suddenly wobbled in the detective's hands and threatened to
tumble down to the ground. Captain Martian reached down to grab
them as the left Callahan's grip. From some where above him,
Martin heard Callahan whisper to Gary, "Gotcha!"
It was 2:14:44 in the afternoon
The shot that rang out was deafening. It was like being in a
bunker when a bomb went off inside it. It shocked everyone in to
surprised screams of fright and terror and then into cold
silence as the ghost of the vibrations bounced rapidly from wall
to wall within the small enclosure that was the lobby of the
precinct building.
It was 2:14:45 in the afternoon
Smoke and the smell of cordite hung heavy in the air. Everyone
looked around for just a second and then the officers in the
room tackled Callahan, wrestling him to the ground and stripping
him of his weapon, cuffing him. Callahan struggled to see if the
shot had hit it's mark but it was hard and painful with knees
and elbows in his back keeping him prone.
It was 2:15:03 in the afternoon
Michelle stood afraid to move. Her hands were tight little balls
seemingly stuck to her mouth. Her arms were pulled together in a
tight gesture and she stared wide-eyed at Gary waiting for some
indication that he was OK.
2:15:04
He stood in an expression of total shock and surprise. That
noise had been so loud he felt the concussion of the gasses as
they escaped the barrel. The wind of it had even rippled his
jacket back some. He stood trying to adjust to the ringing in
his ears. He looked around and saw Michelle standing there. She
jumped with what looked like fear when their eyes met and her
eyes fairly bulged with terror. Then she seemed to relax just a
bit.
She was about to fly out of her skin with fear. He was hit. She
just knew it. "What was he doing just standing there like that?"
she thought to herself. She wanted to run to him but she was
frozen. The moment dragged on forever and then she realized Gary
was looking at her. "He's going to open his mouth and blood
will come gushing out." Then he did smile at her and she gasped
quietly and jumped with surprise. But there was no blood, and
she allowed herself to unwind just a little bit.
2:15:05
He watched as his beautiful wife allowed a slight smile to touch
the corners of her mouth from behind her hands. He could only
see the barest ghost of it hiding there. Then it faltered.
She could feel relief sneaking in and a smile began to form on
her lips. "What's that?" Her eye caught something, some movement
running down to the corner of her husband's jacket and she
thought to herself, OH GOD NO! THAT'S BLOOD!
2:15:06
Her lip started to tremble just as he felt the first signs of
pressure on his chest. That's annoying. he thought. Must have
pulled a muscle. He looked down to see where the pressure might
be coming from. As he did he found he needed to pull open his
jacket to have a better look. He glanced at his wife for just a
brief moment and saw her face had become ashen, her eyes were
pinched and she looked like a woman attending a funeral.
Gary raised his right arm and the pain tore through him like a
saw through board. It felt as if someone were cutting his flesh
with a dull hot blade. The world swam before him but he had to
see where the source of that incredible pain was coming from. It
was so intense he couldn't make a sound, yet his mind wanted him
to wail like a baby. He pulled his jacket lapel away from his
chest and saw light shine through in a small hole that hadn't
been there when he put the jacket on in the hallway back in the
cellblock, he would have noticed that. Shit, that's an eight
thousand dollar coat, shot all to hell. He thought and then
realized that's what had happened. He'd been shot. He said out
loud in amazed wonder, "Wow!"
Michelle started to make strangled little noises. "Don't move
and it will all go away. Please God... Make it all go away."
She closed her eyes and then squinted them open to see if things
were normal. Gary was looking at her and his color was
different. It was more than just different. it was bad. He had
turned a nasty blue/gray color. The sight of that caused her
paralysis to break. She leaped forward but it was too late.
2:15:16
Time slowed down even more for Gary. The light dimmed from his
eyes and the world swam black. He didn't know it but he was
falling. If he had known it he would have put his arms out in
front of him to break his fall.
Time sped up to an incredible level for Michelle. She watched in
horror as Gary closed his eyes and pitched forward and she
realized Gary was falling in fast forward. She would never reach
him before he hit the floor.
2:15:19
The sound of Gary's head hitting the floor was sickening. It
sounded to Michelle like a hollow pumpkin hitting the street.
Blood splattered out in a radius pattern from around Gary's
head. Everyone was still. The shock of the moment was more than
any could bear to break.
Until Michelle wailed...
"NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!"
With her forward momentum she knelt at Gary's side and tried to
turn him over but he was too heavy in plain dead weight. She
screamed at those looking on. "Please, someone call an
ambulance! He's dying!" Captain Martin sprung in to life and
started to bark orders, police officers leaped and marched and
called and offered assistance.
Callahan, who had been hauled to his feet, was in the arms of
his captives singing. "I win, I win, I win..." he was silenced
when one of his brother officers landed a right cross over his
jaw, fracturing his jaw in six places. Callahan collapsed like a
sack of wet potatoes.