The Grim ReaperChapter 43: Aftermath free porn video

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It looked like almost the entire platoon had arrived, led by Lieutenant Southerland. They rolled up to the front gate, actually driving over various body parts as they did so and stopped. The crashed Apache blocked the way in. The first guys to come inside the compound simply stood there and stared at the carnage, though a couple of guys tossed their cookies. Eventually somebody noticed I was standing there and Southerland and another couple of guys ran over to me.

“Sergeant Reaper! Sergeant Reaper!”

I tried to point towards the bunker but started toppling over. Southerland grabbed me. I struggled back upright and pointed at the bunker again. Since I could only use my right arm and hand, and I had my Beretta in my hand, I was pointing it at the bunker. One of the guys from Second Squad grabbed it from me before I shot myself or somebody else. “The bunker...” I tried to say it clearer, but my voice was almost gone, and I couldn’t hear very well after the artillery barrage. “The bunker...”

Southerland ordered, “Help me with Reaper and get somebody to the bunker. NOW!”

I collapsed a second time and screamed as I landed on my shot-up leg. Then I rolled onto my broken arm and screamed again.

“It’s all right, Sergeant, we’re here, we’ve got you.”

It wasn’t all right. I had to get to the bunker. I tried crawling, but Southerland was in the way. “The bunker ... let me ... bunker...”

“We’ve got guys at the bunker, Sergeant. MEDIC!” He turned me over to another soldier and stood up.

I just tried to get to the bunker. Hands kept pushing me onto my back, and then things got very calm and black.

When I woke up, I knew I was in a hospital, but beyond that I was at a loss. I could look around and see some white walls, but not much else, and my arms and legs were strapped down. I drifted off and went back to sleep. I popped in and out of consciousness several more times before I was finally awake and coherent. I looked around and was by myself. “Hello?” My voice was raspy and weak, so I tried clearing my throat, but that simply made me cough.

That was sufficient, though. A nurse came from somewhere and smiled. I think she smiled, anyway, since she had a face mask on. “You’re awake? Sergeant Reaper, how are you feeling?”

“My guys...” I asked.

She grabbed a glass and poured some water in it, and then inserted a flex-straw. “Here, sip some water. You’ve been out for several days. Don’t try talking, just sip.” I did as I was told, and she instructed me to work my tongue around my mouth and swallow some of the water.

Eventually I felt well enough to speak. “Where’s my guys?” I asked.

“I don’t know, Sergeant.”

“My guys!” I demanded. I struggled to get upright, but pain shot through me, and I collapsed into the bed.

“Sergeant! Knock it off!” she ordered. I looked at her angrily, but she didn’t care. I kept my mouth shut. “Sergeant Reaper, I don’t know about your men. That doesn’t mean I don’t care. It means I just don’t know. We’ll find out for you. You have to be calm and behave, or you are going to take a nap until you do. Are we clear on that?”

I grimaced but nodded. “Yes, ma’am.”

“Good. I know there are some people who want to talk to you, and they’ll probably know more about what happened. Right now, though, I need you to talk to me and tell me how you feel. Can you stay calm enough to do that?”

I sighed but nodded. “Yes, ma’am, sorry about that.”

“Forgiven. We’re on your side, Sergeant. Just let us do our jobs.”

“How bad is it, ma’am?”

She smiled at that. “Probably better than you have any right to be, Sergeant. I won’t go into it, but if you give me a few minutes, I’ll get you a doctor. Okay?”

“Not much I’m going to do about it if it’s not okay,” I replied.

“Just remember that!” she said, laughing. “Behave or I’ll make sure we use blunt needles and make ugly stitches.” She let me have some more water and then left.

The comment about the needles and the stitches reminded me of something my mother used to tell Jack and me whenever we got busted up playing football. I thought she’d like this nurse, whoever she was. In any case, there wasn’t much for me to do until she returned with a doctor, so I closed my eyes and rested. Better than I had a right to be could mean damn near anything, up to and including losing all my arms and legs. I wondered what Kelly would do when I told her I wouldn’t marry her and saddle her with a cripple.

I stirred awake when I heard a door open, and I turned my head towards it. My smiling and bossy nurse was there, along with a middle-aged guy with a stethoscope in his pocket. He must be the doctor. He was also gowned up and masked. They came closer and he said, “Sergeant Reaper, it’s good to see you awake. I’m Doctor Barclay. How are you feeling?’

“I don’t know yet. How bad was I hit?” I asked.

“I told you he was feisty,” commented the nurse.

“Who are you?” I asked.

“As far as you’re concerned, I’m the evil nurse who can make your recovery a living hell!” she replied. Then she smiled and added, “But you can call me Nurse Judy. My name’s Brentmeyer, Captain Brentmeyer.”

I looked over at Doctor Barclay. “Bossy, isn’t she?”

“The best ones usually are, son. So again, how are you feeling?”

“I’ll know better when I figure what had to be cut off.” I wasn’t sure how bad I was hit, but my legs seemed like they were gone, or at least my right leg was. The second seemed to be there, but I couldn’t move it.

“Calm down, Sergeant. All the pieces are still there. You’re just in really bad shape. Now, if you’ll give us a chance, we can sit you up a bit more and you can see for yourself.” He motioned to Captain Brentmeyer, who went around the bed and hit a switch on the bed, and it raised up a few inches more. Then he pulled the sheet up and showed both my legs still in their normal position, though both were heavily bandaged. “Now, will you calm down and cooperate with us? Please?”

A wave of relief washed through me. I could go home and marry Kelly after all! She wouldn’t have to deal with a cripple. Suddenly I wondered about something even worse. What if everything was still there but wouldn’t work any longer? What if I was a paraplegic or a quadriplegic? “How come I can’t feel anything?”

The doctor and nurse looked at each other, and then he said, “As far as we know, you don’t have any neurological problems.” He reached into his pocket and pulled out a ballpoint pen. “Tell me if this hurts.” Without much further ado he poked my right foot.

“Hey!”

“You felt that? Good!” He kept poking me and we quickly determined my arms, legs, hands, and feet were all still functioning. “Now, you want to tell me what’s going on?”

“Yeah, it’s just ... I’m engaged, Doc, but I told my fiancée I wouldn’t marry her until I was out of the Army, and I had made it home alive without ... well, with everything still in one piece. I wasn’t going to stick her caring for a cripple.”

He rolled his eyes and muttered, “Oh, good Christ!” He looked at me and said, “Well, everything is working fine. Her biggest problem is that she’s going to be marrying an idiot!”

For the first time, I felt like laughing. “I’ve told her that before. So’s my mother.” I looked over at Nurse Judy. “She’s an ER nurse herself.”

“At least somebody in the family has brains,” she told me. “Now, for the last time, will you settle down and tell us how you feel?”

“Yes, ma’am.” With that I told them that I mostly just felt a lot of pain, in my arms and legs and my back, and a bit of a headache. “What’s wrong with me? Where am I?”

Barclay sighed. “You’re at the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, in Landstuhl, Germany. You were flown here from Baghdad three days ago.”

“Three days!” I just gaped at that.

“Sergeant, I have the unhappy mission to tell you that you actually died,” I stared at him, as he smiled. “Sort of, anyway. You were in terrible shape, you actually bled out there where you were hit, but they managed to get some plasma into you and do CPR on you in the chopper and get your heart started again. You are very lucky, very lucky indeed!”

“I died?”

“Well, a little, anyway.” He smiled. “One of these days you’ll land in front of St. Peter, and you can tell him you’ve already been there before.”

That totally stumped me. I looked at him and asked, “What’s wrong with me?”

“What isn’t?” commented Barclay. “You were right about your arms and legs. After they got you back to Baghdad and stabilized, you spent almost a day on the operating room table getting bullets and shrapnel pulled out of you. They actually were operating on you with an X-ray machine next to you so they could take quick photos and find more things to remove. I’d have to go over your records, but you have hundreds of stitches holding you together right now. You’ve also got breaks in all three bones in your left arm, along with your left collarbone. You had a compound fracture of your right fibula, that’s the smaller of the two bones in your right calf. Once you were stable, they put you on a transport here to Landstuhl.” He went into a little more technical detail, but that was the gist of it.

“What day is it?” I asked.

“It’s Monday, June Eleventh. Right now, you’re in the Intensive Care ward, but we’ll probably move you out of here now that you’re awake,” he said.

“When can I get out of here?” I asked.

“Sergeant, you are going to be in a hospital for quite a while. As it is, we are just waiting for you to stabilize before we send you home. You won’t be back at your unit for months,” he told me.

That brought me back to reality. My unit? I didn’t have a unit anymore. They had all died at Outpost Whiskey. I had nothing to go back to.

I almost missed what the doctor was saying. “Sergeant, there are some people who want to talk to you about what happened. I just want you to know that you’re going to be fine again. Yes, you’re hurting, and it is going to take a long time to heal, but you will heal. Just give it some time.”

“Yes, sir.”

I lay there for a couple of hours, wondering what would happen to me next. I had lost an entire rifle squad. What was the punishment for that? Court martial? Prison? Firing squad? It would have been better if they had just let me die there with the rest of my men. I kept seeing that final sight of the collapsed bunker. It was probably a good thing my arms were bandaged and strapped down, because I would have tried to do something otherwise. I ignored the nurses who came in and swapped out IV bags and took blood samples and did other hospital-type stuff.

Mid-afternoon I received a visitor. At first, I didn’t recognize him, but it turned out to be our battalion commander, Lieutenant Colonel Barstow, dressed up in a hospital gown, with gloves and a mask on. I didn’t even recognize him until he pulled the mask down. “Sergeant Reaper, it’s good to see you again.”

“Colonel Barstow?”

“That was one hell of a job you did the other day, Sergeant. I wanted to come by and tell you that before you went home.”

“Sir? What are you doing here? This is Germany! What...”

I could see him smiling under the mask. “The battalion will be rotating home in a few days, and I decided to go through Germany first. I wanted to see you and thank you.”

I just shook my head. “I’m sorry, sir.”

“Whatever for, Sergeant?”

I looked at him strangely. “Sir, I lost the squad! I lost an entire rifle squad! They should have left me out there with them!”

“What in the ... Sergeant Reaper, you didn’t lose the squad! You saved it!”

“Sir? They all died! They were in the bunker when it was hit! I called in the strike! I killed them!”

He reached out and touched my shoulder, but it was my left shoulder and I flinched. “Sorry about that. No, son, you saved them. They dug five men alive out of the bunker. One of them died later, but that’s not your fault. You saved them, Sergeant Reaper! You saved them!”

I just shook my head. “I saw the bunker, sir.”

“Sergeant, I am not lying to you. The pilot and the gunner in the Apache? They’re both alive. So are Specialists Givens and Montoya. They pulled Corporal Fox out, too, but he died afterwards. I’m told he had been wounded getting the men into the bunker. He never made it off the operating table. Sergeant, you saved them!”

Listening to the casualty report was the last straw. Terrence Hollis, DeFrank Shaniq, Nanda Devi, Tomas Gonzalez, and Riley Fox. Out of eight of us, five had died, including my best friend in the world. I just started crying. Barstow left the room, and a few minutes later Nurse Judy came in and put something into my IV, and I went to sleep again.

I was a little calmer the next day when I woke up. There was a new face to see me when I woke, a large guy with a beard underneath his surgical mask. “How are you feeling, Sergeant Reaper?”

“Okay, I guess. Who are you?”

“My name is Doctor Steven Perlmutter. Your doctors asked me to talk to you,” he replied.

“Why?”

“Maybe because of my specialty. I deal with cases of stress. I’d like to talk to you about that if you’d let me.”

“Uh, okay.” Who was this guy, and what kind of stress? Suddenly it hit me, and my eyes popped open. “You’re a shrink! Oh, sorry, Shrinks don’t like to be called that, I heard.”

He smiled and nodded. “I’ve heard the term before, Sergeant. Don’t sweat it. I’ve been called a lot worse.”

“Huh. I’ve never been to a shrink before. I guess that means I’m crazy, right?”

He shrugged. “Do you think you’re crazy?”

“I don’t know. I don’t think so. Besides, if I was crazy, wouldn’t I say I wasn’t? Or something like that? Who wanted me to see you?”

“That’s not important right now. Let’s just say that several people asked me to talk to you. A lot of people care for you, Sergeant Reaper. Why do you think they wanted me to see you?”

I sighed and looked away, but there wasn’t really anything else to look at. I turned back and said, “Probably because I said I killed my squad.”

“Tell me about that.”

He led me through what happened at Whiskey. I told him about the guys who died, and how I had to call in a strike on the compound. I told him about seeing the collapsed bunker, and how it was my fault. Eventually I wound down, and he had a chance to talk again.

“Sergeant, let me say a few things. First, if you are worried you are going crazy, or have already gone crazy, stop worrying. You’re not crazy. You have what we call ‘Survivor’s Guilt’, but that’s not crazy. It happens to a lot of people, not just soldiers, but people who have been through something awful and can’t figure out why they lived, and others didn’t. It happens to people in airplane crashes who don’t understand why the guy next to them died and they survived. Why did they survive when the boat sank and somebody else drowned, but they didn’t? Why did a hostage in a bank robbery die and the guy next to him live? This has nothing to do with what you did or didn’t do at Outpost Whiskey. It happens to soldiers and civilians alike. Do you understand that?”

I nodded. I had heard of it before. “Yeah, I suppose.”

“Okay, again, that does not make you crazy. That makes you human. Now, just as important, there are things you can do, things we can do, to help you with this. However, the first step is to recognize you have a problem. I don’t think it’s a serious problem, though, not in the sense that you can’t be helped. There are lots of things we can do, and as long as you are here, we’re going to do them.”

“Uh, okay.”

“Finally, here’s the important thing. This is one of those things where we start saying somebody really is crazy. It is not uncommon for people who suffer from survivor’s guilt to think suicidal thoughts. Tell me, have you thought anything like that, anything at all? I want absolute honesty!” Perlmutter said.

I looked away, but then turned back and shrugged. I just stared at my feet. “Yeah, some.”

He let out a breath. “Good!”

I looked at him, startled. “Good?”

“Yes, in the sense that you gave me an honest answer. I’d have been very worried if you had said you hadn’t thought that sort of thing. Being honest about a problem is the first step to getting a handle on it.”

I blinked in surprise at that. “Oh. I never thought about that, at least for going crazy.”

“Like I said, you’re not crazy, not at all. Now, I have other patients to meet with today. I’ll give some people the good word that you’re not as nutty as a fruitcake, okay?” he told me.

“It’s good that you’re so technical, Doc.”

He smiled. “Makes life simpler, doesn’t it? In any case, part of the therapy for survivor’s guilt is to understand precisely what happened. You might not like it, but there are going to be some people who will want to question you about what happened at Outpost Whiskey. It might be painful, but you need to talk to them. Can you do that?”

I shrugged again, as best I could. That was painful on the left side, with my busted arm and collarbone. “Sure. What’s the worst that could happen? If I screw up, will they send me to Iraq?”

“That’s the spirit!” He stood up. “We’ll talk some more, Sergeant. In the meantime, let me see about getting you out of here and into a normal room.”

“Thank you.” I watched him as he left. I didn’t know what to make of this. He said I wasn’t crazy, but then why was a doctor for crazy people going to treat me? I might not be a genius like Kelly, but I was smart enough to know the answer to that question. Still, he was good about getting me out of intensive care. Nurse Judy and Doctor Barclay checked me over that evening, and I was moved out of Intensive Care to a private room. They also unstrapped my right arm, so I could move it around some and scratch. It wasn’t as boring that way, either, since with a useable right hand I could hold a book or magazine and be able to read. Mostly, though, I slept.

The next morning, I was introduced to several officers from G-2, military intelligence, a pair of majors named Kinsley and Montooth, who had flown in from Baghdad. Now that I was out of Intensive Care, they didn’t have to gown up to see me. These guys were a lot better than the last G-2 major from Baghdad I had met, Halstead; they were human. They brought with them several briefcases with recon photos, and they even had a laptop computer that could play movies and audio on it. Very high-tech stuff. I had to go through the entire night with them, the attack, where everybody was stationed, and so forth. They had diagrams of the compound drawn up as well as photos, and I marked on them where each of us was, and when. They played back audio recordings from the radio calls I made to Anaconda Three. At the end, they even had overhead video from a drone, and photos of the compound the next day, after the attack, showing the utter carnage.

The debrief took three long days, and it was utterly exhausting. Of course, I was so weak I fell asleep several times. One of the more interesting questions Major Kinsley asked was, “Sergeant Reaper, what was the one thing that stood out most in your mind about the attack? If you had to use one word, what would that word be?”

I thought for a second and knew exactly the word to use. “It was professional. That’s the word I would use. Professional.”

The two officers debriefing me looked at each other, and then Kinsley asked, “Explain that, please.”

“I was thinking it even during the attack. Whoever was leading the attack knew what they were doing.”

“How so?” asked Major Montooth.

“Well, take your average hajji attack. Anywhere, not just along Route Indigo. These guys run around like chickens with their heads cut off, screaming la, la, la at the top of their lungs, going ‘ Allah Akbar!’, and shooting their AKs in the sky. Zero discipline, zero training, zero brains. Maybe they get lucky and take somebody with them, but the only reason they win is that there are so many of them and so few of us.”

“I’m following you. And this time?”

“Somebody on the Iraqi side knew what they were doing. They had training and they had combat experience. They blocked our reinforcements, used a combination of artillery, infantry, and missiles during the assault, and even had a contingency anti-aircraft capability. The individual hajjis might have been useless, but they were being led by somebody who knew what he was doing, and they must have had radio communications to coordinate it all,” I told them.

The two officers looked at each other and nodded. Major Kinsley said to me, “Sergeant, you sure you don’t want to go career? You get a degree and I’ll put you in for OCS myself. That’s a smarter analysis than I’ve heard from some West Point grads.”

“No, sir!”

They smiled at that, and then Montooth pulled a photo out of his briefcase and slid it over. “Did you ever see this man?”

It was a picture of a slender man with a bushy mustache in the uniform of an Iraqi Army officer, though I couldn’t read the insignia. “No, sir. Who is he?”

“That, I believe, is your opposite number. That is Colonel Nasim Tikriti, ex-Iraqi Army. He was in the Republican Guard. Since the Army was disbanded, he has been working with various insurgents and Islamists to develop the kind of fighting force you ran into the other night. We have radio intercepts that have been positively identified as Tikriti during the battle. You held your own against a short battalion of their best. Congratulations. He has been known to personally behead prisoners while they are still alive. You were playing against the varsity.”

I gulped at the thought and stared at the picture. A small battalion? I had a total of eight guys that night! Jesus! “A small battalion?” I said, sputtering it out. That was unbelievable. “We only had eight guys! None of our outposts have more than a dozen!”

They both nodded. Kinsley said, “Yeah, but that’s the total including the blocking forces. Figure three companies’ worth, but most of that was tied up blocking Route Indigo and running the mortars and anti-aircraft missiles. They’ve counted over eighty bodies around Whiskey and are pretty sure there are more. That part is still going on. Your battalion was delayed going home to be part of the response.”

“Oh?”

“You know that your platoon leader brought in a reinforcement convoy, right?” I nodded in understanding; I remembered everything. “What you might not realize is that we also flew in another entire platoon from Baghdad. Nobody wanted to let anybody get away. They kicked in a lot of doors and rounded up some very suspicious people.”

“This Tikriti guy?”

“No, sorry, he’s still out there.”

I grimaced at that. Major Montooth said, “Sergeant, let me just tell you that no matter how much you might think you are somehow to blame, or that you did something that got your men killed, the only person saying that is you. Look at it from my point of view. This Tikriti fellow managed to cobble together several hundred fighters into some semblance of a combat force, something beyond the usual nut jobs you described earlier. They were probably looking at Outpost Whiskey as an easy job, a milk run, good practice for something bigger down the road. Instead, you basically destroyed them as a fighting force. It’s hard to say what the total Iraqi casualties are but a common figure is three or four wounded to one dead. Work out the numbers. There are hundreds!”

“It goes beyond that, Sergeant,” added Kinsley. “These groups very much rely on the personal leadership of the guy in charge. By causing so many casualties when they should have walked right over you, you brought Tikriti down in their eyes. He is weaker now, not just in the forces available, but in his personal stature and authority. It won’t be easy for him to try this again. It will take longer, and he won’t have as many soldiers. This will save lives in the future; you can count on it.”

“I don’t know what to say. I just don’t know.”

They didn’t have too many more questions, and that was it for them. They thanked me for helping and said that they hoped I got better soon.

I had another conversation with Doctor Perlmutter. Some of what he told me made sense and reminded me of some past battles. I described how I had reacted after the attack on Camp Custer, when I received my first Silver Star, and how I had taken the blame for the losses. He smiled and said, “So if I have you right, you were taking the blame for guys being killed before you could even get to your post? That’s classic survivor’s guilt, Sergeant. It also tells me that you’ll get past this at some point, like you did then.”

“How do you get past it though? It’s not like I won’t remember it.”

“You’ll always remember it. You just will learn to cope with it a little better, and not let it control you.”

“I don’t know. Some days it feels pretty black,” I admitted.

“There will probably always be times like that, but they will be fewer and farther between, and you won’t think suicidal thoughts. Here’s something I want you to think about. One of the things that the Army looks for in selecting soldiers is teamwork and leadership. Tell me, were you ever on sports teams in school? You’re big enough to have played football or basketball.”

I smiled at that. “Football. I was co-captain on my high school team.”

“You guys any good?”

“We took the state championship my senior year!” Then I gave a wry smile. “Seems silly now, I guess.”

He nodded. “It may seem silly now, but I can tell you it’s one of the things that made you the soldier you are today. Being a good soldier isn’t just about knowing how to shoot or drive a truck or tank or fire a gun. It’s about teamwork and leadership. You know that because you’re a leader. The best soldiers are the ones who take responsibility, who set high standards for themselves, and who set high standards for others. Are you at all surprised when you feel like you have failed when the impossible happens? If you think about it, the Army wants the best, so we are selecting for people who will feel survivor’s guilt when the impossible does happen.”

I was going to have to think about that one. I wasn’t sure I was buying it, not totally anyway. The one thing I knew was that I just wanted to be alone for a while. Perlmutter visited me a day after the G-2 majors finished with me. “Sergeant, there’s not much more for you to do staying here in Germany. Medically speaking, you’re healing. You need to stay in a hospital for at least another month, but as far as your body is concerned, it’s all pretty routine. You’ve got to heal up, mend all the broken bones, and do enough physical therapy to be able to get around and get out of the hospital. Do you follow me on that?”

“Yes, sir. I’ve been injured before. When I was a teenager, I broke an arm and a foot and had to do PT after I got out of the casts.”

He nodded. “Same sort of thing. It takes time, but there is no reason for you to stay here and a lot of reason to go home. There’s probably an Army hospital a lot closer to your home than Landstuhl. Where would you like to go?”

That was a real stumper. No way did I want to go anywhere near the Army! I had disgraced myself and couldn’t imagine having to see any of the people I had known. That certainly ruled out the hospital at West Point, the Army hospital nearest to Fort Drum. I was ashamed, regardless of what Perlmutter might think; he hadn’t been there, he hadn’t promised to get his solders home, he hadn’t gotten them killed. I couldn’t face my family either so that ruled out the base hospital at Benning. I looked away from him and said, quietly, “Just send me to Walter Reed.”

“Grim...”

“Please. Do I have to go back to Fort Drum? I’m getting out now anyway. My commitment was up a few weeks ago. I can’t go back to my unit!”

“Grim...”

“Please!”

He sighed and nodded. “I’m going to mark that you need to see somebody there for your PTSD. Grim, this is something we can help with. Family is important for that.”

I didn’t budge, and he simply agreed to send me to Walter Reed. I didn’t know much about it, but I knew it was in Washington, D.C. and that was too far away from Matucket for my family to come looking for me. I just needed to be alone.

A day later I was packed up and shipped home. Doctor Barclay and Nurse Judy prepped me, but that wasn’t all that involved. They simply had to load me on a stretcher and tuck the sheets in around me. I still had IVs and tubes in me all over the place. They wished me luck and an ambulance took me over to the airport. The flight home was in a C-17 rigged as a hospital transport. That evening I was at Walter Reed in Washington. That was going to be my home away from home for the foreseeable future.

Once I arrived, I was checked in and assigned to a room. It was sort of like a regular hospital, in that it was a two-person room, although I was currently the only person there. The most notable thing about it, though, was that there was a telephone in the room. I couldn’t reach it, but it was there, and it was a vivid reminder that I was back home. Unlike Iraq, where you might have to wait to call home, at Walter Reed it was just a matter of picking up the phone and getting a dial tone. I had no excuse not to call home.

Same as The Grim Reaper
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The Grim ReaperChapter 58 Redemption

Monday, Kelly told me that she was going with me to the lawyer’s office, and the way she said it indicated I had better not argue. I still wasn’t sure what Brockport could do for me that Stillwell couldn’t. Everything I had heard from the guys the other day showed that no matter how I got out of this, the County Attorney and the County Council would still demand they get rid of a killer, and I was still probationary. “Grim, just listen to what he has to say. Daddy says the guy is a magician....

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 7 Aggravated Battery

Sunday & Monday, February 18 & 19, 2001 I came to slowly. I was surprised that I didn’t hurt as much as I thought I would, but I couldn’t really move all that well, and things seemed weird. It was warmer than I remembered it being, and brighter, and my sweatshirt and windbreaker were missing. I groaned and tried to move some more. That did hurt, quite a bit, and I tried to find a position it didn’t hurt, and I realized I hurt all over. I blinked my eyes, but only my left eye was...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperEpilogue

Tuesday, July 21, 2015 I got out of bed at 0600, but I hadn’t been asleep. I had slept fitfully at best all night, and I just gave in and got up. I went into the bathroom and turned on the shower, so the water would warm up, and then started brushing my teeth. “Can’t sleep?” asked Kelly, from our bed. “I need to get to the station early,” I told her. Any further discussion was ended when we heard a cry from the hallway. Kelly groaned and got out of bed. I smiled and shook my head and...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 67 Fame and Glory

Things got very strange from that point on. It wasn’t like I could just fly off to Washington so the President could slap on the Medal of Honor. Everything had to be coordinated. I was informed of the Medal of Honor on May 24, which was a Monday. My keepers, which is what the two light birds turned out to be, returned on Tuesday, June 1, to let me know the latest. The Army, by that time, had publicly confirmed that I was to receive the Medal of Honor, but that the ceremony was to be held at...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 61 The Goat Whisperer

Friday, September 5, 2008 I had to do a lot of yard work at that resort. Kelly was very insistent that the lawn needed to be mowed as often as possible. I also had to ‘clear the weeds’, ‘trim the shrubs’, ‘edge the lawn’, and perform every other possible type of yard maintenance. On the other hand, I considered it critical to provide the best customer service possible. It’s just the kind of guy I am. Still, we did have to get out of the room on occasion, if simply to gas up the mower....

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 22 Leave

I told my family to stay there, and I would get my gear and catch up to them. Kelly offered to follow me, but I had to explain that women were not allowed in the barracks, no way, no how! Luckily there was a parking lot near the barracks that would allow me to load my gear up. Dad had driven down in the F-150, so we could toss my stuff in the back and then ride home. The ride home was mostly taken up with my parents and Kelly asking me about the Army and my training. What did I do, what did...

1 year ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 50 Rooftop

December 21, 2007 The rest of the year I simply prepped for the academy, worked at the police station, and ‘assisted’ Kelly with wedding planning. Assistance basically consisted of doing whatever I was told I was doing, regardless of my personal opinions. White and rose orchids? Whatever you say, babe, they look wonderful! The fact that I couldn’t tell an orchid from a dandelion meant nothing. White cake, yellow cake, or chocolate cake? They all tasted delicious, but even if they tasted like...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 11 Cruising

That was pretty much it for grand romance for a few weeks. School was ending the following Thursday, and Saturday Kelly and her mom were flying out of Atlanta to London. Neither set of parental units were allowing us to date on school nights, not even during the last week of school. We were able to go out on Friday night, and we got in some quality time then, but that was it. She was going to be gone the last week of May and the first two weeks of June. She got sort of tearful and clingy and...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 33 The Cherokee Bar And Grill

Jim Talbot called me the next afternoon and told me that there was a lively discussion after I left, but that they hadn’t blown me off. I was still being considered by most of the council. He also told me that one of the other candidates had dropped out, citing the council’s inability to get its shit together. That cut it down to me and one other candidate. Sometime next week would be another interview, though that one would be in a smaller setting. What that meant wasn’t specified, but I...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 65 Coffin Metal Handles

Monday, May 24, 2010 I busted my ass that winter getting back into shape. As the doctors had told me, my problems mostly related to muscle and tissue damage, but my joints were in good shape. My biggest problems were in stretching and rebuilding the muscles in my left arm and side. I spent a lot of time in rehab and therapy, and then even more time in the gym rebuilding myself. Kelly and I didn’t have a gym in the house, but it was another one of those benefits of being a cop. The MPD had an...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 64 Recovery

Thursday proved to be about as hectic as I expected it to be. By the time the detectives came to see me, I would be the last guy they would be talking to. By that time, they would have already interviewed everybody except the three dead guys, and they would have been autopsied. The crime scene crew would have been all over the last car they had been in, as well as all over the Quiki-Stop. The security videos from the Quiki-Stop would have been obtained, as well as any from any of the...

3 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 21 Visitors

They were right, of course, I was beat. I stayed awake through dinner and then fell asleep. I woke up Saturday morning stiff and creaky. As the saying goes, it’s just like cars; it’s not the years but the mileage. At thirty-three I had the mileage for one-hundred-thirty-three. Saturday was all about family. My parents arrived right after breakfast, and after Mom violated the rule about not treating a relative by checking my records, they gave me the latest info. Jack was flying in from San...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 6 Tuesday September 26 2017 to Thursday September 28 2017

Kelly and I watched the news Monday night for about an hour, but it was getting repetitious, and we turned it off. By then Kelly was beginning to get some emails and tweets from people she was friends with, mostly asking what was going on. Most seemed confused, but several were rather vile. A few people wanted me to immediately fly to California and butcher my brother on the fifty-yard line, followed by ritually committing suicide. We went to bed, where Kelly tried to take my mind off...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 45 Job Prospects

I called Kelly as soon as I had finished a couple of slices. It was a Thursday, so she promised to come home that night and spend a long weekend with me. I told her I was heading over to the apartment and to find me there. It would be late when she got there, but that didn’t matter much to me. I went back to the kitchen, grabbed another slice of pizza and a beer, and sat down in the family room. Bobbie Joe returned my keys. When I was finished, I kissed Mom on the cheek and headed out. The...

3 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 8 Scholar

Tuesday, January 7, 2019 The rest of the semester was a bitch, a stone-cold cast-iron bitch. I don’t know what I had been expecting, but it was just unrelenting work. Maybe it was because I had taken a lot of time on the two consulting jobs or maybe it was because of the time taken up with Tolley’s book project. More likely it was because I didn’t know what the hell I was doing trying to get a doctorate in history. I mean, I knew there was a lot of reading that was going to be involved....

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 11 Early Retirement

Seamus fell asleep in his car seat before Kelly got home. That made him extra fussy when we got there, and he was handed to me after she got him out of the car. For the next hour we kept putting him to bed and he kept waking up and fussing. Kelly and I talked about my father’s condition. “So, what happens next?” I asked. “This ever happen to your father?” “Not that I’ve ever heard. Maybe he doesn’t exercise as vigorously as your father does.” I had to laugh at that. “There are some things...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 31 Fire Team Leader

June 2005-March 2006 The next morning, we were back to the Army in earnest. Most everybody had filtered back, and we began with PT, physical training, including calisthenics and a four-mile conditioning run. I was hurting as bad as any of the other troops. Leave had left me soft. It didn’t matter, since I knew I would be back in shape in a few weeks, tops. Montoya and Gonzalez, the fuzzies just out of Benning, were in decent shape. Riley was coming off leave and was in about the same...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 47 Job Hunting

Nothing job-related came to my attention by Friday afternoon. I speculated what the perfect job ad would look like - “Wanted! Matucket Firearms Corporation has an immediate opening for product design and testing in their Machine Gun Division! Iraqi war veterans with PTSD desired! Call now, operators are standing by!” I remembered that the AK-47 was invented by a busted-up Russian sergeant during World War II. Too bad there really wasn’t a Matucket Firearms Corporation, either with or without...

4 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 15 Recuperation

Monday, September 26, 2022 Monday was a busy day. I bundled the kids off to school and then called Matucket State. While I didn’t go into details, I had to let her Department Vice-Chair know she was going to be away from work for a week or two. I didn’t know who to call at DARPA or the NSA, but Kelly didn’t talk to them daily anyway; she could handle that chore. Then I drove over to the hospital. By all accounts, I would be able to bring her home that day. First, though, she needed to be...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 15 Background Briefing

Monday, March 19, 2018 “Dispatch to One-Six-Three.” “One-Six-Three to Dispatch, go ahead.” Dispatch to One-Six-Three, say location.” I was curious as to why Dispatch wanted to know where I was, since they had sent me to supervise an accident at Pinetree and Glen Aubrey. There was a three-car pileup on Glen Aubrey after the first car, a silver Nissan sedan had suddenly braked for a squirrel. The next car, a red Ford Fusion had slammed into the Nissan from behind and had then been...

3 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 34 Moving Forward

Hank called me later that evening, laughing about the three chuckleheads, as he called them, and told me that he had told them some more stories. Of course, he kept their glasses full, so it was a profitable conversation for him. He told me that he had told a bunch of war stories about ‘the old days’ and how we did things ‘back then.’ I laughed and invited him and his wife over some night, and to just call me or Kelly to schedule it. Over the weekend Kelly and I goofed off while driving the...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 17 Preparations

Chief Crowley called the meeting to an end. He told Captain Abernathy to light a fire under the detectives and see if anybody had seen any African-American strangers recently. At best we had maybe a day or two before something might happen. Captain Bullfinch and Lieutenant Roscoe were told to give whatever support possible, including moving watch schedules around. Hank was told to assist me and dial up TRT. As far as I was concerned, Priority One was taking care of my family. What was even...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 60 Wedded Bliss

Saturday, June 21, 2008 I continued riding with Hank Jenkins for two weeks, and he signed off on turning me loose on the public on my own. During our time he taught me about the night and graveyard shifts, much like Jerry had taught me about the day shift and general police work. We also brought in a number of bad guys on various warrants, taking criminals off the street and otherwise making Matucket safer for all. It seemed like every shift would start with Hank handing me a stack of...

4 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 21 Bank Robbery

Fall 2023 The summer progressed nicely. I spent a fair bit of time down in Sullivan County and the nearby environs, first analyzing what they had and then developing the options everybody needed to consider. One thing I stressed with them was that by standardizing on similar doctrine, training, and hardware, the SWAT teams created would be suitable for any eventual regional coordination. How the politics would work out was questionable, but it would be easier if the local units had similar...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 30 Fort Drum

April 2005 - May 2005 A few days later I had to leave. I was due back at Fort Drum on Thursday, so Tuesday Kelly and I loaded up the back of the Outback with all my stuff. This time we added all my personal stuff that I had shipped home when I first deployed to Iraq in 2003. Jack was none too amused when I took the television set with me, since he had set it up in the bedroom, but I wasn’t impressed. “You want to keep it? Fine with me. Just buy me a new one,” I told him. “I don’t have the...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 17 Summer

June to August 2002 The following week we had finals, and that was it. Seniors had to go through graduation, but the rest of us were out for a couple of months for the summer. For me that meant I had about a week of goof-off time before I had to go back to the mill full time. That would take me through all of June and into July, at which time it was back to practice for the football season, running twice-a-days and sweating off about ten pounds under the July sun. Somewhere during that...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 17 Miles Madigan

Summer 2023 The job in Sullivan Springs was a larger project than most of those I had already worked on. The spreadsheets were smoking by the time I got through with them. When I contacted Ballantine in two weeks, it was only to tell him I was still working the project. Unlike some of my other jobs, in this one I didn’t have a single answer already packaged. In my other jobs the chief or sheriff already knew what he wanted to do and simply needed an outsider to give him a third-party...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 41 Abu Dhabi

January 2007 Mom was very upset that I wasn’t going to come home on my leave. She just wasn’t buying my explanation about losing my squad. She wanted me to come home, squad or no squad. I think Dad understood, and he told me that his father understood, but Mom was very unhappy. I had been in the Army now for four Christmases, and three had been spent in Iraq. I didn’t even bother telling her about the incident at Yankee North. One of her latest kicks was, “Are you the only soldier in Iraq?...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 2 Reunion

It seemed late when we finished dinner. There was a Welcome Aboard talk in the ship’s theater and after that we did a bit more exploring. There were all sorts of stuff on the boat, including a shopping center with incredibly overpriced stuff, a casino, and a bunch more bars, restaurants, and lounges. We walked around the deck and then went back to our cabin, where we discovered it had been made up, the bed turned down, and an odd animal formed out of some folded towels. Kelly decided she...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 48 Administrative Assistant

I was able to get in to see Captain Crowley on Thursday morning. Another young officer, African-American this time, was the one who escorted me in, and this time Crowley had some paperwork on his desk. I got the impression that after this meeting it would be time to shit or get off the pot. Crowley outlined the procedure to apply, and then reviewed the pay and benefits. “Grim, as an Administrative Assistant you make a bit more than minimum wage, but it’s a full-time job and it qualifies you...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 20 Schools End

Dad didn’t say anything to me the next day, so we must have covered our tracks. At least the back seat in the SuperCrew was wide enough for us to lay semi-flat on. We still drove around in the cold air with the windows down. Monday at school I saw Coach Summers and gave him the news. I was out for a week, and would be reevaluated afterwards, so I might be able to play if we won next week and went to State. “I won’t let you back on the field until you bring me a release from the doctor,” he...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 27 Returning Home

June 2004 - August 2004 Word came down from Battalion that the rest of Second Brigade would be deploying to Iraq soon. It was expected that they would show up sometime in July, but no dates were available. What they would do then was not known, or at least not known to us down at Camp Custer. Where exactly they would be positioned wasn’t known or might change before they got here. However, one interesting tidbit came out. Fourth of the Fourth was going to get some leave. Over the next few...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 8 Sunday October 1 2017

For the last few days President Trump had been on a Twitter rampage, demanding that the NFL players stand during the anthem, demanding the team owners and coaches fire them if they didn’t, and promising dire actions otherwise. Both Jack and I were getting slammed left and right, me for not complaining about the football players’ protests and Jack for not doing more. He was also bitching about Puerto Rico, primary elections, and fake news. No wonder he wasn’t doing his job - he was spending...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 24 Boxie

2024 Sunday, I helped Jack get home. He had chartered a plane to fly from California to Matucket (“ Can you imagine flying commercial through Atlanta with a wheelchair?”) so I simply drove over to their house Sunday morning and helped him out of the house and down to his rental. None of our homes had ramps and I asked whether we should build some for their next visit. “Grim, I’m not sure you should bother. I don’t think I’ll be coming back here any time soon.” “Jack...” “Grim, I just...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 19 Rescue

I never really passed out, but I wasn’t in a mood to keep talking. The immediate threat was contained, and since I was trapped under a tree and wounded, I wasn’t going to wander around the battlefield. After a few minutes I began to hear sirens, both police and fire department; I wouldn’t be alone for long. I twisted my head to the left but couldn’t see to the end of the driveway out on Lakeside Drive. I did see flashing lights approaching, and the sirens went silent. Moments later I heard a...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 66 Old Acquaintances

Grandpa was right about some of what he had said. I googled ‘medal of honor procedure’ later and it turned out there was a huge process involved in giving the Medal of Honor. Once the recommendation worked its way up from Battalion to Brigade and then to Division, it landed at the Pentagon. At least two boards in the Human Resources Command had to approve it, and then it went before the Chief of Staff, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of...

3 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 12 Thanksgiving

Thursday morning was an exercise in controlled chaos. I had time to do a nice breakfast of scrambled eggs, toast, and bacon, which could be a bit of a luxury. I tried to cook a nice family breakfast on weekends but shift work with the MPD meant I frequently missed weekends. At least three of us ate well. Seamus only ate Froot Loops; he was almost three and was still a knucklehead in the Terrible Twos. After breakfast Kelly put Riley and me to work cleaning the house. Seamus, on the other...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 70 60 Minutes

Captain Crowley simply congratulated me on making it through SWAT and then told me that I needed to call CBS in New York. He gave me a phone number and told me to let him know what was going on. For my mind, I was basically done with publicity. The Army had mustered me out a second time, so they couldn’t order me back to New York, and if 60 Minutes wanted to do something on the MPD, they had to come to us in any case. The call went smoothly. Now that I was home from the Academy, CBS felt...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 8 Recuperation

Mom went back to work down in the ER the next morning, which I found a blessing. I mean, I loved my mother, but she was driving me completely nuts hanging around the room with me. She still dropped in at lunchtime, but I could handle that. Otherwise, I had her bring in a few books from home that I could read holding up with my left hand. Kelly came over after school on Tuesday. She had worked out an arrangement to take a different bus over to the hospital, and then either Mom would take her...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 7 Friday September 29 2017 to Saturday September 30 2017

Friday started out like most other days. We got Riley off to school on the bus, and Kelly loaded Seamus in the Sienna to take to day care at Matucket State. The big difference was that we dug out all the luggage. While she was at class, I packed all my formal stuff in a hanging bag, with the rest in a suitcase. As soon as Kelly and Seamus came home, she grabbed her stuff out of the closet and told me to start packing, while she packed everything for the kids. It became a mad rush, since I...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 6 Kelly

Friday, February 16, 2001 School had just started again after the winter break. I was hanging out after lunch with some friends near the south stairwell lockers, with Tilly next to me, when Terry Watson muttered, “Holy shit!” as he looked at something behind me. I turned around and didn’t see anything unusual, at least not at first. What I did see looked like a bunch of girls hugging. Then I saw one of the girls turn around and come over towards us. She was slim, about my height, with...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 19 A Winning Season

Jack managed to finagle a ride home with a couple of cheerleaders who were juniors. I have no idea if he got anything more from them than a lift home, and I didn’t want to know. One of these days my brother’s love life was going to bite him in the ass. Some girl was going to find him with another girl, and there would be hell to pay. Hopefully she wouldn’t be carrying a weapon when that happened. The Sports Section headline Saturday morning was “UNDERDOG PIONEERS CRUSH WARRIORS!” I had no...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 68 Television

I knew what the citation said; whether I believed it was a different question. It didn’t matter much. I stood there, kept my mouth shut, and looked straight ahead. The President put the ribbon around my neck, and everybody saluted and applauded. He gave me a whispered, ‘At ease.’, and I was able to break position and shake his hand in thanks. That was the end of the official ceremony, and it was time for a meet-and-greet. Mister and Mrs. Obama escorted me down off the stage and over to where...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 53 Living the Dream

Police work was vastly different from military life. One of the biggest differences was that the U.S. Army was quite monolithic, in the sense that everybody trained and fought the same way. Every infantryman trained at Fort Benning. Every helicopter crewman trained at Fort Rucker. Every medic trained at Fort Sam Houston. You get the idea. The same could be said at any camp or fort in the country. Everybody did things the same. There’s a reason they called it the ‘big green machine.’ It made...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 63 Out of State Visitors

Saturday, October 24, 2009 My schedule that week was the night shift, Tuesday to Friday, and then I would have off, Saturday to Tuesday. That worked out well, since Saturday was my parents’ anniversary, and both Kelly and I would have the day off. I would be able to sleep late and then we could go over to the house later. Since it was their Silver Anniversary, the plan was for Bobbie Joe, Kelly, and me to take the parental units out to a nice dinner. Jack and Teresa couldn’t be there, of...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 69 Going Home

That was basically the end of the craziness. From Chicago we flew home for a long weekend. Monday, we flew back to New York, and I went on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, which proved interesting. Stewart was on the liberal side of the spectrum, but he always showed a lot of respect to the soldiers even as he crucified the politicians who got us into Iraq and Afghanistan. Most of the interview was the standard questions, but at the end he asked me something nobody else had asked. Stewart:...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 18 Senior Year

Our first game of the season was at the end of the month, the last Friday of August, the 30th. It was a home game with North Cobb High, from up in Kennesaw. They were from a wealthy suburb of Atlanta, and North Cobb was a big school, certainly bigger than us. That was important in high school football, since the more students you had, the more likely you’ll be able to find better players. I commented on that to Kelly once, and she said something about Gaussian distributions and standard...

4 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 38 Coming Together

Things moved along through the summer. At times it seemed as if for every step we took forward we were taking two steps back. Still, some good things happened. Our new Auto Theft Division made a major arrest mid-June. They grabbed a few cars out of the impound yard and fitted them with GPS trackers and allowed them to be stolen. That generated enough information to get warrants on a pair of ‘chop shops’, garages where stolen cars could be taken and stripped for parts. Lieutenant Dupree of...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 49 Training

October 2007 - December 2007 Mid-October, about when it became obvious that I was going to stick it out and go to the academy, Tim Hungerford showed up at the rickety-bench-with-delusions-of-grandeur that I called my desk. He had a packet of paperwork with him. “Take a break,” he ordered. “You need to look this stuff over.” I looked at him. “Why? What is it?” “It’s the packet from the academy.” “Ah!” I nodded at that. “Let’s take a look. You’ve been through this, right?” Tim nodded....

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 52 The Academy

January 2008 - March 2008 When I went back to work, I let Captain Carson know about meeting the Gorsky family, and that I was sure that a lawsuit was on the way. Both he and Lieutenant Brownell quizzed me on what I had told the Gorskys and I swore six ways from Sunday that I hadn’t said anything that could be construed as an admission of guilt. Their general feeling was that we would be named in the suit, but we could dump any responsibility onto the Sheriff’s office, since they ran the jail...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 16 Springtime

March to May, 2002 Mom was not at all amused by my thinking. All through dinner, which Kelly and I nuked in the microwave to warm up, she badgered me about why I was joining the Army. I pretty much gave her the same reasons as I gave my girlfriend. Dad mostly just sat there and listened. He insisted that they had to meet Sergeant Donaldson, and that I was not doing anything until after I got out of school. Eventually I could escape, and I took Kelly out and we went over to the mall, to do...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 4 Skinny Mike

Friday, September 1, 2017 “Gentlemen, I have had it. I hereby resign my position as a member of the human race. There is no possible way I share any genetic material with what I had to put up with today.” So saying, I settled myself onto a barstool in the center of the bar at the Cherokee Grill. Around me my fellow police officers laughed. Mack Waterhouse, the owner of the bar and a former MPD lieutenant, came over and smiled. “Feel free to tell your friendly bartender what your problem is,...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 46 Barbecue

We slept in the next morning, and I informed Kelly that she needed to pass an audition like I had done with her. How was I to know that she wasn’t a demanding wife? What if she was only interested in me for my body, and not my mind? That got me a smart-ass comment from her, “Really? You want to go there? Grim, you need to stick with your body! Your mind ain’t going to cut it!” That earned her a sharp smack on the ass, and I tickled her until she shrieked and begged me to stop. That led to her...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 59 Back to Work

Monday, May 26, 2008 Certain things worked out for me. The bullshit out of the CORB had gotten pretty extreme, and the Justice Department planned to investigate them and not me. The Review Board wasn’t helped when Pendergast was caught saying that he was hoping for the dissolution of the entire Matucket Police Department and its replacement by a federally supervised police force. That was considered more than a bit nutty, even for hard-core Democrats. In any case, it got me off the hook with...

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