Read Under a Raging Moon Online
Authors: Frank Zafiro
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural, #Thrillers, #Suspense
Under a Raging Moon
Frank Zafiro
Copyright 2010 Frank Scalise
Cover Art by Russ Davis
Cover Photography by Matt Rose
Previous print editions:
1
st
edition, Wolfmont Press, 2006
2
nd
edition (revised), Gray Dog Press, 2010
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r
chase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
For every officer who ever had the courage to wear a badge...and to honor it.
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night
onl
y because rough men stand ready
to do violence on their b
e
half.
George Orwell,
English author and satirist
(1903-1950)
Prologue
Fall 1994
“So what do you want from me, doc?”
“I want you to tell me how you feel about what ha
p
pened.”
The police officer snorted. “It doesn’t really matter what I say.”
The doctor leaned back in his chair before answering. He studied the man across from him. The officer sat in a relaxed position, his feet crossed at the ankles. Both hands lay across his lap. The doctor saw the bandaged arm and shoulder and a leg brace, as well as the cane leaning next to the officer, all evidence of the injuries he had sustained. He noticed none of the defensive body language he usually encountered in interviews such as this one. The officer appeared physically fit, his muscles well-formed even in a relaxed state. He met the doctor’s gaze with a frank, even stare. No challenge resided in his eyes, but none of his inner thoughts were betrayed, either.
“Officer, please understand.” The doctor spoke in a calm, open tone. “I do not work directly for the D
e
partment. I am contracted to do an evalu
a
tion after a critical incident and render a professional opinion.”
“And I am required to cooperate fully as a condition of employment.” The officer smiled without humor. “Failure to do so may result in suspension or termination.”
“That’s true,” the doctor conceded. He tried a different ta
c
tic. “But it may help you to talk about it.”
The officer shrugged but said nothing.
The doctor suppressed a sigh and leaned back in his chair. By force of habit, he opened the officer’s pe
r
sonnel file. He had already reviewed it, of course. He always made a point to know as much as possible about his patients before he sat down with them.
Nothing in the file indicated the man was much different from any other cop he’d interviewed. Still, he found police officers to be a pleasant distraction from his regular practice of rich, whiny men and women. Some cops were uncultured ex-jocks, but many had a combination of intelligence and culture blended with a blue-collar worker’s outlook that fascinated him. Another aspect that made these interviews well worth his time was his exam
i
nation of the effect of power on the individual. He only charged the City forty percent of what he charged his civilian clientele. It only seemed fair, since these interviews were fueling a paper he was writing for a psych
i
atric journal.
“What do they say about me in there?” The officer asked, nodding t
o
ward the file.
“Lots of things,” the doctor replied, unsure if he had detected sarcasm in the officer’s voice or not. He glanced down at the file in front of him. “It says you graduated third in your class at the academy. You’ve been a police officer for just three years and during that time you’ve had no sustained internal affairs investigations. There have been seven unsustained complaints, however. Other than that, your last performance review was very complime
n
tary.”
“Company man,” the officer said. This time the sarcasm in his voice was unmistakable.
The doctor looked up again and caught the officer’s eye. He saw a flicker of emotion. It disappeared quickly and he wondered if he had seen it at all.
He closed the file and set it aside. “Officer, I am required to fill out a general report regarding your mental and emotional fitness for duty. Obviously, a satisfactory response is as impo
r
tant as your physical recovery with regards to your return to full duty.”
At the words ‘full duty,’ the officer winced slightly.
The doctor pressed on. “However, everything you say within the confines of this office is entirely conf
i
dential. By law, I cannot reveal it to anyone, nor can I be compelled to by any court.”
The officer narrowed his eyes slightly. “Totally confide
n
tial?”
“Yes.” The doctor watched as the officer processed the i
n
formation.
The officer remained silent for several moments. Finally, he said in a heavy whisper, “Doc...you wanna know the truth?”
“I do.”
“The truth is...it felt good.”
The doctor nodded. “Go on.”
The officer didn’t meet his eyes, but continued to speak. “I did what I had to do and I don’t feel bad for that.” He chewed his lip a moment, then continued. “See, that’s the problem. I feel bad because I
don’t
feel bad about it. I feel
good
about it. I’d do it again.”
The doctor raised his hand to his glasses, adjusting them on the bridge of his nose. He gave the officer a reassu
r
ing nod.
Now the session had truly begun.
ONE
Friday, August 12th, 1994
Graveyard Shift
2116 hours
Crack!
The flashlight clattered to the pavement. Thomas Chisolm looked up from his note pad to see his rookie, Maurice Payne, looking sheepish. Payne grabbed the light and checked it. Relief flooded his face when it still worked.
Chisolm struggled not to shake his head in disgust. Payne had already spent three times longer than he should have putting the police cruiser through its pre-flight check. To make matters worse, he’d managed to forget half the procedures.
How in the hell did this kid make it through his first two Field Training Officers?
Chisolm wondered.
Christ, how did he make it through the Police Academy?
Payne finally settled into the seat and started the engine. He carefully turned on and off every emergency light, including the yelp and wail sirens. Satisfied, he started to put the car into gear.
“Forget something?” Chisolm asked in as neutral a voice as he could muster.
Payne looked worried and confused.
Jesus, this kid flusters easy
, Chisolm thought. He’d acted the same way earlier when Chisolm pointed out that he forgot to check the back seat.
Payne’s worried look grew almost frantic. He looked to Chisolm for the answer. The veteran put his hand on the shotgun, which sat right beside the radio, its barrel pointing upward.
“Oh.” Payne put the car in park and released the shotgun. He started to clear the weapon in the driver’s seat.
“Do it outside,” Chisolm instructed in an even voice.
For the fi
f
teenth time
, he groused inwardly.
Payne stepped out of the car, banging the butt of the shotgun against the steering wheel along the way. Chisolm watched him unload the shotgun, clear it and then reload. His movements were clumsy and unsure. His attempt to complete the task faster than his abilities allowed only made it worse.
“Easy, son,” Chisolm told him. “Take your time and do it right.”
Payne finished awkwardly and replaced the shotgun in its rack. He picked up the radio to check them into service. “Adam-112, log on.”
“Go ahead,”
responded the dispatcher.
As Payne recited their badge numbers and vehicle assignment, Chisolm winced at the rookie’s voice. It sounded weak and mush-mouth, carrying no authority at all.
Reflecting briefly, Chisolm knew why Payne had made it through two Field Training Officers. They’d gone on a few calls where compassion had been the order of the day. Chisolm had to admit the kid did a superb job. A rape victim is not an easy person to communicate with, especially for a male officer. Some victims d
e
manded a female officer for that very reason, but Payne had been able to establish an excellent rapport with the victim, kept her emotions in check and took a good report.
Still, Chisolm knew that there was a lot more to the job than being compassionate. He had long ago learned to save his compassion for those who deserved it. A cop had to be strong enough to be gentle, but he had to remain strong.
Chisolm recalled the incident right before their days off, when a gang member had come close to assaul
t
ing Payne. Chisolm had seen it coming, but let Payne go with it as far as he safely could. He hoped the rookie learned that the nice-guy routine doesn’t always work, especially when a street-wise gangbanger is yelling, “Kiss my black ass, you white pig!”
A cop had to wear many hats, Chisolm knew: counselor, confessor, friend, philosopher, detective, hard-ass, just to name a few. Those who failed to understand this were weak officers, even if they excelled in one area. Like Payne. Or like James Kahn, who was a grouch almost all the time and got complaints by the trunk load.
“Let’s get some fuel,” Chisolm suggested.
And we’ll see if you can find the fueling station this time.
“Yes, sir,” Payne replied, his voice meek.
Payne surprised Chisolm by finding the fueling station easily enough. The rookie filled the tank wordles
s
ly and the two of them cruised out to tackle the calls that were holding.
The night passed slowly, giving Chisolm plenty of time for reflection. Payne took way too long to a
c
complish even the simplest of tasks. A traffic stop became a major ordeal for him, which Chisolm considered ridicu
l
ous this far into his training.
Even more unforgivable, Payne’s officer safety bordered on critically poor. He seemed completely obli
v
ious to where his gun side was in relation to everyone around him. He took his eyes off people all the time, sometimes even turning his back to them. He wasn’t vigilant at all about having su
s
pects keep their hands out of their pockets. Not only did all of this enda
n
ger Payne, but anyone who worked around him.
Chisolm pressed his lips together in disgust when Payne elected to make a traffic stop on a soccer mom in a mini-van. On graveyard shift, they operated in a target rich environment. There were plenty of shitheads out driving around, guilty of far worse infractions—much less actual crimes—than the failure to signal that Mrs. Middle Class just committed.
Payne fumbled through initiating his emergency lights and advising r
a
dio of his location. Chisolm wasn’t sure which bothered him more—the weak sound of Payne’s voice or the fact that the location he gave radio was a block off.
He clambered out of the passenger seat and stood safely behind the curtain of light at the front tire of the p
a
trol car. Payne approached the car like a frightened cat. Chisolm noted that he carried his flashlight in his gun hand, another cardinal sin.
Payne made contact with the driver, taking three times longer than necessary to acquire her documents. Back at the car, he quickly filled out the ticket, but agonized over whether to write the woman for no insurance since the card in her car had expired two weeks ago. He looked to Chisolm for help.
“You think she’s got insurance?” Chisolm asked him.
“Uh...” Payne swallowed nervously. It seemed like he treated very question like a life or death final exam. “I guess not. I mean, the card’s expired.”
Chisolm gave him an even stare, refusing to answer the rookie’s question. “It’s your call,” he said, figu
r
ing the kid would learn something either way.
Payne nodded hesitantly, then returned to the ticket. He scratched out the charged for no insurance.
Chisolm struggled not to frown.
Back at the van, Payne patiently explained to the woman in the mini-van what constituted proof of insu
r
ance.
“But I have insurance,” she protested. “My agent just sent me the new card. It’s on my kitchen counter.”
“It’s supposed to be in your car.”
“I know that,” she said. “I just forgot.”
Payne cleared his throat. “Well, uh, I suppose if you bring that into the judge, he could probably just—”
“Who’s got time for court?” she snapped. “I have three kids and a house to take care of. Do you have any idea how time-consuming that is?”
“No,” Payne squeaked.
She eyed him with contempt. “Just give me the ticket.”
Payne handed it to her. She scrawled her signature and thrust it back at him. “I hope you’re happy,” she said. “Because you’re an asshole.”
Chisom suppressed a smile.
Payne looked stricken. He tore out the driver’s copy of the ticket and gave it to her, stammering out his prepared speech on how to take care of the ticket.
She interrupted him. “Can I go?”
Payne blinked. He looked back at Chisolm, then at the driver. “Uh, sure. I mean, if you understand how to respond to this infraction, you can—”
“I got it,” she answered, dropping the van into gear and driving away.
Payne watched her go, then turned and trudged back to the car. Once there, he reached for the radio to clear when a shrill alert tone sounded.
“Dispatch to all units. Receiving an armed robbery alarm at 1527 N. Birch, 7-11 store
.” The dispatcher’s voice intoned.
“Hold-up alarm, 1527 N. Birch.”
“Go!” shouted Chisolm and grabbed the mike. He listened in frustration as several units attempted to a
n
swer at once, covering each other with a harsh buzz.
“Coverage,”
stated the operator.
“Receiving further. Suspect is a si
n
gle, white male wearing black jeans, white shirt with long dark hair. Also has a scar down the left side of his face. Suspect displayed a black revol
v
er. Fled westbound on foot.”
“C’mon!” Chisolm yelled, excitement coursing through him.
Same damn guy, the one everyone called Scarface
.
Payne approached the red light at Indiana and Post. His hand hovered over the emergency light controls as if he couldn’t decide whether to use lights or both lights and siren.
“Just drive,” Chisolm told him, punching the lights. At two-thirty in the morning on a Monday night, there wasn’t much traffic to worry about.
“Adam-116, I’m a couple off. I’ll check westbound.”
Chisolm recognized Katie MacLeod’s steady voice.
“Baker-123, in the area to the south. Also.”
Stefan Kopriva, another good troop, chimed in.
“Go ahead, Baker-123.”
“Do we have a K-9 working?”
A pause. Then,
“Negative. Do you want us to call one out?”
“Affirm.”
Good call,
Chisolm thought.
Maybe we’ll catch the guy this time.
Payne drove right past the turn on Monroe Street. He re
a
lized it half a block later and started to slow.
“No,” Chisolm instructed him. “Go up to Ash, we’ll back Katie.”
“Adam-113, on scene at the 7-11 for the report.”
Chisolm shook his head. Adam-113, James Kahn, was only willing to take a report if it meant less work than the alternative. Or if there was a woman involved. Otherwise, forget it.
Ash was a one-way arterial southbound, but Payne still drove way too cautiously for Chisolm’s liking. At Ma
x
well, he directed him to turn right as soon as he saw Katie’s lights.
“Baker-123, I’ll be mobile on Boone west of—”
The buzz of radio transmission coverage cut him off.
“Baker-123, copy,”
replied the dispatcher.
“Other unit?”
Chisolm knew Katie was out of the car and running as soon as the transmission began.
“Adam-116... foot pursuit... south bound from my car. We’re going through... construction yard... ”
Chisolm got on the air before the dispatcher could respond. “Adam-112, her vehicle is parked at Maxwell and Cannon. We’ll swing around and come in from the southwest.”
“Copy.”
“Baker-123, coming in from the southeast.”
“Copy.”
“Take Belt,” Chisolm ordered sharply. He didn’t care anymore about training at this point. Katie was ru
n
ning around in the dark with an armed robber. She needed backup. “And hurry up!”
“This is L-123. All other units set-up a perimeter, four blocks in each direction,”
Sgt. Miyamoto Shen said, his voice calm and authoritative.
No one answered, leaving the radio clear for Adam-116.
At the corner of Belt and Sinto, Chisolm directed Payne to turn left. The rookie did so, still way too slow for his liking.
“Hit all your lights. Everything. Light up that yard.” He pointed at the construction yard to the northeast. An eight-foot fence ran all along the south side of the yard.
Good
, thought Chisolm, already out of the car and scanning for movement.
That should slow him down a li
t
tle.