Part 4
Chapter 11
Lan pulled the Land Cruiser into the half full parking lot of
the sports complex and looked around for burgundy and blue softball
jerseys.
“Do you know which field it is?” Tina asked as she swung the passenger door
open.
“Well, I’m sure I did at one point. All I remember was burgundy and blue
uniforms.” Lan helpfully supplied as she looked out onto the 10 fields or
so. I
never knew this place was so big.
“We can ask around.”
Tina said as she ushered the kids onto the sidewalk. Lan nodded, joining them on the sidewalk.
Lan had thought herself very clever when she asked Jill if
Pete would be playing too. When she said
he would be, she then checked with Jill to make sure it was okay to invite Tina
and the kids.
“I see Pete!” Exclaimed
John, taking off towards one of the fields to the left of the parking lot. The rest of the group just chuckled and
followed, realizing their short search was over and headed in the direction the
excited young boy was heading.
“Pete!” John yelled
about ten feet from the man. Pete swung
around from his bat bag and greeted the boy with a huge smile.
“Hey! What’s going
on?” He shouted, surprised yet delighted
to see the boy. After giving him a
light hair ruffle, he looked over John’s head to see the rest of the group in
tow.
“Hey, Pete.” Lan smiled
as she gave him a quick hug. “Hope you
don’t mind having a small cheering section.”
Seeing that Pete was still a bit confused, Lan began to explain how
she’d heard about the game and how she thought Tina and the kids would enjoy
watching as well. Just then Jill had
spotted them and came over to join the group and finally meet the family Lan
talked so highly of.
“Glad you could make it.
You must be John.” Jill said
smiling down at the young boy who stood next to Pete. She stuck out her hand and John politely
shook it.
“Are you a police officer too?” John asked with big curious eyes.
“I am.” Jill supplied
jovially. “This must be your
family.” She continued, smiling and
shaking hands with Katy and Tina as John introduced them. He sounded like such a young man. It made Lan smile.
“It is great to finally meet you guys. I’ve heard lots about you.” She said looking warmly between the three
with her eyes finally resting on Lan’s.
“Likewise. We’ve heard
lots about you too.” Tina said looking
to Lan as well. The statement caught
Jill by surprise and she raised an eyebrow at Lan.
“Don’t worry, Jill, it was all good.” Lan replied lightly, trying to hide her mild
embarrassment.
“Yeah, she’s right,” Tina said. Waiting a beat, she added, “We’ll mostly.”
“Oh, she’s a funny one.”
Jill intoned around a big smile.
They all laughed easily and Lan was inordinately pleased that Tina and
Jill had seemed to hit it off instantly.
As the group began making their way to the stands, Pete fell
in step with Tina. “Came to watch us put
the hurt on the vice unit?” Pete joked,
figuring Lan had filled her in on who they were playing as well.
“You bet.” Tina
replied, looking up into his eyes. They
stopped at the bottom of the stands and Pete shifted from foot to foot
awkwardly.
“Well, I guess I better go get warmed up.” He paused for another second. “I’m glad Lan invited you guys.” He finished shyly.
“Me too. Good
luck.” Tina replied, touching his
forearm briefly. Pete grinned and nodded
and made his way back down to the dugout, mentally pumping his fist in the air.
Jill, being the ever-observant person that she was, noticed
the little conversation between Pete and Tina.
She knew they’d met when Lan took him over for the barbeque, but she
sensed something else. Interesting.
Jill pulled her baseball hat lower down over her forehead to
combat the afternoon sun. She was glad
for the fact that her good-natured yet chauvinistic colleagues remembered she
turned two double plays during last year’s game and awarded her second base
again.
Even though she moaned and groaned about playing each year,
she did enjoy a chance at showing the boys up.
She loved playing the infield and relished the challenge of fielding a
nicely paced ground ball and throwing them out at first or catching a line
drive and hearing the groans from the opposing team. It was her own little way of getting even in
a male dominated field.
Snapping her gum like a seasoned professional, she bent her
knees, held her glove out in front of her and faced the batter, ready for
action. Up to bat was a guy named
Gleason whom Jill had heard about. He
was a newly promoted detective who barely looked old enough to vote.
Jill settled into her stance and just as promptly fell out of
it as she saw the young detective point and wink at her. What
the hell?
The sharp, hollow clank of the ball hitting aluminum
reverberated through the park and Jill sensed rather than saw the ball rocketing
toward her. On self-preservation
instinct alone, she threw up her gloved hand in front of her face and was
shocked as she heard and felt the impact of the ball smacking into her glove. She squeezed making sure it didn’t fall out
and then raised it above her head in a triumphant smile. Winking back at the now sheepish looking
detective, she rifled the ball to first base and held up her pinky and index
fingers indicating two outs, all the while blowing a huge pink bubble. The third out came quickly when the next
batter popped it up into center field.
It was patrol’s turn to hit and as Jill made her way to the on
deck circle, she noticed that Gleason was catching. “Oh, great,” she muttered to herself.
When it was her turn to bat, she stepped up to the plate. “Nice catch, by the way.” She heard the smirk
in his voice from behind the plate. “But
you’re going to be the third out.” He
said with confidence.
“You think so?” she
asked around an equally confident grin.
They both settled into their positions to wait for the first pitch. It was a high, loping pitch and Jill jumped
on it, sending it over the shortstop’s head.
She smiled as she dropped the bat and hustled to first base, safe by a
mile.
Taking off her batting gloves, she looked over to the catcher
just in time to see him wink at her again.
What is it with this guy? She gave him a smirk of her own.
“You’re barkin’ up the wrong tree, detective.” Gleason heard as he squatted down behind the
plate. He looked up to the slightly
overweight older man who had just stepped into the batter’s box.
“Oh?” Ventured Gleason as he caught the first pitch for a
ball. He winged it back to the pitcher.
“She’s a dyke.” The man
said bluntly as he settled back into his stance.
“Damn.” The catcher
said plaintively. “She’s really
hot.”
“Well, it makes my stomach turn.” Said the older man right before he lunged at
a low pitch popping it up. It was easily
caught and he cursed as he went back to the dugout.
“Wow, what an asshole.”
Murmured Gleason. He was bummed
he wouldn’t get a chance to ask the redhead out, but he didn’t begrudge her for
her preference of the fairer sex.
The older man’s pop up was the third out so Jill began jogging
back to the dugout. “Nice pop up,
Russell.” Jill said teasingly as she
patted him on the shoulder.
Coupled with his foul mood at being the third out, his envy
for Jill’s playing ability and an overall dislike of what she was, he spat out,
“Well not all of us are big fucking dyke softball superstars like you.”
Jill pulled up, shocked at not only the words but the
vehemence of his tone. She had no idea
the older sergeant felt that way about her.
She stared at him in disbelief.
Pete had heard the exchange and was quicker to act. He got up in Russell’s face ready to knock
the bigot right out of him. It angered
Russell further. “It’s unnatural what
she is. Fucking sick,” he sneered.
On the other side of the fenced dugout, Lan and Tina heard the
exchange as well. Both women sat with
their mouths open slightly, not believing the ugly turn of events.
The patrol team began shuffling around, torn between picking
up their gloves or watching what was going to happen next. It was enough time for Jill to regain her
wits and her voice and she stepped in between her fuming friend and the
indignant older man. “Hey, no brawling,
boys.” Jill said, trying to diffuse the
situation. They stepped back but still
looked at each other with anger.
To Pete, she said, “Thanks for sticking up for me, but he just
isn’t worth it.” Then she turned to
Russell and said calmly, “I don’t give a
shit what you think about me. I’m not
ashamed of who or what I am.” She stared at him for another second and then
added. “If you think you’ve
accomplished anything here by outing me, all you’ve done is shown what a
homophobic bigot you are.”
After another still moment in which Russell just looked at her
vacantly, Jill turned away from him. She
took a calming breath and looked out the dugout fence, shaken at having been
outed so vehemently. She didn’t hide the
fact she was gay to co-workers, but she didn’t advertise. She preferred to come out privately to people
she trusted.
She looked out at the stands and saw Lan and Tina looking at
her. She saw a bit of shock on Tina’s
face, but it was not accompanied by disgust as far as she could tell. She then looked at Lan. Lan had a proud smile. Jill returned the smile with a small one of
her own. It grew wider as she watched
Lan mouth, ‘well done’.
“You okay?” Asked Pete
as he came up behind her.
“Yeah.” She said with
growing confidence. Fuck ‘em if they can’t accept who I am, she thought. Then she noticed that no one had left the
dugout yet, except for Russell. They all
had small, benevolent smiles on their faces.
Smiles that to Jill said, I accept
you. This changes nothing. Russell is the exception, not the rule.
“We gonna play or what?”
Called the young detective from the other team. The patrol team looked to Jill.
“Yeah, we’re coming!”
She called and grabbed her glove and headed out to take her spot at
second base.
The rest of the game continued on uneventfully, well if you
could call Jill’s two doubles and Pete’s grand slam uneventful. True to Pete’s
prophetic words, patrol did put the hurt on vice. They ended up winning 10-2.
To celebrate both teams piled into Stockard’s Pizza, a
frequent hangout for local softball leagues.
Pete took the initiative this time and invited Tina, Lan and the kids to
go with them. Both John and Katy eagerly
accepted the invitation for all of them.
“Could you teach me to hit like that?” John asked Pete as he squirmed onto the
already crowded bench seat next to him.
“You bet.” Pete said
around a smile as his eyes met Tina’s across the boy’s dark head. She smiled back, daring to hope that Pete
really meant it.
Just watching him interact with her son gave her great
pause. John was getting to the age where
he really needed a positive male role model in his life. But she didn’t want to impose on the officer.
“Tell you what, how about we ask your mom if we could go out
next weekend to the batting cages? I was
planning on going anyway. I could give
you some pointers.”
Before John could begin his pleading, Tina nodded as she
swallowed a bite of her pizza. “That
would be fine. Pete, that’s very sweet
of you.” She said, her eyes shining a
bit. She felt as if the man read her
earlier thoughts. Pete’s thoughtful,
happy smile made her think that perhaps he did.
The moment was feverishly interrupted as John threw his arms around
his mom’s neck and thanked her and then promptly asked for some quarters for
the video games that occupied a whole wall of the pizza place.
The two were sitting side by side again, laughing at the
whirlwind that was her son.
“Pete, that’s a really nice thing you did. Since his step-father…” Tina faltered. She wasn’t ready to tell her dark secrets to
a man she was quickly coming to admire and like a great deal. She knew sometime in the future she’d be
telling all to this man, but not today.
Sensing her discomfort, he wanted to put her at ease. “I wanted to Tina. He’s a pretty cool kid.” He said simply.
He knew there was a story behind why their dad, and
apparently, stepfather too, weren’t in the picture. He also knew Tina wasn’t ready to tell
it. He hoped to be around long enough to
where she’d trust him with it, and then even longer still. He smiled to himself as he realized just how
quickly and completely this family had taken hold of his heart.
Pete had always been one to fall easily, but this time, he
sensed, was different. He knew though
he’d have to take things pretty slow for both the kids and Tina’s sake. It didn’t take a rocket scientist to realize
the family had already been through a lot.
“Listen, I do have the whole next weekend off. I was wondering if maybe you’d like to go
out? Dinner or movie or something?” Pete ventured, hoping he wasn’t being too forward.
“Oh. Um, sure, I’d like
that.” Tina said in slight
surprise. She’d hoped down the line
perhaps they could maybe start seeing each other. But now was good too. She really liked the officer.
“Cool.” He said with a
crooked grin.
“So, softball stud.”
Lan said in way of greeting as she sat down across from Jill who was
eating a well-drenched salad with gusto.
Her baseball hat was now on backwards holding in place her loosely
pulled back hair.
“Yeah, that’s me.” Jill
said around a mouthful of lettuce and Italian dressing, her eyes smiling for
her.
Lan regarded her for a moment, using the brief seconds the
sergeant spent looking down at her salad, trying to spear a cherry tomato.
She had the classic features of a redhead, light skin and a
healthy smattering of freckles, most of them falling between her small nose and
cheeks. It gave her the appearance of
being much younger than her 35 years.
Her cobalt eyes seemed to add to the myth too, shining with mirth when
she was happy or being silly. They would
turn just a shade darker when she turned serious or upset. Like today at the softball field.
Lan’s heart had gone out to her friend. She knew Jill was strong and indeed she’d
dealt with the situation with what seemed to be to Lan, her regular aplomb, but
still it had to hurt for a colleague to say those things in front of her peers.
“What? I have something on my face?” Jill asked as she began wiping at her chin.
“No.” Lan said
absently, just becoming aware she was staring.
“You okay? I mean from today and
all?” Lan asked as Jill slowly lowered
her napkin and regarded her.
“Yeah. Just caught me
by surprise is all. I know there are
plenty of guys on the force with that attitude.
I’m usually lucky enough that they keep it to themselves, though.”
“Well, you handled it brilliantly.” Lan said, a little shyly.
“You think so?” Jill
said, genuinely thrilled that Lan thought that.
She’d been so embarrassed by the whole thing. She realized most of that embarrassment
stemmed from the fact that Lan had heard it all.
“I do think so.” Lan
said, deepening her voice as she gave Jill a very warm smile.
On the way to take Tina and the kids home, Lan broached the
subject for the first time since overhearing Pete and Tina’s conversation at
the pizza place.
“So you have a date, then.”
Lan stated as she looked over at Tina.
She said it low enough that the kids in the back playing ‘slug bug’
couldn’t hear.
“It is. I guess.” A sideways look from Lan prompted Tina to put
her hands in surrender. “Yes, it’s a
date.” She said in a loud whisper.
A smile spread across Lan’s face as she slipped on her blinker
to turn right. “I’m glad. I knew you two hit it off immediately.” Lan said, extremely pleased with herself.
A deep sigh from Tina gave her thoughts away. Lan wanted to respond but knew she couldn’t
do the conversation justice with the kids in the car. She settled for an understanding smile at
Tina and a squeeze of her forearm.
“So, you wanna babysit?”
Tina asked a little more loudly.
“Lan, you gonna babysit us?”
John piped up. “When?” He asked as he leaned up as far as his
seatbelt would let him.
“We’ll talk about it when we get home, honey.” Tina said as she twisted around to look at
her kids. She noted that Katy had a
rather troubled look on her face.
They pulled up to the house and Katy was out of the car and up
the drive in a flash.
“What’s wrong with Katy?”
John asked as he slid out of the seat towards the open door.
“Not sure.” Tina said a
bit worriedly. She turned and looked at
Lan through the passenger window as she shut the door to the Land Cruiser
firmly. She gave Lan a plaintive
look.
“I’m sure she’ll be okay.”
Lan said reassuringly. She didn’t
really know what was going on in the young teenager’s mind, but she knew Katy
to be a reasonable, mature young woman.
Whatever was bothering her, her and her mom would be able to sort it
out.
Tina gave her small smile.
“I guess I better go see what’s bugging her.” Tina said with attempted casualness.
“Call if you need.” Lan
said and meant it.
“I will.” Tina said as
she turned to go into the house.
It had turned out that Katy had some misgivings about her mom
dating again. Being the bright,
observant girl she was, she had picked up on what Lan and her mom were talking
about. It had just taken her by
surprise. She liked Pete. She just didn’t want her mom to be hurt
again.
After a long talk with her kids, Tina explained that she would
take things one day at a time with Pete and that no major decision would be
made without their input from now on.
Katy seemed satisfied with that and John was just plain overjoyed at the
prospect of seeing Pete more often now.
~~~~
“Lieutenant, you wanted to see me?” Asked Jill as she knocked on the doorframe to
Lt. Vick’s office.
“Come on in, Cooper.”
He said with his usual gruff friendliness. She came in and took the seat in front of his
desk.
“I heard what Russell said to you during the softball
game.” He said without preamble.
Jill sighed. She was
only slightly surprised it got around to him.
Then she turned a little angry.
If he’d gotten wind of it, it was all over the precinct. Great.
“Yeah, well, it’s all sorted.”
She said, not really wishing to bring it up again.
“So, he apologized?”
Lt. Vick asked pointedly, leaning towards her putting his elbows on his
desk.
“It was no big deal, Lieutenant. I’ll stay out of his way, I’m sure he’ll stay
out of mine.”
“Not acceptable, Cooper.
His actions need to be dealt with.”
The lieutenant said seriously.
Jill could see this going nowhere good.
As far as she was concerned the matter was over.
“Sir, please, it could make matters worse. I’d rather not pursue this. Besides, he was the one who left the field
with egg on his face, not me.”
“Yeah?” Vick said,
surprised at his sergeant’s candor. He’d
heard that along with what Russell had said that pretty much all the players
there had Cooper’s back. Perhaps it
would be best to let it blow over.
“Yeah.” Jill said,
chuckling to herself a bit as she saw an almost imperceptible smile cross the
lieutenant’s face.
“Alright, Cooper.
However, he so much as looks at you funny, or if anyone tries to take
this further, you come to me. That’s an
order, got it?” He said seriously as he
rose from his desk.
“I got it sir.
Thanks.” Jill said and turned to
go, a small smile on her face. She had
no doubt that the lieutenant would have raked Russell over the coals if Jill
had asked and it made her feel good to be not only respected, but cared for by
the man she’d grown to see as a mentor as well as superior.
Chapter 12
Lan woke with a sudden start. Her eyes shot open and she winced at the
fresh memory of the dream. It was her
mother, kneeling beside her bed, her face contorted in sorrow, palms raised in
some sort of desperate appeal. It seemed
she was trying to say something to Lan, but there was only the motion of her
lips, no sound. The pain her mother
seemed to be experiencing was palpable.
Lan still felt it heavy on her. “Fuck.”
She groaned out, hands coming up to rub her eyes.
She fought the temptation to look over at the
floor next to her bed. The dream had
seemed so real. She finally sat up, the
last vestiges of the dream sliding away with the onset of consciousness. Her dogs began to gather themselves in her
lap, innately aware of her distress.
She hadn’t thought about much less dreamt about
her mother for a long time. Why now?
She thought to herself as she swung her legs over the edge of the
bed. Lan wasn’t one to dwell too heavily
on dreams or their meanings, but this one was a bit disturbing. If she cared enough to give it more thought. Fact was, she didn’t. Her mother had been out of her life for many
years now and Lan rarely felt the loss anymore.
Not willing to spare anymore of her valuable time
off on analyzing the dream, Lan rose and ambled into the bathroom. She had a few things to take care of today
and wanted to make sure they all got done.
She also hoped to see Jill since she knew the sergeant wasn’t scheduled
to work until tonight.
After witnessing the incident at the softball
field a few weeks ago, her admiration for Jill had grown tenfold. When Jill came out to her, Lan hadn’t really
considered what it might be like for someone in her field of work to not only
be gay, but to be open and not apologize for it.
Jill’s response to the homophobic officer offered
Lan a small glimpse into the mind and heart of the brave, self-assured
sergeant. How she wished she had a
friend like Jill when she was younger.
~~~~
“You out on patrol tonight?”
Pete asked as he joined Jill in the hallway on the way to the squad
room.
“Yep. Sam’s partner’s
wife should be giving birth any minute so I’m filling in for him.” Jill said, nodding to Sam as she spotted
him. He grinned and automatically threw
her the keys.
“Oh no, Officer Cortez, you’re chauffeuring me around
tonight.” Jill informed him, tossing the
keys back to him with a smirk.
“Well, be careful out there.”
Pete said in a deep voice, reciting a favorite line from an old cop
show.
“Will do.” Jill replied
in the same tone. “Let’s go keep the
streets safe, Sam.” She aimed at her
partner for the shift, slapping him on the back good-naturedly.
They had been out on patrol for about 2 hours and so far the
night had been pretty uneventful, with only one, albeit, interesting traffic
stop. It was just the way Jill preferred
it.
Her attention turned to earlier that day when she had gotten
an unexpected phone call from Lan, asking her out to lunch. They’d gone to a little sandwich shop not too
far from Lan’s place.
As she sat opposite Lan,
listening to her recount a funny story about John and Katy, she thought about
how her feelings for Lan had evolved. In
the two months they’d known each other, Jill had gone from fledgling interest
to a kind of docile jealousy when she’d been dating Pete, to an authentic
desire to get to know this woman better.
She also realized her affection for the bar manager had increased the
more she spent time with her. Her mind
came back fully to listen to Lan’s story and an uncontrollable smile spread
across her lips as she looked at Lan intently.
“What?” She heard Lan say, a warm smile caressing her
face. Lan had stopped her story when she
sensed Jill had lost the plot. It didn’t
bother her, though. How could it when
she was on the receiving end of such a smile?
“Do you want children? I mean, you know, in the future?” Jill asked awkwardly. Her embarrassment at the blurting out of the
question was instantly eclipsed by the sudden need to know the answer.
Lan looked at her
thoughtfully, pleasantly puzzled by the not so much incongruous as surprising
question.
“When I’m around those two, I
do think about it.” Lan said. Then she looked down at her half eaten club
sandwich. “But I can’t imagine doing it
alone, you know?” She paused for Jill’s
reaction, getting a nod. “How about
you?” Lan tossed back as she picked up
her sandwich.
“I guess same as you. I haven’t really been around kids all that
much, but the idea of being responsible for a child, teaching them what I know,
it’s appealing. But doing it alone? I don’t think it would be very fair to the
kid.” Jill reasoned.
“Yeah.” Lan replied, sandwich forgotten. She looked
at Jill with an unreadable expression.
Jill wanted so much to ask what she was thinking, but held back, an
innate feeling telling her now was not the time.
“You know, if that guy hadn’t been such an ass, we wouldn’t
have given him a citation.” Sam voiced,
breaking Jill out of her thoughts. He was referring to their one traffic stop,
a failure to stop for a pedestrian.
“No shit. He was
entertaining, though.” Jill replied,
chuckling at the guy’s ineffectual attempt at flirting his way out of a
ticket. When he realized he was getting
nowhere with her, he started to name all the police officers he knew and how
they would never give a ticket for this kind of ‘ticky-tack’ stuff.
“Man, give me that kind of stop any day.” Sam said as he shifted slightly in his seat.
Jill grunted affirmatively.
She knew that routine traffic stops could be anything but routine,
especially in the area their division patrolled.
Suddenly the radio crackled to life. “We have a 415 at 1243 Watson. Units in the area, please respond.”
Jill picked up the mic, “3 Adam 20, our ETA is 3
minutes.” Jill also heard another unit
respond that was within 6 minutes of the call.
She let them know if they needed the second unit, she’d call them in.
“Hmm, let me guess, boyfriend beating the shit out of his
pregnant girlfriend?” Sam speculated,
knowing more often than not these disturbance calls were almost always domestic abuse calls.
When they rolled up on the scene, it was eerily quiet. Jill double-checked the address she’d
scribbled down before proceeding to the front door of the rundown
bungalow. Sam flanked the other side of
the door as Jill knocked loudly. “Police
officers, please open the door.” Jill
paused briefly to listen for any sound coming from the house. She heard heavy footsteps making the floor
creak and then the door was pulled open roughly.
“What the fuck do you want?”
Rasped a mountain of a man, predictably wearing a dirty white t-shirt
and ill-fitting jeans. He was barefoot
and Jill could smell the stench of alcohol on his breath.
“We’re responding to a disturbance call and wanted to make
sure everything was alright. Are you
alone, sir?” Jill asked with a well-born
mix of professionalism and concern.
“Most times, I wished to hell I was.” Deadpanned the man with a deep sigh that told
of years of apathy, alcohol and capitulation.
Jill almost laughed, but knew it could make the situation, which was
still a mystery, go south real quick.
“Are you currently
alone in the house?” Sam tried. The two took turns trying to look into the
house, but had no luck looking around the body that filled the doorway
completely.
“No, the missus is in the bedroom sleeping it off. She was in a rant about James pissin’ his
bed.” He said as if it happened often.
After getting the man’s name and the name of his wife, Jill
made a move towards the door, “Mind if we come in and take a look around?” The
man gave a gesture of ‘be my guest’ as he moved out of the doorframe and into
the house.
“Sorry, the maid went back to Mexico.” He announced acerbically as he kicked some
old newspapers from the middle of the entrance.
The house smelled of stale fast-food grease, sweat and dust. The furniture was worn, especially the faded
floral print couch that had two deep dents, one large one smaller, in the
cushions, obviously from many years and many hours of sitting.
“Where can I find James?”
Jill asked as she looked around the front room thoroughly, taking in
details of the front room: Old console
television across from the couch, a slanted bookshelf with a few dusty romance
novels and well worn 1000 piece puzzle boxes under the front window, battered
coffee table with more newspapers and some fast-food wrappers.
“He’s in his room, door on the right,” The man gestured down
the hall.
“Thanks,” She said as she knocked lightly and then opened the
door. The room was dark and smelled
faintly of urine and sweaty tennis shoes.
“James?” Jill called out as she
searched for a light switch, finding none.
She opened the door wider to let in more light and told Sam to go check
on the mother.
“James?” She tried
again a little louder. “I’m Officer
Cooper, can I speak with you a minute?”
The column of light let in by the hall fell across a young boy, no more
than eight, Jill imagined, with green eyes as big as saucers. She immediately bent down near the bed so she
wasn’t towering over him. She assured
the boy in a soft voice, “I’m just checking in on you. There were some loud noises and someone
called us.”
The boy sat up and switched on a bedside lamp. Now illuminated, Jill could see that the boy
had been crying, his eyes puffy and red.
She began to visually inspect his face and neck for any signs of
bruising as she asked, “Can you tell me what happened tonight?”
The boy sniffed and rubbed his hand across his nose and Jill
wished she’d had a tissue for him. She
took a quick glance around the room. It
was sparse, with a battered dresser missing most of its knobs and a couple of
cardboard boxes with some toys in them.
“I peed my bed and mom got real mad.” He mumbled.
Jill looked down at his thin arms and hands, laying limply on his
sweatpant covered thighs. All she wanted
to do was hug this kid.
“Did she hurt you?”
Jill asked, knowing that if he said yes, CPS would be called. He sat for a minute and after a very adult
sounding, weary sigh he shook his head no.
“You sure? How about your
dad?” Again, he shook his head no. “Do they ever hit you or hurt you,
James?” She asked softly.
“No, my mom, she just yells a lot. I do a lot of things wrong.” He said quietly. It broke Jill’s heart. It made her angry. Angry at the powerlessness she felt to help
this boy’s lot in life. It wasn’t his
fault he was born into this situation.
She also knew that for every James there were many other kids who were
worse off. She looked at the boy, seeing
the top of his head as he was looking down at his lap. She couldn’t imagine how scared and confused
this boy must feel.
With no physical injuries she could see and with the boy’s
answer, and no obvious signs of physical neglect, she knew there was no grounds
to make any arrests. She had the means
to stop him from being bruised and broken on the outside, but not the
inside. The thought of having to leave
him here made her sick. She pulled
herself together and affectionately brushed the boy’s hair back.
“Listen to me, James.
Do you know how to use the phone?”
He nodded, his face brightening a bit.
“Excellent. I’m going to give you
my card,” she said taking one out of her breast pocket. “If you ever need someone to talk to, or if
someone hurts you, you call this number here,” she continued, pointing to her
number. “Ask for Sergeant Cooper.” He repeated her name and nodded again, this
time with a full smile on his face. It
transformed his features. What a handsome boy, she thought.
Before she stood, she put her hand out in front of him. He reached out and gave her a most gentlemanly
handshake. “You know what James, I think
you are a really cool kid.” She chuckled
a bit at his enormous grin and ruffled his hair, letting her hand linger on the
top of his head for a moment. She then
stood and walked out the door, barely in control of her emotions.
She met Sam out in the hallway, snapping back into
professional mode. “The wife is passed
out in the room,” he said pointing to the back of the hallway with his
thumb. “The dad said she didn’t lay a
hand on the boy, just lots of yelling.”
“Yeah, that’s pretty much what the boy said too.” Both shook their head, knowing they were
thinking the same thing. They left the
dad with some anger management and AA class information, hoping, but knowing
the information would probably not be used.
They climbed into their squad car and hoped to finish out the rest of
their shift in relative peace.
Jill slammed back into her car seat outside of the bar,
inordinately disappointed. Unable to shake the sadness she felt for the boy
that was at the disturbance call, she could only think of one person she wanted
to talk to about it. It was only after
she’d pulled up to In the Drink and started to get out of her car that she
remembered Lan was not working this night.
With a deep sigh, she pulled her seatbelt over her chest,
started her car and drove off, feeling as alone and as sad as she’d felt in a
very long time.
Chapter 13
Jill awoke feeling only slightly better than she had last
night. She could count on one hand the
times a call had affected her that much.
Taking a deep breath, she felt compelled to figure out why she reacted
the way she did. On calls like that, an
officer’s only focus should be on the facts of the situation, knowing where
they needed to step in, and to keep people from harming each other, and if they
did harm each other, arrest them. But that was just it, thought Jill. I
couldn’t stop that boy’s parents from harming him emotionally and it completely
got to me. Sometimes, Jill really
hated what she had to deal with on the job.
On the other hand, she couldn’t picture herself doing anything else.
She also pondered her intense need to talk to Lan last
night. She could reason that before she
realized Lan wasn’t working, she’d be the only one up at that hour to talk
to. But Rachel was her best friend,
surely she would have been more than willing to take a call from her if she was
distraught, no matter what time of night.
But she hadn’t even thought to call Rachel. It was only Lan that was on her mind.
Putting the topic out of her mind for now as she had no ready
answers, she threw back the covers and made her way into the bathroom.
~~~~
“So how are things with you and Pete?” Lan asked from her seat at the kitchen
counter. She had come over to Tina’s to
pick up the kids so they could go to the park and wear out the dogs. Lan watched Tina’s face light up at the
question. It was answer enough, but she
leaned forward, awaiting details as she watched her put up the last of the
plates from the dishwasher.
“So far, so good. We
are taking things slow. Real slow.” She said, checking the hallway absently for
her kids. “I’m so scared still,
Lan. My track record with men is so
shitty.” She sighed deeply and came to
stand across from Lan, snagging a sip of Lan’s too-sweet tea. She grimaced a bit and slid it back to
her. It made Lan chuckle. She looked at Tina thoughtfully.
“You know Pete is different.”
Lan waited for Tina to agree. She
did. “How’s he doing with the
kids?” Lan asked, herself checking the
hallway to make sure the kids were not within listening distance.
“He’s real good with them.
Not too eager to please them.
He’s taking his time to get to know them.” She paused briefly, continuing in a lower
voice. “I was mostly worried about how
Katy would react, after the incident in the car, you know. But she’s really come around. She’s fascinated with his job, and asks lots
of questions about procedures and stuff.
She’s so inquisitive.” Tina
finished with a mix of amusement and pride.
Lan was about to comment, but heard the kids come bounding out
of their rooms, smiling and flushed.
“Are your rooms clean? And I
don’t mean, ‘stuffed things in weird places to get them out of the way’ clean,
either.” Tina said seriously.
“I can only speak for myself,” Katy said, sliding her eyes to
her brother, “but my room is very clean.”
John gave her a dirty look and said his was just as clean if not
cleaner. Tina sauntered into their rooms
and made a show of inspecting them. With
some quick peeks under beds and closets she deemed the kids ready to leave the
house.
As they started to follow Lan out the door, Katy held back and
spoke quickly and quietly to her mom, “You didn’t spill the beans did
you?” Tina scowled at her daughter
incredulously.
“Whom do I look like, your brother? Just remember we need her here next Saturday
at 2 p.m.” Tina said, leaving it up to
her daughter to get Lan to their house under false pretenses, for they and some
of Lan’s friends were planning a surprise birthday party for her.
“Hey Lan, I was wondering if you could come over to our house
next Saturday, to help me with a… a... report I’m doing for school.” Katy finished lamely. Now she had to come up real quick with what
the report was supposed to be about. And
why her mom couldn’t help her.
Luckily, she’d already told John to just keep quiet while she
laid out her ruse today. He was keeping
quiet all right, sitting across from Lan and Katy at a picnic table. But his ridiculously bright smile could give
it away and Katy gave him a stern look when Lan turned her attention to the
dogs for a moment before answering.
“Um, well I did have plans for that afternoon.” Said Lan slowly. Katy instantly looked mortified; John did too
for good measure. Misinterpreting Katy’s
distress, Lan quickly said she could change her plans. Obviously the kid really needed her. Why, she wasn’t sure, but... “I’ll just call my friend Jill and
reschedule.” Lan was a bit bummed at the
prospect, though. Jill had called her
last week, surprising her by not only remembering her birthday, but asking her
out to lunch to celebrate it. She hadn’t
seen Jill for a couple of weeks and was looking forward to lunch with her.
“Oh, well. I hate to
have you cancel your plans. What time
were you supposed to have lunch with her?” Katy asked.
Perhaps this could still work out.
“I’m meeting her at one o’clock. I could meet you before, maybe?” Lan asked hopefully.
“No!” Katy said a bit
too loudly. This was getting too
complicated. She was sure she was going
to blow it. Lan looked at her
quizzically and was just about to say something when John piped up.
“Maybe you guys could come over afterward. Katy could use Jill’s help too.” John offered looking pointedly at his
sister. “You know Katy, you could
interview Jill too for your ‘Women in Non-Traditional Jobs’ report.” John finished, grinning brilliantly. He’d remembered the female police officer
guest speaker that came to his school last month for just that very topic
they’d been discussing in class.
Katy looked at him as if he’d just jumped into a burning
building to save dozens of kittens.
“That’s right! She’d be
perfect! Do you think you two could come
over?” Katy asked, almost hysterical
with relief.
“I could see if she has some time afterward. I don’t know if she has to work that
night…” Lan left off as she saw Hook
starting to saunter off towards the trashcan.
When Lan dropped them off at home, Katy gave John a huge bear
hug and kissed his cheek. “You are
brilliant little brother!” She
exclaimed, looking at him with newfound appreciation. “How did you ever think of that topic?”
“Like you said, Katy, I’m just brilliant.” He said smugly as he turned and headed to the
kitchen, feeling 10 feet tall. Katy
followed him with a smirk.
“Hey mom, we forgot to invite Lan’s friend Jill to the
party. She and Lan actually had plans to
have lunch the time of the party.” Katy
reported as she approached the kitchen counter and plumped down in the same
stool Lan was in an hour before. She
then told her what had happened at the park, letting John tell about his role
in the subterfuge.
“Well, I’ll tell Pete to make sure Jill gets her here as close
to two o’clock as possible.” Tina
reasoned, kicking herself for forgetting to invite someone who had become
important to Lan.
Pete had gotten to Jill the Friday before she was to take Lan
out for her birthday, so she was privy to the plan. So, she had just planned on asking Lan if
they could push back their lunch date to two and just driving straight over to
Tina’s. The only thing was why would she
go over to Tina’s? Lan had unwittingly
solved that problem by asking if they could stop by Tina’s to help Katy with a
report. No doubt it was part of the plan
to get Lan there, so she suggested doing that first and then going to an early
dinner instead.
“So, why did you become a police officer?” Lan asked as they made their way to
Tina’s. Lan couldn’t believe she hadn’t
asked this question before. Katy’s
report had gotten her to thinking about Jill’s choice in profession.
“Well, it wasn’t what was expected of me.” She said, thinking of their friend Pete, a
fourth-generation cop. “My mom wanted me
to become a physical therapist.” She
paused to get Lan’s reaction, which was just a little smirk. She wanted to add how she was good with her
hands, but thought better of it.
Instead, she recalled the moment she had decided to become an officer.
“One day during my freshman year in college, I was hanging out
in my dorm room. I heard someone yell,
“Hey, that’s mine!” and then I heard the sound of someone running down the
hallway. I poked my head out just to see
this guy in dark pants and hooded sweatshirt head out the door. He’d stolen a wallet and Walkman from one of
the rooms. I didn’t even think; I just
started running after him. I tackled him
midway through the quad and basically sat on him until campus police showed
up. Turns out he had been responsible
for a whole slew of robberies on campus.”
“So you were the big hero.”
Lan said with a teasing, albeit warm tone.
Jill just chuckled, “A bit stupid, more like it. I had no idea if the guy was armed or
anything. But it did excite the hell out
of me. I remember thinking to myself, ‘I
could do this for a living.’ So I
switched to criminology the next semester.”
“What has been your most memorable call, you know, so
far?” Lan asked, feeling proud that she
was getting to know the terminology.
The call at the young boy’s house a few weeks ago jumped into
Jill’s thoughts and she reflected again on how close she’d come to making a
fool of herself had she actually found Lan in the state she was in. It wasn’t that she was afraid to show emotion
in front of Lan. It was just the amount
and intensity she was feeling that night.
She’d scared herself with it. She
couldn’t image how Lan would have felt seeing her like that.
“Well, that would have to be my first call in which I was negotiator.
It was a man, barricaded alone in a seedy hotel downtown. Seems he’d been threatening other tenets and
going on about his big gun collection he had with him. I was scared shitless, but he was pretty
cooperative right off the bat. He took
the throw phone in no problem, I established immediate contact with him and he
began just unloading his entire life story.
After awhile I just thought, ‘Man, I’m pretty good at this negotiating
thing. I must really have what it
takes!’” Jill chuckled at the
memory.
“Anyway, he began making some pretty innocuous demands: pizza, change of clothes, silly stuff. I figured he was just a lonely, poor soul who
needed some attention. So I started the
textbook talk that would lead him to give himself up. I barely started my spiel when he just said
he was coming out. Seconds later, he
appears at the door hands raised with this weird smirk on his face.” Jill paused to see if Lan was following. She was, with a curiously amused expression
on her face.
“Well?” Lan said.
“Turns out he was a screenwriter. He was having trouble writing a hostage scene
and wanted to see what it was like to barricade himself.” Jill finished, immediately looking over to
Lan for her expression, which was expectedly disbelieving.
“You’re kidding.” She
gasped incredulously.
“Wish I was. I did get
a bit of satisfaction out of letting him know he’d be facing real criminal charges, though. Like for filing a false police report,
obstructing justice…”
“How pissed were you!”
Lan spouted rhetorically.
“I know. Took me awhile
to really take on another negotiation confidently. Well, to be the lead anyway. Here I thought I was hot shit and I’d been
played.”
“But you are aren’t you?”
Lan asked, a hint of pride in her voice.
“What, hot shit?” Jill
asked around an amused chuckle. Lan
smiled and recalled the time Pete came to Tina’s for a barbeque and was singing
his friend and co-worker’s praises.
“Well, Pete seems to think you’re one of the best.” Lan said, almost challenging Jill to denounce
her well-earned reputation. In response
Jill just shrugged.
“I do what I need to do to get the job done. Make sure it all ends well.” She said quietly.
Sensing that Jill wanted to move on to another topic, Lan had
started discussing her latest photography class, which to Lan’s pleasure,
interested Jill very much.
“Why don’t you head up to the door, I’ve got to make a quick
phone call and I’ll be right there.”
Said Jill as she put the car in park in front of Tina’s house. Lan looked at her quizzically but nodded,
saying she’d see her in a minute.
About half a minute later, Jill heard the excited shouts as
she made her way up the sidewalk with a card and gift she’d grabbed quickly
from the back of her car. She looked up
to see Lan looking back at her from the wide-open door, mouthing “you little shit” and then gracing her
with a giant grin. Jill just chuckled
and followed her friend into the house and into the happy chaos that was a true
surprise birthday party.
John and Katy wasted no time in regaling everyone with the
story of planning the surprise party. It
was truly heartwarming to see Lan react to such an act of care and
consideration on her part. Along with
herself, Tina and the kids, Pete was there, the two bar owners Chris and Bart
were there and also Joyce, the seasoned waitress that Lan always talked so
fondly of.
After greetings and reintroductions were made for Jill’s
benefit, they all made their way outside and chatted while Pete manned the
barbeque. It wasn’t long before Lan and
Jill were talked into multiple games of cutthroat croquet while everyone else
looked on, laughing at the two women as much as the two kids in their attempt
to knock each other out of the game.
“Oh, please… don’t wack my ball again. You sent it into the flowerbed last game,”
whined Lan as she saw Jill lining up her mallet. Jill appeared to ignore her pleas as she
squinted, cocked back and… “It is my
birthday.” Lan tried again, this time
with a full-on pout and stomp for
good measure.
Jill froze mid-swing at that.
She couldn’t help but look up at her friend, completely enchanted by
this playful side of Lan. She stepped
back from her ball and leaned on her mallet, appearing to ponder Lan’s plea in
all seriousness. “Hmmm. It is. I can’t let you get off scot-free
though.” She said at last, looking over
to the peanut gallery that was Katy and John.
They were nodding vigorously.
Birthday or not, Lan was in the lead, and that didn’t sit well with the
two little uber-competitors.
Lan stood there, disbelief on her face. She wasn’t going to let on how much she was
enjoying the game and the banter between them.
“Okay, what do I have to do to have you not knock my ball into the next
yard?” Lan asked, arms crossed now,
mallet propped up against her thigh.
Just as Jill was about to reply, she felt her phone
vibrate. “Hold that thought,” she said
as she held up a finger and flipped open her phone. She groaned and looked toward the barbeque to
see that Pete had opened his phone too and was looking at it with a bit of
disappointment. They looked at each
other then, confirming that they were both being called in. Gone instantly were the looks of
disappointment and in their places, grim set features.
“What is it?” Lan
asked, going over to her friend.
“Crisis team is mobilizing.”
She said matter-of-factly. “Pete
and I have to go.” She said with a trace
of regret as she looked into Lan’s eyes.
Seeing the concern there, she tried to lighten the mood, “I guess you’ll
have to wait for your present ‘cuz I want to be there when you open it.”
It caught Lan off-guard and made her smile. “Alright, fine. Just don’t make me wait too long.” She tried for indignant, but it was softened
by the awareness of the gravity of the situation her friend would be in soon.
“Wouldn’t dream of it.”
Jill said earnestly, a ghost of a smile gracing her lips. Their eyes locked fleetingly and something in
Lan tightened. “I gotta go now.” Jill
said quietly as she looked toward Pete who was pulling off his apron and
talking to Tina at the same time. She
impulsively tugged Lan into a tight hug and whispered, “Happy birthday.” The
hug was returned immediately and into Jill’s ear came, “be careful.” They pulled apart and Jill gave her a small
smile, nodded and headed towards the back door. Pete was asking which one
should call in as they went through the house, Jill mindful to grab her present
and card, guaranteeing another excuse to see her friend again in the near
future.
Without much conversation, they decided they’d ride together
and they both jumped into Pete’s truck after Jill grabbed her gear from her
car. She briefly worried about how Lan
would get home, but quickly remembered there were a number of people more than
happy to drive her home when the party was over. Then she remembered her hide-a-key and an
idea formed in her mind. Perhaps she
could have Lan drive her car home and she could be dropped off by Pete when
this was all done. It would be nice since both Pete and I live a lot closer to Lan than
Tina, she thought while waiting for dispatch to pick up. After she listened
to the details of the call, she recounted the call details to Pete as they sped
towards their destination.
Chapter 14
Lan was awakened by the phone at 2:13 a.m. and was instantly
panicked. It had taken her a long time
to drift off to sleep after coming home from the party in Jill’s car.
Lan hadn’t really thought about the dangers of Jill’s job, but
now that she had really gotten to know her and care for her, the phone ringing
sent instant fear into her heart. Get a grip, Lan, she’s probably just calling
to say she’s coming over.
Lan had received a call from Jill a few minutes after she’d
left the party offering her her car so she could drive it home after the
party. Jill had let her know too that
she didn’t even need to bother Lan when she was dropped off at her house because
she had her car keys with her. Lan had
been keen on the idea from the start, but only because she’d be seeing her
friend again that night. The realization
of how much that meant to her kind of took her by surprise. “I’d rather have
you wake me so that I know it was you taking your car, not some thief,” joked
Lan. “Besides, if you are dead on your
feet, I’d rather you crash at my place than try to drive home.” Lan added without forethought but knowing she
meant it.
After another minute of discussion Jill finally relented. She didn’t want to disturb her friend, but
she really didn’t want to pass up the opportunity to see the bar manager even
sooner than she’d hoped. And the fact
that Lan wanted to make sure she was safe warmed her heart more than she could
say.
“Hey Jill.” Lan said
into the phone, her voice rough with sleep.
“I’m sorry to wake you.
I just wanted you to know I’m on my way back and I’ll be picking up my
car in a second.”
“Oh. Okay.” Lan responded, a little disappointed Jill wasn’t
going to come in. She didn’t want to
sever the connection yet so she asked how the call went. She heard a long pause and a rustling sound
followed by muffled voices. Then she
heard a car door slam, in stereo. She
slid out of bed and peeked out of her bedroom blinds and saw Pete’s truck.
“Sorry about that, just saying goodnight to Pete.” She heard Jill say through the phone. She watched as Pete drove away leaving a
slump-shouldered sergeant on her sidewalk.
“We lost the suspect.”
Jill said quietly.
Not knowing if that meant he was on the loose or he died, Lan
wasn’t sure how to respond. She didn’t
want to sound ignorant, so she settled for a concerned, “Oh.”
“Yeah, we managed to get him to release his two sons and their
mother, before…. before he…” Jill
trailed off. Lan watched the woman from
her window, duffle bag hanging from her left hand, her phone pressed up to her
ear with her right. She looked utterly
lost. It didn’t take a genius now to
realize what had happened.
“Jill, why don’t you come inside. You look really tired.” Lan said softly. Jill looked up abruptly to Lan’s bedroom
window and just stood there. “I’ll meet
you at the front door,” was all Lan said as she clicked off the phone, grabbed
her robe and went to unlock the door.
Jill was only halfway to the door when Lan opened it. She came out to meet the woman, getting a
close look at the officer’s face. It
nearly broke her heart.
“I’m sorry I woke you.”
Jill said again quietly as she looked up into Lan’s face. Lan saw the pain and exhaustion etched
clearly on the usual mirth-filled face and just wanted to take it away.
“It’s okay, Jill, I wanted you to,” she said sincerely as she
took her duffle bag from her and led her into the house and into her spare
bedroom. The dogs, sensing the mood of
the women, kept their greetings to a minimum and obediently went back to Lan’s
room when she told them to.
“Can I get you anything?
Something to sleep in or… ?” Lan
didn’t know what else to say to the despondent sergeant. She didn’t know if she should press her about
what happened or offer her a hug… Never
seeing her friend like this, she was unsure of what to do to help her. She only knew that she desperately wanted to.
“No, I’m fine. I’ll
just sleep in my t-shirt I have in my bag.”
Jill’s eyes seem to lose a bit of their daze and she looked up at Lan
from where she’d plopped down on the bed.
“I have to finish my report first thing in the morning. You sure it’s okay that I crash here for a
little while before I have to go back to the station?”
Unable to help herself, Lan sat down beside her friend and put
her arm around her. “Of course. What time should I wake you?”
“Oh, I’ll set my watch alarm.”
Jill said, beginning to set it as she finished speaking. Knowing her friend needed all the sleep she
could get; Lan patted her friend on the back and got up from the bed.
“Let me know if you need anything. Kitchen is pretty stocked, so help yourself
to anything. You know where the bathroom
is, right?” Jill nodded. “Okay, well, goodnight.” Lan said as she turned towards the door. She really didn’t want to leave Jill, but
knew she needed sleep above all else. A
quiet voice stopped her.
“Lan, thanks for letting me stay here tonight. You’re a great friend.”
“Anytime, Jill.” She
said around a warm smile. “And you are
too.” That got a slightly confused look from Jill. “You are.”
Lan said with more conviction and Jill took it for the truth that Lan
saw.
“Thank you.” Jill
half-whispered watching the woman close the door before she curled up and tried
to sleep.
Lan didn’t know what time Jill left, but she knew she was gone
when she woke up around 7a.m. She looked
out and felt a lump in her throat when she saw her car gone. She made a mental note to call her friend
later and make sure she was okay.
She made her way downstairs to the kitchen, her faithful pups
following on her heels. They broke from
behind her and ran to the guest bedroom, looking for their late night
visitor. “She’s gone, guys,” she said, feeling
every bit as disappointed as her dogs.
She followed them into the bedroom and a little scrap of paper caught
her eye.
Dear Lan,
Thanks again for letting me crash at your place. I set your coffee
maker up, but I didn’t know when you’d wake up, so all you have to do is turn it on.
I still have your present, give
me a call.
Jill
~~~~
“I finished the report, Lieutenant.” Jill said as she stepped into her boss’
office. She felt a little better after
some sleep, but she couldn’t curb the replay of the scene after she had the
suspect, Paul Tinsdale, release his young sons and their mother.
After they had been taken safely into police custody, he had
opened the front window, shouted to his family, and put the .38 caliber gun to
his head. She couldn’t get the screams
from the boys out of her head.
“Hey, let this one go, Cooper.” Lieutenant Vick said, knowing exactly what
the young negotiator was thinking about.
He’d lost a few barricade suspects in his career and he knew just what
she was going through. But, to continue
this job, and continue it well, you had to put those instances in a place in
your mind and not visit them again. The
quicker you did that, the better. He
knew it had just happened, but he needed to make sure Jill got on with dealing
with this but not as something that was not her fault.
“Some people are beyond reaching, Jill. He obviously had this in his mind long before
we ever showed up.” He watched her nod,
but she refused to meet his eyes. “You
got him to release his family. They have
their lives thanks to you.” He reminded
her gently.
“Only to watch him end his.”
She stated tonelessly. Her head
was still at the scene and it was written all over her face, in her body
language.
The lieutenant made it a rule never to get too personal or
fatherly with his officers, but he could tell when some advice was warranted.
“Jill, I’m giving you today off. Spend it with someone or do something that
will take your mind away from work. There is more to life than agonizing over
things for which you have no control over.
You did everything you could, you did everything right. Those boys and their mother are alive because of you. The suspect, that was
simply out of your hands. No one could
have changed that. Believe it and move
on. If you need to talk to the shrink,
I’ll set it up.” He added with a little
more emotion than he intended.
Finally, Jill looked up and looked her boss in the eye. “I guess you know what you’re talking
about.” She said with a half-smile. “I’ll go home, work this out, work on putting
it behind me. You can count on me.” She
added, knowing he was concerned for her not only as an officer, but as a
person. She turned to leave and as she
reached the door, she thanked him for the ‘fatherly advice.’ He grinned and shook his head, shushing her
out the door with a wave of his hand.
Jill had decided on a run after coming home and getting a
little sleep. She’d only gotten a couple
of hours at Lan’s after she’d been able to settle her mind down and truth be
told, she was just physically drained, not to mention emotionally.
As the sound of her running shoes pounding the packed earth
faded into the background, she allowed herself some time to go over the call,
anything she could have done differently, comments or verbal cues she
missed. She came up empty. The exchange had by-and-large been
textbook. The suspect was reluctant to
talk at all at first, only shouting epithets about his girlfriend and her
fidelity, which led to questioning the paternity of his sons.
It took Jill a good twenty minutes to get him calmed down
enough to talk to her. He finally began
to open up as she asked probing questions, empathized with him and his lost
faith in his girlfriend. She listened
actively, explained his options clearly.
She only asked for the release of the hostages once there was an
indication of trust.
She saw now in retrospect that perhaps it had been too
easy. The data sheet didn’t show any past history of suicide attempts
or… Jill shook her head, almost
violently. I cannot beat myself up over
this. Lieutenant Vick was right- it was
out of my hands.
She increased her speed and continued running until she could
no longer think of anything except the pain and fatigue in her body.
When Jill finally returned home, she noticed she had a message
on her answering machine. The voice on
it, though sounding very concerned, caused her to smile for the first time in
24 hours.
~~~~~~~~~
Lan hated to go into work without hearing from Jill. She’d left her cell phone number (even though
she knew she already had it) and instructions to call her as soon as she
could.
As Lan waited for Jill’s call before going to work, she began
to contemplate the unexpected amount of concern for her friend.
Surely Pete’s job as one of the SWAT members was more
dangerous than that of a negotiator?
When she realized just how bad things went at the call, she didn’t even
think of Pete, and she’d even dated him!
Of course she would have been mortified had something happened to him,
but the thought of Jill in the situation she was in last night… it made her
heart hurt. Maybe because she was the one talking with the suspect, trying to get
him to surrender, Lan mused.
Either way, here she was at work, trying to rescue a Glenlivet
on the rocks that was ordered without
the rocks. I know I’m not performing brain surgery, but I gotta focus here, she
thought to herself as she put the Glenlivet, neat, on Joyce’s tray.
“You in there?” Joyce
wails, tapping Lan’s forehead before she can straighten up from putting the
drink down.
“What do you mean?” Lan
asked, pretending she doesn’t have a clue as to what the waitress is talking
about. Joyce just rolls her eyes in only
the way she can and mouths, ‘later’.
Chuckling, Lan takes the reprieve for now and seeing that the
patron surge had dwindled along with tonight’s band’s last set, she made her
way back to the office to finish the schedule for the next two weeks. At
least I’m not doing the books tonight…
She also made a mental note to let Bart and Chris know she was
going to be hiring another bartender.
The bar was doing well and was continuing to gain a reputation as a
great venue to see local bands. That
also meant an increase in business, and that was always good news to owners and
managers alike. She also knew that she
wanted to start taking some time off to travel.
She’d breach that subject with Bart and Chris later, however.
About an hour later, she was interrupted by Marty, the
barback. “Some woman is out here to see
you.”
“Kay.” She said as she
followed him out to the bar. She knew it
would be either Jill or Tina and she’d be glad to see either one, but… The thought stopped midway through and her
face lit up. She saw the redhead before
Jill saw her and it gave her a moment to temper her downright euphoric
expression slightly.
She reached her friend and put her hand on her shoulder to
draw her attention. “Hey, how are
you?” She asked earnestly.
“A hell of a lot better than the last time you saw me.” Jill said in her usual pithy way. She swiveled on her stool to fully face her
friend and gave her a small smile. This is exactly what I needed, thought
Jill. Her heart instinctually picked up
a bit just at the sight of Lan.
“Would you like anything to drink?” Lan asked.
“Nah, but thank you.”
Jill replied, not being able to take her eyes off of her friend. Lan too looked at her friend closely, the
worry in her expression not hard for Jill to read.
“I’m fine, really Lan, I am.
It’s part of the job.” She looked
down at the bar and then back up at Lan hoping she could change the subject for
now. “I got your message. Thanks. I hope you don’t mind that I stopped by
instead of calling.” Unable to
acknowledge it at the time, Lan’s concern for her had been a balm to Jill’s
soul that night, resulting in Jill’s affection for the woman growing even
stronger.
She was just about to ask her if she was due a break soon when
Lan said, “You wanna come back to my office?
I’m just working on some paperwork.”
Jill slipped off the stool.
“You sure?”
“Yep. Come on.” She said as she grabbed Jill’s sleeve and
gave it a little tug before she let go and made a path back to her office, Jill
right on her heels with the small gift hidden behind her back.
“Well, here it is. My
office under the stairs…” Lan gestured
to her tight, low-ceilinged office. Jill
took a look around, which took all of thirty seconds. It was just how Jill would have pictured it:
tidy with photos of her dogs and Tina, Katy and John, the bar staff, all stuck
up haphazardly along the wall that was not occupied by shelving and a filing
cabinet.
What did catch her eye were a series of black and white candid
photographs of some of the regular bar patrons, hanging out at the bar,
chatting with Ross the bartender or talking with one another. She stepped in closer to look at one in
particular. It was of an older man
wearing a rumpled but clean looking suit. Lan had captured him through the
mirror behind the bar, so you could not only see the back of him, you could see
his face. His hair, what was left of it,
was neatly combed and he sat on the stool hunched forward with one hand around
his martini glass the other propped up on the bar, cupping his chin. His face had a leathery look to it that
coupled with his expression, made him appear a lot older than he probably
was. She imagined him to be a
world-weary traveling salesman who had had the door shut on him one too many
times. The shot made Jill feel profoundly sorry for the man.
“That man comes in at least three times a week, orders one
martini, drinks it slow, puts down a big tip and leaves.” Lan supplied as she watched Jill looking at
the photo.
“He looks so sad.” Jill
replied, unable to take her eyes away from the photo.
“I know. No one knows
his story though. Not much of a talker,
I guess. But, seeing that expression,
I’m sure it ain’t a good one, you know?”
Lan said around a rueful chuckle.
“When I’m feeling crappy, I look at that picture and think, at least I’m
not that guy.”
“Indeed. Well, even if
it does make me want to cry, it’s an amazing photograph. All of these are.” Jill said as she gestured towards the others. “You are really talented.”
“Um, thank you.” Lan
muttered sheepishly, feeling exorbitantly pleased at the compliment.
Jill smiled widely at the bar manager. “Oh, I have your present!” she announced, almost forgetting.
“Oh, you brought it!
You didn’t have to, you know…”
Lan said as she picked up the card and ripped the envelope open. It made Jill chuckle. She silently read the card, laughing loudly
at the picture and caption of the card.
She swatted Jill on the forearm.
“You’re naughty!” She said still
laughing. She picked up the
present. “I can open it now,
right?” she asked with child-like glee.
“Of course.” Jill said,
thoroughly enjoying watching her. Unlike
the card, she took her time sliding her finger under the tape, opening it with
deliberate slowness. Jill watched her
reaction to make sure she did well in her choice.
“Oh, awesome!” Lan said
and inspected the photo of her, Jill and Sarah in Yosemite. It was a great picture and really captured
the carefree, fun atmosphere of that day.
“There’s more.”
At Lan’s confused look, Jill took the framed photo and turned
it over. Lan took the small business
card-sized paper and read it aloud: “Good for a day trip to Yosemite with
police escort.”
“Cute.” Lan said around
a wry grin. She flipped it around and
around, lips pursed. “You mean it?” She asked shyly.
“Of course. Wouldn’t
have written it otherwise.” A thought
dawned on her. “Unless you’d rather not
go with me, you know, you’d rather go with…”
Lan smiled, putting a hand on Jill’s forearm. “I can’t think of anyone else I’d like to
escort me on a visit to Yosemite.” She
said seriously, her timid smile returning only when Jill’s did.