ONE
Burl
"Bubba" Wallace shifted uneasily on the seat of his battered Ford
pickup. The bulk of his stomach pressed against the steering wheel even with
the seat all the way back. He drummed his fingers nervously on his leg as he
watched the faithful file into the little clapboard church.
His canvas vest
rattled as he picked it up from the seat beside him. He opened one of the
capacious Velcro sealed pockets and brought forth a thirty round magazine for
the AK-47 rifle that lay on the floor behind his boots. The dull blue magazine
was heavy with shining 7.62 X 39 mm. shells, their sharp copper jacketed
bullets lined up in a double stack. Bubba whistled an off key tune while he
pulled three more identical magazines from the pocket and taped them together facing
in opposite directions. This facilitated a quicker reload time by simply
flipping the magazines over.
I'll show them
sum-bitches! He slid the rifle up onto the seat, the muzzle pointing
toward the floor. Them an' their high an' mighty million man marches, an'
their laws makin' it almost illegal ta be white anymore. Can't get a damn
decent job on account'a them, an them damn Mezkins.
He slammed the
first magazine into the weapon's receiver and pulled back the bolt. When he
released it, the bolt slammed home, chambering the first deadly shell.
A choir was singing
as Bubba slipped the heavy wooden door open and stepped inside the little
church. The air was warm and tight, heavy with the smell of perfume and old
wood. His vest hung from his hand, concealing the deadly folding stocked rifle
from those parishioners who turned at the blast of icy air from the open door.
"Welcome,
friend!" An elderly man approached from the end of the last row of pews,
his face like wrinkled ebony where his broad smile pulled the skin into valleys
and creases. His brown eyes sparkled with the joy of living, and his love of
the Lord.
When Bubba swung
the barrel of the rifle up, his vest fell to the floor. The old man's eyes
widened, and a prayer formed on his lips as Bubba squeezed the trigger. Before
the frail body collapsed to the floor, Bubba began to spray death into the
congregation like water from a fire hose.
When the rifle's
bolt locked back after the thirtieth round, he deftly flipped the magazines,
and snapped a fresh round into the chamber. He continued firing without
attempting to aim.
The screams of the
wounded and dying replaced the sweet harmony of the choir, and adults fell
across children in a last show of love, trying to stop the bullets with their
own flesh. Some were trampled by others in their mad rush for the safety of the
side exits, most being cut down within a few feet of the doors.
When his last
bullet had found it's mark, Bubba turned toward the door, the empty rifle
hanging from his hand. From the darkness near the door, a shadow emerged, the
figure clad in a dark suit and red necktie, his eyes covered by sunglasses even
though the darkness was several hours old.
"Bubba,"
the man whispered, motioning the big man closer.
Bubba grinned,
saliva bubbling at the corners of his mouth. "Hey, Ray! What're you doin'
here? Did ya' see? I did it just like I said I would. Just like you told me we
ought'ta do!"
"Yeah, Bubba,
you sure did." The silenced pistol in the man's hand coughed twice. Two
9mm Black Talon bullets tore through Bubba's heart.
Their copper jackets flared like petals on a flower as they spun, and tore
ever-widening channels through the still beating organ.
Shock showed on
Bubba's face as he collapsed on the steps of the little church. His dead eyes
stared up at the frigid sky, steam rising from his blood as it formed a
spreading pool beneath him. The last sound he heard was the sobs of those
inside who had escaped death grieving for friends and loved ones who had not.
Police Chief Harvey
Sanders faced the cameras set up to capture the best angle of the rising sun.
It was difficult to get the angle right. The dark blotches of blood disappeared
when the sun struck them, and the public wanted to see every gory detail.
Yellow crime scene
tape decorated the trees and kept the media from trampling evidence in their
haste to show the slaughter to the outside world.
Sanders spoke
toward the half dozen microphones that were thrust toward his face.
"Thirty two dead, twenty five wounded, some critically. If Agent Raymond
Allen of the F.B.I. hadn't heard the shots, and risked his own life to stop the
gunman, the death toll could have been worse. He is the true hero of this
incident."
Agent Allen stepped
forward, his dark suit and red tie looking out of place at this hour of the
morning. "I only did what I felt I had to do," he said, the rising
sun reflecting from the opaque lenses of his sunglasses.
Detective Clint
Murphy rubbed his temples, thick fingers scratching the curly dark hair above
his ears. His elbows rested on stacks of reports that threatened to topple to
the floor at any second. "What the hell's going on around here?" he
mumbled.
At forty-seven
years old, Murphy was a veteran of what he liked to call "The battle
against chaos." Two ex-wives could
testify to his devotion to duty, and his complete lack of empathy for the
criminal element. At five feet ten inches, and just a shade above two hundred
pounds, he didn't look tough in any respect, but the determination in his pale
blue eyes had been enough to change the mind of many thugs who thought about
resisting arrest.
Art Bendell,
Murphy's partner for the last eight
months shrugged. "I guess it depends on what you're referring to."
Murphy's sport coat
was rumpled from three days of climbing in and out of cars, and two nights of
napping at his desk. His face was haggard from lack of sleep, and the stubble
on his chin and cheeks stood out against his sallow complexion.
The aging detective
shook his head. "Had another shooting at a black church last night. I'll
bet we haven't had two or three incidents like this in the last fifty years,
and now we've got three in the last two weeks."
The lunchroom at
police headquarters was deserted at
this time of the morning, and Bendell poured a cup of thick, black coffee from
the pot on the sideboard. He grimaced when the foul dregs of last night’s pot
assaulted his tongue. "Full moon again last night, Murph?"
Murphy reached for
a donut from a pink box that seeped melting maple frosting onto the desk.
"No. Maybe it would be easier to explain if it was."
Bendell stirred
several spoons of sugar into his cup, sipped tentatively, then stirred in
several more. "So, what happened this time? I didn't have time to watch
the news this morning."
"Some asshole
took an AK-47 into a Baptist church. Mostly black folks," Murphy mumbled
around a bite of donut. "Moron
opened up on the congregation...Took out a shitload of 'em."
"They catch
him?"
"Better than
that. An F.B.I. agent named Ray Allen stopped his clock for him on the front
steps of the church.
Bendell rubbed his
chin, then his fingers moved to the back of his neck, working at a kink.
"Allen... Why does that name sound familiar?"
Murphy grinned.
"Maybe because of the guy from that sitcom on T.V.?"
"Naw. I've
heard that name somewhere... Oh, yeah! Remember a couple of years back, the
Feds came in here like they owned the place, and demanded our cooperation? That
was Allen and his buddies."
Murphy gestured
with the half eaten donut. "I was a sergeant then, remember?"
Bendell laughed.
"How many times is it now, Murph?"
"Third time's
a charm, ol' buddy."
Clint Murphy
regarded the gold detective's shield clipped to his belt as being on loan.
Twice in the last eight years he had been promoted to detective, and twice had
the shield taken back. Murphy was the last thing the new breed of Police Chief
wanted on the roster. Descended from a long line of tough Irish cops, Murphy
was a thorn in the side of the "politically correct” upper echelon of the
department. If subtlety didn't work,
Murphy sometimes resorted to brute force. His last trip back to sergeant's
stripes had come when the nephew of a city councilman resisted arrest on a
felony spousal abuse warrant. When he was released from the hospital, he had
filed brutality charges against the department,
but was persuaded to drop them after Murphy's demotion. It had taken three
years, and a change of chiefs for Murphy to once again gain his status as a
detective.
"I almost
forgot about that, Murph." Bendell made a show of bending to admire
Murphy's badge. "Anyway, this guy, Allen, and several other suits came in
one morning and told us they were going under cover in our jurisdiction. Told
us in no uncertain terms to keep our noses out of their operation, but be ready
to assist if necessary."
Murphy tipped a can
of diet cola up to his lips, draining the last drops from the can. "What
the hell were the feds involved with out here, drugs?"
"Nope. They
were checking out one of the white supremacist groups. Seems this bunch had
been selling illegal weapons... That sort of thing."
Murphy chuckled as
Bendell rolled his eyes in derision. "You'd think the damn fools would
learn after that mess at Ruby Ridge a few years ago. Killed that fella's wife
and son, and couldn't even make the charges stick. He sued their arrogant asses
off!"
Bendell helped
himself to a donut, licking frosting from his fingers. "And Waco. They went in to
save the children from those nasty ol' religious fanatics, and wound up
slaughtering almost everybody in the compound. If I'm ever a hostage, Murph,
promise me you won't let those guys help, okay?"
"You got it,
Pal." Murphy brushed crumbs from the front of his jacket. "Well, it's
our case, so I guess we'd better get movin'.
"Whaa... I
thought you said the guy was dead?"
"Deader'n
hell, but the mayor wants to know why there's been so much of this stuff going
on in the last few months."
Bendell shrugged.
"It's not just here, Murph. It's been happening all over the
country."
"Yeah, but the
mayor isn't up for re-election all over the country... Just here."
"Okay, I can
see where a mass murder or two could cause Mayor Beech some concern
alright," Bendell agreed. He slipped into his jacket and followed Murphy
out the door.
No comments:
Post a Comment