Saturday, December 29, 2012
PRECIPICE CHAPTER 13
Thirteen
PAIGE AND MEGAN’S
COTTAGE
TUESDAY
MORNING
For
the second time that day Drake awoke groggy, with Megan on his mind. Grief
washed over him like an ocean wave, tumbling his emotions. For the life of him
he couldn’t seem to remember why. His brain churned fuzzily, trying to make
sense of unfamiliar surroundings. He found it difficult to concentrate at all,
because his wandering attention kept semi-focusing on the harsh sounds of
hysterical sobbing in the room. Vaguely, Drake found that odd because he wasn’t
making any noise at all. Nevertheless the wailing continued, falling into
low-pitched keening, then rolling shrilly back again, filling the room with
overwhelming sorrow. After a long while he concluded that he lay kind of
crumpled up in a careless heap on the floor. He was face down head to the wall,
awkwardly jammed between an old upright piano and an enormous, overstuffed
armchair. His vantage-point on the floor allowed him to see a crumpled potato
chip bag in the corner behind the chair, tisk,
tisk. When his ears began to coordinate with his brain, they informed him
the brokenhearted weeping originated from somewhere behind him.
Drake’s
mind continued to ponder, slowly struggling to make sense of the whole
discombobulating situation, but his thoughts were still dazed at best. Finally,
after summoning all his mental abilities and setting them to work on the
problem, he came to the firm conclusion that he felt uncomfortable. Further
reflection led him to the realization that he ought to do something to relieve
his discomfort; but what? Oh, yes, of
course! He could move his body into a more comfortable position. Brilliant conclusion, Holmes! Elementary my
dear Watson.
When
he tried shifting his head though, electric jolts of pain surged up and down
his spine, stiffening his neck muscles and threatening to wrench the whole left
side of his head off. The excruciating pain in his head triggered blinding
multicolored flashes which began to dance in brilliant coruscation, mere inches
from his eyes. He found the experience painful as well as confusing. Drake
responded by involuntarily curling into a fetal position and screwing his eyes
tightly shut. That didn’t improve matters to any noticeable degree. The wildly
gyrating flashes continued to explode as if his head were stuffed into a bag of
rocketing fireworks. The pain, the searing lights, and the incessant high
pitched wailing all combined to so disorient him he passed out again.
When
he came to, still huddled face down, someone’s hands were touching his
shoulder. The invisible hands moved to his chest, gently feeling for a
heartbeat. Then he felt himself being turned gently onto his back.
“Careful!”
Drake hissed, his voice a harsh croak, “If my head pops off you’ll have to
chase after it.” He heard a tearful gasp of relief followed by Paige’s choked
voice asking him a flood of questions coming much faster than he could sort
them out.
“Whoa,
slow down,” he breathed, vaguely perceiving her tear-stained face above him.
His mind wasn’t any less fuzzy and he still had difficulty with the demanding
task of forming words and actually speaking them in proper order.
“Paige…? What’s going on…? Where’s Megan…?”
As
he asked this final question he had a gruesome mental image of Megan lying
lifeless on the floor mere inches away. The grief he had experienced earlier
engulfed him again as comprehension dawned and this time he began weeping. His
reaction set Paige off again too. For a time they clung to one another lost in
mutual loss and individual sorrow.
They
were not given much time to work out their grief. Without warning, shadowy figures
began racing past the windows. The front door, standing half-open, bounced off
the wall from an aggressive kick. The
bottom hinge broke with a crack. The door hung crookedly, barely impeding the
entrance of a hoard of shouting men brandishing guns. …As if there had not been
enough of that kind of horseplay already. One of the men—he seemed vaguely
familiar to Drake—dropped to Megan’s side, checking the corpse in a coldly
professional manner. Two others cautiously approached the weeping couple in the
corner, guns drawn. Their weapons were not pointed in any neutral direction
either. They were trained dead-on at Drake and Paige.
Paige
stared back, wide-eyed, incomprehension changing to ire, while Drake handled
the situation with the aplomb born of experience; he was getting used to being
a potential target for government agents.
The thought occurred that maybe he ought to say something. He
should bring everyone up to date or something. But the moment he tried, he was
silenced by a harsh command. It came from Super Agent Dexter, his bearded
buddy.
“Don’t
move!” Dexter yelled. “Just twitch once Father and I’ll blow your head off!”
Drake
suddenly lost his aplomb and began to sweat. Covered by a second man, Dexter
knelt before Drake, cruelly shoving the muzzle of his pistol against Drake’s
forehead. Stan Drake closed his eyes for a quick prayer, then opened them to
stare back into the agent’s tight, angry face. The situation felt unreal. Drake
wondered if he had lapsed back into his former state of confusion.
“I
want somebody to explain exactly what is going on here?” Drake demanded as
calmly as he could.
“I
told you not to move, clown!” Dexter reached across Drake, gingerly retrieving
a large automatic pistol from the floor. Drake stared dumbfounded as Dexter
bagged General Taylor’s .45, wondering what happened to the little Colt .380.
Dexter noted the puzzlement on Drake’s face, taking it for guilt.
“That’s
right!” he crowed. “We got ourselves a murderer, the victim, and the murder
weapon all in the same room. You’re had
Preacher-man!”
“What?”
Drake and Paige exclaimed in the same tone of outrage.
Dexter’s
senior partner, agent Baker appeared, standing beside the gloating youngster.
Baker looked up from a small notebook in his left hand and said, “Reverend
Drake, Ms. Mitchell, it looks like we’re going to have few questions you both.
We will also need to thoroughly investigate this crime scene, of course. I hope
you will save us all a lot of trouble by being completely honest and
cooperative.”
“Are
we under arrest?” Drake demanded.
Baker
threw his arm warningly across his partner’s chest, forestalling Dexter’s
obviously affirmative answer. “I am not placing you under arrest at this time,
Reverend,” he said. “However, I do consider you a material witness and an
obvious suspect in this investigation. For that reason I will take quite
seriously your cooperation or, if you like, your refusal to cooperate. Please
consider your situation; you were found next to a murder victim with a
discharged pistol at your side. If you think about it real hard you will
probably understand, this looks very suspicious from an objective point of
view.” He gave Drake the benefit of his hard penetrating, investigator’s stare,
“Well, Reverend, what about it?”
Drake
restrained his annoyance, knowing the man’s reasoning was sound. “I’ll be happy
to cooperate: Fully. But first, could you have a doctor take a look at my head
please. It feels like it’s about to bust wide open.”
“And
what happened to your head?” asked Baker, pen poised over his little notebook.
“I…
I don’t know,” Drake stumbled receiving a cold look in return for this classic
lamebrain answer.
“I
must tell you Reverend,” said Baker, his face darkening, “I do not consider
this kind of attitude a good example of full cooperation.”
* * *
The
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearm’s interrogation room turned out to be
one huge disappointment. Having watched years of Police dramas on television,
Drake had predictably expected a starkly furnished cubicle, painted dirty
beige, furnished with heavy, government-issue wooden tables and desks. A large
two-way mirror would, as a matter of course, face him from across the table.
Steely-eyed law enforcement types would stand, unseen, behind the mirror,
secretly scrutinizing him while discussing his guilt out of earshot.
Drake found none of that stuff here.
In
fact, Drake found himself in a large airy cafeteria; part of the employee
services building in the larger Park Services complex, located in Yosemite
Village. The recent influx of Federal personal had prompted the ATF to
commandeer this space for their administrative needs. While he waited, Drake
gazed idly out the massive floor-to-ceiling window wall. He watched yet another
storm roll in. Heavy, moisture-laden clouds shifted across the lowering sky,
intermittently blocking the sunlight as they passed through. The huge wall of glass
and the minimal lighting inside caused the ambient light in the cafeteria to
shift dramatically every few moments. Drake found it difficult to keep his eyes
focused.
He
sat at a long lunch table serving as a transient workspace for several BATF
agents. At least that’s what he deduced from the distinct piles of
official-looking debris heaped at regular intervals along the surface of the
table. Across the room Paige sat enjoying the company of Super Agent Dexter,
playing the role of Grand Inquisitor to the hilt. Seated directly across from
Drake, Agent Baker conducted a more professional interview. At least he stuck
to asking pertinent questions of Drake rather than drooling and giggling
maniacally.
“How
did you come to be in Ms. Cameron’s residence at such an early hour?” Baker
asked for the irritatingly umpteenth time.
“I
told you. Several times now; I went there to confront her about her odd
behavior and the sudden appearance of an animal cage in the back of my vehicle.
You are writing this stuff down aren’t
you? Why do you keep asking me the same questions over and over again?”
“Procedure,
Reverend Drake, that’s all. Now, when you returned why did you feel it
necessary to conceal your presence from Ms. Cameron? You did say that you were,
let’s see…‘sneaking around to the back porch.’ Yes?”
“Yes.
And you know the answer to that one too. I believed at the time, and as it
turns out I was right, that the men I saw entering her house were those trigger
happy, Mariposa Militia people.”
Undeterred
by hitting a dead end, Baker changed his point of attack, “How did you come to
acquire an animal transport cage in the rear compartment of your sport utility
vehicle, Reverend Drake?”
“I’d
like to know the answer to that one, myself,” said Drake. “It’s obvious that
I’m supposed to look like the guy who brought that doomed mountain lion into
Yosemite.”
“Yes
Reverend, it does look that way,” said Baker. “Can you tell me anything which
would make me think otherwise?”
“As
a matter of fact, I can. Some of you government types looked over my truck at
the intersection of Big Oak Flat and Tioga Road on the day I entered the Park;
on… let’s see… yeah, last Thursday. There was no cage in the Chevy then. You
can check with the guys who saw me.”
“So?”
Baker seemed unimpressed, “What if you were cleared that day?” he asked
reasonably, “What’s to keep you from bringing in the lion at some other time?”
“First,”
answered Drake, “I can produce several people from my church in Zurich who can
confirm when I left town. Second, I hardly think it’s reasonable for me to
bring an illegal cat into a National
Park, then remove the cage so I can drive through a Government check
point—which, remember, had only been established ten minutes earlier—so I could
demonstrate my innocence. Would I then go
and put the incriminating evidence back
into the Suburban—which by the way, isn’t even mine. And I’m still going to have to explain that mess
to the owner.”
Baker
stared at Drake for several moments and then asked, “Your church is in Zurich,
Switzerland?”
“No,”
said Drake, resigned to, but long since tired of the question, “Zurich,
California. It’s a little town on the Eastern slope of the Sierras. The first
station master for the old railroad was Swiss. And, by the way, in a small town
like Zurich I can probably produce a bunch of people to confirm my movements
over the last month or so.”
“How
so, Reverend?” asked Baker.
“Zurich
has a tiny population of right around fifteen hundred people. In a small town
everyone knows everybody else’s business. And that’s not all,” he said, a new
idea forming in his mind, “Some of that Lion dung looked pretty old to me; you
know, hard and whitish? How long am I supposed to have kept the big hairy beast
in someone else’s truck without anyone noticing? No sir;” Drake shook his head.
“I was set up and I think you know it too.”
“I
don’t know anything yet,” said Baker
with a dogged air, “I’m merely collecting information at this point.”
Across
the room a set of double-hung restaurant style doors banged open; “Hey Baker!”
yelled a woman in another of those windbreakers, “S-A-C wants to see you!
ASAP.” The woman abruptly disappeared and the doors flapped shut after her.
“Excuse
me Reverend, I’ll return as soon as I can. Please do not leave yet. I’ve a few
more questions for you.” Drake sighed in resignation and simply nodded his
head. “Hold on a minute Mr. Baker,” said Drake. “It’s just occurred to me that
I left my dog in the Suburban before I went back to Megan’s house. He’s been
cooped up alone for several hours now. Could somebody go get him, please?”
“I’ll see what I can do,” said Baker, displaying a trace of human
feeling. He walked across the room, snared Dexter and the two of them left by
way of the swinging doors.
Drake
watched them go feeling abused and persecuted. The scripture says it’s better to suffer for something you haven’t
actually done, than to have done something deserving punishment. But it sure
doesn’t feel any better. After the G-men left the room
Drake stood, stretched, and walked to the service counter where he poured two
cups of coffee into plain white enamel mugs. He carried them over to where
Paige sat, offering her one. She accepted it in silence, the stony look on her
face making him feel just the teensiest bit sorry for Agent Dexter.
In
dreary silence they sat while time seemed to ground to a halt. Occasionally
they sipped at their slowly cooling coffee, each grappling with the conflicting
emotions attendant to violent murder and callous interrogation. At last Paige,
voice rusty from disuse, broke the stillness.
“I
keep waiting for you to say something shallow and religious so I can scream at
you.”
Drake
looked bleakly back. “I can’t think of anything shallow for you right now. Go
ahead and scream though, I deserve it. Megan’s dead and I’m the guy who’s
responsible. I didn’t stop it.” Paige returned his look, unshed tears welling
in her eyes, and said nothing.
Cocooned
in his tight little world of grief and self-reproach Drake gradually became
aware of growing activity in the hall. The commotion finally broke through his
insulating shell of withdrawal. He looked around to see the cafeteria filling
with people, mostly men in durable outdoors clothing with an overlay of black
nomex harnesses. The harnesses were studded with hooks and straps supporting
knives, ammunition pouches, flashlights, radios and other more esoteric items
he failed to identify. They looked to Drake like a SWAT team suited up for
action. The woman who had summoned Baker crossed the immense room to a large
black chest. She unlocked a number of padlocks and began distributing
military-type assault rifles to the milling crowd. Magazines were slapped into
place and they began filing out the door to assemble in the large patio beyond
the glass wall.
Through
the huge window Drake watched as one of the by-now-familiar UH-60 Blackhawks
touched down noisily outside. Up close like this, Drake was able to read the
BATF logo on the sliding cargo door. Ten men ducked under the spinning rotor
blades, mounting the chopper. It immediately lifted off to hover nearby while
an identical helicopter landed in the yard. Drake and Paige stared in
amazement. They watched a spectacularly filthy and beat-up Rudy Gutierrez
dismount the second aircraft. His shotgun firmly clutched at port arms, he moved
at a running crouch to the cafeteria. Gutierrez’s eyes noted their presence,
but coldly swept every corner of the room before relaxing and returning to
them. Despite the fact that his uniform shirt was raggedly ripped down one side
and his coarse hair stood out in damp, irregular spikes, Gutierrez looked
anything but ridiculous.
Paige
stared, aghast. She stood and ran across the room to Gutierrez, flinging her
arms around his neck. Weeping and sobbing she poured her heart out, demanding
to know the meaning of his filthy, bedraggled condition. Drake stood back not
wishing to intrude on their privacy. Gutierrez racked the slide back, safeing
his weapon. He laid it on a tabletop and took Paige into the circle of his
strong arms, comforting her and making light of his own condition. They stood
that way, Paige weeping, Gutierrez speaking softly, for several minutes. Drake
backed away but could not tear his eyes from the ranger as he looked back over
Paige’s shoulder; his face an angry mask of stone. Drake found himself
forcefully reminded of fiercely carved Olmec warrior heads he had seen on a
long ago museum visit to Mexico City.
As
they stood there the swinging doors at the other end of the assembly room
flipped open again to admit three people. The first one through was the gal who
had summoned Baker right before all the action started. The second was none
other than Bill Gordon, Special Agent in Charge of the BATF’s Sacramento field
office. He was the same giant of a man Drake remembered from Yosemite Falls.
“Wild Bill” Gordon was obviously in charge, unaffected by the fact
that, his capture was anxiously desired by the high and exalted councils of the
Mariposa Militia. The third person to enter was smaller, older, and completely
unknown to Drake. Judging by the decorations on his uniform he appeared to be a
fairly senior US Park Ranger. Paige gave their abrupt, unwanted intrusion the
benefit of her cold blue eyes but said nothing. Gutierrez and Drake took in the
angry look on Gordon’ face and braced themselves for the impending ordeal.
The
senior ranger—Albert Fine according to the name on his uniform pocked—strode up
to Gutierrez placing his hand warmly on his left shoulder. “Rudy,” he said,
trying to suppress the very human emotion in his voice, “I’m sorry as I can be
about Rod. Glad you made it out though. What’s the situation up there?”
“Chief.”
Rudy straightened up and made his report, “Ranger Weatherly and I were caught
in a fairly clumsy ambush. If those guys had been pros, well, both of us would
have been stone cold dead,” he snapped his fingers, “just like that. They
knocked Rod down with the first volley. He was still alive, but they just
executed him where he lay wounded on the ground. Sorry Chief, nothing I could
do. I managed to evade the ambush. I even popped four or five of ‘em, but I’m
not sure if I actually killed any of them. I think I got two for sure in my own counter ambush—but you gotta
understand Chief, I was facing a squad-sized unit and I only got to whittle on
them some. I’m ticked I didn’t take ‘em all out,” he added darkly. Drake
reflected that it seemed to be a day of foul ups, lost opportunities and harsh
regrets.
Mr.
Special Agent Gordon, who had been sourly eyeing Rudy during his monologue,
arrogantly broke in at that point, “Ranger Gutierrez,” he snapped, “I’m curious
as to why you chose to take on the Militia all by yourself, instead of calling
it in as your standing orders read?”
Rudy
gave Chief Ranger Fine the benefit of his sad-eyed, woe-is-me, Latin look.
“Chief,” he asked in exasperation, “is this guy for real?”
“You
better believe I’m for real, smart guy!” Gordon shot back, “and never mind
lookin’ to your Chief for answers, Sucker! BATF has sole jurisdiction here,” he
added hotly.
“Now
hold on just one little minute there, Mr. Gordon,” replied Fine in a firm, calm
voice, “The jurisdictional details have not yet been ironed out to my agency’s
satisfaction. In the meantime, as loyal members of the great governmental
brotherhood of arms, we are, of course happy
to extend our professional cooperation. That’s cooperation, Mr. Gordon, not capitulation.
Incidentally, my Rangers don’t report to you. They answer to me, Sir. I suggest
you restate your request for information in a more positive tone. I’m sure
Ranger Gutierrez will answer you in a cooperative, professional manner.”
The
mild rebuke was not missed by anyone in the room. However, Gordon managed to
maintain his composure, swallow his pride, and patiently turn his attention
back to Gutierrez. This too, was a show of personal strength recognized by all
present. “Officer Gutierrez,” He said calmly, “you did fail to call in a contact report until you had actually engaged
in a running fire fight with elements of the Mariposa Militia. Your failure to
do so has hindered my team from responding quickly and decisively. Why?”
Gutierrez
now understood the bureaucratic situation. Like the ambush in the forest, he
had encountered this kind of tactical situation before. He recognized Gordon as
the kind of honcho so full of his own self-importance he invariably insists on
being saluted, even under fire. The bottom-line issue for this kind of officer is
the all important question, ‘who is to blame for this failure?’ Years in the
Corps had taught Rudy how to act in such situations: stand at attention, stare
at a fixed point in space and state the facts without any embellishment or
excuse. This he did, earning himself another pointless tirade from Super Agent
Gordon.
Finally,
the BATF Field Boss turned his smoldering attention on Drake who had wisely
spent the intervening time praying for patience and grace. Instead of a
reprimand however, he was shocked to hear a humble apology coming from the
BATF’s Special Agent in Charge. Hummm.
“Reverend,
I’d like to apologize for the zeal of my men. We’ve just received the results
of the Gun Shot Residue test we ran on you. GSR shows a negative presence of
lead or powder residue on your hands. This indicates to us that you haven’t
been shooting any handguns in the recent past. Also,” he added, “there’s the
little matter of that big purple goose egg on the side your head. Fingerprints
matching your right hand were found on that .45 caliber pistol. Yet the lump on
your head is far back on the left. That makes it kind of awkward spot for a
self-inflicted wound. We conclude that you are not a promising suspect in the
murder of Megan Cameron. We had to follow the evidence. I hope you understand.”
“Of
course,” replied Drake hesitantly. Something in Gordon’ manner had him waiting
for the other shoe to drop. “Am I free to go then?” asked Drake.
“That’s
right Reverend, you’re free to go. We haven’t got enough evidence to charge you
with murder.” Drake heaved a sigh of relief which turned out to be premature,
because Gordon hadn’t finished. “There is however,” the S-A-C continued, “the
issue of that curious animal cage found in the cargo space of your vehicle.”
“That
again,” said Drake, silently renewing his prayer for patience. “Look,” he said,
“I understand the problem. That cage gives you physical evidence. But I think
you would be wise to examine all of
the evidence, including how long I’ve been in sole possession of the truck.
That, as well as establishing my movements over the past month, should
demonstrate that it would have been impossible for me to have transported that
or any other mountain lion into this park.”
“We
are checking, Reverend,” said Gordon comfortably. “You can count on that. In
the meantime,” he added firmly, “I must insist that you keep yourself
available and out of trouble. …Please,” He added less than graciously. “Thank
you gentlemen. Ms. Mitchell. That will be all.”
Saturday, December 22, 2012
CHRISTMAS GIFT SUGGESTIONS
To your enemy, forgiveness.
to an opponent, tolerance.
To a friend, your heart.
To a customer, service.
to all, charity.
To every child, a good example.
to yourself, respect.
Owen Arnold
PRECIPICE CHAPTER 12
Twelve
Yosemite HIGH COUNTRY
TUESDAY MORNING
Sergeant Larson’s tinny voice squawked from Parker’s radio. “looks
to me like you poor ol’ rookie-boys need a hand.”
Parker pulled the radio close to his face, keeping his voice low.
“I got it covered. Give me a chance.”
“Nope,” he heard the doubt in Larson’s voice. “I’m sending Schmidt
and Morris’s, squads down there. Try not to shoot them.”
“Yeah, whatever.” Parker cast a sour look at Mullins body,
sprawled in a tangle of brush. He soon began hearing the two groups picking
their way downhill. When the squads arrived Parker showed the direction the
ranger had taken. The men spread out and began climbing the slope.
Parker turned to re-check Morris’s condition before leaving him; definitely
dead. It shocked him to realize he could just as well be the one lying on the
ground. His erstwhile partner lay on the trailside like a huddled bundle of
rags, so unlike a living body. Parker swore. He’d never seen violent death
before and found it difficult to tear his eyes away. This day just keeps getting worse. Not only had they fouled-up the
ambush, but that ranger continued to elude capture. Parker knew the operation was
supposed to have been as much a training exercise as a real mission. But the
ranger had failed to cooperate.
Parker stepped off to follow the rest of the militia-men. They
were enthusiastic but uncoordinated, acting individually rather than as
interdependent members of a fighting unit. That hampered the execution of their
orders. It got worse. The farther they moved after the ranger the more distance
they put between the men and their sergeant.
Parker
stopped to catch his breath, scanning the slope above. His eyes caught a slight
movement. Slowly, so as not to call attention to himself, he brought his
binoculars up, examining the location of that furtive movement. For several
minutes, nothing showed. Then, as he quartered the slope in a methodical search
pattern, He saw a dark green shadow threading its way cautiously upward through
a tumble of granite boulders. Man, This
ranger’s good, he grudgingly admitted to himself, Too bad for him we’ve got superior numbers; and radios. Parker crouched behind a tree,
quietly alerting Sergeant Larson over his transceiver.
* * *
Larson began giving orders. “Attention
Mariposa Battalion, your target is moving eastward, up the hill away from my
position. Schmidt? It’s Buck, you listening…?
“Schmidt,
roger…” came the static laden reply.
“Gary, I want you to take your boys and start working your way
uphill to the right. Take it nice and slow.” Switching channels he issued his
next set of orders. “Morris, you there…?
“Yo, Buck!” answered Morris.
“Roy, I want you, Ash and Honneycutt to run south. Go back down
the trail for half a mile. Then, cross over the top of that hill and come back to
the left. We’ll whipsaw the sucker between us. Careful now boys, stay low and
quiet. Let’s not spook the game.”
* * *
Gutierrez’
hyperactive combat instincts warned him the enemy had managed to get back on
his trail. The open slope left him dangerously exposed. He dredged through the
residue of his memory, searching for a strategy to counter the current tactical
situation. He was a single man pursued by superior numbers. That put him at a
distinct disadvantage. On the other hand, while Gutierrez had the luxury of
firing at anything with a weapon in its hands, the militia boys were forced to
use precious seconds identifying their targets, unless they didn’t care about
shooting themselves. Rudy hoped that there were no campers in the area. Over
the last hour a lot of shots had been exchanged. The running firefight ought to
have scared away any sensible civilians, he judged.
Just as long as there are no Bruce
Willis wannabe’s out there, aching to prove what big studly heroes they are to
their families.
Overhead,
Rudy watched the clouds roll by, billowing in the wind. Please let it rain, he prayed. A heavy downpour would be a godsend,
dampening sound, limiting visibility, and helping to conceal his movements. But
though the clouds were ominously dark and moisture laden, the rain refused to
fall.
So, okay, he thought, I have two
realistic options. I can move or I can stay right here in these nice rocks.
Either way I’m going to have to fight,
he mused. I’d rather not sit around on my
hands waiting to stage Gutierrez’ Last Stand. I’d better keep moving.
Checking
that he had a round chambered in the shotgun, he took a firm grip on both his
weapon and his emotions. Gutierrez sucked in a deep draught of air, exhaled,
and deliberately began following the path he had chosen. Using their concealing
cover, he snaked through the rocks. As he moved he found himself regularly
wiping sweat from his forehead, forever trickling down despite the chill.
He
decided to split the difference between stealth and calling for reinforcement.
Gutierrez switched his radio on, transmitting as he climbed.
“Dispatch,
this is Ranger 1040… Dispatch, Ranger 1040. Requesting a 1033-998. Shots fired.
Officer down. 998, no! 999! Send in the world! My location is Grid H-7, One
half mile east of Lewis Creek midway between Bernice and Merced Lakes.”
Gutierrez released the transmit switch. Nothing but random static emerged from
the speaker.
He
repeated the transmission twice more with the same lack of response. Gutierrez
had no time to waste on fruitless activity. He turned his attention to more
immediate concerns. He followed a sheltered path upwards, but there were still
several hundred tough yards to cover before he reached the top of this ridge.
That was not his final objective. He then had to descend the opposite side of
the ridge and cross yet another saddle in the next range before he would reach Washburn
Lake. He still had to cover a fair distance on a stiffening leg before he
reached anything like safety. It seemed like a good time to stop and whittle on
the opposition a bit, maybe teach them some caution.
Gutierrez’s
path led him into a deep jumble of granite boulders. There were plenty of
crevasses, nooks and crannies for hiding; even some pseudo-caves. Right here, he judged, is my best chance for creating confusion
with a well planned, lightning-quick ambush. No time for planning Marine, he told himself, you’ll just have to improvise.
* * *
Sergeant
Larson had shifted his position along the crest of the hill toward the south.
From there he could cover the up-slope exits from the stand of rocks in which
the target had disappeared. Through his binoculars he detected vague hints of
shadowy movement through clefts in the rocks. He watched as something
forest-green—the color of the ranger’s uniform—took a position to cover its
back trail. Mister ranger obviously planned to ambush the squad coming after
him. Larson’s face broke into a wolfish grin. He saw a way to out-fox the man.
Morris’ squad would soon be in a position to attack from the ranger’s unprotected
rear.
“Schmidt,
This is Buck, come back…”
“Yeah
Buck, I’m here. What’s up?”
“Gary,
I want you and your boys to make us some noise; a whole lot o’ noise. We need a
diversion. The ranger is holed-up in those rocks in front of you. Your job is
to make him think you boys are coming after him. Hot on his tail; get it? I
want you to keep his attention, while me ‘n Morris sneak up on his backside,
Okay?
“Can
do, Buck. Me and the boys are all over it.
“Oh,
hey, and Schmidt… Better find yourselves some solid cover. There’s liable to be
a whole lot of lead flying around. Whatever you do, don’t shoot uphill unless I
give the order. Got it?”
“Got
it Buck. Go get ‘im, son!” Schmidt’s squad immediately slowed their approach
and began stomping on dry twigs, knocking metal against rock, and generally
making loud, random, suspicious-type noises.
Meanwhile, Roy Morris’ squad began their approach, having hooked
around to the south and making their way along the crest line toward Larson’s
position. By making continual use of his radio, Larson coordinated his squads
for a two-pronged attack against the ranger’s fixed position. The trick was to
keep the man focused on Schmidt’s squad while he and Morris’ people moved in
for the kill. Larson checked his compact submachine gun and moved off, leading
Morris’ squad into battle himself.
* * *
Rudy
Gutierrez satisfied himself he had had found an ideal ambush point. Concealed
in good cover he could watch his back trail from a higher elevation. Several
paths converged on this point, funneling any outside approach quite naturally
to the bait covered by his shotgun. Inside that stone box the range was less
than forty yards, certain death for the scattergun he possessed. Gutierrez had
used his time effectively, setting the ambush and scouting an egress point
through a barely negotiable crevasse in the rocks at the rear of his position.
In order to guard against anyone who might sneak up behind him, he had rigged
some impromptu rock-and-stick noise makers.
Vague,
metal-against-rock noises began to reach Rudy’s ears from downhill. Clumsy,
sloppy, the
ranger recognized it as a diversionary tactic. All that noise was supposed to
hold his fearful attention while the real attackers moved into position. That’s right; come to papa, boys. Rudy
shouldered his weapon, but kept his eyes scanning. His ears soon picked up
stealthier sounds. At least, he
figured, the militia guys must think they
are being subtle and stealthy. They
really must be city boys, used to the constant sounds of traffic, music, and
sirens. The sad fact is they just
aren’t as good in the woods as they seem to think.
Abruptly,
without any kind of verbal warning, a submachine gun opened up to his left—full
automatic—making that ridiculous, puny, popcorn-in-a-pan sound, characteristic
of those types of weapons. Bullets ripped into a figure in forest green which
slowly slumped down behind a jumble of rocks. The machine gunner, followed by
three others, quickly advanced into Gutierrez’ sight picture. The militiaman
fired another wasteful burst of ammunition which emptied his magazine. The
sudden silence made the forest seem eerily empty. The shooter stopped and took
the time to slap a fresh magazine in his weapon. He chambered a fresh round and
stepped closer. All four militia-men approached the nest of boulders exercising
commendable caution.
Unfortunately
for them, twelve feet above and behind them, Park Ranger Rudy Gutierrez, USMC
Retired, lay sighting down the barrel of his shotgun. The militia had coldly,
efficiently and quite thoroughly ventilated his coat and hat. Gutierrez had
artistically draped them over a now-shredded shrub. The machine-gunner,
carrying a cheesy little Mac-10, strode up to the rocks. He held the weapon at
arm’s length and hosed the target area without exposing himself. When he had
emptied the magazine he called in the others.
“Morris,
Ash, check it out. Make sure he’s dead!”
Gutierrez had waited patiently for this. They had clearly shot at
what they thought was a U.S. Forest Ranger. He had no qualms now about shooting
back. When all four of them were in the clear, while the leader reloaded again,
he opened fire. His first shot took out the tough guy who had been doing a
Rambo with the Mac-10. In addition to hitting the shooter, the shot pattern
spread wide enough to knock down the man standing beside him. Both men fell,
shredded and still, on the stony ground. Gutierrez calmly pumped the shotgun’s
wooden slide, chambered another round and looked for his next target. The
remaining two militiamen broke and ran in opposite directions, seeking cover.
Gutierrez aimed low, knocking the legs out from under one of them, then racked
the slide again and took down the last would-be killer, employing the same
simple principle used for taking two crossing ducks; the sound of the shotgun a
swift BLAM-clackity-BLAM. Whether or not any of them
were still alive was not his concern at the moment. He was still dangerously out-numbered.
Adrenaline
pumped through his veins, speeding his reactions. Rudy’s senses felt hyper-alert.
Sounds seemed louder; he even caught a whiff of body odor from the group below
him. Time to go, he told himself. Gutierrez
rapidly egressed from his tight little hidy-hole, using the previously scouted
route. There were still, he knew, more of the enemy below and possibly on the
crest above him. He remembered to move carefully but swiftly, clearing the site
of the ambush. He had only a short time to take advantage of the confusion just
created. Soon, some of these over-confident, toy-soldiers would figure out what
had happened. He figured they would very likely want to take revenge on
Gutierrez. Reaching the crest of the ridge, he pulled out his radio again and
began transmitting. This time he got an immediate response.
“1040,
Dispatch-Delta six.” Came the tinny voice over the speaker. “Roger your 999. Be
advised; ATF has a helicopter working the Tuolumne Meadows area. I have
directed them to your general location. ETA, five minutes. Please advise your
exact location and present situation.”
Gutierrez
looked the ridge top over and took up a defensive position in another pile of
rocks. “Dispatch, 1040,” he called back, surveying the hillside below him. “I
am on the Eastern edge of Grid H-7, one mile east of Lewis Creek, midway
between Bernice and Merced Lakes. I am on top of a stony ridge in good ground
cover. I have engaged elements of what I believe to be the Mariposa Militia in
squad strength, approximately three-hundred yards downhill from my position.
Shots have been fired. Officer Weatherly down, presumed dead. I am not, repeat not, engaged at this time.”
“Roger,
1040,” came the calm reply. “Can you mark your position?”
Under
the circumstances, Gutierrez thought his patient restraint commendable. “I can
jump up and down and wave my arms, Dispatch!” he said acidly. “Over!” He spat
at the dust in disgust. Yeah, like everybody carries colored smoke flares in the
wilderness!
The
angel sweet sounds of an approaching helicopter cut the conversation short.
Gutierrez glanced up and spotted a large Blackhawk in olive drab, bearing US
Government livery. It came in from the north, looking just as pretty as any Huey ever had out in the bush. Keeping a
wary eye out for the enemy, he scooped up handfuls of the fine alluvial soil
and began tossing them in the air, creating a dust cloud. The pilot spotted the
dust, immediately angling the chopper toward it. Gutierrez began moving
cautiously toward the spot he expected it to land. He held the shotgun ready,
still covering his back trail. No sense
taking any stupid chances at this point, he thought.
For
whatever reason, the remaining militiamen did not respond to the helicopter’s
approach. Perhaps they were simply biding their time or maybe they had not
recovered from Gutierrez’ little welcoming party, yet. But that didn’t mean he
could not feel their eyes on him, silently watching. The Blackhawk flared as it
touched down and Gutierrez ducked under the spinning rotors, dashing for the
door. Stinging grit assaulted his squinting eyes. It felt great, just great.
Deafened and blinded, the remaining militiamen chose that moment to open fire.
Unlike the Huey’s of Southeast Asia, no pintle-mounted, .30
caliber machine gun offered covering fire. But an ATF agent armed with an
assault rifle sat in the open door. He leaned out, trading shots with the
attacking gunmen. The helicopter vibrated like a tuning fork as several shots
dinged the airframe. Miraculously, it kept hovering. One bullet starred the
windshield, directly in front of the pilot’s nose, still no one on board took a
hit. The Blackhawk touched down barely long enough for Gutierrez to throw
himself through the open cargo door and secure a death-grip around one of the
bench mounts. As soon as Gutierrez latched on, the pilot immediately yanked his
collective, soaring out of Dodge City.
Dusting off a hot LZ just like the old
days, thought Gutierrez as he watched the hilltop
drop away beneath his feet. Reaction suddenly set in, knotting his stomach.
Gutierrez had to lean out the door to rid himself of the acid in his belly. Once
again he marveled at how getting out alive, after leaving someone behind, can
make one feel inexpressible joy and crushing grief at the same time.
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