TITLE: Arms of the Angel
AUTHOR: Marilea Butler
EMAIL: marilea.butler@robins.af.mil
RATING: R (language)
GENRE: crossover: Due South/The Commish/Touched By An Angel/ER
CATEGORY: drama
PAIRINGS: none
SPOILERS: "The Kid" episode of The Commish
DISCLAIMER: if you recognize them, they ain't mine. If you don't, they
are.
I promise to put everyone back safe and sound when I'm done
playing with
them.
AUTHOR'S NOTES: there is a Commish character named Stan in this story.
Ray
is the original Ray Vecchio. August 2000, Marilea Butler.
ARCHIVE: RSY, Hexwood. Anyone else please ask. Feedback begged for!
PROLOGUE
Eastbridge, New York, February
The six of them stood by the bus at the Eastbridge bus depot. "Mr
Schraeger's gonna see to it that the three of you get to Schenectady
safely," Detective Paulie Pentangeli told the three boys waiting
to board
the bus. "I'll give you a call tonight, OK?" He
bent down to tie the
youngest boy, eight year old Kevin's, scarf
around his neck. As he did,
Kevin and Jake wrapped themselves around
the surprised detective. He hugged
back just as hard, only now realizing
just how much he would miss the three
boys he had known for only
a few short days. "It's gonna be fine; I promise
you." Standing up, Paulie hugged Michael, at 16 the oldest of the
three
Collier boys and the one who had started it all when Paulie
and Commissioner
Tony Scali arrested him for robbing a drug store
- both for money to live on
and cough syrup for the middle boy, ten
year old Jake, who was sick. Paulie
had taken in the three boys temporarily,
but now Child Services was taking
custody and sending them to a halfway
house in Schenectady until they could
be placed in foster care. Mikey
was worried that the three of them would be
separated - and it did
seem inevitable.
"OK, fellas, c'mon - let's go," Schraeger said. Kevin and Jake
picked up
their little bags and the four of them moved towards the door of the
waiting
bus. Tony patted Paulie on the back, wordlessly reassuring
his friend that
he was doing the right thing for the boys. After
all, Paulie would be a
single parent with no really set hours of
work - hardly a stable home
environment for three street kids whose
mother was dead and whose father had
deserted them six years ago.
"Tony, I don't care if it's right or not - I can't let 'em go. Maybe
I'll
fall flat on my face, but I'm gonna try to keep those kids together.
Maybe
Child Services here can find a family that'll take the three
of them. Hell,
maybe I'll keep 'em myself."
"You? Paulie, you don't know anything about being a parent! You
said so
yourself!"
"Hey, I don't remember Sarah and David coming with an instruction
book!
Besides, I can always call you and Rachel, right?"
"You know you can, pal. Are you sure you wanna do this?"
"As sure as I've ever been about anything. Hey, Schraeger - hold
up a
minute...."
**
The bus pulled out of the depot - minus three boys. Tony, Paulie, Mikey,
Jake and Kevin all headed back towards Paulie's car. "It's only
until we can
find a home that'll take all three of you," Paulie was saying.
"You're the only one that'll take all three of us," Mikey replied.
"So you're gonna be our Daddy now," cried Kevin from his vantage
point on
Paulie's shoulders.
Paulie looked over at Tony. "Well, we'll see. C'mon."
CHAPTER ONE
Eastbridge, July
It was hot. Hot and sticky. Even at 1:30 in the morning. Arthur Malinson,
small-time petty crook and second-story man, AKA "Smartie Artie"
to certain
members of the Eastbridge Police Department, had just succeeded in finding
a
reasonably cool place to sleep for the remainder of the night,
down on the
docks. He had just managed to drift off when loud talking
woke him up again.
*Shit,* he thought, *why can't these assholes keep it down some? How's
a guy
gonna get any shuteye with this kinda shit goin' on?* He was
about to holler
at them to shut up, but something inside told him
maybe he'd better shut up
and listen. Maybe he'd hear something that
might be worth a double sawbuck
or two. What he heard made him reconsider
that. It was worth something, all
right - it was worth his life.
"Mr Collette don't like guys who steal from him - it means he can't
trust
'em. You wanna know what Mr Collette does to guys he don't
trust?" Artie
recognized that voice - it was Dominic Battaglio,
long suspected by the cops
to be Collette's chief hit man. Long suspected,
never proven. Until now.
Artie listened. Another voice -
"Hey, I never took nothin' from Mr Collette! I swear I don't know
what
happened to that stuff! I swear!!"
"Yeah? You was the only one who was ever alone with the shipment.
So that
means you get elected guilty. Just think - you can be a shinin'
example of
what happens to dopes who rip off Mr Collette."
"Hey, man, I got a wife and kids - what about them?"
"You shoulda thought of that before." Then came the unmistakable
muffled
sound of a silenced pistol, the thud of a body hitting the ground, and
a
splash as the body was pushed into the river. Artie took an involuntary
step
backwards - right into a barrel. He heard the sound of his shoe
kicking the
barrel, then the sound of Battaglio's voice - "What
the fuck..." Artie
didn't wait around to hear any more - he ran. Battaglio followed, but
Artie
was much smaller than the other man, and soon succeeded in
losing him. He
wasn't about to take any chances, though - he ran
straight to the bus depot,
where he bought a ticket on the very next
bus out.
CHAPTER TWO
Chicago
"C'mon, Joey, ya gotta help me here! Collette's people are gonna
be lookin'
for me! I witnessed one of their hits! That makes me as good as dead
if they
find me!" Artie was lucky that the first bus out of
Eastbridge was headed to
Chicago; at least he had a few contacts there who could help hide him,
if
they could be persuaded to. Right now he was trying to persuade
one Joey
Cook, a small-time grifter who had moved on to greener pastures
when it got
a little too hot in Eastbridge.
"Yeah, and if they find you with me, where does that leave me? Dead
too! I
ain't eager to be worm food yet!"
"C'mon, just a few days! I think I got out of there clean; I hid
in the can
for half an hour until the bus left and I didn't see no one followin'
me."
"What're ya gonna do then, huh? You gonna stay here in Chicago forever?
What
happens if you get busted here? When the cops run your prints, your record
from Eastbridge is gonna come up and they're gonna call! Then they'll
ship
your ass right back there pronto!"
"Nah, I got nothin' outstandin' back there. I'm clean. "
Joey thought about it for a minute, then said "OK, you can stay
- but just
for a few days. I don't want Collette's heat on me either!
Clear?"
********
Two weeks later Artie was pretty sure the heat was off of him. He had
found
a job, at least for now, and was trying to settle in to a life
of normal.
He'd gotten a room in a boarding house and moved out of
Joey's, which also
made Joey happy. But soon Artie found that life
on the straight and narrow
was not for him and before long he was
back to his old tricks -
consequently, before long he also met up
with representatives of the Chicago
PD.
CHAPTER THREE
"Vecchio! My office! And you might as well bring Big Red along,
too," Lt
Harding Welsh's voice rang out into the bullpen of the Chicago PD's 27th
District. Detective Ray Vecchio looked up from the report he was attempting
to type and sighed. *Now what?*
"C'mon, Benny, let's see what's up."
Constable Benton Fraser, RCMP, followed his friend and unofficial partner
into Welsh's office. He had come by the station as he and Ray were going
to
have lunch together; those plans got scuttled as soon as he entered
the
bullpen.
Ray closed the door behind him as he and Fraser entered the Lieutenant's
office. Welsh handed him a case file. "Uniforms just picked up this
guy on a
B&E over on LaSalle. He's clean in Chicago, but NCIC turned up records
in
Eastbridge, New York. Small-timer. See what you can get out of
him - for
instance, what is he doing here in our fair city. You might
start by calling
the Eastbridge PD to see if there's any outstandings
there."
"Eastbridge, New York? What the hell's he doing here in Chicago?
And where
the hell is Eastbridge, New York?"
"Vecchio, you're the detective - go and detect. Isn't that what
you draw a
city paycheck for?"
The two men left the Lieutenant's office and went to Interview 1 to review
the file before going to Interview 2 where the suspect, one Arthur Malinson,
was being held. He hadn't lawyered up yet , which was good because Ray
knew
if they were going to get any useful information out of him
it would have to
be before a Public Defender or State's Attorney
arrived on the scene and
made any questioning virtually useless.
While Ray read over the file, Fraser
watched Artie through the two-way
mirror. Artie appeared extremely nervous,
constantly shifting and
pacing around the room.
"Ray, do you see anything odd in this man's behaviour?" Fraser
asked.
Ray glanced briefly into the mirror. "So he's antsy. So what?"
"Ray, he has quite a record. Granted, it's all relatively minor
offenses,
but sitting in an interview room in a police station should
be nothing new
for him. Yet he acts as though he is terrified. I
think we might find out
that that has something to do with his presence
in Chicago."
"Yeah, well, why don't you go and dazzle him with some of that Mountie
charm
of yours before the lawyers show up and screw up the whole thing."
Fraser went into Interview 2 and closed the door. "Arthur Malinson?"
He held
out his hand to Artie. "I'm Constable Benton Fraser, Royal Canadian
Mounted
Police." Artie reluctantly shook Fraser's hand. "What
the hell is a Mountie
doing in Chicago?"
"Well, that's a long story - it takes exactly two hours to tell.
But that
isn't important. I'd like to know what you're doing here
in Chicago. This is
a long way from Eastbridge. Something appears
to have you very scared; I'd
like to help you if I can."
"Yeah? Can you get me out of here? Alive?"
That last word got Fraser's attention. "I'll do what I can; first
you have
to tell me what it is that has you so scared."
"How do I know I can trust you?"
"You don't. You'll just have to try."
Artie snorted. But he thought about it for a minute. *How the hell can
this
nutbag in the red suit help me?* Artie thought. *I really don't
wanna stay
here in Chicago after all; but I don't want to go back
to certain death in
Eastbridge either. Maybe Battaglio didn't really
see me well enough to
identify me. Maybe Scali can keep me safe if
I go back there and tell them
what I know. Hell, I'd like to be rid
of Collette just as much as the cops
would; he scares me.*
Fraser watched the thoughts and emotions playing across Artie's face.
All he
had to do was be patient, and if there was one thing Benton
Fraser excelled
at it was waiting.
Finally Artie sighed. "OK," he said. At that precise moment
the door opened
and Ray came in. "Hey, who's he?" Artie asked, nervous again.
"This is Detective Raymond Vecchio, my unofficial partner. You can
trust
him; if we're going to help you he'll have to know anyway.
I have no
jurisdiction here."
"I dunno...."
Ray knew enough about Fraser's methods to keep quiet. He tried to smile
reassuringly, let Artie relax again. He wasn't entirely sure he succeeded.
"You're sure he's OK?"
"Absolutely."
"If I talk, you'll drop the charges against me here?"
Fraser glanced at Ray, who said, "Depends on what you bring to the
table. If
it's good enough, I'll see what I can do."
Artie looked at the two men for what seemed an eternity. They needed
to get
this wrapped up before the lawyers got there. Ray prayed for
a traffic jam.
Finally Artie sighed, and started to talk. When he
had finished, Fraser and
Ray looked at each other, then got up and
went to the other side of the
room.
"Whadya think, Benny? Think he's on the up-and-up?"
"I believe he is, Ray. He certainly seems frightened enough for
it to be
true."
"Yeah, I thought so too. Hell, anytime we can cut a leg off the
Mob, no
matter where, I'm all for it. You stay here with Artie; I'm
gonna go talk to
Welsh. Keep an eye out for the lawyers."
"Will do."
********
When he had relayed Artie's story to Welsh, Ray asked about putting the
man
in protective custody as a precaution until they could contact
authorities
in Eastbridge. Welsh agreed, albeit reluctantly, but
only for a few days.
"OK, Benny, we're gonna keep him here until someone from Eastbridge
can get
out here and pick him up. I gotta go make some phone calls. Where the
hell
is Eastbridge, anyway..." Ray muttered, returning to his
desk leaving Fraser
and Artie in the interview room.
"So I gotta stay in jail, huh?"
"It isn't exactly jail, it's protective custody. But here at the
station
will be the safest place for you, until arrangements can
be made to
transport you back to Eastbridge. I should think you will
be back in New
York by the end of the week. The leftenant has agreed
to drop all charges
against you."
"Great - I'm off the hook in Chicago, maybe dead in Eastbridge.
How lucky
can one guy get? And what the hell is a 'leftenant'?"
While Fraser explained the differences in Canadian and American
pronunciation
of certain words, Ray was talking to Eastbridge Police
Commissioner
Tony Scali.
CHAPTER FOUR
Eastbridge
Dominic Battaglio was not a happy man - he had just been told by his
'employer' that if something like that ever happened again, he, Battaglio,
would be the next one into the river. And he knew Collette meant it.
So he
did the best thing he could do - kept his mouth shut, and waited
for a
chance to redeem himself. And that chance might not be far
away - Artie was
mistaken when he told Joey no one knew he had come
to Chicago - Battaglio
knew, and now Collette knew as well. Battaglio
had followed Artie to the bus
station but hadn't followed him in
because the place was too busy that
particular night - too many potential
witnesses. But he knew Artie had
boarded a bus to Chicago, and now
he knew that Artie had been busted in
Chicago. All that was left
now was to find out when someone from the
Eastbridge PD was going
to go and get him. Follow them, hit Artie, along
with any cops that
got in the way, and all was well again.
********
"Chicago? What the hell is Smartie Artie doin' in Chicago?"
Paulie said,
disbelief written all over his face. Tony had just finished telling him
about his conversation with Ray. "I'm surprised he could find the
bus
station, let alone Chicago."
"Well, he's there and we need to get him back here. If what he told
them is
true, this could wrap up Collette for good and I don't want to miss that
golden opportunity. I've got Lucille making your travel arrangements;
you
and Stan are gonna fly to Chicago tomorrow so start packing.
And since you
will be escorting a 'protected witness' - " Tony's
voice dripped with
sarcasm - "make sure your carry papers are
all in order. We're not taking
any chances with this one."
"He heard Battaglio talking to Henry Ribisi before he was shot?
And that
Collette gave the order?"
"That's what he said. And we know Ribisi was on Collette's payroll."
Lucille knocked on the door. "Here's your itinerary. You leave from
La
Guardia tomorrow afternoon at 3:00, United Airlines flight 679,
arriving in
Chicago at 4:22 local time..."
"Oh good - frequent flyer miles."
Lucille shot Paulie a dirty look before continuing. "That was the
earliest
flight I could get. Your return flight is Thursday at 1:00
pm local time,
United Flight 684, arriving back at La Guardia at
4:00. Tickets will be
waiting at the airline counter."
"Well, since we'll be there a full day as well as travel days, I
think the
thing to do is get settled and meet with the cops in Chicago,
then leave the
full day for all the formalities and paperwork. Won't
be so rushed that way.
What about a rental car, Lucille, or is that
our call?"
"Go to the Hertz counter at O'Hare; I've already reserved a sedan
for you."
"Lucille, you're the best," Tony said as she left the office.
"Send Stan in
here, willya?"
"I know," she shot back. "And he's on his way."
Sgt Stan Kelly knocked on Tony's door a few seconds later. "What's
up,
boss?"
"You and Paulie are going to Chicago tomorrow to bring back Smartie
Artie."
"Smartie Artie's in Chicago? What the hell's he doing there?"
Tony and Paulie exchanged looks - *didn't we just go through this?*
"I'll let Paulie fill you in on all the details. Just make sure
you two get
him back here in one piece."
********
That night, Paulie sat Mikey, Jake and Kevin down to tell them what was
going on. He was a little concerned about leaving them alone, but he
didn't
really have many options. They had been doing very well with
him, so he felt
that they would probably be just fine - after all,
they could call Tony and
Rachel should they need to.
"OK, guys, here's the deal - tomorrow I have to go to Chicago for
a few
days. I'll be back on Thursday. Do you think you can manage
alright by
yourselves here, or do you want to go and stay with Tony
and Rachel?"
"I think we'll do fine here," Mikey said, but Kevin and Jake
looked just a
little apprehensive. "Like you said, the Scalis are just a phone
call away.
And I expect you'll ask for more patrols around here while you're gone."
Paulie grinned - he had indeed been planning on just that. "OK then.
I'll
call you when I get settled in, again on Wednesday night and
before we leave
on Thursday. All the phone numbers you'll need are
by the phone, there's
plenty to eat here and I'll leave some money
just in case. Kevin, Jake -
time to hit the sack. Let's go."
After Kevin and Jake had been settled into bed, Paulie told Mikey, "OK,
Mikey, you're in charge while I'm gone. Keep your head, OK? Watch out
for
your brothers."
Mikey gave Paulie a look - *wasn't that just what I was doing before
we came
to live here?*
"Yeah, I know, but this is a little different - you live in my house
now,
not on the streets. I trust you - you'll do just fine. And mow
the lawn
while I'm gone, willya?"
Grinning, Mikey threw Paulie a mock salute. "Will do, sir!"
CHAPTER FIVE
The next day, Stan and Paulie drove into New York City, to La Guardia
airport. They picked up their plane tickets and boarded United Flight
679
for the two and a half hour flight to Chicago. They were met
at the other
end by Ray, Fraser and Diefenbaker; Ray was holding
up a sign reading
"Eastbridge". Stan spotted them first
and nudged Paulie. "Those must be the
guys we're meeting." All four men shook hands, then headed off to
the rental
car counter, as Stan and Paulie had no luggage to retrieve, both having
opted for carry-on. Stan bent down to ruffle Dief's fur. "Nice dog."
"Actually he's half wolf," Fraser said.
Stan snatched his hand back and stood up. "Wolf? How'd you get him
into the
airport?"
"He won't hurt you, and we've been in here... well, let's just say
they know
Dief here."
"I'll take your word for it."
"Well, fellas, what's the plan? Should Stan and I get checked in
and then we
get together and discuss this, or discuss first? They've got us booked
into
a Comfort Inn downtown."
"Ray, I think we should let these gentlemen get checked into their
hotel and
go from there."
"Yeah. You two got plans for dinner?"
"Not right now; I thought we'd get our stuff dropped off at the
hotel and
then see what was around. I don't know about Stan, but
I'm not in the mood
for room service."
"Not a problem. You two get checked in, then you can follow us to
my place
for dinner - no arguments, my Ma makes enough for an army.
Benny here was
already coming; two more won't make any difference.
And it'll be peaceful
for a change - my sister Francesca is in Florida
for a week. Benny and I can
fill you in on all the details after
dinner."
Paulie and Stan looked at each other. "Hey, it beats carry-out,"
Stan said.
Paulie grinned at Ray. "You're on. You have no idea how long it's
been since
I had a good, home-cooked Italian meal!"
When they had picked up the rental car Ray asked, "Where do they
have you
booked?"
"The Comfort Inn on Diversey. Not too far from your station,"
Paulie
replied. "They even sprung for separate rooms."
"You know how to get there? OK, you can follow me. Once you get
settled in
you can follow me back to my place. Shouldn't take too
long."
"I just want to give Tony a call back in Eastbridge and let him
know what's
going on, then call..." Paulie hesitated a minute... "my kids."
He found he
had indeed begun to think of them as 'his kids'. He made up his mind
that
when he got back to Eastbridge he would get in touch with Child
Services and
look into legal guardianship.
"Hey, you got kids?"
"Well, sort of - I'll tell you all about it later."
********
Once they got checked in and to their rooms, Paulie called Tony and filled
him in on the details so far.
"So far, so good; Ray Vecchio, the detective who talked to you,
is gonna
fill us in on the deal tonight. He even invited us to his
place for a
home-cooked Italian dinner. How's that for interdepartmental
cooperation?"
"Paulie, you are too lucky for your own good. Give me a call back
tomorrow
afternoon when you've got all the details worked out. "
"Will do. Later." Paulie clicked off, then dialed his home
number. After 4
rings, his answering machine picked up... "Hi, this is Paulie. Leave
a
message." *Smart kids,* he thought, *screening the calls.*
"Mikey, pick up -
it's Paulie."
"Hello?"
"Hey, tough guy - how's it going back there?"
"Fine - Kevin misses you, though. Any chance you'll come back early?"
"Fraid not - it'll probably take most if not all day tomorrow to
iron out
all the details and get the proper paperwork taken care
of. So no, I
probably won't be back til Thursday. If you think it'll
make him feel
better, you can all sleep in my bed tonight and tomorrow
night."
"I think we just might. Thanks."
"You've got my cell phone number if you really need me. I'll give
you a call
again tomorrow night, okay? Bye."
"Bye."
Paulie hung up the phone and rejoined the others down in the hotel lobby.
CHAPTER SIX
Just like Ray said, the two extra people were welcomed for dinner in
the
Vecchio house. Paulie, having grown up in a similar family, fit
right in,
but for Stan it was rather like being thrown in the deep
end of the pool.
Fraser noticed his discomfort. "Don't worry
- as Ray once told me, they only
attack the ones they love."
"Is that supposed to make me feel better?"
"I felt the same way myself the first five or six times."
"Are they always this... lively?"
Fraser smiled. "Actually, this is quiet - Francesca is gone."
"You're kidding."
"So tell me, Paulie, have you got any family in New York?"
Ma Vecchio was
asking.
"No, Mrs Vecchio... well, not exactly - I've got three sort-of foster
sons
at the moment; when I get back I think I'm going to look into
becoming their
legal guardian. And frankly, the thought of it scares
the hell out of me."
It surprised Paulie to actually say it
out loud, but the more he thought
about it the more it seemed exactly
like what he should do. It surprised
Stan as well, but everyone else
took it right in stride.
"Three? How did you get three foster sons? And what do you mean
by sort-of?"
Maria asked.
So Paulie told everyone how the three Collier brothers had come into
his
life, and his doubts about taking them on permanently as a single
parent.
"Nonsense - you'll do just fine. Just remember, your time with them
is short
- treasure every minute. Being a parent is the hardest job on earth,
but
it's also the most rewarding. You'll come back and visit sometime
and bring
your boys. You're family now. Both of you are," Ma
Vecchio said in a voice
that would not take 'no' for an answer.
"I'll do that - thanks for the invitation. And for the dinner. Ray,
I think
we'd better discuss this transfer before Stan and I fall asleep; we're
still
on Eastern time. And what is a Mountie doing working with the
Chicago PD,
anyway?"
Fraser opened his mouth to answer; Ray looked at him and said, "Readers
Digest Condensed version, Benny; we've got other things to discuss tonight
too."
"Understood."
********
Across the street and a few doors down from the Vecchio house a man sat
in a
dark, nondescript car. He picked up a cell phone and dialled
a number in
Eastbridge, New York. "Yeah?"
"They're meeting with the cops in Chicago. Artie ain't with 'em."
"Keep on 'em and keep me informed. When they move Artie, hit 'em.
I want
that little snitch dead, and if you have to take out a cop
of two as
well..."
"Whatever you say. It's your money." He hung up and kept watch.
********
The next morning Stan and Paulie arrived at the station at 9:00. They
met
with Lt Welsh and various representatives of the State's Attorney's
office
to get all the paperwork in order for their return trip to
Eastbridge the
next day with Artie. All involved were surprised at
how smoothly things
went; Chicago was eager to get rid of Artie and
Eastbridge, while not
exactly eager to get him back, was eager to
find out how good his
information was. They were finished by 2 pm.
That gave Stan and Paulie the
chance to 'talk' to Artie about the
whole thing.
"OK, Artie - talk to me. Tell me why we should waste the Eastbridge
taxpayers' money to take your sorry ass back. Tony seems to think you
can
help us bust Collette, but I ain't so sure. So convince me, or
I swear I'll
leave you here in Chicago." Paulie sat one-legged
on the table in Interview
2.
"C'mon, Pentangeli, you think I would have run if it wasn't serious?"
"I don't know, Artie - you tell me."
"Collette don't mess around - if he knew I witnessed a hit and can
finger
the shooter I'd be a dead man by now. You know that!"
Paulie snorted. "Yeah? And here I thought Collette was just another
of
Eastbridge's fine upstanding citizens. Go figure."
"I swear on my mother's grave, Paulie, I heard Dominic Battaglio
that night
down on the docks. I heard him say Collette was gonna make Ribisi an
example! I swear!"
"Think you can make a grand jury believe you? Your record isn't
exactly
spotless, you know."
Ray, Fraser and Stan were watching from Interview 1.
"I take it they have a history," Fraser said.
"Yeah, Paulie gets a lot of good tips from Artie. He's known as
'Smartie
Artie' back at the shop. Has his fingers in lots of pies."
"How much goes on in Eastbridge, anyway?" Ray asked. "I
mean, it isn't that
big."
"We may not be big, but we're close to the City so we get a lot
of spillover
- guys tryin' to escape the heat there sometimes wind
up in Eastbridge. And
we get the occasional 'wannabe' tryin' to make
a name for himself. We've got
plenty, believe me."
"City?" Fraser looked confused.
"New York City - the Big Apple. We're about an hour up the Hudson."
"Ah."
Paulie came in from the other room. "I don't know how worthwhile
this is
gonna be after all. The grand jury might not consider him
to be a reliable
informant. But, we've got a one-way ticket back
to New York... either of you
guys want to come to New York? No? Well,
I guess we'll just have to take
Artie back tomorrow, then."
********
A dark, nondescript car drove past the parking lot near the 27th District
station house. The driver was checking to see if a particular rental
car was
still parked where it had been 15 minutes earlier. Satisfied
that it was,
the car moved on. He was still watching when, an hour
later, two men left
the station and drove off in the rental car,
minus Artie. He figured the
move would be tomorrow, but he kept an
eye on the two anyway.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Once again Stan and Paulie had dinner at the Vecchio house, Ma Vecchio
having insisted. Tony and Maria took the kids to a movie, so the house
was
relatively quiet; the five of them spent the evening in pleasant
conversation. By the time they left Stan and Paulie indeed felt like
'family' and both had promised to return to visit.
Thursday morning Paulie called Tony before leaving for the station. "Tony,
I'm not sure just how much good this is going to do. Artie didn't see
Battaglio, he just heard him. I've got doubts about getting this past
a
grand jury."
"I know, Paulie, but at least if he's back here we can keep an eye
on him -
see if Battaglio tries anything, if he has suspicions about just how
much
Artie does know. That might be enough. After all, you've got
a return
one-way ticket to New York; if you don't bring Artie back
who're you gonna
bring?"
"Hey, I already offered it to Fraser and Vecchio and they both turned
me
down. I guess that leaves the wolf."
"Wolf?"
"I'll tell ya all about it when I get back. Have you heard anything
from the
boys? Anything they didn't want me to know about? Or worry about?"
"No, they're fine. Rachel stopped by there yesterday. Cyd stopped
by; she's
passing through town. She's coming over for dinner tonight; why don't
you
and the boys come too? You can tell the whole story of this little
lark to
the Midwest."
"Sounds good. What time? We get back in about 4."
"Let's make it around 8. That'll give you time to get back here
and get
Artie down to the station."
"See ya then."
Paulie called the boys and told them that they were all going to dinner
at
the Scalis that night and why didn't they head over there about
6:30; he'd
just come straight from the station.
They stopped and got coffee and bagels on the way to the 27th, arriving
around 10 o'clock. All the papers were in order, so they collected Artie
and
headed back to their car at 11:30.
********
"C'mon, Al, just one little drink."
"Richie. It is 11:30 in the morning and you are already drunk off
your ass.
I am not giving you a drink and I really should call the cops. Give me
your
car keys; you don't need to be driving."
"Uh-uh, no can do, Al. Not gonna give you the keys. Nope nope nope."
"Then I'm gonna have to take 'em from you. You are not gonna leave
my
establishment and drive drunk - if you get in a wreck the cops'll
come after
me and hold me responsible because I shoulda kept you
from gettin' behind
the wheel. They'll yank my license, man! You
don't want that to happen, do
ya?"
"No, I guess not. Sorry, man."
"Let me get you some coffee. Be right back."
Al went into the bar's kitchen to get a couple cups of coffee. When he
returned, Richie was nowhere to be seen.
CHAPTER EIGHT
"OK, Artie," Paulie said, "back seat for you. Stan, you
want to drive or you
want shotgun?"
"What the hell, I'll drive. It isn't too far to the expressway,
is it?"
"Just a couple of blocks," Ray said.
Everyone got into their respective vehicles and drove out of the parking
lot. Ray and Fraser in front, Stan, Paulie and Artie following. None
of them
noticed the dark car tailing at a discreet distance. Nor
did they see a very
drunk driver who had just pulled away from a
bar two blocks over, headed
their way - until he ran a stop sign.
"Jesus Christ!" "Ray! Turn around!" Ray was already
whipping the Riviera in
a tight u-turn. "I am! I am! Call it in!" "This is Constable
Benton Fraser,
RCMP. We need emergency vehicles at the corner of... Ray, where are we?"
"Corner of Halsted and Diversey" "at the corner of Halsted
and Diversey.
Motor vehicle accident. Two cars involved, at least four people injured."
The man driving the dark car pulled into a parking lot and made a phone
call. "I think someone has just helped us out a great deal. Some
idiot ran a
stop sign and plowed into the car Artie's in. Can't check anything, the
place will be crawling with cops in seconds."
"Then you'd better find out what hospital they take them to. Keep
me
posted."
********
Carol Hathaway, RN, took the call from the ambulance. "Got it. Look
alive,
we've got an incoming MVA, ETA five minutes. Two serious,
one critical."
The emergency room staff at Cook County General Hospital moved quickly
to
make sure everything was ready. Five minutes could be either an
eternity or
the blink of an eye; it all depended what side you were
on. Then the doors
of the ambulance bay burst open and three gurneys
followed by several
Chicago cops and one Mountie came through, Dief
having reluctantly stayed
behind in the Riv. Doctors and paramedics
were all talking at once.
"Multiple fractures, head trauma, possible internal injuries"
"Head trauma,
broken left arm" "Carter, take this one in Trauma 3; Mark,
take this one to
Trauma 1" "This one's coming around" "He's the best
of the lot - just some
scalp lacs and a broken nose" "He was in the back seat"
"I'm gonna need a
head CT on both front seat passengers, Malik" "Elizabeth, can
you give me a
hand here?" "Gotta intubate this one - he's pretty bad"
"Foley's in; we've
got blood" "Damn" "Someone call for a surgical consult."
Ray and Fraser could only watch and wait. This was one of the few times
they
had been in the hospital's waiting area together; usually one
or the other
of them was the one being worked on. The driver of the
other car had been
DOA; Ray had insisted the paramedics take a blood
sample to check his blood
alcohol content. They waited until the
doctor working on Artie had finished
to talk to him. No one paid
any attention to the man who came in and also
stood, waiting and
watching.
"Hey, Dr Carter, what can you tell me?"
"Detective Vecchio. You with these guys?"
"Yeah. Idiot ran a stop sign. Looks like he was pretty drunk; he
was DOA.
Plowed right into the car."
"Well, the one I was with is fine - cuts, bruises, broken nose,
minor
concussion. Let me check on the other two for you. Be right
back." Dr Carter
returned momentarily. "The driver isn't too bad; some scalp lacerations,
concussion, broken arm. He should be coming around pretty soon. Dr Weaver
wants to get a head CT on both of them to rule out anything more serious,
and we're holding him and the back seat passenger overnight to make sure.
The other guy, though... looks like he took the brunt of the impact.
Right
arm and leg broken, broken ribs, possible skull fracture, cheekbone,
probable internal injuries... as soon as they get him stable they're
taking
him to surgery. He looks pretty bad - the first 48 hours will
be critical.
Friends of yours?"
"Fellow cops, from Eastbridge, New York. They were taking your guy
there
back - potential witness in a mob hit."
Carter's eyes grew wide. "Wow! You think this was... maybe... deliberate?"
"Nah, just very bad luck. We talked to witnesses who saw the driver
leave a
bar. Can we talk to him now?" Ray indicated the area where Artie
was.
"Sure. They've moved him to Curtain Two; you know where that is?"
"Yeah. Thanks, Doc." Ray and Fraser moved down the hall to
Curtain Two.
"Okay, Artie, looks like you're gonna be a guest of the city of
Chicago for
another day or so. The hospital wants to keep you overnight, then Fraser
and
I will take you back to the station until other arrangements
can be made."
All Artie could do was keep mumbling "They know - they know - they
know..."
under his breath. Ray tried to explain that it was not aimed at him,
but
Artie wasn't listening. He was convinced that Collette had arranged
the
whole thing. He knew the mobster wouldn't hesitate to kill a
couple of cops
if he had to to get at his target.
Fraser finally managed to break through and get Artie to listen - "Mr
Malinson, think about this - the car was struck on the right side just
behind the front wheel. You were on the opposite side of the car and
in the
back. Don't you think that if the driver of the other car
was after you he
would have driven into the side of the car where
you were sitting? If
someone in the car were being targeted, from
the point of impact one would
have to surmise that the intended victim
was in fact Detective Pentangeli
and not yourself, as he is the one
who was closest to that point."
Artie looked at Ray - *could you please translate that?*
"That's Canadian for if there was a hit on anyone in that car it
was on
Paulie, not you. He got hit the worst."
"Oh man. How is he? And Stan? Jeez, I never meant for anything like
this to
happen; they're good guys, even if they are cops. Uh - no offense."
"Well, Stan's got a concussion, some cuts and bruises and a broken
arm; you
two are gonna share a room tonight cause the hospital's keeping you both
for
observation. Paulie though... like Fraser said, he was sitting
almost where
the other guy hit you; he's pretty bad. Touch and go
for awhile with him. I
think they're getting ready to take him to
surgery; they'll know more when
they get in there. Oh, Christ, Benny,
I gotta call their boss back in
Eastbridge and tell him what happened."
"No, you don't - I will," Stan said from a wheelchair in the
door. "The boss
and Paulie go back a long way. Let me be the one to call - just as soon
as
this brass band in my head settles down a little."
"Sure. What time were they expecting you three back?"
"The plane was supposed to get in about four, then an hour or so
drive - I'd
say between five and six our time. What time is it now?"
"It's five thirty." Ray handed Stan his cell phone. "Here."
"I'll take you outside to use that," Nurse Hathaway said from
the door.
"They interfere with machines. I just threw one guy out for using
a cell
phone. He was talking about your friends here - was he with
you?"
Fraser and Ray exchanged looks. "Let's step outside and discuss
this, shall
we?" Ray pushed Stan's chair out into the ambulance bay, then turned
to
Carol. "What'd he look like? Was he a uniformed cop? Tell
me whatever you
can about this guy..."
"I didn't hear much; just enough to know who he was talking about,
that's
all." She told Ray as much as she could about the man
that she had thrown
out of the ER. "I take it that he wasn't
with you, then."
"No, he wasn't. I'm gonna make sure that their room is watched tonight,
just
to make sure. He wasn't a reporter from one of the papers, was he?"
"No, they all know better than to use a cell inside the ER. And
anyway he
didn't have a notebook. Why would these two need protection?"
"The back seat passenger is a protected witness; Stan here and the
other guy
are cops from New York. They were on their way to O'Hare when a guy ran
a
stop sign and plowed into their car."
"Oh man - I'm so sorry. What an introduction to our city! Hope it
hasn't put
you off Chicago."
"Well, up until then I was really enjoying it. Now I'm not so sure."
Stan
smiled, then winced - smiling hurt.
"I gotta get back. I'll be back in a few minutes to take you to
your room,
Mr Kelly. Later, Ray."
"Thanks, Carol." He turned back to Stan. "I'll let you
make your call; I
think I'd better let Benny know about this little development. Be back
in a
few."
"Thanks, Ray." Stan looked for a minute at the phone in his
hand. *Jeez, I
am NOT looking forward to making this call!* He sighed, then dialled.
CHAPTER NINE
Eastbridge
"So Paulie just up and decided to take all three boys himself? Our
Paulie?"
Cyd Madison, commissioner of the Oak Port NY Police Department and former
Eastbridge Chief of Detectives, asked.
"Yeah, and I think the one who was most surprised by it was Paulie
himself.
He's done good with them, though. It'll break his heart if they find
a
family somewhere else for them." Tony stood up and went into
the kitchen.
"Another glass of wine, Cyd?"
"No thanks, I'm fine."
"I wonder what's keeping them?"
"They probably got stuck in traffic," Tony's wife Rachel said.
"He'll be
here any minute."
The doorbell rang - it was the three Collier boys. "Hey, guys, c'mon
in. Is
Paulie with you?"
"No, sir, he told us to just come over about 6:30," Mikey said.
"He said
he'd come from the station."
"Oh. Well, there's someone I'd like you to meet. Cyd Madison, this
is
Michael, Jake and Kevin Collier. Cyd here used to have Paulie's
job."
"Nice to meet you, boys," Cyd said, shaking hands with each.
"Why don't you boys go upstairs; I think David's got a new computer
game he
wants to show you."
The three boys ran upstairs. Cyd looked at Tony. "And he took them
in, so
they'd stay together?" Tony nodded. "Well, his heart's
in the right place,
even if his foot's in his mouth!"
Ring! Ring!
Rachel picked up the phone. "Hello?"
"Um, Mrs Scali, this is Stan. Is the boss there?"
"Sure, Stan, just a minute. Tony! It's Stan."
"Hey, Stan, when did you guys get...."
"Um, Boss, we ain't back yet - we're still in Chicago."
"What happened? Flight delayed?"
"Er, ah, no not exactly... I guess there's no easy way to say this..."
"Say what, Stan?"
"We're at Cook County General Hospital. We got hit by a drunk driver,
and..." Stan's voice trailed off.
"Your car got hit by a drunk driver? Is everyone OK?" Tony's
voice had
risen; Cyd and Rachel were looking at him, concern plain on both faces.
"Well, Artie's got some cuts and bruises, my arm's broken; they
want to keep
both of us overnight... ... ..."
"And?..."
Stan sighed. "Paulie's in surgery right now, Boss; he's pretty bad.
He might
not make it." There. It was out.
"Oh my God. Stan, give me your phone number there. I'm gonna get
on the next
flight out." He wrote down Ray's cell phone number. "I'll call
you when I
get there." He hung up the phone and turned to Cyd and Rachel. "I
guess you
heard enough of that to know something's up. Their car got hit by a drunk
driver; Paulie's in pretty bad shape. I'm gonna call and get on the next
flight out."
"I'm going with you, Tony," Rachel said. "I've known him
almost as long as
you have."
"What about Sarah and David?"
"You two go; I'll stay with Sarah and David," Cyd volunteered.
"Are you sure? You don't have to, you know."
"Tony, are you going to argue with me or are you going to go to
Chicago?"
Tony kissed her cheek. "Thanks, Cyd."
"We're going, too."
The three adults looked up to see the three Collier boys on the stairs.
Apparently they had heard Tony. All three were shaken; Kevin was in tears
and Jake wasn't far behind.
Tony and Rachel looked at each other. "OK; you deserve to be there
too.
He'll want to see you when he wakes up. Rache, you wanna get
some things
packed; I'll call the airport."
Rachel went upstairs and packed some things for them and explained what
was
happening to Sarah and David while Tony called the airlines to
check on
flights to Chicago. There was only one available seat on
the next flight, so
Tony took that and booked Rachel and the boys
on the first flight the next
morning. As he left for the airport
he promised to call them as soon as he
got to the hospital and found
out something.
CHAPTER TEN
Chicago
"They're keepin' him overnight in the hospital. I'll be there first
thing
tomorrow morning to see if I can get to him when he leaves."
"Make it quick and quiet, but make sure he knows who's doing it.
And why."
There was a click as the phone disconnected at the other end.
********
Tony was met at O'Hare by Ray and Fraser; introductions were made and
they
set out for the hospital. When they arrived Paulie was still
in surgery;
this time an orthopaedic surgeon was working on him.
Tony went to the Nurse's Station on the surgical floor. "Excuse
me, can you
tell me anything about Detective Pentangeli's condition?"
A pretty, red-haired woman in surgical scrubs looked up from a chart.
"I'm
Dr Corday, perhaps I can help you. I operated on Detective
Pentangeli."
"How bad is he, Doc?"
"It's mostly broken bones, but there was some liver damage and the
right
kidney was badly bruised. He won't lose it but he'll be on
dialysis for a
few days to give it time to heal. Also some lacerations
to the small
intestine and possible peritonitis. There's an orthopod
putting pins in his
leg now. There was severe head trauma as well
so we're keeping a watch on
his intracranial pressure. We may have
to go back and put in an ICP bolt if
it doesn't go down on its own."
"Will there be any permanent damage?"
"It's too soon to tell. The CTs looked promising, but we'll know
more in the
next few days."
"How soon can we see him?"
"Are you family?"
"Closest he's got."
"Not until he comes out of Recovery. Even then, he won't be conscious;
they're going to keep him in ICU in a drug coma for a few days, let his
body
have a chance to heal itself without interference."
"Thanks, Doc."
Dr Corday smiled and went back to her notes. Tony turned back to Ray
and
Fraser. "I'd like to see Stan before I try to find somewhere
to stay for the
night; do you know where his room is?"
"Sure, we'll take you. As far as a place to stay, you're welcome
to stay at
my place as long as you need."
"Thanks, but my wife and the kids are coming in tomorrow. I'll take
you up
on it for tonight, though."
"These wouldn't be Paulie's kids, would they?"
"So he told you about them, huh? They were at the house when Stan
called and
they insisted. I think Kevin needs to see him to make sure he's OK. Now
I'm
not so sure that's gonna be a good idea."
"Hey, kids are pretty resilient. I'll bet it'll be good for Paulie
to see
them when he wakes up."
When they got to the room Stan and Artie were in and passed the uniformed
cop at the door, the night nurse had just left, having doled out the
obligatory nighttime sleeping pills. Artie's had already kicked in; he
was
asleep in the far bed. Stan's hadn't yet, but he was beginning
to feel the
effects. "Heyyy, Boss, what're you doin' here?"
He turned morose, as the
medication kicked in further. "I'm sorry, Boss, it's all my fault,
I'm
sorry."
"Stan, it is not your fault - no one blames you. The guy was drunk.
If it's
anyone's fault it's his."
Too late - Stan was out for the count. "I'll have to talk to him
tomorrow.
He doesn't need to blame himself for this; there wasn't
a damn thing he
could have done to prevent it."
"He may not remember any of this tomorrow. Head injuries are like
that. Most
likely, he won't even remember getting into the car or having talked
to you
on the phone."
"You're probably right, Constable." Tony looked at Fraser as
if seeing him
for the first time. "What the hell is a Mountie doing in Chicago?"
"It's a long story."
"I've got time."
They headed out of the hospital to Ray's car. "I first came to Chicago..."
********
Weird. That was the only way to describe it. One of those clich out-of-body
experiences that were always in the supermarket checkout tabloids. Paulie
seemed to be watching himself, from the time the rescue workers got them
all
out of the car, through the ambulance ride to the hospital, the
doctors in
the emergency room until now, while the surgeons worked
on him. He thought
he should be afraid, that all the frantic activity
surrounding him 'down
there' meant he was dying. But he wasn't. Like
the stories said, there was a
sense of peace, of not being alone.
For a minute he almost sensed someone
else... nah, couldn't be. The
feeling stayed. He turned around and saw
another man standing there.
"Who are you? What's going on, anyway? Am l..."
"Dying? No, you're not. At least not now. My name is Andrew; I'm
an angel."
Reflexively Paulie crossed himself. "Holy Mary, Mother of God..."
Andrew laughed gently. "You seem troubled about something. Maybe
I can
help."
"How did you... okay, dumb question. Yeah, I guess you could say
that. Since
February I've had three sort-of foster kids. Lately I've been giving
a lot
of thought to becoming their legal guardian, making it permanent,
but now...
I'm not so sure anymore that that would be the best for
them. Look at my job
- I could get killed any day. Like what happened
today. Then what would
happen to them? They'd wind up back in the
system, probably get separated...
I don't want that. Maybe it would
be for the best if I found them another
family - a real family."
"What happened today could happen to anyone, police officer or not.
And as
far as your job - you knew that when you took them. What makes
you think
that you haven't been a real family for them? In the past
five months,
you've given those three boys something they haven't
had for a very long
time - stability. Do you really think it would
be for the best to rip that
out from under them right now?"
"I'd be a single parent - if I wind up on a stakeout, or something
develops
with a case that I can't get home until who knows when - they're all
alone
there. And now... they were expecting me to be there tonight
at 6:30! They
must be worried sick..."
"Paulie, you're in that situation right now. The only thing that
would
change is the legal standing. And as far as being worried that
you aren't
back yet - they know what happened. They're on their way
here with Rachel.
At their insistence. She didn't want them to come
but they want to see for
themselves that you're OK. They need to.
They need you."
"But I'm not OK. I won't be OK for a long time. How can I take care
of three
boys like this?"
"Why don't you let them take care of you for awhile? Let them feel
like you
need them as much as they need you."
Paulie thought about that for a minute. It had been a long time since
he had
allowed himself to think that he needed someone, or that someone
needed him
- since he and Diane had divorced. In his past experiences,
when you allowed
yourself to care you got hurt. But the truth was,
when he thought about it,
he did need those kids - they were a part
of him now.
"Y'know, I never thought of it like that. Er... will I remember
this...
later?"
"No... at least not like this. You'll remember it as a rather vague
dream.
But you will hold onto the important parts. Have faith - you're
doing the
right thing. For all four of you."
"Thanks..." Paulie turned back, but Andrew was gone. He thought
about it for
awhile, then closed his eyes and went to sleep.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Artie woke up as the night nurse was leaving the room. It was still dark
outside. Despite the sense of what Fraser had said to him earlier, he
still
wasn't convinced that Collette wasn't behind everything that
had happened.
And he knew that if he stayed here, he was a sitting
duck. Quietly, so as
not to wake Stan, he slid out of bed and got
his clothes from the room's
small wardrobe. He dressed, looked cautiously
up and down the hall and left
the hospital unobserved.
********
When Ray, Fraser and Tony arrived the next morning at the hospital, they
found Lt Welsh dressing down the officer who had been on the door to
Stan
and Artie's room last night.
"And why, Donovan, did you leave your post last night? You were
supposed to
stay at that door until you were relieved - no one in who wasn't on your
list, no one out. And what do we find when we get here this morning?
One
missing witness. What excuse could you possibly have that I will
accept as
good enough?"
"Er - ah - Lieutenant, I had dinner last night at Bernie's Mexican
Restaurant and... well..."
"Let me guess - a touch of Montezuma's Revenge? Then why didn't
you have
someone from hospital security take your post for the duration?"
"Ummmm - there wasn't time..."
Welsh just threw his hands up in the air. "OK, Donovan, get back
to the
station. l expect you to help Vecchio find this guy, since
you lost him to
begin with. And take some Kaopectate." He turned
to see Ray, Fraser and Tony
standing there. He reached out to shake Tony's hand. "Lt Harding
Welsh.
Sorry about your men; they both seem like good cops."
"Two of the best. Commissioner Tony Scali. Did you say Artie just
- left -
last night?"
"Yeah, around four am. Night nurse did rounds at three thirty; when
she came
back half an hour later he was gone. Sleeping pill must have worn off.
Your
other man slept through it; he's fine. No one reported seeing
anyone who
didn't belong on the floor, so he must have just... left."
"Leftenant, it would make sense that Mr Malinson simply... left,
as you put
it. In the Emergency Room yesterday he seemed convinced that there was
a -
hit - on him and that the accident was a way for the people he
was running
from to get to him. I thought I had made him see that
that was not the case;
apparently I was mistaken."
"I see. Thank you, Constable. Commissioner, do you have any ideas
as to who
he might try to hole up with here in Chicago? Any known associates from
your
jurisdiction who might now be here?"
"Not off the top of my head, Lieutenant, but I can call my station
and have
them fax a list of Artie's known associates. We can check your records
here
and see if we come up with any matches. And it's Tony."
"Harding. Sounds good. If you gentlemen will excuse me, I'll see
you back at
the station." Welsh moved off down the hall and caught the next
elevator
down. Tony took out his cell phone and called Eastbridge.
"Lucille..."
"Tony! Where are you?"
"I'm in Chicago, Lucille - I'll explain later. Have Ronnie get Smartie
Artie's sheets and fax a copy of his known associates to this number..."
he
looked at Ray - "312-656-1447." "312-656-1447."
"Got it. When are you going to be back? And where are Stan and Paulie?
Neither one of them has shown up this morning."
Tony sighed. "They're still here, Lucille. I don't know when we'll
be back.
Get Ronnie on that list - we need it right away."
"Well, you'd better call me back when you can tell me what's going
on there!
I'll get Ronnie on your list. Bye."
Tony hung up his phone and turned back to Fraser and Ray. "We should
have
that list within half an hour." While they stood in the
corridor talking,
the doctor came to check on Stan. She pronounced
him fit to leave, but to
take at least a week before returning to
work. He was struggling into his
clothes when they came into the
room.
"Boss? What are you doing here?"
Tony looked at Fraser - *you were right* - "You called me yesterday
and told
me what had happened."
"I did? If you say so..." He looked at the next bed - "Where's
Artie?"
"He decided to go for a little walk last night. So we gotta go find
him."
"Count me in."
"No way. All you're gonna do is help the detectives back at the
27th see if
any of Artie's known associates are in Chicago. And when you're done
with
that you're gonna sit there and wait til we get back. Capice?"
"Got it," Stan said, resigned. "How's Paulie doing?"
"We haven't been up there yet. If you want you can come up with
us; he
should be in ICU by now."
About the time the four of them were ready to head to the ICU, an orderly
came with a wheelchair to collect Stan and take him to be discharged.
He
wouldn't take no for an answer; they had to go downstairs, discharge
Stan,
then head back up to the ICU floor. "Does Lucille have
a brother in
Chicago?" Stan asked, glancing at the orderly.
"I don't know - I'll ask. Excuse me, can you tell me where we can
find
Detective Pentangeli?" Tony asked at the nurses' station.
"He's in Five, but no visitors. The doctor's with him now."
The four of them headed over to Cubicle Five, arriving just as the doctor
was leaving. "How is he, Doc?"
"Dr Romano. And you would be... ?"
"Commissioner Tony Scali, Eastbridge, New York PD. He's one of my
detectives."
"He came through the surgery fine, Commissioner. The intracranial
pressure
is decreasing on its own, which is very good. We don't anticipate
any
permanent damage; now it's just a waiting game. He won't be conscious
for
another few days, so no visitors; immediate family only. When
he's awake and
moved out of ICU you can see him. Excuse me, please."
Tony looked at his watch. "Jeez, I've got to get to the airport
- Rachel's
flight will be in in half an hour. Can you guys drop me
off there? I'll get
a rental car and meet you back at the station
when I get them settled in
somewhere."
"And what are they going to do all day in a hotel room? Worry, that's
what,"
Ray said. "No arguments, they're going to my place for now. We've
got plenty
of room, Ma will be glad for someone besides Tony and Maria to talk to
and
Dief and my nieces and nephews can keep the boys occupied - that
is, if
Benny here doesn't mind leaving him. Besides, Ma cares about
Stan and Paulie
too - she can stay informed this way without being
a pest here at the
hospital."
"Are you sure about this, Ray? Cause if you are I'm sure gonna take
you up
on it. When I got here last night I didn't think I'd be here
more than a few
days; since Artie jumped ship - well, now I'm not
so sure." They headed out
to the parking lot and then to O'Hare.
********
"Yeah?"
"Artie left the hospital last night."
"Where'd he go?"
"I don't know. He just left in the middle of the night."
"Find him."
********
They dropped Stan off at the station, where he and Detective Huey went
to
work on the list of Artie's known associates. Then they went and
picked up
Rachel and the three boys, got a rental car and headed
back to the hospital.
Tony had wanted to go to the Vecchio house
first and let them get settled,
but the four newcomers were adamant
- visit first, settle later. Mikey, Jake
and Kevin, being the closest
thing to immediate family that Paulie had, were
allowed to go in
briefly. Kevin tried to crawl into the bed with him, but
Mikey stopped
him. He had to content himself with holding what he could of
Paulie's
free hand. All three boys were teary-eyed with Kevin crying
unabashedly
and saying over and over, "You're our Daddy now; don't go."
After a few minutes the nurse ushered them out of the small cubicle.
Rachel and Tony stood outside, looking in the window.
"My God, Tony - he looks terrible."
"He'll look worse tomorrow, after the bruises hit their full colour.
Rache,
he's lucky to be here - if they'd been half a second faster, the other
car
would have hit him square."
When the boys came out, Jake and Kevin ran to Rachel and clung to her
like
little limpets. She hugged them back fiercely. "He'll be
fine; he's strong.
He'll be fine."
"C'mon, guys, let's go. We need to get to finding Artie and I want
to
introduce you to Mrs Vecchio."
As predicted, they all received a warm welcome from Ray's mother, who
wanted
all the details about both Stan and Paulie. Within a few minutes,
Rachel and
Mrs Vecchio were chatting away like old friends. Fraser
turned to Dief.
"Now, don't go begging for food - these people
are having a rough time right
now. Besides, you've been putting on weight lately."
"Wurf." The wolf managed to sound indignant and remorseful
at the same time.
"Why don't you go see if you can cheer up the boys?"
"Aorowwf." Dief bounded over to Kevin and Jake; soon his antics
had both
boys smiling. Tony turned to Mikey - "I'll keep you up to speed;
keep an eye
on everyone, OK?" then pulled him into a hug before the three cops
left.
CHAPTER TWELVE
As they thought, Artie indeed sought out a friend from Eastbridge; this
time, though, it wasn't Joey. When Artie had moved out Joey made it plain
that he did not want to hear from him again, so Artie turned to Darrell
Barston. He hadn't known Darrell was in Chicago, but happened to run
into
him when looking for a place to live. Darrell knew people who
could keep
them informed on goings-on, on both sides of the law.
He agreed to hide
Artie for a few days and try to find out what was
happening. Three days
later he had some news.
"Artie, man, you're not gonna like this - Collette does know you're
here,
and there is a hit on you. But that car thing didn't have nothin'
to do with
it. The guy on ya was following behind. Scali's here,
too - I think you
oughta just go to the cops and let 'em take ya
back to Eastbridge."
"No way! No way am I gonna do that! I did once and look what happened!"
"Man, you're bein' crazy - someone's gonna find you and I think
you stand a
better chance with the cops! At least they'll try ta keep ya safe!"
"Darrell, ya gotta keep your ear to the ground, try to find out
who the
hitter is. I feel like I'm a sitting duck here..."
"You are - and you're trying to drag me in with you. Man, you gotta
talk to
Scali. He's trying to keep your ass alive. You think he would have sent
Kelly and Pentangeli all the way here to get you if he wasn't?"
Darrell had
a point, Artie had to concede that. He agreed to think about it.
********
On Sunday night, the doctors moved Paulie out of the ICU. They took him
off
dialysis and out of the drug coma, but on Monday morning he still
hadn't
regained consciousness. Rachel and the boys insisted on staying
at the
hospital until he did. They promised to call both Tony and
Mrs Vecchio the
minute there was any change.
Back at the station the two officers from Eastbridge, the cops from Chicago
and the Mountie pored over the list of Artie's known associates,
cross-checking records in Chicago for matches. So far they had come up
with
fifteen, each one of which had to be run down and checked. This
was going to
take a while.
They got lucky - Darrell Barston's name was number three on the list.
They
had agreed that Ray, Fraser and Tony, along with the hapless
Donovan, would
all go talk to the contacts together - Ray and Donovan
being the CPD
'representatives'; Tony, since they were from Eastbridge
they would know
him. Fraser turned out to be quite helpful - as luck
would have it Darrell
Barston's address was in Fraser's neighbourhood.
Fraser didn't know Darrell,
but Darrell had seen him in the area
and knew he could be trusted, as could
Tony. Still, they could tell
he wasn't being entirely forthcoming when asked
about Artie.
"C'mon, Darrell, level with us - do you really want to see Artie
get killed?
And think of this - if Collette hits Artie, and finds out you hid him,
he
might just hit you too! I know you don't want that!"
"... ... All right. He's here." Darrell opened the door and
let them in.
None of them noticed the man in the shadows.
********
"I found him."
"Good. Make it fast."
"Wait a minute - there's four cops there as well - and one of the
cops is a
Mountie."
"So?"
"Forget it. If I hit a Mountie it's an international incident. That
kind of
heat, I don't need. Hit him yourself when he gets back to Eastbridge."
He
clicked off his phone and melted away into the shadows.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
They managed to talk Artie into coming back to the 27th with them and
from
there made arrangements for Ronnie Lopez to fly from New York
to accompany
Stan and Artie back, the general consensus being that
Stan couldn't
realistically manage alone, not with one arm in a cast
up past his elbow. He
didn't want to leave without knowing about
Paulie but Tony made it an order.
Stan agreed grudgingly but made
them promise to let him know the minute they
knew something. He still
felt somewhat responsible, no matter what anyone
said.
********
It was Thursday afternoon, fully a week since the accident, before Paulie
woke up. During the entire time since he was moved out of ICU someone
had
been there with him, usually Rachel and the boys but Mrs Vecchio
also came
by to give Rachel time to tend to other things. No one
wanted him to be
alone when he woke up - even Diefenbaker had come
to visit frequently. Ever
since Paulie slipped him some cannoli one
night at dinner, Dief had
concluded that he shouldn't let this human
get away.
Dief was the first one to notice Paulie was waking up. He sat up and
gave a
little whine. Rachel looked up from the book she was reading;
the boys
stopped playing cards on the other bed. They crowded around
him; as he
opened his eyes Rachel watched a myriad of emotions play
across his face -
confusion, apprehension, fear, pain - when the
pain made itself known a soft
groan escaped his lips.
"Paulie? Are you back with us?"
"I ...... guess...... hurts......" She had to strain to hear
him.
"Mikey, go get the nurse. And call Tony!"
"What......... happened?"
"You and Stan were taking Artie to the airport to go home and a
drunk driver
ran a stop sign."
The confused look on Paulie's face told Rachel that he had no idea what
she
was talking about. "Tony and the doctors can explain it
a lot better than I
can. Meanwhile there are some boys here who are very happy to see you
back."
Kevin and Jake came over to the side of the bed; Kevin was crying but
Jake
was trying to be brave.
Paulie smiled weakly. "Hey.... guys...... what're..... you.....
doing here?
And.... where's.....
here, anyway?" He reached out his free hand to them. Both boys grabbed
it
and hung on for dear life.
"OK, let me through, please - give him some air!" Mikey and
a nurse bustled
in; she began checking Paulie's vitals. "How do you feel?"
"Hurts......"
"I'm going to give you a little Demerol." She injected it into
the IV. "The
doctor will probably set you up with a PCA after she sees you. She should
be
in shortly. Would you like some ice?"
Paulie nodded. The Demerol was taking the edge off the pain; he was looking
somewhat more alert. The nurse raised the head of the bed before she
left.
"Don't wear him out."
"Hey... tough guy... did you get... the lawn mowed?" Mikey
nodded, smiling.
"It'll need to be done again when we get back, though," he
replied.
"How... long...?"
The doctor came in, followed by Tony and Ray. Fraser was standing guard
duty
at the Consulate, but when Tony and Ray stopped and told him,
he
uncharacteristically smiled - just a little. They knew he'd stop
by when he
could.
"Detective Pentangeli? I'm Dr Corday. How are you feeling?"
She shined a
penlight into both Paulie's eyes; he winced when she held open the right
one. "Do you know where you are?"
"Chicago?"
She smiled. "Very good. What's the last thing you remember?"
"... dinner ... Ray's."
"Which night, Paulie?" Ray asked.
"Wednesday."
"They came twice," Ray explained to Dr Corday. "Wednesday
was the second
time."
"How bad... ?"
"You have a fractured right cheekbone, as well as quite a colourful
lot of
bruises. Broken arm and leg, four broken ribs, bruised kidney..."
she went
on, listing the extent of the injuries. "Your leg will
definitely require
one more surgery, possibly two. The knee may have
to be replaced. The
orthopaedic surgeon who operated on it will be
in to see you later; he can
tell you more about that. I'm going to
set you up with a PCA so you can
control the pain yourself. I'll
let Commissioner Scali and Detective Vecchio
fill you in on the details
of the accident." She left to make arrangements
for the PCA.
"So the last thing you remember is dinner at my house? How much
of that do
you remember?"
"Sitting down at the table. Then I wake up here, looking like Frankenstein's
monster. What day is it, anyway?" His voice was very weak.
"Thursday. You've been out for a week."
"A week? Where's Artie? Did Stan get him back to Eastbridge, or
is...."
Paulie's voice trailed off.
"How's this for luck - of the three of you in the car, Artie came
out the
best. He just had a broken nose and some cuts and bruises..."
Tony continued
the whole story, with Ray filling in details of the accident. About halfway
through Ray noticed that Paulie had fallen asleep again. "C'mon,
guys, let's
let him rest. We can come back tomorrow."
********
*I'm back here again,* Paulie thought. *Why?*
"Hello, Paulie," a voice behind him said.
He turned around, surprised that the voice was not Andrew's as he had
thought it would, but a woman's. She was pretty, with long reddish hair
and
a soft Irish lilt to her voice. "Who are you? Are you...
?"
"An angel? Yes; my name is Monica."
"Why are you here? I guess more to the point would be why am I here?"
"You still seem unsure in your heart that you would be doing the
right thing
for Kevin, Mikey and Jake. I'm here to reassure you. They love you dearly
and it would mean the world to them to know you feel the same way. When
they
overheard Tony telling Rachel and Cyd about the accident, that
you were in
such bad shape, they wouldn't take no for an answer about
coming here to
Chicago. Since they've been here, they've hardly been
away from your side
ten minutes. They were afraid - afraid that you
would leave them and they
would be split up. Are you still thinking
of pursuing legal guardianship?"
"I'm not so sure now. It'll be a long recovery for me; how am I
going to
manage to look after them as well?"
"Like Andrew said, why don't you let them look after you for awhile?
They're
up to it. They need you, and they need you to need them."
He sighed. "That's the problem - I do need them. But I want to do
the right
thing for them - even if that means letting them go. No matter how hard
it
is on all of us."
"Often doing the right thing is hard. The right thing for them is
to stay
with you. It's also the right thing for you, if you'd just
let yourself see
it."
Her words made sense. He thought about what Monica had said, and what
Andrew
had said... how long ago? A week? An accident like the one
he had been in
could happen to anyone and he was fortunate enough
to have lived. Paulie
made up his mind to ask Tony to get him the
paperwork needed so he could
start on it now - and also to keep it
a secret.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
It was the end of August before Paulie was released from the hospital;
during that time the whole Vecchio clan were frequent visitors, as were
Fraser, Dief, Huey and Welsh. He, the three boys, Stan and the Scalis
wound
up all being invited back to Chicago for Thanksgiving. Paulie
accepted
conditionally for all of them. When the orthopaedic surgeon
removed the pins
from his leg, it was determined that he would indeed
need to have the knee
replaced; but the rest of the leg would need
to heal more before that was
done. It was tentatively scheduled for
the week before Thanksgiving, in New
York City.
The grand jury decided that Artie's testimony would be sufficient to
go to
trial, but before they could Dominic Battaglio died of a heart
attack and
the whole thing was dropped, since what they had was all
against him and not
Collette.
Child Services dragged out the investigation it needed to do for the
legal
guardianship request seemingly forever; it almost seemed as
though they were
trying to find some reason to deny it.
********
Finally, on the Monday before Thanksgiving, while Paulie was at home
recovering from his third surgery in four months, Child Services called
with
the good news that his request for legal guardianship of Michael,
Jake and
Kevin Collier had been approved. The boys were in school,
and since they
were all getting ready to leave for Chicago on Wednesday,
he decided to wait
til Thanksgiving Day and make the announcement
then, at dinner - if he could
hold it in that long.
********
Stan picked the four of them up for the drive to the airport; Paulie
couldn't drive and he didn't think Mikey was ready to drive all the way
into
New York City. "Remember the last time we made this trip?"
"Yeah; I just hope this one doesn't turn out like that one did!"
"Amen to that! I'm gonna set off every metal detector between here
and
Chicago as it is!"
The flight was uneventful and all got settled into their hotel. They
had
insisted on staying in a hotel, saying nine additional people
would be too
much, especially with one for whom more than two or
three stairs were all
but impossible. All did pay a quick visit on
Wednesday night, though, to
drop off items for dinner the next day.
Rachel had made bread, Tony and
Paulie brought wine and Stan brought
a dessert.
Thanksgiving Day dawned clear and cold, with a promise of snow in the
air.
When they arrived at the Vecchio house Fraser and Welsh were
already there,
as were Meg Thatcher, Sherry O'Neill and State's Attorney
Louise St Laurent.
Rachel joined the other women in the kitchen;
the kids were all in the back
yard playing with Diefenbaker.
Tony noticed that Paulie seemed wound up - in his words, tighter than
a
watch spring. "Hey, buddy, somethin' eating you or what?"
"No, nothing. Why?"
"You just seem edgy. Oh no - Child Services turned you down, didn't
they?"
"If it were that, I'd be depressed. Itchy is more like it - have
you ever
tried to live with one of these braces on? I can't scratch
anything."
"Don't you remember that time I broke my leg? We were about ten
or twelve."
"Oh, yeah - you were trying to impress Melissa San Angelo and fell
out of
that tree in my back yard. Your mother was so mad at me..."
"Why would she be mad at you? I'm the one who fell."
"She thought I pushed you."
They both laughed at the memory. "Mine used to itch so bad I'd get
a coat
hanger and run it into the cast and scratch with that. They
wondered when
they took it off where all those fresh scratches came
from. Have you heard
anything yet from Child Services?"
"Not yet. They're taking their own sweet time."
"Typical. Maybe it'll turn out to be one of those things where the
longer
the wait the better the news."
"What's up, guys?" Ray and Fraser joined them.
"Just reliving childhood injuries," Tony said.
"Ah, yes - all the things that gave our parents grey hair. To hear
Ma tell
it, me and Frannie are single-handedly responsible for all
hers."
"Where do ya think all mine went?" Tony pointed to the top
of his head. They
all laughed at that.
They sat and talked for the better part of an hour, til Ma Vecchio announced
that dinner was ready. Everyone gathered around the tables that had been
set
up for the occasion and waited while blessings were asked for
the health,
well-being and happiness of all present.
"We have a Thanksgiving tradition here," Ma Vecchio said, "everyone
present
tells what he or she is most thankful for. Raymondo, will you please
start?"
"I'm thankful for having survived another year, and for new friends."
It went on like that, with most everyone present being thankful for the
same
things. Stan added, jokingly, that he was thankful for having
survived his
last trip to Chicago. Mikey, Jake and Kevin were thankful
to be part of a
family. Then came Paulie's turn.
"Well, like the rest of you, I'm thankful for new friends; like
Stan I'm
really thankful to have survived the last trip here. But
I've also got
something very special to be thankful for. While I
was in the hospital here
I had Tony get me the paperwork to apply
to Child Services to be Mikey, Jake
and Kevin's legal guardian. I
didn't want to say anything til I knew what
their decision was. I
found out on Monday - it was approved. As of this past
Monday, guys,
you don't have to worry about being split up - you aren't
going anywhere."
The resulting cheers could be heard in the street in front
of the house. This was going to be a Thanksgiving to remember.
F I N