Our liberty is lessened everyday. In a big global way and in a smaller way. We are less free than before.
The surveillence of the government on our private lives is not known exactly but there are strong indications that federal and local governments will soon be, if not already, spying upon our most private moments.
It's the drones. Those little radio controlled flying gadgets that can either be loaded with heat-seeking missiles or in the case of law enforcement, sophisticated video and audio equipment so they can see you in your home or anywhere else in private.
The laws and rules in effect now banning us from several personal behaviors are too numerous to mention. Regardless of what government tells you as to further sacrifice of your liberties remember what John Stuart Mill in his book On Liberty:
"That the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant . . . Over himself, over his body and mind, the individual is sovereign."
It's that last sentence that inspires me the most. What Mill is saying is that no government holds any sovereignty over your socerignty over yourself. You are the king over you and no one else.
Yeah, the cops have the guns. We must, however, have the courage to assert our rights, constitutional and otherwise whenever the officer goes over the line. In futue blogs I will give you some personal experiiences fromwhuch you may learn.
Sunday, August 31, 2014
Saturday, August 30, 2014
Fear
It's been a while but I must continue my pursuit. Why? Well, as it turns out, I have written the most compelling, provocative and entertaining stories that has been written in a long time. Blood? Plenty and all violent scenes are those you have never seen before. Sex? Oh baby. Detailed but not pornographic. Meaningful but not over done.
Besides all the exciting things above, it's a story about people appreciating their fellow humans. People being helped by other people be they lovers, friends and sometimes strangers.
The whole darn thing is somehow sown into the seam of a baseball. Baseball is the underlying theme and carries the story throughout. Let me know what you think at andyweitz3@gmail.com.
Chapter
3-FEAR
Besides all the exciting things above, it's a story about people appreciating their fellow humans. People being helped by other people be they lovers, friends and sometimes strangers.
The whole darn thing is somehow sown into the seam of a baseball. Baseball is the underlying theme and carries the story throughout. Let me know what you think at andyweitz3@gmail.com.
Chapter
3-FEAR
No matter how satisfying his work was as an ATF
leader, Bob needed the avenue of escape and relaxation of baseball. At 44, in top physical condition and with the
spirit of a 20-year-old, he was still good enough to play with the 30-year-olds
in the local “ Over-30 Baseball League”.
During the last couple of years, however,
age was starting to take its toll. He no
longer was a starter. His fastball no
longer had quite the zip it once did and although he could still hold his own
with the bat, he had lost that extra step in the outfield and running around
the bases. His role as a player had been
reduced to part-time first basemen and closing relief pitcher.
He was known as “ Mr. Clutch “ for his
legendary prowess of shutting down the opposing hitters in the final moments of
a game he was called in to protect. He
no longer had his once-prominent fastball but still had his control and, of
course, his strategic mind. Pitchers in
any league have been known to survive far beyond their expected years with just
those two attributes.
Bob was probably most valuable to the team
as the manager of the club, the team-appointed skipper. His experience and brilliant strategy made
him one the players always went to for leadership, consultation and
inspiration.
It was the end of the 1995 season and, as
usual, Bringston’s team, the Braves, were playing in the championship
game. This one, however, was more
important than usual since Bob knew this was likely going to be his last with
the younger players. Next year he was
ready to move up with the old geezers in the 40 and older league as a win here
would be most coveted.
The game was supposed to be on Saturday,
but it rained heavily in L.A.
the entire weekend. Summer rains in Los Angeles were quite
rare, but not out of line with the strange climate pattern in the area over the
past few years. Mild summers with rain,
harsh winters, including the rarest of rarities, snow in the heart of the San Fernando Valley .
The climate had been such to expect the most unexpected.
The game had to be played on the
following Monday morning since it was the only day the field was available for
many weeks. As difficult as it was to
get 30+ men in the prime of their professional careers to take a weekday
afternoon off to play ball, most of them, including Bob, were not going to miss
the big game.
A big crowd turned out for the game and
Bob was pumped up for his last hurrah with the youngsters. He instilled the same positive spirit into
his teammates. The game turned out to be a pitcher’s duel. Bringston did not go into the game as he felt
it best to save himself for needed relief in the last innings. With Bringston’s team leading 2-1 and the
Braves pitcher showing signs of tiring, Bringston started to warm up in the 8th
inning. It was a moment he was looking forward to as much as he could ever
remember. There were runners on second
and third with one out. The number 3
hitter was up for the opposition who hit from the left side of the plate and
led the league in hitting. In addition,
he rarely struck out. Normally
right-handed pitchers like Bob don’t do as well against left-handed hitters
because their curve ball breaks towards the hitter. Bringston though usually throws a screwball
for his breaking pitch which curves the opposite way as a curve ball and thus,
away from a left-hander making it more difficult for him to hit.
Bob stepped out onto the field,
confidently climbed the hill and put his palm out for the ball. The Brave
pitcher gladly handed it over, as he knew he was done.
“Nice job, Tom. I’ll close it up from here,” said Bob.
Bob then begun the somewhat odd ritual
that every pitcher performs when he first comes into the game. Bringston manicured the pitcher’s mound to
his liking by moving dirt around with his feet and stomping it into place to
secure it down. He then moved to a
different area of the mound and dug up more dirt with his spikes and rearranged
that earth. Ask any pitcher why he performs this strange protocol and he
probably couldn’t explain it. The best
explanation is territorial. A pitcher
must portray the most menacing image as possible to the hitters. Tearing up the mound and molding it to his
liking when he arrives is the pitcher’s way of establishing his territory and
letting the hitters know he controls it.
From the moment he plants himself on
that mound, every move Bob makes is designed to advance his physical and
psychological dominance over the hitter.
Bringston took a few warm up pitches and as the hitter stepped into the
batter’s box, Bringston stepped off the mound on to the grass and stared out to
centerfield with his back to home plate.
As he did, he mixed up as much mean as he could muster. Although standing there for just a few
seconds, the impatient batter wondered if the old guy was ever going to turn
around and pitch. He had faced Bringston
once before but didn’t recall this little psychological game. The hitter thought it was nonsense and made
him dig in even more. The umpire and
most of the members were not surprised.
This was typical Bringston behavior to fire himself up. As expected, he abruptly pivoted around,
charged up the mound and stood erect upon the pitcher’s rubber, the six-inch by
twenty-four-inch rubber rectangle from where the pitcher begins his delivery to
the batter. This was likely Bob’s last
thirty-year-old caliber ball game and today he was going to let everything
fly. He glared at the hitter with the
look of a crazed killer. The hitter
seemed unfazed by Bob’s antics and stepped into the batter’s box without
hesitation.
Bringston went into the stretch and
paused. He stared at the runner at third
and peered back at the runner on second.
Just like his approach to life and baseball, his windup was simple and
straightforward. He brought his hands to
his waist and delivered. It was a
fastball with such velocity that it left Bob’s hand low but by the time it
traveled those sixty feet six inches and crossed the plate it rose
significantly. The hitter swung and his
bat must have been six inches below the actual path of the ball. He hadn’t thrown a fastball like that in
years and given the age of his arm and rest of his body, he doubted he would
able to do it again on this day.
As Bringston prepared for the next
pitch, he noticed the hitter placing himself in the batter’s box nearly on top
of the plate. He likely got a scouting
report about Bob’s screwball and was looking for an edge to make that screwgy
less effective. Since that pitch breaks
away from a left-handed hitter, standing close to the plate gives the batter a
better chance of hitting the pitch before it tails away.
It was time for Bob to send a clear
unequivocal message regarding who controlled the mound and home plate. No words needed here. All that was necessary was a ball or two
toward the hitter’s ear or otherwise threatening his head.
Bob concentrated more on the location
of his next pitch than the speed. He certainly didn’t want to hit the batter
but it had to be close enough to make him think. He whirled and threw one hard, high and
tight. It was not a pitch known as “chin
music” in baseball vernacular. It was
more like a “bow tie”. It might or might
not have hit the batter in the neck, but the batter had no interest in standing
still to find out. As the ball sped
towards his head, he bent over backwards so suddenly and so fast, he fell over
flat on his butt outside the batter’s box. As he got back on his feet, he
looked directly into the eyes of Bringston with a smirk indicating he was not
about to concede anything.
It was that classic battle between
pitcher and batter that went right to the core of the utter fascination of
baseball. It was like a showdown hand in
poker. Who was bluffing? Who would dare to call the other’s
bluff? Who, if either, would be the
first to yield?
Based upon where the batter placed
himself in the box for the next pitch, he didn’t appear to be backing down one
iota. He stepped right back up crowding
the plate though his location was a shade further back than previous.
Bob, of course, had the significant
advantage in this clash of control. He
held the ball and with his pinpoint control was the sole determining factor as
to where it was going. He stepped off the mound to think about the next pitch
he was going to serve. It was one ball
and one strike. If he walked this guy,
it wouldn’t be tragic but on the other hand, the clean up hitter was a righty
and overall a tougher out than the present hitter. Would it do any good to brush the batter back
again or was it time for the screwgy? He
needed the consultation of Johnny Fenster his catcher. The two exchanged ideas on how to approach
the hitter. Only in baseball does one
ever see two players standing in the middle of the playing field in the midst
of the game having a conference. There
is no official time limit for the meeting because baseball is the only major
team sport where time is not an issue.
Theoretically, a baseball game could go on forever. There are plenty of borders, boundaries and
restrictions but time is not one of them.
The umpire’s patience though is limited.
As he walked up to Bob and Johnny to break it up, Johnny gave his final
advice.
“Throw him a fastball Bob, but make
sure it’s inside of the black, right on the hands. At this point, we can’t afford to give him
anything good to hit. Depending on his
reaction, then come in with either the screwgy or the palm ball,” said Johnny.
Bob was one who was not too proud to
take instructions when they made sense.
What Johnny said had a good ring to it and he got up on the rubber ready
to deploy the plan. The fastball was
placed just where Bob wanted it. It was
right on the hitter’s hands and would have tied up most. This batter though was determined. He took an exaggerated step to the outside
with his front foot that opened up his body to the ball and allowed him to take
a full swing. He belted that
baseball. He crushed that cowhide. It was a screaming line drive hit deep to
right and had it not been few feet foul would have easily cleared the home run
fence.
Bob was amazed that anyone could have
hit that pitch given the tight inside location.
He couldn’t remember ever gaining more respect for a hitter than this
one. With one ball and two strikes, he
knew the batter was expecting a screwball.
It mattered not to Bob that the hitter continued to “cheat” by standing
close to the plate. It was time for the
palmball.
The palmball is a pitch held with all
four fingers and the thumb around the ball and placed in back of the hand. It is one of the most deceptive pitches
around in that it is thrown with the same motion as a fastball but travels
ten-twenty miles per hour slower. With
the hitter all wired up and previously exposed to nothing but fastballs, this
was the perfect situation to “pull the string”.
The moment it left Bringston’s hand, the hitter knew the pitch was like
no other. He seemed to adjust for the
slower speed but wasn’t ready for the other feature of Bob’s palm ball that
doesn’t work all the time but on this day was near magic. As the ball reached the plate, it dropped
severely, as if the bottom fell out of it.
As the hitter lunged at the slow-moving sphere, the ball sank well below
his bat as he swung and missed for strike three. As the batter walked back to the dugout, he
tipped his hat to Bringston. Bringston
tipped his hat back.
So now it was two down, two on, with the tying and
go ahead runs in scoring position and stepping up to the plate was 41-year old
Augusto Diaz. He and Bob were the only
40-year-olds in the 30-year-old league, faced each other on numerous prior occasions
and, over the years, gained immense respect for each other. Bob knew that Diaz was a pure hitter and a
free swinger. He was a classic bad ball
hitter who often got his hits off pitches way out of the strike zone. Bob was also aware that Diaz was a thinking
hitter who more often than not predicted the pitch that was coming, enabling
him to adjust for a full swing at the ball.
Augie respected Bringston most for his strategic mind. By far, Bob was the most difficult to
outguess as to forecasting what pitch was on its way. Somehow, Augie managed to hit .316 against
Bringston over the years. Since he
couldn’t predict what pitch was coming from Bringston, Augie’s strategy of
always swinging at the first pitch had proved successful.
As Bob stood on the mound and Augie in the
batter’s box, the battle of wits accelerated.
Augie closely followed the at bat before him. He noticed that Bob never threw the prior
hitter the screwball. He was ready for
any pitch but prepared for this pitch.
That approach played right into Bob’s strategy. He knew Diaz was smart enough to pay strict
attention to the prior hitter and would likely be expecting and anxiously
awaiting a screwball. The fastball was
too risky especially on the first pitch.
The free-swinging, first-ball-hitting Diaz would likely get around on
the fastball even if he put one well off the plate. He also had a slider in his arsenal but it
tended to hang at times and wasn’t his best pitch. That left the palm ball. It was usually not thrown on the first pitch
but as a change up after a series of fastballs and sliders. Given the hitter and the situation, Bob
thought it was the perfect time for the pitch.
Bringston placed the ball in the back of
his palm with all four fingers and his thumb surrounding the ball. He went into his windup and didn’t reveal the
ball in his hand until the moment before release. It was as if Bob had slammed on the brakes on
the ball after his release as Diaz awkwardly swung for the ball and lost his
balance. He did manage to hit the ball
on the end of the bat as it rolled slowly to the second baseman. Ten years ago, Augie would have beat this one
to first, but at this stage in his life, the ball beat him to first as the
memory of his baseball-playing days began to fade into dust.
Bob ran into the dugout after he saved his
team from disaster and got pats on the back and high fives from all his
teammates. The whole squad was trouncing
around the dugout like a bunch of twelve-year-old little leaguers. Bob felt like a million. He couldn’t wait to get back on the mound in
the final game to save it for the championship.
Just before the beginning of the 9th
though, his special government-issued pager went off. The number and code following it meant only
one thing: He was being ordered to
report in to the ATF central office for immediate assignment without delay. It
was a dilemma he dreaded facing, but one that was in the end no contest. Baseball was the constant, always accessible
in some fashion. If not a full-blown
game, one could always play catch with a buddy, go to the batting cage, or, as
Bob did all day and night, toss a baseball around to himself. In some form or another, it was always there.
The nation’s security, on the other hand,
seemed continuously on the brink of being lost, especially to domestic
terrorists. It was a delicate balance
that Bob was obligated to protect. More
importantly, the spreading slaughter of innocent individuals across the land
had made Bringston more determined to defend those lives. It was also, of
course, the safe thing to do.
His entire life, Bob had often chose
the seemingly safe route as opposed to what his heart may have been telling him
was right. He lived his entire life
always going after the sure thing rather than what his true desires told him
otherwise.
The fact is, there was one aspect of Bob
Bringston that had remained with him since he was a young lad. It was a fear not, ironically enough, of the
barbarous, brutal killers he faced on a regular basis. Death was just part of
his job and he was ready to face the ultimate challenge head on everyday he
went to work. It was a fear of losing or
more aptly, failing. Learn from it as he has over the years, the big hero was
often reduced to a small, helpless child not so much from failing itself but by
the fear of such failure. It was only
his determination and powerful inner strength that pulled him out of it.
His life experience also helped as he had
learned that his fear of failure was usually, if not always, ill founded. He either often did not end up failing or his
failures had proven to be something from which to be learned.
Bob was raised by two Russian immigrants
who lived through the Great Depression and World War II, two of the most
harrowing and insecure times of the 20th Century. His father was an overly critical and blunt
patriarch who did not put up with any challenges to his authority. If, in his eyes, his son was not stupid or
incompetent, he was a liar. He had an
unreasonable and uncontrollable temper that he violently displayed against not
only Bob but also his two brothers and his mother. The contribution of Bob’s mother was to seed the clouds of
negativity created by his father by constantly expressing her dissatisfaction
with whatever Bob may have accomplished in his life.
When Bob was 12 years old, he proudly told
his parents of a science project he had entered in the 6th grade
Science Fair. It was a display of the
properties of kinetic energy and Bob worked on the project into the wee hours
of the night for many weeks. He invited his
mother and father to school later that week to see what he thought was a grand
scientific accomplishment. He also
informed them that out of two 6th grade classes comprised of 63
students, he finished second in the fair.
“Hold it stupid, you didn’t win? I’m not
embarrassing myself,” his father mocked him.
As was typical in his growing years, his
father’s words pierced through his heart and left him with a deep, dark and
heavy feeling over his whole body. His
mother, always one to jump on the bandwagon of pessimism, was not far behind to
drive the already crushing blow even deeper.
“Honey, when you get first prize, me and
your father will be proud to go.”
Though he never let anyone see it from the
outside, that desert of despair and pure, unmitigated emotional pain has stuck
with Bob Bringston to this day. Dark,
deep, but always there. He irrigated it
with a stronger self-confidence, but it is the fear of returning to this emotionally
barren state that continued to plague him decades later.
The most serious long-term damage of this
apprehension occurred in 1974, the year Bob graduated from Arizona State . He finished as the top mechanical engineering
student at the university and was recruited by companies ranging from small,
local outfits to heavy hitters like Boeing, Goodyear, and General Electric. In
addition, nearly a dozen major league baseball teams pursued him for not only
his raw baseball talents, but also his reputation as a fierce competitor who
ate nails and spit fire.
Finally, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms and other U.S.
government agencies were conducting an aggressive recruitment on the ASU
campus. Though hundreds of miles from
home in Los Angeles ,
Bob heard the voice of his father loud and clear. If he took a position at GE, or even the
smaller companies and failed, he just couldn’t bear the barrage of ridicule he
knew he would get from the old man. His
mother would make it worse.
His love for baseball was what he really
wanted to pursue, but despite his immense self-confidence in his abilities to
make it to the Big Show, his engineering mind and the fear of failure
prevailed. Making it as an engineer was
certainly doable. The odds of any young
man, no matter how good, making it to the major leagues were long indeed.
He decided upon what he considered a
compromise. He opted for the wild and
risky world of federal law enforcement. Though he has enjoyed his nearly 20
years as an ATF agent, the possibility, the probability that he could have been
serving up his heat to major league hitters and otherwise surrounding himself
in the magnificent world of baseball, has gnawed at him over the years like a
slow-growing tumor. Bob knew that he certainly could not ignore his ATF
obligations merely for some amateur baseball game, but this small dilemma
reminded him that his chance to immerse his life in baseball had long ago
passed him by. Each day he grew older
drove that knife in, cutting a little piece of him away on each turn.
When Bringston called in to the ATF office
he learned of the delicate situation awaiting him. A group called Whack had taken over a federal
courtroom in downtown Los Angeles . The militants were not only devoted to the
typical anarchical principals of eliminating all laws, bureaucracies and other
aspects of government, they were determined to start their elimination process
by violently destroying the court system and anyone connected with it.
In the past few years, the group had
kidnapped and murdered judges, bailiffs, court clerks and other court staff
with a powerful arsenal of guns and explosives and did so, at times, in
suicidal fashion. When Bringston arrived at the courthouse, he was greeted by
Tim Tuttlehorn who briefed his buddy on the situation. There were three enemies
in the courtroom. Shots had been fired,
apparently wounding 3 U.S.
Marshals. The terrorists had not yet made any demands except their safe exit of
the courthouse which, given their prior modus operandi, they will guarantee
with a hostage.
During the exchange of fire with the U.S. Marshals,
Frank Ganji had managed to infiltrate the courtroom held hostage appearing to
be nothing more than a member of the press covering the trial being held
there. In actuality, ATF agent Ganji was
armed with a .45 caliber handgun, just knawing at the bit for his opportunity
to deposit some of his lead in the heads of the crazed courthouse kidnappers.
There were 4 other federal agents on the government court-rescue mission. Two were from the FBI and the 2 others from
the Drug Enforcement Agency.
“Strange,“ Bob thought to himself. “The DEA
almost always avoided these types of high-profile operations”. It was true that Whack had managed to
stockpile a rather large cache of arms financed by a sizable drug smuggling
operation, but the DEA’s success was built upon undercover methods.
Even stranger, these guys came all the way from the DEA Washington office.
Whatever the reasons, Bringston had to work
with the team he was given. The six
government agents met in the courthouse hallway to decide on their plan of
attack. Bob, who was usually appointed the leader of these types of hostage
situations with little, if any, objections, ran into strong resistance from DEA
agent Dick Greer. Bob knew that the key
to winning these confrontations was a heavy element of distraction. He was dressed in his full baseball uniform,
including his maroon Atlanta
Braves cap, dark gray maroon-trimmed jersey with white pants, navy blue stirrup
socks and a sleek-looking black vinyl warm-up jacket. Since Bob had only played less than an
inning, he still sparkled in is uniform like it was Opening Day. The only dirt scattered around his
celebrative attire was residue from the dirt of the diamond. The magic baseball dust seemed to enhance
Bob’s comfort and confidence.
Ganji was already inside and armed. Bob explained that he was confident that he
can create enough diversion by his looks and his speech to give Frank the
opportunity he needs to bring the kidnappers down.
“Forget it, pretty boy,” Greer said
firmly. “We’re not going to risk the
success of this operation on the silly baseball games of ATF.”
“Spoken like a true territory protecting,
glory-seeking government bureaucrat,“ Bob thought to himself. He played into those motivations perfectly.
“Look, Dick, you know a lot more about drug
smugglers than we do. I think you’d
agree, though, that these guys are not the sort you typically run into. My team has had a lot of encounters with similar
hostage situations in the Midwest and here in L.A.
What do you say we put our heads together and secure the situation?”
Once again, the Bringston charm and
charisma paid off.
“Five minutes, Bringston,“ Greer
conceded. “Your man Ganji is already
equipped with a miniature mobile listening device, so if we hear that it is time
to come in before that, we’re coming in.”
“Fair enough,“ Bob agreed with all
confidence and fire of a closing relief pitcher to whom the manager has just
given the ball.
Bob entered the courtroom and was greeted
by the proverbial goon guards who searched him from head to toe. He had a baseball in his pocket and one in
his hand, both of which were confiscated by the guards. One of the goon’s eyes
lit up when he saw a bag of hard-to-find barbecue flavored sunflower seeds
protruding from Bob’s jacket pocket.
“Hey, pal,” Bob coaxed, you won’t find
these many places,” said Bob as he flashed the bag of seeds to the rebel. “Check it out. They’re Jim Beam Kentucky Bourbon soaked sunflower seeds. You
can have them if you get your boss to release the hostages and the rest of the
courtroom.”
“Say Jimmy, do we really have to hold
this place any longer?” the big guy asked the leader of the revolutionary
group.
“Oh, Jeez, Chuckie, you need a little
snack, do ya?” Jimmy asked sarcastically.
He proceeded to handcuff the terrified judge to the raised rail and
walked down towards Bringston. It was
not the first time they had met. Over the years, terrorist leader Jimmy
Borskovich had clashed with Bringston before.
“Gimme that shit,” demanded Borskovich as
he grabbed the rare sunflower seeds from Bringston’s pocket and threw them at
the overly salivating Chuckie.
“Hey Bobby, I got some bad news for ya. I’m
pullin’ you out of the lineup. We’ve got
your balls, so no more of your little tricks,” Borskovich boasted as he walked
back up to the elevated judge’s bench next to his hostage.
“Tricks?” asked Bob. “ I give up a huge
opportunity to be the closing reliever to win a championship in my fading
baseball career, all to meet up with a dick like you?” Bob roared.
He caught the eye of Frank Ganji seated
in the audience who gave him a comforting grin. Bob calmly took off his warm-up
jacket and strolled right up to the bench where the judge was being held
hostage. Bringston moved around the
courtroom like a lawyer passionately arguing a monumental trial in court.
“And then you have the fucking nerve to
compare the great American Pastime to trickery.
You just don’t see the light,“ Bringston preached.
With the entire courtroom standing in
amazement of the power of his words, Bob flung his jacket up to the bench. It landed directly on Borskovich’s head
completely disorientating him.
Bob was right behind his jacket as he
leaped to the bench. He tackled and
subdued the terrorist before Borskovich could remove the jacket and get his
bearings. The judge, pursuant to Bob’s
instructions knelt underneath the bench.
Bringston had Jimmy down on the floor behind the massive wall of wood
making up the judge’s bench protecting him from the guards at the entryway.
Before they created any problem for
Bringston, Ganji sprung up within the court audience and blasted a large chunk
of one guy’s head half way across the courtroom. Ganji’s high-powered artillery
exchange with sunflower seed sucking Chuckie while Bringston was wrestling Borskovich
under control did not work out so well for Frank. Ganji received some serious chest wounds from
Chuckie.
In the meantime, Bob managed to secure
his jacket around the leader’s head with a rubber band he found on the judge’s
desk. Fortunately, Jimmy had left
another set of handcuffs on the desk which he used to secure Borskovich to the
short stairway banister leading up to the judge’s chair.
The gun Jimmy was holding was nowhere
in sight and Bob sensed there was at least one enemy remaining. He was laying fox-hole style on the
floor. He looked behind him and inches
from his feet stood the California
flag perched upon a flagpole with a large triangular, metal ornament at the
top. At its zenith, it came to a rather
sharp arrow-like point.
Bob peaked around the right side of the
bench and saw Chuckie cautiously approaching where Bringston had staked out.
Bob wasn’t sure if the other bad guy was still alive but he simply had to take
the chance.
Bringston grabbed the flagpole, vaulted
up and, with his ballistic arm, hurled the flagpole in the direction of the
opposition and then quickly kneeled back down for cover. The California Golden Bear never took a more
majestic flight. The piercing-pole
headed straight for Chuckie. Before he
realized what was targeting him, he fired a few errant shots at Bringston.
Bob was pretty close to his aim. He compensated for the scientific fact that
his spear would drop below the point parallel with his release point. The makeshift arrow punctured the cultist
smack dab in the center of his chest.
The power of Bob’s thrust behind it, pushed his attacker into the wall,
pinning him like one secures a note to a bulletin board.
Bob peered around the bench and proudly
observed the results of his spectacular “javelin“ toss. The hole in the bad guy’s chest was so large;
the flag attached to the penetrating pole was drenched in red with blood
dripping from the lower corner of the flag.
He also saw the third terrorist lying face down in a large pool of
blood. Old Ganji, “ Mr. Reliable” came
through in the clutch once again.
The madness in the Halls of Justice had
finally ended. But where was his loyal
friend Frank Ganji? Bob got up and
frantically went to where his old buddy was sitting. He found Frank seated on the floor with his
back against the audience bench with a dazed look on his face and his entire
upper torso doused in deep red from his profuse bleeding. Bringston called an ambulance.
“Rest easy, Ganj, help is on the way, “
Bob assured his beloved friend.
“I’m afraid it’s going to be too late,“
Frank strained to tell Bob. This is it buddy. I sure went out in style, though,
huh? I must have separated that one
guy’s face right from his skull,” Frank proudly proclaimed with his quite
obviously final breaths as Bob smiled affectionately.
Bob rested Frank’s head in his
arms. He sensed these were his best
friend’s last moments.
“We sure had great times together, huh
Bobby?“ Frank whispered. “Ball games,
chasing women, fightin’ bad guys. I’ll
miss you, brother.”
Frank warmly smiled at his loyal
friend. Bob lovingly smiled back. It was the last thing Frank saw before he
died in Bob’s arms. The sense of loss in Bob’s heart was devastating. He had just lost a most cherished life-long
companion. A genuinely good man who, on
countless occasions, like this one, risked his life to save his comrades, America ,
and her values.
The most empty, desolate feeling
suddenly came over Bob as the magnitude of the pain consumed him. Motionless, frozen, without a thought in his
mind except that he lost someone he deeply and truly loved. Bob stayed in the kneeling position with
Frank in his arms until the paramedics arrived.
The small flow of tears from each of
his swelling eyes met at his chin and slowly, painfully dripped onto Frank’s
body. Just then the FBI and DEA agents
stormed the courtroom and took custody of Borskovich who was still handcuffed
to the judge’s bench. Minutes later, the
coroner arrived for Frank’s body and the two dead terrorists. Bob just sat in the courtroom withdrawn and
numb to his surroundings. How, he
thought, will he ever get over living and working without his most dear friend?
As the government agents were whisking
Borscovich out of the courtroom, the rebel stopped in his tracks when he
reached where Bringston was sitting.
“Marsh really sent his best out for
this one didn’t he? Well, you can tell
the Director that he has double-crossed us for the last time,” Borskovich
warned. The agents then took him away.
Bob, though still distraught, was
suddenly awakened from his deep withdrawal.
He hadn’t heard the name of his former mentor in years. Was the crazy cultist actually referring to
DEA Director Victor Marsh? If he was,
what in the world did he mean by Marsh had double-crossed him for the last time?
This mystery just had to be
solved. Bob vowed to investigate and
research this baffling question as soon as he got over the grief of the loss of
Frank Ganji.
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