(Revised 12/3/2022)
This is yet another departure from our typical fare. Will wrote the prior (
A Butterscotch Sky
), and I (Devo) am offering this multi-character, multi-arc story, with segments related by each in first person.
The original version of
A Walk Changed Everything
rates fairly high, so we know our readers aren't afraid to dive into complicated stories. Though it's not complicated in a similar way, I'm still hoping you enjoy the tale I offer. After all, everything any author writes is an experiment.
Finally, Will helped me with a crap-ton of research for this tale. We couldn't find legal experts who were willing to consult without being paid for their time, and the attorneys we personally know don't practice in the fields portrayed here. If you do, please suspend some disbelief if we depart from reality.
As always, all characters engaging in intimacy are over the age of eighteen.
We hope you enjoy
Crimes, Torts, and Trials
CHAPTER 1
RIVER
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
My right thumb was so far inside her body I couldn't stick it in any deeper. I pressed it toward the bone I felt at its pad. I hoped what I was doing would work because I had no clue what else to try. She was beginning to move a little which was an encouraging sign. The moans I heard were, too, since it all meant she was still alive.
"Does anyone have a 911 operator on the line?" I shouted without looking up to the half-dozen or so people observing the spectacle from various positions and distances.
Though every single person was holding a phone, not a single one answered.
"Idiots doing it for the
gram
," I mumbled to myself as I pulled my own from my pocket with my free hand.
Thank
god
I'd recently added my left thumb's print to the Touch ID.
"911. What is your emergency?" said the operator who answered after probably two minutes of being on hold.
"I'm with a female, approximately twenty years of age. I think she's been shot. She was bleeding profusely from her leg. I need an ambulance and police near the intersection of 31st and Indiana near the south entrance to Dunbar Park."
"I have your location. Police are already in the area. Second Fire Battalion is responding. It's less than a mile away. Stay on the line with me."
"Okay, but I need to put my phone down. I'm putting you on speaker so I can use both hands to keep pressure on her. Give me a few seconds."
"What's your current status?" the operator asked once I confirmed we could hear each other.
"I have my thumb in the wound. I'm trying to stop the bleeding."
"Perfect. Keep doing what you're doing until an EMT advises otherwise."
Within seconds, I heard the wail of sirens approaching from the south and saw a cruiser's flashing lights rounding the corner of 31st to the west. The evening rush hour had long since ended, so I was hopeful the EMTs would be able to quickly navigate the less than a mile's worth of streets which otherwise would have been congested.
Two officers exited the cruiser. The shorter one spoke first.
"Well! If it isn't
Markie
!"
I didn't look up when I said, "Give it a rest. I literally have my hands full right now, okay?"
"Oh,
shit
," the taller gasped when he grasped the meaning of my words. "What happened?"
The shorter cop pissed me off, and I was a bit terse with the other as a result.
"I'm pretty sure she's been shot. I mean, there's this hole in her thigh, but how would I know what made it? I heard what I thought were firecrackers. This lady had jogged by me going the opposite direction, and I heard her collapse behind me. At first, I thought she just tripped or something, but then she grabbed her leg, and I saw it bleeding. She passed out a few seconds later."
"The firecrackers. The sounds. Where'd they come from?" the man asked.
"I think from the direction of the softball field," I answered, pointing northward with my head because my hands were occupied.
"What did you hear?"
"Like I said, I thought it was firecrackers."
"Yeah. I get it. Can you describe it better? We were already nearby. Dispatch had already received a couple of calls of possible gunfire in the area."
"It was like … bang. Bang
bang
bang."
"So, four?"
"Yeah. I think so. One, then three more a few seconds later."
"Did you see anyone?" the officer asked.
"No one except some dog-walkers, this lady, and the idiots who've suddenly and miraculously disappeared who were taking pictures or videos of the whole thing. There was also a couple of people in their sixties riding a yellow tandem bicycle along the other side of the street. Their shirts had the Manchester United crest on the back."
"Units on TAC-3, check the vicinity near and north of the Dunbar Park softball field. Witness heard shots from that direction," the officer spoke into his radio's shoulder-clipped microphone. "That's great information, ma'am."
"Justin, don't waste your breath. I'll fill you in later," the shorter policeman said.
Less than a minute elapsed before two CFD trucks and an ambulance arrived along the curb.
"Move back, please," a paramedic already wearing blue exam gloves demanded.
"I don't think I should yet," I said.
I removed my left hand from over my right, affording the man a view of the situation.
"
Oh
. Yeah, don't," he said, jaunting back to the ambulance as another paramedic went to work placing an oxygen mask and checking vitals.
The first guy then returned to us and situated a couple of items. One was a packet of granules, the other an applicator he deposited them into. He readied himself, placing his hands next to mine.
"When I say
three
, remove both of your hands out of the way of mine and move back."
"Understood."
"Okay. One … two …"
I removed my thumb one second later and he placed Celox granules into the wound.
"You did a good job slowing the blood loss. We'll take it from here. One of the guys over there will help you clean up," he said and nodded toward some firemen who seemed eager to assist.
As I walked toward them, the short officer taunted behind me, "Aw, did you get your hands dirty?"
I thought about giving him a piece of my mind but decided I didn't need to waste my time.
A particularly observant firefighter must have somehow sensed my thoughts, or maybe my face conveyed them.
He said, "I know what you're thinking, but don't do it. That particular asshat is known for being a little heavy-handed, and I'm not sure it matters to him that you're a woman."
My name is River Marquette. I don't like it shortened to
Riv
. I'm not French, so it's not pronounced
Revée
, and don't
ever
call me
Markie
. Once I'd kicked asses in the Corps, the others in my unit caught on quickly enough to address me as Sergeant Marquette, or only River when ranks weren't expected.
I completed my service, the last of it in Okinawa training other countries' units in specific instruction. In my current job, I get along just fine with most police officers, but a few didn't seem to care for me too much.
One of the guys motioned me over to the side of the truck.
"Stand back. This might come out a bit fast at first," he said, uncapping a bulkhead where a hose would normally be fitted. He pulled a lever and water poured onto the ground, splashing back on my leggings at my shins before it slowed to a suitable flow.
"Sorry about that," he sheepishly said.
"Don't worry about it. Water on my legs is the least of my concerns right now," I said, stepping forward so I could at least try to rinse the drying and coagulating blood from my hands.
The water did a decent job, but thankfully, another firefighter came alongside with a pump of antiseptic soap and a few paper towels. I held my palms out and he deposited blobs into both. It helped a lot, but I'd have to worry about the undersides of my fingernails later.
"Can I ask you a question?" the guy supplying the water said.
"Go ahead," I replied and began to rinse.
"Did you really have your finger in her leg?" he asked with an oddly elevated pitch in his voice.
"My thumb, but yeah."
"How'd you even think to do that?"
"All of you are EMTs, aren't you?"
"Yes, but only basic life support. I'm not a paramedic like the bus drivers," he said, pointing toward the ambulance.
"I've read a lot of books. I read a lot when I had downtime overseas. You know, when my unit was on standby or waiting before a hurry-up."
"Military?" he asked, handing me the towels.
"USMC. Second of the Second."
"
Oorah! Semper Fi
, sister!"
I chuckled at his exuberance. "You, too?" I asked as I dried my hands, trying to fish out the rusty flecks under my nails.
"Yes, ma'am. I was based at Camp Gonsalves in Okinawa. I exited five years ago."
"The JWTC? A jungle rat, huh? We might have been on the island at the same time. I completed my service seven years ago."
We compared MOSes and tours to discover we were only a year apart in age.
"Shit—um, sorry for the language, ma'am." He blushed. "Small world, isn't it?"
His self-aborted expletive tickled me because I was accustomed to far worse than his slip. As he shut off the flow of water from the truck, I walked a few steps down the sidewalk to deposit the spent paper towels in a waste bin.
"Thank you for helping me clean up," I said.
"No problem, ma'am," he answered.
I chuckled again. He was polite, cute, and quite well-built. Given his left ring finger was bare, I sensed where the interaction might head. I decided I'd gently turn him down if he tried to ask me out because the last thing I wanted was to get involved with yet another sort of adrenaline junkie.
I said, "I can do without the ma'ams, and also the sist—"
The sound of a metallic
ping