Silent Kill

By David Fingerman

      Hout wanted to look into the policeman’s face but the man’s stomach took up the window.  A swallow caught in the doctor’s throat.  He’d noticed it before, but it didn’t register.  Cops don’t wear their bulletproof vests on the outside of their uniforms.  Two small, circular dents had been punched into the vest.  My God!

“I honestly thought I was going thirty, Officer.”

     “I clocked you at thirty-one.  I’m going to have to give you a citation, sir.  Oh, excuse me . . . Doctor.”

     “Thirty-one!”  Dr. Hout’s face steamed.  He instantly forgot about the dents in the vest and the size of the authority. 

     “I’m getting a ticket for going one mile an hour over the limit?  I’ll see you in court, officer.”

     Even before his words spilled out, Dr. Hout regretted losing his temper.  But this was nuts!  Never had he heard of anyone getting a ticket for going one mile an hour over the limit.

     An angry fist smashed against the roof of the Lexus.

     “That’s it.  I don’t have to take this abuse.”

     The driver's door flew open and a giant paw reached in and caught the doctor by the collar.  Playing a rag doll, Dr. Hout flopped out of the car.  Arms and legs flailed in midair.  Lightning shot through his legs as they smashed into the front fender, but from the waist he kept moving.  Metallic thunder crashed in his head as the cop slammed it onto the hood of the car.  The doctor felt something wet on the side of his face.  He thought he might be bleeding.

A moment later the sickly sweet smell of tobacco filtered through his nostrils.  The damn wad of tobacco.  He tried to squirm out of it but a heavy hand at the base of his skull held him in place.

     “I just try to do my job and all I get is some higher-than-fucking-God psychiatrist telling me to go fuck myself.”

     Hout tried to shake the static from his head.  “I didn’t say that.  I’m sorry if you got that impression.” It was hard to speak with one side of his mouth pressed against metal.

     “Did I say you could talk?” The cop grabbed a handful of Leonard’s hair, lifted his head a few inches, and slammed it back onto the hood.

     Leonard’s knees buckled, his lips smacked into the gob of brown juice.  He tasted blood and tobacco and car.  Nausea churned in his stomach ready to erupt.

Fresh pain shot through his shoulder as the policeman jerked his left arm and twisted it up behind his back.  A click and then a new agony of metal bit into his wrist.  Before he could move, the cop yanked Leonard’s other arm behind him and the other cuff snapped off the circulation of his right hand.

     As if he were nothing more than a child’s toy, the giant cop flung Dr. Hout toward the police car.  Hout lost his balance and landed hard on his backside, barely avoiding crushing his hands.  Sitting on the ground, he noticed the cop’s white socks and sneakers spotted with blood.  The uniform slacks hiked well above the ankle, cuffs hugging massive calves.

The doctor frantically searched the sidewalk for help.  The noonday sun reflected off the house windows so he couldn’t see inside, but he prayed someone, somewhere, might be watching, and hopefully filming this on their camcorder.  That might help later, but for now Dr. Hout had to rely on his own wits.

The policeman walked up and stood over him, blocking out the sun.  He reached down and lifted Hout off the ground by a handful of his already thinning hair.  Dragging him across the pavement like a sack of laundry, the giant opened the door to the squad.

     Leonard Hout choked back a cry, and vomit bubbled up his throat.  A man lay crumpled on the back seat, his dead eyes staring at the roof. 

 

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