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©1999 - 2012
Edward D. Reuss
All rights reserved. Including the right of reproduction in whole or part in any form

 

HELP IS JUST A CAPE AWAY
By Gina Gallo


Some thought it was because he looked good in tights. Others said it was a cop's version of building a better mousetrap. But when Mass Transit tactical officer Otto D. reported to work in a Superman suit, everyone knew it'd be a night to remember.
Mass transit cops are the tunnel rats who patrol Chicago's subways.  By riding the trains and acting as decoys on the subway platforms, they snag the thieves, robbers and other predators who strike beneath our city streets.  The decoy operation is fairly simple. Dressed in thrift-store clothes, one cop plays a drunk slumped against a wall or across the floor. Sometimes inert, other times muttering crazily to himself, he's always positioned to show his wristwatch and a few dollars protruding from a pocket.  His back-up team is hidden nearby, waiting for the subway rats to take the bait.  It's standard procedure that's usually successful, but often boring. Exactly why Otto D. becomes Superman one Saturday night. His costume won first prize at the last Halloween party, but now it's time for something different.
At the corner of State Street and Jackson Boulevard, the Mass Transit cops descend the subway stairs with their plan intact. Hatton will  be the decoy. Decked out in baggy brown tweed and a dangling gold pocket watch, he could be a college professor after a crash course in Sour Mash 101. While he sprawls across a bench, Mendoza  and Young get out their screwdrivers. After removing the hinges from a platform level maintenance closet, they tuck 'Superman'  neatly behind the door. Meanwhile, Ward and McCarthy crouch  at the top of the stairs with a pile of shredded newspapers and an industrial fan. Once they're all in  position, it doesn't take long.
Seconds after the 'A' train rumbles past, two young thugs stroll down the platform, eyeing the drunk old geezer. Dressed in dark jackets and baggy jeans, Jamal and Toad circle cautiously.   Nobody else is on the platform, nothing between them and a quick score. Ten minutes from now, they'll be fencing a watch and splitting the contents of a fat wallet.  The old freak's sure to have a lot of cash, Jamal tells his partner.
Only rich people carry pocket watches.
They move closer.
"Yo, man! What's wrong wid you?" Jamal kicks the drunk and waits. No response. Another nudge, and still nothing. It's their  golden opportunity. While Toad grabs  the watch, Jamal reaches for the wallet, and  all hell breaks loose.
"HIT!" screams the drunk. The closet door crashes down on the concrete, echoing down the tunnel like a subterranean blitzkrieg.
"Shit!" screams Toad.
"Superman!" chokes Jamal. It's the only word he can manage. The Man of Steel has them both in a headlock.
"Yes!" shouts Superman. "I'm here to preserve truth, justice and the American way!"
"I thought you was just some cartoon dude?" Toad gasps. It does no good  to struggle. For a cartoon dude, Superman has arms like a vise. One wrong move, and he'll toss both of them on the tracks. And now that the 'B' train's pulling up to the platform, he might  throw the whole damn train on top of them.
Instead, Superman keeps them in his iron grip while an elderly couple steps out on the platform.
"Look, dear, isn't that Superman?" The blue haired lady turns for a better look, but her husband tugs her away.
"Don't bother him, Edna. He's got enough to do keeping the peace. Good thing, too. There's never a cop around when you need one."
Now dressed in full uniform, Mendoza and Young saunter up.
"Hey, there, Superman. Looks like you've got your hands full. Need any help?"
"Why, thanks, Officers!" While handcuffs are snapped into place, the Caped Crusader scowls at the thugs. "Try this again, and I'll pulverize you into dust, you hear?
Nobody pulls this stuff in my Metropolis!"
Mendoza's quick pat-down produces a quantity of weed, some crack rocks and a
filthy green glass pipe. He holds it up and smirks.
"Look, Superman. I think this is Kryptonite. Maybe these two are tryin' to off you."
Toad nearly faints. Piss off the man of steel, and he's history for sure.
"Naw, man! That ain't no damn Kryptonite! I don' be messin' with no Superman!"
He rolls his eyes in supplication. "I swear 'fore God, I ain't never even seen Kryptonite before!"
"Doesn't matter. I have the antidote. Kryptonite doesn't affect me anymore," Superman growls. "I am invincible!"
"No shit! What, you take it like a flu shot or somethin'?"
Young can barely keep a straight face. "You fool! Can't stick needles in Superman. He bends steel with his bare hands!"
"It's a patch," Superman says. "Nicotine, Kryptonite - takes care of all that stuff.
Science is a wonderful thing." He takes a step backward and raises his arm in salute.
"I've gotta go now. Time to get back out there, patrolling Metropolis. But remember, Officers, if you ever need me, just give me a shout. I'm only five minutes away by cape."
"Ten-four, Superman."
"Justice will prevail! Always remember that!"
"Will do."
In perfect superhero form, Superman races up the stairs and vaults over the turnstile. Positioned upstairs, Ward and McCarthy turn on the fan and feed it with paper shreds.
"DAMN! Superman flew right on outta here!" Jamal shouts against the gusting wind and paper.
"Whaddaya think?" asks Mendoza. "He travels on roller skates or somethin'? You guys really are a couple of mopes!"

In the courtroom the next day, defendants Jamal and Toad are seated next to  the public defender. The arresting officers, now dressed in sport coats and ties, wait to be sworn in for testimony. Eying them, Toad whispers frantically to Jamal.
"There will be silence in the courtroom," the judge pronounces. "This is not the time for private conversation, young man."
"Them ain't the dudes that locked us up!" Toad yells.
"I beg your pardon?"
"Them coppers. They ain't the ones from last night."
The judge glares over his glasses.
"Are you saying the arresting officers aren't here?"
"Hell, no, your honor. It was Superman who grabbed us." Mistaking the court's silence for sympathy, Toad leaps to his feet.
"Here's what happened, your honor. Superman come flyin' down the subway tunnel. Then he tore up a couple trains with his bare fists, then grabbed us and..."
"Counsel, approach the bench."
Even before he gets there, the public defender knows what's coming. Not only does the judge think his clients are looney tunes, but probably still high as well. Didn't the arresting officers also recover a quantity of controlled substances?
"Yes, your honor, but -"
And who does this crackpot kid think he is, tying up valuable court time with his hallucinations?
"Yes, but-"
Which is exactly why both defendants will  be referred to the court psychiatrist. Let him pick their brains for awhile.
"Yes, but -"
And one more word out of anybody will be taken as contempt of court. Any questions?.......Didn't think so.
At his psychiatric evaluation, Toad figures he can finally set the record straight.
He's not crazy. Once he tells the shrink what happened, everything will be fine.
But fear, fatigue, and too many strange things in too short a time are confusing him. Somehow, fact and nightmares jumble together in one non-stop rant.
Superman locked them up, Toad confides to the doctor. Before he knew it, they were flying through the air, over the subway trains, and out above Wrigley Field.
When Toad tried to get away, he held them hostage on the roof of the Sears Tower.
Told them he'd buzz over to Daley Center Plaza and skewer them on the Picasso sculpture if they didn't act right. 
The doctor listens quietly, recording everything on tape.  A half hour later, Toad is
 still ranting, about air sickness and Kryptonite patches and narrowly missing the incoming jets at O'Hare Airport. When he extends a skinny arm to the doctor, inviting him to check for 'cape burns', the evaluation is over. 
Jamal takes a different tactic. He may be crazy but he's not nuts. After entering a  guilty plea, he's sentenced to three years at Joliet. On the recommendation of the court psychiatrist, Toad is remanded to Dunning, a state facility for the criminally insane.
Leaving the courtroom that afternoon, Otto D. a/k/a Superman suggests  a new Mass Transit slogan to his partners. An updated version of  "Dial 911- Make a cop come," he explains. Something different. Something the Man of Steel would be proud of..
 "Help is just a cape away."

Copyright © 2001 by Gina Gallo - www.gallostories.com

Gina's new book, ARMED AND DANGEROUS: MEMOIRS OF A CHICAGO COP
(Forge Books) has just been released.

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