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CopShock, Surviving Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Chapter 1
Assaults
(Excerpt)
The conductor slid open the right side door and Christine leaned out, one foot on the
catwalk. The man whose face was shrouded in darkness crept toward her.
"Excuse me, sir, would you mind stepping into the train?" she said, her voice
non-threatening.
She could see in the gloomy light his coat was rumpled and dirty. His pace did not change.
"Sir, you're not supposed to be out here. Please get into the subway car."
The man brushed against her as he passed, and then stopped, turning to face her. His beard
was matted and he smelled bad. The brief physical contact made her uneasy. Did he mean to
touch her? She suppressed a momentary revulsion.
"This is dangerous. Please get onto the train."
He did not respond, appearing to study her as if he hadn't made up his mind what she was.
He wasn't very big, barely over five feet. Christine wasn't very big either, but she knew
she could handle him if it came to that. Able to lift her own weight, she assumed he would
be easy to subdue and drag in.
She stepped onto the catwalk. Immediately, she sensed something wrong. His cold stare was
predatory. As if on the hunt, he was searching for an advantage.
Drawing the baton from her utility belt and tucking it under her arm, she slid a couple of
steps closer to him on the catwalk.
"Sir, get on the train."
He pushed her hard, knocking her off balance. Her hat flew off.
"You're under arrest," she said, "for attempting to assault a police
officer. Turn around and put your hands up."
Bending toward the train, he pressed his hands against the car's window. Christine's heavy
winter coat and bulky utility belt prevented her from getting behind him in the narrow
width of the catwalk. She thought, It'll be okay. He's cooperating.
She was clamping a cuff on his left wrist when he twisted toward her, folding his left arm
around her head. He grabbed her by the hair, yanking her head back. His other hand skated
down the left side of her face, a shiny object between his fingertips. The object slashed
a path from the tip of her scalp, down behind her ear, across her neck, severing veins,
nerves and muscles.
Christine felt the pressure of the object against her throat, then an immediate tingling
and sharpness. Touching her neck, her hand came away bloody.
"You son-of-a-bitch!" she cried.
Dropping the cuffs, she drew the baton and bashed him twice, once on the neck, then on the
head. The next time she hit him, the stick bounced off and flew onto the tracks.
Issued by the academy, her nightstick proved to be an ineffective weapon. According to
Christine, it was about as hard as rolled up gift wrapping paper.
Rather than deterring the man, Christine's defense enraged him. Lunging at her face, he
tried to slash the other side of her throat. When she dipped back to dodge the attack, she
saw in his eyes a feral bewilderment.
He went wild, hacking at her coat and vest. The vest prevented him from puncturing her
heart and lungs. But he managed to slice through the arms of her coat, gashing her arms
and shoulders. Throwing up her hands to block his renewed advance, he focused his anger on
the soft tissue of her palms, flailing and cutting.
Despite her wounds and the shock of the assault, Christine backed up to draw her service
revolver. The more she retreated, the more he went after her.
Defending herself with one hand, she closed the bleeding fingers of her other hand around
the gun butt and tried to pull the gun from the holster. Her gun would not let go. It was
stuck.
Her holster had a specially constructed notch that served as a safety mechanism. Too many
people had stolen officers' guns from their holsters during fights, and the notch was
designed to prevent suspects from getting the weapons. The notched holster required an
officer not to pull up on the gun so much as twist it out. Only the maneuver required
space to twist the weapon out, something she didn't have. To get it out, she'd have to use
both hands, possibly a fatal course of action.
Her thoughts racing, she went for a spare gun, an off-duty five-shot in a shoulder holster
under her left armpit. It wasn't there. During the struggle, the holster and harness had
twisted around her back. The gun was behind her, unreachable, humped under her uniform
jacket and heavy coat.
As the man pressed his attack, Christine felt a sticky wetness down her uniform.
Light-headed, losing blood, she grabbed at the concrete wall. Her hand fell on a rusted
metal handrail. What drew her attention, and remains a recurring memory today, was the
image of her own blood blackening the painted, yellow, rotted steel.
With unexpected strength, she wrenched the handrail from the wall and thrust it at him.
Now she was on the attack. Still trying to retrieve the spare gun with her right hand, she
swung the four-foot pole from side to side with the other hand to keep him at bay.
She struck the wall, then the side of the train, missing the man, yet driving him back.
The next blow made contact, bludgeoning him on the neck and the shoulder. She clubbed him
again in the neck. Jerking the pole back to gain momentum, she struck the train car,
snapping the shaft in half.
Taking advantage of the sudden shift in the struggle, her assailant scooped up the broken
half of the handrail and hammered her in the shoulder and hands.
As long as he isn't cutting me, she thought, I can try again for the gun.
Using both hands as he pummeled her, she finally freed her service revolver from the
holster. But then he turned around and walked away, toward the rear of the train.
"Police, don't move!" she shouted, pointing her gun at his back. He didn't stop.
She could have shot him. But a New York cop could only shoot a fleeing felon if he posed
further threat. She regrets she didn't fire. Shooting might have given her some measure of
control. Shooting might have prevented her from seeing herself in the months and years to
come as a victim.
Not aware how badly she was hurt, Christine followed him toward the back of the train. She
called the central dispatcher again. The radio was useless.
Her heart pounding, she tasted what she thought was copper in her mouth. She watched the
man jump down onto the train tracks and cross to the other side, heading toward the 59th
and Lexington subway station, from where she came.
Her feet, hands and head tingled. She couldn't open or close her hands nor raise her arms.
Aware she was weakening, Christine accepted that the battle was over.
She staggered to the open door of the train car. She told me she thought the man, the
fight and what happened next were all a dream, and she could only remember fragments of the
dream.
Fragments like...
Calling on the radio, "1013, 1013, officer down." The radio
dead.
Floating into the car.
Faces of people screaming.
Blood dripping down clothes.
Bloody bootprints on the floor.
The radio suddenly working. Shhhhhhhh...
In the dream, a woman orders people off a seat and says, "Lay down,
officer!"
Faces appear before her like apparitions. Hands press a scarf against the wounds. A man
plays with the dial of her microphone.
"I'm a passenger on the train. We have an officer that is slashed, and she's in real
bad shape. She's starting to pass out."
Christine describes the attacker, what direction he was going in. The man repeats what she
says. A woman's face bends down into the helpers trying to stop the bleeding and says,
"Why are you helping her? She's gonna die anyway."
To her horror, Christine realizes the train is not moving. It's sitting in the dark tunnel
like a dug-in beetle afraid of the light. Five minutes or five hours pass. She thinks
she's dying. The motorman won't budge. He is afraid the suspect is still on the tracks. He
might run him over.
After an eternity, the train inches forward into the next station.
It was all a dream, wasn't it? If only she hadn't taken her uniforms to the cleaners, she
would have reported for work earlier, and she wouldn't have been on this train, and this
wouldn't have happened. If only, if only, if only...
Suddenly the car door rumbled open and in rushed a transit cop. The cop and a passenger
picked Christine up and ran her out of the train up two long flights of stairs.
Near the top, the rescuers lost their balance, almost dropping her. Not one to let a joke
go by, even in a desperate situation, Christine said, "Hey, wait til I get to
at least street level. Then you can drop me."
At street level, Christine told me she thought she saw "millions of lights and
cops," touching her, pushing her toward the ambulance's open doors. News cameras
poked their lenses at her, capturing the drama. SEE COP BLEED TO DEATH, STORY AT
ELEVEN...
She was in and out of consciousness. She recalls sirens blasting as they raced to the
hospital, police car lights surrounding her, strobing through the windows of the
ambulance, an attendant shouting her vital signs over the din into a microphone. Then,
nothing.
Infinite black space.
A piano tinkling Waltz in E flat.
A saxophone hooting out Silent Night.
Screaming awake into a sea of noise, she fixed her eyes on the ambulance's ceiling. She
tasted copper in her mouth.
Emergency attendants scissored up the arms of her uniform coat, slicing through socks,
pants, searching for a vein to accept an IV tube, all the time talking to her, trying to
keep her awake.
"Christine, Christine, stay with us," she remembers them saying over and over.
"Do you know your arm is cut, too?" She didn't know.
To keep her alert, they told jokes. But when she said in a stern voice, "Don't ruin
these pants," it took them a moment to realize she didn't mean it. They laughed. She
laughed and closed her eyes. And the world darkened and disappeared.
Waking up, she gasped for air. She was in motion, sailing down a long corridor. Ceiling
lights rushed by like luminous frosted clouds. Someone in green held her wounds shut.
Someone in white jabbed her with a needle. And around her spun a tempest of blue, white,
and green uniforms and a wall of jumbled sound.
Then the face of her attacker appeared like a ghost on a subway wall. She wasn't
hallucinating. It was him. The cops had caught him and brought him to Bellevue Hospital
for a "show up." Parading the assailant in front of the victim was standard
procedure for making an identification. When she said, "That's him," he laughed.
In his pocket police found the razor blade he used to slash Christine.
Her gurney resumed its stormy journey into the Emergency Room where hands lifted her onto
a shimmering, metal table. Someone in green washed the blood away. Doctors fussed over her
wounds and prepared anesthetic. Though they were ready to sew her up, she refused to go
under. She wanted to see Robert, to hear his voice.
What seemed like seconds later, he appeared. She told him she loved him, and he said he'd
be here for her always, a promise he meant and kept. She accepted the medication and, with
insensibility swelling over like waves, floated away into deep blue as they wheeled her
into surgery.
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