Текст книги "Upholding the Paw"
Автор книги: Diane Kelly
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Chapter Twenty
A Howling Good Time
Brigit
Her partner made a fast left turn into the Vickery rail yard, and Brigit slid across her platform. Weeeee!
“Hang on, girl!” Megan called back as she braked the cruiser to a quick stop in the gravel-strewn lot.
Brigit could tell Megan was excited. She was breathing rapidly and pecking away at her laptop like her fingers were on fire. Click-click-click-click-click.
Brigit had no idea what her partner was doing, though she’d heard her mention the word Facebook several times today, so it was possible she was looking at that site again. If there were such a social media platform for dogs, it would be called Buttbook and dogs would post pics of their hindquarters, tails raised. Gender options would include male, female, and neutered/spayed. Relationship statuses would include stray and part of a pack. Dogs, of course, would be interested in men or women. Gender was irrelevant. They’d have a relationship with any human who would give them good food and a warm bed. Canines would post about dead squirrels they’d manage to catch, a new toy they’d been given, other dogs they’d humped, holes they’d dug.
Brigit’s ears pricked as she detected the clackety-clack of a train approaching the station. The conductor laid on the horn. Toot-tooooot!
Why not join in? She raised her head, opened her mouth, and let loose with a howl. Awoooooooo!
Megan shushed her when a dispatcher came over the radio. “Stolen Fiat spotted on Henderson heading northbound from Myrtle Street.”
Her partner grabbed her mic. “Officer Luz and Brigit responding!”
As Megan floored the gas pedal, Brigit dug her claws into the carpeted floor of her enclosure to try to maintain her balance. She looked through the windshield. Where were they going? Would there be a foot chase?
She wagged her tail hopefully.
Brigit was ready to take a bite out of crime.
Chapter Twenty-One
Round and Round
Smokestack
As he sped away from the convenience store, Smokestack shoved a hand down his pants, tugged the bank bag from his underwear, and tossed it to the Switchman in the passenger seat. “Split that up. Then we’ll bail and go our separate ways.”
The Switchman unzipped the bag, dumped the bills onto his lap, and hurriedly began to separate them into stacks, fumbling with his gloves on.
The Conductor stuck his head between the seats. “Hurry up!”
“I’m going as fast as I can!” The Switchman barked. “It’s not easy with these damn gloves.”
When the Switchman finished counting out the bills into three equal piles, Smokestack reached over, grabbed his share off the Switchman’s lap, and tucked it into the pocket of his jeans with his Zig-Zag rolling papers and the steam train engine. Or what was left of the engine, anyway. The chimney had come off at some point and fallen out of his pocket.
He scanned the street ahead, looking for a place where they could ditch the car.
WHUP-WHUP-WHUP-WHUP-WHUP.
Shit! He looked out the window. The police helicopter swooped into place to hover in the air above them.
The Switchman put his hands on either side of his head. “We’re screwed!”
Smokestack mashed the gas pedal to the floor and careened out of the lot. The helicopter had a bead on them, following as they raced north up Henderson.
“Stop!” hollered the Conductor from the tiny back seat. “We need to make a run for it!”
Smokestack began to slow down. Though the chopper was on them, street patrols had yet to reach them. If they bailed out and ran in different directions, the chopper would be able to trail only one of them. There was a chance two of them could escape. He only hoped one of the two would be him. He realized, however, that the odds weren’t in his favor. Too much dope and too many donuts had made him pudgy and slow. The others were in far better shape.
Woo-woo-woo!
He eyed the rearview mirror to see a FWPD cruiser gaining on them from behind. “Aw, hell!”
He punched the gas, only to find himself speeding toward another cruiser heading down Henderson from the north. He braked and banged two furious fists on the steering wheel. “Dammit!”
With Trimble Tech High School blocking them on the right and Harris Hospital on the left, there was no way out.
Or was there?
Chapter Twenty-Two
Ramp It Up!
Megan
Woo-woo-woo!
There it was! The little green Fiat! Just a block away and headed right toward me, the police helicopter hovering in the air above it. There was no way they could escape now.
I threw a victorious fist in the air. “We got ’em, Brig!”
My partner barked in excitement. Woof-woof!
Flashing lights came up Henderson from the south, the sound of the second cruiser’s siren blending with my own.
I quickly gained on a sedan whose driver had yet to yield. Blurgh! What part of woo-woo-woo did he not understand?
The Fiat veered over the yellow center line and the sedan’s brake lights ignited. The threat of a head-on collision finally got the driver’s attention.
I jammed on my brakes, my cruiser stopping mere inches from the other car’s back bumper. Tires squealing, the Fiat turned in front of the car and entered the Harris Hospital parking garage. Looked like these guys had no plans to give themselves up without a fight, something they had in common with Phillip Gunderbaugh. Is he one of them?
Looking over my shoulder, I threw my cruiser into reverse and backed up a dozen feet. I turned to face the front, shoved the gearshift into drive, and began to pull around the sedan only to find its driver starting to move forward. Oh, for the love of God! I grabbed the microphone for my public address system. “Pull to the curb!” I yelled.
The driver finally obeyed, easing over to the right to get out of my way.
Derek’s cruiser barreled down on the entrance from the other direction, but I wasn’t about to let him get in before me. The two of us nearly collided in our haste to enter the garage. Luckily, my front bumper had a few inches on his. I pulled into the lane, stopped to grab a ticket, and sped through the instant the gate lifted. Derek drove through on my tail.
I drove as fast as I dared up the first three levels, keeping a sharp lookout for the Fiat. Derek trailed behind me, our sirens echoing off the concrete walls of the structure. Lest I cause permanent hearing loss to people in the garage, I cut off my siren. Mackey took my lead and did the same, though we both left our lights flashing.
When we reached the fourth floor, I grabbed my radio mic. “Mackey!” I called. “Go down and cover the exit!”
For once, the guy didn’t argue with me.
“I’m on it.” He broke off at the next ramp, heading down instead of following me up.
I continued round and round, circling all the way up to the uncovered parking on the roof but finding no evidence of the Fiat. I grabbed my radio mic again to contact the chopper. “Has the Fiat left the garage?”
“No,” they replied, the whup-whup-whup sounding in the background. “Haven’t seen anyone leave on foot either.”
Good. The bank robbers were still inside the garage.
Having reached the pinnacle, I began to circle down. I was on the third level when Derek’s voice came over the radio. “Found the car! Second floor.”
I grabbed my mic. “Almost there.”
I circled the corner and there it was. The little green Fiat parked between a pickup and a minivan. I pulled my car to a stop behind Derek’s cruiser, angling it so they wouldn’t be able to get past it if they backed out.
Derek climbed out of his car and hunkered down beside it, his gun at the ready.
I ordered Brigit to lay and keep her head down. The last thing I wanted was my partner to get hurt if this ended in a shootout. She obeyed and I gave her a “good girl.”
Keeping my head low, I slipped out of my patrol car, readied my gun, and bent down beside my front bumper.
Derek hollered over his hood. “You in the Fiat! Come out with your hands up!”
We waited for several seconds but there was no movement.
I peeked through the windows of my car at the Fiat. With the dim lighting in the garage, the shadow cast by the minivan, and the tinting on the car’s windows, it was difficult to tell whether anyone was actually still in the car. They could be ducked down in the seats.
“Is anyone inside?” I called to Mackey.
He raised a palm to indicate Who knows? and called out again. “Everyone in the Fiat come out now! Hands in the air!”
Still nothing. We’d have to go in. Ugh. For all we knew, the bank robbers were ducked down inside ready to open fire at close range when we approached. I was tempted to suggest we call the SWAT team, but I knew Derek would never go for it. The guy lived for this kind of dangerous confrontation. Once again, I found myself wishing for more testosterone. Maybe they could put it in some type of fruity smoothie drink. A citrus-flavor one. They could call it a Tangerinerone.
Though I considered this case to be mine, not his, I voiced no objection when Mackey took charge now. He waved a hand, motioning for me to follow him as he approached the car.
I took a breath to steel my nerves and crept out from behind my car, approaching the Fiat from the right while Mackey approached from the left. When we reached the car, he shouted “Doors! Now!”
I grabbed the passenger door and yanked it open while Mackey opened the driver’s side door. We peeked into the cab, our eyes meeting over the empty space.
“Dammit!” He slammed his door and stood fully upright. “They must be on foot somewhere in the garage.”
“I’ll send Brigit after them.” I was headed back to my cruiser to let her out when an odd noise reached my ears. Hoo-hoo-hah-hah. Hoo-hoo-hah-hah.
What was that sound? The ventilation system? Some type of hydraulics for the elevator?
The question was answered when a thirtyish man and a very pregnant woman performing breathing techniques rounded the corner at the bottom of the ramp.
“Police!” the man called, waving his arm. “Three men just stole our car!”
The woman paused, putting one hand on the trunk of a shiny black Chrysler and the other on her belly, grimacing.
Derek and I hurried down to them.
“What happened?” I asked.
Hoo-hoo-hah-hah.
The man put a supportive hand on his wife’s back and turned to me, his eyes wide. “We were getting out and three men ran up and demanded my keys. Then they jumped in and drove off!”
“What kind of car was it?” I asked.
The woman straightened as the contraction evidently eased. “A 2008 Honda Accord. It’s white.” She looked up at her husband. “Our brand-new baby seat was in the back.”
“We’ll do our best to get it back,” I told them. “Baby seat and all.”
I contacted the chopper again. “The men bailed on the Fiat and stole a white Honda Accord. Have you seen one leave the garage?”
Brief chatter ensued as the pilot and the other officer in the chopper compared mental notes.
“We think it may have exited a minute or so ago. We’ll go higher and see if we can spot it.”
Without conferring with me, Mackey backed toward his cruiser. “This is your case, Luz. I’ll let you wrap things up here.”
My chest tightened in anger. I knew why Derek was suddenly deferring to me. So he could get back out on the streets and try to find the bank robbers. Call me spiteful, but I’d be really pissed off if Mackey caught these guys when I’d been the one working the investigation all day, interviewing witnesses, chasing these jerks all over town. But what could I do? One of us needed to finish up here, and Mackey was already climbing into his cruiser.
Hoo-hoo-hah-hah.
While Derek drove past us and headed off down the ramp, I whipped out my notepad and quickly jotted down the couple’s contact information. “I’ll let you know as soon as your car is located. Good luck with the birth. And congratulations!”
“Thanks.” The woman offered me a smile that morphed into a cringe as another contraction hit. Hoo-hoo-hah-hah.
I returned to my cruiser. Seemed I’d been in and out of my car a thousand times today.
As my butt hit the seat, my phone pinged with a text from Seth. Just say when on the margaritas.
I sent him a quick reply. Wrapping things up. Will be back in touch with an ETA ASAP.
It was now a few minutes after five o’clock and my shift was officially over, but protocol—and my work ethic—dictated that I continue my pursuit, at least until the evening shift officers could be caught up on the details. I also wanted to pursue the theory I had about the yellow R on the note. If the letter had, in fact, been cut from a depiction of a railroad crossing sign, it could implicate Christopher Vogel, couldn’t it? Or could it be mere coincidence?
As I pulled out of the parking garage, I forced myself to try to think like a criminal. If I’d robbed a bank, stolen a city bus, torched a convenience store, and performed a series of car-jackings, which way would I go to ditch the vehicle?
Hmm …
If I’d been heading north when encountering the police not long before, maybe I’d turn south when I exited the garage, to keep the cops guessing. I might also ditch the car near the Texas Christian University campus, which sat not far to the west. There were always hordes of people walking around the university area. No one would think twice about three men on foot.
It was worth a shot, right? If I found them, hooray for me—assuming, of course, they didn’t shoot me dead. If I didn’t find them, well, I had a frozen margarita and a hot guy to look forward to.
As I headed south down the divided part of University Drive, I rolled to a stop at a red traffic light. As I sat there, waiting for the light to turn green, I glanced around at the people making their way down the sidewalks and through the crosswalk in front of me. Many of the college boys and some of the girls wore baseball caps. For some it was a show of support for one sports team or another. For others, it was a way of hiding the fact that they’d rolled out of bed late and hadn’t had time to shower or wash their hair before going to class.
Seeing the caps brought my mind back to the photo of Lewis Blakemore in which he’d been wearing the striped hat. Unlike a regular ball cap, his hat had appeared slightly looser and taller on top.
Just like the type worn by a train conductor.
Holy wow! Had I just found a possible connection between him and Vogel? A train fetish?
Before I could process the thought, a white sedan with a twentyish Caucasian guy at the wheel pulled to a stop at the light in the northbound lane. A black man sat in the passenger seat, a second Caucasian man in the back. My eyes went to the license plate. Sure enough, it was the number the pregnant woman had given me. My prediction that the men would head to the university area had proven correct. Yay for me.
“Here we go, girl!” I called to Brigit. I flipped on my lights and siren and eased into the crosswalk. Vehicles were not technically supposed to cross over on the pedestrian lane, but as a cop I was exempt, of course. The only problem was all of the college students who were in the way.
The young man driving the Accord floored the gas pedal and ran the red light, forcing students to dash out of the way or be run over. The college kids scurried to the curbed median to let me through, and I took off in hot pursuit of the Accord.
Grabbing my mic from the dash, I cried, “Backup needed! In pursuit of armed robbery suspects heading north on University Drive at Princeton Street.”
That all-too-familiar male voice came back. “Officer Mackey responding.”
Damn!
I pursued the car north past the cross streets of Cantey, McPherson, and Park Hill. My eyes spotted Derek’s patrol car sitting up ahead at the Colonial Parkway intersection. He pulled into the lane as the Accord approached. Mackey attempted to force the Accord over, but the driver pulled an evasive maneuver, braking and circling around the back of his cruiser.
The three of us rocketed over the bridge spanning the Trinity River. Just after the bridge, the Accord made a sudden left onto Collinsworth—screeeeee!—the excessive speed temporarily taking the car up on two wheels. An oncoming Suburban swerved to keep from hitting the Accord. Unfortunately, the driver overcompensated when trying to correct and ended up spinning out in the middle of the intersection—a three-ton metal whirligig, slamming into a silver Dodge Avenger and sending it careening across the road.
With the intersection blocked and potential injuries suffered, I feared we’d have to abort our pursuit. Fortunately, however, one of the evening-shift officers approached from the north and contacted us via radio. “I’ll take care of this mess. You two go get those bastards.”
Derek wove his way through the glass and metal debris, and I followed along on his bumper, continuing westbound on Collinsworth.
My eyes scanned the area, looking for the car on the road or abandoned in a parking lot, the men fleeing on foot. I saw nothing until we approached an automated, conveyer-driven car wash. The back end of the Accord disappeared behind a veil of soapy water as it proceeded into the bay.
Nice try, guys. You can run, but you can’t hide. Your crime spree is over now.
I grabbed my mic again. “Mackey! They pulled into the car wash.”
Ahead of me, Derek whipped into the lot. “I’ll take the exit,” he said over the radio. “You made sure they don’t try to back out the front.”
Dammit, again! Obviously, the officer at the exit would be the one to nail the suspects. A Cadillac coupe had followed the Accord into the car wash. There was no way they’d be able to back up. Still, as frustrated as I was, my duty had to come before my pride.
While Derek drove around to the exit, I parked my cruiser sideways across the entrance to prevent anyone else from entering the bay. I opened the back door to let Brigit out. If the men attempted to flee on foot once the car emerged at the exit, her services could come in handy. “Come on, girl.”
She hopped down, her tail wagging as if she were looking forward to a chase.
As Brigit and I stood there, I began to fume. When Derek and I had been partners, he’d always made me do the grunt work, forced me frisk suspected drug dealers and risk the needle prick, ordered me to get out in the rain to write traffic tickets, left me to wrangle the drunk and disorderly suspects while he stood by laughing when one of them threw a fist at me or puked on my shoes. Once again, I would do the bulk of the work and Derek would get the credit.
Or would he?
Maybe I could get a worker to stop the machines so that Brigit and I could enter from the front and nab the suspects as they sat in the car.
Next to the bay was a door marked OFFICE set in the cinder block wall. I hurried over, Brigit trotting along with me. I peered through the narrow glass panel at the top of the door but saw nobody inside. I knocked anyway, but saw no movement inside. Is the attendant outside somewhere? I hurriedly glanced around but saw no one.
Surely there was an emergency shutoff switch somewhere. I led Brigit back to the entrance. I found a box mounted on the left wall that looked promising. Unfortunately, a key was required to open it. I toyed briefly with the idea of smashing it with my baton, but decided against it, realizing the property damage would be difficult to justify.
Undeterred, I decided to head into the bay on foot. The brushes and pads should be easy enough to avoid if I stuck to the side wall. All I risked was getting a little bit wet. Right?
I wrapped Brigit’s leash tight around my hand. “Come on, girl. We’re going in.”
Chapter Twenty-Three
This Ain’t No Dog Wash
Brigit
Oh, hell no. If Megan thought Brigit would voluntarily go into a car wash she must be smoking catnip.
Brigit sat on her haunches, dug in her heels, and pulled back on the leash with all the force she could muster.
“Come on!” her partner demanded.
Still Brigit resisted. She realized doing so would mean her partner would be stingy with the liver treats for a while and that she might renege on that spoonful of peanut butter, but the dog would deal with it.
“All right,” Megan spat. “Have it your way.” She quickly tied Brigit’s leash to the door handle of the cruiser, turned, and ran into the car wash.
Yep, definitely on the catnip.