Read RCC03 - Beneath a Weeping Sky Online

Authors: Frank Zafiro

Tags: #USA, #police

RCC03 - Beneath a Weeping Sky (33 page)

“It’ll be all right,” he said in low voice that he hoped no one else besides the medics could hear.

Katie didn’t answer, but after a moment she nodded in acquiescence.

Without hesitation, the medics raised the gurney and slid her into the ambulance. One medic crawled in after her while the second slammed the door behind them. The second medic turned to head toward the driver’s door.

Tower grabbed his sleeve. “Which hospital?”

“Sacred Heart,” the man answered.

Tower glanced down at his nametag. It read
A. Hoagland
.

“Is she going to be all right, Hoagland?” Tower asked.

Hoagland gave him a neutral look. “She took some heavy blows to the head. I think she has a concussion at the very least. They’ll do some tests on her up at the hospital to see if she sustained any injuries more serious than that.”

“But she’ll be okay?”

Hoagland bit his lip. “It’s hard to say with head injuries, but she’s coherent now, so that’s a good sign.”

Tower clenched his jaw. “That doesn’t sound too promising.”

Hoagland reached down and removed Tower’s grasp from his sleeve. “Head injuries are tricky, but she looks good right now.” He put his hand on Tower’s shoulder. “She looks like a fighter to me. I think she’ll be all right.”

Tower nodded.

“I’ve got to get her transported,” Hoagland said. Without waiting for a reply, he turned and hurried to the driver’s door. Within another moment, the ambulance’s engine fired to life and it lumbered forward. Tower watched the flashing lights atop the large, white box approached Post, slow, then turned right and disappear down the hill.

 

2303 hours

 

Chisolm followed Gomez and Čert out of the bushes and onto the sidewalk. His uniform was soaking wet, but he ignored the chill. Čert charged eastward along the sidewalk. Gomez loped along behind him while Chisolm sprinted to keep up.

About twenty yards from the intersection, Čert stopped. He dropped his nose lower toward the ground, sniffing urgently. Chisolm stopped and drew in deep breaths while he waited. The street was clear of foot traffic. There were no cars. He glanced over his shoulder. There was a single house up the street without any exterior lighting. Other than that, all was clear.

The dog seemed to be wandering in a large circle, searching for scent. He whined again, but even Chisolm could hear that the sound was now frustration, not eagerness. A sinking feeling settled in his stomach.

Gomez didn’t give up. He worked Čert up and down the sidewalk on both sides of the street for several minutes, trying to pick up the scent. They always returned to the same point on the sidewalk, where the dog finally sat down and let out an angry, mournful howl.

“Shit,” Chisolm finally muttered.

Gomez sighed and ran his hand through his hair. “He must have jumped in a car, Tom. That’s the only thing I can figure happened.”

“Shit,” Chisolm repeated. He realized that meant the car that Kahn had seen was probably the suspect. He raised the radio to his lips. “Secure the perimeter,” he said.

“Copy,”
the dispatcher replied.
“Secure the perimeter.”

The two men stood on the wet sidewalk, brooding. Čert whined, his tone suggesting that he commiserated.

We almost had him.
The thought throbbed in Chisolm’s skull.
We almost had him and it’s my fault he got away.

Gomez knelt next to Čert and rubbed the dog’s head. “You did a good job, boy,” he whispered. “It’s not your fault.”

“Shit,” Chisolm said a third time. He couldn’t think of anything else to say.

 

2304 hours

 

At first, he’d fought the terrain, blasting through the bushes and bouncing off the trees. The water from the bushes he forced his way through soaked his clothes to the skin. That coldness jarred him enough. He put aside the absolute ecstasy that hummed through his body and tamped down the rage that was seething and bubbling beneath it. Instead, he focused on his escape.

Instead of blindly running, he dodged and slipped around trees and bushes. That sped up his progress considerably. When the hillside steepened, he leaned forward for balance, even using his hands to pull himself along.

He kept his ears piqued for the sound of pursuit, but for some reason it fell off almost right away. Had he outrun them? Outrun the
police
? That surprised him, but it made him smile in spite of the cold and the darkness around him.

He hurried forward.

He burst out the bushes and onto the street near his car. Without hesitation, he sprinted to the car, got in and started the engine. Then he sat for a moment, thinking.

Which way to go?

The police weren’t stupid. They had radios. There would soon be cop cars all over the neighborhood. What would they be looking for? Probably a man on foot. But they had seen his car when he drove by. Would they remember it and make the connection? Did they write down his license plate? Take his picture?

He decided in an instant, flipping a quick U-turn on the small street.

It was too narrow for a complete turn, so he bounced up onto the sidewalk with his front tire. Once he was pointed back east, he drove forward. He paused briefly at the stop sign, then crossed Post and continued east at the speed limit.

He frowned as he drove. If they had his license plate, they’d soon have his address. Going home could mean walking into a trap.

This wasn’t something he’d planned for. He never imagined his own home as a danger. Home was his sanctuary. He’d have to trust it was still safe.

Drive home. Throw his clothes in the washer. Shower. Think of an alibi.

If the cops came, he’d bluff. That was the only play he had right now. Later, maybe he could come up with a different plan for another time, but for now, he’d bluff.

His frown turned into a scowl. Did they have his picture?

Did that bitch get a look at his face?

He shook his head. It was too dark. She didn’t see him.

He reached Atlantic Avenue and turned left. Two blocks later, he turned off his headlights and cruised quietly up the street. His block was still. Most of the lights inside the small ranchers and brick single story houses were turned out for the night. It was too cold for anyone to be sitting out on the front porch. No one would notice his stealthy approach.

He pulled into his driveway and shut off the engine. Before exiting the car, he took several deep breaths. Then he went inside.

 

2310 hours

 

Officer Paul Hiero turned onto Atlantic just as the order to secure the perimeter came over his radio. He frowned, knowing that meant the K-9 track had failed. Which meant the suspect had escaped.

He cruised slowly northbound along the residential street. Most of the lights inside the houses were turned off. Outdoor lights burned over the front doors of almost every porch. The occasional flicker of a television behind curtains told him that some people were still awake, but the majority of people in the neighborhood had already called it a night. That didn’t surprise him. The neighborhood consisted largely of retired folks and working class families. The retired folks went to bed early because they were old. The working families had either school or a job to get to in the morning.

Hiero sighed. This was a waste of time. There was no way a scumbag rapist would live in a neighborhood like this.

Nonetheless, he drifted along the street, watching for any pedestrians or anything suspicious. There was nothing, just as he expected.

When he reached Garland, he stopped for the stop sign. He lifted the radio mike and spoke into it. “Baker-127, clear of the call.”

“Copy, Baker-127.”

He turned right and headed back east to Baker Sector.

 

 

 

FOURTEEN

 

Tuesday, April 23rd

Day Shift

0611 hours

 

 

Tower stood in his kitchen, staring at the small cactus in a coffee cup that was on the windowsill. That cactus was his sole contribution to the flora and fauna life in his home. All the rest came with Stephanie as she slowly moved in. As he sipped the strong coffee from his own cup, he ran the events of the previous night through his head.

He tried to work up some anger toward Kahn for not breaking perimeter to go after the car. Or at Chisolm for directing him not to. But in the end, he knew it had been the right decision. Besides, he’d been too worried about MacLeod’s injuries to even be aware of the track. It wasn’t until she’d been shuttled off to the hospital that he turned his attention to the activities around him.

He took a long sip of the brew in his cup. The bold blend overwhelmed his mouth with taste. As he swallowed and enjoyed the after-scent of the coffee, he decided that even if there had been mistakes made by the officers, it had been his task force. He should have foreseen the mistakes or prevented them. Or had a better plan.

The cactus on the windowsill looked dry. He supposed that was the cactus’s nature, but that didn’t stop him from reaching out and dribbling coffee over the top of the spiky bulb. The steaming hot liquid washed down the green cactus and darkened the dry earth beneath it.

A shuffling sound arose behind him.

“John, what’re you doing?”

“Watering the plants,” Tower said evenly.

Stephanie brushed past him toward the cupboard containing the coffee cups, leaving a trail of bed-warmth from her body in her wash. She poured herself a cup and sidled up next to Tower.

“You didn’t get in ‘til late last night,” she said.

Tower grunted and took another sip.

“You should have woken me,” Stephanie said, giving him a gentle nudge with her hip.

Tower sighed. “I was exhausted.”

“What happened? Did you catch the guy?”

“Nope.” Tower reached out and dribbled some more coffee onto the cactus.

Stephanie watched him. Then she said, “You know, some people believe that plants can feel pain. You could be burning the hell out of that poor cactus.”

“Those people are idiots,” Tower remarked. He gave the cactus one last splash of coffee. “Besides, cactuses are tough.”

“Cacti,” Stephanie corrected.

Tower sighed again, a tickle of irritation going through him. “Thanks. Are you getting into crosswords or something?”

“What?”

“Never mind.” Tower drank the last of his coffee. He thought about pouring himself another cup but hesitated. He should get to work. Of course, he knew what was waiting for him there.

Questions.

And Lieutenant Crawford.

He poured another cup.

“I saw your sister yesterday,” Stephanie said. “Little Ben sure is cute.”

Tower smiled in spite of himself. His nephew was a cute kid, and he was proud of the boy. He didn’t know if he’d ever have kids of his own, but somehow being an uncle to Ben made that concern less worrisome.

“Thought that’d make you smile,” Stephanie said. Then she assumed a mock pout. “Although, it’d been nice if the prospect of waking me up for sex had done the same thing.”

Tower leaned over and kissed her temple. “I really was exhausted, babe. And I had a bad night.”

Stephanie leaned in and nestled into his chest. “Well, I’ll tell you what. When you have bad nights like that and you’re tired, wake me up anyway. I’ll make your night better. And I’ll even do most of the work.”

Tower kissed the top of her head. “Okay. You got it.” He kissed her head again, pausing to smell her hair. “Thanks,” he whispered.

In that moment, it didn’t matter to him that Crawford was probably already waiting to chew his ass at the office. Or that the Rainy Day Rapist was getting the better of him. For those few seconds, it didn’t even matter that Katie MacLeod was up at the hospital. All that mattered was the scent of her hair and the closeness of her body.

“Thanks,” he whispered again.

 

0630 hours

 

He sat at his kitchen table, staring down at his uneaten breakfast. The reality of his near capture the previous night settled in after he’d slept for a few hours. He’d been foolish to attempt something with no plan. And to risk doing it without his ski mask was doubly foolish. What if she’d seen his face?

The entire scenario played itself out behind his eyes. Spotting her while driving by. The rush to grab her. The quick response of the police. Her rebellious words—

Fuck you!

—once he had her in the wooded area rang in his ears. So did the beautiful sound of his fist slapping into her face. The memory of the sweet limpness of her body afterward still made his fingers and palms tingle hours later.

But he forced his mind to ignore that for a moment. He worked on the events some more, thinking things through. He supposed it was possible, though not probable, that there had been police officers that close simply by chance, but he doubted it. And one of them had called out a name.

“Katie,” he breathed.

If they knew her name, then they knew who she was. So that meant she was with the police. Or she
was
police. Probably a decoy.

Yes, he decided. That was it. He’d fallen for a decoy.

The idea made him grind his teeth. Still, even with all their planning, his unplanned actions had won out. He’d escaped, leaving behind a limp body. Not a dead body, granted. But a limp one was pretty good for the time he’d had to work with.

So now their little ploy had failed. He knew their game. He could stop what he was doing. Maybe even move to a different city and start over.

The thought caused his jaw to clench even tighter. He didn’t want to be dictated to by the police. He’d never considered them as rivals before because he’d been so focused on his work, but now he knew that was exactly what they were. Rivals. Enemies. And there was no way he was going to allow them to beat him. Especially not some bitch cop who thought she could trick him.

No. He’d stay. He’d just have to be more careful.

The first thing he needed to do was get them to stop with the decoys. After that, he needed to finish the job with this Katie the Cop bitch. The prospect of that made his whole body tingle.

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