I thought back to the day I’d driven to the crime scene.
Remembered passing the mobile home park sign, then seeing a black dog off to the side of the road that I passed.
I remembered thinking that the owner needed to get the dog the fuck out of the way when he heard lights and sirens blaring.
“Yeah, I saw him,” I confirmed, thinking back to the man in question. “Black hoodie. Black pants. Red shoe strings in the shoes. Dog had a red collar with black lettering on it. Black lab.”
Agent Elliott took notes on his pad of paper as I spoke.
The other one just watched me closely.
“Any cars in the area?” he asked.
I shook my head. “Actually, no. I passed four houses before I got to theirs and hadn’t seen a single one. The couple had two cars in the driveway as well as a red mid-sized sedan belonging to the elderly couple. I did pass an abandoned car with hazard lights on pointing in the opposite direction I’d been going, but I also saw a man walking away from the car in a white t-shirt and khaki pants.”
The agent nodded. “Good. Thanks.”
“We have reason to believe that the man’s a practicing doctor in the area. Or a nurse. Or a midwife. Possibly a registrar at the hospital. Each woman that’s been killed, their only connection, is them being in the same doctor’s office that practices in the Ark-La-Tex. It’s a large one that has over eight offices and seven doctors serving it. Only four of the doctors travel over the state line, and we’ve made a note of those four in this chart,” Agent Palmer said, sliding the three of us a stack of papers.
I scanned the names on the list as well as the pictures.
I didn’t recognize any of them.
“So what do you need from us?” Chief Rhodes asked bluntly.
They both shook their head, but Palmer was the one to answer.
“Nothing. Not yet anyway. We’ve already been privy to the reports, photos, and crime scene data. We just ask that, if you encounter another one of these, you call us. We’ve been working this case for a little over two years now, and so far we have just as much now as we did then. A bunch of nothing,” he said simply.
I looked down at the papers in front of me, recording the faces of all the four doctors into my memory bank so I’d have it later if I had need of it.
“As for why you’re here, Officer Perez, it’s just so that we can congratulate you for saving that child. He’s our first survivor, and I never wished more that a baby could talk than I do right now,” he said dejectedly.
I completely agreed.
I’d wished the same thing.
I didn’t know what kind of heartless person could shoot an innocent baby like that, but whomever it was needed a single shot to the heart as his final coup de grâce.
“So is it a coincidence that all these men are cops?” Chief Rhodes asked as he looked through his own folder.
I flipped to the page behind the one I’d stopped looking at and saw what he was talking about.
Longview Police. Kilgore Police. Shreveport Police. Gun Barrel Police. Gilmer Police. Bossier City Police. Benton Police. Tyler Police. Waskom Police. Hallsville Police.
“What the fuck?” I exhaled.
Not only did they kill pregnant women and babies, but the fucker was a cop killer as well.
“So you have nothing, is what I’m understanding?” I asked carefully.
The two of them nodded. “Nada.”
I linked my fingers together, and steepled them while tapping the first two together.
I was a fidgeter.
Like major.
I couldn’t sit still for anything, something I’d learned to live with.
It drove my friends and family nuts. It was what it was, though. Nothing I could do to change that.
“I have a couple of people that might be able to help us, and Luke’s brother in law is a part of The Dixie Wardens MC. They’re in the town of Benton, Louisiana. One of the cities you named. He can talk to them and see what he can dig up. I can do the same through my resources. Go from there,” I offered.
Both men looked at me, moved their eyes to Luke, then settled them on Chief Rhodes.
“You vouched for them. If this gets leaked to the press, there’ll be a public outrage. You understand that, right?” Agent Palmer confirmed.
Agent Rhodes nodded. “My boys wouldn’t give this kind of information to just anyone. I trust them implicitly.”
Finally, the two nodded and stood to leave. “Keep us informed, and we’ll do the same.”
With that they left, and the three of us sat there silently for a few long moments.
“If this gets out, I’ll kick both of your asses,” The Chief rumbled.
I smiled down at my hands before standing. “I’ll get it done on my part. Luke, you gonna talk to the Wardens?”
Luke nodded and stood, pulling out his phone. “Yeah, I got it.”
With that, we all split up, me heading to Free, and Luke heading to Louisiana.
It was going to be a long rest of the day.
Chapter 9
Dear teenagers, complaining about life is like a toddler complaining about nap time. You’ve only seen the tip of the monster’s dick. Just fucking wait!
-Michael’s secret thoughts
Michael
“Get up off the floor or I’ll make you get up,” I growled at the stupid teenager who’d tried to boost my truck.
I’d had that bastard stolen twice, or nearly, in the same fuckin’ day, and this time I was not amused.
“I didn’t do anything!” The boy yelled, refusing to move.
With no other options, I moved the boy myself, all under the crowd’s watchful eyes as they watched the entire thing take place.
Rolling him over onto his back I stared down at him in contempt.
“What did you think you were going to do? How far did you think you could get? You nearly stole a police officer’s truck,” I hissed. “Not to mention I have GPS on it that I could’ve activated. Then there’s the fact that every cop in the city would be looking for you because you don’t steal something from a cop without consequences. You’d have every single cop in the state looking for your dumbass. Not get the fuck up off the ground and go sit on the fuckin’ bench like I asked you.”
He did.
Reluctantly.
Very reluctantly.
The boy was fifteen, at most, with an attitude that said he usually got whatever the fuck he wanted.
Well not fucking today.
I’d walked into the convenience store to get my receipt, but decided that I could use a Gatorade while I was in there.
When I turned the corner of the snack aisle, I came upon the fifteen year old shoving candy bars down his pants.
He wasn’t even being conspicuous about it.
They were so full already that you could see the large bulge, as well as the orange wrappers sticking out the top of his pocket.
Then he ran.
I had to give it to the boy, he was quick.
He’d made it past me and into the parking lot before I’d even pushed out the door toward him.
Lucky for me, and unlucky for him, I’d caught him at my truck.
All he’d seen was a truck running with the windows down.
Sadly, I still had the keys in my hand and had turned the truck off before he could even get it into drive.
He’d looked at me like I was the grim reaper, as he should since he’d been sitting in my truck.
Then he tried to bail out the other side’s window, but only managed to fall on his face.
“Why’d you steal those?” I asked, gesturing to the pile of candy bars and bottle of milk that was in a pile at his feet.
He shrugged.
“What’s your name?” I asked.
A cruiser’s chirp-chirp of the siren going on and off quickly had me looking up as Miller, another member of the SWAT team, pulled up.
He stepped out of the cruiser and moved his glasses up to the top of his head.
“Saint,” Miller said, nodding his head.
I nodded back, choosing not to call him on the use of the nickname that I hated.