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Bad Wolf Chronicles, Books 1-3

Page 28

by McGregor, Tim


  To his surprise, he was reinstated three weeks later. The Homicide detail was down in numbers, specifically seasoned homicide detectives and they simply couldn’t afford to get rid of him. They brought him back in, read the riot act and gave him his job under a few ironclad conditions.

  Stay in the background.

  Everything by the book.

  A single complaint, the tiniest deviation from procedure, and he would be turfed.

  He could live with that. What else was he going to do? There were bigger things to consider, like the house. Barely keeping his head above water as it was, he’d lose it for sure if forced to start over in some other line of work. The house he shared with his daughter would be forfeit. If the house was gone, he’d be forced to find some smaller place and feared Amy would want to stay at her mother’s place for good. He couldn’t endure that. Not now.

  Returning to work hadn’t been easy. He had few real friends at work before everything blew up but when he came back, he found even less. His involvement in the death of his former Lieutenant, the whispered suspicions, hung over him like a plague and people stayed away.

  He could live with that too. Going back to work meant having access to all the resources of the Portland Police Bureau and more. Resources he needed if he was ever going to find his AWOL partner.

  A uniformed officer entered the kitchen and handed something to Detective Wade. A wallet. Wade dug through it, pulling pieces of ID. “Raymond Arbuckle. Thirty-four.”

  Gallagher squatted on his knees and studied the body on the floor. The victim’s hands were dirty and the arms snaked with tattoos. The clothes were grubby and dark with stains. Work clothes. The face was raw and weathered, like life had kicked him around the block and come back for more. He looked out of place in this quaint bungalow. “This guy lives here?”

  Wade scrutinized the vic’s drivers licence. “Address here says Verlaine. That’s ten minutes from here.”

  Gallagher rose and crossed to a stack of mail on the counter. “Then whose house is this?”

  “It belongs to a Mrs. Ines Brakken,” said the uniform who was first on the scene. “According to the neighbors, Ines ran screaming from the house right after the shots and hightailed it down the street.”

  “Jesus.” Detective Wade shook his head. “She shot the guy and bolted.”

  “Is Raymond here the husband? Or the ex?” Gallagher looked back to the body on the tiled floor. “And why did she light him up?”

  “Yo, detective?” The uniform pointed at the floor under Gallagher’s feet.

  Gallagher looked down. He was standing in the pool of blood.

  Bad luck.

  Mrs. Brakken was found halfway down the block at a friend’s house. The gun lay on the coffee table with the tang of gunblack stinking up the room. She was incoherent to questions and Wade had her driven to precinct to cool off in the box. Gallagher drove to the house on Verlaine and regretfully informed Mrs. Arbuckle that her husband was dead. He advised her to call someone to come over but Mrs. Arbuckle insisted on going to the precinct to find out more and Gallagher drove her and her two boys there. The grieving woman also had a teenage daughter but she’d been staying at a friend’s house for the week. Gallagher let it go, figuring the kid was better off there then crying in the hallways of a police station.

  By the time he settled the family into an office to wait, the shooter, Mrs. Brakken, had calmed down enough to answer questions. Detectives Gallagher and Wade entered the box and softballed questions to the woman to get the story out. Did she know the man she had shot? Why was he in her house?

  Ines Brakken stated that she had never seen the man before in her life. The deceased, Raymond Arbuckle of 3312 Verlaine Avenue, had busted down her door with a crowbar in his hand, screaming for her husband, Mr. Troy Brakken. Ines tried to call 911 but Arbuckle had slapped the phone from her hand and slammed her into a wall. He was out of his mind with rage, screaming at her that her husband had raped his daughter and that he was here to kill him. When Ines told him her husband would never do such a thing, Arbuckle flew into a rage and told her he would take his revenge on her unless she told him where he was. He struck her, she fought back and fled to get the gun her husband kept in the cupboard near the cereal. She shot the man in the chest but Arbuckle kept coming and she fired a round into his neck. He dropped and a sickening gush of blood gurgled out of his destroyed throat. She ran.

  “Holy shit,” said Wade as they exited the box. They brought Mrs. Arbuckle into interview room B and gently asked her questions. Mrs. Arbuckle said that she and her husband had found a used pregnancy test in their teenage daughter’s room and confronted her with it. The daughter, all of seventeen, denied it all but eventually broke under questioning. She confessed she was in love with a man and they were planning to run away together. The man, fifteen years her senior, was married. Her father flew into a rage and forced his daughter to give up the man’s name. Raymond Arbuckle got a crowbar from the garage and peeled off in his car. That was the last Mrs. Arbuckle had seen of her husband.

  Gallagher and Wade stepped out of interview room B and took a deep breath. Wade leaned on a cubicle, crushing the plastic Christmas holly strung along the border. “So the dead guy goes off to lay a beating on the scumbag who was screwing his teenage daughter and winds up dead. Mrs. Brakken, attacked by a crazed man she had never seen before, shoots the guy in self-defense.”

  “Jesus.” Gallagher eased a kink in his neck. “How the hell do you frame this mess?”

  “Manslaughter?” Wade said. “Let’s talk to the lieutenant about it.”

  Detective LaBayer popped up out of his cubicle with the phone cradled against his shoulder. “G? The husband just walked in. He’s in the lobby.”

  “Look, Goddamnit, I need to see my wife. Now!” Troy Brakken stood about six-five and he towered over the uniformed officer he was berating. Demanding to see his wife and openly slandering the officer’s intelligence when he didn’t get his way.

  Detective Wade tried to talk him down. “Sir, if you could follow me. We need to ask you some questions.”

  “No! Not until I see my wife. How many times do I have to tell you people?”

  Gallagher strode past his partner and shoved the man into a chair. Brakken blustered and cursed about his rights until Gallagher snarled, nose to nose. “Your wife shot the father of the girl you’re screwing, chump. Take a pill.”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  He snatched the man’s necktie and twisted. “You just destroyed two families, you piece of shit.”

  “Leave it, Gallagher.” Wade stepped in and pulled Gallagher back. “Ain’t worth it.”

  Wade was right. Gallagher had to watch his step. He turned away from the man, leaving Wade to deal with the man but then stopped cold. Lieutenant Cabrisi stood near the elevator, watching the whole thing. He did not look pleased.

  The Lieutenant waved at him to follow. “My office,” he said.

  “I don’t need to remind you of your probationary period, do I?” Lieutenant Cabrisi settled back into his chair with a slight wheeze. He looked every inch the cop, from the mustache to the belly tipping over his belt. Cabrisi had been brought in from Sex Assault to steer the Homicide detail. Gallagher barely knew the man but was willing to bet Cabrisi had an AA chip in his pocket and a shiny Harley in his garage that ne never rode. Some clichés you settle into, like quicksand. Others you buy into. The Lieutenant looked like the buying kind.

  Gallagher didn’t take a seat, knowing when he was about to get chewed out. Take an earful, let the Lieutenant feel better for doing so and get out. “I was just making a point with the man, that’s all. Read the incident report, you’ll understand why.”

  “No I won’t, detective. I don’t care if you got Satan himself in cuffs, you keep your hands to yourself. Especially in precinct.”

  “My mistake,” Gallagher said, eating it. “Won’t happen again.”

  Cabrisi frowned and let ou
t a sigh, the end of which trailed into the tell-tale wheeze of a smoker. “How are your therapy sessions?”

  “No complaints.”

  “Obviously.” The Lieutenant pushed some papers around. “You’ve missed the last three appointments.”

  “Yeah. Homicides keep getting in the way.”

  “Those sessions are a conditional part of your reinstatement here. They’re mandatory, not optional.”

  Gallagher fought the urge to look at his watch. Just play nice so you can get the hell out of here. “I’ll make the next one.”

  “The staff therapist is in precinct today. And she’s got time this afternoon. Be there.”

  “Can’t. Got plans.”

  “Detective, make me happy and just frigging be there.”

  “I’ll make up my sessions, don’t worry.” Gallagher gave in and checked his watch. “But I got to pick up my daughter. She’s got practice.”

  The Lieutenant frowned deeper but let it go. “Basketball, right?”

  “Something like that.”

  THREE

  AMY BROUGHT THE gun up in both hands and sighted her eye down the bead. Beyond the sight lay the target, a standard body silhouette at twenty-five yards. Amy steadied her hand, held her breath and pulled the trigger. The Glock kicked a little but nothing she wasn’t used to now.

  “Again. Six rounds.”

  Amy fired again, six quick rounds. Remembering what she’d been taught. Don’t overthink it, just find the target and go with your gut. The spent casings spit from the chamber and tinkled at her feet and she lowered the gun.

  Gallagher hit the button on the wall and the target swung forward. He looked at Amy and gave a thumbs up. “That was better. No hesitation that time.”

  Amy lifted the earmuffs. “I dunno. I’m still thinking too much.”

  “Give it time, it’ll come.” He nodded to the gun in her hand. “Take it apart.”

  She hit the release and slid the magazine out then racked the slide back. A glance down into the chamber to ensure it was empty. She shook her hand to dispel that weird tension she got when shooting, then she dismantled the piece.

  The target dangled before them and Gallagher pulled down the paper silhouette. Four hits on the sheet, two of which were in the eighth and ninth markers. The third puncture was in the blank void in the head area, the fourth had landed outside the silhouette entirely. Gallagher clucked his teeth. “You went for a head shot?”

  “My gut told me to.”

  “Cute. But for the millionth time, forget the fancy headshot and go for the trunk.” He pinned a fresh silhouette on the target and punched the button, trailing the piece back to the twenty-five yard line. He thumbed the second pistol on the deck. “Pick up the fifty and load it.”

  Amy wiped her slick palms down her jeans and took up the second gun. The Desert Eagle was big and heavy in her hands and Amy didn’t like the awful kick it gave. Its weight and size made it harder to aim properly and she had to grip it tight to keep the recoil from snapping back and hitting her in the head. She didn’t know why her dad insisted she learn to shoot the thing. It was too much gun, overkill unless she suddenly found herself facing down a charging rhinoceros.

  They used to shoot hoops in the driveway. Now they shot guns, here on a firing range just off the Banfield Expressway. Things changed. Before the incident, her dad didn’t let her even see a gun, locking up his service issue when he came home from work. Now he was teaching her how to shoot the damn things. At his insistence, she’d enrolled in a self-defence class. She had wanted to take Tae Kwon Do but he pushed for something harder and more practical like Krav Maga, a military mixed martial art. At home, there was an intricate alarm system and three bolt locks on both the front and back doors.

  The term ‘paranoid’ often sprang to mind but she had yet to utter it aloud. Give it time, she told herself. Things will settle and her dad would come back to normal. That was three months ago and he had only gotten worse.

  “Whenever you’re ready.”

  Amy brought the gun up, arms straight but even with her left hand supporting the weight the gun was too unwieldy. A slight tremor rippled down her biceps, throwing the bead off the target. Be still. Aim. Fire.

  Boom.

  The recoil jerked her back and she knew it was a bad shot the second she squeezed off the round. Amy snapped the safety on and clunked the heavy thing back to the counter.

  “I can’t shoot this. It’s just too much kick.”

  Gallagher picked up the Eagle, hit the safety and held it out to her. “You learn to compensate. All it takes is practice.”

  “It’s not practical. I’d never get a clean shot off if I ever had to.” She made no move to take the weapon. “Why can’t I stick to the Glock? I’m so much better with it.”

  “Are you quitting on me?”

  That was unfair. He always knew how to goad her into something. “I’m just saying it’s impractical and too heavy gauge to be of any use. The Glock, or any nine millimetre, is enough to bring down any creep. The fifty cal is just show-off and overkill.” She took the gun and resumed the stance.

  He watched her slip the muffs back over her ears and said; “There are worse things out there.”

  The Siberian, like all dogs, displayed a sixth sense at its owner’s approach. It lay curled into a ball on the porch, its tail wrapped over its legs and its eyes closed. The ears twitched and angled for the street, picking up the timbre of the Cherokee’s engine among all the other vehicles stinking up the roadway. It rose and trotted down into the yard to wait.

  The Cherokee rumbled into the driveway, Amy the first to disembark.

  “Here boy.” Amy nickered and the dog came to her. Tail wagging and nose pressing her palms until she dug her nails into its ruff. She cooed to it and scratched behind its ears.

  The moment her dad swung out of the truck, the dog left her and trotted to his feet. It sat on the cold ground and looked up at Gallagher as if awaiting instructions. Gallagher patted the dog’s head and spoke softly to it. “It’s okay. Go on.”

  Amy watched the dog bound back to her with its tail wagging. The dog was a mystery the way it acted like a puppy around her but was oddly obedient to her father. The husky was another lingering effect of the incident, having belonged to a crazed suspect her dad was tracking at the time. The dog was supposed to have been destroyed but her dad pinched it from the animal shelter and brought it home. Not with the intention of adopting it however. For two months, he had taken the dog out to the area where his partner had disappeared, hoping the Siberian could track the scent and follow Lara Mendes’s trail from where she had vanished into thin air. For two months, they had come home exhausted and empty-handed.

  He had told Amy not to get attached to the dog. It’s not a pet and it’s not staying. It was funny now, the way the husky leaned into her knees and licked her hands. It was like the dog had always been here.

  While the dog nudged her for affection and wagged its tail, it constantly glanced back to her dad, looking for approval or waiting for his lead. When her dad went up the steps to the front door, the Siberian trotted at his heels and followed him inside. That’s how it was. The dog played with her but kept an almost spooky vigil at his side. More than once he had had to shoo it from the bathroom.

  “Batman and Robin,” she said and went up the porch steps after them.

  FOUR

  THE WOMAN KNELT before the corroded wood stove, feeding a fresh log into the flames. Sparks roiled out of the grate door, incandescent before winking out into pale ash. She closed the iron door and pushed the vent all the way open to kindle the new wood faster. The day spent fishing had dropped her core temperature to dangerous lows. Her feet burned they were so cold, a hair away from frostbite. How soon did gangrene set in once frost killed one’s appendages?

  Warming her hands before the grate, she looked over the tarpaper shack she had called home for the last month. A hunter’s shack, judging by the makeshift construction and lack
of any amenities. One room containing an old woodstove, a few crates and a wobbly table. An army surplus bedroll pushed against the wall and two ancient fishing rods hanging on hooks. No running water. In the clearing out front stood a picnic table and down near the river, a tree stump stained with fish blood and scales.

  As crude as it was, it suited her and she remained grateful for the shelter it provided. Deserted for the season and remote. There wasn’t even a road, just a rutted track running half a mile from the dirt road. A serious outdoorsman type of place, she was surprised the walls weren’t decorated with centerfolds. A small stack of newspapers in a bin to be used for kindling the stove. She had worried that the owner might come back for whatever was still in season this time of year until she rifled through the newspapers. Nothing newer than 2006. She’d be safe here for a while.

  More importantly, no one else would be at risk if she lost control again.

  When the pain in her toes receded to a tingle, she looked through the crate where her provisions were stacked. A few canned goods and a sack of dried beans. Not much left. She’d have to go into town. A two hour walk. Shorter if she hitchhiked but thumbing a ride could lead to questions. What’s her name? Where she’s from? She couldn’t afford the risk.

  The crate was pushed aside to reveal a patch of bare wooden floor. She dug her fingers into a seam and a length of floorboard popped out. Reaching down into the crawlspace under the shack she withdrew a leather wallet sealed inside a clear plastic baggie. An evidence bag in fact, a small vestige of her old life before the misery. Back when she’d had a job. And a home. A life.

  She opened the wallet and counted through the meagre bills. Sixty dollars, some loose change. Since vanishing from her old life, she had lived like a hobo. On the move and off the grid. She hadn’t a dime on her when she decided to run but she couldn’t access any of the money she had. Her bank accounts, her car, all of it had to be left untouched if she was going to make a clean break. If it was going to work, everyone she knew had to conclude she was missing for good and presume her dead. As horrific as that was, as cruel, it was better than them knowing the truth.

 

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