Lieutenant Taylor Jackson Collection, Volume 2

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Lieutenant Taylor Jackson Collection, Volume 2 Page 91

by J. T. Ellison


  He really loved this woman. She wasn’t struggling, or begging. She was stoic.

  Hmm. He decided to see just how brave she really was.

  CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

  Taylor ran back to the front desk of Forensic Medical, where Kris was waiting for her.

  “Nothing. She’s not down there. Do you have her schedule up yet?”

  “Yes, and I called the doctor—she hasn’t shown there. Here, look.” Kris got up and let Taylor sit in her chair, pointed over her shoulder at the computer screen.

  “It was a normal day. We had intake of three new cases, late afternoon. She was going to post them overnight, began the night shift staff meeting at ten, that’s when she realized her car was crapped out. She was going to grab dinner beforehand, and it wouldn’t start, so she decided to have someone from staff run out and get something for her. It was a typical twelve-hour shift.”

  “Was Stuart in last night?”

  Stuart Charisse was Sam’s favorite assistant in the morgue, a quiet, smart man who was devoted to Sam.

  “Yeah, he was in. I think he got off at two o’clock.”

  “Call him.”

  Kris wasted no time. She moved to the right and grabbed her phone. She obviously had all the staff numbers programmed in, she simply hit a single button and put the phone on speaker. A sleepy voice mumbled, “Yeah?”

  “Stuart, it’s Kris. I’m here with Lieutenant Jackson. We’re looking for Sam. Have you seen her?”

  He yawned loudly. “No. Not since I left. She and Iles were going to get something to eat. She missed dinner.”

  “Barclay?” Kris asked. “He was in last night?”

  “Yeah. Something about his performance review. They decided to do it over Subway, I think.”

  “Thank you, Stuart,” Taylor said, then cut off the phone. Kris’s face had gone white.

  “Kris, what’s wrong?”

  “Barclay isn’t in Nashville this week. I was talking to him when you got here. He’s in Florida. His mom is sick, he went down to help. He goes down there a lot.”

  Barclay fucking Iles.

  “Kris, how long have you and Barclay been dating?”

  Kris was wringing her hands, the knuckles white from the force, her eyebrows touching across her forehead as she frowned. “Almost a year now. He’s a great guy. You know him, Lieutenant. I recommended him to Sam—he seemed like he’d make a really good ’gator. He went to med school for a while, he’s really smart. The rest of the staff all like him, too. He loves Sam. He loves you, too—he talks about you all the time. You’re his hero. He wants to be just like you. I actually got a little jealous once, but that was silly. I was just being insecure. But why would he lie to me? What’s going on?”

  What’s going on indeed? Taylor ran back through her memories of Iles. She’d worked with him the first time not too long ago, but he’d been around the department, at the crime scenes, for months. Access. He’d have access to everything—personnel files, schedules, home addresses.

  Son of a bitch.

  “Kris, listen to me very carefully. I think Barclay may be someone else, someone very, very dangerous. I need you to give me every bit of information you have about him. His phone number, his address. Every picture you have. Everything you can think of that belongs to him. Right now.”

  CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE

  Come to Papa. Predesignated spot. Game over.

  Bill Reiser had received the message on the BlackBerry he’d been given just as he crossed into Tennessee an hour ago. He was looking at the Nashville skyline now. He hoped this didn’t mean he wasn’t going to be able to hit his final target.

  He took the exit and swung around onto Ellington Parkway. He was surprised at how quickly the turn came; within five minutes he was on Gass Boulevard heading toward the target.

  The navigation told him he’d arrived at his destination.

  What the fuck was this? The Tennessee Bureau of Investigations offices were on his right. This was wrong. This was a suicide mission. He was supposed to shoot someone at a federal building?

  Bull. Shit. Hell, no. He wasn’t crazy enough for that.

  He drove past the building. There was one more building on this road, he’d turn around in that parking lot and go regroup. Send Troy Land an email and tell him no way, no how. What did he look like, an idiot?

  He turned into the building’s parking lot, saw a white van that said Medical Examiner on it and realized where he was. Jesus, this place was a morgue. Great.

  He parked for a moment so he could send Troy the message. He was tapping away when he saw a blur of flashing light behind him, looked in the rearview mirror. Plainclothes cops. Shit. Was this private property maybe?

  He used his left foot to shove the gun all the way under the seat. Play it cool, accept the ticket. He wasn’t doing anything wrong. At least not right this minute.

  He hadn’t done anything wrong in at least fifteen hours.

  He watched the big guy approach the car carefully, his left hand on his weapon. He used his right to touch the back of the car palm down. He’d read once that cops do that so their fingerprints were left on the car in case the driver snatches them, or shoots them.

  He could shoot him.

  He could shoot the cop.

  A rush of adrenaline flowed through him. The cop knocked on the window, made the universal sign for “roll it down.”

  Think it through. Wait to see what the deal is. He probably just wants you to leave. If it’s just a ticket, don’t be dumb. You still have a game to win. So much money. Erase the past shitty year with one lump sum payment. And you’re so close. Don’t blow it now.

  He pressed the down button for the window. The man was at an angle, nearly behind him. A cold wind whipped in his face.

  “Sir? Please step out of the vehicle.”

  “Why, Officer? What did I do?”

  “Step out of the vehicle with your hands up.”

  Oh, this wasn’t good at all. He bit his lip. He’d only have one chance at this. He glanced in the side mirror, the other man had sidled to the passenger side. His gun was drawn.

  Bill’s heart sank. Troy was right, he was blown. They’d found out. They knew. God, what should he do? There were only two of them. The gun was fully loaded. He would have to be quick.

  The cop wasn’t going to wait while he made his decisions.

  “Get out of the car, now, sir. Show me your hands. Show me your hands right now.”

  The other voice joined in, slightly lower, more demanding. They were getting twitchy. He heard the decibel level rise. He really didn’t have a choice. He didn’t want to go to jail. Maybe he could talk his way out of it. No, probably not. These guys didn’t look like they were in a talking mood.

  He raised his hands up, then slowly used his left to open the door. As he started to step out, he let his right trail behind, like he was using it to boost himself. His fingers brushed the metal of the gun.

  “Hands, now!”

  Now was right. He whipped the gun out from below the seat and stood, aiming at the cop closest to him. He squeezed the trigger. Saw gray sky. What? He squeezed the trigger again but the shot didn’t go off. Shouting, screaming.

  Oh.

  He felt the pain now, a searing blaze through his chest. The gravel smelled like gasoline. A flock of geese flew overhead, honking. He smiled. He’d always liked geese. His grandfather had them on his farm, up in Northern California. Thought they were a nuisance. He’d always wondered…

  CHAPTER FORTY-SIX

  Lincoln righted the small boy that Colleen Keck, scratch that, Emma Brighton, had dropped on the hard, cold cement in front of the CJC. Flynn was crying, so in shock at his ignominious plop that it hadn’t registered that his mother was no longer in front of him.

  Lincoln patted the boy on the back a few times, then handed him off to a sheriff’s deputy walking nearby. “Take him to the Homicide offices. Now, please. I’ll be back in a minute. I have to go after his mother.” />
  The deputy glared at Lincoln but went ahead and took Flynn from his arms.

  He ran across the street to the parking lot. He didn’t see Colleen, she’d gotten well ahead of him. He had no idea what floor she’d parked on, so he bounded down the first set of stairs and started through the rows. The concrete walls and floor, backlit by powerful beams, glowed in ghostly silence. It was still very early, so there weren’t a lot of cars. Or people. He didn’t hear any engines running.

  Something felt all wrong about this. He drew his weapon, focused his senses. He could smell blood. Fresh blood.

  He took three steps toward the scent. From his right, a woman rushed toward him, like a quail flushed by a bird dog. There was no extraneous noise, no shouts of warning, just the quickening of her feet on the concrete, a predator. His mind tried to process the scene: not Colleen; the woman had a knife; she was charging him with the blade extended. He stopped thinking, his training took over. His finger squeezed with the precision of years of practice on the range. Center mass, three shots.

  The woman crumpled in a heap at his feet, moaning. The knife clattered to the ground. He shook his head, his ears ringing from the shots. All the sounds were tunneled, like he was underwater. Smeary voices, shouts, clanging echoes.

  The shots went a bit lower than he expected, adrenaline making the tip of the Glock drop. Or maybe he hadn’t raised it all the way? He’d have to take a look at that on the range, but the truth of the matter was, he’d never fired his service weapon in the line of duty before. There was going to be a shit storm today, that was for sure. Officers didn’t usually kill patrons in the parking lot of the Criminal Justice Center. He felt the sweat break out on the back of his neck.

  The woman stopped moaning.

  He kicked the knife out of her range and bent to feel for a pulse. Thready, weak. Without medical attention, she was certainly going to die.

  He didn’t see Colleen. And he didn’t have his radio, damn it, or his cell phone. He’d rushed out so fast he hadn’t grabbed anything; they were all piled neatly on his desk.

  There was an old Honda Civic two rows over, alone, in a spot directly in front of the elevators. A dark trail of oil lead from the driver’s-side door. The door itself was slightly ajar. Colleen.

  Shouting now, clanging steps on the hard, cold concrete, people coming in response to his gunshots.

  He circumnavigated as he ran, coming at the car from a direction he hoped would preserve any evidence. Colleen was slumped in the driver’s seat. It wasn’t oil; there was blood everywhere, deep and thick, arterial spray. He was afraid she was gone, the wound in her neck was deep. But as he watched, her chest rose fractionally. He drew as close as he could and took her hand, which was still wrapped around the steering wheel, as if she could drive away from death.

  “Colleen?” he asked.

  “Tommy? Is that you?”

  Her voice was raspy. Lincoln reached past her and got her cell phone from the dashboard sticky pad. Flipped it open, called the desk. Made it official. Told them it was an officer involved shooting. Asked for backup, EMTs, everything they could send, Code Three.

  Colleen was talking again.

  “Tommy, you shouldn’t…shouldn’t have come. Flynn. We need to take care of Flynn.”

  Lincoln ripped off his jacket and pressed the fabric to her throat. He shushed her.

  “Don’t talk, Colleen. Just hang on for me.”

  Sirens began to blare, he could hear them through the haze. People were close by but he ignored them, focused all his energy on Colleen.

  Colleen shook her head, her eyes fixed on Lincoln. “Tommy. I’m glad you’re here. I’ve missed you. You made me so happy. So safe.”

  She smiled, her face suffused with a glow.

  “Colleen…”

  She put her finger to his mouth.

  “No, no, Colleen, hold on. Flynn’s across the street, he’s waiting for you. Please, Colleen, don’t do this to me. Don’t you dare die. Help is here.”

  “Tommy, I love you.”

  Her eyes closed gently, and she was gone. He could feel it, the moment when her body lightened as her spirit fled. He didn’t think he’d ever forget the exact taste and shape of the moment, how the voices drew closer, how Colleen’s eyes were slitted at the bottom, as if her soul needed to be able to see its way out of her body, how the blood was soaked into the dark fabric of his jacket, the dusty scent of concrete mixed with dying blood. Lincoln fought back tears. Fought for a moment as someone pulled on his shoulder, then dropped the jacket and stepped away, let the EMTs go to work. He knew it was too late. It was too late for them all.

  CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN

  Taylor was about to step out into the parking lot when she heard gunshots. She drew her Glock.

  “Lieutenant, did you hear that?” Kris squeaked in alarm.

  “I did. Go inside the main offices, shut the door behind you.”

  Kris disappeared into the hallway. She’d be safe in there, you needed a key card to get through.

  Taylor glanced out the front door and saw her two bodyguards standing over a man. Whatever was happening was over, the threat had obviously been neutralized. She holstered her gun and ran outside.

  “What happened?” she yelled. “Who is this?”

  Wells turned to her, eyes quiet and cold. “Pretty sure he’s one of the copycats. License plate matches. And he went for a gun. I had no choice.”

  She looked at the man spread-eagle on his back, his face arranged in a soft smile, eyes forever focused on a sky only he could see. Felt nothing for him.

  “Which one was he?”

  Rogers tossed her the man’s wallet. “His license says William Reiser. I’d assume he’s the Zodiac copycat out of California.”

  “What the hell is he doing here? Making a move on me?”

  “We don’t know, ma’am. We saw him coming up the road, then stop for a minute in front of the TBI. Then he came up here, parked and took out his BlackBerry.”

  He handed that to her as well. She pushed the home button and the screen came to life. He’d been composing an email, to someone named Troy.

  She scrolled down and saw the message he’d been responding to, felt her skin crawl.

  Come to Papa.

  He was answering a direct communiqué from Copeland. Wells was right, this was one of the copycats.

  “Well done,” she said to him, then grabbed her cell and got Commander Huston on the horn.

  Before she could even say hello the commander launched in, fast and loud. “Jackson, what in the hell is going on? We’ve just had a homicide in the parking facilities. That woman you’ve had Detective Ross babysitting was killed a few minutes ago.”

  All the breath went out of her in a rush. Oh, God. Colleen.

  “How?” she managed to ask.

  “We’re figuring all that out now. She left the building and was ambushed. Detective Ross shot and killed her attacker. You need to come down here, now.”

  Lincoln killed a suspect. He must be devastated. He’d never taken a life before. All of her people were getting hurt. Taylor took a deep breath.

  “Ma’am, I can’t do that just this minute. I need a crime scene tech at Forensic Medical. We’ve had a breach of security, one of the national copycats got into the parking lot of the building. He was taken down by two of Mitchell Price’s men, who I hired to watch my back.”

  “Another shooting? Christ almighty, Lieutenant.”

  “I know, ma’am.”

  “You sit tight there then. I’ll handle things here. Be careful, Lieutenant.”

  “Yes, ma’am.” She hit End, then called Kris, who answered on the first ring.

  “Kris, everything is fine out here. We need a death investigator. I need to leave. Can you arrange things, come out here and make sure nothing is messed with?”

  “Yes. But, Lieutenant, shouldn’t you stay—”

  “Kris, I have to find Sam. Please. Do this for me.”

  “All righ
t.”

  She hung up and looked at Wells. “I need to move.”

  “Yes, ma’am. What do you want us to do? Come with? There are more of these fools out there, right?”

  “Stay here. Call Price and tell him what went down. Give your statement and tell the truth, Wells. You won’t be held accountable, he drew first. When you get clear, call me and we’ll meet back up.”

  “Are you sure, ma’am? You’ll be exposed. These killers are getting close, too close for comfort, if you ask me.” He nudged Reiser with his foot.

  “Stay, Wells. Give your statement. That’s an order.”

  “Yes, ma’am.”

  And just like that, she was free. Her guards had served their purpose, for the first stage of the game.

  Thank you for the setup, Copeland. Couldn’t have planned it better myself.

  CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT

  Baldwin’s cell rang as he was leaving his office. He was pleased to see the internal Quantico number, recognized it as Kevin Salt. Baldwin kept walking, answered the phone as he locked his office door.

  “Hey, man. You have something for me?”

  “I do. And don’t worry, we’ve already gone into overdrive to get this taken care of. Teams have been sent to each house. I’ve brought in some extra computer staff to start running their files. Charlaine’s off to talk to the doctor she told you about. We’ve got everything covered on the national scale, okay?”

  Ah, the power of the office. He certainly missed being the one directing the show.

  “Okay. How can I argue with that? Shoot.”

  “California’s car was rented to a man named William Reiser, we’re assuming he’s the Zodiac copycat. Record is totally clean, he’s run below the radar for years. He’s a computer programmer out in Silicon Valley, got laid off last year. New York’s Son of Sam contestant was Preston Pylant of Long Island—that guy is a nut. He’s got a history of deviant behavior, he might be schizophrenic. He’s got a record, did some time about ten years ago—assault. His file lists a history of mental illness.

 

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