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Angry Betty

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by Jamie Lee Scott




  Angry Betty

  A Kate Darby Novel

  Jamie Lee Scott

  ANGRY BETTY

  * * *

  Copyright © 2019 by Jamie Lee Scott

  All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher, Novels & Coffee, 1106 Hwy 69 N, Forest City, IA 50436.

  * * *

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Text copyright © 2019 Jamie Lee Scott, All Rights Reserved

  * * *

  ISBN: 978-1-942245-25-4 ebook

  ISBN: 978-1-942245-26-1 paperback

  Created with Vellum

  Contents

  Get Jamie’s Newsletter

  About the Kate Darby novels:

  COP SLANG

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Epilogue

  Other books by Jamie Lee Scott

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  About the Kate Darby novels:

  I’ve been wanting to write a series to highlight our men and women in blue for quite some time, and I even started with a series called Uncertain, but I realized the novellas didn’t do the stories justice. Then the idea came to write a series set in East Texas, so I made up the small city of Peculiar, Texas, and set my story in a place with a small college and a beautiful lake.

  The stories in this series have instances of real occurrences that happen to uniform cops on a regular basis. I tried to portrait the real world as much as possible, but gave myself artistic license to change details to fit the stories.

  Yes, it’s true that small towns don’t have a full detective unit, and the officers are required to investigate major crimes. Sometimes they are assisted by other agencies, but many times the crimes are investigated by the local cops. These are the stories of the police officers of Peculiar, Texas.

  As for the titles:

  Each title in this police procedural/crime fiction series is a cop slang term, and I’ll be using the terms in alphabetical order, so you’ll know the order in which to read the books.

  I really hope you enjoy this series as much as I’ve enjoyed writing it.

  COP SLANG

  Term: Angry Betty

  Usually a high, crackhead, crazy, mad female, arms flailing, screaming, swearing

  Chapter 1

  Corporal Kate Darby looked at the clock on the dashboard of her patrol car. 5:30 am. Half an hour until her shift ended. Her friend in the restaurant business liked to say a slow night meant last minute customers, whose order wouldn’t be enough money for the extra time she’d have to pay her employees to wait on and wait for the customer to eat and leave. And those customers always stayed and stayed, even after half the lights in the restaurant were turned off.

  Kate wouldn’t mind having to work a few extra hours. It would give her an excuse to cancel her morning meeting, even the thought of the phone call she received made her stomach turn.

  “Miss Darby?” the woman on the phone said.

  “Yes, this is Kate Darby,” she responded warily, thinking maybe it was a sales call, but it came from a local area code. Robocall, she was sure of it. Weren’t they tapping into local numbers these days?

  “This is Eva Bonnet with Lloyd, Norris & Taylor. I’m calling to inform you that your grandfather, Edwin Barrow, died two weeks ago, and his will is being read at Mr. Norris’ office tomorrow morning at nine. Mr. Norris thinks it’s important you be there.”

  “My grandfather?” Kate asked. “Where are you calling from?”

  “As I said, Lloyd, Norris & Taylor.” The sickening sweet in her tone was well trained.

  Kate shook her head. “No, I mean what city? Because I think you may have the wrong person. I don’t have a grandfather. I was raised in the foster system.”

  “Ma’am, you are the daughter of Amy Darby, right?” Sounding so patient, Kate thought she must have to deal with idiots all day. Kate dealt with idiots all day and she knew the tone.

  “I am,” Kate said. “Wow, this is unreal. I haven’t seen or heard from my mom since I was very young. I’m pretty sure she said my grandparents were dead. But again, I was pretty young. I may be remembering it wrong.”

  “Will you be able to make it to the reading, Ms. Darby?”

  Kate took down the address. She had a grandfather. All this time. She wondered how long he’d known about her, and why the hell he hadn’t come forward when DHS had taken her from her mother.

  Kate agreed to be at the attorney’s office at nine, and immediately wondered what the old man looked like. Tall, wiry, with a thick head of white hair? Or maybe short and dumpy, with a bald, shiny head? Whatever he looked like, he’d known about her and done nothing to help her situation when she was as grandkid. Screw him. She didn’t want or need anything from him. And to go sit in a stuffy attorney’s office and listen as an old man’s will was read made her skin crawl just at the thought of it.

  But maybe her grandfather didn’t have anything to offer. Look at the daughter they raised. What a peach. But he had to have something, since his attorney was Mr. Norris, one of the partners. Didn’t the lesser clients get the associates, and the better ones got the partners?

  The conversation and the thoughts of the meeting rolled through her head on a loop during her entire shift. Lucky for her, it was a slow crime night, and as she patrolled the streets, her stomach churned at the thought of knowing her grandfather had been nearby all her life, and he’d never tried to contact her. She wondered about her grandmother, would she be at the reading? Who else would be there?

  Only fifteen minutes until six o’clock. Kate turned onto Sutter Street. A white Mercedes rolled through the stop sign, right in front of her. “Not smart, asshole,” she said aloud, thinking Who doesn’t stop when there’s a cop car to your right at a four-way stop?

  She lit the guy up, following him as she radioed dispatch. “229 headquarters, copy signal 18 HQ.”

  “Go ahead, 229.”

  Kate gave the license number, color, make, and model. “Stand by for stop, HQ.”

  “Standing by.”

  “229 HQ, stop is going to be at Mission and Sixth. Occupied by one
.”

  Easy enough, she’d check the driver’s license, issue a warning, and send the guy on his way. Clock out, nap, go to the meeting with the lawyer.

  She turned on her spotlight, then hit the button on her chest camera and opened the door, getting out of her car. Stepping up behind the Mercedes and touching the left rear fender with her right hand, to leave her presence on the car, she took two strides forward and said, “Good morn—”

  “Why are you harassing me?” A greasy looking male in his thirties cut her off, clearly unhappy to have been pulled over.

  “If stopping you for a traffic violation is harassment, it’s new to me. You rolled through that stop sign at the Sutter Street intersection.”

  “What the fuck? I didn’t roll through nothing.”

  Great way to end the day. When she’d first started as a cop, she dreaded the confrontations, expecting them at every stop, being relieved when it didn’t happen. Not everyone was an asshole, usually just the ones who habitually broke the law, and yet they were being targeted or harassed. She’d grown a thick skin over the years, but she had to admit, she never stopped a car without being aware it could go wrong.

  “Okay, may I see your license and registration, please?” Kate’s patience was worn thin from the twelve-hour shift.

  The driver reached across to the glove box and Kate’s senses ramped up, but not fast enough. She stepped back just as the driver stomped on the gas pedal and burned rubber as he drove off.

  As she ran back to her car, she said, “Dude, it’s on,” then pressed the button on her radio and said, “Vehicle running. West on Mission.”

  Adrenaline pumping hard through her veins, she jumped in her car, shut the door and was moving before she heard it close. Trying to keep up, but aware she was in a neighborhood, she radioed in again. “229, vehicle turned left on Cypress.”

  She slammed her steering wheel hard when she made the left on Cypress and the Mercedes was gone. “Shit.”

  She slowed her car and continued to look down side streets. On St. Claire, she saw a commotion and turned right. Halfway down the block were two patrol vehicles. Two officers stood on the corner, near the street sign, staring at the white Mercedes.

  It looked a little different than it did when she pulled the driver over, because it was now wheels up with all the windows broken, and instead of being on the street, it had come to a stop in a shallow ditch.

  Kate pulled her car to the side of the road and got out. Walking over to the other cops, she said, “Tell me you’ve got my driver somewhere.”

  “Nope. Never even saw him,” Officer Williams said.

  His casual attitude about losing the driver made her want to pull out her baton and smack him up beside the head. There was a reason the jerk fled, not just to make the last half hour on her shift interesting.

  Williams would be under her supervision when she made sergeant. She’d give him an attitude adjustment soon enough.

  “How is that possible? I wasn’t ten seconds behind him.”

  She knew that wasn’t exactly the truth. She’d been maybe fifteen seconds behind him but had slowed when she lost sight of him on Cypress. He had close to a minute, maybe two, on her by then.

  “That’s an eternity in a car chase,” Williams said. “I turned the corner in time to see the car flip, but I never saw the driver. By the time I got to the car, he was gone. He can’t be too far.”

  She walked to the Mercedes, looking closely for any signs of the driver and saw the trunk had popped open. Was he hiding in the trunk? Sounded like a stupid idea, but most criminals weren’t exactly brain trusts. Stepping down into the ditch, she pulled out her flashlight and shown it into the darkness. “Holy shit.”

  Once again, she pressed the button on her radio. “Suspect fled. Possible 27 in the trunk. Call out a detective.”

  Twenty-seven, the code for a dead body. The way the car had landed in the ditch jammed the rear quarter panel and popped the trunk, but the ground kept it from opening far enough for the body to fall out. No way to get to the body until the wrecker came to pull the car out and turn it over. She didn’t think there was any possibility the guy might still be alive, since the back of his head was missing.

  Moving her flashlight around in the dark trunk to see what else might be stuffed in there, Kate only saw the man, who had been dressed in jeans and a thin cotton shirt. Not wanting to touch the body until her supervisor, or a detective arrived, she stood up and backed away.

  What a way to end a shift, she thought.

  The K9 unit pulled up and Jackson took his time getting out of the car. Kate wanted to light a fire under his ass. She’d lost the douchebag, but at least the K9 could catch him before he got to a main road and caught a ride. Hurry the fuck up, she thought as he casually opened the back door and put the leash on Sailor.

  She really needed to stop swearing, but she’d been doing it since she was four, so it was sort of ingrained. Another wonderful trait passed on by dear old Mom. Better than being a junkie, she told herself.

  “Do you know which way he went?” Jackson asked after Kate gave him the rundown on the situation.

  “Not a clue. He was gone when I got here.” It killed her to admit her failure.

  “So much for getting off work before the next shift takes over,” Williams said.

  “Got someplace pressing you need to be?” Kate snapped.

  “Yeah, my bed. It’s been a long night.”

  “It’s gonna get longer. Did you see what was in the trunk?”

  Williams and Jackson followed her to the car. They both crouched down as she shined her flashlight into the opening of the trunk.

  “Well, that blows,” Williams said.

  The sight of the dead body got Jackson’s ass in gear. He took Sailor to the driver’s side of the car for a good whiff, then set off on his trail.

  Thank God the car accident hadn’t woken too many people in the neighborhood. And those who did come outside to see what was going on quickly went back inside when they remembered how hot and humid it was.

  “Crime scene tape, Williams,” Kate said. “Let’s get some up before the neighbors come nosing around.”

  Kate looked at her watch. Maybe she’d have a good excuse to miss the meeting after all.

  The tow truck driver arrived at the same time as the fire department.

  “Kate,” the tow truck driver said.

  Peculiar, Texas was a small town, so they used the same companies a lot. Kate had already seen Lou twice this week.

  “Lou,” Kate said. “We have cargo in the trunk, so we need to turn the car over and retrieve it before you load up the car.”

  “Cargo? Meth? weapons?”

  “A body?” she said as if it were a question.

  “Fuck.”

  “Yeah, that’s what I said, too. Coroner is on his way, so as soon as we get the guy out, you can load the car.”

  “The guy?” Lou asked.

  “What kind of body did you think I meant?”

  “This keeps getting better and better.” Lou walked back to his truck.

  He talked to his partner, pointing to the car, then specifically at the trunk. The younger guy pulled the cable from the winch at the front of the truck and hooked it up to the frame of the overturned car, then stepped out of the way. Lou started the winch, pulling the car out of the ditch a little as it turned right side up.

  We should be so lucky as to have the trunk pop right open, Kate thought as the trunk looked jammed on one side. Kate swore the trunk had been opened more when the car was belly up. But just the one side had somehow lifted, probably from the way the car crashed.

  Kate offered, “We can pull out the back seat, and get to the trunk that way.”

  “This is easier than dragging a dead body through the car, and besides, we need to preserve the interior for evidence,” the coroner said.

  Kate startled at the sound of his voice, not having seen him arrive. She doubted there’d be enough evidence to
help them, but who was she to say at this point? Then she went to the driver’s side of the car and pulled a glove from her pocket. She slipped the glove on and doing her best not to touch anything, she leaned in through the broken window. “Pull now,” she said as she pressed the trunk release button.

  The trunk popped open. Kate walked back to join the officers. They stood gawking at the man with the back of his head missing. She silently patted herself on the back for being smart enough to try the trunk release.

  Just like a lot of small towns, Peculiar had its share of drug problems, theft due to drug problems, and even a bit of prostitution, but murder rarely touched their town. Kate hadn’t seen a dead body in the line of duty, not like this anyway. He had dark skin and a sleeve of tattoos on the arm she could see. The other arm tucked under him as he’d been folded and tucked into the trunk. His thin white cotton shirt had short sleeves and buttoned up the front. The fabric looked nicer than your average shirt, and she knew the jeans were expensive by the logo on the back pocket. Nothing you could buy around Peculiar.

  “What the hell is going on here?” Detective David Peebles asked.

  Kate wasn’t going to let this asshole, who couldn’t be bothered to get out of bed in a timely fashion, take control. He’d taken almost an hour to get there.

  “You live ten minutes away.” Kate looked at her watch. “It’s been an hour since you were called.”

 

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