Middle of Nowhere

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Middle of Nowhere Page 8

by Ridley Pearson


  “Tonight would work, certainly. Once we’ve completed the agreement. Any night you choose.”

  “The ‘agreement’? Okay, what’s the catch?”

  “Consolidated Mutual would like you to complete a very brief survey, which I can go over with you now, if you wish. After the satisfactory completion of that survey, the tickets—and the guaranteed savings on your homeowner’s policy—are yours. Or, if you prefer, we can arrange for the tickets at a later time. The offer is good for three months.”

  “A survey? A phone survey? That’s it?”

  “That’s all. No obligation whatsoever, and a guar- antee—”

  Brumewell chimed in, “I got that, okay? Now we gonna get down to this survey or what? How much time M I D D L E O F N O W H E R E

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  are we talking about anyway? My dinner is getting cold here! How come you people always call at dinnertime?”

  “We can do the survey now, certainly, sir. That would be fine. Or, I could call back, if you would prefer.”

  “Nah. . . . My dinner’s probably already cold anyway. Go ahead. How long did you say?”

  “Seven to ten minutes, sir. Some questions about your coverage is all. You may find it worthwhile to have a copy of your current homeowner’s policy in front of you, though that is not required by any means.”

  “I’ll pass on the policy.”

  “We’ll have it done in no time.”

  “Okay. . . . Okay. . . . Let’s get on with it.” Brumewell eyed the microwave. Dinner could wait.

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  As he stepped out of his battered,department-issue Chevy, Boldt immediately sensed that something was out of place. A moment later the same sensation registered as relief—the neighbor’s dog was not directly on the other side of the rotten fence greeting Boldt after a long day of work. Instead, he was barking furiously at the far corner of their shared property—thankfully a decent enough distance away to reduce the ear damage.

  The Boldt driveway led past the left of the house to a detached garage. Liz’s spanking-new Ford Expedition typically won the inside parking while the Cavalier was relegated to the elements, where it rightfully belonged. But with Liz and the kids at the Jamerson home, Boldt nosed the front bumper to within a foot of the garage door and parked with the engine running. He didn’t carry a clicker. He would have to trip the automatic door from inside the garage. His watch read 11:00. Suddenly it hardly seemed worth parking the thing in the garage for a few brief hours while he attempted sleep. He killed the engine and pocketed the keys. Though he’d been preoccupied with the Sanchez case and now Brooks-Gilman, he had nonetheless put M I D D L E O F N O W H E R E

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  in some time on other cases, including a teen shooting at a drugstore. Just as he was leaving the precinct, he sent off a second department-wide E-mail requesting information on any of Sanchez’s activities or known cases prior to her assault. But he wasn’t holding his breath. Neither was that damn dog. The thing was suddenly berserk with the barking—wild to where Boldt shouted,

  “Shut up!” loudly enough to hope his neighbors would hear. If his own kids had been home, they would have been sleeping. That seemed reason enough for the reprimand. Eleven o’clock, he thought. Gimme a break! The back door to his house, just ten to fifteen yards away, suddenly felt much farther. His neighbor’s fence was to his left; the garage, directly in front of his car, blocked his way to the back porch, forcing him to come around the rear bumper. Three sides of the box were closed to him—his only egress to the street. He wasn’t sure why any of this mattered; perhaps it had something to do with the blood-curdling yelps of that annoying dog and its steady approach up the fence toward Boldt. The air felt electric. Adrenaline charged his system. What the hell? he wondered.

  Someone jumped him from behind. Someone big. Someone strong who’d probably come up along the narrow space between garage and fence, because that barking dog was now immediately on the other side of that fence. Boldt’s brain kicked in: muggings were up a hundred and fifty percent since the walkout. The chokehold was decisive: Boldt’s neck in the crook of an elbow, enough pressure to slow the blood 94

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  to his brain and air to his lungs. A stinging rabbit punch below and behind his right ribs. He heard his gun thump to the driveway.

  Another person to his right. Big, and broadshouldered. Too dark to see faces. Or maybe masks—

  he wasn’t sure. They meant business. Another rabbit punch. More pressure on his windpipe. A hand found his wallet. It registered in him again that he, a cop, was being mugged. But his body felt hard and frozen. He was in no shape to put up much resistance. Another devastating blow found his side. Caught a rib. Maybe broke it. A hand slipped down his pants side pocket and pulled out some bills and change. He took another charge of voltage to his gut and weakened. One or two more like that and he’d be throwing up blood.

  A third man appeared to his left—or had the second simply moved? Boldt caught sight of a black balaclava covering this one’s face. The next abdominal blow buckled him forward, further choking him and thrusting him toward unconsciousness. Down there by his own shoes he saw a pair of gray and brown Nike running shoes, one of the curved logos partly torn off. He raised his head. It was a third guy, and this one carried a baseball bat, its polished aluminum winking in the ambient street light. Boldt thought that a hospital bed might be wishful thinking. This guy seemed intent on a home run to the head.

  The neighbor’s crazed dog sounded ready to climb the fence.

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  The dog! What little strength Boldt still had lay in his legs. He rocked back into the chokehold and simultaneously pushed off his car, driving the man behind him into the fence. The chokehold faltered. Boldt broke the hold and spun around. Either the baseball bat or more fists found his upper back—his chest and lungs felt stunned, his right arm numb. He was going down.

  The man who’d lost the chokehold around Boldt’s neck wanted it back, and now danced around Boldt in an ungainly step, using the fence to pin him in. Boldt took advantage of this human shield, protecting his abdomen by leaning over. At the same time, he kicked the rotten fence like one of the kids in the park practicing penalty kicks. The bat hit a single to first base using his shoulder as the ball. The old plank fence had seen endless winters of relentless rain, had stood witness to days, weeks, even months of it without a single ray of sunshine to dry it out. Boldt’s second kick split it open. The black shiny nose of the angry creature with the gleaming white teeth poked through, quicksilver saliva raining from its gums.

  The chokehold reinstated itself with authority, and Boldt gagged and choked. He felt a glove against his ear and pressure began to twist his neck to the right. He kicked the fence again as the man behind him attempted to drag him away from that wall. Extremely strong, Boldt thought. No junkies, these three. He kicked a larger hole through the rotting wood, this time big enough for the thing’s entire bearlike 96

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  head to poke through. That limited success provoked further enthusiasm from the dog. He took over for Boldt. The hole widened even more.

  “K-9,” a voice warned from behind. The baseball bat found the dog, bouncing off as if it had hit a stone statue. The dog clearly took umbrage at the use of an aluminum bat on its head. It shrugged and wiggled forward, enlarging the hole and making progress through it. The dog’s entire head popped through, ears and all, followed by the shoulders. Splinters of rotten wood rained out onto the Boldt driveway. He was some kind of hybrid—bred for teeth and head and muscle. An oak body, but flexible. And fast.

  Perhaps Rin Tin Tin had been trained to identify the victim versus the assailant—perhaps it was a matter of posture, but the four-legged trained killer went straight for the calf of the man holding Boldt, who was released in a nanosecond and purposefully fell to the ground, both to distinguish himself from the othe
rs and in hopes of retrieving his weapon.

  The man cried out as those jaws tore into him and ripped flesh.

  Boldt felt blindly around the blacktop for his gun, the fervent growling like a wind in his ears. A dull thump of that baseball bat won a whimpering whine and a momentary relapse as the dog considered the time zone. Footsteps fleeing. Car doors thumping shut. At least one engine starting. Ferocious barking as the dog regained his bearings and ran down the drive in pursuit. Tires screeching. Boldt tried to roll over, hop-M I D D L E O F N O W H E R E 97

  ing to catch a car profile or even the license plate, but his body belonged to Pain, and Pain alone. He gasped for air. A huge, wet tongue found his face. “Good boy,”

  Boldt said, more than a little afraid of the animal.

  “Good boy.”

  His right ear rang like an alarm clock sounding in a distant room—he’d been struck in the head with the bat and was bleeding buckets, the way only head cuts can bleed.

  “Good God,” a man’s voice said.

  His neighbor, the owner of the dog.

  “Police,” Boldt groaned, finally able to straighten up. He fished for his ID wallet, but his attackers had apparently taken this along with his wallet and money.

  “I live here,” he managed to cough out. “Neighbors.”

  “Don’t move! I’ll call!” The man took off at a run. The dog followed, probably expecting a Tasty Chew.

  “No!” Boldt stopped him. He lay there in the dark, the smell of the rotting fence and his own blood overwhelming him. He didn’t want a 911 call. He didn’t want the press getting hold of a cop getting mugged. An inquiry. Reports. Paperwork. Invasion of privacy. He didn’t want to worry Liz, didn’t want her arguing for him to take sick leave—thinking that maybe that had been the intention of his muggers, and not wanting to face that right at that moment. “I could use a little help here,” he said. He needed to patch himself up and think this through.

  Daphne, he thought, as his neighbor attempted to help him to his feet, and he felt the effort like a boneraw punishment.

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  Daphneworetightbluejeansandacaramelsweater that complemented her dark eyes. With the sleeves of the sweater pulled up, she looked like a woman who meant business. The twisted silver bracelet signaled she wasn’t at work. Boldt figured that she had plenty of other such leftover trinkets from her courtship with Owen Adler—the man would have bought her the Space Needle if it might have guaranteed her love for him.

  She switched on Boldt’s bedside lamp and leaned in close and studied him. It seemed strange to see a woman other than Liz in this bedroom. It even inspired guilt in him, despite the pain.

  “Take your shirt off,” Daphne ordered him.

  “I don’t think so. The last time I had my shirt off with you—”

  “Take it off and sit up on the bed or I’m getting in my car and going home.”

  “Maybe that’s best.”

  She asked, “Are you sure there isn’t something broken?” His ribs and chest carried crimson blotches and eerie blue bruises. She gently touched one or two and Boldt winced with the contact.

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  “Not exactly positive,” he said. The ear had been patched up with a Band-Aid used as a butterfly.

  “Turn around,” she instructed.

  “I just love it when you boss me around,” he teased.

  “Now!”

  He obeyed. “I’m amazed you can breathe. And this one, this one’s right on the kidney. Have you peed yet?”

  “What?!”

  “Are you peeing blood, Lou?”

  “No.”

  “You need to see a doctor.”

  “At which point I’ll have to report a mugging. At which point I’ll have twenty reporters camped on my front lawn and ringing my phone off the hook. No, thanks.”

  “You really need to see a doctor,” she repeated.

  “No.”

  “What about Dixie?”

  “His patients are all dead,” Boldt replied. Dr. Ronald Dixon, chief medical examiner for King County, was one of Boldt’s closest friends.

  “Lie back,” she advised. “I’m going to pour you a hot bath, feed you some aspirin, make some tea and call Dixie. When you’re out of the bath, I’m driving you down to the ME’s and he’s going to look you over. They have X-ray there, access to the hospital. Fair enough?”

  “It’s not fair at all.”

  “Or I walk out now and leave you to patch yourself up.”

  “Sounds fair to me.” He lay back, every bone, every 100

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  muscle complaining. He wasn’t sure he could sit up again without some help. “That’s extortion, you know?”

  “Do you want bubbles?” she asked, heading into the bathroom.

  “Ha, ha!” he replied.

  “Is that a yes or no?”

  “Yes, please,” he confessed. “The eucalyptus.”

  “That’s just so the bubbles hide you when I deliver the tea. Mr. Modest.”

  “Damn right. That is, unless you’re going to get in the bath with me and scrub my wounds?”

  Mocking him, she said, “In your dreams!” She started the water running. He could only hear it out his left ear.

  Boldt was thinking: Sometimes you are, yes. M

  The Medical Examiner’s office, in the basement of the Harborview Medical Center, was eerily quiet when empty of Doc Dixon’s staff.

  Dixie pronounced Boldt “reasonably intact and still alive.” He added editorially, “If you had come in as a cadaver, I’d have guessed you had jumped from a moving train, or fallen from a very high ladder.”

  “That’s my story and I’m sticking to it,” Boldt said softly, finding it too painful to speak. The pain grew inside him, like roots of a tree trying to find water.

  “I could write you a couple of prescriptions. Pain. Sleep.”

  “No, thanks.”

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  Daphne said, “Maybe just write them anyway.”

  It hurt too much to object. “Listen to the little lady,”

  Dixie said.

  “How’s Liz anyway?” Dixie asked, his back to them as he wrote out the prescriptions. Was there innuendo in that question? Boldt wondered.

  “Healing rapidly. She doesn’t like to discuss it.”

  “When do you tell her about this?”

  “Not yet,” Boldt answered.

  Daphne mocked, “He doesn’t want to go through the paperwork.”

  “Uh-huh,” Dixie said.

  “Who needs another case to investigate?” Boldt reasoned.

  “That was a baseball bat,” Daphne said, as Dixon once again studied the ear.

  Boldt mumbled, “K-9.”

  “What’s that?” Dixon asked, still probing the damaged ear.

  “Since when does a mugger call a dog a K-9?”

  “Uh-oh,” Daphne said. “I smell a conspiracy theory coming.”

  Boldt asked, “Okay, so it’s a mugging. So why not take off once they had my stuff? Why stay to punish me with the baseball bat?”

  “I thought that since the Flu, assaults like this are up,” Dixie said.

  “Dozens,” Daphne answered.

  “True enough,” Boldt agreed.

  “Blood in the urine?”

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  “No.” Boldt felt Daphne’s stare.

  “You want to watch for that as well as dark stool.”

  “So noted.”

  “And I want to hear about it immediately.”

  “Affirmative.”

  “You got lucky here.”

  Boldt winced. “Yeah, I’m feeling like a real winner.”

  “No cop would ever do such a thing to another cop, Lou. Sickout or not, I just don’t see it,” Dixie said. “That brick? Sure. Some name calling? Some harassment? You bet. But this
? Just to keep you off the job?”

  “I guess you’re right,” Boldt admitted. “Though it certainly crossed my mind.”

  “Muggings are up,” Dixie repeated.

  “I caught that the first time,” Boldt said.

  “Can you have him stay with you?” Dixon asked Matthews. To Boldt he said, “I understand your not wanting to alarm Liz before you know what’s going on. I know you. But you can’t stay alone at your house tonight. You just can’t. Doctor’s order. You need someone there. So, you either head over to the Jamersons—”

  Boldt shook his head interrupting him. To Daphne Dixie said, “So you play nurse. Take his temperature every four hours, feed him more aspirin, if necessary. Call me if there are any rapid changes in his condition.”

  M

  “I need to call Liz,” he said from the passenger seat of Daphne’s Honda.

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  “Now you’re coming to your senses.”

  “But I don’t want to wake her up, and I don’t want to frighten her.”

  “That’s out of my territory.”

  “I’ll wake everyone up and turn this into a huge deal and make promises to her that by the morning I’ll break, because I’m not going to take time off—and that’s what she’ll want.”

  “Lou—”

  “If I take sick leave, what the hell’s it going to look like?” He answered his own question. “Flu. And I’m not going to give Krishevski a chance to play that card. No way.”

  “And this has to do with calling Liz?” she questioned.

  “It’s complicated,” he said.

  “It must be.”

  “It can wait until morning,” he convinced himself.

  “No need to wake anyone tonight,” he justified. “Sleep it off and see how I’m doing.” He tested, “Right?”

  “This is your decision, Lou. Am I heading to Mercer Island—to the Jamersons?”

  “No,” he answered. He leaned his head back. A moment later he was asleep and lightly snoring. Daphne drove Boldt to her houseboat and made up the futon couch in the downstairs living area. Just north of the NOAA docks on Lake Union, the floating community of houseboats had taken on a mythical reputation, raising property values fivefold in just eight years. Two thousand square feet of living space dressed in red-104

 

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