Lady Justice on the Dark Side (Volume 19)
Page 1
REVIEWS
At what point do the ends justify the means? That’s a question Walt Williams must ask himself as his life takes a new direction in Lady Justice on the Dark Side.
Walt finds himself at a career crossroads which causes him to question his black and white views of right and wrong. He wonders whether he can head down a slippery slope of questionable activities if, in the end, he will come up once again at the side of Lady Justice, his ever constant companion of the past five years. Does it really matter on which side he stands as long as justice is truly served?
As one of Bob Thornhill’s editors, it’s been a pleasure to come to know and understand his cast of characters and to watch their development throughout the Lady Justice series. Because Bob writes cozy mysteries, it’s very hard to fully develop all of the characters in just one volume. Therefore, I love it when Bob pulls someone like Louis the Lip into a story line, giving me a different perspective on his motives and personality, demonstrating how even Louis’ questionable actions can lead back to the side of justice.
Every time I finish a new Lady Justice book, my conversation with Bob usually ends with me saying, “This is my favorite story line yet!” And I mean it every time. So, please trust me when I say, Lady Justice on the Dark Side is, yes, another favorite. I hope you enjoy the dark side of justice as much as I did.
Cynthia Butcher, Blue Springs, MO.
*****************************************
Walt Williams, a senior member of the City Retiree Action Patrol retires from serving Lady Justice after a life-threatening ambush.
Is author Robert Thornhill retiring one of our favorite comedy/mystery heroes? Maybe only for about the 3 minutes it takes you to get engrossed in the new direction Williams gets pulled into — after all, there are more angles to serving the Lady than just being a cop!
A great afternoon read with all the familiar characters and plenty of action to keep the story moving right along.
Thornhill has added some new twists and turns, but in the end, Walt is still protecting Truth, Justice and the American Way!
Christina Jones, Independence, MO.
******************************************
Lady Justice on The Dark Side is another 5 star hit by Robert Thornhill. At seventy years old and sustaining an injury on the job, Walt Williams decides it is time to retire. But that doesn't seem to be in the cards for Walt. Restless with his retirement and urged on by his brother-in-law, Walt decides to become a Private Investigator.
Laugh out Loud fun as Walt meets the new Lady Justice on the dark side.
The controversial topic of black criminals and police brutality is also addressed in this installment.
Walt faces many decisions and gives great thought to the morality of his choices.
For Walt Williams life is not just black and white as he ponders Lady Justice on the Dark Side.
Sheri Wilkinson, Princeton, IL.
*****************************************
I’ve been following the “Lady Justice” series since it started and was just as excited to read this story as I was the last. Walt and Ox, two police officers, great partners on the force, but most of all…best friends in life. If “Murphy’s Law” is to strike, it finds these two these gentlemen. On a police call, both men get shot by two guys seeking revenge for the loss of their brother. This time, Walt promises his wife (Maggie) he’ll retire. Ox is sad to see his partner go but understands, after all, he is seventy years old.
Walt retires and finds out within the first week he is bored to tears and his old partner is assigned a new one, 30 years his junior. Walt’s boredom was seen as an opportunity for his brother-in-law (Kevin) to get some surveillance help on a current case
As a retired and decorated police officer, he thinks about opening his own business, with the support of Maggie and friends “Walt Williams Investigations” is opened. During his first case, he learns more than he ever expected about his own life and who makes up his family. This is a story worth reading.
So, what side of Lady Justice does Walt like playing? The author describes it beautifully, “the lady wearing the flowing white robe and a blindfold” or the lady “wearing a tight skirt, fish-net stockings and high heels.”
Where the end of the game is the same it’s all in the rules.
M. Stanhope, Chesapeake, Virginia
LADY JUSTICE
ON THE
DARK SIDE
A WALT WILLIAMS
MYSTERY/COMEDY NOVEL
ROBERT THORNHILL
Lady Justice on the Dark Side
Copyright February, 2015 by Robert Thornhill
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any way, by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording or otherwise without prior permission of the author except as provided by USA copyright law.
This novel is a work of fiction. Names, incidents and entities included in the story are products of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, events and entities is entirely coincidental.
Published in the United States of America
Cover design by Peg Thornhill
Fiction, Humorous
Fiction, Mystery & Detective, General
LADY JUSTICE ON THE DARK SIDE
CHAPTER 1
“Looks quiet for now,” Ox, my partner for the last five years, remarked as we patrolled the Midtown neighborhood in our old black and white.
In the last week, there had been two drive-by shootings resulting in the deaths of two young girls, ages six and ten. Understandably, the community was incensed by these tragic murders. One local pastor labeled the shooters as ‘terrorists’ and compared them to the Taliban and Osama Bin Laden.
The chief had pulled out all the stops, cancelling vacations and authorizing overtime, to put as many officers on the street as possible to calm the jittery residents and discourage any further shooting sprees.
Ox and I had pulled a rare evening assignment on top of our regular daily patrol.
As we cruised by the site of one of the attacks, we saw the memorial that had been erected for the ten-year-old victim. The flowers, teddy bears and candles brought back bitter memories of similar memorials for two young black men that had been slain by Kansas City police officers just a few short weeks earlier.
Those two officers were Ox and me.
While both of those incidents had been ruled ‘justified,’ there still remained an undercurrent of unrest in the black community.
“Still having nightmares?” Ox asked, referring to the recurring dreams of being burned at the stake by the brother of one of the victims which had haunted me in the wee hours of the morning.
“Now and then,” I replied, “but they’re getting farther apart. How about you?”
“Not really nightmares, but I still wake up in the middle of the night and replay the incident with Tyrell Jackson over and over again, wondering if there was something I could have done differently, but it always comes out the same way. I’m trying to make peace with myself, but it’s hard to do.”
Suddenly, the radio came to life. “Car 54, shots fired in the 3200 block of Myrtle. Please respond.”
I keyed the mike. “Car 54 responding. We’re two blocks away.”
Ox flipped on the lights and siren, made a U-turn and sped down 31st to Myrtle.
Turning onto Myrtle, we spotted a black van a block away and heard the crack-crack of an automatic pistol.
We were a half block away when the van pulled from the curb, burned rubber and fish-tailed down the street.
&n
bsp; Ox stepped on the gas and as we passed by the house that had been riddled with bullet holes, I noticed that it was a board-up.
“Why would someone shoot up an abandoned house?”
“Damned if I know why these creeps do anything they do,” Ox replied. “Maybe somebody they were chasing is holed up in there.”
The van headed down Linwood, turned onto Benton and headed north.
A few blocks later, the van pulled to the curb, two guys bailed out and sprinted into the courtyard of the old Victorian Apartments.
Ox pulled in behind the van and I called in our location and requested back-up.
The Victorian Apartments had once been a grand old structure, undoubtedly the home of many of Kansas City’s elite back in the forties and early fifties. As the demographics of the neighborhood changed over the years, the affluent moved away and the building was sold to an out of town investor who turned it into Section 8 rentals.
The once manicured lawn was now bare dirt and graffiti covered the walls. There was a low brick retaining wall that separated the courtyard from the street. Once inside, the buildings themselves formed a horseshoe around the courtyard, and in the center were the remains of what was once a beautiful fountain.
We stepped out of the cruiser and cautiously approached the entrance to the property. Peering in, we saw one of the shooters enter the door of the center building.
“There!” Ox said, pointing. “Let’s get him!”
“Shouldn’t we wait for back-up?” I asked, grabbing his arm.
“No telling how long until they get here. Let’s at least get the guy trapped inside the building. I’ll go around back, you watch the front and when help comes, we’ll find the guy.”
Just then, a green dot appeared on my chest. Ox and I saw it at the same time.
“Laser sight!” he shouted, pushing me to the ground.
A second later, I heard the report of a rifle and felt the slug whiz past my head.
“Quick! The fountain!” Ox said, helping me to my feet.
We sprinted to the edge of the concrete wall that had once held sparkling water in a pool and crawled inside just as another volley bit into the statue behind us.
Once inside, we found ourselves in about a foot of disgusting water that was most likely deposited there by the last rain. Trash and garbage floated on top and I could only guess what was lying underneath.
We had just hunkered down, out of the line of sight from the shooter, when another volley slammed into the pool from the other direction.
“Holy Crap!” Ox muttered. “They’ve got us in a cross-fire.”
Then I remembered the old board-up house on Myrtle. “That wasn’t a drive-by shooting. That was a decoy to lure us into a trap and we fell for it. They were hunting cops all along.”
Ox peeked over the wall drawing another round of fire that was close enough to pelt us with chips of concrete.
“We’ve got to get them to back off or it’s just a matter of time until one of them gets lucky,” Ox said pulling his .45. “You fire some rounds at the shooter on the south and I’ll fire at the guy on the north. Maybe we can keep them busy until help arrives.”
I pulled my revolver and fired a few rounds and Ox did the same. I breathed a sigh of relief when there was no return fire.
Then, there it was again --- the green dot on Ox’s back, and it was coming from the east building. They had us surrounded on three sides.
I pushed Ox to the side, heard the crack of the rifle and felt the searing pain as the bullet pierced my skin.
There was another shot, and the last thing I remembered before passing out was hearing my partner scream over the sound of approaching sirens, and feeling his warm blood splatter against my face.
CHAPTER 2
I awoke in a daze and found myself in a hospital bed surrounded by every significant person in my life.
My wife, Maggie, was at my bedside holding my hand and Dad was peering over her shoulder. Mary, Willie, Bernice, Jerry and the Professor were huddled at the end of the bed, and Captain Short stood by the monitors that were hooked to various parts of my body.
Seeing my eyes flutter open, Dad was the first to speak. “Son! Thank God! I thought we’d lost you.”
As my head began to clear, that last horrifying moment before I blacked out flashed into my mind. “Ox! Is he ---?”
“He’s fine,” the captain replied. “He’s in the next room and Judy is with him. He took one in the arm, but it was a through and through. He’ll be all right.”
“The shooters?”
“By the time we arrived on the scene, the creeps had scattered like a bunch of cockroaches. We checked every apartment and, of course, no one saw a thing. The van they left out front was stolen, so we don’t have much to go on.”
“I guess you’ve figured out that the drive-by was a set up.”
“Seems that way. Looks like we’ve got a militant gang out there with one thing on their minds --- killing cops. We’ve cautioned every officer to not take any situation for granted. Any routine call, a domestic disturbance or even a hold-up could be another trap. This vendetta is undoubtedly payback for the deaths of the two young black men. It’s scary as hell out there right now.”
Bernice patted my foot. “How are you feeling, Walt? Does it hurt much?”
Up to that moment, I had been more worried about my partner and nearly forgotten that I had been shot as well.
At Bernice’s urging, I took stock of my body parts and suddenly realized that my kiester hurt like hell. “Actually, yes! My butt feels like it’s on fire.”
“You caught one in the arse, Son,” Dad said, grinning. “The doc says you’ll be okay, but you’ll probably have a new dimple on your cheek.”
“Swell!”
“On the bright side,” Jerry said, “you now have something in common with Forrest Gump, although I wouldn’t recommend you showing it off like he did.”
Jerry’s remark brought to mind the scene in the movie where Forrest is being presented with the Medal of Honor and President Lyndon Johnson asks where he was wounded.
“In the but-tocks, Sir,” Forrest replies.
Forrest is shocked when the president says he would like to see it, and Forrest obliges by dropping his trousers and mooning the president.
Jerry needn’t have worried. I definitely wouldn’t be showing off my scar.
“Okay,” Dad said, “time to go. The kid needs some rest.”
Everyone nodded reluctantly and one by one, they said their goodbyes.
Mary Murphy, the bold-as-brass housemother at my Three Trails Hotel, leaned down and a tear fell on my cheek as she kissed me on the forehead. I think it was the first tear I had ever seen her shed.
She came close and whispered in my ear. “Mr. Walt, please don’t do this no more. I don’t know what I’d do if we lost you.”
Willie was right behind her. “Dat was a close one. I thought I’d lost my bes’ friend. When you gonna quit doin’ dis dangerous stuff?”
The Professor, hearing the words of his friends, wasted no time in quoting a bit of wisdom from one of his favorite sages. “Confucius says, ‘Forget injuries, never forget kindness.’ It would be wise to heed the advice of those who love you.”
Finally, everyone was gone but Maggie. She hadn’t uttered a word since I had gained consciousness. She didn’t have to. The expression on her face said it all.
In the five years I had been a cop, we both had flirted with death so many times I had lost count. Just a few weeks earlier, I had nearly been killed three times within a matter of days as the shooting incident involving the two young black men played out.
I had promised Maggie as soon as things died down we’d have a serious conversation about our future. I hadn’t forgotten that promise, but I kept putting it off.
The look on her face left no doubt that the time for our talk had arrived.
“Walt, I just don’t know if I can do this anymore. Every day when you go to work, I w
onder if I’ll ever see you alive again. I know I’ve told you over and over again that if this is what you want I won’t stand in your way, but I have to ask you, is this really how you want us to spend what time we have left?”
She was right, of course. We were both seventy and had been married only four short years. I had been truly blessed to have found this wonderful person with whom to share my golden years. Only a fool would risk losing all that to pursue a career that could put an end to everything at any moment.
“No,” I replied, “I’ve given this a lot of thought and it’s time to put away the badge. You mean more to me than anything in this crazy old world. As of right now, I’m retired. I’ll tell the captain and break the news to Ox.”
“Walt, are you sure? I don’t want you to resent me for forcing you to make this decision. That would be worse than having you out there risking your life every day.”
“How could I resent you for wanting me to be safe? It’s not just you. The throbbing in my ass is telling me in no uncertain terms that this is the right time to step away. It’s time. No regrets.”
Maggie’s soft sobs as she laid her head on my chest told me I had made the right decision.
It had been a rough night.
My butt cheek throbbed when I tried to lay on my back or right side, so the only other position was on my left side. After a few hours, even that was uncomfortable.
To make matters worse, I knew the next day I would have to do one the most difficult things I could imagine --- tell my partner that I was quitting.
After breakfast, I slipped out of bed, grabbed the back of the hospital gown so my ass wouldn’t hang out, and padded into Ox’s room dragging my IV rack.
He was sitting up in bed, his arm in a sling. “Hey, Partner. I hear our friends tried to give you a new asshole. How’s that working for you?”