Full Moon Bloody Moon

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Full Moon Bloody Moon Page 1

by Lee Driver




  FULL MOON-BLOODY MOON

  Book Two in the Chase Dagger Series

  Lee Driver

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is coincidental. Any slights of people, places, or organizations is purely unintentional.

  Copyright © 2000 by Lee Driver

  ISBN 978-0-9785402-7-2

  Library of Congress Control Number: 00-106008

  All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.

  Smashwords Edition

  FULL MOON-BLOODY MOON

  CHAPTER 1

  Monday, October 9, 3:30 a.m.

  She didn’t have time to scream.

  Lisa felt comfortable jogging the Tri-County Lakeshore Trail. Completed last year, it rambled through three Northwest Indiana counties—Lake, Porter, and LaPorte, hugging the southern shores of Lake Michigan. As part of the combined efforts of several towns’ tourism bureaus, the Lakeshore Trail succeeded in drawing more sightseers to Indiana beaches, not to mention their gambling boats.

  The trail was rarely empty, attracting cyclists, inline skaters, joggers, runners, as well as walkers, at all hours of the day. Except when Lisa jogged. Because of her work schedule, she had to fit in her three-mile jog whenever she could.

  The air had a bite to it but she had worked up a sweat so her hooded sweatshirt was tied around her waist. Moonlight glistened off the asphalt path and it was bright enough to see the golden colors of the leaves clinging to the ground.

  Blonde hair pulled back in a ponytail bounced across her back. Firm muscles pressed against the spandex pants and there was barely any exertion in Lisa’s breathing.

  The trail darkened as it ducked through a forest preserve just east of Cedar Point. This was the part of the trail she didn’t like, the part where shadows darkened, lurked, appeared to move wantonly. Eyes gleamed from under brush as tiny feet scurried. Shadows appeared to move inward, hiding deeper into the underbrush.

  There were two things that calmed Lisa’s fears. One was the 9mm Bersa tucked in the holster at the small of her back. The other was Max, her three-year-old Doberman jogging alongside her.

  “Here comes the fun part.” She tightened her grip on the leash.

  The Doberman remained focused. Small animals or even deer were no threat so he ignored them. He was in just as good of shape as his master and neither of them sounded or looked out of breath.

  The smell of wet leaves blended with the musty odor of lake waters and residuals of burning leaves to give the air that Midwestern/fall season aroma. This was the time of year when people made their annual trek to the Covered Bridge Festival in southern Indiana to view the best of the fall colors, although Northwest Indiana was no slouch when it came to showing off its finest vibrant shades.

  The trail curved inward, cutting deeper into the woods transforming the outdoor path into a shadowy tunnel. Tree branches swayed overhead and leaves rustled as if some of nature’s creatures were running to keep up with her.

  Max made an abrupt stop, practically pulling Lisa’s arm out of its socket. His head jerked up, ears back as he stared at the ceiling of leaves.

  “What is it?” Lisa followed his gaze but saw only darkness. The branches were so thick it blocked out any light from the moon. “Come on.” She tugged on his leash and continued her jog. There was a clearing ahead where the path opened up. This was Lisa’s turn-around point, her halfway mark. The clearing was bathed in moonlight and the young woman felt a sense of relief when she saw several tankers beyond the breakwater, as if proof she wasn’t alone in the world. She paused several minutes to take a breather and let Max sniff a few posts. There was something in the way the Doberman kept peering back toward the path that made her uneasy.

  Lisa pulled a small flashlight from her pocket. “Come on, Max. Let’s go home.” The path was bathed in an intense halogen beam. Halfway through the woods the breeze picked up, rustling the trees, sending another flurry of leaves drifting across the asphalt. The high-intensity beam created long shadows and dark pockets and her eyes began to play tricks. And so were her ears. She could swear she heard footsteps on the pavement behind her.

  A low growl rumbled from deep within the Doberman’s throat. His entire body turned and skidded as though on ice. The high beam reflected off the pavement but as far as the beam reached, the path was empty.

  It took a lot to make Lisa nervous. Seeing Max bare his teeth, hearing his growl intensify, caused her heart to pound against her rib cage. This wasn’t just a wild rabbit or fox. Something was out there. Peering at the shadows ahead, Lisa dropped the leash and moved the flashlight to her left hand. Slowly, she reached around for her Bersa.

  “What is it? What do you see?” she whispered. Her heartbeat pounded in her ears and a chill shuddered through her body. Branches bucked and swayed, fighting a useless battle to keep their foliage. Another thrashing overhead brought Max’s head around, ears straight up, another low growl.

  “Max?” Lisa heard a thud behind her, as though the wind had knocked down a tree limb, sending it crashing to the ground.

  Max jerked and turned quickly. Lisa followed suit, her left hand pointing the beam of light toward her attacker. Suddenly, a force knocked the flashlight from her hand as Max let out a high-pitched whine. All Lisa had noticed before the flashlight was extinguished were two yellow eyes, glowing like large slitted moons. At first, he was twenty feet away but he covered the distance between them so quickly that Lisa thought he either drifted or was flying. Her fingers felt for the butt of her gun. The ground dropped from under her yet she could still see him in front of her. She soon realized she was being lifted and her attacker was rising with her. Such power, such swiftness. How could this be happening? She didn’t feel any pain. Why not? Was this some type of animal whose venom rendered her paralyzed? She couldn’t feel her arms much less move her fingers. All she felt was a warmth spreading over her chest. She thought it might have been fear that created that sensation. But then realized it was her own blood spilling down the front of her shirt. Where was it coming from?

  Everything had happened in the blink of an eye. Lisa didn’t have time to think. Didn’t have time to defend herself. Didn’t have time to pull out her gun.

  She didn’t have time to scream.

  CHAPTER 2

  October 9, 4:35 a.m.

  Do you wanna have some fun?

  Dagger’s eyes flew open. The voice came from somewhere, everywhere. He blinked the sleep from his eyes and tried to get his bearings. A canopy over the bed, sheer drapes covering the windows, eyelet pillow cases. This definitely wasn’t his bedroom. Slowly he sat up, noticing a partially clad body facing away from him.

  “God, what the hell?” He ran his hands through his long hair and shook the cobwebs from his head. He had stopped off for a couple drinks and ran into his ex-fiancée. The last place he wanted to end up was in Sheila’s bed. Checking his body he saw that he still had his clothes on. Relieved, he remembered he had driven Sheila home because she had too much to drink. Then she had wanted him to stay until she fell asleep. Mr. Nice Guy. He had to change his persona if he wanted to discourage her.

  Dagger, are you awake?

  The voice again. This time he recognized where it was coming from—inside his head.

  Sara, where are you? He stood and stretched his lean body, searched in the dark for his shoes, tried not to make any noise and risk waking up the blonde witch on wheels.

  Do you remember Padre mentioning the ATF was on the lookout for a shipment of illegal weapons?

  Dagger stumbled t
hrough the dark living room, stepped into his shoes, and grabbed his jacket.

  Yeah, something in the multi-millions I think he said. He patted his jacket pocket for his keys but they weren’t there. It would be just like Sheila to hide them so he couldn’t leave. There was something about Sheila’s condo he didn’t like. The décor for one. Too white, too clean-looking. Too damn expensive. Barely even needed a nightlight with all the white furniture lighting up the room like huge glow cushions.

  Well, guess what?

  Dagger smiled at the excitement in Sara’s voice. What? He lifted the lid on a silver candy dish but his keys weren’t there either.

  I’m by a warehouse near the harbor. I think it used to be a brewery. There are guys here unloading crates from a semi. They dropped one and it broke open. I got close enough to read HK69A1 40MM.

  He almost dropped the lid onto the glass top table. Jezzus, that’s a goddam Heckler & Koch grenade launcher. Again he checked his jacket, pulled a pen light from his pocket, and checked the drawers in the end tables, the cubbie holes in the Queen Anne secretary. Then he found Sheila’s purse on one of the wing-backed chairs.

  Should we call Padre?

  Sergeant Jerry Martinez was known as Padre to close friends because of the brief time he had spent in the seminary before joining the police force. He was one of the few people Dagger trusted.

  I’ll do that. Dumping the contents of the purse on the chair, Dagger quickly found his keys. “Bitch,” he said under his breath. He fled the condo feeling as if he were escaping a fate worse than death. Sure sign that it wasn’t true love, which was why he had broken off the engagement in the first place.

  Climbing into his black Lincoln Navigator, he started it up and turned on the heat. What’s happening now, Sara?

  They are carrying the crates inside. I’m on the roof looking through a broken vent window. You wouldn’t believe the number of crates, Dagger.

  Must have brought them in by boat. Dagger tucked his long hair under a black baseball cap, then punched the auto-dial button for Padre’s home phone and steered the Navigator out of the parking lot. After three rings, the phone was answered.

  “This better be good. I’m on vacation,” the groggy voice said.

  “It will be worth it, Padre.”

  “Dagger?”

  Dagger could hear the rustling of sheets and lumbered breathing.

  “I think I found that shipment of weapons ATF is looking for.”

  “What?” Padre’s response was a loud whisper.

  Dagger listened as Padre called his office on another phone. Flipping open the cooler in the console, he pulled out a bottle of water and wished it were a steaming hot cup of coffee. Next, he punched a button on the dashboard and a screen came to life. It lit up a cool gray with a grid of the city. A red blip pulsed. It was a tracking device so he knew where Sara was at all times. The sensor was in a small earring clamped to the top of her right ear. When she shifted into the hawk or wolf, the earring looked as if the animal were tagged. If something happened to Sara in her shifted form, if she lost consciousness and was unable to communicate with him telepathically, he would be able to locate her.

  They aren’t unloading everything, Dagger.

  What are they doing?

  They left two men at the warehouse. The rest are in the truck with the remaining crates.

  Smart. They aren’t stashing them in the same location. I’m not far from the warehouse, Sara. Follow the truck and let me know where it goes.

  Dagger relayed the information to Padre, then turned down Lake Street. It was a frontage-type road, which ran the length of the beach. He parked the Navigator alongside a boat storage facility. Tarp-covered power boats and sail boats were in the process of being readied for winter. Dagger killed the headlights and rolled down the dark-tinted driver’s side window. His night vision binoculars revealed very little activity below at the warehouse. Doors were closed, windows blocked, no guards outside. Padre’s posse was only a few minutes away. Dagger stole a quick glance at the screen to see the location of the red blinking light.

  The gray hawk glided over the treetops, its forty-inch wing span silhouetted against the moonlit sky. Even from this altitude it could read the license plate number of the truck heading east. The driver was avoiding the entrance ramp to the toll road and turning south instead, away from well-monitored expressways.

  If the truck had stayed on an easterly course, the hawk might have detected something else. It might have sensed danger, smelled the strong scent of life blood, discovered a sight more gruesome than it had ever seen before.

  CHAPTER 3

  October 9, 9:05 a.m.

  Sara reached for her glass of orange juice, then hesitated. Her eyes searched the dark area rug from the doorway to the couch. Nothing escaped her keen eyesight. She took a swallow of juice while watching for movement. With a shrug, she set her glass down and settled back against the couch cushions, the morning paper across her lap. A yard of sunstreaked hair streamed down her arms. She gathered it to one side and quickly created a long braid.

  Morning light sliced through the wall of windows, showcasing a sprawling landscape bursting with fall colors. Sara felt safe from the outside world here on three hundred acres of reservation land. It was nestled on the eastern edge of Cedar Point, a suburb of Indiana. The mausoleum of a building with its multitude of skylights resembled a research lab or planetarium more than a residence.

  Again something dark scurried across the carpeting and under the oak coffee table. Pulling her feet up under her, she leaned over and peered around the table. Although she detested spiders, she always told herself they were only lost. She would usually capture them in a glass and release them outside. Roaches were a different story. Other than dust floating through the shafts of light, she saw little evidence of anything else moving.

  Puzzled, she straightened, her gaze drifting to the shadows under the bookcases and dark corners by Dagger’s desk. Still not convinced, Sara slowly rolled the newspaper into a weapon, ready to strike if it were a roach. Another movement caught her eye, this time on the couch, scurrying toward her from the armrest. It was black, about the size of a quarter with gleaming red eyes.

  “AIYEEEH.” Sara leaped from the couch and threw the rolled up paper toward the insect. “DAGGER!” She screamed as she fell back on her rump. Her feet and hands back-pedaled away from the pursuing beast as it leaped from the couch and charged after her.

  She heard laughter drifting from the doorway to Dagger’s bedroom. Her turquoise eyes flashed anger at her partner, who was doubled over, tears in his eyes.

  “DO SOMETHING!”

  A blur of scarlet and blue flew over to the aviary door. Sara’s screams had awakened Einstein who clamped his claws onto the grates. “HELP ME, HELP ME!” Einstein screeched.

  “I am doing something,” Dagger laughed as he worked the remote in his calloused hands. Amusement sparked a light in his dark eyes. He dropped to one knee and held his hand on the floor, palm up. The black object crawled onto it.

  “What is that?” Sara followed Dagger to the couch.

  “WHAT’S THAT? AWWWKK.” The scarlet macaw clamped its beak onto the grating and climbed higher. “OUT, OUT,” Einstein demanded.

  Dagger set the spider on the coffee table and handed her the remote. “Want to try?”

  “Where did you get this?” She cautiously pressed the lever and watched the spider scurry. It flew off the table, landed on the floor, righted itself and turned. Sara laughed as she reached down to retrieve the metal object. “Did Skizzy make this?”

  “We both worked on it. Unique, isn’t it?” He scratched the rough stubble on his chin. They hadn’t returned home until five in the morning and barely slept. The high from the weapons bust still had the adrenaline pulsing through his veins. Dagger had stayed in the comfort of his SUV while Padre, the ATF and SWAT teams descended on the warehouse. According to Padre, the state police had intercepted the semi near Griffith, Indiana. />
  Sara studied the gadget. Its body was glistening ebony with four legs. Beady red eyes were separated by a square, micron-sized reflector. Turning it over, she found a hard metal underside. There was barely any weight to it.

  Dagger was amazed at her unusual curiosity. He couldn’t have asked for a better partner in Dagger Investigations. The business was located in Sara’s house and he rented office and living space for himself and Einstein. Sara’s room was at the top of the steel staircase at the end of the catwalk. The rent he paid in addition to her salary as his partner gave Sara the money she needed to maintain her grandparents’ house. The arrangement Dagger had with Sara fit perfectly. It had been an unspoken promise he had made to Sara’s grandmother before she died that he would watch out for her eighteen-year-old granddaughter. Keep her safe in a world that was as foreign to her as she was to the world.

  “Batteries, right?” Sara asked, holding the spider between her fingers.

  “No. It actually uses a microcore controller. Absorbs its energy from a light source.”

  “Sunlight?”

  “And lamps, even the glow from a TV. Skizzy calls it LEMICC. Light energized microcore controller. Just MICK for short.”

  “Mick.” Sara smiled revealing the most perfect set of lips known to mankind. “Neat. What do you use him for?”

  Dagger took the spider from her and pointed between its red eyes. “Audio and visual surveillance. There’s a small camera right there.”

  “What is the range?”

  “Skizzy and I both have receivers. We figure we can cover a twenty-mile radius.” He raked his fingers through his shaggy hair and stretched. “Weren’t you going shopping?”

 

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