Blood flies.
The responding officer yells from the head of the hallway. “Get your hands up.”
“Daisy, come here, big guy,” Shelby yells from behind the officer.
“Get her the fuck out of here,” I yell back as I hit the guy with the butt of my gun. His screams turn to gasping cries begging for help. Daisy’s teeth are buried in his wrist. I grab the guy by his tie and lift my gun up to the side of his head.
“Release,” I say sternly to Daisy. After another savage growl and a shake of his head, he releases the mangled wrist in his jaws and backs up. Shelby is yelling at the officer and refuses to leave her damn dog. “Daisy is fine, Shelby,” I gasp out. “Don’t move motherfucker,” I tell the man beneath me. What I really want to say is, “Go ahead and move.” I’d like nothing more than to blow his motherfucking head off.
Sirens blare out front. Shelby now has Daisy in her arms and the officer still has his gun trained down the hallway. I holster my gun and grab the man beneath me by the front of his jacket. I turn him enough that I can slam him face-first into the carpet. His wrist is a bloody mess and I hope he loses his damn hand.
I begin patting him down and use every bit of training I have to resist putting a bullet in the back of his head. The image of Shelby bound and almost naked keeps buzzing through my head and it makes me fight to stay in control. When I’m sure he’s free of weapons, I pull his wrists behind his back, enjoy his scream, and cuff him with the set of cuffs attached to my belt. The other officer holsters his gun as soon as the cuffs snap in place.
Everyone and their brother is now piling into the house and trying to see down the hallway. I can still hear Shelby’s voice calming Daisy. “Someone cover her up and get her out of here,” I demand. Shelby looks down the hall at me. I don’t think she realized she was standing there in her bra and panties until I said something. I want to kick myself for the embarrassed expression that tinges her cheeks red. She backs up and pulls Daisy with her. A blanket goes over her shoulders and she says something to the officer who put it there but I can’t hear her.
I ask someone to call an ambulance. Unfortunately, I need to get this SOB medical attention. Sometimes the legal side of the law sucks.
Chapter Fifteen
SEVERAL HOURS GO BY before I have the entire story. I didn’t take a knife off Donald Terry when I searched him. The knife was discovered on Shelby’s coffee table. Blood surged through my veins when I saw it. All I could picture was Shelby’s bloody and lifeless body.
I sent two uniformed officers to accompany Terry to the hospital. One called an hour later while I was working with the crime scene techs and told me Terry had tendon damage that will eventually require surgery. Terry is medically cleared to go to jail.
Shelby was driven to another hospital to be checked out. She wasn’t happy but I sent a text to her phone from across the room where we were surrounded by officers and evidence techs.
Go, for me. PLEASE!
She’s now wearing jeans and a T-shirt, which I retrieved from her room. She’s not acting like the crazy wild woman I care so much about and it guts me. She glances down at her phone then turns my way with a forlorn look before walking out the door. A female patrol officer accompanies her.
I’m relieved when Shelby’s gone. I’m having a very hard time separating Shelby, the woman I’m in a relationship with, from a key witness in a serial murder case.
I arrive at the jail to personally book Donald Terry in. He lawyers up as soon as I read him his rights. I keep my cool, aware that cameras are everywhere. I want so bad to break his other wrist. I’m holding on by a thread.
An hour later, I sit in the viewing room and watch one of our female detectives who specializes in sex crimes, interview Shelby. Shelby glances up at the small camera in the room with such a lost look on her face. I know she’s wondering why it isn’t me in the room with her.
I can’t allow this guy to walk. When the defense questions me I won’t lie about my relationship with Shelby, and that relationship could destroy this case if I’m not careful. Before I walked into the interview viewing room, I reviewed positive lab results. We have matching DNA from our first and second victims. A match with Terry will be the ace in the hole if we get it.
Shelby’s testimony will be a royal flush.
Her voice grows stronger the longer she talks. “He came to the door in a suit and tie holding a Bible. I was in a hurry and had just put Daisy, he’s my dog, outside. I planned to tell the guy I didn’t need saving. He shoved me back and I fell. He had the door shut and locked before I could scramble up. He pointed a gun at me and said I was lucky Daisy was outside because he planned to kill him and still might.” Shelby wipes tears from her eyes and Detective Nichols hands her a box of tissues. “Thank you, sorry.”
“It’s okay, take your time.” Detective Nichols is good. That’s why I had her called in on her day off.
“He told me to take my shirt off. I cried and stalled. I had to be in court at ten this morning. I had already called work and told them I would be in late, but I knew someone at the courthouse would raise an alarm when I didn’t show. Judge Rictor is my uncle.” She lifts her head and pride shows on her face.
“Good girl,” I whisper into the quiet room. I don’t want her to let what happened keep her down. She needs to have pride in her family. And herself. She saved her own life by stalling. I want so bad to wrap my arms around her and say exactly that. And that’s why I’ve stayed clear of her. She needs to explain what happened with no prompting from me.
“Daisy was barking and that gave me the courage to defy him. He talked a lot. Said he liked dirty girls.” She looks up at the camera and my heart twists. “He told me about the other women he killed.”
My fists clench.
“He… he said he eats their soul.”
One thing Shelby and the media don’t know is that Donald Terry cut a small strip of skin from each victim. I hold my breath as Shelby continues.
She covers her face with both hands. “He eats their flesh.”
Kurtis and I discussed the missing skin and concluded they were trophies. This is a sick, sick individual. Shelby’s statement absolutely ties Terry to the other victims and I’m able to exhale. Her testimony will crucify this asshole.
Shelby lowers her hands and looks up. “I fought him when he put tape around my wrists. He also covered my mouth and then he cut my shirt off then removed my skirt. I kicked him in the thigh and he was getting angrier because I wouldn’t do what he said. That’s when the patrol car pulled up out front. He pushed me into the corner and told me not to move. He could see me from the hallway.”
Shelby talks for another thirty minutes and then Detective Nichols clears up a few things Shelby said. How did Terry know where she lived? Had she ever seen him before? Shelby explained about her work with HHW and that she was on Central Avenue the evening before. These questions take another hour.
I’m waiting when the two women leave the interview room. Shelby walks straight into my open arms. I look over her head and Detective Nichols mouths, “She’s lucky.”
Not quite—she’s strong, fearless, and brave.
“Can we go home now?” Shelby whispers into my chest.
“Yes,” I say as I lead her out of the police department. I’m holding her hand for the world to see. I don’t care if she’s the lead witness in my case. I’m not hiding it and the case will run smoother without any kind of cover-up. I forget about the long-ass report I need to write, the search warrant to get Terry’s DNA, and all the other shit that goes with closing a case. Right now it’s all about Shelby.
For the first fifteen minutes of the drive home she’s quiet. I run my thumb across the back of her hand, which is still wrapped in mine. I give her time.
“Were you watching the interview?” is the first thing she asks.
“Yes.”
“Was it enough to put him away forever?” Her voice is so tiny, which isn’t the Shelby I know.
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I can only give her the truth. “It’s in the hands of the justice system now. It’s never as cut and dried as it seems.”
Her head jerks in my direction. I have my eyes half on her and half on the road. “How can you say that? He’ll kill again if he gets out.”
I squeeze her hand. “It’s a good case and I don’t see how he has a chance in hell of getting off.”
Her sigh is loud in the cab of my truck. “Okay, could you lie to me next time I ask that question? I need to know he’ll never get out.”
A grin tugs at my lips. “He won’t get out, not a chance.”
She pulls her legs up on the seat. There’s a large console between us and it’s filled with change and other assorted items. “Here,” I lift the console and don’t even cringe when everything inside makes a racket. I unclip Shelby’s seatbelt and pull her in close so she’s tucked into my side as I drive. Her entire body trembles while she quietly cries. She held up so well today and now she’s suffering adrenaline dump.
I pull into my driveway and wrap my arms around her again.
“I’m such a fool,” she mumbles into my chest.
“No, Shels. You’re strong. The strongest woman I’ve ever known.”
“I was so afraid,” she whimpers.
“I was afraid too… terrified.” I don’t even want to think about the drive from the courthouse to Shelby’s house. Terrified is too tame a word.
The sun is barely going down but I feel like it’s midnight. I’m also suffering an adrenaline dump. “Come on. Let’s get inside and let Daisy out. He needs to eat too.”
I put Daisy and a large bag of dog food in my house so the crime techs could do their job. Crime scene tape is still covering Shelby’s front porch. The house is clear for us to enter but I’ll play that by ear and see how Shelby feels about it.
Daisy greets us at the door. Shelby goes to her knees and hugs the goliath while receiving slobbery kisses. “I love you, you’re such a good dog,” she tells him.
“I’ll order delivery for dinner. Is pizza okay?” I ask as Shelby continues to hug Daisy.
“Yeah,” she says and looks up at me. Tears stream down her cheeks but she smiles. “Let’s get you outside, big boy.” She releases the dog and rises to her feet. I pull out my phone while watching her move to the back door. Her hand reaches for the knob and then she freezes. I walk up behind her and place my hand over hers and we open the door together. She sucks in a sharp breath.
“You’re staying here tonight and for as many nights as you need. I have no choice but to go into the station tomorrow and write my report. I can drop you at your parents’ house and pick you up when I’m done. You won’t be alone until you’re ready.” While I was talking, Daisy streaked past us heading deep into the yard.
“Not my parents but you’re right. I don’t want to be alone,” she says quietly.
I know she’ll be okay. My Shelby is a fighter. It’s just that right now her timidity is tearing my heart out.
Chapter Sixteen
I HAVE FORTY-EIGHT HOURS to deliver my report to the district attorney’s office. They press the formal charges. The next step will be presenting my case to the Grand Jury so they can decide if I have enough evidence to move forward. If I don’t have my report in, Terry walks and the process starts over while he’s a free man.
With report and case file in hand, I carry it into the district attorney’s office with time to spare. I bring the entire case file to answer additional questions while the report is reviewed.
It goes smoothly. I head to JFCR offices to pick up Shelby. She insisted on going into work and having a normal day. I didn’t tell her it would be far from normal with the media blasting what happened.
She looks frazzled and relieved when I walk through the front door. She grabs her purse and leaves a group of people surrounding her desk. “I need to get out of here,” she whispers. I place my arm around her waist and we walk out. “My parents are requesting us at their home for dinner.” She looks up at me to catch my reaction.
I smile. “Funny because my parents want the same thing, though they’re willing to wait until this weekend. Do you want to go home and change first?”
She shakes her head. “No, I’d rather just get it over with.”
“Good, you’re beautiful just as you are.”
She laughs and her cheeks turn pink. “Let’s do this.”
She provides directions in between telling me about all the bullshit she put up with throughout the day. Questions from her co-workers at JFCR, media calling and asking for interviews, and last but not least, her boss asking if a relationship with a police officer is in her best interest.
She squeezes my hand after this last statement. “I gave my notice today. I love what I do, but the police aren’t the bad guys. Yes,” she turns and looks at me, “some are. I just won’t be part of anything that throws everyone into the same melting pot.”
I’m stunned. “I can handle it. You didn’t need to give your notice.”
Her smile is brighter than I’ve seen it since yesterday morning. “I did it for me. I’ve been thinking about this for a long time. I want to go back to school and get my law degree. You might not approve, but I want to defend people who don’t have a voice. There’s too much discord and bureaucracy at JFCR. It’s time for me to finish school and do what’s right for me.”
I’m so proud of her. “You may not approve of my badge and the dangerous situations it puts me in. If you can handle my job, I will support you as a defense attorney.” I manage not to cringe at the words “defense attorney.” I believe in the justice system, but, like most cops, I’ve always considered defense attorneys the cesspool of humanity. I’ll need to work on my opinions because I have no doubt Shelby will accomplish exactly what she sets out to do.
The scenery changes as we head into her parents’ neighborhood. I knew they were well-off even though I’ve never stayed in a Ryan hotel. This area is commonly referred to as billionaire row, and for some reason I didn’t equate Shelby and her kooky clothes with the wealth her parents obviously have. We drive up to a gate that separates the commoners from the elite and Shelby tells me the access code, which I enter. There’s also a guard on duty. He waves us through after the security gates pull back.
“My uncle’s here,” she says as she points to a sprawling mansion up ahead on the left. The driveway circles through perfectly trimmed grass and manicured vegetation. Shelby must have been stifled here. We get out of the car and she takes my hand leading me up the long walkway to the front door. She opens the most ornate door handle I’ve ever seen and enters without knocking. The fact the door is unlocked in the city boggles my mind.
Three people stand. I recognize Judge Rictor. They walk forward to meet us in the large foyer. Shelby doesn’t release my hand. The woman, who from the stark resemblance is obviously Shelby’s mother, reaches us first and kisses her daughter on both cheeks. Her lips remain pursed in a very unlike-Shelby way. I release Shelby’s hand to shake the judge’s hand and the man who is no doubt her father, according to the stern expression on his face. His eyes sweep over Shelby’s outfit—purple blouse that reaches her knees, bright orange skintight pants, scarves in various shades of purple and large wooden bracelets at her wrists. Shiny gold sandals adorn her feet. His jaw tightens and distaste shows heavily in his expression once his inspection is complete.
“Sir,” I say to both of them wondering if I’ll be able to keep my cool. “I’m Lincoln Street,” I add for her father’s benefit.
“Let’s be seated,” her mother interjects.
Shelby takes my hand again and leads me to the furniture grouping they were sitting in before our arrival. She takes the loveseat and pulls me in beside her.
Shelby’s father introduces himself as Theodore and speaks first. “We owe you a debt of gratitude, Detective Street. Our daughter is known for behaving irrationally at the best of times.”
Shelby’s grip tightens around my fingers and I
squeeze back.
“I want to thank you too,” Judge Rictor offers.
I nod my head at the judge. I glance at Shelby’s mother, who gives me a stone look. My eyes travel to her father. “Your daughter saved herself. You should be proud she kept a level head. Not many people in her circumstances could. I’m not sure what you’ve heard on the news, but if I were you, I would listen to your daughter’s narration before the media.”
Theodore glances at our locked fingers before meeting my gaze again. “Shelby has always been strong-willed and a trial for me and her mother. We are well-aware of her resourcefulness in most situations.”
I really don’t think they are. They know nothing about their daughter. Shelby stands and I rise with her. “I’m in the room and you’ve spoken about me like I don’t exist. I came here because you asked nicely. I’m leaving because my father is an asshole, my mother can’t take a breath without asking for permission, and my uncle doesn’t want to stir the pot.”
Her mother gasps and her father’s lips compress. Judge Rictor bites his lip to keep from smiling. I may decide to like him eventually. We walk to the front door and out to my truck. “Please squeal your tires as we leave. Hopefully it will damage their heated driveway.”
I shake my head and pull out carefully. Who the hell has a heated driveway?
“If your parents don’t help, how will you support yourself and attend college?” I ask because I have a feeling her parents could be writing her out of the will as we speak.
“The trust fund from my grandparents kicks in as soon as I enroll in new classes.”
I’d forgotten about her trust fund. “Come on over here.” I put the console up so she can settle against my side. She unclips her seat belt, moves over, and buckles the middle one.
“We made it through your family. Does this mean we’re in a relationship?” I ask with a smile while looking straight ahead.
Shelby tugs my hair. “I don’t do relationships. This is a sexual connection with a deep mental understanding.”
Street Justice Page 7