Down & Dirty: A McCray Crime Collection

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Down & Dirty: A McCray Crime Collection Page 30

by McCray, Carolyn


  “Actually, sir, I did have a lot of help. Officer Hadderly, one of the local uniforms, was right there in the thick of things. Couldn’t have done it without him.”

  “Hmmm. I’ll keep that in mind, especially considering what I’m calling about,” Agent Tanner rumbled.

  “Sir?”

  “Well, you have to know that I’m not just calling to pat you on the back.” Her boss took a deep breath and then let it out as an extended sigh. “The DNA came back on the hand. It’s a match for the others.”

  Sariah felt her stomach muscles clench in a combination of excitement and nerves. She was right. Had been right all along. Humpty Dumpty was back. She had two conflicting urges… to confront Salazar and tell him to suck it, and to break down crying. Instead, she listened intently as Agent Tanner continued.

  “You were the one who found the link where no one else would’ve, so I’m putting you on this.”

  “Sir, I’m so—”

  “Don’t,” Tanner cut her off. “Don’t thank me. The other reason I’m assigning you is because everyone already thinks you’re either nuts or a suck-up. Word gets out that there’s a big team working the Humpty case and it’s a PR disaster. You’re going to be working this mostly on your own.”

  That dampened Sariah’s enthusiasm a bit, but couldn’t snuff it out completely. “I understand, sir. But what do you mean by ‘mostly’?”

  “Well, if the Ann Arbor precinct gives their okay, we may be able to borrow the officer you were talking about. You’ve worked together, and he seems to like you. That’s not nothing.”

  Sariah took the implied criticism in stride. “No, sir, I guess it’s not.”

  “But that’s not exactly what I meant.” Agent Tanner paused again. “I think we need to bring Joshua Wright in on this.”

  “Agent Wright?”

  “Former Agent Wright,” Tanner corrected her. “Since he worked the case and… well… everything happened that happened, I think he’s gone pretty far downhill.”

  Sariah thought for a moment. “I heard he was up in New York, working as a bartender or something.”

  “Or something. He’s the janitor for a bar, actually.”

  “Wow,” Sariah breathed.

  “Wow is right.” Her boss cleared his throat. “But no one knows that case better than he does. You’ll need to reach out to him.”

  “No problem.”

  “I can’t promise that, Agent Cooper. My guess is he won’t be too thrilled to hear from us.” Another deep breath, then Tanner finished up. “We can talk about it more when you get back. For now, grab that officer and buy him and yourself a drink. On me.”

  “Thank you, sir.”

  “Good work, Agent Cooper.” And then the connection ended.

  Sariah sat staring at the phone as the screen faded to black. Her world had just changed in a heartbeat, and for the life of her, she couldn’t tell if that was a good or a bad thing. She probably wouldn’t know until she was deep into working the Humpty case.

  Shaking her head to rid herself of the shadows that now seemed determined to take over, Sariah lifted her head to look over at Had, who had finished up and was looking over at her, a sad smile on his face.

  Sariah grinned back at him, suddenly determined to keep the happy mood around her while she could. There was no way to control what was coming up in the not-so-distant future. But right now?

  Right now, she could take her friend out for a celebratory drink.

  Tomorrow they could tackle Humpty Dumpty.

  Devious

  PROLOGUE

  The sun had set long, long ago.

  The streets of Seattle became a very different place when it was dark. Let’s be honest, even during the day, things had a tendency to be a bit bleak in the Pacific Northwest. But after dark, things got downright creepy.

  A light drizzle, nothing more than a clear late summer night for anyone who had grown up here, weighed down Abby’s bleach-blonde hair. She had not grown up here. For her, this much precipitation was the rough equivalent of a downpour. Phoenix, Arizona wasn’t known for its abundant annual rainfall.

  How she had ended up here she knew very well, but couldn’t believe to this day. A guy. It was always a guy, wasn’t it? A boy and his band, wanting to test the waters in a bigger city, but without the balls to head to Vegas or L.A. She should’ve known then.

  Now, a year and a half later, the band had broken up, and the boyfriend had headed out somewhere for parts unknown. And Abby? Abby was stuck in a lease with a job that paid just well enough that she didn’t want to leave it, but not well enough for her to ever really get ahead.

  Tonight was the first night she had gone out on her own since the breakup three months ago. She’d grabbed a couple of the girls from work and jetted down to the Foundation Nightclub, a local hotspot just a couple of blocks away from Pike Place Market.

  It was a little touristy, sure, but Abby was still new enough to Seattle that being a tourist was okay by her. The drinks were expensive, but she didn’t normally have to worry too much about that. And the guys there were a bit more upscale than her grungy ex.

  But after both of her friends had gotten picked up and it had started getting late, Abby had decided to head home. Drinking alone in a bar just felt way too pathetic.

  The problem with that? Abby couldn’t remember where she had parked. Maybe that last cosmopolitan had been a bad idea. She would’ve hailed a cab and come back for her VW bug tomorrow, but in looking for the parking lot where she’d left it, she’d entered into some much narrower streets that were pretty quiet, even for this area. There wasn’t a cab anywhere in sight.

  She pulled off her heels, feeling the wet cool of the sidewalk soothe her aching feet. Going out on a Friday after work always sounded like such a great idea, but man, was she beat. Next time she planned an outing with the girls, it would be on a Saturday. And the girls would be ones who wouldn’t abandon her at the first sign of a smile from a cute guy.

  Whatever. She was over it.

  Now that the clatter of her own heels wasn’t ringing in her ears, Abby could’ve sworn she heard something. She stopped for a moment, but whatever it was had dissipated into the surrounding mist.

  How many times had she thought she was being followed late at night, only to realize it was her over-active imagination? Abby chuckled to herself and started walking again. Time to fish her phone out of the bag she called her purse and figure out where the hell she was.

  Rummaging through the accumulated crap of at least three years—once Abby found a purse she liked, she used it until it disintegrated—she finally got her fingers around her smartphone and swiped down the screen to wake it up.

  No reception. Sonofa…if she hadn’t signed a two-year contract with this idiotic company before moving out here, she would’ve ditched them a long time ago. There were more holes in her coverage here than in a fine piece of swiss cheese.

  Glancing around, Abby looked for any street sign that might look even remotely familiar. As she spun around in a circle, she saw a dark blur move into the shadows cast by a building that blocked the hazy light from a nearby streetlamp. Was that the direction from which she had heard that sound earlier? Hard to tell in the dark, with all the drizzle.

  She was being ridiculous. It was just some person, or maybe even a stray animal trying to hug the sides of the businesses to take advantage of their canopies to keep the moisture off. No one was following her. Of course not.

  But somehow, as she started walking again, her steps were more purposeful, more rapid, less likely to veer to one side or another. That wasn’t being paranoid. She was just tired of being stuck out in the rain. Time to get home.

  As she teetered somewhere between a walk and a trot, she heard the distinct sound of footsteps on pavement. That couldn’t have been her imagination, could it? Just because every other time it had ended up being her own fears didn’t mean it would every time, right? And honestly, who was she afraid of seeing her panic? It
’s not like there was anyone there to laugh at her.

  Except the one who was actually following her.

  Screw it. She was running.

  Picking up speed fueled by fear and adrenaline, she rounded a corner, then ducked into an alley, hoping to lose her pursuer with a few twists and turns. Maybe a serious chase would deter her pursuer.

  But with every step she took, it seemed, her shadow gained ground. The footsteps were clearer, more resonant. She could hear every footfall, every echo ringing back from the walls on either side. There was something unusual about the sound, but she couldn’t put her finger on exactly what it was.

  The almost absolute darkness of this area was pierced as she rounded yet another corner. The warm yellow glow of an open business beckoned. What kind of business would be open at 1:30 in the morning gave her very little pause. Right now, an open door and light was just the kind of safe haven she was looking for.

  She whipped through the door, pushing the swinging glass in front of her, heedless of the force she put into it. The door slammed into the wall, ricocheting closed with the combined momentum of the spring-loaded action and the reversed inertia of her initial push.

  Safely inside, Abby took a deep, shuddering breath. Whether or not she had imagined the whole episode, that had been one of the scariest things she had ever experienced. She lifted her head to see where it was that she had landed.

  It was a Laundromat. The ambient warmth from the never-ceasing action of the industrial-sized driers against one wall mingled with the moisture of the Seattle air to create a muggy swamp of an atmosphere. She dropped her heels to the floor and slipped them back onto her feet.

  Several of the dryers spun with clothes inside, but there was no one around, as far as Abby could see. Probably left to grab a coffee at some 24-hour café. Or just a coffee shop. It was Seattle. There shouldn’t be a lack of coffee shops.

  Abby would’ve preferred some company at this point, but the heat and light were doing wonders to slow her beating pulse down to non-life-threatening levels. She wandered up one of the aisles of washing machines, playing with the old quarter feeder slots on the tops of the machines. This Laundromat was old.

  As she was about to get to the end of the aisle she was moving down, Abby heard the front door open. Her pulse ratcheted up once more, even though she tried to convince herself that no would-be rapist would try anything in a public place. Especially one so well lit. With glass doors, for crying out loud.

  She continued telling herself that until the lights went off.

  In spite of herself, she let out a muffled whimper of terror. This was so much worse than any horror film she’d ever seen. There was someone in here with her. And that someone had flipped off the lights. That was not the act of a person who was just here to pick up his dry clothes.

  She stifled the sound of her breath as best she could, wishing that she hadn’t put her heels back on. Moving as silently as possible, Abby groped along the tops of the machines, looking for anything she might be able to use to defend herself. Nothing. She guided herself by the dim glow of the indicator lights on the tops of the machines, the only lights that shone here, in this death trap.

  Was there a back exit? She had no idea. But she sure as hell wasn’t going back up to the front of the store, with whomever it was lurking there.

  Stepping carefully, doing everything she could to keep her heels from clacking on the cracked tile floor, Abby made her way to the back of the Laundromat, trying in vain to remember the brief glimpse she had had of the layout of the place before the lights went out. Just when she was about to collapse from the overwhelming tension, she saw one of the most welcome sights of her life.

  As she moved beyond the end of the aisle, there, just beyond the old wooden folding table in front of her, was a dimly glowing EXIT sign. There was a back door. Abby could slip out quietly and get to a more public place. She wasn’t out of the woods yet, but she could see the way there.

  She moved around the table, running her finger along the tabletop as she went. Her hand came into contact with what felt like a box of powder detergent, a theory confirmed in the low light from the sign. As she rounded the corner, she discerned duct tape holding up one of the legs of the dilapidated table.

  Hurrying toward the beckoning light, Abby was completely unprepared for the elbow that seemed to come from out of nowhere to land squarely against her jaw.

  White lights starred in front of her vision. Her perception rocked back and forth, spinning with the force of the blow. She clawed upward blindly with her nails, scoring a track along what felt like the person’s forearm. There was a low grunt in response.

  Her attacker was somehow in front of her, blocking her access to the door. Abby scrabbled her way backward, coming up against the folding table. Her grappling hands found the box of detergent. She swung the box around, spreading the powder in a large arc where she guessed the assailant was.

  A muttered curse confirmed at least partial contact.

  It wasn’t enough. She knew it wasn’t enough. Abby moved back around the table, feeling the tape under her hands. Wait. She grabbed beneath the table, gripping the leg in both hands as she twisted.

  Luckily, whoever had done the jury-rigging on the table leg hadn’t done a very thorough job. The leg came free, the tape parting and tearing from the force of her desperation. The table wobbled for a moment before stabilizing itself on its remaining three legs.

  Feeling along the length of the wooden leg, Abby could feel the jutting nails at its top. She couldn’t have asked for a better weapon with which to fight off her attacker.

  She watched as a dark lump separated itself from the darker corner of the folding area, where the light from the sign couldn’t reach. There was something strange about the shape. Something about the way the form moved…

  There was no time for assessment. The shape was moving fast. Abby swung her table leg as hard and as fast as she could, landing a blow on the shadow’s shoulder. Another grunt and a slight ripping sound as she pulled her makeshift club back proved the efficacy of her weapon.

  But before Abby could land another blow, her assailant closed the gap between them and landed another blow to the other side of her face, snapping her head to the side. A hand scrabbled for the table leg, ripping it out of Abby’s hand as if she weren’t gripping it at all. Abby was left defenseless.

  “Please,” she begged, looking into the shadows of the person’s face. The head lifted slightly at her plea, the faint glow from the EXIT sign limning the harsh lines and angles of the nose and cheekbones.

  Abby gasped at what she saw, but the gasp was hampered by the cloth her attacker had placed over her mouth and nose. The cloth that smelled of chemicals.

  Nothingness reached up to embrace Abby and dragged her down into its fuzzy embrace.

  CHAPTER 1

  The leg was sticking out of the dryer, leaving the foot, ankle and part of the calf exposed. Well, the foot wasn’t exposed. It had a shoe covering it. A shoe with a three-and-a-half-inch heel, along with a slight platform at the toe. Fuchsia. The leg formed a forty-seven degree angle with the rest of the machine, that angle drifting up from the picture in front of him and entering Detective Robi Darcmel’s mind as a glowing cipher of information that joined with the others already arranging themselves in a shimmering line.

  Shining a penlight into the dark recesses of the dryer’s drum, Darc attempted to catch a glimpse of the head. If it were shaved… But the angle of the body obscured his view. There was nothing further to be gained by using the flashlight.

  Darc had been on the scene for seven minutes and twenty-one seconds already. He had gleaned all the facts from the rest of the Laundromat and was now at an impasse. Not an impasse of logic, which would have made sense to him, but an impasse of rules.

  According to the Code of Criminal Procedure, Darc was not allowed to move the body. Only the ME could do so. By Darc’s calculations, the coroner would not be at the crime scene for anoth
er eight minutes, at a minimum. That was eight minutes of wasted time in Darc’s investigation.

  Debating the merits of disregarding the regulations, Darc attempted to peer into the inside of the dryer through the crack in the door held open by the angled limb. As he suspected, there was not enough light for him to be able to see much of anything. One more reason that was tipping the scale in favor of him moving the body.

  As Darc moved his hand up to the dryer door, a voice rang out in the Laundromat. A deep, booming voice. Darc’s superior officer, Captain Merle.

  “Don’t even think about it, Darc.”

  “It has already been thought of, Captain. The thought was also processed and fully reasoned out. I was in the implementation phase when you arrived.” The captain had a penchant for non-specific language that Darc found troubling in one who was meant to be his superior officer. Darc did what he could to correct the failing, although his efforts did not seem to be fully appreciated.

  The captain wiped his hand across his face, pulling his skin down in a way that exaggerated his jowls. From an aesthetic viewpoint, that was less than pleasing. It was not personally troubling to Darc, but it might be worth mentioning to him at some future point in time. Captain Merle heaved a big sigh, then looked around the Laundromat.

  “Where’s your partner?”

  “McGarren is headed to New Mexico. I need to move the body. Now.” The urgency here was plain, if Captain Merle would simply think things through completely. With every minute that passed without gleaning the information that only the body could tell them, the killer put more and more distance between them.

  “Wait. What?” The captain seemed confused. Perhaps Darc had spoken too quickly. That often happened when he was communicating with other members of the department. “McGarren’s in New Mexico? When did that happen?”

  “Yesterday at lunch. He had the pastrami on rye and a Diet Coke. And he is not in New Mexico. He is traveling to New Mexico.” Darc spoke slowly and enunciated carefully. Perhaps that would help with the evident communication issue with which the captain was struggling. McGarren had often told Darc that he went too quickly. Well, what he had actually said contained multiple expletives, but that had been the salient point he had taken from the conversation.

 

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