Contents Under Pressure

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by Edna Buchanan




  Contents Under Pressure

  A Britt Montero Mystery

  Edna Buchanan

  Copyright

  Diversion Books

  A Division of Diversion Publishing Corp.

  443 Park Avenue South, Suite 1004

  New York, NY 10016

  www.DiversionBooks.com

  Copyright © 1992 by Edna Buchanan

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  For more information, email [email protected]

  First Diversion Books edition April 2014

  ISBN: 978-1-62681-246-8

  More from Edna Buchanan

  Britt Montero Mysteries

  Contents Under Pressure

  Miami, It’s Murder

  Suitable For Framing

  Act Of Betrayal

  Margin of Error

  Fiction

  Nobody Lives Forever

  Non-Fiction

  Carr: Five Years of Rape and Murder

  Never Let Them See You Cry

  Do not cling to events of the past or dwell on what happened long ago. Watch for the new thing I am going to do. It is happening already—you can see it now!

  ISIAH 43:18-19

  One

  I stopped to listen. So did a detective and several patrolmen, frozen in motion. One cocked his head and held his walkie up to his ear. The morning had started out as a slow news day, but that could change in a heartbeat. It was happening now.

  A radio in the heavy leather belt of a patrolman at the front desk had spit out a rush of static as I walked through the lobby at headquarters after reading a stack of routine police reports from the night before. A high-pitched emergency signal had followed, then the clear-as-a-bell disembodied voice of a dispatcher giving the location, Suwannee Park Elementary School. An armed abduction. Possible machine gun involved.

  Children and guns: The combination raised the hairs on the back of my neck.

  The victim was a woman, the dispatcher announced, abducted at gunpoint after dropping her children off at school. A domestic, I thought, maybe an irate estranged husband or boyfriend. I had covered countless stories about women murdered by men who “loved” them.

  The address hung on the air—precisely enunciated by the coolly impassive dispatcher. The cop grounded by desk duty looked wistful as I quickly pushed through the heavy glass door into the sun-blasted parking lot, already eighty-five degrees at 8 A.M. The cloudless sky was a cruel and brilliant blue. Carloads of commuters swooped by on the elevated Metro Rail tracks across the street as I scrambled onto the front seat, hit the key on my dashboard scanner, and peeled out of the parking lot. The dispatcher was reporting that the suspect had forced the victim to drive him away in her own small, white, American-made car.

  The crime scene was on the move out there somewhere, rolling through Monday morning rush hour traffic. I tried not to think about what had to be going on in the woman’s mind. An all points was out on her car, but nobody knew the exact make or tag number yet. Suwannee Park Elementary was the place to start. I drove, scanning oncoming traffic for a small white car with a terrified woman at the wheel.

  A Miami patrol car passed me like a heat-seeking missile, siren wailing, lights flashing. I hit the gas and stayed on its tail, accelerating past startled motorists who pulled to the side. I love it when the cops and I are bound for the same destination. There is no risk I’ll be stopped for speeding; their goal is to answer a call for help. As a reporter on the police beat, mine is to write about what happened, how they handled it. Or didn’t.

  I swung in to the curb behind him, across the street from the school. A child was crying, and I feared at first that students were hurt. But the piercing sounds came from one of two small girls who stood on the sidewalk. About six and eight years old, they clung to one another, half-surrounded by several men in uniform, a disheveled civilian, his white shirt torn open at the front, and a taller man, probably the principal, sweating in a suit and tie. I recognized Officer Ted Ferrell, tall, thin, and wiry, hunkered down in front of the girls. The little one wailed, while the other, wide-eyed and solemn, tried to answer the policeman’s questions.

  Ted got to his feet and passed me on the way to his patrol car.

  “Thought you worked midnights,” I called out.

  “Hi Britt. I did, until today. Rotation.”

  I had forgotten this was the first Monday of the month. Shift change. Officers transferring from one shift to another work both. Ted, I knew, had worked midnights and was now doubling back onto days.

  “What happened?” I asked him.

  “This is a crazy one, Britt. Woman drops her kids at school and stops to talk to a teacher. He’s standing at her car when this guy charges up with what looks like a machine gun, grabs the teacher by the shirt, yanks him away from the car, jumps in the backseat, threatens to blow off the woman’s head, and orders her to drive away.”

  I looked up from my notebook. “Her kids see it?”

  “The whole thing.”

  “Somebody they know?”

  “Nope.” He reached for his radio mike. “Total stranger.”

  Ted reported that the eight-year-old said her mother’s car was a Chevrolet, a Nova. He asked dispatch to send a patrolman to the family home in search of a relative or a neighbor who knew how to reach the woman’s husband at work, then he turned back to me. The gunman appeared to be the same man who had run amok a few blocks away. He had tried a robbery, Ted said, but his victim ran. The would-be robber confronted several strangers on the street, but they stampeded away also. Then he tried to force his way into a house. “People started calling us. He evaded the first units by running through backyards to the school here, where our victim was sitting in her car. Looks like she just happened to be there when he needed a ride.”

  “Did the teacher give you a good car description, or the tag number?’’ I asked.

  “He was so scared that he fell down and tore his pants trying to get away. I feel sorry for the girls. I’ve got one her age.” He pointed to the smaller child.

  “Mommmeee!” Twin cries rose from the sidewalk. A white car, a Chevy Nova, had turned the corner, a woman at the wheel. The two little girls broke and ran. They attached themselves to her before she emerged from the car.

  I joined the circle that quickly formed around her. She was about thirty-five and pudgy, with short dark hair, and wore a slightly rumpled flowered house-dress. “I was scared to death,” she said, eyes watery. She held her youngest girl tightly in her arms, while the other clung to her skirt. “But I tried to stay cool. That man is crazy … when I told him my gas tank was on empty, he said I was his hostage, and if the engine died, so did I. He made me take him to N. W. Third Street and Twenty-seventh Avenue. That’s where he got out and told me to keep driving. I came right back here, to my girls.”

  The cops were shooting questions as I scribbled notes. “Last time I saw him,” she told them, “he was walking toward a Yellow Cab, with the gun hidden under his windbreaker.”

  Always be suspicious of men wearing windbreakers in Miami during the blistering heat of early September, I thought, taking down a brief, relieved quote from the woman, who praised the Lord, and a number where I could reach her later.

  The cops fanned out in their cars to hunt the gunman down. I followed, cruising the neighborhood where he was last seen, hoping to be in the r
ight place for any action.

  We zoomed in all directions, passing each others’ cars, scouring the side streets. I was pleased that no TV reporters had picked up the scent. They always get in the way and make the cops crazy. TV cars from two local stations had crashed head-on at an intersection while surveilling a ransom drop in a kidnapping last year. The crews jumped out and began filming each other, instead of keeping a low profile in a sensitive situation. Those guys make it tough on all of us.

  Ted Ferrell was one of those cops with an uncanny knack for being where the action was, so I decided to hang in close to him. He was good at catching people. The talent was instinctive, something that could not be bottled, manufactured, or taught. He once approached a man he spotted hurrying away from an office building. The man ran, and Ted chased him. As he caught him a block away, a bomb blast shook the building. The bomber explained: “America is falling like Cuba did, and something must be done!” When examined, his motives proved more personal than political: His wife worked in the building. He was unemployed, and humiliated because she was supporting the family. But if the building blew up, she would lose the job and no longer be the breadwinner. His plan made perfect sense to him, another example of how fleeing one’s homeland sometimes skews the thought process. I had also reported the time Ted pulled over a motorist on what began as a routine traffic stop and wound up yielding fifty-six kilos of cocaine, $850,000 in small bills, two silencer-equipped Barettas, and one of the FBI’s ten most-wanted fugitives.

  Ted’s hunches were gold. A reporter could stay busy just following him, which was exactly what I was doing, trailing half a block behind, when a Yellow Cab drove past us, in the opposite direction. The driver, a middle-aged black man, sat rigid in his seat, eyes frozen straight ahead. I had heard Yellow Cab conduct a radio roll call at police request on my scanner. This one, number 87, had not responded, although its driver was not at breakfast or using a restroom. He was driving too carefully, stone-faced, at exactly the speed limit in what looked like an empty cab.

  Ted, in his car up ahead, showed no sign he’d even noticed. Come on, I thought, you can’t be that tired. His cruiser moved on down the street at a leisurely pace and swung into a slow motion U-turn a block away. I rolled into a corner gas station to turn around, trying to stay inconspicuous.

  A red light at the intersection a block away caught the cab, which came to a smooth, perfectly precise stop. Ted’s patrol car approached quickly from behind it. Suddenly, the cab’s back passenger door swung open and a man bailed out. He was running before he hit the ground. He still had the gun. The cab jack-rabbited across the intersection against the light, the open door swinging, as motorists screeched to a stop.

  I didn’t even see Ted leave his car; I just saw him sprinting after the gunman, a stick-thin dishwater blond in his twenties. Ted was fast. They both were a lot faster than I would be in the shoes I was wearing. I kicked off my heels and pulled on an old pair of flats that I kept in the backseat, along with a set of telephone books, a city directory, and other such essentials. I tossed my purse in the trunk, locked it and ran after them, just carrying my keys, a notebook, and a pen.

  My press ID swung from a beaded metal chain around my neck as I pounded after them. The gunman started cutting across backyards toward the projects, a low income, high crime neighborhood, now mostly black. My intent was not to catch them. Sometimes I am reckless, but I’m not stupid; I have seen what automatic weapon fire can do. I just wanted to keep them in sight. Ted had a radio with him, but I hadn’t seen any backup yet. When you are running through yards and vacant lots, it is hard to report exactly where you are.

  I lost them momentarily and stopped to catch my breath beside a little boy playing in a scrubby side yard. He didn’t say a word; he just pointed. I followed his tiny finger and saw the gunman. He still had the weapon as he scaled a wooden fence. The leap could qualify him for an Olympic team, I thought, my heart racing. Ted went over after him. His movements were controlled, with more strength than panic. I could see him being cautious, in case the man with the gun wheeled to confront him. In real life, there were no dress rehearsals.

  Having caught my breath, I explored the fence, trying to find a way around it. From the other side came Ted’s raspy shouts for the man to halt. A guttural, muffled yell came in response. I could not make out the exact words, but they sure didn’t sound like surrender. Maybe he was cornered. More shouts, different voices. Something was happening, but I could not find a way around the fence.

  Damn! I hate to climb wearing a skirt, but there was no other way. I clipped my pen to my notebook, stuck them in my waistband, and looked around for something to stand on. There was nothing. A handful of tiny children had gathered, most of them giggling. I attacked the fence, grabbed the top with both hands, and tried to pull myself up. My sunglasses skidded off my sweaty nose as I strained, then lost it, picking up a splinter in my palm on the way down. The kids, now joined by a few adults, were raucous and hooting, doing nothing for my vanity.

  “Out of the way,” I muttered, and retreated for a running start. Two little boys were jumping at the fence in exaggerated imitations of my poor showing. This time I hit the fence with my right foot first, grabbed the top and walked up the side on the balls of my feet while pulling up with both hands. I grunted as I pushed myself up waist high, swung my left leg over the top and flung the rest of myself after it. Something gave way in my panty hose as I landed, staggering, on my feet. The kids on the other side cheered and clapped. I didn’t know whether they were applauding my success or the sight of my bloomers as I sailed over the top.

  Neither Ted nor the gunman were in sight. I took a deep breath, then trotted into the project complex, a labyrinth of connected apartment buildings surrounding cluttered courtyards.

  People in various stages of alarm were emerging from all three levels, and kids were collecting in the breezeways. I followed their eyes. Ted and the gunman had each taken cover behind concrete stairwells in the same building, about fifty feet apart. Each held a gun. Ted yelled for people to get down, out of the line of fire.

  “Go home, go inside,” I told the gaggle of children nearest me. None listened, or even looked at me. Their dark faces were intent, aglow with curiosity.

  An apartment door opened, four or five feet from the crouching gunman. An elderly lady in house slippers stepped out, her expression irritated, peering uncertainly through her spectacles to see what the commotion was about. The gunman seized the moment, darting past her into her apartment. I held my breath but no shots rang out. He slammed the door behind him. The man was armed, had already committed a good six or seven felonies today, and seemed to be trying for an even dozen. Ted would have been justified had he opened fire—some would say he should have—but shooting was too risky, with all the women and children around.

  The elderly woman looked dazed, and started to protest. A young mother who had been herding toddlers into an adjacent apartment took her arm and led her inside to safety. I joined them.

  From their open door, I could see both Ted and the apartment sheltering the gunman. Burglar bars protected the windows. The only other way out of that apartment, I realized, was another door in full view, eight feet down the corridor. The man with the gun had boxed himself in.

  A half hour ago this seemed to be the slow news day I needed to work on my weekend feature. Now I was two miles from the office in the middle of the projects, in what could be a shoot-out. That is one of the things I love and hate about this job: News always breaks when you least expect it. I couldn’t see Ted’s expression in the long shadow of the stairwell, but I was certain he was thinking of his own children. Damn, we needed a photographer. I turned to ask to use the telephone when, like an answered prayer, I caught a glimpse of frizzy red hair and cowboy boots across the courtyard. It was Lottie Dane. The cavalry had arrived.

  Slung over her right shoulder was her Canon EOS automatic focus with a long telephoto lens, for shooting from a
distance. A second camera was slung over her other shoulder, a wide-angle lens with a flash, to use when it was all over, as she elbowed her way in for a close-up. She had already spotted me, sized up the situation, and was scanning upper levels of the buildings for a good vantage point to shoot from. Lottie was the best photographer I’d ever worked with and the best friend I’d ever had. As I watched, she scampered up the outside stairway of the next building and out of my view.

  I glimpsed Ted’s face as he shifted position. No fatigue there; he looked sweaty but sharp, and as serious as a stroke. The door to the apartment flew open and I saw the gun thrust out, then leveled toward Ted. Involuntarily, I held my breath and squeezed my eyes shut. No shots. Ted held his fire. “Come on out,” he called, managing to sound almost friendly. “Throw out the gun.” The door slammed.

  Twice more, the man opened the door, then slammed it.

  “It’s okay,” Ted said calmly. “Slide out the gun and nobody will get hurt. Do it now.” The door slowly opened.

  “Take it easy. You won’t be hurt. I promise.”

  “Don’t shoot,” the gunman croaked.

  “Slide the gun out slow, butt first, keep your hands up in front of you. You’ll be okay.”

  The man crouched, then shoved something out the half-open door. Metal scraped on concrete. He straightened up and emerged, skinny and scared, palms open in front of him.

  Ted had him spread-eagle against the wall and handcuffed in seconds. Cheers and applause rang out. I heard the whir of an automatic shutter over my shoulder. “Where’ve you been?” I asked Lottie.

  “You might have called,” she sniffed, still shooting, never taking her dark eyes off the subjects. “Luckily I stumbled on this myself, on my scanner. Just missed you at the school. Got the woman and her kids.”

 

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