Sheepdogs: Keeping the Wolves at Bay Gordon Carroll (readera ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: Gordon Carroll
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Max and I searched the rest of the perimeter but found nothing else. After letting him mark every tree in the adjoining neighborâs yard, I put him back in the car and returned to the house.
Another police car pulled up to the driveway and a uniformed officer got out carrying a big, black tackle box. Lakewood dedicates certain officers to lifting prints and collecting evidence on minor crimes. It would be a waste of time on this case. Like I said before, the guys that did this job were pros. No way they werenât wearing gloves. But this guy I knew from way back. It was Fred Monique. I caught a few bad guys with him when he worked a beat. He looked a little grayer, and there was a noticeable paunch that bulged out from under the bottom of his bulletproof vest, but other than that he was the same old Fred.
âGil Mason,â he said, smiling and holding out a hand, âhavenât seen you in years.â
I shook his hand. âHow you been, Fred?â
He patted his tummy. âEating good. The wifeâs trying to kill me off soâs she can collect on the insurance.â He gave me a once over. âI thought Iâd heard something about you going the PI route after you got fired; that why youâre here?â
I nodded. âThe sonâs missing.â
âYeah, I saw weâd taken a missing person report when I checked the call history. But he was listed as a probable runaway. You think this burglaryâs related?â
âI do. The kidâs mixed up in something. I donât know what yet.â
âYou think thereâs any latents?â
âI doubt it. These guys were good. I did find a partial shoe-print in the back.â
âThat wonât help much on a case like this,â said Fred. âSimple second degree burg, the detectives wonât give it a lot of time.â
âWould you cast it for me anyway?â
âOh sure. I do my job either way. If the boys upstairs or in the D.A.âs Office want to blow it off, thatâs their business. Me, I do my best and forget the rest.â
âThanks.â I hesitated, pulled the zip-lock from my pocket and handed it to him. âMy new dog found this in the bushes out back. Itâs fresh.â
Fred scrunched his eyes at it. âGum?â
âYeah. I think maybe one of the burglars spit it. Send it special attention to Sarah Gallagher at CBI and mention my name. Sheâll take care of you.â
Fred took the bag. âYou shouldnât have moved it. I need pictures.â
âI know, sorry. If Iâd known you were processing the scene I would have left it.â I looked toward the backyard. âThird bush from the kicked door near the garden path. Pick your branch and take your photos. Close enough.â
Fred nodded. âGuess itâll have to be.â He snorted. âYou still got that killer dog Samson?â
I shook my head. âHad to put him down about nine years ago. Hips went. He couldnât even get up to eat.â
âShame,â said Fred, âquite an animal. âMember the time he caught that weenie-wagger that tried to grab the two little girls outta the park? Man he âbout tore that perv apart. Probably the most justice that scumbag ever got. It was a sweet sight.â
âHe was a good dog,â I agreed. I did remember the case. Samson snapped the guyâs femur and nearly severed the femoral artery. The molester took a year on a plea bargain, with two months credit for time served and another three off for good behavior.
Go figure.
A week after getting out he snatched a little girl off the street on her way to school and sexually assaulted her. He got nabbed a week later when he tried to kidnap another girl from a park. Her father heard her scream and was able to catch him before he made it to his car. The father did a job on him, but not as good as Samson. Samson was the reason the girlâs father was able to catch him in the first place. Heâd given the scumbag a permanent limp.
The perv was sentenced to ten years this time. Better â not great â but better. I couldnât help but think that if only Samson had caught the guy a little more center and two inches higher, he wouldnât have had anything to rape the other little girl with.
Missed opportunities. Thatâs life.
As I held the front door open for Fred, I felt someone eyeballing me. I couldnât see anyone, but my hackles were up and Iâd learned to trust my instincts over the years. Someone was watching. And whoever it was, didnât want me to know it.
10
Max
Riding in the car was enjoyable for Max. It was so unlike the first trip in a car Max had taken. In that instance he had been locked inside a cage, beaten, muzzled and near death. This was much better.
The whooshing wind that rushed past the partially opened window was soothing, and combined with the air conditioner felt good running through his thick coat.
Heâd been asleep when the Alpha came for him back at the house, curled up in a tight ball on one of the Escaladeâs backseats. Heâd been dreaming of his old home and hadnât wanted to wake up. But his instincts for self preservation were stronger than his desire for comfort so he awoke even before the Alpha opened the door, his scent giving him away.
Max had hopped out, landing lightly on the sidewalk, the thick pads of his paws instantly registering the temperature, texture, contour, and
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