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Run to Ground by Katie Ruggle (5)

Chapter 5

Present Day

The call came through just as Theo was about to wrap up his shift. He pivoted away from the locker room door, turning up his portable radio as a surge of relief spread through him. This meant he could delay going home for a few hours. Since his K9 partner, Goose, had died of cancer a year ago, Theo’s small house seemed echoing and empty. And now, after Don…

His head jerked back as the reminder took him unaware, and he immediately shoved the thought from his mind, forcing himself to concentrate on the dispatcher’s words.

repeat, officer requesting assistance at 4278 Green Willow Lane.”

Booted feet behind him made Theo turn just as Hugh passed him, thumping Theo on the shoulder as he went.

“What’s up?” Theo asked, increasing his pace to keep up with the other officer.

“Wilson spotted a vehicle parked outside the Schwartz compound. Said it looks a lot like the van used by the Golden Sun Restaurant robbery suspect. He wants some backup before ringing the doorbell.”

Theo snorted as they descended the stairs to the underground garage where the squad cars were parked. “Don’t blame him.”

“Grab Vig before you head to the call. You know how Gordon Schwartz likes to stockpile things that go boom.”

Resisting a wince, Theo turned toward the kennel on the opposite side of the garage. He took in Viggy’s flattened ears and sighed. This wasn’t going to go well.

As Theo put on the dog’s protective vest and harness, Viggy stood listlessly, his tail tucked. A memory hit Theo like a punch to the belly, a flash of Don prepping Viggy the same way six months ago, laughing at something Theo had said. For that call, Viggy had been vibrating with excitement, ready to work, so confident and eager and just so fucking happy. The passive, dull-eyed dog standing in front of Theo now was just a shadow of that K9 officer. That was Theo, too—a shadow of the person he’d been a few months ago.

Theo gave a rough, humorless laugh. “We’re a pair, aren’t we, Vig?”

The dog didn’t react, didn’t even glance at him, and Theo swallowed a bitter surge of grief, gathering the numbness around him like a security blanket.

“C’mon, Viggy.” The weary resignation in his voice would’ve worried him if he’d managed to care. “Let’s get this over with.”

With a reluctant Viggy in the back of his squad car, Theo pressed the accelerator, flying past vehicles that had pulled over in response to his overhead lights and siren. That low burn of anticipation he usually got when heading to a call wasn’t happening, though. There was no surge of adrenaline, no bouncing nerves. He didn’t feel anything.

Viggy shifted, drawing his attention for a split second before Theo returned his gaze to the road. It was strange having a dog in the back of his squad car again. After Goose died, Theo had successfully managed to put off getting a new dog for more than ten months. He didn’t think he’d have the same connection with another K9 that he’d had with Goose, not ever again. Ever since Theo had picked up Goose from the training facility, the two of them had clicked. Goose had been an amazing partner—a once-in-a-lifetime K9 officer.

His eyes flicked to the rearview mirror again as guilt burned in his chest. Viggy had been a good dog, too—was a good dog. They just weren’t right for each other. Vig was Don’s partner. At least, he had been.

A dull pain throbbed in his stomach, and Theo tightened his grip on the steering wheel until his knuckles whitened.

As they left quaint downtown Monroe and headed toward the west edge of town, Theo slowed. The twists and turns of the narrow mountain road were treacherous even at normal speeds, and Theo didn’t want to plow into one of the vertical rock faces that bracketed the pavement. Monroe was just west enough of the Front Range to be officially in the mountains, rather than in the foothills. Nestled in a valley, the town could be accessed by only two roads—one to the east and one to the west.

As he approached the turnoff to Blank Hill Road, the squirrelly waitress popped into his head…again. For some reason, he was thinking of Jules with unsettling frequency. Theo pictured her smile after he’d told Norman Rounds to back off. It had transformed her face, turning her from pretty to flat-out beautiful.

He realized he’d been slowing down, as if he were going to turn toward Jules’s house, and he made an annoyed sound as he pressed harder on the accelerator. This preoccupation with Jules had to stop. Despite his resolution, he couldn’t help but glance in the side-view mirror to catch a last glimpse of the Blank Hill Road sign.

Maybe he should swing by after the call was over. After all, he’d be driving right past again. The house she was renting was isolated, and it was obvious she was running from something—or someone. He’d do a quick check on her place and then leave. Jules wouldn’t even know he’d been there.

His breath came out in a huff as he got close to the scene. He needed to stop obsessing. Her suspicious behavior just screamed she’d be trouble, and his life was enough of a mess right now. If only she hadn’t smiled at him like that…

Theo cut his siren as he turned onto the road leading to Green Willow Lane but left his overhead lights flashing until he pulled up behind Hugh’s squad car. The September sun was starkly bright and warm. Theo automatically checked to make sure the window fan ventilating the backseat was on and then froze. How many times had he done the same for Goose? Shaking off the nostalgia and grief, Theo strode toward Lieutenant Blessard, the incident commander. As he passed Hugh’s car, Lexi, Hugh’s K9 partner, barked twice.

“Bosco!” The lieutenant strode over to meet Theo. “You got Don Baker’s dog with you? The search warrant just came through.”

With a tight nod, Theo turned and returned to his car. Lexi stayed silent that time when he passed Hugh’s car. As Theo opened the back door and reached to attach the lead to the dog’s harness, Viggy flattened his belly against the floor. Taking a step back, Theo eyed him. Vig was the picture of misery.

“I know, buddy,” Theo said softly. Every time he looked at Viggy, Theo was hit with a stab of grief. The dog acted exactly how Theo felt. There wasn’t time to wallow in their mutual sadness, though. They had a job to do. Their fellow cops’ lives depended on him and Viggy doing what they were trained for, even if their hearts weren’t in it.

“Let’s go to work.” Although he tried to infuse his voice with excitement, his tone remained flat, as did the dog. “C’mon, Vig. Out.”

Theo pulled on the lead, but Viggy resisted for so long that Theo began to worry he’d have to lift the seventy-pound dog and carry him to the scene.

“Viggy…” He hauled on the leash again, and the dog reluctantly climbed out of the car.

“What’s wrong with him?” Blessard asked from just a few feet away. Theo stiffened. He’d been so occupied with getting Viggy out of the car that he hadn’t even noticed the lieutenant approaching.

Rubbing the back of his neck with his free hand, Theo kept a tight grip on the leash to prevent Viggy from slinking underneath the car to hide. “He’s been this way ever since Don…” Theo had to stop when Don’s name caught in his throat.

“Yeah.” Blessard eyed the dog with sympathy. “Think we were all knocked sideways by that.”

Clearing his throat didn’t seem to help move the impediment. “Ready?” he asked gruffly, wanting—no, needing—to change the subject.

“Let’s do this.”

Theo squared his shoulders and walked up the weed-choked two-track that led to the compound gates. The sun lit the ever-present mountain peaks towering over the trees, turning the whole scene into a postcard. Holding back a cynical snort, Theo glanced behind at a plodding Viggy. The two of them were as far from a picture-perfect pair as they could get.

With a sharp shake of his head, Theo tried to refocus. They just needed to pull themselves together long enough to go in, find the explosives—if there were any—and get out. But he couldn’t stop himself from glancing back at the lackluster dog again, feeling an echoing pang of emptiness.

Yeah, this is going to be bad.

* * *

“Gordon Schwartz is talking with one of our negotiators. Said he’s trying to convince Romanowski—our robbery suspect—to voluntarily come out and talk to us.” Blessard spoke quietly, his usual carry-through-the-crowd voice muted. “Glad Schwartz didn’t manage to talk him into that yet. We’ve been waiting for a while for a way to get a look inside of that place, see what kind of toys our buddy Gordon and his minions have been collecting.”

Theo grunted acknowledgment before asking, “Any idea what kind of weapons he’s got in there?”

“No.” Lines of displeasure creased the skin between Blessard’s bushy gray brows. “We’ve gotten some unreliable witness accounts that claim his collection is anywhere from a couple of shotguns all the way to a fully stocked armory. Best guess is that it’s somewhere in the middle-to-arsenal range. Schwartz is teetering on the edge of crazy, and I’d rather know what he’s got stockpiled before we’re involved in a standoff.”

Theo made a wordless sound of agreement as they approached the closed compound gates.

“You’re not coming in!” yelled a short, stocky man on the inside of the gate. Theo had seen him around enough to recognize him as Gordon Schwartz. “This is my home! You can’t come inside my house without my consent. If you try to break in here, you fascist bastards will be trampling my constitutional rights!”

Hugh, the closest officer to the fence, raised a hand in a placating gesture even as his posture stayed alert. “You’re not in trouble, Gordon. We just need to come inside to talk to Romanowski.”

“He’s coming out.” Schwartz glanced over his shoulder, the tension on his face belying the certainty in his voice. “Give me a little more time. I’ll keep talking to him, and he’ll come out.”

Blessard strode forward until he was standing next to Hugh. As Theo stopped well back from the gates, Viggy slunk to the end of his leash and sat as far from the compound as he could get, his ears flat and unhappy.

“Fuck your warrant!” The yell from Schwartz drew Theo’s full attention, and a tense readiness rippled through the crowd of cops. With a whine, Viggy leaned against Theo’s hold on the leash, his tail curled between his hind legs. Theo knew that, if Viggy weren’t restrained, he’d be running back to the safety of the car. It hurt to see how timid the formerly confident dog had become. “It’s nothing! It’s a piece of paper. You know what piece of paper trumps your search warrant? The Constitution of the United States! And the Constitution says that I have the right to protect my home.”

A year ago—hell, even two months ago—Theo would’ve been buzzing with adrenaline, alert and ready for whatever was going to happen. Now, he just felt a heavy wave of weariness press down on him. It was just another day, another call, another rotation of the hamster wheel, another chance for one of his fellow cops to get hurt or killed or messed up in the head. His muscles ached with the pressure of his resignation.

“Gordon,” Hugh soothed, shifting so he blocked an impatient-looking Blessard from Schwartz’s view. Theo marveled at Hugh’s seemingly endless supply of patience. “We don’t want to step on your rights. All we need to do is to go in, get Romanowski, and then we’ll be off your property. Mrs. Lee was injured in that robbery. With the suspect walking free, she’s terrified all the time. We need to bring in the guy who hurt her, so she can sleep at night. Don’t you think Mrs. Lee deserves that?”

Schwartz’s rigid posture softened slightly, and Theo felt everyone’s tension ease. “Yeah,” Schwartz mumbled. “I barely know the guy. I’d never hurt an innocent like that, not for money.”

“We know, Gordon.” Hugh reached through the gate and squeezed Schwartz’s rounded shoulder. “We’re on the same side—the side of justice.”

Theo clenched his jaw, holding back a sardonic snort at the cheesy graphic-novel dialogue. The side of justice? He was going to give Hugh so much shit for that later.

“You’re just going to go in, grab Romanowski, and leave?” Schwartz repeated, still sounding wary but much more compliant than he had just a few short minutes before. Cheesy or not, Hugh’s superhero speech was working.

“That’s it.” Hugh held Schwartz’s gaze steadily. “First, though, would you agree to letting our explosives dog take a sniff around, just for the safety of our officers?”

His shoulders jerking back into his earlier tense posture, Schwartz shot a furious glare toward Viggy and snarled, “No dog. No way. I know how you people work. You’ll come in here, into my house, and plant evidence against me. No one’s coming in.” His hand jerked slightly, and Theo had his gun holster unsnapped before he even paused to think. He wasn’t the only one who’d noticed the threat. Theo saw that Blessard had his TASER drawn, holding it behind his left hip, out of Schwartz’s view.

Hugh hadn’t made a move toward his weapon. “How about this, Gordon. Why don’t we let the dog go first? At the entrance to each room, we’ll have the dog check things out, but we won’t go in until we get an all clear. That way, we couldn’t plant anything, even if we wanted to, and our guys will be safe from any explosions. Romanowski doesn’t want us to bring him in. Who knows what he’s doing right now. I need to keep my friends safe, just like you want to keep your friends safe. Sound like a plan?”

Even before Schwartz reached reluctantly for the lock on the gate, Theo knew that Hugh had succeeded in talking him into letting them on his property. Giving a cowering Viggy a sideways glance, Theo felt his stomach begin to burn. Everyone’s safety depended on their ragtag team of two.

They were so screwed.