Phantoms
stretch of brightly lighted pavement. He had feared the darkness as much as he now feared the light.
He nervously combed one hand through his thick white hair. He kept his other hand on the butt of his holstered revolver.
Jake Johnson not only believed in caution: He worshiped it; caution was his god. Better safe than sorry; a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush; fools rush in where angels fear to tread… He had a million maxims. They were, to him, lightposts marking the one safe route, and beyond those lights lay only a cold void of risk, chance, and chaos.
Jake had never married. Marriage meant taking on a lot of new responsibilities. It wasn’t worth risking your emotions and your money and your entire future.
Where finances were concerned, he had also lived a cautious, frugal existence. He had put away a rather substantial nest egg, spreading his funds over a wide variety of investments.
Jake, now fifty-eight, had worked for the Santa Mira County Sheriff’s Department for over thirty-seven years. He could have retired and claimed a pension a long time ago. But he had worried about inflation, so he had stayed on, building his pension, putting away more and more money.
Becoming an officer of the law was perhaps the only incautious thing that Jake Johnson had ever done. He hadn’t wanted to be a cop. God, no! But his father, Big Ralph Johnson, had been county sheriff in the 1940s and 50s, and he had expected his son to follow in his footsteps. Big Ralph never took no for an answer. Jake had been pretty sure that Big Ralph would disinherit him if he didn’t go into police work. Not that there was a vast fortune in the family; there wasn’t. But there had been a nice house and respectable bank accounts. And behind the family garage, buried three feet below the lawn, there had been several big mason jars filled with tightly rolled wads of twenty- and fifty- and hundred-dollar bills, money that Big Ralph had taken in bribes and had set aside against bad times. So Jake had become a cop like his daddy, who had finally died at the age of eighty-two, when Jake was fifty-one. By then Jake was stuck with being a cop for the rest of his working life because it was the only thing he knew.
He was a cautious cop. For instance, he avoided taking domestic disturbance calls because policemen sometimes got killed by stepping between hot-tempered husbands and wives; passions ran too high in confrontations of that sort. Just look at this real estate agent, Fletcher Kale. A year ago, Jake had bought a piece of mountain property through Kale, and the man had seemed as normal as anyone. Now he had killed his wife and son. If a cop had stepped into that scene, Kale would have killed him, too. And when a dispatcher alerted Jake to a robbery-in-progress, he usually lied about his location, putting himself so far from the scene of the crime that other officers would be closer to it; then he showed up later, when the action was over.
He wasn’t a coward. There had been times when he’d found himself in the line of fire, and on those occasions he’d been a tiger, a lion, a raging bear. He was just cautious.
There was some police work he actually enjoyed. The traffic detail was okay. And he positively delighted in paperwork. The only pleasure he took in making an arrest was the subsequent filling out of numerous forms that kept him safely, tied up at headquarters for a couple of hours.
Unfortunately, this time, the trick of dawdling over paperwork had backfired on him. He’d been at the office, filling out forms, when Dr. Paige’s call had come in. If he’d been out on the street, driving patrol, he could have avoided the assignment.
But now here he was. Standing in bright light making a perfect target of himself. Damn.
To make matters worse, it was obvious that something extremely violent had transpired inside Gilmartin’s Market. Two of the five large panes of glass along the front of the market had been broken from inside; glass lay all over the sidewalk. Cases of canned dog food and six-packs of Dr Pepper had crashed through the windows and now lay scattered across the pavement. Jake was afraid the sheriff was going to make them go into the market to see what had happened, and he was afraid that someone dangerous was still in there, waiting.
The sheriff, Tal Whitman, and the two women finally reached the market, and Frank Autry showed them the plastic container that held the sample of water. The sheriff said
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher