Predator

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One more tale of life on the street.
20.4k words
29.9k
51
21

Part 1 of the 7 part series

Updated 06/08/2023
Created 03/15/2015
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Tuesday Afternoon

He was about forty, forty five years old, very tall, almost gaunt, and not very well groomed. The man was, in fact, slothful looking in a peculiar, potbellied sort of way, and was wearing greasily tattered green chinos and an old, untucked plaid short-sleeved shirt. His sneakers were foul looking, and probably even fouler smelling, Officer Amy Breedlove thought as she watched the suspect through binoculars from her unmarked patrol car, a battered, twenty-six year old silver Pontiac Grand Am coupe. She was parked beside a fragrant trash dumpster off Harry Hines Boulevard, deep inside the industrial wastelands of central Dallas, Texas, in an almost war-torn district full of taquerias, strip joints, peep shows and barren industrial warehouses. She had been following this 'perp', a guy named Bruce Walker, who was a 'just released from prison' pedophile-rapist, for three days, ever since CID had received an anonymous tip that Walker was downloading kiddy porn and had been seen roaming around schools and playgrounds.

Yet here he was in an area full of homeless addicts, scabby-legged hookers and tired old gays cruising glory holes for their next load – and not working the parks and playgrounds the detectives in CID were hoping for. Still, Breedlove had her orders, so she pulled a battered old Canon 1Ds from the seat beside her and slapped a 400/5.6 on it, then swung it to her face. She lightly depressed the shutter and centered the guy in the viewfinder, then fired off a five frame burst when his face was clearly visible.

It was around two in the afternoon, two hours to shift change, and it was hotter than Hell outside – maybe '110 in the shade' hot, and of course the air conditioner in this stinking, fucked-up old car had seen better days – 'like maybe ten years ago,' she thought. Breedlove was baking in the afternoon heat, sweat was pouring from her neck down her back, and she wanted an ice cold Coke in the worst sort of way. She leaned forward and tried to pull the water-logged bullet-proof vest away from her skin, sure the goddamn thing was adding about ten extra degrees to her internal temperature, when she caught sight of really odd looking person following the suspect.

"What the fuck! Is that – a woman?"

The woman was short, dressed in black fatigues – including a black hood covering her head – and every instinct Breedlove had screamed "wrong!" – that this woman was following the suspect. Breedlove raised the camera to capture this woman, but just then she stopped, turned and looked directly at the unmarked car. Breedlove instinctively fired off a burst with the Canon – and the woman turned and ran off into shadows between two buildings. Breedlove noted the time and location on her notepad, started the engine and slowly made her way over to the area where she had seen both the suspect and the woman, and when she came up empty she started to drive around the area looking for any trace of them.

"I don't fucking like this," Breedlove said to the hot air in the car, so she picked up the mic dangling from the radio and pushed the transmit button:

"317 to 310 on two," she said, calling the district patrol sergeant on the tactical frequency.

"310, go head."

"Uh, 310, I've got a female over here in what looks like a black ninja suit, including a hood, following a signal 7 suspect."

"317, what's your 20?"

"Harry Hines at Freewood."

"10/4. 247, are you clear yet?" the sergeant said on the primary frequency.

"247 to 310, 10/4, clearing now."

"247, back up 317, Harry Hines at Freewood on a signal 13. Contact 317 on Tac2 for information."

"247, code 5."

"Central received, 247 en route at 1420 hours."

Breedlove circled the area, was driving north on Harry Hines when she saw someone running west from a Church's Chicken a block ahead, so she jumped on the accelerator.

"317 to 247, got the suspect running west on Mrytle Springs, away from the chicken place, black fatigues, black hood, looks like a large knife or machete in hand."

"10/4, almost code 6."

"310 to Central, get me some units heading to 317s location, and notify CID."

"Central received at 1422 hours."

"317, suspect running south on Maybank, through the trees!"

"247, code 6 in the area."

"247 at 1426 hours."

"247, this is 310 and I'm about a minute out."

"Received, uh, 247, Signal 33, officer down, repeat, 33, officer down on, on Maybank, just south of Myrtle Springs..."

"310, get some air support headed this way, and all responding units go Code 3, now!"

"1426 hours."

"310, code 6, oh, crap! 310, two officers down, repeat two down! I want a full tactical callout, now! Advise Watch Commander...oh, shi..."

"310, received at 1427 hours."

"141, Code 6 in the area." '141' was Ben Acheson, a traffic officer assigned to motorcycle patrol in northwest district, and as he was close when the call came out he headed to the area to provide extra back-up. He was the next unit to roll up on the scene, and he nearly vomited when he saw the carnage.

He jumped off his BMW R-1200-RT-P motorcycle and let it fall to the ground while he drew his Sig-Sauer P-226 from his holster and covered the scene.

"141, I've got three officers down, decapitated, no suspect in sight."

"141 at 1429 hours."

Acheson kept his 9mm moving, his senses acutely tuned to pick up the slightest sight or sound, but all he heard now was a rolling avalanche of sirens, then a helicopter overhead. Within a minute he was relieved to hear a herd of patrol cars approaching, and he knew a mobile Command and Control Unit would be on the scene soon. He holstered his weapon and walked over to the three slain officers; their bodies were artificially positioned, leaning against one another, the heads placed neatly in their laps. He fell to his knees and vomited just as the first back up units screeched to stop behind him.

+++++

Acheson could hear several helicopters over the crime scene now, and he knew the entire area was being cordoned off as detectives and Crime Scene Units from the department arrived. He saw techs from the Medical Examiner's office looking over the bodies and his stomach lurched again. Looking around, Acheson guessed there were more than fifty patrol cars searching the area now, as well. He had poked his head in Breedlove's unmarked car, looked it over, read her notes, and now was back on his BMW, trying to trace 317s route from where, he'd read on her notepad, she had first picked up the suspect.

He circled around a particularly seedy area on Harry Hines just south of Lombardy Lane, looking around a cluster of adult bookstore/video arcades that were usually full of gays and hookers worshipping cocks on their knees, when he thought he saw something odd behind a tire store on the corner. He motored over and saw a leg sticking out from behind a pile of old, worn out truck tires, and got on the radio.

"141, out on a possible Signal 1 at 10499 Harry Hines, believe this is related to 317s case."

"141 at 1455 hours."

"105, get some backup and CID over there, Code 3!"

"1455 hours, 309, 315, respond Code 3 to 10499 Harry Hines, at Lombardy, back up 141 on a possible Signal 1."

Acheson got off his bike and walked over to the tires, looked down and suddenly felt like vomiting again. There on the ground lay what was left of an old man, his head severed and his green pants pulled down past his knees. The man's penis had been cut off, his abdomen cut open from the sternum to the pubic area, and his intestines were spread out randomly on the dirty concrete. He walked around the tires, heard sirens closing in on his position when he found the man's head.

Acheson fell to his knees again and vomited uncontrollably when he saw what he assumed was the man's severed penis lodged in a hideously contorted mouth.

Wednesday Morning

Captain John Wayne Dickinson, usually called "The Duke" by his team in CID, was in charge of the investigation, and he was tired, dog-tired, having been at the scene on Maybank since late afternoon the day before. He picked up another glazed donut and took it down in one bite, then downed a pint of ice cold milk in one long pull.

"Look, I want to get some sleep sometime this month," he said as he looked over the crime scene photographs one more time, "so let's summarize what we know so far.

"First, Breedlove was assigned to tail this perp, Walker, and had been for three days;

"Second, she had him near the cum-palaces on Harry Hines, south of Lombardy;

"We also know she was detailed to photograph the perp, so she had one of the department's Canons with her, a 1Ds with a 200 and a 400, and those are missing;

"Third, she calls in and advises she has a suspicious person, dressed in some sort of ninja get-up, stalking the perp, this Walker guy...

"So, do we assume she got some images of this suspect?"

The Duke looked around his briefing room.

"Sounds reasonable to me," Ben Acheson said.

"Remind me, Officer Vomit, just why you're here?"

"Watch Commander assigned me, sir, in case I can fill in any gaps."

The Duke sneered derisively. "Fine, but if you barf on my floor, you'll be working Animal Control for the next five years. Got it, Meathead?"

"Yessir."

"Well, again, assume she got some images of the suspect, as well as the perp she was tailing. So, where does that leave us?"

The Duke looked around the room. "Anyone have any ideas?"

"I do," Acheson said.

"I don't give a fuck if you do or don't, Meathead. Anyone else?"

The room was silent.

The Duke fumed.

"Okay, Meathead, let's hear it."

"Well, okay, assume she shoots them both, but the suspect sees her with the camera. Taking her photograph, that is. If that's the case, it seems to me the suspects first priority would be to recover the camera, get the memory cards. So she disappeared, briefly, then lured Breedlove into a kill zone, took her out but then had to deal with two other officers who got on the scene quicker than she anticipated. So, she took 'em out."

The Duke nodded his approval. "Then what?"

"She circles back to her original target, Walker, and takes him out, then gets the fuck out of Dodge."

"Okay, I like it, makes sense. What about the crime scene? What does that tell us, Meathead?"

"First, she treated the officers' bodies with respect. She placed the heads neatly on their laps, so my guess is she killed them reluctantly, out of perceived necessity. I guess we can assume the suspect was pretty pissed off when she did Walker, sir."

"Okay, the rest of you take off, get some sleep. I want to talk to Acheson for a minute before I go home."

The room cleared, leaving The Duke and Acheson alone.

"That's pretty much what I took from things, kid. Good work."

"Thank you, sir."

"No sirs when we're in here chewing the fat, kid. So, why are you on motors?"

"Calculus, I guess, sir."

"Calculus?"

"I have an engineering background, BS in Mechanical, UT Austin. When I finished my probation here they moved me to Traffic, sent me to reconstruction school..."

"Oh? Where?"

"Northwestern, sir."

"No shit. So, you're one of those hotshots, eh? You're not exactly young. What did you do before?"

"Air Force, sir. Right seat on C-17s."

"Really? Why aren't you flying for American or Delta or some such shit?"

"I did. For a couple of years. Layoffs got me, in 2008."

"Oh, yeah. Shitty times all over."

"Yessir."

"Duke. Call me Duke."

"Sorry sir, ain't in my DNA."

"Alright. So. Did you know her?"

"Sir?"

"Breedlove. Did you know her."

"Yessir. Academy."

Ouch, Dickinson said to himself. Academy classmates were always close. "You okay about that?"

"I will be, sir. In a few days, I guess."

"Okay, understood, but don't keep it bottled up. Any interest in coming to CID?"

"No sir, none. I love it out there on motors."

"Yeah, I did too."

"Sir?"

"I was in motors, Traffic, for about five years. Bad crash, fucked up my arm."

"You miss it, sir?"

"Somedays, but not when it rains." The Duke laughed, then shook his head. "Fucking shoulder is like a goddamn barometer now. Every time a fucking storm heads this way my whole fucking arm feels like it's going to implode."

Acheson nodded. "Sorry, sir."

"You ride out there long enough and you'll know what it's like to feel like a barometer. Don't you forget that."

"Yessir. You still ride?"

"Yup. A hawg, every now and then. Electra-Glide."

"Heavy bike. Where do you ride around here?"

"Hill Country. Llano. Usually run down to Cooper's BarBQ and pig-out, then come back up next day."

"I've heard about that place, sir. Good grub?"

"The best."

"Well, next time you head that way, give me a yell if you want some company. I'd like to get out on the open road, away from all this, anyway."

"Sure, kid. Well, I guess you're with us on this one. You finish your report?"

"Yessir, two supplementals, for each crime scene."

"Okay, I'll look 'em over later, but tomorrow. I'm going home now, get some shut eye. Report to me after briefing tomorrow morning, but write up your theory about what happened, put it in a supplemental and drop it in the Watch Commander's box. Tell him I told you to."

"Yessir."

"And good work, Meathead."

Acheson turned, grinned. "Thank you, sir."

____________________________________

Acheson wrote the report Dickinson wanted, dropped it off at the WC's office, then walked to the locker room, grabbed his helmet and a fresh ticket book before he ambled through the station and out to the parking lot. He started the BMW's motor and turned on the strobes, then walked around the bike, checking to see that all the emergency lighting was working properly. He mounted the bike, turned off the lights and was getting ready to retract the side-stand when a patrol car pulled up alongside.

"Hey," Carol Denison said as she rolled to a stop.

Acheson looked over at her and smiled. "Hey, yourself." Then he looked at the thing next to her, and groaned. "Hey, Rookie," Acheson barked.

"Sir!"

"Don't you ever, and I mean ever, ever let me see you picking your nose when you're in a department squad car. Got that?"

"Sir?"

"And that bugger on your fucking finger? You put that mother fucker in your mouth and I'll put three rounds in your fuckin' face. You, like, hear me, Rookie?"

"Sir! Yes sir!"

"You his FTO?"

"Yup. Hey, someone's gotta train these kids..."

"Guess so."

"Well," Denison said – rolling her eyes, "How you hangin'?"

"Low. Like down in the weeds low."

She nodded. "I don't know how you did it, man."

He looked away, didn't really want to go there today.

"So," she said when she saw his eyes, "Would you like to come over for dinner tonight? Me and Brad are doing up some steaks by the pool. Maybe a salad and ice cream?"

"Y'all still over in that complex off Northwest Highway?"

"Yup."

"Well, sure. Unless..."

"Yeah, I know, I know. There he is, ladies and germs: Joe Ace, Traffic Reconstructionist Extraordinaire. Gets called to go work every bad wreck in the county."

Acheson grinned. "I never, ever shoulda taken calculus. No good ever came from taking too much math."

"You finally figured that one out, like all by yourself?" Denison smiled. That knowing smile he remembered.

"With a pencil, too. Say, that reminds me. Rookie!"

"Yes sir!"

"Do you know how a mathematician gets rid of constipation?"

"No, sir!"

"Works it out, with a pencil."

Stone cold silence.

"So, you get it?"

"No, sir."

"Where do they did up these morons," Acheson moaned.

Denison shrugged. "He's not too bad, Ben."

But not as good as you were, she said to herself. She and Amy Breedlove and Acheson had become inseparable halfway through their Academy class, and for a while there had been even money on who loved Acheson more, Carol Denison or Amy Breedlove. Yet Acheson had been oblivious to everything, was always the serious student and had never let on that he noticed what was going on.

And who knows, Denison thought, maybe he really hadn't caught on. Better for him now if he hadn't.

"So, got a girlfriend yet? If so, bring her along!"

He shrugged. "You know me, still flying solo. You and Brad engaged?"

"No way! He's still married to his job..."

"Still selling cars?"

"Cadillacs, Ben, not cars."

"Oh, right. Silly me."

They laughed.

"Well, okay. Seeya around four thirty or five?"

"Sounds about right, and Rookie? Keep that finger out of your nose." he said, then he looked at Carol: "Be careful out there."

"You too, Ben." She slipped the car into gear and eased away, pulled out into traffic and was gone.

"141, are you in service?"

"141, 10/4," he groaned, knew what was coming next.

"141, 27B, Lemmon at Turtle Creek. Vehicle on fire, one fatality reported."

"-41, Code 5."

"141, at 0910."

"Well," he said as he pulled away from the station, "there goes the day."

____________________________________

Acheson cleared from the wreck a couple hours later, then headed out Lemmon Avenue past Love Field, then wound his way over to Harry Hines and began cruising the area Amy had been working the day before. He didn't have any idea what he was looking for; in fact, he felt kind of lost as he cruised up and down the streets around the crime scene. He stopped on Maybank, looked toward the tire store as a Southwest 737 lined up on final for Love Field, then made his way back to Harry Hines. He was waiting to make a left onto Lombardy when something, some sort of insight, flashed through his mind. The light turned green and he turned east on Lombardy, rode a few hundred yards, then stopped on the shoulder and looked around again. Something was bugging him, but after a minute he pulled back onto Lombardy, then turned south on Denton Drive. Another few hundred yards and he crossed a little concrete bridge over a paved storm-water runoff ditch that carried floodwaters down to the Trinity River, and there it was again – he knew he was missing something important. But what? He pulled the bike over onto the shoulder again, and something in his gut twitched, some little alarm in his head went off.

"So, if I ran from Maybank to Lombardy, killed Walker there, where would I go next?"

He looked through the trees to his right. He could just see the tire store, there beyond the drainage ditch. And the crime scene on Maybank – was at the far end of an imaginary line running from here through the tire store.

"Well, I'd keep on running, away from the scene on Maybank."

He drew a line on the map in his head, and it led to right here. He pulled the BMW off the road, parked under a shade tree and walked down the concrete slope of the drainage ditch, then over to the bridge that carried traffic on Denton Drive over the ditch. He saw a couple of water moccasins in the shallow, brownish water and skirted them warily, then walked under the low bridge.

He saw it immediately.

A white towel, folded neatly on top of a small blue duffel bag.

He walked over to pile, took a pencil and unfolded the towel.

A blood-soaked knife. A notepad.

And some writing on the notepad.

"Better luck next time, Ben," was written on the pale yellow pad, and in a daze Acheson ran up to the BMW and called dispatch.

The mobile crime scene unit arrived before anyone from CID, and they secured the scene while Acheson paced around and around, obviously agitated.

One of the techs came up a few minutes later.

"Any idea who this 'Ben' is?" the tech asked.

"Yeah. Me."

"No shit? That's fucked up, man."

Acheson looked at the guy, cold smoldering fury in his eyes.

"Well, right, anyway, the camera is in the duffel, along with a bunch of shots of that Walker dude, probably from the CF card."

"That sounds about right," he said as the implications of the note pounded away inside his head. He went to the radio again, shook his head, took a deep breath.