Ring In the Dead

Read Ring In the Dead for Free Online

Book: Read Ring In the Dead for Free Online
Authors: J. A. Jance
scene at the Doghouse.
    As suddenly as if it were yesterday, it all came crashing back. As soon as Bob Murray told me shots had been fired, I charged out the restaurant’s back door, with him at my heels. Out in the parking lot the smell of burned cordite still lingered in the hot, still air. I found Lulu McCaffey’s bloody body lying sprawled on the pavement between cars. A green bit of paper that I recognized as the check from someone’s table was still clutched in her hand. I checked her pulse first. Finding none and thinking my partner had been shot, too, I turned to Pickles. By then, Bob Murray had raced back inside to call 911.
    Pickles was a few feet away from Lulu, slouched against the building. Kneeling next to him, I looked for a wound of some kind, but there wasn’t any. Whatever had happened to Pickles, he hadn’t been shot. But I did find his gun and I could tell it had been recently fired. He kept trying to talk to me, but all I could make out from his mumble was that there had been two guys and they had taken off on foot.
    I knew that if Pickles had taken a potshot at the two fleeing bad guys, there was going to be hell to pay, and I didn’t want my fingerprints anywhere on the gun. I used a pen to ease his Smith & Wesson out of his lap and set it down on the pavement. He kept trying to talk to me, but most of what he said was too garbled to understand. Eventually the Medic 1 guys showed up. At the time, Seattle had bragging rights because Medic 1’s still relatively new presence in the city had made Seattle the best place in the world to have a heart attack. By the time the ambulance showed up, I was pretty sure that’s what we were up against—­a heart attack.
    As soon as the EMTs took over, I heard the sounds of arriving patrol cars converging on the area. I grabbed an evidence bag from the back of our unmarked car, deposited the gun in that, pocketed both, and hurried back into the restaurant. From the way Pickles looked, I was convinced he was a goner. If his death occurred while he was interrupting someone in the process of committing a crime, that meant that whoever had gunned down Lulu McCaffey would be guilty of two counts of homicide—­both his and hers—­rather than just one.
    Bob Murray was a smart guy. He had come to the same conclusions I had—­that the two guys who had skipped out on paying their tab had committed cold-­blooded murder in his parking lot. Using chairs from the dining room, he had cordoned off both Lulu’s station and the booth where the dine-­and-­dash bad guys had been sitting. Although the rest of the restaurant had somehow managed to return to some semblance of business as usual, Bob had made sure that none of the tables in Lulu’s section had been cleared. He was personally standing guard to see to it that no one ventured anywhere near them.
    â€œDid you see the two guys?” I asked him. “Can you give me any kind of description to pass along to the guys on patrol?”
    Bob shook his head. “I was in the kitchen when they came in. Lulu seated them and served them, so she’s really the only employee who saw them.” He handed me a piece of paper. On it were scribbled several names and phone numbers, written in several distinctly separate styles of handwriting.
    â€œWho are these?” I asked.
    â€œThey’re the ­people who were seated at nearby tables,” he told me. “I had them write down their names and phone numbers in case you need to get back to them.”
    â€œAny of them still here?”
    Bob nodded, but his customary grin was missing in action. “All of them,” he answered. “I sent them to the bar and told them to have one on me while they wait.”
    See there? I told you Bob Murray was a smart guy.
    I glanced over at the booth. “Nobody’s touched it?”
    â€œNope,” he said. “And I aim to keep it that

Similar Books

Fatal Thaw

Dana Stabenow

The Ex Games 2

J. S. Cooper, Helen Cooper

New Year Island

Paul Draker

The Broken Highlander

Laura Hunsaker

#5 Icing on the Cake

Stephanie Perry Moore

The Penny

Joyce Meyer, Deborah Bedford

Tricksters Queen

Tamora Pierce

The Night Falling

Katherine Webb