Something about the eager way Fuller followed his wife into the dressing room set me on edge. I’d never met a man eager to play fashion show, and the quick way he convinced Holly to try on the dress made me suspicious.
“Change of plan. All units converge on the sixth floor, at the northeast dressing room. We’re taking the target down. Repeat, we’re taking the target down. Over.”
I hung my star around my neck and tugged out my.38, which was happy to be free of its claustrophobic holster.
Several patrons stared at me, mouths open. I warned them to stay back.
Two steps into the dressing room, I heard gurgling and grunting. A muffled scream. I followed the sounds, found the right door. Locked.
I kicked off my flats, planted my left foot, and snap-kicked the door at knob level, grunting with the force of my effort.
The jamb splintered. The door swung inward. My gun came up.
Fuller had Holly by the throat. He spun her around, in the path of my.38, and I jerked the shot high, firing at the ceiling.
I recovered quickly, leveling the gun, bringing my left hand up to steady it. Fuller’s massive forearm was locked around Holly’s throat. Her face was a mess of tears, mascara, and spit, and her eyes were squeezed shut in pain.
Fuller was smiling.
“Hello, Lieutenant.”
I aimed at his head.
“Drop her, Barry!”
“I don’t think so.”
His arm tightened. Holly went from red to purple.
My hands had begun to shake. I tightened my finger on the trigger.
“Dammit, Barry! We can work this out! Don’t make me shoot you!”
I heard Fuller’s shots a millisecond after I felt them, ripping through Holly’s belly and slamming into mine. It was like getting kicked in the stomach.
I fired on reflex, my slug winging Fuller in the forehead.
All three of us went down.
The dressing room was carpeted, and the floor felt plush under my back. Comfortable. I looked down at my belly and saw blood and bits of flesh. Somewhere in the back of my mind, I realized my outfit was ruined, and that amused me for some reason.
To my left, lying less than two feet away, Holly Fuller stared at me. She blinked. Opened her mouth to say something, but all that came out was blood.
“Don’t talk,” I told her.
She nodded, once. Then she closed one eye, and the other continued to stare at me as her life left her body.
Behind her, Fuller was laid out on his back. His head spurted blood with his heartbeat, and I saw bits of bone tangled in his hair. His right hand was clenched around a bloody semiautomatic.
“Die,” I whispered.
He didn’t.
I heard screams, and then Herb’s plump face was staring down at me, filled with anguish. I wanted to tell him not to be so sad, but I couldn’t get the words to form.
He pried the.38 from my hand, and touched my cheek.
“It’s going to be okay, Jack. It’s going to be okay.”
Not for Holly Fuller, I thought. And then it was getting too hard to keep my eyes open, so I went to sleep.
CHAPTER 22
When I woke up, Latham was holding my hand. He smiled at me.
“Hiya, sport. You got out of surgery an hour ago. Had two bullets removed from your abdominal wall.”
I looked around, took in all the standard hospital surroundings, and then went to sleep again.
The second time I awoke, Herb was there.
“Good morning, Jack. How you feeling?”
“Stomach hurts,” I said. Or tried to say. What came out was something that sounded like, “S’hurt.”
“I’ll have the doctor up your morphine.”
I shook my head and tried to say no.
“Thirsty?”
I nodded. Benedict poured me some water from a pitcher and held the glass. I took two sips, and two more sips dribbled down my face.
“Day?” I managed.
“Friday. You’ve been out about twenty-four hours.”
“Olly?”
Herb shook his head.
“Uller?”
“He’s in recovery. I’ll tell you more when you’re feeling better.”
“Ell me.”
“This is how we figured it – lemme know if it’s right. Fuller was holding Holly around the neck. Did you know he had a gun?”
I shook my head.
“He had it pressed to her back, and tried to shoot you through his wife. The slugs ripped through her and got lodged in your stomach muscles. I guess it pays to do sit-ups.”
I grunted. It wasn’t sit-ups. Holly’s body slowed them down, so they didn’t penetrate deep.
“Your round took off part of his head, above his right eye. Mostly skull. The docs picked bone splinters out of his brain for the better part of ten hours. Also, they found something else.”
“What?”
“Fuller had a brain tumor. About the size of a cherry. They removed that as well. He’s in stable condition.”
I mumbled for more water, and we did the slurping/spilling thing again. A small voice whispered to me that I should have shot Fuller immediately, before he had a chance to kill his wife.
“Latham should be back any minute. Went on a burrito run. All of these flowers are from him.”
Herb made a grand, sweeping gesture, and for the first time I noticed all of the bouquets surrounding the bed, replete with stuffed animals and Mylar balloons.
“He hasn’t left your side since you got here, Jack. He’s like Lassie.”
“Case?” I asked. I wasn’t up to talking about Latham.
“Airtight. We found a body in the back of Fuller’s truck. She’s wrapped in plastic, and his prints are all over her, not that it makes a difference at this point. The State’s Attorney is making a case for the two other women, Eileen Hutton and Davi McCormick, plus the Andrewses.”
“Huh?”
“Oh, yeah. You didn’t know. The dealer, and his mother. Both shot. Witnesses saw a large Caucasian man leaving the scene. Fuller was making so many mistakes, it’s almost like he wanted to be caught.”
I took a deep breath, smelling rubbing alcohol and iodine. My arm itched where the IV was jabbed in, and I scratched the skin above the hole. My stomach hurt; not from the inside, like an ulcer, but from the outside, as if someone had kicked me. I pulled down my sheet and pulled my hospital gown to the side. Herb carefully examined his shoes, while I poked and prodded at the large gauze bandage taped to my lower body.
The poking made me realize how badly I needed to go to the bathroom, and I managed to sit up and plant my feet on the floor. The tile was cold.
“Where are you going?”
“Bathroom.”
“I don’t know if you should.”
“You want to cup your hands and hold them next to my knees?”
Herb helped me into the bathroom.
When finished, I was a little dizzy, and held on to the sink until the room stopped twirling. The woman in the mirror looked like hell. Hair, a disaster. Face, scrubbed clean of makeup, letting age and exhaustion shine through. Pallor, not much better than one of Derrick Rushlo’s dates.
So when I stepped out of the bathroom, it was a given that my boyfriend would be standing there.
He was wearing a smile that could charitably be called dopey, and in his hands was yet another floral arrangement, this one blooming from a coffee mug with a rainbow on it.
“Hi, Jack. You look great.”
And I could tell that he meant it.
Maybe it was the drugs, or the pain, or the guilt, but I burst into tears right there. He held me, softly, so as not to hurt me. But I hugged him tight, with everything I had, not ever wanting to let go.
“I’m so happy you’re okay, Jack. I’m sorry I didn’t call you back. I love you.”
I sniffled, making a mess of his sport coat.
“I love you too, Latham. God, I love you too.”
CHAPTER 23
The hottest summer on record eventually fizzled out, easing into autumn’s first frost. One hundred and three degrees to thirty in three short months. It confirmed my belief that the Midwest would be much more hospitable if we moved it six hundred miles south.