Home > Cut and Run(14)

Cut and Run(14)
Author: Mary Burton

“I remember hearing Mom talk about it.”

“Russell defended Josie and got all the shoplifting charges dropped.”

A horn honked behind her, and she realized the light had turned green. She started driving. “Okay.”

“She appears in his datebook ten more times after her case was cleared. The last entry was May 2, 1988.”

“That was a month before I was born.”

“I had a buddy in robbery pull her picture.” PJ dropped his voice a fraction. “I’ll text it to you. You might be a little stunned.”

“Why?”

“Just have a look at it. I might have found your birth mother.”

She glanced to Kat, wishing she were alone. “I’ll have to call you back later. I’m on my way to the shelter with one of the kids.”

“Sure. Of course.”

She hung up, the phone still gripped in her hand. PJ was efficient and didn’t delay. If he was sending a text, it would be coming soon. Within fifteen seconds the text arrived, and despite her lack of privacy, she glanced at her phone long enough to open the attachment and then back up at the road as the image loaded. When she looked back down, she drew in a sharp breath. She was staring at a black-and-white mug shot of a young girl who looked like her. Blond hair. Light-colored eyes. The face. The lips.

Too stunned and not quite able to process, she dropped the phone in her lap and focused on the road ahead.

“Texting and driving?” Kat quipped.

“I know. It’s a bad combination.”

As if sensing Faith’s unease, Kat held in whatever comeback she had at the ready. “What’s going on with you? You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”

“I might have.”

“Who is it?”

“Josie Jones. She could be my birth mother.”

“Can I see?”

Normally far more guarded, Faith handed over the phone.

“Wow. You do look like her. I didn’t know you were adopted,” Kat stammered.

“You make it sound like it’s a bad thing.”

“I’m not sure if it’s good or bad,” Kat said.

“It can be a very good thing if handled properly.”

Kat sat in silence for a moment and then handed back the phone. “You’ve never heard anything about your mom before?”

“No. My parents didn’t like to talk about it. And when I was older, I tried to find her. Hit nothing but brick walls.”

A frown settled on Kat’s face, and some of her natural vibrancy faded. “So this Josie Jones just got erased like she never existed.”

The girl’s tone cut through Faith’s own confusion and reminded Faith that Kat was completely dialed in to every word coming out of her mouth. “It doesn’t have to be like that with you and your baby if you choose adoption. Adoptions can be open now. You can have contact with the child, if that’s what you want.”

“That’s not what Mrs. Myers said.”

“Who’s Mrs. Myers?”

“She’s with social services. She came to talk to me a few weeks ago. She told me it would be better for me to close this chapter and get on with my life because I’m so young.”

Faith gripped the wheel, speaking with as much calm as she could muster. “You never told me about the visit.”

Kat shrugged, as if to say, “Whatever.”

“Going forward, don’t speak to anyone about adoption unless I’m there. This is huge. You won’t be doing this alone.”

Kat flipped the sun visor up and down a few times, then reached for the radio and turned it up again. “Why’re you being so nice to me?”

This time, Faith turned the radio completely off from the control on her steering wheel. “I like you, Kat. I can help you with placing or keeping the baby. I can also help with your college, if you’ll let me.”

“College. Might as well land on the moon.”

“No. It’s not that kind of a long shot.”

“What if I don’t want help with school or the baby?”

Faith turned a corner and then shot the girl a grin. “Then you’re shit out of luck, kid, because I’m probably going to continue to butt my nose into your life until I know you’re on solid ground.”

A ghost of a smile tugged at Kat’s lips as she turned the radio on again. They listened to a rap song that had Kat sitting a little taller and finally tapping her hand on her knee. Faith’s mind drifted back to the image of Josie Jones. Could all this be as simple as a note in a datebook?

“Are you going to track down this Josie Jones woman, or what?” Kat asked.

“I just need a little time to digest it all. It’s fairly overwhelming, but yeah, eventually, I’m going to get to the bottom of this.”

CHAPTER NINE

Tuesday, June 26, 12:45 p.m.

Hayden and Brogan arrived back at headquarters to view Officer Holcombe’s dashcam as well as the security footage videos that had been forwarded to Hayden’s computer. The uniforms had tracked down three cameras that had captured a dark truck driving in the direction of Comal Pocket Park and Macy Crow’s crash site.

Hayden shrugged off his jacket and brewed a fresh pot of coffee.

He handed Brogan a cup, and the two sat in front of the computer screen. The first block of dashcam footage showed the path of Holcombe’s vehicle charging forward, lights flashing on the buildings of East Austin as her headlights caught the park’s west side seconds before she came to an abrupt stop. The audio recorded the squeal of her tires as the visual captured Sammy Kent screaming by Agent Crow’s contorted body lying on the ground.

Officer Holcombe sounded breathless, amped, the slight edge of panic contained when she called in the incident, requesting backup and an ambulance, and then offered a description of the situation. As she ran forward, the jostling image of her camera was hard to follow until she stopped and leaned over Macy Crow. Her hand was trembling as she felt the injured woman’s neck for a pulse.

“She’s alive, barely. Head trauma. Broken bones.” A split second passed and then more calmly, “Ma’am, the police are here. Just lie still. Help is on the way.”

“Oh, Jesus H. Christ!” Sammy shouted. “That truck came out of nowhere and just mowed her down.”

“What truck, Sammy?” Holcombe asked.

“A dark-blue, maybe black truck.”

“Did you see the plates?”

“ATX something. Oh, sweet Jesus, is she dead? There’s so much blood! Sweet Jesus.”

Blood oozed from the woman’s scalp as the wail of sirens grew closer. Sounds gurgled in the woman’s throat. Hayden could see Macy’s lips moving.

“Ma’am, I need you to stay still,” Holcombe said. “The ambulance is almost here. You’re going to be all right. Help is here.”

“Jesus, look at her arm,” Brogan said, mostly to himself.

All Hayden saw was Faith. Intellectually, he knew it wasn’t her, but that’s all his mind registered. Beautiful Faith, broken and battered. He resisted the urge to call her a second time, even though he needed to hear the sound of her voice.

“Don’t try to move,” Holcombe said. Agent Crow tried to raise her head. She was trying to talk. Officer Holcombe lowered her head closer to the injured woman. “Do you know who did this to you?”

“Jack?” The woman went still for a moment, but the officer remained crouched close. Sirens grew ever louder. And then the woman moved again. “Paige.”

The paramedic crew arrived, and the officer reported what she’d seen as they went to work on Agent Crow.

The audio captured Holcombe’s desperate whispering. “Holy shit. Holy shit.” The officer who’d been so steady when he’d spoken to her was struggling to get control of her own emotions.

“Jack is her father,” Brogan said. “Who is Paige?”

“A teenager who went missing recently.” Hayden rubbed his hand over the stubble on his jaw. “Let me put in another tape.”

Security footage from the store across the street from the park captured a truck driving into the park at 2:01 a.m. Its lights were off, and it moved slowly toward a darkened corner and waited. Five minutes later Crow came into the camera’s view as she passed. He saw her pause and talk to Sammy, move to the ATM, and then hand something to Sammy. Just as she left Sammy, the vehicle came out of the shadows and barreled directly toward her.

“You see that?” Hayden said. “That was no accident.”

“I got a partial on the plate along with the make and model,” Brogan responded. “Running it now.”

Ten minutes later, they had the name of the owner of the vehicle, a 2008 Ford truck that had been reported stolen several hours before.

“The truck belongs to Randy Kelly. He lives in North Austin. He’s been arrested for selling narcotics and is currently on probation.”

“Let’s have a talk with him,” Hayden said, reaching for his jacket.

Hayden and Brogan drove to the North Austin neighborhood and to Randy Kelly’s apartment building. They climbed to the second floor and banged on his door. Inside they heard footsteps, muttered oaths, and a lock turn. “Who is it?”

“Texas Rangers. We’re looking for Randy Kelly.”

Two more locks clicked, and the door opened. The guy who stood before them was shirtless, wore jeans, and his hair stuck up. “That’s me. You find the truck?”

“Mind if we come in, Mr. Kelly?” Hayden asked. “I have questions.”

Kelly nodded and stepped back. “Is my truck okay?”

“Your truck was used in a crime we’re investigating.”

“Shit,” Kelly whispered as he pulled on a shirt that had been on the floor.

Kelly’s one-room apartment had a Murphy bed, a small kitchen, and a bathroom. Several action-movie posters decorated the walls, a couple of pizza boxes were stacked on the kitchen counter, and dirty clothes were scattered on the floor around a card table holding a laptop.

   
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