the right to let me by. As much as I hated to admit it, I liked the sense of power my authority gave me. As a child Iâd been helpless to stop the bullies whoâd teased me about my stutter. But with my badge, weapons, and cruiser, I sure as hell wasnât powerless now.
I sped past a bus stop where an inordinate number of people seemed to be disembarking. But there was no time to ponder the situation. I had bank robbers to catch. I only hoped the robbers would realize resistance was risky and surrender quickly. On the bright side, if they decided to come out of the bank with guns blazing, at least it was a pleasant day to die.
A quick prayer couldnât hurt, right?
Less than a minute and a Hail Mary later, my cruiser whipped into the bank parking lot, tires squealing as I braked to a quick stop. Screech!
My pulse thrummed and throbbed, and a sticky, anxious sweat coated my skin. I yanked my gun from my belt and slid out of the car, letting Brigit out of the back and ordering her to stay by my side. Her unique skills could be useful in taking a suspect down or chasing them should they attempt to flee. Still, as always when I deployed her, my heart squeezed a little. Sure, she was a tool, a piece of equipment designed to assist me in my work. But she was also a sentient creature, a living being, not to mention my partner, roommate, and fuzzy-wuzzy buddy. The decisions I made could put her life at risk. If anything happened to her, could I ever forgive myself?
I forced the thought from my head. I couldnât think about that now. The two of us had a job to do.
With my K-9 partner by my side, I hunkered down and ran as fast as I could to the brick wall next to the front doors, plastering my back flat against it.
What was going on inside?
Had the men whoâd held up the bank taken hostages?
Had anyone been hurt?
I pushed the button to call dispatch. âWhatâs the status at the bank?â
âWe donât know,â the dispatcher said. âWe got a quick call from someone on a cell phone two minutes ago but the call dropped.â
Dammit! Brigit and I were working blind here.
A second cruiser pulled into the lot. Officer Spalding. Thank God. Spalding was a stocky black officer with ten years under his belt. Just the man you wanted to have your back.
He slipped from his cruiser, readied his weapon and bullhorn, and crouched down behind the open door of his car. Raising the bullhorn to his mouth, he aimed it at the front doors of the bank and calmly said, âLaw enforcement has surrounded the building. Come out with your hands in the air.â
Trembling, I crouched next to Brigit, whispered âgood girlâ to let her know she was doing well, and aimed my gun at the door in case the robbers decided to come out shooting. Please, please, please, dear Lord! Donât let that happen! Truth be told, my gun skills sucked. Having been a twirler in my high school marching band, I was much better with my baton. Problem was, a baton was of limited use. It required your target to be within striking distance. While I had a Kevlar vest to stop bullets, Brigit was unprotected. Sheâd make an easy target. My heart squeezed again, even harder this time. Please donât let Brigit get hurt!
A moment later, the glass door opened a few inches, then banged shut again.
What was happening?
Were the robbers scrabbling with innocent customers?
If so, it was my job to stop it before anyone got hurt.
Gulping back the cantaloupe-size lump of fear that had formed in my esophagus, I gave Brigit the order to follow me, ran to the door, and yanked it open, dashing inside.
Two screams sounded in stereo. âAaaah!â
The first scream came from an elderly man who was having trouble opening the door from his electric scooter. The second came from me as I tripped over the scooter and rolled in an inadvertent somersault over the tile floor of the foyer, through the open inner door, and into