Read Jump The Line (Toein' The Line Book 1) Online
Authors: Mary McFarland
Wha
t’
s driving Megalo Don to gnaw on these women?
Angie Miller, like Alaina, was a topless dancer at Oma
r’
s. But there all similarities, and details I can use as points of comparison between Megal
o’
s vics, end. Angie Miller was a vanilla blonde with a lush young cheerleade
r’
s body, same as vic number tw
o’
s. Trim at twenty-two, Angi
e’
s body would have gone fleshy after childbirth, if sh
e’
d lived. Alaina, on the other hand, is dark haired, and taut and low slung with a serious athlet
e’
s torso and thighs and calves: a Ferrari to Angi
e’
s Cadillac. Other than the fact they both danced at Oma
r’
s, the two share little in common. And Meera, NP
D’
s first vic, also has nothing other than age in common with Angie Miller and Alaina Colby. Until we figure out Meer
a’
s identity, no one can say where she even worked.
Like the throb from an old wound in my hip, one question plagues me. If Bite Doc is Megalo Don, wha
t’
s his motive?
“
Thi
s’
ll speed things up
,”
Doc says, winching Angi
e’
s mouth open wider with the speculum and then stepping back like h
e’
s unveiling a painting at the Louvre.
The vi
c’
s mouth drifts open, like sh
e’
s enjoying a gaping yawn, awakening from a nap. Fortunately for us, her eyelids are glued shut, so I do
n’
t have to look into her shocked sad gaze as
I’
m inspecting the interior of her mouth.
“
Here you go, son
.
”
I accept the penlight magnifier Doc shoves into my hands. Holding my breath against the deathly sickening raw-steak, the meaty smell, I peer inside the vi
c’
s mouth.
“
Bingo
,”
I say. Angi
e’
s upper maxilla, left quadrant, first and second bicuspids as
I’
m facing her, are missing.
“
Was there ante mortem blood in her mouth
?
”
“
Filled with it
,”
Doc confirms.
“
Took me a while to clean her up so I could even look
,”
he says, looking proud of his bastard so
n’
s quick mind.
I can tell he knows precisely how Angi
e’
s teeth were removed, but he gives away nothing. Like I said, in here h
e’
s all business. H
e’
s a drunk, womanizing lech, facts no one questions. But he is
n’
t putting evidentiary analysis into my hands. I
t’
s his job to figure out the cause and manner of death. I
t’
s my job to figure out who killed Angie Miller and why.
“
The
y’
ve been cut out
?”
I ask, peering with the pen light into the vi
c’
s silenced mouth, fighting my urge to dwell on what a tragedy this is for Angie Miller and her family.
“
Yep. Used a surgical knife
.
”
He points to cuts along the gum line. They run up into the jawbone.
“
I sure as hell did
n’
t make those with my needle
,”
he adds.
I straighten.
“I’
m done
.
”
“
Uh-huh
,”
Doc says, lost in a fog and already figuring how to restore his previous handiwork, the rewiring of her facial maxillary. When he pulls the speculum out, Angi
e’
s mouth drifts open.
“
Do
n’
t worry.
I’
ll re-set her face, son
,”
he says, his voice spurious, colluding with me now and casting yet another favor my way.
“
Her folks wo
n’
t know w
e’
ve had an unauthorized look
.
”
Watching as the slack mouth yawns, he says
,“
But if yo
u’
d have asked me, I woul
d’
ve told you how those teeth came out
.
”
“I’
m grateful for the favor . . . Doc, but
I’
d never ask you to do that. Anyway, I had to see for myself
.
”
Shaking my head, fighting sadness at the tragedy humans visit on each other, I shrug and turn away from Angie Mille
r’
s cadaver.
“
Right. I understand
,”
he says.
“I’
m proud of you, son. Real proud
.
”
“
Bastard probably got off watching her scream
,”
I say, concluding my evidentiary analysis.
“
Just cut out her teeth and listened to her scream
.
”
“
Catch him, will you? H
e’
s one ruthless bastard. I want to see his ass fry. Beside
s
”
—
Doc Smalley glances at the cloc
k
—
“
h
e’
s costing me a shitload of overtime
.
”
I tear off my surgical gloves, then the mask and gown, and toss them in a hazardous waste container.
“
Thanks for letting me take a look. I
t’
s more of a favor than I expected
.
”
“
My pleasure. You got time for a beer at the country club
?
”
“
Nah, sorry, but
I’
m still on for breakfast tomorrow, though
.
”
“
Good
.
”
He starts wheeling away Angi
e’
s gurney.
“
Did Doctor Verbote stop by here today
?”
I ask.
“
Sure did
,”
Doc says, stopping to answer my question.
“
Meyers practically ordered his ass down here first thing this morning. He took impressions before I sewed shut her mouth and set her face
.
”
I file the info away. When
I’
d met with him this morning, Bite Doc knew Angi
e’
s teeth were missing and how the
y’
d been removed. So why did
n’
t he just say so? Did he think I needed to see for myself? Or is he messing with my head?
It would
n’
t be the first time a per
p’
s taunted me. The thought hardens my resolve to nail Megalo Don.
“
Are
n’
t you going to cover her
?”
I ask, noting the vi
c’
s exposed shoulder.
“I’
ll do it when I close her back up
.
”
The Miller
s
’ daughte
r’
s body is laying on a gurney in the morgue, her shoulder and other parts gnawed like an unfinished pot roast. All the while, a sick bastard is running around getting off on some other young gir
l’
s pain. I point toward the framed motto above the door.
Cadavers are people, too.
“
Well, dammit, son, you
are
exasperating
,”
he says, and smiling he pulls the white paper sheet over Angi
e’
s face, her mouth frozen wide in a silent scream.
“
See you tomorrow morning at breakfast. Yo
u’
re buying
.
”
“
Sure thing, Doc
.
”
Dad.
I try it on for size. It feels . . . weird.
Unable to make up my mind whether to go home or have a few brews with friends, I realize finally wha
t’
s going on with me, why I feel so cranky.
I’
m consumed by this case. I wo
n’
t stop to eat or sleep until
I’
ve nailed Megalo.
I’
ve got a to-do list longer than my arm, so socializing is out for now. Maybe forever if I do
n’
t get something on Megalo Don.
Chapter 25
Leaving Newport, I take the Big Mac across and hit the rive
r’
s Ohio side twenty minutes after leaving Doc Smalley at the morgue. Realizing
I’
ve not eaten, I decide to hit Popey
e’
s for some fried chicken. Dinner and life as usual will be spent in my car, where
I’
ll catch up on phone calls.
“
Yeah, Hawks
,”
I tell myself
,“
you are living the life of a dick now, ai
n’
t you, buddy
?
”
Wha
t’
s Megal
o’
s motive?
The question plagues me, my mind wandering over the investigatio
n’
s progress, or its lack thereof as I head for Popey
e’
s.
I’
ve verified what Bite Doc said about Angie Mille
r’
s teeth being cut out ante mortem, so
I’
m more obsessed than ever with figuring out wha
t’
s driving Megalo Don.
Meer
a’
s missing her first and second bicuspid, upper maxilla, right quadrant. Angi
e’
s missing the same teeth, left quadrant. This makes two of sixteen female victims, just as Bite Doc said. Wanting to get We
s
’ take on all this, I call him and bring him up to speed.
“
So other than Meera and Angie, where are Megal
o’
s other vics
?”
he asks.
“
Wh
y’
s that so important right now, Wes
?”
I fire back.
“
Wish I knew who they were
,”
Wes says. As frustrated as I am, h
e’
s searching for the same thing I feel is important: motive.
Why?
“
I do
n’
t know where his other vics are
,”
I say, truthful.
“
One thin
g’
s sure, though. This son-of-a-bitch is
n’
t stopping any time soon. Those women are out there, and you and I both know h
e’
s got them targeted.
“
Can you do me a favor
?
”
“
Name it
,”
Wes says.
“
Find out what Hollow Volume Overlay is
.
”
I explain my visit with Doc Verbote and his work with HVO to identify and compare bite wounds on Meera and Angie Miller.
“
I specifically want to know its evidentiary value, Wes, whether we can use it to get Megal
o’
s ass prosecuted
.
”
“
Consider it done
.
”
“
Thanks, Tiger
,”
I say.
“
Later
.
”
Letting my thoughts drift, I recall Angie Mille
r’
s frozen mouth, the fact she was a co-ed and the same age as Alaina. This makes me want to drive straight back to that crack house where I dropped off Alaina. I know I pissed her off good, but I do
n’
t care. She has no business involving herself in a homicide investigation. Tha
t’
s my job. Wha
t’
s not my job is the feeling I need to protect her, but not the way a cop would one of Oma
r’
s dancers. I need to protect
her
. I
t’
s personal.
I swing through Popey
e’
s drive-through. Thinking
I’
ll call Alaina later and apologize for being overly blunt, I dig a drumstick from the takeout chicken dinner and check in at home.
Judge Hawks answers my call.
“
Dad, I ca
n’
t stop by this evening, so can you pass some info to Mom for me
?
”
I fill him in on Vine Work
s
’ progress.
Vine Works is Mo
m’
s charity foundation. She named it Vine Works because the Hawks Opera House, the one sh
e’
s tasked me with restoring, is located on Vine Street, and its purpose is to give youths wh
o’
d never get the chance the opportunity t
o“
climb and grow
,”
my mom says. The
y’
ll use the revitalized Hawk
s
’ Opera House to practice theatre arts and dance.
“I’
ve got my architectural engineer and the historical society talking finally
,”
I say
,“
so w
e’
re moving forward with restoration of the original hardwood floors
.
”
“
Good job
,”
my dad says.
“
When w
e’
re done with this project, it will keep several generations of Cincinnati youth off the streets
,”
he adds, sounding proud.
For a second, I imagine Alaina dancing not on the cheap stage at Oma
r’
s but instead on the one
I’
m having restored. The coupling of my vision of Alain
a’
s delicious body, with the fantasy of her dancing on stage at Hawks Opera Houses, stirs a new fire in my already heated belly.
“
Always leave the world a better place, son
.
”
Noshing another drumstick, I mull over Da
d’
s advice. I
t’
s pithy, but tha
t’
s my dad, the one Babbs married. To him, life is easily summed up: do good. But my life is
n’
t so simple. I did
n’
t graduate Kin
g’
s Point and then decide
not
to go to law school expressly to piss off my old man. I tried. But after a semester wasted at Chase Law School, I figured things out: some guys do good, and
I’
d like to think
I’
m one of them, but
I’
ve got a dark side, one Judge Hawks frequently berates.
Leave the world a better place.
How about using the world well before leaving it? To me, this seems a more personally enriching game plan. Being lucky,
I’
ve claimed all the booty I can, thanks to a ripped body and enough common sense to hide my dark side from women
I’
ve gotten close to.
“
The legacy you leave behind matters
,”
the judge continues lecturing. Stopping the last drumstick from my Popey
e’
s chicken dinner on its way to my lips, I wonder if Doc Smalle
y’
s mom gave him the same lecture because, for all I know, h
e’
s got more women in his past than I do and, possibly, several bastards like me running all over Kentucky.
“
Remember that, son. Yo
u’
re always focusing on your legacy
,”
Judge Hawks adds, jolting me back from my reverie.
What legacy do I wish to leave behind?
“
Sure, Dad. Talk to you later. Be sure to give Mom my progress report on Vine Works
.
”
Dodging a garbage truck, I flip off the driver, and then return to my obsession: Alaina Colby. She grew up in a little burg called Goshen, Ohio. Thinking over her hometown and comparing it unfavorably to mine, I savor the chicke
n’
s aftertaste, and think of Alain
a’
s rosebud breasts. They look exactly like the woma
n’
s in
La Fornarina
, Raphae
l’
s painting of his mistress.
When I dropped her off at Stoke Farre
l’
s apartment, sh
e’
d leaned into the window and kissed me hard.
I groan. Wh
y’
d I piss her off with that remark about her harem outfit? I was
n’
t trying to insult her. I was warning her off this investigation, damn little hothead. From the moment she limped into the copy room demanding another look at Angie Mille
r’
s photo, I knew she was hell bent on working herself into this investigation. That will cause more problems than it solves for us both and put her at risk.
And I give a damn why?
I start looking for motive for my own irrational attraction. I talked to Alain
a’
s student advisor, who told me sh
e’
s majoring in criminology with a minor in dance. Maybe tha
t’
s wha
t’
s driving my fixation. I love dancers. They treat their bodies like temples, literally. And I have every intention of worshipping Alain
a’
s. I stop noshing a drumstick, arrested by an irritating thought. What if sh
e’
s got a boyfriend?
I let the ugly thought drop and pick up another.
I’
m twenty seven. Alain
a’
s going to be twenty-two.
What if she does
n’
t like older men?
I want to get her something for her birthday, but what do you give a girl yo
u’
ve just met and barely know, but think yo
u’
re going mad for?
The Welcome to Ohio sign pops into view, suspended above the Big Mac, a spot my bruised heart lurches to and then perches when I wonder jealously if Alaina has a boyfriend. Hellfire, I think, a jolt of lust bouncing my heart back into place in the middle of my chest, but leaving the rest of m
e—
including certain body parts
I’
ve no mind to contro
l—
rising.
I’
m Aidan Hawks.
What woman would
n’
t want me?
* * *
The Buick glides off the Big Mac into downtown Cincinnati.
I’
m winged Eros, Greek god of love. Of
course
Alaina wants me. When sh
e’
d bumped my hand from her shoulder down onto her breast,
I’
d felt the electricity. I was dying to take her, right there in the Buic
k’
s front seat, in front of God and everyone, in broad daylight. All that stopped me was imagining the newspaper headline
s—
Cop Arrested for Public Indecenc
y
—
and my parent
s
’ mortified reaction, if
I’
d been caught.
And the
n—
that kiss. Sh
e’
d leaned in the window of my Buick and kissed me, unaware the pressure sh
e’
d intended to hurt me had instead turned me on. Right then,
I’
d formulated my plan: I would have her.
Alain
a’
s student advisor also told me Angie Miller was helping Alaina make a video to enter the Rockette
s
’ jump-the-line competition. I admire her resolve. With a disability like hers, sh
e’
s still shooting for the stars, but sh
e’
s not going to get that movie made, not with Angie murdered, unless I help he
r
—
That gives me an idea for her birthday present. But my plan requires I straighten out the mess
I’
ve created by ordering Alaina to keep off the investigation. Or was it the remark I made about her skimpy harem outfit that pissed her off?
Women. Impossible. But oh so incredibly mouth watering wonderful.
My cell phone rings. Maybe i
t’
s DeeDee, wanting phone sex.
“
Yeah
?
”
“
Hawks
,”
Captain Meyers bawls
,“
meet DeeDee over at Oma
r’
s. We got another fresh one
.
”
The captain then orders
,“
I also want to see your mug in my office tomorrow morning at oh-eight hundred. W
e’
ve got a review meeting on with Megalo Don, and I want to hear all yo
u’
ve got so far
.
”