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Authors: Diane Kelly

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BOOK: Upholding the Paw
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“Guys like
you
,” Jackson said. “What exactly do you mean by that?”

He gave her a patronizing look. “I mean guys with a face and body like mine.”

Seriously?
Grant Dawson really needed to be taken down a peg or two.

Jackson closed her eyes for a moment. She was probably counting to ten herself. When she opened her eyes, she asked, “Who around the bank has a bone to pick with you? Who have you pissed off?”

I had a feeling that list could be very long.

“Last week one of the other tellers got mad when he found out I'd fooled around with his girlfriend. Like it's my fault she wanted to trade up.” He rolled his eyes. “What a loser.”

Less than two minutes with this guy and already I didn't like the condescending jerk. He wasn't Prince Charming. He was Prince Charm
less
. “So, in your opinion, this other teller is a ‘loser'?”

Grant rolled his eyes and twirled a finger in the air. “Haven't we already established that?”

My hand played over the baton on my belt. But as tempting as it would be to smack some respect into this arrogant twerp, doing so would only land me in hot water. I only liked to be in hot water if it was bubbly and scented with lavender. Besides, Grant's judgmental comments might be intentionally harsh. It was possible he was trying to throw us off track.

Jackson tossed Grant a pointed look. “Just stick to the facts, son. Keep the commentary to yourself.”

The smile he offered was as insincere as it was condescending. “Whatever you say, sarge.”

Jackson remained calm. She had years of experience dealing with witnesses, many of whom were uncooperative and belligerent. No doubt she'd dealt with an occasional narcissist, too. “You said the other teller got upset when he found out you'd been seeing his girlfriend. How'd he find out?”

Grant raised a nonchalant shoulder. “I might've let it slip. But the guy totally overreacted. He even had the nerve to throw a punch at me.”

“He hit you?” I asked.

“No. He was on the other side of the counter. I pulled back and he missed.”

“He swung across the counter?” Jackson said. “Seems like his chances of hurting you were pretty slim.”

“That's not the point.” Condescension virtually dripped from his words, as if he were speaking to the stupidest people he'd ever met. He put his hands on the table and leaned forward. “The point is he took it to a physical level. He tried to assault me, for God's sake! Serena's the one he should've been mad at. Not me. I didn't owe the guy anything.”

The words were out of my mouth before I could stop them. “Sounds like you at least owed him an apology.”

Grant's only reply was an eye roll.

I kept on. “I take it this other teller wasn't working this morning?”

“Hell, no!” Grant cut me a look that was equal parts incredulity and derision, as though my question was the most ridiculous thing he'd ever heard. “Chris got canned.”

“Chris?” I put my pen to my pad. “What's his full name?”

“Christopher Vogel.”

“And the girlfriend?” I asked.

“Serena Herrera.”

Jackson and I wrote the names down before she continued. “You think Vogel could have been one of the robbers?”

“Could be. The guy standing at the doors was about his size.”

The detective eyed Dawson for a moment, her head tilting slightly as she appeared to be assessing him. “Who else have you had run-ins with?”

“There was a woman who came in last week complaining about overdraft fees assessed on her account,” Grant said. “She went ballistic, screaming and hollering like a crazy person. Security had to escort her out to the parking lot.”

“What set her off?” I asked.
Could it have been your sparkling wit?

“Hell, if I know,” Grant retorted. “All I did was suggest she brush up on her basic math skills and she lost it.”

Jackson held her pen poised above her pad. “What was her name?”

“Yolanda Wilkes. I remember because I made a note of the incident in her account records.”

Both the detective and I wrote down this name also.

“Anyone else?” Jackson asked.

“A guy who came in two or three days ago claimed I'd shorted him a hundred dollars on a withdrawal.”

“Did you?” I asked.

Grant snorted derisively. “Of course not. I don't make mistakes.”

Jackson skewered him with a look. “We
all
make mistakes on occasion, Mr. Dawson.”

“Well,
I
didn't. The manager counted my till and it was perfect. Not a penny out of balance. I think the guy who said I'd shortchanged him was some kind of con artist.”

“You remember his name?” Jackson asked.

“Sure do. It was Arthur Scheck.”

“Any others who might have a bone to pick with you?” the detective asked.

“That's all I can think of. Here at the bank anyway.”

There were likely plenty of other people outside the bank who found Grant Dawson less than appealing. I had a feeling he was at the top of more than one shit list.

“Is Serena here today?” I asked.

“Yeah.”

Jackson jerked her head toward the door. “Go get her for us.”

Dawson stood and walked out of the room.

Jackson shook her head. “That boy thinks quite highly of himself.”

“That's for sure.” I glanced back at the names on my notepad. Christopher Vogel. Yolanda Wilkes. Arthur Scheck. “You think one of the people he named could be involved in the robbery?”

She raised a brow. “What do you think?”

“You're going to make me reason it out myself, huh?”

“Consider it detective training.”

I mulled over the few details we'd collected so far. “The letter did seem to be directed to a male teller,” I said. “So holding up Grant c-could have been a personal, premeditated choice. Then again, the robbers may have simply cased the place earlier this morning, realized a male teller was working the window closest to the doors, and put the note together right before the robbery.”

Jackson pushed the paper toward me. “Is the glue fresh?”

I carefully picked the note up by the edges, held the page to my nose, and breathed in. Hey, my K-9 partner wasn't the only one who could sniff out clues. My olfactory senses failed to detect the scent of fresh glue. I set the letter down and gave the red D and black R in “Dearest” a nudge with my pen. Neither moved, firmly affixed to the page. “The glue is dry.”

Still, that didn't rule out the possibility that they'd prepared the note in advance and hastily added the greeting this morning. The smooth, flat set of the cut-out letters and the lack of telltale ooze around their edges told me the thieves had used a glue stick instead of liquid glue. Glue stick adhesive dried relatively quickly.

I continued to speculate out loud. “I suppose the bank robbers could be strangers, as Dawson claimed. But he seemed awfully calm for someone who'd just been robbed. You think maybe he's in on the heist?”

The detective slid the note into a clear plastic evidence bag. “What I think, Officer Luz, is that anything is possible.”

Chapter Eleven

Floored

Brigit

While the humans continued their conversation, Brigit lay on the floor of the conference room, wondering if she could reach that remnant of pink frosted donut that lay forgotten under an empty chair on the other side of the table. It looked a day or two old, dry and crusty with the glaze flaking off. But dogs weren't picky eaters. Heck, she'd once gobbled down a week-old, brick-hard slice of pepperoni pizza her first owner had left in a delivery box on his coffee table. She'd enjoyed every last bit of it, too.

She slunk toward the treat, pulling her leash taught, and stretched her neck toward the donut.

Got it.

Yum!

Chapter Twelve

In Your Parking Lot and in Your Face

Smokestack

“There!” Smokestack cried, pointing through the windshield at a building just up the road. “Pull in there!”

“The police station?” the Conductor asked. “Are you nuts?”

Nuts
, no.
Stoned
, yes. His partners-in-crime seemed unnecessarily tense and uptight. They could benefit from a relaxing toke or two.

“Come on!” pleaded Smokestack, snickering again. “It'll be a hoot and a half!”

The Conductor eyed the Switchman, who shrugged and said. “It's the last place anyone would expect to find this bus.”

“I suppose you're right. Besides, we don't have much time. That chopper's nearly on us.” The Conductor slowed and turned the bus into the police station parking lot, pulling to a stop at the end of the lot next to a blue Smart Car.

The Conductor opened the door with another
whoosh
, left the keys in the ignition, and scurried down to the asphalt. Thankfully, the large bus would block the view of any security cameras that might be on the building.

Smokestack hopped down after him, turned, and lifted his chin. “There's a gas station with a food mart two blocks over.”

“So?” the Switchman said as they quickly headed across the street.

“So let's get a beer.” He also wanted a hot dog and barbecue potato chips and Oreos. Thanks to the marijuana he'd ingested this morning, he had a raging case of the munchies. Hey, was that where the term “
pot
belly” came from?

“A beer?” The Conductor glanced at his watch. “It's not even noon yet.”

The Switchman frowned. “It would be better if we split up as soon as possible. Like you said last night, the cops will never be able to connect us, to figure out that we know each other. Not unless they catch us together.”

Smokestack issued a derisive snort. “Weren't you the guy who said he was sick of playing by the rules? Of being a candy ass? Besides, we took that bank for three or four grand and got away with a bus. Hell, man! That's cause to celebrate!”

Chapter Thirteen

On Track

Megan

A young woman with latte-color skin, dark hair, and brown eyes bright with anxiety stepped into the doorway of the conference room. “I'm Serena,” she said, her voice tight and squeaky with barely controlled emotion. “Grant said you wanted to see me now?”

Detective Jackson waved her in. “Take a seat.”

Serena slid into the chair Grant had vacated.

Jackson launched right into her questions. “Did you recognize the robbers, Serena?”

“No,” the young woman replied, her lip quivering. “I didn't recognize either of them.”

“Either?” I repeated. “So you saw only two men?”

She nodded.

“What did they look like?” Jackson asked.

“It's hard to say. It all happened so fast and—” She paused to wipe an errant tear from her cheek. “I was so scared. I was afraid they'd shoot us all.”

Jackson nodded in understanding. “Just do your best, hon. That's all we ask.”

“Okay.” Serena chewed her lip in concentration. “Both were white. The one who came to the counter was short. He was wearing a dark hoodie and mittens and a green hat made to look like a frog. He had his right hand in his pocket and was pointing a gun at Grant through the fabric. The one who stood at the doors was average height, I guess. He wore a plaid hat that came down over his ears. The kind that lumberjacks wear. He also wore sunglasses. He was holding some kind of rifle or shotgun. I'm not sure what kind exactly. I don't know much about guns.”

“How was he holding the gun?” Jackson asked.

“In both hands.” Serena stood so she could demonstrate. “Pointed up and to the left. Like this.” She demonstrated what was commonly known as the ready carry.

“Was his finger on the trigger?” I asked.

“No.” She slid back into her seat. “One hand was wrapped around the barrel and the other hand was gripping the wider part behind the trigger.”

“The stock,” I supplied.

“Right.”

While current Texas law prohibited the open carry of handguns, rifles and shotguns could be carried into banks. As long as the gun was legally owned, the man had violated no gun laws. He'd obviously caused the tellers and customers to drop a load of shit bricks, though.

“Was the man with the gun also wearing mittens?” the detective asked. “Or some kind of gloves?”

Serena looked down for a moment, as if trying to conjure up an image of the man. “I'm pretty sure he was wearing a pair of leather gloves. Brown ones.”

Jackson tilted her head. “How can you be sure the man at the door was with the other in the frog hat? Is it possible the man came to the bank on his own and just happened to stumble upon the robbery?”

“I don't think so,” Serena said. “The man with the gun stood by the doors until the other guy left with the bag of money. Then he walked out right after him. That means they were together, doesn't it?”

Jackson bobbed her head. “That's a reasonable assumption.”

“Were the men thin or heavy?” I asked.

Serena's brow furrowed. “It's hard to say for sure because they were both wearing loose clothes. But the guy who came to the counter seemed to have thick legs so I'd guess he was heavy.”

Jackson gazed for a moment at the young woman. “Grant Dawson says Christopher Vogel attempted to assault him after Vogel discovered you and Dawson had been seeing each other.”

Serena's eyes darkened, and she lowered her head to look down at her lap. Grant seem to have no regrets, but at least Serena seemed to feel remorseful about how she'd handled things. “I should've told Chris up front but, to be honest, I wasn't sure how serious Grant was about me. Grant goes through a lot of girls.”

Jackson pointed out the obvious conclusion. “And you wanted to hedge your bets. See if things worked out with Grant before breaking things off with Chris.”

BOOK: Upholding the Paw
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