Page 8 of Red Rooster
Ashely sighed and slipped the phone into the pocket of her robe. “What the hell’s going on over at that place?”
“I don’t–”
The back door flew open with a shower of splinters and the mutedthudof a police-issue battering ram busting the lock to pieces.
Years of training honed to instinct compelled him to move, and for the first time in over a year, his body actually responded. He picked Ashely up around the waist, tucked her in tight to his chest, and launched into a tuck-and-roll that carried them up over the breakfast bar and down to the floor on the other side. Through it all, Ash didn’t make a sound, so he heard the thump of the door landing on the kitchen floor, the bark of angry male voices, the treads of a dozen pairs of boots crunching over debris, and the particular click of riot gear shifting on the human body as suited-up men poured into the house.
He took a moment to get his bearings, kneeling on the tile with Ashley caged in by his arms. She’d dropped her phone, and had one hand clapped over her mouth, breath whistling through the gaps in her fingers.
“I need a gun,” he whispered in her ear.
She pulled her hand away enough to say, “Upstairs.”
Shit.
“You two behind the wall, get up,” one of the intruders commanded. “Nice and slow. Hands behind your heads.”
Weaponless, and probably harboring a fugitive, there was nothing to do but comply.
Rooster stood up first, slow as ordered, hands clenched together behind his head. He kept himself between the men and Ashley, a barrier they didn’t like.
Facing off from them was a knot of guys in helmets and all-black tac gear, armed with a combination of rifles, handguns, clear riot shields, and batons. Facial details were lost behind the clear face shields of their helmets. Too many for the small kitchen to hold, they spilled out into the hallway and the attached living room – where the redheaded girl had been only moments before. She wasn’t there now, and Rooster was strangely glad.
“Separate,” the closest guy, the leader, said, motioning to Rooster and Ashley with the end of his baton.
Rooster didn’t move; he’d shielded Deshawn before, and he would shield his wife now.
But Ash hedged away a few steps, palms facing the cops, and said, in her calmest, most commanding voice, “Problem, officers?”
“Where’s the girl?” the leader asked. He motioned over his shoulder and three of his boys broke off and headed down the hall, toward the front of the house, floorboards popping under their boots.
Rooster wasn’t a cop, so he would admit that he didn’t know the ins and outs of raid protocol, but several things stood out to him:
For starters, the girl was just that: a girl. Young and slender as a reed, and so obviously not a threat, and these guys were tricked out like they were busting up Taliban spider holes. An unarmed teenager in white pajamas shouldn’t have brought out the big guns.
Then there were the cops themselves: there was no lettering on their vests. Whether Homeland, or FBI, CIA, DEA, or even just NYPD, they should have had their agency printed in bright white across their backs.
Then there was all that stuff Ash had found about the Ingraham Institute on her phone.
Throw in the fact that Rooster’s internal alarms were going off like air raid sirens, and none of this sat right with him.
“Are you people deaf?” the leader asked. “Where’s the girl?”
“What girl?” Ashely asked, smooth as silk. “It’s just us, and my daughter. You’re the ones who broke down my door, so maybe you’d like to show me a warrant, or the next time we speak, we’ll be in court.”
Desiree!Rooster remembered with a jolt. Shit, those three guys were at the foot of the stairs. Surely they wouldn’t…
The leader took an exaggerated, aggressive step forward, baton just a handspan from Ashley’s face. “Shut up,” he said, calm, expecting to be obeyed, and all the more threatening for it.
More of his men branched off. In the living room, Rooster heard a chair overturn.
He said, “Which agency are you with?”
The baton came to his face, and hung there, a silent warning.
Thiswasn’t right.
“Found her!” someone called, and a moment later two men came back down the hall into the kitchen, dragging the girl between them. She resisted like a little wild cat, thrashing and struggling, kicking at them with her socked feet. They overpowered her easily.
Table of Contents
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