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The Sleeping Doll (Kathryn Dance 1)

Page 13

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The MCSO uniform was typical khaki, but O'Neil often dressed soft, and today he was in a navy suit, with a tieless dark shirt, charcoal gray, matching about half the hair on his head. The brown eyes, beneath low lids, moved slowly as they examined the map of the area. His physique was columnar and his arms thick, from genes and from playing tug of war with muscular seafood in Monterey Bay when time and the weather allowed him to get out his boat.

O'Neil nodded a greeting to TJ and Sandoval.

"Any word on Juan?" Dance asked.

"Hanging in there." He and Millar worked together frequently and went fishing once a month or so. Dance knew that on the drive here he'd been in constant touch with the doctors and Millar's family.

The California Bureau of Investigation has no central dispatch unit to contact radio patrol cars, emergency vehicles or boats, so O'Neil arranged for the Sheriff's Office central communications operation to relay the information about the missing Worldwide Express truck to its own deputies and the Highway Patrol. He told them that within a few minutes the escapee's truck would be the only one not stopped at a gas station.

O'Neil took a call and nodded, walking to the map. He tucked the phone between ear and shoulder, picked up a pack of self-adhesive notes featuring butterflies and began sticking them up.

More roadblocks, Dance realized.

He hung up. "They're on Sixty-Eight, One-Eighty-Three, the One-oh-One. . . . We've got the back roads to Hollister covered, and Soledad and Greenfield. But if he gets into the Pastures of Heaven, it'll be tough to spot a truck, even with a chopper--and right now fog's a problem."

The "Pastures of Heaven" was the name given by John Steinbeck in a book of the same title to a rich, orchard-filled valley off Highway 68. Much of the area around Salinas was flat, low farmland, but you didn't have to go far to get into trees. And nearby too was the rugged Castle Rock area, whose cliffs, bluffs and trees would be excellent hiding places.

Sandoval said, "If Pell's partner didn't drive the getaway wheels, where is he?"

TJ offered, "Rendezvous point somewhere?"

"Or staying around," Dance said, nodding out the window.

"What?" the prosecutor asked. "Why'd he do that?"

"To find out how we're running the case, what we know. What we don't know."

"That sounds a little . . . elaborate, don't you think?"

TJ laughed, pointing toward the smoldering cars. "I'd say that's a pretty good word for this whole shebang."

O'Neil suggested, "Or maybe he wants to slow us up."

Dance said, "That makes sense too. Pell and his partner don't know we're on to the truck. For all they know we still think he's in the area. The partner could make it look like Pell's nearby. Maybe take a shot at somebody up the street, maybe even set off another device."

"Shit. Another firebomb?" Sandoval grimaced.

Dance called the security chief and told him there was a possibility the partner was still around and could be a threat.

But, as it turned out, they had no time to speculate about whether or not the partner was nearby. The plan about the Worldwide Express trucks had paid off. A radio call to O'Neil from MCSO dispatch reported that two local police officers had found Daniel Pell and were presently in pursuit.

*

The dark green delivery truck kicked up a rooster tail of dust on the small road.

The uniformed officer who was driving the Salinas Police squad car, a former jarhead back from the war, gripped the wheel of the cruiser as if he were holding on to the rudder of a ten-foot skiff in twelve-foot seas.

His partner--a muscular Latino--gripped the dashboard in one hand and the microphone in the other. "Salinas Police Mobile Seven. We're still with him. He turned onto a dirt road off Natividad about a mile south of Old Stage."

"Roger . . . Central to Seven, be advised, subject is probably armed and dangerous."

"If he's armed, of course he's dangerous," the driver said and lost his sunglasses when the car caught air after a run-in with a massive bump. The two officers could hardly see the road ahead; the Worldwide truck was churning up dust like a sandstorm.

"Central to Seven, we've got all available units en route."

"Roger that."

Backup was a good idea. The rumors were that Daniel Pell, the crazed cult leader, this era's Charles Manson, had gunned down a dozen people at the courthouse, had set fire to a bus filled with schoolchildren, had slashed his way through a crowd of prospective jurors, killing four. Or two. Or eight. Whatever the truth, the officers wanted as much help as they could get.



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