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Vanishing Point: Warner & Lopez, #0
Vanishing Point: Warner & Lopez, #0
Vanishing Point: Warner & Lopez, #0
Ebook197 pages2 hoursWarner & Lopez

Vanishing Point: Warner & Lopez, #0

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UFOs are all in the imagination. Aren't they?

In 2014, Ethan Warner finds himself on the hook for a homicide near Kankakee, Illinois. Although unarmed at the time, witnesses swear they saw him shoot and kill a bail runner on a dark night on a bridge just outside the town. Jailed and facing twenty to life, Ethan's only hope is that his partner, Nicola Lopez, can solve the crime before he's sent down.

Lopez traces clues to the tiny town of Cairo, Illinois, and a secretive cult rumored to be hiding in the backwoods. But before she can crack the case Ethan is bailed by a mysterious woman desperate for his help. Her conditions are simple; rescue her son from the Cairo cult, or she'll rescind the bail and Ethan's back inside.

His hand forced, Ethan skips bail and heads south. With the police and Sheriffs on his tail, it's a race against time to figure out why Ethan was framed for homicide. But the forests of Cairo hide a secret that's beyond human comprehension, and nothing Ethan and Nicola have seen yet can prepare them for it...

Warner & Lopez prequel novel, 200 pages.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherDean Crawford
Release dateNov 12, 2018
ISBN9781386497912
Vanishing Point: Warner & Lopez, #0
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    Vanishing Point - Dean Crawford

    VANISHING POINT

    © 2018 Dean Crawford

    Publisher: Fictum Ltd

    The right of Dean Crawford to be identified as author of this Work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

    All rights reserved.

    Dean Crawford Books

    I

    Manteno, Illinois

    2014

    Ethan Warner knew that he’d found his target. Sometimes, gut instinct was all you needed. That, and the aura of discomfort that enshrouded the guilty. He’d seen it before in Iraq and Afghanistan during his service with the United States Marines, the shifty glances and hesitant footsteps of insurgents trying to get close enough to American troops to detonate whatever hellish device they had constructed.

    A large Greyhound bus sat amid the glow of streetlights on a parking lot on 95th outside Princeton Park, forty miles south of Chicago as Ethan strolled up and boarded it. The bus interior was warm compared to the chill night air outside. He had a ticket for Missouri, a hundred bucks and change from the kiosk on the I–57 running south. A glance down the Greyhound and he knew he’d earn it back within a few minutes.

    Ethan had picked up his target’s trail out of Rockdale after a call–in from an informer he ran in Joliet, south–west of Chicago. Dwayne Austin, forty–two, out of Cicero, was on the run for multiple aggravated assaults and burglaries on the south–side from a couple of years back. After a botched robbery of a convenience store in Englewood, when a courageous cashier had stood up to Austin’s attack and been beaten half to death for his troubles, Austin had been arrested and jailed at Cook County only to be bailed for a remarkable twenty thousand dollars. Predictably, Austin had skipped bail. Local law enforcement had been on the lookout for him but Ethan had been keen to beat them to the chase and collect the bounty. Thing was, Austin had then vanished into thin air and not been seen for almost a year.

    Figuring that Austin, a man with family in the windy city, would lie low for a while before returning home, Ethan had put the word out. After a twelve month wait, he had been rewarded with the sighting of Austin boarding a Greyhound for Arkansas via Missouri. Ethan had no idea who had bailed Austin, a man with no known connection to big money, but he sure as hell didn’t care right now. Austin was looking at five to ten inside, but if Austin crossed the border into Missouri he could wave from across the state line and there was nothing Ethan could do about it. Six foot two and heavily built, Austin wasn’t going to be a walkover, but Ethan had a trick or two up his sleeve. He made his way to a vacant seat, walking past Austin without looking at him but checking him out none the less.

    Austin’s face was mostly hidden behind a baseball cap pulled low over his eyes, but Ethan could see his neck where a cheaply deleted Outlaws tattoo scarred the skin. Austin had been a member of the motorcycle gang for some years, although they now considered him too hot to handle and had booted him out a year prior to the assaults and burglaries. That was when Austin had disappeared, completely vanished from trace until the recent reappearance in Chicago.

    Ethan took a seat two rows back from where Austin slouched and surveyed the rest of the bus. There was maybe a dozen or so people aboard, two young children with their mother Ethan’s biggest concern. Trick was to get Austin off the bus without risking anyone else’s safety – Austin was known to be violent and taking a hostage was probably something he would try if he was cornered. Worse, he was known to carry firearms. Ethan couldn’t afford a firefight on a bus even if he was carrying, which he wasn’t, but there was no guarantee some other have–a–go hero wouldn’t pull a piece and get involved.

    The bus pulled out and Ethan watched Austin carefully. The man had been feigning sleep while the bus was in the lot, keeping his head low, but now as it moved slowly out and accelerated onto the interstate he came back to life. Ethan hid behind the headrest of the seat in front and watched surreptitiously as Austin pulled out a roll of bank notes and began counting them.

    Ethan figured that Austin must have robbed someone or someplace in the last few hours, maybe even before boarding the bus. His recorded posessions at Cook County Jail amounted to a few dollars in change and cigarettes, nothing like the fat wad of twenties he was caressing in his hands like a newborn child.

    Ethan settled in to watch as the Greyhound rejoined the I–57. Soon, the trap he had laid for Austin would be sprung.

    *

    Kankakee, Illinois

    Nicola Lopez sat in a flame–red Corvette with her sneakers propped up on the dash in front of her and her cell phone resting between her thighs. The screen glowed blue in the darkness, her car pulled in and out of sight of the I–57 where she lay in wait. Dressed for the chase, she knew from Ethan’s texts that Dwayne Austin was aboard the Greyhound as were numerous innocent folks. Priority number one was to get Austin off the bus without him being able to take hostages or otherwise hurt bystanders.

    Traffic streamed by along the darkened highway as she waited. There wasn’t much to the job but the big payoff at the end, two thousand bucks a huge haul for one low–life bail runner. Most all perps they pulled were worth a fraction of that, although there were plenty of them. The greatest shame was how many had once been normal, law–abiding citizens who had then descended into crime as a result of addiction to powerful painkillers after automobile or industrial accidents. Lopez had lost count of how many opioid–addicted runners she’d apprehended who had once been lawyers, business owners, military personnel, even a couple of bail–bondsmen running a fentanyl ring out of the south–side.

    She glanced at her reflection in the car mirror, long dark hair pinned behind her head in a pony tail and dark, almost black eyes staring back at her. She’d come a long way from Guanajuato in Mexico all those years ago, and through the Washington MPD to here, sweeping up the scum of life in the windy city.

    Her phone buzzed in her lap and she saw a message from Ethan.

    Two minutes out.

    The jump was easy. Lopez would slow the bus down to a stop using her Corvette, and then board the bus while Ethan closed in on Austin from behind, effectively pinning him between them where they could overpower him. Neither she nor Ethan were armed, in accordance with Illinois’ state gun laws. They were actually qualified to carry concealed, but neither did given the difficulty in dealing with exchanges of gunfire when perps were found to be carrying. The law was a minefield and a single misplaced shot could bring legal hell or, worse, an innocent fatality that neither she nor Ethan wanted on their conscience.

    Lopez started the Corvette’s engine. This was going to have to be swift and efficient, bringing the Greyhound to a halt rapidly but smoothly to avoid alerting Austin to the sting.

    Moments later, the Greyhound bus roared past and Lopez gunned the engine, the Corvette lurching out of hiding and screeching onto the freeway.

    ‘The game’s afoot,’ she murmured as she saw the Greyhound’s tail lights ahead.

    ***

    II

    Ethan glanced out of his window as the bus cruised along the highway, and right on time he saw Lopez’s red corvette move out. He heard the big engine growl as it accelerated past the bus before moving in front of it. They had practiced this manoeuvre a few times in the past to get bail runners out of moving vehicles, and it had worked like clockwork every time.

    The bus slowed, the driver changing down through the gears. Ethan watched the road alongside the bus and waited for the tell–tale flashing of the indicator lights that would confirm to him that the bus was going to pull over. They were right outside the town of Kankakee, the river probably somewhere just ahead of them, and out here they would quickly overpower Austin and get him into their vehicle. Ethan figured Lopez would aim to stop the bus on the bridge over the river, limiting Austin’s escape routes.

    Ethan prepared to move, ready for anything as the bus slowed further and the indicator lights began blinking in the darkness. He carried two pairs of metal cuffs, the second pair for Austin’s ankles if he became too much of a handful, and Lopez also carried pepper spray to help incapacitate their mark.

    He saw Austin look up as the bus began to slow down and pull in to the side of the freeway. He’d been on his cell for a couple of minutes, talking quietly enough not to be heard by the other passengers. Alert but not apparently concerned, Austin put the cell away and watched intently as though he were considering what was happening. Then, quite suddenly, he leaped out of his seat and bolted for the front of the bus.

    Ethan got up and moved after him but he stayed silent, slipping down the center aisle as the bus slowed and the brakes hissed as it came to a stop. The bus driver saw Austin rush up on him in one of the mirrors and was about to cry out a warning when Austin lunged past him and hit the switch to open the doors. The double doors hissed apart and Ethan closed in without making a sound as Austin leaped from the bus and into the night just as Lopez came sprinting to the doors.

    Lopez ducked down as Austin’s bulk tumbled from the bus, and she rolled into his legs. The towering convict hurtled over her and lost his balance as Lopez drove up from the thighs and flipped the big man over.

    Austin crashed down onto the asphalt but he rolled with surprising grace and came up on one foot as Lopez whirled to face him. Lopez jabbed out with one fist to strike Austin on the nose and briefly blind him, but the big thug smashed her arm aside and swung one fist into her chest. Lopez slammed into the side of the bus as Austin turned and ran, just as Ethan leaped out of the doors.

    Ethan broke into a full run in pursuit as Lopez coughed and slumped against the bus, struggling to catch her breath and get back on her feet. She threw a can of pepper spray up into the air and Ethan deftly caught it as he sprinted past. Austin was running hard out into the night across a bridge that spanned the Kankakee River.

    ‘There’s nowhere to run, Dwayne!’ Ethan yelled.

    The convict didn’t reply as he ran, Ethan closing the gap steadily as he found his pace, the pepper spray clutched in one hand. He didn’t know if Lopez was behind him but he figured that she was out of the count right now after taking Austin’s punch.

    Austin made it out to the center of the bridge, running hard. A golf course and woods were ahead to the left and it looked like he might make it into the darkness. Ethan cursed to himself as he ran. The bus driver would call the police and they would search the area, and with helicopters and dogs it would only be a matter of time before they found Austin and Ethan could kiss goodbye to two thousand bucks.

    Ethan tried something else.

    ‘Don’t make me shoot Dwayne! Stop now and get down on the ground!’

    To Ethan’s surprise, Austin heard the warning above the roar of passing traffic. He slowed and put his hands in the air, his chest heaving as he turned to face Ethan. He was standing alongside the edge of the bridge, the black waters of the Kankakee River sliding by fifty feet below them.

    Ethan slowed, the pepper spray can in one hand. He pointed it at Dwayne as though it were a gun, hoping against hope that in the darkness the dim–witted thug would not realise it wasn’t a pistol. With no lights on the bridge and only the flashes of brilliance from passing headlights, it was tough to see anything at all.

    ‘Face down on the ground!’ Ethan yelled, to keep up the pretence.

    ‘Don’t shoot!’ Dwayne yelled in panic.

    Ethan, surprised, dropped his voice.

    ‘Easy, nobody’s gonna get shot just as long as you do as I say.’

    ‘I said don’t shoot!’

    Dwayne’s voice rose higher, echoing into the night. Ethan hesitated, froze on the spot as some instinct told him that something was going terribly wrong.

    ‘I’m not going to shoot you,’ he said. ‘I just want to…’

    ‘No!’

    Dwayne Austin’s last word was twisted high with terror, his eyes wide as he stared at Ethan, and then he turned and hurled himself over the side of the bridge. Ethan stared in shock as the big man vanished into the darkness, and he dashed to the side of the bridge to hear but not see Austin crash into the black water.

    ‘What the hell?’ Ethan uttered.

    Lopez staggered up to him, holding her bruised chest and fighting for breath as she stared down at the water below them.

    ‘What the hell was that?’ she uttered.

    ‘I don’t know,’ Ethan said as he grabbed his cell phone and began dialing, the bounty forgotten. ‘He’s not going to last long in the water. I’m calling an ambulance. I don’t want this guy dying on us and…’

    The sound of sirens cut Ethan off, and he looked up to see four squad cars tearing down the freeway toward them with lights flashing blue and red. The cars screeched to

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