When he reached the porch, Gundersson raised the glasses. He could see the feathers in Roland’s hand as Wendy reached for them.

Fox must have been raiding the henhouse.

The couple went back inside the cabin. It was time for breakfast. Gundersson was hungry himself. Eggs sounded real good.

But he’d be eating out of a can instead.

He made his way down the tree and, taking a hint from the fox, he navigated a new route back to his camp so that he wouldn’t create a trail that Roland might follow.

Sly as a fox. I hope I’m quick enough to dodge four bullets when my time comes.

CHAPTER TEN

“Morgan!”

Mark snapped alert. His Basic Law Enforcement Training instructor was in his ear, leaning into the sedan.

“Yes?” Mark asked, avoiding the automatic “sir” he was compelled to add. While most of the students were in their early twenties, Mark was close to the same age as Derrick Frady, a former sheriff’s deputy who’d lost his job during a political housecleaning. Frady, who made up for his diminutive stature with a militaristic zeal, was of course nicknamed “Frady Cat” by the students, but none of them dared call him that to his square, flinty face.

“The suspect just ran another car off the road during the chase. It looks like a probable PI. What do you do?”

“PI” was the police code for “personal injury.” Mark was faced with the choice of continuing his pursuit of the suspect or serving the public he was sworn to protect.

Well, I haven’t sworn anything yet. I still have another two hundred hours of training to go.

Mark figured that a real cop faced with such a dilemma would punch the accelerator and indulge in the adrenaline rush of a high-speed chase. Because that was Mark’s first impulse, he figured it was probably the wrong one.

“What’s the Ten-Twenty of my backup?” Mark asked. He was in the back parking lot of Durham Tech, behind the wheel of a dummied-up police cruiser. The car sported a two-way radio, siren, bar lights, and all the accessories of a real cop car. It even had the black-and-white, two-toned paint job, although it bore no emblem or insignia of any kind.

“Half a mile behind, but the neighboring department has a road block a mile ahead,” Frady said.

“I pull off pursuit and check on the collision victims,” Mark said. “Calling it in, of course.”

Frady pulled a twisted crease in one side of his mouth, an expression that passed for a smile. “Serve and protect,” he said. “The first word is serve.” He slapped the top of the sedan. “Good enough.”

A series of orange cones were arranged across the empty parking lot. Mark had negotiated the obstacle course in just under three minutes, burning a little rubber off the tires but managing not to tip any cones. He’d scored an 87, which wouldn’t have him busting Vin Diesel in a Fast and Furious sequel anytime soon, but at least he hadn’t skidded into the chain-link fence that surrounded the lot.

Several students waited their turns on a weedy courtyard between the lot and main campus building. They were all dressed in the loose black athletic pants and gray T-shirts that bore the BLET logo. The outfit was part of the indoctrination, a sort of junior varsity uniform to prepare them for blues and badges. Two women were in the class, and they were both as tough as twisted rawhide.

Mark had not beaten the women at anything yet, although he suspected it would be his turn to shine when they trained for presenting evidence in court. If only he could keep his head straight and concentrate.

“All right, Morgan, we need a braking maneuver and a full turn in pursuit,” Frady said.

“Which way?”

Frady smirked. “Listen to the radio, rookie. Now wheel it to the start.”

While Mark navigated the cruiser to the end of the hundred-yard lot, he eyed the crumbling asphalt. The roads wouldn’t be in any better shape once he pinned on a badge, given the sad state of infrastructure funding. Fortunately, government leaders didn’t dare cut law enforcement budgets, so he should be able to land a job even if he didn’t make top of the class.

Frady had a short-range CB radio system set up in the courtyard. The receiver in the cruiser was set to a channel used infrequently but sometimes prone to interference. Frady’s reasoning was that real-life emergency communications often featured overstepping and crowding, so an officer should be skilled in filtering out the noise.

“How’s it looking, Unit Seventeen?” Frady’s broadcast voice issued from the dashboard speaker, using Mark’s assigned number to simulate on-duty patrol.

“Looks like asphalt’s a little-”

“All units, Ten-Thirty-two!” Frady barked. “Armed robbery suspect heading west on Tree Street.”

“Unit Seventeen in pursuit,” Mark said into his mike, gunning the engine and accelerating. “Tree Street” was the name of the straightaway where the students practiced accelerating, braking, and dodging obstacles. The route had a series of four exits, each at a different angle and all named after various species of trees.

As Mark pushed the cruiser to sixty, he fully expected Frady to throw the 90-degree left turn at him, which was the most difficult. He braced for the fake name of “Dogwood Avenue” to come over the radio.

“Suspect in a maroon SUV, armed and dangerous,” Frady said, spitting the words like staccato bullets.

“This is Unit Seventeen. I’m Ten-Eighty with suspect in sight,” Mark replied, talking fast but steadily. Even though the situation was make-believe, he couldn’t help the surge of adrenaline coursing through him. Part of the drill was to maintain control with only one hand on the wheel, the other busy manipulating the mike.

Mark glanced to the side where Frady stood by the radio unit, the students gathered around as if part of some frat prank.

He zoomed past Dogwood. Goddamned Frady. Trying to show me up. He’ll probably throw Birch at me just to keep me off balance.

“Suspect turning onto Cedar!” Frady said.

The fuck?

Mark slammed on the brakes, and despite triggering the anti-lock mechanism, the rubber bit at the pavement with a squeal of resistance. Cedar was two streets back, the first left turn.

“Suspect still in sight, Unit Seventeen?” Frady asked, artificially maintaining urgency.

Instead of replying, Mark dropped the mike, yanked the wheel wildly to the left, and cut a donut. I’ll show that asswipe.

As he leaned into the turn, fighting inertia, his body pulsed with a rush of warmth. The glow was exhilarating and heightened his senses. The tires wailed in a symphonic scream, the surrounding fence glinted like sunlight dappling the surface of uneasy water, and the vehicle was like a sled riding soft snow beneath him. He could even smell the stale cigarette smoke from some prior student’s law-breaking indulgence.

He rolled out of the circle, startled by his own mastery of the move. He’d not even broken the painted boundaries of Tree Street. By the time the wheels quit complaining, he was already up to forty and headed for Cedar, which was now on the right.

“Goddamned, Morgan,” Frady said, breaking protocol. “What in the hell are you doing?”

Mark felt the grin fixed on his face like a skeleton staring stupidly at its own epitaph. He yanked the mike into his fist by its cord and thumbed it on. “I’m Ten-Eighty on Tree Street,” Mark said, wondering if the students could see him through the tinted windshield.

Mark realized he’d already botched the assignment, because he’d forgotten to engage the bar lights and siren. Not that the criminal cared, and it wasn’t like Mark needed to warn vehicles in a deserted parking lot.

He communed with the roar of the engine, 250 horses galloping toward hell. As he thrust the accelerator to the floor, he was dimly aware of the unexpected pleasure of power. In high school, while the jocks were picking up chicks in muscle cars and hot rods, he’d driven a rusty Toyota, reading Forbes instead of Car and Driver. Now, here he was, hunched over the wheel and wanting more juice.

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