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  POLICE PROCEDURALS RESPECTED BY LAW ENFORCEMENT.™

  “Usually it’s hard for me to read cop books without picking them apart, but I read the entire Madison Knight series and I loved them all! The way Carolyn wrote Madison describes me and the way I work and even my personal life to a t.”

  — Deputy Rebecca Hendrix, LeFlore County Sheriff’s Department Poteau, Oklahoma, United States

  “Carolyn Arnold provides entertainment and accuracy.”

  —Michael D. Scott, Patrolman (Ret.) Castroville, Texas, United States

  “For Police procedurals that are painstakingly researched and accurately portrayed look no further than Carolyn Arnold’s works. The only way it gets more real than this is to leave the genre completely.”

  —Zach Fortier, Police Officer (Ret.) Colorado, United States

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  Deadly Impulse (Book 6 in the Detective Madison Knight series)

  Copyright © 2015 by Carolyn Arnold

  Excerpt from In the Line of Duty (Book 7 in the Detective Madison Knight series) copyright © 2016 by Carolyn Arnold

  www.carolynarnold.net

  November 2016 Hibbert & Stiles Publishing Inc. Edition

  This e-book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  All rights reserved. The scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the author constitutes unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the author.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  ISBN (e-book): 978-1-988353-32-6

  ISBN (paperback): 978-1-988353-12-8

  ISBN (hardcover): 978-1-988064-29-1

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  Chapter 1

  APPARENTLY NOT EVEN A DEAD body could stop traffic.

  Madison scanned the three-lane, westbound stream of cars. All of the drivers had somewhere to be. Even now, only a few braked to gawk at the investigation on the side of the road.

  Squad cars with flashing lights cordoned off the right lane, and the officers were diverting traffic over. This was the busiest intersection in Stiles. With a population of about half a million, seventy-five thousand people passed through this section every hour. Shopping plazas with franchise restaurants and grocery stores occupied two of the four corners; the other two had health care buildings, including one of the city’s three hospitals, the largest of which was on the northeast side of the intersection.

  Peace Liberty Hospital sat on acres of land with chain-link fencing running its perimeter. It was outside that fence that the deceased had been found.

  Cole Richards, the medical examiner, was working over the body as Crime Scene Unit investigators Cynthia Baxter and Mark Andrews were busy taking pictures and collecting anything that might be evidence.

  Cynthia headed up the crime lab. She was also Madison’s closest friend. Her strong genetics gave her the sexy librarian look, and she had wielded that power expertly over men until she got involved with Detective Lou Stanford of the Stiles PD. Now she was engaged. Three months had passed since the announcement, and Madison still hardly believed it some days.

  Mark was the only man on the forensics team and the youngest of its four members. Both elements served to make him the target of blame and teasing. All in good fun, of course, even if he might not think so at times. He had long, dark hair that he tied back into a ponytail at the nape of his neck. His hairstyle and other mannerisms had most of his colleagues curious about his sexual preference. To date, it remained an enigma.

  Madison lowered her sunglasses and took in the scene. It was midday and mid-July, and the sun was beating down with nondiscriminatory heat.

  The deceased was an elderly woman, her identity unknown and age estimated to be in her late sixties or early seventies. She had a short cut of gray hair and wore a T-shirt and a skirt. She sat in a wheelchair on the side of the road, her head dipped to her chest at an unnatural angle. That position alone would disclose to anyone paying enough attention that she was dead.

  It was a sad state when people were too preoccupied with their busy lives to notice an elderly woman on the side of the road like that. As it was, people would have passed in good quantity before the jogger who had found her had come along.

  His name was Erik Marsh, and he was sitting in the back of a squad car providing his statement to the officers who had arrived first on scene. She and Terry would talk to him shortly. The people who found a body were always the first suspects.

  The woman’s chair was on the grass beside the sidewalk, placing her closer to the fence than the road. Based on her thin arms and frail frame, she would have needed help to get there. A wooden board strapped to the back of the chair read, PUT AN END TO ABORTION.

  “Protesters in this area are not uncommon, but what makes an older lady come out and sit in the hot sun with a sign strapped to her?” She asked the rhetorical question of her partner, ruminating on what brought the woman to this point.

  Her partner, Terry Grant, was three years younger than she was and her total opposite. He loved running, and his hair was always perfect—rarely were one of his blond hairs out of place. Madison, on the other hand, hated mornings, so she stuck with a wake-up-and-wear-it cut. While she had a hard time making commitments, Terry was married to his sweetheart of just over five years. Annabelle was pregnant with their first child and due any day.

  Madison continued. “Not to mention, why would she get involved in such an issue? Her child-birthing days are behind her.”

  “She could have faced this issue earlier in life, or maybe a family member had? She could have been trying to keep things the way they used to be.”

  “When was abortion legalized?”

  “In most states, 1973. That would make her somewhere in her late twenties, early thirties, if she faced the issue herself.” Terry pulled his phone out and poised a finger over the screen. Despite Madison’s desire that he take notes on a lined pad, like other cops, he was adamant about embracing technology. His hardheaded determination was paying off, though, as his texting speed was improving.

  “There’s no way she came alone. Someone must’ve brought her here. But was she dead when they dropped her off, or did she die sitting in this heat? My grandmother always wore a hat on a hot day.” She paced a few steps and brainstormed aloud. “I don’t think this woman chose to come here.”

  “Good deduction,” Cole Richards stated matter-of-factly.

  It was the only way Richards talked to her these days. Madison’s friendship with him used to be one based upon mutual respect, but things had changed when she questioned his ruling on a prior case. From there, she had dug into his personal past. If she could go back and chan
ge things she would.

  Richards continued. “Her forearms show bruising to indicate she was in a struggle, but the cause of death still needs to be determined.”

  Madison’s gaze fell to the woman’s wrists, marred in hues of purple. Heat surged through her, the fire of adrenaline blending with rage.

  Richards’s dark skin pinched around his eyes as he squinted in the bright sun. “Based on the coloring of the contusions, they happened around the time of death.”

  “And when was that?”

  “I estimate time of death between twelve and eighteen hours ago. Her body is in full rigor.”

  “You can’t narrow it down any more than that?” Madison asked.

  Richards shook his head. “Liver temp will be off given the heat. I’ll know more once I get her back to the morgue and conduct a full autopsy.”

  “When will that be?”

  He shrugged. “I’ll let you know.”

  Madison nodded. “So you don’t think she died here?” She hoped his answer would instill some faith in humanity. Surely if she’d been here for that length of time, someone would have seen her before Marsh.

  “Again, I’ll let you know.”

  “What about lividity? Doesn’t it tell you anything?” Terry asked.

  Lividity was the settlement, or pooling, of blood in the body after death. If it showed in the woman’s buttocks and the backs of her thighs, she would have died in a sitting position. But that would’ve only told them she’d died in her chair, not her actual location.

  “I’ll let you know once I conduct the autopsy. As for where she died, I will leave that up to you to determine.” Richards signaled for his assistant, Milo, to come with the stretcher and body bag. Sadness always soured Madison’s gut when the black plastic came out, ready to wrap the dead in its dark cocoon.

  She turned to face the road. “Protesters against abortion are nothing new around here, but I have a hard time accepting that she was a regular. Why would a woman her age get involved with such a controversial issue?”

  “No idea. All I care about is finding out what happened to this poor woman.” He put his phone away, seemingly done with taking notes.

  Madison watched as the woman was sealed inside the bag. Memories of her grandmother rushed back and made her more determined to figure out all that happened to this woman. Her grandmother had been the greatest influence and supporter in Madison’s life. She had died of brain tumor a couple of years ago and had left everything to Madison, overlooking Madison’s mother and causing the already-existing rift between them to grow. Madison had turned down marriage and children for law enforcement, and that didn’t sit well with her mother.

  Madison gestured to the twentysomething man dressed in spandex who was talking with an officer and running a hand through his hair. “First, we’ll speak to Marsh over there. After that, we’ll show her picture to hospital personnel and see if they recognize her. If she was a regular protester or a patient, maybe we’ll get an ID.”

  Terry opened his mouth to speak, but before he could get any words out, Cynthia called over. “Maddy,” she said, holding up the protest sign in her gloved hands. “You might want to see this.”

  Madison and Terry stepped closer to the chair, and she followed the direction of Cynthia’s pointing finger. There was an imprint on the wheelchair: PROPERTY OF PEACE LIBERTY HOSPITAL.

  “We found it when we removed the sign,” Cynthia said. “It looks like there is a serial number on it, too. VG235. The hospital does loan out chairs, and I bet they track it and match it to patients by those numbers.”

  Madison’s heart sped up. Maybe this case would be an easy one to solve. In the least, having an ID was a good start. “Have Marsh brought in. We’ll get to him soon.”

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  Chapter 2

  “THE SERIAL NUMBER VG235 WAS assigned to Elaine Bush.” Jackie, the nurse behind the emergency room desk, looked over the glasses perched on her nose.

  “We’re going to need her address,” Madison said, just as a page went out over the intercom. It was in hospital code, but Madison understood every word. A patient was missing from the psychiatric ward.

  Jackie listened to the announcement and then asked, “Do you have a warrant?”

  Madison was aware of the blood heating in her veins. She swore she could sense every cell as it moved through her. Her earlobes warmed, too. She didn’t have the patience for a nurse on a power trip. Terry stood beside Madison, quietly letting her take the lead.

  The nurse accompanying Jackie kept glancing over. She had registered several patients in the time they had asked a few questions. The scowl on her face indicated she wasn’t too impressed having to handle the workload by herself. The waiting room was full to capacity with people of all ages, sporting all sorts of injuries.

  Jackie must have sensed her coworker’s attitude. She quickly glanced over at her and shrugged. She looked back at Madison. “I don’t understand why you need—”

  “Elaine Bush’s body was found outside of your hospital an hour ago,” Madison said.

  “Help me! He’s going to die.” A woman in her thirties ran to the counter, dragging a man behind her. Blood poured out of a head wound.

  Madison averted her eyes but not before she noticed the rebar projecting from his skull. And…all that blood.

  The bile rose in her throat, and her legs became unsteady. She set her hands on the counter for balance. Her head was spinning slightly.

  “Here.” A nurse ran over, placed the man in a wheelchair, and carted him off. This left behind the hysterical woman, tears streaming down her face, her arms flailing in wild arcs. A second nurse at the desk calmed the woman down enough to obtain her insurance information.

  When Madison looked back at Jackie, she tilted her head to the right. She wasn’t fazed by what had just transpired. Of course, for an ER nurse, she had probably seen similar, or even worse, before.

  Jackie’s eyes drifted to Madison’s hands. “You don’t like blood, do you?”

  Madison lifted them from the counter.

  “You’re a cop and you don’t like blood?” Jackie chuckled. “How do you—”

  “Never mind me. The woman in the wheelchair didn’t die of natural causes.” It might have been a push on the facts, but it was justifiable. The woman had bruising on her wrists. There had clearly been a struggle. The circumstances were strange, at best.

  The grin on Jackie’s face melted. She touched her neck, which had turned blotchy from nerves, a telltale sign for some people. “You’re telling me she was murdered?”

  “It hasn’t been ruled out.” Madison held eye contact. The pause allowed the smells of the hospital to permeate her sinuses—antiseptic cleaner and the fragrance of flowers, the smell of sickness and death. To think life was also brought into the world in this place…

  “All right. One minute.” Jackie pushed her glasses up her nose and put her attention back to the computer monitor. “Miss Bush lives at— That’s odd.”

  “What?” Madison asked.

  “There’s a note on her file. The wheelchair, VG235, must have been reassigned. She ended up with another one.”

  “What do you mean? I don’t understand.”

  Jackie drew her eyes from the monitor to meet Madison’s. “According to Elaine’s record, when they went to get her chair upon checkout, it wasn’t there.”

  “It wasn’t there? You’re telling me it disappeared? It seems a lot goes missing around here,” Madison said, remembering the announcement over the speakers.

  Jackie’s eyes glazed over in brief confusion, and then she pointed to the ceiling. “You understood the code.”

  Madison nodded.

  “I don’t know what else to tell you about the chair. It’s missing as far as we’re concerned.”

  “Well, we found it along with a dead woman.”
<
br />   Jackie’s blotchy skin was now a bright red. “From my end, there’s no way to know who she was if the chair had been missing.” Her words came out low, in an almost apologetic tone.

  “We’re going to need Elaine Bush’s number,” Madison said. They needed to confirm, without a doubt, that Elaine wasn’t the one in the chair.

  “Certainly.”

  The other nurse glared over at Jackie. “Watch what you’re doing,” she said.

  “Keri, a woman is dead.”

  “Still.” The other nurse shook her head and went back to another patient.

  “Here you go.” Jackie handed Madison a piece of paper with Bush’s phone number scribbled on it.

  Madison dialed it immediately. After three rings, a woman answered, identifying herself as Elaine Bush. After confirming some information with the woman, Madison hung up the phone.

  She stepped away from the counter, gesturing for Terry to come with her. “The woman in that chair was not Elaine Bush.”

  “So we find out who she was.”

  She nodded. “Unfortunately, it’s not going to be quite that simple. I’d wager she didn’t die where she was found, all things considered.”

  “You want to make a bet?” There was a spark in Terry’s eyes. It wouldn’t be the first time they made bets during an investigation. The regular was twenty dollars. While she’d like to claim she won the majority of the time, it wasn’t necessarily an honest assessment. But she wasn’t in the mood.

  “No, I don’t want to make a bet. I want to find a killer.”

  “Come on, I could use the extra money with the baby coming.”

  She sighed. “Fine.”

  “The regular amount?”

  “Sure, why not?”

  “You say the lady died elsewhere, and I say she died where she was found.” He extended his hand to seal the wager with a shake. She complied, and he was all business when he pulled his hand back. “Let’s go to the abortion clinic, see if they recognize the woman. You didn’t actually think it would be as easy as providing them a chair number and getting an ID, did you?”