Brooklyn
I stepped out of the low-rise housing
The Dearborn Restaurant
and turned toward the parking garage where I'd left my car. I'd just finished my face to face meeting with Sage Piper, the first of the two women I'd initially selected to be a companion for Billy-Ray Ogden. She fit his preferred coloring and body type, and I was certain he'd appreciate her mental toughness and never say quit attitude. I'd started with Sage because she was local. A thirty-minute drive from my home in Orland Park to downtown Chicago to meet with her was much more convenient than flying to Tucson, Arizona, to meet with Melinda Rassbury. I owed due diligence to Billy-Ray to also meet with Melinda, the second woman I'd selected as his possible companion, but after meeting Sage, I suspected I'd already spoken to the woman I'd choose to pair with Billy-Ray.
I turned into the garage, silently sighing with the sudden coolness inside the massive concrete structure, a pleasant change from the typical hot, sticky heat of a Chicago in summer. I took the elevator to the third floor and walked down the line of automobiles to where I'd parked. My steps slowed to a stop as I approached where I'd left my car. I glanced around. The spot where I thought I'd left my emerald green Audi RS5 coupe was now occupied by a dazzlingly blue Honda Fit with red stripes.
With a sinking feeling in my stomach, I walked farther along the row, hoping I'd misremembered where I'd parked, but my Audi was nowhere to be found. I returned to where I thought I'd parked, certain the car was there and I'd just overlooked it, but the Fit was still in the spot and my Audi wasn't.
While it was conceivable that I hadn't remembered the exact location where I parked, I couldn't believe that I'd gotten the entire floor wrong. Swallowing hard, the weight in my stomach becoming heavier with every step, I walked the entire parking structure, hoping beyond hope to find my car. I didn't.
"Shit," I muttered. I pulled my phone out of my purse and dialed as I made my way to the sidewalk outside the parking deck.
Chicago 3-1-1, how may I help you?
the disembodied voice on my phone asked. In the background I could hear the soft murmur of other voices handling other non-emergencies.
"My car has been stolen."
I'm sorry to hear that. May I have your name?
"Brooklyn Lancaster," I replied, and then spelled it as I heard the rattle of computer keys.
Location?
"Parking deck near the corner of Dearborn and Randolph streets."
Did you see who took the car?
"No. I came from a meeting and it was gone."
Are you in any immediate danger?
"No."
I've dispatched a unit to your location. Please speak with the officer when they arrive.
"Thank you," I said and ended the call.
I paced around in front of the parking deck for ten minutes, staying in the shade of the structure to avoid the worst of the late July heat, raising my hand to flag down the approaching white Ford Explorer sporting Chicago PD's new paint scheme of an angled medium blue stripe down low, a grey and blue checkerboard stripe above, and a giant ass badge over the rear wheels. The SUV rolled to a stop beside me as the blue lights on the roof popped on.
"You Brooklyn Lancaster and reported the stolen vehicle?" the officer asked as he exited the vehicle.
The man was tall, at least six inches taller than my own five-foot six, with massive arms barely contained by his short-sleeved uniform shirt. He was decked out in full police gear, with a radio on his shoulder, a pistol and Taser on his hip, and he was clearly wearing some type of armor under his shirt that made his chest look huge.
He was a little older than most cops I'd seen over the years, probably in his mid- to late forties, with beautiful strawberry blonde hair worn longer than the military style haircut of most officers. He wore his uniform with pride and seemed more relaxed and dedicated than the only other police officer I'd dealt with.
Months ago, while in Philadelphia to interview a potential companion, someone had snatched my purse. Because my only injury was a minor scrape from having the bag ripped from my shoulder as the kid ran past, the cop acted as if he couldn't have cared less that someone had stolen my bag.
"Yes."
The officer rounded the front of his vehicle. "Where was the car located?"
I jerked my head toward the structure behind me. "In there."
"Can you show me?"
I led him to the elevator and we rode to the third floor without any words exchanged between us. When the doors opened, I led him to the Honda. "I think it was parked right here."
"You think?"
I glanced at his name tag. "Officer Husher," I said, pronouncing his name as it was spelled, my annoyance clear in my tone, "I'm not some ditz. I may be off a parking place or two, but I know it was in this area."
"It's pronounced
Hugh-sher,
ma'am, Police Sergeant Ryan Husher. Are you sure it was on this floor? All the floors look the same."
I glared at him. "I'm sure, but just in case, I walked the entire deck before I called to make sure I wasn't confused. I wasn't."
"Do you have your keys?" I rummaged in my purse and produced my key, holding it up for him to see before dropping it back in my bag. He nodded. "Anyone else have a key? Boyfriend? Husband?"
"No."
"Loaned the car to anyone lately?"
"No."
"Make and model?" he asked as he pulled a notebook and pen from his pocket.
"2017 Audi RS5 coupe. Green."
"Nice car," he muttered as he scribbled. "Any distinguishing marks? Body damage, fancy wheels, graphics, anything like that?"
"No."
"When did you see the car last?"
"When I parked it, about four hour ago."
"I assume you locked it?" I glared at him and he smiled. He had a nice smile. "I have to ask the questions."
"Yes. It locks automatically when I walk away from it."
"Know anyone that would want to steal it?"
"No."
"Can I get your contact information?"
I pulled a business card from my purse and handed it to him. He took it, slid it into his book, scribbled a little more, and flipped his book closed. "I think that's all I need for now. I'll be honest with you, we're not likely to recover your car. You can get a copy of the police report from the Chicago PD website tomorrow for your insurance company."
"That's just great."
"I'm sorry, Ms. Lancaster. The recovery rate for stolen vehicles is very low, but maybe we'll get lucky."