For more information on the characters in this story, please read the following:
What Mother-in-Law Wants
Badge of Betrayal
Clarissa Gets Served
Grab Life by the Balls
The Ghost of Red River Falls
Darla's Dilemma
Getting Back to Square One
***WARNING*** This is a long story. How do I know? Because I wrote the damned thing. If plot development, character development and dialogue are important to you, then read on. If not, don't waste your time, especially if you are just going to head to the comments and bomb me with 1-star votes. There is sex in this story but if you are looking for some quick jack-shack material, this isn't it! Move on!
***WARNING #2*** This story deals with a couple of heavy topics - Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Islamic extremism. If reading these topics makes you feel uncomfortable, then please move on and skip this one. I won't even know so I won't be offended. As always, supportive comments and constructive criticism are always welcome. If you're just gonna throw hand grenades, move along. Go be a jerk on someone else's time. For the rest of you, I hope you enjoy my offering. - SB
Flowers for All Occasions
A Sheriff Pat Quinn Story
I couldn't get to my Expedition fast enough but once there I turned the key, threw it in gear and slammed my foot on the accelerator. I reached down to the center console and flipped on the emergency flashers and siren. We had installed hands-free radio systems with Blue Tooth headsets in all of our department vehicles for just such an event as the one I was now involved in. I hoped it would make it easier for me to get control of the situation as I sped like a bat out of Hell towards the south side of Red River Falls.
"Dispatch, 17-01!"
"17-01, dispatch. Go ahead."
"Dispatch, contact Minnesota Highway Patrol! Have them contact all sheriffs' departments on their side of the border and establish traffic control points on all bridges and roads leading in from this side! Make sure they understand that both subjects are armed and dangerous!"
"10-4, 17-01. I have Minnesota State Patrol on point-to-point. Stand by for confirmation."
I was headed to the location of the suspects' house and hoped like hell I might be able to catch a glimpse of them before they got too far away. If they were already on the Minnesota side of the border, it might be too late. There are a hell of a lot more highways and byways that they could get lost in than there were in our state.
"17-01, dispatch."
"Dispatch, 17-01! Go ahead!"
"Minnesota State Patrol advises they have units in place on all bridges between Red River Falls and Fargo. Also, they advise that all bridges between Red River Falls and Cherokee Flats should be controlled within ten minutes. They are also asking if you want all border crossings manned as far south as Sioux Falls."
"10-4, dispatch! If they've got the personnel to do it, tell them to go ahead and shut it down! Contact the Border Patrol and advise all international crossings to be on the lookout as well, in case they break for Canada! Relay the vehicle info as soon as it comes across!"
"10-4, 17-01. We have the vehicle info now and will send it via the net. Suspect vehicle is a black 2014 Mercedes E-Class sedan. Mason County plates Lincoln-David-Adam-Seven-Six-Five. Registered to Ibrahim Walad-Hammadi, age 28 with D.O.B. of 4-16-87. Secondary suspect is Muchtada Walad-Hammadi, age 26 with D.O.B. of 3-21-89."
"10-4, dispatch."
I turned off Highway 120 and roared west on 25
th
Street Southwest towards a fairly affluent section of Red River Falls. The Hammadis lived on Fairway Drive, a long and winding cul-de-sac near the country club. As I pulled up to the front of the Hammadi's McMansion-style house, there were already several Red River Falls PD cars on site as well as Deputy Brian Kelley. Brian ran over to my vehicle as soon as he saw me.
"We just missed 'em, Pat! The father says they were just here, grabbed a couple of duffel bags and took off. He either doesn't know where they're headed or he's refusing to tell us! According to a neighbor, it looked like he was going to go with the sons but they took off as soon as they heard sirens! Red River PD is detaining the old man, for now! "
"What about the mother?"
"She's in the house, screaming and crying for all she's worth! Red River PD is still in the backyard with the girl's body and waiting for BCI!" Even from my Expedition I could smell that putrid odor.
"Which way were they headed?"
"One of the neighbors said they took off and headed east on 25
th
Street!"
"Alright, let's get turned around and head towards 120 again!"
"I'm right behind ya!"
I whipped the big Ford into a u-turn and nearly took out several mailboxes. I gunned it back down the cul-de-sac towards 25
th
street and turned east towards Hwy 120, which is also Broadway Avenue and the main north-south thoroughfare through Red River Falls. I was frantic, at this point, because I had absolutely no idea where the two men were headed and I was dreading the kind of threat they posed to the public. Fortunately, my luck was about to change.
"17-01, dispatch."
"Dispatch, 17-01. Go!"
"We just received multiple 9-1-1 calls of a black four-door sedan traveling southbound on Highway 120 at a high rate of speed. Vehicle matches the description."
Yes! They were still on this side of the border!
"Good copy, dispatch! All units! All units! Converge on Highway 120 and prepare to stop! Be advised suspects are armed and extremely dangerous! Be prepared to use deadly force if necessary!"
I looked in my rear view mirror, just for good measure, to make sure Brian Kelley was still behind me as we turned south from 25
th
onto Highway 120. We both floored it with lights flashing and sirens wailing as we flew by the Auto Mile and headed south out of town. I had no idea what the specs were on a Mercedes E-Class but I knew enough about the quality of Mercedes in general to know that it was a fine brand of automobile.
Both Brian and I quickly kicked it up to 120 miles per hour as we headed south. I was driving my 2014 Ford Expedition while Brian was operating a 2015 Ford Taurus Police Interceptor Sedan, which had effectively replaced the venerable Ford Crown Victoria as the police cruiser of choice for many departments. Each shift lieutenant also drove an Expedition while each shift sergeant drove a Ford Explorer Police Interceptor SUV. The shift deputies all drove the Taurus sedans. The purpose was to ensure, given the variety of terrain we cover, that we would have at least one 4-wheel drive vehicle available per shift.
"17-01 from 17-03,"
called Lieutenant Deputy Chris Hayes.
"17-03, go!"
"Pat, I have 17-04 and 17-19 both following me. We're gonna head west on State Highway 5 towards Royal Fork! That way we can cut down either county roads T-65, T-40 or T-15, if we have to, and hopefully stay ahead of them if they cut west."
"Stand by, 17-03. All units, all units! Are there any available deputies or state patrol south of county road Y-29?"
"10-4, 17-01! This is 17-15! I'm just pulling up to the intersection of Y-29 and Highway 120 along with State Patrol 83! State Patrol 95 is northbound about a mile behind us! We're setting up a TCP now!"
A TCP is a Traffic Control Point, or road block in layman's terms.
"Do any of you have stop sticks you can deploy?"
"We do, 17-01, but they may not be effective. We can keep the subjects from going south on 120, pretty easily, but that gravel lot on the northwest corner of the intersection gives them a lot of room to bypass us!"
Fuck! I'd forgotten about that. Years ago the state Department of Transportation had set up a flat gravel area at that intersection. They often stockpiled road construction materials there, such as base rock for paved roads and gravel for the rural roads, and also sand during the winter.
The other problem was that Highway 120 was now four lanes wide. The junction of Y-29 was an at-grade intersection, meaning that the two roads met directly at a T-intersection. It had been a complete waste of money to widen the road to four lanes. But our state's lone congressman, Republican Representative Ben Reynolds, had been able to get an entire barrel of pork money to get it done. It was completely unnecessary to have the interstate linking Fargo, Red River Falls, Cherokee Flats and Sioux Falls along with a now four-lane US Highway 120.
Deputy Billy Shoemaker, 17-15, along with the two State Troopers could effectively block the road going south but there was no way they could cut them off with only three squad cars if the bad guys headed west. They could also jump the median and try to bypass the road block also. Hopefully, they would take Y-29 west if they did anything at all. Otherwise, we could be in for a long and dangerous chase. So "herding" the bad guys west on a narrow two-lane road could be our best bet. I cursed Congressman Reynolds under my breath for widening the damned road just because he could!