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  Critical Pursuit

  Copyright © 2007, 2013 by Janice Cantore. All rights reserved.

  Previously published in 2007 as The Kevlar Heart by OakTara under ISBN 978-1-60290-016-5. First printing by Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., in 2013.

  Cover photography copyright © Spanic/iStockphoto. All rights reserved.

  Designed by Mark Anthony Lane II

  Published in association with the literary agency of D.C. Jacobson & Associates LLC, an Author Management Company. www.dcjacobson.com

  Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, King James Version.

  Critical Pursuit is a work of fiction. Where real people, events, establishments, organizations, or locales appear, they are used fictitiously. All other elements of the novel are drawn from the author’s imagination.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Cantore, Janice.

  [The Kevlar heart.]

  Critical pursuit / Janice Cantore.

  pages cm

  “Previously published in 2007 as The Kevlar Heart by OakTara.”

  ISBN 978-1-4143-7553-3 (sc)

  1. Police—Fiction. 2. Detective and mystery stories. 3. Missing persons—Fiction. 4. Women detectives—California—Long Beach—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3603.A588B75 2013

  813´.6—dc23 2013013767

  ISBN 978-1-4143-8839-7 (ePub); ISBN 978-1-4143-8412-2 (Kindle); ISBN 978-1-4143-8846-5 (Apple)

  Build: 2013-08-02 11:08:20

  To my aunt E,

  who was my inspiration,

  but who is now with Jesus.

  Contents

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  Discussion Questions

  Acknowledgments

  Thank you to my faithful friends, all the Reunioners: Lauraine, Wendy, Kathleen, Kitty, Marcie, Sue, Bonnie. All of you have helped me more than I can say. And thanks to Geri, Sheri, Patti, Rene, Mary, Sandra, Mark, Lisa, and everyone who encouraged and prayed for me through the years. God bless.

  Prologue

  THE HEAT OF THE DAY evaporated as a curtain of dark descended across the desert floor. Now the breeze had an icy edge, and six-year-old Brinna Caruso shivered. The thin, oversize T-shirt she wore offered little protection. Tears and dirt were dry and caked on her face, and all that was left of her voice after hours of screaming for help was a weak whisper.

  She hugged the rough pole to which she was handcuffed and hiccuped sobs, unable to comprehend why she’d been left out in the middle of nowhere, barefoot and terrified.

  “‘Jesus loves me; this I know, for the Bible tells me so.’”

  She repeated the words over and over, a tuneless song recited between hiccups, wondering if anyone in the dark desert would ever find her.

  The roar of an engine bubbled up in the sky, faint at first and then loud enough to sound to Brinna like something large and vicious, coming to swallow her whole. She craned her neck and sniffled, looking up.

  A light blinded her; then dust began to swirl all around, the pings of pebbles hitting the ramshackle building behind her sounding like gunshots. The sting of sand pummeling her bare legs made her fidget, but there was nowhere to hide.

  Is the mean man coming back? Where are Daddy and Mommy and Brian? What is happening?

  A thousand questions overloaded her six-year-old brain as she squeezed her eyes closed to shut out the dust and sneezed as grit forced its way up her nasal passages. She couldn’t run; she couldn’t scream.

  All she could do was strain at the handcuffs and wait for the monster to attack.

  1

  SEVENTY-FOUR PERCENT of abducted children who are murdered are dead within three hours of the abduction.

  The grim statistic rumbled around in K-9 Officer Brinna Caruso’s brain like a hand grenade without the pin. There was no evidence that six-year-old Josh Daniels had been abducted, yet the statistic taunted her.

  Brinna and her K-9, Hero, a four-year-old Labrador retriever, were part of a team of officers fanned out across El Dorado Park, the largest city park in Long Beach, California, searching for Josh. He’d disappeared from an afternoon family picnic two and a half hours ago.

  The huge park successfully created the illusion of wilderness, dense in some places, open in others. There were a thousand places to hide—or be hidden. Brinna normally loved the park, the smell of pine trees and nature, the illusion of pristine innocence and safety. Today all she could think about was how quickly innocence could be lost or, worse, stolen.

  Hero trotted ahead on a well-beaten path, panting in the summer heat. Brinna and Officer Maggie Sloan followed a few feet behind. Maggie had left her partner back at the picnic site with the boy’s family.

  “You are so intense it’s scary,” Maggie said.

  “What?” Brinna glanced from Hero to Maggie, who regarded her with a bemused expression. She wasn’t just another officer; she was Brinna’s confidante and best friend on the force.

  “I’m just keeping an eye on my dog,” Brinna explained, wiping her forehead with the back of her hand. “He’s definitely following a scent.”

  “That’s good news, isn’t it?” Maggie asked. “It means we should find the boy. Why the frown?”

  Brinna shrugged. “I want to find a boy and not a body.”

  “Harrumph.” Maggie waved a hand dismissively. “There’s no indication Josh was snatched. The best guess is he got lost playing hide-and-seek. El Dorado is to parks what Disneyland is to carnivals. He could be anywhere. You always imagine the worst where kids are concerned.”

&nbs
p; Brinna gritted her teeth. “Because you know as well as I do, if a kid is abducted, the chances are overwhelming that they will be a victim of murder.”

  Jaw set, Brinna returned her full attention to the dog. She’d had this conversation before, with Maggie and others, almost every time a child went missing. The guys on her team liked to say that since Brinna didn’t believe there was a God watching out for kids, she’d given herself the job.

  “The operative word is if. You’re such a glass-is-half-empty person.” Maggie slapped Brinna’s shoulder with the back of her hand. “What about the ones found alive? Elizabeth Smart, Shawn Hornbeck, Brinna Caruso?”

  “For every three of us rescued, there’re nine who die,” Brinna shot back. “You know my goal is 100 percent saved.”

  Maggie snorted in exasperation. “All the time you spend riding rail on registered sex offenders and monitoring any missing kid case flagged suspicious.” She shook her head and wagged an index finger. “You can’t save them all.”

  Brinna said nothing, hating that truth. Hero came to a stop, and like dominoes, so did Brinna and then Maggie.

  “Maybe I can’t save them all,” Brinna conceded to Maggie. “But it certainly won’t be for a lack of trying.”

  Maggie followed Brinna’s gaze to Hero, then turned back to her friend and smiled. “You sure earn your nickname, Kid Crusader.”

  Brinna watched the dog. His nose up, testing the air, Hero trotted off in a more determined fashion than before. When he caught a scent, the hackles on the back of his neck rose ever so slightly. Brinna felt her own neck tingle as if there were a sympathetic connection between her and the dog.

  “He’s got something stronger.” She stepped up her pace after Hero, Maggie on her heels.

  They jogged to the left, into an area thick with tall pines and full oaks. After about a hundred feet, Hero barked and sat, turning toward Brinna. It was his practiced alert signal. Brinna’s heart caught in her throat. If her dog had just found Josh, the boy wasn’t moving; in fact, he wasn’t even standing.

  She followed the dog’s gaze to a pile of leaves and held her breath.

  When she heard muffled sniffling coming from the leaves, Brinna exhaled, rolling her eyes in relief. Then she saw the toe of a small tennis shoe sticking out. The boy was hiding. Turning to Maggie, she pointed at the shoe. Maggie smiled.

  Brinna spoke to the quivering mass. “Josh, Josh Daniels. It’s the police. Is that you?”

  A half sob and an intake of breath emanated from the pile. The leaves moved, and a dirty-faced blond boy peered out at her.

  “The po-police?” He cast an eye toward Hero. “That’s not a coyote coming to eat me?”

  Kneeling, Brinna bit back a chuckle. The boy’s fear was plausible. He’d wandered into a particularly dense section of the park. The only things absent were dangerous animals. She understood a lost boy’s imagination getting the best of him.

  “Nope, it’s my dog, Hero. Hero is a police dog. He doesn’t eat little boys. He helped me find you.”

  Josh sat up and the leaves fell away, revealing a little boy smudged with sweat, soil, and grime. He sniffled. “I was playing and I got lost. I called and called, but my mom didn’t come. Then I heard noises. I was afraid of wild animals, so I hid.”

  “Well, your mom and dad sent us to find you,” Maggie said. “Are you ready to go home?”

  Josh nodded vigorously and stood, brushing off dirt and leaves as he did so. “Can I pet your dog?” he asked Brinna, the tears already drying.

  “Sure,” Brinna said as she stood, ignoring the triumphant smirk Maggie shot her. Brinna pulled out her handheld radio and notified the command post that the situation was code 4, all over and resolved. “We’re on our way out.”

  Brinna smiled as she took the boy’s hand. “Do you like Beanie Babies, Josh?”

  He looked up at her and nodded.

  “I’ve got one for you in the car,” she said with a smile as the statistic tumbling around in her mind disappeared in a poof, like a dud.

  * * *

  “Officer Caruso, Officer Caruso!”

  Brinna groaned. Tracy Michaels, the local police beat reporter, was hailing her. Brinna had almost made it to her car avoiding all contact with the press. She wished Maggie were still with her. Maggie always knew how to talk to the press. But Maggie was with her partner, seeing to the happy family reunion.

  “Officer Caruso! I have the okay for an interview.”

  Brinna stopped at her K-9 unit, a black-and-white Ford Explorer, and turned, counting to ten so she didn’t say anything she’d regret. Reporters only wanted bad news. They thrived on tragedy. She faced Michaels, a young, eager woman who approached with a pad and pen in her right hand.

  “Tracy, we found the kid in a pile of leaves, alive and unmolested—not much excitement in that story.”

  The reporter shook her head. “I don’t want to talk about Josh Daniels. I want to talk about your upcoming anniversary.”

  “My anniversary?” Brinna frowned.

  “Don’t tell me you don’t mark the day in some special fashion,” Tracy said, hands on her hips. “Next week, it will be twenty years to the day that you were rescued after being abducted.”

  2

  “HEY, HOT DOG, is it time for the rest of us to retire?”

  “Is it Caruso and Hero or Batman and Robin?”

  “Hey, John Walsh Jr., when does your TV show air?”

  “Do you want to be called RoboCop now?”

  The e-mail ribbing began before Brinna left her driveway. As a K-9 officer, she took the Ford Explorer home and left only a few work-related items in her station locker. She dressed at home and logged in before driving to the station for the squad meeting. The messages popped up on the mobile computer as soon as her status showed 10-8, in service. Bracing herself to endure teasing from her coworkers all night, she cleared the screen as the station came into view.

  Tracy’s article had run in the local paper that morning. With a headline like “Local Cop Tells Pedophiles, ‘Watch Out; I’m After You,’” Brinna knew her fellow officers would have a field day. Collegial teasing was as much a part of police work as writing tickets.

  When she’d first read the headline of Tracy’s article about her anniversary, a headache tiptoed into her temples. It was the text that made the ache stomp with combat boots. Tracy got the facts right, but the way she’d embellished everything made Brinna sound like a cross between the Lone Ranger and the Terminator.

  Brinna climbed out of the Explorer and left the engine running with the AC on for Hero. Her afternoon shift began at 4 p.m., and sweltering summer heat had not yet abated for the night. She stopped at the locker room to see if Maggie was there. Before she was all the way inside the room, she could see that someone had pasted the article and headline to her locker. Maggie.

  Brinna tore the paper off and tossed it in the trash, trying and failing to think of a witty retort for her friend.

  “Hey.” Maggie poked her head around the corner, a silly grin on her face. “I was hoping you’d autograph that for me.”

  “Ha-ha. Go ahead, pile on,” Brinna groaned. “You should have seen all the e-mail messages I got when I logged on.”

  “Come on, it was a great article.” Maggie stepped to where Brinna stood and held her arms wide. “Enjoy being the celebrity of the moment.”

  Brinna snorted. “Tracy made me sound like some sort of Lone Ranger cop, an aberration. That kind of celebrity I can do without.” She blew out a resigned breath and leaned against the locker. “Reporters write to entertain, not inform. I don’t like being entertainment.”

  Maggie stepped past Brinna to the mirror and began to pin her long blonde hair up in a bun, off her collar. “Deal with it. You make good copy. The kidnapped kid growing up to help kidnapped kids. What did your mentor have to say about the article?”

  “Milo hasn’t seen it yet. He’s in Mexico on his annual fishing trip. I’m sure a copy will find its way to him when he
gets back.”

  Maggie giggled. “You got that right.”

  * * *

  Brinna and Maggie slid into their seats in the squad room with a minute to spare.

  “Hey, it’s our own local supercop.” Rick, Maggie’s partner, moved his desk a bit as if to make room for Brinna and gave her a mock bow.

  “Stand in line, Rick. I got about a hundred e-mails cleverer than that.” Brinna stuck her tongue out just as one of the afternoon sergeants brought things to order.

  The sergeant read off the night’s assignments and made no reference to the article. But as everyone was dismissed to log on in service, the K-9 sergeant, Janet Rodriguez, called Brinna back to the office.

  “Bad news.” Rodriguez gave her a look that said I’m sorry, and Brinna braced herself, crossing her arms and waiting warily for the hammer to fall. “Press relations just called. They’ve decided it would be good PR to send a reporter along during your shift tonight.”

  “What?” Brinna felt like her jaw hit the floor as Rodriguez continued.

  “They’re fielding a lot of requests and questions about you because of the Michaels article. The reporter they want to send with you tonight will do a piece about being on the job with the Kid Crusader.”

  “You’re pulling my leg, right? This is a late April Fools’ joke to get me going.” Brinna glanced around the room, expecting other officers to pop out snickering. Rodriguez’s expression, however, said it wasn’t a joke, and that made her stomach feel like a greasy doughnut just slid down her throat.

  “I wish I were kidding,” Janet said. “But a reporter from the LA Times, Gerald Clark, is waiting for you at the business desk.”

  * * *

  Brinna was only an hour into her shift when she truly wished she’d called in sick. Gerald Clark had questions about everything. He asked Brinna every question Tracy had and more.

  Brinna tried to shift the conversation to Hero’s work record and away from her plight at the age of six. “You aren’t going to reprint everything Tracy wrote, are you?” She stopped the reporter midquestion.

  “Of course not. But I’d like to get my own feel for your story. The Times is way more in-depth than your local paper.”