The Wounded Dog Who Led A Small Town Officer Into A Drug Ring-eirian

Ryan Mason found the first drop of blood on the Bennett family’s staircase.

It was not much, just a dark spot on the wood where somebody had tried to wipe it away with a sleeve.

But Mason knew blood, and he knew Scout had been wrapped in a fresh clinic bandage less than an hour earlier.

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Clara had left him a trail.

The house was too still around him.

Evelyn’s tea steamed on the table, Clara’s notebook was open to a page of careful cursive, and the front door moved with the wind as if the house itself was breathing hard.

Deputy Lena Ortiz came through the doorway behind him, her weapon low and her eyes sharp.

“No bodies,” she said.

Mason nodded, but relief did not come.

No bodies meant time.

Time meant they were still being moved.

His radio clicked again on the private channel Harper had forgotten Mason could monitor.

“Bring the girl through the old rail tunnel,” Harper said.

The voice on the other end answered with a laugh Mason recognized from a mug shot.

Derek Cole.

Cole was the driver from the black truck, a trafficker who had slipped through county lines for two years and had come to Silver Creek because small towns were easy to scare.

Mason walked back outside and followed the tire tracks with his flashlight.

They cut behind the Bennett house, crossed an alley, and disappeared onto the service road that ran toward the abandoned rail tunnel below the ridge.

Ortiz grabbed his arm before he could get into the cruiser.

“We need backup.”

“Harper is backup,” Mason said.

That was enough.

Ortiz got in beside him.

They drove without sirens until the town fell behind them and the road narrowed into black ice and pine shadows.

Halfway to the tunnel, another set of headlights swung out from the clinic road.

Mason nearly reached for his weapon before he saw Dr. Elaine Porter’s old van fishtail into the lane.

She pulled up behind them, breathless and furious, with a blanket over her shoulders and Scout standing on three legs beside her.

“He woke up tearing at the door,” Elaine said.

Mason stared at the dog.

Scout’s leg was wrapped, his fur shaved in patches, and every breath hurt him, but his ears were forward and his eyes were fixed on the tunnel road.

Clara had said Scout always knew when danger was close.

That night, Mason believed her.

He knelt in front of the dog and placed a hand against his neck.

“One more time, partner.”

Scout pressed his muzzle into Mason’s palm, then limped toward the tunnel entrance.

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