The K9 Who Found A Woman In A Locked SUV And Exposed A Ring In Nevada-eirian

The phone in Nathan Cole’s hand felt too light for the weight it carried.

Its cracked screen glowed against his glove, a red marker pulsing over the Western Freight warehouse three miles outside Silver Creek.

Behind him, Megan Hart trembled in the hospital bed, one bruised wrist pressed against the place where her unborn child moved under the blanket.

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Rex stood between the door and the hallway, body low, ears forward, waiting for the next sound that did not belong.

Nathan read the message again.

Bring the witness before sunrise, or the rest move without you.

For a moment, nobody spoke.

Nurse Linda Perkins covered her mouth with one hand, and the color left her face as if the hospital lights had drained it out of her.

Megan shook her head slowly, already understanding what Nathan did not want to say.

The rest meant the other women.

The ones she had heard crying behind metal doors before Dorsey’s men dragged her into the SUV.

Nathan slid the phone into an evidence bag and forced his voice to stay calm.

He asked Linda to lock the maternity wing doors, move Megan to a room without a public number, and tell no one except the charge nurse where she had gone.

Linda did not argue.

She had worked emergency rooms long enough to know when fear had a name.

Nathan stepped into the hall and called Detective Carla Monroe at the state bureau, a woman who had spent six months tracing disappearances along the Nevada-Arizona line.

Carla answered on the second ring, and Nathan heard traffic in the background before he heard her voice.

He gave her the phone, the map, the snake tattoo, Megan’s statement, and the name Frank Dorsey.

The silence after that name was the first proof that Nathan’s instincts were right.

Carla told him Dorsey had been presumed gone for three years after a federal sting collapsed outside the state line.

She also told him that if Dorsey was moving people before sunrise, they had hours, not days.

Nathan looked through the glass at Megan, who was trying to sit still while Linda adjusted the IV line.

She looked impossibly young under the hospital blanket.

Rex turned his head once, as if asking for the order.

Nathan gave it.

By two in the morning, a state tactical team was rolling without sirens toward Western Freight.

Nathan rode in the lead unit with Rex pressed against his leg, the dropped phone sealed in the case beside him.

Carla sat behind him checking names against missing-person files, and every few minutes her breathing changed when another possible match appeared.

The warehouse rose from the desert like a rusted box, its loading bay lights glowing weakly over weeds and sand.

It should have looked abandoned.

It did not.

Fresh tire marks crossed the dirt, a generator hummed behind the office wall, and one bay door sat open just wide enough for a truck to slip through.

Nathan unclipped Rex and touched two fingers to the dog’s collar.

The dog did not bark.

That was worse.

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