His Dog Found A Buried Badge, Then The Chief Raised His Gun At Home-eirian

The first warning came from Rex before the sun cleared the Montana pines.

Marcus Thompson had heard that German Shepherd bark at bears, coyotes, thunder, and strangers who took the wrong road after midnight.

This was different.

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Rex stood beneath the old oak at the edge of the property with his back arched, his paws planted in wet leaves, and his amber eyes fixed on a bulge six feet up the trunk.

Marcus tightened his grip on the coffee mug and felt thirty years of detective work wake inside him.

He had retired from Cedar Falls Police after his wife Sarah died and after his daughter Emma’s death had hollowed out the rest of him.

The cabin was supposed to be quiet.

Rex was supposed to be peace.

Emma had asked for that dog from a hospital bed, whispering that dogs did not leave you, and Marcus had carried those words longer than he had carried his badge.

He crossed the grass slowly, calling Rex’s name in a low voice.

The dog did not come.

The oak smelled wrong before Marcus touched it.

It was not sap, not rot, not any clean thing the woods were allowed to make.

He opened the old police knife he had carried since his first year on patrol and cut into the cracked bark.

The first strip came away wet.

The second showed cloth.

The third exposed a curve of metal so familiar that Marcus stopped breathing.

It was a Cedar Falls badge.

He wiped it with his thumb and saw the number.

Detective Jake Morrison.

Jake had been Marcus’s partner, his best friend, and the man everyone said had disappeared fifteen years earlier while chasing a lead in the mountains.

Search teams had walked those woods until their boots split.

The department had held press briefings, candlelight vigils, and finally a funeral without a body.

Chief Robert Williams had stood beside Jake’s widow Helen and promised that every possible lead had been followed.

Marcus reached deeper into the hollow.

His fingers found oilcloth wrapped around a small notebook.

Jake used to carry those notebooks in his shirt pocket because he did not trust memory where evidence was concerned.

Truth does not rot; it waits.

Rex whimpered, then snapped his head toward the road.

A patrol car was coming up the dirt track.

Marcus slid the badge and notebook inside his jacket before Deputy Carol Anderson stepped out and called his name.

She said there had been a report of gunshots.

There were no neighbors close enough to report anything, and Carol knew that.

Rex knew something too.

He stood between Marcus and the deputy with a growl rolling low in his chest, even though Carol had scratched his ears a dozen times on welfare checks.

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