Read Detective Wade Jackson Mystery - 01 - The Sex Club Online
Authors: L. J. Sellers
Tags: #Mystery, #Suspense, #Murder, #Thriller, #Eugene, #Detective Wade jackson, #Sex Club
Beyond the entrance and across the grass, a small group of protesters gathered on the sidewalk. Kera had counted seven as she hurried into work this morning. Now they were lowering their signs and preparing to leave. Like clockwork, they showed up every Tuesday and Friday before 7 a.m. with signs that said things like “Choose Life” and “Don’t Murder Your Baby.” The group was mostly female, although occasionally a middle-aged man joined in. Kera had come to recognize two of the protestors who participated every week: a young woman of around twenty who looked half starved and always wore red—a symbol of blood, Kera thought—and a tiny middle-aged woman with close-cropped hair who often carried a Bible in addition to her homemade sign. The anti-abortionists called out with cries of “We can help,” hoping to attract the attention of the women who entered the clinic in the early hours.
But those activities were over for the day. The protestors were getting into their cars and heading home, and the clinic was unusually quiet. Two young mothers with babies on their hips stood at the counter, where Roselyn, the young Hispanic receptionist, silently stared at the computer screen, searching for information. Another young woman waited in a chair near the front windows. Jessie seemed to be long gone.
As Kera spun around, intending to place Jessie’s chart in the to-file basket, thunder boomed, the building shook, and the glass in the front windows blew out. Stunned by the blast, she lost her footing and went down. As she fell, Kera hit her head on the corner of the reception counter and, for a minute, her world went dark.
Tuesday, October 19, 9:45 a.m.
She woke to wailing babies and the sulfur stink of burnt gunpowder. Kera’s temple pulsed with pain, but she ignored it. She pushed herself up, felt a cool October breeze blowing through the lobby, and promptly became so dizzy she had to lie back down. What the hell had happened?
Pounding footsteps charged down the hall. Most were muffled, the soft thud of work shoes. Only the director’s pumps made sharp staccato sounds as they approached. In the background, the babies kept crying.
“Kera. Are you hurt?” Sheila Brentwood kneeled next to her, the tall woman’s voice sounding far away. Lavender scented hands touched Kera’s forehead.
“I don’t know.” Her own voice seemed distant. “I think I hit my head.”
“You did.” Sheila turned to someone and said, “Bring some gauze and some ice.”
“Has anyone called 911?”
“I am right now.”
The excited voices jumbled together, and footsteps thundered in from the reception area. “A client is hurt.”
Kera desperately wanted to sit up, to rush to the aid of the injured, but she knew she wasn’t ready. “Am I bleeding?” The fog in her brain began to clear, replaced with a sharp sting at her temple.
“Just a little.”
Sheila still had the bedside manner of a nurse, but with her black blazer and auburn hair pulled tightly into a bun, she looked like the administrator that she had become.
“Was that a bomb?” Kera asked.
“It blew out the front windows.” Andrea, the clinic manager, pressed gauze to Kera’s forehead. Andrea’s perfectly balanced Japanese features showed worry for the first time since Kera had known her. Kera reached up and tried to push Andrea’s hand away. “I’m okay. Go help the others.”
“Only one young woman is injured, and both Janine and Julie are with her.”
“How badly?”
“There’s a three-inch chunk of glass sticking out of her neck.” Andrea’s voice was soft, but her enunciation was always perfect.
Sirens sounded in the distance. Sheila and Andrea breathed a collective sigh of relief, and Kera willed their young client to hang onto her life. If the girl made it into the emergency room, the ER doctors would save her. Kera had witnessed that miracle many times.
She shuddered to think how many people could have been hurt if this had been a busy Friday afternoon instead of a quiet Tuesday morning. Who could have done such a horrible thing? What were they thinking?
The woman blinked as the windows blew, and she missed seeing the full effect of the explosion. But the sound was overwhelming. Even from across the street, the noise was bigger than she had expected. It was only her second pipe bomb. The first one—for practice—had been a bit of a dud, so she’d apparently over-corrected this time. But bigger was better. It was the only way to get through to these people. The political channels were too slow, and hundreds of babies’ lives were at stake every day.
Accessing the clinic had been quite a challenge. It was new and built with security in mind. There was a camera mounted on each side of the building and not much in the way of shrubbery to hide behind. She had cased the clinic during its first few months from the safety of a group of regular protesters. After methodically planning her moves, she had stopped coming with the group. Today, the navy-blue hooded sweatshirt, jeans, and backpack she had worn made her look like a kid—if the camera even caught her.
Now the sweatshirt and backpack were stuffed under the car seat, and she was just another middle-aged woman in the parking lot at the shopping center across the street. She knew she should get moving, but the sight of women and girls running from the building transfixed her. Upending their ordered little world where they encouraged promiscuity and discarded life was immensely satisfying. She could feel God’s approval.
Out of the chaos, a young girl emerged, moving quickly across the parking lot and up the sidewalk toward Commerce Street. For a moment, she thought it might be Jessie Davenport, a young church member and close friend of her daughter. But it couldn’t be. Not Jessie, not here. Just someone who looked like her.
The wail of a siren sent a bolt of anxiety through her, and she almost lost control of her bladder. She put the Tahoe in reverse and sped away from the shopping center. She had to hurry home and change before her volunteer shift at the hospital.
Detective Wade Jackson turned down Commerce Street and was relieved to see the clinic still standing at the end of the block. The report of a bomb had stunned him. He had lived in Eugene, Oregon, his whole life and had been on the police force for half of it, but had never dealt with a sizable explosion. A few years back, a young male ecoterrorist had set fire to a car lot full of SUVs down near the university, but overall, Eugene was a safe, mid-sized town with a hundred and forty thousand people, many of whom drove around with bumper stickers that said “Visualize World Peace.”
As the most experienced detective in a group of sixteen, Jackson typically investigated homicides rather than sex or property crimes. But he didn’t have an active investigation at the moment, and the supervising sergeant had asked him to take the lead. A wave of guilt hit the pit of his stomach. Now that he was a single father, every time he took on a new case, for the first few days he effectively abandoned his daughter. And Katie was still struggling with her parents’ separation and the fact that her mother chose to continue drinking rather than be part of their family. If this bomb case turned out to be long and complicated, he’d have to give up the lead to another detective.
Jackson pulled into the long narrow parking lot, where he passed a group of women—assorted sizes and ages—huddled on the sidewalk near the street. Two young girls each held a baby on their hips. One wept openly, shoulders heaving, but no one in the group looked bloody. Tension drained from his shoulders. Maybe this would not be as awful as he’d expected. The nightly news for the last three years had led him to associate bombs with body parts scraped off the pavement.
Only a dozen cars, including a black-and-white police unit, were scattered throughout the lot. Jackson slammed into the first open space. He felt for his Sig Sauer and evidence collection bag, then jumped out of the car.
He jogged up the sidewalk toward the main entrance. The intentionally nondescript gray brick building sat on the back curve of the street and sported good visibility on all sides. Its one vulnerability, the windows in the reception area, had been blown out, and a gaping hole exposed its soft yellow inside. A twenty-something Asian woman in light blue scrubs ran out the front door, spotted him immediately, and sprinted down the sidewalk.
She grabbed his arm. “We need an ambulance. Someone’s hurt badly.”
Jackson started to reach for his cell phone, but in the distance he could hear the wail of the ambulance screaming up West 11th Avenue. Another patrol unit careened into the parking lot and almost hit a blue Toyota pulling out of its space. Jackson motioned for the officer behind the wheel to roll down his window.
“Secure the perimeter,” he yelled. “ Don’t let that car leave. And don’t let anyone in that group near the sidewalk leave.”
As he looked over at the huddled clinic workers, his eye caught a group of protestors across the street, at the edge of the shopping center. Their signs hung limply at their sides as they stared back at the clinic. “And bring those protestors back over here for questioning.”
Then it hit him. This bomb seemed almost inevitable. A few months earlier, one of Portland’s abortion clinics had been rocked by violent protests, followed by several pipe bomb explosions. The statewide group that sponsored the Portland protests had a chapter here in town. In hindsight, it was only a matter of time before they turned their attention to Eugene’s new clinic. Jackson was glad that his daughter was only fourteen and that he didn’t have to worry about her coming to Planned Parenthood for many years.
He turned back to the clinic and started up the front walkway. Shards of white-tinted glass and mangled azalea branches covered the narrow lawn and spilled onto the cement path. The smell of gunpowder wafted past on a warm gust of wind. The combination reminded him of summer afternoons at the firing range.
Once inside, Jackson found himself in a small glass-walled foyer with a camera mounted above the door. But the security system was unmanned at the moment, and he pushed through the unlocked door into the waiting area. Near the massive hole in the front wall, two clinic workers huddled over a young female client, who, from where he stood, looked lifeless. Blood pooled in the area around her head. Jackson rushed over, past the twisted chairs and scattered debris, desperately trying to recall his first aid training. The women weren’t wearing white, so Jackson asked, “Is either of you a nurse or doctor?”
The older of the two looked up quickly and said, “I’m a nurse.” She wore her hair pulled into a ponytail and her makeup-less face was drained of color. “But I can’t do much here.”
Jackson was close enough to see the injured girl now, with her Goth-black hair, delicate features, and Green Day T-shirt. A chunk of glass thrust out of her neck and the blood flowed freely around it. The nurse pressed white strips of cloth to both sides of the wound. The injured girl’s eyes fluttered open, then closed again. She didn’t look much older than his daughter.
“I’m afraid to remove it,” the nurse said, her voice almost a whisper. “If I do, she could bleed to death.”
They all heard the ambulance then, its siren cutting off as it entered the parking lot. For a moment, silence settled over the room. Then a sparrow burst through the opening in the wall and began chirping wildly as it swooped around looking for an exit. For a second, the bird drew their attention away from the bleeding girl. A moment later, paramedics charged through the foyer door, and Jackson gladly stepped back.
“Is anyone else hurt?” he asked the nurse.
“One of our staff is down in the hallway.”
Jackson moved quickly to the end of the counter, around the corner, and into the wide hall.
Another female lay prone on the crème-and-gray tile floor, attended to by a tall woman in a tailored black blazer. Jackson recognized her as the clinic’s director, Sheila Brentwood. He had met her at a fundraiser last year, an event his soon-to-be-ex wife had dragged him to. Sheila nodded to him but didn’t speak.
“Is she all right?”
The prone woman sat up. Through the skylight, the sun lit up her copper-colored hair, which fell in a braid nearly to her waist. Even seated on the floor with a bloodied forehead, she looked strong and athletic.
“I felt dizzy for a few minutes. But really, I’m all right.” She tried to smile, but didn’t make it. Her wide-set hazel eyes held a sadness that went deeper than this incident.
“The paramedics will be right with you. I’m going to check out the rest of the building.”
Sheila stood and said, “I think it’s empty now. I asked everyone to stay outside and speak with the police when they got here, but I’m afraid a few of our younger patients may have left. And who could blame them?” She gave him a thin, determined smile.
“Once we’ve secured the building, I’ll need a place to conduct interviews,” Jackson said. “And a list of everyone that was here at the time of the explosion. And anyone in the parking lot, if they’re still here.”
Jackson moved off and began to search the rooms—for more injured victims or even the bomber, who could be hiding somewhere. But he knew that was wishful thinking. The Portland police had failed to identify their bomber, even with the help of the FBI. Meanwhile, they had beefed up security around all the clinics, but one had eventually closed. Jackson made a mental note to suggest to Sheila that she hire a full-time security guard. If this was the work of the same person or group, there was more to come.