Slow Kill - Michael Mcgarrity [102]
As they waited at the covered baggage stall next to the terminal, Ellie’s cell phone rang.
“Is Sergeant Pino with you?” Lieutenant Macy asked.
“Yes, she just arrived,” Ellie said.
“Good. I need you both here now,” Macy said. “Claudia Spalding is out of jail.”
“What happened?”
“The judge threw out the arrest on a technicality and released her. She’s home, but I’ve got people there making sure she stays put.”
“Do you want us at Montecito?” Ellie asked.
“No, the sheriff and the DA want you and Pino here to vet the new arrest affidavit before it’s served. They want everything in perfect order.”
“Does it need vetting?”
“I didn’t say that.”
“Are they just covering their butts?”
“I didn’t say that either,” Macy replied.
“We’re on our way.”
“Problems?” Ramona asked as she picked up her luggage.
Ellie smiled. “We’ve been called into work. I’ll tell you about it on the drive.”
“Another Friday evening shot to hell,” Ramona said cheerfully as she followed Ellie to her unit.
Much more than three hours passed while Detective Bill Price waited in his unit with all the windows down so that no outside sound would go unnoticed. Every ten minutes he checked in with his team by radio. All the entrances were covered, two detectives were constantly circling the estate perimeter in units looking for any sign of movement, and an officer was on station at the bottom of the hill ready to stop, ID, and question the destination of any drivers entering the street.
Price checked the time as he unwrapped a stick of gum and folded it into his mouth. The night breeze whispered through the trees, soft and soothing, and a full moon flung tangled webs of shadows from the branches across the roadway.
The distant sound of rotors made Price stiffen, listen intently, and look up at the empty sky through the windshield.
He got out and did a three-sixty scan. Tall trees blocked his line of sight in every direction.
The sound grew closer and a helicopter broke into view, traveling fast, descending quickly, veering toward the estate.
Price decided he couldn’t wait for Macy’s call. He reached into the car and grabbed the microphone. “Go, go, go,” he yelled. “Stop that chopper.”
Car engines roared to life, entrance gates opened, and police cars barreled onto the grounds from three directions, converging on the house. Price swerved around the lead car and braked hard by the front door just in time to see the chopper rise above the rooftop, displaying only the tail boom and rear fins as it flew away.
His cell phone rang. He took a deep breath to swallow his frustration and answered.
“You’re good to go,” Macy said.
Price watched the flashing anticollision beacon on the upper fin of the chopper recede in the sky. “It’s too late. A helicopter just picked her up.”
“Dammit,” Macy said. “You’re sure of that?”
“It just left, Lieutenant. We’re at the house now, but we haven’t searched it yet.”
“Do it,” Macy snapped. “I’ll notify all the area airports and local police departments.”
Price thought about LAX and Burbank, which weren’t that far by air, Santa Barbara just minutes away, and all the other, smaller fields Spalding could land at before any cops could get there in time. It seemed hopeless.
“Ten-four,” he said.
“Did you ID the chopper?” Macy asked.
“Negative, I couldn’t read the markings.”
“Dammit,” Macy said, this time with more feeling. “Seal that place off and search every inch of it. I’ll take care of the warrant affidavit. I want to know exactly what Spalding took with her.”
“Roger that.” Price put the cell phone away, gathered his team, and began the search.
The only person they found on the premises was Glenn Davitt, the estate manager, waiting for them in his quarters. He cheerfully admitted that he’d seen Claudia fly away.
“Did she say where she was going?” Price asked.
“No,” Davitt replied, “just that her arrest had all been a big mistake.”
“Were you with her when she arranged for the helicopter?”
Davitt shook his head. “I didn’t even know about it until it landed.