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Behind the Mask
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BEHIND THE MASK
A Jill Andersen Mystery
J.D. Cunegan
Copyright © 2017 Jeff Cunningham
All rights reserved.
Cover Design: Shardel (selfpubbookcovers.com/shardel) and
Sarah Anderson
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, distributed, or stored without the express written consent of the author, except for the purpose of a review which may quote brief passages.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental and beyond the control of the author.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Behind the Mask (Jill Andersen, #4)
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 29
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 31
CHAPTER 32
CHAPTER 33
CHAPTER 34
CHAPTER 35
CHAPTER 36
CHAPTER 37
CHAPTER 38
CHAPTER 39
CHAPTER 40
CHAPTER 41
CHAPTER 42
CHAPTER 43
CHAPTER 44
CHAPTER 45
CHAPTER 46
CHAPTER 47
CHAPTER 48
CHAPTER 49
CHAPTER 50
CHAPTER 51
Acknowledgments
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For those who continue to fight for what's right, no matter the odds.
CHAPTER 1
EVERY TIME SIRENS WAILED into the night, Jill Andersen's heart skipped a beat.
The two weeks since Jill had marched into WJZ’s studios, hacked into the live television feed, and broadcast to all of Baltimore who she really was had crawled by. It was almost reminiscent of when Jill and her younger brother Brian were children, eagerly awaiting Christmas morning. Each day that drew closer to the holiday seemed to drag along slower than the last. The only difference this time was the overwhelming dread that came with waiting. It almost literally pressed down on Jill's shoulders, the bone-chilling and stomach-churning realization that any night could be the night Jill finally lost her freedom.
And in a way, Jill thought she should. After all, every time she donned the black leather, every time she assumed the mantle of Bounty, she broke the law. Her day job had centered on bringing those who broke the law to justice; if Jill broke the law, wasn't she supposed to face the same fate?
In a perfect world, she would—but then again, that same perfect world would have seen the four officers who tortured and killed Devin Buckner suffer the same fate. Instead, the Baltimore Police Department aided and abetted them, threatening Jill in the process, and it got to the point where those four wound up in a watery grave thanks to a nameless, faceless vigilante. An argument could be made that frontier justice was better than no justice at all, but if the system didn’t do what it was supposed to... what recourse was there?
That ultimately led to Jill turning in her badge. As for the reveal? Well, that was a much more complicated, much more sordid tale – one she wasn’t quite sure how to tell. Jill had kicked herself plenty for her rash decision over the past couple weeks, whenever a close call nearly had her hunched over in the back seat of a squad car with her wrists shackled together behind her back. It was the reason she wore a bulky black overcoat on top of her leather. It was the reason she had chopped much of her hair off and dyed it jet black. It now curled up at the sides around her ears, bangs forming over her forehead.
It was the reason she abandoned her apartment and hadn't so much as spoken to her brother or her former partner, outside of an untraceable text from a burner phone. It was the reason Jill kept her trademark katana hidden in an abandoned warehouse on the corner of Lee and Charles.
It was the reason Jill's heart just now leapt in her throat and she peered over her shoulder around the corner of the building. The sirens were growing louder, and Jill couldn't help but wonder if this was the night the cops finally cornered her. To her relief, the warehouse in question still had one of those old-style fire escapes. The metal was rusted from lack of care, and it chaffed against the leather on Jill's palms when she jumped to grab it, but her enhanced strength made ascending the warehouse's six stories a relative walk in the park.
As Jill made her way to the roof, she peered over her shoulder again. The police vehicle, which was actually a K-9 SUV, had stopped a block to the north, blue overheads spinning to announce their presence. The light bounced off the buildings in the vicinity, and despite having height to her advantage, Jill crouched down to stare over the ledge. A husky officer named Yancey emerged from the driver's seat, sauntering to the rear of the vehicle and producing two adult German Shepherds. Jill cursed under her breath and pressed her back against the ledge.
Jill knew almost nothing about dogs, aside from her childhood memories of Brian begging for a puppy for his tenth birthday. She had no idea how good their sense of smell really was, if they would be able to sense where she was and when. Perhaps that was a bit paranoid, but it came with being on the run.
A side effect of being with the Homicide unit her entire career, Jill hadn't taken the time to learn how other divisions operated. She wondered if that ignorance would be her undoing, and part of Jill bristled at that. She didn't want Fido to be the reason she wound up behind bars. She was a superhero, a freaking cyborg... she was so much better than that.
Pushing off the ledge, careful not to let her boots crunch too loudly against the gravel, Jill tried to keep an eye on Yancey's route. He stuck to the sidewalks and lit a cigarette, content to let the dogs lead the way. Their black snouts were pressed to the pavement, their tails remarkably still.
Yancey turned around, giving Jill a full view of his face. He pushed the brim of his cap up, puffing out a drag of his smoke. Even from six stories up, Jill could see the bags under his eyes and the general disinterest on his scruffy features. Pulling the cigarette from his mouth and tapping out a few ashes, Yancey shook his head and glanced toward the sky. His gaze wasn't in Jill's direction, yet she still crouched down further in response. Yancey looked as if he was none too pleased with this particular assignment, and he didn't notice as the two dogs wandered into a nearby alley. Instead, he kept sucking away at his cigarette before finally flicking the spent butt out onto the street without bothering to snuff it out.
The dogs barked in unison and Jill flinched. But Yancey merely stuffed a hand into the pocket of his bulky overcoat, producing a flashlight and heaving a sigh before turning around and joining his pooches. It was in the opposite direction of where Jill was, and she released the breath she hadn't even realized she had been holding. Chances were, Yancey was simply following orders—reluctantly so, if Jill had correctly read his demeanor. So if he was the one to catch her, would she really b
e able to blame him?
For that matter, was he even looking for her?
For all the bravado Jill tried to pump herself up with, for all the times she would catch a glimpse of herself in the mirror and remind herself that there were those in this town who worshiped her... this was wearing on her. When Jill wasn't actually on the run, she was having trouble eating. She certainly wasn't sleeping. Her titanium skeleton and enhanced strength weren't doing her any good when she was this run down. If only Project Fusion had rid her of the need for food or rest.
The barking in the distance stopped. Jill glanced over the ledge again, but she didn't see Yancey or the dogs emerge from the alley. At first, she didn't think anything of it, but with each second that passed, and as the traffic lights at the intersection of Charles and Hughes went through three cycles, dread built in her gut. Her first instinct was to go investigate; whether as a cop or as Bounty, that was what Jill's body was practically trained to do. Yet she kept still, because there was too much at risk. If someone else saw her, or if Yancey was, in fact, alright... the last thing Jill wanted to do was fall into a trap.
Minutes passed without any sign of Yancey or the dogs. Jill got to her feet, deciding she could no longer ignore the intuition plucking away at her subconscious. One of the first lessons she had learned as a cop was to trust herself when her gut told her something wasn't right. A cop's gut wasn't gospel, despite what a few old-timers had tried to tell her, but Jill had eventually learned that listening to her proverbial spider sense was beneficial more often than not.
But when Jill got to her feet, the sound of gravel scraping behind her gave her pause. Jill held her breath, her hands automatically balling into fists. She held her breath, training all of her senses to hone in for that sound again. She was met with nothing more than the howl of wind off the bay, her hair fluttering in the breeze, but she could feel the presence behind her.
Tightening her fists, Jill turned to regard whoever was now on the roof with her. She wasn't sure what she expected—if it was a cop, chances were they would have already announced themselves, but once Jill caught sight of the lanky man wearing a black and orange overcoat and a matching baseball cap hung low over his forehead, she frowned.
This was not what she expected.
"Erikson?"
"You're a hard woman to find," the Baltimore Sun's investigative reporter said with a sideways grin. "Though I guess that's by design these days."
Reluctantly, Jill unfurled her fists. "Sneaking up on a paranoid superhero's not a very good idea."
"Even if I have a tip?"
"Please tell me the next words out of your mouth are that the cops aren't after me." Jill shook her head. “How did you find me, anyway?”
Because honestly, the fact that a reporter had an easier time tracking Jill down than the Baltimore police was slightly vexing, if not outright disturbing.
"Not quite, but just as good." Stanley Erikson glanced over his shoulder and tugged on the bill of his cap. His eyes narrowed when the wind picked up. "Tomorrow night, an associate of David Gregor's will be awaiting a shipment at the Port of Baltimore."
Jill's spine stiffened at the sound of that name. "While he's across the Atlantic. The perfect alibi."
"My sources tell me he's resuming the drug trade," Erikson explained. "If you're not too busy playing hide-and-seek with your former employers, might be worth checking out."
“That it? You could’ve just texted me.”
“There’s also this,” Erikson said, producing a black USB drive from his pocket and handing it to Jill.
She took the device with a frown and a quirked brow, shaking her head. It wasn’t like she had ready access to a computer to read whatever was on here, yet her fingers curled around the small stick regardless. “What’s this?”
“Something I have a lot of questions about,” Erikson said, zipping up his coat and stuffing his hands into the pockets. “Questions I know you have answers to.”
Something about the way Erikson said that rubbed Jill the wrong way, yet she couldn’t tear her eyes away from the flash drive... nor could she ignore the intel he had provided just moments before. If she could corner one of Gregor’s associates while he was out of the country... oh, the possibilities were endless.
“I’m guessing you won’t take a ‘no comment’.”
A rueful smile crept onto Erikson’s face. “Oh, something tells me you’ll have plenty to say about this.”
“You still haven’t answered my question.”
Erikson stared at the skyline surrounding them. Heights weren’t a friend of his, but the majesty of his hometown’s downtown hub was enough of a distraction that his knees didn’t wobble this high up. He pursed his lips to fight the smirk tugging on his lips before turning his attention back to Jill.
“I’m not tracking you, if that’s what you mean,” Erikson offered. “I just figure someone dedicated enough to helping this city to become a superhero wouldn’t let a little thing like being a fugitive stop her. If you weren’t holed up in some warehouse, it made sense you’d be on the prowl.”
“Cute trick.” Jill’s frown deepened. “But don’t think you know me.”
“Ms. Andersen, I understand your mistrust, but I don’t think you need me to remind you that you’re short on allies right now. Strange as it may seem, I’m probably the closest thing to a friend you’ve got at the moment.”
Erikson turned to walk away, and Jill bit back the number of retorts resting on her tongue. As much as she hated to admit it, the reporter was probably right. She couldn’t rely on her old colleagues at the Seventh anymore, and she had strained things with her brother—again—to the point where he wouldn’t help her, either.
Still, relying on a reporter?
Something about that reality made Jill’s skin crawl. But not nearly as much as the silence that greeted her when she glanced over her shoulder. The dogs were no longer barking, and the blue flashing lights were gone. Chances were, Yancey had simply moved on to his next post, but in an odd way, the silence was more nerve-wracking than having him in her sights.
Jill glanced at the flash drive in her palm with a frown. The last thing she needed was another surprise.
CHAPTER 2
THERE HAD BEEN A TIME when Daniel Richards envisioned himself going to the Bishop L. Robinson Sr. Police Administrative Building—or The Bishop, as just about everyone in the department called it—every day. A career that once seemed to have him staring at a future in the department's upper administration had stalled at the captaincy of the Seventh Precinct, and Richards found himself making weekly trips to this building that were for nothing more than tedious meetings. Arrest rates, case closure percentages, and other statistics that made his eyes glaze over... that was what The Bishop meant to Richards.
But even as he ascended the stone steps leading to the Bishop on this sunny morning, Richards knew this meeting was going to be different. There was nothing concrete to this feeling, but the phone call earlier that morning from Commissioner Saunders left an unsettled feeling in the pit of the captain's stomach. It was, in all honesty, a call Richards had expected in the last couple weeks. A moment of reckoning was at hand, and this morning was apparently the time. Truth be told, he had expected it to come much sooner.
Working his way past the reception area, with the woman behind the desk ignoring him, Richards took the spiral staircase leading to the second floor. From there, Richards was greeted by a narrow hallway illuminated by nothing more than the morning sun pouring through the floor-to-ceiling windows. Several fresh-faced interns wandered the halls, clutching overstuffed manila folders and hoping the bags under their eyes weren’t too obvious. Richards remembered being that young, and even in the uncertainty of the moment, he allowed himself a lopsided grin.
But that grin disappeared as soon as Richards came to wooden double doors to his right. They led to the only conference room on the floor, the room he had been summoned to just minutes after getting to his office
and pouring his first coffee of the day. If this meeting went as expected, Richards would need something stronger than coffee later in the day.
Opening both doors to push his way into the conference room, Richards saw one table along the far wall with five impeccably dressed individuals sitting on the other side. Commissioner Saunders, decked out in a uniform that more closely resembled that of a military general, sat at the center of the table with the American and Maryland flags flanking him over each shoulder. Janet Baldwin, the deputy commissioner, sat to Saunders' right, and to his left was Jeff Downs, the colonel whose help in the Devin Buckner case had eventually led to this mess. Men the captain didn't recognize sat on the ends of the table, and their suits looked like they cost more than Richards made in a month.
Of the five, Baldwin was the only one who wasn't a white male. It was a sight Richards had dealt with throughout his entire career.
Each of the five had a full glass of water in front of them. Saunders grabbed his glass and took a long first sip; when he set the glass back on the table, his fingerprints were visible against the morning sun peering through the windows. Richards swallowed, the tick of the second hand on the clock behind him the only sound in the room for what felt like minutes.
"Sit," the commissioner ordered, pointing to a solitary wooden chair across from the table.
Reluctantly, Richards did just that. His hand went to the service piece on his hip; he took it with him every time he left the office. He felt more comfortable with the weight of it on his hip, and if this meeting went the way he feared it would, he would at least be saved another trip before turning in the weapon. But the captain kept his expression neutral, deciding to get a feel for how this was going to unfold. The tension was thick enough to slice through with a knife, and Richards could feel the collective stares burrowing into him.
For the most part, Richards had always been friendly with the people at the table over the years. Seldom did his disputes with downtown, annoying as they often were, ever erupt into anything major. He had a feeling that was about to change.