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Charlie-316 (#1)

Charlie-316 (#1)

book 1 in the Charlie-316 Series

Tyler Garrett is a model SWAT officer whose good looks, education and familial status add to that image. The fact that he is a black man in the predominately white Spokane Police Department only adds to the city administration’s pride in one of their own. He’s often pointed to as an example of the department’s best and brightest—a young man on the rise.

One summer evening, Garrett stops a reckless driver. It’s something he’s done a thousand times except this time, gunfire erupts from a nearby house. As Garrett dives for cover, the driver turns and begins shooting as well. Garrett survives the ambush by killing the driver and chasing off the additional shooter.

The legend of Tyler Garrett grows and the community rallies around him.

Until the initial investigation determines the driver was shot in the back and his gun has somehow disappeared. Suddenly, the police department, city hall, and even the national news media are wondering just what happened that night? In a nation where police brutality dominates the headlines, Garrett’s case has suddenly become a flashpoint.

Now, Officer Tyler Garrett must take matters into his own hands. Time is quickly running out for him to find the second shooter and to clear his name.

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Charlie-316 (#1)

Chapter 1

Tyler Garrett slid behind the wheel of the patrol car and shut off his overhead lights. Ahead of him, the car he’d stopped a few minutes ago pulled tentatively back into the roadway and headed on its way. The driver had been a grocery clerk, just off shift, and she’d drifted through a stop sign on her way home. Garrett had given her a friendly warning. He didn’t write tickets to working people.

Garrett reached for the microphone and depressed the button. “Charlie-three-sixteen, I’m clear.”

“Three-sixteen, copy,” came the dispatcher’s reply.
He put the car into gear and drove with the air conditioner cranked and the windows down. It was a habit he developed over the years to better connect with his environment. He wanted to be able to feel, hear, and smell the neighborhoods as he drifted through them looking for crime.

Garrett smiled as an image of Marvel’s Luke Cage popped into his mind.

“Yeah, I’m Power Man,” he muttered to himself. “A regular crime fighting machine.”

He guided his patrol car through East Central Spokane, a neighborhood just south of Interstate 90. It was an eclectic mixture of black and white, with a growing Russian population. Spokane was a predominantly pale city but East Central bucked the trend. Almost everyone he knew either grew up in or had connections to the neighborhood. Even though he no longer lived in that part of the city, it was a personal mission to keep watch on this neighborhood.

DJ Khaled’s “I’m the One” softly played while he drove. Garrett whispered the words and bobbed his head, his eyes scanning for any illegal activity. With a light ding, a call for service popped up on the Mobile Data Computer to his right. A quick glance told him it was a noise complaint between two neighbors on the South Hill, Spokane’s wealthiest part of town. Garrett shook his head. He planned to take a break in a few minutes to stretch his legs. He didn’t want to listen to some Richie Rich complaining. Let someone else take it, he thought.

He hooked his finger over the top of the ballistic vest that was underneath his uniform and tugged it down. While he sat in the car, the vest had a habit of riding up until it touched his throat. Most of the time, it didn’t bother him much. However, on a hot Au-gust night, the vest was a nagging irritant that threatened to put him in a foul mood.

It was shortly after midnight and vehicle traffic had thinned out in the neighborhoods. A white male rode a BMX bike across the street in front of him, a TV balanced precariously on the handlebars. He considered stopping him, but knew it almost certainly meant some sort of paperwork. If the guy didn’t have an arrest warrant, then either the TV or bike was stolen.

Or both.

Garrett grinned. If he had a nickel for every scraggly white guy riding a BMX while carrying a TV in Spokane…
A Chrysler 300 lurched out onto Thor Street from Ninth, cutting him off. Garrett tapped his brakes to slow his car. It was the second time Garrett had seen the car tonight. It was hard to mistake it with the front-end damage and the spare tire running on the front left. The Chrysler immediately turned west onto Eighth without signaling, cutting off a newer pick-up truck headed in the opposite direction. The Chrysler accelerated, its engine roaring in the quiet of the night.

Garrett turned in front of the now stopped truck and caught the eye of the BMX rider. Both the driver and the cyclist were watching so Garrett accelerated to catch up with the Chrysler which was doing its best to avoid him. The engine of his patrol car whined as he gained ground for several blocks.

Garrett grabbed his microphone and keyed it. “Charlie-three-sixteen, a traffic stop.”

“Three-sixteen,” a radio dispatcher responded. “Go ahead.”

“A white Chrysler 300 at Greene and Eighth,” Garrett said, before he phonetically read the letters of the license plate. “Code Four.”

“Greene and Eighth. Code Four,” the dispatcher repeated, verifying his instruction that a back-up officer was not needed.

Garrett activated his emergency lights, and, for a moment, the Chrysler accelerated be-fore its brake lights flashed on and off several times as the driver tapped his brakes. The Chrysler continued the length of the block, his speed consistent.

He’d seen this many times before. The guy was deciding whether to run.

“Don’t do it,” Garrett muttered. “Just pull over.”

The car turned right when the street ran into Underhill Park. Garrett keyed his mic. “Charlie-three-sixteen, he’s still rolling. We’re at the park.”

“Copy, Sixteen. Charlie-three-twelve to back?”

Officer Ray Zielinski’s gravelly voice immediately responded to the request for back-up. “Twelve, copy.”

The Chrysler suddenly pulled over and stopped on the right side of the street. The park was on the opposite side of the street and an older home with a for sale sign stood on the right. Garrett immediately parked his car behind the Chrysler and hopped out, watching for signs that the driver might run into the park where he had played as a child. He keyed his shoulder mic at the same time. “Sixteen, we’re stopped. Still Code Four.”

“Copy, Sixteen. Charlie-three-twelve, disregard.”

Zielinski clicked his mic in response.

The driver exited the car and turned to face Garrett. A tall, skinny white man, he wore only knee length shorts and tennis shoes. A single thick gold chain hung around his neck. Highlighted in blue and red by the splashing rotator lights of Garrett’s patrol car were various tattoos that covered his body.

“What is your problem, man?” the driver yelled.

“Get back in your car,” Garrett ordered him.

The driver waved his hands around as he yelled. “You think you can do anything? The mighty five-oh. I ain’t afraid of you. You can’t do nothing to me. Why keep pretending?”

Ty dropped his hand onto his Glock and repeated, “Get back in your car. Now!”

“I’m not taking this anymore!” the driver yelled and reached behind his back.

Garrett unsnapped his holster and freed his Glock.

A shot rang out and the window in his driver’s door exploded. Garrett’s mind froze for a split second. He hadn’t seen the driver fire, but instinctively, he pointed his gun at him.

A second and third shot rang out. He snapped his head to the right in the direction of the shots. They were coming from the vacant house.

Ambush!

The realization hit him hard. A surge of adrenaline seemed to explode through him. He dropped behind the driver’s door and took a deep breath to steady himself. Training kicked in as his mind immediately switched into tactical mode.

Two points of fire, he thought quickly. The car and the house. They had him triangulated. Garrett’s mind raced and came to one immediate decision. Eliminate one threat now.

More shots cut through the night as rounds thudded into the patrol car. Glass exploded and rained down around him.

Remaining crouched, Garrett quickly scooted out from behind the door and fired two shots at the driver. At least one round found the target as the driver collapsed to the street.

Ty moved to the back of the car and arose slightly above the trunk section. He fired three quick shots into the house before dropping below the cover of the car. Without hesitation, he moved toward to the hood section of the car. As he shuffled along in a crouch, he changed magazines, keeping his weapon fully loaded just as he’d been trained. At the front tire, he raised back into view, prepared to fire. Garrett realized no more shots were being fired from the house. An eerie silence had descended upon the neighborhood.

He became keenly aware of the whirring of his emergency lights above him when he heard a screen door slam in the distance. Then it slammed a second time.

Garrett stood and sprinted toward the house, seeing a six-foot-fence that bordered both sides of the house as he ran. He knew not to scale it and come face-to-face with a potential shooter. Instead, he leaped on the porch in a single step. He steadied himself and kicked the door. It opened with a splintery explosion at the handle.

From behind the house, an engine revved loudly. Garrett raised his weapon and hurried through each room, prepared to find a shooter waiting for him in the dark. With each step, he was convinced there’d be a flash of light and the bite of lead. Sweat poured down his forehead and into his eyes. He wiped it away with his left hand and kept his gun trained on the threat areas as he moved through the small house. His radio crackled but he ignored it. No one waited in any room, and there was no furniture to hide behind. The house was completely vacant.

When he got to the rear of the house, the back door stood open. He burst through the screen door which slammed shut behind him. At the edge of the yard, the fence gate was open and he could hear a car racing down the alley.

Garrett sprinted across the grass and into the alley. He could see red taillights at the far end of the block. He raised his Glock and his finger tensed, but he didn’t fire. He didn’t know what else was at the end of the block and knew better than to send a round into an environment like that.

Ty Garrett lowered his weapon and felt his heart pounding against his chest. He was suddenly aware that he was drenched in sweat. His ballistic vest felt like it weighed a ton. The lights from his patrol car danced in the sky above the house but didn’t reach the alley.

He stood in the quiet of the alley’s darkness, wondering what in the hell had just happened.

Crime fiction author Colin Conway writes the Cozy Up Series, the 509 Crime Stories, the John Cutler Mysteries, the Flip-Flop Detective, and the Charlie-316 Series.

Meet the Author

Colin Conway writes in multiple crime fiction genres including cozy mysteries, police procedural, private detective, amateur sleuth, and thriller. He’s published over thirty books in a variety of series.

If you're a fan of crime fiction novels, we'll have something you'll like.

Colin's love for crime fiction started while serving in the U.S. Army. That’s when he discovered authors likes Lawrence Block, Andrew Vachss, and John D. MacDonald. Colin’s interest in writing developed while working as a police officer in Spokane, Washington.

His creative secret is Rose the Office Dog, his constant companion.

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