Raining Tears
Raining Tears by Laura Freeman, 2023, crime detective thriller

“Raining Tears” will be released Jan. 30, 2023 and can be pre-ordered at https://goo.gl/B7lKMs or other book sites. Here is a teaser with the blurb:
Detective Sydney Harrison thought the police shooting of an armed robber was cut and dry, but when the facts don’t add up, she finds herself in a cat-and-mouse game with a drug-addicted woman willing to sacrifice the lives of others to feel normal.
Claire’s life spiraled out of control when a grab and dash for a purse turned into a chance meeting with a stranger in a dark alley. His death wasn’t her fault, but the police are searching for her. Before running she needs to tie up loose ends even if it means another person has to die.
This is the first chapter. I hope you enjoy it and consider purchasing the ebook or print book.
Chapter One
Claire Batton recognized the old woman seated at the Newtown bus stop as an easy mark. Edith Merryweather was a regular in the pain management program at the hospital where the doctor prescribed her oxycodone medication. Although the opioid painkiller was highly addictive, it provided comfort care to octogenarians like Edith. Many patients kept their pills handy when away from home. If Claire was lucky, Edith had her meds in her outdated leather purse left unattended on the bench beside her. If nothing else, she’d net a few dollars.
The clouds on Ohio’s May evening were leaking a misty drizzle, and Claire pulled her backpack from her shoulders and removed a small bag. The hospital had given out the one-size-fits-all rain gear in assorted colors at the chamber of commerce expo in February. She shook out the black one and slipped it over her head, pulling the large hood forward to obscure her face. The raindrops fell steadier. The poncho’s thin plastic blended with her black stretch pants and battered running shoes and created a dark mass of nothing identifiable to any witness of her anticipated acquisition.
After slipping on latex gloves, she removed a small revolver from her bag. As a nurse, her fingerprints were in the system for background checks, and she was careful not to leave any on the weapon or ammo in case she had to ditch the gun. She was a fan of mystery stories and paid attention to details. She pulled her backpack onto her shoulders and took a deep breath as she surveyed her target. Her right hand gripped the molded handle beneath the folds of the poncho. She didn’t want to hurt anyone. The doctor could prescribe Edith more medicine, and she would return to a feeling of normalcy the pills produced. She’d be able to function again without the panic and anxiety that haunted her. It wasn’t a crime to feel like a human being.
Claire dashed across the street as the gentle sprinkles morphed into an intense downpour. The rain pelted against the plexiglass enclosure around Edith. A wind blew an empty coffee cup out from under the raised walls and into the street. The trash can outside the enclosure overflowed like a scoop of melting ice cream on a cone, and the ground was littered with soggy clumps of cigarette butts and crumpled food wrappers.
The change in the weather had come on suddenly, and unprepared individuals scattered for cover, but no one joined solitary Edith. The bus traveling toward the stop was a half dozen blocks away, delayed as a mob of wet boarders pushed and shoved to escape the rain. Claire had to make a decision while the timing was right. She could snatch the purse and dash off before the bus arrived and Edith realized she had become a donor to the Claire Batton Foundation, or she could do nothing and continue on her route.
Claire hesitated. What if Edith recognized her? What if she grabbed for her purse? She saw the bus closing its doors. The vehicle wouldn’t take long to cover the distance. It was now or never. She stepped inside the shelter. The rapid fire of heavy raindrops was deafening in the small enclosure, but there was no need to talk. Edith’s arthritic hands struggled to tie a plastic hat over her fluff of white curls.
Claire tugged her hood forward and pointed the gun in Edith’s face. Before the elderly woman registered what was happening, Claire snatched the purse off the bench and dashed out into the rain. She fled behind the bus stop, along the brick wall of a Mexican restaurant, and turned into the alley that ran behind the eateries and small businesses of downtown.
The cloudburst continued an angry assault on the rooftops and roads, filling gutters and potholes. Newly formed rivers flowed along the edge of the sloped asphalt pavement, seeking storm drains. She splashed through the virgin rivers as the water soaked her exposed clothing.
Claire hugged the backs of the retail buildings, hiding in the shadows, listening for any pursuers. The darkness was broken by an occasional streetlight attached to a telephone pole.
Her heart raced, the rush of adrenaline from obtaining Edith’s purse rivaling any feeling of opioids when they coursed through her body. She slowed to a walk, savoring the natural high. Ahead was a large metal trash dumpster with two plastic flip-up lids. She stepped beneath the overhang on the back of the building for protection from the steady rain and opened Edith’s purse to search the contents. She pulled out a prescription bottle of oxycodone and shook it. Nearly full. It had been worth the risk. She slipped her backpack off one shoulder and transferred the plastic bottle inside along with her revolver.
She glanced around. Alone. If Edith had raised the alarm, they weren’t after her yet, and she could make her escape. She pulled out Edith’s wallet. The bills were arranged from ones to twenties all facing the same way. Claire didn’t have time to count it. She folded the stack in half and shoved it deep into her bag. The remaining items inside the old handbag were useless. She tossed the purse and wallet into the trash container.
The rain eased into a gentle pitter-patter, but the cloud clusters bathed the alley in dark shadows even though it wasn’t yet nine-o’clock. Claire searched her surroundings to find her bearings. Edith’s bus stop was behind her. The hospital and her nearby apartment were north on the other side of Main Street. She’d have to use the crosswalk a couple of blocks ahead. The police would be looking for someone in black.
She searched for another poncho. Neon yellow would work. No one would think a thief wore a bright color. She removed the black one and debated whether to toss it in the trash. It had the hospital name printed in small letters near the neck. Leave no clues was her motto. She took time to fold it over and over until it was small enough to fit into the storage bag. She shook out the yellow poncho and slipped it over her head. It was like transforming from notorious Ms. Hyde into sweet Nurse Jekyll.
Claire’s shoes were soaked, and a chill in the air made her shiver. She had an hour to run home, take a hot shower, and put on dry clothes before reporting for her ten-hour shift at the hospital. She kept her latex gloves on to keep her hands warm and headed toward the intersection.
She paused. The sound of footsteps, softened by the splashing of water, approached from the opposite direction. Who else would be in the alley? A police officer wouldn’t be on foot. She moved against the back of a building, searching for the closest alley for an escape. Claire wasn’t afraid of the dark. She had her gun. No one was going to mess with her. She searched her bag, glad she hadn’t removed her gloves, and withdrew her revolver.
A man whistling a jingle stepped into a circle of dull yellow from a light fastened to the back wall of the next building. He wore a fancy raincoat and a floppy hat.
Claire remained in the shadows. Water dripped in a steady plop-plop beat as it overflowed a sagging gutter overhead, splashing in a puddle at her feet. It hit the barrel of her gun, and she jerked it out of the water’s path to protect her weapon.
He stopped and stared at her. “What do you want?”
She extended her arm, and the metal of the barrel reflected in the dull glow of the light’s outer edges.
He gasped in a sharp intake of air but didn’t run. “You have a gun.”
She laughed at his statement of the obvious.
“You’re a woman.” The man’s voice squeaked with surprise.
Claire had made a mistake revealing her gender. “Don’t let that fool you.” She jabbed the gun in his direction. If he wasn’t going to flee, she’d use his stupid bravado against him. “Give me your wallet.”
“You can have it.” He reached into his coat pocket. “I don’t want any trouble. My boy is sick, and I need to return home with his medicine.”
Medicine? “What kind of pills?”
“Penicillin drops. He’s eight months old and has an ear infection.”
Drops for a baby was useless to her. A police car’s siren echoed in the distance. Edith must have told the bus driver about the robbery, and he’d called it in. An old friend worked at the local dispatch center and had shown her the screens she monitored every shift. The mapping system allowed dispatchers to track patrol cars and calculate distances to crime scenes, sending the closest officers.
She was wasting time. She needed to get out of the alley now. She waved the gun sideways to send the man on his way. “Forget it.”
He held out his wallet, waiting for her to claim it. A loud crack made her look above at the overhang of the building. The rusty gutter, filled with rainwater, broke away from its neighboring section and crashed onto Claire’s outstretched arm and hand holding the gun.
The weight of the water inside the aluminum frame was like a brick being slammed down on her forearm. She screamed and dropped the gun. A spasm shook her arm, and a sharp stabbing pain shot through the muscles up into her shoulder and down to her fingertips.
The gun lay on the wet pavement between them. The man gazed into her eyes for the briefest moment before h leapt. Claire dove onto her knees to reach her revolver, but the man snatched it in his left hand and stood over her. He pointed the barrel down at her head as she knelt on the wet pavement.
“I think I’ll keep my money.” He still had his wallet in his right hand and gripped the gun awkwardly in his left.
She looked up at him towering over her and debated whether to challenge his possession of her weapon. “Do you even know how to use that?”
His shoulders snapped back, and he cocked the hammer before she could warn him. It took skill to safely uncock the firing mechanism of the old gun, and in his inexperienced hands, it could go off and kill her with the slightest touch on the trigger.
Claire huddled close to the ground, watching a vehicle as it entered the alley at a slow crawl behind the man who now held her captive. The suburban utility vehicle flashed no lights and echoed no siren, but the reflective white letters on black paint declared it was the police. It had to be a second car from the one approaching with sirens blaring from the opposite direction. They were trying to trap her in the alley. How would she escape? Maybe she could dash for the narrow opening between the next two buildings and cross Main Street. She raised one knee and put her foot beneath her.
The driver of the police car turned on the spotlight and lit the man’s figure from behind, outlining him above her. They’d see her escape if she ran, especially in the yellow rain poncho.
Claire crouched down and covered her head as she screamed, “Please don’t shoot me! Please don’t shoot me!”
“What?” The man gasped. “I’m not going to hurt you.”
She raised her head, trying to decipher the figure in the bright blinding light. He fumbled with the gun.
“Police! Turn around!” a female officer ordered. Her voice was from the other side of the alley on the passenger side of the cruiser. That meant two police officers and less chance of escape. What was the deal? All she had done was steal an old woman’s purse.
“Show me your hands!” The masculine voice of the other officer sounded closer.
“What?” The man above her turned. The metal of the gun in his hand reflected in the bright spotlight as he rotated to his left and the voice.
“Gun!” the male officer shouted from the center of the alley. “Drop it! Drop the gun!”
The first shot was from Claire’s revolver. She’d practiced shooting enough to recognize the high pinging sound. The shots that followed were from a different gun and rang out deeper and louder above her, one after another. She covered her ears as the barrage echoed off the buildings in the narrow alley.
She watched as the man fell backward from the blows of the shots, and his body crumpled to the ground, sprawled out on the pavement. He was on his back, his face turned toward her, his eyes open in shock and pain. Ribbons of red swirled in the puddles of water around his body. His mouth opened as if to speak, and he gave a final gasp as life left his body.
She heard footsteps approaching and snatched the latex gloves from her hands, stashing them in a pocket. Freed, her damaged hand throbbed, and tears filled her eyes. She blinked to make them fall.
After kicking her gun away, the male officer knelt by the body and checked for a pulse. He walked toward her and extended his hand. “Are you all right?”
She sobbed and placed her left hand in his as she planned her escape.
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