treated her like a dog bite victim. Four stitches, antibiotic. Minor really."
"Why did she leave?"
"She had to work."
"Is she a brain surgeon?"
Confusion flickered over his pale face. "I'm sorry?"
"Her work couldn't wait? What if the wolf was rabid?"
"The chances of that are slim, Officer. Rabid animals tend more toward bats or the rodent family - mice, squirrels." He paused, considered a moment, continued. "Or stray cats. Nasty things. You definitely need rabies shots if you get bit by a stray cat."
I didn't plan on getting bit by any stray cats, since it would be an ice-cold day in Miami before I touched one. However, information is always welcome.
The doctor shook his head. "It's highly unlikely that a wolf is carrying rabies."
"Doesn't mean she's in the clear."
"No. But she has the right to refuse treatment."
"And if she starts gnawing on a co-worker, does she have the right to sue you?"
He winced at the word sue, an occupational hazard, I'm sure. "You're like a dog with a bone on this."
Dog? Bone?
I waited for him to snicker, but he was either too tired to get his own joke or he was amusement-challenged. Maybe a little bit of both.
"I like all my ends neat and tidy," I continued. "Call me anal. Everyone else does."
His lips never twitched. Definitely amusement-challenged.
"You can follow up." He scribbled on a notepad. "Here's her address and place of business."
Karen Larson's home was located just off Highway 199.
Huh. That huge car had screamed tourist. Getting out of her vehicle to check on an injured wolf shouted moron. If she wasn't a temporary resident, she was at least very new. Until folks had lived here for a winter they always thought they needed huge tires to roll over the huge snowdrifts.
Her address explained her presence on the highway. It did not, however, explain why she was driving home alone at 3.00 a.m. on a weeknight. Maybe I was nosy, but little details like that bugged me.
Perhaps that was why I'd become a cop. It gave me license to snoop.
I glanced at the doctor's chicken scratch again. Miss Larson was a teacher at Treetop Elementary.
Though some schools finished before Memorial Day weekend, others, like ours, continued classes nearly all the way through June. This was a direct result of the state lawmakers and their brilliant idea that schools should begin after Labor Day in order to make the most out of the tourist season. None of them ever seemed to understand that this only cut several weeks off the other end of summer.
Since Miss Larson had been so all-fired concerned about work - I glanced at my watch - and she should be there by now, I headed in that direction, too.
My decision was a sound one. By the time I reached Treetop Elementary, there was a whole lot of screaming going on.
I was the first officer on the scene. Probably because everyone was more interested in getting out of the building than dialing 911, although sirens in the distance assured me someone had phoned in an emergency.
I wasn't on duty, but what the hell? People running, children screaming, call me silly, but the situation called for a cop.
I parked my squad car at the curb, radioed in my location, then got out and pushed against the tide of bodies leaving the building. Once inside, I searched for someone in charge. As no one was volunteering, I snagged the arm of the nearest adult. At my touch she shrieked, causing several of the children around her to burst into tears.
Their behavior made me edgy. Had the nightmare of a school shooting reached the north woods? Though I didn't hear any gunfire, that didn't mean there hadn't been any.
"What happened?" I demanded, none too nicely.
"I-I don't know. Down there." She jabbed her free hand back the way she'd come. "Screaming. Crying. Shouting. They said evacuate calmly. Then everyone ran."
Which didn't sound good. Typical, but not good.
I released her, and she ushered the few stragglers onto the lawn.
The school had gone eerily silent. I should probably wait for backup, but if there was a gunman inside I didn't plan to let the little bastard do any more damage than he'd already done.
Honestly, if every child who'd ever been teased or tormented grabbed a weapon, none of us would have survived our school years. What was going on in the world that made kids believe it was all right to solve their troubles with a gun? But then again, who was I