doorway, looking at him. Greyson held out his hand and smiled. “Greyson Morgenstein,” he said.
“Detective Boris Shear,” the man replied. He led him inside and motioned toward an empty chair in the small office.
Greyson sat down and began, “What can you tell me about the missing War Dog?”
“I think that’s my line,” the detective said drily.
“I mean, what have you found out about the dog?” Greyson asked, with an airy wave of his hand. “Obviously the US government is very concerned.”
“And yet you’ve been weeks getting here,” the detective said, the corner of his lips curling up.
“Well, I just arrived,” he said, “because the file was given to me yesterday. So I admit the wheels of government turn pretty slowly at times, but I’m here to rectify that.”
“But not everybody moves just because you say so,” the detective said. He reached over, grabbing a file. It was damn slim. He opened it up. “All I have is a signed receipt of the airport handlers, saying they accepted the dog. It was taken to the shelter. I don’t even have a picture of the dog from the shelter or where it was kept. Just notes from the next morning, saying the dog was gone.”
“Any theories or suspicious behavior?”
“I think they were assuming somebody let the dog out.”
“But that would mean somebody must have been in the shelter in order to have done that, which would make it an inside job,” he said.
The detective lifted his gaze and stared at him. “What do you mean?”
“I mean,” he said, “there’s no outside access or gate to the run where the dog was kept.”
Silence. “Interesting,” he said, sitting back. “I wasn’t aware of that.”
“Did you go to the site?”
“I did,” he said, “and I saw the pen and run from the inside.”
“So you didn’t get into the run then?”
The detective shook his head.
“That’s how you would have seen that there’s no gate on the outside,” he said.
“So, what do you think happened?”
“I think the dog jumped,” Greyson said honestly. “They are well-known for scaling six feet easily.”
The detective shook his head. “I don’t like the sound of that,” he said. “This is a military War Dog. He’s dangerous, and he shouldn’t be out on the loose.”
That isn’t what Greyson wanted to hear at all. He leaned forward. “She’s very well-behaved and certainly isn’t aggressive without reason.”
“How about hunger?” the detective snapped back. “Just because you say it’s well-trained doesn’t mean it is. And just because you say it’s well-mannered and well-behaved doesn’t mean it is. This dog has been missing for weeks now. For all you know it could have been eating other dogs and cats in the neighborhood.”
“I highly doubt it, or you would have reports to substantiate missing pets,” Greyson said calmly. “Would she have taken a rabbit or a bird because she needed to? Yes, absolutely she would have. The same as you and I would.”
“When does a bird or a rabbit become a small child?”
“You haven’t been worried about Kona eating pets and children all this time,” Greyson said. “Why now?”
“I was assuming the dog was stolen.”
“For what purpose?”
“Maybe somebody heard about the dog? Maybe somebody thought they could use it for breeding?”
“All War Dogs are fixed,” Greyson said calmly. “So, if they thought they would breed it, they would be wrong.”
“But they may not have known that when they took it,” he said. “For that matter, they may still not know it.” The detective frowned. “So, it would be a rude awakening. And what happens if they turn on the dog because they’re upset now?”
“The dog would defend herself against a certain amount of abuse, but she’s in a very strange circumstance now, and her orderly and regulated life has been burst wide open,” Greyson said. “That doesn’t make her a mad, foaming-at-the-mouth dog that’s dangerous.”
“It doesn’t make it a cozy pet that everybody will want to keep either,” the detective said, glaring at him.
“And what is it you think she’ll do?”
“How do I know?” he said.
The detective’s attitude didn’t improve over the next ten minutes, when they sorted out what options they had for finding the dog.
“I’m expecting somebody to turn him in,” the detective said in a surly note. “Most likely after he’s attacked somebody.”
“Once again, it’s a female, and her name is Kona. I hope you’re wrong,” Greyson said, standing up. “That would be the worst-case scenario.”
“It would, indeed,” the detective said, standing up as well. “So why don’t you try and find her before she