She breathed through clenched teeth.
âTry holding out your hand like youâre friendly.â
âAre you crazy? Heâll bite it off.â
âOkay.â Abandoning his radio, Dan edged forward and cautiously reached for the overturned gurney.
Like lightning, the dog dug its teeth into the cushioned top and with a whip of its head sent the gurney clattering.
Sherri edged sideways along the wall as Dan sprang back and nearly went down.
But the dog didnât pounce on him. It immediately retrained its narrowed black eyes on her and stalked closer inch by menacing inch.
Reaching behind her, she felt for the doorknob.
It didnât give.
Sweat trickled down her cheeks. Dan was yelling something, but she couldnât make out what over the roar of blood pulsing past her ears.
Finding the doorbell, she drilled it with her thumb. âNice doggie,â she repeated.
With a blood-chilling growl, the dog bared its fangs.
âDan!â
âYah, yah!â he yelled and jumped around like a crazy man. âHelp is coming, Sherri. Just donât make any sudden moves.â Except Danâs sudden moves werenât doing a thing to distract the beast.
She struggled to pull in a breath. Theyâd warned her about dogs in training. But she couldnât remember a thing theyâd said. âAm I supposed to maintain eye contact?â She hadnât dared take her eyes off of him.
âYeah, I think so,â Dan said between âyahs.â
She tried showing it an open palm like heâd suggested earlier.
âNo, donât look him in the eye!â A guy rushed toward them, scooping up a dead branch as he ran. âLook at its ears or feet, or itâll think youâre challenging him. And fist your hands. Pull them close to your body. Donât give him anything to bite.â
She instantly shifted her gaze to its ears, gulped at their pointy tips aimed straight at her face.
âGo home!â the guy ordered. âBad dog. Go home!â
âItâs not listening,â Sherri eked out. She chanced a glance back at its eyes and the dog lunged.
Massive paws slammed into her, driving the air from her chest. Razor-sharp teeth sliced through her shoulder.
âCover your face!â The guy swung the branch toward them.
The dog snapped its head around and caught the limb in its teeth. She pushed at its chest, trying to get out from under him. Pain screamed through her shoulder. âGet him off me!â
* * *
âStay in the truck,â Cole ordered Eddie as they careened to a stop behind an orange car parked behind Sherriâs ambulance. The sound of her scream ripped through his chest. Drawing his gun, he raced toward Dan and another guy waving their arms and bouncing around like rodeo clowns.
At the sight of Sherri pinned to the ground by a monstrous dog, its paws on her chest as it viciously tore into her, Coleâs heart lurched. He skidded to a stop and got a bead on the dog. Sweat stung his eyes as his finger trembled over the trigger. Blocking out her screams, he inhaled, the scent of blood so strong he could taste it.
Aim center mass and shoot to stop the threat.
His field training officerâs instructions blasted through his brain. But Sherri was under that mass!
He jerked up his arms and squeezed off a shot.
The bullet pinged the stucco wall, distracting the dog enough to break his bite, and Coleâs heart kicked back to life.
The guy with the branch stormed in again, swinging.
The dog lunged for the tree limb as, gripped by the image of it mauling Sherri, Cole tried to get another bead on it.
Two animal control officers raced up. âItâs okay. We got it.â
The guy wrestling with the dog flung the branch at it and scaled the wall as effortlessly as Spider-Man would have.
The animal jumped and tried to clamber after him.
The guy clung to an awning with one hand, his feet and other hand braced against adjoining
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