I park outside of a rundown dive bar outside of town with a gravel driveway and a sign so worn and chipped itâs impossible to read. âWhere the hell did you bring me, Angelo?â Sara asks, squinting through the windshield. Itâs around five on a Saturday and there are already half a dozen cars parked nearby.
âThis is the High Noon and itâs a freaking cop bar.â
She laughs and shakes her head. âYouâre kidding me.â
âNope, Iâm serious. The state police have a headquarters nearby and I guess a bunch of the cops in the area all started congregating here. Donât ask me how that happened.â
âI thought they all hated each other.â
I shrug and kill the engine. âHereâs the thing. I did some research over the last few days.â
âYeah? Did you now? And what did you find out?â
âOur detective, Misty Vance. She happens to come here, to this bar, every single Saturday right around this time.â
âAnd how the hell do youââ She holds up a hand. âYou know what, never mind, I donât want to know.â
I grin at her and donât bother saying I hounded the secretary that works at the Dallas PD and gave her a big fat bribe for any info he had to share about Detective Vance. This was the only good tip she had.
âVance is going to be surrounded by her cop buddies in there which means sheâs not going to talk. But we might be able to wait out here until she emerges.â
Saraâs lips press into a line. âIâm a lawyer. I could go in there.â
âI doubt they get very many lawyers like you at a place like this.â
âItâs a cop bar, right? That means itâs the safest place in the world.â
I laugh drum my fingers on the steering wheel. âYouâd be surprised how true that is.â
âLook, you can stay here, but Iâm going in.â
âSaraââ
âThis isnât your show, Angelo.â She gives me a hard look. The soft, moaning, whimpering girl from a few nights ago is totally gone. I thought I saw a glimpse of her the next morning, but Saraâs been rebuilding her walls and putting them up twice as high ever since she gave in and let me make her feel good.
But it was fucking worth it.
The taste of her skin, her hard, pink nipples, her soaking wet little clit, her moans, everything about her was perfection. I wanted so much more and it took all my willpower not to cross that line.
I could see what would happen in her face. The moment the real world began to reassert itself, her walls came back up. She wouldâve been freaked out and any progress Iâm making on opening her up wouldâve been ruined.
I held back. But I donât know if I can do that again.
She snaps off her seatbelt and goes to get out, but I grab her arm. She glares at me, nostrils flaring.
âThink for a second,â I say quickly. âIf you go in there and start talking to her in front of all her cop buddies, what do you think will happen?â
She hesitates. âIâll ask her to speak privately.â
âAnd theyâll all know sheâs talking to a lawyer. Theyâll figure out who you are and connect you back to her one big case. Then whoever is behind this coverup will know weâre after them.â
âHow do you know it isnât Vance herself?â
âYou really didnât look at her files.â
âYes, I did,â Sara says, sounding annoyed. âVance is twenty-eight, young for a detective, but decorated. She was promoted six weeks agoââ She stops, lips pressed together. âThatâs it, isnât it?â
âSheâs a rookie,â I say. âA young detective without much experience. Why would anyone assign her a case like this?â
âUnless they want her to mess it up.â Sara relaxes and sits back in her seat. âI shouldâve seen this sooner.â
âYou have enough to worry about. If you go storming in there, everyone will know weâre chasing after this lead, and we definitely donât want that.â
âSo what do we do?â
âSit back and wait.â
Sara glances at me then looks at the bar and sighs. âStay in this car with you for possibly hours or roll the dice and go inside. I have to admit, itâs not an easy decision.â
âAs much as I love your wit and your conversation, this is whatâs right for the case. Sit back and relax, my frigid little princess. Weâve got time to kill.â
Sara closes her eyes, curses quietly, but at least she doesnât move.
Half my job is boring. There are exciting bits, like running after scumbags that wonât pay their debts or breaking knees or killing enemies, but mostly itâs a lot of administration. Making sure guys have product, making sure the stash houses are safe and secure, keeping cops fat and happy, all that shit. Iâm used to this sort of exhausting boredom, but Saraâs not.
She gets antsy after ten minutes.
âTell me something about growing up,â I say just to keep her distracted. âWhat was it like?â
âIâd rather not give you my sob story.â
âAh, come on. Youâre one of those overachievers. What did Mommy and Daddy do to you?â
Her jaw flexes, but she must be even more bored than I realized, because she answers. âMom is an alcoholic homemaker and my father is a surgeon.â
âSurgeon. Fancy. Gotta admit though, I know a whole lot of alcoholic homemakers. Thatâs basically just where Iâm from.â
She gives me a look like sheâs sick of my shit. âWhat about you? Your parents both passed?â
âThatâs right. My grandma raised me.â
âShe mustâve been a good woman.â
âThe best there is, but she couldnât work much. Had all these health problems. COPD, arthritis, diabetes. Bunch of shit. Thatâs why I am what I am.â
âAnd what you, Angelo?â
I consider that question. âIâm a man that looks out for those that I love.â
She seems surprised by my answer, but she doesnât try to correct me. Instead, she shifts down lower in her seat and closes her eyes. I figure the conversation is over and let her get some beauty rest, but after a few minutes she speaks up.
âWhen I first met you, I never wouldâve guessed you were the type of guy to drop everything to come down to Dallas and help out a friend.â
âNicolas isnât just a friend. Heâs a brother.â But I doubt she can understand that.
âEven still. I donât agree with the way you go about things, but so far, youâre getting some results, and youâre risking a lot to do it.â
âIn my line of work, you treat your people like kings. You take care of your family and you pay your debts. Thatâs always been how I live.â
âIf you werenât a criminal, thatâd almost be noble.â
âUnfortunately, Iâm scum.â
She cracks a smile and turns on the radio.
We get lucky. Cops all across the world tend to be the hard drinking type. Itâs the sort of job that sticks with people, that really gets under the skin, under the nails, thatâs like a grime under their tongue. Drinking softens some of the bad stuff. Makes some of it almost easy to manage. Iâve met sober cops, but Iâve never met a cop that doesnât have at least one coping mechanism.
Detective Misty Vance exits the bar flanked by a big gentleman around eight. Only three hours, which is lucky. They pause out front, talk for a few minutes, then go in opposite directions. Iâd guess partner, boyfriend, lover. Maybe all three. I nudge Sara and she startles awake.
âNowâs our chance,â I say and open the door. âYou ready?â
âReady,â she says and follows me outside.
Detective Vanceâs car is a black Ford pickup. Sheâs parked at the far end of the lot, and as we approach, she puts her back to the vehicle and turns on us, one hand moving to the weapon at her hip. Sheâs pretty, short blonde hair, hard eyes, no makeup. Denim jacket over jeans. I give her my best smile, and maybe Sara does too, because the detective squints at us and doesnât draw the gun.
âCan I help you two?â she asks.
âDetective,â Sara says. âMy name is Sara Bray and this is my associate, Angelo. I work for the law firm Klein and Houndson.â
I try not to grin. Iâm her associate now? It sounds like we both work for that fancy law firm, which was probably her intention.
Detective Vanceâs eyebrows raise. âWhat can I do for you, Ms. Bray?â
âSara,â she says and clears her throat. âDetective, I wanted to ask you about Wally Batt.â
Detective Vanceâs entire demeanor changes the moment Sara mentions that name. Just like Wally back at the motel, her arms cross over her chest and she shuts down. Sheâs not going to run away like good old Wally did, but the expression on her face is harder than iron.
âIâm sorry, Ms. Bray, but I canât discuss that.â
âYou spoke with Wally, didnât you?â Sara takes a step closer and Detective Vance flinches. âThatâs what he told us, but thereâs no record of your conversation.â
âIf you have an issue with the files we released, you can take it up with the judge, or you can come down to the station during business hours. Surprising me on my night off isnât going to get you anywhere, Ms. Bray.â
âWhat Saraâs trying to say is who wanted that interview to disappear, and why do you look like youâre ready to bolt?â I smile as sweetly as I can but Detective Vance looks like she tastes something sour.
âI donât know what youâre talking about, sir. If you folks need something, go through official channels. Iâm heading home.â
âPlease, Detective,â Sara presses. âThere are five dead bodies and an innocent guyâs going down for it. Why did your interview with Wally disappear?â
Vance stands with her hand on the handle of her truck, ready to yank it open, but she pauses. She stares straight ahead, not moving for a few seconds, and the nightâs so filled with tension that I think itâs trying to shove its way down my throat. My heartâs going fast and I donât know how the detectiveâs going to react to this line of questioning. Some part of me worries sheâs about to lash out at Sara. Maybe I had it wrong and Vance really is part of the coverup after all.
But she looks down at the ground. âIf I was interested in the truth, Iâd find that interview. I conducted it and filed it through the proper channels, and if itâs missing, well, I donât know who made it disappear.â
âWhere should we look?â Sara asks.
But the detective only shakes her head. âGood luck to you two.â She opens her door, gets inside, and the engine roars to life.
We move out of the way as Detective Vance drives off and doesnât look back.
âWell, that was interesting,â I say and steer Sara to the car.
âWe need that file.â
âProblem is, where the hell can we find it?â
âCops are half enforcers and half bureaucrats. They file, refile, and do everything in triplicate. Itâll be somewhere.â
I get back behind the wheel and Sara clicks her seatbelt on.
âYouâre a scary woman, you know that?â I smirk as she glares at me. âGoing toe to toe with that detective.â
âTake us back to the hotel, Angelo.â
âYes, maâam. Itâll be my pleasure.â