• 34 •
Justice for All
ChAPTER ThREE
Excuse me,” Sandy said to Michael when her phone rang out the melody to “I Kissed a Girl.” She fished it out of her jacket pocket and swiveled away from the breakfast bar where they’d been drinking tea and talking.
“Hi, babe,” Dell said. “I’m at Sloan’s. We’re just wrapping up, but I’ll be a little while yet. You anywhere nearby?”
“Like upstairs?”
“Oh hey, that’s good.” Dell didn’t sound all that glad.
“What’s up?”
“The lieutenant is here. She wants to talk to you.”
“In person? Now?”
“Yeah.”
“I’ll be down in a few.” Sandy disconnected and shrugged at Michael. “Sorry. Frye wants me.”
“Of course. I understand. Are you still…helping out?” Michael hesitated. “You don’t have to tell me, if you can’t.”
“I don’t think it’s a secret. I mean, Sloan probably tells you everything, right?”
Michael smiled, but said nothing.
“Dell tells me stuff. Not much. She’s really all about the rules when it comes to the cop stuff.” Sandy grinned. “She’s loosened up some since she’s been hanging out with Jasmine, though.”
“Sloan doesn’t like to talk about her work very much either,”
Michael said. “In fact, when she’s involved in a case, she pretty much forgets to eat, sleep, or do much of anything else except work.”
“That worries you, huh?”
• 35 •
RADclY fFe
“Oh,” Michael said quickly. “I didn’t mean… She’s intense. I fell in love with her because of how focused she is, how driven. How…”
She blushed. “Passionate.”
“I get that part all right.” Sandy laughed. “Any girl with a beating heart gets that part about Sloan.”
“Apparently.” Michael laughed. “I had to get used to that pretty quickly. Fortunately I’m not really the jealous type.”
“I am.”
“I don’t think you have much to worry about from what I can see,”
Michael said softly.
“I didn’t know I was—jealous that way. Until her.” Sandy shrugged. “Dell is the first one who ever mattered, you know.”
Michael nodded. “I do know. Exactly.”
Sandy grinned. She had girlfriends, sort of. Girls she hung with on the street. Girls she looked out for and who looked out for her. But mostly they talked about what they needed to know to get by—which johns to avoid and which pimps were quick with their hands and which cops wanted favors. And the rare ones, like Frye, who didn’t. But she’d never talked to any of them about Dell. About being with her. About having someone of her own. “I should go. Frye gets cranky if you keep her waiting.”
“Does she now.” Michael chuckled. “She’s never been anything except completely chivalrous with me.”
They eyed one another for a few seconds, and then burst out laughing together. Michael draped her arm around Sandy’s shoulder and walked her toward the door.
“You’ll think about what I said?”
“I will. I should talk to Dell, you know?”
“Absolutely. Take all the time you need.”
“Thanks,” Sandy said, feeling so much more than gratitude but not quite knowing what to say.
“You don’t need to thank me,” Michael said gently. “We’re friends.”
“Yeah,” Sandy said with a sense of wonder as she stepped into the elevator. “We are.”
v
• 36 •
Justice for All
“Hiya, Frye,” Sandy said as she plopped into a chair across the table from Rebecca in the conference room. On her way through the main room she’d seen Dell bent over a computer with Jason and Sloan, but Frye was alone. Frye never talked to her about street stuff in front of others, especially not Dell. “You look like crap.”
“I’ve heard that two times too many today.”
“You okay or just playing macho cop?” Sandy didn’t add that she’d been scared just about brainless when she’d heard that a cop had been shot in a raid, because Dell had been in on the bust, and she’d felt only a little less terrified when she’d learned it was Frye. Frye was special in a crazy kind of way she couldn’t explain. Frye was a hard-ass and pain in the ass, but she’d never lied to Sandy about what she wanted from her. Even back in the early days when Sandy was working the streets for real and Frye squeezed her for information, she never took advantage like some cops. Frye always paid and treated her like she mattered. She was the first person who ever had.
“I’m okay enough,” Rebecca said. “Everything quiet?”
“As far as I know.” Sandy picked at a chip on the red polish on her thumbnail. “I haven’t been out since things went down the other night. I wasn’t sure—” She glanced through the open door in Dell’s direction, but Dell was busy tapping away at a computer. Dell always got hinky when she was working for Frye. She liked that Dell worried about her, but she didn’t want her to worry too much. She liked that Dell got a little jealous. Okay, sometimes a lot jealous. She liked that feeling of being special and cared about. But she would never make her jealous on purpose. She’d played games to survive her whole life, and she would never do it with Dell.
Rebecca stood. “Let’s go for a walk.”
“Are you kidding me? You look like—”
“You said that already. Come on. We won’t go far.”
Sandy shook her head, but followed Frye to the elevator. Dell looked over once as they walked through the room, then quickly back to her keyboard. Sandy kept her distance while they rode down, aware of the cameras everywhere. But once outside on the street, she looped her arm through Frye’s without being invited.
When Frye gave her a raised eyebrow, she snapped, “You don’t look that steady. I don’t want you falling into the street and getting run
• 37 •
RADclY fFe
over. I’ll never get any dinner, which is what I came here for to begin with.”
“Let’s go to the deli around the corner,” Rebecca said, moving her arm out of Sandy’s grasp to curl it around her shoulder. “Why the hell don’t you ever dress for the weather? You’re shivering.”
“I’m used to it.”
“That’s not what your body is saying.”
“I’m in charge of my body,” Sandy said flatly.
Rebecca said nothing. A few minutes later they slipped into a greasy spoon on the corner of Market and Fourth that smelled like fried onions, strong coffee, and tomato sauce. They claimed a booth at the back and a waitress asked them what they wanted, not bothering to offer them menus. Rebecca ordered a sandwich and coffee, then thought better of the coffee and switched to water. She still had a headache and maybe the caffeine wasn’t such a good idea.
“Just a Bud,” Sandy said.
The waitress cocked her head at Rebecca and Rebecca nodded.
Sandy was legal in all the ways that counted. She’d proved herself enough times to deserve a beer.
“So, what’s the deal,” Sandy asked.
“Things have changed,” Rebecca said. “We’ve put a crimp in the supply line by exposing the trafficking operation down at the port. I’m sure there’s plenty of those foreign girls still around, but my guess is whoever is running them is going to be very cautious for a little while.
That means a lot more action is going to come to your friends.”
Sandy sipped the beer the waitress brought her. “Don’t you mean me and my friends?”
“Not if you’re not hooking, which you aren’t. Right?”
“Jeez, don’t start sounding like Dell.”
Rebecca frowned. “Are you and Mitchell having problems about that?”
“No,” Sandy said quickly, afraid that she might get Dell in trouble somehow. “She’s just, you know…overprotective. Must be a cop thing.”
“Must be.” Rebecca waited until the waitress slapped a heavy white plate with a thick sandwich down on the table. She wasn’t really hungry, but she couldn’t remember the last time she ate. She knew she
• 38 •
Justice for All
needed the food, so she forced herself to take a bite. “I want you to find me a replacement.”
“For Dell?” Sandy said, her heart rising in her throat. Man, Dell would lose her mind if Frye let her go.
“No,” Rebecca said in exasperation, trying not to shake her head and make the pounding any worse. “For you.”
“Why? I’ve got the contacts, I like the money, and besides—you know you can trust me.”
“Like I said, the situation is different now.”
Rebecca had thought long and hard about this while she’d been lying in a hospital bed. Any reliable confidential informant was invaluable, and Sandy was not only trustworthy, she was smart and street savvy. She was as much a member of the team as any of them.
But she was also the least trained and probably the least capable of taking care of herself. Rebecca had intentionally used her, put her at risk, more than once. It was necessary because she needed Sandy to get the job done, and the job was everything. The job had always been everything, more important than her lovers, more important than her life. But something had changed, and she wasn’t quite sure how or what.
Six months ago, if Sandy had been hurt while gathering information for her, she would’ve been angry. If Sandy had been killed, she would’ve been saddened, hurt. And she would’ve hunted down whoever had done it no matter how long it took. Because that was her job, and Sandy was hers to protect. Now if Sandy got into trouble some night, if she was hurt, Rebecca wasn’t sure she could live with it. She knew Mitchell wouldn’t be able to. She closed her eyes and pinched the bridge of her nose again. How the hell had she gotten this attached to one of her CIs? And how did she end up with a cop on her team involved with her CI, a prostitute no less? It was a recipe for disaster, completely against protocol. Why hadn’t she put a stop to it? At times like this, she thought maybe she still should.
“Look,” Sandy said, gripping Rebecca’s arm. “I’m careful. I’m smart. And I’ve got friends out there. People I care about, just like you care about Dell and Jason and Sloan. Hell. Even Lard Ass.”
“That’s Detective Watts to you,” Rebecca said, smothering a smile. “I’ll look after your friends. That’s my job.”
• 39 •
RADclY fFe
“Yeah yeah. You’ll look after everyone. Sure. Look at you. You are as gray as this floor.” Sandy pulled her phone out of her jacket again. “I’m calling your lady to come and get you.”
Rebecca jerked upright and winced. “No! I’m heading home soon.” She looked at her wrist and for the tenth time that afternoon remembered she didn’t have her watch. Catherine must have taken it home from the hospital when she’d been admitted, because it hadn’t been with her personal effects. “What time is it?”
Sandy looked over her shoulder at a round-faced wall clock with a faded Hershey’s ice cream logo hanging on the wall behind the counter.
“Almost six thirty.”
“Oh, Christ,” Rebecca whispered. Catherine would be home any minute. She pulled money from her pocket and dropped it on the counter. Thankfully, Catherine had made sure she had cash when she left the hospital. “I’ve got to go. We’ll talk about this tomorrow.”
“You’re not driving, are you?”
“No, Watts is my ride. He went back to headquarters to finish up some paperwork. I’ll call him to pick me up outside of Sloan’s.”
Sandy jumped up and wrapped her arm around Rebecca’s waist when Rebecca swayed. “Gimme your frickin’ phone and tell me his number.”
“It’s number two on speed dial.” Rebecca didn’t resist the help.
She really did feel like crap.
v
“So,” Vincent asked when Angelo picked up the phone. “You doing anything over there besides pulling your crank?”
“Hell, yeah.” Angelo raised his left shoulder to hold the phone against his ear while he handled the video camera. “Are you sure you don’t have me watching some kind of whorehouse? There’s more action going on in that building than in some of our joints.”
“Yeah? Like what?”
“Like girls coming and going. Real lookers and real friendly-like.
Some of them are dykes for sure.”
“Heard that. You getting ID?”
“They’re not wearing name tags, but I’ve shot some great footage.
Real boner material.”
• 40 •
Justice for All
“Just keep it in your pants. The boss wants to know who’s shacked up with who.”
“There’s some little blonde who looks like she’s servicing the whole team. She has to know plenty. We ought to put one of the boys on her.”
“Don’t worry. The boys are gonna be plenty busy soon. See you in the morning, and you better have more than tits and ass on film.”
“Believe me, I’ve got plenty.” Angelo dropped the cell phone on the windowsill and zoomed in on the face of a tall, chiseled blonde in casual clothing who climbed into the passenger side of a Crown Vic.
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