In Pursuit of Justice (19 page)

“Is everything okay?” There was an odd formality to Catherine’s tone that made Rebecca uneasy.

“Everything’s fine. I just wanted to talk to you for a minute.”

“Okay,” Rebecca replied suspiciously. It hadn’t been her experience that when a woman wanted to talk to her that it was something minor. Especially not when she and that woman had parted on less than perfect terms the night before.

Catherine laughed, picking up on Rebecca’s uncertainty. “And I wanted to tell you that I miss you.”

“I miss you, too.”

“Good. Drive carefully.”

*

An instant after Rebecca knocked, Catherine answered the door.

“Hi,” Rebecca said, hesitating on the threshold, still feeling uncertain about her welcome.

“Hi.” Catherine took her detective’s hand and pulled the unresisting woman into the waiting room that adjoined her office, closing the door resolutely. “Joyce is at lunch, and I don’t have a session for an hour. What about you?”

“My schedule is my own. I’m still on light duty, remember?”

“Yes, I know that’s what it’s called,” Catherine said dryly. “Come on back to my office.”

Catherine locked her inner office door and motioned Rebecca to the couch, then settled beside her. Before she could speak, Rebecca slipped an arm around her waist and kissed her. It was more than a simple hello kiss. There was an edge to it, an underlying pulse of hunger that immediately left Catherine aroused. She kissed her in return, for longer than she should have, but she liked knowing that she stirred this desire in her. Finally, she broke away, palms against Rebecca’s chest.

“Enough. I’m working,” she reminded her lover regretfully. “I have to see patients in less than an hour. I can’t sit here all afternoon in a state of sexual frustration.”

“I could fix that in just a few minutes.”

Catherine laughed. “I have no doubt that you could. But I think I’d rather anticipate now and be satisfied later at a slightly more leisurely pace.”

“Then that’s what you shall have,” Rebecca promised, lifting Catherine’s hand from her chest and kissing her palm. Serious now, she asked, “What did you need to see me about?”

Catherine appeared uncharacteristically tentative as she glanced away, then met Rebecca’s gaze squarely. Taking a deep breath, she said quietly, “I was contacted by Agent Clark this morning. He requested my services as a consultant to a task force he’s running.”

Rebecca stiffened, and her eyes grew cold. “Son of a bitch,” she said softly. “How did he get your name?”

“I’m on the list of departmental consultants,” Catherine said. “He also mentioned Captain Henry.”

Rebecca got up and quickly crossed the room to the window that fronted the street. She’d stood there once before, the first night she’d met Catherine, but it had been dark then. She watched university students come and go outside the window, carefree and confident. It was a beautiful early September day.

Without turning, she asked, “What did you say?”

“I said I would get back to him. This is your task force, isn’t it?”

“No,” Rebecca said sharply, her back still to the room. “It’s
Clark’s
task force.”

“You know what I mean.”

There was no anger or accusation in Catherine’s voice, and Rebecca realized that Catherine had not instigated the situation. Her lover didn’t deserve her wrath. Turning to face her, she tried to figure out why she felt like punching something. “I’m sorry. You caught me off guard. Yes, it’s the task force I’m involved with—the pornography prostitution investigation.”

“I work with the police fairly frequently, Rebecca. It’s quite likely that you and I will come into professional contact from time to time.”

“I know. Why didn’t you give Clark your answer earlier?” She tried and failed to keep the resentment from her voice.

“Because this is the first time something like this has come up for us,” Catherine said gently. “I wanted to see how you felt about it.”

“Does that matter?”

“Yes, it does.” Catherine heard the anger, but she saw something else in the troubled blue gaze. Worry. Gently, she said, “You matter. And
we
matter very much to me.”

“The last time you and I worked together,” Rebecca pointed out darkly, “it ended badly.”

“But this isn’t the same thing, though, is it?” When Rebecca was silent, Catherine rose and crossed to her, worried now herself. “
Is
it, Rebecca? You said this was more or less an administrative assignment for you. That it wasn’t dangerous. Is there more to it than that?”

“No,” Rebecca said, deciding that there was no point in bringing up her suspicions and speculations about something going on behind the scenes in the department. She didn’t really have any facts, and there was no point in worrying her lover for nothing. Still, she didn’t like the idea of Catherine being anywhere near an investigation that felt as off as this one did. “I only wonder why Clark isn’t bringing in his own people. If there’s one thing the feds have plenty of, it’s profilers.”

“I asked him the same thing,” Catherine said. “He pointed out that we’re not profiling an individual but just a general pathologic type, and that I probably have as much experience with it as anyone. He also suggested that it would be helpful to have someone local so that…he mentioned two people, Sloan and McBride…so they would have someone immediately available if they got a hit.”

“That makes sense,” Rebecca agreed reluctantly.

“Rebecca,” Catherine said, taking the other woman’s hand. “This is what I do, and it’s something I love to do. If it’s going to be a problem working this closely with me—”

“No,” Rebecca interrupted swiftly, finally getting her emotions under control. “It’s not. When you first mentioned it, I thought about Blake. That’s all.”

“It’s not the same thing.” Catherine moved closer, gently threading her arms around Rebecca’s waist. “I will never do anything like that again. I would never put you in danger.”

Rebecca stared at her uncomprehendingly. “What are you talking about?”

“I insisted on being involved in the Blake investigation, and it resulted in you being shot. Nearly killed.” Her voice broke on the last word.

“That wasn’t your fault.”

“Yes, it was.” There were tears in her voice, although her face was calm.

“Jesus, Catherine. Is that what you think? You blame yourself?” She pulled her tightly into her arms, resting her cheek against Catherine’s hair. She thought back to the nights that Catherine had lain beside her, tossing fitfully and awakening in terror.
Christ, how could I have been so blind?

“Is
that
what the dreams are about?”

When Catherine didn’t answer, Rebecca leaned back, cupping Catherine’s chin in her palm. Looking into her deep green eyes, she saw the pain swimming close to the surface. “No. It wasn’t your fault. What happened—that was
my
decision. I thought of Blake just now because I don’t want you anywhere near an investigation that might be dangerous. I can’t stand the thought of anything happening to you. I can still see him with that fucking gun against your head.”

Suddenly, they were both trembling, each of them remembering that moment, each fearing for the other. Quietly, Catherine said, “I love you.”

Rebecca pressed her lips to Catherine’s temple, her fingers curved possessively on the back of her neck. “And I love you.” Sighing, she asked, “When are you briefing with us?”

“Tomorrow at 7:00 a.m.” Her cheek was still nestled against Rebecca’s shoulder. “Will you come to me tonight?”

“It might be late,” Rebecca answered reluctantly.

“I don’t care.”

“I want to. I miss you so much.”

Eyes closed, listening to Rebecca’s heartbeat, Catherine said softly, “Then don’t stay away.”

Chapter Eleven

Rebecca knew that what she should do was go home and catch some sleep, but she was too restless for that. Watts was following up on the scant help they’d gotten from Alonso Richards, the inmate at the State Correctional Institution at Graterford, in exchange for a promise to get him moved to another cell block far away from a particular prisoner who wanted to kill him for reasons Richards couldn’t imagine. He’d reluctantly given them a couple of names of some of his old running buddies who
might
know somebody who
possibly
knew somebody who
maybe
had once helped make some sex movies. But he swore he didn’t know who or where or for whom—all he knew was that it was someplace in the city and the chicks were young.

Maybe Watts would pull another rabbit out of his hat, but she’d pretty much resigned herself to the fact that, for the moment, unless Sloan came up with something, or an informant gave her a lead, she had nothing to chase. But Jeff’s murder was still open, and she wanted to be able to tell Shelly Cruz that justice had been done when she went to see her. She’d been putting off visiting Jeff’s wife because she was embarrassed that the department—that
she
—had nothing substantial to offer the young widow in terms of consolation.

Taking a shot in the dark, she drove back to the station house and took the elevator to the second floor where the Homicide division was housed. She usually walked up, but she was beat. A couple of detectives she knew nodded hello, one of them remarking as she passed, “Good to see you back, Frye.”

She muttered her thanks but didn’t stop to talk. She found the person she was looking for in the break room, jacket off, feet propped on a wastepaper basket, multitasking with an open murder book propped next to her brown-bag lunch.

“Sorry to bother you,” Rebecca said to the woman in the dark blue suit as she closed the door to the small stuffy space. There was a window with a view of the river, but it was grimy and looked to be nailed shut. “Got a minute?”

Trish Marks glanced up from the case file she was reviewing, startled but too experienced to show it. “Frye. How are you doing?”

“I’m not bad. You?”

“Different day, same old shit. Crime might be down, but murder still has a way of happening.”

Rebecca nodded. “I know what you mean. Sex still sells, too.”

Trish closed the thick file and pushed it aside, draining her Coke can and tossing it into a nearby wastebasket. Leaning back in her chair, she fixed Frye with a steady look. “What’s on your mind?”

“Jeff Cruz and Jimmy Hogan.”

“Why aren’t I surprised,” Marks said to herself, and it wasn’t meant to be a question. She got up and stretched, then walked to the coffee machine and poured a cup. She glanced inquiringly at Rebecca, who shook her head no. When she had added two sugars and enough fake cream to give herself brain cancer, she walked back to the table and sat down again. “What have you heard?”

Rebecca wondered how much to reveal. Trish Marks had a rep as a solid cop, and whenever Rebecca had interacted with her in the past, everything had seemed to confirm that. On the other hand, Marks was one of the detectives responsible for solving Jeff’s murder, and she hadn’t done that. Rebecca had to question why she had dropped the ball.

For a moment, the two women simply assessed one another in the silence. At first glance, they didn’t seem all that similar, even though Marks was about Rebecca’s age. She was dark where Rebecca was light, short where Rebecca was tall, mildly curvaceous where Rebecca was lean, but the look in their eyes was a matched set—tough, competent, and wary.

Rebecca could almost see it when Marks reached a decision, and she just waited, giving the Homicide detective a chance to gather her thoughts. There were allegiances to be considered, and cops were loath to give out information on their cases, even to other cops.

“We didn’t get anything from the crime scene,” Marks said, carefully choosing her words, “which is about what you’d expect. Flanagan worked it hard, but there just wasn’t anything to find.”

“Contract hit, right?”

Trish nodded. “Despite how fucked up this case got, I still think that’s the truth. There was absolutely nothing at the scene to go on. And no rumors on the street to say differently—no talk of personal beefs, nothing to suggest it was a drug buy gone bad. Everything about it spelled hit.” She stopped, wondering without much hope if Frye would let it go at that.

“What about Jimmy Hogan’s files? What about his supervisors? Somebody somewhere knew what he was into. The last time I spoke with you and your partner, you hadn’t had a chance to go through Jimmy’s cases. Since that was over two months ago, I’ll ask again. What did you turn up there?”

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