In Death 32 - Treachery in Death
“Otherwise, this round I’ll let her have a go at you. And she’s meaner than I am.”
Webster rose again, scowled. But stuck his hands in his pockets.
“You’re not cutting me out of this, Dallas.”
“Me, cutting you out? You just stood there and tried to grab my case.”
“Bad cops fall under IAB.”
“Don’t give me your bureaucratic bullshit. If I didn’t expect, and fully understand, that IAB needs to have a hand in this, I wouldn’t have asked for your assist, and you’d still know squat.”
“At which time I played it your way instead of immediately informing my captain. I’m sick to death of this attitude that we’re not cops, not real ones.”
“I never said you weren’t a cop. But you’re sure as hell not Homicide, not anymore. You made your choice there, Webster. You’ve got a job to do. Accepted. So do I, and you’re not making a grab for my investigation.”
“You need the collar? No problem. I’ll make sure you get the credit.”
“I ought to kick your ass for that.” Indeed her hands fisted at her sides. “Fuck you. Fuck you sideways if you think this is about a collar, about credit. If you think—”
“I don’t. I don’t,” he repeated, and rubbed a hand over the back of his neck. “And that was a cheap shot, Apologies.”
She swore again, paced away. “I could have done this without you.”
“Yeah, and it feels like you are. Give lip service to the rat, but don’t keep feeding him any new cheese.”
She turned back. “What?”
“Why don’t I hear until this morning that Garnet came after you? I don’t hear he got the chance because you’d gone to talk to one of Renee’s people.”
“Lilah Strong isn’t one of her people.”
“She’s in the squad,” he reminded her, “and I should’ve been consulted on it. I didn’t hear until this morning there’s a tail on you. I didn’t hear about Garnet.”
“I informed the commander,” she began.
“Now who’s bullshitting?”
“It’s not bullshit. That’s my first duty. And I didn’t contact you at every turn because you were . . . involved, in the thing. Darcia.”
“Now you’ve got a problem with me and Darcia?”
“No. God.” Frustrated, she raked her hand through her hair. “I wasn’t holding out on you. I didn’t contact my own partner because I didn’t deem it necessary. I didn’t contact you, same reason, and also because I thought I was doing you a solid. Giving you the night to ... to go to the theater. The musical theater.”
He stared at her for a moment, then his body lost its fighting stance. “I guess you were, doing me that solid. It’s appreciated. But I’m a cop, and so’s Darcia. You know interruptions of... musical theater are part of the deal.”
“What would you, or could you, have done about any of it, if so interrupted?”
“Nothing, really. But I’d have had it worked out in my head better, been clearer on the lay of the land.”
“Fine, I’ll interrupt you next time. And if you’re in the middle of the big production number, it’ll be your own fault.”
He laughed. “I always had a thing for you.”
“Oh, for—”
“Not that way, not that way.” Cautiously, he took a step back. “Don’t punch me, or call out the dogs. I worked with you a few times, and I like the way your mind works. Even when I don’t agree. I like how you can chomp at a case until you spit it out, your way. You’re a hard-ass, Dallas, but that’s one of the reasons for the thing. You weren’t much of a team player back the couple times we worked the same cases.”
Maybe not, she thought. No, definitely not. “I wasn’t in command. Command changes things because your men depend on you to head that team. I wasn’t ... a lot of things for a lot of reasons.”
She thought of walking with Roarke on a summer evening. “I’m not the same person now I was then.”
“No. I guess I’m not either.” He held out a hand. “Bygones?”
“It depends.” She took his hand. “If you go after my case, I’ll take this hand again. And I’ll break it off at the wrist.”
He grinned at her. “Go, team.”
“I’m going to trust you, because I’ve gone through doors with you before. If you want to stay for the rest of the briefing, take a seat. I’ll be right back.”
“No, but I appreciate it. I’ve got things to do before we meet with the commander.”
“I’ll see you then.”
She walked to Roarke’s office, opened the door, shut it behind
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