I can ‘lighten up’ like Pryce?”

Jesse was silent. Louis waited, watching as he fumbled with his service pin. He dropped the clasp and jerked the bar from his shirt and looked at Louis.

“All right. I’m sorry,” he said. “It slipped out.”

“Freudian slip?” Louis said.

“Give me a fucking break, Kincaid. It’s not like I called you a nigger or something.”

“Well, actually it is like you called me a nigger or something. You’d be surprised how many people don’t quite catch that subtle distinction.”

Jesse looked away, trying again to force the clasp on the pin under his shirt. His face was red, whether from anger or embarrassment, Louis couldn’t tell.

“Look,” Jesse said, “I got a real bad habit of using my mouth to hurt people. I didn’t mean anything.”

“Right.”

“Cut me a little slack here, Kincaid. The only black people in this town are a couple of maids over at the lodge and old Elton at the bait shop. I never worked with a black man before Pryce got here.” He dropped the clasp again and bent to pick it up. He still couldn’t fix it to the back of the pin. “Christ, my own father used to call black people porch monkeys.”

Louis stared at Jesse, but Jesse couldn’t look at him.

“I’m sorry, man,” Jesse repeated, finally facing Louis. “Okay?”

Louis hesitated then nodded. “Okay.”

Jesse got the last pin on and went to a mirror.

“Look,” Louis began. “About this Pryce case. I’m not trying to show anyone up. I think the chief just thought I might bring a fresh eye to it.” He paused. “You could help, you know.”

Jesse let out a grunt. “The chief doesn’t think so. Sometimes I get the feeling he thinks I’m stupid. Well, I’m not stupid. I may not have a college degree and I can’t play chess or spout out quotes and shit, but I’m not stupid.”

Louis decided to let that one lie. He didn’t want to get involved in Jesse’s relationship with the chief, whatever it was.

“Jess,” Louis said. “I need your help.”

Jesse turned to Louis, studying him. “All right,” he said, “what do you want to know?”

“For starters, I need to know more about Pryce. You think he might have kept a case file to himself for some reason?”

“Shit, maybe. Pryce hated having anyone looking over his shoulder, that’s for sure.”

“It’s got to be a former perp,” Louis said.

“I told you, we looked. We went through every file in his desk.”

“Did you ask Mrs. Pryce if he kept any files at home?”

Jesse’s face colored slightly. “No. We’re not supposed to take files out of here.”

Louis leaned against the locker, folding his arms, looking at Jesse.

“You think Pryce might’ve taken stuff home?” Jesse asked.

“It’s possible, given what you’ve told me about him.”

Jesse let out a long sigh. “I guess we’re going to have to go to Flint.”

“I’ll drive,” Louis said.

“No fucking way.”

They started out of the locker room. Jesse stopped and turned. He patted his pins. “Straight?”

“Damn straight,” Louis said.

After shift was over, they made the three-hour drive down to Flint. Stephanie Pryce had moved back to her mother’s home, a simple shingled house on the outskirts of the city. When Jesse pulled the Loon Lake cruiser into the drive, the front door opened and a woman came out. She rubbed her hands on her apron as she watched the two officers get out of the car. Louis assumed she was the mother. A small child burst from the door and wrapped chubby arms around the woman’s legs. Louis recognized him from the photo. Louis put his cap on and walked to the door, Jesse behind him.

“Mrs. Reanardo?” Louis asked, hoping he had pronounced it properly.

The woman nodded. “Officers. You made good time. Stephanie is in the kitchen. Come on in.”

The house was warm and filled with the smell of chocolate chip cookies. The child hopped off to the kitchen and Mrs. Reanardo motioned for them to sit. Both men politely declined as she disappeared into the kitchen.

Louis wandered to the bookshelf. His eyes locked on a frame that encased Pryce’s badge against blue velvet. There was a plate with an inscription from Winston Churchill: “The only guide to a man is his conscience; the only shield to his memory is the rectitude and sincerity of his actions. With this shield, however fates may play, we march always in the ranks of honor.”

Jesse saw him looking at it. “The chief gave that to Mrs. Pryce at the funeral,” he said.

Next to the framed badge was a large piece of lavender quartz sitting on a tripod. Louis picked it up, turning it over in his hands.

“I’m sorry I — ” someone said.

Louis turned, the quartz still in his hand. Stephanie Pryce was staring at him, her hand at her throat. The expression on her pale face was so strange Louis couldn’t immediately speak.

Jesse spoke for him. “Mrs. Pryce, I’m Officer Harrison. This is Louis Kincaid, my partner.”

Louis came forward and she held out her hand. “Is there something wrong?” Louis asked.

She shook her head. “No. It was just…just the uniform. From the back…”

Her eyes went to the crystal in Louis’s hand.

“Oh, sorry,” he said, holding it out.

She hesitated then took the quartz from Louis, carefully placing it back on its tripod. She walked back to the sofa and sat down. Louis was sure that in better times she was quite lovely. But today she wore an oversize shirt that probably had belonged to her husband. Her straw-colored hair was pulled back in a haphazard ponytail and there were dark circles under her blue eyes. She started chewing on her already bitten-down nails.

“You drove a long way to see me,” she said. “What do you want?”

“Do you feel up to talking with us about your husband, ma’am?” Louis asked.

“I don’t know what I can tell you.” She ran a hand over her hair. “Please, sit down.”

Louis waited until after Stephanie Pryce’s mother brought coffee. He cleared his throat, edging forward on the sofa.

“Mrs. Pryce, we’re looking for some files,” he began. “Did your husband ever bring work home from the office?”

“Occasionally,” Stephanie Pryce said.

Louis glanced at Jesse.

“Did he ever mention anything specific he was working on?”

She shook her head. “He didn’t talk to me about what went on at work.”

“Do you ever remember seeing any files like this around the house?” Louis held out a manila file with a case number printed on the front.

She looked at it then shook her head. Louis handed the file to Jesse. He wasn’t sure where to go now; he had been banking on Stephanie Pryce simply handing over a batch of files. He glanced at Jesse, who seemed equally perplexed. Louis thought suddenly of the bits of paper in Pryce’s desk and Jesse’s comment about his doodles.

“Mrs. Pryce,” he said finally, “was your husband the type to keep things — papers, documents and the like?”

She smiled slightly, nodding. “He kept everything. He had one of those minds, you know, always moving. He was always writing notes to himself, stuffing them in drawers, his pockets, then forgetting them. I used to put these little baskets all over the house, trying to get him to throw his stuff in them. It didn’t really work.”

If there were any missing files, Louis thought, they could be sitting in the county landfill by now.

“What is this about?” she asked, her face clouding.

“Some of your husband’s case files might be missing,” Louis said. “We were hoping he might have brought them home.”

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