glowing margins of a streetlight and he couldn’t help himself, he gathered her in his arms and kissed her. Usually she’d never tolerate that, she hated public displays of affection. But that night she’d had enough wine to make her tipsy and she melted into him, his hands on the smooth silk of her waist, her fingers in his hair, one of those times when a kiss was so much more than the meeting of lips. It was as close to a perfect moment as he’d ever gotten.

His phone rang, shattering the reflection. He checked the caller ID: Syd.

“Hey,” he said. “Find anything on Parrish or Krex?”

“Not a damn thing.”

Jake heard a garbled loudspeaker in the background. “Where are you?”

“JFK. I’m flying out to meet you.”

“Yeah?” Jake sat up and set his stocking feet on the floor. “You sure?”

“I’m sure that if I spend another day alone in that office, I’ll be tempted to take a diver off the roof. Seriously, we need to hire a secretary.” Syd paused before continuing, “Besides, I’ll have my laptop and cell phone. No need for me to be chained to a desk.”

Jake grinned. “I didn’t realize the decorators got around to installing the chains.”

“Funny guy. You okay with this?”

“Sure, I could use the company. Another day with Randall and I might be tempted to take a diver myself.” He was going to ask what she saw in the guy, but let it drop. “I was wondering how long you’d tolerate being an indoor cat.”

“Yeah, well. It was worth a try. Where do we start?”

“Tomorrow I’m cruising by a biker clubhouse in Stockton -the warden’s file says Dante Parrish hung out there before he got arrested. Figure some of his old prison buddies might be hanging around.”

“I’m sure they’ll be thrilled to talk to you.” Syd scoffed.

“Probably not. But you, on the other hand, they’re gonna love.”

“I do have a way with a Harley.”

Jake laughed. “I’ll bet. Anyway, we might find someone Parrish pissed off who knows where he is.”

“Sounds like a plan. I’m on the red-eye, meet me at Oakland Airport around six tomorrow morning.”

“You got it, boss. Enjoy the middle seat.”

Syd snorted. “Please. Like I’d fly anything but first class.”

Jake’s reply was cut off. He caught himself smiling as he hung up. Syd reminded him a lot of his first girlfriend, Lana, a feisty girl who grew up on a ranch and could rustle a calf or win a beauty pageant, depending on what the occasion called for. She’d been exuberant, passionate…pretty much the antithesis of Kelly. Jake shook his head. He knew that Kelly wasn’t thrilled about his new business partner. He first met Syd when she infiltrated a smuggling ring that was trying to utilize his former boss’s ships. Sure, she was damned attractive, but he’d never viewed her as anything other than a friend. And he was smart enough to know that a relationship with her would probably follow the same track as all his earlier ones: six months of intensity before the crash and burn. At his age, he preferred stability.

Jake stood and stripped out of his clothes, glancing at the clock. It was just after nine, still early, but tomorrow was likely to be a long day. He called Kelly to say good-night, got her voice mail again, and hung up. Moodily, he gazed back up at the ceiling.

The Phoenix police chief closed the door and joined her at the observation window. “Is there a skinhead convention in town?”

“Apparently,” Kelly said, crossing her arms over her chest. They both watched as the detective tried again.

“Why did you attack Agent Rodriguez?”

“John Harper, Private, 54687.”

“I gotta say, you’re making a big mistake. All the other guys are rolling, you’re going to be left holding the ball. Time for you to smarten up.”

The guy stared levelly at the wall opposite, as if the detective wasn’t even there. “John Harper, Private, 54687.”

The detective shifted in his chair to gaze at them through the one-way glass and shrugged.

“What is that crap?” the chief demanded.

“Far as I can gather name, rank and serial number,” Kelly said with a frown.

“What, he’s former military?”

“Nope.” Kelly nodded toward the file on the table. “Lifer, in and out of prison since he was fourteen. So I’m guessing that’s his prison number.”

“So what the hell?”

Kelly shook her head. “I don’t know. They seem to think they’re some sort of military group.”

“Under whose orders?”

“I’m guessing the bartender, Patrick Croll. He seemed to be in charge when I was there.”

The chief eyed the skinhead. “This connected to the Morris thing?”

“Maybe. Rodriguez was following up a lead related to that 911 call.”

“The tip on the stash house?”

Kelly nodded.

The chief shook his head. “Boy, you folks love to make our lives harder. We find the gun that killed Morris in a house filled with scumbags, along with a pile of artillery that would make bin Laden blush. But no, you gotta bring skinheads into this.”

“They beat Rodriguez up, and were probably going to kill him,” Kelly pointed out. “Doesn’t seem like they’re exactly innocent.”

“Lady, I don’t want to tell you your job, but someone named Rodriguez walks in there, it’s a toss-up whether they’ll kill him for being Mexican or being a Fed. Doesn’t mean they know jack-shit.” The chief held up a hand to silence her. “Things are different down here, especially after what happened to Duke. Can’t go strolling into a place like that, counting on a badge to save you. Shit, I wouldn’t go in with anything less than a SWAT team.”

Kelly stopped herself from retorting that Rodriguez wasn’t supposed to go in alone. Regardless of how she felt, she wouldn’t rat him out to Phoenix P.D. She wouldn’t even tell McLarty unless she had to.

The chief was watching her out of the corner of his eye. Inside the room both detective and con had settled into an uneasy detente. The chief leaned forward and rapped on the window. The detective stood, clearly relieved, and gathered up the papers on the table.

“You see their files?” he asked Kelly.

“Sure, I skimmed them.”

“Notice what they all had in common?” He leaned forward. “Drugs. Every last one of these guys has gone down for possession or intent at least once in their miserable lives.”

“So?”

“So the MS-13 squad is encroaching on the skinheads’ turf, and they decide to send a message by ratting out their stash house. The Morris gun being there was a coincidence.”

“Maybe,” Kelly conceded. “But look at this guy. Does he strike you as a rat? Seems to me they’d settle it another way, not get the police involved.”

“They use us as much as we use them,” the chief said darkly. “Anyway, Agent Jones, I spoke to ASAC McLarty today, told him you were almost done here.”

“You had no right to do that,” she protested.

“I can’t afford to assign officers to a task force that could drag on forever, not when I’ve got three punks we can charge with this. Especially since they probably did it.” He shot her a pointed look. “I also don’t have the man power to save G-men who get in over their heads.”

Kelly bit her lip, determined not to rise to the bait.

“So wrap this up, Agent Jones.”

“I’ll see what I can do,” she finally replied.

Seemingly satisfied, the chief left the room. Kelly watched as Harper worked his jaw, gaze still locked on the same spot. She’d already spent an hour with the bartender. He recited the same litany, the only difference being

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