more. Tensions were high in the small house.
âAnd that sent you to the speed bag becauseâ¦?â
âNeeded a workout,â he said evenly.
Sorenson went back to the report. Matt returned his attention to his open desk drawer, pushed aside a jumble of small binder clips and rubber bands, and found a thin gold wedding ring He hooked it with his index finger, then used his opposing thumb and forefinger to set it spinning in a hypnotic, gleaming whirl on the surface of his desk.
Married? Not married? Whatâs my angle here?
When the gold circle spun down and clattered to a stop, Sorenson asked, âYou think thisâll go down better if thereâs a Mrs. Chad Henderson?â
Sometimes a ring helped. He wore it when working prostitution busts because hookers were less wary of a âmarried man,â as if wedding vows somehow explained trolling Craigslist for sex. The smart ones still made him strip to his skin before talking money because most cops wouldnât go that far to throw off suspicion.
He would.
âI wasnât wearing it for the interview,â he said as he flicked the ring into a second spin.
âLeft it at home?â Sorenson offered.
âPossible,â he said absently.
If he wore the ring, sheâd back off. No way would Eve start anything with a married man. But the stakes were too high to give her any excuse to put distance between them. Without her knowledge or consent, he had to get up in her business, in her personal life, in her head. He didnât like it at all.
Do your job. Sheâs the most important informant in the biggest case in the departmentâs history, and sheâs playing with fire. If the Strykers find out what sheâs doing â¦
Snapshots of brutalized bodies flared in his brain. To scatter them he flattened his palm over the ring, ending the spin with a thud, swept it back in the drawer, and got to his feet.
âHold on and Iâll wire you up,â Sorenson said.
Standard protocol for undercover operations called for any officer involved to wear a wire, but Matt shook his head. âShe had a concert-worthy sound system in there,â he said. âAnd she said sheâd get me my shirt later. No telling who will be around when I change.â Heâd have to ditch the nearly invisible Sig P239 inside his waistband before he reported for work. The Ka-bar and the Kahr PM9 would be fine on either ankle, hidden by his jeans.
Sorenson sat back in her chair. âSo no radio either, in what could be a long-term operation,â she said. âI donât like it.â
He looked down at her. âYou like working with someone who gets the job done.â
âThereâs a fine line between âresultsâ and âcowboy.â Grab a phone and give me the number,â she said. âCheck in when you leave too, so I donât lose my beauty sleep worrying about you.â
âIâm late. Tell Hawthorn,â he said, knowing his LT would be no happier with his unmonitored state than his partner was. Sorenson knew that too, because she flipped him off. He tossed her a half salute/half wave, signed out a cell phone heâd use as Chad Hendersonâs for the duration of the case, registered his call sign and location with dispatch, then headed out to protect the departmentâs most valuable asset, who just happened to be the first woman in years heâd felt even a flicker of emotion for.
Lock it down, Dorchester. Itâs on.
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CHAPTER TWO
Eve tapped the screen on her iPhone to disconnect a call and smiled at Chad. âYouâre early,â she said.
He gestured to the fruit boxes stacked neatly to her left and the filled tubs waiting to be distributed along the bar. âThought you might need a hand with prep.â
âPrep isnât part of your job description.â As the owner, however, no detail of Eye Candyâs nightly operation was too small for her.