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In The Line Of Fire
Molly opened her mouth one more time and shut it again. She couldn’t argue with that.
She wanted the same thing for her kids. It was what she had been trying to do here herself these past two years, why she volunteered her time to the center—though her methods were different. She wanted each and every one of them to get out of the poverty, the drugs, the petty crime that could lead to treacherously bigger things.
Still, she felt she had a certain stake in being contrary, if only because he looked so good with that ball in his hands…and he knew it. “What do the rest of the kids get in this grand scheme of yours?”
“They get something to do for a few hours a day instead of hanging, on the streets.”
This time when he sent the ball swishing through the net, Molly lunged for it and caught it as it bounced to the floor. She gathered it against her chest. “They’re off the streets—sometimes—even without organized basketball. I keep them off the streets. I help them.”
“And how do you do that, pretty Molly French?”
Pretty? Her heart chugged even as she refused to react. “I get them jobs and I get state assistance for their families. I listen when they talk.”
“Admirable.” He started circling her again, clearly looking for a way to knock the ball from her arms.
She felt like prey. Molly pivoted with him, trying to keep him in front of her. “Basketball’s just…you know, something we horse around with here while we…while we…talk.”
“Not anymore.” His hand snaked out so quickly she barely saw him move. He knocked the ball straight down out of her grasp. The back of his arm nudged her breast. Molly lost her breath and took a quick step back. The basketball bounced on the floor between them, and he scooped it up with one broad hand, then he spun it on his index finger.
“Show-off,” she muttered.
“Yeah.” He grinned. “Maybe we ought to leave you in charge of jobs and state assistance. When it comes to the game, you’re…ah, a bit lacking, Molly. No offense intended.”
She flushed. “I rarely get worked up about something so trivial.”
“So what does work you up?” He grinned a devil’s grin, sizing her up with his eyes.
He was flirting with her. Molly definitely felt something working inside her now. It was a low, steady thrumming. She decided to change the subject. “So what are your qualifications for this, hot shot?”
“All-state my sophomore year.”
That would have been high school, she thought. “And the college scouts just gobbled you right up, didn’t they? That explains why you’re working for Ron now.”
A hardening came to his eyes. It happened as fast as his nifty hands could move. “I quit playing when I was a junior.”
“And now you’re here to impart all you learned in two short years.” That was always her problem, Molly thought. She never knew when to keep her mouth shut. “Aren’t we blessed.”
To her surprise he laughed. It was a deep sound, a little rough around the edges. It tickled her skin. He pocketed the basketball against his side and shook his head. “Thanks. I haven’t done that in a while.”
What? Laugh? That puzzled her, then her thoughts scattered again as he took a step toward her until his face was inches from hers.
“Guess what, Molly French? I think I like you.”
Her heart somersaulted. “My jury’s still out on you.”
He laughed again and rubbed his throat as though the reflex hurt him.
“I’m leaving now,” Molly decided.
“It’s pouring.” He gestured with the ball in the general direction of the barred window.
Molly saw rain battering the dirty glass, making tunnels in the brown-gray dust there.
“I’ve decided I don’t care.”
She hurried to the door and shot into the vestibule where she ran headfirst into Fran Celtenham, another volunteer whose contribution to the center was about as indefinable as Molly’s. Fran was in her sixties. She was a widow, a retired civil servant, who worked hard to organize the kids into doing occasional community-service projects. She also ran a bingo program on Monday nights—not just for the kids but for any Mission Creek family who cared to join in. Attendance was sporadic, but she never stopped trying.
“Ron hired a new guy,” Molly blurted without even greeting the woman.
“Yes, I know. On Friday.” Fran smiled at her benignly as she started to step past.
Molly caught her arm. “No, I mean, he hired him.” She held up her hand and rubbed her fingers together to show that money was changing hands. Then, finally, Fran’s words registered. “What do you mean you knew?”
“Ron told me.”
“He didn’t tell me.”
“You weren’t here on Friday.”
That was true. Molly rarely missed a day, but she’d had to testify in court on one of her arrests. “Everyone knew but me.”
Fran patted her on the shoulder before she continued into the gym. “Don’t take it so hard, sweetie.”
Exactly what Danny Gates had said, Molly thought. She stepped outside into the drenching downpour, disgruntled. In seconds her hair was flattened to her skull. She put her head down and trudged to her car.
She was halfway home before she realized that she’d hardly thought of Mickey or her birthday at all today.
The man standing in front of the long ebony desk practically vibrated with anger. “Are you out of your mind? You approve of this?”
“I think it’s a brilliant move.”
“Letting her on the task force?”
“Think about it. She was sticking her nose where it didn’t belong, anyway. She found Ed Bancroft. Think of the trouble we’d have on our hands if she’d gotten to him before his, ah, demise…if he had talked to her.”
The man was silent, but his eyes narrowed with consideration.
“We need her where we can control her and keep an eye on what she’s up to,” the second man said. “We can’t have her running around sleuthing on her own like that.”
“She’s smart. She has big-city experience. It’s a risk. I just don’t like it.”
The second man shrugged. “It’s a risk we’ve been instructed to take. We’ll minimize it by having her work the task force on her own hours. That’s your responsibility, to wear her out with her regular patrol duties so that her participation with the task force is limited. And have someone keep an eye on her when she’s in that war room. Try to have someone get close to her to keep track of what she’s thinking, what she’s decided she knows.”
“I’m not some damned baby-sitter.”
“Yes,” the second man said. “You are.”
“One week,” Jerome said. “He’ll be all over her like white on rice. Did you see the way he was eyeing her?”
“I’ll take that bet. How much?” Fisk asked.
“Twenty bucks.”
“Twenty and my diamond stud says she decks him when he tries.” Cia touched a finger to one of the many piercings in her left ear. “Molly’s tough.”
“She’s still a chick,” Lester said. “And he’s got the moves down. My Starter jacket says she wraps herself all over him when he finally gets around to it.”
“I’ll take that.”
“Right.”
“Yeah.”
High-fives were exchanged, then the subject of the conversation headed in their direction. The kids began to disperse.
“Whoa,” Danny said. But he had to pull his mind and his eyes off the door to address them. Molly French could make one hell of an exit when she had her dander up.
It might have been six years, but he knew a rattled woman when he saw one, Danny thought. He was inordinately pleased with himself for the achievement. Damned if he didn’t still have the knack.
He waved a hand in greeting at an older woman who came through the gym doors Molly had just flashed through, then he brought his attention back to the kids. “What were you guys just betting about?”
“Who says we were betting?” Lester challenged.
In response, Danny high-fived the air and touched a finger to the earring he didn’t have. He was gratified when they exchanged wary glances. “Been there, guys. So spit it out. What’s the bet?”
“Nothing,” Anita muttered. She was a pretty black girl who paled in comparison to Cia’s looks and she seemed to know it. Danny felt something in his heart go out to her.
“Nice tattoo you’ve got there,” he told her.
Her eyes shone with gratitude. She held up her wrist. An inked chain of ivy and roses encircled it. “You like it?”
“Wouldn’t want one, but, yeah, it looks good on you.”
“Thanks.”
“Where’d you get the kind of money to pay for something like that?”
Her eyes shut down. He’d known they would.
“None of your business, man,” Lester said, protecting her.
“Yeah, well, see, that’s where we’re going to have a problem.” Danny put the basketball on the floor and sat on it, resting his arms on his knees, looking up at them now. “I’m not going anywhere, and I’m going to keep asking questions.”
“Don’t mean we got to answer you,” Anita said.
“Nope. You don’t. But trust me, I’ll wear you down after a while.”
“Who are you?” Lester was getting agitated.
“My name’s Danny. I’m the guy the rec center hired to teach you kids the game of basketball.”
“Molly plays with us,” Cia said.
“Correct. Molly plays with you. I’m going to teach you basketball. There’s a difference.”
“What if we don’t want to learn?” Fisk asked, but Danny could tell he was curious.
“Just give me a couple of weeks, then you can decide.” He’d hook them. He was confident.
“What are you, some kind of do-gooder?” Lester demanded.
Yeah, these days he was, Danny thought. But that wasn’t the way to reach them. “Actually, I just came off six years of doing time.”
Eyes widened again in five identically stunned faces. For the first time, Danny looked around the whole gym and realized that they’d lost the skinny, quiet kid with the razor-short black hair. “Where’d that other boy go?”
“Bobby J.? Man, he’s like smoke. He’s here, he’s not here, you know?” Jerome said.
Danny did know. That kid was troubled, he thought again. He made a mental note to keep an eye out for him, not only here at the center, but on the streets, as well.
“Okay, here’s the deal.” He eyed Lester’s feet. “Tomorrow you all show up in gym shoes. No boots.”
“What if we don’t have none?” Jerome asked.
“Then give me your size, and you’ll have some by this time tomorrow.” Danny had a mental image of his remaining nine thousand dollars dwindling fast.
“What about us girls?” Cia asked.
“You’ll play, too.”
“Why would I want to play basketball?”
“Boys think it’s a contact sport.” He was delighted when she tossed back her purple-and-black hair and laughed.
Danny finally stood and picked up the basketball again. “Okay, one last question. What’s with the lady? Molly French? What’s her story?” As soon as the question left him, more high-fives were exchanged. Ah, so that was what the betting was about, he realized.
“You won’t like her, dude,” Lester said, heading for the door. “Leastwise not if you’re telling the truth ’bout doing time.”
“Why’s that?” But something in his gut shifted.
Cia giggled. “Molly’s a definite do-gooder. She’s a cop.”
Every good thing Danny had felt since leaving the parole office abruptly left him.
Molly made it in and out of her apartment, with her hair dried again and her uniform on, in less than half an hour. Record time, she thought. Which just went to show what a good head of steam could do for a woman.
She was really irritated about Danny Gates.
She landed back at the police station three and a half minutes before roll call. The task force cops gave her baleful looks. A couple of them were here, though neither Gannon, McCauley or Hasselman worked the four-to-midnight with her because they all had a healthy chunk of seniority. They got the plum shift, day work, eight-to-four.
Molly’s manna was another cop’s poison. While many of the others complained about working the swing shift, she was just glad to be home each night by 12:30. She had only just worked her way up to the four-to-midnight three months ago. Prior to that, she’d been on graveyard.
Beau Maguire shot a smirk in her direction as Molly slid into the vacant seat beside him. He was on the task force and putting in a lot of overtime these days. “The extra hours getting to you already, Officer?”
Molly made a pointed show of looking at her watch. Then she raised her hand when her sergeant called her name. “Bingo. Present and accounted for. And, I’m pleased to say, not a second behind schedule.”
“You need to work on that mouth of yours,” Beau said, scowling.
“So I’ve been told.” She smiled at him. “Maybe later.”
When roll call was finished, Molly shot to her feet. She already had her cell phone out of her trousers pocket when she got to the hallway. She tapped in Ron Glover’s office number with her thumb. When he wasn’t at the center, he worked as an accountant.
“What have you done?” she asked when Ron answered on the first ring.
“Molly?” He sounded, as he always did, vaguely befuddled. His voice was always hushed and hesitant, but he had a heart of gold. Ron had taken over the operation of the rec center nine years ago, and against all odds it was still open for the kids.
“There’s a man in my gym,” Molly said.
“Ah, him.”
Ah, him? “Did one of the Wainwrights or the Carsons make some major contribution to our bank account that I don’t know about?”
“Most of them won’t even accept my phone calls.” Ron sighed. “No, we’re still limping along on the same budget. I wish I could pay you…” He trailed off without finishing. Neither Molly, Fran nor Plank Hawkins—who ran a city-funded soup kitchen out of the center’s back room on Sundays—were compensated for their time.
So how had he found it in the coffers to pay Mr. Basketball with his smooth male grace and that crooked bad-boy grin? It just didn’t make sense, Molly thought. Something was wrong here.
She entered the city garage and held her hand out for her cruiser keys as she passed the attendant there. He dropped them into her palm, and she went to her assigned unit. “Danny Gates just came to the rec center for a job, and you flipped open our limited checkbook and said sure?” Molly said into her cell phone.
“Well…yes. That was—that’s just about the way it happened.”
In a pig’s eye, Molly thought.
“He’s also going to fix the place up in exchange for the use of the apartment upstairs.”
“That’s not an apartment. It’s a cardboard box.” She knew. She had spent two nights there shortly after moving to Mission Creek until she’d gotten her apartment.
“Be that as it may…” Ron said, then he trailed off again. “The neighborhood’s not the best, Molly. It’s good to have someone like him there at night.”
Someone like him? What did that mean? This was getting stranger and stranger, Molly thought.
She drove out of the garage. When something smelled, she thought, it was usually a fish, even if you were standing in the middle of a desert at the time. But she had connections, didn’t she? She was a cop. Ron Glover was hardly her only source of information. “Okay,” she said equably. “I’m on shift, Ron. I’ve got to run.”
“Oh, of course. I’ll see you later, Molly.”
She disconnected and narrowed her eyes on the road ahead of her. Thinking. Simmering. Oh, yes, she thought, there was a fish in this desert somewhere, and she was going to follow her nose until she found it.
She went around the block and turned in the direction of the rec center. Danny Gates’s ugly yellow car was still in her parking space. She pulled to the curb half a block away and got out, locking the cruiser and pocketing her keys.
She was just going to meander inside and poke her nose into Ron’s office for a moment. She’d been volunteering here for two years; she was in and out of Ron’s office all the time. So why did she suddenly feel nervous and guilty about it?
Because, she thought, she didn’t want Danny Gates with his devil’s grin and sexy, not-quite-definable air of danger to catch her at it this time. And Fran might be around somewhere. Sometimes she came in early to set up for bingo. For some reason Molly realized that she didn’t want Fran to know what she was up to, either.
Molly slid into the vestibule and waited for a moment, listening. There were no basketballs thumping in the gym. He was probably upstairs. She stepped into Ron’s office and closed the door quietly behind her. The resulting clicking sound seemed furtive even to her own ears. She moved over to his desk and found what she was looking for right there, on top, in the center of his blotter: Danny Gates’s application.
It was typed. That was very weird.
She pulled her cell phone from her trouser pocket again, and this time she hit in the number of the Department of Motor Vehicles. She ran his Social Security number.
“He just registered a car today,” the woman at DMV said after a moment. “All the paperwork hasn’t caught up yet, but his last known address was the state penitentiary.”
Molly felt her legs fold suddenly. She turned around fast and sat in Ron’s chair. “The pen?”
“Please tell me, Officer, that you’re not standing at the side of the road with this guy pointing a gun at you.”
“Oh, no. It’s nothing like that.”
“Well, good. Anything else I can do for you?”
“Not a thing.” Molly disconnected.
She would make one more phone call, she decided. She looked at her watch. It wasn’t quite five o’clock yet. Ralph would still be at his desk.
She’d dated Ralph Bunderling once, eighteen months ago. He was a probation officer. He was the kind of man who normally went for lady cops. Not a Danny Gates kind of man. She’d known better, she chided herself. She’d known from the start, when her stomach had somersaulted and she hadn’t been able to get her air, she’d known that a man like Danny coming on to a woman like her was just…well, flat-out too good to be true.
He was the bad-boy-hero type and she was no big-breasted bimbo. She was a woman who was a whole lot smarter than to get goofy-eyed over an ex-con.
“Damn it.” Molly dropped her forehead briefly against the desk.
Ralph was more her speed. Ralph and his kind adored her. Ralph was quiet, timid—basically spineless. He craved an authority figure in his life. Maybe it was her badge, or maybe it was her stubborn strength or her nonstop mouth, as Beau Maguire had said earlier. Maybe it was even the fact that her physical attributes were all—to her way of thinking—just a tad on the side of average. Either way, the Ralph Bunderlings of the world flocked to her while the Danny Gateses…well, the ones who didn’t have records just pretty much ignored her.
She’d let Ralph down gently so he was glad to hear her voice when he picked up his line. “Molly! It’s been a long time.”
“I know. I’m sorry. I’ve been very busy. Listen, I need a quick run on a Social. I’m on the city’s clock right now.” She winced a little at the inferred lie.
“Certainly. Absolutely. Anything. Just read it to me.”
Molly did. She could hear Ralph’s fingers clicking on the computer keys in the background.
“Got him,” Ralph said. “Daniel Gates. He was released today, parole for good behavior after six years. He ran a basketball program at the prison. He’s not part of my caseload. The parole department has him.”
“What did he do?”
“Armed robbery.”
Her stomach wanted to heave. She pressed a hand to it.
“Oh, now, here’s something interesting,” Ralph continued. “His parole officer got him a job at that rec center you help out at. Hey, he’s living there, too.”
“No kidding.”
“You’ll keep him on the straight-and-narrow, Molly. I have faith in you.”
“Thanks,” she said hollowly. “Anything else?”
“Well, they finally got him on the convenience store holdup but prior to that he had a rap sheet going back to the time he was eleven. Those were just loitering and vagrancy charges when he was a kid, though. You know how it is, they don’t want to go home for the night, they hang out somewhere else. And good cops like you get them.”
“Like me. Right.”
“By his late teens, he was already wrapped up with the Mercados.”
“The Mercados?” How much worse could this get? Her head spun. “Any charges there?”
“No, none. It’s just in his backup bio. A rumored association is what we call it. He was clean from his last vagrancy charge at sixteen until six years ago when he held up the store.”
“Thanks, Ralph. That’s what I needed to know.” She fumbled her thumb over her phone buttons, disconnecting, and stood unsteadily from Ron’s desk. Then the door opened.
The ill-fitting clothes he’d worn earlier—prison issue, she understood now—were gone. Danny stood there, the doorknob in one hand, those dangerous dark eyes of his steady on hers. He wore navy-blue gym shorts and a T-shirt emblazoned with—of all things!—TEXAS A & M.
These clothes fit. Nicely. He must have gone shopping, she thought inanely.
“Great legs,” she said hoarsely, trying to smile.
He ignored that. “You really put in the hours here, don’t you…Officer?”
So he knew she was a cop. He must have done some digging on her, too. It made absolutely no sense that that should please her, especially under these new circumstances.
Molly licked her lips. “That’s me. Dedicated. Ron called me and asked me to stop by to…ah…check on something.”
“Something like me?”
He noticed that she had the good grace to flush. Her gaze slid away. A cop. Damn it, it still burned at him two hours later.
The law had been his enemy for too many years. He might be starting over with a clean slate, but damned if he wanted to snuggle up to a narrow-minded, handcuff-toting police officer who wouldn’t know a guy was being set up if the proof jumped up and bit her on the nose. And he had been thinking about snuggling up to her. Life had been starting to look good for a little while there. That was the pity of it.
“Were you with Mission Creek six years ago?” he asked sharply, then he heard his own question and fought off the urge to wince. What difference did it make?
“No,” she said stiffly. “I was in Laredo back then.”
“Were you a cop there, too?”
She nodded.
“Got it in your blood, have you?”
It drove into her heart like a knife. “No. It didn’t start out that way.” Mickey had changed everything.
So she hadn’t been one of those in that interrogation room with him six years ago, Danny thought. They hadn’t heard a word of explanation he gave, just stared at him with contempt in their eyes. Then again, he’d known she hadn’t been a part of that. There was something about her…something vibrant and vital and worn stubbornly on her sleeve. He’d have remembered her, Danny knew, if she had been there.
“What are the odds that you’ll end your involvement with this place?” he asked evenly.
She brought her chin up. “Because of you?” She gave a little snorting laugh. “Slim and none.”
“That’s what I thought. But I don’t want to cross paths with you.”
“Finally we agree on something.” And he couldn’t leave the center, at least not without seriously ticking off his parole officer, she thought. Whatever else he was, he didn’t seem stupid.
“Then here’s how we’re going to do this,” he said. “From now on, you just stay on your side of the gym and I’ll stay on mine. I changed my mind. I don’t like you after all.”
She fought the hurt. “No problem.”
“Good.”
“Good,” she repeated.
“And stop running my name through the system. You won’t find anything else. There wasn’t a hell of a lot there to start with.”
“I didn’t—” But she had to break off. She couldn’t lie.
“Points for honesty, Officer.” His grin was feral. “Unfortunately, you started in the hole.” He left her and slammed the door hard behind him. Molly sank back down into Ron’s chair. For some reason she felt ashamed. Like she’d been narrow-minded and she’d misjudged him. But that was insane. How badly could you misjudge someone who had held up a convenience store? How badly could you misjudge someone who had been associated with the mob—the same mob her task force was looking into for the bombing?