by Radclyffe
Ever since the HPC unit had busted the human trafficking ring smuggling young girls from Eastern Europe into the country to fuel the porn and prostitution business for the Zamora family, crime had gone underground. None of the team believed they’d stopped the Hydra-like organization, even though they’d cut off one of its main heads. Kratos Zamora, one of the two brothers in charge of running everything from guns to crack cocaine to girls for hire, had been shanked in his jail cell before he even went to trial. His brother Gregor was suspected of having orchestrated Kratos’s assassination. Whatever information Kratos might have traded in a plea bargain to reduce his prison time had died with him. Gregor, so far, was untouchable. For all intents and purposes, he was an upstanding businessman.
The only rumor Dell had been able to pick up after pounding the streets for twelve hours was the same one she’d been hearing for the last six months—vague rumbles that new blood was moving in from Central America by way of the West Coast and challenging the long-established crime hierarchy on the East Coast. MS-13 and its offshoots were organizing, merging disparate cliques into cohesive gangs with solid leadership and better communication. Unlike traditional crime families that tended to specialize in one type of crime, La Mara would take on anything to turn a profit—drugs, guns, prostitution, pornography—and their currency was violence and intimidation.
The police were scrambling for leads—they had faces, they even had some names, but what they didn’t have was evidence. The OC guys were running wiretaps wherever they could, shooting thousands of surveillance photos, trying to put undercover officers into the gangs, but infiltrating well-organized groups took years. And every day that passed, more girls died in the service of masters who only saw them as commodities to be sold, bartered, bargained for, and discarded when their use was over. Every day more schoolkids became addicted to the drugs that flowed freely, every day young men died in gang wars fought not with fists and chains, but with automatic weapons. The battle was unending; only the colors of the uniforms and the symbols tattooed on faces, arms, and torsos changed.
Dell stepped off the elevator and the doors slid silently closed behind her. She threaded her way through the desks, computer workstations, monitoring equipment, file cabinets, and other workaday equipment that filled the huge loft. Ten thirty at night. Most of the lights were off, but she wasn’t surprised to see one monitor glowing. Sloan leaned back in her swivel chair, her hands flying over the keyboard as data streamed across the thirty-inch screen. From across the room she looked relaxed, sleepy even, but Dell knew better. She’d looked into Sloan’s face enough times to know her sharp indigo eyes would be intensely focused and her scarily quick mind assessing, collating, and discarding facts as rapidly as they appeared.
Dell pulled out a nearby chair and dropped into it. Sloan glanced over, brushing her hand through her jet black hair. The platinum wedding band glinted on her left hand. She wore her usual jeans and tight white T-shirt. She looked nothing like the Justice agent she’d once been, or the current civilian liaison to the police department. “What are you doing here?”
“I don’t know.” Dell stretched out her legs, clasped her hands behind her head, and stared at the ceiling. “Sandy’s got swing shift and won’t be home for a while. I’m getting nowhere. I think I must be missing something. Have you got anything?”
“Not yet. But there’s encouraging chatter.”
“Chatter.” Dell sat up straight. “Meaning?”
“Jason and I have been working on this new algorithm to track low-level street activity that ordinarily would get written off as too minor to mean anything—drive-bys, bar fights, domestic disturbances, drug busts. Minor street activity that usually flies under the radar.”
“Yeah? Why?”
“Because when you can’t see the big picture, you need to start looking at the small pieces. Remember, maybe once or twice a year we’ll take down a huge shipment of cocaine or find a container full of girls, but those big hits never stop the crime machine from running. Business as usual is mostly small deals—selling a trunk full of guns, street soldiers peddling a dime bag here, a vial of crank there, some sleaze shooting a thirty minute porn flick on dirty sheets with his iPhone in the back of some warehouse. Your scumbag pedophile uploading a handful of blurry photos to his friends for a small charge.”
“How does tracking all that help us?”
“I’m pulling data from the central system downtown and mapping geographical profiles of where crimes are occurring, which gangs are involved or suspected to be involved, assigning territories, looking at shifting borders.”
“Does the brass know?”
Sloan grinned, a feral smile that would have made Dell’s blood run a little colder if she hadn’t known her. Sloan had been betrayed by the very system she’d fought for, and she had no respect for organized law enforcement. She followed no one’s lead, other than Frye’s. “They’re not using it, so I might as well.”
That figured. Dell leaned forward, clasping her hands between her knees. “What does all that tell you?”
“The old territories are in flux—boundaries are changing.”
Excitement shot through Dell’s chest. “Like we thought, new regimes.”
“Definitely. By cross-referencing crimes with the new geography along with what little intel we’re getting from vice, organized crime, and homicide, we can start placing people inside the high-activity zones, which means we can start building profiles of leadership.”
“Yeah, I got it.” Dell glanced across the room to the huge whiteboard where they posted photographs and other data on the hierarchy of the various crime families. What had once been a simple genealogy with one dominant ruling crime faction now looked like an array of stars circling a sun. The smaller constellations weren’t splinter groups, but new gangs moving in. La Mara was one, but only a few photos with names underneath were arranged in that constellation. No clear leader had been identified.
“So how do we figure who’s who?”
“You tell me.” Sloan’s eyes glinted.
“We need someone inside, but infiltrating a gang takes a long time.”
“Or?”
“We turn someone already inside.”
Sloan nodded. “Exactly. I’ve set up a capture net to monitor any busts involving anyone from the hot zones, anyone associated with anyone from those areas, anyone who we might be able to leverage into giving us intelligence.”
“You know,” Dell said, “if we could get to someone like that, we could use them to get one of our people inside. Save us a lot of time.”
“You got anybody in mind?” Sloan grinned.
Dell ran her hand over her chest and rested her fingertips just above her belt line. She hadn’t been undercover for a while. After things got really hot with the Zamoras, Mitch had to disappear for a while. She missed him. “Yeah. I know just the guy.”
*
Provincetown
Flynn retched, her stomach empty, nausea rolling through her like an oily tide. Gravel bit into her cheek, burning the abraded skin. She blinked dirt from her eyes and rolled onto her belly, trying to get her hands and knees underneath her. She was so weak she couldn’t push herself up. If she could just get a breath, just one short breath, she could get to her feet, she could find Mica, she could tear that bastard apart for putting his hands on her.
Screams filled the alley.
Oh God, not Mica. Please, please don’t let her be hurt.
The screaming trailed off into a steady wail, reverberating inside her head. Her lungs expanded sharply and cool salty air burst down her throat. She sucked in a lungful, coughed, sucked in more, and managed to push to her knees.
Siren. Not screaming. A siren.
“Mica?” Her voice was barely a croak.
A bright light hit her in the face and she raised her arm, trying to shield her tearing eyes.
“Hands in the air,” someone shouted.
Flynn raised her other arm. “Mica,”
she gasped. “A guy…took Mica.”
“Flynn?”
Flynn couldn’t see through the glare, but she recognized Bri’s voice. Dark shapes raced by at the edges of Flynn’s vision. “Bri, somebody’s got Mica.” Fear gripped her throat so hard she couldn’t get the rest of the words out. She shoved upright and staggered, nearly going down again. “He’s got—”
“Hey, take it easy.” Bri’s arm came around Flynn’s waist. “Let’s get you over here where you can sit down.”
“No.” Flynn tried to pull away. “Mica.” She scrubbed her eyes and saw swaths of light cutting through the dark near the beach. Flashlights.
“Got something,” someone yelled.
Flynn’s heart stilled in her chest and she managed to break Bri’s grip.
“Stay here, Flynn,” Bri ordered, a command edge in her voice. “More backup’s on the way.”
“I need to find her. If she’s hurt—”
“If she’s hurt, we’ll take care of her.”
Flynn couldn’t just wait. Mica was out there in the dark, maybe hurt, maybe dying. Life ended so quickly, without warning, without rhyme or reason or logic. Life’s plan wasn’t meant to be understood. Flynn knew that, but she’d never been able to accept it. She couldn’t accept it when Debbie had done the unthinkable, and she couldn’t accept it now. If she could have found peace with God’s wisdom, she’d still be wearing her collar. She yanked away from Bri. “I’m not leaving her out there alone.”
“Sorry, Flynn, but you need to stay out of the way.” Bri waved to a sandy-haired officer. “Smith, keep an eye on her until the EMTs come.”
Two figures stumbled out of the darkness into the flickering blue light that bathed the alley.
A uniformed officer called, “Need a medic.”
A second, raspy voice cut through the jumble of voices. “Get your hands off me. Where’s Flynn?”
Mica. The fist of terror crushing Flynn’s chest eased. Mica sounded royally pissed off. She’d never heard anything sweeter. “Mica? Mica!”
“Flynn!”
Flynn ran toward the sound and Mica broke free, stumbling toward her. Flynn braced herself and Mica crashed into her arms. Pain raged through her chest, but she wrapped her arms around Mica and held her close. “Are you hurt?”
“No.” Mica’s hands flew over Flynn, tracing her shoulders, her chest, her sides. “Did that motherfucker stick you?”
“I’m okay.” Flynn winced when Mica squeezed her right side.
“Like hell you are.” Mica searched the faces of the officers milling about, her arm around Flynn’s waist. “Yo, you guys! Over here. She’s the one who needs a medic. I think her ribs are broken.”
Bri stepped out of the crowd. “You’re both going to the clinic. Once you’ve been seen to, I’ll get your statements.”
Another cruiser screeched to a halt in the street, a door slammed, and Reese Conlon strode down the alley. She took one look at Flynn and Mica, then turned to Bri. “Do we have the assailant?”
“Negative,” Bri said. “We were here maybe a minute or two tops after this all went down. A civilian walking by heard someone yell for police and hit nine-one-one. We were ten-seven at the Wired Puppy. Two seconds sooner and we would’ve had him.”
Reese’s cool gaze slid over Mica and Flynn. “Looks like you got here in time.”
More sirens, the crackle of radios, and the alley quickly filled with paramedics and more officers. EMTs from the night crew pushed a gurney toward Flynn and Mica.
“Who’s first?” a short muscular blonde asked, staring at Flynn in concern. “God, Flynn, are you all right?”
“Yeah. I’ll walk, Chris,” Flynn said.
“Like hell you will.” Mica pointed at the EMT. “Her ribs are broken. She needs to ride.”
“You heard the lady, Flynn,” Chris said, taking Flynn’s arm and leading her to the stretcher. “No use fighting us all.”
Flynn gave in. Her legs were about to give out. When she tried to lie back, pain shot through her chest and she felt something pop. She groaned.
“What is it?” Mica said sharply. “Where are you hurting?”
“I think the cartilage is separated,” Flynn said, gritting her teeth. “It hurts like hell but the ribs aren’t broken.” She raised her hand and Mica took it. Mica’s knuckles were scraped and bloody. “You sure you’re okay?”
“Yeah,” Mica said her expression closing down. “I’m just great.”
“You’ve got blood on your shirt,” Flynn said gently, her stomach twisting.
“Yeah.” Mica glanced down as she walked along beside the stretcher. “It’s not mine, though. Asshole had a switch. Now he doesn’t.”
Chapter Sixteen
Allie awoke disoriented, unsure if it was morning or night. The buzz of her cell phone vibrating on the bedside table reminded her of a swarm of angry wasps, and she resisted the urge to slap at the air. She searched in the dark for a touchstone and found it in Ash’s warm body pressed against her back. In an instant she remembered climaxing with Ash inside her, falling asleep with Ash in her arms. She knew where she was, who she was, and she groped for her phone. “Tremont.”
“Hey,” Bri said. “Sorry to get you up, but I thought you’d want to know someone jumped Flynn and another girl tonight.”
“Is Flynn all right?” Allie pushed up in bed and Ash, waking instantly, wrapped an arm around her waist. “What happened?”
“Not sure yet. We’re on the way to the clinic right now.”
“The girl…Hispanic, early twenties, about five-seven, black hair, brown eyes?”
“Sounds right. That the one?”
“Yeah. I’ll be there in ten.”
“Roger that.”
Allie disconnected and shoved the covers aside. “I have to go in. Sorry.”
Ash clicked on the lamp on her side of the bed. “What’s going on?”
“That was Bri. Flynn and Mica—the woman I told you about—were assaulted. That’s all I know.” Allie grabbed a pair of jeans off the shelf in the closet. Her hands were shaking.
“How bad?”
“I don’t know. Damn it. I knew something was going on. Tell me this is a coincidence.” Allie yanked a shirt off a hanger. “If I’d questioned her the way I wanted to instead of waiting for the damn computer checks, I might have—”
“Hey.” Ash’s hands came down on Allie’s shoulders, and she drew Allie back against her chest. Ash kissed her temple. “Facts first, right?”
Allie took a breath and gave herself a second to let Ash’s calm strength settle her. She didn’t usually get emotional where work was concerned. If Ash was hurt, yeah, her world tilted. Flynn was a friend—okay, a little more than a friend; the exact definition escaped her—but that still didn’t explain why she felt so guilty. “I feel like this is my fault, somehow. Like I should know what’s going on and I don’t.”
“Babe,” Ash murmured, turning Allie to face her. “You’re doing all you can do. Go find out what’s going on and take it from there. You’re a good cop. Better than you should be for someone your age.”
Allie laughed and slugged Ash softly in the shoulder with her fist. “Don’t go pulling that older and wiser crap on me.”
Ash grinned. “Well, as soon as you get your temper up, you start thinking more clearly.”
Allie kissed Ash hard on the mouth. First she’d make sure Flynn was all right, then she’d find out who Mica really was, and she wouldn’t stop digging until she had the answers she wanted. “I love you.”
“Same here. Take it easy out there, okay?”
“I always do.”
*
The back doors of the medic unit opened, and Mica looked out on the same parking lot she’d seen before. The same clinic, only lit tonight by floods at the corners of the roof and over the door. She was strapped to the same stretcher, but this time she was awake and Flynn was on a stretcher across from her. A lot more police cars pulled in around them than the first time
too.
Her chest seized. This was bad. She’d gotten away the last time before she’d been asked questions she couldn’t answer, but she wasn’t so sure she could do that again. Too many cops and a lot more questions. Then there was Flynn. She turned her head, peering around the blond EMT who was bent over Flynn in the tight space, organizing the lines and tubes and monitors attached to her. Flynn had a plastic collar Velcroed around her neck, an IV in her arm, and a bunch of wires attached to her chest. Her eyes were open, but in the flat yellow light of the ceiling dome, she looked dead. Dead people got this look about them—their eyes stopped shining the second their soul, or whatever it was inside them, disappeared.
Mica’s heart hammered hard against the inside of her ribs.
“Flynn?” Mica wet her dry lips. “Flynn, are you okay?”
Flynn’s eyelids flickered and she turned her head a tiny bit until the collar stopped her. “Yeah. You?”
“Good. I’m good.” Mica got her breath back and the pain around her heart lessened. “I’m sorry.”
“Why? Did you kick me?” Flynn’s voice was hoarse, lower than it usually was.
“You know what I mean.”
“I do, and there’s no reason for you to be sorry.” Flynn raised the hand that wasn’t strapped down and tugged at the collar on her neck. “Come on, Chris, I don’t need this. It’s driving me crazy.”
“Sorry, Flynn,” Chris said. “You know the drill. It looks like somebody played soccer with your head. The immobilizer stays on until Tory says it can come off.”
The male paramedic who’d been driving climbed into the back, and Mica gripped the stretcher for the trip into the clinic. The medics took Flynn out first.