Daddy Protector. Jacqueline Diamond
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Still, Hale enjoyed the challenge of discerning the facts and tracking down crooks. He supposed he ought to be studying for the exam to earn promotion to sergeant, which Joel had passed several years ago, but that might mean a transfer to a different division.
He didn’t require extra income to pay alimony, either. Sipping his third—or maybe fourth—cup of coffee of the morning, Hale flexed the arm muscles he’d strained yesterday replanting Connie’s flowers. Darn, that woman was bossy! But fun to tease, and kind of sweet once in a while.
Opening the first case file, he got to work. The hours vanished silently and swiftly, until the scream of sirens from the fire station next door jolted him from his absorption. “Chemical fire in a warehouse on the east side,” noted Detective Lieutenant E. J. Corwin, who paused in striding toward his office.
A second siren blared. “What kind of chemicals?” Things could get ugly fast in any blaze, especially one that involved toxic substances. Firefighting was even more dangerous than police work, according to Hale’s insurance agent.
“Unidentified.”
Not a good sign. However, police usually only got involved with fires to control traffic. Or when bodies turned up, which he hoped didn’t happen.
Thirty minutes later, as the idea of buying a sandwich from a vending machine loomed large in his mind, the phone rang. To his terse response, a woman said, “The chief would like to see you in his office, Hale.” The voice belonged to Lois Lamont, the sixtyish secretary whose tenure dated back to the late Mesozoic era.
“I’m on my way.” He rang off. He had no reason to expect trouble, but neither did he usually pal around with Willard Lyons.
The new chief had come on board the previous year to clean up the PD’s image. At Saturday night’s party, he’d glad-handed the community leaders and stayed until the bitter end, or at least as much of the bitter end as Hale had observed before bowing out at eleven.
The man worked hard, and according to office gossip, he’d had a reputation as a decent cop in his previous positions with the Whittier PD and LAPD. The guys respected him, even if no one felt particularly chummy. Will Lyons’s manner didn’t invite chumminess.
Hale walked past the watch commander’s office and the traffic bureau, his curiosity growing with every step.
The secretary’s desk and several file cabinets crammed the small outer office. When he entered, Lois peered at him through owlish glasses beneath a fuzzy orange halo of thinning hair. “None of your cheekiness today, young man. He’s not in a good mood.”
“Moi? Cheeky?” All the same, Hale appreciated the warning.
“I hope you haven’t settled for any of the ladies in this town yet,” Lois continued. “My beautiful nieces put them in the shade. You really ought to let me introduce you. They won’t stay single forever.”
She’d been offering to fix him up for years in what had evolved into a running joke. Judging by the photos on her desk, the girls seemed pretty enough but not Hale’s type. Not blond and smart-mouthed with a quick temper. “I’m married to my work,” he said. “Haven’t you noticed?”
She sighed, then indicated the inner door. “Go ahead.”
Inside, light through a large window flooded the expansive office. The wooden desk and conference table from Vince’s tenure had been refinished and the chairs reupholstered. Satellite images of Villazon hung where once the walls had displayed photos of the town’s quaint former city hall.
“Close the door, please,” the chief said.
Must be a sensitive subject. Curious and a bit wary, Hale obeyed and followed the chief’s directive to take a seat.
With his broad chest, thin mustache and close-cropped brown hair, Will Lyons fit the image of a police administrator. Not merely a bureaucrat, though; more than once, he’d helped resolve an investigation by asking key questions of the detectives.
In his thirteen months on the job, not once had Lyons acted nervous or uncertain in Hale’s presence. Now, however, he folded his hands atop the desk and cleared his throat.
The words “So what’s bothering you, boss?” nearly slipped from Hale’s lips. That’s what he’d have said to Vince in the old days. But no one joked freely with Chief Lyons and, besides, Lois’s warning rang in his ears. So he waited.
Finally the chief said, “I’d like you to probe something discreetly. It may appear that I’m protecting myself, but the fact is, I think this may be an attempt to embarrass the department. If at any point you believe these contentions are true, Detective, you’re to treat this as you would any other case.”
Curiosity about the subject warred with an instinctive dislike of subterfuge. “Why me?” If this was a politically sensitive issue, he’d rather it went to someone of higher rank, such as Frank Ferguson, captain of the detective bureau and interim chief before Lyons’s arrival.
“Because every man and woman on this force likes and respects you,” his boss replied. “I’m a relative stranger here. If any of this comes out, they’ll trust you to be absolutely honest.”
Did his fellow officers respect him that much? As chief party animal, Hale knew he had friends. But if he was truly held in such high regard, it meant more than all the commendations he’d received over the years.
That kind of esteem, however, brought responsibility. “What exactly are you asking me to do?”
Lyons tapped a pad by his phone. “I received a troubling call this morning from Tracy Johnson at the newspaper.”
The publisher, editor and reporter of the Villazon Voice pursued stories with a zeal that often scooped dailies and TV stations. She’d never given the police a break, but she was usually fair.
“What about?” Hale asked.
The chief released a long breath. “A source of Tracy’s claims my son is dealing drugs.”
Here was a potato hot enough to burn anyone who touched it, Hale mused. Which made it possible the chief had chosen him at least in part because, if anything went amiss, a lowly detective made a better scapegoat than a high-ranking officer.
The chief’s nineteen-year-old son, Ben, had reputedly run wild since his mother’s death from cancer five years earlier. He’d served a stint in juvenile detention for drug use and now participated in a treatment program. He also took classes at community college and delivered pizzas.
The young man and his strict father didn’t get along. Were barely speaking, according to the grapevine.
“She has no details and refuses to name her source,” Lyons went on. “Since she can’t prove anything, she volunteered the information in exchange for a promise that, whenever we have news to release, we give her a heads-up if possible.”
“Big of her,” Hale muttered.
“I didn’t agree to an exclusive, only that we’d alert her.” After a moment, the chief added, “She did say she hoped it isn’t true.”
“So do I.” Okay, they