As Frank reached the door Kennedy called, "Frank?"
"What?"
"Thanks."
Her back to Kennedy, Frank smiled.
"No sweat."
Kennedy had been right. The psychologist Frank was required to see after she'd been shot got nothing from her. Later on, when Mag was killed, she hadn't been forced to see anybody. Instead, Frank had spent a lot of nights with the Jantzens. Long after Tracey had gone to bed, Noah and Frank would sit out on the patio, watching the barbecue coals die. He tried to get her to talk, but they shared more silence than words. He'd nurse a couple drinks, Frank a bottle, and eventually she'd pass out in the lounge chair.
"Hello, Frank."
Richard Clay stepped out of his office, interrupting Frank's thoughts. He held out his hand.
"It's good to see you again. I wish it were under more auspicious circumstances."
"Hello, Dick," she said smoothly, returning the shake. She perched on the edge of a chair in front of Clay's desk while he took the one beside it. Frank recognized the move, she did it all the time. Get close to your suspect. Make her nervous. Invade her body space.
"How's your serial case coming along?"
"Not mine anymore. RHD's got it."
"Hmm. Is that a relief or a disappointment?"
Frank hated this touchy-feely shit, hated it like the plague, but she knew she had to go along with it for Clay to sign off on her ROD. She felt his quiet appraisal and wondered vaguely if he saw what she wanted him to or something else. Frank was a detective. She was a master at projecting whatever attitude was needed. Today called for casual yet earnest cooperation.
"Guess I'd have to say disappointing."
"And how does being relieved of duty feel?"
"It's probably good for me. I haven't taken a vacation in years."
Clay was peering at her over his bifocals.
"Does it feel good?"
Frank considered for a moment, wondering how high Clay's bullshit barometer went. As she recalled, it was pretty sensitive.
"I've felt better."
He smiled softly. "I'll take it that's a 'no'."
She shrugged.
"Tell me about the shooting."
Clay remained silent while Frank laid out the mechanics of the story. When she'd finished he asked, "How did you feel going in?"
"The usual. Excited. Tense. Pumped."
"And in the hallway right before Detective Kennedy was seized?"
"Same. Probably a little more concerned. We didn't know where this guy was, but he was in there somewhere with us."
"Were you afraid?"
"Didn't have time to be. I suppose I was. It's hard to remember," she lied.
"How about when you were in the bathroom and heard the suspect screaming at your detectives? How did that make you feel?"
Frank remembered the lurch her stomach had made and the nauseating panic, then the icy calmness that took over, the complete detachment.
"I felt like a machine. My vision and hearing were acute. I could smell the towels on the door. They'd been damp for a couple of days. There were black and brown cracks in the linoleum. It was mustard colored, had some sort of a square geometric pattern. I was on autopilot."
"Were you scared then?"
"I guess. I don't remember."
"When you shot the suspect, what was going through your head?"
"Not being seen. Being 100 percent accurate. No room for error."
"It must have been tremendous pressure."
Frank shrugged. "I suppose. You don't think about it at the time, though."
Frank was trying to lead the conversation and hoped he'd ask when did she think about it. But Clay had been doing his job for a long time. He bowled her over by asking, "Tell me how you felt kneeling over Detective Kennedy while she was dying on you."
Frank wasn't expecting that one. Clay's vivid description forced the scene into her mind, followed by Mag on the dirty liquor store floor. Frank sat perfectly still. Her eyes narrowed and focused intently on Clay's, warning him not to continue. Clay steadily maintained his gaze. They both knew he'd set the hook. Now she'd either fight it or give into it. He was allowing her time to figure it out. When she spoke it was almost in a whisper, as if sound might shatter her self-control.
"I know I'm supposed to talk about this. I have no intention of doing so. I respect your time and I don't want to waste it."
Clay took off his glasses and thoughtfully polished them with a handkerchief. He took some time doing it, carefully rubbing each lens, redoing them, examining them for smudges. He refolded the handkerchief and patted it back into his pocket. Frank knew he was buying time. Slowly, using both hands, he slid the glasses back onto his nose, adjusting then until he'd found just the right spot. Adopting Frank's casual posture, he leaned halfway out of the chair and rested his forearms on his thighs, fingers clasped between his knees.
"You know I have to sign an evaluation saying you're capable of performing your job."
"I am capable of performing my job."
She spoke evenly, very quietly.
"Are you sure about that?"
"Very."
Silence stretched between them until Clay said, "Unfortunately, I think you're right. I think you'll be just fine on the street. To be honest, it's what you do when you're not working that worries me."
Frank knew what he meant, that sometimes work was the only thing a cop had and when the job was gone there was nothing left but bullets or bottles. She offered him nothing.
"Your consult form says you're single."
"That's right."
"Do you date?"
"Are you asking me out?"
Clay smiled. "Do you?"
"No."
"How come?"
"Too busy."
"Would you like to date?"
Frank and Clay were head to head, eyes locked. She hesitated before answering no, and he immediately asked her why.
"Too busy," she repeated with a shrug.
"Doing what?" he pressed.
Frank sighed, conveying a supreme indifference to the barrage of questions.
"I don't know. Working, I guess."
"What do you do when you're not working?
"Sleep. Eat. Exercise. Read the paper, watch the news, football."
Clay sat back, asking what team she liked.
"Chiefs look good. And just to show I have a heart, Warren Moon makes the Seahawks a sentimental favorite."
Clay smiled again, like an indulgent grandfather. "You wrote down that you drink moderately. What's moderate to you?"
"I don't know. Depends on the day."
"Do you drink more on bad days?"
"I suppose."
Frank sat back, stretching her legs all the way out, crossing arms and ankles.
"What's an average day's consumption?"
"Two, three beers. Scotch sometimes, maybe wine if I have dinner."
"Do you ever have nightmares?"
Frank's nonchalant expression wavered for an instant, but then she said stoically, "It's a package deal. You get a pension, medical, and nightmares for the rest of your life."
"Are they bad ones?"
"Is any nightmare good?"
Clay smiled at his own question, neatly laying the trap. "Do you ever wake up crying?"
The flexed jaw muscle was Clay's answer. He shifted his attention to a thread on his slacks. "I don't suppose you'd tell me what they're about."
He looked back up and searched her cobalt eyes, waiting. Finally he sighed loudly. "Lieutenant, you seem like an intelligent person. I have to admit, I admire your investigative skills and I've enjoyed it the few times we've worked together, but frankly, I sure as shit wouldn't want to be living in your shoes right now. I'd say you're on the edge of a hard place and I'm offering you a hand— no strings attached. I can help you, Frank, but only if you'll let me."
Their eyes dueled while Frank considered Clay's offer. She respected him, he seemed like a straight-up guy, but she just couldn't tell him everything. What she'd endured lately with Kennedy and Noah was bad enough. She wasn't willing to go any further. Not for a stranger. Clay finally realized that.