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with him and Sergeant Paul Chi. I could hear them opining on the upcoming meeting, but there was little controversy. We were all of the same opinion. Brady was going to announce his future plans. But what had he decided to do?

The root of the matter was the scandal that had devastated the Southern Station, our station, not long ago. Lieutenant Ted Swanson of Robbery had enlisted two teams of bad cops to knock off drug dealers and payday loan joints for cash. Eighteen people died in several shoot-outs, and even Swanson took enough lead to kill him two or three times over. But he survived his injuries and was now serving out the rest of his worthless life at Chino, a maximum-security prison.

Warren Jacobi, our friend, my former partner, and at that time chief of police, had to take the fall. He was retired out, and Jackson Brady, our good lieutenant, picked up the slack for Jacobi, simultaneously running Homicide and the Southern Station. When asked to choose which job he wanted, heโ€™d put off the decision. Maybe he took too long. Lately, rumor had it that the mayor was having talks with Stefan Rowan, a heavyweight organized-crime commander from New York.

I loved working for Brady. He was smart. He never asked anyone to do anything he wouldnโ€™t do. He was brave. And he was loyal to the people who reported to him.

What scared me most was that the rumor might be wrong. That Brady was going to step up to become chief of police, and the hard-ass New Yorker would replace him as Homicide CO.

Maybe a promotion would be good for Brady, but speaking for myself, it would break my heart.

CHAPTER 5

I LOOKED PAST CONKLIN and saw Brady leave his office in the back corner of the squad room. He put on his jacket and headed up the center aisle toward the front of the room. Conklin got up from Cappyโ€™s desk as Brady passed and joined me at our desks.

Brady took the floor, his blond-white hair pulled back in a pony, his denim shirt tucked in, his dark jacket unbuttoned. I couldnโ€™t read his expression.

Brady took center stage at the front of the squad room, facing the dozen Homicide cops from the day shift, another dozen cops from the night shift, and more were coming in. Cops from other departments leaned against the walls, sat in empty chairs, or perched on the corners of desks, all quietly waiting for Brady to drop a bomb.

When the anticipation had stretched so thin it was starting to thrum, Brady said, โ€œI know the wait time has been hard on everyone. I did my best to hold things together with your help. My wife says I look like Iโ€™ve been dragged behind a car. To tell the truth, I feel a little like that, but I was of two minds.

โ€œNow, yโ€™all know Iโ€™ve been running up and down the stairs, changing hats in the landing. I was asked to choose, fourth floor or fifth, but if I coulda kept doing both jobs, I woulda done it. But in the interest of safety, public good and welfare, and living to see my forty-fifth birthday, Iโ€™ve decided to hang my hat in Homicide.โ€

Big sigh of relief from me, and a spontaneous round of raucous applause and hooting from the squad.

I said loud enough for Brady to hear, โ€œSo glad, Brady. That was a sacrifice.โ€

โ€œNo, he said, โ€œit was selfish. I just couldnโ€™t move into Jacobiโ€™s swell office and push paper. Iโ€™m a street cop and I like being part of the action.โ€

Laughter came up all around the room and it was like sunshine breaking through the clouds. Then I realized we hadnโ€™t heard the rest of the story.

Who was our new police chief?

Anticipating the question, Brady said, โ€œAnd that leaves the last shoe. I make it to be size eleven medium wide, currently filled by a former Homicide cop from LA and Vegas who for the last dozen years has been heading up our forensic lab, ably, with good humor. Not prideful, but we know heโ€™s a first-class CSI.โ€

It took a minute for the parts to come together, and then I got it. I had just never considered Charlie Clapper as chief of police, but damn, he was an excellent choice.

Brady was saying, โ€œAt this point, Iโ€™m supposed to draw back the curtain and say about a former cop and highly respected forensic scientist, โ€˜Round of applause for our own Charlie Clapper, now police chief, SFPD.โ€™

โ€œBut I forgot to get a curtain, and Clapper isnโ€™t here. Heโ€™s going to be across the street at MacBainโ€™s โ€” second-floor private room reserved for alla us, from noon to two. No cover charge, beerโ€™s on the house. If there are any questions, weโ€™ll get ya answers all in good time.โ€

Conklin got to his feet and said, โ€œBrady? If you had anything to do with recommending Clapper for the chief job, I just want to say, hot dog. Good choice and all in the family. And Iโ€™m glad youโ€™re staying with us.โ€

CHAPTER 6

CONKLIN AND I WALKED across the street at the appointed time, still stunned by the breaking news. But pleased.

We both liked Clapper. A lot. He was a solid pro, never a showboat. I remembered so many cases where heโ€™d been the forensic specialist; when hamburgers had become bombs, when we dug up a dozen decapitated heads in a backyard, when heโ€™d gone through the exploded science museum where my husband, Joe, had been almost killed. Heโ€™d taken us through crime scenes and pointed out things he thought we ought to know.

The bottom line: Charlie Clapper had never let us down.

Richie held the door for me at MacBainโ€™s and we entered the favorite watering hole for Hall of Justice workers, from court stenographers to the motorcycle police. At lunchtime, the

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