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Inside the building, the brand new, orange, plastic chairs reflected off a white institutional-tile floor, which was buffed until you could almost see your face in it. The rest of the room contrasted unfavorably, as the walls were scuffed and marked, long past the need for a new coat of paint, and the old-fashioned drop ceiling showed the stains of a current or one-time leak. The room was small, as befitted a town that barely met the population requirement for a city charter.

A counter stretched across the middle of the room and doubled as the front desk. A door had been cut to one side and was clearly the locking kind you had to be buzzed through, which was a nice little piece of security if you were keeping out blue-haired old ladies too frail to just vault the counter.

The rather chubby officer behind the counter was obviously very busy, and was presently playing a holographic game of multicolored blocks in various configurations, falling from the top of the virtual screen. He looked up as they came in the door and tapped the front of his buckley, which obediently switched off the game and brought up a screen of something that looked very serious and industrious. A boss program.

As they approached the counter, Cally let her eyes meet Sands’, and they both affected the attitude of federal agents who hadn’t really expected any better from local law enforcement. Near simultaneously and seemingly from nowhere, they pulled out little black leather folders and flipped them open to display their credentials to the embarrassed man.

“Special Agents Wilson and Brannig. We need an interrogation room, and then I’ll speak to the senior supervisor on duty,” Cally said, a slight nod of her head indicating that George was to be the person interrogated, as if the man behind the desk were too stupid to have figured that out on his own.

“That would be the chief. He’s working late tonight,” the officer said, clearly glad to be able to say something that might make the city police look good.

“Satisfactory. The room?” Cally reminded him as if he’d already forgotten. His slight flush deepened as her eyes noted the open box of donuts on the table behind him, and then returned to rest on him. She raised her eyebrows as if to ask why he was still just sitting there.

“Uh, yeah. Here.” He reached under the counter and they heard a buzz and a click as the small door unlocked.

Cally gestured for George to precede them, meticulously avoiding touching him, perfectly courteous, and yet managing to convey the clear message that if he wasn’t yet under arrest, that was a technicality that could be corrected instantly if she or “Brannig” became displeased.

Sands, on the other hand, looked at their not-prisoner, if not quite sympathetically, at least as if she hadn’t already convicted him in her mind as an ax murderer. As she followed Cally through the gap, she turned to the cop behind the desk. “Thank you, officer… Hardy,” she read off his badge.

Cally focused on the man again, her expression calculated to make him feel like an idiot that he was still seated and still hadn’t gotten them their interrogation room.

He almost stumbled over his feet in his hurry to get up and comply.

The police chief looked distinctly less than happy to have a pair of Feds on his doorstep, even if they did come bearing what might be a major break in his case. He also looked resigned, and uncritically swallowed their story about the ex-boyfriend aka person of interest.

“We’ve been ordered to coordinate and cooperate with you,” Cally said, with a hint of sourness under the professional mask. “Strictly speaking, since there is no hard evidence of linkage across state lines as of yet, it’s your case, but I’m sure you’ll understand how much pressure we’re facing from above.” There was no evidence of linkage across state lines. Or, more accurately, no evidence the Bane Sidhe was going to let civil police authorities in on.

“Frankly, most of the reason we brought him up here was as an excuse to drag him on a three-hour road trip and get him tired and hungry,” Sands admitted. As if on cue, her stomach growled.

“Okay, so what have you got?” he asked.

“The ex-boyfriend from high school. Word is the breakup was not friendly. This one used to work for a grocery store. In the meat department,” Cally said.

The chief turned a little green around the gills.

“You saw the body,” she said, unsurprised when he nodded, swallowing hard, and his eyes narrowed grimly at George.

“Time to shake him until his teeth rattle.” The ersatz agent didn’t wait for a reply from the chief, but turned and entered the room vigorously, slamming the door behind her.

The interrogation that followed was a skit played out entirely for the chief’s benefit, the characters being the good cop, the bad cop, and the suspect. Said play continued until the buckley vibrating on Cally’s hip told her part two of the operation was kicking loose on the PD’s emergency lines.

The beauty of the whole drama was that none of them had to do a particularly good acting job. George’s character could be believably bad at pretending total innocence, while Cally and Sands could get away with a bit of overacting. They were playing agents playing good cop, bad cop. Cally was, thus, free to make a dramatic production of losing her temper and slamming out in a huff when Sands bodily kept her from assaulting the “suspect.”

She ran a hand through her hair as she walked into the observation room with the chief. “That always winds me up. I really do need a time out,” she said.

Right on cue, a pleasant female voice issued from the other man’s hip pocket. “Chief, you have a call. Chief you have a call. Please see the screen for details,” it said.

He pulled the device out and glanced at the screen casually, doing a quick double take. “Oh, shit,” he said.

“If you need to go take care of something, she’s not going to be asking him any real questions for at least another five minutes as she tries to build a bond,” Cally told him. “I’m gonna take a walk and get my head back in the zone before we really start up again.”

“Uh, sure, if you wouldn’t mind.” The chief didn’t even look at her as he took off for the front office at a pace just short of a run. Step one accomplished. She now had the freedom of the station.

She didn’t dither, but made a beeline for the probable locations of the evidence room. There were several candidates because she only had the building plans to work from. Unfortunately, the small room on this side held a broom closet and assorted junk that was quite clearly not evidence, unless you considered it evidence that somebody had a pack-rat problem. She wrinkled her nose in disgust and prepared her excuses as she backtracked to the front of the building, which was laid out in a horseshoe pattern. She would have to go through the front desk area to get to the other side of the building. It was also the side with the fire exit she’d originally prepped. She would, no doubt, have to unlock their side’s exit to get Sands and George out.

In the front of the station, she smiled apologetically at the cop working the desk. “Do you mind if I grab one of these? I haven’t eaten in five hours,” she said.

His eyes glinted at her, amused, and roved over her body. For once, his eyes didn’t even stop at her breasts, but skimmed on down to the thighs men seemed to like but she fought a constant battle with.