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“I'll be with you in just a moment, Mrs. Steinmetz.”

Herb stroked her hair. All of his indecision melted away. He'd made the right choice. Her friend Phil was right. Bernice was a real trophy.

Trophy. The word snagged in his mind. People won trophies in sports, but they also shot trophies. Like that ten point buck on Phil's sweater.

“Bernice—your friend Phil. Is he a hunt...”

The bullet caught Herb in the meaty part of his upper shoulder, spinning him around. Before hitting the floor, he glimpsed Phil, clutching a rifle in the doorway.

Screams filled the room, Bernice's among them. Herb tugged at his hip holster, freeing his Sig. His left arm went numb from his finger tips to his armpit, but he could feel the spreading warmth of gushing blood, and he knew the wound was bad.

“Drop the gun, Herb!”

Phil had the .22 pointed at Herb's head. Herb hadn't brought his gun around yet. Maybe, if he rolled to the side...

Too late. Bernice stepped in his line of fire.

“Phil! Stop it!”

“I'm doing it for you, Bernice! He's no good for you!”

Herb chanced a look at his shoulder wound. Worse than he thought. If he didn't stop the bleeding soon, he wouldn't make it.

“I love him, Phil.”

“Love him? He's never home, and when he is, you said it's just the same, boring routine!”

“I like the same, boring routine. And I like my husband. Stop acting crazy and put down the gun.”

Bernice took a step towards him, her hands up in supplication.

“Bernice...” Herb's voice radiated strength. “He won't shoot you. Walk out and call the police.”

“Shut up!”

Bernice turned and looked at Herb. He nodded at his wife, willing her to move.

“I'll kill her! I'll kill both of you!”

Bernice stepped to the side. Phil's gun followed her.

Herb's gun followed Phil.

Detective First Class Herb Benedict fired four shots, three to the chest and one to the head.

All of them hit home.

Phil dropped, hard. Bernice rushed to her husband.

“Herb! Herb, I'm so sorry!”

Herb's eyes fluttered twice, and then closed.

“Bingo!” Mrs. Steinmetz yelled.

#

The food redefined horrible, but Herb ate everything. Even the steamed squash. Assuming it was steamed squash.

“I can't wait to get out of here and eat some real food.”

Bernice stroked his arm, below the IV.

“We need to talk, Herb.”

Herb didn't like the tone of her voice. She sounded so sad. He shook his head, trying to clear the codeine cloud, trying to concentrate.

“Bernice, honey, I'll make it up to you. I know I haven't been there. I know I've been spending too much time at work. Give me a chance, and I'll change.”

Bernice smiled.

“That's what I want to talk to you about.” Bernice took a deep breath. “I don't want you to transfer to Property Crimes.”

Herb did a damn good impression of confused.

“But I thought...”

“When you told me you wanted to transfer, it was a dream come true for me. But then, with Phil...”

Herb reached out with his good hand, held hers.

“You're a good cop, Herb Benedict. It would be selfish of me to keep you from that.”

“That's okay. You're allowed to be selfish.”

Bernice's eyes glassed over.

“You know, every day when you go to work, I worry about you. But seeing you in action...”

Herb smiled.

“Was I dashing?”

“You were magnificent. You saved more than me and you. Phil had...problems.”

“No kidding.”

After his death, a search of Phil Grabowski's apartment uncovered a large cache of weapons and eighteen notebooks full of handwritten, paranoid ranting. Herb was only one name on a long list of targets.

“I can't deprive you of your job, Herb. And I can't deprive Chicago of you. You've got six years left to do good for this city. I want you to use those years well.”

Herb pulled Bernice close and held her tight, despite the twenty-odd stitches in his shoulder.

“You know, the doctor says I'll be out of here by next Friday.”

Bernice touched his cheek.

“Just in time for pot roast.”

“Pot roast is my favorite, you know.”

“I think you've mentioned that before.”

“But this Friday, why don't we go out to eat instead? Someplace nice, romantic.”

Bernice's eyes lit up. She looked like a teenager again.

“I'd like that.”

“And then afterwards, maybe some nookie.”

“That sounds perfect, but you know what?”

“What?”

Bernice grinned, and it was positively wicked.

“We don't have to wait until Friday for that.”

She closed the door to the room and turned out the light.

Last Request

Phin has been in four of the six Jack Daniels books so far, Whiskey Sour, Rusty Nail, Fuzzy Nave, and Cherry Bomb. In those books, Jack tempers some of Phin's darker moments. Not so in this story. This is also my favorite first line of anything I've written.

I picked up a transsexual hooker named Thor, all six feet of her, at the off ramp to Eau Claire, Wisconsin, as I was driving up north to kill a man.

She had on thigh-high black vinyl boots, red fishnet stockings, a pink mini skirt, a neon green spandex tube top, and a huge blonde wig that reminded me of an octopus. I could have spotted her from clear across the county.

“You looking for action?” she said after introducing herself.

“I'm always looking for action.”

“Tonight's your lucky night, handsome. I'm getting out of this biz. You give me a ride, you can have whatever you want for free.”

I opened the door, rolled up the window, and got back on the road.

Thor spent five miles trying to pay for her ride, but the painkillers had rendered me numb and useless in that area, and eventually she gave up and reclined her seat back, settling instead for conversation.

“So where are you headed?” she asked. She sounded like she'd been sucking helium. Hormone therapy, I guessed. I couldn't tell if her breasts were real under the tube top, but her pink micro mini revealed legs that were nice no matter which sex she was.

“Rice Lake.”

I yawned, and shifted in my seat. It was past one in the morning, but the oppressive July heat stuck around even when the sun didn't. I had the air conditioning in the Ford Ranger cranked up, but it didn't help much.

“Why are you going to Rice Lake?” she asked.

I searched around for the drink holder, picked up the coffee I'd bought back in the Dells, and forced down the remaining cold dregs, sucking every last molecule of caffeine from the grit that caught in my teeth.

“Business.”

She touched my arm, hairless like the rest of me.

“You don't look like a businessman.”

The road stretched out ahead of us, an endless black snake. Mile after mile of nothing to look at. I should have gotten a vehicle with a manual transmission, given my hand something to do.

“My briefcase and power ties are in the back seat.”

Thor didn't bother to look. Which was a good thing.

“What sort of business are you in?”

I considered it. “Customer relations.”

“From Chicago,” Thor said.

She noticed the plates before climbing in. Observant girl. I wondered, obliquely, how far she'd take this line of questioning.

“Don't act much like a businessman, either.”

“How do businessmen act?” I said.

“They're all after one thing.”

“And what's that?”

“Me.”

She tried to purr, and wound up sounding like Mickey Mouse. Personally, I didn't find her attractive. I had no idea if she was pre-op, post-op, or a work in progress, but Thor and I weren't going to happen, ever.