"Chickens," Alicia said, feeling queasy. "Young, tender, defenseless."
She looked at Will. So clean-cut, almost boyish-looking with that short blond hair; his job put him in almost daily contact with humankind at its worst, yet he seemed to have remained untainted somehow.
"That's what they like. And Floyd Stevens is one of them. I followed him. He knew exactly where he was going—in fact, I think he must have called ahead, because there was somebody waiting at a corner with a very young-looking girl when he pulled up. The kid got into the car and the two of them drove away."
The bread stick crumbled in Alicia's hand as her anger flared. "And you let him?"
"Of course not. But I didn't want to complicate things by nabbing him myself—didn't want that lawyer raising any questions of entrapment or harassment—so as I followed him into the dock area, I patched through to a couple of guys I know on Vice. They waited till he parked, snuck up on him, and caught him in the act."
"Wow will someone take him off the streets?" she said, brushing the crumbs off her lap.
"He is off the street. At least for the time being. He's locked up, charged with having sex with a minor."
"And that's your good news? Another poor kid was molested by this creep?"
"Don't you see?" Will said, looking a little hurt. "He's not going to walk away from this one. Now he's got two sexual molestation charges in one week. He can't threaten or buy his way out when the witnesses are cops. He's going to be too busy defending himself to go after you. You're off the hook."
… Off the hook…
Alicia slumped back against the padded back of the booth as the truth of Will's words seeped past her anger at Floyd Stevens.
"Oh, my God," she said softly. "You're right. He can't say he never touched Kanessa. Can't say I imagined it all and overreacted."
"And best yet," Will said. "He's going down for last night. He's going to do time."
Alicia closed her eyes and took a deep breath. She felt as if a small planet had been lifted from her shoulders.
"Thank you," she said, looking at Will. She felt a sudden burst of warmth for this man, this good, good man. "What you did is above and beyond duty. I… I don't know what to say." Impulsively, she reached across the table and clutched his hand. "Thank you."
He shook his head. "Nailed a perv and helped a very special lady out of a jam. Trust me. The pleasure was all mine."
Alicia realized that Will had cupped her hand in both of his. She couldn't pull away now… and wasn't sure she wanted to.
The waiter's arrival with the wine broke the spell.
Will made a big display of aerating the tasting portion of the Chianti, checking its legs, sniffing it, swirling it in his mouth, doing everything but gargling with it, then he swallowed and puckered his face into an awful grimace.
"This is swill!" he told the waiter. "Take it out back and pour it down a storm drain!"
The waiter snorted. "Yeah," he said with a crooked smile. "Like you'd know."
He poured Alicia a glass, then casually added more to Will's.
"I'm like Rodney Dangerfield here," Will said, shaking his head. "No respect."
"With beer, you maybe got credentials," the waiter said. "But wine? Fuhgheddaboudit."
He left the bottle on the table and strolled away.
"You really do come here a lot."
Will laughed. "Yeah, Joey's the owner's nephew. We go way back."
Alicia sipped the wine and found the first sip a little tart, but the second wasn't so bad.
"So," she said, edging toward a question that had begun to niggle at her. "I imagine working all day and following people half the night plays havoc with your social life."
"Social life? What's that?"
"You know—friends, family, girlfriend… that sort of thing."
"It was no sacrifice, believe me. My friends didn't miss me, my folks retired to South Carolina; and as for the woman in my life"—he rotated his glass, staring into the swirling ruby fluid—"she up and left almost a year ago."
"I'm sorry," Alicia said, mentally kicking herself for prying. She fumbled for something to say. "I—I guess the long hours of being a cop are tough on a relationship."
Will grunted. "I wish that had been it. I could have handled that, maybe even worked something out. No… it was just about this time last year she went home to visit her family in Vermont—a little town called Brownsville—and ran into an old beau. They hooked up, the old sparks started burning again, and next thing I know she's on the phone telling me all about it and saying she's not coming back to New York, she's staying in Vermont and marrying this guy."
"That must have hurt," Alicia said, feeling for him. He'd delivered the story so matter-of-factly, but she sensed the lingering pain.
"That it did. Took about a million calls and even a trip to Vermont before it finally got through to me that she really meant it." He straightened and looked at her, as if shrugging off the memories. "But that was then. I got over it. Life goes on."
And now you think you should find someone else, Alicia thought. Please don't set your sights on me, Will Matthews. You've had enough trouble already.
"How about you?" he said. "How's your love life?"
Alicia echoed his earlier comment. "Love life? What's that?" She forced a smile. "Especially when you're married."
He blinked. "Married? I thought…"
For a moment she was tempted to morph her story about a traveling beau into a traveling husband, but she couldn't lie to him. Not after what he'd done for her.
"But you've already met my spouse," she said, smiling as she watched his baffled expression for a few heartbeats. Then she let him off the hook: "The Center. We're inseparable, you know."
"Oh!" He laughed. "Married to the job," he said, nodding. "I know all about that. Got a bit of that problem myself."
It's not always a problem, she thought. Sometimes it's a solution.
She could see him relax. That was good… and that was bad. He probably thought he had a clear field.
They spent the meal and perhaps an hour afterward talking, Will probing for details of her life, Alicia dodging and countering with a steady stream of questions that forced him to talk about himself.
The upshot of the evening was Alicia gathering a portrait of a decent man who liked beer, bass fishing, and basketball; a dedicated detective who'd managed—at least so far—to avoid the deep cynicism that seemed to infect most big-city cops.
And Will? As they left the restaurant, Alicia doubted he knew much more about her now than he had when he'd walked in.
As Will drove her home, Alicia watched his hands where they gripped the wheel. Strong hands, and strong arms. She wondered what those arms would feel like around her. She rarely minded being alone, in fact, most of the time she was too busy to realize that she was alone.
But there came times, at night, mostly, when she felt an urge to cling to someone, to feel protective arms around her, when she simply wanted to be held.
She was feeling relaxed and safe as Will pulled to a stop in front of her apartment. And she was torn: Ask him in or not?… ask him in or not?
And then a beeper sounded.
Will checked his belt. "Not mine."
Alicia fished hers out of her shoulder bag, and felt the mood shatter as she recognized the number on the display.
Hector's floor. Only one reason they'd be calling her at this hour.
"Will, can you take me over to St. Vincent's? Fast? I mean, really fast."