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I took his advice and as soon as Bates was out of sight, I regretted it.

4

Matt led me through the tunnels that the teams used to go from the locker room to the ice.After we cut through a few doors and an office, I was lost.

“Where’d you park?I can let you out a door near your car.”

“I didn’t drive,” I told him.I didn’t tell him it was because I didn’t have a car.

“Okay.We’ll go out the exit by the statues.”

We emerged from the tunnels and into the main concourse.Aside from concession workers and security, only a few fans milled around.I wondered how the game was going.

“If it was up to me,”Matt said, “I’d just move you to a seat on the other side of the arena. But I’m only the assistant team leader. Besides, we’ve got a zero tolerance policy on fighting.I’m sorry.”

“Not your fault.I’m the one who got in a fight.”

We walked in silence for a few yards.A loud, collective “ahhh!” from the crowd drifted through the walls and I guessed that the Flyers had missed a scoring chance.

A shot of pain, stronger than the rest, blasted through my knee.Our pace had been quick, at least for me.My limp became more pronounced, forcing me to slow down.

Matt noticed and slowed, too.“You get hurt in the fight?”

“Old injury,” I told him.“Fight didn’t help, though.”

“You want to stop for a second?”

“How far is it?”

He pointed at a set of doors where the corridor curved left.It was about forty yards away.

“I can make it,” I said.

Matt nodded and kept walking, but he had slowed down even further.I didn’t complain.My knee felt like shattered glass grinding together.I heard another outburst from the crowd.

“So is it true what Glen said?”Matt asked me quietly. “That you’re not a cop anymore?”

“It’s true.”

“What happened?”

“Long story,” I told him.“Not one I can tell in twenty-five yards, even if I wanted to.”

“Fair enough.So what kind of work do you do now?”

I stopped walking and turned to face him.“What’s with the interrogation, Matt?Couldn’t you have done this back at the cell?”

Matt swallowed hard.“No…I mean, sorry.I just — “

“I’ll show myself out the rest of the way,” I snapped at him.I turned and began striding purposefully toward the doors, ignoring the pain in my knee.

It took about three seconds for Matt to catch up.“Wait,” he said.“I’m sorry.”

I ignored him and kept walking.I’d already had to deal with Bates and his condescension tonight.I wasn’t about to spill my life story to some guy I hadn’t seen in almost twenty years just because we went to the same high school.

“Stef, wait.Please.”

Something in his voice made me slow down.Maybe it was the hint of panic that rang out when he said my name.Maybe it was the desperation that turned his words into a whine.I don’t know for sure.But I stopped and looked him dead in the eye and waited.

He seemed surprised.“I…I need your help.I need you to look into something.”

“I told you.I’m not a cop anymore.”

“I know.But you were, right?”

I nodded.

“Then maybe you can still help.I don’t know who else to ask.”

I watched his eyes as he said it and knew he was serious.I didn’t know what he needed, but decided right there that the least I could do was listen to him.

“Okay, Matt.Ask.”

He took a wavering breath.“It’s my daughter.I’m worried something bad has happened to her.”

“Like what?”

“Well, she-”

His radio squawked,“-21 to -2.

“Damn,” Matt muttered.Then, into the radio, “-2, go ahead.”

We’ve got a code 9 to deal with in 114,” came the reply.

Matt keyed the radio.“Copy,” he said, then looked up at me.“Some fan heckling the visitor’s bench that needs to be removed,” he explained.

I shrugged.

“Listen, do you have a card or something?I’ll call you tomorrow.”

“No.No card.No phone, either.”

He gave me a strange look.“You mean no cell phone?”

“No.I mean no phone.”

Questions came into his eyes and I cut them off.

“Look, Matt. I usually eat breakfast at the Rocket Bakery at 1st and Cedar. We can talk there.”

Matt thought about it, then nodded his head.

We walked the remainder of the distance to the doors and he swung them open.Cold air spilled in through the opening, making my knee hurt worse.

“All I’m promising is we’ll talk,” I told him.

“That’s all I’m asking,” he said.

I stepped out into the cold and began the long limp home.

5

The next morning, I woke early after a fitful night’s sleep. The throb in my shoulder and arm and the needles in my knee kept me always on the edge of wakefulness.I took two extra strength pain relievers from my giant jar of three thousand, which I’d bought in bulk when I still had a membership to Costco.

The hot water from the shower helped work out the stiffness in my shoulder, but my knee wasn’t going to cooperate.Not yet.I flexed it slowly under the steaming water, wincing.The jagged exit wound in the center of the knee was in marked contrast to the straight, surgical lines all around it.I had matching exit wounds on my left arm and left collarbone, courtesy of a gangmember who took a personal dislike to me one night in late August almost eleven years ago.

Looking at my knee made me start to remember and remembering everything from that time in my life made me want to drink. Drinking was a bad idea, so I finished washing up before the hot water in my little apartment gave out.

After my shower, I slipped on some jeans and a t-shirt.I found my running shoes and put them on.Walking, even the seven blocks to the Rocket Bakery, required preparation.The running shoes were the only expensive thing I owned.

As I tied the laces, sitting in the only chair in my tiny living room, I looked around at the place.For the first few years, I’d been disgusted and embarrassed that I lived here.I’d been a cop, making good money and living in a nice, new apartment on the north side of town.Only losers and college kids lived in Browne’s Addition then.Now, it was losers, college kids and me.

I put on my leather jacket and slipped out of the apartment.I hadn’t bothered to look at the time, but the sun wasn’t up over the downtown buildings yet, so I figured it was around eight.The air was crisp, but not deadly cold and the streets and sidewalks were bare of snow, except for a few small salt-and-pepper patches that used to be large piles.

In its early days, Browne’s Addition was a wealthy part of River City.Built on a large spur at the edge of downtown, its large homes were near the downtown core. Perfect for the socialites of the time.They could live in an exclusive neighborhood, do their shopping tothe east and drop down the hill to the west and be at the Looking Glass River, all in less than a mile.It must have seemed like paradise to them.But time marched on. The wealthy moved into newer houses on the south hill or the north side of town. Slowly, the large houses in Browne’s Additionwere sub-divided into apartments. True apartment houses sprung up on any spare lots. Over time, the entire neighborhood became Renter Land.The rich abandoned Browne’s Addition to the peasants.

The Rocket Bakery sat on the southeast corner of 1st and Cedar.I started coming to the coffee shop while I was still on the job.I’d been assigned to work light duty in the detective’s division while I recovered from my shooting injuries.A group of detectives went daily to the Rocket Bakery for coffee.Or tea.Or to ogle the young baristas.They always frequented the new trendy places, so their loyalty to the Rocket Bakery was short-lived.But I liked it and stayed.

The smells of fresh baked goods and hot coffee met me at the door.Light jazz played over the speakers.The place wasn’t as intentional as a Starbucks about atmosphere, but in the end, they were the same.For all their pretensions and being eclectic and hovering almost off the grid, they were both businesses that had numerous branches in River City and both were there to make money.