off the car and tossed her cup, coffee and all, into a Dumpster. Then she met his gaze with a stony one of her own.
âFine,â she said. âMaybe it was a trick of the light. Or the shadows. Or my fucking imagination. It was raining, it was cloudy, I saw whatever it was from the corner of my eye for a split second, and then all hell broke loose. Iâm sorry I even mentioned it.â
Robertsâs lips thinned. Then he shook his head. âLook, letâs just forget it, all right? Like I said, weâre all under stress.â
Alex bit the inside of her cheek to keep further comment to herself. She changed the subject. âHowâs the kid doing?â
âThe rookie? Heâs pretty shaken up, but heâll survive. His trainer is apoplectic, however.â
Alex would be, too, if her partner had been that quick to fire. Or if heâd missed at that range.
Two shots, both buried harmlessly in the wall behind Trent, wide of their mark. If she hadnât seen it with her own eyes, she wouldnât have believed it. She hugged her arms around herself.
Still wasnât sure she did.
âRemedial firearms training?â she hazarded.
âOh, yeah.â
They fell silent for a moment, watching the latest victim being zipped into a body bag and then loaded onto a gurney.
Roberts cleared his throat. âWhether you saw him or not, Alex, we came close this time. Any closer and weâd have had him.â
âYeah. Sure.â
Roberts looked down at her. âHeâs getting cocky. Killing in broad daylight in an alley off a busy streetâif he keeps up like that, we will get him.â
Alexâs palms turned clammy. She remembered Trentâs flat, cold expression; his colder words: âYouâd better hope to Heaven that you donât, Alex Jarvis. Because you donât stand a chance against him. Not you, and not your entire police force.â
She stared again at Trent. He didnât look in her direction, but she felt his attention on her all the same. His awareness of her, echoing her own sensitivity to him. Her heart stuttered in her chest. Roberts had continued speaking, and now something he said snagged her attention.
âWhat did you just say?â
âI said, even with this rain, we got here soon enough that we might actually find some evidence.â
âBefore that.â
âWhat? The part about Trent having such good hearing?â
âIs that what he told you? That he heard something?â
Her staff inspectorâs forehead creased. âIs there a problem with that?â
Alex hesitated. Was Trentâs claimed sixth sense something she wanted to share? She glanced at her partner again and noted the tension that had crept into his posture, as if he knew what they discussed and didnât want her to continue. Which gave her ample reason to do so. She straightened her shoulders.
âWe were sitting in a coffee shop two blocks away,â she told Roberts. Trent turned his head and Alex recoiled under his fury. Then she lifted her chin, met his anger glare for glare, swallowed hard, and made herself continue. âHe said he could feel the killer. Physically hauled me out and brought me here. Told me to wait while he went into the alley alone.â
Silence met her words. She saw a muscle flex in Trentâs jaw and she deliberately hardened her own expression and turned her back on him and looked up at her staff inspector.
âIt was raining,â she said harshly. âAnd thundering. There was traffic and we were two blocks away , inside a building. Trent didnât hear anything.â
Doubt mingled with outright skepticism on her supervisorâs face, and he looked in Trentâs direction. âYouâre telling me you think the guyâs psychic?â
âIâm telling you what happened. What he told me. He said he could feel the killer. Feel him stalk the victim, feel him kill . . .â Alex
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