“I got axed. It’s being chalked up to cutbacks due to the financial deficit. Naturally, freelancers are the first to go. Don’t worry, Linds. I know things about homeland security very few people know. As soon as the word gets out, I’ll get calls.”
My mouth was dry. My heart was thudding almost audibly.
I make a cop’s salary. It isn’t bad money, but it wouldn’t support our airy three-bedroom apartment on Lake Street, which Joe had rented when he was working for the government as deputy director of Homeland Security.
When he was making a ton.
“How much money do we have?”
“We’ll be fine for quite a few months. I’ll find a job before we run dry. We’ll be fine, Lindsay,” he said. “I’m not going to disappoint my two fabulous girls.”
“We love you, Joe,” I said.
Our little daughter started to cry.
Chapter 7
YUKI WAS NAKED, lying flat on her back on the bedroom carpet, panting, her pulse slowing after her heart’s wild gallop over the hills during the morning’s romp.
She turned her head and looked at her gorgeous and in every way fantastic lover.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I tried, but I was distracted. Thinking about other things.”
Brady laughed.
He rolled toward her, put his arm across her body, and pulled her to him. “You’re too much fun. I’m crazy about you, you know that?”
She knew. She was crazy about him. Was this just the best sex she’d ever had? Or were she and Brady traveling in lockstep toward the real deal?
She touched Brady’s mouth and he kissed her palm. She swept his damp blond hair back from his eyes and kissed the side of his mouth.
He took her face in one hand and kissed her lips and she felt him start to get hard again. He grabbed her by the shoulders and shook her gently, saying, “I hate to do it, but I’ve got to leave.”
Brady was Lieutenant Jackson Brady, head of the homicide squad, SFPD, Southern District. Yuki reached down and ran her fingers up his leg, stopping at the round pink scar on his thigh, where he took a bullet that nicked his femoral artery. It was sheer good fortune that he had gotten to the hospital in time.
She said, “Me, too. I’ve got court in an hour.”
Yuki got up, pulled her robe from the bedpost, and started for the kitchen of the condo her mother had left her. In a way, Keiko Castellano still lived here. She often talked to Yuki, although not out loud. It was as though Keiko’s voice, her opinions, her experiences were so embedded in Yuki’s mind that Keiko was just always there.
Now her mother said, “You good girl, Yuki-eh, but foolish. Brady still married. Look what you doing.”
“You shouldn’t be watching,” Yuki muttered as she picked pillows off the floor and threw them onto the bed.
“I can’t help myself,” Brady said. He zipped up his fly and reached for his shirt. “You’re so very cute.”
Yuki grinned, slapped his butt. He yelled, “Hey,” grabbed her, lifted her into his arms, kissed her.
Then Brady said, “I wanted to tell you about this case.”
“Start talking.”
As Yuki made coffee, she mentally rebutted her mother’s commentary, telling Keiko that, as she well knew, Brady was separated, and his soon-to-be-ex-wife lived in Miami, as far across the country as possible.
Brady was saying, “You’ve heard of Jeff Kennedy?”
Yuki poured coffee into Brady’s mug.
“Basketball player.”