Erica was on the last leg of her morning run on the Green Lake Trail. One more curve and then she would head across the grass, run in place at the crosswalk until the light changed, jog across the street, probably cutting the corner just a bit, then past a few shop fronts and up the stairs to her second floor flat. Just like every other morning. Then it was shower, granola and bus downtown to work, with a stop at the coffee shop on the main floor, because it was Seattle and there was a rule that you had to drink coffee.
As she passed the bench under her favorite willow tree, she took note of a jogger taking a breather. He looked familiar, probably a regular; maybe even one of those that did the whole circuit. That was more ambition than she had most days. She continued on around the loop, going over her mental calendar for the day; too many meetings, too few hours to get the real work done. Same as usual. She didn't pay attention to the runner coming up behind her. Green Lake was so popular, they had to post signs and paint stripes telling people which part of the path they were allowed to use. But then he spoke from just behind her.
"You shouldn't be so predictable. It's not safe." Her pace faltered and he came up beside her. It was the man from the bench. "Every day, same time, same route. You make it really easy for someone with nasty ideas."
"Like you?" she challenged in her most scathing voice, and lengthened her stride. He easily matched her pace.
"Like anyone."
She fell to a walk and looked around. There were easily a dozen people in shouting distance if not closer. He turned and jogged backward in front of her. "Change it up," he suggested. "Run the other direction, hit the gym some days."
She came to a full stop, hands on hips. "Who the hell are you to tell me what to do?"
He continued to jog in place. "I'm a cop. Detective, actually. Just passing on some good advice."
"Well find somebody who gives a damn." She took off across the grass with her longest stride, even though she was winded. He stopped jogging and watched her go. Erica's straight blonde hair was pulled back in a pony tail. It was being whipped one way by the breeze and swung another by the rhythm of her run. She was built tall and lean, with long legs, although today she was wearing her rain-shedding outfit which was far from flattering. Soon she would be wearing her office uniform of button down blouse and pencil skirt. But right now, she was wearing an annoyed frown. She didn't like being interrupted on her morning run. She even wore fluorescent ear buds and her phone in an arm band as an additional cue that she wasn't in the mood to talk to anybody. She just knew that this bad start was going to blow her whole day.
****
The next morning, Erica came down the stairs from her apartment, adjusting her ear buds and looking around for lurking cops. When she reached the street corner, she stretched, waiting for the light to change and eyeing the people that were out bright and early to enjoy the sunshine. In Seattle, you had to take the sun wherever and whenever you could get it. She was wearing shorts and a tank top in celebration. When the light changed, she jogged slowly across the street then down the grassy slope toward the path that circled the lake, warming her muscles. Once she hit the path, she began to speed up. As usual, she passed some joggers and others passed her. About an eighth of a mile in, near a cove frequented by ducks, she always hit her stride and it was as if she was all alone, moving effortlessly, grooving to whichever playlist she had picked that day. Beyonce was singing when she reached her morning nirvana. Beyonce blended into Alicia Keyes. Erica could almost close her eyes and follow her route without looking now. The breeze off the lake smelled slightly of algae, as it always did whenever the sun warmed the water.
After Alicia Keyes, there was an annoying gap before the playlist kicked into her favorite Dido song. It was during that quiet gap that she realized someone was a short way behind her, matching not just her stride, but even her footfalls. She glanced over her shoulder and saw the cop -- alleged cop -- from yesterday. Swearing, she kicked out her stride. Now the music beat was off and she was really pissed, especially when he matched her stride again, hanging back about six feet. She kicked it up again, doing a fair impression of a eight hundred meter athlete, save of course she didn't have eight hundred meters in her at that pace, not even close. When he matched stride again, she had to concede, and slowed until she came to a full stop and was leaning on her knees trying to catch her breath. Naturally, he didn't run on by. Bastard wasn't even breathing hard. She decided she had pegged him right as a full circuit fanatic, probably even multiple circuits. So why the hell was he following a rank amateur like her?
"You okay?" he asked, when she was breathing a little easier.
"Fuck you," she replied. He chuckled. "What the hell do you want from me?"
"Seeing as how you won't keep yourself safe, I figured I'd better hang around. You should keep walking. Don't want to cramp up."
"Which way are you going, so I can go the opposite?"
"Seriously. You need to..."
"I was being serious," she snapped and turned back, her morning run totally ruined. She tried to get back into the rhythm set by her playlist, but it eluded her, plus his footfalls right behind her set her teeth on edge. The full-on run, the erratic pace on the way back and the general overall aggravation colluded to wear her out well short of home and she finally slowed to a walk on the final curve. He, again, didn't have the decency to run on by. He settled into a walk beside her.
"What?" she finally screamed at him. He only looked at her with a cocked eyebrow. "Do I have to get a restraining order to get you to leave me alone?"
"If you're going to be out here every morning putting yourself at risk, I'm going to be here keeping an eye on you."
"Why?" she demanded. "Why do you care?"
"Have you looked in a mirror, lately?"
"What? No, wait. Forget that. I have a boyfriend."
"Really? Where is he?"
"Serbia. Uh, Bosnia. He's a photojournalist. He travels."
"And you're here by yourself. Alone. In danger."
"Jesus. Look around. The park is full of people. I don't go to the back side of the lake. I don't go off the trail. The only one I'm in danger from is you. So just stay the hell away from me." She began backing away from him, across the grass, toward the street. When he started to follow, she raised both hands. "I'll scream," she threatened. "If you really are a cop, you'll be up shit creek."
He smiled, reached into a back pocket and pulled out a set of handcuffs. "I'll just explain that I'm arresting a perp."
"Fucker," she spat.
"My, my. Such a mouth on you. If you were mine, we'd have to work on that, for sure."
"I'm not yours. I'm not anybody's," she snarled, continuing to back away and secretly relieved that he was no longer trying to follow her. He was getting more than a few looks as he stood there holding handcuffs. She finally turned and ran for the street, then dodged traffic to cross against the light, and ran all the way to her apartment.