Captain Mike Cullen, St. Paul Robbery/Homicide Commander POV
Regency Condominiums, Shepherd Park Neighborhood, St. Paul
Saturday, October 16, 2021
"Need another beer, honey?"
I smiled as Dani came out onto the deck of our fourth-floor home overlooking the Mississippi River with another Surly Furious IPA. The fall bird migration was past its peak, but there was plenty to see with good binoculars. Once in a while, the trail would offer up the toned ass and tightly-bound tits of a young jogger, as long as I didn't get caught watching. "Sure. Sit with me? Soon it will be too cold for me to enjoy the view."
"The days are getting shorter, but I love the cool air when I sleep." Dani was a senior Emergency Room nurse at United Hospital. We'd met twenty years ago when I was on downtown patrol. My partner and I brought in an underage rape victim, and Dani was the tiny spitfire of a nurse who took care of her. It was love at first sight; I proposed a week later, and we married soon after. Our daughter was in her first year at Arizona State, so we sold our big suburban home and bought the condo a few months ago near our downtown work. The short drives to work meant more relaxation time, and the underground heated garage meant no more shoveling snow!
Our schedules were nuts, so we made the best of what we had together. Dani sat in my lap, leaning against my shoulder as I kissed her dark-red hair. "Sorry I didn't wake up when you came home this morning."
"That's all right. You needed the sleep." She wasn't kidding. I'd worked my ass off on the Book Killer case, and I was praying for a quiet weekend. Naturally, my phone rang. I picked it up, groaning as I looked at the caller ID. "Work?"
"Sort of." I hit the answer button and brought it to my ear. "What can I do for you, Talia?"
"I'm sorry to bother you on the weekend, Captain, but I made my decision. I'm resigning from the force, effective immediately."
Damn. "Is there any way I can talk you out of this? It can't be that bad."
"No, sir, and it is that bad."
I let out a sigh. "Fine. Turn in your letter of resignation on Monday morning, and we'll handle all the personnel stuff first thing."
"Captain, I might be out of town by then. Can I hand it to you in person? Today?"
We had another ninety minutes before we had to head out to dinner and the Wild game. "Sure. Can you come by my place? I'm on my second beer, and my wife just woke up."
"I can be there in twenty minutes. Thank you, sir."
I hung up the phone and set it back on the table, finishing the last of my old beer with a few gulps. Dani looked up at me. "Talia Devine? The one I met at the Labor Day party?"
I nodded. "Detective Devine got caught messing around with a suspect and disobeyed my orders to stay away from him. She's suspended pending an IAD investigation, but it sounds like she's giving up."
"She must love him to risk this much," she whispered.
"I hope so. Talia's thrown away her career for this guy."
"Is he still a suspect?"
I shook my head. "That's the funny part. We caught the guy who did it, and her boyfriend was innocent. All she had to do was keep off his dick for a few weeks, and she'd have been fine."
"He must have a dick like yours," Dani said as her hand moved down to my crotch. "I couldn't resist it or the guy wielding it."
I groaned. "Talia will be here in twenty minutes."
"Like that's not enough time?" She sat up, giving me a toe-curling kiss before heading back inside with a sassy sway of the hips.
"Red-Headed Kryptonite," I said as I got up to follow her. "I'd follow that ass anywhere."
She was in the shower when Talia arrived, so we ended up at the kitchen table. I could tell she was devastated as she handed me the manila envelope with her resignation letter. "What's the hurry?"
She hung her head. "IAD has embarrassing surveillance video from when I went north to investigate the burner phone. They don't want the scandal, so they offered to bury the whole thing if I quit by Monday. If not, I'll lose at the hearing and could lose my license."
I looked at her letter. "I'm sorry it ends this way, Talia. You're a good cop."
"I was. I should have listened to you instead of my heart."
I put the letter back and set it on the table. "What should I tell everyone about your decision?"
"Just that I didn't want to fight the charges."
I could see something was bothering her. "What's on your mind?"
"My gut tells me we missed something," I confessed. "My informant told me two men were involved in Allison Decker's death and disposal, but we only know about Michael Klinesmith. And isn't it a bit convenient for him to confess to one murder while leaving evidence connecting him to three others?"
"Maybe he jumped before he finished his confession. Maybe he heard we were getting close."
"And maybe there was more than one person involved in these murders." She sat back and let out a breath. "Fuck it. Tracy Hardin's death is not my monkey and not my circus."
"What is next for you?"
"I'm meeting with Detective Pierce to turn over my thoughts on the Decker case, and then I'm going to go somewhere and get my mind right." She got up to leave.
"Good luck, Talia."
"Thank you, sir. I learned a lot from you." She walked out the door, leaving the envelope behind.
I made a phone call. "James, your partner just quit," I told James Maloney.
"God dammit! She didn't even talk to me first?"
"I'll explain later, and I don't want you saying anything about it until I make the announcement Monday morning. She brought something up that has me thinking. We never found any direct evidence tying Klinesmith to the Hardin murder except the whiskey glass and the necklace, right?"
"Yeah. We couldn't exclude Michael, but that was it."
"Tracy's gut was telling her Michael had an accomplice. Did she tell you?"