"They said an hour."
"So?"
"So it's been an hour." Capaldi glanced at his watch. "Sixty-four minutes. You think they're still coming?"
"You figure because SC is four minutes late, that means they ain't coming?" Druckman eyed his partner over the top of his data slate. "Listen, I know you haven't been in Metro that long..."
"Two years this May, asshole."
"... but you do not fuck with Special Containment. So they're four minutes late."
"Five now."
Druckman shrugged. "Five minutes, five hours, don't matter. We wait."
Joseph Capaldi glanced at the frosted window of the interrogation cell, then back to his computer. He was a large man, powerfully built, and hid impatience poorly. His shoulders rose above the swivel chair like a gorilla at a tea party.
"Hooker, right?"
"What?"
Capaldi pointed a thumb toward the interrogation room. "The girl in there. You saw when they brought her in. Hooker?"
"Nah." Druckman shook his head and took a sip of coffee. "I clocked her dress, too expensive. You're paying that much, it's a call girl. Escort, maybe."
"Huh." He paused. "Hookers, they're normally pretty happy to talk. I doubt escorts are much different."
"Uh huh."
Silence fell, seeping into the crevices of the precinct office. Raindrops began to ping off the roof, rising to a steady tattoo that drowned out the quiet with white noise. Capaldi shifted in his seat, trying to get comfortable, but the itch remained. His eyes lingered on the interrogation chamber. If he could just get in there, talk to her for a bit...
"You know Barnes?" Capaldi asked, failing to sound casual.
"Milly Barnes? Narcotics?" Druckman raised an eyebrow. "You don't wanna know about Barnes, man."
Capaldi shrugged. "The way I hear it, she helped Containment bust open a major smuggling ring. Big promotion. Works out of DC now."
"Uh huh. Where'd you hear that?"
"Around." Capaldi hesitated. "I was at the bar with Torres last week, you know..."
Druckman powered off the data slate and pressed it onto the table next to him. He adjusted his glasses. "Torres is full of shit."
"So what happened, then?"
"She don't work Metro no more, that's what happened."
"Gabe, I'm going to keep asking."
"Shit." Gabe Druckman leaned forward, rubbing his eyes and pinching the bridge of his nose. "Fine. Way I hear it? Barnes thought she'd make a splash, got herself into some SC problem and got disappeared. Hey, look at me." He pointed at Capaldi, meeting the other man's eyes. "She don't work here. She don't work anywhere else. Got it? Look up Milena Barnes in the database, you ain't gonna find her. That's what happens when you push into Special Containment's shit."
"You're trying to scare me with this or what? Ghost stories for the new guy?" Capaldi grinned, pushing himself up and stretching. His eyes flicked to the interrogation room, then back to Druckman.
"Don't care if believe it," Druckman said. "Just do your job, keep your nose out of what ain't your business. Yeah?"
"Right. Yeah." Capaldi coughed into his hand. "Understood."
"You better. Ain't just your ass on the line." Druckman stood, stretched, grimaced. "They are late, though. I gotta drop one off." He nodded to his partner. "You see Special Containment, you yell for me. Back in ten." He grunted, wrinkled his nose, and frowned. "Maybe fifteen."
Capaldi watched as Druckman shuffled toward the bathroom, eyes tracking as the older man rounded the corner. He heard a door close and lock. Capaldi waited another thirty seconds before he moved to the interrogation room and keyed open the magnetic lock.
The first thing he noticed was the woman: olive complexion; backless white club dress, pressed tight against her toned body; glossy brown hair, hanging to her shoulders. Black lipstick and nail polish. Both wrists were manacled, a meter of reinforced chain bound to the old steel table. Heavy shackles, the kind reserved for cybernetic enhancements, dwarfed the woman's delicate wrists. Why had they bothered, Capaldi wondered?
The woman was seated in the center of the room, legs crossed, beneath the sterile glare of halogen lights. There was something wrong with her eyes, Joseph realized. No pupil, all black. Capaldi froze. He swallowed.
The woman smiled and her teeth were very white.
Joseph blinked, then looked again. It was nothing - a trick of the light. Her eyes were pale green, probably bio-engineered. Joseph wondered if she charged extra, given how she looked. Probably did. Probably had to, just to pay off the surgeries. The more he looked, the more beautiful she was. Full figure, heroically restrained by the tiny dress, her cleavage a plump, tantalizing display. Her face was the perfect blend of beautiful and sexy, natural, not the recycled knife work so common among would-be socialites. The swell of her hips, the toned curve of her thighs...
The more he looked, the more Capaldi felt compelled to stare. She was breathtaking. Art and music, sin and salvation. The man had stepped in with a plan, something he wanted to say. What had it been? Words trickled through his mind like sand as his gaze lingered on the goddess chained before him.
"Not who I was expecting," the woman said. Her smile widened and she laughed. "And you really shouldn't have come. Unless you're here to stare at my tits - then you're in the right place." She gave her breasts a jiggle for emphasis and Joseph found his eyes following their sway. Back and forth...
The woman slid her legs apart. Past the wickedly short dress, Joseph could see the outline of her pussy lips beneath sheer black panties. "But now that you've had time to think," she continued, "That's not all you want. Is it?"
Joseph shook his head.
"Good boy, keep watching," she purred. "You're thinking about it right now, aren't you? Slipping off my thong and burying your cock inside me. I'm so wet, officer. So hot... This is what you want, sweetie. I'm all yours. Give yourself to me."
Capaldi was spellbound. He took one step forward, then another.
Thunder crashed overhead, frighteningly close, jolting the man awake in a burst of violent sound. He shook his head. What had he been thinking? But it was all flowing again, all making sense. He could use this.
"We've got you pinned you were at a murder scene," he said, projecting a confidence he was scrambling to hold. "It would be a shame to add solicitation to the list. Miss...?"
"Rose." Her smile held, but the expression no longer reached her eyes.
"Is that your real name? Or what you tell customers?"
Rose shrugged her brows. "My real name is hard to pronounce. This is easier to wrap your mouth around."
Joseph grabbed the chair opposite his prisoner, squatting over it and leaning on the back. He rested his chin on well-muscled arms. It was an intimidating posture, one he'd been trying to perfect. "Alright, Rose, I'll lay it out for you. Special Containment will be here any minute. They aren't much for conversation, so this is your last chance to make a statement before you're hauled off to a black site for interrogation."
"That sounds serious."
Capaldi's face was stone. "Hell of an understatement, since I've never known someone to come back. But..." He held out a hand, palm up. "If they had a reason to drop you now, some information worth having? It's possible you could stay here. At least see an arbiter."
Rose snorted, amusement evident on her face. "You have no idea what I am, do you?"
Capaldi was having trouble maintaining his focus, thoughts drifting back to the offer Rose had made earlier. It couldn't happen, of course. The consequences would be horrific. But images drifted across his mind, unwelcome and unbidden: ripping off the dress, pressing her against the table, and...