His gaze darted over to Katie and back to him. âSeriously, whatâs the problem? Is it you? Katie? Is the kid okay?â
Trent swore under his breath. There was no subtlety to Max Krolikowski, no filter on his mouth. When he saw a problem, he fixed it. When he cared about something or someone, he went all in. Hell of a guy to have backing him up in a fight, but best friend or not, Trent wasnât sure the man heâd been partnered with on the cold case squad was the guy he wanted to confide his frustration and concerns about Katie to. âShe basically told me to mind my own business.â
Max dropped his voice to a low-pitched grumble. âYou think somethingâs up?â
Even if Trent wanted to share his suspicions about blackouts and prowlers and threats in the snow, he wouldnât get the chance to. All conversations around the table stopped as Lieutenant Ginny Rafferty-Taylor rushed into her office. âAre we all here?â The petite blonde officer set her laptop and a stack of papers at the head of the table before going back to shut the door. âSorry Iâm late.â
Trent set down his coffee and turned everyoneâs focus to the police work at hand. âMaâam. Katie said you had an emergency meeting with Chief Taylor?â
The older woman nodded. âSeth Cartwright from Vice and A.J. Rodriguez from the drug unit were there, too. Iâll get right to it since it affects investigations in each of our divisions.â
âWhat affects us?â Jim asked.
âLeland Asher.â
Trentâs mouth took on a bitter tang at the mention of the alleged mob boss whose name kept popping up in several of their unsolved investigations.
Olivia leaned forward at the familiar name. âWhat about him? Gabeâs first fiancée was writing a newspaper exposé about Asher when she was killed.â Olivia and Gabe had solved that murder, but they hadnât been able to prove Asher had hired the man whoâd shot the reporter.
Even Katie, who had never dealt with Asher directly, knew who he was. âHis name shows up as a person of interest in several investigations in the KCPD database. Has he been arrested for one of those cases?â
âNot likely,â Max said. âHe has a great alibi for any recent crimes. Heâs currently serving a whopping two years for collusion and illegally influencing Adrian McCoyâs Senate campaign.â
âNot even that, Iâm afraid.â Lieutenant Rafferty-Taylor shrugged out of her navy blue jacket, hanging it over the back of her chair before sitting. Her back remained ramrod straight. âAsherâs case went to appellate court on a hardship appeal. The chief just got word that Asher is being released from prison early, on parole. Thatâs what good behavior and a pricey lawyer will do for you.â
A collective groan and a few choice curses filled the room.
âAny chance the judge made a mistake?â Trent asked.
Their team leader shook her head. âItâs the holidays, Trent. I think Judge Livingston was feeling generous. Chief Taylor wanted to alert us that Mr. Asher will be back on the streets, albeit wearing an ankle bracelet and submitting to regular check-ins with his parole officer, sometime tomorrow or Thursday.â
âWell, merry Christmas to us,â Max groused, folding his arms across his chest. âJust what we need, a mob boss heading home to KC for the holidays. I bet the crime rate doubles by New Yearâs.â
For a moment, the petite blonde lieutenant sympathized with her senior detective, but then she opened her laptop, signaling she was ready to begin their morning meeting. âI know we believe Leland Asher is the common link to several of the departmentâs unsolved or ongoing cases. The chief wanted us to be fully informed so we can keep an eye on him. Without our efforts turning into harassment, of course,â the lieutenant
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