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Searching for Love: Behind Blue Lines Series by Christine Zolendz (4)

Chapter 3

Brooke

There were more flowers on my porch when I left for work that next morning—wildflowers of every color and size—absolutely beautiful. I kicked them over the edge with my boot. Then, I stomped on them until they were just a pile of broken glass and crushed petals full of snowy mud and slush.

The flowers looked as bruised as my arms and chest were from the bathroom incident. But, I made sure Captain Anderson had matching welts. I found myself hyperventilating over his ruined gift, in my front yard. I straightened quickly, and flattened down my coat and looked around. I just…I needed to get to work…I couldn’t think about any of that…I needed to just focus.

When I arrived at the precinct, there were two more huge bouquets of deep, red roses sitting on my desk, taunting me. I choked back a scream and went right to stand muster at roll call. Those damn flowers could rot on my desk for everyone to witness. I knew he was sorry, but I also knew he wasn’t. I knew he was frantic and out of control possessive and jealous. I knew he didn’t want to hurt me, and I also knew something inside him did want to. And I could never forgive him. I would never forget what he did. Not for what he called a hook-up. I was so confused and twisted up inside I couldn’t even think straight.

I just tried to focus on work.

I was doing decently well too, for the last month.

Lonely—but decent. Hey, that’s what vibrators are for anyway.

Out on patrol, I focused on the dashboard of the radio car and tried not to lose my shit.

“Jesus Christ, don’t you hear the sirens?” my partner Mark Gunner shouted behind the wheel of the sector car when a packed SUV full of idiots lingered in front of us. The siren squawked and whooped, reflecting a carousel of red and blue lights everywhere as we inched past the stopped vehicle. The first call of the day was a 10-21: Burglary. Dispatch said it was in a commercial storefront and reported the address: Three-Two-Eight, fifty-sixth Street. Dental office.

“A dentist’s office?” Mark grumbled as he sped through a red light. He pressed harder on the gas pedal and outside the window everything blended into a colorful blur. “Hate dentists.”

“If you didn’t have such a sweet tooth, the dentist wouldn’t be such an issue for you.”

“Shut up,” Mark laughed. “Hey, want to tell me about all those flowers? Who are you banging?”

“No one,” I huffed.

“Riiiiiight,” he laughed, as he rolled up to the curb of the scene, and yanked open his door to jump out.

My throat closed when I climbed out of the car, my heart tapping out a fast drumbeat, quickly increasing in speed. I was familiar with this office, more so with the dentist, who was standing in the middle of a trashed waiting room, chairs and tables overturned and red spray paint splattered across the walls and ceilings.

“Does that say whore?” Mark asked, squinting at the graffiti that was tagged over every surface.

I scanned the letters sprayed out recklessly, more than a hundred times, over paintings and frames, on the rug, the ceiling, even the television. “Yes, I believe that is the word ‘whore’.”

“Brooke?” the man standing in the middle of all the chaos called to me. “This…this is what my secretary opened up to this morning.”

“Hello, Gavin.” I took out my memo book and started to ask questions, trying to be as professional as I could. Gavin and I went out on a date, two weeks before. My mother played matchmaker, but honestly, it was one of the lamest dates I’d ever been on, and I hadn’t returned any of his calls since. He was sweet and safe and…and maybe that was my problem. I kept going for the wild guys, the ones that lived on the edge and didn’t want to take me to ice cream parlors to share a sundae. I liked the guys that did me from the behind in the bathroom stalls of those shitty little dates while pulling my hair in their fists.

There was something seriously wrong with me.

Even Mark said it after we had left to write up the reports back at base. “The dentist was a nice guy. You just don’t like nice guys.” He laughed, scanning the streets through the windshield. “Let me guess, you like that bondage shit, right?”

“No,” I said, rolling my eyes. “That’s not it. I just like something exciting and passionate. I don’t like getting tied up or anything, but I like when you feel that crazy need to be with someone, and it’s overwhelming.” The one date I had since breaking up with Harris, I got taken to an ice cream shop for burgers and dessert. All Gavin talked about was his five-year plan and how he made lists for everything and under the table I was scouring Facebook and taking those silly quizzes about how well I knew movies from the 1980s. “He lectured me the entire night about flossing, and he didn’t even try to kiss me goodnight. He just sort of waved.”

“Maybe he was just being a gentleman?” Mark chuckled.

“I don’t know, maybe.” I sighed, loudly. “It was just boring to me.” It wasn’t what I was used to, and I liked what I was used to. I liked it all, until the guy I was falling for turned into an abusive asshole. I squeezed my eyes shut and tried not to think about him. I just didn’t understand how everything was seemingly perfect for three months and then one day, a stranger takes the place of someone you loved. What happened to the Harris I was falling in love with? I wanted to ask Mark about stuff, but I was too scared he’d read into it and just know.

I opened one eye and peeked at Mark, tilting my head to better examine him. He was thirty-something, could have passed for a football player with his build, wide smile, and light blue eyes. “Whatever. Let’s talk about more important business,” he said, seriously. “Where are we going for lunch? You want Nathan’s? I’m in the mood for some hotdogs.”

Stunned, I looked down at my watch. “It’s only ten o’clock.”

He shrugged, beeped the siren again, and crawled through another red light. “But, I’m hungry.”

“Is Nathan’s even open for breakfast?”

“Fine, but we’re going to eat lunch there.”

“I brought my own sandwich,” I said, shaking my head.

“What the hell is with you lately. You’re too mopey. Are you on the rag?”

“Why? Do you want to borrow a tampon?” I snapped back, laughing.

He pulled the car into a spot in front of the precinct and jumped out without another word. I took my time climbing out. I was in no rush to sit at a desk full of flowers and do reports.

The waiting area of the station house smelled like piss. People sat quietly, shifting around in their chairs, watching us as we walked in. One older woman clutched her purse to her chest in a death grip as tears poured down her face and hiccups shook her small frame. Another woman, much younger, sat two seats down from her, with rings of mascara around her eyes that ran all the way down her cheeks. She stared up at me blankly. Her eyes seemed so empty that it made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.

I walked over to the front desk. “What’s up with raccoon eyes over there?” I wanted to go over and help her, ask if she was okay. But that wasn’t protocol, and we always had to stick to protocol.

“She’s waiting. Just came in,” she sighed, and tilted her head up at me, giving me a once over. Next to me, Mark drummed his fingers on the countertop. “Captain was looking for you a few minutes ago.”

“Both of us?” Mark asked, drumming his fingers faster.

“Just Officer Fury,” she said, giving him a flirtatious smile. I rolled my eyes at her. I found myself wondering if she ever got out from behind that desk and did any sort of real police work.

“I’ll just stay and talk with you then,” Mark smiled, winking at her.

Ew. Get a room. They both made me sick. They’ve been screwing around for months, pretending that they weren’t. And her husband was a really nice guy. Somebody should slip him a note.

I ignored their continued whispers and walked through the waiting area and into what we called the 124 room, where we all have our desks. My shoes squeaked loudly over the tiled floors and the smell of piss still lingered in the air.

Inside, the first person I caught a glimpse of was Ryan Cage, perched on the edge of Officer Lydia Martinez’s desk. There were of course a ton of other officers around, searching through filing cabinets, drinking coffee, typing on keyboards, yet they were the only two I took notice of. They had their heads pressed together as if they were sharing a secret. His head lifted as I walked in. He had a smile on his face and a laugh on his lips from something she had just said. For a split second, my feet wouldn’t move, and a strange unwanted burning sensation spread across my chest.

Ryan’s eyes flickered away quickly, continuing his conversation with Lydia. It was funny to me, just then, how I never noticed how beautiful Officer Martinez was until just that very moment. “Of course she is,” I mumbled to myself. The heat in my chest intensified, and I rushed past them and sat at my desk for the rest of my shift, writing reports. Mark never came to make sure I had my sandwich, and we never went back out on patrol.

Five minutes before the end of my tour, I finally walked into the hallway to the Captain’s office.

I took a deep breath, a few actually, before wrapping my knuckles hard against his office door.

“Come in,” his deep voice called from the other side.

“Sir,” I said, entering.

“Close the door, Officer Fury.” He sat behind his desk, his white shirt crisp and perfect—his gold brass glinting from the sunlight filtering in through the window.

I didn’t close the door.

In that moment, Captain Harris Anderson looked every bit his forty-five years. His lips pulled down, deep fissures in his brow; the rest of him was as hard and brittle as his twenty-year career. His icy, blue eyes pierced right through me. “Close. The. Door.”

Again, I didn’t.

He stood up, slowly, deliberately, leaning his hands down on his desk. Even from where he was, across the office, he towered over me. His massive presence filled up the room; it was suffocating.

“Do you want a command discipline?” he growled, clenching his hands into fists.

I took a slow, deep breath and closed the door.

It clicked softly, making my eyes well with tears.

“I miss your mouth on me.” His voice cracked with each word. “You need—”

“Please stop,” I whispered, looking up at him. His eyes darted back and forth between mine, and I knew he saw the tears there that I was desperately holding back.

“I don’t want to,” he said, softly. He rushed around the desk and gently clasped his hands over mine. “I don’t want you with anyone else. I—”

“Harris, please stop,” I said, stepping away. The tears came then, streaming down my cheeks, unstoppable, uncontrollable. “I can’t be with you like that any longer. I can’t wait for you all the time and pretend we aren’t together. For what? For when we are together, and you don’t like what I say so you put your hands on me?”

“I told you. It will never happen again. I drank too much. I saw you and I lost it. I promise you. You have to trust me.”

“Stop telling me to trust you!”

“Why?”

“Because I’m still covering up the bruises from the last time you told me to!”

He cringed and changed the subject, “You put in for a transfer. Why?”

“How can you stand there and pretend not to know?”

“Well, it’s denied.”

“Harris—”

He paced back and forth, agitation settling tightly in his neck and shoulders. The more strides he took, the angrier he became. “I think maybe you’ll be my driver for the rest of the month. Maybe we could talk things through. Or maybe, instead of talking, I’m make you drive me all over and wait in the car while I get my cock sucked from other willing girls. That wouldn’t bother you, would it Fury?” His hands were fisted menacingly at his sides.

“No, Sir.” I backed up, closer to the door, closer to an escape.

“If you’re fucking someone else. I will make your life hell, Fury.”

I grabbed the doorknob and yanked it open. “It already is, Sir.”

I ran out of his office, tears blurring my eyes, straight into the solid chest of Detective Ryan Cage.

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