Mr. Cade? About... about what you had to do, I mean?" 'About what he'd had to do'? Couldn't she say the words 'about shooting people'? "Next question, please," said Cade. "Manuel, put two sugars in hers, okay?" Manuel nodded. "Mr. Cade," said Bain, "I have no doubt the shooting was justified, if that's your concern. I'm asking because..." Interrupting her, Cade said, "I'm just an inter-agency loaner. You don't have to be concerned about my feelings." Her gaze narrowed as she set her purse on the table and firmly said, "But it happened while you were on loan to us, Mr. Cade, so if you should feel a need for counseling, we have several good people available." Counseling, huh? That would be a first. Cade kept a straight face to avoid offending her as he glanced up to see how far along Manuel was with her coffee. Getting up to save Manuel a trip, Cade served Bain her coffee and said, "Like I said, milady; next question." Bain said nothing until Cade had handed her the coffee and sat back down. She sipped for a moment, then set the coffee down on the table and regarded Cade quietly for a time. "Okay, then," she said, "The next question is, how many rounds did you fire?" "Four. Avery fired twice." "You're sure about that?" "I'm sure. I hit him twice up here and twice on the sidewalk when he aimed up at us. Avery fired at him on the sidewalk." She nodded and said, "If any rounds went astray, we'll have to account for them. May I see your weapon?" Cade unholstered his Glock, dropped the clip and handed it to her, then turned the gun slightly to the left and jacked the slide to eject the round in the chamber, which he caught with his left hand and set upright on the table. Leaving the Glock's slide open, he set the gun on the table, as well, and picked up his coffee. Bain had watched the casual emptying of the gun with one eyebrow raised, then she gave Cade a wry look. "I'll bet that trick impresses the hell out of some women." Shrugging, Cade said, "The only women who've ever seen me do that could probably do it, too, LT, so I kind of doubt it. Are you through counting my bullets?" Nodding, she handed him the magazine and asked, "Did you have one in the chamber as well as a full magazine?" As he thumbed the loose round into the top of the magazine, Cade said, "Yup. One up the spout." He put the magazine back in the Glock and thumbed the slide release to close it, then put the gun back in its holster. Bain said, "Thank you," and sipped her coffee again before sighingly saying, "I'm sorry, Mr. Cade, but you and your people were dropped on us from out of the blue. I simply don't know you well enough to just take your word for some things." Shrugging again, Cade said, "No problem. Someone once said, 'Trust, but verify'. It's a good policy. Now answer a question for me, please." "If I can." "Who was the woman who flew off with the car?" "I can't tell you that." Heading off his next question, she quickly added, "I don't know who she is. Or was, I'm afraid. She was apparently dropped on us, too." "Apparently?" With a curt nod, she said, "I hate to admit it, but she was a complete surprise to the Atlanta PD." Cade met her gaze for a moment, decided that if she wasn't telling him the truth, it wasn't worth pushing, and said, "I've seen tabloid reports of two superwomen and didn't really believe in either one of them until today. One is supposed to hang out in or around California and the other has been reported mostly around Las Vegas." "That's what I've heard, too. I made a request for info as soon as I heard what happened. Before I got out of the comm center, word had come down that I was not to ask again." Avery came to the table and said, "Lieutenant Bain, we're going to need you in a few minutes." "Okay, I'll be right there," she said, then as Avery nodded and walked away, she said, "Mr. Cade, my office doesn't seem to have your contact info." "My boss knows where to find me." Bain gazed at Cade thoughtfully for a moment, then stood up and picked up her purse as she said, "In that case, I'll go see what Avery and Dolman have for me." Her eyes flicked to the unfinished report on the table. "I'll give that to Avery," said Cade. He sat back down as she walked away, but he didn't take his eyes off her. Great legs. Tall, brunette, and generally a fine example of womanhood. As she passed the coffee bar her head turned slightly and Cade saw her looking back at him in the mirror-finish of the coffee machine. He gave her a nod that said, 'Yeah, lady. I'm looking.' Bain held his reflected gaze for a moment, then moved on to join the other cops. Cade returned to finishing the police report and -- after rereading it twice -- judged it finished about fifteen minutes later. Cade signed it and presented it to Avery, then pulled his DragonCon 'registered guest' badge out of his jacket pocket, clipped it to his collar, and headed into the hotel to see if this year's convention was still underway after all the excitement. In the second-floor con suite, it seemed that a number of other people were wondering the same thing. They filled the con suite practically wall-to-wall as Cade squeezed in and looked around. No answers there; Cade left the con suite and headed for the registration ballroom on the first floor, taking the cell phone he'd been issued out of his pocket and dialing the Atlanta number he'd been given for the mission. A woman answered with, "Zero-eight-two-six." "Dragonfly here." "Go, Dragonfly." "I filed a police report. Nothing to add. Am I offline?" "Yes. John says 'good job' and you're on standby." "Okay, thanks." "You're welcome. Enjoy your stay in Atlanta." She disconnected. Cade slipped the phone back in his pocket as he approached the elevators. As usual, there was a herd of people waiting. Some began chanting in unison as if that would somehow make the right elevator light come on. "Down, down; we wanna go down!" As he waited, Cade's mind returned to the moment that the blonde had dragged the car out of the hotel's driveway. A Crown Vic's roof came almost even with his shoulders. She'd been tall enough to easily see over it, so that made her between five-seven and five-ten. And her legs. By God, she'd had magnificent legs. Even from across the street, he'd seen that she'd had the long, solid legs of a fitness diva. How had she happened to be on hand to deal with the car bomb? He'd never seen or heard any reports of flying blondes in Atlanta. Chances were she'd been on tap just like more than half of the other people he'd met during this operation. That would make it likely that she'd been in town at least a few days, stashed somewhere as an ace in the hole. It had to have been one hell of an explosion up there. Cade wondered if she'd still been hanging onto the car when it blew. Yeah, probably. She couldn't very well let go of it. Damn. Motion in the lobby below caught his eye; the guy who'd been taking pictures in the street was cradling the camera and leading a small herd of people through the dense throng of conventioneers, heading toward the front doors of the hotel. Spurred to action for yet-unclear reasons, Cade glanced around for a way through the crowd by the elevators, but he realized that backtracking to the stairs near the con suite would cost him too much time. He looked over the rail at the lobby below. The fountain below the balcony was the only area clear of people. Swinging his legs over the balcony rail and letting himself dangle at the bottom of the rail, Cade dropped perhaps seven feet into six inches of water. Amid cries of "Jesus!" and "Holy shit!", he clambered out of the fountain and bored through the crowd after the knight and his entourage, nearing them just before they'd reached the sidewalk at the end of the hotel's carport. "You! The knight!" yelled Cade. The knight and most of his group stopped immediately. They saw Cade, soaked to the knees, running toward them. One woman shrieked, "He's got a gun!" and pointed when she saw Cade's shoulder holster, but someone else laughed and said, "So do all the stormtroopers, Sandy. I don't know who he's supposed to be from what movie, though." Cade hauled out his wallet and flashed his Atlanta PD Auxiliary Services ID as he came to a halt and said, "I'm not a character from a movie. The gun's real." Turning to the knight, he said, "You were taking pictures in the street before the explosion. Did you get any closeups of the blonde who took the car?" "Hey, man!" said the knight, "What I got in this camera's worth some money! I've already called World News Net..." "Yeah, fine," interrupted Cade. "WNN can wait. I need to see what you've got in that camera." Someone said, "Then you can catch the six o'clock news, just like everybody else, man. This isn't evidence, it's news." Gl
ancing at him, Cade said, "She grabbed a taxi and took off with it.
Ed Howdershelt's Novels