“I always knew I could see her if I wanted to. All I needed to do was get on the bike and go. Now…” Bri blew out a breath and consciously forced herself to relax. It’s just that we’ve never been apart, not really, since we were fifteen. Those four months in the spring when I was being a jerk and Carre wasn’t talking to me don’t count. That was just plain hell. This is different; this is something we both agreed would be good for Carre’s art career. So I just have to suck it up. “It’s okay. I knew it would be hard at first. I’ll get used to it.”

“Well, you know…you’re welcome at the house anytime.”

“You must be pretty busy, with Reggie and all.”

“She’s settling in. And you’re like family, too, Bri.”

Bri flushed, “Thanks. I…uh…appreciate it.”

Reese wanted to ask her about Allie but didn’t quite see how she could. She didn’t know that anything was going on between them, and if she were in Bri’s shoes, she wouldn’t want anyone making assumptions or prying into her private business. On the other hand, she didn’t want to wait until there actually was a problem to do something about it As if you could. As if it’s even any of your business. A muscle in Reese’s jaw jumped. If Bri had been a recruit, it wouldn’t have been an issue. She could’ve demanded to know what was going on and would have been well within her rights. A lot of things were easier in the Corps.

Knowing Bri was unhappy and feeling helpless to help her made Reese think of her infant daughter. She decided on the spot that she was completely incapable of being a parent All she wanted to do was keep Reggie in the house, safe and secure, for the next twenty years or so. She certainly didn’t want to think about her getting involved with anyone, male or female, where there was the slightest possibility that she could get her heart broken. However, Reese was certain as well as eternally grateful that Tory would know exactly what to do about any problems that Regina might face.

The radio crackled, flooding Reese with a sense of welcome relief. She wouldn’t have to pursue the conversation with Bri any further at least, not until she had something concrete to discuss. She grabbed the microphone and clicked receive. “Conlon.”

“Passerby reported an abandoned vehicle, late-model Aerostar or similar, dark blue or black, on 6 just west of the turnoff to Race Point,” Paul Smith, the officer assigned as dispatcher, reported.

“We’ll check it out,” Reese advised. “ETA two minutes.” She swiveled to face front, her expression intent. “Go east on Bradford and cut over to 6 at the end of town. Come up on the vehicle slow and park twenty feet behind it so I can check the plates. Keep the engine running.”

“Yes, ma’am.” Bri’s expression and tone were calm and controlled, but her heart was racing. Vehicle stops and domestic disputes were the most dangerous situations a law enforcement officer could face, because the call could be something as routine as a flat tire or as potentially lethal as a psycho with a gun. Bri put the worries from her mind and focused on following orders. After all, she was trained for this. And she was with Reese.

In just over a minute, she pulled up behind a dark green van with tinted windows parked on the sandy shoulder of the double-lane highway. “Tires are okay. The hood’s closed. Doesn’t look like a breakdown.”

“I see that.” Reese strained to see through the dark glass into the interior as she keyed in the license plate number on the remote computer terminal. She waited. There didn’t appear to be any motion inside the vehicle. The relay to the station house was slow, but eventually Smith’s disembodied voice returned.

“Vehicle registered to Thomas Bridger of Chelmsford, Mass. No wants or warrants. The vehicle, however, was reported stolen sometime last night. You need backup?”

“Have Lyons and Tremont swing by,” Reese replied curtly. “Code two.”

“Roger that.”

Reese flicked on the loudspeaker. “Anyone in the vehicle, step out with your hands in the air.”

Five seconds. Ten. Reese repeated the message. When there was no movement in or around the van, she unsnapped her holster, drew her weapon, and opened the patrol car door. “I’m going to have a look inside. Back me up from here stay behind the cruiser door.”

“Yes, ma’am,” Bri eased out, rested her forearms on the top of the open door, and trained her weapon on the rear of the vehicle. The metal door in front of her wasn’t bulletproof, but it afforded her some protection. Reese, on the other hand, was out in the open and vulnerable.

With her weapon at her side, Reese put her back to the driver’s side of the vehicle and inched forward, hesitating for a second to peer through the rear window. She reached out and tried the rear door. Locked. With continued caution, she moved forward and attempted to open the driver’s door. As it swung open, she crouched instinctively and trained her weapon on the interior. A millisecond later, she hastily holstered her weapon and leaned inside.

A boy he didn’t look older than fifteen lay slumped on his side, his legs under the steering wheel, his head leaning toward the passenger seat His eyes were closed, his face gray and sweat coated, and his limbs loose and lifeless. He didn’t appear to be breathing. She would have thought him dead except when she touched his neck, his skin was warm. As she pressed two fingers to his carotid artery, she scanned the rest of the van. Empty. A faint, weak pulse trilled beneath her fingers.

She backed out and straightened, then turned to Bri and waved her forward. “Got a casualty here. Unconscious male.” As Bri rushed to join her, Reese continued, “We need to get him to the clinic.”

“Should I call for the paramedics?”

Reese shook her head. “It’ll be faster if we take him ourselves,”

“Is it okay to move him?”

“It doesn’t appear that the vehicle has been involved in an accident, and he doesn’t show any evidence of trauma. I doubt his neck is at risk.” As she spoke, Reese levered the front seat back carefully and bent over the victim once again. “Just to be sure, I’ll support his head and shoulders and you get his feet.”

“Here come Allie and Jeff,” Bri announced as the second patrol car pulled in front of the van, sandwiching it between the two cruisers.

The four officers easily lifted the boy out and carried him to Reese’s patrol car. Once they had him secured in the backseat, Bri climbed in with him and Reese got behind the wheel. She looked up at Jeff Lyons through the open window. “We can’t be certain he was alone. Check the vehicle for any evidence of illegal substances, and then search the scrub in the immediate area to make sure there isn’t someone else out there in need of help.”

“You got it, boss.”

Reese sped with lights and siren clearing the way toward the East End Health Clinic, hoping that after 8 p.m. on a weeknight, the clinic wouldn’t be too busy. The parking lot was nearly empty when she pulled the cruiser up to the front door and bounded out.

“We need a stretcher out here,” Reese called in Randy’s direction as she stuck her head in the door. Then she hurried back to help Bri lift the youth out. By the time they maneuvered his inert body from the vehicle, Dan and Randy had the collapsible stretcher open and waiting for them. Within a matter of minutes, they were back inside the clinic and heading down the hallway toward the treatment rooms.

At the commotion in the hall, Tory stepped out of her office wearing her white clinic coat and stared at the group. “What’s going on?”

Reese’s face never changed expression, despite her surprise. “Found unresponsive in a car out on 6. He’s barely breathing.”

“Bring him in here,” she directed briskly, leading the way to a treatment room, “Accident?”

“No sign of one,” Reese replied.

Dan steered the stretcher to the side of the examination table and, while Reese and Bri stood out of the way, he and Tory moved the youth and began resuscitation. They worked together efficiently, with very little conversation.

Reese had seen Tory in action many times, but her lover’s focus, skill, and confidence never failed to impress her. Even now, although she was baffled and uncharacteristically angry, Reese was spellbound.

Tory placed her stethoscope against the boy’s chest, frowning as she listened. “Respirations shallow four times a minute.” She reached up and thumbed his right eyelid open. “Pinpoint pupils.”

“Pulse and pressure low,” Dan said tersely.

“Overdose.” Tory turned to an open tackle box that stood on a stainless steel tray next to the examination table. She pulled out a tiny glass ampule, snapped off the top, and filled a syringe with the clear liquid. As she worked, Dan started an intravenous line in the boy’s forearm. Tory passed him the medication. “Amp of Narcan. I’ll push the D50.”

Dan injected the drug intravenously while Tory prepared a bolus of glucose, just in case the problem was a diabetic complication and not a drug overdose. If it was insulin shock, the concentrated sugar solution would bring him around. Within seconds of the injection of antinarcotic, however, the boy’s eyes flew open, and he began to thrash and cough.

Bri stared, then asked in a low, urgent voice, “What’s going on?”

“They just gave him an antidote to a narcotic overdose. It works almost immediately, especially if the narcotic is the only drug he’s taken.”

The boy stared wildly about before lunging upright on the table. Before Dan could restrain him, the patient grabbed Tory’s arm and pulled her off balance, nearly causing her to fall. Reese was at her lover’s side in an instant, grasping the youth’s shoulders and pushing him back down on the table.

“Easy, buddy.” Both her voice and her grip were kind, but her eyes were sharp and hard. “We’re just trying to help you out here,”