Chris reached for her. "Sergeant, can you tell me—"

She turned aside and brought her burden to one of the detectives, paying him no heed.

Another officer ignored Chris's second plea with an abrupt "I'm off duty."

Welcome to Stapleton. Chris meandered through the ops floor, taking in bits of conversation and noting details. He looked over an enormous street map of the precinct that covered the north wall. Precinct 112 sat divided into eight color-coded regions. Magnets with dry-erase names showed which officers were scheduled for patrol in each zone that week.

He looked for Mason and found his name in a large rectangle at the precinct's center, slightly east of downtown, running north to south. Kazsinski. Can't wait to meet him... or her.

Another officer stopped beside him, a studious black woman with a tight bun and a pretty face. She adjusted names on magnets for the residential area on the east side of the precinct.

Chris glanced at her nametag. "Afternoon, Sergeant Bristow. You post the patrol schedule?" His academy instructor's voice echoed in his mind. Always pays to know the scheduler. Never disappoint your Captain, never screw over your scheduler, and you'll be fine.

She gave a silent nod, then spared him a second glance. "Mason... right. New guy." She extended a hand and gave a firm shake. "Welcome to Stapleton. Your first patrol's next week, good luck in the Twenties."

"Uh, sure, thanks," he answered. "Can't wait to hit the street. But can you point me to the Captain's office first?"

She laughed. "My bad. Captain's office is down the hall around the next corner. Good timing, I think your new partner's in there now."

"Perfect." Chris nodded his thanks and hurried to report in. His shining dress shoes clicked on the tile floor with military precision. But a sudden voice swallowed up the sound.

"Come on, I had the last one! You gave me Jarvis, and that guy was a moron. Do me a solid here, give him to someone else."

A soft voice replied behind the tinted door and windows ahead, but Chris couldn't make it out. He slowed as he neared the door. Stenciled letters read 'Michael McCullough, Captain of Police, Precinct 112.'

"Look at the record. This kid's so fresh outta academy, he's probably still wearin' T-shirts with the logo on the chest."

Chris blushed and stood at parade rest outside the Captain's door.

"Kazsinski," the other voice growled. "You know why I give you the new guys? 'Cause you get results. If half my force hit the beat like you, the Mayor would finally be off my—as a matter of fact, look who we got here. Come in!"

Chris turned the knob and entered. "Sergeant Mason reporting for duty, sir."

Kazsinski snickered. He looked like a caricature of a bodybuilder, with an oversized chest stuffed into a too-tight uniform shirt, tucked into a pair of creased trousers over thin chicken legs. His blonde spiked hair looked frozen in plastic, and his abnormal jaw muscles bulged. He probably does reps clenching his teeth with all his "bros" just for that effect.

The Captain seemed the opposite of everything Kazsinski represented, with thinning grey hair, some chubbiness under his chin, and a decent beer-belly stretching his waistband.

"Have a seat, son, and relax. Meet your new partner, he's gonna show you the ropes."

Kazsinski huffed and spun toward the door. "I got tickets to file. See you tomorrow morning, six forty-five, ready to ride, scrublet." He stormed out and let the door slam behind him.

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