The Choices We Make
By: Axianna

 

Disclaimer: The Sentinel and all things Sentinelish belong to Pet Fly, Paramount, and whoever else. Anna is mine, but if you want to borrow her, just ask me first.

 


The kid stepping into the room looked hopelessly out of place. Her back pack, scruffy jeans and flannel shirt, with a hole along the bottom edge, screamed starving student while her long blond hair and wide eyes made her seem younger than she'd like people to think. One of the uniforms passing by the room approached her and after a whispered conversation pointed out the desk in the corner.

As she walked up, her eyes eagerly took in everything on the desk from the little scrimshaw carving sitting on top of the computer screen, to the feather fern sitting on the corner of the desk, to a half cup of cold coffee that was holding down a pile of papers. To say it was cluttered would be a wild understatement.

The desk across from it was the complete opposite. It was almost clear except for a small, neatly stacked pile of folders in one corner and, dare she even contemplate the concept, a clean cup sitting on a coaster. Taking in the nameplate as confirmation that the messy desk was the one she was looking for, she sat down in a chair that was just off to the side and waited.

Pulling out a paper back (it being way too much of a bother to pull out a textbook) and leaning back, she hoped the man she was looking for wouldn't be in too late. After about ten minutes, her vigilance was rewarded. Sort of.

"Can I help you?"

She just about jumped out of her skin when he spoke. Quickly jamming her book into her pocket, she looked into a set of blue eyes that made her want to forget about her current boyfriend. Shaking her head a little, she took in the rest of the picture. The man was older than she'd first thought, with short hair just salted with gray and a fine network of lines around his eyes. Since he was towering over her and not looking too pleased to see her there, she really hoped they were laugh lines.

"Um, Yeah, I'm looking for Blair Sandburg?" She tried to keep the tremor out of her voice, but didn't succeed vary well.

"I'm his partner. What can I do for you?" The man still hadn't identified himself, so she stuck out a hand and asked.

"I'm Anna Minske, and you are…" She hoped he wouldn't just bite her head off or something, so she put on the big, helpless female smile (which her Aunt had taught her was the best way to get people to underestimate her) and waited.

"Jim Ellison." He ignored her hand but that was okay, because she'd stopped breathing and was staring at him like she'd seen a ghost. He got impatient and snapped out a quick "What?"

"I can't believe it." She spoke, but her hand was still held out and the shocked expression on her face didn't change.

"Believe what?" The detective was starting to wonder if he'd grown a second nose or something.

"After everything that happened and all these years, you're still partnered with him." She finally pulled her hand out of the air and breathed. "Wow! I mean who would have thought, with the whole Sentinel fiasco and the aftermath, that the PTB's would still…"

"Is there a point to all this?" The eyes that had earlier been fairly neutral were now as hard as ice and Anna flinched when the glare hit her.

"Um, sorry. I just wanted to talk to Detective Sandburg for a few minutes."

"Is he expecting you?" Det. Ellison kept glaring at her. After a deep breath, she did the other thing her Aunt taught her to do in stressful situations and lied.

"Sure, I gave him a call yesterday and said I'd be stopping by." She didn't think he was buying it.

"Now tell me the truth." Nope he definitely wasn't.

"How did you know?" Her eyes lit up as she considered the thought that had been tickling through her mind ever since she had first read Det. Sandburg's, then a struggling grad student, thesis.

"I've been a cop for over twenty years, it takes a better liar than you to fool me." His eyes eased up a bit and he took his seat behind the desk. But he still didn't look happy to see her.

"oh." Another wild fantasy tossed out the window. "Do you know when he'll be in?"

"He's down in forensics. Should be here in a few minutes." With that, one of the folders on his desk was opened and he started reading through the information, effectively ignoring her.

She opted to leave her book in her pocket and stared around the room. Didn't they call it a bull pen or something? There was an oriental woman with long black hair sitting across from a man who looked like he stepped off from the cover of a magazine. Other than that, there weren't that many people in the room. A few uniforms passed in and out, but that was about all there was to see.

She turned her focus back to Det. Sandburg's desk and started to marvel at the amount of stuff he had piled on it. The fern had a cleared corner but that was about the only space that could be described like that. Every other surface was covered with something; the pile of papers with the coffee cup, a stack of CDs topped with discs topped with a pair of glasses. Then there were all sorts of little figurines and carvings cluttering up the top of his computer. The scrimshaw was the only one you could see when walked in.

"Rafe, Iwassa. My office. Now!" Anna jumped again when the booming voice bellowed out of the doorway leading into the captain's office. She managed not to react so noticeably when the door slammed shut and rattled on the hinges.

"You're in for it this time Rafe." Det. Ellison didn't even look up from his report, just turned another page after his comment.

"Oh laugh it up now Jim, you know it's only a matter of time before you and Hairboy get dragged in there." The really cute guy, obviously Rafe, just frowned as he and his partner walked across the room.

"Hey, how long is it gonna take you guys to quit calling me Hairboy?" A new figure walked in, an old leather jacket slung over an arm. Anna was taking this whole by-play in with her eyes even wider, hoping that they'd just forget she was there. The interaction between these guys was fascinating.

"I think they might give up on it when you go bald, Chief."

"That is *so* not funny man. Besides, we all know you'll go first." The new guy walked up to the desk she was sitting next to and directed his gaze at her. Again she was hit by a pair of brilliant blue eyes. His eyes were lighter than Det. Ellison's but they held an energy and excitement that tried to take her breath way. He was younger and very good looking, with long, dark, curly hair tied back. Maybe she should stop looking at the University for a boyfriend and start dating cops. Yea, right.

"Can I help you?"

She couldn't help but notice that he said it the exact same way that his partner had earlier. Gathering up her courage, Anna decided to just get it over and done with. If she was lucky, he would just kick her out of the station and not press charges for harassment of something.

"Detective Sandburg, I'm Anna Minske, from Rainier Anthropology department." She held out her hand and though Det. Sandburg shook it, the second she mentioned Anthropology he let go like he'd been burned.

"How can I help you?" His voice was completely devoid of the teasing note it held when he'd first walked in and had become formally polite.

"I was wondering if I could talk to you about your dissertation." She could have heard a pin drop in the quiet that followed. She wasn't sure what she expected, but shocked silence wasn't one of them.

"Why?" It wasn't Det. Sandburg, but Det. Ellison who asked that. She glanced at him absently and returned her attention back to the person she came to see. She was usually pretty good at reading faces, but she couldn't see anything in Sandburg's.

"I was going through some of the old books in the Anthro Library, and sort of stumbled across Burton's writings on Sentinels. When I started doing a little digging, your name kept coming up in journals and…" She was interrupted before she got a chance to finish her train of thought.

"I got out of Anthropology a long time ago. I'm sure there are other people at the University who can help you better." He gave her a noncommittal smile and she could see the dismissal coming.

"I don't need help, I just wanted to ask you if I could…" Her courage failed her as she tried to figure out a way to ask a person who admitted to fraud if she could take said fraud and try to validate it.

"Could what?" he prompted.

"Well, I think your research had more merit than people thought. Okay, you faked your final research, but the work you did regarding people with one or two enhanced senses has been verified and I don't really care if there are full Sentinels out there or not, although if I found one that would be incredible, cause I just want to work on the effect of enhanced senses in everyday life for my Grad studies, but I wanted to talk to you about it first since a lot of the initial research is yours and…" She knew she was starting to rattle, but this was further than she'd gotten with most of her Proffs. It didn't seem to matter when he interrupted her again.

"There are no full Sentinels out there. I spent nearly fifteen years looking. As for choosing the subject for your grad studies, I'm surprised you found a professor to take you on with a subject like that."

"Well, um, that's the problem. I haven't yet." She hadn't exactly wanted to admit that to him.

"If you want to get those little letters after your name, I suggest you find an area of research with more backing." He was starting to sound like he was humoring her. She'd had enough humoring in the last month alone to last her a life time. Her frustration over the last few months was coming to a peak, but she tried to calm down. If he felt he had to explain things to her like she was a child, she'd return the favor.

"I don't care about those letters after my name. Your initial research helped a lot of people and there are still people out there who are seeing things, hearing things and don't know why. I've looked into the case studies you did. The validation for your work was there…" She was doing a pretty good job of staying calm, until he interrupted her again.

"Listen, Ms. Minske…" That was quite possibly the worst thing he could have said to her. She just exploded after that, all efforts at staying calm thrown right out the window.

"Don't you *dare* 'Ms. Minske' me. I've been 'Ms. Minske'ed by every gray haired, bespectacled, dry as bones, wouldn't know an original thought if one came up and bit them on the ass professor in the entire Anthropology department! Nobody will listen! I thought at least YOU might give me the courtesy of listening to what I was saying before dismissing me out of hand!" Grabbing her back pack off the floor, she wheeled around and fled to the elevators, jabbing at the buttons and muttering under her breath about blockhead cops, stupid Proffs and ancient elevators.

"Smooth one, Chief." Blair just ignored Jim's comment and looked at the ball of fury that was still jabbing at the down button.

"This was not what I had in mind for this morning. I mean, I haven't heard anything about that for the last four years." Putting the file that was still in his hand down on top of his cup, he pulled a lock of hair behind his ear that had managed to work its way out of the hair tie.

"Well, you might want to go talk to her before she breaks the button for the elevator." Jim smiled at the retreating form of his guide. The kid still couldn't handle someone, anyone being mad at him.

"Hey wait up a second." Sandburg got there just in time to stick his hand into closing doors. Fortunately, shift change was over so they had the elevator to themselves. He slid in and was ignored as the girl punched the ground floor button and stared up at the decreasing numbers. "Look, I'm sorry if I made you angry or something…"

"Who said I was angry. Just because I've had the lousiest three months of my life battling with a bunch of stiff-necked, old geezers who won't listen to a word out of my mouth past Sentinel, even though there is documented evidence of enhanced senses, so I go talk to the guy who screwed it all up in the first place by faking his research so now no one will even TALK about it, only to have him give me the same 'thanks, but you're nuts' line. What ever gave you the idea I was ANGRY!" By the time she was finished the doors of the elevator opened up and she stomped out of its confines

"Just wait up a sec." Sandburg had to dash after her and by the time he caught up with her, they were outside. "You caught me off guard, if you can give me a chance to explain…"

"What's there to explain? You faked your research. I knew that to begin with. It was a stupid idea to come down here to talk to you about it. I'm actually surprised you took it so well. Most people would have just pushed me out a window or something. Of course, you're a cop, you could find a better way to get rid of me, say SHOOT me or something. I just might ask you to do that anyway, cause after all, my life SUCKS!" She was talking so fast, that her words started to bleed together, but never to the point that a person couldn't understand what she was saying. By the time she'd finished her tirade, a bit of a crowd had gathered and she blushed as they all looked at her, including one, slightly shocked ex-anthropologist standing in front of her.

"And Jim says I talk fast." He smiled at her and she just waited for the ground to swallow her up. She hadn't blown up like that since she was a teenager and her Aunt wouldn't let her date a guy from the college.

"Look, I'm sorry to dump on you. I'll get out of your life and you can forget I ever showed up, Okay?" She turned around to leave, only to notice Det. Sandburg had moved to stand in front of her again.

"How about we find someplace I little quieter to talk, and I'll answer what questions I can."

She was never one to look a gift horse in the mouth, particularly after she'd just spent the last few minutes insulting it, so ten minutes later the two of them were seated in the secluded corner of a coffee shop. Taking a sip of her latte, Anna looked at the man sitting across from her, who insisted she call him Blair, and wondered.

"I still don't understand it. I've read all the articles you wrote, your thesis; I even managed to get a copy of your dissertation. The basis of your work was solid. Even without a full fledged Sentinel, you had enough material to finish you're Ph.D." She took another sip of coffee.

"Can we get past the whole, faking thing. It's not one of my favorite subjects." Blair squirmed in his seat a bit and Anna felt immediately contrite.

"Oh man, I'm sorry. It must be hell having it brought back up after all this time. I'm just not on the ball today. I mostly wanted to ask you about your early research."

"What do you want to know?" Blair picked up his own cup of coffee and took a sip, waiting for her question.

"Well, first off, how did you get on the subject in the first place. I mean I spent nearly a year trying to track down Burton's monograph…"

"I thought you said you stumbled on it?" His tone wasn't accusing or anything, but she still felt like two year old beside a glass of spilt milk.

"I didn't lie, I did stumble onto it. A few times actually. I had to photo copy it since they wouldn't lend it out and I couldn't afford to get my own copy and the damn thing kept slipping out of the bookcase and onto the floor…" Seeing the look in his eyes, she shut up and went back to the main subject. "Anyway, what *did* get you started?"

"Well, I'd always been fascinated by anthropology as a kid and I didn't want to do anything that had been done to death already when I started my Graduate studies, so when a friend of mine started complaining about headaches and hearing things he shouldn't be able to hear, it reminded me of something I had read when I was an undergrad." As he started talking, his eyes lit up and he started making gestures to punctuate a point. He talked about his some of his early subjects, the problems they'd encountered and some of the methods that he'd come up with to help them deal with their unique difficulties. They could have spent the entire morning talking if they hadn't been interrupted by the shrill buzz of a phone.

She knew it wasn't hers since she hadn't been able to pay her bill for the last month and she sighed away her disappointment as Blair reached into his pocket and pulled out a slim phone. Her digital phone looked like a dinosaur next to his. That wasn't hard since hers was almost eight years old.

All color drained from Blair's face as he listened to the other end and he was already out of his seat by the time he said bye.

"Listen I have to go, here's my card. Call me if you have any questions." Then he was out the door before she had a chance to get a word in edge wise. She followed him out of the cafe and her curiosity peaked when she heard the wail of Ambulances in the distance. She had to sprint to keep Blair in sight as he wove through the block of foot traffic back to the precinct.

She stood within a crowd of rubbernecks, looking at the devastation to the front of the building. She managed to push her way past some geek who'd weaseled his way in front of her and tried to spot Blair through the shattered glass of lobby. While she had good eye sight, it was not as good as her aunt's, so she blew a tendril of hair out of her eye in frustration when she couldn't spot him. Spying a different familiar face stepping under the hastily raised police tape, she called out.

"Hey, Daryl!" The recipient of her call turned around and when he spotted her, frowned. But he did walk over to where she was now ducking under the yellow plastic.

"Anna, what are you doing here?" He waved to the uniform who must have recognized him since he waved back and went back to keeping out reporters.

"I was talking with Blair when he got a call and headed back here." Following Daryl as he stepped through what used to be the glass walls of the lobby, she figured that what ever happened must be taken care of. He snagged her arm and pulled her into a corner, presumably so he could yell at her in private.

"I though I told you I'd talk to him first." Daryl wasn't impressed, but she'd been bugging him to talk to Det. Sandburg for ages.

"You said that over a month ago." She shifted her pack and dared him to say anything in his defense. "And what are you doing here?"

"My Dad works here, remember?" Daryl glared at her. Since he was the only one who'd ever listened to her spouting on about enhanced senses, she didn't really want to piss him of. She swallowed the sarcastic reply on the tip of her tongue.

"Oh, yea."

"Oh, yea." Daryl took a deep breath and Anna noticed some of the tension around the young man's eyes. "He gave me a call to let me know he was okay, but I thought I'd come over and see for myself."

"Well, you're father is just fine, without you having to check up on him." They both jumped at the booming voice that came from beside them. Anna cringed when she recognized it as the guy bellowing out of the office earlier that morning.

"Hi Dad." Daryl tried to play it cool, but he was soon swept up into a big hug and Anna pretended not to notice the tears glistening in both sets of eyes.

"Like I said, I'm fine." Mr. Banks finally let go and his son's eyes narrowed as he looked over his Dad's haggard appearance.

"How close?"

For a few moment's, Mr. Banks didn't answer but when he did, it was not an easy admission. "Too close." Quickly changing the subject, he glanced at the girl beside his son. "Who's this?"

"Anna Minske." Who winced at the hard gleam in the eyes of Mr. Banks. She hadn't really noticed just how tall and intimidating he was when he walked up. She definitely noticed it now.

"The Sentinel hunter." The disapproval was more than obvious in Mr. Banks voice.

"Dad, she's not like that." Daryl moved a step closer to Anna as if protecting her from his wrath.

"Son, you know what happened last time. He was a really nice guy too, until…" Mr. Banks turned to his son and lowered his voice, but Anna could still hear most of what they were saying. She listened in, shamelessly.

"Well, it's a bit late anyway, 'cause she went and talked to Blair on her own."

"Damn." A hand reached up and Mr. Banks rubbed the bridge of his nose. "How'd he take it?"

"I don't know. I just ran into her outside." Daryl opened his mouth to say something else, but stopped when he noticed the two figures approaching them. Anna stared open mouthed at Det. Ellison, who looked like he lost a fight with one, very large cat.

"It's not that bad Chief. It's just a scratch."

"Just a scratch. A scratch is what's covering the rest of you. The one on your arm is still trying to bleed through the bandage. That is not a scratch. Hey Simon, so what was it this time?" Blair switched gears so fast, it took everyone a moment to catch up, during which time, he noticed the girl in the corner, trying to hide behind Daryl. "Hey, Anna. What are you doing here, I thought I left you at the coffee shop."

Anna tried not to stare at the slowly spreading splotch of red on the pristine white bandage on the one detective's arm. She really didn't handle the sight of blood all that well.

"Um, I ran into Daryl outside, and we started talking…" She finally tore her eyes away from the bloody bandage, letting the sentence trail off. She took a few gulps of air and tried to tell her stomach that spewing coffee on a couple of cops wasn't the best idea in the world.

"Hey Daryl, why didn't you tell me you knew somebody was looking into Sentinels." Blair reached up and lightly scuffed the back of Daryl's head.

"Well, I was going to, but I was looking for the right time to bring it up, and so I talked it over with Dad, and…"

"Let me guess, he flat out forbid it."

"Well he tried to…"

Anna had let the conversation flow over her and turned away from the babble. She took in the process of everyone trying to put the main lobby back together, while trying not to pay attention to the media frenzy outside. She spied the EMT's across the room, working with a uniform who must have been caught in the flying glass. She guessed Det. Ellison wasn't the only one who would look like he'd been in a cat fight.

One guy had a gloved hand clamped down on the woman's leg while another dug into a box of equipment. When the one moved his hand and the other tried to slap on a bandage, blood started spurting out of the gash and falling to the floor. The uniform promptly passed out and Anna suddenly felt like she was about to join her. Pushing back a wave of blackness and nausea, she ripped her gaze away and took a few more gulps of air.

"Are you okay?"

Anna turned around to face Det. Ellison. Her face was very pale and her hands clenched the straps of her back pack so hard the knuckles were white.

"Yea, I'm fine, I just," She swallowed a few times and seemed to go even paler as she noticed that the splotch of red on his arm was even bigger. "don't deal well with blood."

"Maybe we should let you sit down or something." He looked around, to see if he could spot a chair or something, but she waved him off.

"I'm fine." Her voice was weak and she swallowed a few more times, her lungs doing an admirable job of hyperventilating. "I think I just need a little, fresh … air."

And then she promptly fainted.

***********

It took her a few moments to gather her thoughts as she woke up someplace very different from where she fainted. Thinking about it, she was rather glad, because there had been a fair bit of the red stuff splattered around once she started looking about. She looked at the ceiling above her and wondered where she had ended up.

The last time she fainted, some idiot had dragged her into a professor's office (that she'd never been in before) and then locked the door, so she could have some privacy. Lets just say they came running when she started yelling at the top of her lungs. She shifted on the couch she was on and tried to sit up, only to have Daryl push her back down.

"You should probably lie down a bit more."

"Daryl, I fainted, I didn't have a near death experience." She pushed off the blanket that some kind soul had placed over her and looked around. "So where are we?"

"Dad's office." He got up and poured her a cup of coffee.

"Oh, hell. How long was I out?" She gratefully took a sip and sighed as the hot liquid cleared out the lingering cob webs in her head.

"Not quite two hours." Daryl had to rush over and take the cup out of her hands as she choked.

"What the hell happened?" She reached out and reclaimed her cup and took another sip of the coffee that was better than she'd thought it would be.

"Well Jim tried to catch you, but somehow you slipped out of his grasp and hit your head when you fell."

"Great, now I have a concussion as well." She stood up and was pleased when the floor didn't spin too much without her.

"The EMT's checked you out…" Daryl started.

"Then why aren't we having this conversation in the emergency room?" Not that she minded in the least. Hospitals held about as much appeal to her as a teen slasher flick.

"Well, I sort of explained about your parents and they said that since it wasn't serious, as long as someone kept an eye on you for the next twenty-four hours, you should be fine."

Anna closed her eyes against the images that assaulted her at the mention of her parents. Her mother's body, barely identifiable as such, crushed in the confines of the twisted metal wreck of their car. Her father bleeding to death in the ER, because despite all the advances made in the medical world, serious injuries for a hemophiliac still spelled death. And in all of it, blood. Everywhere. Spilling onto the road, spilling onto the floor, on the walls, on her clothes, on her hands, in her hair. She hasn't dealt too well with the sight of blood since then.

"Thanks. I don't think that waking up in the hospital would have added to my day at all." Opening her eyes, Anna took another sip of her coffee and glanced out the window to where three people were having a rather intense conversation. "Have they decided what to do with me yet?"

"What do you mean?"

"From the comment your father made, apparently they've had people nosing around before."

"Well, a few years ago, some guy started a fuss and brought the whole mess back in everyone's face."

"I don't remember that." She frowned as she tried to think back of any mention of Blair's research after the original publicity over his dissertation.

"That's the year your Aunt moved and you stayed with her for the summer." Daryl sat back in his father's chair and recalled the mess it ended up in. "This jerk managed to get a copy of Blair's dissertation and insisted that it was all real. He made Jim's life hell and the whole mess drove everybody here around the bend. It was hard enough for Blair to admit he screwed up in the first place, but having to go through it all again wasn't very pleasant for all involved."

"So that's why he called me a Sentinel hunter. If I knew how much of a bother this would have been for everyone, I wouldn't have started this in the first place." Anna plunked her cup down and moved to the window to stare out. She was surprised when her gaze was met by the blue eyes of Det. Ellison. "It's just…

"I never told you about my Aunt," she started. "When she first took me in, after my parent's died, I never noticed anything unusual. It wasn't until I'd gotten so depressed that I went across the field beside our house and started popping pills and she saw me.

"I'm not saying that she could see me across the field like I could see you across the field. I'm saying she could see that it was me, that I was balling my eyes out and dry swallowing her prescription headache meds across the field. She was one of Blair's first subjects." Anna turned away from the mesmerizing gaze of Det. Ellison. For some reason, she felt that he knew the gist of what she was saying. It must have been written all over her face.

"Anyway, she took me to the hospital and got my stomached pumped and then we sat and had a long talk. I must have been twelve at the time. The thing is, the doctors had diagnosed her as severely agoraphobic because she got dizzy, disoriented and had blinding headaches if she wasn't surrounded by walls all the time. Even windows threw her for a loop. Anyway, one day, Blair came knocking on her door and told her the real reason for her problem.

"He helped her a lot and she used to keep in touch with him for the longest time. Anyway, when his dissertation came out and the mess that followed, she was so.. I don't know, mad? Disappointed maybe? Well, they lost contact eventually. The point is, he gave my aunt back her freedom. He taught her how to control what she was seeing and how to focus. I never wanted to mess his life up again."

She sniffled a little and tried to blink away the moisture building up in her eyes. Daryl came up beside her and put a hand on her shoulder before deciding that wasn't enough and pulled her into a hug.

"Hey, man. Your dad's gonna get the wrong idea and then I'll be lucky to get of this building alive." She pulled away after a few moments, swiped at the moisture in her eyes and smiled up at him. "But thanks."

"Why didn't you say anything about this. All this time, I thought this was because you had some fanciful idea in your head about modern day super heroes." Daryl scolded her, but his eyes held a note of relief.

"Well, it's not something that comes up in regular conversation. And you were my TA, not my psychologist." She pulled a hand through her hair and than caught a glimpse of her watch. "Oh crap, I'm late!" She grabbed her bag and opened the office door.

"For what?" Daryl wondered what she could be late for. Classes had been out for a while and most people at the university would be high tailing it out of town for a long weekend caused by an administrative holiday.

"I'm supposed to talk to the head of the department at two. It's gonna take me forever to get there on the buses." Her hand again went through her hair, this time snagging on a tangle. "Not to mention I probably look like something the cat dragged in."

"Why don't I give you a ride? It'll give you a chance to tidy up and I don't have to be at work until tonight." He watched as she paused in the door way, her desire to clean up warring with her desire not to be an inconvenience.

"You don't mind?" she asked.

"Not at all." Daryl followed her out of the room. "Besides, doctor's orders. You're not supposed to be alone for at least 24 hours."

"You had to remind me of that." She looked around the room that was empty except for the three men, now relaxing by the coffee room door. "So where is the little girls room anyway."

"Um," Daryl looked around with a slightly confused look on his face. "I actually have no idea. I know the men's room in just outside the pen, but…"

"I know, you haven't exactly looked for its counter part. Well, since you're giving me a ride I have a chance to look for it." Heading out of the bullpen, she eventually found the washroom so, after running a comb through her hair and pinning it up, touching up her makeup and washing out a spot on her shirt, she deemed herself as presentable as she was going to get and went in search of Daryl. She found him talking with his father.

"Shall we blow this joint?" She smiled at both of them, feeling more herself than she had in a while. Confiding in Daryl had been one of the better ideas she'd come up with lately.

"Listen, I just got a call from work. They want me in early, but I can still drop you off. Can one of your roommates pick you up?" Daryl looked unimpressed with his change in schedule.

"No can do. Tina took off to her parent's cabin with her boyfriend yesterday and Alice is still on the expedition in Arizona. But I can take the bus home." A quick glance at her watch told her they still had a few minutes before they had to leave.

"Wait a minute. You're suppose to have someone with you for at least the next twenty four hours."

"I'll be fine. They just say that so nobody sues them if something happens." She glanced around, a bit uncomfortable at this display of concern.

"They say that because things do happen. I'd keep you company, but I'm the night shift." Daryl was deep in thought and then turned pleading eyes to his dad.

"Don't look at me, son. Maggi wanted to go out to dinner tonight." With that, Mr. Banks headed back to his office.

"You know I'm a big girl, I don't need a baby-sitter." Anna waved her hands and hoped to nip this thing before it got any worse. It wasn't like she was going to die if someone didn't keep her company.

"Could you get Michelle to stay with you for the night?" Daryl ignored her comment.

"It's her and Lorne's anniversary this weekend. It would take more than a not really sick friend to pry her out of his arms tonight."

"What about Terri?"

"Trip to Europe. It was a present to herself for graduating. Now would you quite worrying? I'm starting to feel smothered here. Besides which, we have to get going or we'll both be late." She tugged on Daryl's arm, hoping he'd take the hint.

"But the doctor said…"

"Just give it up Daryl. Everybody I know is busy tonight, or not in town. One night on my own isn't going to kill me."

"If you need a place to stay for the night, you could crash at our place." It took a few moments for her to realize exactly what Det. Ellison said. It wasn't every day a practical stranger offered her a place to stay for the night. Daryl's eyes lit up though as he considered this new development.

"Hey, that works out great. You guys could pick her up after you're done here and she could sleep on the couch. That way I know she'll be okay."

"Are you nuts!" Anna smacked Daryl. "I hardly know these guys and you expect me to spend the night at their place. No offense guys, but for all I know you could be serial rapists or something. Besides which, it's not fair to them to have me imposing on them."

"Listen, it's no fuss for Blair and I" Ellison broke in.

"Besides which, you could fill him in on how your aunt's been doing." Daryl looked at her, hoping to get her to cave.

"Who's your Aunt?" Blair threw his two bit's in and Anna knew it was a lost cause.

"Jackie Drake, she was one of your…"

"You're Jackie's niece? No wonder you looked familiar. How are her eyes doing? She kept having trouble with headaches, has she gotten over that yet?"

"Well, she still gets the occasional doozy when she over does things, but they're less frequent now."

"Has she kept up her meditation?" Blair's eyes lit up with her answer and she felt herself getting swept up in the conversation as they waited for the elevator.

"Actually, she gets the headaches when she sluffs off on meditating. She still uses that tape with the drums on it that you gave her." She stepped in and held the door open for Daryl, but he said he forgot his jacket in his Dad's office. Saying she'd meet him by his car, she went back to comparing notes on her aunt with Blair.

"You were listening in, weren't you." Daryl had waited for the doors to close before evil eyeing the guy who for the longest time was Uncle Jim.

"Yea. I thought it might be a good idea under the circumstances." Jim realized at that moment that the son had inherited his father's glare.

"Well, since she told you about her aunt anyway I won't turn you into Dad, who'll lecture you on listening into private conversations. Just don't do it again, okay?" Daryl had definitely inherited his father's leadership abilities. But he was still a bit young to be trying them out on a guy who could whoop his butt at one on one.

"Yes Dad." Jim snipped.

"Shesh, first Anna and now you. I'm just concerned about the physical, mental and moral well being of my friends. Is that a crime?" Daryl held his hands out as he waited for the elevator to come back. "You sure you're okay with her staying for the night?"

"Like you said, it's doctor's orders. Besides, she kinda reminds me of Blair."

"No way man, they're totally different." Daryl was quick to deny any similarities between the two. For one thing, she was no where near being a pacifist.

"Well, I'm not saying she's a carbon copy or anything. Maybe it's just the anthropology connection." Jim looked thoughtful as he compared the two in his mind. "But, you better get going before she drives herself over there and leaves you stranded."

"Thanks for letting her stay over though."

"Any time."

On that note, Daryl stepped into the elevator and with a reminder to pick Anna up, waved as the doors closed.

A few hours later, as Anna was kicking pebbles in the Hargrove Hall parking lot, she wondered how she let herself get talked into that. The sense of well being that had carried her through to her appointment, fled as the department head told her to find a new topic for study or look elsewhere for her continuing education.

Kicking another pebble, she told herself she wasn't going to go there. She wasn't going to spend the evening ranting about some geezer who didn't want to take a bit of a chance exploring a new area of research just because it had the taint of a scandal attached to it. It wasn't like she was trying to recreate Blair's work or something, she just wanted to study how people with heightened senses fit in the standard social structure of the modern age, compared to their roles in ancient cultures.

This would have given her a chance to find people who had adjusted to their gifts, but also people who's gifts have turned into curses. She couldn't help wondering if there weren't a few people in the psyche ward who really did hear the voices in their heads. She figured if she could find them, she could help them to some extent or at the very least direct them to someone who could.

From the way the department was reacting, though, you'd think that she was looking for some, how did Daryl so aptly put it, some modern day super hero. If such a person existed, which aside from a few of her wilder fantasies she never really believed they did, she could never expose them. Look at what happened to Det. Ellison and that was just from an unsubstantiated, technically unpublished paper.

Feeling her frustration level rise, again, she took a deep breath and tried to calm down. She went through a quick breathing exercise her aunt taught her but it didn't help. She settled for sitting on the grass and taking her frustration out on that. Ten minutes later she had to move from the bald spot she'd ripped up. She had at least another ten minutes until Blair and Det. Ellison were due to pick her up, so she decided to give up on waiting and went to find a soda.

As she made her way back to the parking lot, a few minutes later, they where already there and as she got closer, she could hear part of their conversation.

"And how many times have you been shot in the last ten years?" Blair was rocking back and forth on his heals, just waiting for his partner's answer.

"What, five times?"

"So that's my two, compared to your five. I think I've pulled my weapon maybe once while on duty; you drag the thing out every time there's the slightest threat. I think the statistics confirm that a drawn gun just provokes further violence." Blair jabbed a finger at Ellison to emphasize his point, by which time Anna was right beside them.

"Sorry I'm late, I went to get something to drink. You guys ready to go?" She threw her bottle into the recycle bin and walked up to the truck door. Blair got in first so she ended up squeezed up against the window. It was a nice truck, though in her ignorance about vehicles, she wouldn't be able to tell one truck from another unless they were a different color. There were the standard pleasantries ('How did the appointment go?' 'The guy's a bastard who deserves to be eviscerated.' 'That good?' 'Yea, that good. How did work go?' 'Paperwork was invented by the devil as a torture device.' 'That good?' 'Yea, that good,') but as the drive progressed, Anna couldn't help asking something.

"Okay, my curiosity is eating me alive. What in heaven's name have you guys been doing that you ended up getting shot seven times between the two of you?" She'd read the national statistics for Job site injuries when she started her research. Police work had one of the lowest records for injuries, but evidently, not these two.

"Ask the trouble magnet over there." Jim glanced meaningfully at his partner who feigned total innocence.

"Me, a trouble magnet? May I remind you that I hadn't been shot, stabbed, attacked by crazed psychos, drowned, and so on until after I met you. Well except for that time in Africa, but that was just your standard mugging so I'm not including that."

"How many times have you been stabbed?" Jim's face took on a slightly devious cast waiting for the answer, and Anna wondered just what she'd started with her question.

"Three." Blair freely admitted.

"Four. I've never been stabbed. And you've had at lest six major concussions."

"I was being held hostage for most of those, and I can't believe you want to included the Dobinski case. It was barely a scratch."

"It had stitches, it counts."

"It's smaller than the 'scratch' on your arm. And what about you and trucks? How many have you totaled? I'll be nice. Let's just keep to the ten year time frame."

"Five." Jim's jaw started to grind at that point. A sore point perhaps? Anna decided that mentioning car accidents in his presence was not a good idea for the future.

"And you broke your arm crashing the Ford. And speaking about concussions, you've had your fair share. What about the time Brackett got out?"

"He cold cocked me, that doesn't qualify. What about…"

Anna sat in wonder for the rest of the trip as the two detectives compared injuries and close calls while trying to blame the other for the injuries. It made for a quick drive home at least. It also made Anna think that today was more typical than she would have thought. What a scary concept. She breathed a sigh of relief as they pulled into a parking lot safe and sound.

She liked the loft right off the bat. First off, the place was spotless. That was something she really appreciated since both of her roommates considered a clean room a sure sign of dementia. The next was that it felt like a home. There was a blanket thrown over the back of a couch, pictures adorning a very full bookcase, even a few masks that she could easily identify, hanging on the wall. Somehow she thought Blair would have distanced himself from Anthropology more than he apparently had.

Putting her backpack on the floor by the couch she became part of what must be a nightly routine. Jim went upstairs and changed; Blair dug into the fridge pulling things out for supper and set her to cutting up vegetables for some kind of casserole. She loved a man who could cook. Especially since she couldn't. Then Jim joined them by starting on a salad.

Supper was better than her standard fair of Yellow Death (AKA mac & cheese) and she drifted with the conversation that covered the upcoming Jag game, the increasing price of tuition, how student life had changed, the upcoming football season, who was teaching Intro. to Anthro, the latest troubles in Russia and ended up on the effect of deforestation on tribes in Brazil. That was mostly between her and Blair, though.

The rest of the evening was spent cheering the Jags despite the fact they lost by ten points. By the end of the game, it was getting late so the glasses they'd used were quickly washed (this more than anything else convinced her these guys were neat freaks, well at least one of them) and Jim started rummaging in the closet for some extra blankets. Within no time, she had a bed made up on one of the couches and was left in privacy as the two detectives went to their respective rooms.

***********

She woke up to the steady drizzle of rain pattering on glass and the smell of coffee. The rain she could do without, but the smell of fresh coffee was enough to pry open an eye lid. She soon regretted the action as the little bit of headache she'd managed to ignore yesterday had invited company over night. The pounding in her head was something else she could do without this morning.

She burrowed herself deeper into the covers and wasn't going to move at all, but she could hear the subtle sounds of somebody moving around. She might as well get up then. Easing herself up, she still got up too fast and blackness came over her in a wave. She felt a hand on her elbow and she sat back on the blankets until she could see a concerned face hovering in front of her.

"I'm fine, I just got up to fast." She gave Det. Elision a (hopefully) bright smile, while he looked intently in her eyes, probably looking for dilating pupils or something.

"Do you always try to pass out first thing in the morning?" When the intensity in his face eased, she figured she wasn't going to die, so she accepted the hand he held out so she wouldn't thoroughly embarrass herself again.

"I have chronically low blood sugar. Means I can pass out at the drop of a hat, particularly if I haven't eaten recently." She felt the need to explain, both for today and yesterday.

"Or you get a good whack on the head." His eyes wouldn't meet hers and she figured he was feeling bad about not catching her.

"Yeah, that too." She followed her nose to the kitchen and started to pour herself a cup of coffee, adding a healthy dose of sugar to last her until she could actually get something solid to eat. She hated mornings. "Thanks for letting me stay here. It wasn't really necessary but I never would have heard the end of it from Daryl otherwise."

"Hey no problem, always ready to help a damsel in distress." His eyes lit up as she visibly winced at his statement.

"Oh, don't call me that. I am not the least bit damsel like." Anna poked a finger through the hole in flannel shirt she was using as a nightgown. Her tee was a little on the short side for her to feel comfortable running around in. This shirt at lest covered her bum.

"Oh, I don't know, give you the right dress and that hair, I could see the resemblance." He took a sip of his coffee while she ran a hand though the mess that her hair had become, getting her fingers caught in the tangles. She should have braided it back yesterday, but hadn't thought much about it at the time.

"If you say so." She put down her cup so that she could unwind a particular nasty mess from around her fingers. "This 'damsel' is going to go make herself look a bit less like medusa so if you'll excuse me."

Grabbing her bag, she shut the bathroom door, and hoped it wouldn't take her an hour to brush out the mess. At least she'd slipped her brush in her backpack yesterday. Her apartment was on the other side of Campus and she hadn't wanted to bother going all the way there last night. Starting at the bottom and working her way up, she managed to get her hair brushed out in no time. Pulling it partially back in a clip, she let the rest hang loose. A few minutes after that, she was clean faced, dressed and a bit more ready to face the world.

Opening the door, she put her pack by the couch and noticed that Ellison was by the French doors, looking out over the city. There wasn't much to see through the omnipresent drizzle, so she started folding up the blankets and clearing away the evidence of her bed. Once that was done, she didn't have anything better to do, so she picked up her now much cooler cup of coffee and sat down.

She kept finding herself watching the detective watch the city. There was something about him that was familiar though she still couldn't put her finger down on what. He seemed totally engrossed in the happenings outside the window. Something caught his eye and he'd stare off at it for a while before moving on.

There was something protective in his stance, like he wasn't just watching the city but watching over it. Maybe it was a cop thing. While she was intimidated when she first met him, she'd seen how he interacted with others and the indulgence in his eyes as he bantered with Blair. Watching him now, she'd be more than willing to trust him with her life.

Again, something caught his eye and she watched with growing fascination as his coffee cup lowered a bit and his eyes narrowed, while his pupils seemed to dilate ever so slightly. That was the exact same way her Aunt looked when she was seeing something beyond the normal human range.

Realization struck Anna like a ton of bricks.

"holy shit." She barely whispered that out, but Ellison's head snapped around anyway. It was more than just his eyes than, but hearing as well. At least two enhanced senses then and probably more. But if Ellison DID have enhanced senses and if he WAS a Sentinel, that meant that Blair didn't fake his dissertation, that his research was valid. "It's true."

"What?" Ellison came up beside her again, but she pretty much ignored him.

"Why the hell did he do it? Why on earth would he just throw away fifteen years of his life just like that? I mean even with all the pressure, there must have been a way. Why did he lie?" Anna looked over at Det. Ellison, spearing him with a desperate glance that needed to understand. From the confused look on his face, he didn't have a clue what she was rambling about. "Why did Blair say his paper was a fraud, when it wasn't?"

Ellison was quiet for a few moments when he realized she had found him out. "What gave me away?"

"You do the same eye thingy my aunt does when she's looking at something." Anna gestured impatiently with her hand, wanting him to answer her question, not ask his own. Instead, he moved back into the kitchen and poured himself some more coffee, bringing the pot over to fill up her cup as well, before returning it to the kitchen.

"You said you managed to get a copy on Blair's dissertation, have you read it?" The detective waited for her hesitant nod before continuing. "What is a Sentinel?"

It took her a few minutes for her to switch gears in her mind. This was a question that required more than a nod. She thought back to sitting in the living room with the paper in her hands, reading the information and comparing it to the other work Blair had done, trying to pick out what was real and what wasn't. The concept of a guardian watching over the city was one that stuck in her mind and wouldn't let go, no matter how many times she told herself it wasn't real.

"A Sentinel is a person with five enhanced senses, that protects the tribe." She must have said the right thing, because he nodded at her, then pointed out the window.

"That's my tribe. That's who I protect. What's a Guide?"

"A Guide guides. He teaches the Sentinel how to use his senses, he protects the Sentinel when he uses his senses." A thought popped in her mind and more pieces fell into place. "Blair's your Guide."

"He protects me." Ellison admitted.

"And when all the publicity started you couldn't function as a Sentinel, so he said his research was false so you could go back to protecting the city." Understanding started to seep in, but she still couldn't comprehend what would make Blair give up so much. Ellison, noticing this, set about explaining it for her.

"More than that, he gave me back my life. Being a Sentinel is more than just enhanced senses, it's who I am. I had to make a choice to accept what I was and use it. I couldn't when I was being swamped by reporters. My life was being systematically exposed, my family hounded, there were reporters camped out in front of the loft, at the precinct.

"Blair tried to prevent the news from coming out, but it was a hot story and there was no stopping it. I wasn't helping things either, blaming him for what happened when it was just a mistake. But he stuck by me, even when I pushed him away.

"When I heard the news conference, where he said that the research was false, it was like I'd been hit over the back of the head with a 2x4. I was completely shocked. He had just given up everything he had ever dreamed of, for me."

"Hey man, your life is worth more than a bit of fame and fortune." Blair spoke up from where he was standing behind Anna, causing her to jump.

"I was wondering when you where going to throw your two bits in." Of course Ellison wasn't surprised.

"I thought you were doing a pretty good job there on your own, Big Guy." Blair had a cup of coffee in his hand and Anna realized he had been there for at least a few minutes. He was already dressed as well.

"This is just so…" Anna let the sentence trail off, not sure how to describe the situation.

"Weird, crazy, insane, twisted, demented, odd? No I don't think demented works. Wild, convoluted, tangled. I know, daft!" Blair cheerfully ignored the glare directed at him from Ellison and continued his speech. "Nobody uses daft anymore. It has such a nice ring to it, though I think convoluted seems about the most accurate."

"Yea, I think convoluted fits quite nicely." Anna leaned back in her chair, trying to absorb everything. It still seemed so… fantastical.

"So now what are you going to do?" Blair's question broke through her thoughts and it took her a few moments to formulate a coherent answer.

"Well, there's not that much I can do. If I tell anyone, it threatens Det. Ellison, if they believe me in the first place." She took a deep breath before going on. "But it does give me hope. Just knowing that there is validity to the research gives me a basis that I can use to start. I mean I can't exactly reference your dissertation but I can look at your references and knowing what to look for makes thing that much easier."

"What about funding?" Blair stuck his head out of the cupboard he was getting a cup from.

"Oh, I'll come up with something, even if I have to switch departments and talk to the guys in Biology. Or maybe Medicine. They usually have a slightly more open mind and it's with a few case studies, they should take me seriously. I've had as much as I can take from the Anthro department and with my Biology minor, I shouldn't have any trouble." She tried to sound more confident than she felt which, considering how UNconfident she felt, wasn't as hard as one might think.

"Would that actually work?"

"Probably not. But it's the only thing I can think of right now." So much for a confident front. She almost deflated before their eyes, a sense of gloom coming over her as she thought about the battle she had yet to win.

"What about private grants?" Jim threw his two bits in the conversation only to get 'yea right' looks from his companions.

"Do you have any idea how many butts I'd have to kiss to get a private grant? Not to mention the fact that it would still need the University's approval if I do it as my research project. And if I don't have the University's backing for the research I'm not likely to get very far in the first place."

"Could you afford to do the research on your own while working on something else?" Blair asked.

"What, like telling the department one thing and then working on another?" She thought it had merit, but it wasn't exactly the most honest thing in the world and tricks learned from her aunt aside, Anna tried to be honest in the daily dealings. That and she'd most likely get booted out if the University ever found out.

"No more like working on one thing while working on the other but only having funding for the one." Blair thought back to the early days of his partnership with Jim. Trying to keep two vastly different lives straight while not skimping on either of them, had left him scrambling more times then he'd care to remember.

"That does not sound like an easy answer." Just the thought of how organized she'd actually have to be to do something like that made her shudder. She was not what a person could call organized. Then there was the classes she'd have to take and the classes she'd most likely end up teaching, the lack of life she'd end up having… Who was she kidding, she didn't have much of a life to begin with.

"Were you looking for one?" It took her a brief second to realize he wasn't talking about her lack of life but easy answers.

"No, but do you have any idea how much time one project can take up, let alone two? Stupid question, forget I asked it." She took a swig of her coffee, grimacing at the sweet dregs she'd reached. "But I'd still be essentially on my own as far as support from the University is concerned. The department still doesn't even want to hear about enhanced senses."

"Okay, forgive my ignorance, but why are they being so stubborn about this?" Jim leaned back in his chair, trying to figure out all the intricacies of the situation. His question opened a big can of worms as Anna started rambling out an explanation, her words sliding out with her hands punctuating the sentences.

"Reputation is everything in this field. Without it, you might as well slight your throat and be done with it. The Anthro department had a pretty serious blow when the news about the diss came out, and a fair bit of funding ended up being cut and diverted. As a result, the Head has become utterly conservative. He won't accept any of the research Blair did or anything even remotely connected.

"Rumor has it that an MD wanted to get a copy of Blair's research, some of the earlier stuff you'd already handed in, because he suspected a patient had a heightened sense of … I think it was touch. Yea, that's right because the guy had rashes everywhere. Anyway, the old geezer wouldn't even see the guy. I don't think the department head would see the truth if it was presented to him on a silver platter."

"That's it!" Blair's hand slapped the table, causing Anna to jump in response.

"What's it?" She was glad the coffee cup was empty because other wise, she'd be cleaning up a spill. Fortunately Blair didn't notice and the Sentinel just politely ignored her reaction.

"Your aunt." Blair's eyes shone and he looked at her as if his answer held the secrets of the universe. Anna apparently slept in the day they covered body language because she didn't have a clue what he was on about. Since Ellison's face mirrored hers, at least she wasn't alone.

"What about my aunt?"

"Get her to go see the Department head." Blair seemed to be dragging this out on purpose and if she knew him better, Anna would have smacked him. Instead she got sarcastic.

"In all honesty I don't think getting my aunt to talk to the bastard will have the same effect it had when I was in Jr. High and the Vice Principal wouldn't believe me about not being involved with a break in."

"No, no, no. You don't get it. You want to give him indisputable proof on the validity of your chosen research, show him your aunt. Get her to show him the validity of it." Blair's grin grew wider as dawning comprehension flashed over her face.

"You know, that just might work." She fiddled with a strand of hair as she thought, twining it around her fingers as her mind considered the possibilities.

"What's Jackie doing right now?" Blair prompted.

"She's an appraiser. She's working with a jeweler, pricing the jewelry they want to buy and sell. She also does a bit of contracting with an insurance company." Anna had to admit, the idea was growing on her and her aunt's job would just make things easier.

"Perfect" Blair apparently agreed with her.

"You're right. I can't believe I never thought of that." It seemed like such a simple solution to her problem.

"Well, it will expose Jackie to a lot of publicity and not all of it will be good. It will put her life under a magnifying glass." Blair pointed out the most obvious down fall.

"And that's not a nice place to be." Jim spoke with the confidence of experience.

"The publicity might not be a bad thing in her business, but she is a rather private person. Well, it's an idea at least, which is more than I've had for a while. I suppose I could look up some other people and see if they're willing." Anna rambled on a bit more and thinking out loud. She bounced a few more ideas off of Blair, with Jim just sitting back and enjoying the brainstorm. Eventually they had most of the possibilities worked out and a few details. They sat in the ensuing quiet, each thinking their separate thoughts while drinking more coffee.

"This could actually work." Blair broke the silence, and they all looked at each other.

"Yea, it actually could." Anna looked at the two men sitting in front of her, a big goofy grin splitting her face, looking like she'd just been given the world. And that's how she felt.

"Oh man! We have to get going to work, Banks is gonna kill us if we're late again." Blair jumped out of his seat with a bouncing intensity that dispelled the remnants of the earlier quiet.

"What do you mean we? I was on time yesterday, you were the one who had to spend how long talking to Janice in Evidence?" Jim got up and cleared off the table while the two of them fell into their morning routine.

"It was only a few minutes and I did have to drop some stuff off." Blair popped his head out of his bedroom and gestured with his comb to make a point.

"Try half an hour and then you where gone not five minutes later." Jim shot back.

"You didn't get into trouble over that did you?" Anna had grabbed her bag and pulled out a jacket against the light rain falling, but now glanced anxiously at Blair who'd just emerged with a pack slung over his shoulder.

"No, and it was a TWENTY minute DISCUSSION over the new departmental procedures." His exaggerated emphasis seemed to amuse his partner.

"New procedures. Right, Chief."

After a bit more bantering between the two, the group headed out the door with a parting promise from Anna to let them know how things turned out.

***********

This time, as she walked into the room, she didn't look quite so out of place. She was wearing a button up blouse with loose, blue dress pants and her hair was tied back in a clip and hair net. She looked very professional, except for the unabashed excitement shining from her face.

"It worked!" She almost was shouting across the room as she made her way quickly through the sea of desks to her target. "My aunt totally wowed them. First, the Department head and now then entire department!"

"I gather it went well then." Ellison put down the file he was reading.

"Went well. We blew them out of the water!" Her arms waved around in her exuberance and the smile didn't diminish in the least. "I have the Proffs fighting to take me on and the University has already committed two grants, and I have good leads on more than a few others. Where's Blair?"

"Down in Forensics."

"Again?"

"He's dating one of the technicians." Jim proceeded to tidy up his desk and then reached behind him for his jacket.

"Why am I not surprised. Everything's still good for supper though, no last minute calls or anything?" There had been more than a few she'd heard about in the last few weeks as she got to know the two detectives better.

"Yea we're fine. Is your aunt meeting us there?" By that time they were at the elevator, waiting for it to arrive.

"Yes, I sorta said you could give me a ride so that she'd have a chance to go back to the hotel and change." She looked up at him with those big eyes Jim had discovered she shared with her aunt.

"No problem. Do you want to stop by your apartment?"

"Nah, this is the last thing I have that's clean and you do not want to know how much they want for a load of laundry in my building." The elevator dinged and the doors slid open. "Might as well go straight to the restaurant. How long do you think we'll have to wait for him?"

"Your guess is as good as mine. This is the third time he needed to talk to her over some detail of a case and the last time, I didn't see him for an hour."

"Well with any luck it won't be that long or Jackie will wonder what happened to us. We're supposed to be there in twenty minutes. And if we're late, it's me she's going to blame, not him. How 'bout we drag him away before she sends out the search parties."

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