go."
Dammit. Throwing his hands on his hips, Griff glared around at the dissipating crowd. The purse snatcher was being put into the cruiser. "I need to see her."
"You know her?"
"No. I need her name and address, Officer."
"Sorry, I can't do that."
Griff glared at him.
"Police policy, Lieutenant. Sorry."
"But—"
"I'm sure she'll show up if there's a hearing, and you'll be there, too." The cop grinned. "Gutsy broad, wasn't she?" He glanced significantly down at Griffs bare left hand. "I'd want her name and phone number, too, if I were in your shoes."
Griff bit back a nasty retort. He didn't like the innuendo in the cop's voice. But he wasn't going to lower himself to the man's locker-room level. "I'll see her in court," he snapped, spinning on his heel and heading in the direction of his dropped bags.
Retrieving the luggage, Griff grimly asked himself why the hell he wanted to see Dana again. She'd taken a nasty punch. Her eye was going to swell shut. Did she have anyone to care for her? To hold her or maybe just listen to her story, her fear?
"You're nuts, Turk. Knock it off and get back to business." Bags in hand, he swung off the curb and made his way to the parking lot where his red Corvette was waiting. This whole situation was crazy. Four days ago his best friend, the brother he'd never had, had been killed, thanks to the incompetence of a woman student-pilot over at Pen-sacola Naval Air Station. Lieutenant Toby Lammerding had been an instructor pilot at Pensacola, only miles away from Whiting Field, where Griff was also an IP. Toby had taught officer candidates, while at Whiting Field, Griff taught Annapolis grads making a bid to pass the toughest flight tests in the world and become U.S. Navy pilots.
Griff had never believed a woman could meet the tough standards necessary to become a Navy pilot. Women simply weren't physically strong enough—or emotionally prepared—to handle a thirty-million-dollar fighter jet. When Toby had called, excited about his first female student pilot, Griff had felt a cold chill work up his spine. Toby had been ecstatic over the chance to help a woman get her wings. Griff couldn't agree with his friend. In the year Griff had been an IP, or 03 as they were called by the students, he'd never had a woman assigned to his training schedule. He never wanted one.
Unlocking the car door, he threw his luggage into the passenger seat. He'd just returned from Augusta, Georgia, where Toby had been buried that morning. The flight investigation blamed the woman student-pilot for the flight error. The woman had bailed out in time but Toby had valiantly stayed behind to try and save the crippled trainer. The engine had exploded.
After buckling his seat belt, Griff rammed the key into the ignition, his feelings of grief and loss over Toby surfacing. He hadn't cried at the funeral as Toby's family and friends had. No, he'd attended in uniform, stoic and strong for those who weren't. Tears burned in Griffs eyes as the Corvette purred to life. Dana's bruised, battered face swam before his tear-filled eyes. God, but she'd had wide, clear eyes—the kind a man could fall into and feel safe and good about himself.
"Dreamer," Griff growled at himself harshly. That was his Achilles' heel. Though his world required highly complex skills, a mind that worked at the speed of a refined computer and brutal physical demands, Griff recognized his own soft underbelly. He'd dreamed of Carol being more than a "wife." Maybe it was his fault their marriage had fallen apart. Maybe he'd wanted her to be something she never could be. Funny how women touched his wistful-dreamer side, especially when based on his five-year-marriage track record, he was a failure.
Well, tomorrow was a fresh start in so many ways. No more getting together with Toby on weekends to go deep-sea fishing, or Friday-night poker games with the IPs at Pensacola. Griff's apartment would be silent and empty, as usual since his divorce from