Hand over the badge, Officer Reyes — a woman who cries at traffic stops

Doyle laughed — that ugly, performative laugh men use when they think they’ve already won. “Oh, I insist, Reyes. Let the whole department see what a real leader looks like.” He crossed his arms, chest puffed like a rooster. What Doyle didn’t know was that three weeks ago, Internal Affairs had approached me. Quietly. They’d been investigating him for months — falsified overtime, missing evidence from the Pearson case, a rookie named Alvarez who’d filed a harassment complaint that mysteriously vanished. They needed someone inside. Someone he underestimated. Someone who cried at traffic stops. I reached into my breast pocket and pulled out a small black recorder, placing it beside my badge with the same gentleness. Doyle’s smirk cracked. “Captain,” I said, loud enough for every desk to hear, “for the record, that’s the fourth time this month you’ve publicly demeaned a female officer. I have all of them. I also have the voicemail where you told Sergeant Alvarez her complaint would ‘disappear like the Pearson evidence.'” The bullpen went so quiet I could hear the coffee machine gurgle. The side door opened. Two IA investigators stepped in, along with the Chief himself — who I’d been briefing every Friday morning for a month. “Captain Doyle,” the Chief said, voice like gravel, “hand over YOUR badge.” Doyle’s face drained of color. He looked at me, then at the recorder, then at the Chief, opening and closing his mouth like a fish yanked from water. “She — she set me up —” “No,” I said softly, picking up my badge and clipping it back on. “You set yourself up. I just kept the receipts.” As they walked him out, hands cuffed politely behind his back, I turned to the bullpen. Alvarez was crying — the good kind. I walked over, squeezed her shoulder, and whispered, “Sometimes the ones who cry are the ones still paying attention.” The Chief cleared his throat behind me. “Captain Reyes,” he said. “Your office is ready.”

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