Some detectives find the truth. Anne Vincent forces it to look her in the eye.
Anne Vincent didn’t believe in omens, but the night she took the pro bono case the streetlamp outside her office flickered like a dying heartbeat. She lit a cigarette, watched the orange tip glow in the darkness, and told herself she wasn’t getting soft. Not yet.
Her client, Marcy Delgado, looked like she had run out of places to hide. The bruises on her forearms were the faint yellow of old storms, but the ones in her voice were fresh. She spoke as if each word needed permission. Her ex-husband, Todd Kline, had skipped child support for eight months, then tracked her to the shelter and made sure she “understood the consequences” of asking again.
When Marcy finished, Anne closed the folder with the delicacy of someone handling dynamite. “I’ll get your support,” she said. Then her tone cooled. “And I’ll get something he doesn’t owe you—but he deserves.”
Anne found Kline at Rusty’s Garage, puffed up with beer and the kind of swagger cowards buy cheap. He didn’t recognize her at first. She let him stew in that confusion before she stepped closer, her shadow swallowing his.
“You Todd Kline?” she asked.
He smirked. “Who’s asking?”
“The woman who’s here to collect.”
She pinned him against the workbench before he could blink. Years of Krav Maga and a childhood spent dodging trouble gave her strength he couldn’t match. She leaned in until her voice was a whisper wrapped in barbed wire.
“You hit Marcy again, you hit her with words, fists, breath, or looks—and I swear you won’t need child support because you’ll be eating through a straw for the rest of your miserable life. Do you understand me?”
Kline’s bravado drained away like oil from a cracked pan. He nodded.
Anne twisted his wrist just enough to make the message unforgettable. “Good. Now you’re going to give me every cent in your wallet for Marcy. Consider it interest. Each Friday you will make a payment to her until every cent you owe. On time. Starting Friday. And, you’ll keep making payments for the children until they’re 19.”
She left him trembling, a grown man suddenly aware of the shadows he’d never bothered to fear.
Back in her office, Anne wrote one sentence in her case notes: Debt collected. Interest delivered.
Justice didn’t always roar. Sometimes it walked out of a dim garage wearing a trench coat and smelling faintly of gunpowder and resolve.
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🔥 Reader Question
If Anne Vincent starred in a full noir series, what kind of case would you want her to take on next?