Emily leapt out of the car and bounced toward Officer O'Neal. "I need to talk to you!"
O'Neal squinted at her. "Who's there?"
Emily stopped next to him on the slate path. Snow spiraled around them. An ashtray filled with cigarette butts stood to their left, the burning ember from O'Neal's cigarette right on top. "I'm Emily Fields," she answered. "I was at the country club."
"Oh, right!" O'Neal grinned. "You're the girl who led us to them. Good job—they didn't know what hit them."
"Actually, I didn't help bust them. In fact, I think you should let the elves go."
O'Neal stared at her blankly. "Excuse me?"
"You heard me. Let them walk. They've learned their lesson."
He drew up to his full height and barked out a laugh. "That's a good one, Miss Fields. But I've already started their paperwork. They're of age, you know. They might be facing jail time. Or at least some pretty strict community service."
"They weren't doing anything wrong," Emily said. "Well, okay. They shouldn't have broken into the country club and messed with private property. But they were just trying to send a message. They weren't looking to hurt anyone."
O'Neal crossed his arms over his chest and studied her. A few flakes of snow fell on the tip of his nose, but he didn't wipe them away. "I don't know why you care. They stole your family's property, too. They confessed to everything."
Then he turned on his heel and headed back into the station. "Wait!" Emily cried, pulling out her phone. "There's something you need to see."
She pressed the phone into his hands. When he looked down at the picture, the color drained from his face. "Where the hell did you get this?"
"Does it matter?" Emily snatched the phone away from him before he could delete the image. "But I don't think you want this getting around."
O'Neal's eyes grew wide. He seemed to shrink back a little. "You wouldn't."
"Believe me, I don't want to." Emily stepped a little closer. By the frightened look in O'Neal's eyes, she knew she had him.
"What do you want me to do?" O'Neal asked in a defeated voice.
"Strike the elves' confession from the record," Emily said, thinking quickly. "Give them a slap on the wrist for breaking into the county club, make them go back there and return everything to where it belongs, but say you have no evidence about the other pranks and can't charge them. Let them go free."
O'Neal's nostril flared. "So you want me to lie?"
"No…just selectively forget. Make the elves take back everything they stole—that should placate the victims, right? Just make it go away. Oh, and you don't need to tell my mom about my coming here, either. Or else…" She rocked the phone back and forth in the air, the photo of O'Neal in his Stripper Santa outfit still on the screen.
O'Neal stared off into the parking lot, chewing on the inside of his cheek. Emily's heart thudded against her ribs, wondering what she'd gotten into—she was basically blackmailing a cop. She glanced around the parking lot, suddenly certain someone was watching. A shadow fluttered behind one of the parked cruisers. The tiniest sign sounded from next to a row of dumpsters.
"Fine." O'Neal threw up his hands. "I suppose I can make that happen." He shook a finger in Emily's face. "But if anything else goes missing in Rosewood—even something as small as a lightbulb from an outdoor lighting arrangement—I'm coming to you for answers, got it? And I'm telling your mother everything."
"Understood," Emily said.
She held out her hand, and O'Neal shook it. Just before he went back inside, she called out, "One more thing. Don't tell the elves I negotiated their release."
O'Neal raised an eyebrow. "Don't you want them to thank you? They're rich girls. They could probably buy you an amazing present."
Emily stared off at the dusting of snow that now covered the parking lot. An amazing present wasn't the same as being part of the elves' clique…and she would never be welcome in their group again. In their eyes, she would always be a traitor, a girl they didn't want to know. This could just be her anonymous Christmas gift to them—her way to make up for what she did. She shook her head.
O'Neal slipped back inside. Emily stood by the window and watched him traverse the lobby, pull a couple of papers from his desk, tear them up, and shoot them through the large shredder in the corner of the room. After he was finished, he ambled over to a holding cell and tapped on the bars. Four figures appeared. Cassie, Lola, Heather, and Sophie were still wearing the thick down coats they'd had on at the country club. Their hair was matted, and their eyes and noses were red as though they'd been crying.
The snow was making a fine layer on Emily's eyelashes, but she didn't blink, not wanting to miss a moment. O'Neal said a few words to the girls, then finished in his pocket for a set of keys. He opened the jail cell and stood aside so the girls could file out they stared at him skeptically, and then smiles bloomed on their faces. But for once, the smiles of gratitude. Relief.
Emily backed away from the window, feeling like everything was right with the world again. She slid silently into her car, started the engine, and reversed out of the parking space. By the time O'Neal escorted the elves to a cruiser in the parking lot, Emily was long gone—they would never know it was her who set them free. But their grateful smiles were reward enough.