What Lies Behind. J.T. Ellison

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this leads. What if she’s involved in something bad? What if you find out there’s some sort of attack coming, and she’s a part of it?”

      She nodded, and stood, arms tight around her waist.

      “Riley, she’s not. She’d never be involved in anything to hurt us.”

      “Have you seen today’s bulletin? On the threat to the nation’s natural aquifers? What if someone hit our water supply here in D.C.? Just strolled right up to the plant on Roosevelt and popped something in the water.”

      “Wouldn’t happen, Riley. There are fail-safes to make sure nothing biological can get through.”

      “You don’t know that. Read the bulletin. It’s scary stuff. There are too many threats to count. Amanda could have stumbled across the wrong person and they tried to recruit her into doing their dirty work.”

      “Then I absolutely need to find out what she was involved in.”

      He ran a hand through his brown hair, the bicep flexing. Hard. He’d always been so hard, all sinew and bone and flesh, muscles tightly coiled, a big cat, ready to pounce or leap away at a moment’s notice.

      “I’m going to have to call in a favor or two.”

      “Thank you, Riley.”

      He gave her a brief hug, cold lips pressed to her forehead, and left, stalking out through the living room, his heels banging on the hardwood. That man could walk silently across a field of broken glass; she knew he meant it to make a point. He was doing this against his will.

      Well, so was she.

      Riley would work things from his end, seeking out who had called using Mandy’s phone. There was one phone call she needed to make. If there was anyone who might know what Mandy was involved in, Atlantic would be the one.

      She put in word that she needed to talk to him, then sat back and waited.

      And waited. And waited.

       Georgetown

      CANCER? SAM FELT the quick flash of alarm, tried to keep herself in check. “Are you okay? Are you sick?”

      Fletcher shook his head. “Oh, no, this isn’t about me. Emma said Cattafi was involved in cancer research. He’s doing some sort of specialized microbiology internship that has been making waves. Cellular differentiation or something like that. Stem cells, cancer vaccines, all sort of really cutting-edge stuff.”

      “What’s a fourth year doing in research? That’s usually postdoctoral work.”

      “Kid’s a prodigy, from what I’ve heard. Juggling internships. Someone said he was in the M.D./Ph.D. program. So he’s at GW in a coma. There was a woman with him—her name was Amanda Souleyret. She didn’t make it.”

      He was messing with his spoon, putting it in his cup, taking it out. The fidgeting was uncharacteristic. Clearly, something had him rattled.

      “And?”

      “And...” The spoon went back in the coffee cup with a clatter. “On the surface, it looks like a domestic. He stabbed her, stabbed himself. He had the knife in his hand. The spatter patterns are consistent with an attack. It’s cut-and-dried. Only thing that saved his life is his ex-girlfriend getting drunk and deciding she wanted a reconciliatory booty call and stumbling right into the scene. If she hadn’t shown up when she did... It was a near thing. EMTs managed to get a heartbeat. He’s not doing well. His family is flying in. Probably brain-dead—they may be looking at organ donation.”

      Sam had a vivid flash from the night before, the EMT working frantically, giving CPR. “That’s terrible. But...?”

      He looked at her finally, really looked, met her eyes and smiled. “You know me too well, don’t you?”

      The food came, and they waited for the waiter to clear off before they continued the conversation. Sam ripped off a chunk of croissant, lavishly buttered it. “I know when you’re building up to something. So spit it out.”

      “The ID on the woman had a red flag. This is between us, right?”

      She crossed her heart, waved the flaky pastry at him. “You, me and my croissant.”

      “She’s blacked out in the system.”

      “What does that mean?”

      “It means I can’t do my job, because someone doesn’t want me to know who she really is, and what she really does.”

      “Oh. That is rather odd. What do you think, she’s some sort of agent? A spy? We are in D.C., after all.”

      He looked serious all of a sudden, put a hand on the back of his neck and squeezed. “That would be my guess. I don’t know what agency she’s from, whose side she’s on. What I do know is ten minutes after I got to work this morning, I was told that there’d been a meeting scheduled at State, and my presence was requested. Either I’m about to be relieved of this case, or they’re going to send me on a wild-goose chase.”

      “Fun times, my friend. You always catch the coolest cases.”

      “Which is why I was thinking, maybe if you have a look-see, I’ll have a better sense of what’s happening. I don’t know what a spy would be doing having a fight with a kid in med school. It’s probably just domestic, like I said, but...”

      “No worries, Fletch. I’m happy to help, as always.”

      Her cell phone rang. She apologized, pulled it out of her pocket. Glanced at the screen, saw the call was coming from Quantico. John Baldwin. In a way, he was her new boss.

      “Fletch, forgive me, I have to answer this.”

      He held up a hand. “No worries. Go ahead.”

      She stood and walked outside, determined not to disturb everyone around her with the call.

      “Baldwin?”

      His deep voice sounded stressed. “Sam, good morning. I hope you’re doing well.”

      “I am. Out of the house and everything, having breakfast with Fletcher. What’s up?”

      “Ah, that’s good. I’m glad you’re already with him. Has he told you about the murder near your house last night?”

      She grew wary. “He has. Plus I saw parts of it—the sirens woke me. Why?”

      “The female victim, Amanda Souleyret? She was one of ours.”

      “She was FBI?”

      “Yes. A longtime undercover agent, working...well, what she specialized in is most likely irrelevant, considering. I was told this looks like a domestic situation.”

      “That’s what Fletcher said.”

      “Such

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