Colorado Crime Scene. Cindi Myers
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Fine. He needed to be more suspicious of her, as well. “What were you doing at the races?” he asked.
“I’m a writer. I was covering the races for Road Bike Magazine.”
“So you work for the magazine?”
“No, I’m a freelancer. I write for a lot of different publications, though my specialty is bicycle racing.”
“Are you in Denver to cover the Colorado Cycling Challenge?”
“What if I am?”
And what if she was here to do more than write about the races? “I’m here for the race, too,” he said. “We’ll probably see each other again.”
“I never saw you at those other races.”
“I wasn’t there.” Before she could ask the obvious question, he said, “I saw you on surveillance video.”
She closed her eyes. Maybe she was counting to ten before she went off on him. When she opened them again, her voice was calm but chilly. “Why don’t we stop this game of twenty questions right now and you give me some straight answers. What is this about? Why were you looking at surveillance videos of me? Why were you following me just now?”
“You want the truth?”
“Of course I want the truth.”
“I wasn’t looking for you on those videos, but you stuck in my head. I remember a lot of people, but most of them don’t make any strong impression on me. But you did. I wanted to meet you and try to figure out why.” That was the truth in its simplest form. Basic attraction leads to impulsive action. His bosses would not approve.
“Seriously?” She stared at him.
He nodded. “You said you wanted the truth, and that’s it.”
“I can’t decide if that’s the worst pickup line I ever heard, or the best.” Some of the tension went out of her and she sat back, studying him.
“You have to give me points for originality,” he said.
This coaxed the beginnings of a smile from her. She had full lips, highlighted with a pink gloss. He wondered what it would feel like kissing those lips, then he pushed the thought away.
“So how does this memory thing of yours work?” she asked. “Do you just automatically remember everyone you’ve ever seen?”
“I have to focus on them for a few seconds, but yes, after that I’ll recognize them again.” As a small child, he thought everyone related to the world that way. Once he’d learned a face, he never forgot it. He remembered not only that he’d seen a person before, but where and what they’d been doing. Most of the time, it wasn’t a particularly useful talent, not like Mark’s memory for facts and written information. That talent had allowed him to breeze through school. He’d earned his PhD in physics before his twenty-fifth birthday, while Luke had been only an average student.
Then the FBI had come calling and he’d found his niche, the one place where his particular skill could make a difference.
Two men entered the bar, dressed casually in jeans and T-shirts, engrossed in conversation. He’d seen the older one earlier on the street, buying coffee from a food cart. The other one was the wrong race for any of his suspects, though he filed the man’s face away for future reference, as was his habit.
“You’re doing it now, aren’t you?” Morgan asked. “Memorizing people.”
“It’s my job,” he repeated.
“Is that why you’re here—to memorize people at the bike race?”
“Let’s just say I’m here for work, and leave it at that.”
But he knew before he said the words that she wasn’t the type to leave it. “You’re looking for someone, aren’t you? Someone else you saw on those surveillance videos.” She went very still; he wondered if she was holding her breath, waiting for his answer.
“I really can’t talk about my assignment with a civilian. It’s confidential.” Maybe he’d already said too much.
“But I’m free to make an educated guess. And since you are a federal agent, I’d guess that you’re here because of the terrorist who’s been targeting bike races.”
“Let’s just say that after the bombings in Paris and London, there’s a big law enforcement presence at this race.” But only one small group was there with his assignment—to look for people who had been present when the other bombings occurred and bring them in for questioning. Only a handful of people had shown up at both the races where bombs had detonated, all of them men. Which didn’t mean others weren’t involved. That Morgan wasn’t involved.
“There was serious discussion about canceling this race,” she said. “The organization was just getting back on its feet after the doping scandals of several years ago, and now some nut job is setting off bombs at some of the biggest races.” She leaned toward him again, her voice low. “That’s why you’re here, isn’t it? You’re looking for the bomber. Do you know who he is?”
Was she asking the question as a journalist or out of idle curiosity—or because she had a more personal interest in the answer? “I can’t say.”
“Of course, you know who he is. You said before you were here searching for someone who wasn’t me. You’re looking for the bomber.” She stared into his eyes, as if she could see into his head and decipher the image of the bomber there. “Why can’t you tell me who it is? I attend a lot of these races. Maybe I can help you find him.”
“Or maybe he’s a friend of yours and you’ll run right to him and tell him the FBI is looking for him.”
She gasped. “You don’t really think that, do you?”
“I don’t know. I don’t know anything about you but what you’ve told me.”
She tried to look wounded, but mostly she looked afraid. Because he’d hit too close to the truth? “Why does it matter so much to you?” he asked.
She stood, bumping the table and sending water from her glass sloshing onto the surface. “I have to go,” she said.
“What did I say to upset you?” He stood, but she had already brushed past him, hurrying out of the bar and into the lobby.
He started after her but stopped in the door of the bar. What would he do when he caught up to her? Clearly, she was done talking to him. And he had no reason to keep her, only a gnawing uneasiness that something wasn’t right.
Moving cautiously, keeping objects and other people between himself and Morgan, he followed her across the lobby. She stopped in front of the elevators and pulled out her phone, punching in a number. The anxiety on her face increased as she listened for a few seconds, then ended the call. She hadn’t said anything, and he had the impression whoever she’d been trying to reach hadn’t answered.
Had she been calling the bomber to warn him? His