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Fourth Day

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by Lisa Phillips




  Fourth Day

  NORTHWEST COUNTER-TERRORISM

  TASKFORCE BOOK 4

  Lisa Phillips

  Copyright 2019 Lisa Phillips

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Publisher Lisa Phillips

  Cover design Lisa Phillips

  Edited by www.jenwieber.com

  CONTENTS

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Epilogue

  Chapter 1

  “I need help!” Allyson huffed out a breath, then yelled again. “Medic!” The muscles in her back screamed as she hauled her teammate through the warehouse door and out into the chaos.

  Sirens. Lights. Emergency vehicles.

  With Max pressed up against her side, she could feel the warm blood seep into all three layers: her T-shirt, uniform shirt, and vest, all pulled down over her hip. “Medic!”

  Her boot caught on the uneven concrete. Several people reached out to catch both her and Max. As she righted herself, she felt her phone buzz in her pocket. All her teammates were here, so who was calling her?

  She dismissed the thought, shoved back a few strands that had escaped her ponytail and followed behind Max, now being carried by two of her teammates. ATF. Her friends and family, all rolled into one. They just didn’t know she felt that way about them. And they never would. It wasn’t that kind of team. Yeah, they bet their lives on each other, but that didn’t mean they needed to be more than work colleagues.

  “Hey.” Someone snagged her elbow. Someone with a low voice and a southern twang.

  She stopped and looked up at Carl. The motion made her rifle bump up against her, and she righted it.

  “Did you get hit?”

  She shook her head, glancing at the red stain. “All this is Max’s.”

  Carl opened his mouth to say something else, but she walked away. Allyson climbed into the ambulance and rounded the EMT to speak to the injured man.

  She crouched by his head. “You good?”

  The skin around his eyes was pinched with pain, his face flushed. “If I am, it’s thanks to you.”

  “Is she coming with?”

  She ignored the EMT’s question. Max said, “Call Lynnie.”

  “I’ll see you later.” She squeezed his shoulder and forced her body to climb back out of the ambulance. She stumbled and nearly fell to the ground, but managed to stay upright. Her phone started up, buzzing again.

  Before she could reach for it and see who it was, she got a slap on the shoulder. “Let’s go.”

  Two of the guys on her team stood around her. Carl and Finn.

  “In a minute.” She needed a minute. Couldn’t they see that? Allyson wanted nothing more than to lean forward, plant her hands on her knees. Take a second and just breathe.

  They would laugh about that for a week.

  But who could blame her? It had been a crazy last few days—ever since they got word through the wires that a high-level target had escaped federal custody. An explosion where he’d been held. Then there had been a terrorist attack at the rally.

  Multiple crime scenes, even before they’d been assigned to this breach.

  She squeezed the bridge of her nose. Her ATF team had worked the house explosion all day, then wound up here helping with the takedown. They’d gotten the suspect back—he was in custody, and she’d heard word the Northwest Counter-Terrorism Task Force had cleared the whole thing up. Including a Secret Service assistant director who had been in on it. A dirty cop.

  Allyson’s stomach rumbled. She hadn’t eaten. Hadn’t slept in probably three days. Maybe she should take a week off. Even she needed a break sometimes.

  “Are you sweating?”

  She lowered her hand and ignored their glances. “Probably just rain.”

  Finn nudged her shoulder. “That’s what they all say.”

  She grinned. They were twin idiots, frequently referring to each other as their brother from another mother. Whatever that meant.

  She looked around. Firefighters were here. Cops, local and state. There were a million FBI agents all over the place like ants. Her team was all filthy. Sweaty. She shoved at the rifle slung across her back. Time to get rid of it, clock out. Take a shower. Tomorrow she’d probably be back at the stadium, continuing the scene investigation there.

  Allyson’s group supervisor, her boss, wandered over. Special Agent Daulton handed them each a water bottle. In her pocket, her phone rang again. She twisted the cap on the bottle and downed half of it, turning to continue surveying the area.

  Across the parking lot, the Northwest Counter-Terrorism Task Force team all headed to their cars. Arms slung around each other. Laughing. Bantering, like her team did. Just not sticking around to do the cleanup here. Their man was caught, job done.

  They all looked like nothing big had happened, and now it was time for them to celebrate.

  The lone man at the back of the group turned. Slender. Tall. That weathered face and those deep-set, dark eyes. Jeans and a western-style shirt.

  Finn nudged her shoulder again. “Your boyfriend probably wants to invite you to the team dinner.”

  She glanced at him. “I will get out my stun gun.”

  Out the corner of her eye, she saw movement. Sal was actually walking over. Right now? She looked awful. She probably smelled like smoke from the stadium bomb. Or the house that exploded, the one where Yewell had been kept prisoner by the Secret Service—a whole investigation in itself. Especially considering the fact the assistant director had been working with him, betraying everything he’d sworn to uphold.

  Now Yewell was in custody. The threat had been eliminated, and she was covered in dirt from rolling around on the floor with a gunman. Not to mention the blood.

  Just because it was another day on the job didn’t mean she had to like it.

  His brows drew together. “You okay?”

  Her team milled around, pretending they weren’t listening. Allyson was pretty sure she heard one of them snort.

  Motioned to the blood. “Not mine.”

  “Is Max okay?”

  She pointed at the ambulance, driving out of the parking lot. “He asked me to call his wife.”

  His mouth shifted. That was all he gave her.

  She shrugged. “You were the one undercover in a terrorist organization.”

  Daulton took a couple of steps closer. “Alvarez, we’ll need your statement, given your involvement in this.” He looked at his tablet. “Plus a statement from a ‘Drew North’.”

  Allyson turned to her boss. “Why are we point on this?” There were a million FBI agents here, and her team was better dealing with the aftermath of the explosion. As the ATF, it was kind of their thing, actually.

  Alvarez said, “Drew left already.”

  Her supervisor sighed.

  “I’ll hit your office first thing in the morning and lay it all out for you.”

  “Copy tha
t.”

  “Thanks for your help on this.”

  Allyson glanced between them. “Help?”

  “We got our result,” Daulton said with a shrug.

  “Result?”

  Sal nodded. “Tell your undercover I appreciate his help getting into Yewell’s operation.”

  Daulton nodded, then walked away.

  She looked at her teammates who’d taken a couple more steps but were obviously still listening to everything. Nosy, or trying to protect her?

  “So…” she started. “I’m gonna get back to work now.” She folded her arms. “Plenty of stuff still to do.”

  Sal’s teammates hadn’t left yet, but they seemed to be getting impatient. He didn’t make a move to leave. Just frowned some more and continued to stare at her like they weren’t all waiting for him.

  “What?”

  He sighed.

  Someone called out, “Let’s go, Sanchez.”

  She glanced over her shoulder. “Be there in a second.”

  They were trying to protect her. It seemed they didn’t think much of Sal, even after what happened at the Seattle federal courthouse. The scar on her arm itched, but she didn’t touch it. Did his itch sometimes? It had been two years. Maybe it shouldn’t still be bothering her.

  “Deputy Alvarez!” Victoria strode over on her heels. She looked like she’d just stepped out of a board meeting.

  Allyson said, “Don’t get in trouble on account of me.” Her phone rang again, so she pulled it out. She didn’t recognize the number.

  Sal lifted one finger to Victoria, then turned back to Allyson. “I’ll see you tomorrow?”

  “I may have to go to the house you guys blew up and take another look. Or the stadium.” She wasn’t about to tell him she liked to double check and make sure she hadn’t missed anything. “I don’t know where I’ll be.”

  He frowned. “What house we blew up?”

  “The house where Yewell was being protected by the Secret Service.”

  “At the behest of the current administration.”

  She shrugged. “Doesn’t matter who’s sitting in the chair, we all still follow whatever orders we’re given.”

  “Well, yeah.”

  Allyson was a little more “boots on the ground” than that, which was why she was ATF and hadn’t applied to the Secret Service. And she had thought Sal was as well. After all, instead of investigating with his team, he’d gone undercover.

  “Copy that.” It was her boss.

  She turned to see what was going on.

  “Load up.” He motioned for all of them to get rolling. “Someone just drove a truck into the side of a gun store. We’ve gotta roll.”

  . . .

  She looked completely exhausted. Sal couldn’t bring himself to watch her respond to another call out, especially while he headed to a restaurant with the rest of his team. Not when the reason she was so wrung out was because they’d been dealing with his task force’s fallout for days.

  He said, “I’ll go with you.” Even though he was exhausted, his head still full of everything that had happened with Yewell.

  “Aren’t you guys going somewhere to celebrate?”

  He shook his head. “I’m not hungry and you’re a man down, so I’ll tag along.” Sounded good out loud, not just in his head. Thankfully.

  The ATF didn’t need a complete team just to respond to a robbery, but he still waved off his own team to leave.

  Victoria frowned. He turned back to Allyson and took a few steps with her.

  As he walked, he decided it might be worth being part of this call out as a marshal. Victoria had handed him back his badge and gun as soon as the operation had been over. No way was he going to stay out of a gun store robber case when it could’ve been done by someone he’d met before. It might be a case the marshals would eventually find themselves working on.

  Keep trying to convince yourself.

  The fact was, he’d nearly died today. One of her teammates had been shot. He pretty much just needed to face the fact he was only going because he wanted to spend more time with Allyson.

  His teammates all knew what he was doing. When he glanced over, this was confirmed. Dakota wasn’t happy. Haley was confused. Their significant others would reassure them it was all good. Right now Talia and Mason were only concerned with each other, which was fine considering the past few days. Their lives had been turned upside down.

  Another of his teammates in a relationship.

  Even Victoria had someone to worry about. Welvern had been shot and was in the hospital. His recovery from being hit by a rifle round would be long.

  The team’s vehicles pulled away from the curb. It almost felt easier to watch them go than it would’ve been to even out the numbers at dinner. Especially knowing he was about to leave them anyway.

  Could he get on a task force with the ATF? That might be fun. But hearing more about small town life from Drew had made him wonder about being a sheriff.

  Going home.

  Back to those open skies. Snowcapped peaks. If he returned to Wyoming, he could find a town where they would take a US Marshal as a sheriff. Or vote him in the normal way. Somewhere without the memory of his father’s final breath as a weight against his chest.

  Despite that thought, the yearning for his mountain was there.

  Allyson climbed into the back of an SUV and left the door open. He got in, and they were driven to the gun store. He closed his eyes because neither of them had the mental energy for small talk right now. Not when everything they said to each other had a level of emotional impact he still hadn’t figured out. The why, or the what—as in, what to do with these pent-up feelings.

  He needed to decide what he was going to do next, given this life was making him seriously antsy. It happened every few years. Usually he just asked for a transfer. This had been the longest stretch working with one team.

  Was it time to move on?

  When they pulled up at the gun store, he opened his eyes. And immediately gaped. A huge rental truck had smashed into the side of the wall.

  Doors were opened. Slammed. As a group they walked to the uniformed officers on scene.

  Allyson’s boss, her group supervisor, was a former NYPD detective who’d come over to the federal side years ago. He spoke with the officer. Sal moved closer to hear and felt Allyson squeeze in beside him.

  “…called the rental company.”

  She glanced over and met his gaze.

  Sal mouthed, You okay?

  She nodded. You?

  He scrunched up his nose, unsure how to answer that. Their relationship—if he could even call it that—had always been complicated. It had developed into maybe becoming something a couple of years ago. Right before the situation they were both working at the courthouse erupted. Now he had nothing to show for it but a bunch of scars.

  “The truck was supposed to be returned tonight at midnight, according to the company’s computer.”

  Sal glanced at the cop. “So they decided to do one last job before they returned it?”

  Allyson leaned around her boss and told the officer, “They usually steal the keys out of the return box and drive the truck off the rental lot. Use it in one job, grab as many guns as they can, and race away in a secondary vehicle.”

  He figured she also said it for his benefit.

  The officer took in the blood all down Allyson’s side.

  Sal moved the conversation forward. “Have there been any other similar robberies in the area recently?”

  One of the ATF agents—he was pretty sure the guy’s name was Carl—chuckled. “You almost sound like a real cop, Deputy.”

  Sal shot him a look that made him laugh. All of them knew what marshals did. They’d worked together before, but the friendly rivalry was part of it. Gone were the days of agency secrets and backbiting. 9/11 had changed more than just TSA policy and federal policing, it had changed the whole culture of law enforcement. Refusing to be part of the team these days g
ot innocent people killed, and no one wanted that.

  The cop walked them through the scene.

  “You think they left something behind?”

  Allyson shrugged. “We’ll look at the surveillance video.”

  They headed for the office, and the employee there showed them a grainy image of three guys with hooded sweatshirts hauling out armfuls of guns and boxes of ammo. It could have been someone he knew. There was also literally no way to tell.

  One of Allyson’s teammates wandered in and peered at the screen. “Military trained.”

  Sal said, “Yep.”

  The employee shifted in his seat. “You can tell that?”

  Allyson said, “Look at the way he holds them.”

  Sal said, “Can we have this enhanced and get more from it?”

  Both Allyson and her teammate reacted like that was a dumb question.

  “Sure,” the employee said. “If it was high-quality digital footage. It’s a surveillance video. Blurry’s all you’re gonna get.”

  Sal was pretty sure Talia could work with that, and that she’d done so in the past. Was he going to call her right now, though? She’d been grazed by a bullet today. He decided to let her have her evening.

  She was happy, like the rest of the team. While they moved on, Sal would be right here, unsure of what to do. Nothing in his life had progressed, not for years. Probably not since his father died. It was like the breath of his life had ceased at the same time, laying in that damp grass on the side of a mountain watching the sunrise.

  Allyson and her teammate headed out, so he followed back to the main part of the store. The whole place was disheveled. Half empty shelves, and destruction. The cab of the rental truck was inside the store, drywall dust and debris everywhere.

  Allyson stood to the side, holding her cell phone to her ear. The rest of the agents stood in a huddle in conversation with Daulton, their supervisor, who broke off when he saw Sal approach.

  Allyson said, “Slow down.”

  He looked over. She’d gone pale and was almost crying. Sal started toward her before he even thought about it.

  “Tell me where you are. I’ll come and get you.”

 

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