by CJ Lyons
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Dear Reader,
Every book published is born from a community. Black Sheep is special because in addition to our normal team, involving the wonderful folks at St. Martin’s and my agent, Barbara Poelle, two people volunteered their real-life names for characters in Caitlyn’s world as part of charity fundraising efforts. I’d like to thank Mike LaSovage and Mary Agnes Garman for their generosity.
Caitlyn’s journey takes her to places both real and fictional. While Cherokee, North Carolina, is real, Evergreen, Balsam County, and the VistaView Casino are entirely fictional. The Cherokee Nation’s court case involving the freedmen is quite real and is still in the news today. Butner Federal Correctional Institution is also real, and I’d like to thank Lee Lofland for his virtual tour of their facilities. All embellishments are mine.
One of the best parts of my job is doing the hands-on research. For Black Sheep that included participating in hostage situations and building searches while I visited Quantico and the FBI Academy. If you are interested in the FBI’s hierarchy or their investigation techniques, you can download a pdf from my website: http://cjlyons.net/wp-content/uploads/FBI-Terms-and-Resources.pdf. It includes a glossary of law enforcement terms and acronyms as well as a variety of resources I used while creating Black Sheep.
As always, thanks for reading!
CJ
CONTENTS
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Author’s Letter
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
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Don’t miss Hollow Bones
Also by CJ Lyons
Praise for Blind Faith
About the Author
Copyright
CHAPTER ONE
“Drop the gun!” Caitlyn Tierney shouted to the FBI agent.
The agent hesitated, chin bobbing as she tried to decide the correct move to make. Tough choice since Caitlyn held the agent’s male partner against her chest as a shield. She’d grabbed his weapon and now used his greater height as an advantage. The only portion of Caitlyn’s five-six frame visible to the female agent was Caitlyn’s hand holding the male agent’s own weapon to his head.
The female agent held her weapon steady, aiming at her partner and Caitlyn behind him. Fat lot of good that was going to do her, but it was standard procedure.
Caitlyn braced herself against the larger agent. He smelled minty fresh, as if he’d chewed gum or used mouthwash before following his partner into this squalid dump of an apartment. Sweat trickled down from his hairline, beading at the back of his collar. His hair had been freshly trimmed; his skin still held tiny nicks from the razor.
She glanced around. He was her only cover. The rest of the apartment was bare of furniture except for a sagging tweed couch shoved against the far wall and a coffee table made of cheap two-by-fours. Back to the wall, Caitlyn’s only exit was the door to the right of the female agent across from her.
“Let’s talk about this.” The female agent’s voice quavered, but her aim didn’t falter. “Let him go and we’ll talk.”
“Shut up or I shoot him!” Caitlyn responded, effectively removing the agent’s best weapon: her command authority. Hard to negotiate or intimidate when you can’t speak. “Drop your gun. Now!”
Make a choice, make a choice, Caitlyn thought. The overhead ceiling fan swooshed, barely stirring the air with its listless movements. The place stank of mold and sweat, of windows that didn’t open, shag carpet decades out of date, and too many years of too many people making too many bad decisions. The FBI agent was just one more, standing in the weak light of a naked sixty-watt bulb, her mind stuttering through a minefield of options.
Don’t make me do it. Choose. Just choose.
The agent didn’t choose. Her aim faltered, dropped down, then raised halfway up in indecision.
Caitlyn shot her in the forehead, followed by a double tap to the chest.
Then Caitlyn touched the muzzle of her weapon to the male agent’s temple. “Bang. You’re dead.”
* * *
“Tierney!” The scenario leader yelled her name from his observation post. “What the hell you doing?”
Trying to teach them how to stay alive in the real world, Caitlyn thought. She’d been where these New Agents in Training were: forced to choose between following procedure and taking a chance on her instincts.
Six months ago when she’d had a gun to her head and another pointed at her partner, Caitlyn surrendered her weapon. If she hadn’t, she’d be dead—and so would five hundred innocent civilians. But she’d done it consciously, knowing her Glock wasn’t her only weapon. That it wasn’t even her best weapon.
These NATs needed to learn to think like that. It might save their lives someday.
The scenario leader, Mike LaSovage, one of the FBI Hostage Rescue Team members, clomped over to her, aiming his clipboard as if it were a weapon. “Supervisory Special Agent Tierney, a word, please.”
Caitlyn removed her helmet and rubbed her right temple, lifting her short red hair, matted by the training gear, away from the itchy scar. She glanced at the female NAT she’d shot. The woman trembled. Her hand touched her face shield, coming away with neon green paint on her fingers—the color of Caitlyn’s Simunition.
“She needed to make a decision,” Caitlyn muttered, wiping her own sweaty palms against her black cargo pants. Simulation or not, the scenario hit close to home, awakening memories as well as a surge of adrenaline.
“The purpose of this exercise is to allow agents in training a chance to follow proper arrest procedure, not to throw them into a hostage negotiation.” LaSovage turned so his back was to the NATs. Didn’t want them to see Mommy and Daddy fighting. The Bureau was above that. Follow the bible—a four-inch binder crammed full of rules, regulations, and standard operating procedures—and you’d go home at night, was the catechism the kids were meant to learn from these exercises.
Despite the fact that a few were close to Caitlyn’s age, they were just kids. No idea what the real world held for them. Decisions made in a heartbeat, bullets fired that could never be unfired, good people lost because of your actions—or inaction.
“You saw the way they entered,” Caitlyn argued, feeling older than her thirty-five years as she spied the crushed expressions on the NATs’ faces. Nine years carrying a loaded weapon, almost dying twice, killing a man in close-quarters combat, watching a good man sacrifice his l
ife to save hers: Permanent scars crisscrossed her body and her soul. She couldn’t remember ever being as young as these new agents. “He was more concerned about following her lead than the threat I posed. Totally opened his weapon side to me. How could I resist? No real suspect would have.”
LaSovage looked over his shoulder to where the two dead agents huddled together commiserating and, hopefully, dissecting their mistakes. “It was a sloppy entrance. But this is their first exercise outside of FATS video training. First real-life scenario. You didn’t need to push it that far.”
“I’ll bet they don’t make the same mistakes next time.”
He grimaced in agreement. “Maybe. But let’s play the rest of these by the book, okay?”
Caitlyn had never done “by the book” well. Used to be she could fake her way through it, pretend her actions were guided by rules and regulations, but after returning from an extended medical leave for emergency brain surgery that saved her life, she’d given up the pretense. Which was why the powers-that-be had left her in limbo, on temporary assignment here at Quantico.
“You doing okay?” LaSovage asked, trying not to stare at her hair, still not fully grown back after her operation. “Can’t be easy after—”
“I’m fine.” How many times a day did she have to tell people that? Or pretend she didn’t notice their stares as she walked through the halls at the academy.
Six months ago she’d have embraced the idea of continuing on as a permanent instructor—she enjoyed teaching and loved challenging her students. But to be stranded here as temporary duty, merely so she could remain under the scrutiny of the bosses without becoming a PR risk? Suddenly her office in Jefferson Hall felt as cramped as a prison cell.
Her last case had earned her an unofficial reprimand from the Office of Professional Responsibility and an official, but grudgingly given, commendation for uncovering corruption in the FBI’s higher ranks, the U.S. Marshal Service, and even the sacrosanct FBI National Laboratory.
The brass would have preferred if she’d taken their offer of a medical pension and left the Bureau quietly, but no way was she going to let them bully her into quitting. Given that she knew of several embarrassing skeletons hidden in the FBI’s closet, they couldn’t fire her, not without risking another blot on the Bureau’s public image.
Which left Caitlyn and her career in limbo.
“You sure?” LaSovage persisted. “We could grab a beer or something after we’re done here. If you want to talk.”
His glance dropped to the top part of the scar that ran vertically up her chest, visible above her tactical vest. The rest of the scar formed a letter K with the crossbars slashing above and below her left breast. If it weren’t for her fair skin the scars would have been less noticeable, but after six months they were still reddish and she’d given up trying to hide beneath turtlenecks. Just like her attitude, they were now part of her, take it or leave it.
His concern seemed more genuine than the morbid curiosity most of her colleagues had exhibited. Interesting since, although LaSovage was a four-year veteran of the Hostage Rescue Team, the FBI’s vaunted equivalent to an elite SWAT unit, he’d never actually had to kill anyone.
During the course of their careers it was rare for FBI agents to draw their weapons outside the range. Which made Caitlyn, so young, yet already almost dying a violent death twice and killing a man up close and personal, a distinct anomaly. She heard the whispers: Was she reckless? Stupid? Or just plain unlucky?
She wished she had an answer. “Thanks, but I need to be somewhere tonight,” she told LaSovage. “Maybe next time.”
He nodded, gave her an uncertain smile as if wondering if she was trying to protect him or herself, then turned to usher the next group into position.
They finished out the remaining training for the day, and she returned to her office in Jefferson Hall to grab her laptop and car keys. She was surprised when the female agent in training from the earlier scenario appeared at her doorway, now wearing clean regulation khakis and a blue polo shirt.
“What would you have done?” the NAT blurted out, ignoring the strict protocol that usually guided NATs’ interactions with their instructors. Belatedly she added, “Ma’am.”
“What’s your name?” Caitlyn took the seat behind her desk, but left the NAT standing at attention. This group was new, hadn’t taken any of her classes yet, so she didn’t know them personally; she’d merely been playing a bad guy in today’s scenarios to help with evaluations.
“Garman, ma’am. Mary Agnes Garman.”
Mary Agnes? Sounded like a nun’s name. She was only a year or two younger than Caitlyn, in good shape but not as fit as the recruits coming from the military or law enforcement, with an hourglass figure that did not fit her name. Although who knew what nuns looked like under those habits?
Caitlyn filled her mind with an image of a mother superior holding a compass—a mnemonic technique she’d cultivated after her brain trauma made remembering things like names a struggle. Not that she’d ever share that secret with anyone.
“What did you see as your options, Garman?”
Mary Agnes hesitated, not in indecision as she had earlier, but in thought. “You didn’t give me any.”
“Exactly. What’s wrong with that statement?”
Her rigid posture sagged. Caitlyn nodded to the chair across from her, and Mary Agnes slumped into it. “I gave you the power. But—” She scowled in thought, her gaze drifting past Caitlyn to the window, already dark with the early-January sunset. “But I still had no options.”
“Tunnel vision. The adrenaline makes you focus on what’s in front of you, the direct threat. It does that to your mind as well. But there are always possibilities. Don’t ever forget that.”
“I could have lowered my weapon, but regulations—”
“Do the bad guys play by the rules?”
“No, but—”
“In here”—Caitlyn gestured to the cement-block walls surrounding them—“you have to know the rules, live by them. And that’s not a bad thing. Nine times out of ten they’ll save your butt.”
“And the tenth time?”
“Look for options. You never considered any other options today. Instead you hesitated, couldn’t commit to a course.”
“I froze. I got my partner killed.” The remorse and fear in Mary Agnes’s voice was real. Good. Better she learn the hard lessons now before the gun pointed at her shot something more lethal than a paintball.
“You did. Next time you won’t.”
“What would you have done?”
“You still controlled the exit.”
“It was too far away.”
Caitlyn shook her head. “No. It was only three steps to your right. Adrenaline. It distorts everything. Good thing is, the bad guys are affected as well, have the same limitations.”
“I could never abandon my partner.” Her voice made it sound like sacrilege, reinforcing the mother superior image in Caitlyn’s mind. As if what Caitlyn suggested was as bad as betraying a family member. Which, in a sense, it was. Unless you imagined past the knee-jerk blind obedience to ethics and codes of conduct.
“Yes. You could. Three steps and you would have been behind cover, able to observe, negotiate, call for backup, or shoot if the hostage taker took further action.”
“Further action. You mean kill my partner.”
Caitlyn stood. Stretched her arms wide. “Look at me, Garman. I’m all of five-six, can bench one thirty, maybe one fifty on a good day. What good would a six-foot, two-hundred-pound deadweight do me?”
“You wouldn’t have shot him?”
“Not unless he was no longer useful. And that would only happen if—” She arched an eyebrow, waiting for Mary Agnes to put the pieces together.
It took a moment, but the frown faded as the answers fell into place for the agent in training. “I blocked your escape. If I was out of the picture, dead, you could make a run for it. By standing there, I gave you more reason
to kill us both.”
“Exactly. You were thinking about what you wanted, but you should have been focused on what the hostage taker wanted. Embrace the possibilities, decide how you can control the outcome.”
Mary Agnes took a deep breath, chin bobbing in agreement. She stood with renewed energy. “Thank you, Supervisory Special Agent Tierney. You gave me a lot to think about.”
Caitlyn smiled, remembered why she enjoyed teaching so much. “No problem, Garman. Have a good night.”
Mary Agnes headed back to the dormitory while Caitlyn took the steps down to the lobby, waved to the guard there, and jogged through the cold, her coat flapping open, to her Subaru Impreza WRX parked in front of Jefferson Hall. A thin coating of frost crackled across the Subaru’s windshield, but she didn’t waste time scraping it clear. She still had thirty-six miles to drive to Paul’s place in DC.
She took back roads, avoiding 95 and the constant snarl of traffic on the interstate. Usually she enjoyed the hour-long drive. It provided needed breathing space.
As extroverted as she was introverted, Paul often joked that if it weren’t for him, she’d be living the life of a hermit. She never let him know how close to the truth that was. She’d yet to invite him to her place in Manassas for a night, was more than willing to let him think it was because as a neuroradiologist he had to stay close to GW.
In reality, she simply didn’t do entertaining. Or strangers in her space. So much easier to make the drive, enjoy Paul’s company, and leave when she wanted. She liked the freedom, needed the control—another thing Paul teased her about.
Only lately he wasn’t teasing. He was hinting. Emptying a dresser drawer and shelf in the bathroom for her. Talking about how much her drive took away from the time they had together.
He was ready to settle down. With her. For the long term. And it scared the shit out of her. Caitlyn didn’t do relationships, never had. She did longer-than-average flings that ended in shouting matches, bruised egos, guys storming away, and her sighing in relief at another bullet dodged.
Paul didn’t shout. He wasn’t an alpha male, not like her usual guys, and his ego didn’t bruise. He cuddled. Comforted. And actually enjoyed it.