Shadow Man

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Authors: Cody McFadyen
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about privacy or rights. It’s about whether or not I can be trusted to represent the FBI. Or hold a gun.
    “I got a report yesterday. He says you still have a ways to go and are not ready to go back to work. Period. Now you show up at six in the morning and want to go to the scene of a murdered friend?” He shakes his head, vehement. “Like I said: no fucking way.”
    I draw on the cigarette, weighing it in my fingers as I watch him, and try and figure out what to say. I realize that I know why he’s here. Because of me. Because the killer wrote to me. Because he’s worried.
    “Look, sir. Annie King was my friend. Her daughter is still alive up there. She’s got no other family, her dad’s dead, and I’m her godmother. I’d be flying up there anyway. All I’m asking the Bureau for is the courtesy of a ride.”
    He draws smoke down the wrong pipe at this, and actually sputters.
    “Puh-leeeze! Nice try, but who the fuck do you think you’re talking to, S H A D O W M A N
    49
    Agent Barrett?” He stabs a finger at me. “I know you better than that, Smoky. Don’t bullshit me. Your friend is dead—and I’m sorry about that, by the way—and you want to go up and get yourself on the case. That’s the truth. And I can’t allow it. One, you’re personally involved, and that excludes you from the get-go. That’s straight from the manual. Two, you’re probably suicidal, and I can’t allow you to step in the middle of a crime scene in that condition.”
    My mouth hangs open. Then my words are filled with fury and shame. “Jesus Christ! Do I have a sign hanging from my neck that says I’ve thought about killing myself ?”
    His eyes soften at this. “Nah, no sign. It’s just that we all know we’d think about it if any of us experienced even half of what you did.” He tosses the cigarette to the pavement and doesn’t look at me when he continues speaking. “I thought about smoking on my gun, once.”
    As with Callie at lunch yesterday, I am speechless. He catches this and nods. “It’s true. I lost a partner, about twenty-five years ago, when I was on the LAPD. Lost him because I made a bad decision. I led us into a building without backup, and it was more than we could handle. He paid the price. Family man, beloved husband and father of three. It was my fault, and I thought about correcting that inequity for almost eight months.” He looks at me, and there’s no pity in his gaze. “It’s not that you have a sign hanging from your neck, Smoky. It’s that most of us think we would have blown our brains out by now if we were in your position.”
    This is the essence of AD Jones. No small talk, no dancing around things. It fits him well. You always know where you stand with him. Always. I can’t meet his eyes. I throw down my cigarette, half smoked, and grind it out with my foot. I’m doing some careful thinking about what to say next. “Sir. I appreciate what you’re saying. And you’re right, on just about every point, except one.” I look back up at him. I know he’ll want to see my eyes when I say what I say next, to gauge the truth of my words. “I have thought about it. A lot. But yesterday? Yesterday was the first day I knew for sure I wasn’t going to do it. You know what changed?” I point at my team, standing and waiting on the steps. “I went and saw those guys, for the first time since it happened. I went and saw them, and they were still there, and they accepted me. Well, the 50
    C O D Y M C F A D Y E N
    jury’s still out on James—but the point is, they didn’t pity me or make me feel like a broken piece. I can tell you, flat out, that I’m no longer suicidal. And the reason is that I stepped foot back into the Bureau.”
    He’s listening. I can tell I haven’t won him over, but I do have his attention. “Look, I’m not ready to take NCAVC Coord back over. I’m sure as hell not ready to be in any tactical situation of any kind. All I’m asking is that you let me dip

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