“Cassie, please,” she said. She gave him her best contrite expression, then said, “Honest, Patrick, I’m not trying to get you to talk to me…” She gave him a sly smile, then added, “Although I
“I want my attorney first, Cassandra.”
“That’s what I told them you’d say, but I had to ask first.” She then shrugged and added, “And, I
“Thank you,” Brad said. He squared up his shoulders and added, “My team and I found him. I was the cadet strike-team leader.”
“Wow. You’re a hero. Pretty cool. What a great story.” She turned to Patrick. “You must be very proud of him, sir.”
“I want to speak with my—”
Cassandra held up her hands. “I’m sorry, I’m sorry, Patrick — I don’t mean to pressure you or chat you up in hopes of getting you to talk to us,” she said. “I… I really did want to meet you. You’re a hero to a lot of us.” She held out a hand again, then said, “When this is over, I hope we have a chance to get together and get to know each other.” She gave him a slight smile when he shook her hand, then nodded respectfully. To Brad, she held out her hand. “Very nice to meet you, Cadet McLanahan.”
“Call me Brad,” he said quickly. Patrick blinked in surprise at that invitation but said nothing.
“Okay, I will, Brad. And you can call me Cassie.” She gave him one last smile, turned, and headed back to the break room.
“Hey, she was nice,” Brad said after Renaldo departed.
“I guess,” Patrick said noncommittally.
Brad looked at his Dad carefully. “You don’t think she’s nice? I think she’s great.”
“I really don’t know her, Brad,” Patrick said. “I’ve seen an awful lot of folks doing and saying strange things this morning, and I don’t feel like trusting anyone just yet.” He turned back toward the wall and logged back online once again, with his son guarding his back — so he didn’t notice Brad’s eyes following Cassandra Renaldo as she walked across the hangar.
Renaldo returned to the others in the break room. Chastain was finishing another cup of coffee. “Well?” he asked.
“Like I thought: he stayed lawyered up,” Renaldo said.
“Losing your touch, Renaldo?” one of the other agents quipped.
“My job is to track down extremists, Brady, not to bat my eyes and shake my ass at suspects,” Renaldo said acidly. The agent named Brady gave her a “yeah, right” expression. She turned back to Chastain. “I still don’t think he’s working with any extremist groups, sir,” she said.
“Based on?”
“Gut feeling right now,” Renaldo admitted. “Plus, he’s Patrick McLanahan. Everyone thought he was going to run for president last year.”
“David Duke ran for president too,” Chastain said. “There are plenty of extremist groups who would welcome McLanahan as their leader, even as a spiritual figurehead.”
“Like an American Osama bin Laden,” the agent named Brady interjected.
“You’re comparing Patrick McLanahan to Osama bin Laden, Brady? Are you insane?” Renaldo asked. “Sir, I don’t think we should abandon our investigation, but I just don’t feel it. He’s not the target.”
“Anyone who lawyers up right away like that sets my alarm bells off, Renaldo,” Chastain said. “The guy’s been through hell fighting off the Gardner indictment, and he could be angry at the government for sticking him in this shithole assignment. When a disaster like the attack in Reno happens, most everyone cooperates, but not McLanahan. And what in the world is he doing out in the middle of nowhere at Battle Mountain? There’s nothing out here — a few buildings, a skeleton staff, not many aircraft. Hell, the Space Defense Force doesn’t
“McLanahan wasn’t flying — Judah Andorsen was,” Renaldo said. “I can’t wait to have a chat with
“The guy has been talking with investigators since he flew home,” Chastain said. “He’s giving statements to everyone, and so far he checks out. The guy is cooperating, which is more than I can say for McLanahan.”
“Well, I don’t think McLanahan is going to talk before his lawyer shows up.”
“We’ve already heard from his damned lawyer,” Chastain said. “I can’t figure out how a D.C. law firm found out we had one of their clients in Nevada, but Washington is already ordering us to charge McLanahan or release him.”
“I thought I saw McLanahan in a corner working on a laptop with his son, but I checked and he didn’t have one,” Renaldo said. She thought for a moment, then said, “McLanahan’s son.”
“What about him?”