I guess he’s just naturally charming that way, she thought.
She found herself relieved at the thought that she’d jumped to conclusions, and he’d never been flirting with her after all.
He was a nice guy, and she looked forward to getting to know him better. In fact, she felt pretty sure that John and Ryan would like each other. Maybe they could all get together sometime soon.
When the interns finished their meals, Hoke Gilmer rounded them up and took them down a few floors to a large locker room that was to be their headquarters for the ten-week term. A younger agent who was assisting Gilmer assigned each of the interns a locker. Then all the interns sat down at the tables and chairs in the middle of the room, and the younger agent started handing out cell phones.
Gilmer explained, “It’ll soon be the twenty-first century, and the FBI doesn’t like to be behind the latest technology. We won’t be passing out pagers this year. Some of you may have cell phones already, but we want you to have a separate one for FBI use. You’ll find instructions in your orientation packet.”
Then Gilmer laughed as he added, “I hope you’ll have an easier time learning to use these than I did.”
Some of the interns laughed as well as they claimed their new toys.
Riley’s phone felt oddly small in her hand. She was used to larger house phones and had never used a cell phone before. Although she’d used computers at Lanton, and some of her friends there had cell phones, she still didn’t own one. Ryan already had both a computer and a cell phone, and he sometimes teased Riley about her old-fashioned ways.
She hadn’t liked that very much. The truth was, the only reason she didn’t already have a computer or a cell phone yet was because she couldn’t afford it.
This one looked almost exactly like Ryan’s—very simple, with a small screen for text messages, a number pad, and just three or four other buttons. Still, it felt strange to realize she didn’t yet know how to even make an ordinary phone call with it. She knew that it was also going to feel strange to be reachable by phone all the time, no matter where she happened to be.
She reminded herself …
I’m starting a whole new life.
Riley noticed that a group of official-looking people, most of them men, had just filed into the locker room.
Gilmer said, “Each of you will be shadowing an experienced special agent during your weeks here. They’ll start off by teaching you their own specialties—analyzing crime data, forensics work, computer lab work, and what have you. We’ll introduce you to them now, and they’ll take things from here.”
As the younger agent matched up each of the interns with their supervising agent, Riley soon realized …
There’s one less agent than interns.
Sure enough, after the interns went away with their mentors, Riley found herself without a mentor of her own. She looked at Gilmer with perplexity.
Gilmer smiled slightly and said, “You’ll find the agent you’ll be shadowing down the hall in room nineteen.”
Feeling a little unsettled, Riley left the locker room and walked down the hall until she found the right room. She opened the door and saw that a short, barrel-chested, middle-aged man was sitting on a table.
Riley gasped aloud as she recognized him.
It was Special Agent Jake Crivaro—the agent she’d worked with back in Lanton, and who had saved her life.
CHAPTER THREE
Riley smiled when she recognized Special Agent Jake Crivaro. She had spent her morning among strangers and she was especially glad to see this familiar face.
I guess I shouldn’t be surprised, she thought.
After all, she remembered what he’d told her back in Lanton, when he’d handed her papers for the Honors Program …
“I’m eligible for retirement, but I might stay on for a while to help someone like you get started.”
He must have specifically requested to be Riley’s mentor for her internship.
But Riley’s smile quickly faded when she realized …
He isn’t smiling back.
In fact, Agent Crivaro didn’t look the least bit happy to see her.
Still sitting on the table, he crossed his arms and nodded toward a nondescript but amiable-looking man in his twenties who was standing nearby. Crivaro said …
“Riley Sweeney, I want you to meet Special Agent Mark McCune, from right here in DC. He’s my partner on a case I’m working on today.”
“Pleased to meet you,” Agent McCune said with a smile.
“Likewise,” Riley said.
McCune seemed markedly more friendly than Crivaro did.
Crivaro stood up from the table. “Consider yourself lucky, Sweeney. While the other interns are stuck indoors learning how to use filing cabinets and paper clips, you’ll be heading right out into the field. I just came up here from Quantico to work on a drug case. You’ll be joining Agent McCune and me—we’re headed to the scene right now.”
Agent Crivaro strode out of the room.
As Riley and Agent McCune followed him, Riley thought …
He called me “Sweeney.”
Back in Lanton, she’d gotten used to him calling her “Riley.”
Riley whispered to McCune, “Is Agent Crivaro upset about something?”
McCune shrugged and whispered back, “I was hoping you could tell me. This is my first day working with him, but I hear you already got to work on a case with him. They say he was pretty impressed by you. He’s got a reputation for being kind of brusque. His last partner got fired, you know.”
Riley almost said …
Actually, I didn’t know.
She’d never heard Crivaro mention a partner back in Lanton.
Although Crivaro had been tough, she’d never thought of him as “brusque.” In fact, she’d come to think of him as a kindly father figure—quite unlike her actual father.
Riley and McCune followed Crivaro to a car in the FBI building’s parking level. Nobody spoke as Crivaro drove them out of the building and continued north through the streets of DC.
Riley began to wonder whether Crivaro was ever going to explain what they were supposed to do whenever they got wherever they were going.
They eventually reached a seedy-looking neighborhood. The streets were lined with row houses that looked to Riley like they must have once been pleasant homes but had become awfully rundown.
Still driving, Agent Crivaro finally spoke to her.