them. Gwen smiled and thanked them. Maggie only nodded. They started down one of the walkways. Gwen knew they had a long way to go. What would it hurt to make another attempt at finding out if Maggie was, indeed, okay?
“How did breakfast go with your mom yesterday?”
“Fine.”
Too short, too easy. This was it. She knew it.
“It was fine? Really?”
“We didn’t actually have breakfast.”
A group of law enforcement officers in green polo shirts and khakis moved to the side of the walkway and let the two women pass. Used to living in the hustle and bustle of the District, Gwen always felt the treatment she received at Quantico was over the top on the polite-and-courteous Richter scale. Maggie waited for her at the next door before they started down another hallway.
“Let me guess,” Gwen continued as though there had been no interruption, “she didn’t show up.”
“No, she showed up. Boy, did she show up. But I had to leave early. For this case, as a matter of fact.”
Gwen felt that annoying maternal instinct begin to stir—the one that only reared its ugly head when she was feeling protective of her friend. She didn’t dare ask the question for fear she’d get the answer she expected. She asked, anyway. “What do you mean, boy, did she show up? She wasn’t drunk, was she?”
“Can we talk about this later?” Maggie said, then greeted a couple of official-looking men in suits.
Gwen recognized them as other agents. Yes, this probably wasn’t the best place to air the family laundry. They turned a corner and approached another walkway, this one empty. Gwen took advantage of it.
“Yes, we can talk later. But just tell me now what you meant, okay?”
“Jesus! Did anyone ever tell you you’re a pain in the ass?”
“Of course, but you must admit, it’s one of my more endearing qualities.”
She could see Maggie smile, though she kept her attention and her eyes ahead and safely away from Gwen’s.
“She wants us to have Thanksgiving together.”
It was the last thing Gwen expected. When the silence lasted too long, she felt Maggie glance over at her.
“That was sort of my response, too,” Maggie said with another smile.
“Well, you’ve been saying for some time now that she’s trying to change.”
“Yes, her friends and her clothes and her hair. Reverend Everett seems to have helped her change quite a few things in her life, many of them for the better. But no matter what she does, she can’t change history.”
They got to the end of the walkway, and Maggie pointed to the last door on their right. “We’re here.”
Gwen wished they had more time. If she wasn’t eternally late, maybe they would have. As they entered the conference room, the man at the end of the table stood, though it took effort and he leaned on a walking cane. His gesture prompted the other men around the table to stand, as well; Agent Tully, Keith Ganza, whom Gwen recognized as the head of the FBI crime lab, and Assistant Director Cunningham. Detective Julia Racine shifted impatiently in her chair. Maggie ignored her colleagues’ clumsy attempt at courtesy and walked ahead, directly to the senator, her hand outstretched to him.
“Senator Brier, I’m Special Agent Maggie O’Dell and this is Dr. Gwen Patterson. Please excuse us for being late.”
“That’s quite all right”
He shook both their hands with a brisk but bone-crushing strength, as if making up for his disabled left leg. It had been the result of a car accident, Gwen remembered, not a war injury as the media seemed quick to point out during the last election.
“I’m so sorry for your loss, Senator,” Gwen said and immediately saw him flinch, uncomfortable with the rise of emotion her simple condolence seemed to spark.
“Thank you,” he said quietly in a tone that suddenly lacked the control and strength that his greeting had projected.
Other than the dark circles under his eyes, Senator Brier looked impeccable, dressed in an expensive navy suit, crisp white shirt and purple silk tie with an initialed gold tie bar. Hoping to put him back at ease, Gwen noticed four initials—WWJD—instead of the traditional three engraved there.
“That’s a lovely tie bar,” she said. “If you don’t mind me asking, what are the initials?”
He looked down as if needing a reminder. “Oh, no, I don’t mind at all. It was a gift from my assistant. He said it’s supposed to help me make important decisions. I’m not much of a spiritual man, but he is, and well, it was