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“Which one?”

“DEA.”

“Okay, did you contact them when they didn’t get back to you?”

“We did and found out that a DEA special ops team is going to be arriving in Baronville in about two hours.”

“So the dead guys were with them?” asked Jamison.

“That’s the thing — they’ll neither confirm nor deny that.”

“But if they’re sending a team?”

“That could mean a lot of different things. But I’ve got a buddy over in the D.C. office at DEA. I talked to him before I called you. He said this has gone right up to the DEA director’s office. Look, I can jump on an agency plane and be up there in about two hours.”

“No, you have enough on your plate.”

“And you two are supposed to be on vacation.”

“I was wondering when you were going to get to that,” said Decker.

“I tried to talk him out of it,” chimed in Jamison. “But you know Decker can’t resist a good murder.”

“Seriously, there is something going on here that I don’t like,” said Bogart.

“There are a lot of things going on here that I don’t like, principally a bunch of murdered people. And me and Alex almost ending up roasted.”

“I’m going to monitor the situation from here. When the DEA show up they’re going to want to talk to you.”

“I just don’t know how much I have to tell them. It’s pretty early yet.”

“The point is the DEA will play things close to the vest.”

“Just like all our alphabet agency friends,” noted Jamison. “Remember the DIA? Talk about zipped lips.”

Bogart said, “And if the dead men are two of theirs, they’re going to want to take the lead. There might be a turf battle.”

Decker said, “I’m just here to find the truth. Somebody else can play the politics.”

“Which is why I’m asking you, Alex, to play the counterfoil to the DEA. They’re going to come in like a tank brigade. They’re going to run right over the locals for sure. Just don’t let them do that to you. You have the right to be there. You were asked to join the investigation. They can’t force you out.”

“I’ll do my best,” she said.

“And if the dynamics on this shift, I can inject the Bureau into the situation. And we can go toe-to-toe with anybody. Good luck.”

Decker put his phone away and looked at Jamison.

He grumbled, “Turf battles and office politics. I hate that crap.”

She smiled and said, “So, Decker, are you enjoying your vacation yet?”

Chapter 19

The eight-person DEA team blew in with the intensity of a Cat Four hurricane.

It was led by Special Agent Kate Kemper. She introduced herself to Decker and the others with a handshake like a grip of iron and a face set in granite. She was in her midforties, average height, but wiry, with dirty blonde hair and the determined features of a person who had faced many obstacles in life and had overcome them all.

“I need to see the bodies,” she said firmly.

Green nodded. “They’re in the morgue. Are they yours?”

“Let me see the bodies and then we’ll talk. To the extent I can.”

Green frowned at this, but nodded. “Let’s go for a ride.”

The DEA team followed Green, Lassiter, Decker, and Jamison over to the morgue.

Inside, the drawers were opened and the metal beds rolled out.

The sheets were lifted and Kemper stared down at the first man, and then the second.

Decker watched her closely while she did this.

“Thank you,” she said to the ME. “We will be taking possession of the remains.” She turned to Green. “And we will be taking over this investigation.”

Green said, “You can work it and I can’t stop you. But you can’t stop us from working on it.”

Kemper took out her phone. “I sure as hell can. With one call.”

Green looked ready to protest when Jamison intervened.

“Look, this is going to be a long, complicated investigation with many moving parts. It seems to me that the better path is to marshal all of the assets that we have to tackle this sucker.” She looked at Kemper. “The DEA can ride point. But the FBI is already engaged and we want to see this through. Baronville has been the scene of six murders now, and to cut the local cops out of investigating the crimes seems like it could turn into a field day for the media. That’s not going to help anyone except a network’s TV ratings. And that would distract us from finding out who killed these people.”

Everyone looked at Kemper to see her reaction to this.

At first it looked like she might be put off by Jamison’s words. But then she nodded. “Ground rules: All investigations flow through me. Leads, clues, interview notes, results. DEA is the central clearinghouse.”

Decker said, “I believe that all six of the murders are connected. If they are, that means your two guys had to be involved in all of that in some way.”

“I don’t see how that could be possible,” retorted Kemper.

“I think I might,” said Decker.

“How?” she shot back.

“First, I need to know how long they had been undercover.”

“Who the hell told you they were undercover?” Kemper snapped.

“No one told me.”

Jamison said, “Then, Decker, how did you know?”

He looked around at the array of DEA agents. “The FBI makes inquiries about possibly two dead agents. All sister agencies give the FBI a negative response except for yours,” he said, indicating Kemper. “Not only did you not respond, the inquiry went right up to the top at DEA and a special team is dispatched almost immediately.”

“But the undercover part?” asked Kemper. “They could just be agents.”

“Two agents in the normal course of business go missing, you’d know right away. But two undercover cops won’t be checking in regularly. They go missing, you wouldn’t necessarily know unless they missed a check-in with their agency point of contact.”

“And how do you know so much about undercover operations?” asked Kemper suspiciously.

“Believe it or not, back when I was a cop in Ohio, I worked undercover. My naturally scruffy appearance seemed to fit right in. And I’m a big guy. Most people bought the fact that I was an enforcer looking for work. And I wouldn’t check in for days because the bad guys keep a close watch over you. It’s not like you can run off and text the cops every five minutes. You go undercover, you live the role. You’re freewheeling. You have to build your cred. You have to breathe with the scum. So what were they doing?”

“No one in this room is cleared to know that other than me and my team,” said Kemper sharply.

“Makes it pretty difficult to work together, then,” noted Decker.

“I said I was the clearinghouse, not that we would be working the investigation together.”

Decker looked at Green. “Okay, I guess we just investigate the other four murders, which are not officially part of DEA’s pissing contest, but are squarely within your jurisdiction. Then if we find out there’s overlap, we can call in the FBI to come and run point. We solve the whole case and DEA looks like the chumps they are.”

“You are way out of line, mister!” barked Kemper.

Decker eyeballed her. “No, what’s out of line is we’ve wasted so much time over absolutely nothing but bullshit because your agency’s ego is apparently more important to you than finding out who murdered two of your guys. If this is how you run your investigation, knock yourself out. But it’s not how I run mine. So, speaking on behalf of the FBI at least, screw this, and we’ll see you around.”

He walked out of the room.