Page 5 of Echo: Line

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"Classified." Patterson's tone makes it clear that line of questioning ends there.

"And Echo Ridge's motive? What's driving them?" I pull out my notebook, habits from years of profiling kicking in despite my exhaustion. "Ideological? Financial? Personal vendetta against the intelligence community?"

"That's what you're going to find out." Patterson hands me a folder. Physical files, which means this is sensitive enough they don't want digital trails. "Everything we have on Mercer and known associates. Your assignment is straightforward—locate him, confirm identity, call in the tactical team for arrest. Do not engage. He's too dangerous for solo apprehension."

I flip open the folder. Military records. Psychological evaluations. After-action reports. The man in these pages is exemplary until Syria. Commendations. Successful operations. Then everything changes. Refuses a direct order. Gets burned. Disappears into the Montana wilderness.

"What was the order he refused?" I ask, reading between the lines of the heavily redacted incident report.

"Classified."

"Patterson, if I'm profiling him, I need to understand his breaking point. What made a decorated Delta operator disobey a direct order?"

"The classification came from above my level, Ward. I don't know, and even if I did, I couldn't tell you." He leans forward,hands flat on the table. "This comes from the Director. You don't question, you execute. Understood?"

The words land like a slap. Eight years with the Bureau, and I've earned enough trust to ask questions. Or I thought I had. Politics, usually. And politics in federal law enforcement means someone powerful wants a specific outcome regardless of what the facts say.

"Understood," I say, because arguing won't change anything. "Where do we think he is?"

"Intel puts him in the Jackson Hole area. Wyoming. We have reports of a suspected sighting near a remote cabin in the Teton range." Patterson pulls up a map. "Isolated location, limited access, perfect for someone trying to stay off grid."

Mountainous terrain. Lots of places to hide. Lots of places to set up defensive positions if Mercer is as tactically proficient as his record suggests.

"When do I leave?"

"Wheels-up in two hours. Local field office is coordinating logistics. You'll have air support and a tactical team on standby." Patterson's expression doesn't soften. "This is priority from the Director. Non-negotiable."

"Understood." The exhaustion doesn't matter. Neither does the jet lag. When the Director says jump, you don't ask how high—you're already in the air.

The briefing ends. I gather the file and head for the door, already mentally cataloging everything I need to do in the next ninety minutes. Email my HOA about extending my trip. Pack cold weather gear. Review the complete file. Maybe grab actual food instead of airport vending machine snacks.

My phone buzzes. Email from Patterson with the travel itinerary and tactical team roster. I scan it walking to my car, the morning sun too bright after the fluorescent hell of the conference room.

The angles are wrong. I pause at my car door, pulling up the surveillance images on my phone. Zoom in on the figure pursuing another operative. The movement is textbook pursuit tactics. Weapon discipline. Cover usage. Exactly what you'd expect from someone with Mercer's training.

But he's not moving to eliminate. He's moving to contain. To capture, not kill.

Maybe the jet lag is worse than I thought. Maybe I'm seeing patterns that aren't there because I'm looking for reasons to question orders I don't like. Or maybe my profiler instincts are telling me what the evidence won't—that Mercer's not the domestic terrorist the Director wants him to be.

The drive back to my condo takes close to an hour in heavy traffic. I use the time to mentally review the briefing. Mercer's military record showed high discipline, strong moral compass, protective of civilians. His psychological evaluations indicated no anti-government ideology or extremist tendencies.

Then Syria happened, and everything changed. But the change wasn't radicalization according to the file. It was disillusionment. The psych eval done after his discharge noted "deep distrust of command authority" and "moral injury consistent with ethical violations in chain of command."

That's not a terrorist. That's a soldier who saw something that broke his faith in the system.

My condo is exactly as I left it two weeks ago—minimalist, functional, decorated with exactly zero personal touches because I'm never here long enough to make it matter. I throw clothes into a duffel, add the cold weather gear I keep for field assignments.

I catch sight of myself in the bathroom mirror while grabbing toiletries. Dark circles under my eyes. Hair that's given up on professional and settled for just clean. The exhaustion sits in mybones, but underneath it is determination. Purpose. The reason I do this work.

I became FBI for reasons that seemed simple at sixteen. My father was NYPD. Good cop for fifteen years. Then not good. Then dirty. Then in prison while my mother cried and I pretended I didn't hear her through the bedroom wall.

Detective Michael Ward. Decorated. Respected. The cop who knew everyone in the neighborhood, who broke up domestic disputes without drawing his weapon, who kept the peace through presence and relationships rather than force. I grew up believing he was a hero. Watched him pin on his shield every morning like it was sacred. Like it meant more than metal and authority.

I was fourteen when the first whisper reached me. Overheard conversation at a friend's house, her father talking low to her mother about "Detective Ward's arrangement with the Castellano family." I didn't understand then. Told myself they were wrong, that people spread rumors about cops because they were jealous or bitter.

But the whispers got louder. More frequent. Kids at school whose parents knew things, whose older siblings ran with the wrong crowds, started looking at me differently. Not with fear. With knowing.

He was supposed to be a hero. Instead, he took money from drug dealers. Looked the other way when gang violence spilled into our neighborhood. Didn't just ignore crimes—actively protected the people committing them. For a price.