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Chapter 65 - CHAPTER 64

WHILE WATCHING THE INTERVIEW, Floyd and Tyson were talking:

— Tell him to stop it, man! — Tyson said. — This woman doesn't know anything...

— I'm starting to agree. — Floyd Kenagan replied, vaguely touched.

— And she's been working here for many years, an exemplary employee, it wasn't her, it can't be... — Tyson said, huffing his dissatisfaction.

GREGORY LEFT THE ROOM to breathe for a while before returning to the interrogation, he wanted to give the woman a chance to compose herself. Seeing him, Floyd then said:

— Agent Evans, I trust your work, but this woman shows no sign of guilt.

— I have to believe so — he replied. — The control questions are generating much greater reactions, she really doesn't know what we're talking about.

— Release her.

Shaking his head, Greg thought for a moment. He didn't want to let an opportunity to find the culprit go by through mere negligence. After thinking about it, he replied:

— Give me one more chance, there's still something I need to find out.

— What do you want to know? — Floyd Kenagan asked, frowning his smooth forehead.

— There's a small chance, and this is on the day of such an important meeting like this, when security is more intense, that the person who planted the bugs hid them somewhere to remove later, when the siege is less tight.

— Even with such contradictory results, we still can't declare her guilty.

— Much less innocent, if you ask me, which still leaves her under suspicion. Thinking about this possibility, I'd like to investigate the place where she keeps her belongings and work equipment.

— White House security isn't something sporadic, agent. — Tyson replied, offended and weakened.

— I'm not questioning that. — Gregory Evans told him.

— Every day we remember who we're guarding, there's not a single moment that there's no surveillance on everything and everyone. — Tyson finished, looking at him.

— No offense, Mr. Tyson, but every system has a flaw. And I believe that every flaw could be called by one name: the human factor.

— Every corridor in this building is protected by the best equipment ever made; no one enters armed or carrying any suspicious instrument.

— But you still have employees.

— Mr. Tyson, — said Floyd Kenagan, — we need to analyze all possibilities. If something is unlikely, it needs to be our highest suspicion.

Tyson Galloway was very upset, but he was unable to use new arguments. He answered them with some resentment:

— Let's do this right away.

— It's just a possibility, but I want to be sure. — said Gregory Evans.