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My sister hurled red wine across my dress uniform and told me I had no place in that ballroom, my father told security to get me out before I humiliated his future son-in-law, and I watched the stain slide over my ribbons, checked the countdown on my watch, and said, “You’re right. I don’t,” because in less than a minute the entire room was going to understand why I had really come.

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I had smiled back and wondered why a civilian executive knew the classified operational range of a relay package that hadn’t even been announced yet.

Agent Hayes had warned me that the most dangerous moment in any massive fraud case came right before exposure. People shredded documents. They rewrote history. They moved money. They vanished.

When the continue reading …

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