
“But?” Kennedy asked prodding him in the direction she knew he was headed.
“Turning a man into what we’re looking for,” Hurley stopped and shook his head, “it just ain’t that easy.”
Kennedy sighed. This was the opening she was looking for. Touching Hurley’s arm she said, “I’m not saying it is, which is why you have to start trusting the rest of us to do our jobs. I have brought you a gift, Stan. You don’t realize it right now because you think a guy has to go through boot camp before he’s ready to have a run at your selection process, and normally I would agree with you, but this is different. You’re just going to have to let go of some of your control issues for a bit. What I have in that car is exactly what you’ve been looking for, Stan. No bad habits that’ll take you months to undo. None of that stiff military discipline that makes all these guys stand out like a sore thumb when we dump them into an urban setting.”
Hurley glanced at the car.
“He’s off the charts on all of our tests,” Kennedy added. “And he’s yours for the shaping.”
With a deep frown Hurley studied what little he could see of this raw lump of coal that Kennedy was about to dump in his lap.
“That is,” Kennedy said, “if you can swallow your pride and admit that the little girl you used to bounce on your knee is all grown up and just might be better at spotting talent than you.”
