Chasing the White Lion James Hannibal (essential reading TXT) đ
- Author: James Hannibal
Book online «Chasing the White Lion James Hannibal (essential reading TXT) đ». Author James Hannibal
âLook. Jordanâs harsh. But an abrasive boss isnât necessarily a traitor. I learned that lesson with you six months ago. Iâd hate to make the same mistake twice.â
Brennan sighed and steepled his fingers over his spare tire. âSo, whatâs your play?â
âBusiness as usual. Keep my eyes open.â
âAnd if she sends you out again?â
Talia shrugged. âI go out.â
âRisky.â
âComes with the job. Ask Luanne. Sheâll tell you.â
âAnd what about Tyler?â
Talia scrunched up her nose. âWhat about him?â
âIf Jordan sends you out again, youâll keep Tyler in the loop. Right?â
Talia flicked his donut box with a finger and laughed. âAs if you wonât. I know where he gets his intel.â She started for the door.
âBy the way, young one,â he called after her. âI picked up on the thinly veiled insult earlier. For your information, I was never an abrasive boss.â
âSee you, Frank.â She let the door to OTHER fall closed behind her.
CHAPTER
TEN
CIA HEADQUARTERS
LANGLEY, VIRGINIA
EDDIE GUPTASAW TALIACOMING. She watched him duck behind his bank of monitors when she entered the gleaming intelligence palace known as Russian Ops, still called The Russian Ops Desk by all who knew of its existence.
The central branch of the Directorateâs Russian Eastern European Division had shrunk to just thatâa deskâafter the dubious end of the Cold War. The Agencyâs operational focus shifted to counterterrorism, and funding for old-school espionage against Americaâs favorite foe had diminished. But in recent years, thanks to the almost mystic talent of its chief, Mary Jordan, to put officers in the right places at the right times, the desk had once again bloomed to a full branch. And Talia was its rising star.
This hadnât earned her a great many friends.
âTerrance.â She gave a âsup chin lift to a passing case officer, a veteran of the branch. Terrance had scored a seat at Russian Ops four years earlier and had dug in like a tick. He favored bow ties, although he refused to see any correlation between his fashion choices and his glaring lack of field assignments.
He answered with a curt smile. âWelcome back. I hear you got your asset killed. Nicely done.â
âHe wasnât an asset. Not yet.â
âOh, thatâs right. You never landed him in the first place.â
She glowered at his back as he marched up steel-grate steps to his cubicle. Russian Ops had reached its lateral limits, and Jordan had added staircases and a few upper-level cubiclesâsought-after real estate, like the top bunks at summer camp. Terrance had already declared to Talia sheâd never get his.
âEddie . . .â Talia approached the geekâs desk. He didnât answer from behind the monitors, but she heard a sneeze and a juicy sniffle. âI know youâre there.â
He rose like a prairie dog peeking out of its hole, assuming a prairie dog could hold a handkerchief to its nose and wear wire-rimmed glasses that were perpetually sliding out of place. A second hand appeared, palm up, holding a little box of chocolates.
Gifts were not really a thing between them. Talia set her coffee on the edge of her desk and folded her arms. âWhatâs this?â
Eddie traded the handkerchief for his phone, showing her a text message on the screen.
She knows.
Arriving today.
Run, hide, or bring gifts.
Maybe all three.
The sender was listed as UNKNOWN. âTyler?â
âFinn, I think.â Eddie looked at the screen as if trying to decide. âYou can almost hear the Melbourne accent.â He brought the chocolates to her and offered them, lowering his head. âLook. Iâm sorry. I should have told you I was working on Tylerâs project.â
âI get it. And youâre forgiven. Sending him to Volgograd saved my life.â She accepted the gift. âBut donât tell him that.â
The designation NC-1701-D was stamped in gold print on the clear plastic top of the chocolate box. She turned it over. âHey. This says âFree with your purchase of Star Trek: The Next Generation commemorative Christmas socks.ââ She lowered the box. âAnd itâs dated two years ago.â
Eddie scrunched his shoulders. âI was pressed for time.â
The chocolates went straight to the trash bin under Taliaâs desk, and she followed Eddie back to his monitors. Hundreds of lines of alphanumeric code rolled up his left screen in a continuous stream. Corresponding graphs and tables flashed up and down on the center and right screens. âWow. What are you working on?â
âOh this? This is my screensaver. Makes it look like Iâm doing Jordanâs bidding when she walks by.â Eddie clicked his keyboard. The code and graphics dissolved, revealing a flat global map that took up all three monitors. Arcing red and yellow lines joined cities all over the world. âThis is what Iâm really wor . . . worââ He sneezed. Hard. His glasses clacked down on the keyboard.
âAre you sick?â
âItâs nothing. Probably spring fever.â
âItâs the fourth of December.â
âWhatever.â Eddie wiped his nose, put the glasses back on, and went to work again.
The map coalesced into a globe on the center screen. Some of the yellow lines ran to satellites, hopping from one to the next before returning to Earth.
âThe Volgograd save came from a breakthrough I had in Tylerâs project.â Eddie zoomed in on a bird in geostationary orbit over the South Atlantic. âBut this morning I had another one. Bigâlike someone handing me a cheat code for Legend of Zelda. Suddenly hidden rooms and side quests were popping up everywhere.â
A diminutive woman of Korean descent walked by, hair pulled back into a tight ponytailâanother Specialized Skills Officer like Eddie. She glanced at the screen with interest.
Eddie hit a key to bring up his screensaver. He swiveled his chair and motioned with his handkerchief for the woman to keep moving. âEyes to yourself, Sue Lin. These are my screens, not yours. Youâre not cleared for this.â
Sue Lin let out a huff, hugged a stack of files to her chest, and walked on.
Talia looked down her nose at her friend. âCan a guy with your social skills afford to alienate a girl like Sue Lin? You two have a lot in common.â
âI donât need her.â Eddie swiveled his chair back to his
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