That Time in Moscow Logan Ryles (book suggestions .txt) đ
- Author: Logan Ryles
Book online «That Time in Moscow Logan Ryles (book suggestions .txt) đ». Author Logan Ryles
âMoscow,â Edric said. âWeâre going to Mother Russia.â
Edric paused theatrically, but nobody reacted. This was Charlie Team. They couldâve been told they were going to North Korea and they wouldnât have blinked, but behind his forced passiveness, Wolfgangâs heart thumped.
Moscow. The heart of enemy country for espionage operatives. The hornetsâ nest.
Heâd never been, of course, but he imagined Moscow the way he saw it in the moviesâgrey, cold, locked in ice and snow, and infested with enemy operators with wits and skill sets every bit as sharp as his own.
This is gonna be fun.
âYou guys give me nothing,â Edric said, rolling his eyes.
Megan waved a finger. âItâs almost December, Edric, and youâre sending us into an icebox. You want theatrics, call Bravo Team.â
A ripple of laughter erupted, and Edric turned back to the marker board. âOkay, I see how it is. Letâs get down to brass tax, then.â
He wrote, and the room fell silent. âThe target is Pasha Koslov, code named Trident. Heâs a Russian-born chemist with a specialty in airborne transmission of manufactured agents.â
âChemical weapons,â Wolfgang said.
Edric nodded. âEssentially, yes. Koslov began his career working with air fresheners for the Russian equivalent of Proctor and Gamble, but his peculiar talents quickly caught the attention of the Ministry of Defense. Theyââ Edric made air quotes with two fingersâââacquired him,â and heâs been working in Moscow for the past four years, most recently on a project to design new types of chemical weapons that offer higher rates of transmission, penetration of protection equipment, and cost-effectiveness.â
âI thought chemical weapons were illegal,â Kevin said.
âThe Geneva Convention outlawed their use in warfare, effective nineteen twenty-eight,â Edric said. âIn nineteen ninety-seven, the Chemical Weapons Convention, by power of the United Nations, outlawed the development, production, retention, stockpiling, or acquisition of chemical weapons. So, yes, theyâre illegal. Your point?â
Kevin blushed. âI just thought, if we know this guy is developing chemical weapons for Russia, wouldnât that be a problem for the state department?â
Fair question.
Edric jotted on the whiteboard again. Wolfgang wondered what the point of the whiteboard was. Why couldnât he just brief them on the details?
âAs I mentioned earlier, Koslov is code-named Trident. That name was assigned to him by the CIA, where he has served as an undercover informant for three of the past four years.â
Wolfgangâs mind spun, quickly connecting the dots. âThatâs why they canât involve the state department. American would have to disclose how they got the information, which would self-sabotage their own intelligence efforts.â
âBingo.â Edric circled a word on the whiteboard and stepped back. âMAD. Mutually assured destruction,â he said. âItâs kept us safe against the Ruskies since Kennedy was in power, and itâs just as effective against chemical warfare as nuclear. If the Russians are willing to risk an international scandal by producing chemical weapons, what else are they willing to risk? The position of the Pentagon is that America is better able to protect herself than the U.N. is. So, for eighteen months, Trident has fed us data on the developments underway in Russia, which has given our scientists time and information with which to build anti-chemical weapons gear, inoculants, and . . . well . . .â
Wolfgang sat forward. âAnd matching weapons. Thatâs where MAD comes in, right? They wonât use it on us if we can use it on them.â
âYou didnât hear it from me,â Edric said. âWho knows what the CIA is up to? The bottom line for us is that things in Mother Russia are starting to disintegrate. Koslov wants out. Iâm not sure if the pressure has gotten to him, or if the Russians are getting suspicious. Either way, heâs demanding that the CIA extract him immediately, or heâs going public with what he knows.â
âAnd at this point, that burns America as much as Russia,â Megan said.
âPretty much. Which is why the CIA made a phone call to their trusty friends at the SPIRE Corporation. Our mission is to extract Koslov from Moscow and deposit him in Minsk, where the CIA will take over.â
Lyle spoke for the first time, pushing his smudged glasses up his nose and leaning forward. âI know I always ask, but why canât the CIA do their own dirty work?â
Everybody laughed, and Edric motioned to Wolfgang. âYou wanna say it this time?â
Wolfgang leaned back. The answer was obvious. It was always the same answer to the same question. âPlausible deniability. If we get caught, the CIA wants to distance themselves from the operation.â
Edric recapped the marker and settled into his chair. âActually, itâs a little more severe than that. The CIA isnât just distancing themselves, theyâre transferring blame. If our mission goes sideways in Russia, theyâre not just going to disown us, theyâre going to burn us. The CIA will pin the entire Trident operation on SPIRE.â
The stillness in the room was deathly.
âThatâs a risk SPIRE is willing to take?â Megan said.
Edric nodded. âI spoke to the director myself. The CIA is writing an extra-large check for this assignment. A seven-figure check. Charlie Teamâs cut has been tripled.â
Kevin let out a low whistle, and Wolfgang sat back. He remembered his last checks from the Cairo and Paris jobs. Together, they were enough to buy the Mercedes and lease a penthouse outside of Saint Louis for a year, with several grand left over. At triple his usual cut, the Moscow job was worth over a hundred grandâmore money than Wolfgang really knew what to do with.
But is it worth it?
Wolfgang glanced around the room, watching the dollar signs spin behind Lyle and Kevinâs eyes, but not Meganâs. Hers were deep, and distant, and strong. And so damn beautiful.
Itâs absolutely worth it.
âWhen do we go?â Wolfgang asked.
âThe plane is being fueled as we speak,â Edric said. âWe fly directly into Moscow, and from there, we make contact with the CIA operator code-named Sparrow. Sparrow is a native Russian brought on by the CIA to be Koslovâs handler. Theyâll brief us on Koslovâs
Comments (0)