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Synopsis
Shelve under: Travel, Romance, Art Theft, Hostages.
Librarian and CIA agent-in-training Quinn Ellington and her handsome spy boyfriend James “Bond” Anderson find themselves in the middle of an international incident when the Indian ambassador is kidnapped from a Library of Congress event. The key to saving the ambassador is tangled up with a long-lost sacred library, a desecrated temple, and some very modern machinations. At least their cover as blissful newlyweds isn’t too hard to pull off . . .
“Do not miss out on this fun-filled ride.”
—RT Book Reviews on The Librarian and the Spy
Release date: August 29, 2017
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 320
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A Covert Affair
Susan Mann
The library book nearly jumped from Quinn Ellington’s hand. Standing alone in the stacks, she’d been so absorbed in its pages she hadn’t perceived her stalker’s movements. While she chided herself for being caught unawares, she was pacified by the knowledge that had she not immediately recognized the voice, its owner would be doubled over and gasping for air after receiving an elbow to the gut.
Two arms slid around her waist and held her tight. She smiled and said, “Now, why would I do a stupid thing like that?”
Chills raced through her when James Anderson kissed her neck and then straightened. “Ready to go?”
“Almost.” She spun around, gripped his tie, and tugged him into a lingering kiss. She went nearly cross-eyed when she pulled back and looked at him nose to nose. “Now I’m ready.”
He pinned her against the metal shelf with his body and gave her a kiss that had her knees buckling. He lifted his head and gave her a lopsided smile. “Me too.”
Once assured her legs wouldn’t give out from under her, she pushed away from the shelves and led him through the stacks to her desk. She set the book down and slipped on the jacket of her pantsuit. She couldn’t wear jeans to work anymore, something she greatly lamented. It was one of the trade-offs when she accepted her grandfather’s offer to work for the CIA.
James peered down at the book. “Women of the OSS. What are you working on?”
“I’d tell you—”
“But then you’d have to kill me. I know,” James finished. “I’m pretty sure you can tell me without getting in trouble.”
“Yes, yes, you’re right, Mr. I Have a Security Clearance and You Don’t,” she teased. “For the record, I’m working on something pretty cool. One of the recruiters who visits college campuses is preparing a presentation that highlights some of the women who worked in intelligence in the past. She asked me to find some interesting stories.”
“It won’t be long before you’re one of those women with interesting stories.”
“We’ll see. It’ll be a while, since I haven’t . . .” She was going to say, “Since I haven’t trained at the Farm yet,” but stopped. Other than the head librarian, none of her library coworkers knew the plan for her to become a covert operative. Only a handful of people within the agency did.
James nodded. “No matter what happens in the future, you already have one good story under your belt.”
“That’s true.”
On their way out, Quinn stopped by her boss’s office and knocked lightly on the door. At the muffled “Come in,” she pushed it open and poked her head through the gap.
Linda Sullivan looked up from her computer. “Hello, Quinn. What can I do for you?” Six weeks before, Linda had told Quinn the information they collected, maintained, and provided to agency directorates was vital to national security and the safety of Americans around the world. By the time she left Linda’s office that first day, Quinn was ready to do anything asked of her.
“I wanted to remind you I’ll be away from the library for an hour or so,” Quinn said.
“Thanks for checking in. You have an escort?”
“James Anderson.” Without her clearance, she wasn’t free to walk unaccompanied around CIA headquarters.
“Excellent. I’ll see you when you get back.”
“Yes, ma’am.” Quinn pulled her head back and gently shut the door.
Quinn and James left the library and, after a short elevator ride, walked down a long corridor to their destination. They stepped into a front office and were met by a young man behind a desk. “Ms. Ellington, Mr. Anderson. Go on in. He’s expecting you.”
“Thank you,” Quinn said.
Supervising Officer Aldous Meyers, her and James’s Clandestine Services boss, glanced up from scribbling notes in a file. “Thank you, James.”
“Yes, sir.” He gave Quinn an encouraging smile before he stepped out and closed the door.
Meyers indicated a chair in front of his desk. “Have a seat.”
Quinn sat as directed and waited. The acid roiling in her stomach was about to burn a hole in its lining.
He dropped his pen, folded his hands in front of him, and looked at Quinn with a penetrating gaze. “I hear from your instructors you’re doing well in your unclassified training.”
She resisted the urge to slump in relief. “That’s good to know. Thank you.”
“So well, in fact, I want to see you in action. I have a minor op for you this afternoon.”
“Oh, okay.” She paused. “Yes, sir.”
“You sound hesitant,” Meyers said. “Is there a problem?”
“No, sir. It’s just that I thought we weren’t allowed to run ops on US soil.”
Meyers’s lips twitched. “Yes, that’s true. I’ve already cleared this with the appropriate domestic authorities.”
“Of course.” She could kick herself for questioning him.
He picked up a folder and handed it to her. “Your task is to follow this man.”
She flipped it open. The man pictured appeared to be around sixty years of age. His hair was gray, as were his eyes and bushy beard. With his thick-rimmed, black glasses, he was rather monochromatic.
“His name is Karl Bondarenko, a Ukrainian weapons engineer. Our intel indicates he’s developed an honest-to-God death ray and is in DC today to meet with a potential buyer. We need to know who that buyer is. All we need you to do is follow him and take pictures of whomever he meets with. Once we get photos of a face or two, other officers will take it from there.”
“That doesn’t sound too difficult. Follow him and take pictures.” She studied the photo. “Will he have the weapon with him?”
“We believe the meet is only to discuss a deal, not deliver a product. If he does have a working prototype, he most likely has it stashed somewhere.”
“What if he does have it with him and hands it off to the buyer? What do I do?”
“Operatives in the field can’t call in every time they’re faced with a decision.”
That wasn’t a helpful answer. While she was excited to be given the opportunity to stretch her fledgling operative wings, she was also keenly aware how important it was to not screw up. If Bondarenko’s weapon fell into the wrong hands, lives would certainly be at stake. The sudden weight of responsibility felt heavy on her shoulders.
“Any other questions?” he asked.
“Where is he now?”
“He’s registered at the Elegance Hotel in Georgetown. You’ll start there. Also, do not discuss your task with anyone. Good luck.” He extended his hand.
She gave him the file and left.
James rose from his chair in the outer office and gave her a questioning look. “Everything okay?”
“Yeah, it’s fine. Can you escort me back to the library and then out of the building? I have an errand to run.”
“Sure.” He opened the door for her, and as they walked toward the elevators, James asked, “Is it something I can help you with?”
“No, thanks. I got it.”
“Are you sure? I don’t have much going on today. I can go with you.” He pressed the button to summon an elevator.
The doors slid open. “That’s nice of you, but like I said, I got it.” They stepped on and rode in silence.
Back at the library, James waited by the front desk while Quinn popped into Linda’s office to tell her she had something she had to take care of and would be out for the rest of the day. Then she snagged her bag and was out the door again.
They arrived at the building’s exit security checkpoint. James stopped her just before she was to go through. “Come on, Quinn. Tell me what’s going on.”
Why was he being so pushy? “I can’t. Let it go, okay?”
“You know how I worry about you.” His face hung like a scolded puppy’s.
Her aggravation with him dropped away and her tone softened. “I know you do, but it’s no big deal.”
“Can you at least tell me if you can still go to dinner with me tonight?”
She rose up on her tiptoes and kissed his cheek. “I’m not sure how long this will take. I’ll call you later and let you know. I promise.”
“Fine,” he said, still sounding wounded.
She turned, went through security, and exited the building. As she strode to her truck, she turned James’s odd behavior over in her mind. Her grumbled conclusion was “Men are weird.”
Nervous excitement swirled inside Quinn as she sat in the lobby of the Elegance Hotel with a Brick Cobalt spy novel open in her hands. Of course at that moment, she wasn’t actually reading it. It worked as a great prop while she kept watch for Bondarenko. It paid to always carry a paperback in her purse.
Adrenaline surged through her when the fancy brass elevator doors glided open, revealing Bondarenko like a prize on a TV game show.
Her head stayed bent over her book while her eyes tracked her quarry. Bondarenko, briefcase in hand, exited the elevator and walked across the lobby and out the door.
As her training dictated, Quinn didn’t immediately jump up and follow him. She stayed in her chair and watched him through the window. He turned right and started up the sidewalk.
Careful not to appear too obvious, Quinn deliberately placed her bookmark between the pages, closed the book, and returned it to her purse. Then she slipped on her sunglasses and ambled out onto the sidewalk.
Bondarenko was half a block ahead. At the next corner, he made a right.
A few seconds later, Quinn rounded the corner and exhaled a relieved breath when she spotted him. She remained a respectable distance behind him and hoped she blended in with her fellow pedestrians enjoying the warm, early May sunshine.
The Ukrainian crossed to the other side of the street and entered a pub.
Quinn did the same.
The tavern brimmed with historic charm. It was one of those cramped spaces with wood everywhere. Tiffany-style lamps hung from the ceiling and cast circles of light on the bar and tables. Natural light streaming in from the window that fronted the pub helped brighten the room.
Only a handful of patrons sat scattered throughout the place, so Quinn had no trouble spotting Bondarenko. He sat alone at one of the tables near the bar. She meandered through the maze of tables and chairs and took a seat on one of the wooden barstools. From her vantage point, she could keep an eye on Bondarenko’s table in the mirror behind the bar.
She ordered a Coke from the bartender and took out her phone, ready to snap pictures when Bondarenko’s contact arrived.
A few minutes later, a man slid onto the stool next to Quinn. She cringed when he turned to her and said, “So, do you come here often?”
She glanced at him and gave him a polite smile. Easily twenty years older than her, his mustache was as cheesy as his pickup line. The cocky, smarmy vibe he gave off made her skin crawl.
Hoping to discourage any attempt at conversation, she looked back down at her phone to convey disinterest. In a bored voice, she answered, “My first time.”
“Oh, a virgin,” he said, laughing at his own joke.
Ugh. What a colossal douche. Her teeth were clenched so tight her jaw began to ache.
Bondarenko stood and made his way toward the men’s room. As he did, he brushed past her in the tight space between her and the chair behind. Quinn picked up her glass and sipped her Coke, not only to hide her face from the man she was following but to swallow down the venom she itched to spew at the ass next to her.
Smarmy Douche Canoe swiveled toward her and leaned in as she set her drink down. “You know, sweetheart, if you’re new in town, I can show you around.” The stale alcohol on his breath made her nose wrinkle as she tilted away from him. “I can show you a really good time.”
The muscles in her face twitched while indignation flared hot in her chest. It was all she could do not to slap the smug bastard’s mug with such force his knocked-out teeth would shoot across the room and embed in the wall.
She gulped down more Coke and glanced into the mirror. Bondarenko’s table remained empty. “No, thanks. I have my boyfriend for that.”
“I bet your boyfriend can’t show you as good a time as I can.”
So help me, if he touches me I’m gonna break his arm. Without looking at him, she said, “Not interested.”
“Aw, don’t be like that,” he pouted.
She couldn’t take it anymore. Unless she got away from Smarmy Douche Canoe, she was going to haul off and deck the guy. Not wanting to call attention to herself, she decided escape was her best option. She grabbed her purse and fled to the ladies’ room.
In the end, it worked out well. She took up a position at the restroom door. Peering through the crack, she kept watch for Bondarenko’s exit from the men’s room.
Another few minutes passed and the Ukrainian still hadn’t emerged. He was either suffering from some serious intestinal distress—maybe he’d downed some dubious oysters and was paying for it—or something had happened. Worry began to gnaw at her middle.
When a man exited the men’s room, she popped out from behind the door. “My uncle has been in there a while. Is he okay? Black glasses? Bushy gray beard?”
“Sorry,” he answered and hiked his thumb at the door behind him. “There was no one else in there.”
Tingling alarm buzzed through her. “It’s empty?”
“Yeah. Sorry.” The man turned and walked away.
Quinn pushed open the door, leaned in, and scanned the bathroom. Unless Bondarenko was standing on the toilet in the stall so she couldn’t see his feet, it was as the man said. Empty.
Her mind flooded with questions as panic rose. How did he get past her without her noticing? Had she been so distracted by Smarmy Douche Canoe she didn’t see Bondarenko leave? Why did he leave before the meet? Maybe the meet had already happened and he simply came to the pub for a drink. The worst question imaginable hit her: What if he was on his way to the meet now and she’d lost him?
Silently berating herself as the worst spy ever, she slalomed through the tables and hurried out of the pub. Stopping just outside, she scanned the sidewalk to her left and right. There was no sign of him.
“Dammit,” she spat and thrust her hands through her hair in frustration. She was screwed.
She stood rooted to the sidewalk, trying to decide what her next move was. Her stomach dropped. She didn’t have one.
The incessant electronic burbling of a cell phone caused her irritation to spike. “Answer the damn phone,” she growled and glanced at the people occupying the outdoor tables. Not one made any movement to answer a phone.
She pushed aside her annoyance and threw back her shoulders. She knew what she had to do. The op was bigger than her pride. She’d call Meyers, confess she’d lost Bondarenko, and fall on her sword. Wanting some privacy, she spun on her heel and marched off in the direction of her truck.
“What the hell?” she muttered when she still heard that damned ringing phone. Was someone following her? She stopped, pretended to look in a shop window, and peeked to the side to see who stopped, too. No one. Everyone filed past. And still the phone rang.
The answer dropped on her like a ton of bricks. She rifled through her purse and found a cheap prepaid cell phone tucked in the outside pocket. She took a deep, calming breath and flipped it open. “Yes?”
A voice changer distorted the words. “The wire transfer has been received. Proceed to the southernmost bench in the playground area of Montrose Park. You will be given further instructions as to the location of the prototype.”
The call ended. Quinn lowered the phone and stared at it in absolute bewilderment.
“Holy crap,” she mumbled when the pieces fell into place. “The meet happened. With me.” Bondarenko must have believed Quinn had been at the pub on behalf of the weapon’s buyer and had slipped the phone in her purse on his way to the men’s room. She’d lost Bondarenko but now was on the trail of the actual prototype instead.
No way would she call Meyers now. She still had a chance to turn her initial failure into a success if she secured the weapon. Keeping it from the bad guys was surely a top priority, even if the op hadn’t gone exactly as planned.
She stuffed the burner in her bag and hurried to her truck.
At the park, she walked to the playground and sat on the appropriate bench. While she waited, she alternated between surveying the area and watching little ones climb on the play equipment.
No one approached. No one called. Nothing happened.
A thought struck. What if her “further instructions” were already there? Bending forward, she ran her fingers along the underside of the bench.
A quiet yelp of victory bubbled up when her fingertips touched what felt like an envelope. She peeled it from the seat and withdrew a piece of paper with a couple dozen Cyrillic characters written on it.
Using the Ukrainian keyboard on her phone, she painstakingly hunted and pecked for each character. She felt a real sense of achievement when all the words were in recognizable English. Her triumph was short-lived, however, when the words were, “Organic Dog Treats Bella Moose.”
Her brow furrowed in confusion. What did dog treats have to do with the location of a weapon prototype? Was it another code to crack?
Applying Occam’s Razor, she figured the obvious thing should be her next step. A quick Internet search informed her there was indeed a product called “Bella Moose’s Organic Dog Treats.” A picture of a smiling golden retriever was featured prominently on the website. She knew she was on to something when she noted a pet supply shop only a couple of blocks away stocked them.
Tenacity was one of the things that made Quinn an exceptional research librarian. Once she was on the trail, she wouldn’t give up until she found the answer. That same thrill of the hunt buzzed through her as she hoofed it to the store.
The door chimed when she entered. She headed straight for the treats and scanned the shelves. It only took a moment before she spotted the smiling golden retriever on the front of each bag.
As discreetly as possible, she nudged the bags around, searching for any kind of clue. When she came up empty, she feathered her fingertips under the shelf. Nothing.
She took one of the bags and skimmed the information on the back. It assured her the treats were “so tail-waggin’ flavorful, your dog will wish she has opposable thumbs so she can open the bag herself.” Quinn breathed a quiet laugh when she thought of her grandparents’ dog, Pot Roast. His response to a bag coming between him and his treats would be “Bag? What bag?”
A quick glance at the list of ingredients had her admitting to herself that if she were ever hungry enough, she wouldn’t be opposed to eating a treat or two. She read nothing relevant to her quest, however.
Working under the assumption someone was watching and her purchase of the treats would be a signal to approach and hand off the prototype, she took the bag and queued up in the checkout line. No matter what happened next, Pot Roast would be the beneficiary of her trip to the pet store.
As she waited, she idly wondered if she could cajole Rasputin, her brown tabby cat, to try one. She smiled when she pictured the look of utter contempt and betrayal he would certainly give her.
She paid for the treats. When the cashier handed her the receipt and her change, it came with a second piece of paper. Schooling her features, she clutched it all in her hand and hurried outside.
Written on the paper were two sets of numbers separated by a comma. Both sets consisted of two digits, a decimal point, and then six more digits. Whenever she saw numbers like that, her mind automatically went to the Dewey Decimal Classification system. But Dewey numbers always had three digits to the left of the decimal. When she noted a minus sign in front of one of the sets of numbers, she discarded the idea completely.
When all else fails, search the Internet, she thought, and typed the numbers into the search box. A map popped up with a red dot indicating a café only a few blocks from where she stood. She doubted it was a coincidence that the restaurant was on the same block as the Embassy of Ukraine. Feeling like she was back on the scent, she power-walked to her truck and drove toward the café.
The parking gods smiled on her that afternoon. She pulled into a spot near the entrance to the pedestrian-only alley where the restaurant was located and checked the map again. She was practically inside the red dot. She hopped out of her truck and walked down the narrow lane of red and gray bricks until she came to a patio with a number of outdoor tables. At one of them, three men sat enjoying coffee and dessert.
As she neared them, the English bulldog lying under the table stood and lumbered toward her. His stubby tail wiggled with excitement. Quinn squatted down and rubbed the sides of his massive, wrinkled head with both hands. The dog received her greeting with happy, snuffling noises and then stuffed his face in her purse.
Baffled and annoyed, she looked up at the oldest of the three men and said, “Grandpa, you sent me on some elaborate wild goose chase to pick up dog treats for Pot Roast?” She scowled at Bondarenko, who sat grinning at her. “What the hell is he doing here?”
“Settle down, angel,” her grandfather said evenly. “Have a seat and we’ll explain.”
Still frowning, she sat in the empty chair. Pot Roast flopped down next to her, dropped his head on her foot, and released a low, mournful sigh.
She arched an eyebrow at James, directly across the table from her. “Et tu, Brute?”
He lifted a shoulder and shot her a disarming smile.
“I take it there’s no Ukrainian death ray,” she said to Bondarenko.
“Nope. There’s no Ukrainian death ray,” he said, removing his glasses.
She sat up ramrod straight in surprise. She knew that voice. “Ben?”
Off came the wig and beard, revealing her friend, fellow librarian, and CIA covert operative, Ben Hadley. She’d met him when she and James rescued him from arms dealer Roderick Fitzhugh during their mission in England. She kissed his cheek in greeting. “It’s great to see you. It’s been a while.” She settled back in her chair. “Now spill your guts or I’ll rip them out.”
Ben laughed. “I like how you’re always so demure. You’re a regular shrinking violet.”
She smirked in spite of herself. “Yeah, because being shy and reserved would have worked so well growing up with five older brothers.”
“Our Quinn has always been a bit of a spitfire,” her grandfather said. The blue eyes behind his glasses gleamed with pride. Less than three months before, Quinn had received the shock of a lifetime when her grandfather revealed to her he’d been a spy for the CIA for most of his life. Not only that, but he and the agency had been watching her, waiting for the time when they could recruit her to become a covert operative. “Now, before you melt us with your death ray glare, you should know this was a training exercise.”
“To train me to fail? I lost Ben completely at the pub.”
“Yes, and that was the plan all along,” Grandpa said. “This wasn’t about your abilities to follow a mark or decipher clues. The object of this lesson was to teach you that even the simplest, most straightforward assignments can go sideways very quickly.”
“My only task was to shake you,” Ben said. “No matter how long it took.”
“Well, it didn’t take long,” she said dejectedly.
“Don’t be hard on yourself.” He scrubbed his hands over his cheeks and smoothed his hair. “I’ve been trained to give people the slip, just like you will be.”
“So the creep at the bar. Was he in on it, too?” she asked. “Did you send him in to hit on me to distract me?”
James bolted up. Fists clenched, he growled, “A creep hit on you?” He glared at Ben. “That was not part of the plan.”
“Easy there, tiger. I had nothing to do with it. I just used it to my advantage. I slipped away when he had Quinn sidetracked.”
Nostrils flaring, James looked like he could spit nails. “You didn’t stay to make sure she was okay?”
Ben gave James an indulgent look and said patiently, “Quinn didn’t need my help. She looked like she was about to ram her hand down the guy’s throat and rip out his gizzard.”
Quinn shrugged. “He’s not wrong.”
Mollified, James sat back in his chair.
Her grandfather chuckled and said, “S. . .
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