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| READ MORE |
| PROLOGUE |
| CHAPTER ONE |
| CHAPTER TWO |
| YOUR TOUR IN PHOTOS |
| READER REVIEWS |
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| REVIEWS |
| "...fascinating characters, nerve-tingling pace, and a great story. It reminds me of Robert Ludlum at his very best. This cements Lynds' reputation as one of the premier espionage authors of our time." |
| — Vince Flynn |
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| "A sizzling thrill ride... seamlessly melding global politics, cutting-edge technology, and the dark world of espionage into a compelling, full-blooded novel. [Lynds is] a master of the spy thriller." |
| — Steve Berry |
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| "The Queen of the International Spy Thriller is back ... great plotting, fascinating characters, amazing technical accuracy, breath-taking action." |
| — Marcus Wynn |
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Part One
I grew accustomed to walking on a knife’s edge and could imagine no other life.
— Soviet General Dmitri Polyakov
For eighteen years, he was a U.S. mole code-named Tophat, until Soviet mole Robert
Hanssen betrayed him.
Chapter 1
April 2005
Chaux de Mont, Switzerland
All days should be like this. All moments. Gerhard Shoutens hurtled down an expert ski
run that paralleled a razorback ridge, following his friend Kristoph Maas. Sunlight
drenched the snow-mantled Alps, and the wide sky was a vault of sapphire blue.
Gerhard reveled in the soaring exhilaration of speeding through the crisp new powder. “Das ist Wahnsinn!” he shouted into the wind.
Kristoph whooped in agreement. “Super! Toll!”
They flashed through a hushed stand of pines and into an open area, their velocity
increasing, their skis hissing as the trail took them along the winding rim of a couloir. On
one side spread a slope of pristine snow. Gerhard glanced down the other—a spectacular
gorge so deep that house-size boulders at the bottom appeared to be mere pebbles. It was
breathtaking.
“Sieh dir das mal an!” he yelled.
But before his friend could admire the view, his entire body seemed to recoil as if he
had struck some obstacle hidden in the snow. He gave an outraged bellow, his skis lifted
off the track, and he was airborne. Gerhard leaned low into his skis, frantically trying to
reach him. But Kristoph shot off the edge and into the void.

Two days later
Allenwood Federal Correctional Complex
Allenwood, Pennsylvania
At 6:40 a.m., ten minutes past morning call at the crowded federal penitentiary in the
Susquehanna Valley, a stranger in civilian clothes marched down a gray cellblock, staring
straight ahead. A Bureau of Prisons lieutenant led; two guards followed. All looked
uneasy.
The man paused at a cell. As soon as the door opened, he moved inside and glared
down at the solitary cot. The blanket had been yanked aside to reveal blue prison trousers
and shirt stuffed with crumpled newspapers and arranged to mimic a man lying on his
side. There was also a fake wood arm covered with flesh-colored upholstery from the
prison factory. With the pillow pounded high as if it covered a head, and the blanket on
top exposing part of the arm, not even the obligatory flash of a guard’s light during
nighttime checks would reveal that no one slept there.
“Clever bastard.” The stranger jerked a cell phone from his pocket. He punched in a
number and kept his voice low: “He’s gone all right. I’m in his cell now. I’ll—”
“Seal it off,” the voice on the other end of the line ordered. “No one’s to search it,
understand? And for God’s sake, make sure no one tells the press that Jay Tice has
escaped!”

Langley, Virginia
At 9:06 a.m. Laurence Litchfield, the CIA’s Deputy Director of Operations—the DDO—
hand-carried a sealed white envelope down from the seventh floor to the Staff Operations
Center, the SOC, which was responsible for case-management support to colleagues in
the field. In his mid-forties, Litchfield was lean, with a runner’s wiry body and a lanky
gait. His eyes were carved deep into his face. Above them, wide brows formed an inkblack
line across his forehead.
The SOC chief looked up from her desk. “Good morning, Mr. Litchfield. We got
some overnight requests from our people in Yemen and Qatar. I was going to memo you
about our progress with the intelligence summit, but I can fill you in now.”
“First I need to talk to one of your people—Elaine Cunningham.”
She noted the envelope in his hand. “Cunningham? You know she’s sidelined.”
“I know. Show me where she is.”
She nodded and led him out the door and down two long corridors and into a room
crammed with gray modular cubicles, which someone long ago had cynically dubbed the
Parking Lot. Here a glacially changing landscape of some three dozen field officers
waited like used cars collecting dust, futures uncertain. Their covers had been irrevocably
blown, or they had proved inept, or they had run into Langley politics. For many, the next
stop was the tedium of personnel or recruitment or curriculum—or, worst case, dismissal.
The chief pointed out Cunningham’s cubicle among the maze, and Litchfield thanked
her. “Go up to my office. I’ll meet you there.”
She left, and he turned down the narrow aisle and found Elaine Cunningham in her
cramped enclosure, marching back and forth beside her desk, arms crossed, her shoulder
propping her phone against her ear as she talked quietly into it. She was a small woman,
twenty-nine years old and blond, dressed in an unbuttoned black jacket, white T-shirt,
and belted black pants.
As he leaned against the frame of her cubicle to study her, she glanced up and
recognized him. She winked one large blue eye in greeting.
And continued talking into the phone: “So, your missing source is a broker in
Brussels. He’s a morose Dane, unmarried, follows soccer. He didn’t show up for a blind
date yesterday and missed the alternate meet this morning. Now you have word he’s in
the wind, and Copenhagen can’t find him.” She pursed her lips. Her pace quickened. “All
Scandinavians tend to be stereotyped as morose, but there are real national differences.
It’s the Swedes who are mostly angst-ridden, while the Danes are more happy-go-lucky.
So your morose Dane may actually be Swedish, and if he’s driving home, he probably
didn’t stop in Copenhagen but took the Øresund Fixed Link across the sound into Malmö.
When amateurs change identities, they usually create legends based on what they already
know. If he’s Swedish—especially if he comes from the Malmö area—it’s possible he
knows Copenhagen well enough to fake it as his hometown, and if he does, it’s a good
bet he speaks Danish like a native.”
Cunningham paused, listening. “My pleasure. No, this is the end of the Langley road
for me. Hey, it’s been great working with you, too. You always give me interesting
questions.” As she hung up, she grabbed the single sheet of paper in her printer tray.
“Morning, Mr. Litchfield. This is my lucky day. Who would’ve thought I’d get to resign
to the DDO himself. Just to make it official, here’s my letter.”
Litchfield was unsurprised. “You’ll make your psychologist happy.” He took the
letter, folded it into his pocket, and sat in the only side chair.
“That’s what I’m all about—making CIA clinicians happy.” Her smile did not involve
her eyes.
“I suspect you don’t really want to quit. People who excel seldom do.”
As Litchfield continued to watch, she blinked then sank into her desk chair. Dressed in
her simple black and white clothes, her hair smoothed back into a ponytail at the nape of
her neck, and wearing little makeup, she could pass as a cop or the leader of a gang of
thieves. This flexibility of affect would be easier for her than for some, because she was
neither beautiful nor ugly. Still, she was pretty enough that she could use her looks: Her
face was slender, her cheekbones good, her classic features slightly irregular, and her
golden hair shone. Litchfield had studied her file. Now he had seen her. So far, she was
perfect.
“What you say has a certain truth to it,” she acknowledged. “But I’ve also heard it said
that a rut is just like a grave—only longer. I’m in a rut. I’m not doing Langley any good,
and I’m not doing myself any good. It’s time to get on with my life, such as it is.” She
gazed at the white envelope in his hand then peered up at him curiously. “But I think you
have something else in mind.”
He inclined his head. “I have a job tailored to your talents . . . and to your limitations.
To do it, you’ll be in the field alone, which you seem to prefer anyway.”
“Not necessarily. It’s just that the bodies Langley kept sending to partner with me
turned out to be less than stellar.”
“You don’t trust anyone, do you?”
“My mother. I’m fond of my mother. I trust her. Unfortunately, she lives far away, in
California.”
“You trusted your husband, too. But he’s dead. Afghanistan, right?”
For a moment she appeared speechless. She seemed to shrink, grow calcified, as hard
as a tombstone.
He pushed her again: “You’ve had a problem working with people since he died. Your
psychologist has recommended Langley let you go.”
Instead of exploding, she nodded. Her expression was grim.
“You were one of our best hunters,” Litchfield said. “Right now, I need the best.” As a
hunter, her specialty was locating missing spies, assets gone to ground, “lost” foreign
agents, anyone in the covert world of interest to Langley who had vanished—and doing it
in such a way that the public never knew.
He watched a reflective look cross her face. It was time to change the subject: “Why
do you think you were so successful?”
“Probably because I simply have a knack for it,” she said. “I steep myself in the
psychology of my target until the physical evidence and clues take on new meaning.
That’s all there is to it.”
For the first time, he smiled. “No, there’s far more than that.” She was modest, and
she had not lost her temper. All things considered, she was clearly his best choice.
Eyeing him speculatively, she said, “When the DDO comes to call, I figure something
important has happened. And when I’m on the verge of being fired and he still comes to
call, I figure it could be crucial. So let me help you out—if you think I can do the job, tell
me what it is, and I’ll tell you whether I can or want to take it on.”
He looked around. “Not here. The assignment is with one of our special units. And it’s
M-classified.” “M” indicated an extraordinarily sensitive covert operation. Among the
highest the United States bestowed, single-letter security clearances meant the
information was so secret it could be referred to only by initials.
Her blue eyes snapped with excitement. It had been a long time since she’d had such
an opportunity. “Give me back my resignation letter. As long as I don’t have to mommy
fools, I’ll deliver.”
He handed it to her along with his envelope. “Here’s the address and the name of your
contact, plus my phone number. It’s the usual protocol—you hunt, our regular people
capture. Read, memorize, then shred everything, including my number. Good luck.”

The Catoctin Mountains, Maryland
Dense forests flowed dark and primeval down the ridged sides of the Maryland
mountains to where a roadside stop had been built on a green basin of land off busy
Highway 15. A cool breeze typical of the early hour at this time of year blew around the
two-pump gas station and parking lot and café.
Jay Tice stood utterly still in shadows. His bloody clothes announced he should be
considered dangerous, but there was something else about him that was perhaps even
more sinister: It was in his aging face, where intelligence and violence warred just
beneath the skin. His hair was short, the color of iron shavings. Two crevices curved
down from either side of his nose to his mouth. His chin was as firm as ever, marked by
the dramatic cleft.
He moved off through the trees. At the rear of the cafŽ, he dropped to his haunches.
There were four windows on the back wall—one was opaque glass, two displayed
customers eating, and the fourth, next to the doorway, showed a desk and file cabinets.
That was the office, just where he remembered. The back door was open. From it drifted
the greasy odors of fried sausage and bacon. Tice looked around, then sprinted to the
doorway. He peered cautiously inside.
“Two eggs, easy!” A voice yelled from the end of the cluttered hall. “Half stack!”
Within seconds he slipped unnoticed into the office. He locked the door and activated
the computer and, while it booted up, opened the window. From somewhere inside the
café, a newscast described a terrorist bombing by a group thought to be connected to al-
Qaeda. He sat down at the computer and created a new Yahoo! e-mail account from
which he opened a blank e-mail, addressed it, and typed into the message window:
Dog’s run away. Call home.
As soon as he hit send, he addressed another e-mail with a different message:
Unexpected storm forced evacuation. In touch soon.
Deleting all copies saved to the computer, he turned it off. He slid out the window,
stifling a groan as his hip grazed the lip, furious that he was not as agile as he once was.
He closed the window and seconds later was in the forest again, moving swiftly away.
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