Red Widow by Alma Katsu (good books to read for beginners txt) 📗
- Author: Alma Katsu
Book online «Red Widow by Alma Katsu (good books to read for beginners txt) 📗». Author Alma Katsu
But she knew that going in. That’s the way it’s always been, the way the game has always been played.
That’s why she trusts no one but herself. Depends on no one but herself.
She signs it, Kanareyka.
TWENTY-SEVEN
The next few days are difficult for Lyndsey.
She tells Eric about the latest message from Masha, hoping he’ll agree it’s their duty to help.
“I’m afraid there’s nothing we can do for her right now,” he says flatly.
Lyndsey’s blood pressure spikes. “How can you say that? Her husband is dead and it’s our fault—”
That seems to touch a nerve with Eric, and his face goes red. “We’ll do something as soon as we can, but you’ve got to stall her. With my other operation about to go off, Moscow Station is stretched thin. I can’t put anything else on their plate right now.”
She doesn’t know how to argue against that. She knows how important Morozov is to Eric, to the Agency.
“Keep her at the dacha. We’ll come for her as soon as we can,” he promises. It’s not the answer she wanted, but it’s the best she’ll get at the moment. She bites her tongue. Sometimes the job is like juggling knives.
That afternoon, Lyndsey sits in on a briefing being done especially for Eric. It’s in the big, fancy conference room down the hall. It has tiers of seats along three of its walls, like an operating theater. In the center, on the floor, is the big conference table, overpowering the room like something out of Dr. Strangelove. People pick random seats as they drift in, looking first to see who has already arrived.
Eric is the last one, everyone else shifting restlessly in their seats as they’re made to wait for him. His eyes lock onto hers momentarily as he enters the conference room but then he takes his chair at the head of the table, his back to her.
The briefers tell a fascinating story: analysts found a huge spike in FSB activity after the recent deaths and disappearances. “On the day of Genghis’s death, all senior FSB staff out of the Moscow area were recalled back to headquarters,” the briefer says as a fresh PowerPoint slide pops up showing a map of Russia dotted with thumbnails of various officials. “Communications between Moscow, Washington, D.C., and other world capitals—the channels we’re aware of—have been noticeably higher than is usual for this time of year,” the briefer says. Another map, this time of the world, with graphs over various cities showing rates of increase.
“Meaning what, exactly?” Eric twitches in his chair, trying to hide his impatience.
The briefer coolly adjusts her eyeglasses on the bridge of her nose. “They wouldn’t break op sec”—operational security—“if it wasn’t important. The increase in unanticipated communications shows that they were caught off guard.”
“By Popov’s death?” Eric forgets to use the cover term; Evert Northrop, sitting in a shadowy corner, winces.
“It’s impossible to know the reason for the increase by the timing alone. As you know, we don’t have access to these communications. Most are encrypted.”
Eric nods as she speaks, processing. “Were there no other notable events on those days? Something else the Russians might’ve been talking about?”
“Only routine activity. Nothing that we judged likely to be the reason for the increase.” Lyndsey leaves the room turning this over in her mind. Moscow was surprised. They hadn’t expected Popov’s death.
She has little time to think about it, however, as today there was an important visitor.
Shortly after Lyndsey told Eric of her suspicions about Theresa, he decided they had reached the limit of what they could learn from the resources they had at hand, computer logs and access lists and what coworkers were willing to say. They had a suspect now. CIA cannot run surveillance on U.S. persons. For that, you have to turn to the FBI.
The move rattled Lyndsey. Was it too soon? Will it turn out The Widow was innocent all along and make her look like a fool? But she will give this much to Eric: he knew how to make things happen. By the end of the day, the court order was ready to go before a FISA judge. They caught up with the judge at a dinner party in Georgetown, briefed him in the butler’s pantry, and by midnight had authority to wiretap Theresa’s phones.
Maggie swings by Lyndsey’s tiny office, giving her a quick nod. It’s time for the meeting. Everything is hush-hush, because no one in the office can know what the meeting is about. It still seems incredible to Lyndsey that they are meeting with the FBI when Theresa’s desk is only a hundred feet away.
The woman at the table in Eric’s office looks like she stepped right out of the Texas Hill Country. She’s tall and lanky with an aw-shucks friendly smile but an undeniable quiet confidence in her gray eyes, just the kind of person you’d feel good about entrusting with the civil liberties of your friends and neighbors. She wears a navy pants suit and no jewelry except a wristwatch with a plain black band, and her hair is cut in a short, no-nonsense style. “Special Agent Sally Herbert,” the woman says as she rises and extends a hand. She explains that she’s a squad supervisor in the Washington Field Office and will be leading the team working on this case. “We’ve set up a joint task force with Foreign Counterintelligence Division Five in the National Security Branch. They’re pulling in people from the U.S. Attorneys office to start work on the warrants for your Russian agent’s arrest. Don’t worry; we’re pulling in the absolute minimum to work this case. We all appreciate the sensitivity.” Herbert addresses Eric. “We executed the wiretaps and put a team on her house the morning after the court order was signed. She’s under coverage twenty-four seven.”
Lyndsey feels a twinge. It’s hard to see this happen to someone you know and once liked, for
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