âThatâs Greenlees.â
âWhoâs Greenlees?â
âJohn Greenlees, an old station chief, put out to pasture ages ago. He comes into the office every so often to talk to Baker, the deputy station chief. They must have worked together, but I donât know, heâs in the wind. Nobody has cared about him in years. I only recognize him because I happen to have an office next to Baker.â
An office? She almost laughed. She knew Hargrove stamped visas in the morning and spent his afternoons in a cubicle, typing up Bakerâs cables. It was the fate of all greenhorn case officers who were undeclared.
âWhatâs Greenlees up to?â
âNothing, as far as I know.â
âHe doesnât work for, um, your people?â
âGreenlees? No, heâs out of the game. But heâs got contacts, Iâm sure, since heâs been around forever. Heâs burned at the organization, though. Left under a cloud, not too happy about it, I hear. Something about a local mistress.â
âEveryone has a mistress,â she said.
Hargrove shook his head. âHe left his wife for her. A CIA station chief doesnât leave his wife for a sex worker. Itâs blackmail material. And itâs not professional.â
Sheâd heard him use the word before. Professionalism was a sacred concept to earnest young men like Hargrove.
âSex worker?â
âWhore, I guess. Thatâs the word Baker used.â
Which could mean anything. Whore was a generic insult used by old glad-handers like Baker, a way to put a woman in her place. Underneath.
âHe may have been compromised. Thatâs not something for print, of course,â Hargrove said, âalthough I canât imagine anyone would care. That was years ago. And I assume nothing was proven, or they would have pulled his passport. But you know how rumors are. They can ruin a career.â
She knew he intended to stay clean, but she also knew he wasnât above exploiting a rumor or two, if the timing was right. Thatâs what reporters were for.
âAny idea where to find him?â
Hargrove shrugged. âAt the embassy, I suppose. He comes in every now and then. I could ask Baker.â
âNo,â she said too quickly, and saw Hargrove hesitate. He was an ambitious FNG; he wouldnât miss the implication that this was important to her. But there was no use not nailing it down.
âCan you just let me know if he comes in?â she said too casually.
Hargrove reached for the bottle of Scotch. She had been right about him, she thought as she watched him pour. He was well built. Wide, but in a bulldog way, unlike Locke, who was lean.And Hargrove was fresh. Clean. He had good instincts and a sharp eye, and he wanted to learn. He was a young man who could be moldedâwho wanted to be moldedâif a woman knew how to handle him.
âSo whoâs the other guy?â he said, handing her a glass.
It was almost too easy.
She handed him Lockeâs card, with its bullshit consulting business. âIt seems legit, but heâs ex-military. I knew him years ago. In Africa.â
âKnew him?â
She shook her head. âJust because I used to be a nunââ
âI know,â Hargrove said.
And I know you love it, Alie thought. She licked her lips and sipped her Bowmore. âEverybody makes bad decisions, right?â
She was laying it on thick, but what the hell. She had been flirting with Hargrove for weeks, practically since he arrived in Kiev, and the longer something like that goes on, the more inevitable it becomes. And besides, she was lonely. It was a hard life on the road, where every story was temporary and every relationship short-lived. If she didnât sleep with sources like Hargrove, who would she sleep with? Those were the only people she knew anymore.
âYou donât think heâs a merc, do you?â she asked. One of the CIAâs new
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