Read Flight of the Raven Online

Authors: Rebecca York

Tags: #Suspense

Flight of the Raven

BOOK: Flight of the Raven
4.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Flight of the Raven

Rebecca York

To our special research assistants, Norman and Howard

With special thanks to the staff of the United States Embassy in Madrid for their valuable assistance, and to John Riehl, for giving us the benefit of his expertise in Russian language and customs, and to Dr. Paul Burka for taking the time to answer our many medical questions

CAST OF CHARACTERS

Julie McLean—
When it came to spying, she was a rank amateur.

Aleksei Rozonov—
Seducing Julie McLean was just part of his job.

Feliks Gorlov—
The agricultural undersecretary cultivated form rather than substance.

Yuri Hramov—
The KGB’s secret weapon.

Georgi Krasin—
The young political officer was in charge of monitoring—and sometimes abetting—terrorists’ activities.

Dan Eisenberg—
Was his death an untimely accident, or did it have darker implications?

Bradley Fitzpatrick—
His unprepossessing exterior hid a sharp, analytical mind.

Amherst Gordon—
He ran the Peregrine Connection with the skill of a veteran spymaster.

Constance McGuire—
Data on all Peregrine agents was at her fingertips.

Cal Dixon—
Officially an American embassy staffer, but he was rumored to have connections to the CIA.

General Bogolubov—
He was obsessed with catching the Raven.

The Raven—
A double agent on the run, with one last mission to complete.

AUTHOR’S NOTE

We were delighted when Harlequin Intrigue told us they would be republishing our Peregrine Connection trilogy. They are some of our favorite stories, and we had a wonderful time creating daring women and dangerous heroes and catapulting them into plots swirling with high-stakes intrigue and jeopardy.

With the fall of the Berlin Wall, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the restructuring of Eastern Europe, the world has changed at warp speed over the past eight years since the Peregrine novels were written. Yet, with spy scandals at the upper echelons of the CIA and even a terrorist attack at the World Trade Center, themes of preserving peace and the balance of world power are just as relevant today as they were in the eighties when the Peregrine Connection was written.

Ten summers ago we were held hostage by a darkly attractive, extremely dangerous KGB agent in Ruth’s office. He’s Aleksei Rozonov, the hero of Flight of the Raven, one of the most exciting adventures we’ve ever written. We did extensive research for this book, traveling to the American embassy in Madrid, visiting residences of the staff and deputy ambassador, exploring the Prado and combing the city for rendezvous spots.

While we were in Madrid, the embassy staffers urged us to visit a restaurant out near the air force base. Days after we left, the place was a target of a terrorist attack. Fortunately we missed it, but it gave us a dramatic opening for our spy story.

To get a handle on our Russian characters, Ruth read textbooks on Russian life and tuned in to Radio Moscow to listen to programs being beamed from behind the Iron Curtain. Eileen interviewed a Russian linguist and gathered data on Spanish terrorist groups.

The Soviet Union has dissolved since we wrote the tale of innocent-abroad Julie McLean playing a deadly cat-and-mouse game with KGB agent Aleksei Rozonov. Yet, if current headlines are any indication, spies are still around. And there are still fascinating stories to tell about what people will do for passion, loyalty and greed. After reading Flight of the Raven—and all the Peregrine Connection books, we were pleased with how well the books stood the test of time. We hope you think so, too.

Rebecca York (Ruth Glick and Eileen Buckholtz)

Contents

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Epilogue

Prologue

T
he roll of film in his pocket was a death sentence. And if he wasn’t careful, it was going to be his.

It took all his discipline to feign interest in the flashy display windows lining the Plaza Mayor, but it was important to blend into the noisy evening crowd. He’d stopped under the shadows of the stone colonnades lining the square and doubled back often enough to assure himself that a KGB agent wasn’t following. But the reprieve was only temporary for the double agent with the code name Raven. At any moment his cover could be ripped away with all the violence of a jealous husband who has discovered a naked lover in his wife’s bed. The image brought a grim smile to his face. In this case he suspected that the injured party would shoot first and ask questions later.

A wiry youth in a black leather jacket jostled him from behind and mumbled a
“Pardon, señor.”
The Raven’s hand automatically shot to his pocket to make sure it hadn’t been picked. Nerves.

Reaching a corner of the plaza, he started down the stone steps to the narrow street. The meeting place was around the corner. Instead of entering, he stopped at a
tapas
bar with a carryout window and ordered a plate of fried
setas.
Although tasty, the Spanish mushrooms didn’t compare to the wild ones near his family’s dacha outside of Moscow. The nostalgic memory from his childhood made his chest tighten painfully. How could you love your homeland yet be compelled to give away its most guarded secrets, he wondered for the thousandth time. Then his fingers curled around the roll of film. The thought of leaving the fate of the world to the tender mercies of the Kremlin strategists made him shudder.

From long practice at subterfuge, he gave no sign of recognition when his contact, Eisenberg, strolled past him and sauntered into the Taverna San Jeronimo. As though he had nothing more important to do, he washed down the mushrooms with a glass of sangria. But his thoughts were racing ahead. Soon the information in his pocket would be on its way to the one man who would know how to use it. After dropping a handful of pesetas onto the counter, he started across the street toward the San Jeronimo.

For a horrible, confusing moment the air around the tavern seemed to shimmer. Or maybe it was the deafening blast he heard first. In the next second, the wooden door of the tavern ripped from its hinges, and shards of glass and splintered wood flew through the air like tiny missiles. Several tore through the fabric of his suit, digging into his flesh and making him stagger, but he didn’t stop to register the pain.

Next to him, an old woman clad in black doubled over and sank to the uneven pavement.

“Madre de Dios,”
someone else sobbed.

Suddenly the pavement was jammed with running feet heading away from the scene of the explosion.

But the Raven was riveted in his tracks. Holy mother! Eisenberg was in there and other innocent people too. From inside the tavern he heard the cry of someone in agony. He had to help get the people out of there.

It had been only seconds since the explosion. But his analytical mind was registering a whole series of damage assessments and speculations. The old stone building was already starting to collapse. He could picture the scene inside. Heavy wooden beams falling, plaster walls disintegrating, centuries-old floorboards giving way. Probably the bomb had been hidden in the front room. Could he get in at all? Could he get out alive?

Khaki-clad police with their ever-present machine guns materialized from the direction of the plaza, taking the decision out of his hands. His gut reaction was to stay, but there was too much at stake for him to be placed at the scene of what appeared to be a terrorist attack.

Drawing back in the shadows of a grimy doorway, he watched the Spanish civil guard begin coping with the chaos. From what he could see now, it looked as though they were going to be bringing out more bodies than survivors.

Turning reluctantly away, he shoved his hands in his pockets and felt the cold metal of the film spool. The implications of what had happened suddenly slapped him in the face.
Chyort!
He was in one hell of a fix now.

Chapter One

A
t the headquarters of the Peregrine Connection in Berryville, Virginia, Amherst Gordon blotted his lips with a white linen napkin. “Tell the chef the poached salmon was seasoned with just a bit too much tarragon.”

Constance McGuire gave her gray-haired contemporary a sympathetic look above the rims of her half glasses. A visitor who stumbled into the country elegance of the Aviary would probably take the two of them for Virginia aristocracy. It was a pose that Gordon ordinarily relished. Yet she knew that on days like this, responsibility weighed heavily on his tweed-covered shoulders. He might be independently wealthy, but he wasn’t Virginia gentry. He was a veteran spymaster known to a few highly placed members of the intelligence community as the Falcon. His daily business was coordinating the activities of a worldwide network of intelligence agents.

And when the Falcon started finding fault with the Aviary’s exceptional cuisine, it was because he was really worried about one of his operatives.

Gordon stood up. Leaning heavily on his cane, he walked over to the doorway that led to the solarium. Lush with tropical plants and his cherished birds, it was his favorite part of the house. But today, gazing at his indoor paradise did nothing for his stress level. “I suppose the damn siesta’s over in Madrid by now,” he muttered. “And we’ll find out what Eisenberg got from the Raven.”

He’d had the feeling for weeks that both men were being maneuvered into a net, and he could sense it tightening around them. He’d already offered to pull them off. But the Raven had refused to abandon his dangerous perch. He’d insisted that the information just within his reach was too vital to abort the mission now.

The curt refusal had filled Gordon with a sort of fatherly pride. He’d found Justice Louis Brandeis’s “spark of idealism” in the Raven and fanned it into a flame. But even he hadn’t realized at first how extraordinary the man really was. By conventional standards he would be considered a traitor to his country. But to anyone who understood his motives, he was nothing less than a hero. The problem was to keep him from becoming a martyr as well.

Gordon’s grim thoughts were interrupted by a chime that in an ordinary home could have been the doorbell. But this was no ordinary home.

“I think we’d better get to the office.” Connie pushed back her own chair. The special bell always meant trouble. It was connected to the computer that monitored the State Department’s most secure communications line. When a key word from their data base—like an agent’s name or cover identity—showed up in text, the alarm would sound.

Connie never seemed to hurry, yet by the time Gordon reached the library she had already triggered the dual mechanisms that opened the section of wall leading to their shielded sanctuary. Age, he noted, had not impaired her economy or grace of motion.

Connie crossed immediately to the computer. For a man with a rebuilt kneecap, Gordon was at her side in surprisingly short order. Together they scanned the message on the screen. It detailed a suspected terrorist bombing of a restaurant in Madrid. One U.S. embassy employee had been among the victims.

Behind her, Constance could hear the spymaster utter a curse. “I was afraid of something like this. They got Eisenberg. I just hope they didn’t get the Raven too.”

“Maybe it was just bad luck.”

“Not likely. The first thing I want you to do is get the whole damn political section of the embassy on the case. And drop a hint to Ambassador Thomas that U.S. defense strategy could be riding on his staff’s detective work. I want immediate access to everything they find.”

“The Raven could still be alive,” Connie reminded him.

“If so, we’ve got to pull him out of there. When you’ve finished getting the embassy off their tails, transfer some funds from his Swiss bank account to Madrid.”

“You know he’s refused to accept any payment for what he’s supplied to us.”

“Dammit, this time he’s going to have to burn his bridges. And that means he’s going to need some cash.”

* * *

J
ULIE
M
C
L
EAN
had passed up an invitation from another embassy staffer to see a current Burt Reynolds movie dubbed into Spanish and had opted for a quiet evening at home.

BOOK: Flight of the Raven
4.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Primitive Secrets by Deborah Turrell Atkinson
The Tour by Shelby Rebecca
Child Of Music by Mary Burchell
Meatspace by Nikesh Shukla