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‘The hell do you mean, she’s been fired?’

Doug Jarvis stood at the door to the office of a low-ranking analytical official by the name of Guy Rikard, who blocked his access with wide, fat shoulders and sneered down at him.

‘Pending assault charges,’ he spat back at Jarvis. ‘The little bitch is going to get everything she deserves.’

Jarvis glanced at Rikard’s sweaty brow and saw the thick purple bruise swelling around his left eye. He smiled.

‘Not the only one by the look of things.’

‘Who the hell are you?’ Rikard snapped.

‘Defense Intelligence Agency,’ Jarvis growled back, and flashed his identity card. ‘Either get out of my way or I’ll put you on your ass too.’

Rikard stared in amazement at the ID card and then backed away from the door. Jarvis strolled in and glanced around. Several members of staff were looking at him with interest. Jarvis turned to Rikard.

‘What was Natalie working on here?’

‘I am not at liberty to discuss that with outside parties from any governme—’

Jarvis took one pace toward Rikard, grabbed his testicles and twisted them hard as he yanked them upward. Rikard yelped as he staggered backward on his toes and collided with a water cooler in the corner of the office.

‘She was tasked to disseminate from public office records information pertaining to alleged misconduct by government agencies against American citizens!’ Rikard sang in a bizarre high-octave voice.

Jarvis nodded slowly. ‘Good. Now, why did she hit you?’

Rikard’s patchy red face was glowing like a beacon as he struggled to talk in quick, abrupt sentences.

‘Her friend was involved in a car wreck. I got mad because it would leave us one man down. She got mad about that and then whacked me.’

‘And you were surprised?’ Jarvis uttered. ‘Who was her friend?’

‘Ben Consiglio. He works here.’

‘What was he doing?’

‘Chasing up leads on Natalie’s work,’ Rikard squeaked. ‘She was looking for somebody called Joanna Defoe, some orphanage or something.’

‘Where?’ Jarvis snarled and twisted harder.

‘Virginiaaaah,’ Rikard squealed as tears began flowing from his eyes.

Jarvis thought for a moment. Virginia was a long way to go to pursue Joanna Defoe’s life story, if that was what Natalie had been doing.

‘Why was this Ben doing it for her?’ he asked, and released some of the pressure.

‘Because I wanted Natalie in this office,’ Rikard heaved in response. ‘She was going off too much on her own mission and not doing her job.’

‘Sounds like she was doing her job just fine,’ Jarvis said. ‘Anything else?’

Rikard shook his head.

‘Not much, just some old junk files from something called MK-ULTRA.’

Jarvis let go of Rikard as though he’d been electrocuted. The office manager let out a gasp of relief as he slumped against the wall and slid to his knees, his hands clutching his groin. Jarvis barely noticed. Suddenly a huge missing piece of the puzzle had fallen into place and he realized what the whole charade had been about.

He knew all about MK-ULTRA. In fact, anybody who knew anything about the CIA would know about the controversial program that had been blown wide open by the Senate’s Church Committee back in the 1970s. But if Natalie had been researching the files from the testimonials then Jarvis could think of only one good reason why. Either Joanna Defoe was more involved with her father’s history than he might have otherwise assumed, or MK-ULTRA was still an active program.

Only one explanation really provided a reason for the extensive surveillance operations now extending to himself at the DIA and to Natalie Warner. A new and unexpected concern flooded his awareness as he considered the implications of Natalie discovering anything about an active MK-ULTRA program that the CIA would want to remain covert.

‘How far had she got with her work?’ he demanded of Rikard as the office manager struggled to his feet.

‘This is assault!’ he gasped, ‘I’ll have you up in front of a tribunal and—’

‘People are dying,’ Jarvis snapped. ‘Your man Ben Consiglio was possibly the subject of an assassination. Anybody involved in the Congressional investigation of intelligence agency corruption could become a target.’

The office around Jarvis went deathly silent. Rikard stared at him for a long moment before he spoke.

‘That’s insane,’ he said. ‘They wouldn’t dare do such a thing.’

‘Believe me,’ Jarvis replied, ‘they’ve done far, far worse in the past and nothing’s changed, except for the fact that things are covered up much better than they used to be.’

Rikard’s slitty little eyes glazed over for a few moments.

‘I’ve got two kids,’ he said.

‘So have I,’ said somebody from across the office.

Jarvis scanned the members of the analytical team and made a decision.

‘Go home,’ he said. ‘Each and every one of you. Take two days off and don’t come anywhere near this office. You’re all sick with a bug. You don’t come here, you don’t do any work and you won’t be a target for anything more than a disciplinary hearing from your boss, which we’ll ensure won’t happen, right, Guy?’

Rikard looked at his team and nodded. ‘Get out of here.’

The office emptied quicker than a high school at the end of semester. Only one person remained, a thin-looking man with big brown eyes who seemed cautious of approaching either Jarvis or Rikard.

‘I’ll stay,’ he said. ‘Nat’s had a rough day.’

‘This is Larry,’ Rikard said. ‘He follows Natalie around like a pet puppy.’

‘Better than treating her like a dog,’ Larry muttered back.

Jarvis looked at Larry. ‘Where did she go?’

‘To the scene of the accident, out near Aden on the 646.’

Jarvis’s mind went into overtime as he considered what had happened to Natalie’s colleague Ben. If Rikard had sent Ben out to the orphanage to chase a lead on Joanna Defoe, then whoever made the hit had to know something about it. And for them to have known about it, somebody had to have told them, because the CIA was tasked with tailing Natalie, not random colleagues from her office. Even with the intense security around anything like MK-ULTRA, if it was still running, the CIA just didn’t have enough manpower to keep tabs on an entire Congressional investigation. An informer would be a much wiser resource, planted within Congress and most likely within the analytical team itself.

‘Who knew where Ben Consiglio was going?’ he asked Rikard.

‘Me, and anybody who overheard the conversation, I guess,’ he replied.

Jarvis nodded. The office had emptied almost immediately. Jarvis had flashed a DIA identity badge in front of all of them, which meant that any CIA mole would most likely have hotfooted it out of the office with the rest of the team for fear of being spotted.

All that was left was Rikard and Larry.

‘Listen to me very carefully,’ Jarvis said to them. ‘Nothing that I tell you can ever be heard by anybody else, understood?’

The two men nodded in understanding.

‘Good,’ Jarvis said. ‘Then this is what we’re going to do. Natalie is in great danger and may need protection. I’ll call the police and have her taken into custody in the nearest station to the car wreck. I want you both to stay here and search through Natalie’s work — try to figure out exactly what she was doing and how far she got. Rikard, you gather together everything the pair of you find out and take it to the Congressional committee, Congress, the Investigator General of the CIA — anybody, and tell them what’s happened, understood?’

Rikard nodded as his bad attitude suddenly evaporated in the face of a true crisis. Larry whirled and headed toward Natalie’s desk and the piles of paperwork still sitting there.