Scotch spotted McKinney the moment he entered the pub. He looked
less polished since he had retired from the agency, disheveled even.
It was an odd counter to the immaculate appearance Scotch was used
to seeing. A seasoned agent before McLeod took over running the
agency, he was the agent everyone went to including McLeod when they
were in over their heads. From the greetings he got upon entering the
Cock’s Comb McKinney was still missed. Scotch waited while McKinney
made a circuit around the room and stopped at the bar to pick up a
pint. The retired agent found Scotch soon enough seated in a private
corner with an espresso on the table in front of him.
“Scotch.”
McKinney said, extending a hand in greeting.
“Fearless Man
returns.”
“I wasn’t
fearless. Young and stupid at times but not fearless.” He responded
with a grin.
“They’re still
teaching your old mission scenarios in training.” Scotch countered.
“Are they pointing
out what I did to get into those scenarios in the first place?”
“McLeod insists
that it’s the recovery that matters. You know that.”
“The agency
weakens every time they don’t look at the complete picture.” He
said with a smile. “It’s nice to know that a few people remember
me.”
“More than a few
McKinney, more than a few.”
McKinney looked
around the room before changing the tone of the conversation. “Now
why don’t you tell what I’m really doing here?”
“I’m going
through a tough time.” Scotch said. “Can’t a man want to have a
drink with a friendly face?”
“I heard that you
were training a new partner and that she’s a real pip. That’s an
espresso sitting in front of you not a whiskey or a pint. You’re
working Scotch.”
“You are more
observant than your typical retired man of leisure. I should have
known that the disheveled appearance was a disguise. What are you
working on?” Scotch asked, he looked around the pub. The bartender was busy
with a customer and everyone else appeared to be engrossed in their
own activities. He leaned in and whispered. “I have a question
about business among the agencies.”
McKinney gestured
toward the door with a nod of his head and took a long pull from
his pint. “A pint doesn’t taste the same anywhere else.” He
held on to the glass for a moment and looked at it thoughtfully
before setting it down. “Thanks for the drink Scotch. I’ve got to
be going, I’ve got a date with a hot brunette. Walk me out?”
Scotch walked with
McKinney past his car and into an empty park. “My new partner is a
poisons specialist. I have been escorting her on neutralizations,
when we get to the target’s location, they are already dead.”
“It’s making
the new partner nervous.” McKinney said.
“Yes. So nervous
that she went to McLeod with it.”
“What did he tell
her?”
“McLeod said that
sometimes there is more than one agency that wants someone dead and
not to worry about it.”
“It’s true.”
McKinney said.
“Of course it’s
true. But two targets within a week of each other? On the night that
she went to McLeod with the deaths there had been a major breach into
the agency’s computer system.”
“McLeod must have
been having a fit over that one.” McKinney commented as they
walked.
“He wasn’t. He
was completely relaxed about the whole thing. It was almost like he
was expecting it.”
McKinney stopped
walking and looked at Scotch. “Did you look into it?”
“I can’t get
much on the computer issues, IT is keeping quiet on the specifics,
but McLeod has assigned three other teams to work Neutralizations.”
McKinney continued
walking. “It sounds like someone’s cleaning house.”
“Why?” Scotch
asked. “The last time that a clean up like this took place was
after the Berlin Wall fell. Why do it again? Why now?”
There was a silence
between the two men. Scotch could tell that McKinney was making
calculations, taking a moment to decide if he could trust Scotch and more importantly,how much was safe to share.
“Do you know why I
left the agency?”McKinney asked.
“I thought that
you retired. Clearly you haven’t.”
“I have been
doing a little freelancing here and there. I also have a special
project I’m doing on my own time.”
“What are you
doing today?” Scotch asked.
McKinney studied
the sunset for several moments, both men watched as the sun went down
and the sky above grew darker.
“I left the
agency because things are changing.” He said. “Not in a good
way.”
Scotch studied his
friend and mentor. McKinney was American born, having been taken in
by his estranged father at sixteen after his mother passed away in
the United States. McKinney had never lost his accent or his American
turn of phrase.
“History repeats
itself. Because people choose to ignore history, it’s destined to
continue repeating itself. Many people are on their way out because a
few are on their way in. The ones coming in are a bigger threat than
the ones on their way out.”
“On how many
levels?” Scotch hated asking so many simple questions, it felt too
much like he was the new kid in town instead of a seasoned
professional.
McKinney shook his
head. “A man ceases to be a beginner in any given science and
becomes a master in that science when he has learned that he is going
to be a beginner all his life --Robin G. Collingwood said that. You
always hated asking too many questions Scotch. It makes you feel like
a beginner. Asking questions makes you an explorer not a beginner.”
“I’m a spy.”
Scotch countered.
“Don’t hold on
to that identity too closely, it could kill you one day.” He
shifted a bit and then continued. “Pen is a beginner, you are not.
Everything is new to her ; you know how everything is supposed to
work. If you’re smart, you’ll use your differences to your
advantage.”
Scotch looked at
McKinney.
“Don’t pretend
that you’re taking my advice. We both know that you won’t. You
could say ‘Thank You’” McKinney pointed out.
“Thank you for not
telling me anything except ‘Bad people are coming.’”
“That is what you
needed confirmed, isn’t it?” McKinney grinned. “If I hear
anything I’ll let you know.” He looked at his watch. “If I
don’t get going my hot brunette is no longer going to be hot. She’s
just going to be angry.”
“It’s not a
good idea to keep a lady waiting.” Scotch agreed.
Pen watched as the
two men shook hands and parted ways.
*This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
*This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
4 comments:
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