“Too dangerous? Why? What’s going on? Does it have something to
do with our new friends?”
Pen’s questions
were met with silence.
“That’s a
great big ‘yes.’” She said.
“What?”
Pen rose from her
seat. “Haven’t you ever heard the expression, ‘No answer is an
answer?’”
Scotch shook his
head. “It must be something that circulates through the colonies.”
He responded without looking at her.
“The colonies?
First I’m a rotten spy and now I’m, what, an errant child?”
No answer.
“Scotch. Scotch
are you with me?” She asks, snapping her fingers.
Scotch does not
respond.
It had been a very
long night and Pen was losing her patience. “Do this. Don’t do
that. Go here, don’t go there. You’re a spy, figure it out. No,
nothing is wrong. You can’t leave because you’re in danger. Your
inconsistencies are infuriating.” She said. As she turned on her
heel the fabric of the robe flowed around her legs.
“It’s
classified.” He muttered.
She turned to face
him. “What?” Pen asked quietly.
“It’s
classified.” Scotch repeated.
“It’s
classified? I’m supposed to be a spy, I’m the one in danger
and it’s classified?”
Her comments are
once again met with silence. Pen turned around and left the room.
“Where are you
going?”
“I would tell
you but it’s classified!” She called out. She changed into her
clothes, locked herself in the bedroom with the comfortable bed, and
left at first light.
Pen did not
realize that she had the wrong phone until a text message popped up
from Corporate the next afternoon. She put down the book she had
filched from Scotch’s apartment and proceeded to text herself.
You have my
phone.
Hello. It’s
nice to hear from you too. Yes, I did sleep well thank you for
asking. --S
I still have
your phone.
That’s what
happens when she sneaks out of a
gentleman’s apartment in the wee hours. A lady forgets things. - S.
Women who behave
like errant children are hardly ladies. Pen
finished typing and hit send.
The
phone rang.
“Shit.”
Pen muttered before picking up. “Yeah.”
“Is
that any way to greet a man after you’ve spent the night at his
place?”
Pen
did not respond.
“Is
this the, no response is a response, thing that you were talking about?” He
asked.
More
silence.
“It
seems that it is.” Scotch
continued. “I have a couple of friends that were wondering if you
might be interested in bowling a game or two.”
“Bowling?”
“They
are anxious to know how our venues compare to yours in America.”
Pen
thought for a moment. “Sure. That
could be fun.”
“I’ll
meet you at the school yard tomorrow at four pm. Oh and bring your
day planner. We’ll compare calendars.”
“O-Kay.
See you then.” Pen put down the phone, getting as far away from it
as possible as quickly as she could. She looked at the clock on her
nightstand. Six pm. Twenty- two hours. She had twenty-two hours to
figure out what what was in that novel. She’d better get to it.
Scotch
was not happy when four pm came and he found himself standing alone
in the park. Pen’s phone vibrated in his hand.
Change of
plans. Walk to the far side of the park, make a left, and duck into
the tea house on the corner. Delete this message now.
Scotch
deleted the message and wondered what was going on. He moved
quickly, carefully matching his step to that of the
power walkers around him. He
made sure to allow a jogger or two to pass him in
an effort to avoid standing
out.
He entered the tea house and assessed the situation. The establishment
was nearly full. Pen had chosen a small table at the back. A wall was
behind her and she was facing the door. The kitchen was located on
the opposite side of the building. The spy was able to claim the
table next to her within seconds of it being abandoned by other
patrons.
“You
found me.” She said without looking at him.
Scotch
leaned back in his chair allowing the waitress to clear things away,
wipe down the table, and put it to rights. He gave her a quick nod
and a “Thank you.” Scotch looked around while pretending to
peruse his menu. “What happened to you?”
“Didn’t
you wonder how you got out of your apartment building the other night
without being detected?”
“It
did seem a bit easier than it should have been.” He admitted.
Pen
received her tea and scone from
their waitress. The waitress
then turned to Scotch and took his order.
“The
men in the SUV weren’t following either of us. They were following
this.” She said.
Scotch’s
phone landed on the table in front of him.
“My
phone? The agency has these phones specially made and programmed. Each
is run through IT for screening and to verify that the phone has not
been corrupted at any point during the manufacturing and shipping
process.”
“The
programming wasn’t corrupted. A very small chip was
attached to the agency’s GPS chip. A professional would have had a
difficult time finding it.”
“How
did you find it?” Scotch asked accepting the
pot of tea placed on the
table in front of him.
“It
was askew.”
“Askew?”
“It
was not perfectly placed on top of the other chip. When placed
correctly, the chip blends
in. I was looking for something that did not look right and there was
a slant to it. Someone was in a hurry when they placed it there.”
Scotch
turned over the phone and began to pull off its back cover.
“Too
late.” Pen said as she began slicing her scone in half.
“Where
is it? Did you check for prints?”
“I
looked for prints but there were none. The chip is in a Koi
pond in a rest home on the
other side of London. Hopefully it has been eaten by one of the fish
that is going
to be transported to Vienna. The owner of the rest home is a bit of
hobbyist. The Koi bred
very well this year.” She paused to enjoy a bite of her afternoon
treat.
“How
did you know about the chip?”
“I
noticed our new friends outside my apartment building late last
night. I did a bit of research, took a
peek in the back of the phone and voila!”
Scotch
looked at Pen as he returned her phone to her. “You are full of
surprises today.”
“One
of my college roommates dated a guy that had a scientific mind and an
obsessive love of technology. He lived
to talk
about it. I was the only one in the apartment who
could keep up with him. We
stayed in touch, so I
knew where to look.”
“You
have officially earned your first double gold star.” Scotch
proclaimed.
“You
have a message from Corporate. It was why I texted you yesterday.”
Scotch
scrolls through his messages. “It looks like we have a new mission.
In thirty minutes.”
*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.
2 comments:
Very good. Nice intro to Pen's tech knowledge.
@C.S. Jennings Thank you.
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