Bigot list, p.1

Bigot List, page 1

 

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  What the Critics Say about Previous Works

  Nonfiction

  Hitler in Vienna (biography)

  “Lively and perceptive.” New York Review of Books.

  Viennawalks (travel guide)

  “A delight.” New York Times

  Viennese Mysteries Series

  The Empty Mirror

  “A colorful story that neatly combines fact and fiction.” – Washington Post

  “A meaty historical that bodes well for further adventures.” – Publishers Weekly

  Requiem in Vienna

  “Sophisticated entertainment of a very high caliber.” – Kirkus Reviews

  “A first-class historical mystery.” – Booklist

  “Pitch perfect, with an intriguing plot, interesting characters, and wealth of Viennese color.” – Richmond Times-Dispatch

  The Silence

  “The intricate plot unfolds with suspense and style.” – Kirkus Reviews

  “Very much in the fireside-snug Baker Street style.” – Haaretz (Jerusalem)

  The Keeper of Hands

  “Jones recreates the beau monde of vintage Vienna with verisimilitude and consummate style.” – Kirkus Reviews

  A Matter of Breeding

  “One of the series best at combining plot and historical background.” – Publishers Weekly

  The Third Place

  “This masterfully plotted tale offers an intimate and revealing portrait of turn-of-the-century Vienna, with fine characterizations, gentle humor, clever dialogue.” – Booklist

  Novels

  Time of the Wolf (thriller)

  “An accomplished thriller…and exciting game of cat and mouse.” Publishers Weekly

  Frankie (YA novel)

  “A fast-paced realistic piece of historical fiction.” School Library Journal

  Ruin Value: A Mystery of the Third Reich

  “Fans of WWII fiction should consider this one mandatory reading.” – Booklist

  Basic Law: A Mystery of the Cold War

  “A perfect blend of thriller and whodunit…it challenges the reader from the first to the last page.” – Richmond Times Dispatch

  The German Agent

  “A well-written espionage thriller.” – Kirkus Reviews

  The Edit

  “Jones brings deliciously dark humor to his psychological thriller, a worthy cousin to John Fowles’ classic The Collector.” – Kirkus Reviews

  The Cry of Cicadas

  “An immersive journey into the tumultuous era of WWII, filled with rich historical detail and compelling characters to delight fans of well-penned mystery.” – Readers’ Favorite

  Copyright © 2024 by J. Sydney Jones

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

  The story, all names, characters, and incidents portrayed in this production are fictitious. No identification with actual persons (living or deceased), places, buildings, and products is intended or should be inferred.

  Werthen Press

  Cover art by Evan Jones

  Layout and formatting by Jason & Vidya at ebookpbook.com

  ISBN: 979-8-9896582-4-4

  Also by J. Sydney Jones

  Viennese Mysteries Series

  The Third Place

  A Matter of Breeding

  The Keeper of Hands

  The Silence

  Requiem in Vienna

  The Empty Mirror

  Standalone Fiction

  The Cry of Cicadas: A Byrns on the Homefront Mystery

  The Edit

  Basic Law

  The German Agent

  Ruin Value

  Time of the Wolf

  The Hero Game

  Frankie

  Nonfiction

  The Man in the Tower: And Other True Tales from a Vanished Europe

  Hitler in Vienna: 1907–1913

  Viennawalks

  Vienna Inside-Out

  Tramping in Europe

  Bike & Hike

  The Crusades: Biographies

  Table of Contents

  Part One

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Part Two

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Part Three

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Part Four

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  About the Author

  PART ONE

  Chapter One

  I’m losing them, he thinks. Always that way when we get to the Hanseatic League. Can almost see the scales descending as their eyes gloss over, the thousand-yard stare, a yawn here and there. Wannabe historians and they get bored with the Hanseatic League. Same every semester.

  And as with every semester, he pulls a modern analogy out of his hat.

  “Think of it as a precursor to the European Union,” Jake says. “Or NATO, even.”

  But maybe it’s not the Hanseatic League that’s putting them to sleep, Jake begins to think, noticing that the clutch of students is chattering now, passing around a gigantic iPhone. Redfern in the front gets the phone next and his eyes go wide.

  “Mr. Redfern, may I ask what the hell is going on?” His professor tone. “This is class, not a time for social media.”

  Appositely named Redfern, red-headed and freckle-faced, has the good grace to blush.

  “Sorry, Professor Jacobs. Maybe you should see this.”

  “The only thing I would like to see from this seminar is concentration on the subject at hand.”

  Abrasive young Michaels, seated behind Redfern, is, as usual, less diplomatic.

  “Says on this site you were a spook, Professor Jacobs. That true?”

  Jake feels a clutch in his chest. He swallows hard, trying to cover his confusion.

  “Do not believe everything you read online, Mr. Michaels. A good historian is also a careful analyzer of sources.”

  He tries for nonchalance; not sure it comes off that way.

  “Really looks like your picture here,” Michaels says. “Younger for sure, but if not, you’ve got a doppelganger.”

  “Let’s return to the Hanseatic League, ladies and gentlemen.”

  He struggles through the rest of the seminar and piles on extra reading on Baltic maritime trade in the Middle Ages as a sort of punishment. He’s managed to rein in his curiosity to see what site would be running a picture of him.

  But really, what the hell does it matter? he asks himself as he heads out of Social Sciences to his aged Mercedes. Who cares if I was an agent or not? Ancient history. He never brings it up; his job is education now. All that world of CIA is in back of him. Out of the agency for more than twenty years.

  Reaching the faculty parking, he unlocks the car door, tosses his backpack filled with papers to grade onto the passenger side, slides onto the cold leather of the seat, inserts the key, and teases the car to life.

  Rain starts halfway home, and he turns on the wipers. The left one allows a wide streak of moisture as it sweeps back and forth. He’s been meaning to change it for months.

  By the time he gets to his condo, the rain—driven by a blustery wind—is coming down sideways.

  And me with no raincoat. Sunny when he left this afternoon.

  Getting out of the car and running for his door, he wonders for the hundredth time, Why the hell did I ever come to this evergreen, ever-wet freaking state?

  And for the hundredth time he reminds himself: Because of my daughter. Because of Anne.

  All grown up now and on her own, working in Silicon Valley. And me still here in Portland like a beached whale.

  Shut it, Jacobs, he tells himself, unlocking the front door and bursting into the tiled entry, dripping water.

  First thing he sees is the red light blinking on his phone. He doesn’t bother anymore with a cell. Jake Jacobs, landliner. Not a Luddite, just wants to control his own time.

  He ignores the blinking light, sets down his briefcase, shakes out his tweed jacket, and heads for the drinks cupboard. An inch of Islay to allay the wet.

  One inch leads to a second as he settles in the wingback and turns on the local classical station. Bach. He’s in the mood for Mozart, Mahler even. But he’s too lazy to look for a CD. Anne keeps telling him he needs to subscribe to Spotify.

  H

e finishes his drink, does his nightly fifty pull-ups on the steel bar he bolted across the top of the door jamb to the closet, puffs his way through fifty push-ups and fifty sit-ups and is on the way to bed. He again notices the red light on the phone. Totally forgot about it. Could be Anne, he thinks, and presses the playback.

  “Well fuck all, old boy. I thought I might get a bit of chin wag with you personally, but…”

  Jake hits the playback button again, stopping it. Christ. He’d recognize that tony voice anywhere. Armitage. Bastard Lawrence Armitage from Directorate of Operations. What the hell does he want after all these years?

  And then he remembers the seminar tonight. “You were a spook?”

  He lets the message run again.

  “… I guess I’ll just have to satisfy myself with a recording. And what the hell, Jacobs? You too cheap to buy a cell? Or just stuck in the past? The grand historian. But I haven’t called to berate you. Much too easy, that. Perhaps you are not so stuck in the past that you don’t own one of those tube thingies that connect you to the great wide world. If so, I highly suggest a visit to a site called Reckoning. Warm up the old tubes and take a gander. Looks like chickens may be coming home to roost. By the by, you’ll want to know that Peter Driscoll met with a tragic accident earlier today. Seems he drowned in his pool in Florida. Peter was a hell of a swimmer. Took early retirement to devote himself to triathlon. A little back-watching might be in order, but I leave that to you, old boy.”

  Armitage and his stupid, mincing locutions. Old boy. Screw you.

  But the name Peter Driscoll does send a worm of unease in his guts. And this makes him want to check out Reckoning.

  In fact, Jake does own a computer, a flashy little Apple laptop that Anne gifted him last birthday. He told her he wasn’t celebrating them anymore—you get over fifty and it’s just not fucking funny anymore. But, the laptop.

  He keeps it in the spare bedroom he’s converted into an office, on the desk amid a sprawl of files, hand-written notes, and books he’s researching for a work on what he calls ‘The Fourth Mole.’ Espionage activities not attributable to the three big moles of the 1980s: Edward Lee Howard and Aldrich Ames of the CIA, and Robert Hanssen of the FBI. The project started as a funky sort of hobby, but now consumes him so that he has trained himself not only in the grinding work of research, but also in the layered depths of the cyber world. Still refuses to let on to his tech-savvy daughter that he is quite comfortable in her world—with limitations.

  The more he delves into the hits the CIA took in the 1980s, the more it seems obvious to him that there had to be a fourth mole in the very guts of the U.S. intelligence community. Someone else beyond that infamous trio of Howard, Ames, and Hanssen passing on inside information to the KGB and GRU. Even to the KGB successors, the FSB and SVR. Someone at the very heart of U.S. intelligence, and someone perhaps still active.

  But now he fires up the laptop and keys in Reckoning and up pops a very cluttered website with a row of five photos made to look like most-wanted mugshots at the post office. His is third from the left, after Lawrence Armitage and his old colleague from Vienna days, Will “Sandy” Sanderson. The fourth picture is of Yuri Vosenko, former station chief for the Sovs in Vienna.

  Jake takes a deep breath. He doesn’t like where this is going.

  The fifth picture is of Peter Driscoll. Recently deceased.

  Under each of the photos is the CIA title and in Vosenko’s case, his title as KGB Rezident.

  The tag line to the photos reads: “Remember Vienna 1988? Justice is coming. A Reckoning is at hand. I spy you. You are all on my personal Bigot list.”

  As Jake finishes reading it, a thick, black X suddenly appears over Driscoll’s face.

  He slams the laptop shut, his heart racing, his fingers drumming hollowly on the desk.

  Remember Vienna 1988? Fuck all, he’d spent the better part of three decades trying to forget it. A piss poor revenge op at the tail end of the Cold War.

  Yeah, Jake thinks. I remember Vienna 1988…

  There were three of them in the parked Mercedes, waiting for the meet. Waiting in the dark night. Reni was in the back seat and held out a filter-tipped Dames to be lit. Jake, sitting in the front passenger seat, searched in the dark for the dash lighter, finally found and pulled it out, then held it over the back of his seat. She nudged the cigarette into the glowing socket and sucked deeply. An orange glow lit the car interior momentarily.

  “Keep it low,” Sanderson, the driver, said. His usually gruff voice was nasal and muffled from a cold. Sandy did not take his eyes off the windshield as he spoke, as if he were still driving instead of parked at curbside.

  Jake shrugged at Reni to show how comical he thought Sanderson’s precautions were; to put her at ease. It didn’t work. She took one puff, then crushed the cigarette in the ashtray on the car door, raking fingers through her loose blond hair.

  “You sure you want us to go through with this, Jake?”

  I’m not sure of anything anymore, he thought, replacing the lighter. Not my wife, not my job, for sure not this snatch.

  “Go through with what?” He looked her square in her blue eyes, turning half way round in his front seat to do so.

  “Jake.” Her voice went down at the end, reprovingly, but she smiled at him. He wished she wouldn’t.

  “You take me for the silly little farm girl from Styria still? How long have I worked for you? I know when you plan something big. You always wear your Loden coat.”

  “It’s cold.” And the stupid sods in Washington have no idea of the field. They just order a snatch; a snatch it is. Make up for Iran-Contra; the Marine guard in Moscow compromised by Soviet swallows; the Walker spy ring; Howard hot-footing it to Moscow, one step ahead of the F.B.I.; Pollard spying for the Israelis. Fucking defectors all over the map and a goodly number of the Agency’s Soviet moles rolled up, victims of the 9mm solution.

  So, the CIA needs a win.

  “We’ve been taking hits, my friend,” Armitage from the Directorate of Operations had told him on his fact-finding tour last week. “The President doesn’t like it. Casey doesn’t like it. They want to hit back for a change.”

  And so, this snatch. So, this stupid, got-you-last game.

  He bundled deeper into the folds of the Loden coat.

  “Such a silly coat, Jake. You look like a bookkeeper in it.”

  “You’re going soft on this one, Reni.” He turned his attention to the side window now, absently gazing at the back-lit silhouette of the Votivkirche. It shimmered in the darkness, a beautiful, eerie Gothic structure. He’d been bitterly disappointed to learn it was a fake: built late nineteenth century in thanks for a failed assassination attempt on Emperor Franz Joseph. Reni had told him that.

  Reni, the debunker of myths.

  “He is sweet, Jake. A big Russian bear. I think he loves me. He says he does. But he knows nothing you cannot read in Pravda. A functionary, Jake. Just like you.”

  “I don’t know what the hell you think is going on, Reni. It’s a meet, just like always. A simple meet.”

  “With back-up?”

  Shit, he thought. So, she’s noticed. He’d wanted to keep her in the dark; keep it natural. He said nothing.

  The silence was broken by the jangling of a tram bell on the street nearby. Number 38 from Grinzing.

  It’ll be the last one of the night, he thought. Midnight soon. No pedestrians, no witnesses. All the good Viennese tucked under eiderdown for the night. He kept staring at the silhouette of the church.

  “It’s stupid, Jake. Let me tell you that. Cowboys and Indians. There’s no need. The Cold War is over.”

  “Tell that to Moscow.” But he knew she was right. The Soviets were broke. We’d outspent them. Going bankrupt ourselves in the process. Better I’m at home repairing the damage with the wife and baby Anne. But they want results in Washington. Armitage with his English suits and transatlantic accent made that painfully clear. Results. Something to get the media off our backs. Got you last. And so, he was using Reni just like they told him to. The dutiful deputy station chief.

  Reni sighed heavily. Jake could hear the zipper close on her down ski jacket.

  “So, I guess it’s time to go. I shouldn’t make him wait in the cold.”

  He kept his back to her as she opened the door and got out. A blast of night air made the hairs stand up on the back of his neck.

 

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