Showing posts with label Preston Fleming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Preston Fleming. Show all posts

Monday, December 29, 2014

"Dynamite Fishermen" by Preston Fleming

EXCERPT
Dynamite Fishermen
by Preston Fleming



Dynamite Fishermen is the first book in The Beirut Trilogy. Also available: Bride of a Bygone War. Coming soon: Green Line Crossing.


For more books by Preston Fleming, see my blog post on Forty Days at Kamas, and my blog post on Exile Hunter.

Description
Beirut, 1982. Conrad Prosser is a skilled Arabist, expert agent handler, prolific intelligence reporter, and a connoisseur of Beirut's underground nightlife. But, as his two-year tour at the U.S. Embassy nears its end, Prosser's intelligence career is in jeopardy because he has not recruited an agent while in Lebanon, a sine qua non requirement for promotion.
Surveying his many contacts, Prosser selects an attractive Lebanese doctoral student and her idealistic brother as candidates for development. At the same time, he holds clandestine meetings by day and night with his string of Lebanese and Palestinian agents, pressing them to discover who is behind the latest wave of car bombings that has terrorized Muslim West Beirut. But when one of his agents supplies information used to capture a Syrian-backed bombing team, Prosser sets off a cycle of retaliation that threatens more than his career and cherished way of life.
At first denying, then later concealing, apparent attempts on his life, Prosser sets out to save both his job and his skin, exploiting his agents, his best friend, a former lover, his new girlfriend and her enigmatic brother. In doing so, he puts their lives at risk and discovers too late the effect of his heedless actions.
Dynamite Fishermen offers complex characters, fast-paced action, a vivid portrayal of human intelligence operations and the pungent flavor of Beirut during its dark days of civil upheaval.

Excerpt
Chapter 1
Wednesday
“You erred in coming, habibi. Listen.” Maroun Ghaffour lowered the car window and cocked his head to hear the distant hammering of machine-gun fire. “They are tuning up now. Soon the concert begins.”
Maalesh,” the American driver replied. “You signaled, so here I am. Let’s find ourselves a quiet place and do some business.”
The silver Renault turned the corner at the crest of the hill and slowed to a halt at the entrance of a narrow lane that was shrouded in darkness. No streetlamp broke the gloom. No light escaped from behind the heavy wooden shutters of the street’s ancient stone villas. Even if someone had observed the Renault’s approach, to identify the face of the elegantly suited Lebanese businessman in the passenger seat—or that of the American driver who, at thirty-two, was nearly ten years his junior—would have been impossible.
The Lebanese man had a boyish, chubby face that was deeply tanned and displayed the meticulous grooming of an expensive salon. The sunburst wrinkles at the corners of his eyes were the byproduct of a perpetually confident smile. Rarely did anxiety furrow Maroun Ghaffour’s brow, but tonight his manicured hand trembled noticeably as it reached into the inside pocket of his double-breasted linen blazer to produce a thick manila envelope.
“I made you a copy of the minutes from Monday’s war council meeting,” Maroun said, “along with all the committee reports that were presented. Take care with them. I had no time to cover the serial numbers as I copied.”
Conrad Prosser turned off the engine, opened the envelope, and looked at the first page of each stapled document. “First-rate work, Maroun. Exactly what we’ve been looking for. I can guarantee you that this material will be on the director’s desk when he arrives for work tomorrow morning.”
“That is all I ask, Peter,” Maroun replied, using the alias Prosser had given him at their first meeting a year ago. “I want Washington to realize what a dangerous road Bashir has chosen for the Christian Lebanese.”
Although Bashir Gemayel, the headstrong young leader of the Phalangist Party and chairman of its war council, was officially Maroun’s commander in chief, Maroun had decided five years earlier that Bashir represented a long-term threat to the survival of the Lebanese Christian community. He had been reporting Bashir’s every move to the CIA since the early days of the Lebanese civil war in 1975.
Maroun turned to face Prosser, grasping his wrist gently so that the American had to stop taking notes. “Peter, it is absolute madness for Bashir to think he can seize West Beirut and the southern suburbs. Even if the Israelis invade from the south as they promised to do, and they neutralize both the Syrian army and the Palestinian Resistance south of Sidon, the southern suburbs of Beirut and the refugee camps are too well fortified to be cleared as quickly as Bashir expects. Neither we nor the Israelis have the stomach for a lengthy siege. Believe me, in a few months the Israelis will be forced by international opinion to withdraw south of the Litani, leaving us alone once more against the combined forces of the Syrian army, the Palestinians, and the Lebanese Muslims. The massacre that will follow is unthinkable. That is the message I want your government to receive.”
He fixated on Prosser’s eyes before withdrawing his hand. “But that is not the only reason I called you, Peter. There is something else. The car bombs. They are hurting us terribly. If the bombings cannot be stopped soon, some members of the war council will insist on launching our own campaign of terror bombings against West Beirut—perhaps even against Damascus itself. Peter, we need to know who is sending these bombs and how they are able to bring them into East Beirut and the Metn. If we can answer this question, I am confident that our security forces will stop the bombings and that tempers will cool again. If we do not, I fear the provocation will be too great not to respond in kind.”
“Your guess is as good as mine on how the explosives are getting in, Maroun,” Prosser said. “Has anyone tried asking the Israelis?”
“It seems they are displeased with us at the moment. Besides, they seldom offer us any information that we do not already know. Believe me, you Americans know ten times more about Lebanon than the Israelis do. They sit in their fortified security zone along the border, look north with their high-powered binoculars, and think they know everything about us. Well, I am telling you, they know less about Lebanon than I know about the Brazilian rain forest, and most of what they claim to know is mistaken.”
“You may have a point there.” Prosser chuckled. “For all the money and effort the Mossad has poured into covering Lebanon, the reports I see out of Tel Aviv these days don’t impress me. But I’m afraid the Agency doesn’t have a solution to your car bomb problem, either. Our people take it as a working assumption that Syria is behind the bombings, but that’s as far as it goes. We have no proof.”
Maroun waved the disclaimer aside. “Please, all I ask is that you do what you can to help us in this. You cannot imagine the effect the explosions are having. Our wives and children fear to step out onto the street. No place in East Beirut is safe. When you have seen even one time a child’s severed limb lying in the street, covered with dust and flies, you will understand.”
“Listen, Maroun, this is something that really ought to be handled through an official liaison between the Agency and Bashir, not by you and me. Even if I could help, you wouldn’t have any way of explaining how you obtained the information. I’ll tell you what I’ll do: if I’m able to come up with anything on the car bombings, I’ll see to it that our chief of station takes it in person to Bashir. How about it?”
Maroun shook his head. “I could easily explain having such information. I could say I obtained it from my own contacts in West Beirut and Damascus. I have often obtained valuable information by such means.”
“As I said, Maroun, if I come up with anything, I’ll do my best to get it to you before it’s passed through the proper channels.”
“That is reasonable. I ask no more than that you do what you can.”
Maroun’s disappointment was palpable, but Prosser sensed already that he may have offered Maroun too much. “All right, then, habibi, let’s roll,” he said. “The big guns are likely to let loose any minute, and I want my ass to be on the other side of the Green Line when they do. Especially with these babies tucked under my belt.” He patted the war council documents behind his waistband.
“I will walk to my car from here, Peter. For you, the Sodeco crossing will be the best choice for returning. But you must leave quickly if you are to reach the checkpoint before it closes. I fear it may soon be too late.”
“That’s all right. If it’s closed, I’ll try the museum crossing. One way or another, I’ll make it. Ma’assalama, Maroun. See you Friday on Hamra Street.”
Au revoir,” the Lebanese man replied before scanning the street for unwelcome company. Then he shut the passenger door behind him and disappeared into the darkness of the alley.
Prosser drove off, rounding the first bend and concentrating his thoughts on the problem of crossing the Green Line. He headed south and west through the maze of Achrafiyé’s one-way cobbled streets, using a shortcut that passed near the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and St. Joseph’s University. That he encountered no other motorists along the way gave him a rising sense of unease. He was coming about as close to Beirut’s east-west confrontation line as he had ever dared to come, even in daylight hours when no battles were brewing. The bullet-scarred walls and burned-out shells of houses and vehicles on every other block bore silent witness to the many armed skirmishes that had spilled over into these streets.
He had never expected to use this particular shortcut by night. It was nearly nine o’clock; before long the trickle of cars crossing between the two sectors of the city would dry up entirely. He felt his grip on the steering wheel relax a bit as he caught sight of the stylized green cedar-tree emblem marking the last Phalangist checkpoint before the no-man’s-land of the Sodeco crossing.
He lowered his window and, for the first time that evening, heard the distant rumble of shellfire accompanying the chatter of automatic weapons fire downtown in the city’s former commercial district. There, on most nights, many tons of machine-gun bullets, rocket-propelled grenades, mortar shells, artillery shells, and other assorted ordnance would be launched westward by the Phalangists and eastward by the Lebanese leftist militias, the Palestinian Resistance, and the Syrian army. The fighting generally persisted throughout the night and tapered off shortly after dawn, in time for the first waves of commuters to brace themselves for the Sodeco, museum, and port crossings en route to their jobs on the other side of Beirut.
By six or seven o’clock in the morning, Radio Lebanon and the Voice of Palestine would broadcast advice on which crossing offered the fastest and safest route across the Green Line while announcing the unofficial casualty toll for the previous night’s battle. Killed and wounded among the combatants could almost always be counted on the fingers of one hand. Civilian casualties were usually three or four times higher.
Prosser felt the dull ache of fear spread through his limbs and tried to reassure himself that it was still too early for the fighting to have spread from Place de l’Étoile and Place des Martyrs to the Sodeco checkpoint. By the time that happened, he expected to be through the checkpoint and on his second cocktail at Harry’s party on the other side of town.
He stopped the Renault on an uneven white line painted across the pavement between shoulder-high walls of burlap sandbags. To his left, behind one wall, stood a prefabricated concrete guardhouse surrounded on all sides by still more sandbags. A hatless Phalangist of about twenty years old dressed in Vietnam surplus, tiger-stripe fatigues and jungle boots, with an M-16 slung horizontally across his waist, emerged from his cramped shelter to confront him. The Phalangist wore no insignia of unit or rank, and his careless dress showed that he was a militiaman rather than a regular soldier.
Bon soir,” Prosser said as he lowered the window and held out his diplomatic identity card for inspection. The Lebanese approached the car warily and bent at the waist to peer through the window. As soon as he recognized Prosser for a foreigner, he waved the car forward with a desultory flick of the wrist.
Prosser disregarded the gesture. “The crossing is still open, no?”
“Open? Yes, yes,” came the militiaman’s impatient reply. “But not for much longer, Ingliizi. Yalla! Go now and do not stop until you are across.” He looked over his shoulder with nervous, darting eyes. “Yalla! Vite! Vite!
As if to underscore the Phalangist’s message, the aftershocks from a brace of mortar rounds falling half a block away buffeted the car from the left. With the echoed reports of the twin explosions still reverberating between the abandoned buildings, Prosser put the Renault into gear. The car lurched across the white line toward West Beirut. It was accelerating through the third cratered intersection when a deafening tumult erupted on every side. Prosser noticed the swath of orange-red tracer-bullet paths ahead just in time to slam his foot on the brakes and stop the vehicle a car length short of the intersection.
As he fumbled nervously to shift into reverse, three rapid-fire flashes of white light illuminated the walls to his left and right, followed at once by the blast of three rocket-propelled grenades. The triple concussion hit his ears like the pummeling of giant fists. Then another barrage of machine-gun fire counterattacked the source of the RPGs, the trails of burning phosphorus seeming to merge into a braid of glowing magma stretched across his path. Prosser was transfixed by the eerie play and could not tear his gaze free until a cluster of bullets ricocheted against a stone wall and tore through the Renault’s headlight and grille.
An instantaneous surge of adrenaline pushed him into action. Ignoring the damage to the Renault, he let out the clutch and felt the car shoot backward—accelerating until the engine screamed—then he wrenched the steering wheel sharply to the left so that the car’s nose swung around to face forward again. Without touching the brakes, he shifted into first again and began retracing his way to the Phalange checkpoint. He came to a stop in a sheltered spot directly opposite the sentry box and leaned on the car’s horn.
“Damn you—you nearly had me killed!” he roared in Arabic above the din. “How do I get out of here? Out, sortie—which way?”
The militiaman peered over the shoulder-high barricade and gazed open-mouthed at Prosser like some mute fish.
“I said which way out, which way back to Achrafiyé? Damn you, speak up!”
The soldier, unaccustomed to hearing curses in Arabic from the mouth of a khawaja, and perhaps embarrassed at having offered such disastrous advice, pointed south. “Take that street—there, to the right,” he answered, shouting to make himself heard. “It will take you back across the main road toward the museum crossing.”
Prosser eyed him suspiciously and did not budge. “Is it open?”
“Perhaps,” the soldier answered, shrugging and lapsing once more into surliness. “But in any case that is the direction. Go without delay. Once the shelling has begun, no place in Achrafiyé will be safe. Yalla! Vite!
Prosser was still not satisfied with the Phalangist’s directions, but by now the noise level had made further discussion impossible. To his left and right, stray bullets nipped at the upper stories of abandoned villas. In a vacant lot less than a block away, a mortar crew fired a string of three rounds, each sudden crump driving the breath back into his throat.
He raced up the hill in the direction the Phalangist had suggested, taking the narrow and poorly surfaced lanes much too fast in the darkness and praying he would encounter no other vehicles along the way. He kept up the pace until he reached the Hôtel-Dieu de France Hospital, perched on the southern slope of Jebel Achrafiyé overlooking the Lebanese National Museum at the border of the no-man’s-land separating Christian East Beirut from the Muslim West Side. He pulled up beneath a flickering streetlight to inspect the damage. Five tidy entry holes the size of dimes pierced the Renault’s fender. Two or three bullets had gone on to shatter the left front headlamp and parking light and to tear a long diagonal gash in the plastic grille, but none had penetrated the radiator. Grateful for his good luck, he scrambled back to his seat and pressed on toward the National Museum.
At the roundabout in front of the Palais de Justice he fixed a wary eye on the helmeted head of a Phalangist peering out at him from the hatch of an armored personnel carrier. Discerning that the soldier had no intention of stopping him, he pressed on toward the west. A hundred meters ahead he spied a late-model Mercedes passing through the Lebanese army checkpoint on its way west into the no-man’s-land. He smiled at his good fortune: the crossing was still open.
Prosser pulled up to the roadblock opposite the National Museum, where a steel-helmeted sentry wearing the signature red and black armband of the Lebanese army military police waved him through without so much as a second glance. Then he shifted up through the gears once more and watched the speedometer needle move steadily to the right as he entered the no-man’s-land.
He drove straight ahead, gas pedal held nearly to the floor, for what seemed like miles through the inky darkness before he recognized the Hippodrome racecourse, then the Argentine and Czech embassies, and at last the twin rows of black-and-white-striped oil drums marking the western side of the museum crossing. In a moment he would be under the protection—if one could call it that—of the Syrian army. All the way across the no-man’s-land, he had noticed only a deafening cacophony of rocket, shell, and machine-gun fire. Now the distinctive sound of each weapon rang out with an odd clarity that he had never sensed before.
The sentry, a malnourished sergeant with a gaunt face and sunken eyes, examined Prosser’s diplomatic identity card without apparent comprehension. After staring at the card for several long moments, he turned on his heel and carried the card off to a small stone structure some twenty meters away, returning with an officer whose uniform identified him as a captain in the Syrian Special Forces. The captain gestured for Prosser to lower his window once more, then handed him the card.
“Where are you going?” the captain asked in an unexpectedly accommodating tone.
“Ras Beirut,” Prosser replied.
“Where in Ras Beirut? Hamra? Verdun? Corniche?”
“Minara. I am going home to sleep, inshallah.” He laid his pressed palms against his cheek and closed his eyes in the universal pantomime for sleep.
“The crossing is closed,” the captain answered unsympathetically. “Who told you to cross?”
“Closed? What do you mean? It can’t be closed,” Prosser burst out. “The sentry let me pass!” He felt a surge of anger and frustration, fueled by his lingering resentment against the Phalangist who had nearly sent him to his grave a quarter of an hour before. “What am I supposed to do now, go back?”
The Syrian officer suddenly broke out into a grin. “No, no, no. Of course not. Go to Minara. Go home. Do as you wish,” he replied with an amiable shrug, as if to reassure the foreigner that he meant no offense. “I only wished to caution you against crossing here so late, when our fighters are expecting trouble from the east. That you have survived your trip is proof of your good fortune. At times like these the Phalangist snipers normally lie in wait on the rooftops of those buildings and fire at everything that moves.”
Prosser could not help taking a quick glance back along the road he had traveled. “Believe me, Captain, I have no intention of trying this again.”
“You speak Arabic very well for a foreigner,” the Syrian offered. “What is your work here?”
“I’m at the American embassy.” Prosser waited for the reaction.
“American embassy—very, very good!” the Syrian exclaimed enthusiastically, emboldened to test his rudimentary English. “I like America too much! But for Syrian military man, no visa to America. Visa very difficult.” He paused. “If I come to American embassy, you give me visa?”
Prosser laughed. “Inshallah, Captain,” he replied. “But visas are for the consul to decide, not me. For a visa, you must speak to the consul.”
“You speak for me?” The Syrian flashed an unctuous grin. “You help me take visa?”
Prosser reached into his trouser pocket and handed the officer one of his business cards. “Here is my card, Captain. If you come to see me at the embassy, I will take you to the consul. We will speak to him together.”
The Syrian struggled to pronounce the name Conrad Prosser using the Arabic transliteration on the reverse side of the card, coming out with something like “Cone-rod Bruiser.” Prosser nodded his approval.
“You go to Minara now, Mister Cone-rod,” the captain continued in English. “Many bad Lebanese here, kill too much. Nobody stop them kill—not even Syrian army. Lebanese crazy, crazy too much.” He pocketed Prosser’s card, gave a casual salute, and waved the traveler forward.
Prosser returned the salute and drove off along the deserted boulevard, bemused as usual by the nearly universal Arab ambition to obtain a visa to the United States. While he did not question the captain’s sincerity in applying, there was little chance the man would follow through. Apart from the fact that Syrian officers posted to Lebanon carried no passport in which a visa might be stamped, an unauthorized visit to the American embassy would probably land the man ten years at hard labor. But, then again, there was always the chance he might take the risk, and if he did Prosser would be more than willing to strike a deal. Beirut was full of people desperate enough to turn traitor for the chance to start over.
“Crazy Lebanese—crazy too much,” he mimicked before patting the area along his waistband where the envelope filled with reports from Maroun was concealed.
A momentary thrill sent his pulse racing when he thought of the splash that Maroun’s information would make at CIA Headquarters and the tale he would be able to spin for Harry Landers about how he drove right into a firefight. Then he pressed the accelerator and sped off toward Ras Beirut as if to outrun the trouble that seemed to be chasing him home.

Praise for the Book
"Conrad Prosser, immersed in the civil disorder of early-'80s Beirut, employs whatever means are necessary to expose the organization behind a series of car bombings. The possibility of bloodshed at any moment keeps the story at an elevated level of suspense. Even the more languid moments move with a searing undertone. Uncertainty among the characters, coupled with relentless gunfire and explosions, make for an extraordinary novel, each page as eruptive as the city providing the setting." ~ Kirkus Reviews
"Dynamite Fishermen is an absolute stunner of a novel. It's clear Fleming has done his research and it shows in the seamless dialogue and the ease at which he tackles the task of conveying the wartime ambiance. This is a must-read for history buffs - although I feel strongly everyone will enjoy the rapid pace and captivating suspense. Fleming is a writer deserving of many accolades." ~ San Francisco Book Review
"In Dynamite Fishermen, Preston Fleming depicts heedless violence as a way of life from the perspective of an American intelligence officer. The story falls during a lull in the long running Lebanese civil war, a period plagued by daily car bombings, civilian shootings, artillery attacks and other mayhem. As many details of this conflict continue to reverberate today, this intelligently written novel provides a compelling page-turner and a memorable story." ~ Pacific Book Review
"An intelligence officer who has dodged making decisions and cleaning up his messes is forced to face the consequences, showing resourcefulness and decency...at last when he must. Fleming does know how to spin a yarn... his fiction has more verisimilitude than many others in the genre." ~ bookpleasures.com

About the Author
Preston Fleming was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He left home at age fourteen to accept a scholarship at a New England boarding school and went on to a liberal arts college in the Midwest. After earning an MBA, he managed a non-profit organization in New York before joining the U.S. Foreign Service and serving in U.S. Embassies around the Middle East for nearly a decade. Later he studied at an Ivy League law school and since then pursued a career in law and business. He has written five novels.


Links



Tuesday, September 16, 2014

"Exile Hunter" by Preston Fleming

EXCERPT
Exile Hunter
(The Kamas Trilogy Book 3)
by Preston Fleming


Exile Hunter is the third book in The Kamas Trilogy. It was recently awarded a Gold Medal in the Fiction - Suspense category of the 2014 Reader's Favorite Book Awards

Also available: Forty Days at Kamas (read my blog post) and Star Chamber Brotherhood.



For another book by Preston Fleming, see my blog post on Dynamite Fishermen, the first book in The Beirut Trilogy.

Description
Exile Hunter, the third book in the Kamas Trilogy, begins in 2023, one year before the Kamas revolt, in a dystopian America ruled by a tyrannical President-for-Life who turns America’s military and intelligence assets against his domestic enemies. The protagonist, an undercover officer specializing in targeting exiled political opponents, becomes the scapegoat for a failed operation and is sent to die in a corrective labor camp near the Arctic Circle. But, defying all odds, he survives, escapes and devotes his remaining energies to finding and aiding a woman whose family he has ruined.
Beirut, 2023: When undercover intelligence officer Warren Linder agrees to lure an exiled opponent of the President-for-Life back to impoverished, low-tech, post-Civil War II America, Linder is unaware that the target is his childhood sweetheart’s father. On learning this, he ignores his better instincts and plunges ahead. But a surprise encounter with the woman who rejected him years before triggers a change in Linder that derails the operation. His bosses, suspecting treachery, capture Linder along with the target and his daughter and spirit them back to the U.S. aboard a secret rendition flight. Linder’s ensuing journey takes him from Beirut to a Virginia interrogation center and on to an Arctic labor camp; then, after a nearly impossible winter escape, on a 2000-mile trek to the Utah Security Zone, where his onetime love was last held. Though he finds her, their respective ordeals have changed them. The story reaches a climax in the couple’s home town of Cleveland, where Linder aims to recover his former target’s last cache of rebel funds and use it to take his loved ones beyond the regime’s reach. Exile Hunter is a tragic yet life-affirming saga of a man who risks everything to set right past wrongs, regain lost love and resist the tyranny he once served.
In Exile Hunter, author Preston Fleming offers his most richly imagined vision yet of the future American dystopia introduced in Forty Days at Kamas, while endowing the story’s characters with complexity and a remarkable capacity for growth. Warren Linder's epic journey crackles with excitement at every step and leads to a deeply satisfying conclusion. Devoted Fleming readers will likely consider Exile Hunter the author's best work by far.

Excerpt
Who can protest and does not, is an accomplice in the act. ~ The Talmud
September, Thursday, West Beirut
Warren Linder stepped from the taxi onto the cobbled side street, felt the glaring heat of the midday sun, and nearly fell on the ice. Not sheet ice, for this was September in Beirut, but a layer of discarded ice cubes that some restaurant sous-chef had poured onto the curb. Seizing the taxi door with both hands, Linder regained his balance quickly, but for all his hardheaded worldliness, he had developed a superstitious streak of late and, rather than curse at the proximate cause of his near fall, pondered whether it might have a deeper meaning. And in that moment he wished he had never left his flat in the Cypriot resort town of Limassol, a mere hour’s flight away, where he had spent the previous night after a week on the road.
While he imagined himself back on his fourth floor balcony overlooking Akrotiri Bay, the taxi driver fetched his bags from the trunk, deposited them on the sidewalk, and awaited payment. Linder refocused in time to pull a wad of Lebanese banknotes from his jacket breast pocket and pay the jovial driver, adding a generous tip and a few words of appreciation.
Only then did he notice his reflection in the polished car window. The sight unnerved him: he looked every bit as dissipated as he felt. The dark circles under his bloodshot, puffy eyes, the gray streaks infiltrating his hair and whisker stubble, the furrows in his forehead and cheeks: these were all products of the past two years.
Though he exercised most days, ate reasonably well when he could, and made an effort to catch enough sleep and cut back on the booze, Linder knew his 38-year-old body had logged more than its share of mileage and stress during his dozen years of government service. He was nearing the end of his rope: the proof of it was in the mirror, and in the nightmares, and in the need for more and more alcohol to stave off his dread.
All at once he felt a powerful urge to pitch it all and board the next ferry to Larnaca and, from there, another boat to Turkey and then a bus or taxi to some obscure seaside or mountain village in Greece or the Balkans where he could buy time and figure out how to give his life a radical makeover.
He turned and called out to the driver.
“Is there still a daily ferry from Beirut to Cyprus these days?”
“Not daily, not weekly, siidi. To go by sea, you must hire a boat and a captain. Best to find them at Jounieh or Kaslik. Shall I take you?”
Linder hesitated.
“And to Syria? The same?”
“There are ships for carrying goods to Latakia, but none for the people.”
“Too bad. Maybe another time, then,” Linder replied, noticing the middle-aged doorman who had come to fetch his luggage. With a parting nod to the driver, Warren Linder followed the doorman and his bags into the lobby of the Hotel Cavalier.
The desk clerk was an unctuous twenty-something Lebanese with a receding hairline and ample paunch, likely the product of some European hotel-management school or apprenticeship, one of the generation of prematurely aged young fogeys who were rebuilding the new commercial city-state of Beirut from the ashes of its most recent conflagration. Linder greeted the clerk in French and handed him the alias passport that he occasionally used for the kind of undercover work that had brought him to Beirut. The clerk gave him a professional once-over, then proceeded to check him in.
As Linder pulled out his wallet, full of credit cards and IDs under his current alias, the urge to flee gripped him once more, and he wondered whether he had enough cash and credit in his two hands, right now, today, to vanish from sight. No, came the answer; it was impossible. Even if he took cash advances from all the credit cards before leaving Beirut, he would not get very far. Without having planned further ahead, he would likely be caught within days.
This sudden feeling of dread and unease puzzled him. Usually, he loved being on the road and arriving in a new city. Though he sometimes dreamed fondly of having a real home, of putting down roots somewhere with a wife and family, each time he returned to his flat in Limassol, or Basel, or London before that, or even Cleveland to visit his parents and sister, within days of arriving he would daydream of being on the road again.
The problem with being a self-starter and overachiever was that he could never quite bring himself to slow down. He felt rather like a shark that needed to constantly move to survive. The analogy was apt, not only because of the work he did, but also because it was true in a physical sense. His muscular, heavy-boned physique was so lean that he could literally lie flat on the bottom of a swimming pool without rising. From adolescence on, he had come to hate swimming because if he failed to swim fast, he sank.
After completing the check-in procedure, Linder took the self-service elevator to the hotel’s top floor and found his mini-suite at the end of the hall. It was as spacious and well appointed as the operations assistant at Beirut Base had described by email, with a view of the shimmering Mediterranean across a vast array of red-tiled roofs. Linder placed his suitcase on the folding luggage rack, opened it to retrieve his toiletries kit, and retired to the bathroom to freshen up after his travels. When he returned to the sitting room, he opened a tall bottle of sparkling mineral water, poured himself a glass, and downed it in a single draft. Next, he pulled out a tourist map of Beirut and had barely spread it across the coffee table when he heard a sharp rap at the door.
Quickly Linder refolded the map and closed his suitcase before walking quietly to the door. Through the peephole, he saw a familiar face, and, without hesitation, opened the door to let in Neil Denniston. Both men waited for the door to close before speaking.
Denniston, a gangling, narrow-shouldered figure dressed in dark tropical wool dress trousers and a tailored striped shirt unbuttoned to the breast bone, wore a confident grin as he offered his hand to Linder. His lush crop of flaxen hair had thinned on top since Linder had last seen him three summers before, and his deep-set eyes and thin-lipped mouth were surrounded by a few new wrinkles, but otherwise, Denniston looked much the same as he did a decade ago when the two men had worked together on a CIA-led counterterrorist team, also in Beirut.
Five years later, both left the Agency to join the newly formed Department of State Security at a time when nearly all American troops and intelligence operatives were being brought home for good. As with Vietnam-era counterinsurgency experts two generations earlier, Arabic-speaking counterterrorist officers now glutted the market as they filed through the crowded halls of the Pentagon and CIA Headquarters, searching in vain for onward assignments.
Then, as now, Denniston was always on the alert for career-advancing opportunities, always the first to pursue the next big thing, always hustling close friends and associates to team up with him on his next gig. And Denniston was nothing if not persuasive. He had a deceptively languid manner, speaking slowly and softly in a Kentucky Gentleman drawl that charmed many into underestimating his shrewdness and force of will. Similarly, by maintaining eye contact and lavishing praise, he made others feel as if there was no one else in the world he would rather talk to. Women, particularly the more vacuous ones, tended to find Denniston irresistible. In an earlier era, Linder could easily picture his friend as a Mississippi riverboat gambler or a Florida land swindler or a New Orleans pimp.
Denniston’s personal qualities, Linder was certain, perfectly matched CIA’s recruiting profile for new clandestine operations officers, a profile that dated back to the World War II Office of Strategic Services and was refined continuously by way of sophisticated psychological testing techniques. The same recruiting profile, Linder believed, described the constellation of character traits commonly found among loan sharks, Wall Street bond salesmen, drug pushers, Ponzi schemers, plaintiff lawyers, used car salesmen, and other borderline sociopaths.
Such charm, craftiness, and determination were largely the reason why Denniston was now Branch Chief for North Africa and the Near East in the DSS’s Émigré Division. Of course, his Unionist Party membership had also played a role, but joining the Party before the President-for-Life’s final election was just one more example of his friend’s unusual foresight and tactical genius. When he and Denniston were fraternity brothers at Kenyon and Linder coached him through one exam after another, Linder would never have imagined that one day Denniston’s career would outshine his.
Linder took Denniston’s outstretched hand and gave it a hearty shake before pouring his guest a tumbler of sparkling water.
“Sorry, I don’t have anything stronger,” Linder said as he handed over the glass. “No ice, either.”
“You can send up for something if you want. They have an excellent bar here,” Denniston offered.
“Yes, I remember.”
“Of course,” Denniston responded. “You were stationed here, too, in those days. I keep forgetting. It seems like another lifetime.”
Linder poured himself another glass of water and took a seat across the coffee table from Denniston. This time he would not let Denniston suck him into another drinking bout. If Denniston wanted to booze it up, he could visit the bar alone.
“At the risk of being abrupt, Neil, I’d like to ask you a question I didn’t want to put in official email traffic. What exactly do you and Bednarski want from me in this operation? My understanding is that your target is one of the rebel leaders who looted the downtown banks during the Battle of Cleveland, and that your objective is to render him back to the States. But don’t you already have an inside man to set this up? Why do you need me?”
“Actually, the only inside man right now is you,” Denniston replied with his usual self-assurance. “Our plan is to introduce you as an insurgent leader from one of the western restricted zones. Your funding request will be of a scale that requires our target’s approval, since he decides on all major funding requests to his particular war chest.”
“So you want me to go to him as Mormon Joe Tanner?” Linder asked. “Has your man met Tanner before?”
“Not yet, but we’ve had a couple of our European-based assets vouch for you. And there’s one other step involved. You see, before you can get to our primary target, you’ll have to make your pitch to his go-between.”
Linder shook his head in distaste. “Does Headquarters know about this? Frankly, Neil, this is starting to sound like something you cooked up on your way over here.”
“Oh, they know all right—in broad terms, of course,” Denniston responded, full of his usual bravado. “The thing is, the old man is cagey and easily spooked. That’s why we wanted somebody with demonstrated abilities in dealing with insurgent types, so we can reach our man on the first try. In short, we wanted the best undercover operator around, and that’s you.”
Linder had heard the pitch before: Denniston was in over his head and needed someone to bail him out.
“If you’re resorting to flattery, there must be a catch. What is it? Whose signoff are you missing?”
Denniston shifted uneasily in his seat and looked away before answering.
“No, really, we’re good to go. Bednarski has an oral okay from the Division Chief.”
“Oral? I’d prefer something in writing,” Linder pressed. “I know we’re under time pressure and all that, but…”
“Sure, just ask Bob,” Denniston nodded. “Since he’s Base Chief, officially it’s his op. You can talk to him when we get together this evening.”
“Yeah, right. A lot of good that’s likely to do me, considering how well he and I get along.” Linder complained. Linder realized his complaint was useless. There was no way out; he was here, and so he would have to perform. Denniston had outmaneuvered him again. “So, tell me, how many days are we going to need for this? And how far do you expect it to go? Are we reeling in the fish in one go or just setting the hook?”
“That depends on whether you can get a face-to-face meeting with the target,” Denniston explained, leaning back in his chair, getting comfortable. “Once you do, and you establish your bona fides, we’ll decide how far and how fast to push. You may have to come back once or twice to seal the deal.”
Linder offered his colleague a resigned smile.
“No problem there,” he answered. “I’ve been working this town for over ten years and have become rather attached to it. Now, do you mind telling me who the target is?”
Denniston paused for effect.
“Roger Kendall is the go-between,” he teased.
“Then the target is…” Linder felt a sudden tightening in his gut.
“You guessed it. Philip Eaton.”
Linder gritted his teeth. “You’re certain of that?”
“No doubt about it,” Denniston shot back.
“I heard that Eaton might have travelled this way, but what is Kendall doing here?” Linder challenged. “He never leaves London any more.”
“Don’t forget, Eaton is his new father-in-law,” Denniston pointed out. “And Kendall seems to think that the meeting with Tanner is very important. So it appears his visit is mixing business with pleasure.”
Linder rose from his chair and strode to the open window. He gazed out over the Mediterranean and spotted a fishing boat heading out to sea. He wondered how long the trip to Limassol might take, if he chartered a yacht from Jounieh. And how much would it cost? He just might be able to put together enough cash for that with advances from the alias credit cards. There was plenty more in his safe deposit box in Limassol. He just had to get in and out before anyone knew he was missing.
Linder’s mind raced on. He imagined himself disappearing on foot into the back alleys of the Lebanese capital, catching a taxi and making his way through the hills to the east, across the Bekaa Valley into Syria, then up the coast to Turkey and across Bulgaria to some seaside resort in Croatia or Montenegro or Albania. The urge had been nagging at him for the better part of a year, but now it was more powerful than ever: if he did not break free and start a new life now, leaving everything he knew behind, something dreadful was certain to happen. But if he fled and was caught, his end would likely be just as dreadful: arrest and conviction on national security charges, a sentence to hard labor in some godforsaken prison camp in Alaska or the Yukon, and death from overwork or exposure.
Linder managed to regain control of his wayward thoughts, turned away from the window, and met Denniston’s gaze.
“Did Kendall bring his family?”
“You mean Eaton’s daughter and granddaughter?” Denniston inquired.
Linder nodded.
“Not to our knowledge,” Denniston answered. “Kendall’s registered at the Sofitel in Achrafiyé. He seems to be alone.”
Linder scowled as he strode back to the couch.
“I don’t get it. Kendall is a mere dabbler in rebel politics. And the latest word on Eaton is that he’s run out of dough. Frankly, Neil, this whole thing is looking like a fool’s errand.”
“Bob and I disagree,” Denniston demurred. “And so does the Division Chief. So here’s what we’re going to do. You’re set to meet Kendall tomorrow for coffee at one o’clock on the East Side. Right now, I suggest you get some rest, shower up, and meet me downstairs at seven. We’ll go to Bob’s for drinks and then step out for dinner and work everything out among the three of us.”
“Out to dinner? Together? When we’re prepping for an op? Have you gone nuts?”
Denniston shrugged and flashed his most disarming smile.
“Don’t fret. Eaton and Kendall never come to the Muslim side of town after dark. Besides, Bob wants to go out; and when Bob gets his mind set on something, there’s no point arguing with him.”
Without waiting for a response, Denniston finished his mineral water and rose to leave.
“Come to think of it, let’s not meet downstairs at seven. Why don’t I pick you up on Rue Clemenceau instead? I’ll look for you at seven sharp walking along the fence side of the street by the American University. I’ll be driving a silver Renault station wagon. It’ll be fun. You’ll see.”

Featured Review
I thoroughly enjoyed this spy adventure/thriller set in the world of the dystopian Forty Days at Kamas of a post American Civil War II. Follow Warren Linder, a former CIA agent now working for the DSS (Department of State Security), in a gripping spy adventure of betrayal, love, and the desire to make reparation. Follow Linder into the icy Yukon Prison camps and travel a near- impossible 2000 miles towards a hoped-for freedom and to fulfil a promise and find a lost love. The book is well written and very descriptive. Even though I read this book during an African heat wave I could feel the gripping cold of frostbite of Alaskan snow storms. My only objection is that the first couple of chapters were a little slow in development, but the remainder of the book more than made up with faced past and gripping action right through to the very end. I was quite sorry that the book came to an end as I was ready for more and here's hoping that the author can find a few more stories to tell that are set in this not too distant and maybe likely world. While Exile Hunter is the third instalment in a series starting with Forty Days at Kamas it doesn’t need to be read in sequence standing as an independent story. I won’t hesitate to recommend and read any of Preston Fleming's books.

About the Author
Preston Fleming was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He left home at age fourteen to accept a scholarship at a New England boarding school and went on to a liberal arts college in the Midwest. After earning an MBA, he managed a non-profit organization in New York before joining the U.S. Foreign Service and serving in U.S. Embassies around the Middle East for nearly a decade. Later he studied at an Ivy League law school and since then pursued a career in law and business. He has written five novels.


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