He felt a bubbling nervousness now that their months of tedious and fruitless investigative legwork was about to pay off. He was about to put eyes on
“Delta One has a visual,” he said.
“Air One.”
“Going dark.”
When the RHIB disappeared behind the neighboring boats, Rick removed the earpiece from his ear and descended from the fly bridge to the main deck. Halfway down the ladder, he felt his phone vibrate, and when he reached the bottom, he pulled it out and saw another message waiting in the secure portal. He glanced in the target’s direction then back to his phone, deciding he had time to check the message before regaining a visual. There was only one way off the dock, and it led right past his position from the deck of
Rick unlocked his cell phone with a six-digit passcode and biometric scan, then opened the secure portal. Entering another unique passcode, he connected to the server and downloaded the waiting message. Over the last several months of monitoring communications between
This was out of the norm, and it worried Rick that
After downloading the message from the secure server, he read it through quickly and felt his face flush. He read it again, then glanced in the direction of the RHIB and cursed.
“Well, shit.”
He exited the secure portal and dialed Punky.
Punky had cleared the bulk of Los Angeles area traffic and had the convertible Mille Miglia Red Corvette purring like a kitten. But she couldn’t keep her mind from racing with worry.
Her hair thrashed in the wind as she pushed the classic muscle car south to San Diego. The speedometer needle cracked ninety miles per hour, and she instinctively veered into the left lane to pass slower-moving traffic. Patience might have been a virtue, but it wasn’t one she had been blessed with. At least not when it came to rooting out traitors and putting them behind bars, where they belonged.
A modern sports sedan veered out in front of her, and she swerved back to the right and stomped on the gas, avoiding the temptation to flash her badge — or middle finger — at the offending driver. As much as she refused to admit it, she wasn’t any closer to uncovering
Her phone rang as the traffic in front of her opened up. She slipped in her AirPods as all two hundred and seventy ponies shoved her back into her seat. “What’s going on, Uncle Rick?”
“We got another one,” he said.
“Another…?”
“Message.”
“So soon?”
“This doesn’t sound good,” he said.
“The
Aside from the fact there had been a predictable cadence in communications between
“Where are you?”
“An hour from the base. Are you going to tell me what it said? Or am I supposed to guess?”
Rick sighed on the other end, and she knew he was struggling with the idea of discussing classified material over an unsecured line. Rick was a good agent, but sometimes the cumbersome rules put in place to protect their country from its enemies hindered those who were trying to stop them.
“Spit it out.”
“The message said, and I quote, ‘Navy pilot downloaded aircraft data. Potential compromise.’ End quote.”
She felt her first glimmer of hope. Instead of floundering about in reports she had already read at least a dozen times, hoping to find a needle in a haystack and a new morsel of information that might lead her to the traitor, all she needed to do was find the pilot. If
“What’s bad about this? This is good news,” she said.
“Punky. What do you think
Her foot came off the gas pedal a smidge. She hadn’t considered the danger to the pilot just because of whatever knowledge he possessed, and she tried convincing herself her motives for finding him had changed. “I’ll find him,” she said.
“Punky…”