Ronan and Jewel
Prologue
I’d like to say it started
when I met him, but that not exactly what happened. It actually started the
summer before that. I was nineteen, and interning for a consulting company.
They weren’t really a consulting company and I wasn’t simply interning for
them. I was spying on them for C.O.D.A., Covert Operations Defending America.
It was the perfect cover.
I worked, slept, and ate in their building. There was no family to check in on
me and the three friends I’d kept up with after high schooled believed I was
teaching English in a foreign country. After I finished working for them for
the summer I would return to my hometown never to be seen by them again. It
would have been perfect…
The Company had realized
someone was leaking information to the government. They had only begun to track
it to someone in my department that Monday. It was Friday I was scheduled to
leave at the end of the day. That morning I got up just like any other workday,
except I had everything packed to leave as soon as I got off work. As usual I
went to the cafeteria at 7:00 am, ate breakfast, and then made the ten minute
commute up the stairs to my work space. I arrived at 7:50, five minutes before
any of the other half dozen interns. They arrived at 7:55. The boss would come
at eight on the dot, steaming coffee from an outside bakery always in hand.
This morning when he
walked in he was furious. He yelled at his secretary, “I want security to come
to me when they think there’s a mole in MY department!”
“Yes, Mr. Hendricks, I’ll
let them know,” shy Lauren’s voice quivered.
Mr. Hendricks then turned
to us, the interns, “Security will be here shortly, they think we have mole in
our department,” I noticed how he had changed his phrasing from, “my” to “our”,
“I will have to ask every one of you to corporate.” Security, that’s great I
thought. I probably could have talked my way out easily convincing them I was
innocent. But I’d been there too long and had too much evidence to risk it.
C.O.D.A. had provided me
with several tools and gadgets to help me get out of trouble. The best was a
handler that was a computer expert, named John. I could get information on
surveillance footage; he could also loop that footage so I could sneak around
undetected. If there was a microphone around John could also get audio. It was
our first mission together. Apparently he was a computer expert and had even
been a field agent himself for a brief time. We could converse at any time
thanks to a “hearing aid” planted deep within my ears. He was my eyes and ears.
I had to get out of the
room but with so many people in the room I couldn’t sneak out, the “washroom”
excuse would only stall for a short time. Mr. Hendricks would get suspicious if
I get didn’t come back. Sitting at my desk I felt defeated and was about to
panic. Then I remembered in my desk was roll of mints. I know that doesn’t seem
significant, but when I first tried one I almost threw up, I guess it was a
little too acidic for my stomach to handle. Two or three in a minute would
surly make me throw up. I pocketed the USB drive I had sneaked in late last
night to make; then popped four mints in my mouth for good measure. In three
minutes, my stomach stated tumbling and thirty seconds I was curled up on the
ground clutching my stomach. While my actions were over exaggerated, my stomach
really did hurt.
Derek, a nice guy two
desks down was the first to notice. “Joy!” he called as he ran over to me. “Are
you okay?” he asked his hands helping me to my feet. I answered by throwing up.
He jumped back just in time but never removed his hands from my shoulder,
steadying me. “Mr. Hendricks! Joy is sick!”
“Okay take her to the
infirmary, then come right back,” Mr. Hendricks demanded. Derek helped me out
of the room. I made a beeline for the washroom with him close behind.
In the washroom I threw
up into the toilet for a while before Derek called into the room. I didn’t
answer and he called again. He ran into the washroom asking if I needed some
help. My stomach was empty, so I turned around and kicked him in the stomach.
When he was on the floor I knocked him out. “Sorry Derek, but I’m glad I didn’t
have to kill you.” I left, locking him in the washroom.
In my dorm room I had two
packs if I been able to leave the front door I would have taken my meager duffel bag with my clothes and toiletries; but as it was a risk coming back for
the backpack with my gadgets and stolen
secrets in it. Putting the backpack on my back I spoke to the hearing aid, “You
there, John?”
“Yep, I’m here,” a disguised
male voice said.
“I need a way out.”
“I’m on it,” I could hear
the clicking of keys as he pulled up something on him computer. “Okay, the
front is too well guarded; there is a side exit, down the stairs. That’s pretty
quiet.” I turned to leave the room. “Uh-oh, Jewel, Security is up stairs
talking to Hendricks right now.”
“What? What’s happening?
Tell me what you see.” I said. By the way my name is Jewel; Joy is simply my
cover story.
“Okay.
Five guards, usual weapons and body armor. The one with the white arm band is
talking to Hendricks,” he said. That made since. The different guards wore
different colored arm bands, they showed a guard’s rank and white was one of
the highest. “The rest are wearing purple or blue.” These were the entry level
guys, John continued, “They’re going through the desks. Jewel, one just started
look through your desk.”
“Has
security found anything?” I asked.
“No,
nothing incrementing, yet,” he said.
“I’m headed for the south
stairwell.” I concluded. I walked out headed to the south stairwell, and half
way down.
“Jewel, they’re sending
more guards up. You have to get out. I count ten guards that just entered the
stairway. They’re fully armed.”
“Okay, are there cameras
in the vents?’ I asked, in response I could hear more clicking of computer
keys.
“No.”
“Is there a vent opening
large enough for me to crawl through in the stairs?” I asked. Although I was
pretty sure I knew the answer. The stairwell was stuffy, not drafty.
“No, but you’re at level
nine. There’s a vent just across the way outside the door on level 10.”
“Okay, I’m headed up,” I
said. I climbed the stairs until I came to the door marked with a gigantic ten.
I opened the door and bolted across the hall. The vent cover was on the ground
with would make crawling into it easy but first I had to get the cover off. I
took an old fashioned pocket knife out of my backpack’s front pocket. Opened
the knife then used it to unscrew the screws. There was no point in recovering
the vent because the security camera watched my entering it. “Okay I’m in.” I
said, “Get me out of here.”
“Well,
where would you like to go? I see two exits on the ground, one in the basement
and one in the parking garage.” John relayed.
“No,”
the word practically getting stuck in my throat, “Up,” I declared.
“Up,
alright, there’s an exit, I think you can crawl through, on the roof.”
“That’s
good, just direct me there.” I said. I climbed for a while, following John’s
directions, never stopping to rest, knowing that a second of rest would give
security a chance to catch up with me. As I neared the top I got nervous, I
knew that the top few floors were inhabited by professional assassins.
I emerged from the
ventilation system a few minutes later, surprisingly not fatigued. I was in
perfect physical health and adrenaline was making up for any exhaustion I may
have been feeling. John said, “I’m tapped in to the local traffic cameras. Bad
news, there’s no fire escape for you to climb down. Jewel, are you sure this
was a good idea?”
“Yes, I’m sure. The first
places they’ll check are the ground exits.” I confidently stated. “Does a
nearby building have a fire escape?”
“The one on the east side
does, why?”
“How much lower is it
than this building?”
“About, one story,” John
said.
“Okay then I’ll try that
one.” I said running fast as I could for
the edge on the roof. When I got there I simply kept running. Five feet away
and eight feet lower I rolled as I hit the next door roof. At that instant a
shot rang out from behind, missing me from by inches.
“Jewel, what happened?”
John yelled.
“Call an ambulance!” I
said glancing behind me, “there’s a man lying face down in the apartment behind
me.”
“Are you sure you want me
to that?”
“Yea, I am. If he’s alive
they might be able to save him, if not, the extra confusion might help me get
away,” I said as I continued running across the roof. Reaching the other side I
lowered myself off the roof onto the fire escape. “Is the extraction team on
the street out front?”
“Yes, it’s one building
farther east. It’s the neon green cab.” John informed me.
I climbed down fourteen
floors. Hidden from the other buildings line of sight I felt fairly safe. Just
as I was reaching the second floor I heard the sirens of an ambulance I emerged form the alley exhausted, and looked for the neon cab. I walked
purposefully to the cab. At the cab I asked the driver, “Do you drive
downtown?” It was a really silly question in my opinion, but one that would
unlikely be asked since we were already downtown.
The official looking
driver responded, “If you have a discount card.” I handed him my discount cab
card, which really did look like it was a card for a cab company but was really
a C.O.D.A. agent card especially assigned for this mission.
“John, your wrong, the
cab is a lime green color,” I teased; we’d become good friends over the summer,
so I was perfectly fine teasing him. “I’ll hear you next mission, Eyes and
Ears.”
“Well, see you next
mission, Hands and Feet. Signing off now,” now he said.
“Bye,” I said to silence,
since he’d already signed off.
It had been over a year
since I’d been in my hometown. I felt at home seeing the city limits sign but
besides that I haven’t had a home since my mother’s death when I was four.
C.O.D.A. set me up with a cute condominium only a few miles from downtown where
my office will be. It took me twenty minutes to unpack my two boxes. So while
on a beautiful day I would have gone for a run, it was to wet and dreary to
run. I grabbed the new spy romance, I’d picked up at store when I bought new
toiletries, and headed to the little, family owned coffee shop down the street.
It was unusually crowded,
although I hadn’t been to this shop in over a year so maybe they had simply
gotten more popular. I purchased a hot vanilla latte, then, was fortunate to
find an open table against the back wall. The table had seats for two; I sat on
the booth side, leaving the chair opposite empty. Pulling out the spy novel I
began to drink my drink.
I was almost finished
with my latte when a handsome, casually dressed man with his iced tea asked,
“Excuse me,” I looked up from my book at that, “is this seat taken?”
“No,” I said retuning to
my book. Hoping this would end our conversation.
“I’m Ronan, just moved
here recently,” he said using his hand to pull his leg under the table. That’s
when I noticed he was holding a simple metal cane.
“No, I’ve lived here my
whole life, except the year I studied abroad,” I said, a little surprised that
a young man would have a cane.
“Uh, no, I just moved
here.” He said, looking me over, “A Marie Vargas spy romance.”
“Yep,” I was still trying
to end the conversation. I only had till the end of the week off before I’d
have to return to work and intended to make the most of my time.
Persistently he added,
“Grate writer, but terrible when it comes to realism.”
“What? How would you
know?” I joked, finishing off my latte.
“Oh, come on there’s no
way spying could be that glamorous or adventurous.” Ronan said, taking a sip of
his tea. I got up to leave, picking up my book and trash.
“My name’s Sarah,” I said
using my free hand to pull my golden hair behind my ear. Now was his turn to be
surprised.
“Uh, okay” he fumbled for
words.
“My gold colored hearing
aids throw of a lot of men.” I finished, “I was born deaf.” With that I left
hoping to never see him again because in the spy business overly friendly
strangers are usually a danger.
Are you hooked?
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