Robert Ludlum's the Blackbriar Genesis
Robert Ludlum's the Blackbriar Genesis
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Author(s): Gervais, Simon
ISBN No.: 9780593419991
Pages: 512
Year: 202308
Format: US-Tall Rack Paperback (Mass Market)
Price: $ 13.79
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

ONE Cairo, Egypt Four years ago Assistant Deputy Secretary of State Edward Russell maintained a brisk pace as he hurried through Terminal 3 of the Cairo International Airport. He walked past the different stores, seeing flashes of books, overpriced food, and clothes. He wondered for a moment who in their right mind bought clothes at an airport, but seeing that every store was busy with customers, he just shook his head and continued toward the main station of the MiniMetro. Quite familiar with the airport, Russell didn''t need a map to find the station, which was located between the freshly renovated Terminal 2 and the slightly older but much bigger Terminal 3. Looking past the bobbing and weaving heads of the other passengers walking in front of him, Russell spotted the red-and-white train symbol. He turned left at the next junction, with the instructions he''d been forced to memorize before leaving Washington playing in his mind over and over. From Terminal 3, walk to the main MiniMetro station. Take the MiniMetro to Terminal 1, then use one of the terminal''s public bathrooms before climbing back into the train to Terminal 3.


From there, buy a local newspaper from the gift shop and go to the lobby of the Le Méridien hotel by crossing the pedestrian bridge. Someone will be waiting for you in the lobby. Though he remembered every word, it failed to boost his confidence. Russell wasn''t a spy, but he wasn''t a fool, either. He knew he was being watched. He just didn''t know by whom. All around him, arriving and departing passengers were hauling not only suitcases and travel bags filled to overflowing, but also teddy bears, pillows, and shopping bags stuffed with consumer goods. As large and nice as it was, Terminal 3 was packed with sweaty travelers, and their hurried footsteps, mixed with the sounds of crying babies, echoed up and down its structure.


How anyone could find him in this crowd was a mystery. It seemed that every square inch of the terminal was occupied. And it suffocated him. To his left, a porter called out, offering to carry Russell''s lone carry-on. Russell dismissed him with an impatient wave of the hand and reserved the same treatment for the two currency exchangers waiting on the MiniMetro platform. No. He didn''t want to exchange his US dollars or euros for Egyptian pounds. No, he didn''t need a taxi.


And no, he didn''t want companionship. Russell wormed his way around the well-dressed peddlers and battled for position as the bright red train arrived. He squeezed into the car, which was already packed. There was standing room only, but he didn''t mind after the thirteen-hour flight. He had much more important things to worry about. Russell, who had cultivated and maintained a multitude of contacts throughout Egypt during his thirty-year career at the Department of State''s Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations, had been sent to Cairo as the US secretary of state''s personal emissary. His job for the next forty-eight hours was to hold discreet talks with what remained of the Muslim Brotherhood leadership. Once Egypt''s largest opposition movement, the Brotherhood''s political wing had won a plurality of seats in Egypt''s lower house in 2011 but had been pushed out by a coup d''état two years later.


Following a brutal crackdown, many of the Brotherhood''s leaders and thousands of its members were imprisoned or forced into exile. With the Muslim Brotherhood completely cut off from political and civic participation, the CIA had cautioned that the remaining influential members of the Brotherhood were about to splinter into different groups. Without a central leadership, the most radical factions of the Muslim Brotherhood would become much more difficult to track. Not only could this cause significant social unrest in the capital and fuel more terror attacks against government forces in North Sinai, it could jeopardize the fragile but improving relationship between Egypt and Israel. With the current instability in Libya and Sudan, and the escalating crisis in Ethiopia, the United States government saw the rapprochement between Egypt and Israel as vital for its national interests in the region. In an effort to truly understand the growing discomfort within the Muslim Brotherhood ranks, the secretary of state wanted a finger on its pulse. Russell was that finger. But there was a problem.


With the Egyptian government having designated the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization, the United States couldn''t afford to be seen entertaining discussions with them. That meant Russell had to travel to Cairo unofficially and without the contingent of DSS special agents he would normally be entitled to for such a trip. "But it doesn''t mean you''ll be alone, Edward," the secretary of state had told him when he had summoned Russell into his office. "A small team of private contractors led by a man named Oliver will be waiting for you in Cairo. They''re very, very good at what they do. Follow their lead, and they''ll keep you safe. Trust me on this." As the train began to move, Russell could see a dull gray sky beyond the windows.


It must have rained hard earlier because the drains adjoining the airport were flooded. The traffic around the terminals was backed up, thanks in part to the vehicles that were double- and even triple-parked curbside. In the background was a constant sounding of horns by frustrated drivers. Russell''s eyes moved from left to right, searching for somebody who might be paying too much attention to him. None of the faces looked familiar. It took Russell a little less than thirty minutes to reach the final step of the procedures he''d been asked to follow. He was midway through the 250-yard-long pedestrian bridge leading to the hotel lobby when a hand suddenly squeezed his elbow. Russell froze, spooked.


"Don''t stop walking, Mr. Russell. You''re clear. Keep your distance, but follow me," a tall man dressed in dark slacks and matching zippered jacket said without stopping. Russell''s heart was pounding. Where had this man come from? He just appeared from seemingly nowhere. And, even more critical, who was he? The instructions had said that someone would be waiting for him in the lobby. There had been no mention of someone accosting him on the bridge leading to the hotel.


Shit. What was he supposed to do? The man''s English was perfect, without a hint of an accent. And he knows my name. It has to be Oliver. Russell prayed that he was right. TWO Cairo, Egypt Oliver Manton entered the hotel lobby and scratched his right ear, a gesture intended for his partner Trent, signaling that Russell was on his way. "Good copy," Trent replied, his voice coming through the earbud deep in Manton''s ear canal. "The SUV is at the door and ready to receive.


" The lobby was spacious and elegant, with dark marble floors and a large reading area, but it lacked any real charm. The reception area was busy with the regular hum of arriving and departing guests, and Manton figured that, on a busy day, the check-in counter might be mistaken for a terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson Airport in Atlanta. A quick look outside through one of the large floor-to-ceiling windows confirmed that the rain had stopped, but the dark, low-hanging clouds promised more very soon, which didn''t help lighten Manton''s bad mood. Another downpour would only worsen the drive out of the airport. Moreover, in Manton''s opinion, it didn''t make much sense to have three Treadstone agents babysitting an assistant deputy secretary in Cairo. Manton had read the ops plan prepared by Treadstone Director Levi Shaw and understood why DSS special agents couldn''t be involved. He was in agreement with Shaw as to why Russell needed to be protected. That wasn''t the problem.


What Manton couldn''t wrap his head around was why Treadstone had been given the assignment in the first place. These kinds of duties were usually assigned to private military companies who specialized in close protection. Treadstone operatives were hardened assassins, not protectors. Unless. Was escorting the assistant deputy secretary only a cover for a darker assignment? Having worked for Shaw for years, Manton wouldn''t be surprised. Manton grunted at the thought. Did it really matter? Whatever the real reason he and the other agents were in Cairo, they would do what they were told. Like they always did.


He had never worked with the other two operatives before, and he couldn''t even remember the last time he had worked so closely with another agent, let alone two. Still, it was comforting to know he was operating alongside highly skilled individuals who had graduated-survived, really-the same brutal training he had. Manton crossed the polished floor of the lobby and strode past Trent, who had taken position next to the concierge desk. Manton pushed through the brass-framed revolving door and headed toward the dark gray Audi Q7, his head on a swivel. The stench of gasoline fumes emanating from the idling vehicles parked curbside, mixed with the smell of jet fuel, assaulted his nose. The odor was so powerful that Manton could taste it. When Edward Russell stepped out of the lobby twenty seconds later, followed ten steps behind by the second Treadstone agent, Manton gave the assistant deputy secretary of state a nod and opened the rear passenger door for the two men. "You can leave your carry-on here, si.



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