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STATE SANCTIONED
A SPECIAL AGENT DYLAN KANE THRILLER
J. ROBERT KENNEDY
About the Special Agent Dylan Kane Thrillers
"Dylan Kane leaves James bond in his dust!"
Though this book is part of the Special Agent Dylan Kane Thrillers series, it is written as a standalone novel and can be enjoyed without reading the other installments.
What readers are saying about the Special Agent Dylan Kane Thrillers Series:
“The action sequences are particularly well-written and exciting, without being overblown.”
“I love how the author explains what's needed but doesn't just ramble on in narrative.”
“Don’t mess with Kane, he takes no prisoners, especially when you target his friends.”
“Fast paced international spy thriller with good old American values among its main characters. I'd like to think we really do have agents like Kane.”
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BOOKS BY J. ROBERT KENNEDY
The Templar Detective Thrillers
The Templar Detective
The Templar Detective and the Parisian Adulteress
The Templar Detective and the Sergeant's Secret
The Templar Detective and the Unholy Exorcist
The James Acton Thrillers
The Protocol
Brass Monkey
Broken Dove
The Templar’s Relic
Flags of Sin
The Arab Fall
The Circle of Eight
The Venice Code
Pompeii’s Ghosts
Amazon Burning
The Riddle
Blood Relics
Sins of the Titanic
Saint Peter’s Soldiers
The Thirteenth Legion
Raging Sun
Wages of Sin
Wrath of the Gods
The Templar’s Revenge
The Nazi’s Engineer
Atlantis Lost
The Cylon Curse
The Viking Deception
The Special Agent Dylan Kane Thrillers
Rogue Operator
Containment Failure
Cold Warriors
Death to America
Black Widow
The Agenda
Retribution
State Sanctioned
The Delta Force Unleashed Thrillers
Payback
Infidels
The Lazarus Moment
Kill Chain
Forgotten
The Detective Shakespeare Mysteries
Depraved Difference
Tick Tock
The Redeemer
Zander Varga, Vampire Detective Series
The Turned
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Table of Contents
Beginning
Preface
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Acknowledgments
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About the Author
Also by the Author
For Jonathan Pitre, The Butterfly Boy, whose indomitable spirit brought joy to those who knew him, and a city to its knees with the news his battle had been lost.
“In an ironic sense Karl Marx was right. We are witnessing today a great revolutionary crisis, a crisis where the demands of the economic order are conflicting directly with those of the political order. But the crisis is happening not in the free, non-Marxist West but in the home of Marxism- Leninism, the Soviet Union. It is the Soviet Union that runs against the tide of history by denying human freedom and human dignity to its citizens.”
Ronald Reagan, June 8, 1982, Speech to British House of Commons
“Certain people in the United States are driving nails into this structure of our relationship, then cutting off the heads. So the Soviets must use their teeth to pull them out.”
Mikhail Gorbachev, Sept. 9, 1985, TIME Magazine
“A Soviet man is waiting in line to purchase vodka from a liquor store, but due to restrictions imposed by Gorbachev, the line is very long. The man loses his composure and screams, ‘I can't take this waiting in line anymore, I HATE Gorbachev, I am going to the Kremlin right now, and I am going to kill him!’ After 40 minutes, the man returns and elbows his way back to his place in line. The crowd begin to ask if he has succeeded in killing Gorbachev. ‘No, I got to the Kremlin all right, but the line to kill Gorbachev was even longer than here!’”
Soviet Era Joke
PREFACE
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the USSR, was founded on December 30, 1922, after a communist-led revolution. For almost seventy years, it dominated the region, and after World War Two, was a constant rival to liberal democracies including the United States and Western Europe.
That all came to a sudden end, when on December 25, 1991, Mikhail Gorbachev resigned as the President of the USSR and declared the office extinct. The next day, the Supreme Soviet voted itself and the Soviet Union out of existence.
The West celebrated, while the long-suffering people of what President Ronald Reagan once called an “evil empire” were subjected to years more of chaos, an economic collapse that rivaled the Great Depression setting in.
And while many in the West feel the collapse of our greatest rival was a good thing in the long term, many today in Russia still yearn for the old days, when the USSR, or the CCCP, was something to be both feared and respected.
And some knew before the collapse, that the reforms being pushed by the last leader of their great nation, Mikhail Gorbachev, would destroy everything they had built.
And they were determined to stop him.
1 |
Moscow, Russia Present Day
“If anything happens to them, it’s my fault.”
“How do you figure that?” asked Viktor Zorkin, the septuagenarian former KGB agent staring at his companion. “They’re half a world away.”
CIA Special Agent Dylan Kane couldn’t tear his eyes away from the phone gripped in his hand, the speaker blaring bursts of gunfire and static from a frequency jammer as they both listened to what sounded like a vicious assault taking place back home in Langley. He hated feeling helpless, especially when friends were involv
ed, and today he couldn’t imagine feeling more so.
For one of those who could die this very minute was the love of his life, the other the girlfriend of the best friend he had ever known.
All because he hadn’t thought things through.
“I should have known.”
Zorkin grunted. “We all should have known. There was no way she was getting into the US.”
Kane frowned, stealing a glance at the old man. “If you’re trying to make me feel better, stop.”
Zorkin chuckled, patting him on the shoulder. “Sorry.”
Kane held up a finger. “Those are MP5s. They must have engaged the targets.”
Zorkin leaned closer. “As long as we hear two of those, we’re good.”
Kane closed his eyes, picturing two of the most important women in his life and what he imagined they would do in a situation he couldn’t see, but could only hear.
Then his heart leaped into his throat as the love of his life shouted, “Sherrie, look out!”
And one of the MP5s went silent.
And Kane’s head slumped as he knew his best friend’s girlfriend had just died.
2 |
Red Square Moscow, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics May 31, 1988
“It’s a beautiful day.”
CIA Agent Leif Morrison had to agree with his KGB counterpart. Though neither officially knew the other was a member of their countries’ respective clandestine services, they both knew the unacknowledged truth. The CIA dossier on his counterpart’s cover was thin, and the file on the real man, Agent Igor Kulick, was equally thin, as likely was the KGB’s file on “Secret Service Agent Jeffrey Wainwright.” He hated the name, but they weren’t about to give a CIA agent’s real one to the Soviets, though they too likely knew who he really was, and how green.
I thought we were supposed to be trying to get along?
It was the entire point of this summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. The leaders of the two most powerful nations in the world, sitting down to talk, in the capital of the enemy. Peace was a long ways away, but it was closer than anyone could have thought possible just a few short years ago.
They’re terrified of the Star Wars program.
The first time he had seen the video showing the working prototype, he had been stunned. And excited. And a little scared. Though he was young and new to the Agency, he knew how critical the balance of power between the US and USSR was to peace. If the balance were to tip too far in favor of one side, it could trigger a war by the other before it was “too late.”
Yet things were changing.
The Soviets had reached out, an olive branch extended by their new leader, and the policies of glasnost and perestroika began to change things. “Openness” and “Reconstruction” were the new way of things here in Moscow, though not everyone supported it. In fact, the hardliners were going apeshit over it, according to his briefing before arriving. The powers that be back in DC and Langley were terrified that an attempt might be made on Reagan, and perhaps even Gorbachev, by his own people.
And he was here to help prevent that, along with a security detail whose numbers he hesitated to guess. He had little doubt it went far beyond the official list, with Washington likely pre-positioning assets in the city for weeks if not months. It was plausible there wasn’t a soul in Red Square today actually civilian. Staged clusters of “ordinary” people were hustled into position by handlers for the impromptu stroll about to occur, groups that would allow the two leaders to pretend to interact with ordinary citizens for the cameras. Smiles, handshakes, and baby kissings would be the order of the day.
The baby is probably KGB.
He chuckled.
“Did I say it wrong?”
He turned to his partner, Igor Kulick, his eyes narrowing. “Huh?”
“I said it was a beautiful day, then you laughed.”
Morrison smiled, shaking his head. “Sorry, I was lost in thought. I was just thinking about our civilians over there.” He gestured toward a collection of a couple dozen, waiting patiently, practicing their smiles.
“And something about them strikes you as funny?”
Morrison shrugged. “I was just wondering if the baby was KGB.”
Kulick’s eyebrows shot up and he turned to examine the crowd then smiled, shaking his head. “You Americans.” He wagged a finger at Morrison. “You are very funny. Always joking.” He patted Morrison on the shoulder and they resumed their rounds, on the watch for anything out of the ordinary around the perimeter of today’s events. “I can assure you the baby isn’t KGB.”
Morrison took the bait. “Why?”
“He’s smiling.”
Morrison snorted. “I didn’t think you Russians had a sense of humor.”
“Oh, we do, but sometimes you have to be careful what you joke about, and who you joke with.”
Morrison regarded him. “I can’t imagine living like that.”
Kulick shrugged. “Well, if you know no different, it isn’t such a big thing.”
“Perhaps. Maybe things will change for your country if things go well here.”
“Perhaps, though I fear things will get far worse before they get better.”
“Let’s hope you’re wrong.”
Kulick’s eyes widened slightly and a slight smile broke out. “I did hear a good joke the other day from my cousin.”
“Lay it on me.”
“Excuse me?”
“It means, ‘tell me.’”
Kulick nodded. “Very well, I will lay it on you.” He cleared his throat. “Four strangers are assigned to the same room at a hotel. Three of them start drinking and telling inappropriate jokes about the government, and one just wants to sleep. Finally fed up, he sneaks out of the room and goes to the front desk. He orders tea to be delivered to his room in ten minutes, then returns. As the men continue to drink and joke, he walks over to the electrical socket, bends over, and says in a loud voice, ‘Comrade Major, I’d like tea sent to my room.’ The men stop and stare at him, then a few minutes later, there is a knock at the door and tea is delivered. Everyone drinks their tea in terrified silence, then goes to bed. The man wakes up the next morning and his roommates are gone. He rushes down to the front desk and asks what happened. He’s told they were taken by the KGB. ‘But what about me?’ he asks. ‘Oh, you have nothing to worry about. The Comrade Major thought your prank with the tea was quite funny.’”
Morrison slapped a hand over his mouth, struggling to suppress the laugh he couldn’t hold back. He gently punched Kulick on the shoulder. “So, you Russians do have a sense of humor!”
Kulick grinned. “But don’t tell anyone I told you that. It’s liable to get me sent to Siberia.”
“Another joke?”
Kulick frowned, shaking his head. “Unfortunately, no.”
Morrison sighed. “Do your people want freedom?”
Kulick pursed his lips. “Many do, I think perhaps most do, though I doubt many of us truly understand what that means. None of us knows what freedom is. Some of us have seen your movies, but most of those are crime movies to show how violent your country is compared to ours. We hear some of your music, but it is mostly about sex and shirking responsibility. If freedom means a life like what I’ve seen, I’m not sure I want it.”
Morrison grunted. “Don’t believe everything you see in the movies. Remember, they’re entertainment. They’re meant to be an escape from reality. If they always reflected reality, they’d be pretty boring.”
Kulick regarded him. “I suppose that’s true. Like a good book, it’s meant to take you somewhere else, into a world that’s more interesting than your own.”
“Exactly! Trust me, buddy, you’ll love freedom if you ever get it. And once you and your people have had a taste, they won’t want to ever give it up.”
“I hope you’re right, though I’m not confident I’ll ever see it. Too many oppose Gorbachev’s new ways. It means they could lose their power, and here, powe
r is…” Kulick’s voice drifted off as he stared after a man walking past them.
“What is it?”
“Umm, nothing.”
Morrison eyed Kulick, the man’s face paling slightly, his assigned partner clearly nervous.
No, he’s scared.
“What is it? Is it that man?”
“I, umm, can’t say.”
A pit formed in Morrison’s stomach, and the words of the briefing officer echoed in his head. “Report anything out of the ordinary, no matter how trivial.”
Does this count?
He wasn’t sure. This was his first time in Russia, and his first time on a Presidential security detail. He had been surprised to be assigned. He had impressed his instructors at the Farm, and from all appearances, was on an upward trajectory. His dream was to be an agent, fighting communism in all its forms, whether that meant the Soviets, Chinese, or Cubans. But if the President were to be assassinated on his watch, when he knew something and didn’t report it, his career would suffer an early death. “Tell me what’s wrong?”
“I…”
Morrison activated his radio. “This is Whiskey-Alpha-Four-Two. We might have a problem here, over.” His response was nothing but a burst of static, a burst he had been trained to recognize. “Someone’s jamming our frequency.” His radio squelched and a voice broke through.
“All stations, report in.” Half a dozen all-clears were heard, in order, and when it was his turn, he raised his radio, but before he could respond, he heard his own voice announcing the all-clear. His jaw dropped and he stared at Kulick, who appeared equally shocked.
“What the hell is going on?” He tried his radio again, and again couldn’t get through. He turned to Kulick. “What did you see?”