Shoot Him If He Runs (Stone Barrington 14)
Dino jumped in. “What part of the CIA did you work for, Irene? Were you a spy? Or is my question a no-no?”
“It’s not a no-no,” Irene said. “I worked in the operations section, but I wasn’t a spy; I just worked with spies. I was an administrator.”
“Was it exciting?” Genevieve asked.
“Sometimes it was dull as dishwater,” Irene replied. “And sometimes it was way too exciting. It was kind of fun doing work that nobody knew about, only the people you worked with. It was sort of like a club.” She held up her glass. “May I have another of these?”
“Of course,” Stone said and went to the freezer for the bottle. He came back and poured both Irene and Harry a drink.
“Did you ever work with that guy who killed all those people?” Holly asked. “I forget his name; something about a Teddy Bear.”
Stone tried to keep a straight face. “I know the one you mean,” he said. “He got blown up in an airplane explosion.”
“Oh, yes,” Irene said. “Teddy Fay. Teddy worked with people all over the Agency; he was a technical expert. I knew him, but mostly ten or fifteen years ago.”
Harry chimed in. “What does a technical expert do?”
“All sorts of things: communications, documentation, weapons-you name it.”
“I would have liked to do something like that,” Harry said wistfully. “After you’ve been in the home improvement business for a few years, there aren’t any surprises; one kitchen or bathroom looks pretty much like all the others.”
“You make it sound boring, Harry,” Stone said. “Was it?”
“Well, not really. Once I was doing well enough to hire people it wasn’t so repetitive. After that I just went around and worked up estimates, then
inspected the work. I like to think I had a reputation for quality.”
“That’s hard to come by these days,” Stone said. “I did most of the work on the renovation of my house, and every time I hired somebody else, I had to watch them like a hawk to make sure the work got done right.”
“You’re good with your hands, then?” Harry asked.
“You’re pretty good with your hands, too, Harry,” Irene said, leering at him.
Harry seemed embarrassed.
“My father was a carpenter and a cabinetmaker and a furniture builder, to his own designs,” Stone said. “I worked in his shop part-time as a kid.”
“You can learn a lot from the right man,” Harry said.
“He started out by slinging his tool kit over his shoulder and going around, door to door, in Greenwich Village, asking people if they had any odd jobs. He could fix anything. I still have some of the furniture he made.”
“I would have liked to know him,” Harry said. “I admire people like that.”
“Irene,” Genevieve said, “is it true that the CIA can listen in on just about anybody’s phone conversations and read their e-mail?”
“You’re thinking of the National Security Agency,” Irene said. “They’re the electronics wizards. Most of what the Agency does is just collect information, sort it and analyze it. Of course, there are actual spies, some of them in embassies around the world, pretending to be diplomats, others out on their own spying on people and cultivating sources in foreign governments and societies.”
“I would have liked to be a spy,” Genevieve said.
“Well, you’re beautiful enough,” Dino responded.
“What kind of law do you practice, Stone?” Harry asked.
“I’m of counsel to a large law firm in New York, but I work out of a home office.”
“Why is that?”
“I handle the stuff the firm doesn’t want to be seen to handle, a lot of it personal, for their clients.”