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Stuart Woods_Stone Barrington 14

Stuart Woods_Stone Barrington 14

Titel: Stuart Woods_Stone Barrington 14 Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Shoot Him if He Runs
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diplomats, others out on their own spying on people and cultivating sources in foreign governments and societies.”
    â€œI would have liked to be a spy,” Genevieve said.
    â€œWell, you’re beautiful enough,” Dino responded.
    â€œWhat kind of law do you practice, Stone?” Harry asked.
    â€œI’m of counsel to a large law firm in New York, but I work out of a home office.”
    â€œWhy is that?”
    â€œI handle the stuff the firm doesn’t want to be seen to handle, a lot of it personal, for their clients.”
    â€œThat sounds as interesting as the CIA,” Irene said.
    â€œProbably not. I had a cousin who was in the CIA, but I didn’t know that until after his death.”
    â€œWho was that?” Irene asked.
    â€œHis name was Dick Stone.”
    â€œJesus, I knew Dick; everybody knew Dick. He had just been appointed deputy director for operations when he was killed. A lot of people who should know thought he was on track to be the next Director of Central Intelligence when Katharine Rule Lee retires, which she probably will do when her husband leaves office.”
    â€œI didn’t know that,” Stone said.
    â€œYou must know Lance Cabot,” she said. “He led the investigation into Dick’s death.”
    â€œYes, we, ah, worked together on that. I used to be a homicide detective on the NYPD; Dino still is.”
    â€œYou were up in Maine, then?”
    â€œYes.”
    â€œThen you probably met Ed Rails, who’s retired from the Agency.”
    â€œI did.”
    â€œHow did you meet Lance?”
    â€œHe came to see me when he heard that I was Dick’s cousin, told me Dick was dead. I was also the executor of his will.”
    â€œSo you only met him recently, then.”
    â€œYes,” Stone lied, “last summer, for a couple of weeks.”
    â€œWho’s Lance Cabot?” Harry asked.
    â€œHe’s just a guy at the Agency who wants Dick Stone’s job,” Irene said. “He might even get it.”
    â€œI didn’t know that, either,” Stone lied again. He raised his glass. “Well, good luck to him.”
    Irene did not raise her glass. “Fuck him,” she said.

11
    T he following afternoon, while the others were napping, Stone took a stroll down to the marina. The place had been expanded since his earlier visit; there were probably three dozen berths, as opposed to the previous dozen, but there was only one Hinckley Bermuda 40. He walked down the pontoon and looked her over.
    Harry said he had changed the deck layout, and Stone saw that the halyard winches had been moved to the top of the coachroof, a sensible change, since it allowed sails to be hoisted from the cockpit, and two large electric winches had replaced the original equipment. A windvane self-steering system was attached to the stern, with its attendant lines, and both the headsail and main were roller reefing.
    â€œHello there,” a voice behind him said. Harry had appeared with a couple of shopping bags.
    â€œHello, Harry; I was just looking over your boat.”
    â€œCome aboard, then,” Harry said. Yachtsmen were always anxious to show off their boats. Harry unlocked the hatch, set the shopping bags below and waved Stone down.
    Stone climbed down the companionway ladder and looked around. He had never seen a more neatly kept vessel; the yacht was the very definition of “shipshape.” “I’m impressed,” he said.
    â€œThank you, Stone, I’ve done a lot of work on her.” He began showing Stone his stowage plan, his tool locker and his central heating system. Finally, they sat down, and Harry produced a pair of bloody marys.
    â€œThanks for the drink last night,” Harry said. “I’m sorry Irene got a little snockered; we had a drink before we left the house, and it was all on an empty stomach.”
    â€œWe enjoyed having you. It was interesting hearing about her work at the CIA.”
    â€œYeah, she’s gotten so she likes to talk about it, if she has a good audience. Funny, your cousin being employed there.”
    â€œYes; as I said, I didn’t even know that until he was dead. Our respective sides of the family didn’t talk much, but the summer I was eighteen, his folks invited me up to Dark Harbor, in Maine, to spend a few weeks. Dick and I got fairly close at that time, but I didn’t see him again until eight or nine years ago, when

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