Editing Alicia McBride

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'''Age 29 - January 1960, New York, New York'''
 
'''Age 29 - January 1960, New York, New York'''
 
 
Sergei, her prized defector, was still applauding.  After sive hours of Wagner and eight curtain calls, Alicia was amazed he still had the energy.  He finally, mercifully, sat down as they waited for the crowd to thin out.  "What did you think?  Was it worth it?" he asked her.
 
Sergei, her prized defector, was still applauding.  After sive hours of Wagner and eight curtain calls, Alicia was amazed he still had the energy.  He finally, mercifully, sat down as they waited for the crowd to thin out.  "What did you think?  Was it worth it?" he asked her.
  
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'''Age 30 - April, 1961, Langley, Virginia'''
+
'''Age 30 - March, 1961, Baltimore, Maryland'''
 
 
Alicia checked her desk tells one more time before unlocking the drawer. Her papers had been rifled through, but the drawer, though the lock had been tested, had not been opened.
 
 
 
She sat back with her tea and thought for a few moments before really starting her day. Savoring the first work moments after her "vacation" she wondered about the odd, and sometimes crude, people she worked with:
 
 
 
Killean, who claimed to be Irish but had such a Hamburg accent that she wondered who he thought he was fooling.  Sometimes useful in a fight, but his real value was the fact that he was a master chemist. He could prattle on for hours about the oddest effects on drug interactions. Alicia tried to not think too deeply about where, and upon whom, he had done his experimenting.
 
 
 
Gregg was not quite so serious, but a serious pain in the...rear. His was the honor of getting turned down by Alicia at least every other sentence and of course, he really seemed to think he was reeling her in. He was good with some women and had a con man's confidence. Too shallow though, and no one really seemed to care about him.
 
 
 
Becker and Laszlo, suit twins down to their matching cuff links, seemed to be going nowhere with pedantic fervor.  Superficially, she had much in common with them.  Like her, they were products of the best schools (Yale and Stanford, respectively), both born to middle class American families.  But where they differed from her was in their work: they teamed up and didn’t get much done, other than generating mounds of reports and official looking paperwork that, sadly, appeared to fool at least some of their superiors.
 
 
 
It was Laszlo that started the rumor that he had seduced Alicia some months ago. The rumor had burned bright for some time, the other guys really eating it up.  Alicia was in the middle of a great plan to exact a painful revenge (though the decision to actually inject syphilis virii into his bloodstream was still even odds with merely making him believe he had been injected) when her plan came to an abrupt halt. Laszlo was bending over her desk possessively, acting every bit the conqueror and making what he clearly thought were husky remarks when Tom said "That’s extremely odd behavior for coworkers, Mister Peder."
 
 
 
Laszlo had frozen, spasmed, and gone pale as a sheet in the blink of an eye. Tom, their boss, wasn't much older than some of them and not as old as Killian. Tom was soft spoken, always referring to his employees as "Mister" on in her case case, "Miss.” His tone either left you feeling like you were on top of the world or that you had just been flayed alive, depending on whether you had done well or not.
 
 
 
Alicia held her breath, as there was too much riding on this moment. While she really enjoyed seeing Laszlo in such pain, she knew Tom would not spare her if she misspoke. He had the relaxed poise of a cobra eyeing a frightened snake charmer.
 
 
 
"Mister Peder, you failed to file a 2319 with your travel T-3 last week. Is there a reason for that? Perhaps you could take care of that for me?"
 
 
 
Laszlo mutely nodded and slunk to his desk to fill out the paperwork. Tom looked at Alicia for a moment, his gaze lingered on her eyes, and then he quietly said "My office, Miss McBride. You may bring your tea."
 
 
 
Alicia's throat tightened ever so slightly. She had been away for a month researching her brother, and though she thought she’d kept an ear to the ground, perhaps she’d missed a shift in the political winds?  Tom certainly could not think Laszlo's insinuations were true, but how would he take the effect on this motley collection of agents he called a team?
 
 
 
Seated across from him, she still wondered where he had come from and how he had gotten this assignment. No one knew his background, outside of Harvard right after the war. His clothes were middle class, he seldom wore a jacket, except when outside and armed, and here he was in a small plain office, leading a team of people more skilled and certainly more experienced than he appeared to be.
 
 
 
But as he gazed at her, she wondered. She knew he could kill, had killed.  Some things mark a person and, sitting across from him, Alicia understood that Tom could deal with an enemy of the state with no real remorse or second guessing. Maybe that was what the guys feared about him, that they built up their reputations while Tom spoke to you instead of just killing you and doing the job himself.
 
 
 
"Your brother, this Leonardo, how is he?"
 
 
 
For all her training, her ability to remain calm in the face of adversity, she nearly jumped out of her chair. How much does he know, she asked herself, and then, just as quickly she wondered, since he clearly did know, why hasn't he said something before now?
 
 
 
She took a deep breath.  There was no point lying now; she’d lost control of the situation – maybe never really had it to begin with – and she had to play this out.  "Fine, sir. As far as I can tell.  I haven’t met him yet, but I do have some insight into his activities. He’s a free-lancer.  We’ve been using him for for European jobs, and the odd bit of work in the Far East."
 
 
 
Tom leaned back and looked at her. Alicia felt a chill run down her spine. She was used to men in the agency looking at her either as a secretary or a potential conquest. Even, occasionally, as a rival, but never like Tom looked at her right now. As if her mind were completely open to him and he knew every mistake she had made, as well as how much coffee she had yesterday.
 
 
 
"What will you do when you do meet him?"
 
 
 
Alicia paused at that. Tom's gaze had moved on and she was back in control of her own will. But she wasn't sure what she would do when she talked to her brother. Certainly her adoptive parents were loving and supportive, and a birth mother who’d given her up – no matter how good the reasons at the time - could not compare to them. What could the man now known as Leonardo give her that she didn’t already have?
 
 
 
"Honestly?  I don’t know, sir."
 
  
Tom looked at her for an eternity. "You are an asset to this team, Miss McBride." Sliding a thin file across his desk, he added. "You were not authorized to get this when you did your file request. Eyes only, and you will have forty-six minutes after leaving my office before one of your team mates gets the courage to look over your shoulder. The entire contents, as well as the cover, must be totally destroyed before then. Shred, burn, paste, and reburn."
+
She had a month leave, and it had taken her until the 28th day to make the breakthrough. But she finally had.  She had a name, an identity, and, thanks to yet another favor called in, she had a stack of files sixteen inches high.
  
Alicia nodded and reached out for the file...
+
She was on her fifth pot of coffee, and her 30th hour without sleep. But it was worth it. How often did you get to learn about the twin you were separated from at birth, after all?
  
  
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“I can’t even count how many hours I spent going through records in that hospital in Ann Arbor.  You’d be amazed what you can learn, if you’re just patient and persistent enough.  I’m really hoping it was all worth it, little brother.”
 
“I can’t even count how many hours I spent going through records in that hospital in Ann Arbor.  You’d be amazed what you can learn, if you’re just patient and persistent enough.  I’m really hoping it was all worth it, little brother.”
 
 
'''Age 31 - January 1962, Falls Church, Virginia'''
 
 
Tears streamed down Alicia's cheek as she checked her apartment door for entry and then unlocked it. She had held back for the entire drive home but here, now, it was just too much.  Laszlo had been promoted to her spot, she had been fired based on nothing but hearsay and lies – and stupid lies at that.  Not a single one of her co-workers had stood up for her! Even Killian, normally a helpful if mildly sadistic soul, had turned his back on her.
 
 
"The investigation was not blown because I was in love with the Mark!" She said aloud, drying her eyes. "We did not go..." she slammed her briefcase onto the coffee table "to Vegas for a $20,000 gambling and sex holiday with the Agency paying the tab..." she slammed down her now empty holster, "and we most definitely did not have a conversation about defecting to Cuba!"
 
 
Alicia had balled up her overcoat to throw it at the cat but she just collapsed, sobbing again. "Years..." she rocked herself "What would Mike have thought...what would her parents think?
 
 
"Interesting exercise regimen, Miss McBride."
 
 
Startled, Alicia sprung up and grabbed the letter opener that perfectly balanced for throwing, and much sharper than a letter opener generally was.  She crouched and then faintly saw the outline in the shadow by the refrigerator.
 
 
Tom opened the fridge, pulled out the milk, and sniffed it. "Job hazard, I'm afraid. Fresh food never really gets eaten on time in our line of work, does it?"
 
 
Alicia's mind whirled. Tom was here; the same Tom that fired her not four hours ago. The same Tom that oversaw the disaster that trashed years of her life.
 
 
Tom shrugged and put the milk back. "Don't drink it, Miss McBride. It went sour a couple days ago." Buttoning up his overcoat, one that looked almost exactly like hers, he added. "I must be off. Difficult day at the office, as I'm sure you understand. I'll just excuse myself."
 
 
Alicia watched him as he headed for the door. She couldn't get out what she really wanted to say; there were too many words and not enough time.
 
 
He paused at the door. Turning, looking back at her, he gave a slight, half smile. "Alicia...I can call you that now, can't I?" The smile seemed pained. "There is a tidy sum of cash in unmarked bills on your kitchen counter, as well as a sidearm. Consider them your severance pay for work always done well and always meeting my high expectations of you."
 
 
Alicia looked puzzled, and then just moaned "Why? Why! WHY!"
 
 
Tom raised a hand and quietly said "Calm yourself, Alicia." A chill ran through her spine and she felt frozen. "You did what I needed you to do these past few months, and the trap you fell into was for your own benefit." He looked at her and, as far as she could remember this was the first time, his smile was genuine. "You will be contacted in a few days. There is another team forming, one that cannot be officially on the books. You could not join if you still worked for me. It is a promotion, Miss McBride." The formality had returned.
 
 
Tom turned the knob and then stopped. With a look that Alica really didn't understand, mischievous, maybe, he added. "He will be there, Miss McBride. Enjoy your new job."
 
 
Alicia watched as the door closed behind her old boss...her old life...
 
 
 
'''Age 31 - February, 1962 - Paris, France'''
 
 
She had needed time to think, and what better place to do that than in the City of Lights?  ALicia had been there for three weeks now, renting a flat, spending time as a tourist, taking in the sites that she never had the time to appreciate when she'd been here on business.
 
 
It would be back to business soon.  She was going to take Tom's "promotion"; there had never really been any question.  She knew of, or at least had heard rumors of, such "midnight operations" as they were referred to; teams more invisible than the "black ops" that were an open secret in the Agency.  Alicia had her suspicions that the midnight teams reported - if they reported to anyone at all - directly to the DCI, bypassingh all the tedious bureaucratic oversight and requirements to adhere to even the barest modicums of law or morality.  Which, considering the things that she'd done as a regular member of the Agency, was somewhat alarming.
 
 
But there wasn't any choice.  And whomever had recruited her - the DCI himself, she assumed - knew her well enough to know that.  That was, ultimately, what hurt the most.  It wasn't getting deliberately burned by her superiors, galling as that was.  It was the fact that she'd let her guard down, and allowed herself to be played so completely.  She would not make that mistake again...
 
 
 
 
'''Age 31 - February, 1962, Trenton, New Jersey'''
 
 
Alicia had been watching the house for two days, waiting for some sign of Leo’s return, when the boy showed up.  He was 12 or 13, healthy-looking, wearing a scowl.  He threw down his schoolbag, took off his jacked and threw that too on the ground, and then started attacking the weeds in Leo’s garden.
 
 
He tore them out of the ground roots and all, and from the expression on his face it was clear he would rather have been attacking someone, probably a classmate, than the defenseless weeds.  She watched for half an hour, as the anger gradually drained away, before she approached the boy.
 
 
Alicia knew who he had to be; he knew her brother had taken an interest in the cleaning woman and her son, though she wasn’t yet sure if Leo himself knew what his intentions were. 
 
 
“Hello,” Alicia said, smiling brightly.  “I was looking for my friend, but I guess he isn’t back from his trip yet?”
 
 
“Don’t think so,” the boy mumbled. 
 
 
“I’m Alicia,” she offered, extending a hand.  He regarded her warily but finally shook it.
 
 
“I’m Billy.  Mister Leonard has me take care of his garden,”
 
 
“Well, any friend of Mister Leonard is a friend of mine,” Alicia answered, sitting down on the steps in front of the house.  “Looks like you had a little mix-up today,” she gestured to the bruise on Billy’s hand.  “Trouble with somebody at school?”
 
 
“Just Johnny Morton and his gang,” Billy replied, talking almost without realizing it about things with this stranger that he didn’t tell his mother or Mister Leonard.  He quickly went through the whole miserable story of the fights over the last three years.
 
 
Alicia listened to the sad tale, letting Billy get it all out.  Even knowing that it was a well-known facet of human behavior that people will sometimes open up to complete strangers before they say a word to their loved ones, she still marveled at it. 
 
 
“You know, I know a thing or two that could help,” Alicia finally said.  “You can keep out of a lot of trouble if you know about human nature. The first thing you have to know is…let me try it this way.  Do you know how to play chess?”
 
 
Billy was puzzled, but answered, hesitantly.  “Kind of.”
 
 
“Me, too,” Alicia laughed.  “But here’s what I do know.  Most people only know ‘kind of’.  When they play, they see what’s right there in front of them.  You know, they see if they move their Queen, they can take the other player’s horse.  Right?”
 
 
“It’s called a Knight,” Billy corrected. 
 
 
“So it is,” Alicia agreed.  “But you understand my point?”  The boy nodded.  “OK.  Well, some people see a little further than that.  They see, if they move their Queen, the other player will move their Knight out of the way, and if that happens, then they can do something else.  They see one or two moves ahead.  Still with me?”
 
 
“Sure.”
 
 
“Well, the best players, the grand masters, they see twenty moves ahead.  So when they move their Queen, it’s not just to capture the other guy’s horse.  Nope.  When they move their Queen, they’re setting up the next twenty moves, so that an hour later the other player’s king will be right where they want it, and they’ll win.  And the other player probably won’t have the slightest idea what hit them.  That’s chess.  But it’s true for all of life.  Most people only see what’s right in front of them, and they only think about what they’re going to do in the next five minutes.  And I can just about guarantee you that idiots like this Johnny Morton are like that.  You see what I’m saying?”
 
 
Billy was processing it.  “Uh…”
 
 
“Johnny doesn’t plan ahead.  Or if he does, it’s only as far as the next period at school, or maybe, on a good day, what he’s going to do after school lets out.  The way that you beat people like him is, you figure out what he’s going to do, which isn’t very hard, and you think a move ahead.  Or five moves ahead.”
 
 
“But how does that stop him coming at me?”
 
 
Alicia had had to learn all this on her own; she was glad to be able to pass it on.  “It takes time, and patience, but I promise you it works.  If you can outsmart him, if you think ahead of him, you’ll find that he won’t be able to come at you anymore.  Think about it.  If you knew he was going to find you right after school to fight you, what could you do to avoid it?”
 
 
“Sneak out the side door and get home before he sees me?”
 
 
“That’s one way, sure.  But how about this?  What if you made it your job to learn the Principal’s schedule, so you know what time he goes out to his car to drive home at the end of the day?  Let’s say you do that.  And let’s just say for the sake of argument it’s 4 o’clock, and let’s say you go the extra mile and you go to see where he parks his car every day, let’s just say it’s right at the end of the parking lot, by the baseball field.”  Billy nodded, following along.  “So instead of waiting for Johnny to find you and hit you, you challenge him to a fight instead.  And you pick the time and name the place.  4 o’clock, right by the ball field.  You see where I’m going with this?”
 
 
“Yeah!”
 
 
“Great,” Alicia went on,  “So Johnny shows up, with all his little friends.  And you’re there.  And they’re all looking at you, but what you’re looking for is the the Principal coming out to his car.  There he is.  And you say, ‘I don’t want to fight, Johnny!  I’m sick of you beating me up!’  And being an idiot, Johnny takes that for you being weak, and he takes a swing at you.  And what happens then?”
 
 
“I get punched in the face.”
 
 
Alicia sighed.  “Maybe.  Unless you learn to duck, too.  But fine, he hits you.  What else happens, though?”
 
 
Hesitantly, Billy said, “The Principal sees him?”
 
 
“Right,” Alicia smiled.  “The Principal sees him hit you, and he sees you not hitting back, and remember he just heard you saying you didn’t want to fight.  Right?”  Comprehension dawned in Billy’s eyes.  “So what happens then?”
 
 
“Johnny gets punished!”
 
 
Alicia nodded.  “Johnny gets punished.  And his friends rat him out, too, because they don’t want to get punished.  So now he looks like an idiot to his friends, and he doesn’t trust them anymore because they ratted him out.  Maybe he gets suspended, if you’re lucky, but even if not, he’s got bigger problems than you now, because he’s mad at his friends, and the Principal’s going to be watching him more closely from now on.”
 
 
“How’d you figure all that out?”
 
 
“It’s not that hard.  It just takes time.  You watch people, and pretty quick you’ll start to figure out what they’ll probably do in different situations.  Then you’ll start to see how you can use that to your advantage.  It’s not totally foolproof, because some people out there are like us, looking ahead, using their brains.  But mostly they’re not.  You understand?”
 
 
“I understand.”
 
 
They chatted for a few minutes more.  “I guess Mister Leonard isn’t going to show up today,” Alicia said finally. “If you do see him, I’d rather it be a surprise, so please don’t tell him I was here, OK?”
 
 
“Sure thing, Miss!  Thanks!”
 
 
Turning to leave, Alicia wondered if Billy would really take her lesson to heart.  She hoped so; the boy could certainly use it.
 

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