More about my story – The story within the story
…
Scattered throughout the main story are the threads that are picked up at the end and cover betrayal.
Betrayal is always a possibility, and sometimes an inevitability in being a spy. This story is no exception, and the betrayal comes from within.
There are many types of betrayal, that someone knows your secret and tells the people whom you are spying on.
That someone is informed beforehand that you are coming to them and why, and your cover is blown before you get started, and/or
You are the victim of an internecine war between heads of intelligence services that are in competition with each other for results and, therefore, funding.
Or, perhaps, it’s just two old men, one jealous and the other trying to get work done while the jealous one goes about sabotaging his best efforts.
That wouldn’t be so bad except it’s not the bosses who pay the ultimate price. It’s the agents on the ground.
The question then has to be why?
Politics?
It has a good deal of say in most matters because governments are run by political parties and politicians. First rule: politicians generally have no idea how to run the departments they are responsible for. Spies do not get to run intelligence agencies, by and large.
Perhaps the spies might be the administrators, or private sector heads of departments, but they generally have to do as they are told.
Except what if they defy the minister?
And would the minister know, and if he did, would he tell anyone fo fear of losing that portfolio?
Tricky question.
And for our agent in the field?
He has absolutely no idea what’s going on behind closed doors, just that some of the chess pieces have been rearranged, and he only knows this when a group of bad agents come to kill him.
Well, sabotage the mission and nearly kill him.
Damn!