If You Can’t Trust a Fellow Spy

A Story of Friendships, Betrayal and Revenge

by Gene Coyle


Formats

E-Book
$9.95
Softcover
$20.99
E-Book
$9.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 2/20/2017

Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 384
ISBN : 9781524672225
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 384
ISBN : 9781524672232

About the Book

Washington-based consultant Gerry Doyle is now a very wealthy elderly American with the interesting past of having started out his working life at the CIA during the Cold War era. When that first career unexpectedly faltered, he moved on to the lucrative world of international consulting and accumulated great wealth, as well as some enemies, over the subsequent decades. An old agency colleague from their days together in Moscow reveals to Doyle upon his deathbed that the reason Doyle’s career had stalled in the late 1980s was because circumstantial evidence pointed at Doyle as being a mole for the KGB. As he pursues his subtle inquiries in America and Russia into who might have actually been the long-suspected “fourth mole” at the agency and who had framed him, Doyle, with the able assistance of his young female executive assistant, starts to narrow down the list of possible suspects. This is not without consequences, and several people around Doyle start to have “accidents.” Will his quest for justice end successfully, or will Doyle suffer a fatal accident too? It’s a story of friendships, betrayal, and a search for revenge.


About the Author

Mr. Coyle spent 30 years as a field operations officer for the CIA, almost half of that time abroad, working undercover in a variety of countries, including in Moscow in the mid-1980s during the Soviet Union era. He is a recipient of the CIA’s Intelligence Medal of Merit for one of his Russian operations. Since retiring in 2006, he has been teaching at Indiana University. Having been a student of history and himself an intelligence officer, he is able to weave together a plausible tale of spying, betrayal and revenge. He shows in this, his sixth spy novel, that he understands well the great game of espionage and human emotions.