"Hard to Get," by Jeffery Deaver, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, July/August 2017.
It's a classic concept of the espionage story: an amateur is forced
to into the spy game to play against the deadly professionals.
In
Deaver's variation Albert Lessing is not a complete amateur. He is an
analyst for the CIA; a desk jockey. But when an agent dies in an
accident while preparing for a vital mission, Lessing is the only person
with the language and academic abilities to fill the gap.
So
all of a sudden he is in a small town in Poland trying to attract the
attention of the deputy to the Russian spymaster who is running a ring
of seditionists in the United States. But he has to attract the man
subtly. If he is too obvious they will know hit's a trap. Play hard to
get, he is told...
And Lessing turns out to be very
good at this new trade. Or is he? Or isn't he? As in a lot of the
best spy stories its hard to tell for a while. And there are plenty of
plot twists, one of which made me laugh out loud. A most enjoyable trip
through eastern Europe.
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