Barbie examined the card, then glanced at the briefcase. “She wants it safe, not gone. She’s playing a dangerous game.”
She was the kind of woman who could make a room feel both safe and threatened, all at once. She had vanished after a botched extraction in Nairobi, leaving behind a trail of rumors, half‑finished dossiers, and a mysterious case that seemed to be the key to something called Project GON.
I glanced at the clock. 5:37 a.m. The city was still a hollow echo of sirens and distant trains. I tossed the coffee, reached for my battered .38, and slid the worn leather notebook onto the desk. It was time to see what the universe— or perhaps just a very determined woman—had decided to throw at me. The Gorgon’s glass façade reflected the rain like a shattered mirror. I slipped through the revolving doors, the security badge I’d borrowed from an old contact flashing green. The elevator chimed, the doors opening onto a hallway that smelled faintly of perfume and cheap whiskey. Private.24.07.04.Barbie.Rous.And.Renata.Fox.Gon...
She clapped slowly, the sound echoing through the vaulted ceiling. “Clever,” she said, admiration evident in her tone. “You’re good, Private. But now you have something that could change everything.”
The Sky Lounge was a dimly lit cavern of plush leather chairs, low tables, and a bar that glimmered with amber liquid. A soft jazz trio played in the corner, the saxophone wailing like a lonely lover. In the far corner, a woman sat alone, her back to the room, a slender silhouette against a wall of floor‑to‑ceiling windows. Her hair was the shade of midnight, cascading in soft waves; her outfit was a perfect replica of the iconic Barbie dress— a flawless pink satin mini, a tiny white collar, and matching high‑heeled shoes that caught the light like a promise. Barbie examined the card, then glanced at the briefcase
She sighed, a sound that seemed to carry the weight of a thousand whispered deals. “Because if it falls into the wrong hands— let’s say the Pentagon, the CIA, or a rogue mercenary group— the consequences will be catastrophic. I have the resources to keep it safe, but I need it out of the public sphere first. I need you to retrieve it, discreetly.”
Barbie’s gaze flicked toward me, a flicker of recognition crossing her face. She smiled, a grin that seemed to say, “You’re not supposed to be here, but you’re welcome.” She sauntered over, her heels clicking a rhythm that resonated with the jazz. She had vanished after a botched extraction in
The night before the job, I spent hours studying the floor plan, noting the security cameras, the guard rotations, and the location of the private elevators that would take me directly to the 24th floor without passing the main lobby. I also took the time to learn a little about Barbie Rous. Barbie wasn’t a name you heard in polite conversation. In intelligence circles, she was a legend—a phantom who could slip through the most secure compounds with a smile that disarmed more than any weapon. She earned the nickname “Barbie” because of an incident in Berlin, 2001, where she entered a heavily guarded bunker wearing a pink bomber jacket and a pair of vintage high‑heels, extracting a classified file without leaving a trace.