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The Traitor's Tale

The Traitor's Tale (The Guild Series Book 3)

Ambrose Knight—a highly decorated CIA case officer, top spy recruiter, and member of The Guild—is suspected of espionage and treated as a pariah by many Agency colleagues and friends. After several months of purgatory, he's exonerated when another case officer's treachery is revealed.

 

Embittered by the accusations and Agency racial discrimination due to his African American ethnicity, Knight volunteers to the Russian intelligence service and begins living a double life.


"The Red Queen", a senior female FBI agent who heads the CIA's Counterespionage Group (the mole hunters), claims that Knight is in fact still a spy and has been all along, his exoneration notwithstanding. She's relentless in her sociopathic pursuit, clashes bitterly with Knight's few allies, and has her own dark secrets to conceal. Joining the hunt is Brian Bannock (from "Living Lies"), now head of CIA Counterintelligence, who has suspected for several years that CIA has harbored serious Russian penetrations.

 

Staring at him across the human chessboard is his archenemy, SVR Major General Dmitri Grishin (ret.), who is desperate to protect vital Kremlin interests and a highly placed mole in the U.S. government. Bannock must use all his guile to flush out the spy who corrodes from within.

What the experts are saying about
The Traitor's Tale:

Dr. David Charney, noted forensic psychiatrist and consultant to the U.S. Intelligence Community on the motivations for espionage.

Our case officer hero, Ambrose Knight, gets suspected of being a traitor, which immediately reminded me of my friend Brian Kelley, also suspected of having crossed the line when the actual spy was Robert Hanssen. How can you calculate the emotional toll when you know you’re innocent? And how do you deal with the frosty reactions of co-workers who should know better? No good deed goes unpunished.

 

Buckle up for a novel that enters this treacherous zone—intense, dramatic, gripping, filled with memorable characters (you’ll never forget Shawnee!), insider revelations and occasional no-holds-barred blasts at misconceived agency practices, detailed pointers of how to conduct sophisticated counterespionage, and peppered throughout with literary references, apt quotations from modern poetry, and for good measure, chapter headings referencing classic chess strategies.

The Traitor’s Tale was also surprisingly revealing, which I believe demonstrates Lawler’s personal courage. 

 

Bravo for Lawler’s third novel, which leaves you hungry for more!

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