“Mobile pay phone. Night action. Pen. Clock. Door. Fire. I’ll tell them where I am. That I need help. That OSPREY was right. We have only six days…and that you have the red ledger.”
A one-time support role with the FBI’s Boston Field Office, Peter Sutherland now works the night shift in the Situation Room at the White House, monitoring the emergency phone line. Months have passed since it rang, a caller giving the verification code, and Sutherland is instructed to contact either Diane Farr- chief of staff to POTUS Travers (she hired him) or his boss, James Hawkins - senior advisor to the president on terrorism & counter-intelligence. Hawkins distrusts Sutherland, as his own father was suspected of spying for the Soviets.
That night the emergency phone rings, the caller a young woman named Rose Larkin, who fumbles through the coded message given to her by her aunt and uncle, from a closet in a nearby house she has broken into, insisting a man is trying to kill her. Sutherland calls in the Secret Service and when Farr and Hawkins turn up, he is told to stand down, job well done and report in the morning.
As if???
Three days later, Sutherland attends the funeral and burial service for the Campbells – retired national security figures, and afterwards the niece, Rose follows him to thank him for his help and takes his card. She is supposedly under a security detail at a hotel, but this is merely a drive-by patrol and she is feeling naturally nervous, wanting to know what is going on, what the Campbells were involved in to get themselves killed. Sutherland can’t give her any answers, but tries to give her confidence by showing her the tradecraft of how to tail someone without their suspecting, and is with her at the hotel when the killer makes a move.
Told alternatively from Sutherland’s POV and that of the assassin, Dimitri Sokokov, “The Night Agent” is a stylish political thriller, of a ledger detailing the activities of a mole deep within the White House, close to the President himself, though it emerges that Travers gained the presidency by default when the front-runner was mired in financial scandal before the election.
What follows is a 3-day adrenaline-ride across Washington DC, with people offed in a cover-up that will shake the Presidency. Billed as resembling the earlier works of John Grisham and David Baldacci (neither author among my favourites), The Night Agent held my attention throughout. Gifting Sutherland with family secrets and a support role, frees him of the pressures of a Special Agent, with gutsy performances by the main players and level of detail, particularly the well-described fight scenes.
Verdict: I will look out for other works by Matthew Quirk.