THE DOCTOR AND THE SPY: Part 1

lenafan

Cadet
This is a WHAT IF story.
I’m always trying to fill in the nooks and crannies left open by the writers and JJ or where I can, insert a story within the episodes. This time I thought I would write a story with Dr. Judy Barnett as the main supporting character in a Jack and Irina story. The premise here is that as part of the agreement with the CIA, Irina would talk to the CIA psychologist who would try to ascertain if she could be trusted. Think of it as a boxing match.
A part of this story was written earlier for another story, but I made some changes, so if it seems familiar it is, just go with the flow.
I’d also like to dedicate this to my editor who combs my stories for every flaw she comes across. Thanks…Edie. :cool:

Finally, thanks to JJ Abrams who found such great characters in his devious mind, so we could write about them. Naturally, he owns all of them except the one’s I made up.


THE DOCTOR AND THE SPY

THE SPY

She was attractive and well dressed. Joan Small mentally assessed the woman walking toward her. She had on a Liz Claiborne black suit and a white blouse. Must have cost seven hundred, she thought. Tall too, over six feet with the high heels she was wearing, and she had gorgeous chestnut brown hair. There was a long streak of gray on the left side. She had dark brown eyes that looked at Joan with some amusement in them. Small antique earrings, a matching necklace, and what looked like a Rolex watch on her left wrist. She must have money and a lot of it.

“May I help you?” asked Joan.

“Yes,” the voice was slightly exotic, but rich in volume, “I have an appointment.”

“With whom?”

“Director Devlin. My name is,” she smiled, almost wickedly, “Laura Bristow.”

“Just a minute.” Joan looked at the list posted on her desktop. Sure enough, one appointment was listed for Director Devlin, a Laura Bristow. She remembered that there had been a buzz going on in the office when she got to work. After she had punched the time clock and gone to get the appointment list, they had still been talking. It must have been about the woman in front of her.

“Just a minute, please,” she said. She picked up the phone, dialed the Director’s office. “Yes, Laura Bristow is here for her appointment.” She listened for a moment, and then turned back to the woman. “Someone will be down to take you up.”

“Thank you.” She smiled, and then turned her back on Judy, looking at a wall beyond the entrance. “No names?”

“What? Oh yes, those stars represent agents who were killed in the line of duty.”

“Interesting!”

At that moment, elevator doors opened. The woman turned to see two men approaching. Joan smiled at them and then nodded at her. “Laura Bristow.”

“Could we see some identification?”

Laura Bristow smiled, “such as? Gentlemen, please. I have no driver’s license and no social security card. I am Russian. My real name is Irina Derevko.”

Joan, who had been listening, froze as she stared into the face of the woman who had been placed at the top of the CIA’s most wanted list after she had been identified as being in Barcelona during a shoot-out when an agent had been seriously wounded. She was the suspected shooter. She glanced at the wall in front of her and swallowed. This woman had been the cause of twelve stars. She was an assassin, a cold-blooded killer, yet she was so beautiful. Joan didn’t look at her again. She couldn’t.

The two agents nodded. “You have to go thru security first.” They walked her to Security’s metal detector. She passed through after taking off her watch and other jewelry. They did not give them back, placing them in a brown manila envelope. The three of them entered the elevator, one man on either side of her.

At the top floor, the three exited, walking to the double doors facing the elevator.
The two agents led her through the doors, which opened up into an office where a secretary sat. She looked up, saw them and pushed the button on her intercom. “She’s here.” She looked at the two men. “The Director wants you to wait out here.” To the woman she said, “Go on inside.”

Laura Bristow opened the doors and found three men inside. Director Devlin was behind the desk. Standing at his side was someone she didn’t know and sitting in one of the two chairs facing DDO Devlin was her lawyer, Aaron Tchaikov. She sat down in the empty chair.

The man she didn’t know stared at her openly hostile. She ignored him. “You have accepted my offer?” She asked Arthur Devlin.

He didn’t look happy, but when he received the phone call from Irina Derevko, he had consulted with the DOJ. They said it was a good deal if she produced. He looked at her. The woman had balls. She smiled, waiting. Devlin leaned back in the chair and studied her. She had something about her, something almost charismatic. This woman was the most dangerous operative the CIA had ever faced and she had stayed out of their hands for over twenty years. Of course, they had had no idea she was alive until Sydney Bristow, her daughter, had revealed her current identity as The Man; the head of a world- wide crime cartel.

“Yes. The Department of Justice has authorized it.” Devlin answered.

“Aaron?” She looked at her attorney, who seemed nervous.

“Everything is fine. I checked everything. You have a deal, immunity so long as you keep your word.”

“Okay and as I promised, I am here. I will help the CIA bring down the Alliance and their subgroups, especially SD-6.

“One thing more, a condition from us,” said the man standing beside Devlin.

“And you are,” Irina asked.

“Sorry,” said Devlin, “Johnstone Fleming, the Deputy Director of Intelligence.”

They didn’t shake hands. Irina watched him and asked, “the condition?”

“We want to set up a series of interviews with our Los Angeles psychologist, Dr. Barnett, to ascertain if you are to be trusted. Your track record,” he said stiffly, “indicates that there is a serious risk of you lying to us. She will not ask you any questions about your operations.”

“She?” Irina glanced down at her hands, thinking. Then she shrugged and nodded her assent.

“Then officially,” said Fleming, “you are now our prisoner. You will be processed through the system. You will be flown to L. A. and incarcerated at the operations center there. We also agree that Sydney Bristow is to be the only debriefing officer.”

She stood up, her heart pounding, as she was now in the hands of the CIA. They would no doubt follow protocol for handling high-risk prisoners. Devlin pushed a button on his desk and requested the agents outside to join them.

The door opened and the two agents entered. “Yes?”

“This is Irina Derevko. Process her as a high-risk prisoner. Full protocol is to be used while she is being processed and transported to Los Angeles. She is your responsibility until she is put into a cell in Los Angeles. Come back here as soon as she is in the medical department. There are some papers I want you to deliver to the head of the op center, FBI Assistant Director Kendall.”

The two agents, Miles and Derry, escorted her to the elevator. They went down into sub-basement three where the processing center was, which included holding cells, interrogation rooms, and a medical department. She was placed in a chair in the first interrogation room they came too. They put handcuffs on her right wrist, snapping the other end to a ring on the table. Irina said nothing wondering if the KGB/SVR and CIA were the same. She was going to find out fairly soon. She felt her heart pounding again. This was the biggest gamble she had ever taken and she was in grave danger of losing everything, including her life. The next few hours were critical. Then, if all went well, she would see Sydney again. She feared her daughter, whom she had seen for the first time after twenty years just three weeks ago, just might refuse.

The door opened in front of her and a small, thin man entered. He unlocked the handcuff from the table. “We are about to process you into our system.” She shrugged, saying nothing.

He was a little non-plussed by her attitude and looked at her coldly. Like everyone else at CIA Headquarters, he was well acquainted with the history of Irina Derevko and that she was accused of assassinating twelve CIA agents. They walked over to another room where she was fingerprinted and pictures, front and side, taken. He turned her back over to the other two agents.

“She’s all yours.” He said as he returned and then exited the room.

Agent Miles pulled her out of the chair and took her to a larger room. A moment later, a female agent entered, wearing a white lab coat.

“I’ll be outside. Call me when you are finished.”

The female agent turned to Irina. “Take off everything you’re wearing. Put this white gown on, opened to the back.”

As Irina disrobed, she took the clothing and placed it in a large plastic bag. Miles had given the agent the manila envelope, which held her earrings, necklace and watch. As she finished, the other door opened and a man wearing a white jacket entered. He had a stethoscope around his neck.

“I’m Dr. Mark Jones. I’ll be conducting a complete physical examination including an MRI scan. The MRI will be used to identify you and will also tell us whether or not you have secreted anything on your body.”

“Now why would I do that?” She asked.

“It’s been tried before,” he commented dryly, indicating she should get up on the table.

When the doctor finished the examination, the female agent gave her standard CIA prisoner garb: black sleeveless tee, blue denim pants cut above her ankle, a standard blue jacket, and slip on shoes. Next, Irina was taken to another room where she was measured for a tether chain that would lead from her wrist chain to the ankle shackles. This would inhibit walking fast or running. It was protocol for high-risk prisoners. She could only take small steps. Her normal three-foot stride was cut to about eighteen inches.

Agents Miles and Derry returned and walked her back to the interrogation room, sitting her down in the same chair. She looked at them. “Could I have something to eat? I haven’t eaten for about eight hours.”

“See what I can do,” said Miles. “John, buzz the Director and tell him she’s ready to go. I’ll see if the cafeteria has a sandwich.”

He was back shortly with a wrapped sandwich and bottled water. Irina drank and ate hungrily. She didn’t even notice what kind of sandwich it was, just that it was food and she was hungry.

Just as she finished, Derry returned with a thick folder. “We’ve got a plane waiting at the field.” He glanced at his watch. “Let’s get moving.”

Six hours later, Irina Derevko, her wrists chained to rings imbedded in the large van’s side panel and her ankles shackled to rings in the floor, felt the vehicle come to a stop. It was raining hard. She had been soaked getting out of the plane, now there would be more. Somehow, she didn’t think they would give her an umbrella this time either. The doors were pulled open. She looked out. Two armed U. S. Marshals jumped up, came inside, and released her wrists and ankles and installed the tether chain. She moved awkwardly to the edge of the door. There were bright lights pointing at the van and in front of them were several men with guns, all pointing at her. A guard dog was barking in the background.

Those certainly made her feel empowered. All these men and guns for her! She almost laughed. The two Marshals helped her down. The rain pelted her, but she couldn’t run. They marched her toward a set of doors and through them, leaving the rain behind. Besides the two men on either side of her, there were two more behind. They walked her down a corridor with three steel doors that opened and closed as they went through them.

Finally, they stopped in front of a small door that opened into a room beyond. They pushed her inside and removed the shackles. She didn’t move, but looked around at her new home. It was a sparsely furnished room by any prison standard, although larger than most. There was a steel bunk to her left and to the right of that, a small table with a plain chair. To her right in the corner was a toilet and washbasin. Neither was out of sight of anyone coming to visit. There was a window to the right and left of the toilet. At least she thought she had a view. She turned around; the Marshals had already left. She heard the steel cellblock doors come down as they retraced their steps. Well, she’d have some warning of future visitors. There was some kind of window over her bed. She looked up and found there were two light bulbs. She looked outside the cell and saw a camera facing her. No secrets, she thought, and no privacy. Someone would no doubt be monitoring her every movement and conversation of every day. Of course, she was planning to talk to only Sydney and the psychologist. Now what was her name?
 
THE DOCTOR

Dr. Judy Barnett took the pages off her fax machine and walked to the study, making sure they were in numerical order. Ops Center had just received their much-anticipated prisoner and Kendall wanted to make sure she had everything before she saw Irina Derevko for the first time.

She glanced quickly over the processing report. Other than the physical description and medical examination, there was nothing about the woman herself. She did have however, the debriefing report of Sydney Bristow on the affair in Taipei where her mother had shot her. There was a report on the Barcelona action and Barcelona happened only a week ago. Now, Irina Derevko was a prisoner of the CIA having turned herself in because she wanted to help take down The Alliance.

Judy found the whole sequence of events fascinating. She could feel a tingle of anticipation about meeting this woman, a KGB agent, who had married a young CIA agent, Jack Bristow, in 1972. Then three years later, she had given birth to Sydney Bristow, who was working now as a double agent and, according to reports, was regarded as a valuable asset to the CIA, along with her father, Jack.

Suddenly, Judy experienced an adrenaline rush as she thought about interviewing all three. She had interviewed Jack a few times at the request of the DDI. His life as a double agent was in constant danger. Now he had his daughter to worry about and that increased his anxiety. She folded her hands in her lap and closed her eyes as she tried to remember what he looked like at their last interview.

He had steel-gray curly hair. His eyes were brown, almost piercing in some way. In addition, they were hard, no, cold! There was no life in them unless Sydney was around. He always looked like a well-dressed businessman, of course, what was his cover? Oh yes, an aeronautical engineer. He worked for some company in the aerospace industry. He was tall, almost six two. Ummm, he and, she looked at his file, ah…yes; his wife’s name was Laura. Well they must have made a handsome pair when they went out. She wondered if he knew “Laura” was back.

She opened her eyes and took out the two reports from Sydney Bristow. The first one was dated three weeks ago. Sydney had been sent with her father by Sloane to Taipei to learn about some new Rambaldi machine, the circumference everyone called it, that had been built there by an organization run by The Man. This had almost ended in disaster for Sydney and her handler, Michael Vaughn. Sydney had blown up the machine unleashing a massive amount of water that caught Vaughn before he had a chance to get to the door. Sydney had rushed down a corridor to call her father, but had been caught by The Man’s men and taken to a dirty back room somewhere in the city. She had been tied to a chair. Sydney said the man she knew as Khasinau came in to feed her and to ask her questions. When she said she would only talk to The Man, he told her he wasn’t that person, but his boss was.

Moments later, Sydney’s mother walked into the room holding a gun and when Sydney wouldn’t talk, she shot her in the shoulder. Judy remembered the interview so well. She had been spellbound by Sydney’s tale of how she escaped. She flipped to the third page where she had noted that Sydney’s face had the most tragic look on it as she said she didn’t know how she was going to handle her mother’s presence in her life.

Judy didn’t sleep much that night and actually went into the office earlier than she usually did. In fact, the next shift of agents hadn’t arrived yet. She walked over to the watch officer, the man designated to take calls and answer questions.

“Is the prisoner’s monitor on?”

He nodded; pointing to the screen that showed Irina Derevko did or said. “Orders say it’s to be on twenty-four/seven.”

“Can I play back the tape of them bringing her into the center?”

“Yes, just hit the rewind button. Jack Bristow was in about three this morning to take a look also.”

Judy Barnett, not surprised, walked over and did as the agent had instructed. Moments later she hit the play button and the tape of Irina Derevko’s entrance to the ops center was played back. She frowned. She looked at the report she had in the top file. She wasn’t wrong; the prisoner had walked in on her own accord, saying she wanted to help the CIA. The woman on the screen was chained and couldn’t take but small steps as they proceeded down the hallway. Well, they had their way of treating prisoners. Her job was not to judge them, but to learn the truth. She wondered when she would be able to interview Irina Derevko.


DEREVKO INTERVIEW #1
FILE # 2273301

Judy stood on the balcony overlooking the first floor at CIA Headquarters in LA. They were operating in conjunction with the FBI, but it was their office building. Activity below was not particularly exciting to watch; most of it consisted of typing and reviewing reports that were then sent for analysis and action as necessary. She saw Sydney Bristow’s handler, Michael Vaughn, typing something into his computer. He and Sydney had completed an assignment in Helsinki and returned last night. She heard it was successful.

She turned and went into her office. There was only one name on her appointment list – Irina Derevko. Sydney’s mother had agreed to the first interview. She had seen her daughter twice.

Judy looked about the room. It was comfortable and perfectly decorated. Colors were warm and inviting. She moved a chair to face her desk, shoving the sofa back against the wall and then walked to her desk and sat down. There was a knock on the door.
“Come in,” she said.

A Marshal appeared, and holding the door open, motioned someone to enter. Dr. Barnett watched as the tall, slim-built woman entered slowly. She had been shackled and could not walk with a normal stride.

“Is that necessary? After all, we are on CIA premises.

“Sorry, Doctor, but we are following protocol. All prisoners are allowed out of their cells under certain protocol. This one is the cream of the crop. She gets full treatment.” He glanced at the woman standing beside him. “We have to bring her up through the office and there’s too much going on to allow her any kind of freedom.”

“Very well. You can leave. I’ll call you when she’s ready to leave.”

He nodded and led Irina to the chair facing the doctor, helping her to sit down. Then he left, shutting the door behind him.

Irina studied the psychologist in front of her. Barnett was probably around mid-forties, maybe five foot five, blond, blue-eyed, and she didn’t wear horned rimmed glasses. Maybe she wore contacts. A very presentable, somewhat tired and slightly underweight woman whose job it was going to be to assess her truthfulness. Irina said nothing but continued looking about the office. It was a comfortable and pleasant room to be in. She settled back into the chair.

“Which do you prefer, Irina or – Laura?” Judy smiled, waiting.

That was quick, thought Irina. She smiled back. “Irina. And you are—?“ She knew perfectly well who Judy was, but thought she might be able to control the conversation by making the doctor give information first.

Judy laughed, understanding exactly what Irina was doing. This former KGB agent spoke with a strong, vibrant voice, only slightly accented. “You know exactly who I am, Irina. You can call me Dr. Barnett or Judy if you wish. As you know, part of the agreement is that you allow me to interview you. I have been asked to decide whether you are telling us the truth. How you answer and what you tell me will help clarify this for me. Are you comfortable?”

“As comfortable as one can be like this,” she held up her wrists.

“Your quarters?”

Irina gave a little snort, “Better accommodations than one of your agents would get in my country.”

Dr. Barnett stared at her client for a moment. Irina had a slight quizzical look on her face. Her eyes, however, were steady, cold and distant, as she waited for the doctor to continue. The face was extraordinary with wide dark brown eyes, high cheekbones and long chestnut brown hair that fell down below her shoulders. Her skin was creamy and smooth; the lips were full, almost sensuous. There were a few wrinkles about the corners of her eyes; they were the only real signs that she had aged. However, she did not look her age, which according to the report was about fifty-one or fifty-two. She also looked remarkably fit. She was garbed in the usual CIA prison clothes.

“I think we should begin with the ground rules. In order for me to reach a decision, our conversations have to be frank and open. That won’t happen unless I tell you the following: First, I will not ask you anything pertaining to your operations, unless it has something to do with your daughter or –“ she paused, “—or your ex-husband. Second, everything you tell me will go no further than this room. I will not tape our conversations. You and I have a client/doctor relationship so nothing you say in this room can be used against you.”

Irina laughed, “Anything I say now won’t matter. If I don’t – ummm – perform the tasks I’ve promised, I can be taken away, tried and executed.” Then Irina looked at the doctor who had been dead serious. “Yes, I understand and I appreciate the privacy of the conversations. Thank you.” Again, her voice was cold and distant.

Judy looked down at her notes, “The reports I’ve been given are not complete.”

“Reports?” Irina asked coldly. “I haven’t been in this country for twenty years. How could there be any reports.” She sounded slightly outraged.

“Yes, but there is the videotape.”

“What videotape?”

“About five months ago, a piece of very old video tape was found at an operation site by your daughter, Sydney. When it was played, you were present on it with another agent, Ivan Valenko. You both were being debriefed about your KGB assignment here in America – your husband confirmed that it was you.”

Irina’s eyes widened in slight astonishment, but she said nothing.

“It was the first time he knew without question you were alive and that you were a KGB agent,” continued Dr. Barnett, watching Irina.

The prisoner stared past the doctor to the wall behind her. It was obvious she had not known about the videotape and was somewhat taken aback. She seemed to be trying to remember the time. She sighed then as the memory flooded back into her consciousness. She was not happy about the memory.

“You do remember it then?”

“Yes! My handler and I were being interviewed at KGB headquarters in Moscow. It happened only a day or so after I arrived back home.” She stared at her chained wrists as though remembering something else that had taken place.

“So why did you turn yourself into the CIA?” Judy snapped the question as Irina’s thoughts were elsewhere.

Irina heard the question and knew she’d better be truthful. “My daughter.”

“But you shot her!” Judy said.

Irina smiled, “yes, but I didn’t kill her. Listen, Doctor, I want to tell Sydney why myself. Let me have this conversation with her, then I will tell you.”

“Very well. You know your ex-husband thinks you can’t be trusted. He says you are a killer without a conscience, an opportunistic sociopath and a liar. He’s sure you are up to no good.”

“I’m sure he does. Don’t you think so too, Doctor?” Irina’s voice was cold.

”In my business, it’s better to leave the judging to later, after I have all the facts.” Judy sat back in her chair, her hands folded in her lap, staring at her. “So, all of this is because of Sydney?”

“Sydney!” Irina shifted in her chair as if to relieve a cramp. “My daughter!”
She sounded so impersonal that it was hard to believe she cared about her. “How are you going determine I can be trusted?” She changed the subject.

“By the interviews we have and the information you give to me.”

“They will want to know on what you are basing your decision.” Irina shrugged, and then changed the subject again suddenly with a disarming proud smile, “You know, she refused to give Khasinau the information we wanted. She wanted to speak only to The Man. She was a prisoner, tied up to a chair and she had the courage to demand to see The Man!” Irina’s eyes were shining with the memory. “I decided she earned the right to know.

“I came into the room. She knew me immediately. She called me, ‘Mom’ and I shot her.” Again, Irina shifted in the chair. “You probably don’t know this about me. I am considered one of the best marksmen ever to complete our academy. My instructor told me I was good enough to be on our Olympic team. I put the shot in her shoulder because it would heal faster and it would give her time after I left the room to escape. Sydney is extremely resourceful.” It was the second time Judy had heard her speak with pride. “She escaped as I hoped she would.”

Judy knew she was not going to tell her why. That would come after Irina talked about it to Sydney. “The warehouse in Barcelona was the place you had your second encounter with your daughter. You killed your partner.”

Irina did not smile. “He was going to double cross me. He knew that Sydney was a double agent. For those two reasons, I killed him. I never wanted him as a part of my organization. Good riddance, as you Americans would say.”

“According to Sydney’s debrief, you told her ‘Truth Takes Time.’ What does that mean?”

“That is for my daughter to learn.”

”So you turned yourself in because of Sydney.”

“When I saw for myself that she was a double agent, I became angry. This is Jack’s fault. He has done this to her.” It was the first time she had called her ex-husband by his name. Irina stood up with some difficulty.

“I’m going to have to learn more, before I can tell the agency you can be trusted.” Judy reminded Irina of the reason she was in her office.

“Maybe tomorrow. Call the guard. We’re through for today.” Irina was in control of this round.

Assessment: The prisoner has exhibited a willingness to talk and answer most of my questions. However, I still cannot tell if she can be trusted. I need more input and information.
THE DOCTOR

Dr. Judy Barnett took the pages off her fax machine and walked to the study, making sure they were in numerical order. Ops Center had just received their much-anticipated prisoner and Kendall wanted to make sure she had everything before she saw Irina Derevko for the first time.

She glanced quickly over the processing report. Other than the physical description and medical examination, there was nothing about the woman herself. She did have however, the debriefing report of Sydney Bristow on the affair in Taipei where her mother had shot her. There was a report on the Barcelona action and Barcelona happened only a week ago. Now, Irina Derevko was a prisoner of the CIA having turned herself in because she wanted to help take down The Alliance.

Judy found the whole sequence of events fascinating. She could feel a tingle of anticipation about meeting this woman, a KGB agent, who had married a young CIA agent, Jack Bristow, in 1972. Then three years later, she had given birth to Sydney Bristow, who was working now as a double agent and, according to reports, was regarded as a valuable asset to the CIA, along with her father, Jack.

Suddenly, Judy experienced an adrenaline rush as she thought about interviewing all three. She had interviewed Jack a few times at the request of the DDI. His life as a double agent was in constant danger. Now he had his daughter to worry about and that increased his anxiety. She folded her hands in her lap and closed her eyes as she tried to remember what he looked like at their last interview.

He had steel-gray curly hair. His eyes were brown, almost piercing in some way. In addition, they were hard, no, cold! There was no life in them unless Sydney was around. He always looked like a well-dressed businessman, of course, what was his cover? Oh yes, an aeronautical engineer. He worked for some company in the aerospace industry. He was tall, almost six two. Ummm, he and, she looked at his file, ah…yes; his wife’s name was Laura. Well they must have made a handsome pair when they went out. She wondered if he knew “Laura” was back.

She opened her eyes and took out the two reports from Sydney Bristow. The first one was dated three weeks ago. Sydney had been sent with her father by Sloane to Taipei to learn about some new Rambaldi machine, the circumference everyone called it, that had been built there by an organization run by The Man. This had almost ended in disaster for Sydney and her handler, Michael Vaughn. Sydney had blown up the machine unleashing a massive amount of water that caught Vaughn before he had a chance to get to the door. Sydney had rushed down a corridor to call her father, but had been caught by The Man’s men and taken to a dirty back room somewhere in the city. She had been tied to a chair. Sydney said the man she knew as Khasinau came in to feed her and to ask her questions. When she said she would only talk to The Man, he told her he wasn’t that person, but his boss was.

Moments later, Sydney’s mother walked into the room holding a gun and when Sydney wouldn’t talk, she shot her in the shoulder. Judy remembered the interview so well. She had been spellbound by Sydney’s tale of how she escaped. She flipped to the third page where she had noted that Sydney’s face had the most tragic look on it as she said she didn’t know how she was going to handle her mother’s presence in her life.

Judy didn’t sleep much that night and actually went into the office earlier than she usually did. In fact, the next shift of agents hadn’t arrived yet. She walked over to the watch officer, the man designated to take calls and answer questions.

“Is the prisoner’s monitor on?”

He nodded; pointing to the screen that showed Irina Derevko did or said. “Orders say it’s to be on twenty-four/seven.”

“Can I play back the tape of them bringing her into the center?”

“Yes, just hit the rewind button. Jack Bristow was in about three this morning to take a look also.”

Judy Barnett, not surprised, walked over and did as the agent had instructed. Moments later she hit the play button and the tape of Irina Derevko’s entrance to the ops center was played back. She frowned. She looked at the report she had in the top file. She wasn’t wrong; the prisoner had walked in on her own accord, saying she wanted to help the CIA. The woman on the screen was chained and couldn’t take but small steps as they proceeded down the hallway. Well, they had their way of treating prisoners. Her job was not to judge them, but to learn the truth. She wondered when she would be able to interview Irina Derevko.


DEREVKO INTERVIEW #1
FILE # 2273301

Judy stood on the balcony overlooking the first floor at CIA Headquarters in LA. They were operating in conjunction with the FBI, but it was their office building. Activity below was not particularly exciting to watch; most of it consisted of typing and reviewing reports that were then sent for analysis and action as necessary. She saw Sydney Bristow’s handler, Michael Vaughn, typing something into his computer. He and Sydney had completed an assignment in Helsinki and returned last night. She heard it was successful.

She turned and went into her office. There was only one name on her appointment list – Irina Derevko. Sydney’s mother had agreed to the first interview. She had seen her daughter twice.

Judy looked about the room. It was comfortable and perfectly decorated. Colors were warm and inviting. She moved a chair to face her desk, shoving the sofa back against the wall and then walked to her desk and sat down. There was a knock on the door.
“Come in,” she said.

A Marshal appeared, and holding the door open, motioned someone to enter. Dr. Barnett watched as the tall, slim-built woman entered slowly. She had been shackled and could not walk with a normal stride.

“Is that necessary? After all, we are on CIA premises.

“Sorry, Doctor, but we are following protocol. All prisoners are allowed out of their cells under certain protocol. This one is the cream of the crop. She gets full treatment.” He glanced at the woman standing beside him. “We have to bring her up through the office and there’s too much going on to allow her any kind of freedom.”

“Very well. You can leave. I’ll call you when she’s ready to leave.”

He nodded and led Irina to the chair facing the doctor, helping her to sit down. Then he left, shutting the door behind him.

Irina studied the psychologist in front of her. Barnett was probably around mid-forties, maybe five foot five, blond, blue-eyed, and she didn’t wear horned rimmed glasses. Maybe she wore contacts. A very presentable, somewhat tired and slightly underweight woman whose job it was going to be to assess her truthfulness. Irina said nothing but continued looking about the office. It was a comfortable and pleasant room to be in. She settled back into the chair.

“Which do you prefer, Irina or – Laura?” Judy smiled, waiting.

That was quick, thought Irina. She smiled back. “Irina. And you are—?“ She knew perfectly well who Judy was, but thought she might be able to control the conversation by making the doctor give information first.

Judy laughed, understanding exactly what Irina was doing. This former KGB agent spoke with a strong, vibrant voice, only slightly accented. “You know exactly who I am, Irina. You can call me Dr. Barnett or Judy if you wish. As you know, part of the agreement is that you allow me to interview you. I have been asked to decide whether you are telling us the truth. How you answer and what you tell me will help clarify this for me. Are you comfortable?”

“As comfortable as one can be like this,” she held up her wrists.

“Your quarters?”

Irina gave a little snort, “Better accommodations than one of your agents would get in my country.”

Dr. Barnett stared at her client for a moment. Irina had a slight quizzical look on her face. Her eyes, however, were steady, cold and distant, as she waited for the doctor to continue. The face was extraordinary with wide dark brown eyes, high cheekbones and long chestnut brown hair that fell down below her shoulders. Her skin was creamy and smooth; the lips were full, almost sensuous. There were a few wrinkles about the corners of her eyes; they were the only real signs that she had aged. However, she did not look her age, which according to the report was about fifty-one or fifty-two. She also looked remarkably fit. She was garbed in the usual CIA prison clothes.

“I think we should begin with the ground rules. In order for me to reach a decision, our conversations have to be frank and open. That won’t happen unless I tell you the following: First, I will not ask you anything pertaining to your operations, unless it has something to do with your daughter or –“ she paused, “—or your ex-husband. Second, everything you tell me will go no further than this room. I will not tape our conversations. You and I have a client/doctor relationship so nothing you say in this room can be used against you.”

Irina laughed, “Anything I say now won’t matter. If I don’t – ummm – perform the tasks I’ve promised, I can be taken away, tried and executed.” Then Irina looked at the doctor who had been dead serious. “Yes, I understand and I appreciate the privacy of the conversations. Thank you.” Again, her voice was cold and distant.

Judy looked down at her notes, “The reports I’ve been given are not complete.”

“Reports?” Irina asked coldly. “I haven’t been in this country for twenty years. How could there be any reports.” She sounded slightly outraged.

“Yes, but there is the videotape.”

“What videotape?”

“About five months ago, a piece of very old video tape was found at an operation site by your daughter, Sydney. When it was played, you were present on it with another agent, Ivan Valenko. You both were being debriefed about your KGB assignment here in America – your husband confirmed that it was you.”

Irina’s eyes widened in slight astonishment, but she said nothing.

“It was the first time he knew without question you were alive and that you were a KGB agent,” continued Dr. Barnett, watching Irina.

The prisoner stared past the doctor to the wall behind her. It was obvious she had not known about the videotape and was somewhat taken aback. She seemed to be trying to remember the time. She sighed then as the memory flooded back into her consciousness. She was not happy about the memory.

“You do remember it then?”

“Yes! My handler and I were being interviewed at KGB headquarters in Moscow. It happened only a day or so after I arrived back home.” She stared at her chained wrists as though remembering something else that had taken place.

“So why did you turn yourself into the CIA?” Judy snapped the question as Irina’s thoughts were elsewhere.

Irina heard the question and knew she’d better be truthful. “My daughter.”

“But you shot her!” Judy said.

Irina smiled, “yes, but I didn’t kill her. Listen, Doctor, I want to tell Sydney why myself. Let me have this conversation with her, then I will tell you.”

“Very well. You know your ex-husband thinks you can’t be trusted. He says you are a killer without a conscience, an opportunistic sociopath and a liar. He’s sure you are up to no good.”

“I’m sure he does. Don’t you think so too, Doctor?” Irina’s voice was cold.

”In my business, it’s better to leave the judging to later, after I have all the facts.” Judy sat back in her chair, her hands folded in her lap, staring at her. “So, all of this is because of Sydney?”

“Sydney!” Irina shifted in her chair as if to relieve a cramp. “My daughter!”
She sounded so impersonal that it was hard to believe she cared about her. “How are you going determine I can be trusted?” She changed the subject.

“By the interviews we have and the information you give to me.”

“They will want to know on what you are basing your decision.” Irina shrugged, and then changed the subject again suddenly with a disarming proud smile, “You know, she refused to give Khasinau the information we wanted. She wanted to speak only to The Man. She was a prisoner, tied up to a chair and she had the courage to demand to see The Man!” Irina’s eyes were shining with the memory. “I decided she earned the right to know.

“I came into the room. She knew me immediately. She called me, ‘Mom’ and I shot her.” Again, Irina shifted in the chair. “You probably don’t know this about me. I am considered one of the best marksmen ever to complete our academy. My instructor told me I was good enough to be on our Olympic team. I put the shot in her shoulder because it would heal faster and it would give her time after I left the room to escape. Sydney is extremely resourceful.” It was the second time Judy had heard her speak with pride. “She escaped as I hoped she would.”

Judy knew she was not going to tell her why. That would come after Irina talked about it to Sydney. “The warehouse in Barcelona was the place you had your second encounter with your daughter. You killed your partner.”

Irina did not smile. “He was going to double cross me. He knew that Sydney was a double agent. For those two reasons, I killed him. I never wanted him as a part of my organization. Good riddance, as you Americans would say.”

“According to Sydney’s debrief, you told her ‘Truth Takes Time.’ What does that mean?”

“That is for my daughter to learn.”

”So you turned yourself in because of Sydney.”

“When I saw for myself that she was a double agent, I became angry. This is Jack’s fault. He has done this to her.” It was the first time she had called her ex-husband by his name. Irina stood up with some difficulty.

“I’m going to have to learn more, before I can tell the agency you can be trusted.” Judy reminded Irina of the reason she was in her office.

“Maybe tomorrow. Call the guard. We’re through for today.” Irina was in control of this round.

Assessment: The prisoner has exhibited a willingness to talk and answer most of my questions. However, I still cannot tell if she can be trusted. I need more input and information.
 
DEREVKO INTERVIEW #2
FILE # 2273301

The door opened and Judy Barnett watched as the marshal brought in Irina Derevko. She was shackled as before. He helped Irina to sit down and then left. Irina did not look at the doctor. She seemed pensive. There was a kind of wistfulness about her, as though she were living in a memory.

“I understand you saw Jack yesterday.” Judy began. She had a feeling that Irina was thinking about that meeting.

“Yes!” Irina looked at her finally. “You probably saw it on the monitor.”

Judy shook her head, “No! I wanted you to tell me how you felt about that encounter.”

Irina laughed softly. “More of a face-off than chance encounter. He hates me and I don’t blame him.” She put her hands on her knees, rubbing them.

“Tell me what you felt when you saw him.”

Irina sighed, “It’s hard to really explain. We were married ten years. We had a child, Sydney, whom we both loved dearly.”

“Why did you decide to have a child…knowing that you were a spy, working for your country? You must have known that you could be arrested or ordered out at any time.”

Irina shivered, remembering. “I was beginning to fall in love with Jack. We didn’t have a child right away because I told him I had to get myself established in my career. It was dangerous for me too, as you say. I actually didn’t tell my handler until it became obvious.”

“Was he angry?”

“He would have ordered me to abort the child, but I was four months along before he realized what I had done.” Her eyes became half-veiled as she thought about Ivan’s anger when she told him about the baby. He had wanted her to get rid of it. She refused, saying, that Jack had been getting suspicious of her activities. However, when she told him they were going to have a baby, he’d been ecstatic and forgot he was suspicious.

“Was that true?”

Irina shook her head. “Jack didn’t suspect. At least not then.”

Judy made a note on the pad in front of her. “How was your pregnancy?”

“I guess ordinary. I didn’t have any trouble. I carried Sydney to term. I gave birth to her at the University’s hospital.” Irina’s eyes danced. “Jack said she came out smiling.”

“What happened when you saw him yesterday?” Judy was very interested in what had transpired, at least in Irina’s words.

“He threatened to kill me if I involved Sydney in, what he called, my endgame.”

“Endgame?”

“Yes! He doesn’t believe I’m here to help the CIA. He says I have my own agenda.”

“I thought you wanted Sydney out of the CIA and SD-6?”

“Absolutely!” Irina looked at the doctor without guile.

“But you allegedly run a very sophisticated worldwide organization dealing in Intel, blackmail, buying and selling weapons, every sort of criminal activity imagined and yet here you are, subjecting yourself to this.” She indicated the chains. “There has to be more to it than Sydney.”

Irina’s eyes narrowed slightly as she sifted through the doctor’s words. “I’m fifty-two, Doctor. I have been in the spy business for thirty-one of those years. I am tired living on the edge. You indicated these,” she looked at the chains, “I don’t want Sydney to end up as I am now.

“It’s Jack’s fault. I knew when I saw her, when I heard about her, that I would have to do something. I could not allow her to continue. Using my resources, I found out about Danny Hecht, her fiancé, and the other friends she has. When Danny was killed, I was upset. At the time, I could do nothing, but watch. Then our meeting in Taipei and after that, in Barcelona, convinced me I had to help take down The Alliance so Sydney could leave.”

“You’re willing to go to prison for the rest of your life, so Sydney can leave the CIA?” Judy studied Irina carefully. “That certainly goes against your reputation as a ruthless killer and spy.” Judy looked at the papers in front of her. “You are accused of 86 counts of espionage and of killing 12 agents, some quite brutally.”

Irina grimaced. “I admit to the espionage, but I cannot admit to those killings. Who saw me do them? I don’t think they have any proof.” She was firm in that statement.

Judy decided this was not where she wanted to take the interview. She was trying to assess Irina’s feelings. Did she have them? “Let’s get back to how you felt when you saw your ex-husband. You said it was Jack’s fault. Why do you believe that?”

“He trained her!” Irina snapped. “He programmed our daughter to be a spy!”

“What do you mean?”

“I was sent to spy on the CIA through Jack, who was developing a program called Project Christmas and don’t ask me why the name. The KGB was interested in learning how the CIA was going to train children.”

“Children!” Judy was shocked. She had never heard this before.

“I won’t tell you how because the CIA abandoned the project. I just know Jack gave all the tests, both written and physical, to Sydney. He programmed her to be a spy when she grew up.”

“How do you know he did?”

“I’ve seen Sydney in action and I’ve heard about some of her exploits. He trained her when she was a child. I know he did.” There would be no changing of her mind, of that Judy was positive.

“You say you won’t admit to the killing of the twelve agents.” Judy decided to change the subject again.

“Doctor, I’ve said what I said.” Irina leaned slightly forward. “Both of our countries were in a cold war; CIA would kill our spies and we killed theirs. Both countries backed special operations, black ops, as some call them. Both sides had men running their organization who were cunning and ruthless. No matter what happened to whom, it was a job for me as it was a job for Jack.

“SD-6 and The Alliance are seeking to dominate world governments, including yours and mine. So, just tell the CIA to use me. I offered to help.” Irina leaned back and smiled. “They can use the information I have.”

Judy had a sense that Irina was finished with the interview. “Marshal?”

The door opened and the marshal entered. “Yes?”

“She’s ready to go back.” Judy looked at Irina “I’ll want to see you again. We’re not finished.”

Irina shrugged. The marshal leaned down and helped her to her feet. She shuffled out the door, the Marshal behind her. Judy started to make some notes about what had happened, when suddenly there were shouts, the sound of a body crashing to the floor. Judy jumped out of her chair and rushed out to see the Marshal lying on the floor in front of the elevator and the doors closing on Irina – and Jack.

“He’s going to kill her,” thought Judy.


THE SPY AND THE HUSBAND

It had happened so fast, Irina still wasn’t sure she knew what the exact sequence of events was. She was shuffling off toward the elevator, the marshal a step behind her on the right side. They reached the elevator. The marshal pushed the button and the elevator started up. Seconds later, the doors opened and at that precise moment, Jack appeared, knocking the Marshal to the ground, shoving Irina hard inside and following. The doors closed before the guard had a chance to react. Jack pushed the button for the top floor, stopping it just as an alarm went off below.

Irina sat where she had been pushed, looking at him in astonishment at first, then with alarm. What was he doing? Why? “Jack, are you crazy? Your superiors are not going to like this.”

“Shut up, Irina. I want to talk without the monitor and camera pointing at us. Here we’ll have some semblance of privacy for a few minutes.” He looked at her. “You’re not hurt, are you?”

She was surprised considering the circumstances. “Thanks for asking. No, I don’t think so.”

“You want to sit or stand?” His eyes regarded her coldly.

She shrugged, struggling with the concept of his being in control. “I sit a lot these days.”

He grasped the front of her jacket and pulled her up to face him. “You said some things to me yesterday that I want to explore further.”

Irina leaned against the rear of the elevator, regarding him quizzically. “I thought I was clear about everything.”

“It was your statement that the illusion of our marriage was becoming real, especially after Sydney was born.” Now his voice softened a little.

She felt the blush cross her face. “Yes. I – I was falling in love with you.” Irina held his gaze without flinching. “There were many times when you and Sydney meant more to me than the job.”

“By job, you mean our marriage.”

She shook her head, glancing away for a few moments. “I meant the other part of my assignment – the espionage.”

“And the murders?” Jack reached out and grasped the front of the jacket again. His voice was harsh and his face angry as he leaned into her “We both knew some of those men and their families. For God’s sake, we even went to their homes for dinner. What’s even worse,” he pulled her to within an inch of his face, “we went to some of the murdered agents’ funerals.”

She didn’t answer. She didn’t dare risk telling him anything. The doctor, she could, but not Jack – not Jack. There was no doctor/client privilege. She did not take her eyes off him. She met his gaze without flinching. He gripped her jacket tighter, looking as if he could hit her. Inside, however, the pictures flashed of those events so long ago and her heart raced.

“I’ve thought about you for twenty years, reflecting on your perfidy and now you show up saying you will help bring down The Alliance…and Sloane! I don’t believe you know what the word trust means!” Jack was operating with controlled anger. “I think you’re only here to get Sydney to trust you. Why? I don’t know yet.”

Irina knew she had to go on the attack. Her heart was racing with panic. She had never seen him quite so angry, even when they were married. She lifted her head and decided to question him. “Sydney! Why, Jack, did you do it?”

For the moment, he had to orient himself as to what she was saying. Then he answered without apology. “I didn’t want her to be a victim, like me!”

Irina stared at him calmly, although she felt like he had stuck a knife in her heart. She deserved it. She’d earned it. “Was it your idea to recruit her to Arvin’s organization?” She was pressing the attack.

He shook his head. “No, he did it before I realized what he had done. He fed her that c*** and bull story about him being the head of a sub-secret CIA operations center and that it did impossible jobs. That is something I will never forgive myself for.”

Suddenly they both heard somebody shouting and running up some stairs. Jack released her jacket and turned quickly, pushing the button that would drop the elevator to the first floor. He looked at her coldly and Irina could swear he was looking right into her soul. She kept her gaze steady, noncommittal and as impersonal as she could.

“Do you really care about Sydney?”

“Yes! She’s very important to me.”

He snorted, “I don’t think you realize what you did to her when you left.”

She inclined her head, agreeing, and then said softly, “That doesn’t mean I totally forgot about her – or you.”

Jack didn’t seem to hear as he said quietly, his eyes never leaving hers, “I will kill you if you use her in any way that I deem detrimental to her emotional health.”

The elevator stopped. The doors opened. Two U.S. Marshals stood there with guns pointing at them both. “She’s all yours. We were just talking.”


DEREVKO INTERVIEW #3
FILE #2273301

Judy stood at the doorway watching the elevator. It was time for her next interview with Irina Derevko. It had been several days since the incident when Jack had taken a few minutes alone with Irina in the elevator. Judy had thought he meant to kill her. Irina confirmed to Kendall she had not been hurt. Jack was told not to see his ex-wife again until he talked with Judy. Interestingly enough, she had been talking to him at the same time Sydney was talking with Irina. He seemed so desperate to keep her away from Irina. Now Sydney was on her way to Moscow on a special mission for the CIA.

The doors opened and the CIA’s most valuable informant was being escorted toward her. Judy waited until she was in the room, before following her. Two Marshals had been assigned to her and they waited outside. Irina sat down with a little difficulty. Judy went behind her desk.

“I’m sorry I didn’t see you after Jack’s, ummm, sudden appearance. That must have been frightening.” Judy pulled the yellow tablet toward her and picked up a pencil. “Will you tell me what happened?”

Irina thought for a moment and then turned her dark eyes on her inquisitor. “It was a short discussion, almost a repeat of what happened in my cell.”

Judy made a note. She had a feeling that wasn’t all that had been said. “Really? I’m sorry, but I don’t believe that was all. Jack took a terrible risk in doing what he did just to repeat himself.”

“Ahhh,” Irina said softly, “you think I’m lying.”

The blond woman smiled back, “ I believe he threatened your life again, but that wasn’t all.”

“Very well,” Irina answered and told the doctor everything that happened, leaving out only one sentence and inserting another in its place. The doctor would have been very curious as to the meaning of her words. She would not be privy to the truth here.

“So you confronted him about Sydney?”

“Yes!”

“What is your sense about Jack’s anger toward you?” Judy had interviewed Jack and knew what really bothered him.

Irina gave a short wicked chuckle, “He’s afraid of losing Sydney.”

Judy said nothing nor indicated the surprise she felt with Irina’s answer. For someone who had not been involved with her family for twenty odd years, she was extremely perceptive. “That seems to be a reasonable feeling for a father to have.”

The woman facing the doctor was thoughtful. She needed to be careful. “Yes, I suppose it is.” She rattled the wrist chains. “I don’t know why he is concerned, especially since there’s a good chance I’ll not be free anytime soon. I’ve told you the reason I’m here; to help bring down The Alliance so Sydney can live her life free.”

Judy studied her client. She had the innate sense that Irina was holding back something important. She was facing an extremely clever woman who would not tell her anything she didn’t want to give. The question asked of her when she was given the assignment: could Irina Derevko be trusted. So far, all of her Intel had been on the mark. Yet…

“You know, it does seem darkly heroic of you.” She smiled slightly. “To give u p your freedom, your business, and your friends is a bit dramatic. It belies the ruthless disregard for life they say you have. There have been rumors of more than one killing attributable to you during the past ten years. Would you comment on that?”

“Of course, it’s true. In my business, one is required to take care of those who would like to, how you Americans would say, cut themselves in on the profits. If I am to maintain control, I must take care of them myself. I cannot ask my staff to do it.” Irina stretched her legs out and the tether chain pulled her arms forward slightly. She liked talking to the doctor, knowing what she told her would go no further. She just had to be careful not to be caught lying. She needed her trust.

“So you have killed?”

Irina nodded, tilting her head slightly, as she looked at Judy. “A few times, just enough to make other cartels aware that The Man took care of business himself.”

“So they didn’t know The Man was a woman?”

“Most of the time Khasinau fronted for me. Sydney thought he was The Man, especially that time in Moscow when I had Sark order the boss of the K-Directorate shot.”

“What is your weapon of choice?” Judy asked.

Irina stared at her, slightly nonplussed. “Weapon of choice?” She shrugged. “A Beretta, one that I can fit into my purse.”

“How many have died at your hand?”

“Doctor, is that necessary in deciding whether or not I’m to be trusted?”

“It’s not only the answers you give, but how you give them.” Judy put her elbows on her desk and kept her fingers touching in a church-like pose. She looked at Irina thoughtfully once more.

“Three opponents and Khasinau.” Irina’s dark eyes held the doctor’s with a steady gaze.

“How did you feel when you killed them?”

“They needed killing. The first three were ugly men. I don’t mean their looks, I mean they were terrible men and deserved what they got. Khasinau was a danger to Sydney and was greedy as I told you before. I never wanted him.” She stopped as she saw Judy frown.

“You never wanted him?”

“A figure of speech, really.” Irina hesitated, wondering how much she should reveal. “He was a friend of my father’s who begged me to take him.” She hoped this would allay the doctor’s suspicions.

Judy made a note. “ The AD tells me that your information has been perfect so far and that you have even saved Sydney’s life.”

Irina inclined her head in agreement. “I haven’t been much of a mother and don’t expect her love. However, I love my daughter, Doctor. I haven’t been around to tell her, but I’ve never stopped loving her.”

Judy smiled. She knew Irina was being truthful. “Where is she now?”

The brown eyes regarded Judy carefully. “On assignment, I think, but aren’t you getting too close to asking something you shouldn’t?”

“Actually, I wanted to talk to her.”

Irina knew the doctor was lying. She was pushing the limits of their agreement. Irina thought it was funny. “Aren’t you privy to this information?”

That was a jab at my relations with the organization, thought Judy. She decided she needed to be truthful. She was sure Irina would know the answer after all she was or had been, a part of a similar organization, the KGB. “No, only the agents and their handlers are allowed to know.”

“Why don’t I leave? You must have some sense as to my level of trust by now.”
Irina struggled to her feet.

“Not quite.” Judy leaned back in her chair and looked at Irina Derevko. “There are too many unanswered feelings I have. Objectively, I would give you a “trust her” rating, but subjectively, my intuition says not yet!”

Irina laughed, turned and shuffled toward the door. “Hey, I’m ready to go.” The door opened and the Marshals stood waiting for her. “Goodbye, Judy, I’m beginning to enjoy these discussions.” It was the first time she had called the doctor by her first name.

***

Next Part up on Tuesday. I have a column to write first. :cool:
 
Column finished. Posting this sooner than expected. :cool:

THE DOCTOR AND THE DIRECTOR

Judy found Assistant Director Kendall in his office. She had returned to work the next day to find that the office was buzzing with the news Irina Derevko had been taken to Camp Harris for unrestricted interrogation. She had heard the term “unrestricted interrogation” and knew it was another word for torture in order to get prisoners to talk. She had been stunned. She spoke to one of the computer operators. He told her that Sydney and Vaughn had gone to Madagascar to retrieve Derevko’s Bible, the operations manual. Irina had told Sydney the house was safe. Instead, Sydney had checked under the house at the direction of her father and found Semtex. Sark had shown up and the house had blown up when two of his men entered. The operations manual as well had been destroyed with the house. Jack had been right. His ex-wife was not to be trusted. She had been taken away as soon as Sydney and Vaughn reported they were all right.

“Can I see you, Mr. Kendall?”

“Yeah, come in Doctor.” He was looking at some reports.

Judy entered and shut the door behind her. “It’s about Irina,” she started. “I thought I would—“

“She’s out of our hands.”

“If she is the responsibility of DOJ, why is she at Camp Harris, a CIA facility?”

. “She broke her immunity agreement. Now DOJ can do whatever they want with her. Perhaps, it’s for the best. Jack has not been himself since she arrived.”

Dr. Barnett looked at him, “No, he hasn’t. The two encounters he’s had with her may have sent him over the edge.”

“What do you mean?”

“He’s been extremely angry. He has not wanted Sydney to see her mother at all. He tried to forbid her twice. That didn’t work. My sense is that he would have done anything to put Irina Derevko out of Sydney’s reach.” Judy looked at Kendall. “Derevko is now out of Sydney’s reach.”

“She did it herself! By telling her daughter the house was safe and it wasn’t, she broke her agreement.” He argued.

“No, I don’t think she did.” Judy saw that he wasn’t going to believe her. She sighed, turned around, and then looked back at him. “She loves her daughter too much. That, as a woman, psychologist and a mother, I do know is the truth. Good afternoon, sir.”

She walked out of the office, wondering what they were doing to Irina at Camp Harris.


THE DOCTOR AND THE INTERROGATOR

Five days later, Judy was sitting at her desk reviewing some reports when her cell phone rang. Sighing, she picked it up, “Dr Barnett!”

“This is Mark Hanson, Doctor. Do you know who I am?”

Judy searched her memory, and then a chill went through her. “Yes, you’re the chief interrogator at the CIA’s Camp Harris.”

“Could you come out here?” He sounded upset.

“What’s wrong?”

“I don’t know.” He was genuinely puzzled. “… That’s the problem.”

“Someone hurt?”

“No! I need a doctor like you to tell me what’s happening.”

“Is one of your men having problems?”

“No, it’s the prisoner.”

Judy frowned, searching her memory and then saying, “what prisoner?”

“Derevko!”

Judy sat up in her chair; surprised she had forgotten Irina was there. “What’s wrong with her?”

“Doc, I want you to look at her.”

Dr. Barnett stood up, walking to the closet, saying, “I’ll be there by five o’clock.” That would mean driving through some heavy traffic, but she thought she could do it by then.

At five o’clock, she presented herself at the gates of Camp Harris. The guard let her pass when she showed her credentials. She parked behind the office and walked into Hanson’s office.

“Okay, what’s the problem with Derevko?”

“Come with me!” He stood and walked to the front door. “You know what we do here.”

“Yes. I don’t approve, but that’s not in my job description. I also understand sometimes it is necessary to obtain the information needed.” They walked across an open space between two buildings.

“Yeah!” He answered noncommittally. He stopped at what looked like a steel door and rang a bell.

The door opened by a young man in a private’s uniform, who saluted. “Captain?”

“Derevko still out?”

He nodded as he shut the door behind them. “She’s still gone, Sir.”

“This way, Doctor.” Hanson led the way down a short hallway and came to a closed door, which he opened, allowing her to enter first.

Dr. Barnett stopped just inside the door. Irina Derevko was seated at the small table. Her wrists were handcuffed and the cuffs themselves pulled through a ring on the table. Irina was perfectly still, her eyes open, but unfocused. Judy walked close to her and waved her hand. There was no response. She had gone “away.” It was obvious she had meditated herself into her current state. She obviously had not been treated well; her hair was uncombed, she wore no makeup and her face looked haggard. Her demeanor, however, looked just the opposite—peaceful.

“That’s odd,” thought Judy, “her clothes look damp.”

Fifteen minutes later, Dr. Barnett told Hanson he could not continue with the unrestricted interrogation. If he did, there was a possibility she would die or go into a permanent catatonic state. Hanson had only mildly protested, but seemed relieved that the doctor had been firm. She told him she would back any report he wrote. He was to send it to her by fax and she would sign off on it. Irina Derevko would be on her way to the federal prison in San Pedro within a few hours.


THE DOCTOR AND THE DIRECTOR

Dr. Judy Barnett returned to her office after a three-week vacation in Tahiti with her husband. She found a memo on her desk from Assistant Director Kendall. He wanted her to tell him and the agency whether Irina Derevko could be trusted. She sighed. Well the last time she had heard, Irina was in the federal prison awaiting trial and judgment. She had decided to take her proscribed vacation so she would not have to look or listen to the media frenzy that might occur.

She picked up a file folder under the memo. The file was Irina’s. Judy opened it and sat back to read. She was astounded to learn that Irina had pled guilty, was sentenced to die by lethal injection and then, just as suddenly, the sentence was revoked and the immunity agreement re-instated.

Judy, holding the file, walked out onto the balcony and looked down. She didn’t see anyone she readily knew. Then, from around a corner came Kendall. Moments later, she was in his office.

“I have your memo. I needed one more interview to verify my – ummm – diagnosis.”

“Can’t do it, Doctor. Derevko’s in Kashmir with Jack and Sydney.”

Judy blinked. “What?”

“We had a situation and she went along to help.”

Judy thought for a moment she was dreaming. “Then why do you need my assessment? Looks like you’re trusting her already.”

“Yeah, well, like I said, we had some trouble only she could help with.” He saw her puzzlement. “Look, she’s with Jack and Sydney and they both know what they have to do if she tries anything.”

“Well maybe Jack does, but I’m not sure Sydney could handle anything bad happening to her mother.”

“They’re okay. They are due back tomorrow night.”

“Oh, well, I do need the interview.”

“Yeah, well, I’ll see if I can get her to you sometime in the next two or three days.”


DEREVKO INTERVIEW #4
FILE# 2273301

It was a beautiful day as Judy pulled into the underground parking lot. She was going to see Irina Derevko again this morning and hadn’t slept much since Kendall had called to tell her Irina had agreed to see her. He was specific. Judy had to make a yes or no decision after the Interview. Judy had agreed. As she entered her office, she felt she was on a high of some kind. The interview was scheduled for the morning and she needed to think about some of the questions she wanted answered.

At ten o’clock, she heard the elevator doors open and close. She sat back in her chair; the file folder was at her left elbow on the desk. It now contained the debriefing reports of both Jack and Sydney. The door opened. Irina stood looking at her. She walked in confidently. Barnett realized she wasn’t wearing chains. She had handcuffs on, but otherwise able to move freely. The two Marshals who were behind her, stepped back and Irina shut the door.

Judy smiled warmly, “I’m so glad to see you less—equipped.”

Irina laughed, “Yes, thank you. I am too!”

Judy pulled the yellow pad toward her right hand. “I’ve been reading the debriefing reports from Jack and Sydney. You had quite an adventure.”

Irina simply shrugged. “I suppose it was.”

“Did you like being free?”

“Of course, who wouldn’t?”

“And you weren’t tempted to escape?”

Irina shifted her weight, looking at the doctor with a careful eye. “No, my daughter was depending on me.”

“You didn’t care what Jack thought.” Judy asked as she fiddled with a pen.

“Jack doesn’t trust me and I can’t blame him.” She glanced down at her handcuffed wrists. “I destroyed that the day I disappeared twenty years ago.”

Irina’s dark eyes watched Judy make a note and she waited for the doctor to continue. Irina thought she looked extremely well and tanned too! She must have been on a vacation. Some place near a beach and water.

“How did you escape being executed?”

The question surprised Irina, simply because it was out of context. She blinked, sighed and then inclining her head, she looked away toward the wall next to the door. She straightened up a little. “Jack set me up.”

“Yes, I read that.” Judy watched her. “How did you feel about that?’

“I could understand it.” Irina was uncomfortable. She did not want to pursue the subject.

“So just like that you went off to Kashmir with him and Sydney. No recriminations, no anger for what he did? After all you were tortured and then put into a federal prison.”

Irina frowned. What was the doctor after? “I had no choice. He was afraid Sydney would have a problem and couldn’t handle it if I was free to cause trouble. So he arranged for – ummm – a piece of jewelry for me.” She smiled. “It was coated with C-4.”

Judy had heard about the necklace. “How did you feel about wearing it?”

“I didn’t worry about it. I wasn’t planning to double cross my daughter, -- or Jack. We were on a mission, together, for the first time.” She chuckled. “Of course, Jack and I had some issues.” Irina smiled wickedly this time. “In fact, we actually bickered like a married couple might do. Sydney had to interfere. It was as though we had never parted.” She looked away from Judy for the moment.

“Speaking of Sydney, did you ever tell her why you shot her?”

Irina nodded. She explained about Cuvee’s presence in the other room. “I told her it gave her time to escape. I think she’s fine with that now.” She crossed her long legs.

“And how would you say your relationship with Sydney is going?”

“Better.” She looked wistful. “I love her very much, Judy. I know it’s hard for her to understand, especially after I left so suddenly.” She glanced at the other woman. “I love Jack, too, but he wouldn’t believe me.” She shrugged. “So he’ll probably never know.”

Judy sensed there was truth in what she said, but how did she truly regard her ex-husband? She had called him a fool for loving her and not suspecting her of spying. The doctor imagined that Jack had been hurt by those seemingly calloused words. “If you loved him, why did you call him a fool in your KGB debriefing?”

“Did I?” Irina frowned as though trying to remember. “That was over twenty years ago.”

“When you returned to Moscow, remember?” Dr. Barnett watched her patient carefully.

Judy picked up a remote and turned on the TV behind her. She had obtained the piece of videotape from Kendall. The screen lit up and then the tape began. She watched Irina as the interview began She seemed fascinated watching herself.

“I was interested in why you answered their questions in English, rather than Russian.” Judy asked as she paused the tape.

“I hadn’t spoken my mother language for nearly twelve years. I wasn’t going to start again, at least, not at that moment. I had been trained never to speak Russian, ever.” Irina’s eyes didn’t leave the screen. When she heard herself call Jack “a fool.”, she leaned back, a flash of sorrow crossing her face. Judy caught it as her impersonal mask returned.

“But if you thought of him every day, why that particular word.”

Irina regarded the doctor for the moment. Did she want to tell her the exact reason? Why not? She smiled, “I had just been extracted. I told them what they wanted to hear.”

“According to Jack, you have another agenda. That the real reason you gave yourself up, was not Sydney, but something more devious and self-serving.”

“I gave up my freedom for a reason other than Sydney?” Irina knew hard questions were being asked. The CIA must be pressing the doctor to make a decision. “I live in a twelve by twelve cell with little or no privacy. Everything, everything I do or say is watched and recorded. One mistake by me ends the immunity agreement and I am history. I was almost executed a month ago. That is how quick everything could end.

“How,” she stood up, walked to the window, pulled the drape to one side and looking out into a sunlit street, “in the world, does Jack or anyone else think I am going to escape?” She turned to face Judy. “My daughter is about to become so immersed in this deadly world of deceit, violence and death that she will never be able to extract herself and if she tries, she will probably pay with her life.

“She has lost a fian…a decent young man…to this violent world we live in and I cannot stand for it to happen again. If Jack won’t do something about it, I will. That’s why I’m here. By ending the curse of The Alliance and all their SD affiliates, Sydney can leave. I know that’s what she wants.”

Judy stared up into the intense face looking at her. The dark eyes were flashing in anger and fear…fear for her daughter. Was she acting? As much as Judy wanted to believe her, there was still the nagging feeling of –what? This was a woman, who had lived ten years with her family. They never suspected her secret identity. That took a great deal of guile and cunning. She was, by Jack’s description, immensely capable of making people believe whatever she wanted them to believe.

Judy turned off the video. Irina sat down, almost emotionally spent by her tirade. She watched Judy without speaking.

“That’s an interesting, dramatic speech. How do you know so much about Sydney and the death of Danny? You mentioned you knew about the murder.”

“I have my spies,” Irina said honestly. “I told you, I have never forgotten my daughter. I know a lot about her, more than either she or Jack suspects.” She paused to let that sink in and then continued. “Are you about to make your decision?”

“One more question. If I tell the CIA you can be trusted and you ‘gut’ me as Jack predicts you will, and I’m fired, what would your reaction be?”

“Honestly?” Irina looked at Judy with a half smile and chuckled. “I wouldn’t care. However, I do not plan to do anything other than what I’m here for – protect Sydney at all cost and help her out of this dirty business before it’s too late.” She stood up and walked toward the door, putting both hands on the doorknob, and turning, “Make your decision, Judy. I’m not going anywhere.” She opened the door. The marshals stood up as she walked out, following her.

Judy leaned back in her chair perplexed. She was now faced with a difficult choice.


THE DOCTOR AND THE ASSESSMENT

Judy wrote for about fifteen minutes. She sat back and stared down at the sheet of paper. She liked Irina; although she also knew, she was probably the most ruthless of all men and women she had interviewed during her career. Judy swung around in her chair and looked at the doorway where Irina had been thirty minutes ago. Something still bothered her and she still couldn’t put her finger on it yet.

Kendall wanted a report and a yes or no on trusting the walk-in.

“Damn it,” muttered the doctor. What was she going to do? She looked at the paper again, sighed and then finally signed it.

She hedged her answer, however, as she wrote the following: Irina Derevko can to be trusted as long as Sydney or Jack Bristow is with her. Beyond that, I do not think she is a good risk. I believe she does want her daughter out of the spy business. This woman is extremely dangerous and ruthless. I recommend that the agency does not trust Irina Derevko.

She signed the bottom of the page, staring at the door through which Irina Derevko had left, wondering just what was going to happen next.

***
THE END
 
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