A retired CIA case officer. A body on the dock. A cipher only one other person in the world can read.
Maya Solis ran assets in the worst rooms in the world for twelve years before she left the intelligence community and moved to a lake in Harrow Cove, Vermont. Four years of quiet. Four years of trying not to think about a man named Vahan she failed to protect in 2007.
Then a body washes up on her dock on a Tuesday morning - and beside it, carved into the piling, is a sequence of marks Maya has seen exactly once before, on a classified file from a program that officially does not exist.
The cipher is from CARDINAL ECHO, a joint intelligence operation shut down and sealed in 2009. Maya is one of four names hidden inside it. The others: a former handler she hasn't seen in three years, a woman named Elena Voss who built the cipher in a Berlin hotel room in 1994 and has been missing for thirteen years, and a name Maya doesn't recognize at all.
Someone is killing the witnesses to a twenty-one-year-old operation. Someone wants Maya to find Elena Voss before the cleanup does - and the only map to where Voss has gone is the cipher itself.
As Maya works the code, the body count rises. A handler arrives from Washington with answers he should have given her years ago. A small-town sheriff with a military pragmatism becomes her closest ally. A killer who has been waiting twenty-one years for someone to ask the right question gets closer. And Maya begins to understand that the men implicated in CARDINAL ECHO are not all in the past - some of them are still in office, still in command, still sending people.
When the cipher finally yields its secret, it is not what anyone expected. It is not a kill list. It is something stranger, more deliberate, and harder to refuse.
Deadly Secrets is a quiet, devastating literary thriller about the cost of competence, the long arithmetic of accountability, and the men and women who spend decades waiting for someone to finally ask. Perfect for readers of John le Carr , Tana French, Olen Steinhauer's Milo Weaver novels, and Mick Herron's Slough House series.