Fragments of the Past. The briefing room at Thames House was silent except for the hum of the servers. Jake and Emma sat across from Director Caldwell, the glow of classified files illuminating their faces. On the screen, grainy photographs from 1998 flickered: clandestine meetings in hotel basements, shadowy figures shaking hands, documents stamped Top Secret in fading ink.
Emma leaned forward, her brow furrowed. “This isn’t the Good Friday Agreement. These are… side deals.”
Caldwell’s lips tightened. “Correct. Declan Kearney brokered a parallel accord — one never meant to see the light of day. It involved senior figures from both the British government and the Provisional IRA. Concessions were made, promises exchanged. If exposed, it would shatter the legitimacy of the peace process.”
Jake’s eyes narrowed. “So Kearney isn’t just a fugitive. He’s a liability. He holds the receipts.”
The Hidden Accord
The files revealed a chilling truth: in 1998, as the world celebrated peace in Northern Ireland, a secret pact had been struck in the shadows. Certain atrocities were quietly buried, perpetrators shielded from prosecution. In exchange, weapons caches were surrendered, and key operatives were promised immunity. Kearney had been the broker, the man trusted by both sides to keep the ledger balanced.
Emma’s voice was low, almost reverent. “If this comes out, every family who lost someone will demand justice. Every politician who signed the Agreement will be accused of betrayal.”
Jake tapped the screen, highlighting a name. “And some of those politicians are still in power. That’s why the ex-Provos want him. He’s leveraging. A bargaining chip.”
Internal Fault Lines
Caldwell’s gaze hardened. “You need to understand the stakes. MI5 itself is implicated. Certain files were sealed not just to protect Kearney, but to protect us. If he resurfaces, it won’t just be Belfast that burns. Westminster will too.”
Emma exchanged a glance with Jake. The weight of the revelation pressed down on them. This wasn’t just about stopping a manhunt. It was about preserving the fragile architecture of peace — or tearing it down.
Jake broke the silence. “So what’s our mission? Protect him? Or silence him?”
Caldwell didn’t answer immediately. Her hesitation spoke volumes. “Your mission,” she said finally, “is to ensure Kearney doesn’t fall into the wrong hands. What happens after… will be decided at a higher level.”
The Moral Dilemma
Later, in the operations corridor, Emma confronted Jake. “We’re being asked to protect a man who brokered immunity for killers. Men who murdered civilians. Soldiers. Children. And now we’re supposed to keep him safe?”
Jake’s jaw clenched. “If the truth comes out, the peace collapses. Do you want Belfast to burn again? Do you want car bombs in London?”
Emma shook her head, her voice trembling. “I want the truth. I want justice. But I don’t know if I can live with burying it.”
Jake placed a hand on her shoulder, steady but conflicted. “We don’t have the luxury of choosing sides. We’re MI5. We protect the state. Even when the state’s hands aren’t clean.”
Foreshadowing the Key
That night, Jake reviewed intercepted communications. The codename Blackthorn appeared again and again, tied to encrypted channels and whispered in paramilitary circles. It wasn’t just a meeting. It was a reckoning. And at the centre of it all was Declan Kearney — the man who could unravel decades of lies with a single word.
Emma entered the room, her eyes haunted. “If Reilly’s right, Kearney isn’t the threat. He’s the key. The question is… a key to what?”
Jake stared at the flickering map of Northern Ireland, pins marking hotspots of activity.


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