The opening chapter describes a car chase through London.
Not that secret a war when you mount pavements littered with pedestrians in the hope of maintaining an eyeball on the drug smuggler.
This reads like Jason Bourne movie or worse still an episode of The Sweeney.
Mounting the kerb to chase down a speeding drug-runner, in London. What happens when you clip the legs of poor, old, Mrs Smith, put her on her backside and fracture her pelvis, which leads to her death 3 weeks later with her daughter and son-in-law holding her hand? Or worse still, take out a pram with one-year-old in it? In London? Not Moscow. Not Beijing. Not Pyongyang. London!!!!
What would the papers do: a former MI6 officer was found to be the navigator in car that killed a child, yesterday whilst speeding along the pavement of Lower Thames Street. Can't put a D-Notice on that. They would have a field-day and the former MI6 officer would be in court within a matter of days.
You would need a change of career after that, because MI6 would wash their hands of you.
Smuggling drugs ultimately ruins lives. So does driving around London, whilst breaking every traffic law in the book.
I used to drive an ambulance and I've been a student on the Extremely Fast And Dangerous [EFAD]course. Now and then, we drive people to hospital that have mere minutes to live. No one in the UK, regardless of the colour of their uniform, or the secret organisation they work for, is permitted to mount the kerb.
It gets no better. I stuck with it, but to suggest that standing beside an HGV in a motorway services lorry-park at dark-o'clock when wearing a business suit is an acceptable strategy when trying to maintain covert surveillance is laughable. What will you do when challenged, tell the unshaven gorilla in the donkey jacket that you're struggling with your sexuality?
I picked this up for 50 cents at the market. I don't read comic books, so yes, I feel robbed.
Mind, I did have a good chuckle whilst writing this; maybe I did get my 50 cents worth from it.