Snap.
Snap.
"...ome ..n...Kyle...let's go!"
He jolted up from the leather seat, smoothing his hair to the side as his eyes adjusted to the bright sunlight streaming in from circular window to his right.
"Sorry...sorry, sir, it was just..."
"A long flight? A long day?" A stocky, barrel chested man asked with a teasing smile on his face, his salt and pepper hair betraying his age.
"To be honest, sir, yes...yes it has been."
"You'll have to get used to it, Kyle. This isn't the easiest position in the world and there's a reason I've had five of you rotate through my office in the past two years. I'm hoping you're the one that decides to stick around." Kyle grinned sheepishly.
"I hope I do too, sir."
"And enough of the sir crap. We're out of the United States and in foreign territory. As far as I'm concerned, we're two grunts trying to make sure Cairo doesn't have a crater the size of Jakarta from a suicide bomber. It's Paul from here on out, you got me?" Kyle's ash brown hair lilted as he nodded.
"Right, si-....Paul."
"Good. Now let's get off this plane. I'm sick of looking at it."
Eighteen hours of flight time. It had felt like an eternity, although the cushy interior of the plane aided in soothing the grinding journey. It had only been a week since Kyle Lozano, a wiry twenty four year old who had just finished his masters degree in political science, had gotten a call from one of his professors who just so happened to know that his good friend Paul Bucher, ambassador to Egypt, was in need of an intern that could provide a "fresh take" on the tense political situation in Northern Africa. Jumping at the chance, Kyle contacted Paul and was given a rather short interview by the man himself before being accepted. He had been given almost two hundred gigs worth of data to peruse in a few days and Paul expected him to absorb most, if not all of it by the time they landed. Not to mention relocation from Boston to D.C. and then to Cairo...his mind hadn't been able to process all the changes. Thankfully he had a bit of time now, breathing a sigh of relief as he was escorted into a rather plush looking bedroom in the residential wing of the Embassy. It was probably the nicest living area he had ever been in...
"Looks like we made it..." A smirk.
______________________
A couple of days of settling in passed, Paul granting Kyle an office next to his and getting Kyle to read the official State Department's guide on how to handle oneself in a foreign country as a representative of the United States, which essentially boiled down to "Don't be a moron". He was allowed to leave the embassy whenever needed, but he was constricted in terms of time. He HAD to be back by sundown no matter what. The streets of Cairo got, in the words of Paul, "unsteady".
His first excursion occurred a week after getting settled in, Kyle walking past the sights and scents of the urbanized downtown to find himself in a residential area. After wandering aimlessly, soaking in every sight and sound he could, he decided to return to the embassy when he realized that he was
"Lost."
Crap.
Snap.
"...ome ..n...Kyle...let's go!"
He jolted up from the leather seat, smoothing his hair to the side as his eyes adjusted to the bright sunlight streaming in from circular window to his right.
"Sorry...sorry, sir, it was just..."
"A long flight? A long day?" A stocky, barrel chested man asked with a teasing smile on his face, his salt and pepper hair betraying his age.
"To be honest, sir, yes...yes it has been."
"You'll have to get used to it, Kyle. This isn't the easiest position in the world and there's a reason I've had five of you rotate through my office in the past two years. I'm hoping you're the one that decides to stick around." Kyle grinned sheepishly.
"I hope I do too, sir."
"And enough of the sir crap. We're out of the United States and in foreign territory. As far as I'm concerned, we're two grunts trying to make sure Cairo doesn't have a crater the size of Jakarta from a suicide bomber. It's Paul from here on out, you got me?" Kyle's ash brown hair lilted as he nodded.
"Right, si-....Paul."
"Good. Now let's get off this plane. I'm sick of looking at it."
Eighteen hours of flight time. It had felt like an eternity, although the cushy interior of the plane aided in soothing the grinding journey. It had only been a week since Kyle Lozano, a wiry twenty four year old who had just finished his masters degree in political science, had gotten a call from one of his professors who just so happened to know that his good friend Paul Bucher, ambassador to Egypt, was in need of an intern that could provide a "fresh take" on the tense political situation in Northern Africa. Jumping at the chance, Kyle contacted Paul and was given a rather short interview by the man himself before being accepted. He had been given almost two hundred gigs worth of data to peruse in a few days and Paul expected him to absorb most, if not all of it by the time they landed. Not to mention relocation from Boston to D.C. and then to Cairo...his mind hadn't been able to process all the changes. Thankfully he had a bit of time now, breathing a sigh of relief as he was escorted into a rather plush looking bedroom in the residential wing of the Embassy. It was probably the nicest living area he had ever been in...
"Looks like we made it..." A smirk.
______________________
A couple of days of settling in passed, Paul granting Kyle an office next to his and getting Kyle to read the official State Department's guide on how to handle oneself in a foreign country as a representative of the United States, which essentially boiled down to "Don't be a moron". He was allowed to leave the embassy whenever needed, but he was constricted in terms of time. He HAD to be back by sundown no matter what. The streets of Cairo got, in the words of Paul, "unsteady".
His first excursion occurred a week after getting settled in, Kyle walking past the sights and scents of the urbanized downtown to find himself in a residential area. After wandering aimlessly, soaking in every sight and sound he could, he decided to return to the embassy when he realized that he was
"Lost."
Crap.