The Matter of Accra
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Rowan Pyke
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
In Accra, nothing is “just admin.”
Not the visitor badge that goes missing. Not the meeting room that’s suddenly “unavailable.” Not the strip of tape laid on the floor like a line you’re not meant to cross.
Evelyn Hart arrives in Ghana believing she’s taken a safe posting—work that’s orderly, respectable, and blessedly far from the messy parts of the world. She’s good at systems. Good at paper. Good at making other people’s chaos look clean.
Which is exactly why the Station notices her.
Behind the polite smiles and protocol, the U.S. Embassy is an ecosystem built on quiet hierarchies: who has access, who is protected, and who gets “corrected.” Evelyn is pulled into a corridor-world of beige doors, unmarked offices, calendar games, and documents where the most important names are literally covered over—redacted behind tape like a secret that can still bleed through.
And then there’s Kojo: charismatic, connected, and impossible to read. He seems to know everyone… and what they’ve done to survive. With him, Evelyn feels seen for the first time in years. But in Accra, being seen is rarely a gift—it’s often a claim.
As embassy routines tighten and paranoia becomes policy, Evelyn discovers the truth of this kind of espionage: it isn’t shootouts and gadgets. It’s procedures. Gate logs. Small permissions that turn into irreversible choices. The trap isn’t sprung with a bang—it closes with a signature.
Because the most dangerous thing in Accra isn’t the street outside the compound.
It’s the institution inside it.
Taut, atmospheric, and quietly devastating, The Matter of Accra is a modern espionage thriller in the le Carré tradition—about power that hides behind politeness, desire that becomes leverage, and the moment you realize you were never a bystander… you were evidence.