Having spent most of his professional life in covert operations of one type or another, Raegene Dorryen Doyle had never left himself open to speculation. The first twenty-seven years of his working life had been as an agent of the Central Intelligence Agency. For the last nineteen years he had kept himself busy as a private contractor doing basically the same type of business. As an individual without strings attached, Doyle had become a valuable operative to U. S. Security forces as well as a number of foreign governments and agencies.
Early in his career, Doyle had been dubbed The Author. The nickname had nothing to do with writing books or other types of literature. Instead, the title had developed from his early examples of a unique ability to plan and carry out missions’ others thought impossible. Rage Doyle was of the attitude that anything could be accomplished if one truly searched for an answer. His theory proved right more often than not on projects in which he was involved.
Few who knew Doyle and was privy to his operations also knew that President Lyndon B. Johnson had first called him The Author. It appears Doyle’s name kept coming up at briefings and in reports crossing Johnson’s desk. The President inquired about the young CIA agent one day and was given his file to read. After that, Johnson began referring to Doyle as The Author. Not wanting to be at odds with the President, others began using the label when mentioning Doyle and the nickname stuck.
Watch for more episodes coming for Rage Doyle.