Proizvod vam ne odgovara? Nema veze! Možete nam vratiti unutar 30 dana
S poklon bonom ne možete pogriješiti. Za poklon bon primatelj može odabrati bilo što iz naše ponude.
30 dana za povrat kupljenih proizvoda
ACKNOWLEDGMENT IS TERMINATION.
That's the phrase stamped across a file that isn't supposed to exist-an operational blueprint linking rival intelligence agencies in a single, planet-spanning surveillance net. Satellites. Undersea taps. "Legal harmonization." Shared backdoors. Shared deniability. Shared master keys.
For one operative, it starts as a routine counterintelligence sweep. Then the anomaly appears-traffic routed through systems that should never touch. He follows it anyway...and finds the Black Archive: joint agreements between nations that publicly despise each other, quietly cooperating to watch everyone.
The moment he opens the wrong partition, the hunt begins.
His access is revoked. His name is tagged for review. A safehouse turns to ashes. Friends go silent. And a clean team starts moving-clinical, quiet, designed to erase problems without leaving a story behind.
Now branded ROGUE, hunted by multiple agencies that don't speak to each other-yet somehow never collide-he teams with an unlikely ally and a bitter rival to do the impossible: release the governance charter that proves intent, collaboration, and the kill clause meant to keep the world asleep.
But exposing the truth doesn't end the machine. It only forces it to adapt.
As the data drops and mirrors bloom across the globe, governments deny, contradict, and scramble to pass new "security laws" to stop the spread-ironically proving the very infrastructure they claim doesn't exist. And the operative becomes a myth in real time: hero, traitor, lunatic, patriot, terrorist-depending on who's speaking.
Because the most dangerous thing he gives the world isn't a document.
It's the idea that the watchers can be watched back.
If you love relentless, high-stakes spy thrillers packed with tradecraft, conspiratorial momentum, and a terrifyingly plausible edge, The Operative Who Knew Too Much will keep you turning pages until the last line.