
Britt Westbourne dropped a bomb that Jack Brennan never expected to hear. Walking into her office unannounced, Brennan demanded updates on the mystery project connected to Cesar Faison. But instead of compliance, Britt delivered something far more dangerous than classified intel — she accused Cullum of being a double agent secretly working with Sidwell. And while Brennan dismissed it immediately, what he did next tells a very different story.
The Accusation That Changed Everything
Britt didn’t hold back. Fed up with the constant pressure and the dangerous position she’s been put in, she flat-out told Brennan that Cullum isn’t just another WSB agent trying to uncover the truth. According to her, Cullum has been manipulating the entire operation from inside the bureau — playing both sides while the WSB remained completely blind to what was happening right under its nose.

Brennan’s public reaction was immediate rejection. Accusing a fellow agent of betrayal is an extraordinary allegation, and Cullum has built years of institutional credibility inside the WSB. But his private reaction told the real story. Minutes after leaving the hospital, Brennan placed a call to a WSB contact in Belgium and requested something very specific: Cullum’s expense reports and travel itineraries covering the last three years. That’s not the action of a man who dismissed the accusation. That’s the action of a man who needs to know if it’s true.
The Pattern That Can’t Be Ignored
If Cullum has been secretly working with Sidwell, those financial records and travel logs could reveal everything. Unexplained trips, suspicious meetings, financial activity that doesn’t match official assignments — in the world of intelligence operations, those kinds of details expose the truth long before anyone is ready to admit it. And the circumstantial evidence is already piling up. For months, every WSB investigation into Sidwell’s expanding operation has mysteriously hit a ԁеаԁ end. If Cullum has been positioned inside the agency, he would have had the perfect opportunity to sabotage each one before it got close.
One detail from the Britt confrontation makes the situation even more alarming. When Brennan asked about Josslyn Jacks and her role in the larger operation, Britt admitted she wasn’t certain of Cullum’s knowledge — but delivered a chilling response: if Cullum already knew Josslyn’s secret, she probably wouldn’t still be alive. That single line raises the stakes beyond institutional betrayal into something far more dangerous.
The Clock Is Ticking
For now, Cullum appears completely unaware that Brennan has started pulling the thread on his past. But secrets inside the WSB don’t stay buried the same way they do in civilian life. Intelligence agencies keep records. They track movements. They archive everything. And if Brennan finds even a single piece of evidence linking Cullum to Sidwell — one unexplained trip, one financial anomaly, one meeting that shouldn’t have happened — the consequences could be explosive enough to tear the entire bureau apart from the inside.


