by Tom Clancy
“I’m shouting because I’m half-deaf! Your dear great-grandfather kidnapped me — tried to use that gun on me. The only reason I’m here is because he had a heart attack.”
“You’re not making any sense,” Nicola Callivant said, but her expression was beginning to get frightened. “Grandpa Clyde—”
She suddenly looked over her shoulder, apparently holding a conversation with someone who’d come into her room. Matt couldn’t hear what they were saying. If the pickup was getting it, their voices were too soft for his abused ears to register. But he could imagine the news Nikki was receiving.
Her face was pale when she turned back to Matt. “What did you do to him?”
“It’s more what he did to me. Apparently, he was ready to kill if that would protect your family’s dirty little secrets.”
“You’re crazy,” she said flatly.
“Fine,” Matt spat. “I’ll call my connections at Net Force, and let them find Grandpa Clyde’s gun. Let him explain what he was doing in that car in front of my house—”
“No!” Nikki cut in. She looked at her watch. “You’re at home?”
“Where else?”
“I can be there in forty-five minutes. Will you at least wait that long?”
Matt nodded.
She cut the connection.
Sagging back onto his bed, Matt took in a long breath. Forty-five minutes. It was a bad omen.
He staggered to his computer. This time he wasn’t leaving anything to chance. He was going to leave word for Leif and James Winters, telling them exactly what was going on, in case his plan to get the evidence for who was really responsible for all this mess didn’t pan out. One way or another, he was going to put a stop to this.
Nikki Callivant actually beat her estimated time of arrival, but even so, she cut it pretty fine. Matt’s parents were almost due back home. Matt had left a message for them, too.
He wanted them to know exactly where he was going.
Swinging round onto the expressway that would take them to Delaware, Nikki was tight-lipped and quiet. Finally she asked, “Are your ears any better?”
“Yeah. The ringing’s down to a mild roar. Looks like I didn’t bust an eardrum.”
“When I was little, Grandpa Clyde sometimes took me to a firing range. He always made sure I wore these big plastic earmuffs. Even so, the noise was awful.”
“I’ll tell you something. It’s even worse in a small space like a car. Maybe because it’s so sealed in.” As Matt spoke he cracked the window, letting a trickle of cold air play across his face. By this time he should be sitting down for supper with his folks.
He hoped the note he’d left didn’t scare them.
“You’re treating what — whatever happened like some big conspiracy,” Nikki’s voice took on an odd note as she flashed him a look from behind the steering wheel. “My family — we’re not like that.”
“Let’s see how your dad and the rest react to your new, lower-class friend,” Matt replied.
He suddenly understood her tone. Nikki wasn’t trying to convince him. She was trying to convince herself.
They rolled on, barely speaking, through suburbs and then a stretch of country. Matt glanced at his watch as they pulled up at a gated compound. Nikki had actually shaved a few minutes off her previous record.
A guy in a blue coat — obviously a guard — appeared from the gatehouse. He greeted Nikki respectfully, but kept his eyes on Matt.
“It’s all right, Marcus,” Nikki said. “He’s a friend.”
The gate opened, and they were in.
Matt supposed he must have seen pictures of the Callivant compound somewhere. In real life the place seemed smaller, less — well, rich—than he expected. There was a big house, though, blazing with light. Nikki parked her car, got out, and took Matt’s arm.
Matt might have thought that was funny, but he was glad of the silent support as they went up the front steps. As they crossed the entrance hall, a man who was just a little too tight-faced to be handsome intercepted them.
“Nikki, Marcus said you’d just come in. I thought you said you were going to the hos—” The man suddenly realized there was a stranger present and shut up.
“This is my father, Daniel Callivant,” Nikki said. “Dad, this is Matt Hunter. He’s the one who called the ambulance for Grandpa Clyde. That was pretty nice when you think about it. Matt says Grandpa Clyde was trying to shoot him at the time.”
Daniel Callivant handled it pretty well, but he hadn’t expected any such confrontation in his own home. For an instant, just an instant, his unguarded expression revealed that he knew who Matt was — and what Clyde Finch had been doing off in Maryland.
Nikki caught it. Her breath sucked in, then she said, “I think we’d better see Grandfather Callivant.”
“He’s working on a speech,” her father objected.
“I think this is more important.” Nikki began leading Matt deeper into the house.
“Nikki!” her father called after her.
“There’s a solarium in the back,” Nikki told Matt as they skirted a formal dining room. “It sort of serves as a community den. We do a lot of living on this level because of the Senator—”
A door stood ajar ahead of them, and the sound of a national newscast leaked out. Then the door opened all the way, revealing a man in a wheelchair.
“Nikki, what are you doing here when Clyde needs you?”
Walter Callivant still looked like a senator, even though it had been years since he’d held the office. He had a mane of pure white hair, and a handsome, dignified face, with, as one political writer tried to put it poetically, “the look of eagles.”
On closer examination, however, the eagle looked old. Callivant’s skin stretched tightly over his bones. A blanket covered him from the waist down, concealing legs that hadn’t been used almost as long as Matt had been alive.
The Senator’s cold blue eyes shifted from Nikki to Matt. From the look of contemptuous dislike, Matt suspected that Daniel Callivant had managed a quick briefing. Maybe a place this big had house phones.
“I have to see Grandfather,” Nikki insisted.
“With this — person?” The Senator’s tone of voice would have been better suited if he’d said “worm.”
The Callivant patriarch rolled his automated wheelchair nearer. “Do you realize what you’re doing, Nicola? You’re a Callivant. That means you have certain — family responsibilities. Your grandfather is inside, waiting to see the coverage of his announcement that he’s seeking the nomination.”
He rounded on Matt. “And you bring this — what? This would-be muckraker—blackmailer into our house? Do you want to destroy your grandfather’s chances of getting back into the Senate?
Anger overcame Matt’s sense of intimidation, and he finally found his voice. “Oh, sure,” he said. “What are the lives of a few peons versus the chance of having a Callivant back where he belongs?”
“Shut your mouth, you miserable thief!” the Senator thundered nearly as well as Lucullus Marten. “I know your type only too well — and I’ve dealt with them over the years. You’re like the rats in the wall, emerging to nibble, nibble, nibble away at your betters, coming out to spread lies like some loathsome disease. You’re a ghoul, digging up the dead past to feed on it!”
It was quite a speech, even if the Senator wound up mixing his metaphors a bit. “So tell me, Senator. Did you send Clyde Finch out for a bit of pest control?”
“You don’t seem to realize your position, boy.” The Senator’s face became downright sinister as he ran his wheelchair almost onto Matt’s feet. “You’re an intruder in my home.”
“There are people who know where I am,” Matt replied as steadily as he could. “Lots of them. And I have friends who know exactly what you’ve been doing. If anything happens to me, Net Force will be asking questions.”
“I’ve deposed directors of the FBI,” the elder Callivant sneered. “Do you think you can scare me
with some low-level agent in a wash-and-wear suit?”
“I think that I’m here as an invited guest. And if you try anything stupid, you’ll discover you’re not above the law.”
“I think you’re the stupid one. I’ve been arranging the laws as it seems fit to me since before your parents were born. You’ve got a nerve to lecture me. Not to mention a foolish streak. The truth is what we Callivants say it is. If we say you’re an intruder—”
“I invited him,” Nikki ground out from between her clenched teeth.
“You are being just as foolish as he is, dear.” The Senator aimed a cold look at her. “You’re not thinking clearly. Sadly, it’s a trait that runs in our female line.”
“Don’t think you can do to me what you did to Aunt Rosaline,” Nikki flared. “With that convenient ‘nervous breakdown.’”
Walter Callivant’s cold eyes looked at his great-granddaughter as if she were some sort of lab specimen. “Yes,” he said, “you’re very like Rosaline. But once she’d been committed and started on medication, she became much less of a problem.”
A new voice came from the doorway. “That’s enough, Father.”
Matt remembered Megan’s description of the pleasant Walter G. Callivant she’d met at that formal hoedown. But the gray-haired man who faced them now looked more like the harassed junior senator the comedians all made fun of. It was the hunted look in his eyes. “What’s this all about, Nikki?” Walter G. asked.
“It’s about Priscilla Hadding.”
Nikki’s grandfather flinched, but he didn’t retreat. “It was an accident,” he said softly. “But I’ve never been able to forget it. All these years, it’s stuck with me. We — I was just about your age. We’d gone to a party — a pretty rowdy affair. Silly and I — that’s what we called her, you know.”
He took a deep breath. “Silly and I were out in the Corvette, arguing as usual. Then she was cursing at me, going to leave. I gunned the engine to drown out what she was saying. That Corvette — that was more car than I could handle. Somehow, it got into gear—”
Walter G. Callivant’s face was no longer bumbling or vague as he looked back on that memory. “It almost flew down the road. By the time I got it stopped — Silly’s foot — it had been caught in the door—”
His eyes squeezed shut, and he brought up his hands to cover his face. “But it was an accident,” his muffled voice came from between his fingers.
“A bad-looking accident — especially for a Callivant,” Walter Senior suddenly spoke. “He was my son. It would have reflected badly—”
“On you,” Nikki said angrily. “So you covered it up. Clyde Finch saw his chance. He got hold of a similar car and switched the license plates. It got him a new job, and, thanks to his daughter, he got into the family — sort of.”
“At least Marcia knows how to keep her mouth shut!” Walter Callivant, Sr., didn’t look so senatorial all of a sudden.
But Nikki was far from shutting up. “You let Mrs. Hadding dangle all those years to protect your lie. How—”
“Angela Hadding is a typical example of what happens if you let a woman speak her mind,” Walter Senior cut in.
I bet that attitude must have gone over well with the women voters, Matt noted silently. Then he spoke. “But freezing out a childless widow wasn’t enough. You had to keep people away from those old court records. So you overreacted when your security system sent off hacker alarms. Clyde Finch managed to trace the hacker to the D.C. area. He must have spread his search pretty wide to come up with Ed Saunders’s mystery sim.”
“I thought he was stretching things, too, when he came up with that scenario,” the senator said. “But after our legal people sent the usual letters, we suffered a major hacker attack.” He turned to Nikki. “The hacker erased our family history site, filling it with nasty questions about Priscilla Hadding. And he wanted to blackmail us.”
Matt stared at him. “And that was enough to justify killing Ed Saunders and Oswald Derbent as well as the hacker?”
The eyes of the man in the wheelchair blazed with fury. Apparently it was the first time in decades that someone had questioned Walter Callivant’s decisions. “We didn’t know who the hacker was — we only suspected it was somebody in that sim. Saunders’s death was an accident,” Callivant snapped. “Finch had arranged for him to be mugged. We wanted to get the list of sim participants from him. We figured we could step up the pressure on all of you and find the hacker.”
“It certainly stepped up the pressure on Ed,” Matt agreed ironically. “It killed him.” He shook his head. “And it was totally unnecessary. The poor guy had already sent your lawyers the letter naming the participants.”
“How were we to know?” Callivant Senior demanded. “The fool tried to run and slipped on the ice.”
Matt nodded in understanding. “Of course — it’s much more sensible to stand around and get beaten up.”
Callivant was so angry, he wasn’t censoring himself at all. “I said it was an accident. What about you? What about the threats you sent us after Saunders died? You claimed you had enough already to destroy my son’s candidacy.”
“Not me,” Matt told him. “The hacker, we suspect, was Harry Knox. You must have thought so, too, once your lawyers got Saunders’s list. If you checked people’s backgrounds, you’d have come upon the juvenile charges against Knox for hacking.” He leaned forward. “Was the failure of his truck’s brakes supposed to be another warning?”
“We were dealing with a criminal,” Callivant said stiffly. “My grandson Daniel devised a response and saw the job through.”
“Just like a spy novel,” Matt continued to needle information out of the old man. “Did Daniel get his hands dirty monkeying with the brakes, or was it a high-tech job, like what happened to the autobus? Did he use an EMP to send the truck’s circuits haywire?
“It’s a secret technology.” A little belatedly Callivant Senior clamped his lips shut.
“A government secret, you mean,” Matt said. “As opposed to a Callivant secret. By the way, Net Force is still looking at that bus. I hope Daniel hid his tracks well.”
“But you got the hacker,” Nikki burst out. “Matt told me that Knox had a computer full of information about us. Why did you continue to go after those people? Why did Oswald Derbent’s house burn down? Why did you almost kill Matt?”
“You believe him?” Scorn sizzled in the Senator’s voice. “Unauthorized access to files continued—after that Knox person was eliminated. Worse, it took place on an even more sophisticated level. We targeted those who were most likely to use hacking technology. Derbent had been a systems auditor before he devoted himself to book collecting. And the boy”—Callivant jerked his chin at Matt—“he’s an obvious danger.
“Unauthorized access,” Nikki echoed, looking numb. “That — that was me. I started looking into the files. I heard about all those people getting in trouble because of the old Hadding case, and I wanted to see what it was all about.”
“You?” Senator Callivant looked as if he were on the verge of having a stroke. “You?”
“I got one person killed,” Nikki went on, her voice hollow. “And three more almost killed.”
“You didn’t do a thing,” Matt said grimly. “Your father did, though. I bet he had a hand in the ‘accident’ at Derbent’s. And the Senator already admitted the use of your father’s spy-toy on the bus.”
Callivant Senior was still concentrating on Nikki’s treachery. “You are no longer part of this family,” he grated. “You Judas!”
“I wish I weren’t a part of this family!”
Everyone had forgotten about Walter G. Now they turned to him. Nikki’s grandfather suddenly looked years older than he had mere minutes before. “Father, what I did was an accident. But you, Clyde…Daniel…you killed—”
“We protected you.” Years of frustration and disappointment sounded in the Senator’s voice. “We knew you needed protection.”
“Just wh
at I needed, Father,” Walter G. said bitterly. “More blood on my hands. I feel so…safe.”
He stepped around his father’s wheelchair and strode quickly away.
“Walter!” the Senator called after him. “Son!”
He turned a glare on Matt that should have incinerated him. “Weakling,” Callivant muttered.
For a long moment the Senator sat in stormy silence, thinking. Then he stabbed a finger down on the armrest of his wheelchair. “Daniel? You heard it all?”
“Yes, sir,” Daniel Callivant’s voice came through a speaker hidden somewhere in the chair’s circuitry.
“He’ll be no use to us,” the old man’s voice thickened. “Again. We’ll have to — take care of the situation.” Matt didn’t like the look Callivant suddenly turned on him. “I think the intruder scenario—”
“Marcus saw him come in with my daughter,” Daniel Callivant interrupted over the speaker.
“Can’t you handle him?” the Senator demanded impatiently.
“And create another Clyde Finch?” Daniel asked. Walter Callivant’s hands turned into clawlike fists on the armrests. “Come here!”
A moment or two later Daniel Callivant appeared in the hallway behind Matt and Nikki. “Grandfather.”
“I’ve thought it through,” the Senator said. “Nikki unwisely brought this boy home. He attacked her, and while we tried to subdue—”
“No!” Nikki screamed the word. “I won’t—”
“Of course, she had to be sedated,” Walter Callivant’s voice remorselessly rolled along. He glared at his son. “The alternative, of course, is that the young animal killed her.”
Daniel Callivant went pale, looking at his daughter. “No. Grandfather—”
“You heard how she betrayed us. She’ll betray us all. Choose, Daniel. The family, or this little—”
“Grandfather! Please!”
“You’re a Callivant! You have no choice!”
“I–I can’t—”
“You expect me to?” Walter Senior smashed a hand down on his withered legs. “I tell you again, Daniel. You have no choice.”
Daniel Callivant’s tightly wrapped facade was gone. His lips trembled as he looked at his daughter.