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Remorseless: A British Crime Thriller (Doc Powers & D.I. Carver Investigate #1)

Page 41

by Will Patching

Yes a very big payday indeed for Fan when pig-man finally showed. He giggled. Then an American accent interrupted his reverie.

  ‘Hi. Are you Mister Fan?’

  He squinted up at the man, the sun behind the figure, shadowing his features. Fan giggled again. Much of his profit from the day before had been injected and snorted into his tiny frame. In the fifteen hours since he had left Simm he had not slept or been home.

  ‘Mister Fan? I like that! Yes, Mister Fan I am.’ The stranger sat, and Fan got a clear view of him. For once he was unsure what to make of the farang before him. Despite his chemically enhanced history and toxic brain, Fan could usually spot a mark instantly.

  In his world there were only three types of tourist: those who wanted sex and could be convinced to pay for it; those who liked to have sex with children and knew they had to pay for it; and the rest who were of no interest to him. Since the age of eight, when he had first tasted drugs, he had been involved with the first two categories – ‘marks’ he called them. In Fan’s warped view of the world they made up the majority of Thailand’s tourist business.

  ‘I have a message for you from Mister Simm.’

  Fan’s eyes jumped around, checking the bar, the beach, the road and the man. Nothing. No alarm bells. No police.

  ‘Khun Simm owes me money.’

  Longhaired and unshaven, this man was not a normal tourist. His clothes were faded but not cheap, and his Ray-Bans looked genuine enough, though in Thailand you never can tell. He seemed vaguely familiar.

  Fan felt a twinge of paranoia. Such instincts had kept him alive.

  ‘My boss is delighted with the merchandise and would like to extend the arrangement until the end of the week.’

  It was love! Elation replaced Fan’s paranoia. Dollars. Maybe thousands of dollars. The rich American had promised him ongoing business, a regular supply of wealthy western marks, punters hungry for his merchandise.

  Fan’s foul teeth eased themselves into view again as the man continued. ‘Mister Simm has chartered a yacht and would like to discuss business terms if you would care to join him.’

  Ah, thought Fan, this man is a deck hand, a boat boy for the businessman. He fondled the gold medallion of Buddha, resting on his chest. At last his luck had changed.

  ‘Mr Simm asked me to give you this as a bonus, a sign of good faith.’

  Two hundred dollars! Fan had never known such generosity. He slipped the money into his pocket and demanded, excitement shining in his eyes. ‘When do we go?’

  ‘I have a tender to take you to him now.’ The man pointed to a rigid inflatable dinghy tethered near the beach bar.

  ‘OK. We go now.’ Fan was standing, raring to go and vibrating with excitement. He had to jog to keep up with the stranger as he strode toward the dinghy. ‘Your name, mister?’

  Fan almost collided with the man as he stopped and spun round. They were eye to eye as the farang pulled off the Ray-Bans and smiled for the first time.

  A shark-like grin.

  ‘You can call me Hunter, Mister Fan.’ Piercing blue eyes drilled into his.

  That unnerved Fan. It was a primeval, disquieting stare, and a blip of paranoia lit up the well-tuned radar in his mind. But the two hundred-dollar bills in his pocket, along with the prospect of many more to come, wiped the screen clear as quickly as the blip had appeared.

  Fan shrugged and smiled his sickly smile as he joined the man in the boat.

  ***

  ‘Okay, this is what I’ve just found.’

  Kate peered over her brother’s shoulder as he spoke, head to head with him, her eyes rapidly scanning the words cascading onto one of three large flatscreens arrayed on his desk top, greedily analysing the content.

  ‘Is this a news-site?’ Kate was always impressed by her brother’s talent with computers. He could find just about anything whenever she asked. For him computers were his life, almost as if they were a part of him. Not his brain, that was far better than any computer, but more like his blood. Yes, she thought, that’s computers for Johnny. They were his lifeblood.

  Her brother’s eyes were red rimmed and tired from staring at the screens, yet she knew he needed little sleep, catnapping only when exhausted. Forty or fifty hours could pass with him leaving his station only to pee, and with barely any shuteye at all, oblivious to time – hence waking her in the middle of the night with the news on Simm.

  Kate shook her head in despair as she glanced around the grotty bedsit that he called home. Discarded clothes littered the floor and there was a malodorous undertone that assaulted her nostrils from the moment she had arrived. The place was only ever clean for a brief period – always just after she had visited. He was such a nerd.

  A genius nerd.

  This she knew, and right now he was working his magic, internet fever pumping through his veins. She concentrated on the screen again as he spoke.

  ‘News-site? You insult the great Johnno. This,’ he brushed the backs of his fingers across a screen in a loving caress, ‘is the police report. It was transmitted from Bangkok not long after I phoned you.’ His face creased into a cheeky dimpled grin.

  Uh, oh, thought Kate.

  She was quick, gifted like her brother but in different ways. She could speed read – words were her forte. They tumbled and rolled around her conscious and subconscious mind, her brain sorting and sifting them, rapid fire, readying them for others to hear or see.

  She also had intuition. Bundles of it. And right now a little klaxon was cutting through the barrage of verbiage inside her head.

  Uh, oh.

  ‘The official police report?’ She started to relax as she said it, immediately realising it couldn’t be. It was in English. Not Thai, and therefore surely not the original file.

  ‘Yup. Kindly translated and posted for the whole world to read.’

  The klaxon in her mind started wailing as he rabbited on.

  ‘When I say for the whole world to read, I actually mean my highly gifted Anonymous cyber-fiends – of whom I am the undoubted master!’

  Uh, oh. Uh, oh. Uh, oh. The Klaxon was on full alert.

  ‘And who exactly was it that kindly translated and posted this for your brilliance to access?’ Her sweet sisterly smile had faded.

  ‘Oh, come on Sis! It’s okay – ’

  Kate interrupted, leaving no doubt who was boss, demanding to know, ‘Who Johnny?’

  He swiped a finger across the central screen and a new page appeared in its full glory.

  Oh God, thought Kate. It was the official report all right. And she did not need to read anything to see who had kindly translated it.

  She stared in mute horror at the CIA logo alongside the rather less impressive one belonging to the US embassy in Bangkok.

  She stepped back from the screen, but physical distance was no help.

  The klaxon was screaming. And so was Kate.

  ‘You idiot – for chrissakes! You will end up in prison!’

  She was glaring at him now, and he physically shrank into his swivel chair. He suffered badly from nerves, a consequence of a troubled youth, and immediately folded himself in half, hugging his knees, grimacing. She knew his stomach would be cramping from stress, squirting acid, and she almost relented at the sight of his pain.

  His breath rasped, his voice ragged as he said, ‘Sis. Please don’t be angry. I thought – ’

  ‘I’m not angry.’ Kate tried to calm herself, her voice quiet now. ‘I’m disappointed. I’m devastated. I’m worried sick for my little brother.’ She watched him writhe in real pain as her tirade tortured him even more, and her heart melted. After all, he was only trying to please her. ‘Oh Johnny. What am I to do with you?’

  She brushed his hair with her fingertips and saw the colour start to return to his cheeks. Poor kid. So smart. Yet so daft. And so easy to hurt.

  He tugged open a drawer and swallowed some antacid from a bottle he found in there. ‘I’m sorry Kate. But please listen. I’ve been really careful.’

>   ‘What, like before?’ She pursed her lips and shook her head at him.

  ‘No, really careful. I’ve created something. It’s taken years. A cyber-mask. No one can ever trace this.’ He smudged a greasy finger on the screen and then wiped the mark off with his sweatshirt sleeve as he explained. ‘I am so disguised, like all the computers in the US couldn’t find me if they joined together and spent the next ten years searching. This is the motherfucker mask. I’ve finally sussed the critical pathways and – ’

  ‘Enough!’

  She recognised the fervent look in his eyes. The zealot’s glaze of a nerd about to explain the ‘deeetails’ of his latest glorious conquest of the cyber kingdom.

  But Johnny had recovered, was animated again and starting to babble, ready to bask in the glow of sisterly approbation.

  Kate just could not help herself from letting go a small smile. She loved her seventeen going on thirteen-year-old brother more than anybody or anything in the whole world. She cut him off in mid flow again.

  ‘A cyber-mask?’

  ‘My own creation. It’s the hackers’ holy grail. I based it on an original algorithm – ’

  ‘A mask. It stops people seeing you. Am I right?’

  ‘Sure... It’s well fat.’

  ‘And it’s unbreakable? No one can ever see who stole this?’

  ‘I did not steal it! I just borrowed it, for a quick peek. Like a library book... Cross my heart’ He dimple-grinned her and she had to laugh. He had finally got the message. Enough already.

  ‘Okay Supernerd. Let’s see what our friends at the CIA have given us.’ Kate’s easy optimism surfaced again.

  Nothing bad will happen. It’s only a Thai police report after all. And anyway, she felt confident that if Johnny said no one could trace this to London he was right, even if the document was important.

  Kate leaned over Johnny’s shoulder again as he punched the air, whooped, reached out his left hand – eyes still fixed on the middle screen, right mitt scrolling pages for his sister – and deftly popped a package into the microwave permanently sited at the end of his desk. He spun the timer without a glance and whispered into her ear, ‘We got fresh popcorn!’

  ***

  Fan was having a terrible day. The very worst day of his miserable existence. And the very last day of his shabby junkie life.

  He struggled in the bottom of the dinghy, feeling the bite of wire cutting into his flesh as he realised his hands and feet were bound together behind his back. His head thundered with pain, worse than even his most vicious drug hangover.

  The blow he had received – the one he did not see or even really feel – had slammed part of his cranium against his brain. He was already dying, his skull fractured, soft brain tissue torn, with blood and vital cerebral fluid leaking gently from his right ear.

  As he came fully conscious Fan experienced a totality of agony he could not have imagined. A thousand migraines crushed his fevered mind.

  ‘What you do with me mister?’

  He vomited, a sickly sludge of spiced squid and beer pooling under his nose, the sweet acrid stench acting like smelling salts, dragging him back to incomprehensible reality.

  ‘I do nothing bad. I not hurt you.’ He struggled to speak, his swollen tongue waggling, rancid and sticky in his mouth. Sun scorched down and he longed for a return to unconsciousness.

  The steady beat of the outboard stopped and Fan felt Hunter lift him. He was like a baby in a strong man’s arms. The gentle movement of the waves allowed Fan to drift towards the sanctuary of unconsciousness, and then he came screaming awake – a terrifying agonised wail wrenched from deep inside his tortured soul.

  His body was suspended in the water. The man was holding a very large knife in one hand and Fan’s ponytail in his other.

  The Thai’s body gently swung, twisting slightly as waves lapped against the bow of the boat. Despite the water supporting him below the waist, much of his body weight was hanging from his ponytail. Had his mind been coherent and able to think despite the explosive pain detonating inside his head, he would have realised the rasping noise he heard was the sound of fragments of his own skull grating together.

  Slowly he was dipped deeper. The pain receded as the water took more of his bodyweight, and, for a brief glorious moment he lost consciousness.

  Then the warm water splashed over his face, reviving him. Agony engulfed him, but he was lucid. The bloody fluid was flowing more freely from his deafened ear.

  Hunter’s quiet words were almost crooned into Fan’s other one.

  ‘One question. One answer and no more pain. Where do you keep the children? The rent boys and girls? Where are they?’

  Fan’s ponytail tightened and he screamed again, a long primitive howl that encompassed all the anguish he had felt or dealt in his twenty-four years.

  He was able to whisper a few words, the pain in his skull such that he barely felt the knife slice his belly, spilling his guts into the sea.

  At last, released by the stranger he drifted in the pink water, his tormented synapses fusing and sparking for one last coherent thought. As his bowels were ripped away he realised that the American’s teeth really looked nothing like a shark’s.

  ***

  ‘Boss?’

  ‘Yup, Cody. What’s the deal?’

  ‘We’ve had a Level Four breach, sir’

  ‘Goddammit! Details?’

  ‘Well, we were onto it nanoseconds after it was accessed. Codes are switched already. The target may’ve been a dummy though. Traffic from the Thai embassy. Real low grade shit. Like super low. We think it could’ve been a test run. You want me to come to your office now?’

  ‘Sure do. I’ll tip off the Director. How long before you hook the son of a bitch?’

  ‘Well, we’re having some trouble with that sir. Never seen anything like it.’

  Cody’s boss sighed as he dropped the phone to its cradle. He could feel his shoulders tensing as his gut told him this was going to be a difficult one.

  In the five years Mike Teague had been managing Langley’s Government Systems Security Team, affectionately known as GUSSET by his staff, there had been thousands of breaches. Most were students and geeks, hackers determined to break into the CIA database, to unravel coded transmissions or copy their internal email, anything to prove how fallible national security systems were.

  Mostly for ego, to prove just how good they were, but a few were malicious. A group calling themselves Anonymous had caused some serious problems with Level Four breaches in the past, but rarely gave trouble these days since the FBI had mopped up most of the culprits.

  He thought to himself that in some respects these amateurish attacks had helped keep the systems secure from genuine threats, constantly testing and probing, highlighting weaknesses.

  They were a cheap source of recruits too. Some of his best people, Cody included, were tracked and hooked after they had hacked into government facilities. Once caught, the choice for the most talented was a no-brainer: a criminal conviction and prison, or a well-paid job with the most sophisticated systems the US can offer.

  Thousands of hackers tried to get into Government systems every day but, most of the time, their efforts bounced off the security shielding, like bullets pinging off an Abrams tank. Sometimes they would get through one or two layers of armour. Rarely did they get through three or four. At Level Five the breach was most serious, and that had not happened since his team had been set up. Level Four breaches were a rare enough event these days – read-only access to coded networks and international traffic. Tapping into the veins of the National Security System.

  This bullet had dug real deep.

  The head of GUSSET pushed open the door to the Director’s office and said, ‘Jack. We got a problem.’

  ***

  The source of the CIA’s latest headache was happily munching hot buttered popcorn in a suburban south London bedsit. His sister was flopped on his unmade bed, seemingly dead to the world. Kate�
�s arm was thrown over her eyes, her long blonde hair fanned on the pillow.

  Johnny watched as her chest gently pulsed up and down in a slow steady rhythm, a wistful look on his face. She was his angel. His guardian since their mother died, she had looked after him, nurtured him, protected him.

  Christ, he thought, she changed her whole life for me. He really wanted to help her, and hoped he had finally come good.

  She had once said, ‘You’re so innocent and incapable of deceit Johnny, it’s one of the reasons I love you so much.’ Yet, he thought, she would be appalled if she ever found out the truth.

  His life was the internet, he had been hooked on computers and games for as long as he could remember, and cyberspace was like home to him. It was a magical kingdom, full of friends and comrades, jokes and surprises, games and puzzles.

  Best of all, puzzles.

  Like the one he had solved to help her today.

  He scratched his tousled head, frowning to himself as he thought of her anger earlier, then smiled as he remembered her delight at what he had found. Her mood rapidly morphed into shocked disbelief as she absorbed what she read.

  They had accessed CNN, Reuters, the BBC and a dozen other major news carriers, yet every bulletin was missing vital information about the death of the millionaire businessman. Kate had digested it all and then lay down to rest.

  Johnny decided he should keep looking. He rubbed his eyes with his palms, hard enough to see stars, put another bag of popcorn on to cook and turned back to his screens.

  ***

  The longhaired farang devil lies sleeping. He has several passports in different names but he thinks of himself as Doug Brown. His recurrent nightmare has been dormant for years but tonight it visits him in his hotel bed in Thailand. His muscled torso twists and writhes, tangling his limbs in the sweat soaked sheets...

  He’s running. She’s chasing. Both laughing. The trees flash by and he feels the warmth of the sun on his body. His mother catches him, hugs him, his head snuggling in the comfort and warmth of her soft breasts as she carries him to bed.

  She kisses him goodnight. Tucks him up. Switches off the light.

  He’s sleeping.

 

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