Splicer (A Thriller)

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Splicer (A Thriller) Page 32

by Theo Cage


  Jayne couldn't feel any more surprise. One more body. Everyone was a bit player. Just another suspect with another self-important reason for wanting their piece of Ludd. And the man who orchestrated the whole thing was standing next to her, looking lost, looking like the ghost of somebody who once had a purpose in life but couldn't exactly recall what that was anymore. He'd lost his soul like a man loses his car-keys.

  Kozak lit a cigarette and coughed. "We tracked down Malcolm Grieves' bank account yesterday ..."

  "Dante, right?" said Rusty.

  Kozak almost smiled. "Dante Technology. Over two hundred thousand dollars. All from Rosenblatt again, according to his wife."

  "Advances for the job?" asked Jayne.

  "No. He was bribing Rosenblatt. He was the only one who knew how Ludd had been lured to the Club and then killed. I guess he needed the money to finish his research and it looks like this was going to be his lab." Kozak waved his hand in the direction of the cabin. Rusty had a far-away look on his face that irritated Kozak. And he didn't like the comment about Dante. "You're going to have to make statements, the both of you." He lifted his unshaven chin towards Jayne. "What the hell happened at the University?"

  Jayne answered slowly. "They were after Malcolm. We went there to meet with him. We joined a party in progress."

  "You did more than meet with him," said Kozak.

  In a tired voice Jayne said "Self-defense, Inspector."

  "They were armed. You probably noticed that," said Rusty. "We weren't."

  "Three bodies? And you had no weapons?" commented one of the cops. Grey stared off across the lake, his mouth tight. Then he spoke again.

  "They were agents. A U.S. military special ops team working for the DIA. They were after the code words that would reactivate the Splicer. Although you'll never prove that. "He turned to Kozak. "They were also behind stealing that envelope in New York that I had given your partner. That was our fault. We thought we had him covered."

  Kozak grabbed Aaron's collar in his hands. "Why don't you shut up, Grieves or Grey or whoever the fuck you are. From where I sit, it looks like you started everything. And for what? Do you even know?" He let him go with a push. "Cuff him and get him out of here."

  The old man had fallen on one knee in the waterlogged uncut grass. "You fool. Of course I know. For YOU. And your CHILDREN!" he shouted.

  Kozak let out a breath full of cigarette smoke, which seemed to cloud his expression. "You don't even know my children."

  Rusty glared, cradling his arm. "You're not talking about the Splicer are you? There is no goddamn Splicer," he said, pulling himself up with the help of another uniform cop.

  Aaron Grey fixed him with his piercing blue stare. "You don't know what you're talking about," he said.

  Jayne interrupted. "He's right. You're son admitted it."

  "It was all an elaborate hoax by Ludd," continued Rusty. "He needed something at the Vegas Technology show to get the industries attention. And it was a good lie, because we were close. But close doesn't count. Malcolm and Ludd cooked up a faked set-up. Phony software. An incubator with a hidden door. He even hired a magician to work out the details."

  "And everybody bought it. The military. The investors. You ... whoever you are?" added Jayne. Grey shook his head like a man trying to wake up out of a nightmare.

  "You're looking at CIA," answered Kozak, cocking a thumb at his prisoner. "And I thought I was about ready for retirement."

  Grey was beginning to sag, like he was about to faint. He kept looking at his hands, turning them over slowly.

  "You're a dedicated son-of-a-bitch," said Jayne to him. He didn't look up.

  "My son was everything," he said. "I did this for him." His eyes were red. He was holding back tears. He kept staring at his gnarled hands and turning them over until a police officer in a rain poncho grabbed them, pulled them behind the old man’s back and wrapped nylon cuffs around his wrists. "It wasn't supposed to end like this."

  "It never is," added Rusty. "Malcolm wanted that invention more than life. And at the same time, knowing he was working on something that had that much potential for ... misery, the thought of getting that close, almost drove him crazy. Maybe it did. He just couldn't let the damn thing go." Rusty turned and limped over to Jayne. "Madame, may I escort you to yonder ambulance?" He offered his arm.

  "It would be a pleasure." He took her by the waist, her arm on his shoulder, and they walked carefully down the crumbling steps to the drive at the bottom of the slope together.

  Kozak turned as if to say something, then he dropped his arm and turned back to Grieves. "Let's go, Spymaster," he said.

  Back on the slippery slope of the descending bank, Rusty had his arms full. "Jayne, I hope you get better fast. But I've got to admit, I've grown sort of attached to this form of transportation."

  She smiled at him, saying nothing.

  "And I guess I owe you one," he added.

  "What do you mean?"

  "In the tunnel. You saved my life."

  "I'd forgotten about that," she mused as a paramedic prepared to help her into the back of one of the rescue vehicles.

  "I'll make it up, somehow," he said, getting in beside her. She flashed her signature sardonic grin at him. "I'm sure you will," she said. When he sat down beside her she took his hand.

  "By the way" she said "I take back what I said about the life of a salesman being boring." And despite their aching muscles, hunger and fatigue, they laughed, and then both fell into a dreamless sleep as the ambulance tracked its way back to civilization.

  THE END

  AN EXERPT FROM THEO CAGE’S THRILLER – BUZZWORM.

  Police officers call Washington DC ‘the District’. But we still say it like we’re spitting out a mouthful of beer that’s gone punky. It’s not a feel-good word for politicians. Or for homicide detectives, of which I am the latter.

  Washington used to be the murder capital of the free world - over four hundred homicides a year. We’ve gotten better, but only marginally. I think we are now number three or four. Some consolation.

  Angela, my ex, left me in 2001, the worst year for the city. And mine too. I can’t blame her though. Bullets were as common as houseflies and generous overtime easily paid the alimony payments. I think I ate dinner with her that last year maybe a dozen times. Even that may be an exaggeration. You’d have to ask my daughter Kyla. She was the only one counting.

  Something happens to cops when they can no longer cope with the workload. The pressure of facing a fresh new homicide case every single day starts to eat into you, to hollow you out. You feel like a spent shell.

  The only reason I drag myself to the job everyday is the hope that a case, any case, not even necessarily my case, will be solved. I’m not talking justice here. Just a solved friggin’ case. Because once you feel overwhelmed, it’s not simply a matter of changing careers.

  The victims live in your head forever. So you take the files home with you on weekends, to bed with you at night, into your nightmares. They don’t disappear if you decide to take that cushy job as Security Director for Rothmans over the line in Reston, Virginia. Too much time on your hands just makes the hollowness ring in your ears - like a stomach-churning background noise that never seems to go away.

  The caseload is better now though. But a lot of good detectives ended up leaving for low-stress jobs in the burbs. But I can’t go there. Angela lives out in Arlington with her new husband and I don’t know what I would do if I bumped into him at the Piggly Wiggly parking lot.

  Something I’d probably regret. But nothing new there.

  So I still live in the Palisades, where I grew up as a kid in Washington. My home is on a leafy street in a non-descript bungalow that I bought from a former homicide partner - who moved out to a better life in McLean.

  McLean is the county where the famous CIA Headquarters sits behind locked gates. You can feel like you live at the centre of the universe in McLean, but not have to face a shooting gallery every
day of your life. How is that fair?

  And that’s ironic, because this morning I am reporting to a homicide called in by that very same CIA, only this one is located in a little known building inside the city limits of Washington proper. They call it Building 213. You get there through the Washington Navy Yard at the south end of the city, next to the Potomac River.

  Captain Ipscott gave me orders to report to Building 213, alone. A strange request. I’ve never been asked before to leave my partner behind, although sometimes I’ve got to admit, I’ve felt that way myself. Emile always has my back but he’s not really what you would call a people-person.

  Maybe the CIA knows something I don’t.

  I’ve heard rumors about 213 - everyone who lives in Washington has. We all know that this used to be the head office for NPIC, the National Photographic Interpretation Center, before it was absorbed by the Department of Defense in the nineties. NPIC used to interpret spy satellite imagery for the rest of the Intelligence community. They also had hundreds of interpreters on staff too who watched foreign TV broadcasts, and monitor telephone and email traffic - serious stuff even for the town that built the White House. What they do now is anyone’s guess.

  I had never been to Building 213 before. It’s hard to believe I have spent all these years in Washington and within spitting distance of Langley, but have never had a run in with the spooks or their handlers. I count myself lucky. The FBI was another matter. They were ever-present in this town, and I had good reason to believe I would again be sparring with the dark side before the week was over.

  The Navy Yard is aptly named; a gravel parking lot filled with row upon row of red brick buildings separated by narrow lanes. Finding the building was easy - it was east of building number 212 and just west of 214. There was nothing about the appearance from the outside that would give a visitor any hint as to the buildings real purpose.

  Once inside the out-of-place steel and glass entrance, I entered a lobby that looked out on a feature wall of the same red brick. I was surrounded by what was likely very thick bulletproof glass. By the inner door was a camera and speaker. I was asked to provide ID. I purposefully took my time looking for my badge and then passed it quickly under the camera lens. There was a pause then the voice at the other end got serious and asked for a longer look.

  “Maybe you should send out your Security guy. A Mr. David Dodge. He’s expecting me. This is a police matter.”

  I straightened my tie simply to give me something to do with my hands. I really wanted to rip the video camera off the wall. I’m a big fan of surveillance technology. I also gave big brother a flash of my revolver, which was strapped to my shoulder harness. The chrome handle always looks impressive on a color monitor.

  The door clicked ominously and a short woman stepped out into the enclosed lobby. I’m about six foot four and she might have been able to reach my chin with her hands - if she stretched and stood on tiptoes. Not quite a little person - if that’s politically correct - just a very short woman with a very serious look on a face that hadn’t seen much sun this summer.

  “Hyde”, I said, “D.C. Homicide.”

  I don’t shake hands so I didn’t offer.

  She introduced herself as the head of the Technology Group. Vienna Jobime. She pronounced it ‘how-beam’. She wore a light blue smock, like a scientist would wear in a laboratory. She led me through the lobby, down past the brick wall. A security guard asked for my ID again and passed a wand over me. I lifted my jacket and pointed to the gun. He waved me past. We stopped at a bank of modern elevators. Since the building was one floor, I had to guess we were going down. How far I couldn’t guess. I could only imagine the labyrinth below.

  "What do they do here at Building 213?” Or even a better question, where were the brass? In a case like this, management was always hovering nearby like a bunch of male lions after a kill. At this particular time they were real conspicuous by their absence. Of course here, they probably just watched you on their monitors. Kept their hands clean that way.

  "Jo," she said again, “Just call me Jo.” She looked up, really meeting my eyes for the first time “Our jobs on 3B are pretty ordinary by anyone’s standards. We study satellite imagery. Computer enhance photos. Monitor telecommunications. The man who died? Frank Scammel? He was part of the photo enhancement team."

  We stepped off the elevator into a non-descript hall, then a larger workspace. Deserted. We arrived in a large computer workroom lit largely by the glow of dozens of large color computer monitors. Still no humans in sight.

  "Coffee break?" I asked.

  "We asked most of our personnel to leave this area for a few hours. Partly due to security," she waved at the screens, "and partly to give you some elbow room."

  "I'll need to ask them some questions."

  "That can be arranged privately," she said, holding a side door open. This was a smaller room, the walls covered with large color photos - some old politicians, military equipment, airplanes and weapons, a shot of Beyonce in bed with George W. Bush. When Jobime saw me eye it she explained, "George was in on the joke."

  I stepped up to the large framed photograph. "It's amazing how good they’ve gotten at this stuff. The shadows are perfect . . ."

  "Scammel was one of our best. He'd been with us for over twenty years, almost back to the punch card days." She paused, then swallowed. “He is lying over there behind that desk. We haven’t touched anything or gone near the body.”

  "Do you want to leave me here for awhile?" I asked her.

  "It's OK. My father was a doctor. I saw lots of blood by the time I was twelve." I wasn’t convinced. I’d seen a lot of blood too but that didn’t make it any easier.

  We walked around a large desk unit, and there was Frank Scammel, the programmer/designer. There was more than a lot of blood. He was about forty-something, longish thinning hair. He wore a white Grateful Dead T-shirt, a laughing skull on the back leering up at me. He was lying on his face, blood surrounding him on all sides, one arm tucked underneath. He was a big guy, almost as big as me. Only more fat. Or at least I liked to think so. Soft and white around the middle too. I walked around the pool of congealing blood. He’s been here for a while.

  Jo sat down in one of the computer chairs, swiveled back and forth for a moment. "So, what do you know about Frank?" I asked, pulling out my trusty ‘no batteries required” note pad again.

  She sounded weary. She was a classic A type, ready to wind down into tears, but working hard to hold it back. "He was a technoid. Built his own graphics stations. Wrote some of the first software we used for simulations back in the nineties. Quiet type. As you can see, a bit eccentric for the CIA. But some kind of genius, really. He kept to himself. And for all we can tell, he died because of a computer virus. I guess that's appropriate."

  I stood back on my heels, stretching. It had been about twenty-four hours since I slept last. "Computer virus? Now I thought those things only messed up computers. You think they're going after people now, too?"

  She was searching for the height adjustment on the chair, her feet not quite touching the floor. "I don't know what to think. We've been sensitive to this virus business ever since a sixteen year old kid shut down the entire early-warning system in the late 90's. With a virus he wrote in his high school computer class."

  I moved around the room, expecting our forensic team to arrive at any minute. "Yeah. I heard about that one. I don't remember any bodies involved though."

  She took a deep breath. "We have what is supposed to be the most sophisticated computer firewall system in the world. A wall that stops everything. Nothing gets through . . . that is, until about two months ago. We've had dozens of hits since then."

  I looked up from my notes, so Jo explained, "Every time we get a security breach we call it a hit. This thing comes in, messes up files, screws up whatever it can, then disappears, like a hit and run driver. It's even started leaving messages with our staff."

  "Have you got copies?"
r />   "You mean copies of the message? Only one. We got lucky and captured one yesterday."

  I squinted at her. She expected I would have lost my patience by now. "Pictures. Movies. Some of it pornographic."

  I frowned and shook my head. "Just another sicko hacker on the loose?"

  "When you say hacker, that infers someone getting access over high-speed data lines. The techs assure me that can't happen here. Even God himself couldn't place a call into this building if we didn't want him to."

  "So how does the virus get in?"

  "We don't know. And since this thing is definitely a virus, it still has to be in here somewhere. It's what they call a worm. It wiggles in and then goes into hiding, waiting to pop up again. In a way, it's never gone. We've got some worm expert from Canada working on it as we speak."

  I stopped writing. "You had to import a worm expert? The CIA couldn't come up with one of their own?"

  "It's a specialized field." The obviousness of that statement hung in the air for a moment. Worm experts. I didn't think it was appropriate to laugh in the company of a fresh corpse so I just chewed on my lip.

  "You think Frank was involved?"

  She shrugged, not really surprised by the question. "His job was to create very realistic but false environments. Real enough to fool the other guys. One of our technicians said the virus was like watching MTV from Hell. So we can’t rule the possibility out." She jumped down off the chair. “That stays here by the way. As I said, this is all very classified.”

  "Could this have been a game for him? A little espionage of his own? Was he happy?"

  "Who knows?” She was clearly puzzled by the question. “I thought he liked the work. But he was pretty much a loner. Divorced for ten years. Had a daughter but he never talked about her. Not much of a life outside of his work."

 

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