Shadowrun 46 - A Fistful of Data

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by Stephen Dedman (v1. 0) (epub)




  A Fistful of Data

  A Shadowrun™ Novel

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Thanks to Seth Johnson, Sharon Turner Mulvihill, Tom Dowd, Robert Charrette and Paul Hume, and the gang at Adept Security: John, Paul, Doug, Sue, Vicky, Gail, Laur-ton, Sam, Richard, Vic, Alistair and especially Elaine.

  1

  It was all in the timing.

  Mute sat on top of the elevator, watching the seconds lick by on her retinal clock and waiting for the signal from Mercurio Switch. The shaman sitting beside her looked up anxiously at the space above them—something Mute refused to do. She could feel that they were still descending, not climbing, which meant that the decker hadn’t taken control of the security cameras. If she went through the trapdoor into the lift before Mercurio was ready, someone might get video of her and feed it into a pattern-recognition sensor. She was prepared to buy a new face, if necessary— not that it was easy to see hers through the chemsuit visor and respirator mask—but she knew software now existed that could recognize a walk or a way of moving, and she’d rather risk a relatively quick death, such as being crushed between the elevator car and the top of the shaft, than change that.

  There was a quick flicker of multicolored symbols around the edge of her retinal clock display—confirmation from the decker that everything was going according to plan. Dr. Morales was in the lift with one wired bodyguard and an Aztechnology wagemage, as expected; the helicopter was on the roof, as arranged; the cameras were playing a loop of the inside of the elevator to anyone who might be watching in the security station. Mute held up three fingers while she removed the pin from the gas grenade

  two and the leopard shaman’s brown eyes began to glow faintly amber as she stared into the mirror they had set above the trapdoor and

  one the lights in the lift went out and

  zero Mute raised the trapdoor with her free hand, taking care not to move the mirror, and dropped the grenade into the elevator. Before it hit the floor she’d already grabbed her Taser from its holster, her boosted reflexes giving her superhuman speed. The shaman cast a stunball spell, which the elf wagemage tried to block, but the neurostun gas was already beginning to take effect. The elevator jerked to a stop, and the mage collapsed on top of Morales. Mute felt her weight increase as the elevator began to climb rapidly, and the bodyguard drew his smartgun and pointed it at the trapdoor.

  Mute cursed silently. The vatjob was either obscenely healthy or protected by some sort of filtration system, and she was glad she’d brought a stun gun instead of a narco-ject pistol.

  The bodyguard, obviously tired of waiting for her to show her face, fired a burst of armor-piercing rounds into the ceiling of the elevator car. Mute heard the shaman shriek, and she dived headfirst through the trapdoor, firing as she fell. The Taser dart hit the bodyguard in the throat and he spasmed as the current coursed through his wired nervous system. He tried to bring his gun to bear on Mute, but his hand was jerking too wildly, and he succeeded only in spraying the walls with bullets as he tottered and fell. She grabbed his arm and found the switch to pop the clip from the gun, waited for a few seconds to see if the man was playing possum, and when she decided that he wasn’t, pried the gun out of his grip and bound his hands with a set of plasteel restraints. She examined Morales, making sure that he was uninjured, then called, “Nasti?”

  The shaman poked her head cautiously through the trapdoor. “Yes?”

  “Are you hit? Is your suit punctured?”

  “I don’t think so.”

  “Check.” Mute began patting down the wagemage and bodyguard, searching for anything that might be valuable to her or to her fixer—credsticks, Aztechnology ID, passcards, talismans. A moment later, Nasti slid through the trapdoor and closed it behind her.

  “No holes,” the shaman said. “How long does it take the gas to break down?”

  Mute glanced at the glowing numbers above the door. “We’ll be out of here before it does,” she promised.

  The Hatter leaned against the wall and sipped his tea as he watched Dr. Steinberg, one of Aztechnology’s most brilliant mathematicians, talking to a small gaggle of undergraduates who’d come to hear his lecture. These conferences were great for recruiting, but organizing security for them was a nightmare—a nightmare that recently had been handed to the Hatter, along with a pay raise he considered barely adequate. Steinberg was regarded as an excellent lecturer, for a cryptographer, and a great advertisement for the megacorp’s software R & D department. He was also skilled at spotting talented undergraduates. Unfortunately, it wasn’t only mathematical talent that interested him. The Hatter didn’t much care how many young women Steinberg invited back to his office for a personal interview; security at the Aztechnology Pyramid was excellent. Here in the conference center, though, the security station was off-limits to him and he’d been given only one mage and one low-level company man per Aztechnology scientist speaking at the conference. If someone wanted to try an extraction, he thought, all they’d have to do is—

  His phone rang in his ear, and he grimaced. “Hatter.” “It’s Carrington, Chief. Morales hasn’t shown. The elevator seems to be stuck in the lobby. I’ve tried calling his bodyguard, but Runco doesn’t answer.”

  The Hatter blinked. The elevator was supposed to have taken Dr. Morales and his guards nonstop from his last lecture to the basement car park, where Carrington was waiting to drive the mathematician back to the Pyramid. The Hatter nodded to Steinberg’s bodyguard and hurried to the office, where he’d set up a dataline tap that enabled him to see through the building’s security cameras. “Diaz!” he subvocalized as he ran. “What’s happening with elevator number four?”

  The guard in the security office took a few seconds to answer. The Hatter assumed he’d been up to his usual trick of trying to access the surveillance cameras in the women’s changing rooms. “It’s on its way down,” he finally answered, his voice confident. “Got a clear picture of the three of them in there.”

  “What floor is it on?”

  “Lobby.”

  “Let me know if that changes,” said the Hatter, dumping his half-empty cup into a recycling bin without much regret. “And try to get Runco, Use the elevator's emergency phone if you have to.”

  As soon as the Hatter burst into his office, Diaz looked up with a slightly queasy expression. “I think we have a problem ...”

  His boss stared at the monitor for a few seconds. “No drek. That’s a video loop. Somebody’s hacked into the security system.” His long fingers raced across the keyboard like two wired spiders, calling up images from the other elevators and all the exits.

  The elevator doors opened, and Mute strode out onto the roof, carrying the still-unconscious Morales under one arm, glad that the mathematician was a dwarf rather than a troll. The Mitsuhama company men raised their guns at the sight of the chemsuited figures, but relaxed when Nasti called out the password. A combat mage jumped out of the helicopter and examined Morales to make sure there were no masking or tracking spells on him. A few seconds later, he nodded. “It’s him,” he said.

  The team leader shoved his sidearm back into his holster, and snapped, “Isolde kudasai!” (Hurry!) Two of the men took charge of Morales and strapped him into a seat, and the Hughes Stallion lifted off and headed toward the Mitsuhama skyscrapers, with Mute and Nasti on board. “Where can I drop you?” asked the pilot.

  “Hamlin Hotel,” Mute told her, taking two rolls of stealth line out of a pocket on her belt.

  The Hatter looked at the view from the helipad camera— another video loop, showing the helicopter idling—and shook his head in disgust. “Mitsuhama. They’re on the roof. Or were.”
r />   Before Diaz could ask how he knew, the Hatter had one of Aztechnology’s fastest deckers on the line and had instructed him to shut down all the elevators in the conference center and figure out who was controlling the cameras. Then he started barking orders at Carrington. “I don’t care how many fragging flights of stairs it is! Get two of your men up to the roof! It'll be too late to catch the fraggers, but they might find something useful!”

  Nasti looked down at the street in alarm, gripping the stealth line as tightly as she could. She’d never needed to use her catfall spell under conditions like these, and she tried not to calculate how far she’d fall if she missed the roof. She closed her eyes briefly as Mute jumped through the open doorway, then steeled herself to do the same.

  She landed safely on the helipad, a little less gracefully than she’d hoped. Mute had already touched the catalyst stick to her own line, causing it to dissolve, and she chased after Nasti’s tether and grabbed it just before it flew out of reach beyond the edge of the roof. A quick swipe with the catalyst stick, and it, too, disintegrated without any fuss. “They could have waited,” the shaman grumbled as she removed her chemsuit hood. “Or at least slowed down.” Her complexion had paled to a light tan, except where it was marked with fading black spots; Mute thought she looked like a player from a community-theater production of that ancient musical about cats, but didn’t say it.

  “Your first run?” asked Mute, removing her own hood. Nasti was surprised to see that she was smiling.

  “Second,” she admitted.

  “Scared of heights?”

  “No, I love heights. I’m scared of being found dead on Pine Street. I’d never live it down.”

  Mute’s smile became a grin. “Mercurio said you were good.”

  To her surprise, the leopard shaman found herself grinning back. “You weren’t bad yourself. You feel like a drink?”

  2

  As the Hatter had predicted, the guards arrived on the roof well after the helicopter had left, and they didn’t find anything useful. The elevator containing the wagemage and the bodyguard had been on its way down to the third floor, where the first aid station was located, when the Hatter’s decker finally regained control of the elevator system, and both were still unconscious when the doors opened. Aztechnology had pulled Steinberg out of the building immediately and had cancelled all its presentations for the rest of the conference, and the Hatter had been recalled to the Pyramid for the longest and most uncomfortable debriefing he’d suffered in years.

  Four nights later, he walked into Hare’s windowless apartment on the Pyramid’s fifty-second floor for their weekly game of chess. The two men had been close friends since they’d met in chess club in college. Marc Herrera, a lecherous elf with teeth like tombstones and a dramatic cowlick, had been known as Hare since he’d first created a rabbit icon in his cyberterminal classes. Within a week after the two began hanging out together, a coed with a fondness for Lewis Carroll’s books featuring Alice had dubbed the Roman-nosed Tom Mather the Mad Hatter. After Hare told him that he’d once read that “mad” had originally meant “dangerous,” and “hatter” was a corruption of “adder,” the Hatter had accepted the nickname—but he still took his revenge by planting some of his more creative homemade drugs in the coed’s room and sending an anonymous tip to the school administration.

  Hare was still jacked into his deck, a customized Fairlight Excalibur, when the Hatter rang his doorbell. Rather than unplug himself, the decker opened the security door using the room’s electronics, switched the kettle on, and spoke through the trideo sound system. “It’s your move,” he said. “I’ll be finished here in a few minutes.”

  The Hatter made himself a cup of tea, then walked over to the sofa and stared at the board on the coffee table before moving his queen to king four.

  “Well, well, well,” said Hare.

  The Hatter raised a bushy eyebrow, knowing that the decker was watching him through the room’s concealed cameras. “Want me to move you?”

  “No—I’ve just found out who was playing around with the elevators and cameras in the conference center.” The trideo screen flickered on and was instantly filled with lines of code.

  “They used a deception utility,” said the Hatter after studying it for a moment. “So?”

  “Not just any utility.” Hare highlighted two characters in one of the lines: an H and a G. “It’s a work of art, and he signed it.”

  “HG?”

  “You’ve forgotten the periodic table? You?”

  “Mercury . . said the Hatter testily. The periodic table had been second nature to him long before he'd enhanced his already excellent memory with the best cyberware and biotech he could afford. His eyes widened as he made the connection. “Mercurio Switch? The shadowrunner?”

  “If it wasn’t, it’s somebody using his software. But I’ll bet it was him.”

  The Hatter nodded. “He’d be the team’s third member. The forensic mages said there were two people on top of the elevator. One was a leopard shaman, but there aren’t any leopard shamans working for Mitsuhama, and there can’t be that many in Seattle.”

  “No,” agreed Hare. “Though tracking one down might be difficult; they’re good at hiding. What about the other one?”

  “The bodyguard saw somebody for about a second, but they were wearing a chemsuit, so he didn’t see much. Human, light build, probably female, probably dark skinned with dark brown eyes and at least one datajack.” “Doesn’t narrow it down much,” remarked Hare. “Be there in a second.”

  A moment later, the elf walked out of the bedroom, his long, muddy brown hair even more disheveled than usual. “They’ve got you working as a Johnson?” he said sympathetically, sitting down on the other side of the chessboard and moving his knight.

  “Not quite that bad,” the Hatter muttered, “but I’m doing routine analysis, security clearances, updating our database and dossiers, that sort of drek. Long hours, no travel and no bonuses. I’d like to kill the fraggers.”

  Hare looked at him warily. “You know the rules,” he said. “No vendettas. If shadowrunners are good enough to pull something like that and get away, they’re worth hiring; you shouldn’t waste them. We only kill the ones we catch red-handed. That’s why people like Mercurio Switch leave their calling cards for us to find.”

  The Hatter grunted. “I need to do something to get back on top. Either that, or something that’ll make me enough nuyen to go into business for myself.” He knew that Hare swept his apartment regularly for bugs; it was one of the few places in the Pyramid where he could be sure that nobody was listening in.

  “Do you have anything in mind?”

  “Have you ever heard of GNX-IV?”

  “Not that I can recall,” Hare admitted after a quick search through his headware memory.

  “It was an ORO R & D project. A way to reverse the effects of goblinization.”

  “You’re kidding.”

  “The files are incomplete, so I don’t know how well it worked, or what the side effects were, but it looked promising . .

  “What went wrong?”

  “The riots,” said the Hatter sourly. “There were rumors that goblinization had been caused by an accident at some biotech lab. The story got around that this ORO lab was working on understanding unexplained genetic expression— you know, UGE—and somebody decided that meant the lab was really working on whatever made humans goblinize into orks and trolls. So a mob broke in and trashed the place. Smashed the computer, took the backups, killed the scientist in charge . . . and the samples in the lab just disappeared. Probably destroyed, but maybe stolen. But there was meant to be a vial of the cure on its way from the lab to the airport, to be flown to ORO headquarters in Aztlan. It never arrived, so it might still be out there somewhere— enough of it to try re-creating the formula, anyway.”

  Hare chewed his lip. “A cure for goblinization would be worth a fortune. The Japanese sales alone would be—”

  “Chec
k.”

  “What?” The decker looked down, and swore. “So why hasn’t anybody else tried to track down this sample? It seems more likely that the scientists were fudging their results to get more money, or more mainframe time . .

  “Others have tried, dear boy,” the Hatter replied smugly. “They investigated after the riots, but if they found anything, that data was lost in the worldwide computer system crash of 2029 . . . and after that, they couldn’t find anybody who remembered who’d driven the stuff to the airport, except that everyone claimed they weren’t the one. One of the scientists thought it was a student who was working there as a lab assistant and security guard, but he couldn’t remember his name or anything useful about him. Since then, most rookies in the section have gone through the copies of the old backup files that didn’t succumb to the virus to see if they can find a clue as to who this guy was, something that everybody else has missed. Same as I did. But they didn’t spend the last week getting lectured about how important Morales’ work was, how useful it was for image enhancement and pattern recognition and that sort of drek. So I ran the last security recordings from ORO’s R & D lab through Morales’ software to see if it turned up anything new.”

  “And?”

  “I have a pretty good picture of the lab assistant, taken less than an hour before the rioters trashed the place. No audio, but he’s walking to his car carrying a small case; you can even see the hazmat label. And I happen to know a very good decker—plenty good enough to hack into the Department of Motor Vehicles and see if he can match that photo to their old records without setting off any alarms. And together, maybe we can find this guy and ask him what happened.”

  “Or maybe he’s already dead,” said the decker. “It was forty years ago.”

  “Maybe,” said the Hatter, reaching into the pocket of his hand-tailored suit and producing a datachip. “But he probably wasn’t any older than eighteen or nineteen then; he’d be in his early sixties now. And if he was working in that lab, and driving company cars, he would have passed a security clearance, so he probably has a SIN. It’s worth a shot, right?”

 

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