The Lafayette Campaign: a Tale of Deception and Elections (Frank Adversego Thrillers Book 2)

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The Lafayette Campaign: a Tale of Deception and Elections (Frank Adversego Thrillers Book 2) Page 2

by Updegrove, Andrew


  But there was no urgency driving him this time. No CIA and FBI scouring the country for him, and no evil genius to ferret out and foil. Just this stupid book idea taunting him with his inadequacies. He threw the still-full can of beer at a Ponderosa pine twenty feet away and missed it by five.

  Shit!

  He started pacing back and forth, pulling up the mental list of past failures he kept at the ready for purposes of self-flagellation. Kicking pinecones out of his way, he luxuriated in the warm bath of self-loathing that best suited him in his blackest moods.

  Ten minutes later he became dimly aware of a sound that had been building at the edge of his consciousness. Still only half aware, he stopped and turned to look out over the valley floor that lay thousands of feet below. To his astonishment, he saw a helicopter heading straight at him. It was only a quarter of a mile away, and closing fast.

  He backed up and craned his neck upward as the roaring aircraft reached, hovered over, and then descended at the edge of his clearing, kicking up a cloud of dust and pine needles that nearly blinded him.

  Eyes watering, he wondered what new strangeness was afoot, feeling like an awestruck earthling awaiting his first sight of whatever bizarre creatures might emerge from a UFO. Then one man, followed by another, jumped out of the helicopter and walked towards him, crouching under the still-spinning blades. To his relief, he recognized one of them.

  “What the hell are you doing here?” he yelled over the descending register of the engine’s whine, reaching out to shake hands with his former boss. Publicly, George Marchand was the Chief Technology Officer of the Library of Congress. But Frank had learned in the course of his recent adventures that this was the cover for one of the CIA’s top cybersecurity strategists.

  “I want to introduce you to someone,” Marchand yelled back, gesturing to his companion. “This is Len Butcher.”

  Frank took his visitor in as he accepted his limp handshake. The man’s profile ran in a nearly straight line from the tip of his long, bony nose to the margin of an almost white buzz cut. The overall effect was rather weasely. Frank decided the guy was probably some variety of creep, exact type yet to be determined.

  He turned to George, “How did you know where to find me?”

  “It’s our business to know where people like you are,” Butcher interjected. His adenoidal voice slipped neatly into the negative profile Frank was assembling for him.

  “Oh, really? And who might ‘we’ be, not to mention, ‘people like me?’”

  George cut Butcher off before he could answer. “How about we go inside?”

  Frank shrugged and led the way. Behind them, the helicopter pilot strolled around the clearing, checking out the view and looking with curiosity at the field of charred and twisted metal wreckage strewn below him. Flowers and grass were only just beginning to reclaim what must have been a pleasant mountain meadow before some unknown, violent event had burst upon the bucolic scene.

  Once they were seated inside his camper, Frank leaned back and crossed his arms. “So what gives?”

  “Frank, Len works with another government agency. They’re aware of the essential role that you played in cracking the Alexandria Project, and they’re hoping they can recruit you to help track down a new group that’s also proving tough to find.”

  “Thanks for the vote of confidence, but that’s not what I’m up to these days.”

  “That’s what I told Len. But this is pretty important, so here I am. That, and the fact that the Director of the CIA promised the head of the other agency that we would do whatever we could to help persuade you.”

  “What’s the other agency?”

  “That’s not important, Frank. As a matter of fact, you wouldn’t recognize the name of the agency if I told you, which I’m not at liberty to do. As you know, things have changed a lot since 9/11. There are more than a hundred U.S. intelligence units now, within existing agencies as well as stand-alone outfits. None of the new independent units have been publicly disclosed, and this is one of them.”

  Frank turned to Butcher, “So what does it say on your identification?”

  “When I’m working on this project, it says I’m an executive of a computerized voting machine service company,” Butcher said, taking a plastic card out of his wallet and handing it to Frank.

  “Anyway, Frank, that’s why I’m along for the ride, to credential Len for you. Now how about we tell you what this is all about?”

  “Okay, sure. I can at least listen.”

  Butcher leaned forward.

  “So tell me, Frank. Been paying any attention to the upcoming presidential election?”

  “Some. The President’s going to run again, so no drama there. The Tea Party conservatives keep standing up one crazy whack job of a candidate after another. I can’t believe any of them stands a chance of taking a primary, let alone the Oval Office – or at least I hope not. And the mainstream Republicans don’t seem to have any candidates that people are very enthusiastic about.” He hoped Butcher was a staunch conservative.

  “It is an interesting cast of characters, isn’t it? Have you heard any of the poll results, though? What people are saying about them?”

  “No. Why bother? The primaries don’t start until January.”

  “Because those ‘whack jobs,’ as you call them, are out-polling the credible candidates by double digits.”

  “So what? That’s not unusual. It’s mostly just name recognition at this point.”

  “Usually, yes. So how do you explain the fact that Julian Johnson and Roxanne Rollins are way out in front of Vance Cabot and Hollis Davenport?”

  “Who?”

  “Precisely. Makes you wonder, doesn’t it?”

  “Maybe they’re just badly conducted polls. Or maybe they were taken in those candidates’ home states.”

  “No and no. The polls were conducted in major cities across the country by top professionals.”

  “Then their data’s flawed.”

  “Indeed. So what does that suggest to you?”

  “Somebody’s tampering with the poll numbers.”

  Butcher turned to Marchand. “Your boy’s just as quick as you said he was, George.”

  Marchand gave him a dirty look and jumped in. “At this point, we don’t have a clue who’s behind this, but we do believe someone is altering the data on the pollsters’ systems.”

  “Fine. But these are just pollsters – so why does Butcher’s agency, whatever it is, care?”

  “Well, as you may or may not know, the next election will be the first one where just about everyone will be voting on electronic rather than mechanical balloting equipment. In most states, they’ll even be able to vote using their smart phones. People will fill in their ballots in advance, and then just download them at the voting booth. So that makes it pretty alarming that someone’s tampering with poll data. For all we know, if they’re hacking polling systems now, they may try to hack voting systems later.”

  “Okay, I’ll buy that.” Frank turned to Butcher. “But if you’ve got a hundred intelligence agencies plus the FBI to work on it, what do you need me for?”

  “Here’s the thing. We haven’t figured out yet how they’ve penetrated the polling systems, let alone how they’re changing the data. Until we do that, it’s almost impossible to figure out who they are.”

  “Maybe no one has. Maybe it’s employees with security privileges that are changing the data.”

  “It’s not that, either. We had one of our own people input new data, and then read the results. Guess what? They don’t match − what came out is different than what we put in.”

  “So? That just means someone got to the system before you used it. It’s already programmed to change the results.”

  “Sorry. We used a brand new system, stra
ight from the factory.”

  “Then they paid a guy that works for the vendor to change the polling software.”

  “No again. We’ve scanned the code against an earlier version – which does work fine − and they seem to match identically except for legitimate bug fixes.”

  “Then the malware feature was just lying dormant in the older copy, waiting to be triggered by something. Did you check that out? No? Doesn’t your no-name agency have anybody working on this that knows what they’re doing?”

  “Of course they do,” George said. “And so does the FBI. But so far, no luck. There are over two hundred thousand lines of code in the original software, and a lot of bug fixes and updates besides.”

  Sure, Frank thought. And there were also computer chips and firmware that could have been replaced in the servers the polling software ran on. Not to mention software modules that could be reprogrammed remotely, and an Internet connection that would allow the software to call on external databases for information not found in the system’s memory. Any of those vulnerabilities could be the source of the problem. You’d have to check all of those meticulously, one by one. He began to think what tests he’d run in what order to find where the rat was hiding in the maze. It was an interesting problem.

  “So what do you say, Frank?” Butcher said. “Want to show us how much smarter you are than our boys?”

  Marchand watched the interplay between the two men. Butcher might not be a charmer, but he’d figured out mighty quickly which of Frank’s buttons to push to get him to sign on. Or maybe he’d read the file the FBI had put together on Frank a year ago. Of course – that was the explanation.

  Frank frowned. He had to admit he was intrigued by what he’d heard. It sounded like a pretty good hack. It would be interesting to devise a plan to get to the bottom of it, and then see whether it worked.

  But that wasn’t what he was here for. He’d been looking forward to getting away, making a clean break and getting a fresh start. After the revelation of his role in averting the crisis with North Korea, everyone at work thought he walked on water – at least for a while. But his old job was still painfully dull. Just a lot of ho-hum tasks, just like before. It wasn’t long before he felt bored and ignored again.

  The call from a publisher therefore came at exactly the right time. Would he be interested in writing a book about how he had cracked the Alexandria Project? He decided on the spot that he would. The next day he handed in his resignation and put in his order for the customized MountainTamer expedition vehicle – something he could live in off the road for a month at a time. Then he headed out to Nevada to spend some time with his father while he waited for its delivery.

  Becoming a best-selling author wasn’t looking so easy now. And he’d spent all of the publisher’s advance and most of his savings on the MountainTamer and the equipment he’d loaded it up with. Maybe he should be taking this new cybersecurity opportunity seriously?

  “Let’s say I did. What happens next? I just paid a pile of money for this rig and was looking forward to doing some extended touring. And I’ve got this book I’m working on. I don’t want to set that aside.”

  “No worries.” Butcher said. “We know you’ve got this camper set up to let you do whatever you want wherever you want to do it. In fact, we’d like it to look like you’re keeping to your original plans, so as not to attract attention. But we’ll give you up to the minute, unrestricted access to whatever information and resources you need. We’ll even give you a nice business card, just like mine.”

  Butcher slid another card across the table. At the top was the service company’s name and logo, and below it were Frank’s name, a hologram, and an ID number.

  “Big deal. What am I going to do with that?”

  “That’s up to you. It may come in handy doing whatever you decide to do to get to the bottom of things. It’s even programmable – you can be whoever you want, when you want, and your name on the website will automatically update at the same time.”

  “Do I get to wear a funny hat, too?”

  Butcher frowned. “Whatever floats your boat.”

  Frank was pleased that he’d finally gotten under Butcher’s skin. He stood up, took a beer out of the refrigerator and set it in front of Butcher.

  “Have one on me. George, feel like taking the grand tour of my clearing?”

  “Sure.”

  The two men stepped out and walked a dozen paces away from the camper. Across the valley to the west, angry thunderclouds were building above the purple silhouette of the mountains.

  “So what do you think, Frank?”

  “I don’t know. My last experience with the intelligence establishment wasn’t what you’d call a love fest. And those were public agencies with Congressional oversight, not ones that most legislators don’t even know exist. What would I be getting myself into?”

  “I think everything would work out fine this time, Frank. You’d still have complete independence – no one expects you to become an integrated part of Butcher’s team. Last time around showed that’s how you work best. If you’re successful, that’s great. If you’re not, that’s the government’s problem. Any time you felt like it, you could simply walk away. I don’t know whether you’re still making a killing in the online game space, but if not, the money would be really good. Consultants to non-existent agencies aren’t tied to government pay grades or procurement rules, and that service company on the business card has a real office – even a receptionist. Not much else, but I can guarantee you their checks will clear.”

  As a matter of fact, Frank’s second game idea had been a flop, and he hadn’t yet had a third. With his book prospects in doubt, his economic future was looking murky at best.

  “Would I have to report to this guy Butcher? He wouldn’t be my pick for a detailer.”

  “Not a problem. He’s a desk jockey, not a field manager. I can do a little interfering and be sure that you end up with someone you can work with. And you can contact me any time.”

  George waited while Frank brooded, hands in his pockets and staring out across the valley. Intermittent flashes of silent lightning were now illuminating the angry interiors of the thunderheads massing in the distance. Overhead, skittering silhouettes of bats sketched erratic paths across the fading sky as a freshening breeze enveloped him in the exotic smell of dust and sagebrush from the valley below. Wasn’t just experiencing a place like this enough?

  He kicked a pinecone. Well, no. He’d need something to focus on besides the scenery or he’d be climbing the camper’s walls in two days. And it didn’t look like writing a book was going to provide that focus – or an income.

  He looked back at his camper, its windows aglow in the gathering darkness. In what way was this unexpected invitation not a gift? It seemed to be tailor-made to fill the inconvenient void created by his lack of writing success.

  “Okay. I’ll do it.”

  George clapped him on the back. “That’s great. I’ll go tell Len. Judging by those thunderheads, we’d better beat it back to home base unless you want company for the night.”

  Five minutes later, the whine of the helicopter’s engine was receding in the distance. Frank felt his spirits lift as he watched the blinking navigation lights fade. To his surprise, he was happy to be back in the game.

  * * *

  3

  Shelter from the Storm

  Not long after the helicopter’s departure, Frank was on the move, driving carefully down the jeep track through wind-whipped, driving rain, periodically blinded by vivid flashes of lightning. This wasn’t the usual late summer southwestern thunderstorm, where only a few raindrops survive the long descent through dry desert air without evaporating. This was the product of a full monsoon front sweeping up and across from the Gulf of Mexico, the kind ranchers relied on to refill stock ponds and green up
the grass again for their cattle.

  Now that he had signed on with whoever it was Butcher worked for, Frank was anxious to get started, and he wanted a change of scenery to go along with his new objective. It hadn’t taken long to pack up, but by then the storm was breaking over him.

  The jeep track down the mountain was now a cascading sluice of storm runoff, forcing him to allow the heavy truck to ease itself down the steep grade in first gear. The going was different but no better when he reached level ground, where the deep, red clay dust of the jeep track had dissolved into a sludge the texture and color of borscht. He alternated gunning the engine to avoid getting stuck with hitting the brakes to avoid fishtailing off the track.

  The racket of the rain hammering on the roof of the camper was still distracting as he pulled into Silverlode, mud-splattered up to the sills of his windows. The trip to town had kept him on the edge of his seat, and now he was hungry.

  He opted for a saloon-themed restaurant next to the town’s restored, late 19th century Opera House, which looked like the most hopeful option among Silverlode’s meager epicurean offerings. Inside he found a dimly lit dining room and bar populated by a sprinkling of tourists and locals. He took a table and examined the menu he found standing between inverted bottles of ketchup, mustard and barbecue sauce.

  He was trying to decide whether an emu burger was a local attraction not to be missed or a stupid premise to be actively avoided when someone appeared at his elbow. Expecting a waitress, he found a very wet and bedraggled Josette instead.

  “Please, may I sit down?”

  “Of course.” He stood up, flustered.

  “The wind blew my tent apart,” she said. “It is in rags. So I came to town.”

 

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