by Andrew Grant
your screwed theyll never let you go
It’s a joke. It’s not aimed at you, I was telling myself over and over, when the door opened and a woman walked into the room. She was very tall—over six feet, even in the flat shoes she was wearing—and very skinny, with shoulder-length auburn hair and a long, pointy nose. I couldn’t help thinking that if you dyed her hair black and gave her a tall hat and cape, she’d sweep the board as a Halloween witch.
I stood up and held out my hand but she brushed straight past me, went to the spare chair, and sat down.
“My name’s Agent Brooking. I’m sorry to keep you waiting, Marc, but I was on the phone. To my boss. He’s not happy, because of you. And you know how these things go. Shit rolls downhill. Which means I’m not happy, either. So, now’s a bad time for you to be playing games.”
“I’m not playing games. I came here of my own free will. Because I want to help.”
“When you come out with shit like that, remember Homeland Security still has agents in the hospital after your performance last night. Now, do you still say you’re not playing games?”
“I do. People tried to kidnap me last night. I nearly ended up in the hospital myself.”
“Yada yada yada. I won’t ask again, Marc.”
“I’m telling you. I’m not playing games.”
The woman flashed a sour smile, then pulled Brian’s Motorola out of her jacket pocket. She straightened a tag attached to its antenna, which showed its number. Then she placed a sheet of paper next to it—a call log—with an entry from that morning highlighted in yellow.
“You acknowledge this is your phone?”
I nodded.
“Do you really need me to do this?”
“Do what?”
She shrugged. Then she took out an iPhone, tapped the screen, and a sound file began to play. It was a recording of the call I’d made that morning. To Homeland Security. My tip-off about AmeriTel.
She let the recording run right through to the end. “No games, huh?”
I was stunned. My plan was unraveling before my eyes. It had never crossed my mind that they’d connect me with the phone call. All the confidence I’d built up earlier had deserted me and I suddenly felt stupid and out of my depth.
“Please. Let me explain. What happened was—”
“What happened was, on top of the six guys I’ve got on the disabled list till goodness knows when, because of you, I had another four tied up all morning on a wild-goose chase. Because of you, Bowman. So, stop bullshitting. And start explaining.”
“The four guys this morning. They weren’t on a wild-goose chase. Unless—you did send them to AmeriTel?”
“Oh, I did. Just like you wanted me to. I swallowed your story, hook, line, and sinker. Only, after going over AmeriTel with a fine-tooth comb, what do you think they found?”
“The virus. The one that was on my computer. AmeriTel’s the only place it could have come from.”
“Nope. They found nothing. No virus. Nada. Zip. Zero. AmeriTel’s computers are as clean as the day they were installed.”
“That’s impossible. There’s no way—”
“Forget this. We know the AmeriTel thing was just a diversion. You won that one. I concede. Now, let’s talk about the virus. Did you create it?”
“No. Of course not!”
“Are you being pedantic with me, Mr. Bowman? Because I may not be a big computer expert like you, but I know enough to understand that a virus as complex as this one would be created by a team of people. What I’m asking is, are you a part of that team?”
“No. Absolutely not. I’ve never written any malicious code in my life. I’m a victim of this virus. I have no idea where it came from. If I didn’t catch it from AmeriTel, I’m completely stumped.”
“Oh, I doubt that. I doubt that very much. See, our programmers have been working around the clock, picking the virus apart. They’ve got a ways to go, granted. I’m not saying we know everything about it. But we know what it’s designed to destroy. A particular combination of very specific machines. A combination that exists in only one place on earth. And unless the virus finds that exact combination, it lies dormant. Which makes it almost impossible to detect.”
“Like Stuxnet?”
“Just like Stuxnet. Only this virus isn’t aimed at Iranian nuclear centrifuges. Its target is the White House.”
Thursday. Lunchtime.
TWO WORDS WERE BOUNCING AROUND INSIDE MY HEAD. Collateral Damage.
They were words I’d only read before. In relation to hostage rescues in faraway, train wrecks of countries or drive-by shootings in the written-off, gang-ridden neighborhoods of distant inner cities. Dramatic events. Sometimes exciting. Usually tragic. But always completely divorced from my own life.
Until now.
Until I’d fallen down a rabbit hole and woken up, mute, in an alien universe. The virus on my computer was akin to Stuxnet? That was so far out of my league I could hardly comprehend it. Stuxnet was a bleeding-edge cyber weapon, used to cripple a foreign enemy’s nuclear arsenal. Something from a world where a single misstep could mean all-out war. It could bring death and destruction on an unimaginable scale. Not the loss of a wife. A job. A new product. Another painting. What chance did I have, dealing with stakes like these?
Was I destined to become collateral damage myself?
It was a holding cell I’d been thrown in after the interrogation had come to an end, rather than a desert hideout. And they were accusations that were being fired at me, rather than bullets. But I was boxed in tight. I had McKenna on one side, sniffing around AmeriTel. Brooking on another, chasing down this insane plot. Then there was Peever—wherever his loyalties might lie—and the mystery guys on motorcycles completing the square. Carolyn had abandoned me in favor of her precious career—maybe even helping to jam me up in the first place—so she wasn’t about to raise the alarm. No SEAL team was about to swoop down and rescue me. And how could I free myself, with the damn computer virus linking me to all of them like an unbreakable chain?
Worst of all, it was my own fault I was in that cell. I couldn’t believe my plan had gone off the rails. What kind of idiot was I? I’d been certain the virus had come from AmeriTel. Nothing else made any sense. How could I have been so wrong?
I ran through the possibilities again, but nothing had changed. I was still convinced. It had to be AmeriTel. Unless—could Brooking have been lying to me? Could she have not sent the other agents there, after all? Or could they have missed it? If they were regular field agents, would they even know how to search for a virus? Particularly a new kind. One that everyone outside a specialized lab had missed. I was kicking myself for not questioning her more closely about that, but she’d thrown me for a loop with all her accusations.
I lay down on one of the benches that were bolted to the cell walls and tried to think. My performance in the face of Brooking’s onslaught was spilled milk. There was no point crying over it. I’d just have to try to do better next time. That was my mantra with my work. Always make the next thing better than the last. Like my new project. It was going to—It was going to do nothing. Not for me, anyway. Not after the prototype had been stolen. My only copy had been deleted. And I was locked up, instead of sitting at my keyboard rebuilding it.
Wait. Deleted. Was that the answer? The prototype had been deleted from my computer by the time I came downstairs on Tuesday morning. Could the virus have been deleted from AmeriTel’s system by the time the agents went there today?
If the virus was designed to attack the White House, there was no point in it being on AmeriTel’s corporate network. But Peever had mentioned the ARGUS node that was in the same building. Maybe someone was planning to use that as a conduit? I didn’t know how it was all connected—the topology was top-secret—but it was reasonable to assume that the President would want access to the most sophisticated intelligence system in the world. So if the ARGUS system was infected, could the President’s own systems—at
the White House, and wherever else he may be—also be infected?
Whoever was behind this must have known the virus had spread to my home computer. Which is why they’d had it stolen. They never wanted that particular computer to see the inside of a police lab. They couldn’t risk someone finding any signs of infection. But my laptop had slipped through the net. It had already disappeared into the parcel carrier’s system. It had accidentally become invisible in exactly the way I’d been accused of hiding it.
It made perfect sense.
I was off the bench and halfway to the bars at the front of the cell, ready to yell for Brooking, when my heart sank again. My theory wasn’t enough to put me in the clear. It only accounted for what had been done. Not who had done it. She’d still believe I was involved.
I sat back down, and another sickening possibility hit me. Another reason for the agents not having found the virus at AmeriTel. Who’s to say they actually looked for it? They might have ignored it on purpose. Or they might have found it, and covered it up. The dominoes of suspicion were tumbling in my head now, one after the other. Brooking could be behind everything. And Brooking could be working with Peever. They could be lining me up to take their fall.
No. Brooking and Peever couldn’t be behind everything. They could be framing me for the virus. They could be pulling the strings at AmeriTel. But they couldn’t be betraying my work to Karl Weimann. And they hadn’t sold me out to boost their own careers.
Only one person had done those things.
Carolyn.
But what the hell kind of game was she playing? And who was she playing it with?
Thursday. Afternoon.
THERE WERE NO WINDOWS IN THE CELL. THERE HADN’T BEEN ANY in the interview room, either. That meant I hadn’t seen daylight since I stepped inside the building.
I didn’t have a watch. Or a cell phone. And I couldn’t see a clock, even if I went to the front of the cell and peered all the way down the corridor in both directions, craning my neck around so far it hurt.
I knew because I’d tried four times.
I understood, rationally, that I could only have been at the station house for a matter of hours. But emotionally, not knowing the time was killing me. There was too much I didn’t know. All the unanswered questions were multiplying and combining and braiding themselves together like a rope around my chest. It was wrapping itself tighter and tighter around me, so hard I was struggling to breathe. I’d never been claustrophobic before, but all of a sudden I was desperate to leave that cell. I wanted a lawyer. I wanted answers from my wife. But more than anything, I wanted out. No amount of school or college or work experience or marriage can prepare you for getting locked up, on your own, for something you didn’t do.
After twenty minutes I heard a sound in the distance. An alarm. I sat up, and for a moment I thought I could smell smoke. Then I was sure I could. Smoke. Which meant fire. In a building I was locked inside.
I grabbed the bars at the front of my cell and heaved against them with all my strength, but they wouldn’t budge. I yelled for help, but the only answer that came was from a disembodied, automated recording:
Attention. The fire alarm in this facility has been activated. This is not a drill. You are in no immediate danger. Go to the back of your cell and stand by for further instructions. You will soon be evacuated in accordance with police department emergency procedures. I repeat, you are in no immediate danger. Atención …
The message alternated between English and Spanish, and seemed to be on a perpetual loop. It was never reassuring—not even the first time I heard it—and before long it had become so annoying I was almost more eager to get away from it than I was to escape any flames.
Then, without warning, the announcement died mid-sentence and a uniformed officer appeared on the other side of the bars. A huge, stocky guy with the kind of overdeveloped chest muscles that prevented his arms hanging straight down at his sides.
“Turn around,” he ordered. “Face the wall. Walk forward till your nose is touching the bricks. Good. Hands behind your head. Lace your fingers together. Good. Now, do not move until I tell you. Try anything cute, and I’ll knock you out and leave you to burn. Are we clear?”
“Crystal.” The smell of the smoke was getting stronger by the second, so I wasn’t about to waste any time.
I heard the cell door open, then the officer cuffed my hands behind my back, spun me around, and drove me forward by jabbing something hard into my ribs. Then he steered me along the corridor, out through an emergency exit, and into the parking lot.
It was a relief to be outside, away from the cramped cell, but I didn’t have much time to enjoy it. The air wasn’t exactly fresh—exhaust fumes from dozens of vehicles were mixing with a plume of oily smoke that was rising from somewhere near the center of the building and blowing in our direction. And the whole area was a frenzy of activity. Scores of people—civilian aides as well as uniformed officers and plainclothes detectives—were heading to their designated assembly zones, and the crews from half a dozen fire trucks were hurrying in the opposite direction, loaded down with hoses and other pieces of equipment.
The officer took me to the far side of the parking lot, away from the melee. I realized we were heading toward a cluster of four trucks. They were lined up a few feet apart, with their rear doors facing the building. The trucks’ cabs looked standard, but the bodywork was tall, square, and utilitarian, like the kind the network engineers from AmeriTel use. Except that instead of a corporate logo painted on the side, these had DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS PRISONER TRANSPORT stenciled in harsh, black letters.
The officer gestured to the truck at the end of the line.
“Where are you taking me?”
“Nowhere.” The officer opened the rear door and shoved me toward the little step below it. “This is just to keep you out of harm’s way till we get the all clear from the fire chief. Then you go back in the station house.”
Inside the truck there was an empty space about three feet wide, then a wall made of metal mesh, which formed the mobile cell itself. The officer reached past me and pushed open a small door in its center, then jabbed me with his nightstick to encourage me to go through. He didn’t release the handcuffs, but if he had, I bet I could have touched both sides of the vehicle without moving. I had the choice of a narrow metal bench on each side to sit on. There were no windows, and once the outer door was closed it looked like the only light I was going to get would have to find its way through a rectangle of opaque Plexiglas in the roof.
“I thought it was, out of the frying pan, into the fire,” I said. “Not the other way around. Look at this place. How long will I have to stay in here?”
“Till I get the green light on your regular cell.”
“When will that be?”
“How should I know?” He stepped back and locked the mesh door. “Do I look like a firefighter to you?”
The outer door banged shut, and after standing in the semi-darkness for ten or fifteen seconds I sank down onto the right-hand bench, resolving to make the best of the situation. I was still wondering exactly how to do that when I heard a door slam ahead of me, in the truck’s cab. Almost simultaneously the other cab door slammed, a little harder. Then the whole truck shook for a moment before settling back into an uneasy, coarse rumble. Someone had started the engine. I figured they must need it to power some kind of equipment. A heater would be nice. Or a light. But I was out of luck.
Instead, the truck started to move.
We reversed, turning in a wide, lazy arc, then lurched forward abruptly enough to tip me off my perch. The farther we got from the station house the faster we went, and I was beginning to feel seriously sorry for myself—pitching and rolling on the hard metal floor—when all of a sudden the truck swung hard to the right and braked to a halt. Nothing happened for a few moments, then my enclosure was flooded with light as the rear door swung open. The officer who’d led me to the truck appeared at the top of the step,
leaned in to unlock the mesh door, and gestured for me to slide over to him.
“Turn around.” He took a smaller key from a pouch on his belt. “Cuffs.”
“Where are we?” I massaged my wrists. “Why did we leave the station house?”
“Ask the other guy.” The officer squeezed past me and sat on the right-hand bench. “Go on. Get out.”
I climbed down from the truck, struggling to believe what had just happened. And when I saw who was waiting for me at the base of the ladder, the situation didn’t make any more sense.
It was Agent McKenna.
Thursday. Late afternoon.
MCKENNA EASED THE TRUCK BACK OUT ONTO THE ROAD AND was surprisingly gentle with the gas until we were safely around the next bend.
“What’s going on?” I asked, as we began to pick up a little speed. “Why did we leave the station house?”
“You were in danger. It wasn’t safe for you there.”
“Why not? What kind of danger?”
“I’ll explain later. There’s something I need to show you.” McKenna winced as the truck’s front wheel hit a huge pothole. “Thanks for getting me into that car last night, by the way. You’ve still got credit in the bank for that, no question. I’m just sorry we had to leave you behind. That wasn’t part of the plan. Where did you go?”
“I found a place to crash.” It struck me that I liked McKenna, in a strange kind of way. I wanted him to respect me, so I was in no hurry to confess how dismally my scheme to clear my name had worked out. “How’s your head? If I’d hit the ground like you did, I’d still be out cold.”
“It’s fine. It looked worse than it was.”
“Agent Brooking said you were still in the hospital.”
“Agent Brooking has a habit of exaggerating.” He winked at me. “Anything that woman tells you, take with a pinch of salt.”
“And the accusations she throws around. Does the same go for them?”
“Definitely. First sign of trouble she starts slinging mud, and watches who it sticks to. Not scientific, but gets her results, I suppose. She’s tossed a little in your direction?”