This will never be a civilized country until we expend more money for books than we do for chewing gum.

Elbert Hubbard

 
 
 
 
 
Tác giả: Jeffery Deaver
Thể loại: Trinh Thám
Biên tập: Bach Ly Bang
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Language: English
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Chapter 24
waiting Sachs’s return, Lincoln Rhyme listened absently as Lon Sellitto explained that none of the other evidence in the earlier cases—the rape and coin theft—could be located. “That’s fucking weird.”
Rhyme agreed. But his attention veered from the detective’s sour assessment to his cousin’s SSD dossier, sitting beside him on the turning frame. He tried to ignore it.
But the document drew him, needle to magnet. Looking at the stark sheets, black type on white paper, he told himself that, as Sachs had suggested, perhaps something helpful could be found in it. Then he admitted that he was simply curious.
STRATEGIC SYSTEMS DATACORP, INC. INNERCIRCLE ® DOSSIERS
Arthur Robert Rhyme
SSD Subject Number 3480 — 9021 — 4966 — 2083
Lifestyle
• Dossier 1A. Consumer products preferences
• Dossier 1B. Consumer services preferences
• Dossier 1C. Travel
• Dossier 1D. Medical
• Dossier 1E. Leisure-time preferences
Financial/Educational/Professional
• Dossier 2A. Educational history
• Dossier 2B. Employment history, w/income
• Dossier 2C. Credit history/current report and rating
• Dossier 2D. Business products and services preferences
Governmental/Legal
• Dossier 3A. Vital records
• Dossier 3B. Voter registration
• Dossier 3C. Legal history
• Dossier 3D. Criminal history
• Dossier 3E. Compliance
• Dossier 3F. Immigration and naturalization
The information contained herein is the property of Strategic Systems Datacorp, Inc. (SSD). The use hereof is subject to the Licensing Agreement between SSD and Customer, as defined in the Master Client Agreement. © Strategic Systems Datacorp, Inc. All rights reserved.
Instructing the turning frame to flip through the pages, he skimmed the dense document, all thirty pages of it. Some categories were full, some sparse. The voter registration was redacted, and the compliance and portions of the credit history referred to separate files, presumably because of legislation limiting access to such information.
He paused at the extensive lists of the consumer products bought by Arthur and his family (they were described by the creepy phrase “tethered individuals”). There was no doubt that anybody reading the dossier could have learned enough about his buying habits and where he shopped to implicate him in the murder of Alice Sanderson.
Rhyme learned about the country club Arthur belonged to, until he had quit several years ago, presumably because he’d lost his job. He noted the package vacations he’d bought; Rhyme was surprised he’d taken up skiing. Also, he or one of the children might have a weight problem; somebody had joined a dieting program. A health club membership for the entire family too. Rhyme saw a lay-away purchase for some jewelry around Christmastime; a chain jewelry store in a New Jersey mall. Rhyme speculated: small stones socketed in a large setting—a make-do gift, until times were better.
Seeing one reference, he gave a laugh. Like him, Arthur seemed to favor single-malt whisky—Rhyme’s new favorite brand, in fact, Glenmorangie.
His cars were a Prius and a Cherokee.
The criminalist’s smile faded at that reference, though, as he recalled another vehicle. He was picturing Arthur’s red Corvette, the car he’d received from his parents on his seventeenth birthday—the car in which Arthur had driven off to Boston to attend M.I.T.
Rhyme thought back to the boys’ respective departures for college. It was a significant moment for Arthur, and for his father too; Henry Rhyme was ecstatic that his son had been accepted by such a fine school. But the cousins’ plans—rooming together, jousting over girls, outshining the other nerds—didn’t work out. Lincoln wasn’t accepted by M.I.T. but went instead to the University of Illinois-Champagne/Urbana, which offered Lincoln a full scholarship (and had some panache back then because it was located in the town where HAL, the narcissistic computer in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, was born).
Teddy and Anne were pleased their son was going to a home-state school, as was his uncle; Henry had told his nephew that he hoped the boy would return to Chicago often and continue to help him with his research, possibly even assist in his classes from time to time.
“Sorry you and Arthur won’t be rooming together,” Henry said. “But you’ll see each other summers, holidays. And I’m sure your father and I can swing some trips out to Bean Town for a visit.”
“That might work out,” Lincoln had said.
Keeping to himself that while he was devastated he hadn’t been accepted by M.I.T., there was an upside to the rejection—because he wanted never to see his goddamn cousin ever again.
All because of the red Corvette.
The incident had occurred not long after the Christmas Eve party at which he’d won the concrete piece of history, on a breathlessly cold day in February, which, sun or cloud, is Chicago’s most heartless month. Lincoln was competing in a science fair at Northwestern in Evanston. He asked Adrianna if she wanted to accompany him, thinking that he might go for the marriage proposal afterward.
But she couldn’t make it; she was going shopping with her mother at Marshall Field’s department store in the Loop, lured by a big sale. Lincoln had been disappointed but thought nothing more of it and concentrated on the fair. He won first place in the senior division, then he and his friends packed up their projects and carted everything outside. Fingers blue and breath clouding around them in the painful air, they loaded the gear in the belly of the bus and sprinted for the door.
It was then that somebody called, “Hey, check it out. Excellent wheels.”
A red Corvette was streaking through campus.
His cousin Arthur was at the wheel. Which wasn’t odd; the family lived nearby. What did surprise Lincoln, though, was that the girl beside Arthur, he believed, was Adrianna.
Yes, no?
He couldn’t be sure.
The clothes matched: a brown leather jacket and a fur hat, which looked identical to the one Lincoln had given her at Christmas.
“Linc, Jesus, get your ass in here. We gotta close the door.”
Still, Lincoln remained where he was, staring at the car as it fishtailed around the corner on the gray-white street.
Could she have lied to him? The girl he was considering marrying? It didn’t seem possible. And cheating on him with Arthur?
Trained in science, he examined the facts objectively.
Fact One. Arthur and Adrianna knew each other. His cousin had met her months ago in the counselor’s office where she worked after class at Lincoln’s high school. They could very easily have exchanged phone numbers.
Fact Two. Arthur, Lincoln now realized, had stopped asking about her. This was odd. The boys had spent plenty of time talking about girls but recently Art hadn’t once mentioned her.
Suspicious.
Fact Three. On reflection, he decided that Adie sounded evasive when she’d demurred about the science fair. (And he hadn’t mentioned its site as Evanston, which meant she wouldn’t hesitate to cruise around the gridded streets with Art.) Lincoln was slammed with jealousy. I was going to give her a piece of Stagg Field, for God’s sake! A splinter of the true cross of modern science! He considered other times when she’d begged off seeing him under circumstances that, in retrospect, seemed strange. He counted three or four.
Still he refused to believe it. He crunched through the snow to a pay phone, and called her house and asked to speak to the girl.
“Sorry, Lincoln, she’s out with friends,” said Adrianna’s mother.!!!Friends…
“Oh. I’ll try her later… Say, Mrs. Waleska, did you two ever get downtown for that sale at Field’s today?”
“No, the sale’s next week… I have to get supper ready, Lincoln. You stay warm. It’s freezing outside.”
“It sure is.” Lincoln knew this for a fact. He was standing at a phone kiosk, his jaw shivering, no desire to pick up the 60 cents that had leapt from his quivering hands into the snow after he’d tried repeatedly to feed the coins into the phone.
“Jesus Christ, Lincoln, get in the bus!”
Later that night he called and managed to maintain a normal conversation for a time, before asking how her day had gone. She explained that she’d enjoyed the shopping with Mom but the crowds were terrible. Garrulous, rambling, digressive. She sounded dead guilty.
Still, he couldn’t take the matter on faith.
And so he kept up appearances. The next time Art was visiting he left his cousin in the rec room downstairs and slipped outside with a dog hair roller—exactly the sort used now by crime-scene teams—and collected evidence from the Corvette’s front seat.
He slipped the tape into a Baggie and, when he saw Adrianna next, he took some samples of fur from her hat and coat. He felt cheap, scalded with shame and embarrassment but that didn’t stop him from comparing the strands with one of the high school’s compound microscopes. They were the same—both fur from the hat and synthetic fibers from the coat.
The girlfriend he was considering marrying had been cheating on him.
And from the quantity of fibers in Arthur’s car he concluded she’d been there more than once.
Finally, a week later, he spotted them in the car, leaving no doubt.
Lincoln didn’t bow out graciously or angrily. He just bowed out. Without the heart for a confrontation, he let his relationship with Adrianna wind down. The few times they went out were stiff and riddled with awkward silences. To his further dismay, she actually seemed upset about his growing distance. Damn it. Did she think she could have it both ways? She seemed mad at him… even while she was cheating.
He distanced himself from his cousin too. Lincoln’s excuse was final exams, track meets and—the blessing in disguise: Lincoln’s rejection by M.I.T.
The two boys saw each other occasionally—familial obligations, graduation ceremonies—but everything had changed between them, changed fundamentally. And of Adrianna neither boy had said a single word. At least not for many years after that.!!!My whole life changed. If it weren’t for you, everything would’ve been different…
Even now Rhyme found his temple throbbing. He couldn’t feel any coolness on his palms but he supposed they were sweating. These hard thoughts, though, were interrupted by Amelia Sachs, striding through the door.
“Any developments?” she asked.
A bad sign. If she’d had a breakthrough with Calvin Geddes she would have said so up front.
“No,” he admitted. “Still waiting to hear from Ron about the alibis. And no bites on the trap that Rodney put together.”
Sachs took the coffee Thom offered and lifted half a turkey sandwich from a tray.
“The tuna salad’s better,” said Lon Sellitto. “He made it himself.”
“This’ll do.” She sat beside Rhyme, offered him a bite. He had no appetite and shook his head. “How’s your cousin doing?” she asked, glancing at the open dossier on the turning frame.
“My cousin?”
“How’s he doing in detention? This has to be hard for him.”
“Haven’t had a chance to talk to him.”
“He’s probably too embarrassed to contact you. You really should call.”
“I will. What’d you find out from Geddes?”
She admitted that the meeting had yielded no great revelations. “Mostly it was a lecture on the erosion of privacy.” She gave him some of the more alarming bullet points: the personal data collected daily, the intrusions, the danger of EduServe, the immortality of data, the metadata records of computer files.
“Anything useful to us?” he asked acerbically.
“Two things. First, he’s not convinced Sterling’s innocent.”
“You said he’s got an alibi,” Sellitto pointed out, taking another sandwich.
“Maybe not him personally. He might be using somebody else.”
“Why? He’s a CEO of a big company. What’s in it for him?”
“The more crime, the more society needs SSD to protect them. Geddes says he wants power. Described him as the Napoléon of data.”
“So he’s got a hired gun breaking windows so he can step in and fix them.” Rhyme nodded, somewhat impressed with the idea. “Only it backfired. He never thought we’d tip to the fact the SSD database was behind the crimes. Okay. Put it on the list of suspects. An UNSUB working for Sterling.”
“Now, Geddes also told me that a few years ago SSD acquired a Colorado data company. Their main scrounger—that’s a data collector—was killed.”
“Any link between Sterling and the death?”
“No idea. But it’s worth checking out. I’ll make some calls.”
The doorbell rang and Thom answered. Ron Pulaski entered. He was grim-faced and sweaty. Rhyme sometimes had an urge to tell him to take it easier but since the criminalist himself didn’t, he figured the suggestion would be hypocritical.
The rookie explained that most of the alibis for Sunday checked out. “I checked with the E-ZPass people and they confirmed Sterling went through the Midtown Tunnel when he said. I tried his son to see if his dad called from Long Island just to double-check. But he was out.”
Pulaski continued, “Something else—the Human Resources director? His only alibi was his wife. She backed him up but she was acting like a scared mouse. And she was like her husband: ‘SSD is the greatest place in the world. Blah, blah, blah…’ ”
Rhyme, distrustful of witnesses in any event, didn’t make much of this; one thing he’d learned from Kathryn Dance, the body language and kinesics expert with the California Bureau of Investigation, was that even when people are telling the God’s truth to police they often look guilty.
Sachs went to their suspect list and updated it.!!!Andrew Sterling, President, Chief Executive Officer Alibi—on Long Island, verified. Awaiting son’s confirmation
Sean Cassel, Director of Sales and Marketing No alibi
Wayne Gillespie, Director of Technical Operations No alibi
Samuel Brockton, Director, Compliance Department Alibi—hotel records confirm presence in Washington
Peter Arlonzo-Kemper, Director of Human Resources Alibi—with wife, verified by her (biased?)
Steven Shraeder, Technical Service and Support Manager, day shift To be interviewed
Faruk Mameda, Technical Service and Support Manager, night shift
To be interviewed
Client of SSD (?)
Awaiting list from Sterling
UNSUB recruited by Andrew Sterling (?)
Sachs looked at her watch. “Ron, Mameda should be in by now. Could you go back and talk to him and Shraeder? See where they were yesterday at the time of the Weinburg murder. And Sterling’s assistant should have the client list ready. If not, perch in his office until he gets it. Look important. Better yet, look impatient.”
“Go back to SSD?”
“Right.”
For some reason, he didn’t want to, Rhyme could see.
“Sure. Just let me call Jenny and check up on things at home.” He pulled out his phone and hit speed dial.
Rhyme deduced from part of the conversation that he was talking to his young son, and then, sounding even more childish, presumably the baby girl. The criminalist tuned it out.
It was then that his own phone rang; 44 was the first number on caller ID.
Ah, good.
“Command, answer phone.”
“Detective Rhyme?”
“Inspector Longhurst.”
“I know you’re working on that other case of yours but I thought you might like an update.”
“Of course. Please, go ahead. How’s the Reverend Goodlight?”
“He’s fine, if a bit scared. He’s insisting that no new security people or officers come into the safe house. He only trusts the ones who’ve been with him for weeks.”
“Hardly blame him.”
“I have a man screening everyone who gets close. Former SAS chap. They’re the best in the business… Now, we went through the Oldham safe house from top to bottom. Wanted to share with you what we found. Traces of copper and lead, consistent with bullets that had been milled or shaved. A few grains of gunpowder. And a few very small traces of mercury. My ballistics expert says he might be making a dum-dum bullet.”
“Yes, that’s right. Liquid mercury’s poured into the core. Causes hideous damage.”
“They also found some grease used in lubricating the receivers of rifles. And there were traces of hair bleach in the sink. And several dark gray fibers—cotton, quite thick with laundry starch. Our databases suggest they match the fabric in uniforms.”
“Do you think that the evidence was planted?”
“Our forensics people say not. The traces were quite minuscule.”!!!Blond, sniper, uniform…
“Now, one other incident set off alarms here: an attempted break-in at an NGO near Piccadilly—that’s a nongovernmental organization. A nonprofit. The office was the East African Relief Agency, Reverend Goodlight’s outfit. Guards came by and the culprit fled. He threw away his lock pick down the sewer. But we had a stroke of luck. Fellow on the street saw where. Well, to summarize, our people found it and discovered some soil on the tool. It contained a type of hop that’s grown exclusively in Warwickshire. This hop had been processed for use in making bitter.”
“Bitter? Like beer?”
“Ale, yes. Now it so happens that we have a database of alcoholic drinks here at the Met. And their ingredients.”
Just like mine, he reflected. “You do?”
“Put that together myself,” she said.
“Excellent. And?”
“The only brewery that uses this hop is near Birmingham. Now, we got an image of the NGO intruder on CCTV and, because of the hop, I thought I’d check the Birmingham CCTV tapes. Indeed, the same man arrived at New Street station several hours later, getting off the train with a large rucksack. We lost him in the crowds, I’m afraid.”
Rhyme considered this. The big question was: Were the hops planted on the tool to lead them off? That was the sort of thing that he could only get a feel for if he had examined the scene himself or had possession of the evidence. But now it was just down to what Sachs called a gut feel.
Planted or not?
Rhyme decided. “Inspector, I don’t believe it. I think Logan’s pulling a double reversal. He’s done this before. He wants us focused on Birmingham while he goes ahead with the hit in London.”
“I’m glad you say that, Detective. I was leaning that way myself.”
“We should play along. Where is everyone on the team?”
“Danny Krueger’s in London with his people. So’s your FBI man. The French agent and the Interpol chap were checking out leads in Oxford and Surrey. They didn’t play out, though.”
“I’d get them all to Birmingham. Immediately. In a subtle but obvious way.”
The inspector laughed. “Making sure Logan thinks we’ve swallowed the bait.”
“Exactly. I want him to think we believe we have a chance to catch him there. And send some tactical people too. Make a noise about it, make it look as if you’re pulling them back from the shooting zone in London.”
“But in fact beef up the surveillance there.”
“Right. And tell them he’s going for the long shot. He’ll be blond and dressed in a gray uniform.”
“Brilliant, Detective. I’ll get right to it.”
“Keep me posted.”
“Cheers.”
Rhyme ordered the phone to disconnect, just as a voice from across the room intruded. “Heh, the long and the short of it is your friends at SSD are good. I can’t get to first base, hacking in.” It was Rodney Szarnek. Rhyme had forgotten about him.
He rose and joined the officers. “innerCircle’s tighter than Fort Knox. And so is their database management system, Watchtower. I really doubt somebody could break in without a massive array of supercomputers, which you just aren’t going to find at Best Buy or RadioShack.”
“But?” Rhyme could see that his face was troubled.
“Well, SSD’s got some security on the system I’ve never seen before. It’s pretty robust. And, I’ve got to say, scary. I had an anonymous ID and was wiping my tracks as I went. But what happens? Their security bot broke into my system and tried to identify me from what it found in the free space.”
“And, Rodney, what exactly does that mean?” Rhyme was trying to be patient. “Free space?”
He explained that fragments of data, even deleted data, could be found in the empty space of hard drives. Software could often reassemble it into readable form. The SSD security system knew that Szarnek had covered his tracks so it had slipped inside his computer to read the data in the empty space and find out who he was. “It’s pretty freaky. I just happened to catch it. Otherwise…” He shrugged and took comfort in his coffee.
Rhyme had a thought. The more he considered the idea, the more he liked it. He looked over at the skinny Szarnek. “Hey, Rodney, how’d you like to play real cop for a change?”
The carefree-geek visage disappeared. “You know, I don’t really think I’m up for that.”
Sellitto finished chewing the last of his sandwich. “You haven’t lived till a bullet breaks the sound barrier right next to your ear.”
“Wait, wait, wait… The only time I do any shooting is role-playing games and—”
“Oh, you wouldn’t be the one at risk,” Rhyme said to the computer man, as his amused gaze slipped to Ron Pulaski, who was closing his phone.
“What?” the rookie asked with a frown.
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