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The Queen pbf-5 Page 15

by Steven James


  She’d been so focused on the roads that she hadn’t even been keeping an eye on the gas gauge and now saw that she had less than a quarter tank. She told Sean, and a moment later passed a sign that announced it was ten miles to Hayward. She relayed her location to her stepuncle.

  “Tessa, in about five miles you should come to a bar called Lindberg’s; just explain that you’re my niece and that I told you to wait there for me, and Larry will let you in. It’ll be on the right. I’m coming to get you.”

  “It’s okay, I-”

  “You don’t need to be out in this weather, not in that car. Pat would never forgive me if I let you drive the rest of the way.”

  “No, seriously, I’ll be-”

  “I’m coming to get you.” His voice rang with the same resolve and assurance that Patrick’s so often held, and in a way it comforted her. “Go to Lindberg’s. Get a burger. Wait for me. I’ll be there as soon as I can.”

  Ew. A burger.

  Not.

  But this wasn’t exactly the time to tell Sean she was a vegan.

  “In this weather it’ll take me at least an hour,” he told her. “I don’t want you on the roads. Be careful. I’ll see you soon. I’ll be driving a blue Ford pickup.”

  Honestly, she didn’t want to be driving in this weather or this car anyway. At last she gave in. “Thanks. Seriously.”

  “I’m on my way out the door. I’ll keep Pat’s phone with me. Call me if you run into any trouble. And let me know when you get to Lindberg’s.”

  “Okay.”

  She hung up and stared out the windshield at the blinding snow.

  Five miles to go.

  At this speed, fifteen minutes. Maybe twenty.

  As long as the stupid car didn’t stall out along the way.

  35

  The Schoenberg Inn

  Elk Ridge, Wisconsin

  Lower level, north wing

  Cassandra Lillo had almost missed locating the radio transmission wires in the duffel bag that Alexei Chekov had dropped off with her team, the bag she’d had Becker drive toward the base in order to lead Chekov away from the hotel. The transmitter was very high end. Chekov obviously knew his stuff.

  And now.

  Now.

  She knew from monitoring the police dispatch frequency that the sheriff’s department had found the knife with Chekov’s prints, the one she’d had Ted deposit in the snow beside the Pickrons’ house immediately following their meeting with Alexei.

  And they already had the helmet that Becker had left in the water this morning before daybreak. On the police radios one of the officers had mentioned that the strap was buckled. How could Becker be so stupid? How could he make a mistake like that! He might be good at stopping loggers and whaling ships, but he was not proving to be especially gifted in this current line of work. Cassandra could only guess that, if the cops were thinking at all, the buckled strap would be enough to tip them off.

  And now a deputy, Bryan Ellory, was unaccounted for, and even more fascinating, an FBI agent who was investigating the Pickron killings had been found beside the Chippewa River.

  He’d been pulseless and unresponsive when the EMTs found him; however, from her scuba diving days, she knew the old adage that “you’re not dead until you’re warm and dead” was buttressed by an awful lot of medical research. Cold water immersion, as well as extreme hypothermia, slow the body’s metabolism, and in numerous cases, clinical death had been reversed thirty, forty, even up to eighty minutes after it had occurred.

  But whether or not this man would survive, she was intrigued by his presence here because she actually knew him. Patrick Bowers was the federal agent she’d met last year in San Diego-in fact, he was the one who’d caught her when she was working on an earlier project.

  But her stay in prison had been relatively short-lived, and she had nothing against Bowers personally. He’d just been doing his job and she’d just been doing hers, but she knew that he typically worked serial homicides, so she found it informative that he’d been assigned to the Pickron murders.

  Agent Bowers might recover, he might not, but in the meantime, the FBI’s involvement was something to keep an eye on.

  And use to her advantage, if possible.

  Law enforcement is like a bull with a ring through its snout. You can lead them wherever you want, if you know the kinds of things they look for.

  Which she did.

  Her father had taught her all about that.

  The original plan had been to keep the police focused on Donnie and only later direct the investigators’ attention to Chekov. Admittedly, however, law enforcement had moved a little faster than she anticipated. Prudently, she’d been prepared for that contingency. An international assassin in the area was just too big a carrot to pass up.

  At first, she’d intended for Clifton to disable Alexei but keep him alive so they could time his subsequent “suicide” appropriately. But when Alexei showed some skills and so easily overpowered Clifton White, she’d decided it would be more profitable to let Chekov go free, and then direct law enforcement toward him while he was on the run. It would be less work for her, less of a distraction. This way it would make for a good old-fashioned manhunt and galvanize law enforcement officers, keep them occupied longer.

  Let Chekov lead the bulls around for her.

  With only one good arm left, Clifton hadn’t been of any further use to her.

  She’d had to put him down.

  Something else her father had taught her to do well.

  And now it was time to move forward.

  Cassandra’s partner had explained it all to her last month. “To hack into a computer system with a USB stick you just insert code that’ll automatically execute when it’s plugged into a computer. Two approaches. One: leave a Trojan horse that’ll spread to any additional USB memory device that’s connected to the computer, and from there-”

  “Spread computer to computer every time a memory stick is inserted.”

  “That’s right. And have them transmit back information. That’s why the military has banned USB jump drives from use on all its networks-but the computers still have USB ports. In this case, we’ll do option two: a self-replicating algorithm that’ll move through the system at the root level until it finds the files we need. We’ll just need one USB device, strategically placed.”

  She already knew that computers respond differently to external hard drives than they do to portable USB devices. Every hard drive has a different individualized code, a sui generis fingerprint that allows programmers to identify when and where a drive is used. But, if you know the fingerprint of another drive, it allows hackers to mask the true identity of a drive by overlaying the original code on top of its own.

  So you can stay hidden.

  Even in plain sight.

  And there was no better person to do that than her partner.

  While she listened to the police dispatch channel, she studied her computer monitor, looking over the submarine information Becker had accessed and downloaded from Donnie Pickron’s home computer.

  Clicking to the Department of Defense’s Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communication System, or JWICS, Cassandra confirmed that the USS Louisiana would be ideally positioned in the Gulf of Oman at just the right time, 03:00 GMT.

  That’s when her partner’s algorithm was set to register the signal. That’s when they had to send the transmission-not a minute earlier, not a minute later. No hack goes unnoticed forever, and the sub’s computers would eventually notice the discrepancies in the code and respond with countermeasures.

  Yes, countermeasures in some areas, but carelessness in others.

  After all, the United States military doesn’t just subcontract weapons systems to civilian contractors, but also hires private security firms and civilian companies for less mission-sensitive services.

  Logistics.

  Food service.

  Custodial services.

  No one in the Navy is excited
about cleaning the heads or emptying the leftover raw sewage that hadn’t been deposited in the ocean from a 150-crewmen sub after three months at sea.

  And so, the US Naval Forces Central Command in the Persian Gulf used a private firm, Khdmat Tjaryh at-Tnz?yf al-B?ryn, the Commercial Cleaning Service of Bahrain, to clean their heads and drain their waste storage tanks. Since those areas were located in the sections of Ohio Class submarines that were designed to allow for civilian access, it wasn’t a security threat. Besides, the cleaning crews were carefully vetted.

  They would need to pass through the galley to get to one of the heads.

  The computers in the galley were used primarily for meal planning and inventorying supplies, but of course, they were networked to the other computers on the sub-if you knew how to access the passwords and authentication codes-something a Navy cryptologist would be able to do, given the right kind of access to the system.

  She put the call through to Bahrain, to her man who was assigned to the cleaning crew of the USS Louisiana while it was in port tomorrow.

  Allighiero Avellino, an Italian expatriate and Eco-Tech loyalist who’d moved to the Middle East two years ago, assured her that everything was still in place.

  “We will finish at the sub,” Allighiero stated in his somewhat stilted English, “tomorrow afternoon at 3:00.” Cassandra knew that was Arabia Standard Time; so here in Wisconsin that would be 6:00 tomorrow morning.

  Yes, good.

  She hung up.

  Checked her watch.

  5:41 p.m.

  She would give it a little more time, then check on her captive in the next room and see how the project was coming along.

  36

  I dreamt.

  And here was my dream.

  Ellory sways in a pool of rippling water spreading out all around me. He’s staring at me from a foot beneath the surface, his eyes open, his face grayish-blue, the color of death.

  He’s mouthing something, trying to speak to me.

  I lift him and he’s heavy and limp, the way only dead people are.

  His face emerges and the water flows, drips off his skin, and he murmurs to me with a voice wet and thick, “It’s cold.” Water gurgles from his mouth. “So cold.”

  I’m repulsed, but I want to tell him that things will be all right, that I’ll get him to shore, that I’ll save him, but he’s sinking and I can’t support him any longer and there’s no shore in sight, just vacant sky and lonely water in every direction “So cold.”

  Then I hear a woman’s voice and she’s whispering my name: “Patrick…” The word comes from another place and collides with the nightmare.

  “Patrick…”

  Suddenly I’m spinning free of my dream, watching Ellory’s face disappear into the water, within the blurry fog of sleep.

  “Cold, so cold.”

  Then the voice again. “Pat, are you okay?”

  It’s Amber and I want to reply, but I can’t seem to open my eyes, move, speak. Anything. A thick weight is pressing on me.

  I struggle to speak, and at last I manage to whisper her name. “Amber.”

  “He’s waking up!” The words are liquid, floating and shimmering around me as if they were real things that could be touched, held, squeezed.

  At last I work my eyes open and see her leaning over me, her face backlit by the sharp, white hospital room light, which forces me to shut them again.

  “Oh, is it good to see you, Pat. Thank God.”

  The soft warmth of her hand rested on mine. She squeezed and it felt both right and wrong to have her touch me in this tender way. Skin on skin, as I awoke from my dream.

  Thinking of my current relationship with Lien-hua, I slipped my hand away from my sister-in-law’s.

  Groggy.

  Still groggy.

  I shifted slightly, worked my eyes open again. It looked like I was in an ICU, although it was small and not as modern as I’ve seen, so I guessed I was at the hospital in Woodborough. An IV plugged into my left arm. A cardiac monitor.

  A woman stood beside Amber. Gray hair, medium build, early fifties, a nurse.

  “Dr. Bowers,” the nurse said firmly, “you are a fortunate man.”

  “Fortunate?” The word was hoarse, didn’t even sound like my voice.

  “That tarp probably saved your life.”

  Tarp?

  “Ellory.” I tried to collect my thoughts. “He was there. The suspect threw him in the river. Did they find Ellory?”

  Neither of them spoke.

  “He went under the ice,” I said.

  “Just rest, Pat-” Amber began, her voice soft, palliative, but I cut her off.

  “Where’s Jake?”

  “He stepped out of the room to get some coffee. He’ll be back.”

  “I need to talk to Tessa, tell her what happened, can I borrow…”

  But then, a realization.

  When Tessa’s father had died last summer, she’d become more emotionally reliant on me, and if I spoke with her right now, she would certainly hear the weakness in my voice. And finding out I was in a hospital would only make her worry more-especially when she learned that I’d narrowly escaped drowning, not to mention freezing to death. Being stuck in the Cities and unable to see me wouldn’t help matters at all. Right now the last thing I wanted to do was upset her.

  Call her later, check in when you’re not so queasy.

  “What time is it?” My eyes flicked around the room, found no clock.

  “Just past 6:00,” Amber said.

  No! That’s too long!

  I tried to prop myself up but was too weak to do it. “Tell me, did they catch Chekov?”

  “Who?” She shook her head. “I’m not sure who that is.” Then she thought for a moment. “I did overhear Jake on the phone, though, telling someone that the UNSUB was still at large. Is that him?”

  That term UNSUB always annoys me. Unlike on TV crime shows, almost no one in the Bureau actually uses the term. Besides in this case, Alexei wasn’t an unknown subject of the investigation, he was known, identified, there was no doubt he was the man who’d killed Bryan Ellory. Amber went on, “They were lucky to find you when they did.”

  I felt myself slipping away again, the thick dreamy darkness sweeping over me. “How did they? How did they find me?”

  “Anonymous call.”

  “Anonymous call,” I echoed softly. There was only one person who knew I was lying beside that river, but why Alexei Chekov would have contacted emergency services to tell them about me, to save my life, was beyond me.

  The sense of weariness was overpowering. “Did you give me anything?” I said to the nurse, who had just finished adjusting my IV.

  “No. Do you know your condition when we brought you in?”

  So sleepy.

  “I need to go.” I fumbled with the IV to pull it out of my arm. Failed.

  “It’s okay,” Amber said, her hand on mine again. “Relax, Pat.”

  “Listen, there was a semitrailer.” I was in a fog. “You have to tell Jake. I only saw it for a few seconds…”

  Focus, Pat!

  “Peterbilt extended cab.” My voice sounded faint, as if it were coming from someone else. “Maroon. Silver trailer. No distinctive markings, heading west.”

  Faintly, I heard the nurse: “He remembers that after seeing it for a few seconds?”

  “Yes,” Amber said.

  “Have him call it in,” I mumbled just before I felt myself slip away again into a thick and timeless dream.

  37

  Tessa could feel her stomach churning at the smell of the bar’s greasy, fried meat. Just knowing that those animals had been ruthlessly imprisoned and then barbarously slaughtered just so they could be chopped up, fried, and eaten was disturbing enough, and now she was caught smelling the evidence of all that brutality.

  But it was too cold to wait for Sean outside, and Larry had been generously bringing her free root beer and french fries, and he was so nice that she w
ould’ve felt way rude complaining about the meat smell, so she kept quiet.

  He started telling her stories about turkey hunting with “that lucky-shot uncle of yours,” and the hunting stories didn’t exactly serve to settle her stomach. She held back from sharing her views about sport hunting.

  Tessa was halfway through her second platter of fries when the front door opened and Sean appeared amidst an angry swirl of snow.

  He looked her way. “Hey, I’m sorry I was so long.”

  “I’m glad you made it.” She stood.

  After a quick hello and thanks to Larry, who still refused to let them pay for anything, Sean led her to the truck. “I need to tell you something important about Patrick.”

  A tremor of uneasiness. “What is it?”

  “Climb in. I’ll explain on the way.”

  The money had been at the dead drop, a fact that was a bit perplexing to Alexei, considering the fact that he was evidently being set up. Now he was on the road in a new vehicle, and the duffel bag containing the cash was carefully tucked in the corner of the trunk to make room for the person he was transporting.

  He was nearly to the house when he received word from Nikolai.

  “The phone number you gave me, it was used to phone the American consulate in Moscow to report that…” But then Nikolai paused and seemed to rethink his decision to share the information with Alexei.

  “To report what?”

  A blank silence. “The death of your wife.”

  “What? How do you know this?”

  “We each have our methods, Alexei. But you must trust me. The number, I confirmed it with my sources.”

  Alexei let that sink in. Valkyrie reported Tatiana’s murder?

  That meant that, even if Valkyrie wasn’t the one to pull the trigger, he-or she-was somehow complicit in the crime.

  Alexei felt his anger, his thoughts, spiral in pin-tight. “Anything else?”

  “I will let you know if there is.”

  “I’ll give you an additional $250,000 if you can get me a name within twenty-four hours.” After offering to transfer half of the amount now, as a sign of good faith, it didn’t take a lot of convincing before Alexei’s contact agreed.

 

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