Read The Bloodline Cipher Online
Authors: Stephen Cole
Will you?
Blackland's fort sat bathed in floodlights beneath the dark Texan skies like a deserted Hollywood set, ringed in by formidable fencing. Jonah watched from the cover of a stand of oak trees in this former ranchland. It was half two in the morning, the constant thrum of the cicadas was wearing on his already frayed nerves, and he wished he was waiting in the getaway car with Tye.
âAnother night, another break-in,' he murmured, scanning the straggly bushes before him. Motti had gone ahead first, to scout out the fencepost-mounted CCTV camera and signal when it was looking far enough in the other direction for the others to join him â one at a time, to keep moving foliage to a minimum. Patch had already dashed over; and any time now â¦
At last a hand came up from the twitching foliage, twenty or so metres closer to the fort â and its first line of protection. The fence was ten feet high, marked into sections by concrete posts and crowned with extension arms from which lengths of razor ribbon were tautly strung. Keeping low, Jonah ran quickly and quietly across the scrub to join his friends. They were dressed all in black, as he was.
âFence looks a bit evil,' Jonah noted, eyeing the vicious-looking razor wire.
Patch nodded miserably. âI've got a bad feeling about tonight.'
âOur biggest problem's the microphonic coaxial cable running between the fence posts parallel to the ground,' Motti explained. âThe cable converts any movement in the fabric of the fence into electrical noise. The noise is analysed by software that's supposed to know the difference between wind, rain, little birdies and stuff, and an intruder breaking in â¦'
Jonah nodded. âI'm glad you said “supposed”.'
âThing is, over time, the sensors get jumpy.' Motti turned away, checking the CCTV camera's position again. âWhich means a lot of false alarms for the security team. Which means â¦'
âThey make the fence less sensitive so they're not being called out for nothing the whole time,' Patch concluded.
Motti nodded. âEspecially when the fence alone is a good visual deterrent â to anyone who ain't us.' Satisfied with the camera's position, Motti stuck his hand up in the air again. A dark, slim figure clutching a bundle in both hands came scuttling from the tree-line towards them. âCon and a blanket. 'S all we need.'
Patch sighed. âI could get by without the blanket.'
Con closed the last of the distance and flopped down on the ground beside them. âHello, boys.'
âThe posts are the weak point, Con.' Motti was wasting no time on pleasantries. âProvided you don't touch, kick or disturb the wire mesh directly attached to those posts, the alarm shouldn't go off.'
Con looked doubtfully at the bundle she was carrying. âAnd the blanket is enough to stop me getting shredded on the barbed wire?'
âIt's got a titanium foil lining,' Motti assured her.
âWell, it's actually made from a titanium-aluminum-vanadium alloy,' added Jonah. âDeals with razor ribbon, muffles the signals from RFID tags ⦠A hundred-and-one household uses.'
âJust sling it over the top and flip over,' said Motti. âYou won't feel a thing.' His eyes were back on the slowly rotating camera. âNow, it's just as we planned. We'll wait till one of the guards passes by â that should leave this section of the perimeter safe from the flatfoots for a bit. Then I'll help each of you over the fence, one at a time.'
âAnd wait for us as back-up out here till we signal,' Con added.
Patch sighed. âWhy can't I be the one who stays out of trouble?'
â'Cause you're our indispensable locksmith who's going to get us inside that fort,' said Jonah. âAnd 'cause your glass eyeball is the safest place to carry the plastic explosive that's going to take care of Blackland's high-gain antennae â so no one will hear our stolen manuscript transmitting.'
âSee?' said Patch. âAll you've got is good reasons.'
âLet's just get on with it,' said Con quietly. âAs soon as the guard patrol goes by.'
Long minutes dragged by sweatily as they waited.
Motti scowled. âThese clowns are crummier than I thought. It's been thirty minutes and no one's shown.'
âI've got
such
a bad feeling about this,' Patch told them again.
âLet's go over everything one last time,' hissed Jonah, feeling unnerved enough already. âYou can never be too sure.'
âOK. Con's the lightest and the most agile,' said Motti, âso she'll go in first. Patch, Jonah, if either of you set off the alarm, give the guards the biggest chase you can â buy Con time to get the manuscript. Once you're inside, stick to the shadows and tread careful. There should be dome cameras inside the grounds â faster and more accurate than the CCTV out here, and most likely hooked up to a Video Motion Detection system.'
Jonah nodded. âActively analysing any pixel changes in the video pictures the cameras transmit. If they pick up a disturbance big enough to suggest an intruder, the alarms kick off.'
âBut we didn't find no records online for Blackland buying infra-reds to help light them,' Motti reminded them. âHe's got this whole ain't-it-pretty-floodlit thing going down, showing off his property, lots of bright light â which means stronger contrast in the shadows. Stick to those and it should be too dark for any pixel changes to matter.'
âWe hope,' said Patch.
âJust get in through the first goddamned door or window you come to, OK?' Motti produced a two-way radio handset. âJonah, you got the RT. Signal when you've got that manuscript. I'll let off a signal flare through the fence, bring security running this way. You'll hear it go boom â that's your cue to make
for the main gates. Tye will smash them open with the pick-up so you can get on board with the goods.'
âAnd meantime you double back through the woods to the road so we can collect you on our way back to San Angelo,' Jonah concluded.
âCinch, innit?' said Patch without enthusiasm.
They went on waiting. Another twenty minutes. Jonah saw a light go out at one window, like the fort was giving them a crafty wink. There was still no sign of security in the grounds.
âI don't like this,' said Motti under his breath. âHow long we gotta wait for these a-holes to do their job?'
Con shrugged. âI say we move now.'
âAnd what if you're still scrambling over that fence when some old guard turns the corner?'
âI will try to land on him, yes?' She looked at Motti. âIt'll start getting light in less than two hours, then the mission will be compromised. Get me in and I'll scout around, then come back and tell you how things stand.'
âGuess we don't got much choice.' He looked at Con. âOK, on my signal.'
Con took a deep breath. Jonah held his, as the camera slowly swivelled away from their intended stretch of fence.
Then Motti broke cover â â
Now!
'
He and Con ran to the nearest fencepost. As Con unfolded the blanket, Motti formed a stirrup with his hands. Jonah watched admiringly as she stepped lightly into it, launched herself upwards and placed the blanket over the razor wire to smother its bite.
Then she calmly pulled herself up like a trapeze artist, barely brushing against the chain links, and flipped herself over. She landed sure and safe while Motti sprinted back into the bushes like a man caught short.
As the camera swivelled back to look their way, Jonah ducked out of sight with Patch and Motti. He strained to hear anything from Con over the measured thrum of the cicadas and the pounding of his pulse in his ears.
Finally her voice floated to them through the shadows beyond the fence. âI think it's clear.'
âYour turn next, geek,' breathed Motti, eyeing the camera. âMove.'
Jonah felt sick with nerves as he followed Motti to the fence, but it was like jumping out of a plane â there was no going back now. You just had to do all you could to survive the fall.
Motti made a stirrup again, and Jonah hoped that he wouldn't put his foot in anything else. He clutched at the razor wire through the blanket â praying it wouldn't take his fingers off â and with Motti giving him a bunk-up was able to haul himself up and over. His foot caught against the fence post and he braced himself for the sound of alarms â but the impact must have been within tolerance. He scrambled down as lightly as he could, hit the ground the other side a little awkwardly. Wincing, he stared around for any sign of security but caught only a glimpse of Con as she turned and ducked behind a large, decorative bush clipped to resemble a pyramid. He staggered over to join her, to wait there for Patch.
Then he saw what Con was looking at, and had a
shock of realisation at what was propped up against the tight leafy wall of the pyramid: the body of a security guard, arms splayed out, his navy uniform soaked with blood.
Jonah's guts twisted like a wrung cloth. The thick stub of a crossbow bolt was protruding from the man's chest.
âThe woman who killed Budd and Clyde,' Jonah blurted, staring wildly all around. âShe's been here. She wants the manuscript.'
âBut how?' Con straightened, her catlike eyes almost accusing. âHow did she know it was here? You said the laptop â'
âMorell must have
told
someone â or what about that guy Saitou he was going to employ. Maybe the bow-woman works with him, or she found out somehow, or â¦' Jonah's voice trailed off as he pointed past the glare of a floodlight to where a tree stood in stark silhouette. A dark figure lay at its feet, as if blown from its branches. Jonah stumbled straight through the bright orange spill, no longer mindful of intruder alarms, adrenaline pushing him forward. Security had been torn apart; here was another guard, peaked cap pulled down over his face, lifeless hands locked uselessly around the bolt in his ribs as if he were still trying to pull it out.
Jonah turned away, sickened. âI think we can guess what's happened to the rest of the patrol.'
âThe question is,' said Con slowly, âhas she been and gone â or is she still here somewhere?'
They both jumped as Patch scrambled through the bushes to join them. âLovely,' he muttered. âI'm
guessing this pair ain't just sleeping on the job.'
âUnless someone tried to wake them by firing a crossbow at them,' said Jonah darkly, pulling his walkie-talkie from his back pocket. âMotti, can you hear me?'
âDon't tell me you found it already?' Motti's voice spat from the handset.
âAll we've found are two dead guards,' Jonah reported.
âAnd trouble,' Patch added, grabbing Jonah's arm, pointing behind him.
Jonah saw that a figure had appeared from round a corner of the fort some thirty metres away. Through the fierce floodlit glare it was impossible to make out detail, but he wasted no time shoving Con and Patch behind the tree in case the intruder was armed.
âMotti, we're not the only trespassers here,' Jonah spoke into the radio tersely. âLooks like the bitch with the crossbow. Get on to Tye â we may need back-up.'
Patch nodded. âOr a ride out in a hurry.'
âRoger that,' said Motti gravely. âWatch your asses. Out.'
Jonah peered out from cover to check on the figure â in time to see it vanishing back round the corner.
âCome on, we must follow,' Con snapped, setting off in the same direction.
âWhy?' Patch hissed. âThis whole thing's gone belly up, Con. You heard Motti, we should watch your arse.
Our
arse, I mean â or arses ⦠Whatever!'
Con kept moving. âWhoever we saw, they might have the manuscript, or know where it is. If we can find out who they are, there may be a bonus for us,
yes? Besides, there's one of them and three of us.'
âYeah, until they shoot a couple of us dead like the guards,' said Jonah pointedly. Even so, he found himself jogging alongside her, and Patch was following close behind, clutching the foil blanket close as if for comfort.
As they rounded the huge stone corner Jonah glimpsed the figure dart in through a doorway. âCould be a trap,' he said, pulling on Con's arm, holding her back. âAmbush. We don't know how many of them are inside.'
âLet's surprise 'em.' Patch carried on running round the outside of the fort walls, and Jonah and Con followed. âWe'll get in through the next door we come to and set our
own
ambush.'
âCould work,' Con admitted.
They soon came to a plain wooden door beside a dark window. âThis is the east wing ⦠so if those plans we saw are accurate,' said Con, âthis should be a utility room.'
While Patch rushed to study the lock, Jonah peered in through the glass and clocked a sink, an industrial-size washing machine and a drier just as big. âBang on, Con. Patch, how'd you rate the lock?'
âFifteen pin,' Patch reported, reaching in his pocket for a bunch of keys. âFive pins on three sides. Good security rating. Unless you get busy with a home-made bump key.'
Jonah kept watch anxiously, praying the Crossbow Girl stayed well away. âA what key?'
âBump. It's like a blank key, cut deep, can fit inside a certain type of lock, yeah?' Patch inserted a key as if
to demonstrate, then pulled a screwdriver from his other pocket. âWhen you hit the key in the lock, only the top pins are bumped up, creating a gap between top and bottom pins. At which point â¦' He twisted the key as he cracked the screwdriver against its base, pulled down on the handle â and the door opened.
âNice work,' Jonah muttered, as Con nudged Patch aside and stepped in first, heading for the inner door. âCon, wait, if Crossbow Girl is armed and ready to go â'
She turned back to him impatiently, pulled down the neck of her black top to reveal a phosphor cap pressed to her collarbone â a small glass ampoule that would ignite with a blinding flash under impact. âThey can't hit what they can't see.'