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Authors: Tom Avitabile

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The Eighth Day (12 page)

BOOK: The Eighth Day
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DuneMist: There was a man and a woman poking around the Krummel house today.
SABOT: Were they police, FBI, or real estate agents?
DuneMist: Definitely investigators of some kind. They had a police escort.
SABOT: Interesting.
DuneMist: I watched from across the street. They left with a computer from the house.
SABOT: That’s a good point. I shall instruct our members to erase all communications.
DuneMist: That would be a good thing.
SABOT: Thank you for this information.
DuneMist: :)
SABOT: Signing off.
DuneMist: TTFN

As Bernard shut down his computer, a flood of thoughts invaded his mind. First, DuneMist must live in Wisconsin because that’s where the Gardening Grandmother lived. Second, if one of his own members had figured that Martha was carrying out his orders, then maybe he should become more proactive.

He rebooted his computer and went to the web site of an Illinois ISP. He decided to open an account and to use the name, address, and credit card number of Terrance Johansen of Decatur, Illinois. Terrance’s letter to the May Company, demanding credit to his card #2314-012312-9090 expiration date 09/30/13, had been mangled and was inadvertently ripped open and resealed with a cellophane tape bearing the words “Received in damaged condition, re-wrapped at Parkerville Station.” It was then sent on its way after Bernard photocopied the letter and the envelope containing Terrance’s return address. The online system required either a phone number for billing confirmation, a debit card, or a credit card. Of those three choices, the easiest identity for Bernard to steal was the credit card. The online registration form accepted the “borrowed” information, and Bernard picked the ISP because they offered a seven-day free trial. Bernard knew that as long as he cancelled the account before the free trial was up, Terrance would never see a bill or even know he had an account opened in his name. Bernard already knew this trial period would last only a few minutes, just long enough to e-mail the chief of police in Madison, Wisconsin, whose address was conveniently located at the bottom of the Madison Police Department web site.

∞§∞

With any international corporation, twenty-four-hour buildings were a necessity. The White House was no exception. Late-night staffers and hangers-on from day shifts, attempting to whittle down the millions of tasks the administration was duty-bound to fulfill, populated the halls and basement apart from the president’s residence. Even chiefs of staff sometimes had to burn midnight oil; it was not unusual for Reynolds to turn off his desk lamp at 12:00 AM. He grabbed his coat and walked down the hall to find Hiccock bent over reams of printouts.

“It’s midnight, Bill.”

Hiccock rubbed his eyes. “There’s something trying to knock on my brain here, but so far …”

“Bill, go home and catch a few winks. Then maybe you’ll hear the doorbell.”

“Do you think this is odd?”

“What?”

“We checked. Martha had a computer. The kid had a computer. Every one of these ‘homegrowns’ had a computer.”

“You think they were all wired up to an organization on the web?”

“No, that goes back to the mole theory. What if they were all recruited, trained, and coordinated on the web?”

“How’s that different from what I said?”

“What if none of them knew it?”

Reynolds sat with his coat over his lap as his mind began to race. “Have you been able to confirm this?”

“That’s going to be tough. Every one of them but Martha is dead.”

“Then where’s this coming from?”

“It’s the only plausible common denominator.”

“Let me see if I follow your thinking. You are alleging that somebody—we don’t know who—is recruiting random people on the web—but we don’t know how. These random recruits are attacking this country—without knowing why. Is that it?”

“Yeah, I know it’s off the charts. But it’s the only scenario that ties together all the loose ends. Could be a whole new method of recruitment, training, and deployment. One that is airtight.”

“So what’s the wife—” Hiccock held up his pointer finger— “ex-wife think about this?”

“She feels there is an external behavioral moderator at work here.”

“Inglese, por favor.”

Just then Janice entered the office rubbing the bridge of her nose and yawning. “I just finished reading all the profiles. These people exhibit a hybrid schism”—she noticed Reynolds and “dumbed down” for his sake—“they all have no connection to their targets and no apparent aptitude in the means of destruction. In my opinion, it’s safe to assume that all these people were aware of their actions but probably would have had no recollection of how or why they did it—or how they knew how to do what they did, for that matter.”

“If that’s true that makes them the perfect operatives,” Reynolds said. “Even if you catch them, they don’t know anything. That only leaves how they are being recruited and trained.”

“That’s why I’ve got that meeting tomorrow with someone who might be able to shed some light on the subject,” Hiccock said.

“Speaking of which, the boss has approved your wild idea of bringing him into this, but for Christ’s sake, Bill, he’s not even in the government. Couldn’t you find a smart guy who’s already on the payroll?”

“Wow, that’s a floater just waiting to be creamed, Ray.”

Reynolds simply smirked. It was too late at night for this.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Pen and Sword

THE EXCLAMATION “PULL!” was followed shortly by an ear-piercing shotgun blast that shattered a clay pigeon. The pieces fell serenely into the Chesapeake Bay. The skeeter, in shooting goggles, ear protectors, duck hunter’s hat, and red flannel jacket, was best-selling author Frank Harris. When he was forty-five, he started fooling around with some military-styled video games and a year later wrote his first thriller, which became a huge hit. At the age of fifty-five, the former bank manager was a multimillion-dollar word machine churning out high-tech spy and political novels. Although Harris never served in the military, when his publisher dressed him up in pseudo military casual attire for the picture on his dust jackets, he looked every bit the part of a retired flag officer. He had handsome features, and the peaked cap covering his balding head made him appear years younger.

He was firing from the jetty that extended into the bay from his twenty-five-acre waterfront estate. Hiccock, standing next to him, recoiled from the kickback as the next blast emptied out of the double-barrel shotgun.

“This is about the terrorists, isn’t it?” Harris asked as he removed his ear protectors and walked over to the gun table.

Hiccock smiled. How could he have expected this guy not to figure it out? “Let’s make believe you didn’t ask that and I didn’t nod, okay?”

“Just like in one of my books. What’s the Washington brain trust think?”

“They’re looking for the ghost of cold wars past. They are so inside that box, a light goes on when you open the door. That’s why I’m here.”

“Generals always lose the start of the next war because they fight it like the last war. After a few licks, they’ll catch on.” Harris wiped down the shotgun and placed it on the table.

“Something tells me the clock may run out before we get off the last shot.”

“Well, I think I know what you’re looking for, but it’s going to cost you.”

Hiccock surveyed the vast accumulated wealth of Harris’s surroundings. A quarter of a mile behind him, knights in armor, forever mounted on stuffed horses, stood on motionless display behind the twenty-foot glass windows of Harris’s armaments room. A Sherman tank was propped up like a statue with a landscaped circular garden surrounding it amidst original Remington sculptures with a few Robert

E. Lee pieces thrown in for good measure. It was Harris’s private homage to man’s largest and longest-running endeavor: war.

“Forgive me, but what else could you possibly need or want?”

“The U.S.S.
Iowa
.”

“The what now?”

“I want one magazine battery, three cycles, nine rounds,” Harris said matter-of-factly as he reset his earmuffs and heaved a shotgun into the ready position. “Pull!” he called to his houseboy, butler, or whoever was launching the clay pigeons, fifty yards downrange from them. The clay pigeon disappeared in a smear of powder. “I get to squeeze ’em off.”

“Let me get this straight, Mr. Harris. You want the United States battleship Iowa for target practice?”

“Each shell weighs 2,700 pounds, is 16 inches around, and can hit a target 20 miles away. Ever hear one of those babies go off as it belches out flame and smoke? What a sight! What a sound!” He gently wiped down his prize shotgun. He picked up a smaller weapon.

“How about a million dollars, a plane, and enough fuel to make it to a sympathetic country?”

“Okay, one cruise missile?”

“I can’t believe I flew down here to negotiate weapons of mass destruction with you!”

“That’s what you need to afford the best-selling author who has everything.”

“Deal. I hope.”

“Trance-inducing visual graphics,” Harris said plainly.

Hiccock smiled. “That’s certainly outside the box. You mean brainwashing by computer?”

“If it was my novel and I was writing it, I would have the bad guys lulling regular people in with hypnotic graphics, the kind only a computer can make. Clicking the mouse would make the graphics swirl and perform. When their mouse click responses start to lag or match a predetermined rhythm, then I’d know they were going under and ready to accept input. All that would be left to do is implant the commands. Maybe by telephone.”

“That is
brilliant
. I’ll order a check of the phone company logs.”

“Yeah, maybe I shouldn’t have told you. It would have made a great book. Well, it’s yours now. Time to feed more fish.”

“Feed more fish?”

Harris picked up one of the target pigeons. “I have them specially made from freeze-dried compressed fish food. Mixed with a little egg, they harden like clay. The minute they hit the water they rehydrate into fish food.” He brandished an Uzi submachine gun. “Watch this.” He smiled at Hiccock. “Pull!” he barked. With the sound of a zipper, the gun spit out thirty rounds per second. The plate was not exactly shattered as much as separated in midair, continuing in the rough shape of a plate until gravity pulled the falling pieces apart. “Neat huh?” he asked with the excitement of a schoolboy.

∞§∞

“Last night they burned the midnight oil as they have for so many nights since the terrible rash of terrorist attacks besieged the country. Still in the apparent center of the government’s efforts to find out who the perpetrators of these horrific events are, stands the president’s science advisor, William Hiccock. Normally the science advisor to the president is a backroom political appointee who the public hardly, if ever, sees. In my exclusive report tonight, we’ll explore how the government is using newer, more scientific, techniques to catch a bad guy and how a former college quarterback sensation turned science advisor is calling the plays…”

Watching in his “eyes and ears” center, a bleary eyed Falad made note of this new face, this Carly Simone reporting. She was sharing intelligence on the “Hiccock” he had heard of when he accused certain Moslem countries of pre-emptive strikes against American corporations trading with the Israelis. He wrote up the content of her report, and noted she was new to the network. He made a note to do a Nexus-Lexus search on her to see where she came from and if she knew of what she spoke.

∞§∞

“We have traced back through the worms we found on Grandma’s hard drive,” Hansen explained as he set up more tests in the FBI’s ECL. “We’ll sign on to the same sites she did.”

“What’s a worm?” Tyler asked.

“Originally it was a mole that hackers planted in your computer to track and retrieve what you’re doing on the web.”

“Like my E-bay, bank accounts, and dirty e-mails.”

Hiccock raised his right eyebrow, “You?”

“Didn’t know I banked online, did you?” she said, winking.

“Now legitimate web sites use a form of them to implant redundant information, images, and personal preferences to make their pages load faster.”

“Oh, like a cookie?” Hiccock asked.

“Only not as passive.”

“So we got a record of everywhere she went on the web?” Hiccock said, trying to follow along.

“Parents love it because they know what sites Junior’s been visiting,” the Electronics Crime Lab tech replied as he pulled up site after site.

Tyler leaned into Hiccock. “Remind me to clean my hard drive when I get home.”

The tech navigated through MyGarden.com. The site recognized Martha and displayed the greeting, “Hello, Martha, haven’t seen you for two weeks. How are the petunias?” It waited for a response.

“So the web site doesn’t really know about her flowers or how long she’s been away?” Tyler said.

“Correct! The web site is reading the worm, the cookie as you say, in her machine. Otherwise the site would require enough memory to remember all of this for every person who logged on.”

“So it’s like a distributed form of intelligence?” Hiccock had some notion of this structure.

“Yes, data are spread throughout the Internet in every user’s machine.”

“Are you finding anything unusual?”

“We’ve run routines all day. It all looks normal. No hypnotic or trance-inducing graphics of any kind have come up. Of course we’ll go through all the content again with a fine-tooth comb.” Hansen didn’t sound in the least bit optimistic.

Hiccock felt a wave of defeat wash over him. “You know, a cruise missile just doesn’t buy what it used to.”

∞§∞

Habibe Al Rassam Assad hated shaving. It was one of so many new skills he had to learn. He and his team members had to pray in private, plan in private, and speak Arabic only when they were in the deep room. That was the name of the room in the house consisting of all interior walls, void of windows and any kind of electronic equipment. He had been training for this for three years. When he was recruited he was told that his mission was to carry out the great will of Allah, that he would be a hero, a man whose name would be taught in Madrassas from Teheran to Indonesia. He and the team were ready and released for action. All they needed now was one critical piece of intelligence.

In the corner of the kitchen there was one cell phone. Constantly plugged in, it had a number known only to General Nandessera. It was intended to be used only once. Now that they were released, one of the team members had to remain in the house next to the phone at all times, periodically checking it to make sure the signal strength bars were showing strong. The long awaited message would be in code. The key to the code was based on the Arabic translation of the American book,
Chesapeake
. The code would be in numbers and written down by hand. Every other number was a page number. The one in between was the ordinal number of a word on that page. A zero anywhere in the code indicated that the previous word’s first letter only was to be used. Any American reference or non-Arabic translatable words could be spelled out by using only the first letters of words ear marked with a zero. It was an old key code style. But only two people knew the book chosen, he and the General. The General himself would code the message and hand place a call to a trusted aide half a world away. That aide would then dial up the cell phone number of the safe house and repeat the series of numbers twice. By using this form of layers or cutouts, there was no chance of any electronic trace or pattern, which could be established by the American NSA; the National Security Agency having the task of listening in on the millions of electronic signals generated every minute throughout the world.

∞§∞

Asaad checked the “package.” It was not really necessary, but he was trained to be a professional and leave nothing to chance. He performed the checkout for the hundredth time and found all the elements in their proper and ready state. He proceeded into the deep room to join his clean-shaven team for afternoon prayers.

∞§∞

Joey Palumbo was reviewing the stuff in his overnight in-box between sips of herbal tea instead of the usual morning coffee that was killing his stomach lately. He hoped to delay the ulcer he was working hard to have just one day farther into the future. Having been added to the very tightly controlled distribution list on all “Homegrown” traffic, he was more than interested in the report he held in his hand. It seemed the Madison PD received an anonymous e-mail from someone who knew Martha Krummel’s computer was now in the hands of the authorities. That in and of itself was unsettling. The e-mail reffered to a Sabot Society but fell short of taking credit for the recent wave of events. The most interesting part of the message, which prickled his cop’s nerve endings, indicated that this would not be the last: “Furthermore, for purposes of verification, this and all future Sabot Society communications would carry the code word “ultimate.” Palumbo picked up the phone to dial Billy Hiccock, but thought better of it. He called the Washington headquarters of the FBI instead.

∞§∞

Tyler seemed to love her Tandoori Chicken and Hiccock was working his Lamb Biryani. One of their evolved passions was Indian food—that still cracked up Bill, considering that Janice almost kicked him out of her office the first time they met just because he had it for lunch—and now they were dining in the best Indian restaurant in D.C. He popped his finger into a properly puffed poori, the steam inside escaping from the hollow bread made the same way it had been for dozens of centuries.

Hiccock was a little depressed and Tyler obviously noticed. “Wanna talk about it?”

“No,” he muttered as he ripped off another piece of steaming bread. “It’s just that, well, I really don’t have a clue about what the hell I’m doing. What makes me think I’m right and Tate and the entire national security system is wrong?”

“I didn’t think it was about that.”

“What did you think it was about?”

“I thought you were just investigating the possibility that you could be right.”

“So you’re saying that they are not mutually exclusive conclusions?”

“Yes, I know what you, what we, are doing is applying scientific methodology to a case that has more than one connection with science.”

“So you’re saying it’s not necessarily me against them. I just happen to represent a different set of assumptions than theirs.”

“Exactly.”

She watched him as he pondered this way of thought for a second and then shook his head. “No, no, nothing scientific about it. I wanted to cream that bastard at the FBI. This is personal!” Hiccock noticed the hint of a smile on Tyler’s face. “How do you do that?”

“Do what?”

“Manipulate me like that?”

“Was I manipulating you?” Her eyes couldn’t have appeared more innocent.

He nodded then tried a little reverse psychology of his own. “There’s something I’ve been meaning to tell you.”

“Yes?”

“I think that you have been doing a great job.”

“That’s very nice of you to say.”

“Well, I know what it’s like to work under someone who never acknowledges your contribution.” Hiccock let it hang.

“How do you do
that
?”

“Do what?”

“Compliment me and insult me in the same breath,” Janice, Bill’s former boss at school, said.

“Was I doing that?” Bill said, certain his eyes couldn’t have appeared more innocent.

“Okay, truce!”

They both focused on their plates. After a minute, Janice looked up. “Do you trust your FBI friend?”

BOOK: The Eighth Day
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