Read Mortal Crimes: 7 Novels of Suspense Online
Authors: J Carson Black,Melissa F Miller,M A Comley,Carol Davis Luce,Michael Wallace,Brett Battles,Robert Gregory Browne
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Crime
“I know that. Namibia has its own history of apartheid. But you’re not one of them. Your best friend, the one that was killed, he was a black man.”
“You know what I think?” Ian asked. “I think you’re trying to justify trusting me. I think you’re desperate and so you’re following a hunch.”
“Maybe I am.” His tone was defensive. “What choice do I have? I love this country and I’ll do whatever it takes to save it.”
Ian found himself inspired by Ikanbo. “Fine, I’ve tried everything to talk you out of it. Nothing else I can say, except that I’ll do it.”
“Good.” He dropped his cigar and stomped it out. “Now let’s get out of here. Yesterday, when we were closing in on your hiding place, one of my men spotted a plane circling overhead. One of your unmanned spy planes, I think.”
“A Predator drone,” Ian said. He looked immediately skyward, but of course he saw nothing but a vast, star-speckled expanse. Even in daytime, the Predator could loiter miles away, unseen and unheard.
If Ikanbo was right, it was a bad sign. Armed with a Hellfire missile, the Predator could attack their caravan from afar. More likely, it would fly at a distance, try to find out where they were going, what other forces they could marshal in defiance of the coup plotters.
“Your Chinese friend won’t be happy if we stumble into their camp already tracked and watched by American forces.”
“Then we’d better not tell him,” Ikanbo said.
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
Anton Markov burned across the Atlantic Ocean as the sole passenger of an SR-91 Aurora, an aircraft that officially didn’t exist, but had replaced the SR-71 Blackbird, which no longer flew missions. The Aurora was capable of speeds up to Mach 5, but that speed would have required an additional refueling due to a higher burn rate, which he could not arrange.
Just under Mach 4 was the fastest he could manage, but that would be fast enough. It was the equivalent of a blitzkrieg behind enemy lines, to arrive before he could possibly be expected.
At such galloping speeds they outpaced the rotation of the earth itself and by the time he landed at Andrews Air Force Base, Markov could see the glow of the setting sun in the West.
He’d left his other agents to arrive by commercial flight tomorrow, under false passports. The other two men didn’t know what this was about, and didn’t ask. Nevertheless, when Anton called his friends at the NSA in Fort Meade, and at Langley, he put the two men on his surveillance list. He needed to be sure that they wouldn’t make ill-advised calls, emails, or text messages.
Markov had a company car waiting at the base, together with two more agents. They were older men who had served with him on missions in Beirut and Nairobi back in the old days. Both men had retired to desk jobs, as had Markov himself, but he knew he could trust them.
He made a phone call as soon as he reached the outskirts of Washington. His friend Dave Tilton at Langley picked up.
“Give me a location, Dave.”
“How about GPS coordinates?”
“That will do.”
Dave read the coordinates: “18S UJ 23480632.”
The number sounded familiar. “Is that Department of the Interior property?”
“Exactly. The subject is heading due east on foot, right by the Washington Monument. Travelling slowly, maybe talking to someone, maybe on the phone.”
“Excellent,” Markov said. “Stay by the phone. I’ll be there in five minutes and I’ll need an update.”
He hung up and turned to the other two agents. One was driving, the other sat in the back seat.
“It’s time to brief you,” he said. “Let me start with a warning. This might be a lethal engagement.”
________
Sarah Redd thought she was being followed. The impression had been building for two days. More than once, while in a restaurant, or coming out of her offices on the Mall she would turn to see someone looking away, or ducking around the corner. Once, she had a pair of agents with her—younger men, faster than she was—and she sent them from the car first, but they returned shortly, not having seen anything. She wasn’t afraid, not of physical attack. If the stalker meant to kill her, he could have found a dozen opportunities while she was in public, exposed. What she wanted was to lure him into the open, figure out who was watching her, find out if she was part of an internal investigation.
And so, when she left the meeting with the president, she didn’t take a car, but walked across the Mall, alone. If she got to the Capitol Building without seeing anyone, she’d catch a taxi.
It was late afternoon, almost evening, and people tossed footballs or set up picnics. Hundreds of tourists strolled between the monuments or came out of the museums of the Smithsonian, as they closed.
The meeting at the White House had gone well, she thought. The President had given her authorization to call in SOCOM resources in support of CIA operations on the ground. What he had in mind, of course, was surveillance and search and rescue operations.
Sarah had other plans. She could justify the military action after the fact with carefully concocted evidence. Terrance Nolan could help. And Chang? He wouldn’t care, so long as she could give him some cool technological puzzle to solve or new toys to play with.
The Secretary of Defense was the problem. It had been an uneasy agreement, her needs for support slowly escalating until the entire Djibouti base was put on alert. But she had something on him. More than something. Everything.
She’d stopped the Secretary of Defense on the way out of the White House, explained what she needed, listened patiently to his best, angriest retort, then handed him a manila envelope with a photo of the portly Defense Secretary spread-eagled in leather with a half nude dominatrix kneeling between his handcuffed legs on a bed.
The Secretary shoved the photo back into the folder with shaking hands. He looked around the front lawn of the White House with a horrified expression, as if terrified of who else might be watching.
“Not that it’s any of my business,” Sarah said, “but I find myself wondering if your mistress is a transsexual. There’s something rather masculine about her jaw line…”
She laughed out loud at the memory, both of the ridiculous photo itself and of the Secretary of Defense’s reaction. As expected, that proved the end of negotiations. He capitulated on every one of Sarah’s demands.
Her phone started to ring. It was Chang. “Sarah Redd speaking.”
“I can’t get hold of Markov,” he said. “And I need your permission to try something.”
“What is it? Can it wait?”
“I found a pair of Predators at our base in the Caprivi Strip with sensor arrays that can broadcast implant commands. Those things have a long range, we can send them back and forth over likely routes in Namibia until we find the subject.”
Sarah groaned. “You are so far behind events; you’re just wasting my time. In the first place, the subject is dead.”
“He is?”
“Yes, Markov killed him and is bringing him back to the States even as we speak.”
“Hold on one second,” Chang said. The sound of typing on a keyboard came from the other end.
“I’m kind of busy.” A long pause. “Chang?”
“The thing is,” Chang said as he continued to type, “his implant made contact through an NSA computer yesterday. It was a passive active request packet.”
“Which means what, exactly?”
“In this case, the implant was sending out an error message and as such didn’t require a full sequence initialization. If required software is present, the implant will initiate contact, send out the error code so we can debug. Nobody…”
She didn’t understand half of what he was talking about. “What kind of error message? That the subject was dead?”
“No, that doesn’t disable the implant. In this case, it gave a battery failure message. The implant itself can run on auxiliary power for a couple of weeks before we need to insert a new battery.”
“I thought the battery wasn’t supposed to fail.”
“It wasn’t, but if your man is dead, like you say, it could have been damaged or destroyed by whatever killed him. A bullet, or some other trauma.”
“Ah, I see.” Sarah felt relieved. For a moment she was growing worried that Markov had not given her the full account of events. She should have known better. Markov was a good soldier, did what he was told.
“The only question is why and how the implant established contact in the first place,” Chang said. “Someone must have been trying to read its data, but I didn’t think Markov had any reason to do that.”
“He didn’t.” The nervous feeling returned.
“Then it had to be Dr. Nolan.”
“I thought you locked her out of the system,” Sarah said.
“I did, but so what? This is the implant sending a message to us, not the other way around. Hold on just a second, I’m trying to hack NSA to find out more.”
“Can you do that?” she asked.
“I came from NSA, remember?”
“But why did the NSA have this contact?” she asked. “That’s something else that doesn’t make sense to me.”
“I don’t know. I assumed that you or Markov were trying to hide something from me. I was going to dig into it when I had a few minutes.”
She waited a long, agonizing minute while Chang typed away on the other end of the line.
“Okay, I’ve got it. It was Markov. He sent a huge, compressed file to the NSA, received a data stream back. It’ll take a day or two to figure out what he saw unless I can find out which server it was routed through.”
“How could it have been Markov?” Sarah asked. “What on earth does he think he’s doing? He didn’t have the equipment or the technical know-how.”
Chang ignored the question. “Ooh, this is very interesting. Wow.”
“What? What are you talking about?”
“The data didn’t come from Ian Westhelle’s implant. It came from Kendall Rose.”
The news dropped her back on her heels. “How is that possible?”
“Which means,” Chang said, ignoring her question again, “that both Kendall’s implant and Ian’s implant were in the same room at the same time. Someone—had to be Dr. Nolan—accessed Kendall’s implant and meanwhile, Ian’s implant, in the room, sent out a distress call that found its way to me.”
“Again, I don’t understand. None of this is possible. You must have made a mistake somewhere along the line.”
“You remind me of this guy I used to work with,” Chang said. “Whenever his software was FUBAR, he would blame it on a bug in the compiler. You may not like the conclusion, but the data never lies.”
Sarah felt her blood pressure rising. “Have you ever heard of a software guru called the Almighty?”
“Heard of him?” There was awe in his voice. “Only worship the guy and crib from his code whenever I can. He disappeared a while ago. Maybe he retired?”
“He didn’t retire, Chang. We retired him, understand me? We had to put him somewhere where he wouldn’t be a danger to us or himself. He was one of the casualties of that unfortunate incident at the psychiatric ward in Utah. A bad death. Very ugly.”
Chang was silent on the other end.
“Now spell it out for me. Who is responsible for this?”
When Chang spoke again, the arrogance had fallen away from his voice. He sounded meek, almost. “There’s only one way to put these things together. Dr. Nolan accessed Kendall’s implant, Markov gave her authorization to interpret the data. Ian is with them, or at least they’ve got his implant. I believe they’ve disabled Ian’s power supply, but I don’t believe he’s dead.”
Sarah found it hard to breathe.
Markov
. He’d doublecrossed her.
“So can I do it?” Chang asked. “Sarah, you there?”
“Do what?” she managed at last.
“Can I have those Predators? Try to find and take control of Ian Westhelle. I put in a few modifications while he was in the asylum, but it doesn’t seem to be working yet. If we want to try and use the implant, we’ve only a couple of weeks at most before the implant fails from lack of power.”
“In two weeks it will be over,” she said. “In two
days
it won’t matter. Yes, go ahead, stop him if you can. Call the Secretary of Defense, priority ‘urgent’ and give him the password, which is uhm…’leather codpiece’ and he’ll give you whatever you need.”