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Captain Bernstein continued, "Only it looks like he must've thought that Fowler was the killer. He was blond and wearing a denim jacket. Those denim fibers crime scene found on Lara Gibson must've been stuck to the knife the killer bought from Fowler. Anyway, while Andy was busy cuffing Fowler, a white male came up behind him. He was late twenties, dark hair, navy blue suit and carrying a briefcase. He stabbed Andy in the back. The woman went to call for help and that was all she saw. The killer stabbed Fowler to death too."
"Why didn't he call for backup?" Mott asked.
Bernstein frowned. "Well, now, that was odd - we checked his cell phone and the last number he'd dialed was to dispatch. It was a completed three-minute call. But there was no record of central receiving it and none of the dispatchers talked to him. n.o.body can figure out how that happened."
"Easy," the hacker said. "The killer cracked the switch."
"You're Gillette," the captain said. He didn't need a nod to verify his ident.i.ty; the tracking anklet was very evident. "What's that mean, 'cracked the switch'?"
"He hacked into the cell phone company's computer and had all of Andy's outgoing calls sent to his own phone. Probably pretended he was the dispatcher and told him a squad car was on the way. Then he shut down Andy's phone service so he couldn't call anyone else for help."
The captain nodded slowly. "He did all that? Jesus, what the h.e.l.l're we up against?"
"The best social engineer I've ever heard of," Gillette said.
"G.o.ddamit!" Shelton shouted at him. "Why don't you just can the f.u.c.king computer buzzwords?"
Frank Bishop touched his partner's arm, said to the captain, "This'd be my fault, sir."
"Your fault?" Captain Bernstein asked the thin detective. "What do you mean?"
Bishop's slow eyes moved from Gillette to the floor. "Andy was a white-collar cop. He wasn't qualified for a takedown."
"He was still a trained detective," the captain said.
"Training's a lot different than what goes down on the street." Bishop looked up. "In my opinion, sir."
The woman who'd accompanied Bernstein stirred. The captain glanced at her and then announced, "This is Detective Susan Wilkins from Homicide in Oakland. She'll be taking over the case. She's got a task force of troopers - crime scene and tactical - up and running at headquarters in San Jose."
Turning to Bishop, the captain said, "Frank, I've okayed that request of yours - for the MARINKILL case. There's a report that the perps were spotted an hour ago outside a convenience store ten miles south of Walnut Creek. It looks like they're headed this way." He glanced at Miller. "Steve, you'll take over what Andy was doing - the computer side of the case. Working with Susan."
"Of course, Captain. You bet."
The captain turned to Patricia Nolan. "You're the one the commander called us about, right? The security consultant from that computer outfit? Horizon On-Line?"
She nodded.
"They asked if you'd stay on board too."
"They?"
"The powers-that-be in Sacramento."
"Oh. Sure, I'd be happy to."
Gillette didn't merit a direct address. The captain said to Miller, "The troopers here'll take the prisoner back to San Jose."
"Look," Gillette protested, "don't send me back."
"What?"
"You need me. I have to--"
The captain dismissed him with a wave and turned to Susan Wilkins, gesturing at the white-board and talking to her about the case.
"Captain," Gillette called, "you can't send me back."
"We need his help," Nolan said emphatically.
But the captain glanced at the two large troopers who'd accompanied him here. They cuffed Gillette, positioned themselves on either side - as if he himself were the murderer - and started out of the office.
"No," Gillette protested. "You don't know how dangerous this man is!"
Another look from the captain was all it took. The troopers escorted him quickly toward the exit. Gillette started to ask Bishop to intervene but the detective was elsewhere mentally, apparently already on his MARINKILL a.s.signment. He stared vacantly at the floor.
"All right," Gillette heard Detective Susan Wilkins say to Miller, Sanchez and Mott. "I'm sorry for what's happened to your boss but I've been through this before and I'm sure you've been through it before and the best way to show that you cared for him is to apprehend this perpetrator and that's what we're going to do. Now, I think we're all on the same page in terms of our approach. I'm up to speed on the file and the crime scene report and I've got a proactive plan in mind. The preliminary report is that Detective Anderson - as well as this Fowler individual - were stabbed. Cause of death was trauma to the heart. They--"
"Wait!" Gillette shouted just as he was about to be led out the door.
Wilkins paused. Bernstein gestured to the cops to get him out. But Gillette said quickly, "What about Lara Gibson? Was she stabbed in the chest too?"
"What's your point?" Bernstein asked.
"Was she?" Gillette asked emphatically. "And the victims in the other killings - in Portland and in Virginia?"
No one said anything for a moment. Finally Bob Shelton glanced at the report on the Lara Gibson killing. "Cause of death was a stab wound to--"
"The heart, right?" Gillette asked.
Shelton glanced at his partner then to Bernstein. He nodded. Tony Mott reminded, "We don't know about Virginia and Oregon - he erased the files."
"It'll be the same," Gillette said. "I guarantee it."
Shelton asked, "How'd you know that?"
"Because I know his motive now."
"Which is?" Bernstein asked.
"Access."
"What does that mean?" Shelton muttered belligerently.
Patricia Nolan said, "That's what all hackers're after. Access to information, to secrets, to data."
"When you hack," Gillette said, "access is G.o.d."
"What's that got to do with the stabbings?"
"The killer's a MUDhead."
"Sure," Tony Mott said. "I know MUDs." Miller did too, it seemed. He was nodding.
Gillette said, "Another acronym. It stands for multiuser domain or dimension. It's a bunch of specialized chat rooms - places on the Internet where people log on for role-playing games. Adventure games, knights' quests, science fiction, war. The people who play MUDs're, you know, pretty decent - businessmen, geeks, a lot of students, professors. But three or four years ago there was a big controversy about this game called Access."
"I heard about that," Miller said. "A lot of Internet providers refused to carry it."
Gillette nodded. "The way it worked was that there was a virtual city. It was populated with characters who carried on a normal life - going to work, dating, raising a family, whatever. But on the anniversary of a famous death - like John Kennedy's a.s.sa.s.sination or the day Lennon was shot or Good Friday - a random number generator picked one of the players to be a killer. He had one week to work his way into people's lives and kill as many of them as he could.
"The killer could pick anyone to be his victim but the more challenging the murder the more points he got. A politician with a bodyguard was worth ten points. An armed cop was worth fifteen. The one limitation on the killer was that he had to get close enough to the victims to stab them in the heart with a knife - that was the ultimate form of access."
"Jesus, that's our perp in a nutsh.e.l.l," Tony Mott said. "The knife, stab wounds to the chest, the anniversary dates, going after people who're hard to kill. He won the game in Portland and Virginia. And here he is, playing it in Silicon Valley." The young cop added cynically, "He's at the expert level."
"Level?" Bishop asked.
"In computer games," Gillette explained, "you move up in the degree of challenge from the beginning level to the hardest - the expert - level."
"So, this whole thing is a f.u.c.king game to him?" Shelton said. "That's a little hard to believe."
"No," Patricia Nolan said. "I'm afraid it's pretty easy to believe. The FBI's Behavioral Science Unit in Quantico considers criminal hackers compulsive, progressive offenders. Just like l.u.s.t-driven serial killers. Like Wyatt said, access is G.o.d. They have to find increasingly intense crimes to satisfy themselves. This guy's spent so much time in the Machine World he probably doesn't see any difference between a digital character and a human being." With a glance at the white-board Nolan continued, "I'd even say that, to him, the machines themselves're more important than people. A human death is nothing; a crashed hard drive, well, that's a tragedy."
Bernstein nodded. "That's helpful. We'll consider it." He nodded at Gillette. "But you've still got to go back to the prison."
"No!" the hacker cried.
"Look, we're already in deep water getting a federal prisoner released under a John Doe order. Andy was willing to take that risk. I'm not. That's all there is to it."
He pointed at the troopers and they led the hacker out of the dinosaur pen. It seemed to Gillette that they gripped him harder this time - as if they could sense his desperation and desire to flee. Nolan sighed and shook her head, gave a mournful smile of farewell to Gillette as he was led out.
Detective Susan Wilkins started up her monologue again but her voice soon faded as Gillette stepped outside. The rain was coming down steadily. One of the troopers said, "Sorry about that," though whether it was for his failed attempt to stay at CCU or the absence of an umbrella Gillette didn't know.
The trooper eased him down into the backseat of the squad car and slammed the door.
Gillette closed his eyes, rested his head against the gla.s.s. Heard the hollow sound of the rain pelting the top of the car.
He felt utter dismay at this defeat.
Lord, how close he'd come...
He thought of the months in prison. He thought of all the planning he'd done. Wasted. It was alla"
The car door opened.
Frank Bishop was crouching down. Water ran down his face, glistening on his sideburns and staining his shirt, but his sprayed hair, at least, was impervious to the drops. "Got a question for you, sir."
Sir?
Gillette asked, "What's that?"
"That MUD stuff. That's not hogwash?"
"Nope. The killer's playing his own version of that game - a real-life version."
"Is anybody still playing it now? On the Internet, I mean."
"I doubt it. Real MUDheads were so offended by it that they sabotaged the games and spammed the players until they stopped."
The detective glanced back at the rusting soda machine in front of the CCU building. He then asked, "That fellow in there, Stephen Miller - he's a lightweight, isn't he?"
Gillette thought for a moment and said, "He's from the elder days."
"The what?"
The phrase meant the sixties and seventies - that revolutionary era in the history of computing that ended more or less with the release of Digital Equipment Corporation's PDF-10, the computer that changed the face of the Machine World forever. But Gillette didn't explain this. He said simply, "He was good, I'd guess, but he's past his prime now. And in Silicon Valley that means, yeah, he's a lightweight."
"I see." Bishop straightened up, looking out at the traffic that sped along the nearby freeway. He then said to the troopers, "Bring this man back inside, please."
They looked at each other and, when Bishop nodded emphatically, hustled Gillette out of the squad car.
As they walked back into the CCU office Gillette heard Susan Wilkins's voice still droning on, "... liaise with security at Mobile America and Pac Bell if need be and I've established lines of communication with the tactical teams. Now, in my estimation it's probably sixty-forty more efficient to be located closer to main resources so we'll be moving the Computer Crimes Unit to headquarters in San Jose. I understand you're missing some administrative support in terms of your receptionist and at HQ we'll be able to mitigate that..."
Gillette tuned out the words and wondered what Bishop was up to.
The cop walked up to Bob Shelton, with whom he whispered for a moment. The conversation ended with Bishop's asking, "You with me on this?"
The stocky cop surveyed Gillette with a disdainful gaze and then muttered something grudgingly affirmative.
As Wilkins continued to speak, Captain Bernstein frowned and walked up to Bishop, who said to him, "I'd like to run this case, sir, and I want Gillette here to work it with us."
"You wanted the MARINKILL case."
"I did, sir. But I changed my mind."
"I know what you said before, Frank. But Andy's death - that wasn't your fault. He should've known his limits. n.o.body forced him to go after that guy alone."
"I don't care if it was my fault or not. That's not what this is about. It's about collaring a dangerous perp before someone else gets killed."
Captain Bernstein caught his meaning and glanced at Wilkins. "Susan's run major homicides before. She's good."
"I know she is, sir. We've worked together. But she's textbook. She's never worked in the trenches, the way I have. I ought to be running the case. But the other problem is that we're way out of our league here. We need somebody sharp on this one." The stiff hair nodded toward Gillette. "And I think he's as good as the perp."
"Probably he is," Bernstein muttered. "But that's not my worry."
"I'll ride point on this one, sir. Something goes bad, it can all come down on me. n.o.body else has to take any heat."
Patricia Nolan joined them and said, "Captain, stopping this guy's going to take more than fingerprints and canva.s.sing witnesses."
Shelton sighed. "Welcome to the new f.u.c.king millennium."