Read The Blue Nowhere-SA Online
Authors: Jeffery Deaver
Tags: #Computer hackers, #Crime & mystery, #Serial murders, #Action & Adventure, #Privacy; Encroachment by computer systems, #Crime investigations, #General, #Murder victims, #suspense, #Adventure, #Technological, #California, #Crime & Thriller, #Fiction, #thriller
"He said it was a tough decision to leave but it was the right thing to do and asked if I felt happy for him."
"He asked you that?"
Gillette nodded. "I don't remember what I said. Then we left the restaurant and we were walking down the street and maybe he noticed I was upset and he saw this store and said, Tell you what, son, you go in there and buy anything you want'."
"A consolation prize."
Gillette laughed and nodded. "I guess that's exactly what it was. The store was a Radio Shack. I just walked in and stood there, looking around. I didn't see anything, I was so hurt and confused, trying not to cry. I just picked the first thing I saw. A Trash-80."
"A what?"
"A TRS-80. One of the first personal computers."
A-N-Y-T-H-I-N-G Y-O-U W-A-N-T
"I took it home and started playing with it that night. Then I heard my mother come home and she and my father had a big fight and then he was gone and that was it." T-H-E B-L-U-E N-OGillette smiled briefly, fingers tapping.
"That article I wrote? 'The Blue Nowhere'?"
"I remember," Bishop said. "It means cyberspace."
"But it also means something else," Gillette said slowly. N-O-W-H-E-R-E.
"What?"
"My father was air force, like I said. And when I was really young he'd have some of his military buddies over and they'd get drunk and loud and a couple of times they'd sing the air force song, 'The Wild Blue Yonder.' Well, after he left I kept hearing that song in my head, over and over, only I changed 'yonder' to
'nowhere,' the 'Wild Blue Nowhere,' because he was gone. He was nowhere." Gillette swallowed hard.
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He looked up. "Pretty stupid, huh?"
But Frank Bishop didn't seem to think there was anything stupid about this at all. With his voice filled with the sympathy that made him a natural family man he asked, "You ever hear from him? Or hear what happened to him?"
"Nope. Have no clue." Gillette laughed. "Every once in a while I think I should track him down."
"You'd be good at finding people on the Net."
Gillette nodded. "But I don't think I will."
Fingers moving furiously. The ends were so numb because of the calluses that he couldn't feel the cold of the soda can he was tapping them against.
O-F-F W-E G-O, I-N-T-O T-H-E
"It gets even better - I learned Basic, the programming language, when I was nine or ten, and I'd spend hours writing programs. The first ones made the computer talk to me. I'd key, 'Hello,' and the computer'd respond, 'Hi, Wyatt. How are you?' Then I'd type, 'Good,' and it would ask, 'What did you do in school today?' I tried to think of things for the machine to say that'd be what a real father would ask." A-N-Y-T-H-I-N-G Y-O-U W-A-N-T
"All those e-mails supposedly from my father to the judge and those faxes from my brother about coming to live with him in Montana, all the psychologists' reports about what a great family life I had, about my dad being the best? I wrote them all myself."
"I'm sorry," Bishop said.
Gillette shrugged. "Hey, I survived. It doesn't matter."
"It probably does," Bishop said softly.
They sat in silence for a few minutes. Then the detective rose and started to wash the dishes. Gillette joined him and they chatted idly - about Bishop's orchard, about life in San Ho. When they'd finished drying the plates Bishop drained his beer then glanced coyly at the hacker. He said, "Why don't you give her a call."
"Call? Who?"
"Your wife."
"It's late," Gillette protested.
"So wake her up. She won't break. Doesn't sound to me like you've got a lot to lose anyway." Bishop pushed the phone toward the hacker.
"What should I say?" He lifted the receiver uncertainly.
"You'll think of something."
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"I don't know"
The cop asked, "You know the number?"
Gillette dialed it from memory - fast, before he balked - thinking: What if her brother answers? What if her mother answers? What ifÆ’
"Hello."
His throat seized.
"Hello?" Elana repeated.
"It's me."
A pause while she undoubtedly checked a watch or clock. No comment about the lateness of the hour was forthcoming, however.
Why wasn't she saying anything?
Why wasn't he?
"Just felt like calling. Did you find the modem? I left in it the mailbox." She didn't answer for a moment. Then she said, "I'm in bed." A searing thought: Was she alone in bed? Was Ed next to her? In her parents' house? But he pushed the jealousy aside and asked softly, "Did I wake you up?"
"Is there something you want, Wyatt?"
He looked at Bishop but the cop merely gazed at him with an eyebrow raised in impatience.
"I"
Elana said, "I'm going to sleep now."
"Can I call you tomorrow?"
"I'd rather you didn't call the house. Christian saw you the other night and he wasn't very happy about it." Her twenty-two-year-old brother, an honors marketing student with a Greek fisherman's temperament, had actually threatened to beat up Gillette at the trial.
"Then you call me when you're alone. I'll be at that number I gave you yesterday." Silence.
"Have you got it?" he asked. "The number?"
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"I've got it." Then: "Good night."
"Don't forget to call a lawyer about that--"
The phone clicked silent and Gillette hung up.
"I didn't handle that too well."
"At least she didn't hang up on you right away. That's something." Bishop put the beer bottle in the recycling bin. "I hate working late - I can't have supper without my beer but then I have to wake up a couple times during the night and pee. That's 'cause I'm getting old. Well, we've got a tough day tomorrow. Let's get some shut-eye."
Gillette asked, "You going to handcuff me somewhere?"
"Escaping twice in two days'd be bad form, even for a hacker. I think we'll forgo the bracelet. Guest room's in there. You'll find towels and a fresh toothbrush in the bathroom."
"Thanks."
"We get up at six-fifteen around here." The detective disappeared down the dim hallway. Gillette listened to the creak of boards, the sound of water in pipes. A door closing. Then he was alone, surrounded by the particularly thick silence of someone else's house late at night, his fingers spontaneously keying a dozen messages on an invisible machine. But it wasn't six-fifteen when his host woke him. It was just after five.
"Must be Christmas," the detective said, clicking on the overhead light. He was wearing brown pajamas.
"We got a present."
Gillette, like most hackers, felt that sleep should be avoided like the flu but he wasn't at his best upon waking. Eyes still closed, he muttered, "A present?"
"Triple-X called me on my cell phone five minutes ago. He's got Phate's real e-mail address. It's [email protected]."
"MOL? Never heard of an Internet provider with that name." Gillette rolled from bed, fighting the dizziness.
Bishop continued, "I called everybody on the team. They're on their way to the office now."
"Which means us too?" the hacker muttered sleepily.
"Which means us too."
Twenty minutes later they were showered and dressed. Jennie had coffee ready in the kitchen but they passed on food; they wanted to get to the CCU office as soon as possible. Bishop kissed his wife. He took her hands in his and said, "About that appointment thing of yours All you have to do is say the word and I'll be at the hospital in fifteen minutes."
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She kissed his forehead. "I'm having a few tests done, honey. That's all."
"No, no, no, you listen," he said solemnly. "If you need me I'll be there."
"If I need you," she conceded, "I'll call. I promise." As they were heading out the door a sudden roaring filled the kitchen. Jennie Bishop rolled the reassembled Hoover back and forth over the rug. She shut it off and gave her husband a hug.
"Works great," Jennie said. "Thanks, honey."
Bishop frowned in confusion. "I--"
Gillette interrupted quickly. "A job like that must've taken half the night."
"And he cleaned up afterward," Jennie Bishop said with a wry smile. "That's the miraculous part."
"Well--" Bishop began.
"We better be going," Gillette interrupted.
Jennie waved them off and started making breakfast for Brandon, glancing affectionately at her resurrected vacuum.
As the two men walked outside Bishop whispered to the hacker, "So? Did it take you half the night?"
"To fix the vacuum?" Gillette replied. "Naw, only ten minutes. I could've done it in five but I couldn't find any tools. I had to use a dinner knife and a nutcracker."
The detective said, "I didn't think you knew anything about vacuum cleaners."
"I didn't. But I was curious why it didn't work. So now I know all about vacuum cleaners." Gillette climbed into the car then turned to Bishop. "Say, any chance we could stop at that 7-Eleven again? As long as it's on the way."
But, despite what Triple-X had told Bishop in his phone call, Phate - in his new incarnation as Deathknell
-continued to remain out of reach.
Once Gillette was back at the Computer Crimes Unit he booted up HyperTrace and ran a search for MOL.com. He found that the full name of the Internet service provider was Monterey Internet On-Line. Its headquarters were in Pacific Grove, California, about a hundred miles south of San Jose. But when they contacted Pac Bell security in Salinas about tracing the call from MOL to Phate's computer it turned out that there was no Monterey Internet On-Line and the real geographic location of the server was in Singapore.
"Oh, that's smart," a groggy Patricia Nolan muttered, sipping a Starbucks coffee. Her morning voice was low; it sounded like man's. She sat down next to Gillette. She was as disheveled as ever in her floppy sweater dress - green today. Obviously not an early riser, Nolan wasn't even bothering to brush her hair
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out of her face.
"I don't get it," Shelton said. "What's smart? What's it all mean?" Gillette said, "Phate created his own Internet provider. And he's the only customer. Well, probably Shawn is too. And the server they're connecting through is in Singapore - there's no way we can trace back to their machines."
"Like a shell corporation in the Cayman Islands," said Frank Bishop, who, even if he'd had little prior knowledge of the Blue Nowhere, was good at coming up with apt Real World metaphors.
"But," Gillette added, seeing the discouraged faces of the team, "the address is still important."
"Why?" Bishop asked.
"Because it means we can send him a love letter."
Linda Sanchez walked through the front door of CCU, toting a Dunkin' Donuts bag, bleary-eyed and moving slow. She looked down and noticed that her tan suit jacket was buttoned incorrectly. She didn't bother to fix it and set the food out on a plate.
"Any new branches on your family tree?" Bishop asked.
She shook her head. "So what happens is this - I get this scary movie, okay? My grandmother told me you can induce labor by telling ghost stories. You heard about that, boss?"
"News to me," Bishop said.
"Anyway, we figure a scary movie'll work just as good. So I rent Scream okay? What happens? My girl and her husband fall asleep on the couch but the movie scares me so much I can't get any sleep. I was up all night."
She disappeared into the coffee room and brought the pot out.
Wyatt Gillette gratefully took the coffee - his second cup that morning - but for breakfast he stuck with Pop-Tarts.
Stephen Miller arrived a few minutes later, with Tony Mott right behind him, sweating from the bike ride to the office.
Gillette explained to the rest of the team about Triple-X's sending them Phate's real e-mail address and his plans to send Phate a message.
"What's it going to say?" Nolan asked.
" 'Dear Phate,'" Gillette said. " 'Having a nice time, wish you were here, and, by the way, here's a picture of a dead body.'"
"What?" Miller asked.
Gillette asked Bishop, "Can you get me a crime scene photo? A picture of a corpse?"
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"I suppose," the detective replied.
Gillette nodded toward the white-board. "I'm going to imp that I'm that hacker in Bulgaria he used to trade pictures with, Vlast. I'll upload a picture for him."
Nolan laughed and nodded. "And he'll get a virus along with it. You'll take over his machine."
"I'm going to try to."
"Why do you need to send a picture?" Shelton asked. He seemed uneasy with the idea of sending evidence of gruesome crimes into the Blue Nowhere for all to see.
"My virus isn't as clever as Trapdoor. With mine Phate has to do something to activate it so I can get into his system. He'll have to open the attachment containing the picture for the virus to work." Bishop called headquarters and had a trooper fax a copy of a crime scene photo in a recent murder case to ecu.
Gillette glanced at the picture - of a young woman bludgeoned to death - but looked away quickly. Stephen Miller scanned it into digital form so they could upload it with the e-mail. The cop seemed immune to the terrible crime depicted in the picture and matter-of-factly went through the scanning procedure. He handed Gillette a disk containing the picture.
Bishop asked, "What if Phate sees an e-mail from Vlast and writes him to ask if it's really from him or sends him a reply?"
"I thought about that. I'm going to send Vlast another virus, one that'll block any e-mails from the U.S." Gillette went online to get his tool kit from his cache at the air force lab in Los Alamos. From it he downloaded and modified what he needed - the viruses and his own anonymizing e-mail program - he wasn't trusting Stephen Miller anymore. He then sent a copy of the MailBlocker virus to Vlast in Bulgaria and, to Phate, Gillette's own version of Backdoor-G. This was a well-known virus that let a remote user take over someone else's computer, usually when they're both on the same computer network - for instance two employees working for the same company. Gillette's version, though, would work with any two computers; they didn't need to be connected through a network.