Page 18 of The Scarecrow


  “Don’t be silly, Jack. I know what’s going on. The cat’s out of the bag. There are a lot of stories being written for tomorrow’s paper. But none of them with your name on it, Jack. What’s up with that?”

  That told me he was still floating around inside the Times’ data system. I wondered if it would help the task force run him down.

  “You there, Jack?”

  “Yeah, I’m here.”

  “And it looks like you have no name for me yet, either.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Aren’t you all going to give me a name? We all get names, you know. The Yorkshire Ripper. The Hillside Strangler. The Poet. You know about that one, right?”

  “Yeah, we’re giving you a name. We’re calling you the Iron Maiden. How do you like that?”

  This time I heard no chuckle in the silence that followed.

  “Are you still there, Iron Maiden?”

  “You should be careful, Jack. I could always try again, you know.”

  I laughed at him.

  “Hey, I’m not hiding. I’m right here. Try again, if you’ve got the balls.”

  He was silent, so I laid it on thicker.

  “Killing these defenseless women, that takes a lot of balls, doesn’t it?”

  The chuckle was back.

  “You’re very transparent, Jack. Are you working off a script?”

  “I don’t need a script.”

  “Well, I know what you’re doing. Talking with a lot of bluster and bravado to bait the trap. Hoping I’ll come to L.A. and go for you. Meantime, you have the FBI and the LAPD watching and ready to jump in and catch the monster just in the nick of time. Is that it, Jack?”

  “If that’s what you think.”

  “Well, it won’t work that way. I’m a patient man, Jack. Time will pass, maybe even years will go by, and then I promise we’ll meet again face-to-face. No disguise. I’ll return your gun then.”

  His low chuckle came again and I got the impression that wherever he was calling from, he was trying to keep his voice and laugh down and not draw attention. I didn’t know if it was an office or a public space but he was keeping himself contained. I was sure of it.

  “Speaking of the gun, how was that going to be explained? You know, that I flew to Vegas but then somehow had my gun and killed myself with it? Seems like a flaw in the plan, doesn’t it?”

  He outright laughed this time.

  “Jack, you are not in possession of all the facts yet, are you? When you are, then you will understand how flawless the plan was. My one mistake was the girl in the room. I didn’t see that coming.”

  Neither did I but I wasn’t saying so.

  “Then I guess it wasn’t so flawless, was it?”

  “I can make up for it.”

  “Look, I’m having a busy day here. Why are you calling me?”

  “I told you, to see how you are. To make your acquaintance. We’re now going to be linked forever, aren’t we?”

  “Well, while I’ve got you on the line, can I ask you a few questions for the story we’re putting together?”

  “I don’t think so, Jack. This is between you and me, not your readers.”

  “You know, you’re right. The truth is, I wouldn’t give you the space. You think I’m going to let you try to explain your sick fucking world in my newspaper?”

  A dark silence followed.

  “You,” he finally said, his voice tight with anger. “You should respect me.”

  Now I laughed.

  “Respect you? How about, Fuck you. You took a young girl who had nothing but—”

  He interrupted me by making a noise like a muffled cough.

  “Did you hear that, Jack? Do you know what that was?”

  I didn’t respond and then he made the sound again. Muffled, one syllable, quick. Then he did it a third time.

  “Okay, I give up,” I said.

  “That was her, saying your name through plastic when there was no air left.”

  He laughed. I said nothing.

  “You know what I tell them, Jack? I say, ‘Breathe deep and it will all be over a lot faster.’ ”

  He laughed again, long and hard, and made sure I heard it all before abruptly hanging up. I sat there for a long time with the phone still pressed against my ear.

  “Sssst.”

  I looked up. It was Larry Bernard looking over the sound wall of my cubicle. He thought I was still on the line.

  “How much longer?” he whispered.

  I took the phone from my ear and covered the mouthpiece with my palm.

  “A few more minutes. I’ll come right back in.”

  “Okay. I’m going to go take a leak.”

  He left me then and I immediately called Rachel. The call was answered after four rings.

  “Jack, I can’t talk,” she said by way of a greeting.

  “You would’ve won the bet.”

  “What bet?”

  “He just called me. The Unsub. He has Angela’s cell phone.”

  “What did he say?”

  “Not a lot. I think he was trying to find out who you are.”

  “What do you mean? How would he know about me?”

  “He doesn’t. He was trying to find out who the woman in the room back in Ely was. You spoiled everything by being there and he’s curious.”

  “Look, Jack, whatever he said, you can’t quote him in the paper. That sort of thing feeds the fire. If he gets hooked on headlines, then he’s going to speed up his cycle. He could start killing for headlines.”

  “Don’t worry. Nobody here knows he called me and I’m not writing the story, so he’s not going in it. I’ll save it for when I do write the story. I’ll save it for the book.”

  It was the first time I had mentioned the possibility of getting a book out of this. But now it seemed entirely plausible. One way or another I was going to write this story.

  “Did you record it?” Rachel asked.

  “No, because I wasn’t expecting it.”

  “We need to get your phone. We’ll be able to ping the call and get the originating tower. It will get us close to where he’s at. At least where he was when he made the call.”

  “It sounded like he was someplace where he had to speak quietly or it would attract attention. Like an office or something. He also made one slip.”

  “What was that?”

  “I tried to bait him, to get him mad, and—”

  “Jack, are you crazy? What are you doing?”

  “I didn’t want to be intimidated by him. So I went after him, only he thought I was working off a script given to me by you guys. He thought I was intentionally baiting him into coming after me. That’s when he slipped. He said I was baiting him into coming to L.A. That’s how he said it. Coming to L.A. So he’s somewhere outside of L.A.”

  “That’s good, Jack. But he could have been playing you. Intentionally saying that because he actually is in L.A. That’s why I wish it was taped. So we could have it analyzed.”

  I hadn’t thought of the reverse play.

  “Well, sorry, no tape. There’s one other thing, too.”

  “What is it?”

  She seemed so short and to the point, I wondered if our conversation was being listened to.

  “He’s either still hacking into the computer system over here or he left some kind of spy program on it.”

  “At the Times? Why do you say that?”

  “He knew about the story budget for tomorrow. He knew I wasn’t writing any of the stories.”

  “That sounds like something we might be able to trace,” she said excitedly.

  “Yeah, well, good luck getting the Times to cooperate. And besides, if this guy’s as smart as you’re saying, he knows what he just told me and he knows the bug he planted is either untraceable or he’ll just shut it down and zip it up.”

  “It’s still worth a try. I will get somebody in our media office to make an approach to the Times. It’s worth the shot.”

&n
bsp; I nodded.

  “You never know. It could usher in a whole new era of media and law enforcement cooperation. Sort of like you and me, Rachel, but bigger.”

  I smiled and hoped she was smiling too.

  “You are such an optimist, Jack. Speaking of cooperation, can I send somebody over for your phone now?”

  “Yes, but what about sending yourself?”

  “I can’t. I’m in the middle of something here. I told you.”

  I didn’t know how to read that.

  “Are you in trouble, Rachel?”

  “I don’t know yet, but I have to go.”

  “Well, are you on the task force? Are they letting you work the case?”

  “For now, yes.”

  “Okay, well, that’s good.”

  “Yes.”

  We made arrangements for me to meet the agent she would send for the phone outside the door of the globe lobby in a half hour. It was then time for both of us to go back to work.

  “Hang in there, Rachel,” I said.

  She was silent for a moment and then said, “You too, Jack.”

  We hung up then. And somehow, with all that had transpired in the last thirty-six hours, with what had happened to Angela and my having just been threatened by a serial killer, a part of me felt happy and hopeful.

  I had a feeling, though, that it wasn’t going to last.

  SEVEN: The Farm

  Carver intently watched the security screens. The two men at the front counter showed badges to Geneva. He couldn’t tell what law enforcement agency they were from. By the time he had zoomed in, the badges had already been put away.

  He watched Geneva pick up the phone and punch in three numbers. He knew she would be calling McGinnis’s office. She spoke briefly, then hung up and signaled the two men with badges to one of the couches to wait.

  Carver tried to keep his anxiety in check. The fight-or-flight impulse was firing in his brain as he reviewed his recent moves and tried to see where, if anywhere, he could have made a mistake. It was safe, he told himself. He was safe. The plan was good. Freddy Stone was the only issue of concern—the only aspect that could be considered a weak link—and Carver would have to take steps to make that potential problem go away.

  On the screen he watched as Yolanda Chavez, McGinnis’s second in command, entered the reception lobby and shook hands with the two men. They quickly showed badges again but then one took a folded document from the inside pocket of his suit coat and presented it to her. She studied it for a moment and then handed it back. She signaled for the two men to follow her and they went through the door into the interior of the building. By switching security screens Carver was able to follow them to the administration suite.

  He got up and closed the door to his office. Back at his desk, he picked up his phone and punched in the extension for reception.

  “Geneva, it’s Mr. Carver. I happen to be watching the cameras and am curious about those two men who just entered. I saw them show badges. Who are they?”

  “They’re FBI agents.”

  The words froze his heart but he held himself steady and remained calm. After a moment, Geneva continued.

  “They said they have a search warrant. I didn’t see it but they showed it to Yolanda.”

  “A search warrant for what?”

  “I’m not sure, Mr. Carver.”

  “Who did they ask to see?”

  “No one. They just asked to see somebody in charge. I called Mr. McGinnis, and Yolanda came out to get them.”

  “Okay, thank you, Geneva.”

  He hung up the phone and refocused on his screen. He typed in a command that opened a new set of camera angles, a multiplex screen that showed the four private offices of the top administrators. These cameras were hidden in ceiling-mounted smoke detectors and the occupants of the offices knew nothing about them. The camera views came with audio feeds as well.

  Carver saw the two FBI agents enter Declan McGinnis’s office. He clicked his mouse on that camera and the image filled the entire screen. It was an angled overhead view of the room from a convex lens. The agents sat down with their backs to the camera and Yolanda took a seat on the right. Carver had a full view of McGinnis when the company CEO sat back down after shaking hands with the agents. One was black and one was white. They identified themselves as Bantam and Richmond.

  “So I am told you have a search warrant of some sort?” McGinnis asked.

  “Yes, sir, we do,” Bantam said.

  He pulled the document out of his suit again and passed it across the table.

  “You are hosting a website called trunk murder dot com and we need to know every piece of information you have about it.”

  McGinnis didn’t respond. He was reading the document. Carver reached up and ran his hands through his hair. He needed to know what was in that warrant and how close they were. He tried to calm down, reminding himself that he was prepared for this. He even expected this. He knew more about the FBI than the FBI knew about him. He could start right there.

  He killed the feed and then the screen. He opened a desk drawer and pulled out the stack of monthly server volume reports his staff had prepared earlier in the week. Usually he filed them away until McGinnis asked for them and then he sent them up with one of his server engineers on his way out for a smoke. This time he would make the delivery himself. He tapped the stack on the desk and made the corners sharp, then he left and locked his office.

  In the control room he told Mizzou and Kurt, the two engineers on duty, where he was going and then went out through the mantrap. Thankfully, Freddy Stone was not on shift until the evening, because he could never come back to Western Data. Carver knew how the FBI worked. They would take every name of every employee and run it through their computers. They would learn that Freddy Stone was not Freddy Stone and they would come back for him.

  Carver wasn’t going to allow that. He had other plans for Freddy.

  He took the elevator up and entered the administration suite with his head down, reading the top page of the stack of reports. He nonchalantly looked up as he came in and saw through the open door of McGinnis’s office that he had company. He pivoted and went to his secretary’s desk.

  “Give these to Declan when he’s free,” he said. “But no hurry.”

  He turned to leave the suite, hoping the motion of his pivot move had drawn the attention of McGinnis through the doorway. But he got all the way to the main door without being called.

  He put his hand on the knob.

  “Wesley?”

  It was McGinnis, calling from his office. Carver turned around and glanced back. McGinnis was behind his desk, waving him into the office.

  Carver entered. He nodded to the two men and completely ignored Chavez, whom he considered a worthless diversity hire. There was no place for Carver to sit but that was all right. Being the only one standing would give him a command presence.

  “Wesley Carver, meet Agents Bantam and Richmond from the FBI’s Phoenix office. I was just about to call down to the bunker for you.”

  Carver shook hands with the men and repeated his name politely each time.

  “Wesley wears a number of hats around here,” McGinnis said. “He’s our chief technology officer and the one who designed most of this place. He’s also our chief threat officer. What I like to call our—”

  “Do we have a problem?” Carver cut in.

  “We may,” McGinnis said. “The agents have been telling me that we’re hosting a website here that is of interest to them and they’ve got a warrant that allows them to see all documentation and records pertaining to its setup and operation.”

  “Terrorism?”

  “They say they can’t tell us.”

  “Should I go get Danny?”

  “No, they don’t want to talk to anybody in design and hosting just yet.”

  Carver put his hands into the pockets of his white lab coat because he knew it gave him the posture of a deep-thinking man. He then addressed
the agents.

  “Danny O’Connor is our chief of design and hosting,” he said. “He should be brought in on this. You’re not thinking he’s a terrorist or something, are you?”

  He smiled at the absurdity of what he had just suggested. Agent Bantam, the larger of the two agents, responded.

  “No, we’re not thinking that at all. We’re on a fishing expedition here, and the fewer people brought into it, the better. Especially from the hosting side of your business.”

  Carver nodded and his eyes flicked momentarily in the direction of Chavez. But the agents didn’t pick up on it. She remained in the meeting.

  “What is the website?” Carver asked.

  “Trunk murder dot com,” McGinnis answered. “I just checked and it’s part of a larger bundle. An account out of Seattle.”

  Carver nodded and kept a calm demeanor. He had a plan for this. He was better than them because he always had a plan.

  He pointed to the screen on McGinnis’s desk.

  “Can we take a look at it or would that comp—”

  “We would prefer not to at this point,” Bantam said. “We think it could tip off the target. It is not a developed site. There’s nothing to see. But it’s a capture site, we believe.”

  “And we don’t want to be captured,” Carver said.

  “Exactly.”

  “May I see the warrant?”

  “Sure.”

  The document had been returned to Bantam while Carver was coming up from the bunker. The agent took it out again and handed it to Carver, who unfolded it and scanned it, hoping he was not giving anything away with his face. He checked himself to make sure he wasn’t humming.

  The search warrant was notable for what information it did not contain rather than for what it did. The bureau had a very cooperative federal judge in their corner, that seemed for sure. In very general terms the warrant described an investigation of an unknown subject using the Internet and crossing state lines to conduct a criminal conspiracy involving data theft and fraud. The word murder was nowhere in the warrant. The warrant sought complete access to the website and all information and records relating to its origin, operation and financing.

  Carver knew the bureau would be unhappily surprised by what they got. He nodded as he scanned it.

  “Well, we can get you all of this,” he said. “What is the account in Seattle?”