Helen Hanson - Dark Pool (42 page)

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Authors: Helen Hanson

Tags: #Mystery: Thriller - Alzheimer's - Computer Hacker - Investment Scam

BOOK: Helen Hanson - Dark Pool
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Baxter stared at the front door as if it might open to a parallel universe. The good professor taught computer engineering not theater arts. And while he tilted dramatic, this performance was worthy of a nomination. Ever since Baxter joined his gig nearly five years ago, Sydney’s feet routinely got frostbite, especially lately. But he always found something to return him to calm, usually a bong, a warm hippie chick, or both.

But something had Syd rattled. Perhaps the pitches for the new email campaign contained sensitive stuff. Sure, they were spammers, but they didn’t run just any email pitch. Baxter maintained strict standards: Viagra. Yes. Online Casinos. Yes. Girls from Russia. No. His girlfriend, Natalie, wouldn’t let him keep one anyway. Their butler robot offered enough contention. Baxter squeezed the flash drive in his fist.

The weird encounter faded as his thoughts focused on his schedule for the day. Hitting Science Hill on campus wasted at least thirty more minutes just to run an errand, but he could claim the hours for his work-study position with Sydney. Then he could crank on their email campaigns until Natalie came home in the early evening. No time to catch a wave, though. Maybe tomorrow. Pocketing the flash drive, he stood and left the coffee bar.

Outside, fog patched the skyline while cars moved with caution along the streets. Baxter chirped the car alarm and trailed the sound to reach his ride. He fired up his 370Z and wended his way to High Street, putting up the Empire Grade until he reached the western entrance to UC Santa Cruz.

As life stirred along Heller Drive, bikes and backpacks bumped uphill toward their destinations and then disappeared behind an evergreen veil. He tucked the 370Z into the second level of the Core West parking garage and headed across McLaughlin Drive to the third floor of the Jack Baskin Engineering Building.

The first classes were over an hour from commencing, but the early nerds were busy catching their worms. Baxter barely remembered when he was that eager to impress. As a graduate student within the department, he needed eighteen units for his master’s, and he planned to pursue his doctorate next. Given his lucrative arrangement with Sydney, he wasn’t in any hurry. He swiped his card key in the exterior door and then for the stairs that led to the third floor.

Professor Alessandra Bisch held degrees in Mathematics and Electrical Engineering from Oxford, a Master of Science in Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering from M.I.T., and a Ph.D in Robotics from Carnegie Mellon University, and Baxter still didn’t like her. She came to UCSC because of the degree program in robotics. And the funding. Academic researchers followed funding like the paparazzi followed celebrities. Most of the faculty were accessible and friendly, but Alessandra—or ‘The Bisch’ as she was known by students—reeked of condescension.

A student passed Baxter on the stairs, but when he entered the hall on the third floor, he was alone. The Bisch’s office was on the exterior wall with the window-endowed members of the engineering department, but the fog choked off any sunlight that morning. He’d taken two classes from her, but he only knew the location of her door because it was perpetually closed.

The Bisch was severe for the sake of it: Close-cropped hair. Flinty smile. Constant reminders of her education. Strictly enunciated diction. Brilliant or not, she possessed the warmth of the university mascot—a banana slug.

Baxter knocked on her door. He waited a polite few moments and tried again. Sydney said she’d be here by now. Another knock, only louder. She might be on the phone in which case the knocking could seriously piss her off.

Eh, what the hell? He knocked some more.

If she were in there, he would have roused her by now. He could leave the drive on her desk. Syd would never know, anyway. Baxter gripped the door handle and moved it downward.

With a slight push, the door swung freely to a crack. Since his intrusion didn’t elicit any yelling, he posted an eye at the opening to survey the interior. The Bisch wasn’t here.

Sweet. In. Out. No fuss. No muss.

The light was on as he pushed the door open and slipped inside. With open files and a coffee cup on the desk, the room looked like she should be working. Then he noticed the papers on the floor. Cabinets and drawers splayed open. As he neared her desk, he noticed a reddish-brown pattern in the carpet unlike that in any of the other offices. It glistened.

Nausea swelled in his belly.

Baxter stumbled to avoid stepping in it. And then he saw her. Dr. Alessandra Bisch slumped forward on the floor with a hole at the back of her neck.

 

 

 

 

Description

 

 

Meet Baxter Cruise. Gifted robotics student. Spammer for hire. His cozy world of lattes and free wi-fi explodes when a hippie professor disappears, and Baxter discovers a lady professor’s warm corpse on campus.

 

With his secretive lifestyle, he hasn’t cultivated any real friends. When a student asks for help with a class assignment, Baxter figures it’ll throttle his funk. But the guy blackmails Baxter into programming narcotics delivery vehicles for a notorious cartel. Working for drug lords rattles the needle on Baxter’s errant moral compass, but it’s better than a bullet in the head.

Beautiful FBI agent Claudia Seagal tracks the professor’s brutal assassin, but every angle of her investigation leads to Baxter. He’s hiding something and in far too deep to cooperate with the law.

Baxter ignores the cartel’s depravity until he watches an innocent woman die. When he wakes up on a plane, it’s too late for remorse. In bed with dangerous allies, the cartel requires Baxter’s talent until the robots are complete. Then, he and thousands of others face certain death unless Baxter can find a way to escape.

 

 

Author Bio

 

 

Bestselling Kindle author Helen Hanson writes thrillers about desperate people with a high-tech bent. Hackers. The CIA. Industry titans. Guys on sailboats. Mobsters. Their personal maelstroms pit them against unrelenting forces willing to kill. Throughout the journey, they try to find some truth, a little humor, and their humanity — from either end of the trigger.

 

While Helen writes about the power hungry, she genuinely mistrusts anyone who wants to rule the world.

Helen directed operations for high-tech manufacturers of semiconductors, video games, software, and computers. Her reluctant education behind the Redwood Curtain culminated in a B.S. in Business Administration with concentrated studies in Computer Science. She also learned to play a mean game of hacky sack.

She is a licensed private pilot with a ticket for single-engine aircraft. Helen and her husband spent their first anniversary with their flight instructor studying for the FAA practical. If you were a passenger on a 737 trying to land at SJC, she sends her most sincere apologies. Really.

Born in fly-over country, Helen has lived on both coasts, near both borders, and at several locations in between. She lettered in tennis, worked as a machinist, and saw the Clash at the San Francisco Civic Auditorium sometime in the eighties. She currently lives amid the bricks of Texas with her husband, son, a dog that composes music with squeaky toys, and another dog that’s too lazy to bother.

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Chapter Thirty-Three

Chapter Thirty-Four

Chapter Thirty-Five

Chapter Thirty-Six

Chapter Thirty-Seven

Chapter Thirty-Eight

Chapter Thirty-Nine

Chapter Forty

Chapter Forty-One

Chapter Forty-Two

Chapter Forty-Three

Chapter Forty-Four

Chapter Forty-Five

Chapter Forty-Six

Chapter Forty-Seven

Chapter Forty-Eight

Chapter Forty-Nine

Chapter Fifty

Chapter Fifty-One

Chapter Fifty-Two

Chapter Fifty-Three

Chapter Fifty-Four

Chapter Fifty-Five

Chapter Fifty-Six

Chapter Fifty-Seven

Chapter Fifty-Eight

Chapter Fifty-Nine

Chapter Sixty

Chapter Sixty-One

Chapter Sixty-Two

Chapter Sixty-Three

Chapter Sixty-Four

Chapter Sixty-Five

Chapter Sixty-Six

Chapter Sixty-Seven

Chapter Sixty-Eight

Chapter Sixty-Nine

Chapter Seventy

Chapter Seventy-One

Chapter Seventy-Two

Chapter Seventy-Three

Chapter Seventy-Four

Chapter Seventy-Five

From the Author

Geeky Thrillers by Helen Hanson

3 LIES
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3 LIES
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OCEAN OF FEAR
Excerpt

OCEAN OF FEAR
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Author Bio

 

 

Acknowledgements

 

 

My husband, Michael, deserves a byline for picking up the slack while I wrote DARK POOL. As always, he’s the sturdy string to my short-tailed kite. His expertise gives my writing a depth I could not reach on my own; and his love, a contentment my soul never expected on this rock.

 

MPH, you continue to amaze me. I’m grateful that you are mine.

Maybe another language has a deeper phrase than ‘thank you’ because it never seems adequate to express my appreciation of my writing tribe. Jayme, Skip, and Sonjia your generous encouragement and patient review of my early drafts rein the worst of my proclivities.

My writing sis, Hannah, is my beautiful weekly reminder to keep moving forward.

To the citizens of Half Moon Bay, please forgive my taking license with your lovely burg-by-the-sea. It’s one of my favorite places on the planet. My thanks to the Half Moon Bay Chamber of Commerce for helping me make the details realistic, if not exact. Anyone looking to escape for a breath of fresh air would do well to visit this lovely hamlet.

Maybe I should leave out my Lord, Jesus Christ, because His example loses vibrancy in me. I struggle, flounder, and stumble. Through Him, somehow, it all still works.

In the end, any errors, omissions, or epic fails are fully mine. Thank you for reading.

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