Authors: Ridley Pearson
“Butâ”
“Or,” he added quickly, “Flemming's little end run will find its way to both local and national media, and all the efforts in the world won't keep at least some of it from going public. It's going to come apart on you.”
“You're threatening me?”
“I'm an information gatherer, Ms. Kalidja. I leave the threatening to others. But if I were to threaten anyone, it would be Flemming, not you. From what I know about him, Flemming is a man who gets the job done. Nothing wrong with that. He's known to like things his way. I've been there myself. But I wouldn't threaten a man like Flemming; I'd just expose him and let him deal with it. No, what I'm offering is a trade. I'm trading you a damn good lead for information I should have had in my hands two weeks ago. Who's getting the better end of this one?”
“I don't have the information you request, Lieutenant.” Her voice held a note of apology.
“You're the Intelligence officer. Any such information would have gone through your office.”
“It may have passed through,” she conceded, “but it did ⦠not ⦠stick.”
She was giving him something, revealing something. Boldt could hear the tentative reluctance in her silky voice.
At SPD such information would have been copied, filed and disseminated to those with a Need to Know. The Bureau couldn't be much different, and yet what she was telling him was that she had either failed to make copies or had been ordered not to do so. Either explanation was insufficient and yet intriguing. What the hell was going on over there? Local FBI against the nationals? Perhaps the lockdown had little to do with keeping local police away from it and everything to do with preventing their own FBI field office investigators from running with it.
He asked, “What office received that information, Special Agent?”
“I cannot say.”
“We're doing each other favors here.”
“And I am afraid mine have run out. If you are dissatisfied and would like to take backâ”
“No,” he said, “it's yours. I don't go back on a trade, even when I get the short shrift.”
“I will see what I can do. That is the best I can offer.”
“That is as much as any of us can offer,” he said gratefully, “and I thank you for that.”
“Lieutenant, I am certain you did background checks on us coming into this, and of course we did the sameâor rather,
I
did. Let me just say that from everything I have read, I have great respect for you, both as a person and your service record. Quite frankly, as Intelligence officer, it was my job to speculate on who would head SPD's task force, and I suggested to my superiors it would be you. I am aware of your wife's illness, and I offer my sympathies and those of this agency. I have to think that given other circumstances it would have been you running the show over there, and I think they could use you. I value greatly the information you have just given me, and I hope to earn your respect as well, as the investigation continues.”
“I'd be happier,” Boldt confided in her, “if it didn't continue, if it stopped today.”
“Yes, of course.”
Boldt thanked her, hung up and spun around in his chair with the sounding of the beep that signaled his E-mail. On his computer screen, a menu appeared with a full list of the waiting mail. This most recent arrival was a reminderâa second messageâfrom the mail room that Boldt had received a package marked “urgent.”
As Intelligence officer, with snitches and informants spread around the city like traffic lights, Boldt could ill afford to leave any urgent package gathering dust. Some informants used the phones, othersâpoliticians and white collars mostlyâabhorred them, preferring the written word, always “anonymous.”
By the time Boldt picked up his package, it had been X-rayed, electronically sniffed for explosives and run through a magnetometer for metal densityâas safe as modern technology could make it for opening.
Ronnie Lyte ran mail room security. “It's a CD maybe.”
Boldt realized he had hurried down to the basement mail room for nothing. The ME, Doc Dixon, and he exchanged favorite jazz works all the time. Along with SID's Bernie Lofgrin, they had something of a jazz enthusiasts' club. Boldt's love leaned to keyboards and tenor. Until Liz's illness, Boldt had occasionally held a happy hour piano gig at Bear Berenson's comedy club. Doc Dixon leaned toward trumpet players, though he also had a keen ear for tenor sax. Lofgrin was drummers and bass players: He considered the rhythm section of any group the most important. Boldt immediately mistook this CD as a gift from Dixon, whose offices were a mile away in the basement of Harbor View Medical Center.
The padded envelope had been stapled three times at the fold. The package bore no stamps, no postage meter label, no stamp or sticker from one of the city's many messenger services. This offered Boldt the first twinge of unease. His name and the address had been printed by computer on regular paper, and the paper taped to the package using two pieces of wide, clear packing tape. Boldt studied all this. “How'd we get it?”
“No clue,” Ronnie Lyte said.
The mail room was run by three Asian civilians, administered by Sue Lu. Boldt shouted across to Lu, “Someone sign for this?”
“Don't remember it.”
“Black kid delivered it,” one of her assistants answered. “No signature required, except from you that is.”
“A messenger?”
“Not someone I'm familiar with,” the young man answered. “Not a regular.”
“A cold drop? Is that what you're telling me?”
“A delivery, Lieutenant,” the young man replied. “Guy said it was urgent.”
“But what guy?” Boldt said, exasperated.
“We get a couple dozen couriers in here a day,” Lu explained to Boldt, defending her assistant and herself.
“Was it logged?” Boldt asked.
“Every arrival is logged,” the assistant confirmed, checking a computer terminal. “Arrived twenty minutes ago. We sent you an E-mail.”
“I don't care about the E-mail! I care about how it arrived, who delivered it.” He felt a growing sense of anxiety in his chest; a part of him did not want to open it, another part could not wait. But he wanted the details straight first. The label and the lack of postage had triggered a series of internal alarms. If the envelope contained cash, and not a CD, Boldt wanted witnesses to its being opened. Intelligence officers regularly faced attempts to compromise them; the smarter people behind such attempts left all details off the delivery of the bribe, waiting to make later contact. The CD might be a ruse, the true contents a roll of a couple hundred, a couple thousand, dollars in cash. Boldt needed witnesses.
“I'm opening it here,” he announced. He marked the time aloud. This won the attention of Sue Lu, who joined him knowing he was requesting a witness. She checked her own watch and confirmed the time.
Boldt opened the padded envelope and disgorged its contents: a single gold-colored CD in a clear jeweler's box. The words OPTICAL MEDIA were printed on the disk along with some manufacturing information. No letter or note. No explanation. Everything about this bothered him. He handed the padded envelope to Lu, who looked it over.
“Empty,” she said.
“Just the CD,” he agreed.
“It's a CD-R,” she informed him, pointing out the initials on the disk. “It's marked data, not music. For use with a computer CD-ROM.”
“I need a computer with a CD-ROM player?” Boldt asked her, both testing that he had it right and asking her for advice where he might find one.
“Tech Services' media lab,” she informed him. Adding, “They have everything in there.”
Tech Services occupied two glorified basement closets that communicated by a doorway cut through a cement block wall. An array of electronic gear, predominantly audio/video and computer, occupied black rack mounts that in some instances ran floor to ceilingâlinoleum to acoustic tile. Twice the rooms had experienced water damage due to errant plumbing, damaging gear and blowing circuit breakers. As a precaution against such accidents, a clear plastic canopy had been installed as a kind of shortstop. The sheets of plastic were taped together with silver duct tape, in places partially obscuring the overhead fluorescent tube. Boldt was shown to a computer terminal in the corner of the back room.
“We're working on some audio tapes in the other room,” the technician explained, offering Boldt a set of headphones that were in bad condition. He plugged them into one of the rack-mounted devices.
“I don't think it's music,” Boldt said, not understanding the offer of headphones. “I've got a CD player in my office.”
“It's CD-R,” the tech explained. “Recordable CD-ROM. Multimedia, probably, or why not just send a disk? These babies hold six hundred and forty megs of data, that's why. With compression? Shit, it's damn near bottomless.”
“What do I do?”
The man set up the disk in the machine. “Double click this baby when you're ready,” he said, pointing to the screen. “It should do the rest.” He reminded, “Don't forget the disk when you're done. People are always forgetting their disks.” He tapped his earlobe.
“You go through this a lot, do you?” Boldt asked sarcastically.
“Headphones,” the man reminded.
Boldt slipped the headphones on as the tech left him. He double clicked the CD icon and sat back, watching the screen, his anxiety still with him. Someone had gone to a lot of trouble. The average snitch liked things simple: money for information. This felt more white collar, more upmarket, and that generally meant power and influenceâentities that Intelligence ran up against from time to time.
The computer took a moment to access the CD-ROM. The word WAIT flashed in the message bar, as if he had a choice. The screen suddenly changed to a light gray background, and a credit cardâsized box appeared in the center of the screen. Ambient room sound hissed in his ear, reminding Boldt of interrogation tapes. But there was something else in the sound: a radio or TV.
The small box in the center of the screen showed a small childâa girlâin a chair. He scrambled for his reading glasses. The girl appeared bound to the chair. Worse, she looked alarmingly like his own Sarah, although the room was unfamiliar to him: a pale yellow wall behind her, grandmother curtains on a window behind her and to her right. To the child's left, a television set played CNN, the voices of the news anchors distant and vague.
All at once the image animated. The girl looked left in a movement all too familiar to Boldt. The reading glasses found their way to Boldt's eyes, and he leaned in for a better look.
Not possible
, a voice inside him warned. Terror stung him.
As she spoke, as he heard that voice, all doubt was removed. Sarah screamed, “Daddy!” She rocked violently, her arms taped to the chair. “Daddy!”
The video image went black, replaced by a typewritten message in the same small box. Boldt could not read it for the tears in his eyes.
He saw her all at once as a small fragile creature, cradled between his open palm and elbow, a tiny little newborn, a treasure of expressions and sounds. A promise of life; the enormous responsibility he felt to nurture and protect her.
He wiped away his tears, returned the glasses and read the message on the screen.
Sarah is safe and unharmed. She will remain so as long as the task force's investigation wanders. Do not allow it to focus. Do not allow any suspect to be pursued. If you are clever, your daughter lives and is returned to you happy and safe. This I promise. If you speak of this to another living soul, if the investigation should net a suspect, you will never see your sweet Sarah again. Think clearly. This is a choice you must make. Make it wisely.
Boldt reread the warning, stood from the chair and then sagged back down. He closed the file and took the CD out of the machine.
Think!
he demanded of himself, no thoughts able to land, his balance gone, the room spinning. He drew in a deep breath and exhaled slowly. The Pied Piper might have spies anywhere. Paranoia overtook him. Boldt stood up slowly, like an invalid testing his unsure legs. Chills rushed up and down his spine. His face burned. Someone spoke to him in the hall, and again on the elevator and in the garageâhe saw their mouths move, he heard the shapes of sound, but not the words. He was someplace no one could reach him. He ran several red lights on his way to the yellow house where Sarah and Miles spent their middays with fifteen other children.