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Authors: John Shirley

Watch Dogs (32 page)

BOOK: Watch Dogs
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“So they start with media--and set the stage with that?” Seline asked.

“Sure. But they got impatient. They’re working up another plan. See, they feel that North America should be a bastion of purity related to western European culture--and American culture. And that means resisting this so-called ‘cultural diversity’ thing. They want to resist the liberal agenda, the gay agenda, the immigrant agenda, and above all the socialist agenda. You know, the whole ‘tax the rich’ paradigm, all the regulations and pollution controls...”

“They?” Seline broke in. “Shouldn’t you say
we,
Bullock? I mean--as in you?”

Bullock cleared his throat. “Ah--it was
we.
I’m still pretty much against a lot of that stuff but...it’s where they’re taking it. I was taking notes for Verrick at the last meeting of the Iceberg board of directors and...I guess it scared me. Could be that Verrick saw my reaction. And then when the SystemsLeak file about him and Van Ness came out he started thinking maybe I’d testify against him. Being as I knew about the...expropriation.”

“The expropriation?” Wolfe snorted. “You mean killing those soldiers in Somalia and stealing millions and millions of dollars from the US government?”

          “Ah. Yes. That.” He nodded stiffly. “I knew about it. And I know about
Project Iceberg.
So I guess he figures I’m a liability to that as well as to him.”

Wolfe and Seline stared at him, waiting.

Bullock looked back and forth between them. “Project Iceberg...involves sending up UAVs--special drones, developed by Verrick and Starling. The drones will be transmission stations, intermediary tech that will hack into the automatic pilot systems of passenger jets. Jumbo jets preferably--the bigger the better. They’ve gotten more and more auto-pilot oriented, in the last few years. Makes them vulnerable to hacking, y’know.” He picked up his coffee cup, and put it down again. “Ultimately PURIFY plans to hack into planes coming into O’Hare airport to crash them all over the city. It will rain jet planes...including some military jets.”

Seline’s mouth dropped open. “How will that help
anyone?”

Bullock sighed. “I had the same thought. But Verrick thinks it’ll provide cover for something he wants to do. He plans to take over Blume Corporation. There’s a special meeting of Blume Corporation’s top people...They’ll be meeting over several days. Most of them aren’t the kind who’ll sign on with Purity. They have some kind of qualms about the whole concept, I guess. Fairness, that kind of thing. So they’ll stand in the way of the Purity agenda. They’ll be roadblocks to Verrick and Van Ness. This way--they’ll die. Verrick figures when they’re killed, Blume’s stock value will plunge. Then --Roger Verrick himself--can buy up enough of it to put himself in control of the company. And then when he controls Blume, he’ll be able to get full control over ctOS. Right now he only has intermittent access to it. He’s worried the...the reds, the socialists, the unions, the liberals--that they’ll get control of ctOS themselves.
He want to get there first. Chicago will be heavily damaged by the crashes all over town. That’ll weaken every part of the city. He can insert his own people, in the chaos. That’ll give him control of Chicago. Then he’ll push for ctOS to be established across the country--and he’ll have a special access to the system so he can control it. He’ll be able to take over the whole country...through ctOS.”

“But...” Seline shook her head in amazement. “Countless people will die in Chicago!”

“Sure. But one thing he plans to is to crash a lot of the planes into areas of Chicago heavily populated by liberals--or minorities. If they’re dead...they can’t vote. Plus--he can get rid of Pearce’s network. It’s more concentrated on the poorer sides of town. And he wants to eliminate Aiden Pearce. He’ll use the Club as his enforcers, when he’s rebuilding...”

“Wait,” Wolfe said. “The Club. Tranter. Aiden Pearce...so Verrick is definitely the guy who sent Grampus to kill Pearce?”

“Through Tranter. But...of course it was Niall Quinn who paid for it. And who demanded it get done. In exchange for services.”

“Niall Quinn. Son of Lucky Quinn?”

“Right. Niall Quinn wanted revenge on Aiden Pearce for killing his dad...”

Wolfe grunted. “Big mistake on Verrick’s fault, to get involved with that bunch. Because going after Pearce, for Quinn--got Pearce to fight back. And Pearce’s been using me like a chess piece against Verrick...only I don’t think he knows why Verrick sent Grampus...”

Seline glared at Bullock. “Just tell me--when was this attack...involving drones and planes...going to happen?”

“A few days. End of that meeting the Blume outfit was here for. But--I’ve heard...that Verrick is moving it up. It’s going ahead...tomorrow!”

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

 


So it was Niall Quinn?” Pearce’s voice on the phone was hard, brittle. “I wondered if it might be. He pulled the trigger on Verrick, who pulled the trigger on Tranter, who pulled the trigger on Grampus--who pulled it on me.”

“Yeah. But Pearce...” Wolfe was in the bedroom of the safehouse. She could hear the murmur of voices, Seline talking to Bullock in the next room. “...the attack. If Bullock’s right about that...”

“It fits in with what we know. It’s the last piece of the puzzle, Wolfe. We have to assume it’s true. You’re going to have to go to a guy I know at the Justice Department. Or--I have a friend who’s a friend of his. Kiskel knows him. He’ll see you. There’s an office right here in Chicago. You warn them--Homeland Security will ground those planes and put out an alert for drones.”

“You believe that?”
“Sure, they go on high alert every time a Muslim baby burps. They’re almost as worried about militia nut jobs. And this is pretty much what these Purity guys are.”

“But--Van Ness is a connected son of a bitch. And Purity has a lot of money. You know as well as I do that money talks in this country. Did the Department of Justice go after all those Wall Street lowlifes? I don’t know if they’re going to raid Verrick and Iceberg on my say-so.”

“Look, I’m not a law and order guy. I’m a wanted man. But --we’ve got an obligation to tell people about this. I think Department of Justice is more reliable than Homeland Security. Those dopes at HS will probably arrest you before they’ll detain Van Ness...they’ll figure it’s all a veiled threat from you. But Doolin at DoJ--Kiskel says he’s all right. Go to him, Pearce. Fast. I’ll try to set it up.”

#

It was dusk by the time Seline drove Bullock to the train station.

They were just approaching the curb near the station, when Bullock said, suddenly, “Young lady--you wouldn’t really have carved me up, would you?”

She hesitated. But she couldn’t keep up the pretense anymore. “No. And we wouldn’t have given you to Verrick. But we’d have turned you over to Pearce, probably. And who knows what he’d have done with you....”

He looked up at the station. “I don’t know if this is safe...”

“You want to try to drive out?”

“No. Verrick’ll be watching my house. I don’t want to use a credit card--I’d need that for a rental.”

“You could try O’Hare...”

“No, couldn’t go out through O’Hare. Not with a lot of crashing planes a possibility. But...I don’t feel good about this either. They could be looking for me here. Would you at least come in with me?”

“Okay, Bullock.” She took a left, and lucked into a parking place almost immediately. They parked, got out and walked through the cold gray evening to Union Station. She had the remote camera scrambler Wolfe had given her, in her pocket, and she pressed it several times as they approached. She didn’t know if they were looking for her but she didn’t want to take a chance.

They went through the glass doors, down the hallway, into the big ticketing room. Seline looked around. It was mostly just a room full of busy people, or waiting people. They were bustling off to a train, waiting in lines, or waiting in wooden benches. There were a couple of cops across the room, chatting, paying them no harm. An announcer’s voice boomed out, warning that a train to Kansas City was about to depart.

“You sure you want to go to Los Angeles, Bullock?” she asked. He was planning to pay for the ticket cash, at the ticket windows.

“Yes. I didn’t know if you were going to really bring me here...” He looked around nervously. “I don’t see anyone watching me.”

“There wasn’t any doubt, once Wolfe made you a promise, that he was going to let you go. He’s a pretty square guy. Tough but...honest.”

“You like him, don’t you? I mean...in a big way.”
“None of your business.”

The ticket cashier, a gray haired man in thick glasses, was staring at them, as they got closer in the line. He excused himself for a moment, as the fat lady up ahead fumbled in her purse for cash, and then stepped away from the window, talking quickly into a cell phone.

I shouldn’t be paranoid about that,
Seline told herself. The man could’ve just realized he had to call his wife. Could be anything.

The cashier quickly returned to the window and took the fat lady’s money.

Seline tried to relax. It took a couple more minutes, but at last Bullock stepped up to the window, and asked for a ticket to Los Angeles.

Then Seline realized the cashier was staring past Bullock--past her. At someone...

She turned, saw a flabby pot bellied man in coveralls rushing up toward Bullock. In his hand was something like a walkie-talkie. It seemed modified, with extra wiring on the outside--and he was pointing it at Bullock.

“Bullock!” Seline called.

He turned--saw the man...stared at the device in his hand...

Then Bullock began to sway. He looked dizzy. White foam showed at the corners of his lips. “Insulin...shock. He...”

Bullock collapsed.

Seline automatically knelt by him--tried to hold Bullock still as he convulsed, his eyes rolling back in his head...

She shouted, “Someone! We need an ambulance!”

The cops ran over to her, looking genuinely concerned. Seline looked around for the man with the device in his hand...

But he was gone. Vanished into the crowd.

She backed away. The cops were kneeling by Bullock, one of them taking his pulse. “This man’s dying...”

Seline slipped into the crowd herself.

#

“Wolfe?”

“Yeah, you get him on a train?”

“No. They were watching for him. He’s dead. He said something about his insulin...There was a man there who was pointing a...a machine of some kind at him...”

Wolfe was driving a “borrowed” car to the justice department, listening to Seline on his bluetooth.

She described the man with the “device”.

“That’s Starling,” Wolfe said. “He must’ve been nearby. But then Blume’s headquarters is about half a block away. Must’ve hacked into Bullock’s insulin injector. Made it dump three months worth at once. Too much insulin--you die.”

“Oh, God.”

“You get away without being followed?”

“I think so.”

“Okay. Go back to the safehouse. I’ll call you. I’ve got to go in and see Doolin. Kiskel got me an appointment. I want to get this over with fast before they start looking at me for...other stuff.”

Wolfe ended the call, pulled the car up to the nearest curb. It was a red curb but he didn’t care--he didn’t plan to drive it again.

He hurried through the increasing wind across the street to the Federal Building, sizing it up as he went.

It was old granite building, about eight stories high, with a U.S. flag out front and curving stone eaves. The Department of Justice’s offices in Chicago were housed in two buildings and this was the older one.

Wolfe went in, half expecting to be arrested on sight. He wasn’t sure to what extent law enforcement might be looking for him now.

In the old, echoing marble faced lobby was a scanning machine and a metal detection framework. He’d been expecting this and he’d left his gun in the car.

He went through it, removing off his shoes and belt as at the airport, aware of the curious stares of the Federal Marshals as he put them back on. He didn’t look like the usual visitor.

Wolfe went to the downstairs admissions desk where a brisk black woman in a suit looked him over. “My name’s Wolfe. Agent Doolin’s waiting for me.” She looked at her appointment book.

“Yes sir.”

 Doolin was expecting him. His identification was checked, then he was sent upstairs to room 325.

The door had the old fashioned white glazed glass in it; painted in black on the glass was
Edward Doolin, Special Agent
.

Wolfe reached for the doorknob--then he heard a man whispering inside. Another door opening. The hair went up on the back of his neck. Something was wrong here. He could feel it.

And then he
saw
it...he looked down and saw blood spreading slowly out from under the door.

Wolfe thought,
If you were smart, you’d beat it out of here, now.

He opened the door.
Never said I was terribly smart.

BOOK: Watch Dogs
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