"We do that every week. That's our business."
"We have reason to believe that somebody may've sold you some stolen parts."
"Stolen?"
"You're not under investigation, sir. But it's important that we find the man who sold them to you. Would you mind if we looked through your receiving records?"
"I swear I didn't know anything was stolen. Jim, he's my brother, wouldn't do that either. He's a good Christian."
"All we want is to find this man who sold them. We need the address or phone number of the company the parts were shipped from."
"All the shipping files're in here." He started down the hallway. "But if I needed a lawyer or anything 'fore I talk to you, you'd tell me."
"Yessir, I would," Bishop said sincerely. "We're only interested in tracking down this man."
"What's his name?" McGonagle asked.
"He was probably going by Warren Gregg."
"Doesn't ring a bell."
"He has a lot of aliases."
McGonagle stepped into a small office and walked to a filing cabinet, pulled it open. "You know the date? When this shipment came in?"
Bishop consulted his notebook. "We think it was March twenty-seventh."
"Let's see…" McGonagle peered into the cabinet, began rummaging through it.
Wyatt Gillette couldn't help but smile to himself. It was pretty ironic that a computer supply company kept dead-tree records in file cabinets. He was about to whisper this to Bishop when he happened to glance at McGonagle's left hand, which rested on the handle of the file cabinet drawer as he dug inside with the other hand.
The fingers, very muscular, were blunt and tipped with thick yellow calluses.
A hacker's manicure …
Gillette's smile vanished and he stiffened. Bishop noticed and glanced at him. The hacker pointed to his own fingers and then looked once again at McGonagle's hand. Bishop, too, saw.
McGonagle looked up, into Bishop's revealing eyes.
Only his name wasn't McGonagle, of course. Beneath the dyed gray hair, the fake wrinkles, the glasses, the body padding, this was Jon Patrick Holloway. The fragments scrolled through Gillette's mind like software script: Joe McGonagle was just another of his identities. This company was one of his fronts. He'd hacked into the state's business records and created a fifteen-year-old company and made himself and Stephen Miller co-owners of it. The receipt they'd found was for a computer part Phate had bought , not sold.
None of them moved.
Then:
Gillette ducked and Phate sprang back, pulling his gun from the filing cabinet drawer. Bishop had no time to draw his own gun; he simply leapt forward and slammed into the killer, who dropped his weapon. Bishop kicked it aside as Phate grabbed the cop's shooting arm and seized a hammer, which rested on top of a wooden crate. He swung the tool hard into Bishop's head. It connected with a sickening thud. The detective gasped and collapsed. Phate hit him again, in the back of the head, then dropped the hammer and made a grab for his pistol on the floor.
Gillette instinctively jumped forward, seizing Phate by the collar and arm before the man could snag the pistol.
The killer repeatedly swung his fist at Gillette's face and neck but the two men were so close that the blows didn't do any damage.
Together they tumbled through another door, out of the office and into an open area – another dinosaur pen, just like CCU headquarters.
The fingertip push-ups he'd done for the past two years let Gillette keep a fierce grip on Phate but the killer was very strong too and Gillette couldn't get any advantage. Like grappling wrestlers they stumbled over the raised floor. Gillette glanced around him, looking for a weapon. He was astonished at the collection of old computers and parts here. The entire history of computing was represented.
"We know everything, Jon," Gillette gasped. "We know Stephen Miller's Shawn. We know about your plans, the other targets. There's no way you're getting out of here."
But Phate didn't respond. Grunting, he shoved Gillette onto the floor, groping for a nearby crowbar. Groaning with the effort, Gillette managed to pull Phate away from the metal rod.
For five minutes the hackers traded sloppy blows, growing more and more tired. Then Phate broke free. He managed to get to the crowbar and snatched it up. He started toward Gillette, who looked desperately for a weapon. He noticed an old wooden box on a table nearby and ripped off the lid then pulled out the contents.
Phate froze.
Gillette held what looked like an antique glass lightbulb in his hand – it was an original audion tube, the precursor to the vacuum tube and, ultimately, the silicon computer chip itself.
"No!" Phate cried, holding up his hand. He whispered, "Be careful with it. Please!"
Gillette backed toward the office where Frank Bishop lay.
Phate came forward slowly, the crowbar held like a baseball bat. He knew he should crush Gillette's arm or head -he could have done so easily – and yet he couldn't bring himself to endanger the delicate glass artifact.
To him, the machines themselves're more important than people. A human death is nothing; a crashed hard drive, well, that's a tragedy .
"Be careful," Phate whispered. "Please."
"Drop it!" Gillette snapped, gesturing at the crowbar.
The killer started to swing but at the last minute the thought of hurting the fragile glass bulb stopped him. Gillette paused, judged distances behind him then tossed the audion tube at Phate, who cried out in horror and dropped the crowbar, trying to catch the antique. But the tube hit the floor and shattered.
With a hollow cry, Phate dropped to his knees.
Gillette stepped quickly into the office where Frank Bishop lay – breathing shallowly and very bloody – and grabbed his pistol. He stepped out and pointed it at Phate, who was looking over the remains of the tube the way a father would stare at the grave of a child. Gillette was shocked by the man's expression of mournful horror; it was far more chilling than his fury a moment ago.
"You shouldn't've done that," the killer muttered darkly, wiping his wet eyes with his sleeve and slowly standing up. He didn't even seem to notice that Gillette was armed.
Phate picked up the crowbar and started forward, howling madly.
Gillette cringed, lifted the gun and started to pull the trigger.
"No!" a woman's voice cried.
Startled, Gillette jumped at the sound. He looked behind him to see Patricia Nolan hurrying into the dinosaur pen, her laptop case over her shoulder and what looked like a black flashlight in her right hand. Phate too paused at her commanding entrance.
Gillette started to ask how she'd gotten here – and why – when she lifted the dark cylinder she held and touched his tattooed arm with the tip. The rod, it turned out, wasn't a flashlight. Gillette heard a crackle of electricity, saw a flash of yellow-gray light as astonishing pain swept from his jaw to his chest. Gasping, he dropped to his knees and the pistol fell to the floor.
Thinking: Shit, wrong again! Stephen Miller wasn't Shawn at all.
He groped for the pistol but Nolan touched the stun wand to his neck and pushed the trigger once more.
CHAPTER 00101001 / FORTY-ONE
Unable to move more than his head and fingers, Wyatt Gillette returned to painful consciousness. He had no idea how long he'd been out.
He could see Bishop, still in the office. The bleeding seemed to have stopped but his breathing was very labored. Gillette also noticed that the old computer artifacts, which Phate had been packing up when he and Bishop had arrived, were still here. He was surprised they'd left them all behind, a million dollars' worth of computer memorabilia.
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