Jeffery Deaver - Roadside Crosses

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The Monterey Peninsula is rocked when a killer begins to leave roadside crosses beside local highways-not in memoriam, but as announcements of his intention to kill. And to kill in particularly horrific and efficient ways: using the personal details about the victims that they've carelessly posted in blogs and on social networking websites. The case lands on the desk of Kathryn Dance, the California Bureau of Investigation's foremost kinesics-body language-expert. She and Deputy Michael O'Neil follow the leads to Travis Brigham, a troubled teenager whose role in a fatal car accident has inspired vicious attacks against him on a popular blog, The Chilton Report. As the investigation progresses, Travis vanishes. Using techniques he learned as a brilliant participant in MMORPGs, Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Games, he easily eludes his pursuers and continues to track his victims, some of whom Kathryn is able to save, some not. Among the obstacles Kathryn must hurdle are politicians from Sacramento, paranoid parents and the blogger himself, James Chilton, whose belief in the importance of blogging and the new media threatens to derail the case and potentially Dance's career. It is this threat that causes Dance to take desperate and risky measures… In signature Jeffery Deaver style, Roadside Crosses is filled with dozens of plot twists, cliff-hangers and heartrending personal subplots. It is also a searing look at the accountability of blogging and life in the online world. Roadside Crosses is the third in Deaver's bestselling High-Tech Thriller Trilogy, along with The Blue Nowhere and The Broken Window.

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"RSS is another next big thing. It actually stands for RDF Site Syndication-'RDF' is Resource Description Framework, if you're interested, and there's no reason for you to be. RSS is a way of customizing and consolidating updated material from blogs and websites and podcasts. Look at your browser. At the top is a little orange square with a dot in the corner and two curved lines."

"I've seen it."

"That's your RSS feeds. Chilton is trying hard to get picked up by other bloggers and websites. That's important to him. And it's important to you too. Because it tells us something about him."

"He's got an ego I can stroke?"

"Yep. That's one thing to remember. I'm also thinking of something else you can try with him, something more nefarious."

"I like nefarious."

"You'll want to somehow hint that his helping you will be good publicity for the blog. It'll get the name of The Report around in the mainstream media. Also, you could hint that you or somebody at CBI could be a source for information in the future." Boling nodded at the screen, where the blog glowed. "I mean, first and foremost, he's an investigative reporter. He appreciates sources."

"Okay. Good idea. I'll try it."

A smile. "Of course, the other thing he might do is consider your request an invasion of journalistic ethics. In which case he'll slam the door in your face."

Dance looked at the screen. "These blogs-they're a whole different world."

"Oh, that they are. And we're just beginning to comprehend the power they have-how they're changing the way we get information and form opinions. There are probably sixty million of them now."

"That many?"

"Yep. And they do great things-they prefilter information so you don't have to Google your way through millions of sites, they're a community of like-minded people, they can be funny, creative. And, like The Chilton Report, they police society and keep us honest. But there's a dark side too."

"Propagating rumors," Dance said.

"That's one thing, yes. And another problem is what I said earlier about Tammy: They encourage people to be careless. People feel protected online and in the synth world. Life seems anonymous, posting under a nym or nic-a screen name-so you give away all sorts of information about yourself. But remember: Every single fact about you-or lie-that you post, or somebody posts about you, is there forever. It will never, ever go away."

Boling continued, "But I feel the biggest problem is that people tend not to question the accuracy of the reporting. Blogs give an impression of authenticity-the information's more democratic and honest because it comes from the people, not from big media. But my point-and it's earned me plenty of black eyes in academia and in the blogosphere-is that that's bullshit. The New York Times is a for-profit corporation but is a thousand times more objective than most blogs. There's very little accountability online. Holocaust denials, Nine-eleven conspiracies, racism, they all thrive, thanks to blogs. They take on an authenticity some weirdo at a cocktail party doesn't have when he spouts off that Israel and the CIA were behind the Trade Towers attack."

Dance returned to her desk and lifted her phone. "I think I'll put all your research to use, Jon. Let's see what happens."

JAMES CHILTON'S HOUSE was in an upscale area of Carmel, the yard close to an acre, and filled with trimmed but hodgepodge gardens, which suggested that husband, wife or both spent plenty of weekend hours extracting weeds and inserting plants, rather than paying pros to do it.

Dance gazed at the outside décor enviously. Gardening, though much appreciated, wasn't one of her skills. Maggie said that if plants didn't have roots they'd run when her mother stepped into the garden.

The house was an expansive ranch, about forty years old, and squatted at the back of the property. Dance estimated six bedrooms. Their cars were a Lexus sedan and a Nissan Quest, sitting in a large garage filled with plenty of sports equipment, which unlike similar articles in Dance's garage, actually appeared well used.

She had to laugh at the bumper stickers on Chilton's vehicles. They echoed headlines from his blog: one against the desalination plant and one against the sex education proposal. Left and right, Democrat and Republican.

He's more cut-and-paste…

There was another car here too, in the drive; a visitor, probably, since the Taurus bore the subtle decal of a rental car company. Dance parked and walked to the front door, rang the bell.

Footsteps grew louder, and she was greeted by a brunette woman in her early forties, slender, wearing designer jeans and a white blouse, the collar turned up. A thick Daniel Yurman knotted necklace, in silver, was at her throat.

The shoes, Dance couldn't help but identify, came from Italy and were knockouts.

The agent identified herself, proffering her ID. "I called earlier. To see Mr. Chilton."

The woman's face eased into the hint of a frown that typically forms when one meets law enforcers. Her name was Patrizia-she pronounced it Pa- treet -sia.

"Jim's just finishing up a meeting. I'll go tell him you're here."

"Thank you."

"Come on in."

She led Dance to a homey den, the walls covered with pictures of family, then disappeared into the house for a moment. Patrizia returned. "He'll be just a moment."

"Thank you. These are your boys?" Dance was pointing at a picture of Patrizia, a lanky balding man she took to be Chilton and two dark-haired boys, who reminded her of Wes. They were all smiling at the camera. The woman proudly said, "Jim and Chet."

Chilton's wife continued through the photos. From the pictures of the woman in her youth-at Carmel Beach, Point Lobos, the Mission -Dance guessed she was a native. Patrizia explained that, yes, she was; in fact, she'd grown up in this very house. "My father had been living here alone for years. When he passed, about three years ago, Jim and I moved in."

Dance liked the idea of a family home, passed down from generation to generation. She reflected that Michael O'Neil's parents still lived in the oceanview house where he and his siblings had grown up. With his father suffering from senility, his mother was thinking of selling the place and moving into a retirement community. But O'Neil was determined to keep the property in the family.

As Patrizia was pointing out photos that displayed the family's exhausting athletic accomplishments-golf, soccer, tennis, triathlons-Dance heard voices in the front hall.

She turned to see two men. Chilton-she recognized him from the pictures-wore a baseball cap, green polo shirt and chinos. Blondish hair eased in tufts from under the hat. He was tall and apparently in good shape, with only a bit of belly swelling above his belt. He was speaking to another man, sandy-haired, wearing jeans, a white shirt and a brown sports coat. Dance started toward them but Chilton quickly ushered the man out of the door. Her kinesic reading was that he didn't want the visitor, whoever he was, to know that a law enforcement agent had come to see him.

Patrizia repeated, "He'll just be a minute."

But Dance sidestepped her and continued into the hall, sensing the wife stiffen, protective of her husband. Still, an interviewer has to take immediate charge of the situation; subjects can't set the rules. But by the time Dance got to the front door Chilton was back and the rental car heading off, gravel crunching under tires.

His green eyes-similar to her shade-turned their attention her way. They shook hands and she read in the blogger's face, tanned and freckled, curiosity and a certain defiance, more than wariness.

Another flash of the ID. "Could we talk somewhere for a few minutes, Mr. Chilton?"

"My office, sure."

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