Dark Matter. Greg Iles

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Dark Matter - Greg  Iles


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using refinements of existing technology. Moreover, after a conversation with Andrew Fielding, the quantum physicist he’d already enlisted to work on his machine, Godin believed there was a strong chance that his computer would have quantum capabilities.

      By dangling these plums before the president, Godin had been able to secure almost every concession he demanded. A dedicated facility to work on his new machine. Virtually unlimited government funds to pay for a crash effort modeled on the Manhattan Project. The right to hire and fire his own scientists. For government oversight he got John Skow, whom he had compromised years before by bribing Skow to choose Godin computers over Crays for the Supercomputer Research Center. The president’s single demand had been on-site ethical oversight, which materialized in the form of David Tennant. And Tennant had seemed only a minor annoyance in the beginning. Everything had seemed perfect.

      But now two years had passed. Nearly a billion dollars had been spent, and there was still no working Trinity prototype. In the secret corridors of the NSA’s Crypto City, people were starting to draw parallels to the failed Project Spooky. The difference, of course, was Peter Godin. Even Godin’s enemies conceded that he had never failed to deliver on a promise. But this time, they whispered, he might have taken on more than he could handle. Artificial intelligence might not be as theoretical as quantum computing, but more than a few companies had gone bankrupt by promising to deliver it.

      Which was why Geli didn’t understand the necessity of Fielding’s death. Until last night, Godin had apparently viewed the brilliant Englishman as critical to Project Trinity’s success. Then suddenly he was expendable. What had changed?

      On impulse, she punched her keyboard and called up a list of Fielding’s personal effects, which she had made after his death, at Godin’s request. Fielding’s office had been a jumble of oddities and memorabilia, more like a college professor’s than that of a working physicist.

      There were books, of course. A copy of the Upanishads in the original Sanskrit. A volume of poetry by W. B. Yeats. Three well-thumbed novels by Raymond Chandler. A copy of Alice Through the Looking Glass. Various scientific textbooks and treatises. The other objects were more incongruous. Four pairs of dice, one pair weighted. One cobra’s fang. A mint copy of Penthouse magazine. A saxophone reed. A Tibetan prayer bowl. A wall calendar featuring the drawings of M. C. Escher. A tattered poster from the Club-à-Go-Go in Newcastle, England, where Jimi Hendrix had played in 1967, autographed by the guitarist. A framed letter from Stephen Hawking conceding a wager the two men had made about the nature of dark matter, whatever that was. There were store-bought compact discs by Van Morrison, John Coltrane, Miles Davis. The list of objects went on, but all seemed innocuous enough. Geli had flipped through the books herself, and a technician was listening to every track on the CDs, to make sure they weren’t fakes being used to store stolen data. Aside from Fielding’s office junk, there were his wallet, his clothes, and his jewelry. The jewelry was simple: one gold wedding ring, and one gold pocket watch on a chain, with a crystal fob on the end.

      As she pondered the list, Geli suddenly wondered whether all this stuff was still in the storage room where she had locked it this afternoon. She wondered because John Skow had access to that room. What if Fielding had been killed for something in his possession? Maybe that was why they’d wanted him to die at work. To be sure they got whatever it was they wanted. If so, it would have to be something he carried on him. Otherwise they could simply have taken it from his office. Geli was about to go check the storage room when her headset beeped again.

      “I think we’ve got a problem,” Corelli said.

      “What?”

      “Just like Tennant’s house. They’re inside, but I’m not hearing any conversation. Just faint echoes, like spillover from mikes in a distant room.”

      “Shit.” Geli routed the signal from the Fielding house microphones to her headset. She heard only silence. “Something’s going down,” she murmured. “What do you have with you?”

      “I’ve got a parabolic, but it’s no good through walls and next to useless with a window. I need the laser rig.”

      “That’s here.” She mentally cataloged her resources. “I’ll have it to you in twelve minutes.”

      “They could be gone in twelve minutes.”

      “What about night vision?”

      “I wasn’t expecting anything tactical.”

      Goddamn it. “It’s all on the way. Check Tennant’s car for that FedEx envelope. And give me the address of the driveway where you’re parked.”

      Geli wrote it down, then pressed a button that sounded a tone in a room at the back of the basement complex. There were beds there, for times when her teams needed to work around the clock. Thirty seconds later, a tall man with long blond hair shuffled sleepily into the control center.

      “Was ist this?” he asked.

      “We’re going on alert,” Geli said, pointing to a coffee machine against the wall. “Drink.”

      Ritter Bock was German, and the only member of her team handpicked by Peter Godin. A former GSG-9 commando, Ritter had worked for an elite private security service that provided bodyguards for Godin when he traveled in Europe and the Far East. Godin had hired Ritter permanently after the former commando averted a kidnapping attempt on the billionaire. Ruthless, nerveless, and skilled in areas beyond his counterterror specialty, the twenty-nine-year-old had turned out to be Geli’s best operative. And since she had spent her early summers in Germany, there was no language problem.

      Ritter sipped from a steaming mug and looked at Geli over its rim. He had the gray machine-gunner’s eyes of the boys who had attracted her as a teenager, while her father was stationed in Germany.

      “I need you to deliver the laser rig to Corelli,” she said. “He’s parked in a driveway near the UNC campus.”

      She tore off the top sheet of her notepad and laid it on the desktop beside her.

      Ritter sniffed and nodded. He hated gofer jobs like this one, but he never complained. He did the scut work and waited patiently for the jobs he was born to do.

      “Is the laser in the ordnance room?” he asked.

      “Yes. Take four night-vision rigs with you.”

      He drained the steaming coffee, then picked up the address off the desk and left the room without a word. Geli liked that. Americans felt they had to fill every silence, as though silence were something to be feared. Ritter wasted no effort, either in conversation or in action. This made him valuable. Sometimes they worked together, other times she slept with him. It hadn’t caused problems yet. She’d been that way in the army, too, taking her pleasure where she could find it. Just as she had at boarding school in Switzerland. There was always risk. You just had to be able to handle aggressive men—or women—and the fallout after you’d finished with them. She had always been up to both tasks.

      “Corelli?” she said. “What are you hearing now?”

      “Still nothing. Faint spillover. Unintelligible.”

      “I’m calling an alert. Ritter’s on the way.”

      There was only static and silence. Geli smiled. Ritter made the others uncomfortable. “Did you hear me?”

      “Affirmative. I’m at Tennant’s car now.”

      “What do you see?”

      “No FedEx envelope. He must have taken it inside with him.”

      “Okay.”

      “What do you want me to do?”

      “Go back to your car and wait for Ritter.”

      “Right.”

      Geli clicked off and thought again about Fielding’s personal effects in the storeroom. She had a feeling something was missing, and her instincts were usually dead-on. But she didn’t want to leave the control center now. Once Ritter


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