“Then look again!” Fontaine declared.
The director watched in dismay as the stilted image of the agents searched the two limp bodies in the van for a list of random numbers and letters.
Jabba was pale. “Oh my God, they can’t find it. We’re dead!”
“Losing FTP filters!” a voice yelled. “Third shield’s exposed!” There was a new flurry of activity.
On the front screen, the agent with the buzz cut held out his arms in defeat. “Sir, the pass-key isn’t here. We’ve searched both men. Pockets. Clothing. Wallets. No sign at all. Hulohot was wearing a Monocle computer, and we’ve checked that too. It doesn’t look like he ever transmitted anything remotely resembling random characters—only a list of kills.”
“Dammit!” Fontaine seethed, suddenly losing his cool. “It’s got to be there! Keep looking!”
Jabba had apparently seen enough—Fontaine had gambled and lost. Jabba took over. The huge Sys-Sec descended from his pulpit like a storm off a mountain. He swept through his army of programmers calling out commands. “Access auxiliary kills! Start shutting it down! Do it now!”
“We’ll never make it!” Soshi yelled. “We need a half hour! By the time we shut down, it will be too late!”
Jabba opened his mouth to reply, but he was cut short by a scream of agony from the back of the room.
Everyone turned. Like an apparition, Susan Fletcher rose from her crouched position in the rear of the chamber. Her face was white, her eyes transfixed on the freeze-frame of David Becker, motionless and bloody, propped up on the floor of the van.
“You killed him!” she screamed. “You killed him!” She stumbled toward the image and reached out. “David…”
Everyone looked up in confusion. Susan advanced, still calling, her eyes never leaving the projection of David’s body. “David,” she gasped, staggering forward. “Oh, David…how could they—”
Fontaine seemed lost. “You know this man?”
Susan swayed unsteadily as she passed the podium. She stopped a few feet in front of the enormous projection and stared up, bewildered and numb, calling over and over to the man she loved.
The emptiness in David Becker’s mind was absolute. I am dead. And yet there was a sound. A distant voice…
“David.”
There was a dizzying burning beneath his arm. His blood was filled with fire. My body is not my own. And yet there was a voice, calling to him. It was thin, distant. But it was part of him. There were other voices too—unfamiliar, unimportant. Calling out. He fought to block them out. There was only one voice that mattered. It faded in and out.
“David…I’m sorry…”
There was a mottled light. Faint at first, a single slit of grayness. Growing. Becker tried to move. Pain. He tried to speak. Silence. The voice kept calling.
Someone was near him, lifting him. Becker moved toward the voice. Or was he being moved? It was calling. He gazed absently at the illuminated image. He could see her on a small screen. It was a woman, staring up at him from another world. Is she watching me die?
“David…”
The voice was familiar. She was an angel. She had come for him. The angel spoke. “David, I love you.”
Suddenly he knew.
Susan reached out toward the screen, crying, laughing, lost in a torrent of emotions. She wiped fiercely at her tears. “David, I—I thought…”
Field Agent Smith eased David Becker into the seat facing the monitor. “He’s a little woozy, ma’am. Give him a second.”
“B-but,” Susan was stammering, “I saw a transmission. It said…”
Smith nodded. “We saw it too. Hulohot counted his chickens a little early.”
“But the blood…”
“Flesh wound,” Smith replied. “We slapped a gauze on it.”
Susan couldn’t speak.
Agent Coliander piped in from off camera. “We hit him with the new J23—long-acting stun gun. Probably hurt like hell, but we got him off the street.”
“Don’t worry, ma’am,” Smith assured. “He’ll be fine.”
David Becker stared at the TV monitor in front of him. He was disoriented, light-headed. The image on the screen was of a room—a room filled with chaos. Susan was there. She was standing on an open patch of floor, gazing up at him.
She was crying and laughing. “David. Thank God! I thought I had lost you!”
He rubbed his temple. He moved in front of the screen and pulled the gooseneck microphone toward his mouth. “Susan?”
Susan gazed up in wonder. David’s rugged features now filled the entire wall before her. His voice boomed.
“Susan, I need to ask you something.” The resonance and volume of Becker’s voice seemed to momentarily suspend the action in the databank. Everyone stopped midstride and turned.
“Susan Fletcher,” the voice resonated, “will you marry me?”
A hush spread across the room. A clipboard clattered to the floor along with a mug of pencils. No one bent to pick them up. There was only the faint hum of the terminal fans and the sound of David Becker’s steady breathing in his microphone.
“D-David…” Susan stammered, unaware that thirty-seven people stood riveted behind her. “You already asked me, remember? Five months ago. I said yes.”
“I know.” He smiled. “But this time”—he extended his left hand into the camera and displayed a golden band on his fourth finger—”this time I have a ring.”
“Read it, Mr. Becker!” Fontaine ordered.
Jabba sat sweating, hands poised over his keyboard. “Yes,” he said, “read the blessed inscription!”
Susan Fletcher stood with them, weak-kneed and aglow. Everyone in the room had stopped what they were doing and stared up at the enormous projection of David Becker. The professor twisted the ring in his fingers and studied the engraving.
“And read carefully!” Jabba commanded. “One typo, and we’re screwed!”
Fontaine gave Jabba a harsh look. If there was one thing the director of the NSA knew about, it was pressure situations; creating additional tension was never wise. “Relax, Mr. Becker. If we make a mistake, we’ll reenter the code till we get it right.”
“Bad advice, Mr. Becker,” Jabba snapped. “Get it right the first time. Kill-codes usually have a penalty clause—to prevent trial-and-error guessing. Make an incorrect entry, and the cycle will probably accelerate. Make two incorrect entries, and it will lock us out permanently. Game over.”
The director frowned and turned back to the screen. “Mr. Becker? My mistake. Read carefully—read extremely carefully.”
Becker nodded and studied the ring for a moment. Then he calmly began reciting the inscription. “Q…U…I…S…space…C…”
Jabba and Susan interrupted in unison. “Space?” Jabba stopped typing. “There’s a space?”
Becker shrugged, checking the ring. “Yeah. There’s a bunch of them.”
“Am I missing something?” Fontaine demanded. “What are we waiting for?”
“Sir,” Susan said, apparently puzzled. “It’s…it’s just…”
“I agree,” Jabba said. “It’s strange. Passwords never have spaces.”
Brinkerhoff swallowed hard. “So, what are you saying?”
“He’s saying,” Susan interjected, “that this may not be a kill-code.”
Brinkerhoff cried out, “Of course it’s the kill-code! What else could it be? Why else would Tankado give it away? Who the hell inscribes a bunch of random letters on a ring?”
Fontaine silenced Brinkerhoff with a sharp glare.
“Ah…folks?” Becker interjected, appearing hesitant to get involved. “You keep mentioning random letters. I think I should let you know…the letters on this ring aren’t random.”
Everyone on the podium blurted in unison. “What!”
Becker looked uneasy. “Sorry, but there are definitely words here. I’ll admit they’re inscribed pretty close together; at first glance it appears random, but if you look closely you’ll see the inscription is actually…well…it’s Latin.”
Jabba gaped. “You’re shitting me!”
Becker shook his head. “No. It reads, ‘Quis custodiet ipsos custodes.’ It translates roughly to—”
“Who will guard the guards!” Susan interrupted, finishing David’s sentence.
Becker did a double-take. “Susan, I didn’t know you could—”
“It’s from Satires of Juvenal,” she exclaimed. “Who will guard the guards? Who will guard the NSA while we guard the world? It was Tankado’s favorite saying!”
“So,” Midge demanded, “is it the pass-key, or not?”
“It must be the pass-key,” Brinkerhoff declared.
Fontaine stood silent, apparently processing the information.
“I don’t know if it’s the key,” Jabba said. “It seems unlikely to me that Tankado would use a non-random construction.”
“Just omit the spaces,” Brinkerhoff cried, “and type the damn code!”
Fontaine turned to Susan. “What’s your take, Ms. Fletcher?”
She thought a moment. She couldn’t quite put her finger on it, but something didn’t feel right. Susan knew Tankado well enough to know he thrived on simplicity. His proofs and programming were always crystalline and absolute. The fact that the spaces needed to be removed seemed odd. It was a minor detail, but it was a flaw, definitely not clean—not what Susan would have expected as Ensei Tankado’s crowning blow.
“It doesn’t feel right,” Susan finally said. “I don’t think it’s the key.”
Fontaine sucked in a long breath, his dark eyes probing hers. “Ms. Fletcher, in your mind, if this is not the key, why would Ensei Tankado have given it away? If he knew we’d murdered him—don’t you assume he’d want to punish us by making the ring disappear?”
A new voice interrupted the dialogue. “Ah…Director?”
All eyes turned to the screen. It was Agent Coriander in Seville. He was leaning over Becker’s shoulder and speaking into the mic. “For whatever it’s worth, I’m not so sure Mr. Tankado knew he was being murdered.”
“I beg your pardon?” Fontaine demanded.
“Hulohot was a pro, sir. We saw the kill—only fifty meters away. All evidence suggests Tankado was unaware.”
“Evidence?” Brinkerhoff demanded. “What evidence? Tankado gave away this ring. That’s proof enough!”
“Agent Smith,” Fontaine interrupted. “What makes you think Ensei Tankado was unaware he was being killed?”
Smith cleared his throat. “Hulohot killed him with an NTB—a noninvasive trauma bullet. It’s a rubber pod that strikes the chest and spreads out. Silent. Very clean. Mr. Tankado would only have felt a sharp thump before going into cardiac arrest.”
“A trauma bullet,” Becker mused to himself. “That explains the bruising.”
“It’s doubtful,” Smith added, “that Tankado associated the sensation with a gunman.”
“And yet he gave away his ring,” Fontaine stated.
“True, sir. But he never looked for his assailant. A victim always looks for his assailant when he’s been shot. It’s instinct.”
Fontaine puzzled. “And you’re saying Tankado didn’t look for Hulohot?”
“No, sir. We have it on film if you’d like—”
“X-eleven filter’s going!” a technician yelled. “The worm’s halfway there!”
“Forget the film,” Brinkerhoff declared. “Type in the damn kill-code and finish this!”
Jabba sighed, suddenly the cool one. “Director, if we enter the wrong code…”
“Yes,” Susan interrupted, “if Tankado didn’t suspect we killed him, we’ve got some questions to answer.”
“What’s our time frame, Jabba?” Fontaine demanded.
Jabba looked up at the VR. “About twenty minutes. I suggest we use the time wisely.”
Fontaine was silent a long moment. Then sighed heavily. “All right. Run the film.”