Strathmore had known all along it was on‑line, but even as Susan had been pounding on the main exit downstairs, he hadn’t mentioned it. He could not afford to let Susan out‑not yet. He wondered how much he’d have to tell her to make her want to stay.
Susan pushed past Strathmore and raced to the back wall. She jabbed furiously at the illuminated buttons.
“Please,” she begged. But the door did not open.
“Susan,” Strathmore said quietly. “The lift takes a password.”
“A password?” she repeated angrily. She glared at the controls. Below the main keypad was a second keypad‑a smaller one, with tiny buttons. Each button was marked with a letter of the alphabet. Susan wheeled to him. “What is the password!” she demanded.
Strathmore thought a moment and sighed heavily. “Susan, have a seat.”
Susan looked as if she could hardly believe her ears.
“Have a seat,” the commander repeated, his voice firm.
“Let me out!” Susan shot an uneasy glance toward the commander’s open office door.
Strathmore eyed the panicked Susan Fletcher. Calmly he moved to his office door. He stepped out onto the landing and peered into the darkness. Hale was nowhere to be seen. The commander stepped back inside and pulled the door shut. Then he propped a chair in front to keep it closed, went to his desk, and removed something from a drawer. In the pale glow of the monitors Susan saw what he was holding. Her face went pale. It was a gun.
Strathmore pulled two chairs into the middle of the room. He rotated them to face the closed office door. Then he sat. He lifted the glittering Beretta semi‑automatic and aimed steadily at the slightly open door. After a moment he laid the gun back in his lap.
He spoke solemnly. “Susan, we’re safe here. We need to talk. If Greg Hale comes through that door . . .” He let it hang.
Susan was speechless.
Strathmore gazed at her in the dim light of his office. He patted the seat beside him. “Susan, sit. I have something to tell you.” She did not move. “When I’m done, “he said, “I’ll give you the password to the elevator. You can decide whether to leave or not.”
There was a long silence. In a daze, Susan moved across the office and sat next to Strathmore.
“Susan,” he began, “I haven’t been entirely honest with you.”
CHAPTER 73
David Becker felt as if his face had been doused in turpentine and ignited. He rolled over on the floor and squinted through bleary tunnel vision at the girl halfway to the revolving doors. She was running in short, terrified bursts, dragging her duffel behind her across the tile. Becker tried to pull himself to his feet, but he could not. He was blinded by red‑hot fire. She can’t get away!
He tried to call out, but there was no air in his lungs, only a sickening pain. “No!” He coughed. The sound barely left his lips.
Becker knew the second she went through the door, she would disappear forever. He tried to call out again, but his throat was searing.
The girl had almost reached the revolving door. Becker staggered to his feet, gasping for breath. He stumbled after her. The girl dashed into the first compartment of the revolving door, dragging her duffel behind her. Twenty yards back, Becker was staggering blindly toward the door.
“Wait!” He gasped. “Wait!”
The girl pushed furiously on the inside of the door. The door began to rotate, but then it jammed. The blonde wheeled in terror and saw her duffel snagged in the opening. She knelt and pulled furiously to free it.
Becker fixed his bleary vision on the fabric protruding through the door. As he dove, the red corner of nylon protruding from the crack was all he could see. He flew toward it, arms outstretched.
As David Becker fell toward the door, his hands only inches away, the fabric slipped into the crack and disappeared. His fingers clutched empty air as the door lurched into motion. The girl and the duffel tumbled into the street outside.
“Megan!” Becker wailed as hit the floor. White‑hot needles shot through the back of his eye sockets. His vision tunneled to nothing, and a new wave of nausea rolled in. His own voice echoed in the blackness. Megan!
* * *
David Becker wasn’t sure how long he’d been lying there before he became aware of the hum of fluorescent bulbs overhead. Everything else was still. Through the silence came a voice. Someone was calling. He tried to lift his head off the floor. The world was cockeyed, watery. Again the voice. He squinted down the concourse and saw a figure twenty yards away.
“Mister?”
Becker recognized the voice. It was the girl. She was standing at another entrance farther down the concourse, clutching her duffel to her chest. She looked more frightened now than she had before.
“Mister?” she asked, her voice trembling. “I never told you my name. How come you know my name?”
CHAPTER 74
Director Leland Fontaine was a mountain of a man, sixty‑three years old, with a close‑cropped military haircut and a rigid demeanor. His jet‑black eyes were like coal when he was irritated, which was almost always. He’d risen through the ranks of the NSA through hard work, good planning, and the well‑earned respect of his predecessors. He was the first African American director of the National Security Agency, but nobody ever mentioned the distinction; Fontaine’s politics were decidedly color‑blind, and his staff wisely followed suit.
Fontaine had kept Midge and Brinkerhoff standing as he went through the silent ritual of making himself a mug of Guatemalan java. Then he’d settled at his desk, left them standing, and questioned them like schoolchildren in the principal’s office.
Midge did the talking‑explaining the unusual series of events that led them to violate the sanctity of Fontaine’s office.
“A virus?” the director asked coldly. “You two think we’ve got a virus?”
Brinkerhoff winced.
“Yes, sir,” Midge snapped.
“Because Strathmore bypassed Gauntlet?” Fontaine eyed the printout in front of him.
“Yes,” she said. “And there’s a file that hasn’t broken in over twenty hours!”
Fontaine frowned. “Or so your data says.”
Midge was about to protest, but she held her tongue. Instead she went for the throat. “There’s a blackout in Crypto.”
Fontaine looked up, apparently surprised.
Midge confirmed with a curt nod. “All power’s down. Jabba thought maybe—”
“You called Jabba?”
“Yes, sir, I—”
“Jabba?” Fontaine stood up, furious. “Why the hell didn’t you call Strathmore?”
“We did!” Midge defended. “He said everything was fine.”
Fontaine stood, his chest heaving. “Then we have no reason to doubt him.” There was closure in his voice. He took a sip of coffee. “Now if you’ll excuse me, I have work to do.”
Midge’s jaw dropped. “I beg your pardon?”
Brinkerhoff was already headed for the door, but Midge was cemented in place.
“I said good night, Ms. Milken,” Fontaine repeated. “You are excused.”
“But‑but sir,” she stammered, “I . . . I have to protest. I think—”
“You protest?” the director demanded. He set down his coffee. “I protest! I protest to your presence in my office. I protest to your insinuations that the deputy director of this agency is lying. I protest—”
“We have a virus, sir! My instincts tell me—”
“Well, your instincts are wrong, Ms. Milken! For once, they’re wrong!”
Midge stood fast. “But, sir! Commander Strathmore bypassed Gauntlet!”
Fontaine strode toward her, barely controlling his anger. “That is his prerogative! I pay you to watch analysts and service employees‑not spy on the deputy director! If it weren’t for him we’d still be breaking codes with pencil and paper! Now leave me!” He turned to Brinkerhoff, who stood in the doorway colorless and trembling. “Both of you.”