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“You said you found several interesting things on the computer,” Anita said. “What kind of things?”

“He visited a lot of pornographic Web sites, and there were some bizarre e-mails,” Teller said. “But the thing you’re probably most interested in, especially since you’re still on the hunt, is that someone hacked into his computer five days before he was killed. Someone who knew what he was doing. He used four different proxies.”

“What are proxies?” Anita said.

“It’s complicated,” Teller said, “but basically, a proxy is what hackers use to hide their identities. Every PC on the Internet has an identification number, called an IP, which stands for Internet Protocol number. Each one is unique, like a fingerprint. Typically, a hacker sends a virus or tries to find an IP address. Then he finds a way to exploit the computer’s security program. Once he does that, he’s got full control. Now he’ll use that computer to hack into another by doing the same thing. They call them proxies.”

“So what you’re telling me is that this person hacked into four different computers before he got to the judge?”

“Right. He was pretty good.”

“So it had to be somebody who knew the judge, or at least someone he corresponded with by e mail?”

“Normally, yes. But the county maintains a Web site that has e-mail addresses for all of the judges. The judge checked that e-mail address regularly from his home computer. That’s how the hacker got in.”

“And once he got in, what did he do?”

“Nothing, which is strange. He didn’t download any viruses. He didn’t copy or destroy any files. He didn’t use the computer as a proxy. It appears that he just looked around and left.”

“I still want to talk to him,” Anita said. “Do you know who he is?”

“Assuming it’s a he, I know where his computer is,” Teller said. “I didn’t bother to track down the owner of the address since I knew you’d already made an arrest.”

Teller opened the report, found the page he was looking for, and set it down in front of Anita. “Here it is,” he said, pointing.

Anita felt the familiar surge of adrenaline that occurred whenever she got a break in a case.

“Thank you,” Anita said as she stood and picked up the report.

“What? You’re leaving?” Teller said. “Just like that? We were getting along so well.”

“Gotta go. I have work to do.”

PART 4

53

“Stay, boy. Stay.”

It’s nearly nine o’clock and darkness has fallen. I step onto the deck and close the door behind me. Rio is standing on the other side, eyes bright, tail wagging. He loves this nightly ritual of ours. I’m holding a ragged tennis ball, and I throw it as far as I can into the backyard. I open the door, and he leaps out.

“Go get it, Rio.”

He races down the steps, and I lean on the rail and watch. I can barely see him as he begins his search for the ball. He trots back and forth across the yard, nose to the ground, instinctively creating a grid. He’s invariably successful, and in just a few minutes, he’s back on the deck with the ball in his mouth.

“Good boy, Rio. Good boy.”

He drops the ball at my feet, and I pick it up. I throw it into the darkness again. He’d run and search all night if I’d stay out here with him. As I’m watching, Caroline walks out the door and hands me the phone. It’s Bates.

“Put on a suit,” he says. “I’ll pick you up in twenty minutes.”

“A suit? Where are we going?”

“To meet somebody important.”

“Who?”

“Just put on the suit, all right? I’m on my way.”

I reluctantly follow his order. He pulls into the driveway a little while later, and I climb into the BMW. He backs out without saying a word, and a in few minutes we’re heading west toward Jonesborough.

“So when do you tell me where we’re going?” I ask.

“We’re in for a busy night. Just sit back and enjoy the ride.”

A few minutes later he pulls the BMW into a high-dollar residential area called the Ridges. It’s the latest example of one-upmanship among the rich in the community, full of elegant homes surrounded by a championship golf course. I’ve never been inside any of the homes at the Ridges, but I know several people who live here. One of them is Lee Mooney.

Bates pulls into the driveway of a sprawling white mansion. He turns off the ignition and opens the door.

“You coming or is your ass glued to that seat?” Bates says.

“Is this Mooney’s house?”

“Sure is.”

“I don’t think I’d be welcome here.”

“Neither one of us will be welcome in a few minutes. Now get your butt out of the car and come on. You don’t want to miss this.”

We walk onto the front porch and Bates rings the doorbell. Lee Mooney opens the door a minute later, wearing a navy blue robe that appears to be made of silk and a pair of house shoes. He reeks of booze. The look on his face when he sees Bates is a mixture of consternation and confusion.

“What do you want, Sheriff?”

When he sees me, the look turns to anger.

“And what’s he doing here?”

“We need to speak to you in private,” Bates says.

“About what?”

“It’s important. I wouldn’t be standing here if it wasn’t.”

“This is private enough. Tell me what you want.”

“If you make me stand out here on the porch, I’m going to say what I have to say loud enough so your neighbors and your wife can hear me,” Bates says loudly. “And believe me, it won’t go good for you.”

Mooney looks around nervously and opens the door. As he steps back so we can walk through, he stumbles slightly and catches himself on the door.

“You remember where the study is, I assume,” Mooney says.

“I do,” Bates replies with mock civility.

“Go ahead. I’ll be right up.”

Mooney disappears down a hallway and Bates leads me up a wide staircase. I look around in awe: marble tile, cherry molding, cathedral ceilings, expensive art, a huge chandelier in the foyer. I’ve always heard that Mooney’s wife was extremely wealthy, and from the looks of the house, she must be. We walk into a study filled with plush leather and expensive wood. There’s a large cherry desk to my right and a leather couch to my left. Bates and I sit down on the couch.

“He’s deep in the bottle,” I say.

“No kidding. I thought he was gonna fall on his backside when we came in.”

“You’ve been here before?”

“Once. It’s been a while, though.”

“What’s going on, Leon?”

“You’ll see. Just let me do all the talking.”

Mooney walks in a couple of minutes later and closes the door behind him. He’s carrying a martini. He sits down behind his desk, sets the drink down, laces his fingers around the back of his neck, and leans back.

“What’s so damned important that it can’t wait until morning?” he says in a drunken, belligerent slur.

Bates leans forward and rests his forearms on his thighs. He stares at Mooney for a long minute-so long that even I begin to become uncomfortable.

“We finally got a break in the Hannah Mills case,” Bates says.

“We?” Mooney says. “What do you mean, ‘we’?”

“Me and Mr. Dillard, here. We’ve been working together. Well, that ain’t exactly right. I’ve been doing most of the work, but Mr. Dillard did help me out with one little detail. It was important, though. It surely was.”

Mooney unlaces his fingers, takes a drink from the martini, and crosses his arms.

“Why is he wearing a suit?” Mooney says.

“I’ll get to that in a minute. Don’t you want to know about Hannah? I thought you’d be tickled to hear that we found her.”

“You found her? Where? Is she alive?”

“She was in a mine shaft up on Buffalo Mountain. Somebody killed her and dumped her down that hole like a bag of trash.”

Mooney shakes his head and lowers his chin. He reaches for the martini glass again and misses, then finds it. I don’t know exactly where Bates is going with this, but I can feel a slow burn beginning in my stomach.