Slowly, she typed in the first line from Peter’s note.
Y7(29g)85KL/24
When she hit ENTER, the cursor blinked several times, then the screen went blank.
When it remained that way for more than ten seconds, Quinn said, “That can’t be right.”
“That didn’t happen last time I was here,” Misty said, looking equally concerned. “What should I do?”
“Maybe we should try closing the database and bringing it back up.”
“How? The screen’s blank.”
Behind them, someone said, “Is there a problem?”
They both turned to find a woman in her early thirties, dressed in slacks and a nice blouse, standing a few feet away. Her name tag indentified her as Carole Barnes, Librarian, Interactive Media.
“No, we’re fine,” Quinn said.
But she was already looking past him at the monitor, her eyes narrowing. “Is the terminal frozen?”
Misty hesitated, then said, “It seems to be.”
“Here,” Ms. Barnes said. “Move out of the way.”
“I’m sure it’s just running slow,” Quinn said.
The librarian looked at him, an eyebrow raised. “And I’m sure you’re not the one in charge of the equipment. Now, please, step back.”
Short of rendering the woman unconscious, Quinn didn’t know what else to do. So he gave Misty a subtle nod, and they moved away from the station.
Ms. Barnes immediately took the vacated seat and reached under the desk. A second later, the computer powered down.
“Let’s see if that does the trick,” she said without moving from the chair.
Ten seconds passed before Quinn heard the computer fan kick back on. A moment after that, the monitor sprang back to life. Once it cycled through, they were greeted once more with the Library of Congress screen.
“There,” Ms. Barnes said, finally relinquishing the chair. “Let me know if it acts up again.”
Quinn and Misty thanked her as she left.
“I’ll turn my back, but I’m not walking away this time,” Quinn said when they were alone again.
“So turn already.”
Once more, Misty logged in to the Office’s archive and brought up the search box.
She retyped the characters and said, “Here goes nothing,” as she pressed ENTER.
The result was a repeat of last time.
“Dammit,” she said.
Quinn frowned at the screen. “Try typing. Maybe it’ll allow you to navigate back.”
She hit a few keys. Surprisingly, characters started appearing right where the text box had been.
“Wait,” Quinn said. “Erase that and type in the message again.”
She did what he asked. When she hit ENTER, the screen went black again, but only stayed that way for a second before a column of several short lines of type appeared. The first line contained an address — number and street only. The ones below it appeared to be a short list of cryptic directions.
“Does the address mean anything to you?” Quinn asked.
Misty shook her head. “No.”
Quinn pulled out his phone and took a picture of the screen.
“Is there another page or is this it?” he asked.
She moved the cursor across the screen. “Nothing is linked.”
“What if you try typing it in again?”
As she put her fingers on the keyboard, a small box labeled TIME UNTIL LOG OFF appeared on screen, with numbers below it counting down from thirty.
Misty went ahead and typed in the characters anyway, but none of them appeared. As the countdown clock reached fifteen, she said, “You want to take another picture, just in case?”
Quinn checked the one he’d already taken. It was clean and readable. “We’re good,” he said.
When the clock hit zero, the screen faded first to black, then to the home screen for the Library.
“I guess that’s it,” Misty said, staring at the monitor. “At least we know the message was a password.”
“Yeah, but to what?” He looked around and noticed that Ms. Barnes was heading their way again.
“Everything okay?” she asked.
“Worked fine,” he said. “We just finished up.”
“Great. Well, enjoy your day.”
Quinn and Misty rendezvoused with Daeng and Howard back at the car.
After everyone was in the vehicle, Daeng said, “Well?”
“It worked. Gave us an address,” Quinn said.
“An address to where?”
“Good question.”
Quinn looked at the photo he’d taken, memorized the street and number, then entered them into the search box of his map app. He expected to get at least half a dozen matches across the country, but only three choices popped up. All were on the East Coast — one in Maine, another in New Hampshire, and a third only a few miles away.
“Arlington,” he told Howard.
CHAPTER 12
As was her habit, Helen Cho arrived at her office at five thirty a.m. That was a price she was happy to pay for being able to run her various organizations from the West Coast instead of back in New York or DC.
The East Coast had hurricanes and blizzards and humidity. San Francisco had earthquakes — though not nearly as often as people living elsewhere thought — and that was about it. She didn’t mind a good ground shake anyway. She’d been born in Los Angeles and had lived through more than her share of tumblers.
Between six and six thirty, while she was invariably on a call to someone in the CIA, NSA, FBI, or the Pentagon, her assistant David — who was not a fan of early mornings — would bring in hard copies of reports that had come in overnight, and place them on her desk. If she was on a conference call that only needed her presence but not her attention, she would begin perusing them. Otherwise she would wait until the call had ended.
The call this morning had been an example of the latter, a one-on-one with an assistant director at Langley. After she hung up, she buzzed David to bring her a fresh cup of coffee, and began sorting through the pile.
The first document was a status report on field operations being run directly out of her San Francisco office. Everything seemed to be going smoothly. Next up was a lengthy breakdown of a mission that had finished up two days prior. There had been a couple problems on this one, but it had all worked out in the end. This was followed by reports on wiretapped conversations, shadowing operations, and asset acquisitions.
Near the bottom was a document from O & O. The DC security agency was a recent addition to her responsibilities. For years it had been run semiautonomously, which, it seemed, turned out to be a problem. The powers that be within Homeland Security suspected the agency of flagrant abuse of both authority and budget, but they needed proof, and had installed Helen to evaluate and clean up any messes. It wasn’t a task she’d been thrilled to undertake, but she also knew no one could do it better than she. So far, her biggest problem had been getting everyone at O & O to understand she was the one in charge.
As she read the report, her face hardened in anger. Here was another example of information coming to her long after it should have. According to the document, yesterday someone had broken into an apartment in Georgetown, and one of O & O’s agents had been shot trying to detain one of the intruders. Thankfully the wound had not been life threatening, but that didn’t matter. She should have been informed immediately.
Her anger almost caused her to miss the most important detail, one that resonated with her both professionally and personally — the address of the break-in.
I must be remembering incorrectly.
She checked her private contact list, glad she had not deleted the entry she was looking for. Nope, she hadn’t remembered wrong. The apartment that had been broken into — the apartment O & O had been hired to watch, for some reason — belonged to Peter.