“Yes sir,” the police officer in the backseat said into his phone. “But they—”
He paused for a moment, face actually turning a bit red as Randi pressed his own gun into his ribs. Zellerbach was tilted up onto his uninjured butt cheek, head thrown back and eyes closed. The occasional moan was the only thing indicating he was still alive.
“I understand that, sir. But what I’m trying to tell you is—”
Finally, he just gave up, mumbling a submissive good-bye before severing the connection. When Smith glanced back, it looked like the top of his head was going to blow off.
“Everything smoothed over?”
“Yes,” the man said through clenched teeth.
As requested, Klein had rolled out a few minor miracles, one being that this particular carjacking would be quickly forgotten. It was hard not to sympathize with their accidental hostage, though. He’d undoubtedly expected to have a chance to give the three of them a solid beating before sending them off to rot in prison. Now it was looking like he wouldn’t even get a chance to pull out his Taser.
“There it is,” Randi said tapping the glass separating them.
Gray and a little shopworn, the Honda was exactly what he’d asked for: the most innocuous vehicle on the planet. Smith pulled in behind it and hopped out, opening the back door as Zellerbach eased out of the passenger side with exaggerated slowness.
Randi tossed the cop’s gun into the front seat and flashed him one of her award-winning smiles. “Have a nice day, Officer.”
The keys were right where they were supposed to be and Smith eased back into the road while Zellerbach tried to find a comfortable position next to him.
“I need to go to the hospital. I need medical attention.”
“I’m a doctor, Marty. In fact, I’m an army doctor. Who are you going to find at a suburban hospital that knows more about bullet wounds than me?”
“But you’re not doing anything!”
“It’s not even bleeding anymore,” Smith said, dialing Klein and putting the phone on the dash. “Just try not to think about it, okay?”
As was customary, there was only one ring before it was picked up. “Jon. Did you find the car?”
“We’re in it now, sir. And you’re on speaker with Randi and Marty in the car.”
“Understood.”
“Who is that?” Zellerbach said.
“General Davis,” Smith responded, pulling a name off the top of his head. Zellerbach didn’t know anything about Covert-One, so it would be easiest to just play Klein as his commanding officer.
“What happened?” Klein started. “Did you say that Whitfield’s dead?”
“Yeah…Look, before we left, we sicced Marty on the Merge — asked him to see if he could find anything unusual. He called when we got back, saying he had.” Smith paused, trying to put their actions in the best possible light. “We went to his house to make sure everything he’d discovered was wiped off his computer. While we were in the process of doing that, Whitfield showed up with his men.”
“Uh-huh,” Klein said, his tone suggesting that he wasn’t so easily fooled, but was temporarily willing to overlook the fact that they had ignored a direct order. “And am I to understand that you killed the major?”
“No sir. But to tell that story we’re going to have to dredge up an investigation that you’ve made clear is over.”
There was a long silence before Klein spoke again. “Give me the broad overview and I’ll decide if we need to go into more detail.”
“Yes sir. One of Whitfield’s men was on Christian Dresner’s payroll.”
“Deuce Brennan,” Randi said from the backseat. The dripping hatred in her voice suggested that the man’s life span could now be measured with a stopwatch. “He shot Whitfield and another one of his men.”
“Why? What reason would Dresner have for ordering something like that?”
“To cover up the fact that he’s hidden a subsystem in the Merge that’s capable of killing its user.”
Another long pause. “You told me it was impossible for the unit to directly injure someone. Something about a lack of power as I recall.”
“That was the consensus. But it looks like the consensus was wrong.”
“I want to be perfectly clear here, Colonel. You’re telling me that, in your opinion, Christian Dresner intentionally created a mechanism to kill people.”
“Oh, it was definitely intentional,” Zellerbach chimed in, the pain from his injury fading a bit when talk turned to technology. “He went to huge lengths to hide it and to make it difficult to activate. Amazing stuff, really. The guy really is unbelievably—”
Smith ran a finger across his throat, cutting his old friend off. “Yes sir. You understand me correctly.”
“So I’m to believe that a reclusive genius who’s spent most of his career on things like childhood education, antibiotics, and helping the deaf is really bent on the mass murder of his customers?” Another pause. “Even if we accept what Eichmann told you about Dresner wanting to use the Merge to alter people’s thought patterns, the goal was fundamentally altruistic. If a drug company came up with an antidepressant that did everything he was trying to achieve, it’d get approved and half the world would be on it a year later.”
It was an incongruity that Smith had been pondering for the last hour. “But he didn’t create that, sir. He failed.”
“Your point?”
“I don’t think he wants to kill all his customers. Just some of them.”
“Do I hear a theory forming?” Randi said from the backseat.
“Think about where he came from,” Smith continued. “His parents’ time in the concentration camp. Their treatment by the Soviets. His experience in the East German orphanage. If there’s anyone alive who’s seen what powerful men are capable of, it’s Christian Dresner.”
“Go on,” Klein said.
“The Merge is what everyone talks about, but LayerCake is really the cornerstone of his system — and one of its main functions is accurately judging people. Think about the weird focus of his apps when the system was released: They were for the financial people who got rich by bringing the world’s economy down on top of the common man. They were for the increasingly corrupt and entrenched political class. And they were for the military, which keeps getting more and more efficient at killing.”
Zellerbach’s face was a mask of concentration. He was brilliant with technology but his illness made understanding the motivations of others more of a challenge. “So you’re saying he’s going to kill all the people he thinks are bad? People who make the world a worse place?”
“It makes a certain twisted sense,” Randi admitted.
“I agree,” Klein said. “And I’m going to take this to my superiors immediately. It—”
“I’m not sure that’s a good idea,” Zellerbach interrupted.
Smith looked over at him and he shrank a little, assuming he was going to be chastised again.
“Go ahead, Marty. Why not?”
“Because I guarantee that Dresner can activate that system over the network in a matter of seconds. And I also guarantee that he’ll know if you start talking to people about it.”
“Are you suggesting he can monitor people’s minds?” Klein said. “What they’re hearing and thinking?”
Zellerbach shook his head. “No. But he’d have known that there was a chance his subsystem could be found. And he’s going to be watching.”
“How?” Klein said, starting to sound a little exasperated. He wasn’t used to dealing with Zellerbach directly.
“A million different ways. He’ll look for unexplained network shutdowns. And LayerCake has those apps that evaluate news programs, right? I’ll bet my PlayStation they’re sifting everything being said about the Merge. But if it were me, I’d focus on individual people. He can see who’s online and who isn’t — that’s easy. He’ll be watching powerful people and their families. Let’s say you went straight to the president. Everyone knows he doesn’t use a Merge, but I’ll bet his wife does. And can almost guarantee that his kids do. Do you think he’s going to let them keep using it if you tell him? No way. And when LayerCake sees their usage — or other politicians’, wealthy donors’, friends’, military guys’—start to drop below what his algorithm says is normal, he’s gonna push the button.”