If he'd known how easy it was to make money honestly, he could've saved himself a shitload of grief.
He crunched up a few more peanuts and pushed away the dish, mindful of his waistline, as the bartender arrived with a fresh cup. "Sorry it took so long, and my apologies again."
"No problem." He sipped the coffee-very fresh. "Thanks."
"You're welcome, sir."
Weed Maddox turned his thoughts to the problem at hand. The notebook wasn't in the house. That meant that Broadbent either had it on him or had hidden it off-site, maybe in a safe-deposit box. Wherever it was, Maddox knew he wasn't going to get it now by theft. He felt a swelling of irritation. Broadbent was up to his ass in it in one way or another. Maybe as a rival-maybe even as Weathers's partner.
Maddox could almost hear Corvus's Brit voice ringing in his head- The note book. There was only one way: he had to force Broadbent to give it up. What he needed was leverage.
What he needed was her.
"First time in Santa Fe?" the bartender asked, breaking into his thoughts.
"Yeah."
"Business?"
"What else?" Maddox grinned.
"Are you here for the laproscopic surgery conference?"
Christ, he probably did look like a doctor. A Connecticut doctor on a medical junket, all expenses paid by some pharmaceutical giant. If only the bartender could see the tattoo that covered his back from nape to butt. He'd shit his
pants
"No," said Maddox pleasantly, "I'm in human resources."
20
THE E-MAIL TOM received the next morning went:
Tom,
I "deciphered" the journal. You are not going to believe this. I repeat: you are not going to believe this. Come up to the monastery a.s.a.p. and prepare to have your mind blown.
Wyman
Tom had left the house immediately. Now that his Chevy was approaching the last mile of washboard road to the monastery, his impatience had reached a feverish pitch.
Soon the bell tower of the monastery rose above the chamisa, and Tom pulled into the parking lot, a dust cloud rolling back over him as he got out. In a moment Brother Wyman came flying down from the church, his robes flapping behind him, like a giant bat on the wing.
"How long did it take you to crack the code?" Tom asked as they climbed the hill.
"Twenty minutes?"
"Twenty hours. I never did crack the code."
"I don't get it."
"That was the whole problem. It wasn't & code."
"Not a code?"
"That's what threw me. All those numbers in neat rows and columns, I kept assuming it had to be a code. Every test I ran on the numbers indicated they were not random, that they were highly patterned-but to what end? It wasn't a prime number code; it wasn't any kind of substitution and transposition code or any other cipher I could think of. I was stumped-until it occurred to me that it wasn't a code at all."
"Then what is it?"
"Data."
"Data?"
"I was a complete idiot. I should've seen it right off." Wyman broke off as they neared the refectory, putting a finger to his lips. They walked inside, down a hall, and into a small, cool whitewashed room. An Apple laptop sat on a crude wooden table underneath a disturbingly realistic crucifix. Ford peered around guiltily and carefully shut the door.
"We're not really supposed to be talking in here," he whispered. "I feel like the bad boy at school, smoking in the John."
"So what kind of data was it?"
"You'll see."
"Did it reveal the man's identity?"
"Not exactly, but it will lead you to him. I know that much."
They pulled chairs up on either side of the computer. Brother Wyman raised the screen, turned it on, and they waited while it booted up. As soon as it was running, Ford began typing rapidly. "I'm connecting to the Internet via a broadband satellite connection. Your man was using a remote sensing instrument and copying the data into his notebook."
"What kind of instrument?"
"It took me a while to figure it out. Treasure hunters and prospectors commonly use two devices. The first is a flux gradiometer proton magnetometer, which is basically an
incredibly sophisticated metal detector. You walk along the ground and it measures tiny variations in the local magnetic field. But the data output, measured in milligauss, doesn't look like these numbers at all.
"The second device is a ground-penetrating radar or GPR. It's a machine that looks like a perforated dish with a cluster of bow-tie antennae. It basically fires pulses of radar at the ground and records the echo. Depending on the type of ground and how dry it is, the radar can penetrate as deeply as five meters before being reflected back up. You can get a rough 3D image of something hidden in
the ground or in certain types of rock. It lets you see voids, caves, old mines, buried treasure chests, metal-bearing veins, ancient walls or graves-that sort of thing."
He paused to catch his breath, and went on in a rapid undertone. "It turns out the numbers in your notebook were the data stream from a very sensitive, custom-built ground-penetrating radar. Luckily it had a standard output mimicking a Dallas Electronics BAND 155 Swept FM, so that the imagery could be processed by off-the-shelf software."
"This treasure hunter was serious."
"He certainly was. He knew exactly what he was doing."
"So did he find a treasure?"
"He certainly did."
Tom could hardly stand the suspense. "What was it?"
Wyman smiled, held up his finger. "You're about to see a radar image of it, mapped using the GPR. That's what all those numbers in the notebook were all about: a careful mapping of the treasure in situ in the ground."
Tom watched as Ford connected to a Website maintained by the Boston University Department of Geology. He drilled down through a series of highly technical hypertext pages dealing with radar, satellite imagery, and Landsat, before arriving at a page entitled:
BAND 155 SWEPT-FM GPR PROCESSING AND ANALYSIS WITH
TERRAPLOT®
ENTER YOUR ID AND PASSWORD
"Hacked my way in," Ford whispered with a grin, typing in an ID and password. "No harm done, just pretended to be a student at BU." "This doesn't strike me as very monkish behavior," said Tom. "I'm not a monk yet." He typed some more and a new screen popped up:
UPLOAD DATA NOW
He typed some more, then sat back with a grin, his finger poised above the enter key, a smile hovering on his lips. "Are you ready?" "Don't torture me any longer." He brought his finger down with a crisp rap, executing the program.
21
COWBOY COUNTRY REALTY was located in a cutsie pseudo-adobe building on the Paseo de Peralta, strings of red chiles flanking the door and a chipper secretary in a western outfit manning the reception desk. Maddox strolled in, his own boots making a satisfying clunk-clunk on the Saltillo tile floors. He raised his hand to remove the Resistol hat he had purchased that morning-16X beaver, $420- but then decided against it, seeing as how he was now in the West where real cowboys left their hats on indoors.
He went over to reception, leaned on the desk.
"What can I do for you, sir?" the receptionist asked.
"You handle summer rentals, right?" Maddox gave the girl a lopsided grin.
"We sure do."
"Name's Maddox. Jim Maddox." He extended his hand and she took it. Her blue eyes met his.