on it in the file, and as for our animal-headed friends – so what? Dressing up in funny masks is part of every culture and certainly isn't ether a crime or even suspicious. Look at Halloween or the Wren boys at Christmas. The bottom line is that Draker is off limits, but other avenues we can pursue. And are.'
'The idle thought occurs to me,' said Fitzduane, 'that your ongoing feud with the Taoiseach is becoming no small problem. I wonder why he does dislike you so. This thing has been going on since the Congo. Kind of makes you think, doesn't it?'
'I took this job,' said Kilmara, 'because I hoped to find out who betrayed us back then. My friend the Taoiseach, Joseph Patrick Delaney, had the means, the motive, and the opportunity – but I have no proof. And meanwhile, I have to protect and work with the man.'
'He has a certain Teflonlike quality,' said Fitzduane. 'I guess you could try tact.'
'I do,' said Kilmara. 'I don't call him shithead to his face.'
Fitzduane laughed. 'Politicians,' he said, and he was quoting. '‘Fuck ‘em all – the long and the short and the tall.’'
Kilmara smiled. 'The Congo – the dear-old-now-called-Zaire fucked-up Congo. You bring back memories. But we were naive then. You can't write off politicians that easily. Hell, everything's political. You're no mean politician yourself.'
Fitzduane grunted.
Kilmara broke new ground. 'Speaking of politics,' he said, 'remember Wiesbaden?'
'The BKA and its giant computer, the Kommissar,' said Fitzduane. 'Sure.'
'Large organizations like the BKA are coalitions,' said Kilmara, 'lots of little factions pushing their own particular points of view, albeit within a common framework.'
'Uh-huh,' said Fitzduane.
'One of the factions within the BKA, a unit known as the Trogs – they work troglodyte fashion, underground in an air-conditioned basement – has been experimenting for some time with an expert system to work with the Kommissar. They call it the Kommissar's Nose.' He smiled. 'We have a special relationship with the Trogs.'
Fitzduane was beginning to see the light. 'A back channel?' he said. 'You're not just getting the routine reports from the BKA. The Trogs give you chapter and verse.'
'We trade,' said Kilmara. 'They wanted access to our files for a project they were working on, and then I was able to help them out through some contacts in other countries. It took off from there. We have most-favored- nation status with the Trogs.'
He looked at Fitzduane and took his time continuing. 'They think we may be able to help each other,' he said.
'Who are they?'
'The computer guru of the unit is a Joachim Henssen. He's one of these people who work twenty-four hours at a stretch on the keyboard, live on junk food, and shave but once a month. He's a fucking genius. Administration is handled by a seconded street cop of the old school, a Chief Inspector Otto Kersdorf. Surprisingly they get on.'
'An expert system,' said Fitzduane, 'If memory serves, is a kind of halfway house on the road to artificial intelligence – a computer thinking like a human.'
Kilmara nodded. 'Artificial intelligence is an aspiration. Expert systems are reality right now. Basically you figure out how humans do things and then program their approach into the computer. Human experts tend to reach conclusions through a series of intelligent guesses called heuristics. An expert system is based on a series of heuristics.'
He grinned. 'Here endeth the lesson – because here endeth my knowledge. I belong to a pre-Pac-Man generation.'
'So the Trogs,' said Fitzduane, thinking it through, 'have come up with a software package that can analyze the mass of data accumulated by the Kommissar in much the same way as a bunch of smart, experienced policemen – something no human could do because there is too much computerized data to crunch through.'
'With one qualification,' said Kilmara. 'It's not a proven system yet. That means the BKA top brass won't go public on it in case they end up with egg on their faces – which means what the Komissar's Nose is sniffing out isn't seeing the light of day. The Trogs are going nuts.'
'But they've told you?'
'Unofficially,' said Kilmara. 'It could explain a lot if they are right – but there are many uncertainties involved.'
'But you want to take a flier of the whole thing?'
Kilmara nodded. 'They started off trawling through the Kommissar's data banks and noticed patterns,' he said. 'This led them to look at things on a more global basis – the U.S., the Middle East, and so on. Their findings have evolved into the hypothesis that one person has been behind a series of seemingly separate terrorist incidents over about a ten-year period. Common denominators include an excessive use of violence, a sick sense of humor, and a healthy respect for the bottom line. There is also a fondness for certain types of weaponry, including Skorpion machine pistols and Claymore directional mines.
'The Trogs call the mastermind a terrorist multinational. They say – and maybe they're not joking – that he thinks, operates, and organizes like a Harvard M.B.A. and probably has a gold American Express Card and his accounts audited by one of the Big Eight. They claim his pattern is to work globally through a variety of different subsidiary organizations.'
He grinned. 'Cynics in the BKA call this hypothetical master terrorist the Abominable No-Man. They say it's a wild theory and that Henssen is spaced. The Trogs reckon the only way to vindicate themselves is to track down this mythical being, and to do that, they need to bypass the bureaucracy and be closer to the action. They think there's a chance he may be based in Bern. It's a place to start, and there are quite a few pointers in this direction, including the gentleman you threw off the KirchenfeldBridge and his girlfriend, the chessboard girl.
'Anyway, the Trogs have proposed setting up a small unit here. All they want is a couple of rooms, good communications, and a computer terminal or two. They'll supply the secure modems to link with the Kommissar and the rest of the gear.'
He looked around Fitzduane's borrowed apartment and smiled.
'You devious son of a bitch,' said Fitzduane. 'Where do the Bernese cops come into all this?'
'It's an unofficial operation with unofficial blessing,' said Kilmara. 'Chief Max Buissard is skeptical. Examining Magistrate von Beck is enthusiastic. The deal is that von Beck heads it up with your friend the Bear. The one proviso is that we row in with an official representative. That way, if anything goes wrong, the forces of law and order of three countries – Switzerland, Germany, and Ireland – will be in the shit together and the fallout will be better dissipated. It's an old bureaucratic trick.'
'So who are you assigning? Gunther? He likes computers.'
'A newcomer would take time to get acclimatized,' said Kilmara.
'Anyway, von Beck and the Bear want you in on this thing. The Chief Kripo says you've brought a crime wave with you and is muttering about your screwing up his statistics but will support your involvement if you have official status. The Federal Police are kind of morbidly curious to find out what you're going to come up with next. A bit of terrorism does wonders for their funding, and the Feds think they're deprived if they don't' have Porsches and this year's chopper to run around in.
'I want you in – officially now – because I think we're all holding on to different bits of the dragon without knowing quite what we've found. I want a man on the spot who already knows his way around and whom I can trust. Besides, I don't have anyone else who isn't gainfully employed. So what do you say? You'll have official status, which may prove handy the way the bodies are piling up.'
Fitzduane sighed and spread his hands in resignation. There was a glint in his eyes.
'This all started with a morning constitutional,' he said. 'It's turning out like Vietnam.'
'Don't complain,' said Kilmara. 'Vietnam was a photographer's war. Now, will you do it?'
'Why not?' said Fitzduane. 'I've never worked with a Bear and an intelligent computer before.'
'We'll call the operation Project K,' said Kilmara, 'on account of your upmarket location.'
He tossed Fitzduane a bulky package.
'An Easter present,' he said.
The package contained a bottle of Irish whiskey, fifty rounds of custom-loaded shotgun ammunition, and a lightweight Kevlar bulletproof vest.