tracks serial offenders, I can’t usually bring her with me.

This time, though, Special Agent Lien-hua Jiang, one of my team members at the FBI’s National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime, as well as one of the Bureau’s top profilers, had called me in. We were consulting with the San Diego Police Department on a series of fires that had been started in abandoned homes over the last ten months. No fatalities so far, just property damage.

The Bureau wants to encourage strong family relationships, and since this wasn’t a case that would put Tessa in danger, and I wasn’t the lead investigator, and I was willing to foot the bill for her trip, they had no problems with her coming along. So, all things taken into account, this seemed like a good chance for us to spend some time together, especially since she was on break from school.

“So,” I said, changing the subject, “this is your first time visiting the Pacific Ocean, right?”

“I’ve seen the ocean before, Patrick. You know that. When we lived in New York.”

“But that’s the Atlantic.”

“There’s only one ocean.”

I wondered if this was a joke and I was missing the punch line.

“Last I checked there was the Atlantic, Pacific, Arctic, Indian-”

“Well, last I checked all the oceans were connected. One big body of water. One world, one ocean.”

I peered out the window. Watched the black water lick at the shore in the rising moonlight. “I guess I never thought of it like that before.”

“They do the same thing with land. Seven continents? Yeah, right. Only if you divide up Europe and Asia and split up North and South America and count the man-made Suez Canal.”

I’d never thought of that either. “So why do you think we do that, divide things up like that?”

She shrugged. Took a bite of salad. “How should I know, I’m just a kid. Different cultures, maybe. Territorialism. Ethnocentrism.

I don’t know. It just seems dumb, though.”

Ethnocentrism. That’s just great.

Creighton pressed “record,” swiveled the camera, took twenty seconds of footage.

Since visiting the Blue Lizard Lounge in November, he’d tried to uncover Shade’s real identity, but so far none of his contacts had been able to dig up anything specific, and since Creighton had skipped town, his former lawyer Jacob Weldon wouldn’t even return his calls. So Creighton hadn’t discovered anything about his mysterious new friend, and, although he would never have admitted it to anyone, that troubled him somewhat.

All of their communications had been through voice-altered phone calls, text messages, and dead-letter message drops. All very cloak-and-dagger, which made Creighton think that he-or she or whoever-was probably a spy wannabe.

But maybe not a wannabe.

Maybe the real thing.

Anything was possible.

Creighton pressed “pause,” then rewound the video. Played it through to the end. Adjusted the focus, then pressed “record” once again.

For the first few weeks, it had remained a complete mystery to him why Shade had chosen him for this specific job. But when Shade finally explained the grand scheme to him and then started naming names, he’d seen the beauty and irony of it all. Yes, he was the perfect person to do it.

Really, the only person.

He pressed “pause.”

There.

That was it.

Yes, just a slight glint off the glass, but he could take care of that, just like he’d done in the previous videos.

The camera was set.

He put the ropes in the trunk.

It was time to go find a woman interested in spending the evening with a handsome, slightly devilish male companion.

3

Victor Sherrod Drake, president and CEO of Drake Enterprises, sat at his desk on the top floor of Drake Enterprises’ world headquarters on Aero Drive in San Diego. Most people didn’t know that the biotech industry is the second largest economic force in San Diego, trailing just behind the military. But Victor knew. He’d helped make it a reality.

Most of his employees had gone home at 5:30 p.m., but Victor preferred to stay a little later, especially at this time of year when the 2008 financial reports were rolling in. Of course, it meant keeping a skeleton work crew on-site after hours to make sure his time wasn’t wasted, but that wasn’t a problem. He could afford it.

Victor set his cell phone beside the papers on his desk so it would be available if his accountant called, then he perused the latest profit-margin reports and tapped his fingers to the rhythm of a tune he’d heard while driving to work earlier in the day.

Yes. Things were going well. Very, very well.

He glanced out the window at San Diego, the desert by the sea that humans had staked out as paradise. Victor liked looking down on this city. All the antlike inhabitants. Drones busily going about their petty suburban lives-

“Mr. Drake, sir.” A sultry female voice interrupted his thoughts.

He’d hired the woman behind the voice just for the way she sounded.

He pressed the intercom. “Yes?”

“I have General Biscayne on the line.”

Victor’s fingers stopped tapping.

Biscayne.

Again.

Who cares if you work at the Pentagon? You do not go calling one of the world’s richest men whenever you want to. No, you do not.

On the other hand… the billions of dollars that the Pentagon’s research and development arm, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, was spending on this project could buy the general a few extra minutes of micromanaging.

“I’ll take it on my private line,” he told the voice he loved.

Victor swung the office door shut, snatched up his landline phone, and tried to hide the irritation in his voice. “General. Good of you to call.”

“I wondered if you might have gone home for the day.”

“I like to work late.” Victor calculated the time in the Eastern Time Zone. “You must like to as well.”

“Hate it. Just got out of a marathon DARPA meeting, and we are, how shall I say, anxious to see the progress on Project Rukh.”

“Well, I have good news, General: we’ve nearly completed the prototype. It’ll be ready in only a couple of-”

“Actually, we want to see it now. ASAP. Give it a test run. See how well it performs.”

Just the idea that they questioned whether it would work was insulting to Victor. Just the idea! You don’t build the country’s most profitable biotech firm by delivering faulty products-which was why Victor had arranged for his own internal tests. “When we deliver it to you, General, I guarantee it’ll work.”

“Well, if it does, I guarantee you that Drake Enterprises will be well-positioned when the bidding comes for DARPA’s next project. But, if the device is not ready, we’re pulling the plug on this thing. You’ve had two years to make it work, and so far we have nothing but a 2.5 billion dollar microwave-not exactly what you were contracted to build.”

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