Authors: Michael Connelly
Copyright © 2009 by Hieronymus, Inc.
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced,
distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written
permission of the publisher.
Little, Brown and Company
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First eBook Edition: May 2009
Little, Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette
Book Group, Inc.
The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and
not intended by the author.
Copyright acknowledgments appear on
page 423
.
ISBN: 978-0-316-07345-5
Contents
SIX: The Loneliest Road in America
A
LSO BY
M
ICHAEL
C
ONNELLY
Fiction
The Black Echo
The Black Ice
The Concrete Blonde
The Last Coyote
The Poet
Trunk Music
Blood Work
Angels Flight
Void Moon
A Darkness More Than Night
City of Bones
Chasing the Dime
Lost Light
The Narrows
The Closers
The Lincoln Lawyer
Echo Park
The Overlook
The Brass Verdict
Nonfiction
Crime Beat
To James Crumley, for
The Last Good Kiss
C
arver paced in the control room, watching over the front forty. The towers were spread out before him in perfect neat rows.
They hummed quietly and efficiently and even with all he knew, Carver had to marvel at what technology had wrought. So much
in so little space. Not a stream but a swift and torrid river of data flowing by him every day. Growing in front of him in
tall steel stalks. All he needed to do was to reach in, to look and to choose. It was like panning for gold.
But it was easier.
He checked the overhead temperature gauges. All was perfect in the server room. He lowered his eyes to the screens on the
workstations in front of him. His three engineers worked in concert on the current project. An attempted breach thwarted by
Carver’s skill and readiness. Now the reckoning.
The would-be intruder could not penetrate the walls of the farmhouse, but he had left his fingerprints all over it. Carver
smiled as he watched his men retrieve the bread crumbs, tracing the IP address through the traffic nodes, a high-speed chase
back to the source. Soon Carver would know who his opponent was, what firm he was with, what he had been looking for and the
advantage he hoped to gain. And Carver would take a retaliatory action that would leave the hapless contender crumpled and
destroyed. Carver showed no mercy. Ever.
The mantrap alert buzzed from overhead.
“Screens,” Carver said.
The three young men at the workstations typed commands in unison, which hid their work from the visitors. The control room
door opened and McGinnis stepped in with a man in a suit. Carver had never seen him before.
“This is our control room and through the windows there, you see what we call the ‘front forty,’ ” McGinnis said. “All of
our colocation services are centered here. This is primarily where your firm’s material would be held. We have forty towers
in here holding close to a thousand dedicated servers. And, of course, there’s room for more. We’ll never run out of room.”
The man in the suit nodded thoughtfully.
“I’m not worried about room. Our concern is security.”
“Yes, this is why we stepped in here. I wanted you to meet Wesley Carver. Wesley wears a number of hats around here. He is
our chief technology officer as well as our top threat engineer and the designer of the data center. He can tell you all you
need to know about colocation security.”
Another dog and pony show. Carver shook the suit’s hand. He was introduced as David Wyeth of the St. Louis law firm Mercer
and Gissal. It sounded like crisp white shirts and tweed. Carver noticed that Wyeth had a barbecue stain on his tie. Whenever
they came into town McGinnis took them to eat at Rosie’s Barbecue.
Carver gave Wyeth the show by rote, covering everything and saying everything the silk-stocking lawyer wanted to hear. Wyeth
was on a barbecue-and-due-diligence mission. He would go back to St. Louis and report on how impressed he had been. He would
tell them that this was the way to go if the firm wanted to keep up with changing technologies and times.
And McGinnis would get another contract.
All the while he spoke, Carver was thinking about the intruder they had been chasing. Out there somewhere, not expecting the
come-uppance that was speeding toward him. Carver and his young disciples would loot his personal bank accounts, take his
identity and hide photos of men having sex with eight-year-old boys on his work computer. Then he would crash it with a replicating
virus. When the intruder couldn’t fix it he would call in an expert. The photos would be found and the police would be called.
The intruder would no longer be a concern. Another threat kept away by the Scarecrow.
“Wesley?” McGinnis said.
Carver came out of the reverie. The suit had asked a question. Carver had already forgotten his name.
“Excuse me?”
“Mr. Wyeth asked if the colocation center had ever been breached.”
McGinnis was smiling, already knowing the answer.
“No, sir, we’ve never been breached. To be honest, there have been a few attempts. But they have failed, resulting in disastrous
consequences for those who tried.”
The suit nodded somberly.
“We represent the cream of the crop of St. Louis,” he said. “The integrity of our files and our client list is paramount to
all we do. That’s why I came here personally.”
That and the strip club McGinnis took you to, Carver thought but didn’t say. He smiled instead but there was no warmth in
it. He was glad McGinnis had reminded him of the suit’s name.
“Don’t worry, Mr. Wyeth,” he said. “Your crops will be safe on this farm.”
Wyeth smiled back.
“That’s what I wanted to hear,” he said.
E
very eye in the newsroom followed me as I left Kramer’s office and walked back to my pod. The long looks made it a long walk.
The pink slips always came out on Fridays and they all knew I had just gotten
the word
. Except they weren’t called pink slips anymore. Now it was an RIF form—as in Reduction in Force.
They all felt the slightest tingle of relief that it hadn’t been them and the slightest tingle of anxiety because they still
knew that no one was safe. Any one of them could be called in next.
I met no one’s stare as I passed beneath the Metro sign and headed back into podland. I moved into my cubicle and slipped
into my seat, dropping from sight like a soldier diving into a foxhole.
Immediately my phone buzzed. On the read-out I saw that it was my friend Larry Bernard calling. He was only two cubicles away
but knew if he had come to me in person it would have been a clear signal for others in the newsroom to crowd around me and
ask the obvious. Reporters work best in packs like that.
I put on my headset and picked up the call.
“Hey, Jack,” he said.
“Hey, Larry,” I said.
“So?”
“So what?”
“What did Kramer want?”
He pronounced the assistant managing editor’s name
Crammer,
which was the nickname bestowed on Richard Kramer years earlier when he was an assignment editor more concerned with the
quantity than the quality of news he got his reporters to produce for the paper. Other variations of his full or partial name
evolved over time as well.
“You know what he wanted. He gave me notice. I’m out of here.”
“Holy fucking shit, you got pinked!”
“That’s right. But remember, we call it ‘involuntary separation’ now.”
“Do you have to clear out right now? I’ll help you.”
“No, I’ve got two weeks. May twenty-second and I’m history.”
“Two weeks? Why two weeks?”
Most RIF victims had to clear out immediately. This edict was instated after one of the first recipients of a layoff notice
was allowed to stay through the pay period. Each of his last days, people saw him in the office carrying a tennis ball. Bouncing
it, tossing it, squeezing it. They didn’t realize that each day it was a different ball. And each day he flushed a ball down
the toilet in the men’s room. About a week after he was gone the pipes backed up, with devastating consequences.
“They gave me extra time if I agreed to train my replacement.”
Larry was silent for a moment as he considered the humiliation of having to train one’s own replacement. But to me two weeks’
pay was two weeks’ pay I wouldn’t get if I didn’t take the deal. And besides that, the two weeks would give me time to say
proper good-byes to those in the newsroom and on the beat who deserved them. I considered the alternative of being walked
out the door by security with a cardboard box of personal belongings even more humiliating. I was sure they would watch me
to make sure I wasn’t carrying tennis balls to work, but they didn’t have to worry. That wasn’t my style.
“So that’s it? That’s all he said? Two weeks and you’re out?”
“He shook my hand and said I was a handsome guy, that I should try TV.”
“Oh, man. We gotta get drunk tonight.”
“I am, that’s for sure.”
“Man, this ain’t right.”
“The world ain’t right, Larry.”
“Who’s your replacement? At least that’s somebody who knows they’re safe.”
“Angela Cook.”
“Figures. The cops are going to love her.”
Larry was a friend but I didn’t want to be talking about all of this with him right now. I needed to be thinking about my
options. I straightened up in my seat and looked over the top of the four-foot walls of the cubicle. I saw no one still looking
at me. I glanced toward the row of glass-walled editors’ offices. Kramer’s was a corner office and he was standing behind
the glass, looking out at the newsroom. When his eyes came to mine he quickly kept them moving.
“What are you going to do?” Larry asked.
“I haven’t thought about it but I’m about to right now. Where do you want to go, Big Wang’s or the Short Stop?”
“Short Stop. I was at Wang’s last night.”
“See you there, then.”
I was about to hang up when Larry blurted out a last question.
“One more thing. Did he say what number you were?”
Of course. He wanted to know what his own chances were of surviving this latest round of corporate bloodletting.
“When I went in he started talking about how I almost made it and how hard it was to make the last choices. He said I was
ninety-nine.”
Two months earlier the newspaper announced that one hundred employees would be eliminated from the editorial staff in order
to cut costs and make our corporate gods happy. I let Larry think for a moment about who might be number one hundred while
I glanced at Kramer’s office again. He was still there behind the glass.
“So my coaching tip is to keep your head down, Larry. The axman’s standing at the glass looking for number one hundred right
now.”
I hit the disconnect button but kept the headset on. This would hopefully discourage anybody in the newsroom from approaching
me. I had no doubt that Larry Bernard would start telling other reporters that I had been involuntarily separated and they
would come to commiserate. I had to concentrate on finishing a short on the arrest of a suspect in a murder-for-hire plot
uncovered by the Los Angeles Police Department’s Robbery-Homicide Division. Then I could disappear from the newsroom and head
to the bar to toast the end of my career in daily journalism. Because that’s what it was going to be. There was no newspaper
out there in the market for an over-forty cop shop reporter. Not when they had an endless supply of cheap labor—baby reporters
like Angela Cook minted fresh every year at USC and Medill and Columbia, all of them technologically savvy and willing to
work for next to nothing. Like the paper and ink newspaper itself, my time was over. It was about the Internet now. It was
about hourly uploads to online editions and blogs. It was about television tie-ins and Twitter updates. It was about filing
stories
on
your phone instead of using it to call rewrite. The morning paper might as well be called the
Daily Afterthought
. Everything in it was posted on the web the night before.