Is that really what you want?
<4.2 seconds of silence>
Clay:
Start the conversation. But we’re going to need their full and unequivocal support. Not just on the COD, but into the future. A new special relationship.
When the file arrived on his d-pad, Soren had been in the middle of a novel, a baroque historical packed with architectural terms. It wasn’t very good, but he found it impossible to be nothing here. Too many sounds from too many people coming through the walls. Too great a sense of the weight of humanity around him. Even a poor distraction was better.
There was a knock on the apartment door, the handle turning at the same time. John, knowing that the greater courtesy was respecting his time rather than his privacy.
John Smith said, “Youreadthefile?”
“Yes.”
“Youunderstand.”
It wasn’t complicated. If the Holdfast allied with the American government before the jaws of John’s trap closed, the revolution would be over before it began. “Yes.”
“He’spowerful.”
Soren had read files on the new ambassador, had watched footage of his arrival. “Yes.”
“Canyoudoit?”
“Yes.”
“Willyou?”
When John had pulled him from his retreat, led him into the world with all its pressures, he had explained why. Everything hung in the balance. A war was likely. Millions would likely die. But things would be forever changed. The gifted would assume dominance in America, and from there, the world.
Soren didn’t care. The barriers that separated him from the world would never be toppled. Social change was irrelevant; prejudice had never been his problem. The revolution meant nothing to him.
But it meant everything to John, and to Samantha. The only two people in the world Soren cared about.
“Yes.” He set aside his novel and looked his friend in the eye. “I’ll kill Nick Cooper for you.”
CHAPTER 25
“Follow the money,” Quinn deadpanned over the video link. “Just . . . follow the money.”
Cooper rolled his eyes. “Really?”
“Hey, it won an Oscar.”
“I think it won them all. Do you have the files or not?”
Quinn said, “Sending.” The projection went half-transparent as he leaned too close to the camera.
Cooper sat in the office Epstein had provided, across the square from the apartment his family was staying in. It was stylish, modern, and no doubt bugged from floor to ceiling. While it might be possible to keep secrets from Erik Epstein, he didn’t imagine it was possible to do it in the New Canaan Holdfast.
It didn’t matter. Let him watch.
Cooper glanced at his d-pad. “Receiving.”
“For all the good it will do you.”
“Epstein has a hole card. Something we don’t know about.”
“My friend, he has dozens. We’ve had teams of lawyers and forensic accountants working full-time to decrypt Epstein’s finances for years. A third of a trillion dollars spread across hundreds of shell corporations in scores of countries. If you were to print out all the data I just sent you, you know how tall a stack it would be?”
“No, how tall?”
“Really tall.”
Cooper laughed. “As ever, I feel safer knowing you’re involved, Bobby.”
“I’m not involved. The special advisor to the president asked for a favor, and the DAR was happy to help.”
“Good, because I need another. I want you to link my d-pad to Daria.”
“No way. She’s an agency resource.”
“And I work for the White House.”
“Cooper—”
“Bobby, please. With sugar on top. And presidential authorization.”
His friend blew a breath. “Fine.”
“Thanks.” Cooper tapped a button, and the projection of Quinn vanished. His d-pad showed that less than twenty-five percent of the file had been transferred. Considering the bandwidth available in the Holdfast, that was saying something. Maybe Quinn was right. How much could he expect to accomplish in the face of all of that information?
Cooper sighed, leaned back. There were three tri-ds mounted on the wall, and he had them all on, all tuned to news, all muted. The most interesting by far was the pirate station out of the NCH that hacked into the datafeeds to broadcast a distinctly partisan take on world events. Right now it was showing an image of former President Henry Walker, and as the host talked, someone doodled on the video, drawing a Hitler moustache and horns on the man. Not sophisticated, but kind of funny.
Okay. What are you doing?
On one hand, the answer was simple. He was using his gift for pattern recognition to sort through the finances of Epstein Industries, looking for anomalies that might give him a window into Erik’s intentions.
On the other hand, that was ridiculous. $300 billion was an incomprehensibly huge amount of money. If the Coca-Cola Company merged with McDonald’s, their combined market capitalization would still be $20 billion less than Epstein’s personal fortune. Cooper could stare at spreadsheets for a year and never see the same one twice, and he didn’t have a year.
So do it your way. Forget a brute-strength approach. Trust your gift. Look for the sharp edges and knotty corners. The parts you can catch on.
When he’d met Erik Epstein months ago, the abnorm had asked Cooper to kill John Smith. It wasn’t personal; Epstein wanted Smith dead because he believed that the terrorist leader posed a threat to New Canaan. A belief borne out by recent events.
Okay, fine. But Cooper couldn’t possibly have been Epstein’s only plan to protect New Canaan. In fact, talking to Erik and Jakob earlier, it had been clear that while they’d hoped he would succeed, they hadn’t gone all-in on that notion. Why should they? They were intelligent men running a complicated empire. He had probably been a long shot.
There it was. The first clue. If he had been a long shot, that meant they had other plans in action as well. Plans that predated his arrival and that would have continued after he left.
Now you just need to figure out what they are.
His d-pad pinged softly, showing the connection had been established. Cooper switched to verbal control, and said, “Daria?”
“Hello, Nick. Department of Analysis and Response Inquiry Assessment, ready.” The voice was female, but the force behind it wasn’t a person. DARIA was a research tool, a personality matrix used to sift data.
“Sort largest expenditures, by category, in Epstein Industries and all subsidiaries, 2010 to 2013.”
“Complete.”
“Remove everyday costs of doing business.”
“Nick, I’ll need more precision.”
“Take out stuff like maintenance and legal fees, but leave in things like, I don’t know, product development.”
“Complete.”
“Display.”
A list scrolled. And scrolled, and scrolled. What had Bobby said? A third of a trillion dollars, spread across hundreds of companies.
“Filter for anomalous results.”
“Nick, anomalous in what way?”
“As compared to—” A flicker of motion caught his eye. Something was happening on the tri-d. All of the news stations were showing the same footage. “Um, other multinationals.”
“Nick, that will take several moments.”
“What? Fine.”
He tapped buttons on the desk, and the screens unmuted, audio pouring out from three sources at once, as the video showed . . .
Shannon?
Just flashes of her, moving fast. Dressed in black fatigues and carrying a submachine gun. She was racing down a hall somewhere, a dozen similarly dressed people behind her. The hall was painted a sad shade of green, and the windows were narrow. It looked familiar.