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Menke approximated a smile. ‘Like I said, we have very sophisticated technology at our disposal. But at the end of the day, intelligence is and always has been a matter of human agency.’

Fabel excused himself, explaining that he had to get back to the Commission. Another body had been found, bringing the total to four.

‘What about the dismembered torso that Herr Muller-Voigt seemed so keen to discuss with you at our meeting? Have you definitely ruled that one out?’

‘Not definitely. But it doesn’t feel right,’ Fabel said, standing up and draining his coffee. ‘And murder investigation, like intelligence gathering, is a matter of human agency.’

‘Have you seen the Senator today?’ asked Menke.

‘No. Why should I have?’

‘No reason. It was just that he was supposed to be at our meeting today. In fact, it was exactly the kind of meeting I would have expected him to make a priority… he sees himself very much as the guardian of the people’s right to protest and, to be frank, I don’t think he trusts us that much. I’m very surprised he missed it. He sent us an email to say he couldn’t make it.’

‘Oh, I see,’ said Fabel. He chose not to mention that he had met with Muller-Voigt the night before, nor that he had tried to phone him that afternoon without success. ‘Well, I’ll no doubt see you again soon, Herr Menke.’

Menke remained seated and stretched his lips in a perfunctory smile. ‘No doubt, Herr Fabel.’

Fabel had already turned his back when Menke added: ‘Oh, by the way — I understand that Commissar Wolff is gathering information on the Pharos Project…’

‘Yes, she is.’

‘May I ask why?’

‘Because I asked her to.’

‘And may I ask why you asked her to? Is this connected with these murders?’

Fabel sighed. He had not wanted the BfV man to know of his interest in Pharos until he had found out something more about Muller-Voigt’s mysterious Meliha Yazar. But now that he did, there was no one better than Menke for Fabel to ask about it.

‘I’m looking at a lot of things. It’s just that the Pharos Project came up. I like to check everything out.’

‘You could have come to me.’

‘I intended to. My guess is that given the nature of the Pharos Project — I mean that it’s generally accepted that it is a cult — I guessed that the Bureau has an interest in Pharos, that you have a file on the organisation.’

‘Oh yes, we have an interest in Pharos…’ Menke gave a sardonic laugh. ‘We don’t have a file on them. We have a full-time five-man team…’

Fabel pulled out the chair and sat down again.

Chapter Nineteen

Roman Kraxner had spent two hours in Virtual Dimension. More than two hours.

He was angry with himself for his lack of discipline. But something was not right. He hadn’t seen Veronika 534 for days and she had agreed the exact time they could meet by the Moon Pools at the far side of New Venice lagoons. There again, it was true that that happened all the time: people were suddenly sucked back into real life and sometimes never returned to Virtual Dimension. But Veronika 534 had not seemed the type to skip out like that. There again, she had been spending a lot of time with Thorsten66; maybe they had hooked up in the real world.

The truth was that Roman was paranoid that the others he interacted with on Virtual Dimension would see through the facade: that he would do or say something that would reveal something of his reality. Roman was a conceited man: he was supremely confident in his intellectual abilities and looked down on the entirety of mankind as something inferior. But that was his mind. The part of him that connected with technology. As for the rest of his being, his physical presence, he knew that as far as everyone else was concerned he was just a fat loser. An obese computer geek who sweated and smelled and snorted and wheezed.

And that was what he was afraid of the others in Virtual Dimension seeing. There would never, ever be any real-world hook-up for Roman.

There had been a girl, once. In the real world. The only girl he had ever had a relationship with. Elena had been funny and very clever. Obviously not as clever as Roman, but very, very intelligent. They had met when she had brought her laptop back for repair. While he had worked on it, Roman had pried into every corner of her life, accessing all the personal information, the photographs, the online purchases she had made. It had revealed a person almost as lonely as he was. Somehow, without the mediation of any kind of technology, Roman had somewhere found the courage to ask her out. They had recognised a kinship in each other and they had seen each other for a few weeks.

But the truth, the cruel irony, was that Roman had found her physically repulsive. Because she, too, had been fat.

And if there was anything Roman found unappealing in a woman, it was too much weight.

He had put it from his mind. They clung to each other for companionship, and sex had never been something that either of them seemed to be interested in, so it made it easy for Roman to dispel his abhorrence of her fatness. That was until the night they had gone out to the cinema together. They usually met at the American fast-food bar that was roughly equidistant for their respective apartments, but that night they had arranged to see a film. A group of youths had spotted them and followed them, staying a few metres behind and laughing. Roaring with laughter and mocking them mercilessly, ceaselessly; making vulgar jokes and disgusting remarks about their size. The youths had tired of it eventually, but only after the damage had been done. After the film Roman and Elena had said goodbye and both knew they would never see each other again. It was obvious from the look that neither could keep from their gaze. A look of mutual disgust.

After that, Roman disengaged more and more from the real world. It had been about that time that he had given up the job in the computer store. He had despised the customers for their ignorance and stupidity and his attitude towards them had become increasingly hostile, so hostile there had been complaints; and, in any case, he was earning five times as much illegally in the evenings. If he quit his job, it meant he could spend even more time working on his fraudulent activities. It also removed the imperative to leave his flat every morning.

Roman looked at his profile page on Virtual Dimension. The fiction within a fiction. He had given himself an English name, Rick334, invented a completely false biography for himself, downloaded someone else’s photographs from elsewhere on the web. Someone slim, handsome, blond. He had extended the fiction by basing his Virtual Dimension avatar on the stolen face and body. The rules were that you only allowed people to view your ‘real’ profile after you had known each other for some time within the virtual world of New Venice, the impossibly beautiful city at the heart of Virtual Dimension’s fantasy universe. He had let Veronika534 see his profile and she had allowed him access to hers. They both lived in Hamburg, bringing the possibility of a real-life meeting close. Dangerously close, as far as Roman was concerned. Roman had worked out that it was no huge co-incidence that they shared the same home town: Virtual Dimension attracted people from around the world, but Roman had guessed that, to live up to its promise of ‘consolidation’ of virtual and physical realities, it must analyse the geographical origins of your IP address, grouping people according to their real-world geography.

Of course, Roman could have circumvented this. He had a dozen ways of connecting with a region-non-specific IP address, and his illegal servers allowed him to hide behind other people’s registered details but, whenever he was on Virtual Dimension, he used the same, non-dynamic and geographically accurate IP address. It was, unbelievably, actually legal and registered to his real home address. He used it for Virtual Dimension and nothing else and, in a way, this allowed him to demonstrate a perfectly legal means of connecting with the internet that was free of any association with his fraudulent activities.