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All three of them were quiet. Finally, Natasha said, “I think his wife is still holding out hope. Linnaman’s probably just trying to help her deal with all of this.”

I’d seen this type of thing before in other cases, and it wasn’t helpful; in the end it would only exacerbate her pain. In addition, I’d already sent my condolences to her. I rubbed my head. “Okay, we’ll tackle that later. Let’s move on. Bobby Clarke, the truck driver. Any word?”

Everyone shook their heads.

“I heard from Torres,” Jake said, switching to our other case. “He said Reiser’s time of death was sometime late Tuesday, which would have given Basque plenty of time to clear out.”

But Reiser was seen entering the trailer Wednesday evening…

The killer returning to the scene?

Maybe, or maybe just an unreliable eyewitness.

“They also found newspaper clippings,” he said, “about the murders with Basque fourteen years ago and the more recent ones over the last six months. And some recorded television news footage covering the crimes as well.”

So, Jake’s instincts had been right after all.

“Cable or local?” I said.

“Both.”

“But only the crimes with Basque?”

“Yes.”

Lien-hua spoke up. “I’ve been thinking about Basque. About the knives. Using them isn’t just a way of prolonging the victim’s death, but also, the penetration of the knife into her body has obvious sexual connotations. For him, this act represents coition.”

If you buy into the psychosexual theories of criminal behavior, which I did not, Lien-hua’s observation made sense. It occurred to me that Jake, who’d been working on this case for months, and who did share that perspective, hadn’t made that connection.

“Yes.” Jake nodded. “Reiser’s psych profile is consistent with a tendency to associate violence and sexuality.”

Lien-hua shook her head. “That’s not exactly what I’m getting at. Basque’s partner would be less dominant than him, more easily manipulated, have a lower sense of self-worth, and most likely have followed Basque’s lead in the crimes and the documentation of them.”

“So you’re saying?” Jake sounded irritated.

“Considering his submissive role in the murders, the significance of the blades would likely be different for him, might not even be part of his signature-if he were to have committed crimes without Basque present.”

“Which seems probable, given thirteen years apart,” I noted.

“Yes.”

My mind was spinning, trying to sort through all that had happened in the last two days-searching for Reiser in his trailer, getting called to Woodborough, visiting the scene of Ardis and Lizzie’s murders, finding the helmet, chasing Chekov, nearly drowning…

Letting Ellory die.

Jake stared at Lien-hua coolly. “I’ll have to share my notes with you. Show you what I’ve come up with.”

“Yes, that will be helpful,” she replied.

I flipped open my laptop. “I’m not sure yet how all this is connected, but has everyone had a chance to review the files Margaret sent about the ELF station?”

Jake and Natasha nodded, but Lien-hua shook her head. “The ELF station?”

I filled her in and when I was done, Natasha took the floor and mentioned that she’d pulled prints from the light switch in the study of the Pickron home. “In addition to Ardis’s and Donnie’s, I found one set of unidentifiable prints. I sent them to the Lab to see if they can dig anything up, do a more integrated AFIS search. The only prints in the laundry room were of family members.”

She consulted her notes. “I spent some time yesterday going through Donnie Pickron’s computer and reviewing his deleted files. Whoever accessed the computer wasn’t just looking up deployment records, but also searched through schematics of Ohio Class subs.”

“Schematics?” Lien-hua said skeptically. “Those are available to the public?”

“Not in their entirety,” she explained. “Obviously, there are restricted areas that weren’t detailed, but the basic design of the submarines apparently isn’t any secret. I mean, just watch the movie The Hunt for Red October or Crimson Tide. But there was more on his computer than there should have been.”

I typed a few thoughts onto my computer.

(1)

Above top secret clearance.

(2)

One-way communication.

(3)

Deployment routes.

(4)

Schematics.

(5)

First-strike orders.

“Track with me for a second,” I said. “The deployment patterns for the subs would certainly have changed since the eighties as world powers and threat assessments have changed over time, but those subs are still in use. I’m guessing they would still have the capability to receive and decode ELF signals.”

“If they were still able to be sent,” Jake added.

“Yes,” I acknowledged. “If they were. So maybe whoever was searching through these files wasn’t just looking at where the subs were deployed but also-”

“How they were designed,” Jake interrupted impatiently. “Yes. We’ve established that.”

I was getting tired of his attitude and was about to tell him so when Lien-hua leaned forward. “What are you thinking, Pat?”

“By knowing the most likely targets and the routes the subs traveled in relation to those targets years ago, it might be possible to extrapolate, at least generally, where the subs would be deployed today, taking into consideration the location of countries that currently pose a threat to national security.”

“It’s worth a look,” Lien-hua said.

I turned to Natasha. “As soon as we’re done I want you to follow up on those schematics.”

“I can also ask the DoD about any recent chatter regarding US subs.”

“Good.”

A thought. “Go ahead and see if their data analysts can review the most likely targets of the late eighties and early nineties and compare those to today’s threats. Maybe it’s possible to come up with an algorithm that might anticipate the current deployment routes. If the Defense Department’s number crunchers can do it, someone else might have been able to as well.”

“You think we’re looking at an attack on one of the subs?” she asked.

Not an attack on one, I thought, an attack from one.

“I’m not sure, but Donnie Pickron is a Navy information warfare officer, and if he’s still alive and he’s gone rogue, I don’t want him sending any messages to our subs. Any messages at all.”

“Or if he hasn’t gone rogue,” Lien-hua said, “but is being held by someone, forced to work for them.”

Silence spread through the room.

Natasha nodded slowly, jotted a note to herself on the legal pad in front of her.

I told them about what I’d discovered last night on the Routine Orbital Satellite Database and my theory about the shots through the Pickrons’ living room window being intended to obscure the view into the house. “We’re looking for a hacker, or a team of hackers, with the ability to access some of the DoD’s most sensitive information.”

For nearly an hour and a half we tackled various aspects of the case, each of us offering our analysis, input, findings.

Sean still had my cell, so at 11:00, as we were wrapping things up, I borrowed Lien-hua’s phone and called Angela Knight in Cybercrime to see what she’d uncovered about Alexei Chekov. She informed me that she’d had to pass the project along to a woman on her team and hadn’t heard back yet.

“This is a priority,” I said.

“Everything we’re working on is a priority.” She didn’t sound argumentative, just exhausted. “I’ll follow up with Alyssa, let you know.”

“Thanks.”

End call.

I’ve never been one to put much stock in profiling, an ongoing point of contention between Lien-hua and me, but now I had two of the NCAVC’s most experienced profilers sitting here with me and I knew that despite my reluctance to trust profiles it would’ve been negligent of me not to tap into their expertise.