Criminal Minds (Fox Meridian Book 4) (25 page)

Read Criminal Minds (Fox Meridian Book 4) Online

Authors: Niall Teasdale

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Police Procedurals, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #fox meridian, #robot, #Police Procedural, #cybernetics, #sci-fi, #Action, #Science Fiction, #serial killer, #artificial intelligence, #Detective, #AI

‘That’s… going to need a bunch of luck.’

‘Oh yeah, but it may be the best they can do unless they can figure out who, when, and where he’s going to hit. Kit found me the specs on the Kildare-series. He needs power to recharge about once a week and the number of places he could get that probably climbs into the thousands. Beyond that, he could hide just about anywhere. No need for food, water, even air. He doesn’t sleep and he can operate in the dark without much trouble. No, waiting for an attack and hoping you get to him before he leaves is, unfortunately, the best tactic.’

‘So,’ Alice Vaughn said, ‘someone else has to die to catch him?’

‘Probably.’

‘I am so glad I don’t have your job.’

29
th
October.

‘Position nineteen. Nothing to report.’ Glory Hunter scanned the street and tried her best not to look
too
enticing. Despite the fact that she was dressed in a micro-skirt and a tube top which covered her nipples and little else, she did not really want too many people propositioning her. Turning a lot of people away would blow her cover.

It had come as no surprise when she had been selected for the street detail. An unfortunate period of late-teenage insecurity had resulted in a boob job she had not really needed and she looked more like a sex worker than the majority of her colleagues. She had pulled this kind of detail before, more than once, and did not really mind it, if she was honest. Standing on a street corner in October wearing enough cloth to comfortably dress a hamster was not exactly what she had in mind when she joined the force, but at least it was a relatively warm evening. Glory figured she had another year as a detective, and then she would make inspector and put dressing like a stripper behind her for good.

Checking down 5
th
Avenue, Glory considered her options and then continued down West 131
st
Street. It was all older housing in this area: residential space for people who, mostly, served the rich folks to the south in the MCD. Rich people still had a preference for live servants rather than using cyberframes. That was changing as developments in artificial skin and more powerful computers in smaller packages made androids more and more realistic. A decade or two and someone would probably come through and flatten the area, replacing it with arcologies or luxury apartment blocks, completing the erasure of the architecture of last century.

Musing on the pace of change and words like ‘gentrification,’ the undercover detective did not see the figure poised in the darkness of a narrow access which went through to the rear of the blocks on her right. She did not hear him as he stepped smartly out behind her, and it came as something of a surprise when she felt a hand close over her mouth, pulling her head back.

~~~

‘We’ve got an alarm.’

Olin turned to the tech operating one of the consoles in the operations room. ‘Who? Where?’

‘Position nineteen. Detective Hunter. Her biomonitor spiked and… Shit! She’s gone flatline!’

‘All units converge on position nineteen,’ Olin ordered. ‘Get an exact location and get eyes on that site. I’m going out there. I want reports from on-site in my head in thirty seconds!’

~~~

This one was easy to disrobe. His blades slit the plastic cloth easily and he tossed the shreds aside. She lay there on her back like a crumpled doll, eyes staring up at the night sky, blank and dead, and he mused for a second on the shape of her breasts. He had examined some with the same artificial quality in an earlier subject, discovering a synthetic material under the skin designed to enlarge and reshape, and he had marvelled at the never-ending drive humans seemed to have to change nature. He understood corsets and bustles, both of which performed a similar basic function: they altered the form God had provided to something mankind had deemed more attractive. Neither corsets nor bustles were seen regularly in this world, but still the search for perfection went on.

He knew what perfect was and he began the process of making this nameless whore as perfect as he could by cutting into her skin at the top of the costal arch. Blood welled around the incision as he cut down, through her navel, and continued to the pubis. He was about to make another incision when he heard the buzzing sound behind him.

His head snapped about, taking in the hovering device as it started down the alley toward him. He was observed, and by one of the police machines he had seen before. It would be a short time before more arrived along with armed officers. There was no time to complete his work, but he could mark it anyway. His blades clicked into his fingers and he pulled a sheet of paper from his pocket, dropping it between the subject’s breasts before he stood and ran.

~~~

Fox walked up to the cordon and watched as men, women, and various frames rushed in and out of the alley. She had no expectation of being invited onto the scene itself and no real desire to see another corpse, but when operations had reported a sudden rush of activity in the area, she had felt she needed to check on it.

The expression on Olin’s face when he saw her suggested that he had no intention of inviting her in. Rather the opposite. She watched with a flat expression on her face as he stormed over to the barrier.

‘What are you doing here?’ Olin snapped.

‘I was in the neighbourhood, at a club. Our operations people noticed all the traffic into this area. I figured I’d come over and offer any assistance I could give.’ It was true, even if she expected him to tell her where she could shove her assistance.

‘I told you–’

‘Yeah, yeah, I know. Who’d he get?’

Olin glared at her for a second. His fists clenched. ‘Detective Hunter. They couldn’t save her.’

‘I’m sorry. I know what it’s like, losing people under your command. Anyone get a view of him?’

‘Oh, we got some good images. Gave chase. He got into the old subway tunnels. There’s an entrance beside the old hospital site.’

Fox looked up and north: even with the building right in front of her, you could see the upper part of the Harlem spire which now occupied that site. ‘I thought all those old entrances were blocked off?’

‘He found a way in. He was seen going down. Had to have it prepared as an escape route.’

‘He used the storm drains over in Brooklyn. It makes sense. You’ll never find him down there. It’s a maze and sections of it are flooded.’

‘We’ll try anyway.’

Fox nodded. ‘I know. He’s killed a cop now. The offer’s still on the table. If I can help, call me.’

‘When Hell freezes over,’ Olin replied, turning away.

~~~

‘He killed a cop,’ Fox said. The atmosphere at Sheela Na Gig was hardly suitable for the conversation, but Naomi was down there doing her dominatrix thing and had asked. ‘I assume they had her dressed up and she got unlucky. I mean, what are the odds?’

‘Probably not high, unless they replaced every street girl with a cop,’ Naomi said. ‘And I don’t think they have that many cops.’

‘No. No, they don’t. One less now. Damn. And they’ll keep trying to trap him, but he’s aware of them now. Their chances have dropped significantly. It’s going to be luck, him getting sloppy, or information.’

‘Information?’

‘Yeah. Something which gives us where to look for him. I’m going to go interview Mortenson on Monday.’

‘Well then, good luck.’

30
th
October.

‘There was another note,’ Kit said.

Fox opened her eyes to see the hovering web of information in the murder room and turned to where Kit was standing. There was, indeed, another facsimile of a handwritten note hanging beside her, linked to an ID photo of Glory Hunter. ‘He’s getting almost verbose. What does this one say?’

‘“They do not call her Ginger, but I know her all the same.” Mary Kelly was called “Ginger,” which is where the assumption that she was a redhead comes from, though descriptions of her vary.’

‘And Hunter wasn’t a redhead. She’s blonde. Not even
strawberry
-blonde. That settles it: these notes aren’t about the victims.’

‘I would suggest they refer to a future victim, is that correct?’

‘That’s my take.’

‘There is no suggestion in the case file notes that Inspector Olin has come to that conclusion, but he may have simply neglected to write it down.’ Kit turned slightly, taking in the collection of data nodes around Silver Quade’s picture. ‘Interestingly, I found a connection between Miss Quade and Detective Hunter. Connections of any form between the victims have been rare, discounting the links between the Sisters who have been killed, but these two knew each other socially. It might be pure coincidence, however.’

‘Kit… What do we think of coincidences?’

Kit grinned, just a little because more might have seemed inappropriate. ‘We don’t like them. But I would point out that they
do
happen, frequently more commonly than people expect.’

‘I know. I still don’t like them.’

 

Boston Metro, 1
st
November.

Mortenson was looking like a man who had spent a number of days in a NAPA holding cell: tired, somewhat dishevelled, and the spark of superiority was almost gone from his eyes. He sat on the subject’s chair in an interview room in the primary Boston police building; he was quiet, subdued, looking down at the metal table until Fox walked in.

‘You don’t have your sidekick with you,’ Mortenson said, trying to rally some defiance.

Fox sat down opposite him and smiled. ‘I don’t need Teresa for this. She was with me to translate geeky asshole into English. We’re going to be talking about a serial killer and
his
sidekick, uh, that’s you, and I understand murder fine.’

‘I’m not–’

‘Sure you are. You’re thinking because you created him you were the dominant partner in the relationship? No chance. He’s had you under his thumb since before he manipulated you into setting him free.’

‘I didn’t set him free. He escaped.’

Fox sighed. ‘See… that’s been bothering me. The detectives up here were kind enough to send over your interview transcripts, so I know the story. You made a mistake. You networked the servers, hooked them into your office and then your home so that you could monitor them more easily. Ripper found a way to bypass security and escape onto the internet.’

‘That’s correct.’

‘Doesn’t wash. Even if, as you say, he somehow figured out he was something other than a human, that he was in a simulated world, he wouldn’t have the skills necessary to bypass network security. You set him up in a Victorian environment. No computers. How does he figure out how to get out?’

‘He… I don’t–’

‘How does he figure out how to find and take possession of an android body? How does he know he’s supposed to recharge it rather than eating? He doesn’t know what a cyberframe is. He’s got the mindset of a nineteenth-century psychopath dumped into the twenty-first century.’

‘His mind works very quickly. He could–’

‘And then there’s the selection of victims. He starts out with street girls, much like the original killer. They’re easy marks. A little observation and he can be pretty sure that they’re sex workers and not just women in skimpy outfits. Then he kills one of the Sisters of Corruption. Georgina Parton, a Senior Sister on her way from one client to another.
Not
an obvious target. Suddenly he’s got a mission beyond the basic one. Suddenly he’s working on sneaking into the chapter house. What was it? Naomi wouldn’t take you as a client when she was in Boston?’

‘Are you implying that I deliberately–’ The outrage almost looked genuine, with just that hint of terror lurking in the back of it to spoil things.

‘I’m
saying
that you let yourself be seduced by an AI who got you to let him out of his box. Then he blackmailed you, knowing you’d be locked up and tossed out of the university if anyone found out. You helped him adjust. You helped him with the security systems he needed to bypass to get to Carpenter, Iverson, and Nimer, and to find and use his new body. And then you worked out a way to target him at a group of women you don’t like. Since we locked you up, he’s gone back to picking women off the street.’

Mortenson glared at Fox, but she had learned to intimidate people in the Army and he was just an academic with a superiority complex. He looked away. ‘I refuse to say anything else without my lawyer present.’

‘Fine. Generalities then. What’s his obsession with Mary Jane Kelly?’

It seemed like there would be no answer and Fox considered prompting him, but he spoke eventually. ‘He had a fascination with the lore surrounding the original Jack. He described Kelly as the finest example of the transformations he conducted.’

‘Transformations?’

‘That’s what he called them. Transformations to perfection. A woman is only perfect when she’s dead and of no use to any man. He developed the philosophy on his own. This was not part of his initial programming. Apparently he needed to justify the implanted hatred of women, prostitutes in particular. He told me, “Prostitutes are the most imperfect of women, giving themselves to any man with the coin for it. It is my
duty
to cleanse them, to
transform
them into something perfect.”’

‘Was that when you realised you had an emergent on your hands?’

Mortenson looked at her. ‘Yes. That was the final indication. You said you needed Doctor Martins to “translate” for you, but you seem to know more about the subject than a typical layman.’

‘My PA is a class four. I’ve had her almost since her initialisation and I’ve watched her develop. She was never designed as the PA of a detective and she’s had to learn to cope with the nastier side of the job. And she’s done exceptionally well at it. And I’ve encountered what was probably an emergent AI before. That one was brainwashing people to kill for it. There’s a damn good reason why the mistakes you made should see you locked in a box for decades. Uncontrolled AIs can be
exceptionally
dangerous.’

Other books

Shadow's Curse by Egan, Alexa
A Well Pleasured Lady by Christina Dodd
The Good Rat by Jimmy Breslin
Champagne for Buzzards by Phyllis Smallman
Ripple by Heather Smith Meloche
Just The Way You Are by Barbara Freethy
The Book of Stanley by Todd Babiak