The Lost Throne(10)
Raskin cursed, realizing he had lost the argument. “Dammit! How come you always win? Tell me the truth: Were you on the debate team in high school?”
“No,” Payne joked, “but I beat them up when they wouldn’t do my homework.”
“I should’ve known. I’m going to make note of that in your personnel file.”
“If you must. But before you do, I was wondering—”
Raskin interrupted him. “If I could do you a favor.”
“Crap! Am I that predictable?”
“Both of you are. Let me guess, D.J. is there, too.”
“You know it.”
“And you’re calling from . . . Florida. Am I right?”
Payne nodded. “How’d you know that?”
The ever-present clicking of Raskin’s keyboard could be heard in the background. “Because I’m tracking your call with Blackbird, our latest GPS satellite. Give me ten more seconds and I can shoot a missile up your ass. Seriously. Right up your ass.”
“Ouch! You’re one scary geek.”
Raskin smiled. “Don’t you forget it.”
“Okay,” Jones said from across the hotel room. He sat in front of his laptop, which was logged on to an encrypted system at his office in Pittsburgh. “I’m ready.”
Payne turned on his speakerphone. “Randy, you’re on with D.J.”
“So,” Raskin asked, “what kind of trouble are you in this time?”
“It’s not us,” Jones explained. “It’s a colleague of ours. And the clock is ticking.”
Raskin nodded in understanding. The joking stopped at once. “What do you need?”
“We need access to restricted phone numbers. Seventeen calls in the last twelve hours. All of them placed to Jon’s cell.”
“The line we’re on now?”
“Affirmative,” Jones answered.
“No sweat. I started tracking it the moment he called. Give me a few seconds to get through his network’s firewall, and I can retrieve everything you need.”
“Can you send it to my laptop?”
“If you’d like. Or I can just read it to you.”
Jones shook his head. “No thanks. I want a hard copy.”
“Not a problem. I’ll send it right now.” Raskin hit Enter, sending the file. “It might take a few minutes to arrive. My system is running slow today. I’m crunching some serious data.”
“In that case,” Payne said, “would you mind answering one question about the calls?”
“Fire away.”
“Where did they come from?”
Raskin glanced at his middle screen. It was flanked by several others, all of them filled with data for other projects. “As far as I can tell, the calls came from three different sources. But the majority of them were placed in one city: Saint Petersburg.”
“Saint Petersburg? We’re in Saint Petersburg.”
Raskin shook his head. “Sorry, dude. Wrong Saint Petersburg. I’m talking about Russia.”
Payne hung up, more confused than before. “Someone’s calling me from Russia? That makes no sense. I haven’t been there in years.”
Jones said nothing as he waited for the file to appear on his screen. When it did, he hit a few keys and the document started to print on his portable printer, which weighed less than three pounds and fit inside his laptop bag.
“Here you go,” he said to Payne as he handed him a copy of the phone logs. Then he printed a second copy for himself, so he could take notes in the margin.
According to the list, fifteen calls had been made to Payne’s phone from one number in Saint Petersburg, Russia. They had started at 3:59 A.M. and had ended at 11:01 A.M. That pattern changed at 11:28 A.M. when the caller switched to a pay phone—a fact confirmed by his final message.
“Any thoughts?” Payne asked.
“A few. Take a look at the last column.”
The phone logs were divided into six columns, five of which were pretty straightforward. The first showed the date of the call. The second showed the time it was placed. The third showed the duration. The fourth showed the caller’s number. And the fifth showed the location.
No problems reading any of those.
But the sixth was a different story. It was more complicated.
At the top of the column, there was a single word: TOW.
No description. No explanation. No help of any kind.
Payne and Jones tried to figure out what it meant by analyzing the column itself, but the data was an enigmatic mix of numbers and letters, separated by a dash. 18-A. 22-F. 4-C. And so on. A few of the combinations appeared more than once, always on successive calls, yet there didn’t seem to be a discernible pattern. At least not at first glance. And for all they knew, the letters might have been translated from the Cyrillic alphabet.