Chimera Code (Jake Dillon Adventure Thriller Series) (38 page)

BOOK: Chimera Code (Jake Dillon Adventure Thriller Series)
12.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
* * *

The Westland Sea-King was noisy and relatively uncomfortable.
But Dillon couldn’t help feeling at home in this British made antisubmarine helicopter with its fully computerised warfare control
systems, and Rolls-Royce Gnome engines. Dillon was sitting opposite
Claudia, he’d decided that she could be of use; after all, she was at
the centre of the Chimera Programme, and she happened to have a
master copy of the full programme in her rucksack - something which
Dillon acknowledged could probably be useful.

As the Sea-King buzzed low over the lush green landscape, the
pilot worked hard to maintain their speed at an altitude of only twohundred feet. Dillon looked out of the small porthole, watching the
terrain race by below them, and it occurred to him that
maybe
Ezra was
alive and had been captured by the Assassins. If he had been tortured,
blackmailed, whatever, then maybe the Chimera master copy could be
used in an exchange situation.

“Claudia?”
“Yes, Dillon?”
Sitting directly opposite her, their knees were almost touching,

Claudia was an attractive woman, and Dillon glanced admiringly at
her.
“You know Chimera intimately, don’t you?”
“I helped create the programme; so you could say that I know it
a little more than intimately...”
“Flippancy is something I can do without. So if you don’t want
to be left at whatever airfield we’re heading for...”
“Okay. I concede - you are doing me an immense service, by
letting me tag along with you all. Although, I’m a little concerned as
to how I ended up sitting opposite a lecherous old pervert who keeps
looking at my tits. Not that I mind, at all...”
“Lecherous old pervert?”
Claudia smiled, crossed her legs and slowly ran the toe of her
shoe up the back of Dillon’s calf.
Tatiana had heard, looked round the edge of her seat laughing.
It was not a laugh of support.
Dillon flushed red. “Old?”
“Well, middle-aged, then.” Her eyes sparkled mischievously.
“Middle-aged?” Dillon sounded aghast. “Do you really think I
look that old? Jesus, I knew we should have left you up that mountain...”
“Dillon, do you have a question for the poor girl or what?”
“Okay. If we could load your programme onto a computer -
would it conflict with the copy that Ramus is planning to launch?
Claudia shook her head, her main of red hair tousling around her
face. “It’s a virus, Dillon, not something you can simply load up onto
any old processor, and then let loose globally. But change the little
bitch’s script slightly, and bingo, I can create the ultimate anti-virus.
This would be more powerful than the Kirill version and would hack
and crack anything...” Tatiana’s eyes lit up at that. Claudia continued:
“Point it at the global computer highway and it’ll worm its way through
the original code in under a second. The Kirill version won’t be able to
detect its presence because it will have the same Chameleon cloaking
ability, but with one subtle difference. My version will have only one
objective - to destroy the original code... Nothing is untouchable;
nothing is hidden from it.”
“Will your code be left inside the processors, mainframes, and
servers that it cleans up?”
Claudia shrugged. “Any machine that it comes into contact with
will benefit from a full hardrive scan. It will also be tweaked-up, and
yes my version of Chimera will remain hidden on the hardrive. But,
only as protection, nothing else...”
“What would be the reason for it to remain hidden on the
hardrive?” Tatiana asked bluntly.
“Like many pieces of software, Tatiana, certain elements are
always there, left behind on the hardrive even if the programme is
deleted.”
“I get the picture,” said Tatiana softly.
“But do you? Chimera was originally developed to assist the
Government in their fight against organised crime and terrorism. The
main brief was to come up with the most powerful programme ever
developed to retrieve encrypted information on targeted hardrives,
and then destroy the hardrive. But what Kirill actually came up with,
was a viral programme that could self replicate itself a trillion times
in the blink of an eye, and be controlled to do whatever was asked of
it by the main source.”
“Main source?” Dillon asked.
“The server that the programme is initially loaded onto. Well, find
that and we’re in business to stop a global computer catastrophe...”
“Really? You mean you can actually
stop
this thing?”
“Oh yes. I can stop it, alright. The Chimera Programme that
Ramus stole was running at around 94% perfect, but it was getting
better by the day when...” Claudia trailed off. She coughed, gazing
out at the passing countryside below the helicopter. “We had almost
finished our work at the facility, the glitches in Chimera were being
worked out, and the programme was almost ready to go operational.
We were about to run a series of trials in the lab.”
“So it was feasible to destroy the mountain facility? Because it
had served its purpose?”
“I suppose,” nodded Claudia. “But I don’t understand
why
.
There was no reason to destroy the facility. What a waste of a valuable
resource!”
“Unless you didn’t want anyone to get at the state-of-the-art
hardware located in the main lab. You were
lucky
, that you weren’t
blown from here to kingdom come.”
“Lucky?”
“Yeah, lucky. But, I’ll give this to you - you’ve got balls, missy.
And brains, you had the foresight to make a second master copy...
Although, that begs the question of
why
did you make it? No matter.
Hiding it right under their noses was pure genius.”
“What are you insinuating, Dillon?”
“I’m not insinuating anything, Claudia. You made a copy,
because as a former hacker, you know that with it, you’re in a position
of domination, if that tickles your fancy. But re-write certain elements
of the script to create the anti-virus, and bingo, every major power on
the planet would pay a king’s ransom to get their hands on it. In fact,
you would have the world at your fingertips!”
“You would need to know which scripts to alter... Which
means you would need to
understand
the programme intimately, really
intimately
.” Said Claudia.
“And of course, Ezra would have the right codes, Kirill would
have
had
them, and this character Ramus no doubt
has
them. Seeing as
they all had something to do with designing it.” Dillon snapped.
“Ramus,” said Tatiana softly.
Their gazes met; it all sounded too fantastic, but then, sometimes
fantastic
could happen. Take a terrorist; who makes it his business to
acquaint himself with a government scientist who is working on a
top-secret ground breaking project. The terrorist then sets about
persuading him to join his cause, or whatever it is. He realises that
he could make a mountain of money; blackmail the world’s richest
super-powers; cause a global cyber war; whatever. And he wants his
five minutes of fame, to establish his own immortality; to further his
own ends. To play at being
God
...
“This is beginning to sound like a megalomaniac’s fantasy
playground,” said Tatiana coldly. “I don’t think the world is ready for
it.”
“You’re probably right,” said Dillon.
“Perhaps that was why they destroyed the facility?” said Claudia.
“No. The effort required in planting such an explosive device and
the unnecessary risk that Kirill appeared to undertake in overseeing it
himself, indicates to me that he was ordered to stay behind, because
someone knew that he would not survive. I’d say that our friend
Ramus wanted him dead,” said Dillon. “But I’m sure that when we
come face to face with Ezra once more - then he’ll no doubt have
some answers for us.”
The Sea-King banked round to the left and then levelled out over
the glistening mountain peaks, rotors thrashing the air, its two Rolls
Royce Gnome engines humming with reined-in torque and power; it
banked to the south-west, heading for the coast and the airfield just
north of Edinburgh...
And as they moved at speed over small villages, towns and open
countryside. Dillon mused about their imminent meeting with Ezra...

Chapter 21

The Learjet 85 cruised at an altitude of thirty-three thousand
feet across a cloudless sky of brilliant blue; flying in the black and
gold corporate livery of Ferran & Cardini International, at an average
speed of 500 mph over the Atlantic Ocean far below.

The aircraft came in low over Grand Bahamas and touched
down on the tarmac runway with a squeal of brakes and rubber.
The co-pilot’s voice came over the intercom, “Ladies and gentlemen,
welcome to Grand Bahama.”

“I thought we were heading for Nassau.” Snapped Tatiana.

Dillon held her gaze and nodded, “We are - eventually. But I’m
still not convinced that we’re only dealing with Ezra. If it was Ezra
who sent that message?”

Dillon went forward and spoke in a quiet voice to the captain.
“Fly the Lear under five hundred feet until you reach the Florida
coast, and then make sure you’re on the radar from there into Tampa.
The authorities will assume you’ve come through the Bermuda
Triangle. Then file a new flight plan from Tampa direct to Nassau.”
The captain nodded, and Dillon continued. “One thing, though. Make
sure you’re only on the tarmac at Tampa for as long as it takes to fully
re-fuel.”
“Nassau?”
“Assuming we’re not all murdered there? Make the jet ready for a
quick getaway. If I remember rightly, the partners of Ferran & Cardini
have a private hanger at the edge of the airfield apron. Use it. I’ll
message you when we’re in need of flight. Understood?”
“Understood, Mr Dillon.”
Dillon grinned, “It’s always a pleasure flying with you captain.”
“And life is always interesting when we fly you, Jake.”
Dillon and the others watched as the Learjet disappeared from
sight within seconds, its vapour trail streaking an otherwise clear blue
Bahamian sky.

* * *

The night was hot and humid. Distant sounds of a boat party
echoed across the bay, followed by the splash of revellers diving into
the water in high-jinx.

A quarter of a mile away, the forty-six power cruiser probed the
surrounding darkness. Dillon opened the throttles as they rounded
Pinders Point and entered the Northwest Providence Channel.

The calm water parted easily under the force of the cruisers
bow. A deep rumble emanated from the inboard V8 engine, the sound
penetrating the early hours of the morning as the small group headed
towards their destination - Nassau. Dillon sat at the helm, his gaze
flitting from the green lit dials of the control console to the glittering
black water ahead of them. Tatiana stood beside him in the opulent
gloom of the luxury cruiser’s bridge; she leaned forward, peering out
through the windscreen over the lapping dark water.

“I always dreamed I would visit the Bahamas.”
“Sorry luv, but this isn’t going to be a holiday visit,” said Dillon
softly.
* * *

Dawn was breaking as the power cruiser entered the Northeast
Providence Channel, heading in a south-westerly direction towards
Nassau, the Berry Islands clearly visible on the starboard side as they
raced by. Half an hour later Dillon eased back on the throttles and
the hull of the forty-six foot craft eased back down into the water,
half a mile off New Providence Island. He allowed the cruiser to drift
with the tide, as he gazed through binoculars towards the busy port
of Nassau. After a few moments he opened the throttles again and
headed straight for the port entrance.

Dillon berthed the cruiser, shutdown the engine, and went down
to the day saloon to join the others. Vince was busy at his laptop,
Claudia and Tatiana both looked up as he came down the steps.

“Anyone for breakfast?”
Vince looked up and said, “What are we talking here, chap?

Eggs, Bacon, all the trimmings?”
“I think that can be arranged, big-man. I’ll get right on it.” Dillon
went up on deck and made a call from his unregistered pay-as-you-go
mobile phone. If anyone was trying to track him, they’d have no luck
if he only used this handset. Most of all, Tatiana did not know about
this phone...
Dillon re-joined the others, and twenty minutes later a beautiful
Bahamian woman in her early forties was standing on the pontoon
alongside the power cruiser with a very large rush basket in her hand.
Dillon went out onto the stern sun-deck and greeted her with a wave.
“Margarita.” He went down the gang-plank and hugged her
affectionately.
“Well, I’ll be damned, Jake Dillon.” She held him at arm’s length.
Man, you’re looking older and you’ve acquired more of those nasty
little scars on your handsome face, since the last you were here.”
“Been through a bit since my last visit to Nassau. But, it’s really
good to see you, Margarita. And girl, you’re looking more beautiful
with each passing year.”
“Flattery will get you everywhere, you charmer.”
“Did you manage to get what I asked for?”
“Of course, Dillon. Eggs, bacon, fresh bread and, tomatoes. Oh,
and I also got the other special items you asked for. At the bottom of
the basket; you’ll find two Glock 20s with additional clips, along with
the two-way radios you asked for, and a dozen small stun grenades.
Happy?”
“Very. Thank you, Margarita.”
“Good luck, Dillon. You know where to find me if you need
anything else.”
“Sure, and thanks once again. I owe you one, Margarita.”
The attractive woman walked away, disappearing up the pontoon
towards the Harbour Club, got in an old battered 4x4, and then drove
off in an easterly direction along E Bay Street, disappearing almost
immediately in the early morning traffic. Dillon went back inside to
the others, made his way straight down to the galley, and immediately
extracted the weapons and grenades. He placed one of the Glocks
in the waistband of his trousers, the weapon reassuringly snug in
the small of his back. He then concealed a spare clip in each of his
pockets, and then hid the other weapon and grenades in his rucksack,
which he slung over his shoulder.
“Dillon, you going somewhere?” Vince asked.
“I’m just popping out,” said Dillon suddenly, moving towards
the door.
“I thought you said you wanted breakfast first?” Tatiana said.
“Time for that later. I have people to see, errands to run; like I
said, I have friends here in Nassau.”
“Dillon?”
“Yes, Claudia?”
“Be careful.”
Tatiana’s head snapped round as if on a tensioned spring. A cold
glint in her eyes.
Dillon paused for the briefest of moments, “I’ll see what I can
do.” He stepped out on to the stern sun-deck, got in the inflatable
dinghy tied up to the dive platform rail, and a few seconds later was
powering out into the harbour in a cloud of two-stroke fumes.

Other books

Part-Time Devdaas... by Rugved Mondkar
The Innocent by Evelyn Piper
No Home Training by Ms. Michel Moore
Fallen by Skye, Christina
Lie to Me by Nicole L. Pierce
KNOX: Volume 3 by Cassia Leo
The Captive by Robert Stallman
The Julian Game by Adele Griffin
Midsummer Sweetheart by Katy Regnery