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The Broken Window (Lincoln Rhyme 8)

Page 99

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One was Sean Cassel's.

Closer yet . . . Please. Go away!

On the screen in a small square window: Working . . .

Hell, Pulaski thought to himself and scooted the chair forward. The plug and the window would be clearly visible to anybody who stepped only a few feet into the room.

Suddenly a head appeared in the doorway. "Hey, Sergeant Friday," Cassel said. "How's it going?"

The officer cringed. The man would see the drive. He had to. "Good, thanks." He moved his leg in front of the USB port to obscure the wire and plug. The gesture felt way obvious.

"How d'you like that Excel?"

"Good. I like it a lot."

"Excellento. It's the best. And you can export the files. You do much PowerPoint?"

"Not too much of that, no."

"Well, you might some day, Sarge--when you're police chief. And Excel is great for your home finances. Keep on top of all those investments of yours. Oh, and it comes with some games. You'd like 'em."

Pulaski smiled, while his heart pounded as loudly as the hard drive whirred.

With a wink, Cassel disappeared.

If Excel comes with games, I'll eat the disk, you arrogant son of a bitch.

Pulaski wiped his palms on his dress slacks, which Jenny had ironed that morning, as she did every morning or the night before if he had an early tour or a predawn assignment.

Please, Lord, don't let me lose my job, he prayed. He thought back to the day when he and his twin brother had taken the police officer exam.

And the day they'd graduated. The swearing-in ceremony too, his mother crying, the look he and his father shared. Those were among the best moments of his life.

Would all that be wasted? Goddamnit. Okay, Rhyme's brilliant and no one cared more about collaring perps than he did. But breaking the law like this? Hell, he was home sitting in that chair of his, being waited on. Nothing would happen to him.

Why should Pulaski be the sacrificial lamb?

Nonetheless he concentrated on his furtive task. Come on, come on, he urged the collection program. But it continued to churn away slowly, assuring him only that it was on the job. No bar easing to the right, no countdown, like in the movies.

Working . . .

"What was that, Pulaski?" Rhyme asked.

"Some employees. They're gone."

"How's it going?"

"Okay, I think."

"You think?"

"It--" A new message popped up: Completed. Do you want to write to a file?

"Okay, it's finished. It wants me to write to a file."

Szarnek came on the line. "This is critical. Do exactly what I tell you." He gave instructions on how to create the files, compress them and move them to the hard drive. Hands shaking, Pulaski did as instructed. He was covered in sweat. In a few minutes the job was done.

"Now you're going to have to erase your tracks, put everything back the way it was. To make sure nobody does what you just did and finds you." Szarnek sent the officer into the log files and had him type more commands. Finally he got these taken care of.



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