ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 53

Chapter 53

The next day Jack checked short volume on ReWire.  Short volume was triple normal.  In the past the enemy had concentrated on a single stock at a time.  The program Lee and Alice designed showed that the enemy had only shorted more than one stock twenty-six times out of the suspected six hundred and seventy-six times they’d sold short.

He didn’t have to phone or email the order in. Lee and Alice had been busy, living on the phone and net, putting together an automatic trading program for the group’s brokers.  When the telltales of higher short volume hit, the program sent out buy orders on the stocks.  The good guys split the trades into pieces of one thousand shares or less and placed the orders through twenty-eight different brokers, scattered from London, by way of the Caymans, through Bogotá, up to Mexico City, over to Singapore, and Tokyo.

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

The temptation to place at least some of the trades in the States was strong, but for the Feds’ meddling.  He didn’t worry so much about getting convicted, censured, or even fined.  He worried about spending energy and time tied up in court, every move watched and questioned.  He didn’t want to leave the planet as a result of being bored to death by bureaucrats.

The enemy didn’t worry about US trading rules. It was one of the many business advantages of non-citizens. They didn’t face asset forfeiture if they were convicted.  Two short blocks of fifty thousand shares each went in through a broker in San Francisco.  The enemy’s timing was perfect.  A short sale couldn’t occur unless there was an upward movement in the stock, known on the street as an up-tick.  It didn’t matter how much the stock moved up.  The price movement just had to be up. The news on the stock had been bad for the last six months. Meghan’s slow progress, along with the quality control problems at the plant in Davis, had depressed the stock price by three and a half points over the last eleven days.

Donald O’Hare reported trimming some fat at their corporate headquarters. He’d conned a bank into refinancing over half of their long-term debt a percent and a half lower than before. With that and other cost-saving measures, ReWire’s break-even point dropped by six million dollars.  Even if their earnings came in twenty percent below First Call estimates, ReWire would have free cash flow for the first time in two years.

The stock was still near a three-year low.  Watching the market made him doubt that this was the work of his enemies. The short volume was mostly on three major trades.  Biotech had been out of favor with the brokerage community for quite a while.

The word on the street was that biotech was still overextended and any bad news in the segment would lead to a hard correction.  The biotech group was on the top of the hit list because of all the recent bad luck in the group.  Another thing bothering him was the lack of news stories planted to depress the stock price.  All the bad news he could see had been out there for a long time.  He scrolled back through the news stories they’d gathered to make sure.  He scrolled past the stories about the attack on Meghan and the follow-up stories until he found the oldest bad news.

August 25, San Jose Mercury News Bureau

ReWire Chairman Denies Quality Control Problems at Davis Plant.

Donald O’Hare, President and Chairman of the Board of ReWire ticker symbol RWIR, denies persistent industry rumors that the company’s new plant in Davis has serious quality control problems on its newest production runs of Anti-Environ.

Anti-Environ is the newest in a series of drugs that, as its name implies, purports to create an inhospitable atmosphere for viral reproduction.  The quality control problems are alleged to be caused by unexpected contamination of the growth cultures used to manufacture these genetically altered proteins.  The plant in Davis is brand new and state-of-the-art. The initial studies using Environ to stop growth of Hepatitis C, D, and E, were very favorable.  The reproductive rates for Hepatitis C and D were cut by a factor of 2, from a standard reproductive rate in a moderately heavy-drinking male.

 

DAVIS, CA, July 16

Chief Scientist of ReWire Denies Rumors of Flawed Production

 

Meghan McDonald, chief scientist of ReWire, sister of Bay Area entrepreneur Jack McDonald, denies rumors that the production facility being constructed at their new Davis plant is flawed and says the rumors were started by competitors. Numerous companies are in race to produce commercial quantities of a family of genetically altered enzymes that are said to inhibit the reproductive cycle of many families of viruses.  ReWire has the apparent lead in this race, if they can reach their production estimates.

His private line rang.  He answered it, saying only the four-digit extension: “Three-eight-four-seven.” Stockbrokers had started using automatic dialers to call all the unlisted numbers in the City about a year ago.  They couldn’t get a list of the unlisted numbers.  What they did instead was get a list of all the listed numbers and then had a computer program written to generate a list of the ones that weren’t there.

“Mr. McDonald, Captain Yan will be lunching at the Fire Dragon in fifty-five minutes. He apologizes for the short notice and wonders if you might be able to lunch with him.”  It was Sergeant Washington.

“Are you his social secretary too, or is this business?” Jack asked.

Sergeant Washington chuckled. At least, Jack thought that the sound, somewhere between a lion growling and the rumble of thunder, was supposed to be a chuckle.

“Captain Yan often combines business and pleasure.  Many people are eager to lunch with the Captain.”

Jack agreed to the lunch and rearranged the three meetings he had scheduled for early afternoon.  One was with an SEC official who wouldn’t state his business but said Jack would be doing him a great favor by arranging a quick meeting.

The market got hammered all morning.  The pundits said it was mostly on the lack of any progress in the Middle East, although rumors of another antitrust suit against Microsoft didn’t help.  As if the pundits had a clue.

THERE was the usual line outside the Fire Dragon, mostly businessmen of all ethnicities over from the financial district for real food.  Like most Chinese restaurants on the west coast, Cantonese had started the Fire Dragon.  Over the years they added Mandarin and Szechwan and still made it work.  There were a couple of groups of European tourists who had either stumbled onto the place or picked up one of the guidebooks written by someone who had actually been to the City. The restaurant also attracted the want-to-be-seen crowd.  The atmosphere was comfortable, but not opulent.  The place was designed to feed people well, comfortably and with some privacy.

Jack walked past the cashier, looking for Sergeant Washington, seeing neither he or nor the Captain.  He knew very few phrases of Cantonese.  Fortunately almost all of them had to do with travel, food, and cursing.

He heard the Sergeant’s voice behind him.  He had been surprised so many times by the Sergeant suddenly appearing that he was almost immune.  Washington led him back to the smallest banquet room off to the left of the main hall.  The Sergeant held the door and closed it behind Jack, staying outside.  Captain Yan smiled, stood up from his chair and walked over to shake hands.

Yan motioned him to sit, and followed the Chinese custom of small talk and small food until their initial hunger was sated.  The owner, Lin Pin Lou, sixth-generation oldest son, served them himself as a show of respect.  Jack knew him slightly, and as one of the medium hitters in the City, usually received a good table.

If Lin had been a dog he would have had his tail between his legs and peed on the floor as he approached the Captain.  It was respect at a level Jack didn’t understand.  There was something beyond respect.  It was unexpected but definitely there-fear.  The Captain nearly ignored Lin until Lin bowed and left, Yan acknowledging his exit with a flap of his right hand.

“I understand you have moved your sister from the hospital to your home in Tiburon.  Does this mean she is almost well?” was Yan’s first question.

“Meghan is near consciousness, we hope.  The doctor agreed she might improve more quickly in a homier atmosphere.  She’s been home a week.  All the tests say brain function is normal.  At this point they say she pretty much has to decide to wake up.  Physically she is doing quite well.”

He certainly didn’t tell Yan the major reason-security.  His house had originally been built back in the late fifties by one of the paranoid industrialists of the cold war.  It was more fortress than house and he felt a whole lot happier with his sister there than in a hospital, even a private one.  The house was mostly cinder block and had a real basement and below that a sub-basement bomb shelter that extended down to the top of high tide.  The grounds were nearly big enough to warrant the electronic gate. The twisting drive up the hill wouldn’t give a vehicle a chance to build up speed.

The ocean approach looked easy, but the steep steps were the only quick way up to the house from the dock. A good Marine platoon could take the house, but there would only be a squad left by the time they got inside-and none would make it into the bomb shelter.  Quan Tree Dong, Colonel, Retired, ex of the 17th Sapper Brigade, Army of the Democratic Peoples of Vietnam, thought that the bomb-shelter would protect against a direct hit on the house by a 500-pound iron bomb.

Bob White hired Quan as a subcontractor for a few modifications to the house.  Jack asked Bob how he had come to terms with hiring an NVA regular colonel, someone who had probably been responsible for the deaths of many good American boys.  Bob said he had prayed on that question.  He said an ex-movie actor formerly married to a media magnate and some politicians who kept getting elected had certainly killed a lot a whole lot more good American boys than the colonel.  He said he wouldn’t do business with them, but he would with the colonel.  Quan made very good suggestions about fields of fire and toughening the approaches up the driveway and off the dock.

“I’m sorry, Captain, you were saying?”

Jack had let his concentration lapse while the good Captain was talking.  This was about as smart as falling asleep on an air mattress floating in a shark tank.

The Captain said, “I was saying that when I heard about your sister being moved to your house it made me think of a story I’d heard about you.  I hadn’t bothered to check its validity before, but your reactions, or lack of reactions, during the interview with Ms. Schacter intrigued me.  It seems you needed a zoning exemption to modify the dock on your property making it more efficient. One of the supervisors in your district, a neighbor, blocked the exemption, saying that a dock as modern and large as you wanted would destroy the esthetics of the neighborhood and therefore affect the values of neighboring houses.”

The Captain paused as Sergeant Washington brought in three manila folders.  The sergeant apologized for the interruption, saying the Captain had to sign some papers. While Yan was signing, he glanced around the room again, knowing where Yan was heading and hoping he wouldn’t get there.  The painting of trees in blossom with buzzing bees on the wall looked like an original Ju Lian.

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

Under the painting, on a cart, stood an ancient Minolta copier with attached collator.  Years ago he bought one like it, used, for his first office.  It was a 3050, dependable, and reasonably fast.  It could also rotate a copy, crop, size, and add a gutter.

The Captain apologized for the delay and started back in on his story.  “It seems this neighbor, Martin Guzman, owned a nightclub that catered to, what is the term?  Oh, they are called, “RUBs,” Rich Urban Bikers.  It is rumored you stopped by his place of business to ask him to change his mind and he not only refused, but was extremely rude.  The rest of the story is from the police report.”

Yan opened the file and read bits and pieces.  “A group of three men, among them Mr. McDonald, entered the nightclub at 11:30 PM on the Sixteenth of September, 2006 and paid the hostess to seat them at a table near the stage. Although the owner of the club says this group became drunk and belligerent and started a fight, eyewitnesses deny this.  One witness, the singer who was on stage at the time, a “Dusty Rose,” insisted that Mr. Guzman, some of his security staff, and regulars at the bar taunted Mr. McDonald’s group and when their taunting drew no reaction, attacked Mr.  McDonald and his group.”

Yan looked up at him and grinned like a nine-year-old who’d just discovered his favorite shooter, the one he thought he’d lost, mixed in with some old marbles in the bottom of the front pocket of his Levi 501s.

“Mr. Guzman and four members of his security staff were admitted to the hospital, all but Mr. Guzman and his head of security being released the same night.  Property damage to the lounge was later established by the insurance claims adjuster, as being $76,000?”

The last he said with rising inflection of a question, expecting explanation.

“Flimsy construction?”

It was a good thing no one at the county clerk’s office remembered anyone copying a set of the building plans.  Somehow two load-bearing pillars had been accidentally knocked down, doing most of the damage.

“The investigating officer, Lieutenant Yolanda Santiago, is certain you somehow coerced the group into attacking you.  She is not certain of how you did this as none of the patrons who were sitting nearby can remember any remarks or gestures that could remotely be considered threatening. Somewhat curiously, Mr. Guzman, when he was again capable of appearing at meetings, failed to show up at the meeting where the decision was made to grant the exemption you requested.  Your dock was rebuilt to stand as it does today.”

Yan again stopped, took the half-glasses off his nose and rubbed his face vigorously before making very direct eye contact.

“I understand Mr. Guzman sold his home near yours shortly after, moving to the City.  My policemen would not have left so many unanswered questions, nor would we have been so naive.  Sometimes it is good to take matters into your own hands.  There are occasions where you can take action without much risk and this action has good consequences and gives great satisfaction.  This building permit was probably such a time.  Goading a street tough into throwing a punch at you and then slamming him to floor of a BART station was probably another.  On other important things, like this despicable attack on your sister and all its attendant evils, you would do much better to help the authorities where you can and leave the ‘dirty work’ to us.”

Again the Captain paused, this time with a serene look on his face, as if waiting for something before he said:

“I know that you know that this case is something much more than a robbery gone wrong.  If others are hurt of die because you do not share your knowledge with me, I will make your life a living hell.  I also know that you are a moral man of good judgment.  Please consider very carefully the timing of a future much-needed conversation, the one in which you share with me as openly as I have shared with you.  I repeat for clarity.  Please consider this timing very carefully.  My judgment of you is that you will do the right thing.  Perhaps you are lacking in information that would help you make this decision.  Sometimes this knowledge comes from unexpected places and at unexpected times.  Now, if you will excuse me for a moment, I must use the restroom.  One of the reasons I wanted to eat here was because of the medicinal properties of certain foods.  I believe, based upon unfortunate recent experience, that it may be a few minutes before I return.  Please stay.”  With that Yan rose and left.  He left two of the three files sitting on the table.

Jack waited until the door was firmly closed before he walked over to the copier.  Under the copy of the Police report on Mr. Guzman’s unfortunate incident, was a copy of the file on Albert Weise. He opened the clip on the stack of papers in the folder and checked for staples, paper clips or anything else that would jam the copier. He checked the paper tray in the copier, pulling out a few hundred sheets and fanned them before putting them back and hitting the start button.

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller | Leave a comment

ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 52

Chapter 52

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

Her Grace breathed as calmly and deeply as she could.  She must not let body fail her again.  She had too much to do.  She did not doubt that the doctor had a good heart.  She doubted that the doctor was strong enough to see the truth.  Sometimes what appeared to be cruel was necessary to achieve God’s wishes.

She spoke to her new wheelchair.  “Roll forward!”

“Shall I roll forward?” the machine asked in a pleasant and well-modulated female voice. She had thought the obviously mechanical voice of her speech recognition software was bad, but this was worse.  A machine should sound like a machine and not one of the acolytes.

“Roll forward!” she repeated and the machine rolled slowly forward.  When she was within four feet of her computer she commanded, “Slow down!” A foot away said, “Stop” and the machine rolled smoothly to a stop.  If only her human servants were so efficient.

“Open voicemail,” she commanded in her angelic voice.

It was somehow satisfying for her to hear the mechanical question, “Do you want to open voicemail?”

“Yes,” she said.

She scanned the news headlines on all her RSS feeds.  The stories had been planted.  “Scroll down.”

The voice recognition software said, “Do you wish to scroll down?”

She inured herself to the tedium of the conversation and focused her attention on the stock trades.  By the time her conversation was done she had shorted nearly a million shares of stock and bought puts on another 100,000 shares.  She estimated that within a week when she sold the puts and covered her short positions, she would have added another $6 million to church coffers.

 

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller | Leave a comment

ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 51

Chapter 51

 

Jack paced back and forth mind racing for what felt like hours, and was less than the twenty minutes Bob promised.  The buzzing of the star phone in the middle of the conference room table startled him.

“Jack, you have two…people here to see you.”

“I’ll be right down.”

He trotted down the flight of stairs to the lobby.  The widest human being he had ever seen stood in the lobby.  He wasn’t the tallest and his date would have made it tough for any man to remember what Mr. Wide looked like anyway.

She was over six feet tall without the spiked heels and black spandex miniskirt over legs that seemed to go on forever.  She must have weighed one hundred and sixty pounds, but didn’t look like there was much fat on her anywhere.  She could have made a good living parading in a Las Vegas revue.  She moved like the athlete she was and when she smiled, tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of caps gleamed out of her tanned face.

The man would have gathered looks anywhere.  Five-ten at most, he might outweigh Jack by eighty pounds.  Jack guessed a fifty-five inch chest to go with the twenty-two inch neck.  Mr. Wide was wearing a bomber jacket that must have cost a flock of sheep their lives and a ridiculous black beret, perched right on top of his head.  His cigar had gone out and was clamped in the left side of another set of blindingly white teeth.  He found out later that Mr. Wide was nearing fifty and managed to look thirty-five at most with no nips and tucks.

Mr. Wide held out a hand that was half again as big as Jack’s and said, “I’m Jerome and this tall girl is my bride, Zelda.”

He shook hands with them both, wishing he could borrow Zelda for a few days.  It would be a great way to go.  He asked them to follow him into the small meeting room off the lobby.

“That Bob is something,” Zelda said, slipping the Sig Sauer out of the huge black leather purse that moments before had been clamped under her left arm, releasing the slide and engaging the safety.  “He calls us at the gym and says to get our tail-ends over here to take care of you, and to do it now.”

Jerome looked at his watch and said, “We have a team at the hotel right now.  They should be inserting a bug in the room you identified within a few minutes.  We have cruising cabs on racetracks around the block.  One will stop around the side of the building in exactly six minutes.”

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

THE WAR COUNCIL was in full voice when Dvora entered the room.  She sat opposite Jack at the long, blonde conference table. Bob quickly reviewed what they’d learned.  “Dvora, you’ll see two files in front of you. The first file is a summary of the results of an Internet survey we conducted.  The second file is a transcript of the translated telephone calls we taped in the “Ishigawas” hotel room.

“There are over three thousand blogs relating to stocks and stock sectors.  We suspected various blogs were being used as a mechanism to push down share prices on the stocks in question.  Olga designed a script and we sent a questionnaire to everyone who placed a comment on the blogs in question.  The questionnaire, if answered, includes a $25 donation to the charity of their choice.  Of the 491 people who posted to all the bulletin boards, 353 of them had posted negative rumors and comments on the stocks. Of the 270 that responded on the negative side, 252 wanted their donation to go to the Church of the Seven Sisters.  None of the people who posted positive comments chose this charity.”

This was the final confirmation that the Church of the Seven Sisters was behind the stock manipulation.  He was convinced they were also behind the attacks on his sister, himself, and Lee.

“We face a nimble organization with huge resources. And somehow, they maintain low profile.”

Bob grinned and winked at Alice.  He and Alice grew more connected with each passing hour.  Bob normally wore a plain red tie with a white shirt, black shoes and gray suit.  Today he wore a rep tie, blue shirt, and blue suit with oxblood shoes.  What a wild man, and all Alice’s doing.

Uncle Chin and Sir Ian attended, along with Lee, by secured conference call.  He hated Lee being so far away.  She was scheduled back on a flight in five days.  It felt like a few months.

The current argument was on the order to proceed.  Sir Ian, with his English public school education, wanted to rat out the conspirators to the authorities and then move in for the kill.  He was in the minority.

Uncle Chin hawked, and then, in his best imitation of the plumy old school voice Sir Ian used at his most pompous, asked, “Which authorities do you suggest we call and what do you suggest we say?  Excuse me Mr. Prime Minister.  There is an international conspiracy to control the stock price of a number of different genetic engineering stocks.  What is that Mr. Prime Minister? Is it organized crime that is doing this?  Why, no, Sir. It is a church headquartered in Japan.  Are they English stocks, Mr. Prime Minister? Why, no, Sir.  Call the SEC?  There is no need to be sarcastic, Mr. Prime Minister.  Hello, Hello, Mr. Prime Minister?  Are you still there?”

“Excuse me boys and girls, what I don’t understand, and what we need to understand, is why.  We are reacting and not acting until we know why they are doing what they are doing.  This is over-the-top complicated as a money making scheme,” Jack said.

Aiah, Jack!”  It was Uncle Chin again.  “You cannot be my long lost son.  You have the white man’s disease.  Do you need to know why the sun shines to put on a hat?  Do you need to know why the monsoon rains come to make sure your roof is tight and dry?  It is enough to know the rains will come.  It is time for us to make sure our roofs are tight and dry. I agree it would be good if we knew why; we could be further ahead of them.  But there are still many things we can do.”

The discussion went on for another half hour.  Dvora sat patiently absorbing information and then gave the clearest guidance.

“I know you guys are all the experts on this. I’d like to make a suggestion. We watch them for a little longer, making sure there is no doubt about what they are doing.  Then we counter each rumor and trade as we already agreed to.  After that we inform on them, anonymously of course.  We could send video, audio, pictures and charts to the FBI, SEC, and FINRA, and hell, the CIA for all I care.  And, then we ask some of our favorite reporters, the ones that owe us favors, to show up at their headquarters here and ask them to explain themselves.”

Dvora looked up to see puzzled faces.  “Am I the only one here who watches CNN?  There was a series on the Church of the Seven Sisters not even a month ago.  They moved their headquarters in the US to an enclave near Yosemite last June.  Something about Yosemite being the center of the evil of the ecological religious movement.”

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

 

 

 

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 50

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

 

Chapter 50

Donald O’Hare zipped up and scrubbed his hands in hot, soapy water for forty seconds just like the book said.  He was going to have to have the surgery soon and he hated the idea, but he hated having to pee all the time even more. At least it took his mind off his real problems.  They were starting to feel more like conditions.  A problem was something with a solution.  It appeared that every time the organization tried to fix one problem it created five more.

The brother was a problem.  He had underestimated the brother.  The fact that everyone else had also underestimated the brother didn’t make him feel any better.  It simply made him a member of a large group of stupid people.  He told the organization they should be more patient with the money.  He told them they had tweaked news on the stocks too often.

One of the problems with zealots was that they believed their own press. Donald had always covered his bases, had backup and contingency plans.  Now it was time to dust off two of the contingency plans and move forward.  He thought he could convince the authorities that the group was a terrorist organization. This would buy him time and then who knew what would happen?  He had given very heavily to a new congressman’s campaign, not the one who was part of the Church of Seven Sisters inner circle.  It was time to put out feelers again.  This time the feelers would be more serious.  
 

 

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 49

Chapter 49

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

Short volume on Double Helix was five times normal. The day before short volume had been triple normal.  If the pattern was still in effect, the rumor campaign had started.  Jack had already set up four different searches on the stocks, their direct competitors, major executives, and scientists. There was nothing in US or European news, but a Reuter’s story, credited to their Singapore bureau, was the start.  At first glance, the story seemed like fill on a slow news day.

Michael Ilyich Riyalin was the founder of Double Helix-over the counter symbol DBLH. On first read, story looked like a human-interest bio.  Riyalin’s family had been Ukrainian Jews, who’d survived the forced collectivization of the early 1930s.  Stalin knew the Ukraine would be a hotbed of dissent so he used the army and the NKVD to enforce grain collection rules.  Collectivization was horribly inefficient and Stalin knew grain production would drop.

Stalin raised the quota for the Ukraine to forty percent higher than before collectivization. Until the quota was met, no grain could be saved for use on the collective, except as seed stock.  This meant no food grain for the farmers.  Any farmer not obviously starving to death was suspect and their property searched.  Michael Ilyich Riyalin’s mother took pity on a beggar.  She ran across the street and fell, the stocking stuffed with rye bursting open into the slushy snow, right under the eyes of the NKVD.

Svetlana, who was almost eleven at the time, avoided the firing squad by servicing the nine men who, shortly after, put bullets into her father, mother, and three older brothers. The story went on to talk briefly about his mother’s battle to escape the Soviet Union, her eventual migration to South Africa and her unexpected pregnancy with Michael right after her forty-fourth birthday.  The story mentioned, almost in passing, Michael’s scholarship to Caltech, where he had graduated at the top of his undergraduate class.  He finished his master’s in a year before dropping out of the doctoral program to form Double Helix.

Jack read the story and then read again. As he reread the third time, the subtle nature of the sabotage came through.  What he expected to feel when he finished was admiration for Michael.  Instead, he felt as if he should trust Michael a little less.  He reread it, trying to see how his emotions had been toyed with.  The intimate knowledge of Michael’s suffering was too detailed.  He knew Michael’s pain too well and this familiarity made him uncomfortable.  It was as if a great-uncle with too much to drink at a family Christmas dinner told him in graphic detail how much his great aunt liked to be spanked.

Another part of the manipulation was the phrasing.  Michael’s accomplishments were all “supposed” or “alleged. “He was described as “unyielding, fanatically goal oriented,” and toward the end of the piece, “some have called him ruthless in achieving his goals.”

He emailed the piece to Olga Boginskaya. She might be able to spot the author.  He knew it wasn’t the usual Reuters staffers.  Most of their stuff was more obvious in its hatred for business, typical journalism school stuff. He had once read a story by one of their beat business writers who called the improved living standard in the PRC “a sad homage to the greed of capitalism and the death-knell of the spirit of self-sacrifice instilled by Mao.”

Just before he signed off, he did another quick search.  There was another story on DBLH.

“Industry insiders hint that DBLH’s upcoming earnings report will disappoint.  These sources, all of whom spoke to this reporter on condition of anonymity, say a major hit on earnings is coming.  This will be from much higher than expected costs producing their new drug, Riyalinaze, which is alleged to help strengthen the immune system. These same industry insiders also say the FDA is now considering removing its conditional approval of the drug for late stage AIDS sufferers.  The president of the company did not respond to any requests for comment.”

The story was pure bullshit. Jack knew the president of the company.  He knew a lot more about him than he wanted to, especially after all the play the press had given the storybook romance between Michael and the rock star and subsequent big splash wedding.  It would be hard for Michael to comment.  Unless he had made a major math error, Michael was somewhere near the San Juan Islands on a sailing vacation with his new bride.  The article Jack read said that the couple would turn off everything but their emergency radio for two weeks.  Michael and the rock star planned on getting to know themselves, their new boat, and one of the best stretches of sailing water in the world.

The second story was out of the San Jose Mercury News and wasn’t attributed to any of their reporters.  Strange, because the story was number two lead in the business section for the day.  Any reporter would have demanded credit for that many column inches.  No wire service attribution. The byline was staff reporters for the San Jose Mercury News.

He did lunch with their business editor at least once a quarter.  Right after he’d left Solomon they’d been after him to write a column.  The paper was in the heart of Silicon Valley, which happened to be genetic valley too. He had grown to trust the Mercury News reporters over the years. The reporters knew if they screwed him, he would never talk to them again.

He pulled up insider trading numbers on DBLH. The report was in a kind of short hand, clear to someone in the business.

Source: Insidertrading.com Cupertino, California

 

Insider/Post/Action/Date/Shares/Share Price/Total Shares Owned

Double Helix

Adam S. Walker OD AO 12/17 95,000 $6.00 Unreported

Adam S. Walker OD Sold 12/17 75,000 $21.00 Unreported

Nancy H. Nguyen VP AO 12/17 22,000 $6.00 395,000

Nancy H. Nguyen VP Sold 12/17 18,000 $21.00 Unreported

 

The first was Adam S. Walker, Officer and Director, (OD), acquiring through exercise of option, (AO), on 12-17, 95,000 shares total for $6.00 per share, with his total ownership of shares being unreported. The second entry for Adam showed that he sold 75, 000 shares at $21 and his total ownership was still unknown.

Nancy H. Nguyen, a Vice President, (VP), had also acquired shares through the exercise of an option, (OA), 22,000 shares, at $6.00 a share and sold 18,000 of them on the same day at $21.00 a share.  Her total ownership of shares was 395,000 shares.

Over the last six months, insiders were buying more than they were selling.  Upper management didn’t have as much faith in the company as those further down the food chain.  Directors and majority owners were net sellers, while executive vice presidents were net buyers.

The market closed as Jack watched.  He pulled up his portfolio to check his borrowing ability.  He didn’t want to sell anything, but he’d need at least $10 million working capital to counter the short sellers.  He normally didn’t look at his stocks unless there was hard news on them or a direct competitor.  He didn’t like to sell stocks, because he had to give himself a lot of convincing to buy them in the first place.  If forced, he could sell one.  The one thing he’d learned in all his years in the market was that some days prices went up, and some days prices went down, and eventually, if you did your homework and weren’t too greedy or too unlucky, you made some money.

He didn’t have enough in his accounts the States. He wouldn’t be able to use money from those accounts without going to jail anyway.

He pulled up one of his offshore portfolios.  If anyone asked, it was a model portfolio.  If anyone asked his broker in Macao, it was an aggressive portfolio with a current market value of $26 million, US.  He emailed the buy order on Double Helix to his broker in Macao.  He told the man that rumors supporting DBLH would be arriving shortly.

The story he would have planted was simple and fortunately untraceable.  Olga Boginskaya would polish the story before he sent it out:

 

Sources close to the president of Double Helix, market symbol DBLH, say recent negative rumors about the stock are the work of short sellers who have unfortunately taken positions in the stock and do not wish to cover their losses at current prices.  Sources inside the company are certain the market will see the fallacy of these short positions and there will soon be strong buying demand for the stock.

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

The only source close to the president of that company was a very fit, very assertive female rock star.  If rumors were correct, she could make any man forget his name almost immediately. Jack laughed when Michael blushed at the news conference after Mary grabbed him on the ass.

Jack knew his broker in Macao wouldn’t let anyone know what was what.  His broker had the great good fortune of being Uncle Chin’s youngest daughter’s oldest son.  This meant Uncle Chin knew everything he was doing, but it also meant he got a hell of a deal on commissions. Most importantly, the young Mr. Hong would laugh at the idea of answering a question from the SEC-or anyone else.

Clouds moved in again, blocking what little sun there had been that day. The window was darkened like the rest of the glass in the office tower.  He walked over to the window and felt it with his hands.  After he did it, he felt sorry for the janitors who’d have to clean it early the next morning.  He could feel the window flexing, almost as if it were breathing along with him.  It was just the wind pushing the window in and out with the give the engineers had designed.  Bend, don’t break, be the sinewy willow, not the stiff oak.

The window felt cool, almost cold, unlike the sterility of the room and it’s untouchably constant 68 degrees in winter and 74 degrees in summer.  He had the urge to rest his cheek against the window, hoping its coolness would clarify his thoughts. When he did, the vibration of the wind felt like a careful lover’s caress, with nearly too-cold hands.  As he pulled his face away from the window, he saw a glint, maybe even a light, from a darkened room in the ultra-chic boutique hotel across the street.

The warning hairs on the back of his neck bristled like a razorback hog’s. He was certain he was being watched.  There was only one way to find out if someone had seen anything.  Go to the hotel and check.

Jack tried to remember if he’d turned his back to the window while he had the information up on his laptop. He hadn’t. He reviewed the phone calls he’d made.  None had anything to do with the insider trading.  If someone had read his lips through a telescope or binoculars, they’d have learned a lot about the difficulties of moving an older lumber mill up a river in Siberia.

He had a bad habit of covering his mouth with his hand when he talked on the phone, even when using a headset.  It was a habit he’d picked up when he was a baby stockbroker, working out in the pit, long before he’d earned enough commissions to get an office.  It had been so noisy that he’d had to do his dialing for dollars with his left index finger pushed into his left ear and his right hand cupping the mouthpiece of the telephone mike.

The eraser board!  The board had been aimed right at the window.  It had been erased a week ago and was now turned to face the wall, but if the watcher had been there long enough, he, she, or they, might have seen the stocks on the board.

He told Siri to call Bob White’s personal line.

“Yes, Jack.”

“Bob, I am pretty sure that someone in a room on the sixteenth floor of Hotel Umbria is watching me right now.”

There was the usual silence that preceded any response from Bob, and then, “How sure?”

“Real sure!”

Another long silence, “I’ll have one of our teams in your office in…twenty minutes.  Act as if you are not aware.”  A click and Bob was gone.

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

 

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 48

Chapter 48

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

Her Grace said, “I am not happy with this situation.  I have told you many times that this is a bad idea.  I told you the first time I heard it that it was a bad idea.  Now your people have botched their attempt to keep it quiet.  You have, because of this plan, alerted this abomination of a man. As if that wasn’t enough, you have given him a personal stake in trying to counter this part of our plan.  He is not stupid.  And, he surrounds himself with very capable people.  He has now made contact with this Captain who was quick to find answers to questions that you did not think he would even know to ask.”

Her Grace prayed for patience and waited until she was calm enough to speak. “Perhaps I have been unclear about the next steps in our plan.  Yes, the servant who asked to do this for us failed once.  Yes, he failed again.  But, we have many other servants and they will not fail.  You do not understand the power of the faithful.  Where one falls, another rises from the ashes.  We always have plans in place because the flesh is weak.  The flesh is always weak.  We are now implementing a plan to blunt this man’s threat.”

There was silence on the other end of the line.  When the man spoke he sealed his fate. “I hope you know what you are doing this time.  We can’t leave all of these details open.  Someone will find out what we have done.”

She smiled to herself.  This man had been a source of trouble from the beginning and would continue to be a liability if something wasn’t done.

“We are cleaning up loose ends.  Soon your worries will be over,” she said.

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller | Leave a comment

ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 47

Chapter 47

 

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

 

Dvora listened intently and then asked, “If you and Lee were nearly killed after looking into these stocks, what’s going to happen when we actually do something?  Isn’t Meghan going to be in more danger than she is now?”

 

“The answers are yes and yes. We will have to be careful to keep out of jail after we kick off the plan.  This care should also keep us alive.  Meghan has around-the-clock guards.  I fortunately forgot to cancel them. Why don’t we improve the odds a little by working on those shooting lessons?  First thing in the morning?” He asked.

 

THE range was crowded, mostly with groups of burly young men, each trying to out-macho the other.  Law enforcement attracted many of the same types that went in for combat arms.  Not many special operations types went into law enforcement.  And, he never saw the same crowd rock-climbing.  The answer should have been obvious, given the waist size of the average cop.

Many of the young women competed at a very high level.   Some of them looked as if they were trying to be burly young men, and some looked like fitness models.  The wind that forced its way in from the north was dry, carrying a real chill.  The colder weather promoted much wearing of leather.  Appropriate.

Jack’s favorite gun was an old J-frame .38 Special.  He’d bought it used right after his 21st birthday.  He opened the sealed pouch to show the clerk that all the guns were unloaded and walked Dvora through the paperwork.

The clerk carried a nine-millimeter SIG in a quick-draw holster at his waist.  He had trouble filling out his part of the forms, and stuck his tongue out when he had to write a word longer than one syllable.  He stared at Dvora the whole time she read the hold-harmless agreement they made her sign.  His lips sagged open far enough to let a little rope of spit slide out of the corner of his mouth before he absentmindedly wiped it on his sleeve.

The stare would have pissed Jack off if he hadn’t known the nine-millimeter was unloaded. The vacuous stare was from a bullet that had taken a chunk out of the young man’s brain. The young man had been a clerk in the convenience store three blocks away, working nights because it gave him time to study before taking the MCAT.  The young man covered a little girl with his body during a holdup gone wrong.  The owner of the range said, in writing, as long as he and the boy were alive, the young man would have a job.

Different groups of young men found reasons to crowd around the counter as they outfitted Dvora with ear and eye protection and filled out forms.  A background rumble of bass cop-talk mixed with muted explosions coming through the soundproofed glass wall that looked down onto the range.

He and Dvora walked through the security doors leading from the lobby into the sound barrier area before they were buzzed, one at a time, into the range itself.

Jack said, “Think of shooting as a being a combination of body and gun. Of the two, your body is the most important part.  That’s with modern weapons. The most important part of the body for stability is the hand. The hand is complicated, but when you shoot you mostly use it to hold and stabilize the gun.  This makes the shape of the handle and the gun important.”

“Questions?”

“Nope,” she said.

“A strong grip on the handle, firm wrist, and trigger finger control-all very important.  Good eyesight and knowing what affects your ability to see are extremely important.”

He talked to her about the importance of balance and equilibrium. “Physical conditioning, especially hand strength, reaction time, and stamina, are some of the things that made a great shooter.”

“What I’m going to teach you today are techniques for short-range shooting.  Shooting’s like any other activity.  Natural ability and perfect practice combined with good coaching and you get better.”

Dvora was a good student-no she was a great student.  Even though her hands were large and strong for a woman, she still felt better using a two-handed, wraparound grip.  She tried the J-Frame, Browning, Sig P239, and Glock.  The Sig fit the best and after fifty rounds, she started having fun.  With each bit of instruction, her shooting improved.  The discipline and focus, the will to do well that made her a great dancer, showed in her shooting.

She didn’t get mad at herself, or distracted, or proud of her achievements. She simply ground away at it until she was good.  Her shot groups climbed up the target and she corrected by applying more force to her grip.  She was erratic on one clip.

“My guess is you’ve let your sight picture change.”

She simply nodded her head firmly, made the adjustment, and achieved a tight shot group on the next clip.

They’d been at it for an hour and a half, having stopped twice to get more ammunition, when Dvora’s shot groups scattered again.  He thought at first it was a loss of concentration and was going to suggest a break.  When she reloaded her next clip, her hands trembled and she dropped two bullets on to the growing pile of empty shell casings on the floor.

“Are you tired?” he asked.

She had the self-confidence of the great athlete.  Instead of denying her fatigue she nodded her head.  He checked the guns in for cleaning and an overhaul on the Browning.  He hated having someone else touch his guns, but this range usually did a better job than he did.  And it was sure a more efficient use of his time.

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

 

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller | Leave a comment

ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 46

Chapter 46

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

The congressman said, “I know you have no evidence of any wrongdoing, son.  That’s why I am making this call.  You know I have been able to help you in the past.  I am saying you need to start looking at this fellow and you will find evidence.  The Patriot Act gives you the right to do pretty darn much whatever you please.  You wouldn’t want it to come out later, for instance when you are thinking about running for office, with my support of course, that you had a tip from a reliable source saying insider trading was going on, and you didn’t follow up.  Especially when the money they are making could be used to pay for who-knows-what kind of activities, such as terrorist acts.”

Assistant director Alexander Reed of the FBI sat up in his chair.  This congressman often had information he couldn’t possibly have.  The assistant director hated dealing with the congressman.  Even the congressman’s southern drawl seemed to ooze a sleazy aroma.

Where did the congressman get his information?  The assistant director of the FBI smiled as he thought that particular piece of information might be worth the effort of a follow-up.  The current FBI director was not happy with congressman who used their access to top-secret data to grind personal axes.  The assistant director knew this particular congressman had reminded the Director once too often where his support came from.  While he was investigating this tip, the assistant director would investigate a possible leak.

The assistant director of the FBI absently reached down to scratch his right leg.  He smiled, looking a little embarrassed despite being in his office on his own. He leaned back in his chair and grabbed his umbrella out of the canister behind his desk and rapped on his artificial right leg.  The doctors called it phantom nerve action.  At least he didn’t have the phantom pain that used to wake him every night.  An occasional itch in a leg that wasn’t there surely wasn’t nearly as bad a thing as pain from a non-existent limb.

Alex remembered when he was a kid.  He read a lot of science fiction. They would stick a blown up veteran in some kind of tub and re-grow limbs as easy as some people grew hair.  Wasn’t likely to happen in his lifetime.  His hand reached out, almost on its own volition, to play with the silver buckle.  He’d finished the Western States on his running leg in twenty-three hours forty-one minutes and seventeen seconds.  He’d come back from the dead, according to the doctors.

Reed had been a reservist when it had happened.  It had taken a lot of talking to get his old job back at the FBI, but he had.  He would be god-damned if he’d let some congressman who had never served, but made his tough reputation sending Reed’s brothers into harm’s way, screw with another wounded vet.

The assistant director of the FBI leaned back in his chair, folded his arms behind his head, closed his eyes for a few moments and thought.  Then he called his admin on his land line and said:

“Deidre, I’m going to step out for a little fresh air.  I should be back in a few minutes.” He reached into a his messenger bag to make sure the burner phone had enough of a charge to make a call, put it into his jacket pocket and took the stairs down to walk out into the square.  He wandered to the local coffee house, picked up an Americano and a blueberry scone.  He sat on the park bench that looked into the big open area and was conveniently shielded by Holly Oaks.  He punched a memorized number into his mobile.  “Robert E. Lee White and associates, this is Jane.  How may I help you?”

One of the seven assistant directors of the FBI said, “Hello Jane.  I would like to speak to Robert E. Lee White.”

Jane said, “May I let him know who is calling, please?”

“Just let Bob know it’s a concerned citizen.”

There was a short pause and then Jane said, “It might be few minutes.”

It was more than a few minutes when Robert E. Lee White came on and said, “This is Bob White.”

“ Mr. White this is John Doe.”

“Would you say that again, please?”

“Mr. White, this is John Doe, concerned citizen.”

“Hello, John, it’s been a long time since I have heard your voice. I have heard that you are doing well. Congratulations.”

“Thank you.  I’ve just been given some information or rather told that information exists if we simply dig deep enough.  And, it concerns someone who is quite close to you, someone whose sister is very close to him.”

“I see.  What is it that you would like me to do?”

“I’d like you to help me make sure that a hero and patriot is not put in a bad spot by someone who pretends to be a patriot and is certainly not a hero.”

“I would be more than happy to do this.  I have some information on this that might help you understand the picture more thoroughly.  Before we meet, I don’t suppose it’s worth me asking you to give up the dark side and come and earn an honest day’s wages, is it?”

The assistant director of the FBI laughed and said, “Not quite yet.  Some of us still have to mind the store, you know.  Do you want to meet for coffee to discuss this, or…?”

“I think coffee would be great. Should we say Caffeine Nation in the financial district at 10:15 tomorrow?”

“That would be great.”

“Airborne.”

“Ranger!”

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

 

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller | Leave a comment

ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 45

Chapter 45

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

If Lee hadn’t told Jack about Uncle Chin’s precautions, he would have had a hard time spotting them.  A very large Chinese man walked a constant thirty feet in front of them. He turned his body at the waist every few seconds, scanning the crowd and then looking down at his watch, as if worrying someone was late.  He wore what was now traditional garb for blue-collar Chinese in Hong Kong: Levi’s, probably knockoffs from Indonesia, a sweatshirt from an Ivy League college that didn’t exist, and black cross-trainers.

When the security guard asked the man his business he replied with the high-pitched voice of a boxer who had taken too many punches.  He spoke slowly enough so Jack could understand that the man was supposed to see his cousin off. The man’s eyebrows were thickened with scar tissue and what little nose he’d had before his career in the ring was now flattened, more on the left side of his face than the right.

At first he felt sorry for the young man and the damage the ring had done to him, but when they moved closer he could see that the boxer was near his own age. He expected to see the dullness of a punch-drunk fighter’s eyes.  Instead there was a merry twinkle, like a murderous Santa, as he laughingly put the girl at the counter at ease, knowing his face was scary.

Jack and Lee ignored Chinese propriety and stood holding each other until there was no more time.  He walked through the metal detector and it beeped, saddening him. He had already emptied keys, coins, and mobile into the dark green doggy dish.  Then he remembered the bottle. He gently placed the bottle into the bowl and walked back through, hoping for a miracle.  No beep.

He stood staring down at the little bottle, feeling the crowd surge past, ignoring their upset.  Lee stood just outside the security area, enjoying the look on his face.  The cousin, who had been so late, had the aisle seat two seats behind him, covering Jack’s back.  He wondered at Uncle Chin’s precautions, not the extent, but the ease with which he set them up, and the quick availability of resources.  Uncle Chin had known the vendetta of the Tongs before.  Before he started doing business with the old boys he had written off the labels of pirate and smuggler as jealousy or character assassination.  Now he wasn’t as sure.

The plane turned and raced down the runway, getting closer and closer to the water.  Right before it seemed certain they’d end up as a Boeing canoe, the pilot pulled them up into a steep climb.  The plane turned over the waterborne village of boat people at the end of the runway and the pilot gunned it, heading straight toward the hills of the new territories.  For the first time in years, Jack’s back didn’t hurt on the return flight. The rest of him throbbed like an abscessed tooth.

The whole insider-trading scheme didn’t sit well.  He pulled company’s records on his Air to make sure they had no common officers or board members. Other than genetic engineering, they had nothing in common.  There were 157 publicly traded companies that did genetic engineering around the world.  Why were these five in play?

If someone were going to go heavy into insider trading, these firms wouldn’t be first choice.  The industry made sense, but Double Helix and Genotopian were so thinly traded any activity in them would raise questions.  ReWire and the others had plenty of activity, but he still couldn’t see the connection.  Someone could have stumbled onto a conduit into one of the companies, and then decided to pursue more, but why pick genetic engineering?  Why not Internet connectivity or computer network software, or any of the mid-level software companies that responded heavily to rumors?

Jack didn’t need to know why, but he did need to know more than he knew.  He started at the very beginning with each company, looking at ReWire first.  The company was originally established as a dairy farm, expanding into breeding and fertilizer production in Lodi, California in 1941.

The company stayed private and low-key successful under its founder, J. “Bunny’ Fowler, until 1981, when Bunny had a major stroke.  His family was killed in a car wreck two years before and it had taken the heart out Mr. Fowler.  Fowler was supposed to be in the car, but he had chosen to ride with a business associate instead.  He had the great good fortune to have hired Donald P. O’Hare to the business nine months before the wreck that had taken his family and his drive.

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

Donald took family money and future cash flow from the company and bought Bunny out-at exactly the wrong time.  The inflation of the early eighties caused fertilizer prices to shoot up, making the dairy industry in California a money-losing proposition, even with price supports.  O’Hare hung on and pumped more family money into the company.

In the mid-eighties, Donald got smart or lucky.  Donald diversified into genetic engineering, buying a little lab in Davis, California.  It was illegal to buy humans, but the top-flight scientists didn’t want to leave their experiments, so they came along.  One of the assets Donald bought was a patent on one of the first genetically altered serums for bovine hoof-and-mouth disease. The serum wasn’t important enough to list as a line item on the annual report when he bought the laboratory. There was an outbreak, the lab came through with serum and Donald was a hero.  He took the company public right after that.

The stock had gone public at 15. It had doubled and split, tripled and split, and doubled and split again and was now trading at near twenty.  Shareholders who bought as an Initial Public Offering had seen their investments of fifteen dollars a share become nearly two hundred and fifty dollars.  Good so far, but that twenty dollars a share it was selling for now was down from a high of 31.825, just fourteen weeks ago.  The latest earnings estimates cut thirty percent off the bottom-line, and five brokerage firms lowered their recommendations from neutral to under-perform. One regional firm, specializing in biotech, put out an emergency bulletin to its top clients saying, “…sell as fast as you possibly can.”

Cathay Pacific had premium-quality sound.  He plugged his noise canceling headphones into the jack.  He absent-mindedly channel-hopped and stumbled on a great classic rock mix.  Led Zeppelin’s “Tangerine” ended and Cream came on.

Bad luck and trouble were my only friends. 

I’ve been down ever since I was ten.

Spoonful, Spoonful, Spoonful

The song was appropriate for recent news on ReWire.

Impurity in culture leads to FDA investigation.  Former manager sues for sexual harassment.  SEC alleges irregularities in audit.

Most of the stories were prefaced with statements like:

“An insider who has spoken only on the condition of anonymity,” or the ever popular, “Industry insiders say.”  Someone familiar with securities trading would say, “Short sellers who got spanked are trying to cover their ass by planting rumors to drive the stock down.”

The liberal press tried to paint short sellers as bad or even evil.  Short sellers were, by far, the best early warning radar the market had.  Short sellers were in it for the money, pure and simple.  Unlike regulators who get paid whether they are right or not, short sellers only make money when they are right.  They looked at companies or industries with a microscope.  They looked for problems that others hadn’t seen yet.  Then, they would borrow stock, sell it, and wait for others to see the same the problems.  If they spotted a genuine problem and the market accepted it, they would buy the stock they shorted back at a much lower price.  If they were wrong in their valuation theory, they had to raise money to buy stock at a higher price to cover their short position.

The ones Jack didn’t like were the rumormongers among them. They wanted it to be easy. They’d take a position in a stock, likely as not based on something they heard at a bar or in the gym. When it didn’t pan out, they wouldn’t simply cut their losses and move on.  Instead, they’d try to create enough bad news to help them out of their bad judgment.

He scanned through the news stories on Genotopian, Double Helix, Life Force, and Med Gene. The stories could be divided into three basic types.  First was hard news, from boards of directors, officers of the companies, suppliers, or customers.  The second type was the will-o’-the-wisp ‘anonymous industry sources’ story.  The third was what he thought of as Acts of God, despite not believing in the whole invisible friend thing.

Some poor schmuck president of a company, after ten years of eighteen-hour days, six and sometimes seven days a week, would exercise his stock options, buy a Ferrari and wrap it around a tree as he headed to his new palace in Woodside.  Or a chief scientist went helicopter skiing and took a ride on an avalanche.  There was even a story about a truck laden with LPG taking a wrong turn and blowing up right next to a lab.

Very few people ever gave luck the credit it deserved.  Meghan believed firmly in Karma, saying people found the luck they deserved.  Jack wasn’t so sure.

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

 

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller | Leave a comment

ReWire a Thriller by John Cameron Chapter 44

Chapter 44

 

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

Idiots!” Her Grace shouted.  Even the angry shout was music.

“Please repeat command?” the computer asked quietly.

“Scroll down,” she said more quietly, knowing she had too much work to do to let her excitement attract the doctor.  She had been threatened with around-the-clock nursing if she let herself become too tired again.

He Grace read, constantly monitoring her temper.  The incompetents were everywhere she turned. She almost laughed at the thought.  The only way she turned now was in a powered wheelchair.  The fools had attempted hit-and-run on two trained athletes in Hong Kong!  If they would have tried in the United States, or Canada, or Germany, with good, wide roads, they might have succeeded.  Only fools would try something like a hit-and-run on those streets teeming with people.

She read line after line of incompetence and smiled.  Now senior counsel would have to agree.  Her plan was much more efficient.  They would stop the meddlers and take care of the stubborn servant as well.  He was not much of a servant anymore. She was certain that the conviction of his faith was even thinner than his carefully disguised hair.

Her Grace called for her stenographer.  She could have dictated the message using the voice recognition software.  The newly installed software was very effective.  Now she could control her chair, the lights, and so many more things with just her voice. She hated asking others to do for her. She understood the necessity.  That did not make it any more pleasant.  But, she was not happy with how hard it was to write the nuances she needed with the new software.

The young girl came in.  Her Grace asked the girl to stand close so she could see her face.  Yes, she really was very pretty.

Buy ReWire now on Amazon for only $3.99

 

Posted in Chapters from ReWire a Thriller | Leave a comment