possible building to do the business in. It’s like Amarillo, Texas, but in bad taste.
We ran through the rain from my room to the car, then trucked on down I-10 to the nearest Wal-Mart. We made the call from a public phone using a tiny Sony laptop I’d picked up a few weeks earlier. Dialed up my Bobby number and got nothing. No carrier tone, no redirect to some other number, just ringing with no answer. That had never happened before. I made a quick check again of my e-mail and had a second message, from a person named
polytrope
. He said, “Bobby’s gone. Out six hours now. Drop word. Ring on.”
“Maybe they got him,” I said to LuEllen, popping the connection. “The feds. I gotta make another call, but not from here. Let’s go.”
LuEllen’s a professional thief. When I said, “Let’s go,” she didn’t ask questions. She started walking. Not hurrying, but moving out, smiling, pleasant, but not making eye contact with any of the store clerks.
In the movies, the FBI makes a call while the bad guy is still on the telephone, and three minutes later, agents drop out of the sky in a black helicopter and the chase begins.
In reality, if the feds had taken Bobby, and had a watch on his phone line, they could get a read on the Wal-Mart phone almost instantly. Getting to the phone was another matter-that would take a while, even if they went through the local cops. In the very best, most cooperative system, we’d have ten minutes. In a typical federal law-enforcement scramble, we’d have an hour or more. But why take a chance?
We were out of the Wal-Mart in a minute, and in two minutes, down the highway. Ten miles away, I made a call from an outdoor phone at a Shell station, dropping an e-mail to two guys who, separately, called themselves
pr 48stl9
and
trilbee
: “Bobby is down. Transmit word. Ring on.” I sent a third e-mail to
[email protected]: “ 3577.” The number was my “word,” and I was dropping it into a blind hole.
“THAT’S IT?” LuEllen asked, when I’d dropped the word.
“That’s all there is. There’s nothing else to do. Still want that sundae?”
“I guess.” But she was worried. We’re both illegal, at least some of the time, and we’re sensitive to trouble, to complications that could push us out in the open. Trouble is like a panfish nibbling at the end of your fishing line-you feel it, and if you’re experienced, you know what it means. She could feel the trouble nibbling at us. “Maybe chocolate will cure it.”
THE ring had been set up by Bobby. A group of people that he more or less trusted were each given one segment of his address. If anything should happen to him-if his system went unresponsive-we’d each dump our “word” at a blind e-mail address.
Whoever checked the e-mail would assemble the words, derive a street address, and go to Bobby’s house to see what had happened. I didn’t know who’d been designated to go. Somebody closer to Bobby than I was.
To keep the cops from breaking the ring, if one of us should be caught, we knew only the online names of two members of the ring. I didn’t know until that day that
romeoblue
, whoever he was, was a member of the ring, or that he had one of my blind addresses. The guys I called,
pr48stl9
and
trilbee
, didn’t know that I was part of it; and I had no idea who their guys were, further around the ring.
Nobody, except Bobby, knew how many ring members there were, or their real names-all we knew is that each guy had two names. Two, in case somebody should be out of touch, or even dead, when the ring was turned on.
And the
ring on
thing-if one of us
was
caught by the cops, and extorted into contacting the ring, a warning could be sent along with the extorted message. If the message didn’t end with
ring on
, you’d assume that things were going to hell in a handbasket.
All of this might sound overblown, but several of us were wanted by the feds. We hadn’t been charged with any crimes, you