“Let’s grab a conference room,” Kelsey added, not giving him a chance to resist. She led them into a room across the hall, and Ben sank into a chair. Derek took the seat across from him.
“I’ve got a Web address,” Derek said, “and I need the physical locations of the computers that have posted comments on the site. That something you can do?”
Ben looked Derek over a moment, then put his computer bag on the table and pulled out a Mac. Derek rattled off the address.
“Lot of comments here,” Ben said as he scrolled through the site. “It’ll take some time.”
“But you can get the locations?”
“Sure, provided they didn’t use anonymizers. Even if they did, I can still get them, but it’s more work.”
Derek slid a slip of paper across the table. “I need everything starting with this comment. Especially anything posted from a Houston-area location.”
Kelsey leaned over Ben’s shoulder and read the screen, frowning. “Bathroom tile? What is this?”
“Reads like a coded message,” Ben said.
Derek nodded. “It was posted from a truck stop, possibly by a terrorist who’d just slipped through the border. I think he’s using this home-improvement blog to communicate with his cell.”
Ben leaned back in his chair. “A terrorist.”
“That’s right.”
“Why isn’t the FBI involved?”
“They are. I’m hoping you’re faster.”
“Um, hello?” Kelsey looked at Derek. “Terrorists who tile? What the hell is this?”
“The cyber-jihad,” Ben told her. “The Internet’s become a town square for terrorist orgs. They use it for clandestine communication, recruiting, reconnaissance, even psychological warfare—like when they executed that aid worker and posted the video.”
Derek clenched his teeth as he thought of Ana Hansson kneeling in the dirt. Hailey Gardner would have been next in line.
“You think this is some kind of initiation code?” Ben asked.
“Could be.”
Ben glanced at his watch. “Looks like my game just got canceled.”
Kelsey leaned closer and read the words aloud. “?‘Interesting Advice Here on Bathroom Tile/Shower. Ready to start Five by Fifteen room.’?” She looked at Derek. “Sounds awkward, but how is it a code?”
“Look at the caps,” Derek said. “Maybe it really means, ‘I Am Here at Buck’s Truck Stop. Ready at Five Fifteen,’ which is the exact time our tango was picked up by someone at that location. I want to know who that someone was.”
“Mohamed Atta used something similar,” Ben said. “He sent a coded e-mail to Al Qaeda right before the 9/11 attacks. But this could be one-way communication. So I can run this down for you, but there’s no guarantee anyone answered back.”
“I know,” Derek said. “Just do the best you can. Any comment that looks like a reply to the truck stop comment, or anything at all from the Houston area, could be from an accomplice. What I need is a location. Oh, and heads-up, you need to be stealth about it. Don’t leave any footprints on the site unless you want trouble with the feds.”
Ben smiled. “Stealth is my specialty.”
Derek glanced at Kelsey, who was giving him a worried look. It stayed on her face all the way down to the lobby, and he knew what she was going to say as she ushered him out the door.
“Thanks for the help,” he told her, trying to distract her. “Gage speaks highly of your people here.”
“This isn’t your problem anymore, Derek. If they’re in our borders, the FBI has jurisdiction.”
“I’m aware.”
“Then why are you involved?”
“I’m not.”
She looked at him.
“Just doing a little recon, that’s all,” he said. “If I get anything useful, I’ll pass it along.”
* * *
“Hey, it’s me.” Derek’s low drawl sent a rush of warmth through her.
“What are you doing?” she asked.
“Working. How ’bout you?”
“Same.”
“How’s it going today?”
Crappy, she wanted to say. She’d spent the past six hours sitting in a sweltering car, sans air-conditioning, staking out an Internet café in Montrose. “Fine,” she said instead.
“Any sightings?”
“No.”
“Me, neither.”
The passenger door opened, and two-hundred-plus pounds of muscled man slid in beside her. Elizabeth’s heart lurched.
“How did you get here?” she blurted.
“Drove.”
“No, I mean how’d you find this place?”
He smiled. “That’s top secret.”
She waited, watching him, and he leaned closer.
“How bad do you want to know? ’Cause I’m willing to give it up.”
“Derek, I’m serious.”
He sighed and grabbed the water bottle from the cup holder. “I know you are.” He took a swig. “I found this place the same way you did, I’m guessing. Traced a blog comment to an ISP. Any new leads?”
She looked out the window, trying to get her heart rate back to normal. Not possible with him in the car. He was in jeans and cowboy boots again, but now he had a leather jacket on, too, probably to conceal the loaded pistol he was no doubt carrying.
“Elizabeth?”
She cleared her throat. “As a matter of fact, yes. We managed to trace the registration sticker.”
“You don’t sound excited.”
“The Chevy’s registered to a student at Rice University,” she said. “He sold his car three weeks ago, presumably to one of our tangos.”
“And?”
She looked at him. “And a week later, he was killed in a mugging.”
“A mugging.”
“Someone accosted him outside a bar here in Montrose. Shot him at point-blank range, took his phone, his wallet. We’re investigating the case now, obviously. There’s an evidence response team at the victim’s apartment, turning the place inside out, looking for anything on this car buyer he met up with right before his death.”
Derek shook his head.
“What do you think?”
“I think they’re cleaning up loose ends,” he said, “eliminating anyone who can identify them.”
She sighed. “That’s what I think, too.”
“Also sounds to me like the car’s important. Maybe part of the plot somehow.”
She thought back to the mangled school bus and stifled a shudder. In the right location, a car bomb could wreak havoc. Should she tell Derek about Zahid Ameen? She’d thought about it. It was something he’d definitely want to know, but he was already too involved.
She looked across the street at the Galaxy Café. It had a giant moon for a logo and offered coffee and free Wi-Fi to a steady stream of starving artists and college students.
“It’s a good strategy,” Derek said.
“What?”
“Staking out the neighborhood. People are creatures of habit, even terrorists. We know one of them used the Internet here. We know one of them bought a car from a kid in school less than a mile away. This feels like their comfort zone.”
“You think? Because to me, it feels like a dead end.” She couldn’t hide the frustration in her voice. “If these guys are so smart, they won’t use the same Internet café more than once.”
She glanced at Derek, whose attention was trained on the door. She thought of his petite mother, who’d been so friendly to her when she stopped by the house yesterday. I’m sorry you missed Derek. Come back anytime. Was it just typical Texas hospitality, or did she really mean it? Elizabeth wasn’t sure why it should matter to her, but it did.
“How’s your family?” she asked.
He sent her a sideways look.
“Your parents? Your sisters? Have you had a chance to see them all?”
“They’re fine.” His tone was cautious, as though he was surprised she’d asked a personal question.
Because why would she? For days, he’d made no secret of wanting to jump into bed with her. But heaven forbid she might ask about his personal life.
She took the bottle of water from him. “They don’t mind you coming home, then immediately going AWOL on them?”
“I don’t stick around the house much when I’m in town. Makes me stir-crazy.”