How the Light Gets In

Gilles sat in what they’d begun to call his chair, at the door of the schoolhouse. He ate his breakfast and, when he was finished, poured himself another mug of coffee and tipped his chair back against the door. He was their deadbolt.

 

Gamache looked at his watch. It was twenty-five past four. He felt like pacing, but knew that would be annoying. He was dying to ask how it was going, but knew that would simply break their concentration. Instead, he called Henri and put on his coat, thrusting his hands deep in his pockets. In his panic, he’d left his gloves on the platform with the satellite dish and he sure as hell wasn’t going back for them.

 

Thérèse and Gilles joined them, and they went for a stroll.

 

“It’s going well,” said Thérèse.

 

“Yes,” said Gamache. It was cold, and clear, and crisp, and dark. And quiet.

 

“Like thieves in the night, eh?” he said to Gilles.

 

The woodsman laughed. “I hope I didn’t insult you with that.”

 

“Far from it,” said Thérèse. “It’s a natural career progression. Sorbonne, chief curator at the Musée des beaux-arts, Superintendent of the S?reté, and finally, the pinnacle. A thief in the night.” She turned to Gamache. “And all thanks to you.”

 

“You’re welcome, madame.” Gamache bowed solemnly.

 

They sat on a bench and looked across to the schoolhouse, with its light muffled by the blankets. The Chief wondered if the quiet woodsman beside him knew what would happen if they failed. And what would happen if they succeeded.

 

In either case, all hell was about to break loose. And come here.

 

But at this moment there was peace and quiet.

 

They walked back to the schoolhouse, Henri leaping and catching the snowballs, only to have them disappear in his mouth. But he never stopped trying, never gave up.

 

An hour later Jér?me and Nichol tripped their first alarm.

 

 

 

 

 

THIRTY-FOUR

 

 

The phone woke Sylvain Francoeur and he grabbed the receiver before the second ring.

 

“What is it?” he said, instantly alert.

 

“Sir, it’s Charpentier here. There’s been a breach.”

 

Francoeur got up on one elbow and waved his wife to go back to sleep.

 

“What’s that mean?”

 

“I’m monitoring network activity, and someone’s accessed one of the restricted files.”

 

Francoeur turned on the light, put on his glasses, and looked at the clock on the bedside table. The bright red numbers said 5:43 A.M. He sat up.

 

“How serious?”

 

“I don’t know. It might not be anything. As instructed, I called Inspector Tessier and he told me to call you.”

 

“Good. Now explain what you saw.”

 

“Well, it’s complicated.”

 

“Try.”

 

Charpentier was surprised that so much menace could be contained in such a small word. He tried. His best. “Well, the firewall’s not showing that an unauthorized connection’s been made, but…”

 

“But what?”

 

“It’s just that someone opened the file and I’m not sure who it was. It was within the network, so the person had access codes. It’s probably someone within the department, but we can’t be sure.”

 

“Are you telling me you don’t know if there has been a breach?”

 

“I’m saying there has, but we don’t know if it’s someone from the outside, or one of our own. Like a house alarm. At first it’s hard to tell if it’s an intruder or a raccoon.”

 

“A raccoon? You’re not seriously comparing the S?reté’s state-of-the-art, multimillion-dollar security system with a house alarm?”

 

“I’m sorry, sir, but it’s only because it’s state-of-the-art that we found it at all. Most systems and programs would’ve missed it. But it’s so sensitive, sometimes we find things that don’t need to be found. That aren’t threats.”

 

“Like a raccoon?”

 

“Exactly,” said the agent, obviously regretting the analogy. It had worked with Tessier, but Chief Superintendent Francoeur was a whole other beast. “And if there is an intruder, we can’t yet tell if there’s a purpose, or if it’s just some hacker out to make trouble, or even someone who wandered in by mistake. We’re working on it.”

 

“By mistake?” They’d installed this system last year. Brought in the finest software designers and Internet architects to create something that couldn’t be breached. And now this agent was saying some idiot might have wandered in by mistake?

 

“It happens more often than people realize,” said Charpentier unhappily. “I don’t think it’s serious, but we’re treating it as though it is, just in case. And the file they’ve accessed doesn’t appear all that important.”

 

“Which file?” Francoeur asked.

 

“Something about the construction schedule for Autoroute 20.”

 

Francoeur stared at the curtains drawn in front of the bedroom window. There was a slight flutter as the cold air came into his home.

 

The file seemed so trivial, so far from anything that could threaten their plan, but Francoeur knew that file for what it was. For what it contained. And now someone was sniffing around.

 

“Check it out,” he said, “and call me back.”

 

“Yessir.”

 

“What is it?” asked Madame Francoeur, watching her husband head to the bathroom.

 

“Nothing, just a little trouble at work. Go back to sleep.”

 

“Are you getting up?”

 

“Might as well,” he said. “I’m awake now, and the alarm’ll go off soon anyway.”

 

But alarms were already going off for Chief Superintendent Francoeur.

 

*

 

“They’ve seen us,” said Jér?me. “I tripped the alarm here.”

 

“Where?” asked Gamache, pulling up a chair.

 

Jér?me showed him.

 

“Construction files?” asked Gamache, and turned to Thérèse. “Why would the S?reté have any files on road construction, never mind ones that are secure?”

 

“No reason. It isn’t our jurisdiction. The roads, yes, but not repairing them. And it certainly wouldn’t be confidential.”

 

“They must be looking for us,” said Nichol. Her voice was calm. Just reporting facts.

 

“To be expected,” said Jér?me, his voice also calm.

 

On his monitor they saw files open and close. Appear and disappear.

 

“Stop typing,” said Nichol.

 

Jér?me lifted his hands off the keyboard and they hovered in midair.

 

Gamache stared at the monitor. He could almost see lines of code appear, grow, then contract.

 

“Have they found you?” Jér?me asked Nichol.

 

“No. I’m over in another file. It’s also about construction, but it’s old. Can’t be important.”

 

“Wait,” said Gamache, dragging his chair over to her monitor. “Show me.”

 

*

 

“Sir, it’s Charpentier again.”

 

“Oui,” said Francoeur. He’d showered and dressed and was about to head in. It was now just after six.

 

“It was nothing.”

 

“Are you sure?”

 

“Certain. I had a good look around. Ran all sorts of scans and couldn’t find any unauthorized access to our network. It happens fairly often, as I said. A ghost in the machine. I’m sorry to disturb you with this.”

 

“You did the right thing.” While relieved, Francoeur still didn’t relax. “Put more agents on to monitor.”

 

“Another shift starts at eight—”

 

“I mean now.” The voice was sharp, and Charpentier responded immediately.

 

“Yessir.”

 

Francoeur hung up, then punched in Tessier’s number.

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