“Absolutely not. I’m not going to be cowed into silence.”
“But Travis is getting the names of victims from the blog. He’s reading up on them, finding their deepest fears, their vulnerabilities. He’s tracking down where they live.”
“People shouldn’t be writing about themselves on public Internet pages. I did a whole blog about that too.”
“Be that as it may, they are posting.” Dance tried to control her frustration. “Please, work with us.”
“I have been working with you. That’s as far as I’m willing to go.”
“What can it hurt to take it down for a few days?”
“And if you don’t find him by then?”
“Put it up again.”
“Or you come to me and say a few more, then a few more.”
“At least stop taking posts on that thread. He won’t get any more names he can target as victims. It’ll make our job easier.”
“Repression never leads to anything good,” he muttered, staring right into her eyes. The missionary was back.
Kathryn Dance gave up on the Jon Boling strategy to coddle Chilton’s ego. She snapped angrily, “You’re making these bullshit grand pronouncements. ‘Freedom.’ ‘Truth.’ ‘Repression.’ This boy is trying to kill people. Jesus Christ, look at it for what it is. Take the damn politics out of it.”
Chilton calmly replied, “My job is to keep an open forum for public opinion. That’s the First Amendment… . I know, you’re going to remind me that you were a reporter too and you cooperated if the police wanted some help. But, see, that’s the difference. You were beholden to big money, to the advertisers, to whoever’s pocket your bosses were in. I’m not beholden to anybody.”
“I’m not asking you to stop reporting on the crimes. Write away to your heart’s content. Just don’t accept any more posts. Nobody’s adding facts, anyway. These people are just venting. And half of what they say is just plain wrong. It’s rumors, speculation. Rants.”
“And their thoughts aren’t valid?” he asked, but not angrily; in fact he seemed to be enjoying the debate. “Their opinions don’t count? Only the articulate and the educated — and the moderate — are allowed to comment? Well, welcome to the new world of journalism, Agent Dance. The free exchange of ideas. See, it’s not about your big newspapers anymore, your Bill O’Reillys, your Keith Olbermanns. It’s about the people. No, I’m not suspending the blog and I’m not locking any threads.” He glanced at Hawken, who was wrestling another armchair out of the back of the U-Haul. Chilton said to her, “Now, if you’ll excuse me.”
And he strode to the truck, looking, she decided, just like some martyr on his way to the firing squad, having just delivered a rant about a cause he, though nobody else, fervently believed in.
LIKE EVERYONE ELSE on the Peninsula — anybody over age six and with any access to the media, that is — Lyndon Strickland was very aware of the Roadside Cross Case.
And, like a lot of people who read The Chilton Report, he was angry.
The forty-one-year-old lawyer climbed out of his car and locked the door. He was going for his daily lunchtime run along a path near Seventeen Mile Drive, the beautiful road that leads from Pacific Grove to Carmel, winding past movie stars’ and business executives’ vacation houses and Pebble Beach golf course.
He heard the sounds of construction for that new highway heading east to Salinas and the farmland. It was progressing fast. Strickland represented several small homeowners whose property had been taken by eminent domain to make way for the road. He’d been up against the state and against massive Avery Construction itself — and their armada of big legal guns. Not unexpectedly he’d lost the trial, just last week. But the judge had stayed the destruction of his clients’ houses pending appeal. The lead defense counsel, from San Francisco, had been livid.
Lyndon Strickland, on the other hand, had been ecstatic.
The fog was coming up, the weather chill, and he had the jogging path to himself as he started to run.
Angry.
Strickland had read what people were saying in James Chilton’s blog. Travis Brigham was a crazy boy who idolized the shooters at Columbine and Virginia Tech, who stalked girls in the night, who’d half asphyxiated his own brother, Sammy, and left him retarded, who’d intentionally driven a car off the cliff a few weeks ago in some weird suicide/murder ritual, killing two girls.
How the hell had everybody missed the danger signs the boy must’ve displayed? His parents, his teachers… friends.
The image of the mask he’d seen online that morning still gave him the creeps. A chill coursed through his body, only partly from the damp air.
The Mask Killer…
And now the kid was out there, hiding in the hills of Monterey County, picking off one by one the people who’d posted negative things about him.
Strickland read The Chilton Report frequently. It was on his RSS feed, near the top. He disagreed with Chilton on some issues, but the blogger was always reasonable and always made solid, intellectual arguments in support of his positions. For instance, although Chilton was adamantly opposed to abortion, he’d posted a comment against that wacko Reverend Fisk, who’d called for the murder of abortion doctors. Strickland, who’d often represented Planned Parenthood and other pro-choice organizations, had been impressed with Chilton’s balanced stance.
The blogger was also opposed to the desalination plant, as was Strickland, who was meeting with a potential new client — an environmental group interested in hiring him to sue to stop the plant from going forward. He’d just posted a reply supporting the blogger.