Blood in the Water Oliver Davies (ereader that reads to you TXT) š
- Author: Oliver Davies
Book online Ā«Blood in the Water Oliver Davies (ereader that reads to you TXT) šĀ». Author Oliver Davies
Once the phone was on and good to go, I plugged it into my laptop and passed all the files through my Contain and Analyse routines before starting to dig around. It didnāt take long to find the spyware by searching on a few commonly used code strings. It wasnāt the dumbest package Iād ever seen, but it wasnāt super smart either. It had the capability to dig itself in well enough so that deactivating and uninstalling the system update service wouldnāt get rid of it, but apart from that, it wasnāt much better than the commercial packages that way too many people subscribed to for monitoring their kids online activity or checking up on cheating spouses.
It wouldnāt be hard to āturn the tablesā on this little sucker. Whoever had put it together was a second-rate programmer, at best. I considered popping my earbuds in and putting some music on to listen to while I worked, but my cousinās occasional swearing under his breath indicated that heād probably want to vent a bit sometime soon. I duplicated the spyware bundle, split my screen and started on my modifications.
I set up my own laptop as another, hidden, destination device and pulled up the phoneās web browser. After visiting a few recently viewed pages, I checked that all of that had come through okay. All good. It had also obligingly bounced everything off to another IP address. Their hub? Iād soon find out. There was something very satisfying about improving a shoddy piece of work, and I tapped away happily as I composed my little counterstrike package.
āBastards!ā Conallās volume had gone up a bit there. I paused, waiting. āDid you read through all this?ā he asked, quietly fuming.
āNo, just Osborneās work history. I didnāt open up any of the case files I pulled.ā I hadnāt felt like depressing myself with a refresher on how shitty the life of an undercover operative usually was. Iād had my fill of brooding over crap I couldnāt fix already this week. It wasnāt healthy, or productive. Conall scrolled back up a bit and offered me his phone.
āRead from there.ā
I scanned the section that had set him off. It was nothing unusual. At his debriefing, Osborne had recommended maximum leniency for Cory Phelps and been adamant that he should be released on bail until he could be tried. Phelps, he insisted, was not a flight risk. He was just a dumb kid who had no idea what he was really involved in. Osborneās character assessment and recommendations had all been buried, of course. It wasnāt politically expedient to be seen to be lenient with arms smugglers.
Besides, Osborneās judgement was not to be relied upon. Long term undercover operatives couldnāt help but sometimes feel as if they really had made friends with the subjects they āwrongly perceivedā to be harmless and insignificant, not after interacting with them on a daily basis for months on end.
āYou canāt pretend any of this surprised you, Cuz. You know what the politicos are like, and the kind of pressures theyāll apply when they decide itās necessary. By the time the psych boys had finished reconditioning Osborne and declared him fit for active duty again, I bet he was perfectly willing to agree with their assessment and retract his earlier recommendations.ā
Conall looked suitably disgusted at the thought of it. āIn that case, those people are also indirectly partly responsible for the murder of Damien Price.ā
āTo some degree, perhaps,ā I agreed. āAnd also for ensuring that that arms shipment never got into the wrong hands, thereby preventing who knows how many armed robberies and shootings.ā
If you really wanted to kill someone, youād find a way, gun or no gun, although I detested the use of firearms for a lot of very good reasons. Something as irrevocable as purposefully ending a life shouldnāt be so easy to do and so hard to prevent. I shrugged and handed him his phone back. That was one thing in favour of the laws here, despite how many stupid ones there still were. The statistics spoke for themselves. Give more people guns, and your crime figures spiked proportionally, pure and simple.
Conall had finished reading and made himself a coffee by the time I was happy with my code bundle. āDid you hit the āwipeā link I sent at the end of that file, Con?ā It was always better to check. He nodded.
āAll gone.ā As if it was never there. āAnd you were right about Osborneās retraction.ā Again, not surprising.
I overwrote the spyware on Whitakerās phone with my own package and pulled up a few more pages on the browser to give it something to communicate. We waited a couple of minutes, and then I typed in a query: the location coordinates for the other IP address the phone had contacted came up on my screen. I set my system up to feed all incoming locations into the map and brought that up on the left half of the screen. It was in Aberdeen, the warehouse district down by the quays.
āThatās probably the hub. Weāll see soon enough when the rest of the bundleās installed and deployed itself.ā I set up my next query and waited for a system ready notification before sending it out. A few more green dots appeared on the map around the city. Tagged phones. Yeah, that first dot had been their hub, alright.
āWhat about Lewis and Harris?ā Conall asked, and I switched the map view over.
One green dot appeared for Whitakerās phone, sitting right on top of us, and another also flashed to life, out on the open sea, about a quarter of the way to Ullapool. Bother! That made things a bit more complicated. Well, at least I had my laptop with me, so I didnāt need to call in to ask for a satellite feed. I could get
Comments (0)