The Terminal Experiment - Robert J. Sawyer Page 0,94
seemed to recall, worked in a bank and could have embezzled the funds needed to hire a hitman.
Fog, that’s all the case against him was. Empty fog.
And he’d prove that. He’d audit his own finances. Hiring a hitman would surely have cost tens of thousands of dollars, if not hundreds of thousands. Philo might never find the missing funds, even if she subpoenaed his financial records. But Peter had the advantage of thinking precisely the same way the sims did. If he looked— really looked—and could not find any missing money, well, then he could rest easy.
Peter dialed into his company’s mainframes, logged on to the corporate accounts database, and started digging. He used an accounting expert system made by Mirror Image to help him audit. As he moved through each account, each financial database, and found nothing amiss, his confidence grew. He was interrupted after an hour or so by the locksmith, who had finished his job. Peter thanked the man, paid him, and went back to his searching. Philo had been wrong, completely wrong. Just another cop who loved conspiracy theories. Why, he’d give her a piece of his mind—
His computer beeped.
Good Christ, thought Peter. Good Christ.
A discrepancy in the subrights licensing account. No memo, no payee’s account number, no cross-referenced invoice. Just a whopping big debit notice:
11 Nov 2011 EFT CDN$125,000.00
Peter stared at the screen, his jaw slack.
The timing was just about right. Hans had been killed three days later.
But surely it had to be something innocent. A refund for a licensing deal that had fallen through, maybe. Or an adjustment because of an overpayment to his company. Or …
No.
No, it could be none of those things. Peter’s comptroller was meticulous. No way she’d make an entry like that. And the notation EFT. Electronic funds transfer. Exactly what a sim would have to use.
He was about to log off when the console beeped at him again. Another hit in his database search:
14 Dec 2011 EFT CDN$100,000.00
Peter let out another sigh of relief. There—proof that this was all innocent. Surely no hitman would work on an installment plan. Whatever was causing these debits had to be something routine, then. Patent payments, perhaps. Or …
Two days ago. That second transaction had been just two days ago.
And then it came to him.
What Cathy had said.
“What will happen,” she’d asked, “to the detective when she gets too close to the truth? Will you want her dead, too?”
It couldn’t be, thought Peter. It could not be.
Killing Hans he could understand. Perhaps he didn’t approve, but at least he understood. Killing Rod Churchill was more difficult to fathom, given the extenuating circumstances. But maybe, just maybe, the electronic sim didn’t see biochemistry as an excuse.
But Sandra Philo hadn’t done anything evil, hadn’t hurt Peter in any way. She was just doing her job.
But now, apparently, she had become inconvenient.
Christ almighty, thought Peter. The guilty sim didn’t just have reduced morality or skewed morality. It had no morality at all.
Easy, Peter. Let’s not get ahead of the data …
But—no. It was there, even within the flesh-and blood Peter—buried deep, but there: a desire for self-preservation. There was no one else he wanted dead—that was true. But the detective was putting him, and the sims, at risk. If he were to get rid of anyone now, it would be her. If any version of himself were to get rid of anyone now, it would be her.
Damn it. God damn it. He’d have no more blood on his hands. Peter immediately activated his telephone; a valid address was as good for dialing as was a name. “Toronto Police Service, 32 Division, on Ellerslie,” he said.
The Bell logo danced off the screen. A craggy sergeant appeared. “Thirty-two division,” he said.
“Sandra Philo,” said Peter.
“It’s her day off,” said the sergeant. “Can someone else help you?”
“No, it’s—it’s personal. Do you know where she is?”
“Haven’t a clue,” said the cop.
“I don’t suppose I could get her home number?”
The cop laughed. “You’ve got to be kidding.”
Peter broke the connection and dialed directory assistance. “Philo, Sandra,” he said, then spelled the last name.
“There is no such listing,” said the computerized voice.
Of course. “Philo, A.,” he said. “A for Alexandria.”
“There is no such listing.”
Dammit, thought Peter. But a cop would be crazy to have a listed phone number—unless it was still under her ex-husband’s name. “Do you have any listing for anyone with the last name Philo?”
“There is no such listing.”
Peter clicked off. There must be some way to get a hold of