Wired Truth Read online




  Wired Truth

  Paradise Crime Thrillers Book 10

  Toby Neal

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Sneak Peek

  Acknowledgments

  Free Books

  Toby’s Bookshelf

  About the Author

  Copyright Notice

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  © Toby Neal 2019

  http://tobyneal.net

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

  This book contains material protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author/publisher.

  * * *

  Cover Design: Jun Ares [email protected]

  * * *

  E-book ISBN: 978-1-7327712-3-9

  The greatest good you can do for another is not just to share your riches, but to reveal to them, their own. ~Benjamin Disraeli

  Chapter One

  Two years after Wired Courage

  Sophie: Day One

  “Diamonds are not forever.” Henry Childer, manager of Finewell’s Auction House Honolulu, had a damp handclasp and a plummy British accent. “My diamonds are gone, and I need them found by next week.”

  Sophie Smithson gestured to the seating area in front of her desk, and wiped her hand on her narrow black pants, out of his view. “Please have a seat, Mr. Childer, and you can tell me all about it. You’ve come to the right place—Security Solutions specializes in confidential investigations. I have some documents for you to sign that will clarify things. You can review them while I fix us some tea.”

  Childer looked her over as he took a seat, clearly surprised at her accent. “Delightful to encounter a fellow countryman in this place, and a cup of tea as well, Ms. Smithson.” He tugged a handkerchief from his front pocket and mopped his shiny forehead, pale eyes blinking rapidly. “Infernal Hawaii heat. I don’t know how you stand it.”

  Sophie set a computer tablet, already loaded with the company’s intake forms and disclosures, at the man’s elbow. “Actually, I’m American and Thai, but educated in Europe.” She walked over to a glossy wood credenza and pushed a button. A coffee and tea service, along with the equipment for preparation, rose from within. Paula, her assistant, cleaned and stocked it daily, and all Sophie had to do was press a button to begin the water heating. “Do you take lemon or milk in your tea?”

  “Milk and two sugars, please. Anything can be endured with a spot of tea, they say, but I’m afraid this is a most distressing situation.”

  “You said diamonds are missing?” Sophie assembled the tea things on a tray.

  “I’m manager of the Honolulu branch of Finewell’s Auction House, as I told you. Are you familiar with our company? We’re the premier auction house for luxury collectibles in the Western Hemisphere.”

  That was a big claim to make, but Sophie nodded politely. “Please elaborate on how you came to have the diamonds, and what you know about their disappearance.”

  “The stones are part of a family-owned set that is being auctioned off next weekend. They arrived at our vault and were authenticated upon arrival—all part of our protocol. We cannot vouch for something that is not truthfully represented.”

  Once she had their cups prepared, Sophie arranged them on a tray and returned, setting the beverages down on the low table in front of the couch where Childer sat. She took a sleek modern armchair across from him and propped her own computer tablet on her knee, tapping to wake it up. She dosed her dark Thai tea with honey, and began inputting details for his case into a new file.

  “This appears to be in order.” Childer stashed a pair of reading glasses in his breast pocket, and handed her back the intake information. Sophie scanned the forms as he lifted his teacup. He pursed pink lips and blew upon his tea, then took a sip. “Excellent, my dear. The set was received, verified as authentic, and stored in our secure vault. All was in order at that time; I watched a video of that process and signed off on it per usual.”

  Sophie held up a hand. “I see, from this application, that you are hiring Security Solutions yourself. Not as a representative of Finewell’s.”

  “Correct.” Childer’s cup rattled in its saucer as he set it down.

  “I see. Please, go on.”

  “It’s part of my role to oversee preparing the items for sale—photographing them for the publicity catalogs and whatnot. I went to the vault to pull the set for the photographer, and it was gone. I was most perturbed, but had the presence of mind to reschedule the photography shoot. I verified that the other items for that weekend’s auction were all accounted for. Only the diamonds had disappeared; the parure included a necklace, earrings, a ring, a bracelet, and even a hair clip. Assessed value was three million dollars.”

  Sophie blinked at the cost. “Why didn’t you notify the police?”

  “A theft from our supposedly secure location would be a great scandal. Terrible for the company, and catastrophic for me personally. That’s why I’m here on my own dime, as the Americans say.” Childer dabbed his mouth with a paper napkin. “I will, of course, disclose the theft if we are not able to reclaim the jewels by next Friday.”

  “The sale is next Saturday, you said?” Sophie frowned. “Today is Thursday. Eight days is not long to find something like this. That’s cutting it close.”

  “All I can ask is that you try.” Childer reached into the inside pocket of his suit jacket and removed a checkbook. “What do you require for a deposit?”

  After the contracts were signed and funds exchanged, Childer pointed a plump finger at Sophie. “I researched whom to approach. I want you to work on this for me. I can’t have this case given to someone who won’t treat it with the sensitivity it deserves.”

  “Mr. Childer.” Sophie set her tablet down. “I appreciate your confidence in me, but I’m CEO of Security Solutions. I no longer personally handle cases.”

  “Please.” Childer placed his hands palm-to-palm and bowed a little in her direction. “I looked for the best private investigators and company available, and was delighted to find Security Solutions right here in Honolulu. I was even more impressed with you personally.” He ticked off her accomplishments on his fingers. “A trained ex-FBI agent with a background in tech. Inventor of the Data Analysis Victim Information Database crime solving software, and CEO of the top-ranked security co
mpany in the United States with a seventy-five percent case closure rate.” He gave her a frank once-over. “And a goddess in the flesh who makes a lovely cup of tea.”

  Sophie smiled at the praise, and ducked her head. “That last part has little actual application to crime solving. I will have to run this by Kendall Bix, our President of Operations. He is in charge of case assignments.”

  “But you’ll consider it? Tell me you will.”

  “I’ll consider it. You’ve caught me at a vulnerable moment, Mr. Childer. I’ve been up to my eyebrows in quarterly reports. Who wouldn’t rather get into the field, while a clock is ticking, to solve the mystery of a set of missing diamonds?” She stood, smoothing sleek black pants made for movement, and braced herself to shake his damp hand again. “We’ll need to come in to review your video footage and see the scene of the crime, as it were. I’ll be in touch.”

  Chapter Two

  Connor: Day One

  Connor shut his eyes as he stood on the launch platform, imagining his way through each stage of the challenging obstacle course ahead, breathing deeply to oxygenate himself. In the more than two years since he’d voluntarily joined the ninja training program at the Yām Khûmkạn’s fortress, he had spent countless hours in visualization and intense physical practice. He had never been as hard and fit as he was now—but, as the Master had taught him, the real battle was always in the mind.

  Today was the culmination of two years of training. He just had to make it through the course and across a gauntlet of hot lava rocks while fighting five opponents, and then he’d be standing in front of the Master . . . a graduate.

  The gong sounded.

  Connor launched himself into space, reaching for the first of a series of steel rings hanging over the compound’s water supply pond.

  The rings were all about timing and momentum. Connor let nothing into his mind but the next swinging handhold in front of him as his shirtless body, honed as a blade, reflected back from the glassy surface of the water. He flew unerringly through the challenge, deaf to the yelling and cheering of the watching trainees, three-deep around the edge of the course, a border of dense black gi and blurred faces.

  He should not have looked at them, because as he flipped off of the last ring, his momentum slipped, just for a moment, and his bare feet barely caught on the wooden landing platform.

  Connor threw himself forward, not letting himself lose traction, leaping onto the rolling barrels next.

  Each big wooden cask was hand-cranked in a different direction by a ninja, and Connor leaped from one to the next, moving boldly to keep his forward movement. He focused on a single spot on each barrel, imagining they were stationary, propelling himself relentlessly.

  He shut out the random bellows of the trainees turning the cranks and even the stinging surprise of bamboo whips held by ninjas lashing his legs as he jumped across the rapidly shifting surfaces. A roar of excitement went up as Connor reached safety on a small platform between two huge, upright wooden logs.

  The heavy beating of a taiko drum, knocking off the seconds, penetrated his concentration. He didn’t just have to make it through the course. He was being timed, too.

  Connor tilted his head to look up at notches ascending the heavy logs. The “salmon ladder” obstacle was a tough one—for this challenge, he had to heave himself upward, hanging from a crossbar, hefting the bar upward from notch to notch until he reached the top.

  The salmon ladder was all about strength, rhythm and accuracy, and he’d practiced this obstacle many a time. Connor spread his arms and leaped up to grasp the staff.

  His fingers failed to connect, slithering off the wood—it was dark with oil! He hit the platform in a crouch, almost falling to his knees.

  Behind him, around him, beyond him, the Yām Khûmkạn acolytes shouted and yelled. The trainees were seldom allowed to give voice—but during the test of one of their peers, they had free rein. They gave tongue like a band of wolves howling for blood.

  Connor considered for a precious second how to keep his grip on the bar. He visualized how he would grab the wood, and every swift movement of his lower body to heave himself higher. He took another second to regulate his breathing and heart rate and narrow his focus, even as the noise of the crowd and the sense of time ticking by sawed at his nerves.

  Connor shot up from the ground, grasping the pole overhand with one hand, and underhand with the other, guarding against the slippery spin of the oiled pole. He pulled up his lower body using his abs, and then, used the momentum of his swinging legs to heave himself up—higher and higher and higher.

  The sound of the crowd reached Connor in his distant, focused place as he stepped off the salmon ladder at the top of the logs onto a tiny, unprotected platform. Space and depth yawned around him; the earliest of morning breezes chilled his exposed skin as he assessed the latest challenge.

  A cable ran between the peaked roofs of two of the complex’s buildings. Dangling from that cable was a rope with one end hooked to his platform.

  Connor lifted the rope and gauged the distance from his base to another platform all the way across the courtyard.

  He’d never practiced this swing, only seen it attempted by other trainees at their graduations—and most didn’t make it, coming up too low to the landing area. Considering that, he grasped the rope well above a handily-placed knot, and jumped higher as he took off so that he caught hold of the rough hemp above where his arms could reach. He launched himself into space, generating power by swinging his legs.

  That fickle morning breeze sliced across his bare skin and brought tears to his narrowed eyes as he focused his gaze on the rapidly approaching landing platform. For a second it seemed that his aim had been true—but now he was coming up too high, well above the edge of the platform.

  Connor refused to think of the stone courtyard so far below, and with less than a split second to decide, he twisted his body forward, letting go of the rope and falling through the air. He landed on the platform, almost losing his balance, and steadied himself with a hand on the support beam.

  He raised his arms in victory, absorbing the cry of the watching crowd, and then scaled down the pole onto the ancient roof.

  This section of the obstacle course was his favorite to watch others try to perform, though he’d never been allowed to practice it. Alert for traps, Connor ran on light feet across the spine of the hand-quarried slate, careful never to land more than a fraction of a second in any one spot on the crumbling old tiles, his energy and weight always projected forward . . . and he was making good progress, too, until an entire section of the roof fell away under his flying feet. The large four-foot square must have been rigged to come loose the moment he touched it.

  Connor spared a glance toward the ground as the broken section slid downward. The densely packed observers below were already running, scattering to avoid the asteroid plummeting in their direction. He surfed the roof section as it accelerated, and at just the right moment, launched himself off it, landing spread-eagled on the roof’s surface, clinging with hands and feet.

  The ancient, rough stone tiles cracked and slithered under the impact of his body. Connor pulled himself up with coiled energy from his core and scrabbled forward across the rough surface faster than the tiles could come loose.

  He made it across that particular roof, and launched over the five-foot opening to the next building with ease. Avoiding the roofline now, he made his way around the courtyard on the side of the roof, raining loose tiles on those below, and making up the seconds he had lost in earlier challenges.

  He slithered down a drain pipe and landed on solid ground, turning to face his final challenge: the gauntlet.

  The final course stretched before him: a long path of coals bordered by hot bricks, with opponents holding staffs on either side.

  His “old” mind screamed that the gauntlet was impossible; that he’d be burned and bruised and never make it the hundred yards distance to stand in front of the Master
.

  His “new” mind understood that pain was merely a neurological signal, that time and space could be manipulated, and that he could stand in front of the Master’s dais without so much as a blister. He was in charge of his body and of the elements around him. He could shape energy into whatever he wanted.

  Connor shut his eyes and mentally shaped the smoking coals of the gauntlet into the soft, springy mat of a combat ring, a bouncy and supportive surface that absorbed his every move and amplified his strength as he ran and fought, whirling easily, all the way to the end.

  He held that image clearly in his mind, and ran forward onto the hot coals.

  There was only now: the now of his opponents’ eyes, of their movements, of his counter moves, of that moment when he yanked a staff away and turned to battle the next ninja trying to hit him. He moved like a feather, like water, like wind across the coals, warmth and energy carrying him effortlessly along—and then there was the next one, and the next and the next and the next.

  His dreamlike state was only broken when he yanked one of his opponents onto the path, and the man rolled, screaming in agony, out of the coals.

  Connor almost felt the burning, the bruises through the man’s projected agony—but he brushed them aside and faced his last fight, knocking the man back as if he were made of cardboard and stepping off of the gauntlet’s path onto the cool stone of the courtyard.