It was strange, if the children needed stealth and a low bit rate, that they had not used silent messaging. Maybe someone thought they could fool a pair of old ladies. In fact,
with Juan’s wearable, I could fake sessions like this
! She glanced at Lena. “Maybe you should call in the marines.” Bob and Alice. “Yes, but if it’s a small emergency, they can’t do anything more than you or I. And if it’s a big emergency — well, they might have to do something awful.” Lena hummed a few bars of something nervous. “And Miri says everything is fine. Just fine.”
The last couple of months, Lena Gu had been such a reliable source of certainty.
What if we both wimp out
? Xiu thought. Now, that was a frightening idea. She tried to think of something really forceful to say: “um, your ex has been ‘doing nothing’ for almost half an hour. Don’t you think that’s too long?”
“Okay.” They tooled along the valley floor, slowly enough that the windows could roll down. The resinous scent of manzanita drifted in. On their left was southbound Highway 5, a lightless torrent of fast-moving vehicles, edged by the blaze of the manual lanes. On their right were steep, dark hills, violet light flickering along the ridgelines. Xiang brought up a local network view, looked back and forth between that and the physical world.
Xiang shook her head. This would be their last drive through here tonight. Xiu had helped design the hardware security layer. It solved so many problems. It made the Internet a safe and workable system. Now she was its victim… She thought again of the bag of tricks that sat on the floor beside her feet. She had spent the whole semester building those gadgets, her mechanical daydreams. Maybe —
Xiu leaned over and looked out Lena’s side. She saw two spears of light that just now were turning away from them. “It looks like a car on manual,” or maybe it was on automatic, but driving on unimproved roadway.
“What are they up to?” said Lena. Their own car was almost to the T-intersection. “Car!” said Lena. “Turn right.” “Sorry. That’s not an existing road. The only legal turn is left.” “Turn right! Turn right!” “I’m sorry. I’ll have you in safe traffic in less than five minutes. Please think about giving me an ultimate
Lena sucked in a breath. “We’re so close. Wait. I got a ping response. It’s from Thomas Parker’s outfit. They
are
up there!” And then much louder: “Hey, car, I wanna speak to your supervisor — I mean a
human beingf
Lena Gu seemed to shrink down in her wheelchair. Her gaze swept back and forth between the hillside and the approaching intersection. “We’ve got to stop them, Xiu. I’ll wager they could tell us what’s going on.”
“You’d come out from cover? Let You-Know-Who see you?” “I’d lurk in the background.”
Or… maybe not. Xiu lifted her backpack onto the seat beside her. She picked up the curved tube with the can of diamond flakes; she had improved her first shop-class project out of all resemblance to the original transport tray. This new model was very much designed with destruction in mind; sometimes you needed to get the machines’ attention. She knelt on the back-facing seat and set the tip of the cutter against the dashboard. Given Robert Gu’s example, she had a good idea of what to expect.
Xiu pressed the start button — a real physical button! — and a roar ripped through the cabin. Her transport tray, now a very fine accelerator, drove three thousand diamond flecks into the dashboard every second. The recoil was a soft, steady push. It was easy to keep the tip pointed. Some of the diamonds bounced up, embedding in the acoustic ceiling, but most drove straight into the dashboard. She wobbled the cutter’s tip and the hole widened. Now she was drilling through drive internals.
For Alfred Vaz, there had been various pieces of good news. He had completed his fake investigation of the GenGen labs and provided Günberk’s clever analysts with evidence that would eventually lead them far away. And
finally
Alice Gu had collapsed. That had come very late, but it was more spectacular than Alfred had expected; Keiko’s people claimed that DHS surveillance was blinded, in chaos. That chaos was unexplained good fortune to her and Günberk. For Alfred, it could mean complete success. Give him a few more minutes and his private research program would be safe not only from Günberk and Keiko, but also from the inevitable American investigations.
It was a fantastic claim — and manifestly true. For the last ten minutes there had been minor comm glitches, error retry packets happening a little too often. The statistics were well below the level of reasonable suspicion. But then in a grand gesture — typical Rabbit madness — the creature had sent a two-megabyte jumbogram straight through the milnet and off the end of the fiber.
Mitsuri — > Braun, Vaz:
I’m
the local police.
For several minutes, there was no manager-level traffic. Alfred was aware of Keiko masquerading as the California Highway Patrol. His own attention was on a number of tasks he hadn’t dared try while Alice Gong was still around. Günberk’s analysts were assessing how deeply Rabbit’s intrusion had gone. Their conclusions were tagged a soothing green.
Braun — > Mitsuri, Vaz:
Some analysts had more paranoid theories. The current favorite was that Rabbit was China; that would make tonight a perfect Keystone Kops comedy, all the Great Powers chasing after each other. But there were also nightmare speculations: Maybe Rabbit had fooled the network analysts and all the lesser paranoids. After all, the jumbogram had been sent just before the fiberlink was broken. Maybe Rabbit was a Grand Terrorist, who had used the Alliance as
its
stooge, installing its own interests within the labs, a quick conversion of the entire establishment into a death factory. And there was that UP/Ex launcher in the GenGen area, what amounted to a delivery system.
Alfred sighed to himself. In the long run, he feared Rabbit as much as the extreme paranoids did, but tonight — well, if they looked too closely, they might see Alfred’s own operation lurking in the shadows. It was best to calm things down.
Vaz — > Braun, Mitsuri:
own
the MCog area.
Mitsuri — > Braun, Vaz:
Red doubt was hemorrhaging across the analyst pool, spreading from a statistical analysis team at Moscow-Capetown. These were the same chaps who had been consistently right about the Soybean Futures Plot. They had credibility… and they claimed that the views from the north side of the GenGen area were corrupt. Those were not views Alfred had subverted. For better or worse, his colleagues had discovered some
other
deception.
Now the signals and stat people in all the analyst pools had precedence. A thousand specialists, who a second ago might have been looking at a dozen other problems, were suddenly watching the same data. Computing resources shifted from a myriad drudge tasks, began correlating data from the accessible sensors in the labs. It was as if Indo-European intelligence were an immense cat suddenly come alert, listening and watching for sign of its prey.
Only one of the area cams was offline, but others were subtly misregistered. The inconsistencies were scattered all across the area that the Alliance controlled… but analysis made the Moscow-Capetown guess more and more a certainty. A blotch of deception was moving into the GenGen area at the speed of a fast walk.
For a moment there was no conversation. Then:
Braun — > Mitsuri, Vaz:
There was another long pause. Yes. Günberk’s discovery that Rabbit depended on a single apex certificate authority. All power in the modern world, from flying the largest aircraft to moving bytes between components in a single processor, it all came down to the exchange of appropriate markers of trust, as enforced by the Secure Hardware Environment. And far at the top of Rabbit’s operations, via billions of unknown paths, there was a single source, Credit Suisse CA. Revoking that authority would disarm Rabbit. It would likely destroy the fellow’s access to his own most personal files, leaving nothing but what the creature held in his natural mind (unless Rabbit really was an AI, in which case nothing would be left). But the collateral damage would be enormous. Shutting down a top-level certificate authority was a metaphorical weapon of mass destruction. And now it was all that was left to them.
Mitsuri — > Braun, Vaz:
Another kind of failure threatened Alfred Vaz. Shooting down Rabbit had been one of his fondest hopes, but
not just now
! Alfred dipped back into the GenGen viewpoints. Downing Rabbit had eliminated all the slack from the schedule.
And I need that time for my own cover-up
. He was reduced to emergency measures: Alfred brought two more secret teams online. One would use the fruit-fly scam to divert what was left of Rabbit. The other would destroy his lab-within-a-lab, destroy Alfred’s work of years. But they would also outship his secret lab’s greatest prize through GenGen’s UP/Ex launcher. For Alfred Vaz, some form of success was still possible.
Gu the Eldest and Gu the Youngest hiked southward out of the Huertas cavern. Behind them the shredda containers and the north entrance were swallowed by darkness. The light that traveled above them shone just a few yards in all directions.