The Major pondered this. “And electronic countermeasures to their remote control?”
“The ultrawideband used by the Daemon makes ECM difficult, but not impossible. The trick is that we need EWOs in place with specialized equipment—but we don’t know where the Daemon is going to hit us next. And using the equipment jams our own communications.”
One of the technicians butted in. “Excuse me. Major, there was a Mark V security blimp over Huntley, too. It disappeared minutes before they came under attack. Whatever got it came in under radar. We just examined the blimp video. Looks like drone aircraft. Small. Fast. Not very sophisticated. It might even have simply rammed the airship.”
“So it’s got an air force now?”
Another one of the Weyburn Labs guys responded, “The darknet philosophy seems to be large numbers of small things—swarms. In this case, microjets. We’ve found the wreckage of several near sites where our surveillance drones have disappeared.”
“UCAVs?”
“Smaller and easier to manufacture. They use electromechanical systems; microscale propulsion with no moving parts. It doesn’t require the precision manufacturing of turbines. It utilizes thermal transpiration to conduct a hydrocarbon fuel through aerogel membranes into twin Swiss roll jet engines. That helps to maintain core combustion temperature in tiny jet engines. Quite fascinating if you—”
One of the consultants pointed at the monitor console. “Look.” There on-screen stood a figure dressed in a black riding suit and black motorcycle helmet, staring at them from two thousand miles away.
The Major leaned into the microphone. “Loki. You seem to be hunting my people. . . .”
“
Major. The last time I saw you, you were . . . oh, that’s right. You were shooting Roy Merritt in the back.”
The Major gave a sideways glance to the assembled researchers, then spoke into the microphone. “A darknet lie.”
“Of course. Facts no longer exist. Everything is a ‘point of view’ now. I can’t wait to burn your house of bullshit down.”
“Apparently Dr. Philips was naïve to think we could rehabilitate you.”
“You realize your little campaign against darknet communities is doomed, don’t you? I know what you’re going to do before you do it.”
“You killed some people and wrecked some equipment. So what? There’s no shortage of trigger-happy dipshits willing to make a hundred bucks an hour. In fact, if you kill them, we don’t have to pay them their completion bonus.”
“I will find you, Major. And what’s in your mind will lead me to your masters. Their industrial empire is about to come to an end.”
The Major chuckled. “You’re not the first freedom fighter whose head I’ve put on a stick, Loki. You all fall in the end—usually betrayed by the very people you think you’re saving.”
Loki cocked his head.
“Freedom fighter? Is that what you think I am?”
He laughed.
“I don’t give a shit about freedom. And if I have to kill a hundred million innocent people to get my hands on you, I’ll do it. Sleep well, Major.”
Loki pulled the plug and the screen went dark.
The control room was silent for several moments.
Someone finally muttered, “Holy shit. . . .”
The Major nodded absently. His campaigns had indeed fought and defeated a hundred liberation movements. They’d divided and confused citizens around the globe who tried to rise up against mining companies, oil companies, coal companies, biotech companies—and in the end the people defeated themselves.
But none of those adversaries had their fingers wrapped around the corporate throat like the Daemon did. And none of those adversaries had imbued a single psychotic individual with such unaccountable power as the Daemon had with Loki. This kid was ready to kill a hundred million people. And he’d already slain hundreds, possibly thousands. A whole new era of technological domination was about to begin—and for once, The Major might not be on the winning side.
It suddenly occurred to The Major that he was afraid.
Chapter 14: // The China Price
J
on Ross sat reading
Izvestia
on a handheld device while sipping espresso. He was in the coffee bar of his hotel in the Shekou District of Shenzhen. It was mid-afternoon, and he was dressed in a pressed, four-button black pin-striped suit with a light blue silk tie and a pastel shirt—all handmade in nearby Hong Kong. With his stylish HUD glasses he looked every bit the successful businessman catching up with affairs back home.
Ross preferred Shekou because it allowed him to blend in. It was a pleasant neighborhood popular with expats. It had a small-town feel, but was packed with restaurants and night life.
Here there were dozens of languages being spoken in the cafes and bars, and he was just one more foreign face among many. But none of that mattered now—not for the one piece of unfinished business remaining on this trip.
He downed the last of his espresso as two Chinese men in rumpled suits approached his table. From their hard stares and air of impunity, Ross immediately knew they were policemen—probably Ministry of State Security.
The first nodded and spoke in Russian. “Comrade Morozov. Good afternoon.” He smiled, revealing stained teeth.
Ross lowered his handheld and replied in Russian as well. “Good afternoon. To what do I owe the pleasure, gentlemen?”
“There seems to be a problem with your travel documents.”
“My travel documents?”
The man nodded.
“I don’t see how that’s possible, but . . .” Ross removed his billfold from his jacket. “May I take care of it here?”
“Attempting to bribe a government official is a serious crime in China.”
“
Attempting
, perhaps. What about
succeeding
?”
“This is no laughing matter, Mr. Morozov.” He switched suddenly to English. “Or should I say, Mr. Ross?”
Ross remained calm. He placed money on the table to pay his check and put away his billfold. He switched to English as well. “Your English and Russian are both excellent.”
“Thank you. Please mention that to my commander when you see him. Now, if you would please come with us . . .”
“May I ask to see your credentials?”
The man opened his coat to reveal a pistol in a shoulder holster.
“That’s the one that counts, isn’t it?”
The man gestured for Ross to follow them.
Ross sighed then grabbed his handheld and laptop case and complied.
They brought him outside to a waiting car. It was an unmarked Jeep Cherokee knockoff—what some of the expat Americans had taken to calling “Cheeps.” They opened the door for him, and Ross got in. He noticed that there were no door handles on the inside, and a wire mesh stood between him and the front seat. He was now their prisoner.
The officers got in front and drove off in dense traffic without a word either to each other or to Ross. They drove for only a few minutes before pulling to the curb on a highly fashionable restaurant block. The place was bustling with shoppers and young professionals.
The men got out and opened the door for Ross, who stepped onto the sidewalk and met the gaze of his captor. “I’m confused. Am I bribing you or not?”
The man just grabbed Ross’s arm and along with his partner they moved toward an upscale martini bar done in clean Scandinavian glass and hardwoods with a minimalist logo that was so hip it would be indecipherable to Chinese and Scandinavians alike. The place was packed with cigarette smoke and young, mostly Chinese white-collar professionals who quickly parted to let the grim-faced plainclothes policemen through.
Soon they approached a booth in the rear of the bar—the only quiet corner. The tables all around it were conspicuously empty. There, a young Chinese man in a well-cut suit waited with a frosted martini glass in front of him. He smiled as he saw Ross approaching.
Ross couldn’t help but return the smile. It was Shen Liang. Shen was an old friend from Ross’s dot-com days in Portland—back in the late nineties. Before everything went to hell. Shen had been a kid just out of Stanford back then—barely familiar with America and Western culture. He was a brilliant young mind who’d taken in everything the Chinese universities had to offer at the time and was hungry for more.
Ross and Shen had worked together at a start-up Web company named Stiletto Design—“Cutting through the noise” was their motto. It was the quintessential Web commerce shop with high ceilings, exposed brick, Aeron chairs, ping-pong tables, and soon-to-be-worthless stock options. They were expanding like mad in those days, designing merchant solutions for banks, insurance companies, and half-assed Web start-ups. Young men and women working long hours and late nights—it was a great place to be a young single person. The memory was just a haze of work, alcohol, and sex.
As Ross sat down, Shen extended his hand and spoke in perfect American English. “Jon Ames. Or I guess it’s
Jon Ross
, nowadays. What’d you get married or something?”
“It’s complicated, Liang. You look like you’re doing well.”
Shen motioned to the nearby plainclothesmen and said something in Mandarin.
The lead officer nodded, and both men departed.
Ross watched them go, then turned back to Shen, who was nodding. “I am doing well. I wish I could say the same for you.”
Ross gave him a quizzical look.
“Jon, you’re in a lot of trouble.”
“Then this isn’t a social call?”
Shen grimaced and motioned to a beautiful young woman in a miniskirt. She came to the table immediately, and he pointed her to Ross.
“I’ll have a Stoli, straight up with a twist, please.”
“Of course, sir.” She hurried off.
“Russian vodka. How telling.” He focused an appraising look at Ross as he lit a tiny cigar. “So . . .” He put his gold lighter away. “After all these years I find out that your name isn’t really Jon Ames.”
“Liang—”
“And that Interpol has a global red notice out on you. That you’re the FBI’s Most Wanted Man. Imagine my shock.”
“Like I said, it’s complicated.”
“We were
buds
, Jon. And now it turns out you were an identity thief and a stock swindler?”
“Well, you didn’t tell me you were a spy for the Ministry of State Services back in the old days, either.”
He gave Ross a disbelieving look. “Who was a spy? They paid for my education. I was supposed to come back with ‘mad skillz.’ How is that spying? It’s not like I pretended I wasn’t Chinese.”
“I seem to remember someone wasn’t planning on coming back to China. I seem to remember someone talking about a Web video start-up—”
Shen held up his hand and looked around. “All right, all right. Would you cool it with that shit? And by the way, you were my witness. That was
before
YouTube. I had that idea
before
YouTube.”
“We were on dial-up back then, Liang.”
“That’s not the point. I nailed that.”
“And yet, here you are, working for the government.”
Shen rolled his eyes. “I don’t work for the government, or at least I
didn’t
work for the government until some asshole started fucking with our networks and they reactivated me.” He saluted. “Now it’s Captain Shen, thank you very much.”
“A PLA Cyber warfare battalion? That seems alarmingly conformist for the Shen Liang I knew.”
Shen nodded grimly and took a big sip of his martini. “Yeah, well, I really screwed up in America, Jon. I had to come back here after that, and I had gone
way
off reservation. I had to get powerful friends
fast
to dig out from that mess. I had to be stellar.”
“And is that how you wound up at Wuhan Communications Command Academy?”
Shen stopped mid-puff and narrowed his eyes at Ross. He pulled the cigarillo from his lips. “How the hell do you know that?”
“And how you wound up working with the General Equipment Department, modifying Western router chipsets?”
Shen moved to cover Ross’s mouth. “Would you shut up? What are you, crazy? How the hell do you know that?”
“We’re reaching a crossroad, Liang.”
“This isn’t 1999, Jon. The Web isn’t a toy anymore. Network technology
is
power now—world-domination-type power. This is a deadly serious business. Stop playing around.”
“We had a great time back then. You remember we all thought technology would change the world?”
“Well, it
didn’t
. Our parents were right, Jon. It’s scary how right they were. Nothing changes. Only the faces change.”
“I’m sorry you feel that way. I seem to remember you having great hopes for democracy in China.”
Shen glared hard at him as the cocktail waitress returned with Ross’s drink. Both men were quiet until she departed.
Shen shook his head and reached for an ashtray. “I don’t know what you’re talking about. And besides, we
have
democracy in China. People get to vote with their money, just like they do in America.”
“But if only money talks, those without money don’t get a voice.”
“Well, the smarter people tend to make money, so I don’t see what the problem is.”
“What happens if someone
takes
your money away?”
Shen cast a wary look at Ross.
Ross continued, “Because that’s what we’re talking about here, isn’t it? Someone has threatened to confiscate your company if you don’t perform. Is that how a free person lives, Liang? In fear of the powerful?”
“Freedom is overrated. You can be completely free and starving in an igloo in Antarctica. Business is what makes people’s lives better, not democracy. The world is filled with dysfunctional democracies, paralyzed by idiots with votes.”
“Liang—”
“Jon, do you know that the World Bank said that over half the Chinese people lived in poverty in 1980? You know what it is now? Care to take a guess? It’s four percent, Jon.
Four
. Economic development did that, not democracy.”