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Authors: Michael Walsh

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“We don't know that for sure, Mr. President,” said Seelye.
“Terrific,” said Tyler, rising to signal that the meeting was over. “And where is he now?”
“In Los Angeles, sir,” replied Seelye, also rising and gathering up the folders. “On administrative leave, as you ordered once we intercepted—”
Wrong thing to say. The famous Jeb Tyler volcano was just about the spew molten lava. “Where is she? I want her found or dead, and preferably both.”
“We're not sure, Mr. President,” said Seelye, backing away like a bonze in the Forbidden City circa 1800. “Working on it.”
Tyler took a final swig of the dregs of his empty glass. “Where in Los Angeles?”
Seelye took a last look at the final picture in the L.A. series before shoving it into the folder. “From the looks of things,” he said, “communing with the Virgin Mary.”
His secure communicator buzzed. Normally, he shut everything off and down before entering the Oval Office, but the old norms no longer applied. Everyone who mattered was available 25-7, to distinguish from the peons who were only available 24-7. It was a world in which privacy had died and the First Amendment had been repealed and nobody knew it and nobody had voted on it and nobody cared. The NSA had gone from No Such Agency to the nation's snooping nanny, reading everybody's private e-mails in the name of national security, seeing every teenage girl's Sweet Sixteen topless party pictures in the name of national security, every psycho's threats, every nutsack's nocturnal emissions.
In the future, everybody will be notorious for fifteen seconds. And fucked for life.
Did somebody say fucked?
“Mr. President,” began Seelye, “I think you'd better have a look at this. Sending to you now, sir. . . .”
It was against protocol, sending something from a wireless device to an Oval Office computer, but under the circumstances it didn't matter. Not only was this a matter of national security, it was a matter of presidential reelection: an October Surprise that this president would want to know about.
Something chimed softly on the President's computer screen, incoming.
“On your screen, Mr. President,” said Seelye. “Highest security level and FYEO.”
For Your Eyes Only. No fucking around with mere SCI—Sensitive Compartmented Information. This had to go right to the top. Who, as it happened, was sitting right across from him.
Tyler was already punching buttons. For a president, Seelye had to admit, he wasn't quite a complete idiot.
“Do you have it?”
“I think so, yes . . .” More button-punching. “Cows.”
“Dead.”
“All of them.”
“A vegan's wet dream, yes sir. Fruit-bat paradise: no more meat.”
“Your words, sir, not mine.”
Tyler slide-showed the photos. Rows upon rows, ranks upon ranks of dead cows. “Who sent these?”
“One of Devlin's ops, sir.”
“Name?”
“We don't know. He's Devlin's man. You know the drill.”
Mount Tyler seethed for a moment, then subsided. “I can't have a possible traitor operating a private army, General Seelye. I simply can't have it.”
“Devlin's in California, sir. In exile. As per your wishes.” A pause. “Perhaps you'd like to recall him, send him up north. What have we got to lose?”
Tyler shot Seelye a glance. “The presidency?”
“Paris is worth a Mass, Mr. President.”
“Go to hell.”
“I'd rather go to Paris, if it's all the same to you, sir. After all, if you're going to fire me . . .”
The volcano finally exploded. Tyler picked up the monitor and hurled it across the room. In the old days of computer monitors, it might have exploded in a shower of sparks; today's monitors simply guttered like dead candles and went out. Everything was a metaphor these days.
Seelye waited a decent interval. “. . . if you're going to fire me, it ought to be over something important. Human life or death—the kind of thing that wins elections. Dead cows—we can handle that.”
Tyler was settling down. “But what do they mean? What do those pictures mean? What the hell is going on?”
It was time to leave and get to back to work. “Three choices, sir,” said Seelye. “One, happenstance. Two, coincidence. Three, enemy action. Me, I'm for number three.”
Tyler smiled. “You know your James Bond, Director Seelye.” At last, his real title; he'd never advance as a general again, so DIRNSA was as far as he was ever going to go. “So . . . Devlin?”
“Only you can bring him back. But let me tell you something, sir—if you don't you won't be sitting in this office for very much longer. You and I both know there's a link between whatever the Iranians are up to and what's happening in Central California.”
“What do you recommend?”
“Have Secretary Colangelo order immediate DHS lockdown on the reservoirs, Hetch Hetchy, L.A. Water and Power, everything. In case it's poison.”
The idea of getting Homeland Security involved did not thrill him. He had zero confidence in the cumbersome, useless bureaucracy's ability to get anything done and wished to God he had the political capital to get rid of the whole damn thing. Maybe after he won the next election . . .
If
he won the next election. “Then what?”
“Get Devlin. And pray.”
Tyler looked at Seelye for a long moment, then nodded his head: dismissed. The general said nothing as he left the room, leaving the president deep in thought. After a decent interval, Tyler pressed the buzzer under the
Resolute
.
After an indecent interval, Manuel Concepcion appeared in the doorway. “You rang, Mr. President?”
The scotch was already on the silver tray.
“Am I as dumb as I look? Wait—don't answer that.”
Too late—the words were already out of Manuel's mouth. “No, sir.”
Tyler thought for a moment, then smiled. “Good answer,” he said, reaching for the fresh drink.
His private phone line buzzed—that would be Millie Dhouri, his secretary. “What is it?” he barked, a little more loudly than necessary. Better slow down on the scotch.
“Major Atwater to see you, sir,” she said. “He says it's extremely urgent.”
President Tyler had the drink halfway to his mouth, then set it back down. If anybody knew what the hell was going on, it was Atwater. The man was dutiful and smart; if he'd decided to buck the chain of command by coming directly to the White House, it must be pretty damned important. Otherwise, it was Atwater's ass, but he knew that already.
Tyler liked moxie. And when you were as fucked as he was, what harm could it do? He glanced over at Manuel, who had gone into statue mode. No help there. He was on his own.
“Send him in, Millie,” he said.
The door opened. The major stood in the doorway, holding a salute.
“At ease, Major,” said Tyler. “Come in.”
The President rose to greet the analyst. The man had done good work, that he knew, cracking one of the famous unbreakable codes—something to do with classical music, which Tyler couldn't even pretend to understand. He gestured to an empty chair. “Sit down, Major. Drink?”
“Yes, sir. No thank you, sir.”
“Sure about that?” asked Tyler. “You've come in here, elided your chain of command, barely just missed seeing your boss, so what you have to tell me is obviously pretty damn important and for my eyes only, so if I were you I'd have me a stiff one because I know I only got one chance to make my case and if I don't I've just kissed my career good-bye.”
Atwater eyed the president's whiskey. “No, thank you, Mr. President,” he replied.
Tyler grabbed the drink and handed it to him. “Drink this. And that's an order from your commander in chief.”
Atwater picked up the drink. “Down the hatch,” ordered Tyler. And down the hatch it went. “Feel better now, son?”
“Yes, sir. Thank you, sir.”
“Now get to it.”
Atwater took a deep breath. The fellow had balls, Tyler had to give him that.
“The codes,” he began. “The ones Director Seelye asked me to interpret.”
“And so you did, especially that, whattyacallit one, the Elgar thing.”
“The
Dorabella
cipher, yes sir. Not a code at all but a blueprint. That was the clue that gave the whole thing away. I'm sorry that I didn't see that until just now, Mr. President.”
Tyler had no idea what the man was talking about, or why, if this was some inside-baseball code discussion, he didn't take it up with Seelye or some other NSA geek. Before he could say anything, Atwater was banging away again.
“Here they are, sir—notes that came in via e-mail directly to the DIRNSA's classified inbox. Each one alludes to a famous code, either in literature or reality. The first one reads, ‘DIRNSA Seelye—What are the Thirty-Nine Steps?' ”
“ ‘The Thirty-Nine Steps is an organization of spies,' ” quoted Tyler from memory.
“Right, sir, the Hitchcock movie. But that line's not in the book—in Buchan's book, the steps are just that: steps. They have nothing to do with an organization of spies. It's a clue—not to the code but to the sender's intent. You see what I'm getting at?”
Tyler's expression told him he didn't.
“It's a signal from the sender that we're not to take the codes literally, but figuratively. Steps. In other words, taken together, they are sending us one big message. So let's look at the next one. ‘To Lt. General Armond Seelye or To Whom It May Concern, Edgar Allan POE. (signed) the Magician.' ”
Tyler decided he might as well play along. “What the hell does that one mean?”
Atwater looked the President right in the eye. “Well, this one tells us that the overall message is really for you, sir—which is why I took the liberty of coming directly to you about it. You see, back in 1839, Poe published a couple of cryptograms as a challenge to his readers. The first was deciphered fairly quickly—it was a basic substitution cipher—but the second had to wait for nearly one hundred fifty years and the advent of computer technology. It was a doozy; the letter
e
alone had fourteen variants. . . .”
“Get to the point, Major.”
“Right. So the point is, the cipher was eventually cracked and it turned out to be just crummy poetry, but it's not so much the codes as the name under which Poe published them: W. B. Tyler. We think Poe did that to annoy President John Tyler, who had ignored his entreaties for a government job.”
“What's ‘the Magician' got to do with it?” asked the President.
“Ah, that—that comes from a line this ‘Tyler' wrote in submitting the ciphers, in which he said that the art of concealment by cryptography gave him ‘a history of mental existence, to which I may turn, and in imagination, retrace former pleasures, and again live through bygone scenes—secure in the conviction that the magic scroll has a tale for my eye alone.' ”
“So it's a threat?”
“Yes, sir. I believe it is, sir. . . . Shall I continue?
Tyler nodded.
“The third one everybody knows: ‘UG RMK CSXH-MUFMKB TOXG CMVATLUIV.' That's the substitution cipher from Dorothy L. Sayers's book
Have His Carcase
, and it means ‘We are discovered. Save yourself.' Has to do with lovers, I believe. You see where we're headed?”
It was clear that the President was still evaluating the veiled threat, so Atwater plunged ahead:
“The numbers—317, 8, 92, 73, 112, 79, 67, 318, 28, 96, 107, 41, 631, 78, 146, 397, 118, 98, 114—well, they're the Beale cipher, the one that was deciphered. This one's a double whammy—the Beale Cipher refers to a still-unlocated buried treasure somewhere in Virginia, which picks up the Poe theme, since Poe's most famous exercise in cryptography, “The Gold-Bug,” also has to do with buried treasure. But the key to deciphering Beale Cipher No. 2 turned out to be the Declaration of Independence.”
“Which brings the whole plot right back to this office,” said Tyler.
“Not quite. Because while the sender is obviously obsessed with exacting some sort of revenge upon you and the United States government, he's also consumed with sexual jealousy. We see that in the Sayers quote and even more transparently in the
Dorabella
cipher, which as you know I may modestly say that—”
“You broke it.”
“Not by breaking it, but understanding what its true nature was: a blueprint for something else.”

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