Locked Down

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Locked Down Page 2

by Ed Kovacs


  So, from the very beginning, Grant suspected something wasn't quite right with the Omega Team operation. It led her to take certain measures to cover her butt.

  “Analysts, shut it all down,” said Hernandez. “We're finished. Erase your hard drives. Every last file generated on this op.”

  She hardly believed her ears and stole a quick glance at the techs across from her, seeing they looked equally surprised. They had the Chinese president wired; why stop spying on him? The intelligence value had to be staggering.

  Grant looked down to her keyboard. She was about to terminate the laser eavesdropping on the panel van containing Wang Hongwei, but hesitated. She knew Hernandez was fatigued—he supervised all three shifts and only slept when Wang Hongwei slept, and Wang usually took no more than four or five hours of sleep a day. Could Hernandez be mistaken in terminating the op so abruptly? Surely someone would want to listen to what was taking place inside the van.

  She was about to double-check the issue with him when the pilot's voice, shrill and excited, boomed over her headphones.

  “I've lost control of the bird!”

  Grant snapped her head toward the far end of the container where the pilot sat next to the sensor operator. They were toggling switches and pushing buttons on the consoles in front of and between them.

  “Say again,” said Hernandez over the com-link. She shot him a quick look. He stared at his computer monitors as he held the secure phone handset at arm's length.

  “She's not responding to any commands! I've tried manual override. Not responding. Rebooting the control interface now.”

  “Is it still on a heading for Thailand?” asked Hernandez.

  “Negative,” said the sensor operator. The bird is now on a course for... Beijing.”

  “Prepare to engage self-destruct. Tell me when you're rebooted,” said Hernandez calmly, in stark counterpoint to the pilot. “Analysts, if you haven't already done so, erase your data, now.”

  He's too relaxed, thought Grant. Could Hernandez be that cool of a customer? Everyone in the room was well aware of how an older model stealth spy drone had been lost over Iran a few years earlier, supposedly after Iranian hackers had taken control of the guidance system. She couldn't believe the same thing was happening now, on this sensitive Chinese mission. The engineers were supposed to have fixed the problem and made the ultra-secret drones hack-proof. And strangely, this was happening just when the operation had been declared mission complete.

  She blinked her tired eyes, red from staring at computer monitors for eight hours a day, and focused. Without stopping the laser eavesdropping on the van, she shut down all other programs and began erasing the files on her computers. But she had Darknet software running on an invisible, secure Internet connection she'd been using for her own surfing, and for other reasons. She glanced up at the other SIGINT analysts; they all wore a look of dread. Something was very wrong here. Ten days over China and suddenly their target is apprehended in a massive raid, the mission is declared accomplished, and then they immediately lose control of the most sophisticated stealth drone America flew? She'd learned the hard way as an intelligence analyst not to believe in coincidences.

  “Reboot complete,” said the pilot. “She's not responding, we have no control!”

  “Engage self-destruct,” ordered Hernandez.

  “Roger... engaged,” said the sensor operator.

  There was a pregnant pause, and then the sensor operator said, “No joy, repeat, no joy. She's in a controlled descent, still on a direct course for Beijing.”

  The pilot slammed his balled-up fist down hard on the armrest of his chair. “Damn those Chinese pricks! They're stealing our drone!”

  Grant faced her computer monitors, but shifted her green and hazel eyes toward Hernandez. She watched as he brought the secure phone handset close to his mouth, and she very clearly read his lips as he whispered into the phone, unheard by anyone in the room, “Objective effected. They've got it.”

  She gasped. What in the hell is going on? Objective effected? They've got it? Grant reeled, her stomach instantly knotted. Her analytical mind strongly suspected, with some astonishment, that she'd just taken part in a secret technology transfer, and that her Omega Team had aided one faction of the Chinese government in a counterintelligence operation against another faction. Wang was supposed to be taken into custody and then our most secret stealth drone handed over. It was the only conclusion that made sense.

  Although she wore a thick wool sweater, chills ran up her long, slender arms, while at the same time her hands were damp with sweat. Her initial suspicions that something stunk were being vindicated. The whole turn of events rankled her, since she spent most of her time in the employment of the United States Government fighting against a continuous onslaught of aggressive Chinese cyber spying that had stolen virtually every secret of any import from America's defense arsenals. Helping them, giving away our most secret stealth drone didn't make sense.

  But then, the world had gone crazy some years ago. Even at age twenty-seven, Nicole Grant knew that.

  Grant was a careful planner; loathe to make a decision without having first thought through all options and risks related to the act. But she felt she had to do something right now. She never allowed “instinct” to guide her, in fact she constantly fought against taking action based on impulse, but giving China the drone broke any number of federal laws, perhaps she was even a party to treason. Meaning all evidence should be preserved, such as the audio file.

  Crap, there was no time to think! Perspiration formed on her forehead in the cold room. She had to take action, so her brain synapses fired and she opted to do something risky, something against orders and protocol but yet, she tried to convince herself, was still purely logical. And logic is what guided engineers like Nicole Grant. She canceled the laser eavesdropping on the panel van, encrypted the audio file, and then used the Darknet software that she had running to send the contents of whatever had been said inside that Chinese panel van to a secret place, off into cyberspace.

  Almost immediately, she regretted it, because emotion, especially fear, usually trumped logic, and fear was right now wrapping its hands around her throat.

  Oh my God, what have I done? What if this secret transfer has been sanctioned? What if they find out I sent the file... a file they didn't want saved? I've disobeyed direct orders on the most sensitive kind of operation involving State secrets of the highest order.

  Grant's hands shook. For all of her adult life she'd struggled against spontaneity, and here with so much at stake, she'd just succumbed to it. Big trouble was coming, for sure. Sooner or later.

  CHAPTER 1

  TODAY

  13:46

  “Four hundred Hong Kong dollars,” said the old lady in heavily accented English to Nicole Grant, who held up a fake Celine bag for close inspection on a glorious spring day for outdoor shopping. Yes, Hong Kong's famous mugginess was ever-present, making the humidity much higher than Phoenix, but a salty sea breeze occasionally wafted along Tung Choi Street in an area called the Ladies Market, gifting the shoppers with a pleasant caress.

  Rich blue skies and puffy white clouds lolling overhead made for a picture postcard perfect afternoon. The shabbiness of the street market and rundown condition of this neighborhood of Kowloon called Mong Kok provided a stark contrast to Mother Nature's natural beauty.

  Tung Choi Street closed every afternoon to vehicle traffic and stalls on both sides of the narrow street magically sprang to life to be quickly stocked with merchandise in a ceaseless pursuit of cash commerce. The stalls, constructed of steel poles, bungee cords and plastic tarps were assembled and disassembled more often than a Bedouin’s tent.

  Shoppers like Nicole had to muscle their way along the very center of the street, assaulted on all sides by towering racks of purses, tee-shirts, stuffed animals, blouses, sports jerseys, tapestries, and every gadget and gizmo known to man, in every size, color, and shape. Souvenirs, tchotchkes, c
heap mementos, and plush toys abounded. The colorful displays livened what was otherwise just another dingy Hong Kong street lined by ratty, look-alike eight-story mixed-use buildings with each apartment having a terrace where laundry hung out to dry.

  Still looking at the purse, she moved slightly so a shaft of sunlight illuminated the stitching. She'd seen a photo of one of the Kardashians with the bag, but liked it anyway. It was gorgeous, who wouldn't like it? She never needed a calculator and quickly did the math in her head. Compared to the price of a genuine Celine purse, $52 U.S. dollars seemed like a bargain. But her girlfriends back in Phoenix coached her to counter any price given by a street vendor by exactly fifty percent.

  “Four hundred good price,” said the old lady.

  Grant smiled. She wore her auburn hair pulled back in a simple ponytail. Her relaxed face featured a light tan from recent time in the sun. She possessed a confidence common to successful business people, yet tempered by a genuine tendency to kindness. She didn't want to counter with an offer of only two hundred, especially to the older female seller. Negotiating over small money seemed silly, but just for the experience of it, she softly said, “Will you take three-fifty?”

  The old lady smiled and said, “Okay, for you, three-fifty.”

  Hmm, she agreed too quickly. I could have gotten it cheaper. Still, she'd bartered and purchased what she wanted, so she felt a sense of achievement and satisfaction. She counted out exact change—a must for the serious negotiator, she had read—slung the new bag over her arm, then plunged onward for more shopping.

  Her decision to include Hong Kong in the itinerary of her Asian vacation, her first overseas vacation ever, had not come lightly due to her involvement in the drone operation two years earlier. After the drone had been lost, she'd been a nervous wreck. Grant had bailed from the intelligence game almost immediately. Upon returning to Ft. Meade from the Omega Team fiasco, she'd requested a transfer out of NSA back to a regular air force posting.

  She spent months on pins and needles, certain that her arrest was imminent. Questioned about the intelligence debacle in Top Secret Compartmentalized FBI and NSA investigations, she'd been asked only general questions. The whole episode had been an embarrassment and no one seemed to be looking for the truth. The investigators hadn't asked her about recording the audio file or sending it off into cyberspace, and she didn't mention what she'd seen Hernandez say into the secure phone.

  Timing worked in her favor because shortly after the drone incident her re-enlistment came up. She opted to leave the air force and was mustered out with an honorable discharge. In short order she'd landed a plum position at Security-Tech Solutions, moved to Phoenix, and tried to put the nightmare behind her.

  At Security-Tech she lost herself in the order, structure, and challenge of her position, which gave her lots of responsibility. It was perfect for an engineer like Grant. Two months into her new job—less than a year after that fateful night with the Omega Team in Pomona—her fitful sleep and anxiety faded away. She reached the conclusion she'd gotten off Scot-free.

  While no blowback had befallen her personally, there was no denying she'd been party to some troubling, dark goings-on. So even though she was now a civilian with zero reason to believe that China might have some nefarious interest in her, she'd ruled out a visit to the Mainland. Hong Kong, on the other hand, while technically a part of China, still largely had its independence and freedoms and a Western-based rule of law that made her feel perfectly safe.

  Anyway, why would the Chinese have a beef with her? They'd gotten what they wanted and she'd never revealed the audio file to anyone. And since all of the Omega Team members had used aliases, how could a foreign government even know her identity? Maybe Guangzhou was physically close to Hong Kong at only eighty miles away, but the drone op represented far off events to Grant that she chose not to dwell upon. Today, her only concerns in Hong Kong were related to shopping.

  She checked her Timex watch with a scratched crystal, the same watch she'd worn since high school. It was almost two in the afternoon, so she allotted herself a little more time to look for bargains. Check that, she was looking for more cheap but authentic-looking designer knock-offs. Shopping in Hong Kong had stopped being a bargain years ago, as various guidebooks and magazine articles had informed her. Even the fakes were no great discount, considering what they sold for in the Asian enclaves of Los Angeles.

  Slight guilt hounded her about buying counterfeit items since she would never download movies, music, or e-books without properly paying for them, but she'd promised some female co-workers at Security-Tech to bring back Hong Kong fakes for them, genuine Hong Kong fakes, they had joked, and she intended to deliver.

  At first it had been strange going on vacation by herself, but her apprehension about traveling abroad alone had turned into a subdued feeling of triumph. She certainly didn't need a man with her, but a girlfriend would have been nice. Grant's adult life had been serious and regimented, mostly as a rebellion against her unorganized, impulsive father. She hadn't wanted to end up like him: a man with no pension, no retirement plan, no life insurance, but plenty of debt. So at age fifteen, she had put her nose to the grindstone and got into computers in a big way. Air force scholarships got her through college where she earned degrees in electrical engineering and computer science and excelled in Mandarin language classes. She then began serving her required stint in the air force, including six months at the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center to perfect her Mandarin.

  At Security-Tech back in Phoenix she managed a staff of thirty. Her people were called pentesters or red teams or penetration specialists. Major banks, corporations, and institutions of all types hired pentesters to attack their computer systems—systems that should have been secure—and to breech them or to detect weaknesses, which sometimes meant gaining access to the systems' functionality and data. If problems were found, the pentesters figured out how to plug the holes and secure the systems from future attack.

  With a continuing onslaught of cyber-attacks directed at business and industry, her team had a long waiting list of clients begging for their systems to be tested. So now, at the ripe old age of twenty-nine, Grant had a very good working knowledge of security systems, networking systems, hardware systems, and a general overview of most security suites being used by governments and private industry. She was on top of her game when she took this long-planned vacation to Tokyo, Seoul, and Hong Kong. Professionally, her life was in ultra-glide.

  But this twenty-one day vacation already felt to Grant like a game changer, personally. She was now entertaining a radical concept: perhaps she was ready to go independent with her career and become a consultant. Her thinking had always been that kind of jump would happen after marriage; consulting would allow more flexibility to work or spend time at home as she grew a family. But she'd concluded she wasn't going to meet the man of her dreams while working at Security-Tech.

  It was the story of her life: she was smart, funny, stable, and was a physically attractive package. Her mother constantly teased her about how much she resembled the Hollywood actress Katie Holmes, and pushed her to find her own “Tom Cruise.” Yes, her nose was too big and when she grinned her cheeks resembled two ripe crabapples, but her smile could light up a room and her green / hazel eyes simply sparkled. At five-feet ten-inches she was on the rangy side, and had always felt somewhat awkward physically. That was one reason she tended to walk slowly, because she felt self-conscious about having a goofy walk.

  But negatives aside, she was a perfectly cute package. So why was it that decent men had been a scarce commodity for most of her adult life? Okay, so her practical nature, engineer's mind, her need to plan out every hour of every day, and her Mensa-level IQ probably had something to do with it. She had given up on the concept of Mr. Right; she was now open to Mr. Almost Right.

  Funny, a vacation was supposed to be a time when you could turn your brain off and just enjoy, but this trip had triggered co
nstant examination of her life. Sure, she had gained financial security and stability by being very unlike her dad, but she hadn't gained happiness. She'd been thinking about happiness a lot, lately. People focused on wanting specific things, but how many people simply sought to achieve happiness? In whatever form it might present itself.

  As an engineer, she wasn't even certain her thoughts on happiness were valid. She'd methodically gone from A to Z in her life, and wasn't Z supposed to result in those ephemeral concepts of fulfillment, satisfaction, happiness? From a career perspective she'd gotten to Z and all she had to show for it was Z. And a striking realization was that Z was not enough.

  Maybe a big change was overdue.

  At the next kiosk, crammed between DayGlo Disney backpacks and Star Wars posters she negotiated a little harder and got twenty-five percent off the purchase, an imitation Gucci bag that she dropped into a larger shopping bag. Some bootleg Michael Kors items at a stall just up the street caught her eye, so she casually ambled toward them. If a career or some other change is coming, this is my chance to accessorize for it, she thought, smiling.

  ###

  Ron Hernandez knew Hong Kong well. He’d spent months here tracking down and killing an Islamic terrorist bomber and his support network in an action that never saw the light of day. He felt comfortable, and casually watched Nicole Grant amble amongst the crowds on Tung Choi Street through the viewfinder of his video camera. To anyone watching, he was just another tourist in shorts, tee-shirt and a khaki safari vest, wearing a fanny pack and backpack and shooting some jerky vacation footage on a balmy spring afternoon. No one could know that his Japanese-made glasses were constructed of special light-reflecting and -absorbing materials which defeated facial recognition software, or that the video camera he held contained a suppressed .22 caliber semi-automatic loaded with sub-sonic ammunition.

 

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