Book Read Free

Hong Kong

Page 20

by Stephen Coonts


  Being Virgil Cole’s daughter had always been a mixed blessing. He was quiet and unassuming, brilliant and rich. Somehow her mother’s second husband never measured up. He was very nice, and yet … When she was young she had thought her mother was crazy for not staying with her father, but as an adult, she could see how difficult Cole was, especially for her mother, who was neither brilliant nor quiet and unassuming.

  Perhaps it had all worked out for the best.

  Except for her half brother, of course, who had never come to grips with the fire in his father’s soul.

  A Chinese revolution. Yes, that was Virgil Cole. A great impossible crusade to which he could give all of his brains and energy and determination would attract him like a candle attracts a moth.

  She had never seen him so full of life as he was in April during her visit.

  A crusade! A holy war!

  She had seen the fire in his eyes, so of course she said yes when he asked her to help. He didn’t come right out and baldly ask. He explained what was needed, how the worm programs were already in place and at the right time needed to be triggered from a location outside of Hong Kong, triggered in such a way that the identity of the person doing it could never be established … beyond a reasonable doubt.

  He explained the worms, how they were designed, and she carefully wrote down the instructions she needed to make them dance.

  She played with her computer keyboard, checked the E-mail again.

  So the revolution was now.

  And she was going to help.

  And she might never see her father again.

  She was mulling that hard fact when the execute message came. She turned off the computer and stored it carefully in its carrying case. She left the case on the bed and took only the notebook with her.

  She caught a taxi in front of the hotel and told the driver she wanted to go to the main public library.

  Sure enough, the library had a bank of computers that allowed Internet access. The librarian at the desk near the computers was a plump, middle-aged woman. “The fee is a dollar,” the lady told Elaine, who dug in her purse for a bill. “Such a terrible irony—the computers are here for people who can’t afford their own, but the users must help defray the cost.”

  “I understand.”

  “Everything costs, these days,” the librarian said. “We’re fighting the battle with the library board to get the fee eliminated, but so far they won’t yield.”

  “Yes.”

  “Our only rule is no pornography. If people keep calling up pornographic sites, I’m afraid the computers will have to be removed.”

  “Do you check to see what people are viewing on the Net?” Elaine asked, pretending to be horrified at this privacy intrusion.

  “Oh, no,” the librarian assured her. “But people do walk behind the cubicles, and they talk, you know!”

  “Indeed they do. I’m here today to do some research for my thesis.”

  “Let me know if you need any help,” the librarian said and turned to help the next person, a pimpled teen with unkempt long hair who looked as if he might be very interested in porno.coms. As Elaine walked away, the library lady began briefing this intent young man on the evils of cybersex.

  With the notebook of passwords and computer codes on the table beside her, it took Elaine less than fifteen minutes to get through the security layers into the main computer of the central bank clearinghouse in Hong Kong. Once there, she began searching for the code that her father assured her would be there.

  Virgil Cole answered the ringing cell phone on his office desk with his usual “Hello.” He listened a moment, then broke the connection.

  “The York units are in,” he told Jake Grafton, who was stretched out on Cole’s couch thinking about his wife. “Want to see them?”

  “I thought Sergeant York was a paper program.”

  “It’s hardware now.”

  “You got six?”

  “That’s right.”

  “Steal ‘em?”

  “No.”

  “Buy ‘em?”

  “Not quite. Let’s say the American government retains legal title and I have custody.”

  “Let’s go look.” Jake reached for his shoes. “I was wondering how you red-hot revolutionaries were going to avoid being massacred by the division of troops the PLA has stationed in Hong Kong. This is it, huh?”

  There was not much traffic on the streets at this hour, but Jake Grafton paused in the entrance way of the consulate. Half hidden in the shadows, he restrained Cole with a touch on the arm while he scanned the street in both directions.

  Only when he was sure there was no one waiting did he mutter at Cole and step through the entrance.

  Cole led the way across the street and along the sidewalk for fifty yards. They went down the first alley they came to, then down a ramp to a loading dock under the skyscraper. A tractor-trailer rig was flush against the loading dock.

  Cole climbed the stairs, nodded at two men sitting on the dock, and knocked on the door. A man carrying an assault rifle opened the door. Cole and Grafton went in.

  The Sergeant York units were two-legged robots about six and a half feet tall. The legs had three knees—back, front, back—with three-pronged feet. They had articulated arms and, where human hands would be, three flexible grasping appendages, almost like jointed claws, which ended in sharp points. Two were hinged to close inward and one outward, almost like an opposed thumb.

  Mounted on the right side of the torso on a flexible mount was a four-barreled Gatling gun that fired standard 5.56 millimeter rounds from a flexible belt feed. Capacity was two hundred rounds.

  And the York units had heads mounted on flexible stalks that could turn right or left, be raised or lowered. Two Yorks were standing on the concrete floor back-to-back, turning their heads and looking about with an ominous curiosity.

  “The best part,” Cole said with more enthusiasm than Grafton thought he had in him, “is the tail. What do you think of the tail?” The prehensile tail was only about eighteen inches long, thick where it came out of the body and tapering quickly.

  “It’s cool.” Jake could think of no other reply.

  “The engineers wanted three legs, and the army absolutely refused to buy the thing if it had more than two—they were worried about their image. The tail was my compromise. It helps with stability, balance, agility, shock absorption … . With the tail the York is quicker and faster, and can leap higher. And it gives us room for more batteries, which are heavy.”

  “What were those soldiers thinking?”

  “Yeah.”

  Three Chinese men were watching Kerry Kent walk a York out of the semitrailer. She used a small computer unit, much like a laptop. There were no wires. Like Grafton the Chinese men watched the Sergeant York robots and whispered to each other.

  Jake Grafton felt mesmerized by the spectral stare of the robots that were outside the trailer. Their heads never stopped moving. They had no mouth or nose, but in the eye-socket position—the widest part of the head—were two cameras. The one on the right side had a lens turret on the face. As Jake inspected the nearest one, the turret rotated another lens in front of the left camera, if it was a camera.

  “What the hell are these things looking at?” he asked Cole.

  “Us, the room we’re in, everything. They are learning their surroundings.”

  “Smart machines?”

  “These things use a combination of digital and analog technology in their central processors so they can learn their surroundings without having to carry around computers the size of grand pianos. It’s a neural network, modeled on the human brain. That breakthrough in computer design was one of the advances that took robot technology to another level.”

  “I see,” Jake said as the third robot walked to a spot beside the other two and came to a stop. It tilted its head a minute amount, almost quizzically, as it scrutinized the two men.

  “One of the fascinating things about neura
l networks,” Cole continued, “is that the network needs rest periods or the error rate increases. Nap times.”

  “What is that thing looking for?” Jake asked, indicating the curious York.

  “Just checking for weapons. When they’re in a combat mode, they fire on unidentified persons carrying weapons.”

  ‘They can’t shoot at everyone with a weapon. How do the Yorks separate the good guys from the bad guys?”

  “It’s a complex program, based on physical characteristics—such as size, clothing, sex, possession of a weapon—and aggressive behavior. Some behavioral scientists worked with our programmers to write it.”

  “Sex?”

  “Most soldiers are men. That’s a fact.”

  “I see.”

  “My main contributions to the Sergeant York project were some breakthroughs in ultrawide bandwidth radio technology. They communicate with their controller and with each other via UWB, which as you probably know has some unusual characteristics, unlike UHF or VHF.

  “So these things talk to each other?”

  “They are a true network—what one knows, they all know. Information is exchanged via UWB on a continuous basis, which means that these six are soon working from a very detailed three-dimensional database. Each unit also contains a UWB radar, so it can see through walls and solid objects. Very short-range, of course. The radars are off-the-shelf units, stuff being used to inspect bridge abutments for cracks and look for lost kids in storm sewers.”

  “What about the stalk on top of the head?”

  “There is a flexible lens there for looking around corners. The sensor on the right side of the head works with visible light, the left with infrared. At night the sensitivity on the right sensor automatically increases so it can handle starlight.”

  The fourth York walked out of the truck and took a position beside the others but facing off at a ninety-degree angle.

  “These units are prototypes,” Cole explained, “not the refined designs the U.S. army will get as production units. These lack sensors in the rear quadrant, so they usually want to face in different directions so they will get the three-hundred-and-sixty-degree panorama.”

  “They ‘want’?”

  “Sergeant York has artificial intelligence. The operator can position the units, monitor their performance, override automatic features, approve target selection and the like, but these things can be turned loose on full automatic mode—then they fight like an army. They are an army. We developed them to fight and win on the conventional battlefield, the tactical nuke battlefield, and urban battlefields like Mogadishu. The Somali experience was the catalyst for their development.”

  Jake whistled, and two of the York units turned their heads to look at him.

  “I guess I forgot to mention audio. They have excellent hearing in a much wider frequency spectrum than the human ear can handle.”

  “How much battle damage can they sustain?”

  “A lot. They are constructed of titanium, the internal works are shielded with Kevlar, and Kevlar forms the outer skin. Still, mobility is their main defense.”

  “Two legs and a tail … how mobile are they?” the admiral asked.

  Cole pointed to the Kevlar-coated areas on the nearest York’s leg, the shapes of which were just visible under the skin. “The major muscles are hydraulic pistons; the minor ones are electromechanical servos—which means gears, motors, and magnets. A couple of ring-laser gyros provide the balance information for the computer, which knows the machine’s position in relation to the earth and where the extremities are; it uses the pistons and servos to keep the thing balanced. York is extremely agile, amazingly so considering it weighs four hundred and nine pounds without ammunition.”

  “Power?”

  “Alas, batteries. But these are top-of-the-line batteries and can be recharged quickly or just replaced in the field, a slip-out/slip-in deal. In addition, since the outer layer of each unit’s Kevlar skin is photoelectric, outdoors on a sunny day the batteries will stay pretty much charged up as long as excessive exertion is not required of the unit.”

  Jake Grafton shook his head, slightly awed. “How much does one of these damned things cost?”

  “Twice the price of a main battle tank, and worth every penny. They can use every portable weapon in the NATO inventory. Hell, they can even drive a hummer or a tank if you take out the seat and make room for the tail.”

  “Uh-huh.”

  All six were out of the semitrailer now. They arranged themselves in a circle, each facing outward. They made a small whining sound when they moved, a sound that would probably be inaudible with a typical urban ambient noise level.

  “Preproduction prototypes,” Cole said when Jake mentioned the noise. “The production units won’t make those noises.”

  Kerry Kent came over, her wireless computer in her hand. “Let me introduce you to Alvin, Bob, Charlie, Dog, Easy, and Fred.”

  She was referring to the small letter on the back of each unit’s head and on both shoulders. The nicknames were slight twists on the military phonetic alphabet system.

  “The New York Net,” Jake Grafton said. He wasn’t trying to be funny because he wasn’t in the mood: The thought merely whizzed through his cranium and popped out about as fast. Kent and Cole looked at him oddly without smiling.

  She showed Jake the computer presentation. “Each unit can be controlled by its own computer, or one computer can control as many as ten units. When I’m in network mode, I can see what each unit is seeing or look at the composite picture.” She moved an icon with a finger and tapped it. Jake leaned forward. The picture did have a remarkable depth of field, although it was presented on a flat screen.

  She tapped the screen again. “As you can see, I can designate targets, tell specific units to engage it, or let the computer pick a unit. I can assign each unit a task, tell it to go to a certain position, assign targets, basically run the fight with this computer. Or I can go to an automatic mode and let the system identify targets in a predetermined order of priority and engage them.”

  “What if your computer fails or someone shoots you?”

  “The system defaults to full automatic mode, which happens to be the preferred mode of operations anyway.”

  Jake shook his head. “The bad guys are going to figure out what they are up against pretty quickly. Maybe rifle bullets will bounce off these guys, but grenades, rockets, mortars, artillery?”

  “Mobility is the key to the York’s survival,” Kerry rejoined. She tapped the screen.

  Charlie York stirred. It tilted its head back to give itself a better view of the overhead, which was about twelve feet up. It crouched, swung its arms, and leaped with arms extended.

  It caught the edge of an exposed steel beam and hung there, its tail moving to counteract the swaying of its body. Everyone in the room exhaled at once.

  Jake stood there for several seconds with his mouth agape before he remembered to close it. The dozen Chinese men in the room were equally mesmerized. After a moment they cheered.

  “The units can leap about six feet high from a standing position,” Kerry Kent explained. “On the run they can clear a ten-foot fence. They normally stand six feet six inches high; at full leg extension they are eight feet tall.”

  “Very athletic,” Cole said, nodding his head. He didn’t grin at Jake, but almost.

  “How long are you going to let Charlie hang from the overhead?” the admiral asked Kent.

  Her finger moved, and Charlie dropped to the floor. The unit seemed to catch itself perfectly, balancing with its hands, arms, and tail. Now Charlie looked at Jake, tilted its head a few inches.

  In spite of himself, Jake Grafton smiled. “Wow,” he said.

  A half dozen men began checking the Yorks, inspecting every visible inch. They had been trained at Cole’s company in California as part of a highly classified program. One man began plugging extension cords into the back of each unit to recharge the batteries. The other men busied
themselves carrying crates of ammunition out of the back of the semitrailer and stacking them against a wall.

  “So tomorrow is the day?” Jake muttered to his former bombardier-navigator.

  “Yep,” said Tiger Cole.

  “Another big demonstration in the Central District?”

  “Yep. The army will be there. We’ll strap them on with the Yorks.”

  “Jesus Christ! A lot of civilians are going to get caught in the cross fire.”

  Cole nodded once, curtly.

  “Do it at night, Tiger. Maximize the advantage that high tech gives you. These Yorks probably see in the dark as well as they do in the daytime.”

  “This isn’t my show.” Tiger’s voice was bitter. “I argued all that and lost. Revolution is a political act, I was told, the first objective of which is to radicalize the population and turn them against the government. Daytime was the choice.”

  “Explain to me the difference between your set of high-minded bloodletters and the high-minded bloodletters you are trying to overthrow.”

  “That’s unfair and you know it. You know who and what the Communists are.”

  Grafton let it drop. This wasn’t the time or place to argue politics, he decided. After a bit he asked, “Why only six of these things? Why not a dozen?”

  “It will be a couple years before the first production models come off the assembly line,” Cole told him. “We got all there are.”

  “I hope they’re enough.”

  “By God, so do I,” Tiger Cole said fervently.

  “Here’s a sandwich and some water, Don Quixote,” Babs Steinbaugh said. She scrutinized the computer monitor. The E-mail program was still there, waiting.

  Eaton Steinbaugh sipped on the water. The sandwich looked like tuna salad. Babs read his mind: “You have to eat.”

  He took the duty bite, then laid the sandwich down. Yep, tuna salad!

  “China is so far away,” she mused. “What can you do from here?” Here was their snug little home in Sunnyvale.

  “Everything. The Net is everywhere.” His answer was an oversimplification, of course. Steinbaugh didn’t speak a word of Chinese, yet he knew enough symbols to work with their computers. He wasn’t about to get into a discussion of the fine points with Babs, however, not if he could help it.

 

‹ Prev