by Sam Fisher
‘Okay, the first layer of defence,’ Tom said to himself. The sword somersaulted along the corridor as though it had been thrown by a giant hand. Tommy Boy lifted his arm and saw he was brandishing a large metal shield. The sword struck the shield and with lightning reflexes, he grabbed the hilt before it could flip away. It tried to slip through his fingers, but he held it tight and brought it down, flat to his thigh. It snapped in two and he threw the shards to the illuminated floor. He laughed. ‘Bring it on, baby.’
‘Tom? You okay?’ It was the voice of a tech, Noel Brannigan, on Tintara.
‘Everything’s cool, Noel. Just met the welcoming committee ... Shit!’
‘What?’
Tommy Boy ignored him. The floor ahead of him had vanished. He was sliding over patches of light. There was nothing to grip on to. He began to accelerate. Colours rushed past, and he plummeted into blackness.
The panic hit, but at the same time he could not deny it felt really good. He had not known such freedom since his last sojourn in the cyber world. This universe of bits and bytes was a place out of time and space and so different to the physical world in which he was confined to a wheelchair.
He was tumbling head-over-heels through the void. Bright bands of colour shot up to meet him. He saw outlines of components, wires. He was inside a chip, weightless. He had no size, no mass. He was barely there, just a shadow, an intelligence. Then he landed in liquid. He had not experienced such a thing since he was a young boy. At first, he could not quite understand what had happened. Then instinct took over and he started to tread water.
The place lay in semi-darkness. He could see curved metal walls, a domed roof. Wall-to-wall water. There was nothing to swim towards. It was as though he were a flea that had landed in a cup of coffee. He started to swim, regardless. There was nothing else he could do. That’s when the fear started to grow. What was under the water? What unspeakable thing could be lurking there, ready to attack?
He swam faster and faster, but the rim of the liquid kept moving away, as though the room was growing, the edge forever receding beyond his grasp. He kicked his legs and felt a tiny flash of relief, almost pleasure, at the fact he could do such a thing.
Snap.
The unmistakable sound of jaws slamming together, teeth grating.
He did not stop to look, did not stop to think. Just moved, thrusting forward, thrashing through the water and into the air.
Snap.
His fingertips brushed something solid. Some sort of platform. He grasped at it and felt a rail. He shook his head, letting the liquid fly off him. He could see the rail ... and steps. He swung his legs through the air, pulling himself up with all his strength. A huge black shape soared out of the liquid.
Snap.
He felt the air rush past his legs as the jaws closed centimetres from his ankles, then a loud splash as the creature fell back into the water.
Tommy Boy pulled himself to his feet and flung himself as far from the edge of the lake as he could. He stumbled and, as he caught himself, he twisted, his legs almost buckling under him. He just managed to keep his balance, and straightened.
The barrel of a machine gun was poised 3 centimetres from his nose.
He turned very slowly. Three more guns were pointing at his head.
‘Don’t move!’
He swivelled his eyes, made a slight turn of the head.
‘DON’T MOVE!’
He obeyed.
‘You are not welcome here.’
‘You don’t say!’
He heard the click of a trigger release.
‘Now look...’
‘Silence!’
Tommy Boy closed his eyes. He could not die here, but his avatar would be destroyed and he would be instantly snapped back to the ‘real’ world, his efforts wasted.
But there was no gunfire. He heard a strange sound. Heavy weights hitting metal.
He opened his eyes.
The four Chinese soldiers lay on the floor in a crumpled heap.
‘Tom? What’s happening?’ It was Cyber Control.
He did not answer immediately. He crouched down and inspected the closest body, rolling the man over. His face was contorted in pain. Green lines had spread along his cheeks, a latticework that grew as Tom watched. Then the soldier’s face caved in like a soufflé gone wrong.
Tom pulled himself up. ‘A virus,’ he said to the air.
‘What?’
‘A virus,’ Tom repeated. ‘I must have brought something in with me.’
‘Well that’s fantastic!’
‘Yes, it is,’ Tom replied thoughtfully and stared round at the other three collapsed bodies, now mere piles of rags. A sound came from the lake of liquid. A huge black shape rose to the surface. It bobbed for a second and emitted a low growl. Then it rolled over and dissolved.
‘The virus is spreading,’ Tom said.
‘That should do it,’ Noel Brannigan said. ‘Shouldn’t it?’
‘Maybe, maybe not,’ Tom replied. ‘I’ve still got to make sure.’ He turned at a sound from behind him. A flight of stone stairs had appeared in the wall close to the edge of the lake. Without a second thought, he dashed towards them.
84
Gobi Desert, China
The Hummingbird hovered just out of range of the ELF beam. The missile relaying the destructive pulse from the Chinese base was circling around the crash site 85 kilometres west of their position. From images beamed to them by BigEye 17, they had a clear view of the area on the wall screen in the main control room of the giant aircraft.
Dimitri in the Silverback was directly above the crash site, descending very fast. ‘Target locked,’ he said through the comms, his voice booming out of the speakers. ‘I’m going for a 2 square kilometre sweep with the ultrasound. Prepped and ready.’
‘Copy that,’ Josh replied. ‘Make it quick, Dimitri.’
‘Don’t you worry, my friend. I plan to.’
They watched the sleek jet twist over the wreckage, 21,000 metres above the frigid sand of the Gobi. The sun sparkled off its green fuselage as it plummeted. Then, pulling up, Dimitri levelled off at 10,000 metres, changed course to a heading of 67.44 degrees and set the controls ready for the dive.
It would take all the man’s skill to pull off this delicate operation. He would have to swoop down at Mach 2, twice the speed of a bullet, level off at an altitude no greater than 300 metres, purge the area with ultrasound, then pull up and climb to a safe altitude while all the time avoiding the Chinese disruptor beam.
‘Okay, Hummingbird. I’ve levelled off.’
‘You’re well clear of the beam.’
‘Good. All systems check green.’
‘Copy that here.’
‘Anything from Tintara?’
‘Tom’s doing his best, Dimitri. Remember ... top speed Mach 2. Go a fraction faster and you’ll risk losing trim and...’
‘I know, Josh.’
‘Yeah, sorry, man.’
‘All right.’ Dimitri’s voice spilled from the speakers. ‘Let’s do this.’
85
Everywhere and nowhere
Bundles of information pulsed along the tube. Tommy Boy stared at them zipping past his feet. They glowed every colour imaginable and some he had never conceived of before. Then he leapt forward, grabbed hold and rode the information stream.
He found he could steer the bundles simply by thinking where he wanted to go. And he knew where he was aiming for – the central processor. The fact that information bundles were still moving meant the system was still operating. His mission was not yet accomplished. He had to get to the core of the Chinese computer and take it out.
A fraction of a microsecond and he was there. The outline of the processor grew on the horizon. The information bundle hurtled towards it. Tommy Boy jumped off his ride with precision timing and flew into the heart of the machine, tumbling onto a hard metal floor and rolling over.
‘Get up,’ said a voice.
Tom
my Boy lifted his head. An old man was standing in front of him. He was leaning on a gnarled staff made from some exotic pale wood. Behind him stood the central processor for the Chinese computer system. It hummed quietly. Bundles of information were streaming in and out of it. Tom’s avatar pulled himself to his feet.
‘I am the guardian. It was unwise of you to come here,’ the old man said.
Tommy Boy stared at him, silent.
‘Your virus has weakened us. I cannot destroy you. But I can stop you from controlling the processor.’
Tommy Boy ignored the old man and dashed towards the processor. He slammed into some sort of invisible barrier and fell back in a heap on the metal floor.
The old man cackled, shaking his head slowly. ‘Ah, the folly of youth.’
Tommy Boy pulled himself up. Time was running out. He took another run at the processor and was thrown back again. Then he turned on the old man and swung his arm round to smash his fist into the guardian’s face. Instead, he found himself sprawling on the floor again.
In Cyber Control, Tom shook in his chair. His heart was racing, eyelids twitching.
Tommy Boy went for the old man again. This time, he caught hold of his tunic. The guardian swung around as nimble as a young boy. Tommy Boy clung on and tightened his grip. New strength came from desperation. He managed to pull the old man towards him and they fell to the floor in a confusion of limbs. Tommy Boy clawed and grasped, never letting up. The old man folded under him, his wooden staff flying away. Tommy Boy punched him hard in the face. He went to hit him again and the old man laughed. Tom’s avatar held back, fist poised in midair.
‘You’ll never break into the processor,’ the old man gasped.
‘That’s what you think.’
‘It is what I know. Consider the prime factors of that number ... there.’ And he pointed to the processor. The machine was daubed with a number dozens of digits long. The old man laughed again and wriggled out from under Tommy Boy. Grabbing for his staff, he stood over him, beaming.
Tommy Boy lowered his fist, and in Cyber Control, a shudder passed through Tom’s body. Now he understood. The processor was protected by pure mathematics. Finding the prime factors of such a large number as this was almost impossible.
Tommy Boy looked at the metal floor, let out a sigh and took a deep breath.
‘You realise, yes?’ the old man said, his voice even, totally in control. ‘To break into the processor you must find two prime numbers that multiply together to give you this number. Perhaps you should go now. Return to your friends. Let us get on with our duties.’
Tommy Boy continued to look at the metal. And as he did so, the fear fell away from him. The old man was right. Finding the prime factors of this huge number was almost impossible. It would take a computer thousands of years to calculate. But the old man obviously had no notion of Sybil, the quantum computer. When Tom raised his head, it was he who was smiling.
The old man fixed him with a serene look.
Tommy Boy was about to speak to Cyber Control when the guardian lifted a hand. He looked straight into the avatar’s eyes.
‘Oh ... and no cheating,’ he said, and Tom felt the comm link with Sybil snap.
86
Base One, Tintara Island
‘Shit! What’s happened?’ Noel Brannigan exclaimed and span around, staring at Tom slumped in his chair. The CyberLink was still attached, his eyelids flickering.
‘We’ve lost the comm connection between Tom and Sybil,’ one of the techs responded. ‘Every other system is up and Tom’s getting sensory information in the cyber world. But that’s it.’
Noel Brannigan closed his eyes tight and screwed up his face.
‘What do we do?’ the tech asked.
Noel opened his eyes and stared around the room. ‘I have absolutely no idea.’
87
Gobi Desert, China
On the Hummingbird screen, Josh and the others could see the Silverback making its final turn 6000 metres above the desert. As they watched, it dropped like a stone out of the bright blue sky, moving so fast the cameras on BigEye could barely keep up.
‘Ultrasound coils set,’ Dimitri said through the speakers. ‘Final systems check A-okay. Four seconds to range.’
They all heard the squalling sound from inside the Silverback. It was so loud it almost blew the speakers in the Hummingbird’s control room. Then a computer voice aboard Mick cut through the sound. ‘Warning, warning. Unidentified electromagnetic disturbance. Abort, abort.’
Omar span in his chair to face Josh. ‘His starboard engine is hit.’
‘How bad?’
‘Fifty per cent efficiency and dropping. Forty per cent.’
‘Dimitri, pull up,’ Josh yelled into his headset.
No reply.
‘His comms are down,’ Omar said.
‘Aggh,’ Josh screamed and hit the control panel with the palm of his hand.
‘Port engine hit,’ Omar reported. ‘Seventy per cent efficiency.’
A crackle came over the comms and Dimitri’s voice could be heard, fragmented, distorted. ‘Hummingbird ... get the damn thing ... I’m ... try...’
‘Warning, warning,’ came the metallic rasp of the computer aboard the Silverback. ‘Electro ... serious ... compromi ... abor...’
On the screen, they could see the Silverback levelling off no more than 100 metres above the desert. It screamed over the wreckage, and somehow Dimitri was keeping control of the plane. But they could all see what a struggle it was – the wings kept dipping, and every few seconds the Silverback juddered. The plane started to climb.
‘Starboard engine down to 10 per cent.’
Then suddenly the interference over the comms vanished and the squalling sound disappeared.
‘Dimitri,’ Josh shouted.
‘Hummingbird.’
‘Get out, Dimitri.’
‘Couldn’t get the ultrasound online,’ he said.
Looking at the big screen, Josh saw the plane bank around and start to make a second run.
‘Dimitri. Get out. That’s an order!’
Dimitri’s reply came as fractured words. Then the ear-splitting squall crashed through the speakers louder than before.
88
Everywhere and nowhere
Tommy Boy stared in disbelief at the old man. He could feel the panic rising inside him but knew that to react to it would be fatal for the mission. Instead, he tried with all his strength to calm his breathing, to steady the shaking in his hands, to think clearly, analyse, analyse. That’s what he did best.
The old man’s smile was infuriating. Tommy Boy felt an overwhelming desire to smash the wizened face with his fist, pummel it to nothing. He could not win this battle, but he could smash up the old bastard good. It would be a hollow gesture and achieve nothing. He knew that. He also knew how hard it would be to calculate the prime factors of this number himself. It would take a human being without the benefit of a computer longer than the lifespan of the universe. Whatever Tommy Boy did, the old man would win.
The guardian sighed and narrowed his eyes. Then he broke into a laugh, a triumphant cynical laugh. And it was at that precise moment that Tommy Boy had a brilliant idea.
The old man gave him an odd look as the avatar lowered himself to the floor cross-legged, arms behind him, palms flat to the metal floor.
Hands out of sight, Tommy Boy began to tap.
89
Base One, Tintara Island
‘We’ve gotta unhook him,’ exclaimed Madeleine Alexander standing beside Tom’s chair.
‘No, that would be disastrous,’ Noel shouted leaping from his seat. ‘Both for Tom and Sybil.’
‘Well, what then?’
Noel ran a hand through his hair and stared around the room, desperate for some clue, some answer.
‘What’s he doing?’ It was one of the techs on the other side of Tom’s wheelchair.
Noel and Madeleine both looked at the tech, and then round at Tom. �
�What do you mean...?’
‘There. He’s tapping his fingers.’
Noel took a step forward and crouched down beside Tom slumped in his wheelchair. The young man’s head was tilted to one side, the CyberLink headset clung to his scalp. His eyes were closed, but they could see his eyeballs moving, his lids flicking rapidly as though he were in REM sleep. Glancing down to where Tom’s hand was resting on the leather armrest, they could all see his fingers moving, drumming out a rhythm.
‘What...?’
‘It’s Morse Code.’ It was Madeleine’s voice. She was standing behind Noel, staring at Tom’s fingers.
‘Morse...?’
‘He’s tapping out a message. Get me a pad and pen,’ she snapped turning towards the nearest panel. ‘Quick!’ A tech ran forward and Madeleine stared scribbling.
‘What the hell’s he saying?’
‘Sssh.’
They fell silent.
‘It’s part way through. Just numbers. Start again, Tom,’ Madeleine urged, knowing he could not hear her but needing to say it.
‘Words,’ she said as she scribbled.
‘What words?’
‘He’s saying ... Prime factors. He wants prime factors. Must be a security barrier. Hang on, the numbers again.’ She scribbled more digits onto the notepaper in her hand, flicked the page, writing frantically, knowing she could not afford a single mistake. ‘Yes ... yes, I’m back to where I was,’ she said triumphantly. ‘Got it.’
She dashed over to the control panel, tapping at it and talking twenty to the dozen. ‘It’s a bloody huge number. More than 40 digits.’
‘But Sybil can do it.’ One of the techs interrupted.
‘That’s why their defence system cut the link,’ Noel replied. ‘They can’t stop Tom being there, but they can stop him getting into the central processor which must be guarded with this “insoluble” problem. Well done Tom!’
‘There,’ Madeleine said, and stepped back from the console. ‘Now it’s up to Sybil.’
‘How long?’ Noel asked.