Chapter 36
“Manual abort?” Susan stared at her
screen, mystified.
She knew she hadn’t typed any manual abort command–at least not intentionally. She wondered if maybe she’d hit the
wrong sequence of
keys by mistake.
“Impossible,” she muttered.
According to the headers, the abort command had been sent less than twenty minutes ago. Susan knew the only thing she’d typed in the last twenty minutes washer privacy
code when she’d stepped out to talk to the commander. It was absurd to think the privacy code
could have been misinterpreted as an abort command.
Knowing it was a waste of time, Susan pulled up her ScreenLock log and double-checked that her privacy code had
been entered properly. Sure enough,
it had.
“Then where,”
she demanded angrily, “where
did it get a manual abort?”
Susan scowled
and closed the ScreenLock window. Unexpectedly, however,
in the split second
as the window blipped
away, something caught
her eye. She reopened
the window and studied the data. It made no sense. There was a proper “locking” entry when she’d left Node 3, but the timing of the subsequent “unlock” entry seemed
strange. The two entries were less than one minute apart. Susan
was
certain she’d been outside with the commander for
more than one minute.
Susan scrolled
down the page. What she saw left her aghast. Registering three minutes later, a second set of lock-unlock entries appeared. According
to the log, someone
had unlocked her terminal
while she was gone.
“Not possible!” she choked. The only candidate was Greg Hale, and Susan was quite certain
she’d never given Hale her privacy code. Following good cryptographic procedure, Susan had chosen her code at random
and never written
it down; Hale’s
guessing the correct
five-character alphanumeric was out of the question–it was thirty-six to the fifth power, over sixty million
possibilities.
But the ScreenLock entries
were as clear as day. Susan stared at them in wonder.
Hale had somehow been on her terminal
while she was gone. He had sent her tracer a manual abort command.
The questions
of how quickly gave way to questions of why? Hale had no motive to break into her terminal. He didn’t even know Susan was running a tracer.
Even if he did know, Susan thought,
why
would he object to her tracking some guy named
North Dakota?
The unanswered questions seemed to be multiplying in her head. “First things first,”
she said aloud. She would deal with Hale in a moment. Focusing on the matter at hand, Susan reloaded
her tracer and hit the enter key. Her terminal beeped once.
TRACER
SENT
Susan knew the tracer would take hours to return.
She cursed Hale, wondering
how in the world he’d gotten
her privacy code, wondering what
interest he had in her tracer.
Susan stood up and strode immediately for Hale’s
terminal. The screen was black, but she could tell it was not locked–the monitor
was glowing faintly
around the edges. Cryptographers seldom locked their terminals except when they left Node 3 for the night.
Instead, they simply
dimmed the brightness on their monitors–a universal, honor-code indication that no one should disturb
the terminal.
Susan reached for Hale’s terminal.
“Screw the honor code,” she said. “What the hell are you up
to?”
Throwing
a quick glance out at the deserted
Crypto floor, Susan turned up Hale’s brightness controls. The monitor
came into focus,
but the screen was entirely empty. Susan frowned at the blank screen.
Uncertain how to proceed, she called up
a search engine and typed:
SEARCH FOR: “TRACER”
It was a long shot, but if there were any references to Susan’s tracer in Hale’s computer, this search would find them. It might shed some light on why Hale had manually aborted her program.
Seconds later the
screen refreshed.
NO
MATCHES FOUND
Susan sat
a moment, unsure what she was even looking for. She tried again.
SEARCH FOR: “SCREENLOCK”
The monitor refreshed and provided
a handful of innocuous
references–no hint that Hale had any copies of
Susan’s privacy code on his computer.
Susan sighed loudly.
So what programs has he been using today? She went to Hale’s “recent applications” menu to find the last program
he had used. It was his E-mail server. Susan searched his hard drive and eventually found his E-mail folder
hidden discreetly inside some other directories. She opened the folder, and additional folders appeared; it seemed Hale had numerous
E-mail identities and accounts.
One of them, Susan noticed with little surprise,
was an anonymous
account. She opened the folder, clicked one of the old, inbound messages, and read
it.
She instantly stopped breathing. The message read:
GREAT PROGRESS! DIGITAL FORTRESS IS ALMOST DONE.
THIS
THING WILL SET THE NSA
BACK DECADES!
As if in
a dream, Susan read the
message over and over.
Then, trembling, she opened another.
ROTATING CLEARTEXT
WORKS! MUTATION STRINGS ARE THE
TRICK!
It was unthinkable, and yet there it was. E-mail from Ensei Tankado. He had been writing to Greg Hale. They were working together.
Susan went numb as the impossible truth stared up at her from the
terminal.
Greg Hale is NDAKOTA?
Susan’s eyes locked on the screen. Her mind searched
desperately for some other explanation, but there was none. It was proof–sudden and inescapable: Tankado had used mutation strings to create a
rotating cleartext function,
and Hale had conspired with him to bring down the
NSA.
“It’s…” Susan stammered. “It’s… not possible.”
As if to disagree,
Hale’s voice echoed from the past: Tankado wrote me a few times…
Strathmore took a gamble
hiring me… I’m getting
out of here someday.
Still, Susan could not accept
what she was seeing. True, Greg Hale was obnoxious and arrogant–but he wasn’t a traitor. He knew what Digital Fortress would do to the NSA; there was no way he was
involved in a plot to release it!
And yet, Susan realized,
there was nothing
to stop him–nothing except
honor and decency.
She thought of the Skipjack
algorithm. Greg Hale had ruined
the NSA’s plans once before. What would prevent
him from trying again?
“But Tankado…”
Susan puzzled. Why would someone as paranoid as Tankado trust someone as
unreliable as Hale?
She knew that none of it mattered
now. All that mattered was getting to Strathmore. By some ironic stroke of fate, Tankado’s partner was right there under their noses.
She wondered if Hale knew yet
that Ensei Tankado was dead.
She quickly
began closing Hale’s E-mail files in order to leave the terminal
exactly as she had found it. Hale could suspect nothing–not yet. The Digital Fortress pass-key, she realized
in amazement, was
probably hidden somewhere inside that very computer.
But as Susan closed the last of the files, a shadow passed outside
the Node 3 window.
Her gaze shot up, and she saw Greg Hale approaching. Her adrenaline surged. He was almost to the doors.
“Damn!”
she cursed, eyeing the distance back to her seat. She knew she’d never make it. Hale was almost
there.
She wheeled desperately, searching
Node 3 for options.
The doors behind
her clicked. Then they engaged.
Susan felt instinct
takeover. Digging
her shoes into the carpet,
she accelerated in long, reaching strides toward the pantry.
As the doors hissed open, Susan slid to a stop in front of the refrigerator and yanked
open the door. A glass pitcher on top tipped precariously and then rocked to a stop.
“Hungry?”
Hale asked, entering Node 3 and walking toward her. His voice was calm and flirtatious. “Want to share some tofu?”
Susan exhaled
and turned to face him. “No thanks,” she offered.
“I think I’ll just–”
But the
words got caught
in her throat. She went white.
Hale eyed her oddly. “What’s wrong?”
Susan bit her lip and locked eyes with him. “Nothing, “she managed. But it was a lie. Across the
room, Hale’s terminal glowed brightly.
She’d forgotten to dim it.
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