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Chapter 119

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“It’s accelerating!” Soshi yelled from the back of the room. “It’s the wrong code!”

Everyone stood in silent horror.

On the screen before them was the error message:

ILLEGAL ENTRY. NUMERIC FIELD ONLY.

“Damn it!” Jabba screamed. “Numeric only! We’re looking for a goddamn number! We’re fucked! This ring is shit!”

“Worm’s at double speed!” Soshi shouted. “Penalty round!”

On the center screen, right beneath the error message, the VR painted a terrifying image. As the third firewall gave way, the half-dozen or so black lines representing marauding hackers surged forward, advancing relentlessly toward the core. With each passing moment, a new line appeared. Then another.

“They’re swarming!” Soshi yelled.

“Confirming overseas tie-ins!” cried another technician. “Word’s out!”

Susan averted her gaze from the image of the collapsing firewalls and turned to the side screen. The footage of Ensei Tankado’s kill was on endless loop. It was the same every time—Tankado clutching his chest, falling, and with a look of desperate panic, forcing his ring on a group of unsuspecting tourists. It makes no sense, she thought. If he didn’t know we’d killed him... Susan drew a total blank. It was too late. We’ve missed something.

On the VR, the number of hackers pounding at the gates had doubled in the last few minutes. From now on, the number would increase exponentially. Hackers, like hyenas, were one big family, always eager to spread the word of a new kill.

Leland Fontaine had apparently seen enough. “Shut it down,” he declared. “Shut the damn thing down.”

Jabba stared straight ahead like the captain of a sinking ship. “Too late, sir. We’re going down.”

CHAPTER 120

The four-hundred-pound Sys-Sec stood motionless, hands resting atop his head in a freeze-frame of disbelief. He’d ordered a power shutdown, but it would be a good twenty minutes too late. Sharks with high-speed modems would be able to download staggering quantities of classified information in that window.

Jabba was awakened from his nightmare by Soshi rushing to the podium with a new printout. “I’ve found something, sir!” she said excitedly. “Orphans in the source! Alpha groupings. All over the place!”

Jabba was unmoved. “We’re looking for a numeric, dammit! Not an alpha! The kill-code is a number!”

“But we’ve got orphans! Tankado’s too good to leave orphans—especially this many!”

The term “orphans” referred to extra lines of programming that didn’t serve the program’s objective in any way. They fed nothing, referred to nothing, led nowhere, and were usually removed as part of the final debugging and compiling process.

Jabba took the printout and studied it.

Fontaine stood silent.

Susan peered over Jabba’s shoulder at the printout. “We’re being attacked by a rough draft of Tankado’s worm?”

“Polished or not,” Jabba retorted, “it’s kicking our ass.”

“I don’t buy it,” Susan argued. “Tankado was a perfectionist. You know

 

that. There’s no way he left bugs in his program.”
“There are lots of them!” Soshi cried. She grabbed the printout from Jabba
and pushed it in front of Susan. “Look!”

 

Susan nodded. Sure enough, after every twenty or so lines of programming, there were four free-floating characters. Susan scanned them. PFEE SESN

RETM “Four-bit alpha groupings,” she puzzled. “They’re definitely not part of the programming.”

“Forget it,” Jabba growled. “You’re grabbing at straws.”

 

“Maybe not,” Susan said. “A lot of encryption uses four-bit groupings. This
could be a code.”
“Yeah.” Jabba groaned. “It says—‘Ha, ha. You’re fucked.’ ” He looked up

 

at the VR. “In about nine minutes.”

 

Susan ignored Jabba and locked in on Soshi. “How many orphans are
there?”
Soshi shrugged. She commandeered Jabba’s terminal and typed all the

 

groupings. When she was done, she pushed back from the terminal. The room looked up at the screen. PFEE SESN RETM MFHA IRWE OOIG MEEN NRMA

ENET SHAS DCNS IIAA IEER BRNK FBLE LODI Susan was the only one smiling. “Sure looks familiar,” she said. “Blocks of four—just like Enigma.”

The director nodded. Enigma was history’s most famous code-writing machine—the Nazis’ twelve-ton encryption beast. It had encrypted in blocks of four.

“Great.” He moaned. “You wouldn’t happen to have one lying around, would you?”

“That’s not the point!” Susan said, suddenly coming to life. This was her specialty. “The point is that this is a code. Tankado left us a clue! He’s taunting us, daring us to figure out the pass-key in time. He’s laying hints just out of our reach!”

“Absurd,” Jabba snapped. “Tankado gave us only one out—revealing TRANSLTR. That was it. That was our escape. We blew it.”

“I have to agree with him,” Fontaine said. “I doubt there’s any way Tankado would risk letting us off the hook by hinting at his kill-code.”

Susan nodded vaguely, but she recalled how Tankado had given them NDAKOTA. She stared up at the letters wondering if he were playing another one of his games.

“Tunnel block half gone!” a technician called.

On the VR, the mass of black tie-in lines surged deeper into the two remaining shields.

David had been sitting quietly, watching the drama unfold on the monitor before them. “Susan?” he offered. “I have an idea. Is that text in sixteen groupings of four?”

“Oh, for Christ’s sake,” Jabba said under his breath. “Now everyone wants to play?”

Susan ignored Jabba and counted the groupings. “Yes. Sixteen.”

“Take out the spaces,” Becker said firmly.

“David,” Susan replied, slightly embarrassed. “I don’t think you understand. The groupings of four are—” “Take out the spaces,” he repeated.

Susan hesitated a moment and then nodded to Soshi. Soshi quickly removed the spaces. The result was no more enlightening. PFEESENRETMMFHAIRWEOOIGMEENRMAENETSHASDCSIIAAUE

ERBRBJFBEKIDU Jabba exploded. “ENOUGH! Playtime’s over! This thing’s on double-speed!

We’ve got about eight minutes here! We’re looking for a number, not a
bunch of half-baked letters!”
“Four by sixteen,” David said calmly. “Do the math, Susan.”
Susan eyed David’s image on the screen. Do the math? He’s terrible at

math! She knew David could memorize verb conjugations and vocabulary
like a Xerox machine, but math?...
“Multiplication tables,” Becker said.

 

Multiplication tables, Susan wondered. What is he talking about?
“Four by sixteen,” the professor repeated. “I had to memorize multiplication
tables in fourth grade.”

 

Susan pictured the standard grade school multiplication table. Four by

sixteen. “Sixty-four,” she said blankly. “So what?”
David leaned toward the camera. His face filled the frame. “Sixty-four
letters...”

 

Susan nodded. “Yes, but they’re—” Susan froze.
“Sixty-four letters,” David repeated.
Susan gasped. “Oh my God! David, you’re a genius!”

 

CHAPTER 121

“Seven minutes!” a technician called out.
“Eight rows of eight!” Susan shouted, excited.
Soshi typed. Fontaine looked on silently. The second to last shield was

 

growing thin.
“Sixty-four letters!” Susan was in control. “It’s a perfect square!”
“Perfect square?” Jabba demanded. “So what?”
Ten seconds later Soshi had rearranged the seemingly random letters on the

 

screen. They were now in eight rows of eight. Jabba studied the letters and

 

threw up his hands in despair. The new layout was no more revealing than

 

the original.

P F E E S E S N

R E T M P F H A

I R W E O O I G

M E E N N R M A

E N E T S H A S

D C N S I I A A

I E E R B R N K

F B L E L O D I

“Clear as shit.” Jabba groaned.

“Ms. Fletcher,” Fontaine demanded, “explain yourself.” All eyes turned to

Susan.

Susan was staring up at the block of text. Gradually she began nodding, then
broke into a wide smile. “David, I’ll be damned!”

 

Everyone on the podium exchanged baffled looks.
David winked at the tiny image of Susan Fletcher on the screen before him.
“Sixty-four letters. Julius Caesar strikes again.”

 

Midge looked lost. “What are you talking about?”
“Caesar box.” Susan beamed. “Read top to bottom. Tankado’s sending us a
message.”

 


 

 

CHAPTER 122

“Six minutes!” a technician called out.
Susan shouted orders. “Retype top to bottom! Read down, not across!”
Soshi furiously moved down the columns, retyping the text.
“Julius Caesar sent codes this way!” Susan blurted. “His letter count was

 

always a perfect square!”
“Done!” Soshi yelled.
Everyone looked up at the newly arranged, single line of text on the wall-

 

screen.
“Still garbage,” Jabba scoffed in disgust. “Look at it. It’s totally random bits
of—” The words lodged in his throat. His eyes widened to saucers. “Oh..
.oh my...”

 

Fontaine had seen it too. He arched his eyebrows, obviously impressed.
Midge and Brinkerhoff both cooed in unison. “Holy...shit.”
The sixty-four letters now read:
PRIMEDIFFERENCEBETWEENELEMENTSRESPONSIBLEFORHIROS

 

HIMAANDNAGASAKI “Put in the spaces,” Susan ordered. “We’ve got a puzzle to solve.”

 

CHAPTER 123

An ashen technician ran to the podium. “Tunnel block’s about to go!”
Jabba turned to the VR on screen. The attackers surged forward, only a

 

whisker away from their assault on the fifth and final wall. The databank
was running out of time.
Susan blocked out the chaos around her. She read Tankado’s bizarre

 

message over and over. PRIME DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ELEMENTS RESPONSIBLE FOR

HIROSHIMA AND NAGASAKI “It’s not even a question!” Brinkerhoff cried. “How can it have an answer?” “We need a number,” Jabba reminded. “The kill-code is numeric. ” “Silence,” Fontaine said evenly. He turned and addressed Susan. “Ms.

Fletcher, you’ve gotten us this far. I need your best guess.”

Susan took a deep breath. “The kill-code entry field accepts numerics only. My guess is that this is some sort of clue as to the correct number. The text mentions Hiroshima and Nagasaki—the two cities that were hit by atomic bombs. Maybe the kill-code is related to the number of casualties, the estimated dollars of damage...” She paused a moment, rereading the clue. “The word ‘difference’ seems important. The prime difference between Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Apparently Tankado felt the two incidents differed somehow.”

Fontaine’s expression did not change. Nonetheless, hope was fading fast. It seemed the political backdrops surrounding the two most devastating blasts in history needed to be analyzed, compared, and translated into some magic number... and all within the next five minutes.

 


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Читайте в этой же книге: CHAPTER 104 12 страница | CHAPTER 104 13 страница | CHAPTER 104 14 страница | CHAPTER 104 15 страница | CHAPTER 104 16 страница | CHAPTER 104 17 страница | CHAPTER 104 18 страница | CHAPTER 104 19 страница | CHAPTER 110 | CHAPTER 111 |
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