by Mark Henshaw
The algorithm Weaver extracted from the Chinese CAD program was longer than expected and more complicated than its size implied. MIT had required him to take an introductory course in differential equations, and he’d only gotten a middling grade, so it took him an hour to realize that the algorithm was one of those. He had borrowed a colleague’s textbooks—Weaver had sold his own back to the college hours after the final exam—but they hadn’t helped him one whit. It occurred to him that, given that the algorithm was integrated into a CAD program, texts on general mathematical theory weren’t going to help him much. Geometry or mechanical engineering texts, or maybe physics, would be more relevant.
The other equations measured the simplest of physical properties—length, width, depth, area. This one stayed constant when the dimensional variables were kept proportional: changing an object’s overall size did not change the equation’s output, but changing its shape did. He was overlooking . . . what? Mass? Weaver ruled it out. That would have changed along with the area measurement. Tensile strength? Not possible without inputting the specific material the shape would be cut from, and Weaver couldn’t see a way to enter that value into the program. He considered that it could be a parts number generator, assigning unique identifiers to each new part being designed so it could be located in some database. But the equation was too complex for that. Was it some other engineering function that he wasn’t familiar with?
He finally asked an APLAA analyst to help him identify the related pictograph on the CAD program’s interface. The APLAA analyst had wasted an hour searching out the Mandarin pictograph radicals of that label before realizing they weren’t likely to be in a standard usage dictionary. She found them in a technical dictionary in short order—hengjiemian. The literal translation was . . . “cross-view”? That made no sense to Weaver. Yes, mechanical engineers used CAD programs to create cross-section technical drawings, but where was the connection to a mathematical formula that changed its product when the object’s shape changed but not its size?
Still, even if he had the source code in hand, it was probable that he still wouldn’t understand what the mathematical calculation was supposed to tell him. It was one thing to know that a piece of source code calculated e=mc2. It was another to know that that particular formula explained why nothing could travel faster than the speed of light. This Chinese algorithm promised to be far more complex than Einstein’s simple formula. But Weaver wasn’t going to fail. Identifying the equation’s purpose was now a point of professional pride. Lunch with Stryker was just going to be the capper. She was one of the few DI officers that he’d met of late who weren’t either taken or socially useless introverts. Besides, the woman knew how to write code. That and the fact that she was easy on the eyes made her worth the effort.
Weaver rolled back from the desk and dropped the soda can in the garbage. It was late enough that the pitiful amount of caffeine in a cola wouldn’t keep him awake. Time for the coffee mug.
CHAPTER 10
TUESDAY
DAY TEN
BEIJING CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT (PEK) BEIJING
The airport was in the Chaoyang district, northeast of the city in a suburb no longer considered remote. The ’08 Olympics had fixed that. If the government had spared any expense to ready the city for visitors that year, it had not been here. Beijing’s largest airport left no question that the host country had become a deserving member of the first world. Terminal 2 was all painted girders and steel rising to a low hangar ceiling, well lit and devoid of any obvious Chinese influence. The size was impressive and the architecture was not, which was a disappointment to Kyra. Growing up in Charlottesville had given her an appreciation for the architectural influences of Mr. Jefferson. She wanted a country with such a unique heritage to make a unique first impression. The building was a justifiable source of pride for a nation whose citizens had starved to death by the millions under Mao, but Kyra hoped they weren’t losing their own culture in bits and pieces in a bid to prove their national standing.
The views of Beijing seen from the taxi window as they traveled the Shoudou Jichang Airport Expressway southwest into the city did not change that impression. It was as modern a city as any she had visited, better than most, with construction that was threatening to crush out the buildings that still matched the Beijing that Kyra had pictured in her mind. Rental cars were not available to foreigners, so they had settled for a simple taxi. It was the most random option available, and random behavior was a counterintelligence officer’s worst enemy and therefore Jonathan and Kyra’s second-best defense. The first was to say nothing during the drive and do nothing openly illegal for the rest of their stay.
The expressway terminated in an exit onto the Dong Sanhuan Beilu Freeway near the northern embassy district, one of the four major roadways that circled the city center. From there, the driver took them on a tour of the small side streets that left Kyra grasping for a sense of direction. Despite her boast on the plane, she had spent a good chunk of the flight staring at maps and guidebooks that she’d pilfered from the CIA Library’s map office. The case officer—she still couldn’t think of herself as an analyst—had been trying to memorize the major street names. She couldn’t feel comfortable entering a hostile territory without arming herself with a detailed knowledge of the terrain, but she had finally given up on that dream. The endless dajies and zhonglus labeling the streets had all run together within minutes, and so she had settled for a general overview of Beijing’s asphalt geography. The city center was an elongated box with Tiananmen Square and the Forbidden City at its center and Nanhai, Zhonghai, and Beihai Lakes to its immediate west. Most of the major streets ran north-south and east-west. It was only the smaller side streets that were laid out in haphazard fashion. Seen from above, it made more sense to Kyra than Washington DC’s design; she had cursed Pierre L’Enfant’s name more than once and not because he was French.
Despite being American-owned, she knew that the Holiday Inn Crowne Plaza was not a safe harbor. The staff was almost entirely Chinese and the security briefings detailing the MSS counterintelligence presence in Chinese hotels had been near-terrifying. They were on enemy soil and the locals had all the advantages. There was no guarantee that their rooms had been assigned at random. They were assigned adjoining rooms, which seemed overly convenient. Searching for surveillance equipment would be an obvious giveaway. She had no doubt at all that her bag would be searched the first time she stepped out.
Jonathan went straight for the television. The channel was irrelevant; he increased the volume until it was far louder than necessary. “Under the circumstances, I would have preferred housing at the embassy.”
“No room at the inn, I guess,” Kyra answered. “State Department will have a brigade of Foreign Service officers in country trying to talk Tian down.”
“I doubt the PLA is going to allow diplomats to stop them now,” Jonathan said. “Our friends do know we’re coming?” Cables from headquarters to field stations were not always read on schedule, regardless of how they were marked.
“They should,” Kyra hedged.
“Call the concierge and get another taxi to take us over in an hour.”
“See you then,” she told him, moving to the shared door that led to her room. “And clean up. You need the shower.”
“Don’t lie down,” he warned. “I don’t want to have to wake you up.”
US EMBASSY
BEIJING, CHINA
“This is not a good time,” Mitchell said. Stryker was a case officer, or had been, which nominally put her on Mitchell’s side of the CIA divide. But she wasn’t one of his officers and she was keeping company with a DI analyst. Those two facts alone made her suspect.
“When would be a good time?” Kyra asked, impatient.
“After the war.”
“We can’t wait that long,” Jonathan informed him. He’d dealt with enough NCS officers to know that Mitchell might be serious.
“Beijing is not a safe
operational environment at the moment.”
“Is it ever?” Kyra asked.
“No,” Mitchell conceded. “But the locals are on a bender. They’re harassing everyone who leaves the embassy short of the ambassador. My case officers are getting manhandled in the street. It takes a major operation just to pass a message to any of our local assets, much less get a meeting with them. And now I get this”—the COS waved a headquarters cable in the air—“ordering me to get you in the same room with Pioneer, who you’re not supposed to even know about. Kathy Cooke says you get to talk to him, fine, I know how to take orders. But I’d love to know how you found out about him.”
“That’s hardly relevant at the moment,” Jonathan said.
“What is relevant is that I don’t know if I can put you in the same room with him.”
“Surveillance is that tight?” Kyra asked.
Mitchell dropped the headquarters cable on his desk and slumped back into his chair. “He’s been burned,” he admitted.
Kyra stared at the chief of station. The security measures in place to protect Pioneer had been in the file and they were impressive. Losing an asset through bad luck and random chance was bad enough, but it happened. Someone’s career would die if the breach had come from operational error. “How?”
“We don’t know,” Mitchell admitted. “We pulled off a sign of life but that’s the only direct contact we’ve managed for two weeks. We’ve lost a dead drop. I don’t know if the MSS intercepted it or some third party just randomly picked it up. That could happen, but that’s an awful lot of bad luck given everything else that’s going on.”
Jonathan frowned. “This started at the same time as the surveillance crackdown?”
“They started around the same time, yes. Whether they’re connected, I don’t know, and at the moment I don’t particularly care. I’ll leave that for you analysts to figure out. What I do care about is getting him out of the country without burning my officers. I’ve got headquarters screaming for intel that I can’t provide, we’ve lost our best asset, and the MSS could wrap him up at any time. If they do, they’ll put it on the front page of the People’s Daily and our other assets will decide we can’t protect them and they’ll go dry. So, no offense, but I have bigger worries than arranging a meeting that could get Pioneer killed and you arrested. I’d be doing you a favor if I just turned down the request, orders or not.”
“But you won’t,” Kyra said.
“Don’t test me,” Mitchell said. There was a difference between being bold and being brash, and Stryker was leaning toward the latter. “Getting Pioneer out is my priority, and once we start an exfiltration, I’m sure not going to put it on hold for a few hours so you can have a chat while the MSS is tearing Beijing apart to find him. If we can get him out of the country, you can talk to him then. Until then, I don’t want to hear it. And you go over my head and I’ll kick you out of the country. You understand me?”
Jonathan opened his mouth to answer, but Kyra cut him off. “Understood.”
CHAPTER 11
WEDNESDAY DAY ELEVEN
THE WHITE HOUSE
“This”—Stuart threw OPLAN 5077 onto his desk—“calls for nuclear weapons.” He knew the plan had been revised a few years before and he wondered which general had thrown in that little provision.
Showalter closed his own copy. The operations plan laid out the logistics and mobilization schedule of all US military assets to be used in the defense of Taiwan. It was the product of more than thirty years of work by the Pentagon’s best minds. No single president could match that level of collective experience, though several had been arrogant enough to think they could. “Only as a strategic option. Mr. President, you need to have the flexibility—”
“Unacceptable.”
“Any OPLAN that doesn’t at least have weapons of mass destruction as an option for this would put you in a weak position from the start. Mr. President, if the Chinese are unable to counter our carriers, they could choose to use a nuclear weapon—”
“Tian is not going to nuke our carriers and I’m not going to even consider nuking the mainland. I wouldn’t order a nuclear strike even if the PLA was marching on Taipei, and I sure wouldn’t order a first strike. Seventy years on and we’re still catching grief over Hiroshima. So I am not going to nuke Beijing over that little Kinmen sandbar in the Strait.”
“If I may, sir,” the director of national intelligence cut in. Michael Rhead had been a deputy defense secretary when the plan was revised. “The OPLAN would be deficient if it didn’t offer a full range of options, however unlikely some of them might be. Besides, the OPLAN has been a priority target of the Chinese intelligence services for years. If they’ve secured a copy, they’ll think the option is still active—”
Stuart didn’t miss the implication. “Do you have any intel to back that up?” Stuart demanded. “That they have an asset inside my administration?”
Cooke said nothing. It was Rhead’s question to answer, but the odds that the Chinese had an asset inside the administration were so high that she considered the question to be almost nonsensical. “No, sir,” Rhead answered. “But I’d be stunned if they didn’t. If you look at the history, there hasn’t been a time since 1947 that the intelligence community hasn’t been penetrated by somebody. In any case, the director of the National Counterintelligence Executive would be in a better position to answer that question with hard proof.”
“NCIX reports to you,” Stuart observed.
“Yes, sir,” Rhead said, “and they are working a number of Chinese espionage cases with the FBI—”
“None of which are inside the Pentagon,” Stuart said.
“That was a hypothetical—”
“I’m not going to be paralyzed by hypotheticals,” Stuart said. He put a hand on the OPLAN binder and pushed it back. He was tempted to scrounge a cigarette. He’d kicked that habit years ago rather than face cancer, but like all true addictions, the nicotine craving never truly went away. It helped his resolve that the White House was a US federal building, wherein smoking was illegal, the Oval Office included. “Kathy, do you have any assets in Beijing who can tell us whether the Chinese have a copy?”
“One,” Cooke conceded. Technically it was still true. Pioneer was physically in Beijing, even if he could no longer pass information in a timely fashion.
“Who?” Stuart asked.
“A senior systems administrator inside the Ministry of State Security,” she told him. “His code name is Pioneer.”
“Have you tasked him specifically on that point?”
“Harry, this isn’t a courtroom.” Showalter usually avoided such informality, but he saw the prosecutor in the president coming out.
“It is if I want it to be,” Stuart said. “Answer the question, Kathy.”
“His standing requirements are to report any MSS acquisition of sensitive military information,” Cooke said. “Getting a copy of the OPLAN would certainly qualify.”
“And he hasn’t flagged this”—Stuart lifted the OPLAN—“as showing up stolen.” It wasn’t a question. His line of reasoning had been carried to its logical conclusion, or at least as far as the lawyer in Stuart wanted it to go.
Cooke would have preferred that he had asked the logical next question, but she knew he would not, leaving her to give him the answer to it anyway. “That is true, sir. However, I regret to inform you that operational conditions on the ground in Beijing have left us unable to maintain secure communication with Pioneer. In fact, we have reason to believe that the MSS has identified him as a CIA asset and has him under direct surveillance. Given that, the director of the National Clandestine Service has determined that it’s necessary to terminate Pioneer as a CIA asset and exfiltrate him as soon as possible.”
Rhead jerked in his chair toward Cooke. “Who screwed up?”
“Sir?”
“How did the Chinese figure out that he was ours?” Rhead said, his voice rising.
“We don’t kno
w,” Cooke said.
“When was he compromised?” Showalter asked.
“Again, we don’t know,” Cooke said. She despised not having the answers. “But recently, we believe.” We hope.
“How long has he been in service?” Stuart asked.
“Since 1991,” Cooke told him. She could have told them the exact date when Pioneer walked into the US embassy in Tokyo and offered himself up, but that was a level of detail the president didn’t need.
“And we lost him on your watch,” Rhead said.
“It’s your watch too, Mike,” Showalter said.
“We’re not going to lose him,” Cooke answered. “Yes, he’ll no longer be in service as an asset, but we’re going to get him out. He’ll still be of use to us here. He knows more than he’s—”
“You lost our best asset in Beijing and you just don’t want to—,” Rhead started.
“There’s no time for that,” Stuart said, cutting everyone off. “It’s possible to do everything right and still lose the game. So put the knives away and save them for the PLA.”
“Kathy, your people are sure about this?” Showalter asked.
“That’s he’s been compromised? He’s sure and that’s what matters.”
“Hardly,” Rhead said. “He’s just an asset.”
“He’s as close to a professional intelligence officer as you can get in this business without having gone through the Farm,” Cooke answered.
“You want to burn him, Mike?” Stuart asked.
“There are times when burning an asset is worth the gain,” Rhead answered. “Stopping a war with the Chinese would be one of them if this man can feed us the details on the PLA’s current operations.”