Gridlock

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Gridlock Page 2

by Byron L. Dorgan


  He followed the signs to the car rental desks on the second level and stopped at the Hertz counter, the line fairly short. When it was his turn he presented his British driving license and American Express platinum card. “Thomas Parks.”

  “Good morning, Mr. Parks,” the attractive young clerk said, smiling. “Good flight?”

  “Yes.”

  She brought up his reservation on her computer screen. “I have you for a Chevrolet Impala, but I can upgrade you—”

  “The Chevy will be just fine.”

  She nodded, ran his credit card and driver’s license through the system, which spit out a rental agreement, which Makarov signed and five minutes later he was in the car and heading away from the airport.

  For this assignment, which was almost ridiculously simple by his standards, he’d been contacted the usual way through a secure e-mail account that was routed through several remailers, ending with a large but discrete service in New Delhi. He’d met with his client at a booth in the back of a small pub just off Trafalgar Square at noon fifteen days ago. Both of them carried the day’s edition of Le Figaro. And twenty-four hours earlier Makarov had gone around to the back of the building to make sure that it had a rear door in case something went wrong.

  “Good afternoon,” he said, laying his newspaper on the table and sitting down.

  The man across from him was older, perhaps in his mid to late fifties, with steel-gray short cropped hair, a square almost Teutonic face, and broad shoulders and thick chest that strained against the light jacket he was wearing. He was not smiling, and Makarov got the impression that he never smiled.

  “What do I call you?”

  “For the moment, Mr. Schmidt will do,” Makarov said, a slight German accent to his voice. “You contacted me and I’m here. What do you want?”

  “Do you want to know who I am?”

  “You’re Colonel Luis Delgado, SEBIN. What does Venezuelan intelligence want with me?”

  Delgado’s left eyebrow rose. “A small job of work at first.”

  Makarov said nothing.

  “In western North Dakota, it’s in the upper Midwest of the United States.”

  “Continue.”

  Delgado told him what the job involved. “We’ll book your air, hotel, and car reservations, as well as provide you the proper equipment—“

  Makarov raised a hand to stop the man. “I’ll make my own arrangements. But there must be a better way of striking back after Balboa.” The operation shortly after Christmas had been a U.S. strike on five of Venezuela’s forward air force bases—the most important to Chavez. And the remark got to the colonel, because he was suddenly curt.

  “Do you want the job or not?”

  Makarov handed him a business card that contained only two series of numbers, one with nine digits which was a bank router and the second of ten which was his account number. “Five hundred thousand euros now and an additional five hundred thousand when the job is completed to your satisfaction.”

  The colonel nodded. “Time is of the essence,” he said, but Makarov had already gotten to his feet and was heading for the door.

  The half million had shown up in his Channel Islands’ account twenty-four hours later and he’d spent the last eight days arranging with the Russian Mafia in New York for his equipment to be purchased and put in place, his British documents and credit card secured, and the first-class flight reservations from Heathrow to New York and from there to Minneapolis arranged. He would fly to Paris under a different set of documents when he was finished here.

  He picked up Interstate 494 west which was part of the ring highway system around the Twin Cities and seven miles later turned off at one of the exits for the suburb of Bloomington, where he pulled in at an E-Z Self Storage facility. He entered the four-digit code and the gate swung inward so he could drive back to a small unit in the last row.

  No one was around at this hour, and Makarov unlocked the roll-up door with the key that had been left for him at LaGuardia taped under seat 2A aboard his Delta flight. Inside, a duffle bag was propped up against the rear wall of the unit. Making sure that no one was coming, he opened the bag and expertly checked the partially disassembled American-made model 90 Barrett sniper rifle, making certain that the firing pin was intact. Also included as per his orders were the Leupold & Stevens x10 scope, and one eleven-round detachable box magazine loaded with .50 in Browning ammunition. The 1,000-grain big-caliber bullet was 100 percent deadly from nearly a mile out, and could even penetrate the engine blocks of military vehicles, and aircraft.

  Something blocked the sun and Makarov turned as one of the largest men he’d ever encountered stepped inside. At nearly seven feet the man had to weigh more than three hundred pounds and yet with tree trunk legs, an impossibly broad chest, huge neck, and massive shoulders, his baby face was disproportionately small. He was grinning like an idiot.

  “Who are you?” Makarov asked mildly.

  “Don Toivo. I own this place.”

  “Well, you scared the hell out of me, mate. Do you always go around sneaking up on people?”

  “Only when I find something interesting in the units they rent from me,” Toivo said and he glanced at the duffle bag. “And what’s in there is definitely very interesting. Illegal.”

  “It’s for sport. Target practice. I’m in a competition the day after tomorrow.”

  “Not with full-grain hollow points. That is a weapon for killing people.”

  “How would you know something like that?” Makarov asked, measuring distances and angles. The big man had been injured sometime in the past because he favored his left leg.

  “I make it my business.”

  “Very well. What comes next?”

  “You have two choices: leave the rifle, drive away, and never come back, or pay me what I think I can get for it on the open market. I know some guys.”

  Makarov smiled. “You weren’t a footballer, too big. I suspect that you could never move fast enough. Weight lifter, shot putter?”

  “WWF,” Toivo said.

  Makarov shook his head.

  “World Wrestling Federation. Television.”

  “I see,” Makarov said. “Actually neither choice will work. I can’t leave my things here, nor am I willing to pay you anything.”

  Toivo’s grin broadened. “I hoped you’d say something like that, because there is a third choice.”

  “Which is?”

  “I fucking break you in two and take the gun anyway. How about that choice?”

  2

  DR. WHITNEY LIPTON walked into the press tent at the Dakota Initiative power station a few minutes past noon and took her place at the podium. Only a half-dozen media people had bothered to drive all the way out here—in the serious boondocks, as a Minneapolis Tribune reporter had once quipped—and except for the cutting-edge microbial science, Whitney wouldn’t be here herself.

  Weekly press briefings were held on Fridays at the station just south of Medora in the western North Dakota Badlands, but Whitney, the project’s director who was thirty-three and slender, with the dark good looks of the Hollywood movie star Lara Flynn Boyle, with a near-genius IQ had never gotten used to the things.

  Talking to the scientists and technicians on her new team was a piece of cake, because they all came from the same place, they knew the project, and she didn’t have to explain everything from scratch. Einstein had once told a newspaper reporter that you didn’t really understand relativity unless you could explain it to a kindergartener.

  These briefings about the current progress at the project amounted to just about the same thing. And a couple of weeks ago she’d asked her press officer, Army Lieutenant Rudy Doyle, if the reporters ever read each other’s newspapers. Especially the New York Times and Washington Post science sections. If they had over the past six months, ever since the top-secret project had been thrown open to the public, they would have had at least a basic understanding not only of what was going on here, but some of t
he technical problems that had come up and that Whitney and her team had solved.

  “In the forties with the entire world at war, Roosevelt had created the Manhattan District Project to develop the atomic bomb which would put an early end to the killing,” she’d explained to groups just like the one she was facing this morning. “And it worked. All-out global wars were a thing of the past.”

  “Yeah, MAD, mutually assured destruction, us versus the Russians with ten thousand nuclear weapons. Is that what you guys are really doing out here?”

  “Stopping a war, you betcha,” Whitney said. “That’s what we’re facing, only this time it’s an energy war, because if we keep on going the way we’re going—burning coal for nearly half our energy needs in this country alone—there is pretty strong evidence that we’re facing a runaway greenhouse effect that could do irreparable damage to the entire planet. Irreversible damage.”

  “Don’t lecture,” Doyle had warned her early on. “They’ll tune out. The TV folks need sound bites, and the print people want one-liners.”

  “I’m a scientist, goddamnit.”

  “It’s your project, and that makes you the mouthpiece.”

  General Bob Forester, who ran the project through ARPA-E, the Advanced Research Project Agency-Energy, in Washington, had been directed by the president to open the Initiative’s door.

  “The project has proven itself,” the president had said to a joint session of Congress six months ago. “Through the work of Dr. Whitney Lipton, formerly of the CDC, we have injected a colony of coal-eating bacterium that produces as a by-product relatively clean-burning methane gas to produce electricity.”

  The process was patentless—anyone could request the formula and method for controlling the bugs, and within ten years, even at worst-case scenario outputs, the level of carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere would begin to significantly drop.

  “I want to talk to you this morning about a couple of problems, one of which cropped up five days ago,” she began. “For first several days, actually until yesterday afternoon, we thought we might have such a serious issue that the entire project would have to be either shut down or completely rethought.”

  She had their complete attention now, and despite the electric heaters stationed in the tent the air was still cold, but none of them seemed to mind, not even Doris Sampson, a reporter for the Los Angeles Times, who raised her hand.

  “Another accident like before Christmas when there were casualties?”

  Whitney shook her head. “Nothing like that, except among the microbial colony in the coal seam.”

  The station had been attacked twice just before and just after Christmas by a Posse Comitatus group of fanatics who, as it turned out, had been hired by an American contracting firm that had done business in Iraq, and who had been directed by Venezuela’s intelligence service. A lot of good people had lost their lives in the two incidents, among them most of her scientific staff, most of the power plant personnel, the press director, and Jim Cameron, who’d been chief of security. His death had been the hardest to bear because she had been falling in love with him. And he had given his life saving hers.

  “Would you care to explain?”

  Sound bites and one-liners, Doyle had warned. She glanced at him, standing at the back of the tent, and he shrugged. At the mention of possible casualties the reporters had looked up with interest, but just as quickly they were bored again.

  “Six hundred microbes were injected into a coal seam one thousand feet below us. As long as we could talk to them they ate the coal and excreted pure methane, which we pumped out of the ground and burned to produce electricity. Five days ago they stopped listening and started dying.”

  “What’d you do, Doc, give them a pep talk?” one of the other reporters asked, which got a few laughs.

  “Almost exactly that. They were doing pretty good for us, producing methane. But they were just kids. Five days ago they became rebellious teenagers who told us in effect to stuff it. They weren’t interested.”

  “You solved the problem, how?” Sampson asked. At least she was interested.

  “I took away their cell phones, and threatened to take their cars.”

  Someone else laughed, but she had their attention.

  “We learned their language early on, and with the gadget that we lowered into the coal seam through the bore hole we could talk to them in a chemical and electrical lingua franca that all six hundred different colonies could understand. ‘Work for us, and you get to eat all the free coal you want.’”

  “What happened?”

  “They grew up and lost interest in sex. They wanted to eat coal and party but they didn’t want to reproduce. We finally hit on the notion that teenagers hooked up with each other—if you want to call it that—by texting. And they even spoke their own language. You know stuff like LOL for laugh out loud, or PRL, for parents are listening. This sort of chatter had a different chemical signature than what we were using, so we merely found another chemical that neutralized that sort of talk. And still another series of instructional units that told them in effect that it was okay to go ahead and have unsafe sex, and that if they refused we would send a third series of electrochemical messages that would have hobbled them—made it impossible to travel.”

  She glanced again at Doyle but this time the expression on his round Irish face was unreadable. One-liners indeed, but she still had the reporters’ attention. Sex did sell, even bug sex.

  “And it worked?” Sampson asked.

  “Like Viagra.”

  They laughed. “Couldn’t have been easy,” one of them said.

  “It wasn’t,” Whitney said. “None of us got much sleep this last week. But you’ll be given a briefing package before you leave which will explain our work both in technical and layman’s terms.”

  “You said two problems, what’s the other?” Sampson asked.

  “What to do with the power we generate here.”

  “High power lines lead out of here heading east, presumably they connect with the electrical transmission grid.”

  “That’s the problem. Because unlike just about any other energy resource, electricity cannot be stored. It has to be used the moment it’s produced. And it turns out that we’re talking about a very delicate and very precise balancing act. If a station like ours produces too little energy during a hot summer day when everyone’s air conditioners are running then that extra power has to be routed from somewhere else. Immediately. But if we produce too much power, that nobody needs, we have to shut down.”

  “There always has to be a need somewhere,” Sampson said, but Whitney could see that the woman had a fair idea what was coming. “Hell, Los Angeles is always running short.”

  “You’re right, but we cannot export our electricity to California. There are simply not enough transmission lines from here to there. In fact there are three distinct power regions in the continental U.S. The Western Interconnect, which it’s called, that includes everything west of a line between the middle of Montana all the way down to a section of New Mexico. The Texas Interconnect, which is pretty much the state of Texas. And the Eastern Interconnect, which is us here all the way out to the eastern seaboard.”

  “That’s a big chunk of the country,” Sampson said. “So why does the East Coast have so many brownouts and rolling blackouts? There should be plenty of power to go around.”

  “It’s more complicated than that, because mixed in with those three interconnects are ten regions that are controlled by organizations called North American Electric Reliability Councils, and one hundred twenty-seven different control centers where computers are used to make sure the system works as well as it should under the circumstances.”

  “What circumstances?” Sampson pressed. She was a petite woman with long blond hair who looked more like a runway model than a serious journalist with a major newspaper.

  “I’m a microbiologist, not an electrical engineer. But I can tell you that there is no nati
onal electrical grid in the U.S. Very few power superhighways. Nothing like our interstate system for cars and trucks. What we have is mostly a hodgepodge of a few big, but aging, highways and a lot of dirt roads.”

  “What’s being done about it?”

  “In this economic climate?” Whitney asked. “Not much. In the first place building transmission lines is very expensive, and almost no one anywhere wants them to run through their backyards. And all of these corporations that control various runs of power lines are not much interested in having Washington nationalize the grid.”

  “That’s incredible,” someone muttered, but everyone caught it.

  “I agree,” Whitney said. But what was even more incredible, even unbelievable—something that General Forester had briefed her on two years ago—was a virus that had been implanted into the entire U.S. system. It had been done either by the Chinese or the Russians, there was no way of removing the computer bug, and at any moment whoever controlled it could crash our entire system. The destruction of property and the loss of lives would be far worse than the Civil War. Nothing would ever be the same in the U.S.

  3

  IT WAS IMPORTANT in Makarov’s business that his face was never seen in the actual conduct of a field exercise by someone who could later identify him. In meant he either wore a disguise or he killed anyone who could connect him.

  To this point he’d come out of every mission absolutely clean. And this morning he was not in disguise, which left him only the one option.

  “How are you going to explain a dead body to your employees?” he asked, pleasantly.

  “This is my place, I work alone,” Toivo said.

  “No secretary? No one at the front desk to answer the phone when you’re away?”

 

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