Robert Ludlum's The Utopia Experiment

69


Near Front Royal, Virginia

USA

I DON’T WANT TO HEAR THAT, Marty,” Smith said, easing the car off the highway and onto an empty rural road. Best to stay away from civilization to the degree possible.

“Just forget shutting down the networks, Jon. Sure, you could pull down Afghanistan, because it’s on military satellite. But you can’t take down ATT, Verizon, and every little cellular carrier in America. And even if you did, how many of those people would be near a Wi-Fi hot spot that their Merge would immediately connect to? Killing all the networks at the same time in the U.S.—let alone worldwide—isn’t technologically feasible. Believe me. If it was, someone like me would have done it. They’d be a legend forever. People would build statues to them. Write songs about—”

“What about the power grid?” Randi said, cutting him off before he could get lost in fantasies of hacker fame and fortune. With his meds back at the house, his mind was starting to loop a bit.

“No, no, no! Forget coordinated efforts. Right now LayerCake is scouring the web, emails, forums, chat rooms, and probably half the secure servers on the planet for any hint of something like this. It’s like Santa. It’s watching everything, everybody. And you want to try to coordinate thousand of people and get every one to keep his mouth shut? You’re thinking completely wrong. Not every problem can be solved with a huge hammer.”

“If we’re thinking wrong,” Smith said. “Then help us think right.”

“I’m bleeding again. Bleeding…”

His ability to focus was just going to get worse as his medication continued to wear off. They could stop and fill a prescription but then his mind would turn lethargic for the next couple of hours. Not something they could afford.

“You’re fine, Marty. Now tell me what we’re missing.”

“You’ll yell at me because you won’t like it.”

“I promise I won’t yell at you.”

“And you won’t have someone shoot me again.”

“Marty…”

“Fine. Electromagnetic pulse.”

Randi actually laughed. “Are you suggesting we airburst a bunch of nukes and fry the world’s grids?”

“Told you you wouldn’t like it. Besides, I’m not sure it helps. With no power, how do you warn everyone to turn off their units before the lights come back on? Carrier pigeon?” His gaze turned far away. “How many birds would that take? Seven billion people in the world. Pigeons average about eighty kilometers per hour. What’s the total land area of the earth? About a hundred and fifty million square kilometers, right?”

Fred Klein was still listening on the speakerphone and weighed in while Zellerbach got lost in his math problem. “I’m afraid I have to agree, Jon. Even with the NSA fully behind you, it’s not doable. And the process of getting the NSA behind you wouldn’t escape Dresner’s notice. All risk, no return.”

Smith was suddenly reminded of a television show he’d once seen on the Rapture and how Dresner had, in his twisted way, taken on the role of God. Any minute now, millions of people could just collapse, leaving his innocents to stand in stunned silence.

And then what? Piles of rotting bodies. The destabilization of governments and economies across the globe. Mass graves. But would the seemingly inevitable chaos ensue? Or would all the potential creators of that chaos be dead?

His phone beeped with an incoming call and Smith looked at the screen, eyes widening. “I have an incoming call, sir. You’re not going to believe this, but the ID says it’s from Christian Dresner.”

“Dresner?” Klein said, obviously equally surprised. “Go ahead and conference him in. He can’t track me. I’m connected through a coffee shop in Cambodia.”

Smith reached out, hesitating for a moment before picking up. “Hello?”

“I have to admit to an increasing respect for you, Dr. Smith. Or maybe ‘wariness’ is a more accurate word.”

“The feeling’s mutual.”

“I assume that after what happened to the major, you’ve generated some theories about my plan?”

“You’re going to murder millions of people whose lifestyles you don’t approve of,” Randi said.

“Ah, Ms. Russell. A woman who doesn’t mince words.”

Smith glared at her in the rearview mirror. She flipped him off.

“And is Mr. Zellerbach there, too?”

“Yes,” Marty said, looking more in awe than scared.

“My compliments to you. I identified thirty-nine people worldwide whom I believed had a chance at finding that subsystem and you weren’t on the list. I apologize for underestimating your abilities.”

“Uh, that’s okay.”

Dresner let out an incongruously warm laugh. “I see that you haven’t informed anyone of consequence. I’m sure Mr. Zellerbach told you that I’d be watching all aspects of the network for unusual fluctuations.”

“He did mention that,” Smith said. “The message seems to be that if we do anything, an enormous number of people will drop dead.”

“One million, seventeen thousand, six hundred and twelve as of this moment.”

“As of this moment…” Smith said. The seemingly offhand phrase was the last piece of the puzzle he needed. “It’s not enough for you.”

“Once again, I’m impressed,” Dresner said. “No, it’s not enough. This isn’t about vengeance or killing people who will be immediately replaced by others just as malignant. It’s about fundamentally changing society. It’s about making certain we survive long enough for someone to succeed where I’ve failed.”

“In turning the Merge into something that perfects us as a species.”

“Your phrasing is a bit melodramatic but it’s substantially accurate.”

“So if we try to stop you now, you’ll murder just over a million people. But if we don’t, a few years from now, ten times that many will die.”

“Closer to five times based on my projections. But these are people whose lives are about destruction, Jon. Hate. Greed. People who turn—”

“According to you.”

“Not really true. You’re ignoring the fact that one of LayerCake’s main functions is to temper our judgments with facts. Whatever biases I have because of my life experiences are eradicated by the system. I think you’d be surprised at how many people I personally judge negatively that LayerCake doesn’t. I’m not overriding a single one of those decisions. As you know, the system works. Extremely well.”

It was true. The system did work. In Smith’s extensive experience, LayerCake’s judgments of people and things had proved almost preternaturally accurate. And to the degree it erred, it erred to the positive.

“Even your moderated biases, though, are your biases,” Randi said. “Didn’t Hitler believe he was right? Didn’t Stalin? Didn’t they believe that they were creating a Utopia?”

“I’m not trying to protect my own power, Ms. Russell. I’m not a racist or a sexist. I’m not promoting a political ideology. And my accusations are being vetted by the most unbiased judge ever created. If our species is going to survive to take the next logical step, something has to be done. The weak and the innocent have to be protected from men with access to technology that Hitler and Stalin only dreamed of.”

“And so we should just accept that you’ve checkmated us,” Smith said. “We should just stand by and do nothing.”

“You think too small, Jon. That’s not at all what I’m proposing. I believe that we should form an alliance.”

“Excuse me?”

“The adoption of the Merge has been strongest in the United States for a number of reasons, including your undeniable talent at developing systems useful to your soldiers.”

Smith felt the breath drain from him. Dresner was right. His confidence in the Merge’s potential had handed Dresner a weapon that could decimate America’s defenses in precisely eighteen seconds.

“Adoption by foreign militaries is fairly low still, largely due to the exclusivity agreement Whitfield insisted on. Penetration in Muslim countries like Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iran is coming along, but is also still low—even with the upper class. In China, there’s poor overall adoption because of the poverty in rural areas but also because of the limited effectiveness of the commercial unit in combat situations. Also, there’s not a great deal of online information in those countries for LayerCake to base its judgments on.”

Smith knew where this was going and wasn’t happy about it. “So you have my country dead to rights. If you activate now, we’re the ones who get hit the hardest.”

“Overwhelmingly so,” Dresner said. “But it doesn’t have to be that way. Whitfield forced me into the exclusivity agreement. I propose a leak of the military operating system that would allow other countries full access. You’d see an immediate spike in adoption by your opponents and I’d stand by while you slow—but not reverse—the usage by the U.S. military. This would also give me more time to market to the Muslims and the ruling classes of Africa and Southeast Asia, whom I think you’d agree the world would be better without.”

“So I’d be responsible for the deaths of millions of people.”

“Terrorists, dictators, people involved in the Iranian and Pakistani nuclear efforts, criminals, military leaders in China, Russia—”

“And the men that I’ve led and fought with.”

“LayerCake has no interest in killing a hundred thousand foot soldiers, Jon. In fact, I think you’d be surprised at how few of your military people have been selected. The system is interested less in people who fight wars than the people who court and promote them. Besides, you can’t save them. For all intents and purposes, they’re already dead.”

Smith didn’t respond.

“In the next fifty years, we’ll be able to use the Merge to become what we’ve always aspired to be, Jon. Can you imagine what humanity could accomplish if we didn’t spend so much of our time and energy looking for ways to destroy ourselves? Will my actions cause the deaths of millions of people? Yes. But how does that compare with the wars of the last century? The genocides? The countless massacres throughout history where the peaceful and defenseless were the first to die? How many innocent lives will my actions save? Humanity has a chance, Jon. A chance to survive. To thrive. Think about what role you want to play in that.”

The connection went dead and there was silence in the car for a few moments.

“Thoughts?” Klein said finally.

“Talk about a Faustian bargain,” Randi said.

“Yeah,” Smith said. “What he’s talking about doesn’t save American lives so much as it takes foreign ones. I’m more patriotic than most, but that’s a lot of blood on my hands.”

“Agreed,” Klein said over the phone. “We’re not bargaining with this man. There has to be a way to stop him. We’re just not coming up with it.”

Smith glanced over at Marty, who was staring blankly out the window tapping his foot in a monotonous rhythm.

“Marty?”

He didn’t answer.

“What about a virus, Marty? You write it and I’ll get it into any network you want. You can crash the whole world.”

Again he didn’t answer.

“It won’t crash,” Zellerbach said. “It’s won’t, it won’t, it won’t.”

Smith had seen him like this before. His mind was going a thousand miles an hour in a hundred different directions. His brilliance was unchained, but also spinning out of control. They were going to have to stop at a pharmacy.

“It’s not about the networks,” Zellerbach continued. “It’s not.”

Randi leaned up through the seats. “Then what is it about? How can we stop him from triggering it?”

“We can’t.”

“That’s not acceptable,” Klein said.

“LayerCake,” Zellerbach said. “It’s not about the networks. Or the grid. Or the Merge. It’s about search. It’s about Javier.”

“Who’s Javier?”

Zellerbach didn’t answer, mumbling to himself and beginning to count something on his fingers.

“He may be talking about Javier de Galdiano,” Klein said. “He’s the main tech person behind LayerCake. He’s why Dresner’s search subsidiary is run out of a campus near Granada, Spain. De Galdiano doesn’t like to leave home.”

“Marty,” Smith said. “Look at me.”

He didn’t seem to hear and Smith reached out to force his head around. When their gazes met, Zellerbach came back from the brink a bit.

“We…We can’t stop him from triggering it, Jon. He’ll have too many fail-safes. But maybe we could change the way LayerCake judges people.”

“What do you mean?” Randi said.

“What if we could make it think everybody’s great? Then he can trigger it all he wants. It won’t do anything.”

“Can you hack in, Marty? Rewrite the parameters?”

“No. There’s no outside access. We’d have to be inside the building. And we’d have to have Javier’s password.”

“What do we know about him?” Randi said. “Dresner’s security is notorious but we might be able to get to him somewhere else. Can we find the address of his home and a schematic of any security systems he has installed? How does he get to work? Does he drive himself? Does he have family or friends he visits? What about hobbies that would take him outside? Biking and skiing are big in that area.”

“I can get that,” Klein said. “It’ll take some time, though.”

“Jon,” Zellerbach said, tugging on his sleeve.

“Just a second, Marty. We also need to start looking into the security at the campus. Even if we get to—”

“Jon!” Zellerbach repeated, this time grabbing Smith’s shoulder and shaking him.

“What is it, Marty?”

“I know him.”

“You know who?”

“Javier.”

“You’re friends? How close?”

Zellerbach’s words came out in a breathless jumble. “I’ve never actually met him. He’s an old hacker, like me. There are five of us who have a competition and we set up challenges and try to do them and get a trophy we pass around. Javier has it now. He broke into my system to get it. My system! He’s so smart, Jon. So smart.”

“Can you get in touch with him?”

“Yes. We have a private chat room. The five of us.”

“Tell him you’re coming to Spain and you want to meet.”

“Face-to-face? We don’t do that. He won’t want to do that.”

“You said he has the trophy right now,” Klein interjected. “What if you won it and said you wanted to pick it up personally?”

“Yeah. That’s in the rules. I could do that. But I haven’t won it. He knows I haven’t won it.”

“What’s the current challenge?” Randi said.

“To turn all the screensavers at the National Security Agency to gay porn.”

Klein laughed. Probably not at the image but more at the fact that Zellerbach’s contest happened to be very much within his sphere of influence. “That won’t be a problem.”

“No. It’s hard. This challenge has been out there since they repealed don’t ask don’t tell. The security is tough and getting it to hit all the computers at once is nearly impossible. No one’s even close as far as I know.”

“Trust me,” Klein said. “Tell him you’re coming to Granada and you want him to deliver the trophy personally.”





Kyle Mills's books