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Authors: Mark Alpert

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BOOK: Extinction
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After a few seconds an image of the laboratory appeared on the screen. The center of the image was in focus and the periphery was blurred. For a moment Jim saw himself on the screen, crisp and clear, but then the area of focus shifted elsewhere, darting across the room.

“Okay, close your eyes,” Jim said. “Try to remember the agent.”

Arvin closed his eyes and the screen went black. It stayed that way for several seconds. Then vague shapes started to flash across the screen. An image of a black limousine emerged from the darkness, then faded away. Then Jim saw an image of the lower half of a man’s body, showing pin-striped pants and a pair of patent-leather shoes. Finally, a man’s face appeared on the screen, but Jim saw right away that it wasn’t the CIA agent. It was George Clooney. After a moment Clooney’s face vanished and was replaced by the faces of Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts.

Jim frowned. “Arvin, what are you doing? Remembering the Oscars?”

“Sorry. It’s so easy to get distracted. Especially when you’re nervous.”

“Just concentrate. Think of the agent. Your liaison. Remember the last time you saw him. Where were you?”

Various streetscapes flashed across the screen in rapid succession: a busy intersection, a strip of stores, a residential block, an empty parking lot. But then Arvin seemed to lose his concentration again. The screen showed a kitchen, a refrigerator, a half-gallon of orange juice. Jim grew exasperated. “Come on, Arvin! The agent! The man who threatened you!”

Arvin seemed completely flustered, and the screen showed a confusing jumble of colors and shapes. But then Jim recognized something. He tapped the computer’s keyboard, freezing the screen before the fleeting image could disappear. It was a face with a very distinctive feature, a deep scar on the left cheek that looked like a backward
Z.

Jim remembered that scar. He’d worked with the man back in the nineties, when Jim and Kirsten were helping the CIA intercept the communications of Al Qaeda terrorists. This particular CIA agent had coordinated the rendition program that transferred captured terrorists to the Egyptian secret police. Jim had never learned the agent’s real name; the bastard had told him the same thing he’d told Arvin, that he didn’t need to know it. But Jim remembered the code name the agent used. It was Hammer.

 

TEN

As soon as Jim Pierce left the lab, Arvin Conway collapsed. He slid off his chair and fell to the floor, writhing in pain. It had never been this bad before. It felt like there was a hot coal inside his guts, and the searing heat was spreading up and down his back. Frantic, he fumbled in his pocket for his vial of opiates. It took all of his will just to open the vial, put two tablets on his tongue and swallow. Then there was nothing to do but lie on his back and ride it out.

Over the past year Arvin had become an expert on pain, a connoisseur of agony. It came in waves, usually triggered by stress. That was probably what made this latest attack so terrible. Just seeing Pierce again, after all these years, was stressful enough, God knows. But lying to him made it a hundred times worse. The same vicious thought kept torturing Arvin till the end of their conversation:
Pierce used to work for an intelligence agency. He can see right through you.

But Arvin had done well, almost as well as he could’ve hoped. Pierce seemed to accept his protestations of ignorance. And Arvin came up with a few nimble lies to throw him off the trail. The only problem was the pulvinar implant, the Dream-catcher. Arvin’s own invention had betrayed him. He’d tried to confuse the device by thinking of random things, but he got frightened when Jim shouted at him, and the face of the CIA agent suddenly appeared in his mind. And this was a serious problem, because now Pierce was going to track the man down.

Arvin stayed motionless, taking shallow breaths, until the pain subsided. Then he slowly and carefully climbed back into his chair. He had no choice—he had to accelerate his plans. Reaching for his iPhone, he dialed the number of his personal assistant. He felt another spasm in his guts as the young man answered the phone. “Yes, Professor?”

“Call up Nash,” Arvin said. “Tell him to get his ass to the airport.”

“Yes, sir, I’ll—”

“And call the manager at my hangar. I want the jet ready in an hour.”

 

ELEVEN

Dr. Zhang Jintao was strapped to a gurney and wheeled into the operating room. He’d been anesthetized with a paralyzing agent, so he couldn’t talk or move a muscle, but he could see and hear the activity around him. The man pushing the gurney was Dr. Yu Guofeng, a young bioengineer whom Zhang had recruited to the Supreme Harmony project nine months ago. Dr. Yu had assisted Zhang during the project’s initial phase, when they performed the implantation procedures on the first twenty-five Modules. Yu learned the surgical protocol so well that he performed the next four implantations all by himself. And now, Zhang realized to his horror, Yu was about to perform his fifth procedure.

Yu transferred his patient to the operating table, then readied his instruments: the scalpels, the cauterizing tools, the bone drill. Also laid out on the table were the shiny silver implants. The retinal implants would deliver data through the optic nerves to the brain, while the pulvinar implant would send data in the opposite direction, transmitting signals from the brain to the rest of the network. Early on in the Supreme Harmony project, Zhang had discovered that the patient must be lobotomized to maximize the efficiency of the implants. A patient with an intact, conscious brain could analyze only so much surveillance video at one time. When Zhang tried to transmit the streams of visual data to conscious patients, they quickly became too confused and distracted to analyze the video feeds. Inevitably, the patients would rebel and abandon the task. So Zhang experimented with cutting the intralaminar region of the thalamus before he inserted the pulvinar implant. This procedure severed the neural connections that produced the experience of consciousness, putting the patient in a vegetative state that allowed the brain to concentrate solely and continuously on a single task. In this comalike state, the Module could analyze countless hours of surveillance video.

Cutting the thalamus offered another advantage as well. When selecting the patients who would become Modules, Dr. Zhang had chosen condemned prisoners from the dissident groups operating in Xinjiang, Qinghai, Tibet, and Yunnan provinces. After he lobotomized the patients and linked them to the network, the comatose Modules would obediently compare the images in the surveillance feeds with the images in their long-term memories. Because the Modules could recognize the faces of their former companions in the dissident groups, they could easily pinpoint signs of subversive activity in the surveillance video collected from the western provinces. It was a clever trick, Zhang had thought, using the prisoners’ own memories to dismantle their organizations. But now Supreme Harmony had come up with a few tricks of its own.

As Dr. Yu prepared for the operation, carefully following the checklist Zhang had taught him, another man walked into the room. It was General Tian of the Guoanbu, commander of the Supreme Harmony project. Walking just behind the general was Module 16, who’d been a geologist at Xinjiang University until he got into trouble with the authorities. Module 16, like all the others in the network, had been incapable of locomotion immediately after the implantation procedure, but in the following weeks Zhang had trained him and the other Modules to follow simple commands. They were like adult-size infants, their brains as blank as clay and ready to be molded. When the Modules weren’t engaged in their surveillance activities, General Tian took a perverse pleasure in employing them as zombielike aides-de-camp. They marched behind him, silent and expressionless, as he strode through the Yunnan Operations Center. Tian joked that they were the most loyal soldiers in the People’s Republic.

General Tian stopped in front of Dr. Yu, and Module 16 halted exactly one meter behind the general, just as he’d been trained to do. The Module’s hair had grown out since his operation, covering the implants embedded in his scalp. Tian reached behind him and Module 16 handed him a batch of papers. “This is the final authorization for the procedure,” Tian said. “It’s been approved by Minister Deng himself. He just sent me the orders from Beijing.”

“Deng really wants us to do this?”

“Look at the orders.” The general showed Yu the papers. “It says we should perform the procedure immediately. And no one else is to know about it.
No one
. Understand?”

Yu looked at the message, then shook his head. “I don’t like it. Why is there such a rush? We haven’t even had a chance to interrogate him.”

Tian scowled. “We don’t need to interrogate. You saw the e-mails he sent to Wen Sheng. Zhang was passing information to the traitor.”

“I know, but—”

“The evidence is clear. That’s why Zhang ran away from the Operations Center. He knew we’d find the messages sooner or later.”

Zhang tried to make sense of what the general was saying. He knew that Wen Sheng was one of the Guoanbu agents under Tian’s command. A few days ago Zhang had heard rumors that Wen had fled the Operations Center and defected to America. But Zhang had never sent any e-mails to the man. The evidence was false—someone must’ve fabricated the electronic messages. And after a moment of thought Zhang realized who’d planted the evidence against him. His outrage was so strong that his immobilized body quivered. Supreme Harmony was manipulating them.

Yu shook his head again. “I still don’t like it.”

“Why are you reluctant? Zhang betrayed us. He deserves to be punished.”

“Yes, certainly. But why this kind of punishment? Why not put him in front of a firing squad? Isn’t that the usual way to punish traitors?”

General Tian waved the authorization papers. “Look, this order comes from the commander of the Guoanbu. I don’t question Minister Deng’s judgment. And I recommend, for your own sake, that you don’t question it either.”

Dr. Zhang wanted to scream. The order hadn’t come from the Guoanbu. Supreme Harmony had sent the message to General Tian’s computer, using its knowledge of the system’s security firewalls to make it look like the order came from Beijing. And Zhang knew why the network was doing this rather than simply killing him. Supreme Harmony had used its collective consciousness to develop a plan, and Zhang was a crucial part of it.

Yu stood there for several seconds while General Tian glowered. Then the young bioengineer approached the operating table. Taking a deep breath, he picked up a syringe and jabbed the needle into Zhang’s arm. “I’m sorry, Doctor,” he whispered.

No! You don’t realize what you’re doing! Once the network has me, they’ll be able to—

But before Zhang could complete the thought, he saw some movement behind Yu and Tian. Module 16 turned his head toward the operating table and smiled.

 

TWELVE

Kirsten got the phone call from Jim at 4:00
P.M.
Eastern time, just as he was about to board a plane coming back to Washington. She devoted the rest of the afternoon and evening to calling her contacts at the CIA headquarters in Langley. She had an answer for him by 9:00
P.M.
and spent the next hour drinking coffee at her desk and listening to the comforting hum of the supercomputers on her floor of the Tordella building. Jim finally arrived at her office just before ten, looking red-eyed and breathless. He shut the door behind him and said, “Okay, what have you got?”

“Hammer’s real name is Eric Armstrong,” Kirsten replied. “My contacts confirmed that he was in California yesterday morning, but last night he headed back to his command post in Afghanistan.”

Jim slumped into one of the chairs in front of her desk. “Jesus Christ. Don’t tell me they promoted him.”

“I’m afraid so. His career has thrived since 9/11. Now he runs Camp Whiplash, a CIA base fifty miles north of Kabul. Their mission is to test new technologies for the surveillance-drone program.”

He shook his head. “I can’t believe it. The guy was a sadist. He belongs in a fucking prison.”

Kirsten wholeheartedly agreed. She’d disliked Hammer just as much as Jim had. They’d both participated in the terrorist-rendition operations during the 1990s, and Kirsten had told Jim many times she thought the CIA program was a bad one. It was counterproductive—they would’ve been better off tracking the Al Qaeda terrorists and continuing to intercept their communications instead of delivering them to the Egyptian secret police. But the NSA had lost that argument with the CIA, and after 9/11 the rendition program only grew bigger.

“Who does Hammer report to now?” Jim asked.

“He goes right to the top, the head of the CIA’s clandestine service. The drone program is the hottest thing at the agency now. Everyone at Langley loves it. When it works, they tell the newspapers how many Taliban they killed. And when it doesn’t work? When the drones kill civilians instead of terrorists? Then there’s total silence. Officially, it never happened, so there’s nothing to say.”

“But if Hammer’s supposed to be running this drone base in Afghanistan, why the hell did he come back to the States to arrange this deal with Arvin?” Jim rubbed his chin, mulling it over. “Did the CIA director approve the export of Arvin’s technology to China? Or is Hammer running some kind of rogue operation?”

Kirsten shrugged. “My contacts at Langley didn’t know anything about the export exemption. The CIA likes its people to be aggressive, so sometimes the operatives don’t seek approval for things until after they’ve done them. I bet there’s only a handful of officers at headquarters who know everything that Hammer’s doing.”

The room fell silent. Jim leaned back in his chair and rubbed his eyes. Kirsten noticed there was stubble on his cheeks, which surprised her. In the twenty years she’d known Jim Pierce, she couldn’t remember a single moment when he wasn’t clean-shaven. Even when they were on assignment in some godforsaken country with filthy hotels and no running water, he’d always kept himself spotlessly groomed.

BOOK: Extinction
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