Read The Cloud Collector Online
Authors: Brian Freemantle
âYou weren't part of any over-reaction.'
âThank you, sir.' For as long as he had a better use, thought Hardy objectively.
âI need some inside leverage to make the Bureau's case before any official enquiry or committee,' reluctantly conceded Bowyer. âWhat's happening with Packer and our guy?'
âJimmy's set up an additional game for tonight. Says Packer's flaky but doesn't want to press too hard and spook him. Today's
Times
has got to be the only other thing on tonight's table apart from cards.'
âI don't want to spook him either, but I need to know what's going on inside Meade and that special joint unit that's running with the Agency: know the problems, the weaknesses that need plugging. They're definitely there. It lost al Aswamy, for Christ's sake!'
âI'll talk to Jimmy right away.'
âYou got all the numbers to call me on, Ben.'
âI have, sir.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âThat's ridiculous! Doesn't make any sense!' argued Sally, exasperated, abandoning any thought of being able to get back to Langley from the embassy to meet Graham's deadline. At that precise moment she didn't give a damn. Nor did she care that from all the security checks and monitors her movements would be traceable in and out of Langley and the British embassy like a puppet on elastic strings.
âI agree,' said Monkton, as always frustratingly calm.
âWe
know
there's going to be an attack! GCHQ withdrawing the specially agreed instant exchange like this could let it happen!'
âA point I made personally, more than once, to the Director himself. To be told that all special arrangements had ended: that exchanges would revert to Echelon procedure unless outstanding circumstances arose.'
âOutstanding circumstances like a fucking massacre we were too late to prevent!'
âI gave that warning, too, without the profanity.'
âYou want me to apologize?'
âNo.'
She would have found it difficult, thought Sally.
âWhy!'
she demanded, anguished.
âThe Director is new and GCHQ has been caught up too often in exposure and embarrassments of the sort that required the previous incumbent to resign, which his replacement doesn't want to do. And today's
New York Times
looks just like one of those embarrassments.'
âIs everyone there thinking more about appointments and promotions than what they're supposed to be doing!'
âQuestions like that don't solve our problem.'
âHow much higher can you take it to get it reversed?'
âI've already trodden on too many sensitive egos on this to have kept open receptive doors and ears. I've copied to GCHQ's director and the foreign secretary the warning I've sent directly to the PM, so far without even acknowledgement from anyone.'
âIt's got to be overturned, reversed!'
âGive me something to do that with.'
Â
Sally was an hour late getting back to Langley and didn't care, twice ignoring her ringing cell phone until the third call as she was finally parking in the overflowing CIA lot.
Irvine got as far as âWhere theâ?' before she stopped him with âI'm here, on my way up.'
He was waiting at her office door. âGraham's in meltdown.'
âIt'll get worse,' predicted Sally. âGCHQ have closed us out, frightened by the
Times
coverage. It's strictly Echelon from now on except in extraordinary circumstances.'
âWe're in extraordinary circumstances right now!' insisted Irvine.
âI've been in one ever since I went back to the embassy.'
âI've told Graham you're here; he already knew,' said Irvine as they went up to the next floor.
âThe all-seeing electronic eyes and movement logs,' said Sally sourly.
âThis better be a damned good story!' greeted the deputy CIA director. His face was mottled red. The bourbon bottle of the previous night was gone, but Sally guessed it had been within arm's reach minutes before they'd arrived.
Turning the threat back on the man, she said, âIt's anything but good.'
Graham's face got redder as he listened, shifting awkwardly in his empowering executive chair. When Sally finished, the man said, âI'll get on to Monkton.'
âThat's who I've been talking to for the past three hours,' said Sally impatiently. âAnd he's talked until there's nothing left to say to the GCHQ director, who's adamant they're going back to the official information-exchange system. Monkton's gone direct to the prime minister, but as of an hour ago heard nothing back.'
âWhat are the assholes worried about?'
âToday's
New York Times.
' Sally looked directly at Graham, whose colour, which had started to recede, flared again.
âThe Senate intelligence committee
are
convening an enquiry session.' Graham steadily held Sally's gaze. âIt's being announced sometime today.'
âThat'll frighten GCHQ even more.'
âI'll still call Monkton,' stubbornly persisted Graham, turning to Irvine. âWhat's this shit from Meade?'
âOur best Vevak sourceâsomeone whose darknet transmission we could read because they weren't encryptedâhas closed down. The Brits were actually getting more than us. That's why today was important: we could simply have switched to their interceptionsâ'
âWhoa!' stopped Graham. âHow come they're getting more than us?'
âThey're blanketing a domain routing through Malmö, in Sweden, for what appears to be something directed at the UK. Some of the material that cross-referenced with us didn't come on our Hydarnes route. Vevak's obviously got another darknet we're not into.'
âWhy's our source closed down?'
âWe'll never know,' said Irvine. âCould be he was careless or arrogant or both by not encrypting: got punished for it. We don't believe our close-down came from the guy we were used to: it was a totally different style, although he or she used the same domain name.'
âWhat the hell are we left with?' demanded Graham.
âOnly what we've already got and still can't get a positive lead from.'
âAnd the Brits have got more that they won't share?' Graham formed his fingers into a steeple that reminded Sally of the man's earlier histrionics.
Irvine hesitated, caught by the tone in Graham's voice. âWe think they might have,' Irvine replied cautiously.
âYou know one of my favourite remarks?' asked Graham with strained rhetoric. âMade by Richard Helms, one of the best CIA directors the Agency ever had. Called the CIA the president's bag of tricks. We've already pulled a rabbit out of that bag proving with Cyber Shepherd that despite Iran's nuclear non-proliferation bullshit, they're still sponsoring Al Qaeda with communication facilities on darknet channels.'
âI'm having difficulty keeping up with you,' lied Sally.
âWe got an attack coming that we can't do anything to stop, we've got to turn it over to people who can,' declared Graham. âWe've got to give Operation Cyber Shepherd over to the Brits.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âMotherfucker!' raged Irvine, fury trembling through him. âHe can't! No! Shepherd's mine! I can do it. He's got to let me do it.'
Sally waved Irvine down into his chair, at once accepting that the outburst confirmed a lot of her earliest impressions, which saddened her. âHe can do it and there's unarguable justification that he should. It isn'tâcan't beâpersonal. If GCHQ have a better chance, a more definite lead, they've got to be given it. The only objectives are to stop attacks happening. If they crack the code that does it, it becomes the extraordinary circumstances they built into their back-channel refusal. So we'll get it, too.'
âBut it won'tâ¦,' started Irvine, but stopped. Awkwardly he finished, âWe don't know they have a more definite lead!'
But it won't
be me,
thought Sally, mentally completing what Irvine had started to say. âYou gave Graham enough reason to believe they have.'
âGraham's covering his ass. He passes it over, it's not his responsibility anymore, is it? He's squeaky-clean, every which way.'
âYes, he is. So are we.' But she would have had no personal partâno personal recognitionâin the successful conclusion as she'd had at Sellafield. But for her this wasn't a private crusade, as it was for Irvine.
âBastard!' said Irvine, appearing physically to deflate as the anger subsided. âYou going to speak to Monkton?'
âAfter he's spoken with Graham and gotten back to GCHQ.'
âI'll wait to hear the reaction before going back to Meade.'
âHow do you think your guys are going to take it?'
âAs I'm going to take it, by not giving up.'
âI didn't imagine you would.' She hesitated, wanting to satisfy an uncertainty. âYou know Graham well, don't you?'
âI thought I did.'
Sally ignored the self-pity. âMy first impression wasn't that he was a drinker?'
âHow'd you know he was?'
âWas?'
she queried, ignoring the question.
âHe developed a problem during Stuxnet. Went into a programme just afterwards, straightened himself out. And you didn't answer my question.'
Irvine sat forward in his chair, suddenly demanding. She shouldn't have started this conversation, Sally acknowledged. âJust a guess. We watched Bowyer's press conference together: I thought he was a little high, that's all. I didn't know it had been serious.'
âYou telling me he's relapsed, got too drunk to function properly! To make proper decisions?'
âDon't try to run with that, Jack! You'll be the only casualty.'
âWas Graham drunk?'
âNo! And I won't testify to anyone or any enquiry that he was. He's right in doing what he's doing!'
Irvine remained strained forward for several moments, staring fixedly at her. Then he said, âIsn't it time you called Monkton?'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Sally did so from her Langley office, cautioning Monkton where she was, for the first time unconcerned at an unrestricted exchange's being monitored.
âWho's idea was this?' at once demanded Monkton.
âThe deputy director's. He says, quite rightly, it's the responsible thing to do. What's GCHQ say?'
âThey want to know what the problem is.'
âThey're the problem, cutting off the direct exchange.'
âThey think they're being manoeuvred into something.'
âJesus! You've got to go over their heads: get a directive from Downing Street!' Sally insisted once more.
âI don't need to be told what to do!'
âThat wasn't impertinence. It was despair!' Perhaps it hadn't been such a good idea to be uncaring of the CIA telephone monitoring.
âHave GCHQ got all the U.S. intercepts?' asked Monkton, clearly echoing a GCHQ demand.
âAll of them,' said Irvine, listening at Sally's shoulder, before she could repeat the question.
âWho's that?' demanded Monkton.
âJack Irvine, in charge of the Fort Meade unit.'
There was a hesitation. âThey must immediately be sent anything new that Meade get, even though their source appears to have dried: nothing held back,' said Monkton, repeating what Sally guessed to be another GCHQ insistence.
âThey will be,' undertook Sally, at Irvine's begrudging nod. As exasperated as her lover, Sally said, âWouldn't it be easier to go back to how it was!'
âThat's the manoeuvre they're frightened of,' disclosed Monkton.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Ben Hardy personally reached Frederick Bowyer on the FBI director's cell phone after trying two of the other direct lines the man had provided in addition to the Pennsylvania Avenue headquarters numbers. Nervously, Hardy at once blurted, âYou said I was to call anytime, sir.' It was just after 8:00 p.m. The noise of people, laughter, was in the background.
âAnd now you have, Ben, so it must be something you think I want to hear.'
âIs it all right to talk?'
âI'm walking to the den now.' The noise faded. âSo what is it?'
âJimmy played hardball tonight. Cleaned Packer out and ended up with two hundred dollars of his markers before Packer packed in, which Jimmy did as well. Bought Packer bad-luck drinks and put the arm on as much as he felt was safe. Packer got as nervous as hell with the conversation Jimmy was pushing. Then the news came on the bar TV, with the enquiry announcement, and Packer says that Jimmy should talk to a guy named Bradley, who was the original CIA field supervisor whose crew lost al Aswamy. Bradley got sent into the boondocks because of it. Word now is he's going to be the enquiry sacrifice and is crying foulâ'
âWhich I think is a cry we should listen to.'
âI thought you might think that. That's why I had Jimmy get a number.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Sally accepted lateral thinking as a convenient phrase for others to label her unusual reasoning, but it wasn't something of which she was mentally or even physically conscious, like having a process or a formula she could summon at will to confront situations. To Sally it was simply the
way
she thought. Not until she entered the intelligence service did she actually acknowledge that she viewed and assessed things differently from most people. In her first year at Oxford she'd briefly thought she might have a cognitive problem because her logic was so often at variance with that of others, while even earlier, at prep school, she'd been worried about being judged mentally deficient like characters in Charles Dickens's Victorian novels for being left-handed, which she was.
She considered her recognition of all the Hydarnes-sourced IP domain addresses as being transliterated from original Arabizi as more a fluke than unusual or even supernatural clairvoyance, which was how Irvine had exaggerated her suggestion in the first exhilaration of even partial deciphering. And how she thought of it again now as she sat before her computer in the stark Langley office, asking herself how she could possibly make another contribution.