Read The Darkfall Switch Online
Authors: David Lindsley
David Lindsley
To Jo, for her considerable help, perseverance and patience
.
Title Page
Dedication
AUTHOR’S NOTE
FOREWORD
ONE: London’s Burning
TWO: For Want of a Nail
THREE: One, Two, Buckle My Shoe
FOUR: There Came a Big Spider
FIVE: Doctor Foster Went to Gloucester
SIX: Jack and Jill
SEVEN: Fe, Fi, Fo, Fum
EIGHT: Ride a Cock Horse
NINE: Polly Put the Kettle On
TEN: There Was a Crooked Man
ELEVEN: Baa Baa Black Sheep
TWELVE: Little Tommy Tucker
THIRTEEN: Ring-a-ring of Roses
FOURTEEN: All Fall Down
FIFTEEN: See, Saw, Marjorie Daw
SIXTEEN: Big Bad Wolf
SEVENTEEN: What a Good Boy Am I
Copyright
At the time of writing this story, the incident at the opening has not occurred. However, the technical report to which I refer was actually published in the 1970s, and the possibility of such a disaster does really exist. In fact, many engineers believe that, in some ways, the risk now is even greater than it was in the 70s.
Although many of the technical details presented here are based on reality, I have of necessity simplified some of the more complex issues behind the operation of London's Underground system and the National Grid.
The characters portrayed in this book are entirely imaginary.
David Lindsley
On the night of 10 November (2009), eighteen of Brazil’s twenty-seven states were left without electric power for up to five hours. The incident brought chaos to the underground, road and air traffic at some of the country’s largest cities including Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Brasilia and Belo Horizonte….
Suspicions surrounding the potential involvement of hackers seemed to rise when the Brazilian National Electricity System Operator (ONS) confirmed that – two days after the attack – a hacker had managed to gain unauthorized access to its corporate IT network. Upon detecting and correcting the security hole in its website, the ONS insisted that the network used for real-time operation of the national grid is completely isolated from the open Internet. This would make it impossible for a hacker to access such critical infrastructure, it said
.
From
E&T
, the magazine of the Institution of Engineering and Technology, Vol 4 Issue 21, 5 December 2009.
Furnace heat licked at London. The streets and buildings absorbed and re-radiated it until the city sweltered. It was baking in a summer far hotter and more oppressive than anyone could remember, and for almost three months now, day after day, week after week, the sky had stayed cruelly cloudless, bleached steel-grey by the merciless, incessantly blazing sun. By the middle of each day, the metal and glass of the city's tall buildings were flashing and glittering through shimmering layers of hot, dry air, reflecting the heat and light back and forth to each other, while watery mirages formed on the hot asphalt at the crest of the bridges across the Thames. As the tide fell, what little stream remained under the bridges quickly receded to a trickle, exposing mud that soon cracked into a crazed mosaic. Overhead, the traffic's choking, stinking fumes were trapped between this hard, dry, multi-faceted surface and the blanket of stifling hot air above.
If it was unpleasant at ground level, the stifling heat was almost intolerable deep below the busy streets of Holborn. There, people had been standing on the crowded platform of Chancery Lane Underground station for far too long. All of them were wishing that their uncomfortable journeys could end soon.
They were relieved when a draught of air eventually fanned their faces, heralding the arrival of a train which screeched and whined out of the tunnel and growled to a halt. The doors sighed open, allowing weak currents of fetid air to drift into the compartments. But it was scant relief
for the packed occupants as some pushed their way out past others shouldering their way in.
Jostled and crowded by the people around her, Fiona Wilson took a deep breath and squeezed her way into the packed compartment. She grimaced briefly at the rank, sour smell of sweat that hit her nostrils: it was not going to be a pleasant journey. Still, it was only three stops on the Central line to Oxford Circus, so it shouldn't last too long.
She had arranged to meet an old friend she hadn't seen for a long time. After they made contact with each other again, she had persuaded her boss to let her have an extended lunch break so that she could spend some time with her in a wine bar. She had been working extremely hard over the previous few weeks, putting in hours of unpaid overtime, and her boss had been glad to give her this little time off.
The doors of Fiona's compartment hissed closed and the train set off with its burden of packed, hot and uncomfortable passengers. Everybody was concentrating on their own thoughts as they swayed uncomfortably together. It was as if they were all joined in some macabre dance as the train rattled along the tunnel. Everybody pressed against others. Like figures in a Breughel painting, their faces displayed an array of emotions as they concentrated on their dreams or plans.
Fiona gritted her teeth at the discomfort. Never mind, in a few minutes she would be sitting in an air-conditioned wine-bar, the unpleasantness of this journey forgotten as she and her old friend exchanged news of the recent events in their lives.
Â
The Regent's Canal, built in the nineteen century to link the Grand Union canal with the Thames at Limehouse was once a major trade artery, carrying goods from across the world to factories in the North. Nowadays it is largely a leisure facility â and a vital but unrecognized part of the complex electrical network that supports the millions working in the capital.
People who stroll along the towpath see it as a pleasant walkway beside a quiet stretch of water. But, in fact, another vital purpose is served by the canal. Small signs betray it: for example, when other stretches of the canal-side route are asphalted, here the path is paved with solid, square-cut paving slabs. They are there to give easy access to huge power cables that lie buried deep underneath.
As the holidaymakers' boats work their way along the canal and glide
under the bridges, their owners could be forgiven for missing the other small giveaway signs of the complex systems and machinery hidden nearby. It would be natural to think that the castellated towers that flank one of the bridges are just another part of London's medieval architecture. But in fact they are modern fakes, craftily designed and built to fit in with their surroundings. Hidden behind their stout, securely locked doors are grey-painted steel panels, bright with flashing lights and glowing screens.
Those panels and the secret lifelines below the towpath are crucial to the seething, humming jumble of office blocks, shops, cafés, apartments and theatres of the city.
Â
Far away from London, in the beautiful setting of a rambling, white clapboarded Colonial-style house in Watertown, Connecticut, USA, Luke Proctor was anticipating making history. The prospect had woken him early, and instead of lying in his bed until mid-morning, as was his normal habit, he was wide awake at dawn, excitedly preparing for the climax of his latest venture.
Because on this day he had a mission to complete.
After a quick shower he dressed hurriedly, scurried to his den and switched on his computer. He waited impatiently while it booted up, his thin fingers nervously drumming at the table-top while he looked out of the window to the gently undulating green of the immaculately manicured lawn outside. His gaze took in the basketball hoop fixed to the white-painted clapboard wall of the old barn adjoining the house â that hoop was a reminder of his father's frustrated aspiration for his son to be good at some sport, any sport. For a moment Luke contemplated it almost wistfully, then his mind snapped back to the present.
He heaved an impatient sigh. He was in a hurry and this morning it felt like the computer was taking an inordinately long time to start.
But then the familiar welcome screen opened up. He took a deep breath, started to tap at the keyboard and after a few moments an image appeared on the screen in front of him.
He scrutinized the picture. Some days ago he had managed to hack into an obscure system somewhere. He didn't know what it was or where it was located. But it didn't matter anyway: wherever or whatever it was, he had been delighted to discover it. The complex firewall that protected it had told him that it was very important, and he had been
proud when he had eventually broken the security codes and deeply penetrated it.
It had amused him to defeat the firewall. Whoever had designed it had been good, very good in fact, but Luke had never for a moment doubted that he was even better. He had seen the firewall as an intellectual challenge, and had eagerly responded. Before long he realized that whoever had designed the system had underestimated the brilliance and sheer determination of somebody like him. It had been far from easy: he had been forced to harness the combined power of many remote computers, without their owners knowing, to defeat the barriers. It had taken many hours, very expert knowledge of computers and math â and incredible cryptographic skill â but in the end he had succeeded.
He found that, with a few simple commands, he could actually change some of the features. He had no idea of what he was doing, but it didn't matter. It was as if he was sending out a signal saying: âHere I am. Respond to me, whoever you are, wherever you are.'
On his previous access he had discovered a block of code that had been extraordinarily well protected. Unusually for this system, nothing about it explained its function. That in itself was odd, because the rest of the system was extremely clear: it was âwell documented', as computer experts would say. In other words, the function of every part of it was very carefully described.
Except this one.
It had stretched to the limits his knowledge and ability â and the combined power of all his harnessed computers â to expose the lines of code behind the barrier, but in the end he had succeeded. But that wasn't the end of it: he was frustrated that every attempt to introduce any sort of change into this system-within-a-system had been defeated.
On this morning he put his elbows on the desk, rested his chin on his clenched fists and stared intently at the screen, his mind whirling. Then a thought struck him.
Passwords are the weak spot of any protection scheme. People worry that they will forget them, so they resort to all sorts of methods of remembering them. Some write them down on pieces of paper, which they hope won't be found. Others use some structured method which will be easy to remember. The designer of the system that Luke had penetrated, with its complex, multi-layered password structure, had used a very simple architecture for each successive layer. The password
for each level ended with a number that was ten digits higher than the one below. When he had discovered this fact, Luke had chuckled at the stupidity of anybody who could have created such a secure vault and then left the keys so easily visible. Once the first password was known, and the relationship to the others understood, breaking into any part of the system was extremely simple â at least until he had reached this block. It had defeated him.
But then, suddenly, the Eureka! moment had hit:
instead of a numeric link between these passwords, could it be alphabetical?
He tapped at the keyboard, entering what he now suspected was the correct password. Then he almost cried out loud in joy. He was rewarded by the appearance of a flashing red rectangle containing just five words:
DARKFALL SWITCH. ARE YOU SURE?
Â
He didn't understand the first two words, but the sentence invited him to confirm something. He typed âY' for âyes' and pressed the return key.
The red rectangle disappeared and was now replaced by another message:
Â
DARKFALL SWITCH INITIATED
Â
Then an extraordinary thing happened. Another message flashed on to the screen:
Â
SELF-ERASING
Â
And then, almost before he'd had time to read the message, the screen went completely blank.
In London, Andy McGill dropped to his knees, peering over the edge of the towpath into the Regent's Canal. He swore under his breath. A steady cascade of water should have been visible there, pouring into the canal from a pipe just below his position, but there was nothing. There was no patch of dampness below the outlet either, indicating that the flow had stopped some time ago. It was a bad sign. He sighed and settled
back on his haunches for a moment, thinking over all the implications. Then he reached for his mobile phone.
McGill was an engineer working for National Grid plc. He had been sent to look at what could have caused the sudden outbreak of alarm signals that had arisen over the past twenty-four hours in the Grid Control Centre, far away at Wokingham in Surrey.
He felt the sun bake his sweat-soaked back as he waited. âHi, Peter,' he said, when the call was answered. âIt's Andy. Bad news, I'm afraid: the flow's stopped completely.'
Peter Raynes was McGill's boss, a stoic, barrel-chested engineer who had spent his entire working life in the electrical power industry. He had started his working life as an apprentice with the Transmission and Distribution Branch of the Central Electricity Generating Board and he was now a senior engineer with National Grid.
âChrist!' Raynes' response was bitter and, after a lengthy pause he continued, âAre you sure?'
âAbsolutely. Not a dribble coming out of the discharge. Looks like it dried up a while ago. I haven't found any pump faults, so I'm sure it must be another airlock.'
The cable running under the towpath carried a massive current and it was cooled by water pipes that ran alongside it here and for miles under London's busy streets. For years now the pipes had been prone to the build-up of airlocks and, when these were severe, the pumps could not maintain flow and the cables began to overheat.
On a day like this, when the demand for power was enormous and the ground surrounding the cables was parched, the loss of cooling water was serious.
That morning, the first crop of alarms had warned that something was wrong with the cooling system. These could have been false, but eventually new alarms started to chime in the control room. The cables were indeed overheating. It was not a false alarm.
There was another long interval before Raynes' reply came to McGill's phone. âOK. I'm sure you're right. Take a look and see if you can pinpoint where it's happened.'
McGill grimaced as he disconnected the call. Finding the airlock would not be a trivial task. The problem could be anywhere, buried under any one of hundreds of nearby streets, all thronged with traffic.
As he stood up he wiped sweat off his brow and looked at the city's
distant towers shimmering in the heat. For some reason, the words of an old nursery rhyme came to him: âLondon's Burning'. It seemed to him that the city was indeed burning, even if no actual flames were visible. Now, because of a simple bubble of air in a water-pipe, the complex system supporting the entire capital was under threat and the city was being pushed towards the knife-edge of disaster.
He took a deep breath and started to walk to the nearest control centre. There wasn't much he could do, but it would be a start at least.
He was approaching his destination when he heard a sudden sharp sound. It was like a gunshot. He stiffened and frowned. Then, as horrible realization hit him, he started to trot along the towpath towards the source of the sound.
It was a while before he realized that something had changed. He stopped to listen. After that sharp crack there had been a sudden rise in the noise of the nearby traffic â the blaring of car horns, some shouting and screeching of brakes. But now this had been replaced by a strange, eerie silence.
It was as if the city around him had died.
Â
To those who afterwards recalled the nightmarish incidents, several things had seemed to happen at once.