Starfire. Don Pendleton
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What they knew was that an unknown killer satellite had dumped a nuclear missile on Australia from its low earth orbit, vaporizing a six-mile ring in a desolate tract of the Queensland outback, a fifty-kiloton wallop, as previously indicated by the Farm’s e-mail and database theft of NASA, DOD and CIA satellite reads of ground zero and contaminated vicinity beyond. The last she heard from her own intelligence sources was woefully limited, since no one knew anything of substance, but that was several hours ago.
That left Hal Brognola in her loop.
The high-ranking Justice Department official, who oversaw the Farm and was liaison to the Man, was off on his own intelligence-hunting expedition, and she silently urged a quick wrap on his end and an even quicker chopper ride back to the Farm. He had taken the three-man commando unit of Able Team along with him for a meet with an unnamed and unknown source he’d intimated to her would either prove highly informative or dangerous to his health.
Make that five crisis fronts, including their phantom attackers in cyberspace.
Mack Bolan, aka the Executioner, was off their radar screen at the moment as he pursued his own campaign in Sri Lanka. They could use all hands, but Phoenix Force had just hit Dagestan in a mission that required their one-hundred-percent iron-clad attention.
“Good news and bad news,” Kurtzman suddenly told the mission controller. “The good news is that I’ve scrubbed our hot e-mail dumps, installed another antivirus and antiworm program in our network. The bad news is that our servers were bombed—a brute force attack that means whoever was trying to track us has put together their own network over the Internet. My best guess is they’ve created their own supercomputer, with firewall encryption every bit as sophisticated as ours. For all I know, it could be one to a dozen or more hackers.”
“And you determined they had broken through our firewalls how?”
“They were either cocky,” Tokaido interjected, “or taunting us. They bombed servers we use in emergencies with porn that would make even the dirtiest scumbag blush.”
Kurtzman cleared his throat, frowning as he shot Tokaido an admonishing eye for embellished interruption. “Apparently, they’ve also been busy bombing e-mail from NASA to the CIA and God only knows whoever else.”
Tokaido flashed Price a tight grin. “But believe us, the triple-X shenanigans aside, they’re good.”
They had to be, Price thought. the Farm used encryption software programs that combined elaborate mathematics, symbols and letters that would have sent Einstein screaming into the night. Their crypto texts of substitution, transposition and fractionalization were well beyond the commonly used 56-bit encryption that had seventy-two quadrillion possibilities alone. Only the U.S. government, its military intelligence complex and banks were allowed to use anything above 56-bit encryption. Attempted sale of such encryption programs, home or abroad, was a federal crime.
“We’re attempting to backtrack,” Kurtzman told her. “But—”
“They can scrub and change handles and create new servers as you run them down.”
“I believe I can trace them, however. They’re using Old Testament figures as handles—Noah, Cain and Abel and so forth,” Tokaido said. “And sticking to the same names. It’s almost as if they’re daring us to find them.”
“So, find them,” Price said, and wondered why, if that was true, they seemed so willing to be tracked down and cornered, this invisible enemy being such crack cybercommandos.
Kurtzman’s frown was back. “Thing is, Barb, these are most likely civilians. We all know the Pentagon, the DOD, the Air Force and even the CIA have seen their e-mail busted into recently and with frightening ease and regularity. Very few people outside the elite intelligence loop know about that.”
“Yeah, embarrassment,” Tokaido added, “fear of admitting their own vulnerability. Job security, I imagine, since they don’t want public perception of our intelligence and military hierarchy as inept when it comes to guarding national security and its secrets.”
“And we hack into their databases all the time,” Kurtzman said.
“We’re not exactly up for congressional funding, Bear. What’s your point?”
“Oh, don’t get me wrong, I understand full well the ramifications here. My point is, say we do find them. Statistically most hackers are about fourteen to twenty-five years old. Kids for the most part. Geniuses, without a doubt, but still kids.”
Price knew where Kurtzman was headed, but felt annoyed nonetheless that she had to spell it out. “I wasn’t planning on offering them a job here at the Farm, Bear.”
“But?”
“They’re a clear and present danger to our very existence. If information has been stolen from us, or if our location is pinned down and they think it’s cute and clever to announce to the world who we are, or they want to serve some mercenary agenda—blackmail for money—then we need to pay them a visit. Retrieve or destroy the information, and give them a stern and fair warning.”
Kurtzman nodded. “Give us another hour, give or take, and I can let you know something definite.”
“I’ll be in the War Room. I want a full package on each front in one hour.”
“Will do.”
Price left them to their individual tasks. As she headed toward the armored door, she felt her stomach roll over, her jaw tighten. There was no way to spin any positive angle on what they faced. Both the Farm and the world, she knew, had been shoved to the edge of the abyss by unknown enemies with equally unknown objectives. It was too often standard operating procedure to hurl themselves into the fire, armed with little more than questions and sordid hanging riddles, the sum total of which always put countless innocent lives on the scales of life and death. But stomping out flash-points before mass murder and anarchy could spread to consume entire countries and potentially send the entire world spiraling toward doomsday was what they did best. Only the present critical mass felt more sinister and threatening than at any previous time she could recall during her stint as mission controller. It appeared someone—or some nation—was sending a message they were armed with nukes and could drop them at will from space…
If humankind went the way of the dinosaur, then her worries Stony Man could be exposed by hackers wouldn’t matter in the least. All horrible truth be told, if the world went up in a thermonuclear holocaust, then likewise it would be as if the Farm never even existed.
End of game.
End of life on Earth.
Or so far as all of them now knew it.
Maryland
AS MUCH AS Carl Lyons hated ventures through spook snake pits, it struck him that, more often than not, he found himself doing just that. All the slick lies, intrigue and backstabbing, and those spooks who straddled the fence armed with personal agendas, could put any number of politicians on the grease to shame. Not to mention it seemed he was always creeping—or being led—to the doorstep of waiting Death.
Well,