The Edge of Madness
There were other incidents. The Pentagon, with twelve thousand computer networks and five million computers, was used to hackers having a go at it, but the number of incidents increased sharply. NASA and the Departments of State, Commerce and Homeland Security all reported similar infiltration alerts. Time magazine, in a lead article entitled ‘Hack Attack’, laid the blame at the feet of the ubiquitous Microsoft that supplied so many of the world’s source codes. ‘We are placing our security eggs in one basket,’ it said, ‘and one day someone is going to come along and steal the lot.’ Yet it wasn’t just in America. The banking system in Georgia was brought to a halt for three days, but not many people cared or even knew where Georgia was. And when the Parliamentary elections in Italy had to be held all over again because the new computer system that counted the votes deposited them in an impenetrable black hole, no one thought too much of the matter. It was, after all, Italy.
For all the misfortunes that struck others, none took the brunt more than Britain. Not all at once, of course, the game was spread over several months so that no one would guess the British were even in play. It kicked off when Egg, one of the country’s largest Internet banks, made available its regular monthly statements online, yet when customers tried to access their personal and very private details, they were given someone else’s. Intimate financial profiles were scattered around like seed in front of pigeons, and these included not just the Joneses, Smiths and Browns but also many prominent personalities, much to the amusement of many. As a result the News of the World was able to reveal that the Sports Minister was paying regular monthly sums to an entirely unsuitable female acquaintance, who promptly sold the details of the Minister’s off-duty entertainments to the following week’s edition. It included a colourful description of the Minister rehearsing his speech for the party conference while stark naked and complimenting himself on the size of his standing ovation. The Minister almost died of humiliation, a process his wife vowed publicly to complete, and much of the country was left crippled with laughter.
The railway system was also crippled. Three times in five days inter-city trains found themselves heading towards each other on the same stretch of line. None of these incidents ended in crashes, although there was one close call, but when the rail operators tried to rectify the faults the entire system went down. For four days not a single train moved anywhere in the country.
Ten days later, it was the turn of the national benefit system to screw up. Payments were still made, but none of them was for the right amount. Some gremlin had burrowed into the accounting software and moved the decimal point around. Pensioners from Cornwall to Carlisle muttered in disbelief, but the First Minister of Scotland had to be recalled from a conference in the Bahamas to cope with the riots that broke out in Glasgow. And south of the border, a highly dangerous sex attacker was released thirteen years before the end of his sentence when his name appeared on the list of prisoners granted early parole. The nation united in outrage.
Yet most people knew nothing of what was perhaps the most serious foul-up. On the London Stock Exchange, in the heart of the City of London, many of the trades began to be recorded twice, which exaggerated the movements in the market, making everything much more volatile. One expects the casino to play by the rules, but suddenly the punters were playing with a marked deck and if that news had got out they’d have stopped playing the game. Overnight one of Britain’s most lucrative industries would have been destroyed. That’s why the story was buried down the deepest institutional mineshaft. Better to lie, find a quick fix, move on. Even the Treasury agreed.
Throughout July, in different ways and in diverse places, the country was spun round like a child’s top until it was left wobbling on the edge of chaos. And the game had only just begun.
Millions might have died in this game in Britain, but they didn’t, that wasn’t the plan, although the Minister for Sport came close when his wife threw a large bowl of cereal at him in their kitchen. He ducked just in time. Yet elsewhere there was a handful of fatalities, and most of those were in the United States as a result of the power failure. Two people were killed in a head-on collision in New Jersey that occurred when the lights suddenly disappeared on a stretch of the Palisades Parkway, and a man in Brooklyn succumbed to a heart attack after climbing seventeen flights of stairs because the elevator wouldn’t work. A couple in upstate New York suffered carbon-monoxide poisoning after starting up their generator, and in Providence a family of immigrants was killed by a fire that started once the power had been restored. They’d been tampering with their ancient fuse box. Yet the electricity supply wasn’t cut long enough for real damage to be inflicted.
The most important casualty, however, was a frail but remarkably spirited woman in her eighties named Abigail. She was feeling unwell and hadn’t been on top form for some time, yet she was of a stubborn and independent nature and wasn’t given to complaining. But the chest pains were insistent, and so was her doctor. Abigail was quickly transferred from her traditional New England clapboard home in Brookline to the cardiac unit of the nearby Massachusetts General Hospital in downtown Boston, where her doctor assured her she would be in the best possible hands. Despite her condition she remained feisty, issuing instructions, telling the doctors with a hidden smile that they weren’t a patch on that cute Hugh Laurie, and above all insisting that they must not inform her daughter until all their test results had come in. No point in involving her unnecessarily, she told them, her daughter had other things to worry about. ‘I got the legal right to silence and I’m exercising it,’ she insisted.
Everything was done for the old lady’s comfort. But still she died, one of the first casualties of war, from an overdose of insulin. When she was admitted she was diagnosed as having suffered a moderately serious heart attack, but the medical staff also discovered that she was acutely diabetic. It wasn’t uncommon for a woman in her eighties and the treatment, even for a woman in Abigail’s frail condition, was straightforward. Insulin. A regular measured dose pumping sufficient of the drug into her to stabilize her blood-sugar levels.
The dosage was critical. Too little and the blood-sugar level, already high following the stress of a heart attack, would soar. Too much and the blood-sugar level would fall, and since blood sugar is the body’s basic fuel, life itself begins to fail. That’s why they programmed the bedside computer to deliver just the right amount of insulin rather than leaving the process to the vagaries of human intervention. Life teeters on the brink for many frail old ladies, so she had little resistance when the infusion pump hit her with a massive overdose of insulin. Her blood-sugar level plummeted, and Abigail quickly started to sweat, her pulse racing as she fell into unconsciousness. The nurses on duty at the monitoring station scurried to respond, but it was too late. Within two minutes the patient was dead. They were left with little surprise, only a profound sense of disappointment–and a corpse. The wheel of life had turned one last time for Abigail, then stopped.
There were no recriminations. The medical staff had done all they could, had diagnosed the problem, devised the appropriate treatment, but in the end there was no coping with the vital organs of an elderly lady that had been placed under too much stress. They had no way of knowing that someone on the other side of the world had hacked into the hospital’s systems, right up to the bedside of this particular patient, and temporarily boosted the dosage of insulin ten-fold. The nurses weren’t negligent, they were simply deceived by readings on their monitor that had also been interfered with; they had no idea what was happening, even when it was too late. They ran a routine diagnostic check on the system, of course, in order to ensure that nothing had malfunctioned, but by that time, like the nuclear plant in Sosnovy Bor, everything was back in order.
Nearly three-quarters of those with diabetes die of heart attack or stroke. Abigail became one more statistic.
She hadn’t been an intended target but was what you might term collateral damage. Incidental to the main affair. And
it happened so quietly that no one realized she was a victim, she just lay there and died, right under the noses of all those doctors and nurses. The trouble was, they weren’t paying attention to her, instead they were concentrating on their computers, just as happens all the time in so much of the world.
So she passed away and was gone, accompanied by nothing more than the routine electronic beeping of her killer. One of those things, if it hadn’t been for the fact that Abigail was Arnie Edwards’ mother-in-law, and her daughter the President of the United States.
CHAPTER ONE
Tuesday lunchtime, late July. Central Beijing.
There wasn’t much hint of elegance about most buildings in Beijing, the British ambassador thought as he fought his way through the dense traffic. Practical, brutal. A little like the Chinese themselves. Sweep away the old, throw up something new, most of which was hideous. There was another side to them, of course, the sort of China found in the Fragrant Hills on the outskirts of the city with its pavilions and ancient pagodas, where in autumn the foliage turned a deep red and in summer the air shimmered with the scent of pine, but here in the city so many of the old traditions had been lost, buried beneath concrete. Sir Wesley Lake glanced at his watch. He didn’t wish to be late for his lunch appointment, which he was squeezing in before he left on a week’s vacation–a trip to Eastern Ming Tombs a few hours’ drive from the city, then on to the mountain resort at Chengde, where the imperial court used to withdraw during the summer to escape the heat. Lake liked to escape on his own, it had become something of a pleasing distraction since his wife had died four years earlier. He loved this country, despite its hard-nosed rulers, he had enough Mandarin to get by and was accustomed to losing himself and his lingering pain in the colour and gentle chaos that he found outside the cities. Truth be told, he didn’t want lunch, but he had been invited by a former Chinese ambassador to Benin and it had been difficult to suggest that his invitation was less compelling than a five-hour drive through the countryside. And it was to be at the Beijing Hotel, near Tiananmen Square, one of the less ruthlessly modern of the city’s watering holes. It might have been worse.
He was met in the foyer by a minion in a buttoned hotel jacket. ‘Sir Wesley?’ the man enquired, offering a bow of respect before leading the ambassador not to the dining room but to the elevator. He said nothing, and pressed the button for the top floor. The Englishman was surprised but also quietly delighted when he was led through into a carefully decorated suite filled with polished wood and silk trappings. Set in the window, in the sunshine, was a luncheon table prepared with flowers and cold meats. The man offered another reverential bow and departed.
The ambassador’s delight slowly cooled when, after fifteen minutes, no one had appeared. His mood turned to astonishment and then anger when, ten minutes later, he discovered that the only exit from the suite was firmly locked, and no amount of banging and kicking on the door seemed to make any difference.
Tuesday evening. Heathrow Airport, London.
Five thousand miles and many time zones further east, the tyres of Air Force One scorched onto the tarmac of the runway as the presidential jet completed its landing. The American President had come to town. Blythe Elizabeth Harrison Edwards held a genuine affection for the British and their quaint pageantry and would normally have found her spirits lifting at this point, but a major problem had arisen that distracted her and dampened all her enthusiasm. It could be summed up in one word. Arnie.
It had been the day she had buried her mother, and she’d been sorting out what he should wear to the funeral. That’s when she’d stumbled upon another woman’s earring in her husband’s pocket. Picked up from the floor at the last White House reception, he’d explained, yet despite all Arnie’s dismissive logic, she trusted her instincts more than her husband. Then she’d found the number of his little tart plastered all over the White House call log. He couldn’t even be bothered to cheat on her properly. And when, that evening, she had confronted him, he’d blamed her–her job, her absences, her distractions, and her lack of interest. John Kennedy had complained that he got a headache if he didn’t have sex every two or three days, and Arnie said he felt the same. It was so brutally unfair, he’d wanted the White House as much as she had. Why was he punishing her, most of all on the day she had buried her mother? He’d told her that he wanted a divorce once they left the White House, that he’d only stuck with her for the sake of appearance. Her appearance. Made it sound as if he were doing her a favour. The prick. That’s why he hadn’t come on this trip to Britain, had stayed at home, looking after family business after Momma Harrison’s death, so the official excuse had run. Truth was, Blythe couldn’t bare to lay eyes on him, let alone to wake up beside him. Yet why did she feel guilty about that, too? As if it weren’t bad enough that she hadn’t seen her mother for a month or more before she died. Oh, God, she hurt.
He had promised to behave himself while she was away, so that they could talk like grown-ups when she got back, and even as Air Force One touched down she called him. But he was nowhere to be found. She didn’t need the CIA to tell her where he was, but that was one number she wasn’t going to call, not ever. As the Boeing rolled to a stop, Blythe gazed out of the window. It was a brilliant day but she could share in none of its joys. She’d been a fool, too soft, about Arnie, about everything, perhaps. Time to toughen up, girl, she scolded herself. For a fleeting moment she toyed with the idea of sending the Secret Service into the tart’s apartment, along with television cameras, kicking down the door to catch him with his pants down, expose the wick-dipping little creep, but she knew that it was nothing more than a pathetic daydream because she would be the one to be exposed, as a failed woman, a failed wife. And they would say she wasn’t up to being a president, either. Presidents aren’t allowed a private life, not any more, they have no option but to wrap themselves in a blanket of heartlessness and get on with things. Can’t ever break down in tears, no matter how much she wanted to. She shivered and pulled the blanket ever more tightly around her shoulders. She had no idea how much she was going to need that blanket before the week was out.
Tuesday afternoon. Seventh floor, the Beijing Hotel.
The well of outrage touches significant depths in most diplomats. Theirs is a profession guarded by centuries of custom and law, and the most fundamental rule in it all is that they remain personally inviolable and untouched. They’re not supposed to find themselves locked up in a hotel room. It wasn’t just his pride; Wesley Lake’s foot hurt, too. He’d kicked the door so hard and so often that his shoe was threatening to burst at its seams. There had to be a better way.
The suite in which he was confined consisted of three main rooms, two bedrooms and a large central sitting room, along with two bathrooms and a small kitchen. As he explored he found one of the bathrooms had been equipped with an array of personal items such as toothbrush, hairbrush and razor, while the refrigerator in the kitchen was full of food. At the back of one of the shelves he discovered a dozen cans of beer. As he counted them, he realized this could turn into a long stay.
God, this was outrageous! You don’t touch ambassadors, they have diplomatic immunity. You can shout at them, lie to them, deceive them, but you must never lay a finger on them. Those were the rules, except…Richard Sykes had been shot in Holland, and Chris Ewart-Biggs blown up in his car in Ireland. The rules hadn’t saved them.
Damn.
He stared out of the window, which lacked a balcony or any means of escape, turning the possibilities over in his mind and finding that each grew more lurid than the last. It was as he wondered whether he could or should throw a piece of heavy furniture through the window to attract attention that the door behind him opened quietly.
‘My apologies for keeping you waiting, Ambassador.’
The man who entered with an apology and a bow of deference wasn’t the former ambassador to Benin whom Lake had been expecting but a stranger–or was he? The Briton scoured his memory. Hadn’t he
seen this man somewhere before? He was on the small side, even for a Chinese, with a regulation haircut, impenetrable eyes, ordinary suit; everything about him was unexceptionable, except for the lips. These were surprisingly fleshy and expressive, and were now pinched in concentration. ‘Permit me to introduce myself. My name is Fu Zhang. I am the Vice-Minister of State Security.’
Of course, that was why Lake both knew and did not know this man. The ambassador didn’t deal with the State Security creeps who, like their counterparts all round the world, operated in the shadows. But he’d heard of Fu, one of Mao’s closest associates, a man who came from the same small town in Gansu and had followed him all the way to Beijing, and who allegedly wielded far more influence than his secondary position in the ministry suggested.
‘What the hell am I doing here, Fu? Why am I being held?’ the ambassador barked, dispensing with the normal etiquettes. His face was flushed with anger.
The lips wriggled. ‘Held? Why, Sir Wesley, you are not being held, you are being protected. A thousand apologies for the inconvenience, but it appears that a threat has been made to your personal safety. We couldn’t allow that, so we are providing you with shelter until the threat has passed.’
The ambassador recognized the explanation for what it was–a cover story that both of them might find useful to paper over the cracks when it was all over. His spirit lifted; at least they didn’t mean to throw him out the window. Not yet, at least. He decided against any attempt to give them ideas by hurling furniture at it himself.
‘What threat?’
The lips smiled, but the eyes remained fixed and cold. ‘It appears that a young woman named Wu Xiaoling has been causing trouble. You know this person?’