Neal Stephenson. Cryptonomicon
Neal Stephenson,
CRYPTONOMICON
"There is a remarkably close parallel between the problems of the physicist
and those of the cryptographer. The system on which a message is enciphered
corresponds to the laws of the universe, the intercepted messages to the
evidence available, the keys for a day or a message to important constants
which have to be determined. The correspondence is very close, but the
subject matter of cryptography is very easily dealt with by discrete
machinery, physics not so easily."
Alan Turing
This morning [Imelda Marcos] offered the latest in a series of explanations
of the billions of dollars that she and her husband, who died in 1989, are
believed to have stolen during his presidency.
"It so coincided that Marcos had money," she said. "After the Bretton Woods
agreement he started buying gold from Fort Knox. Three thousand tons, then
4,000 tons. I have documents for these: 7,000 tons. Marcos was so smart. He
had it all. It's funny; America didn't understand him."
The New York Times, Monday, 4 March, 1996
Prologue
Two tires fly. Two wail.
A bamboo grove, all chopped down
From it, warring songs.
...is the best that Corporal Bobby Shaftoe can do on short notice he's
standing on the running board, gripping his Springfield with one hand and
the rearview mirror with the other, so counting the syllables on his fingers
is out of the question. Is "tires" one syllable or two? How about "wail?"
The truck finally makes up its mind not to tip over, and thuds back onto
four wheels. The wail and the moment are lost. Bobby can still hear the
coolies singing, though, and now too there's the gunlike snicking of the
truck's clutch linkage as Private Wiley downshifts. Could Wiley be losing
his nerve? And, in the back, under the tarps, a ton and a half of file
cabinets clanking, code books slaloming, fuel spanking the tanks of Station
Alpha's electrical generator. The modern world's hell on haiku writers:
"Electrical generator" is, what, eight syllables? You couldn't even fit that
onto the second line!
"Are we allowed to run over people?" Private Wiley inquires, and then
mashes the horn button before Bobby Shaftoe can answer. A Sikh policeman
hurdles a night soil cart. Shaftoe's gut reaction is: Sure, what're they
going to do, declare war on us? but as the highest ranking man on this truck
he's probably supposed to be using his head or something, so he doesn't
blurt it out just yet. He takes stock of the situation:
Shanghai, 1645 hours, Friday, the 28th of November 1941. Bobby Shaftoe,
and the other half dozen Marines on his truck, are staring down the length
of Kiukiang Road, onto which they've just made this careening high speed
turn. Cathedral's going by to the right, so that means they are, what? two
blocks away from the Bund. A Yangtze River Patrol gunboat is tied up there,
waiting for the stuff they've got in the back of this truck. The only real
problem is that those particular two blocks are inhabited by about five
million Chinese people.
Now these Chinese are sophisticated urbanites, not suntanned yokels
who've never seen cars before they'll get out of your way if you drive fast
and honk your horn. And indeed many of them flee to one side of the street
or the other, producing the illusion that the truck is moving faster than
the forty three miles an hour shown on its speedometer.
But the bamboo grove in Bobby Shaftoe's haiku has not been added just
to put a little Oriental flavor into the poem and wow the folks back home in
Oconomowoc. There is a lot of heavy bamboo in front of this truck, dozens of
makeshift turnpikes blocking their path to the river, for the officers of
the U.S. Navy's Asiatic Fleet, and of the Fourth Marines, who dreamed up
this little operation forgot to take the Friday Afternoon factor into
account. As Bobby Shaftoe could've explained to them, if only they'd
bothered to ask a poor dumb jarhead, their route took them through the heart
of the banking district. Here you've got the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank of
course, City Bank, Chase Manhattan, the Bank of America, and BBME and the
Agricultural Bank of China and any number of crappy little provincial banks,
and several of those banks have contracts with what's left of the Chinese
Government to print currency. It must be a cutthroat business because they
slash costs by printing it on old newspapers, and if you know how to read
Chinese, you can see last year's news stories and polo scores peeking
through the colored numbers and pictures that transform these pieces of
paper into legal tender.
As every chicken peddler and rickshaw operator in Shanghai knows, the
money printing contracts stipulate that all of the bills these banks print
have to be backed by such and such an amount of silver; i.e., anyone should
be able to walk into one of those banks at the end of Kiukiang Road and slap
down a pile of bills and (provided that those bills were printed by that
same bank) receive actual metallic silver in exchange.
Now if China weren't right in the middle of getting systematically
drawn and quartered by the Empire of Nippon, it would probably send official
bean counters around to keep tabs on how much silver was actually present in
these banks' vaults, and it would all be quiet and orderly. But as it
stands, the only thing keeping these banks honest is the other banks.
Here's how they do it: during the normal course of business, lots of
paper money will pass over the counters of (say) Chase Manhattan Bank.
They'll take it into a back room and sort it, throwing into money boxes (a
couple of feet square and a yard deep, with ropes on the four corners) all
of the bills that were printed by (say) Bank of America in one, all of the
City Bank bills into another. Then, on Friday afternoon they will bring in
coolies. Each coolie, or pair of coolies, will of course have his great big
long bamboo pole with him a coolie without his pole is like a China Marine
without his nickel plated bayonet and will poke their pole through the ropes
on the corners of the box. Then one coolie will get underneath each end of
the pole, hoisting the box into the air. They have to move in unison or else
the box begins flailing around and everything gets out of whack. So as they
head towards their destination whatever bank whose name is printed on the
bills in their box they sing to each other, and plant their feet on the
pavement in time to the music. The pole's pretty long, so they are that far
apart, and they have to sing loud to hear each other, and of course each
pair of coolies in the street is singing their own particular song, trying
to drown out all of the others so that they don't get out of step.
So ten minutes before closing time on Friday afternoon, the doors of
many banks burst open and numerous pairs of coolies march in singing, like
the curtain raiser on a fucking Broadway musical, slam their huge boxes of
tattered currency down, and demand silver in exchange. All of the banks do
this to each other. Sometimes, they'll all do it on the same Friday,
particularly at times like 28 November 1941, when even a grunt like Bobby
Shaftoe can understand that it's better to be holding silver than piles of
old cut up newspaper. And that is why, once the normal pedestrians and food
cart operators and furious Sikh cops have scurried out of the way, and
plastered themselves up against the clubs and shops and bordellos on
Kiukiang Road, Bobby Shaftoe and the other Marines on the truck still cannot
even see the gunboat that is their destination, because of this horizontal
forest of mighty bamboo poles. They cannot even hear the honking of their
own truck horn because of the wild throbbing pentatonic cacophony of coolies
singing. This ain't just your regular Friday P.M. Shanghai bank district
money rush. This is an ultimate settling of accounts before the whole
Eastern Hemisphere catches fire. The millions of promises printed on those
slips of bumwad will all be kept or broken in the next ten minutes; actual
pieces of silver and gold will move, or they won't. It is some kind of
fiduciary Judgment Day.
"Jesus Christ, I can't " Private Wiley hollers.
"The captain said don't stop for any reason whatsofuckinever," Shaftoe
reminds him. He's not telling Wiley to run over the coolies, he's reminding
Wiley that if he refrains from running over them, they will have some
explaining to do which will be complicated by the fact that the captain's
right behind them in a car stuffed with Tommy Gun toting China Marines. And
from the way the captain's been acting about this Station Alpha thing, it's
pretty clear that he already has a few preliminary strap marks on his ass,
courtesy of some admiral in Pearl Harbor or even (drumroll) Marine Barracks,
Eight and Eye Streets Southeast, Washington, D.C.
***
Shaftoe and the other Marines have always known Station Alpha as a
mysterious claque of pencil necked swabbies who hung out on the roof of a
building in the International Settlement in a shack of knot pocked cargo
pallet planks with antennas sticking out of it every which way. If you stood
there long enough you could see some of those antennas moving, zeroing in on
something out to sea. Shaftoe even wrote a haiku about it:
Antenna searches
Retriever's nose in the wind
Ether's far secrets
This was only his second haiku ever clearly not up to November 1941
standards and he cringes to remember it.
But in no way did any of the Marines comprehend what a big deal Station
Alpha was until today. Their job had turned out to involve wrapping a ton of
equipment and several tons of paper in tarps and moving it out of doors.
Then they spent Thursday tearing the shack apart, making it into a bonfire,
and burning certain books and papers.
"Sheeeyit!" Private Wiley hollers. Only a few of the coolies have
gotten out of the way, or even seen them. But then there is this fantastic
boom from the river, like the sound of a mile thick bamboo pole being
snapped over God's knee. Half a second later there're no coolies in the
street anymore just a lot of boxes with unmanned bamboo poles teeter
tottering on them, bonging into the streets like wind chimes. Above, a furry
mushroom of grey smoke rises from the gunboat. Wiley shifts up to high gear
and floors it. Shaftoe cringes against the truck's door and lowers his head,
hoping that his campy Great War doughboy helmet will be good for something.
Then money boxes start to rupture and explode as the truck rams through
them. Shaftoe peers up through a blizzard of notes and sees giant bamboo
poles soaring and bounding and windmilling toward the waterfront.
The leaves of Shanghai:
Pale doorways in a steel sky.
Winter has begun.
Chapter 1 BARRENS
Let's set the existence of God issue aside for a later volume, and just
stipulate that in some way, self replicating organisms came into existence
on this planet and immediately began trying to get rid of each other, either
by spamming their environments with rough copies of themselves, or by more
direct means which hardly need to be belabored. Most of them failed, and
their genetic legacy was erased from the universe forever, but a few found
some way to survive and to propagate. After about three billion years of
this sometimes zany, frequently tedious fugue of carnality and carnage,
Godfrey Waterhouse IV was born, in Murdo, South Dakota, to Blanche, the wife
of a Congregational preacher named Bunyan Waterhouse. Like every other
creature on the face of the earth, Godfrey was, by birthright, a stupendous
badass, albeit in the somewhat narrow technical sense that he could trace
his ancestry back up a long line of slightly less highly evolved stupendous
badasses to that first self replicating gizmo which, given the number and
variety of its descendants, might justifiably be described as the most
stupendous badass of all time. Everyone and everything that wasn't a
stupendous badass was dead.
As nightmarishly lethal, memetically programmed death machines went,
these were the nicest you could ever hope to meet. In the tradition of his
namesake (the Puritan writer John Bunyan, who spent much of his life in
jail, or trying to avoid it) the Rev. Waterhouse did not preach in any one
place for long. The church moved him from one small town in the Dakotas to
another every year or two. It is possible that Godfrey found the lifestyle
more than a little alienating, for, sometime during the course of his
studies at Fargo Congregational College, he bolted from the fold and, to the
enduring agony of his parents, fell into worldly pursuits, and ended up,
somehow, getting a Ph.D. in Classics from a small private university in
Ohio. Academics being no less nomadic than Congregational preachers, he took
work where he could find it. He became a Professor of Greek and Latin at
Bolger Christian College (enrollment 322) in West Point, Virginia, where the
Mattaponi and Pamunkey Rivers came together to form the estuarial James, and
the loathsome fumes of the big paper mill permeated every drawer, every
closet, even the interior pages of books. Godfrey's young bride, nee Alice
Pritchard, who had grown up following her itinerant preacher father across
the vastnesses of eastern Montana where air smelt of snow and sage threw up
for three months. Six months later she gave birth to Lawrence Pritchard
Waterhouse.
The boy had a peculiar relationship with sound. When a fire engine
passed, he was not troubled by the siren's howl or the bell's clang. But
when a hornet got into the house and swung across the ceiling in a broad
Lissajous, droning almost inaudibly, he cried in pain at the noise. And if
he saw or smelled something that scared him, he would clap his hands over
his ears.
One noise that troubled him not at all was the pipe organ in the chapel
at Bolger Christian College. The chapel itself was nothing worth mentioning,
but the organ had been endowed by the paper mill family and would have
sufficed for a church four times the size. It nicely complemented the
organist, a retired high school math teacher who felt that certain
attributes of the Lord (violence and capriciousness in the Old Testament,
majesty and triumph in the New) could be directly conveyed into the souls of
the enpewed sinners through a kind of frontal sonic impregnation. That he
ran the risk of blowing out the stained glass windows was of no consequence
since no one liked them anyway, and the paper mill fumes were gnawing at the
interstitial lead. But after one little old lady too many staggered down the
aisle after a service, reeling from tinnitus, and made a barbed comment to
the minister about the exceedingly dramatic music, the organist was
replaced.
Nevertheless, he continued to give lessons on the instrument. Students
were not allowed to touch the organ until they were proficient at the piano,
and when this was explained to Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse, he taught
himself in three weeks, how to play a Bach fugue, and signed up for organ
lessons. Since he was only five years old at the time, he was unable to
reach both the manuals and the pedals, and had to play standing or rather
strolling, from pedal to pedal.
When Lawrence was twelve, the organ broke down. That paper mill family
had not left any endowment for maintenance, so the math teacher decided to
have a crack at it. He was in poor health and required a nimble assistant:
Lawrence, who helped him open up the hood of the thing. For the first time
in all those years, the boy saw what had been happening when he had been
pressing those keys.
For each stop each timbre, or type of sound, that the organ could make
(viz. blockflöte, trumpet, piccolo) there was a separate row of pipes,
arranged in a line from long to short. Long pipes made low notes, short
high. The tops of the pipes defined a graph: not a straight line but an
upward tending curve. The organist/math teacher sat down with a few loose
pipes, a pencil, and paper, and helped Lawrence figure out why. When
Lawrence understood, it was as if the math teacher had suddenly played the
good part of Bach's Fantasia and Fugue in G Minor on a pipe organ the size
of the Spiral Nebula in Andromeda the part where Uncle Johann dissects the
architecture of the Universe in one merciless descending ever mutating
chord, as if his foot is thrusting through skidding layers of garbage until
it finally strikes bedrock. In particular, the final steps of the organist's
explanation were like a falcon's dive through layer after layer of pretense
and illusion, thrilling or sickening or confusing depending on what you
were. The heavens were riven open. Lawrence glimpsed choirs of angels
ranking off into geometrical infinity.
The pipes sprouted in parallel ranks from a broad flat box of
compressed air. All of the pipes for a given note but belonging to different
stops lined up with each other along one axis. All of the pipes for a given
stop but tuned at different pitches lined up with each other along the
other, perpendicular axis. Down there in the flat box of air, then, was a
mechanism that got air to the right pipes at the right times. When a key or
pedal was depressed, all of the pipes capable of sounding the corresponding
note would speak, as long as their stops were pulled out.
Mechanically, all of this was handled in a fashion that was perfectly
clear, simple, and logical. Lawrence had supposed that the machine must be
at least as complicated as the most intricate fugue that could be played on
it. Now he had learned that a machine, simple in its design, could produce
results of infinite complexity.
Stops were rarely used alone. They tended to be piled on top of each
other in combinations that were designed to take advantage of the available
harmonics (more tasty mathematics here!). Certain combinations in particular
were used over and over again. Lots of blockflötes, in varying lengths, for
the quiet Offertory, for example. The organ included an ingenious mechanism
called the preset, which enabled the organist to select a particular
combination of stops stops he himself had chosen instantly. He would punch a
button and several stops would bolt out from the console, driven by
pneumatic pressure, and in that instant the organ would become a different
instrument with entirely new timbres.
The next summer both Lawrence and Alice, his mother, were colonized by
a distant cousin a stupendous badass of a virus. Lawrence escaped from it
with an almost imperceptible tendency to drag one of his feet. Alice wound
up in an iron lung. Later, unable to cough effectively, she got pneumonia
and died.
Lawrence's father, Godfrey, freely confessed that he was not equal to
the burdens now laid on his shoulders. He resigned from his position at the
small college in Virginia and moved, with his son, to a small house in
Moorhead, Minnesota, next door to where Bunyan and Blanche had settled.
Later he got a job teaching at a nearby normal school.
At this point, all of the responsible adults in Lawrence's life seemed
to arrive at a tacit agreement that the best way to raise him certainly the
easiest was to leave him alone. On the rare occasions when Lawrence
requested adult intervention in his life, he was usually asking questions
that no one could answer. At the age of sixteen, having found nothing in the
local school system to challenge him, Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse went off
to college. He matriculated at Iowa State College, which among other things
was the site of a Naval ROTC installation in which he was forcibly enrolled.
The Iowa State Naval ROTC had a band, and was delighted to hear that
Lawrence had an interest in music. Since it was hard to drill on the deck of
a dreadnought while playing a pipe organ, they issued him a glockenspiel and
a couple of little dingers.
When not marching back and forth on the flood plain of the Skunk River
making loud dinging noises, Lawrence was majoring in mechanical engineering.
He ended up doing poorly in this area because he had fallen in with a
Bulgarian professor named John Vincent Atanasoff and his graduate student,
Clifford Berry, who were building a machine that was intended to automate
the solution of some especially tedious differential equations.
The basic problem for Lawrence was that he was lazy. He had figured out
that everything was much simpler if, like Superman with his X ray vision,
you just stared through the cosmetic distractions and saw the underlying
mathematical skeleton. Once you found the math in a thing, you knew
everything about it, and you could manipulate it to your heart's content
with nothing more than a pencil and a napkin. He saw it in the curve of the
silver bars on his glockenspiel, saw it in the catenary arch of a bridge and
in the capacitor studded drum of Atanasoff and Berry's computing machine.
Actually pounding on the glockenspiel, riveting the bridge together, or
trying to figure out why the computing machine wasn't working were not as
interesting to him.
Consequently he got poor grades. From time to time, though, he would
perform some stunt on the blackboard that would leave his professor weak in
the knees and the other students baffled and hostile. Word got around.
At the same time, his grandmother Blanche was invoking her extensive
Congregational connections, working the angles on Lawrence's behalf, totally
unbeknownst to him. Her efforts culminated in triumph when Lawrence was
awarded an obscure scholarship, endowed by a St. Paul oat processing heir,
whose purpose was to send Midwestern Congregationalists to the Ivy League
for one year, which (evidently) was deemed a long enough period of time to
raise their IQs by a few crucial points but not long enough to debauch them.
So Lawrence got to be a sophomore in Princeton.
Now Princeton was an august school and going there was a great honor,
but no one got around to mentioning either of these facts to Lawrence, who
had no way of knowing. This had bad and good consequences. He accepted the
scholarship with a faintness of gratitude that infuriated the oat lord. On
the other hand, he adjusted to Princeton easily because it was just another
place . It reminded him of the nicer bits of Virginia, and there were some
nice pipe organs in town, though he was not all that happy with his
engineering homework of bridge designing and sprocket cutting problems. As
always, these eventually came down to math, most of which he could handle
easily. From time to time he would get stuck, though, which led him to the
Fine Hall: the headquarters of the Math Department.
There was a motley assortment of fellows wandering around in Fine Hall,
many sporting British or European accents. Administratively speaking, many
of these fellows were not members of the Math Department at all, but a
separate thing called IAS, which stood for Institute for Advanced something
or other. But they were all in the same building and they all knew a thing
or two about math, so the distinction didn't exist for Lawrence.
Quite a few of these men would pretend shyness when Lawrence sought
their advice, but others were at least willing to hear him out. For example:
he had come up with a way to solve a difficult sprocket tooth shape problem
that, as normally solved by engineers, would require any number of perfectly
reasonable but aesthetically displeasing approximations. Lawrence's solution
would provide exact results. The only draw back was that it would require a
quintillion slide rule operators a quintillion years to solve. Lawrence was
working on a radically different approach that, if it worked, would bring
those figures down to a trillion and a trillion respectively. Unfortunately,
Lawrence was unable to interest anyone at Fine Hall in anything as prosaic
as gears, until all of a sudden he made friends with an energetic British
fellow, whose name he promptly forgot, but who had been doing a lot of
literal sprocket making himself lately. This fellow was trying to build, of
all things, a mechanical calculating machine specifically a machine to
calculate certain values of the Riemann Zeta Function
where s is a complex number.
Lawrence found this zeta function to be no more and no less interesting
than any other math problem until his new friend assured him that it was
frightfully important, and that some of the best mathematicians in the world
had been gnawing on it for decades. The two of them ended up staying awake
until three in the morning working out the solution to Lawrence's sprocket
problem. Lawrence presented the results proudly to his engineering
professor, who snidely rejected it, on grounds of practicality, and gave him
a poor grade for his troubles.
Lawrence finally remembered, after several more contacts, that the name
of the friendly Brit was Al something or other. Because Al was a passionate
cyclist, he and Al went on quite a few bicycle rides through the countryside
of the Garden State. As they rode around New Jersey, they talked about math,
and particularly about machines for taking the dull part of math off their
hands.
But Al had been thinking about this subject for longer than Lawrence,
and had figured out that computing machines were much more than just labor
saving devices. He'd been working on a radically different sort of computing
mechanism that would work out any arithmetic problem whatsoever, as long as
you knew how to write the problem down. From a pure logic standpoint, he had
already figured out everything there was to know about this (as yet
hypothetical) machine, though he had yet to build one. Lawrence gathered
that actually building machinery was looked on as undignified at Cambridge
(England, that is, where this Al character was based) or for that matter at
Fine Hall. Al was thrilled to have found, in Lawrence, someone who did not
share this view.
Al delicately asked him, one day, if Lawrence would terribly mind
calling him by his full and proper name, which was Alan and not Al. Lawrence
apologized and said he would try very hard to keep it in mind.
One day a couple of weeks later, as the two of them sat by a running
stream in the woods above the Delaware Water Gap, Alan made some kind of an
outlandish proposal to Lawrence involving penises. It required a great deal
of methodical explanation, which Alan delivered with lots of blushing and
stuttering. He was ever so polite, and several times emphasized that he was
acutely aware that not everyone in the world was interested in this sort of
thing.
Lawrence decided that he was probably one of those people.
Alan seemed vastly impressed that Lawrence had paused to think about it
at all and apologized for putting him out. They went directly back to a
discussion of computing machines, and their friendship continued unchanged.
But on their next bicycle ride an overnight camping trip to the Pine Barrens
they were joined by a new fellow, a German named Rudy von something or
other.
Alan and Rudy's relationship seemed closer, or at least more
multilayered, than Alan and Lawrence's. Lawrence concluded that Alan's penis
scheme must have finally found a taker.
It got Lawrence to thinking. From an evolution standpoint, what was the
point of having people around who were not inclined to have offspring? There
must be some good, and fairly subtle, reason for it.
The only thing he could work out was that it was groups of people
societies rather than individual creatures, who were now trying to out
reproduce and/or kill each other, and that, in a society, there was plenty
of room for someone who didn't have kids as long as he was up to something
useful.
Alan and Rudy and Lawrence rode south, anyway, looking for the Pine
Barrens. After a while the towns became very far apart, and the horse farms
gave way to a low stubble of feeble, spiny trees that appeared to extend all
the way to Florida blocking their view, but not the head wind. "Where are
the Pine Barrens I wonder?" Lawrence asked a couple of times. He even
stopped at a gas station to ask someone that question. His companions began
to make fun of him.
"Vere are ze Pine Barrens?" Rudy inquired, looking about quizzically.
"I should look for something rather barren looking, with numerous pine
trees," Alan mused.
There was no other traffic and so they had spread out across the road
to pedal three abreast, with Alan in the middle.
"A forest, as Kafka would imagine it," Rudy muttered.
By this point Lawrence had figured out that they were, in fact, in the
Pine Barrens. But he didn't know who Kafka was. "A mathematician?" he
guessed.
"Zat is a scary sing to sink of," Rudy said.
"He is a writer," Alan said. "Lawrence, please don't be offended that I
ask you this, but: do you recognize any other people's names at all? Other
than family and close friends, I mean."
Lawrence must have looked baffled. "I'm trying to figure out whether it
all comes from in here," Alan said, reaching out to rap his knuckles on the
side of Lawrence's head, "or do you sometimes take in new ideas from other
human beings?"
"When I was a little boy, I saw angels in a church in Virginia,"
Lawrence said, "but I think that they came from inside my head."
"Very well," Alan said.
But later Alan had another go at it. They had reached the fire lookout
tower and it had been a thunderous disappointment: just an alienated
staircase leading nowhere, and a small cleared area below that was glittery
with shards of liquor bottles. They pitched their tent by the side of a pond
that turned out to be full of rust colored algae that stuck to the hairs on
their bodies. Then there was nothing left to do but drink schnapps and talk
about math.
Alan said, "Look, it's like this: Bertrand Russell and another chap
named Whitehead wrote Principia Mathematica .
"Now I know you're pulling my leg," Waterhouse said. "Even I know that
Sir Isaac Newton wrote that ."
"Newton wrote a different book, also called Principia Mathematica ,
which isn't really about mathematics at all; it's about what we would today
call physics."
"Then why did he call it Principia Mathematica?"
"Because the distinction between mathematics and physics wasn't
especially clear in Newton's day "
"Or maybe even in zis day," Rudy said.
" which is directly relevant to what I'm talking about," Alan
continued. "I am talking about Russell's P.M., in which he and Whitehead
started absolutely from scratch, I mean from nothing, and built it all up
all mathematics from a small number of first principles. And why I am
telling you this, Lawrence, is that Lawrence! Pay attention!"
"Hmmm?"
"Rudy take this stick, here that's right and keep a close eye on
Lawrence, and when he gets that foggy look on his face, poke him with it!"
"Zis is not an English school, you can't do zese kind of sing."
"I'm listening," Lawrence said.
"What came out of P.M., which was terrifically radical, was the ability
to say that all of math, really, can be expressed as a certain ordering of
symbols."
"Leibniz said it a long time before zen!" protested Rudy.
"Er, Leibniz invented the notation we use for calculus, but "
"I'm not talking about zat!"
"And he invented matrices, but "
"I'm not talking about zat eezer!"
"And he did some work with binary arithmetic, but "
"Zat is completely different!"
"Well, what the hell are you talking about, then, Rudy?"
"Leibniz invented ze basic alphabet wrote down a set of symbols, for
expressing statements about logic."
"Well, I wasn't aware that Herr Leibniz counted formal logic among his
interests, but "
"Of course! He wanted to do what Russell and Whitehead did, except not
just with mathematics, but with everything in ze whole world!"
"Well, from the fact that you are the only man on the planet, Rudy, who
seems to know about this undertaking of Leibniz's, can we assume that he
failed?"
"You can assume anything that pleases your fancy, Alan," Rudy
responded, "but I am a mathematician and I do not assume anything."
Alan sighed woundedly, and gave Rudy a Significant Look which
Waterhouse assumed meant that there would be trouble later. "If I may just
make some headway, here," he said, "all I'm really trying to get you to
agree on, is that mathematics can be expressed as a series of symbols," (he
snatched the Lawrence poking stick and began drawing things like + = 3)
[square root of 1][pi] in the dirt) "and frankly I could not care less
whether they happen to be Leibniz's symbols, or Russell's, or the hexagrams
of the I Ching...."
"Leibniz was fascinated by the I Ching!" Rudy began.
"Shut up about Leibniz for a moment, Rudy, because look here: You Rudy
and I are on a train, as it were, sitting in the dining car, having a nice
conversation, and that train is being pulled along at a terrific clip by
certain locomotives named The Bertrand Russell and Riemann and Euler and
others. And our friend Lawrence is running alongside the train, trying to
keep up with us it's not that we're smarter than he is, necessarily, but
that he's a farmer who didn't get a ticket. And I, Rudy, am simply reaching
out through the open window here, trying to pull him onto the fucking train
with us so that the three of us can have a nice little chat about
mathematics without having to listen to him panting and gasping for breath
the whole way."
"All right, Alan."
"Won't take a minute if you will just stop interrupting."
"But there is a locomotive too named Leibniz."
"Is it that you don't think I give enough credit to Germans? Because I
am about to mention a fellow with an umlaut."
"Oh, would it be Herr Türing?" Rudy said slyly.
"Herr Türing comes later. I was actually thinking of Gödel."
"But he's not German! He's Austrian!"
"I'm afraid that it's all the same now, isn't it?"
"Ze Anschluss wasn't my idea, you don't have to look at me that way, I
think Hitler is appalling."
"I've heard of Gödel," Waterhouse put in helpfully. "But could we back
up just a sec?"
"Of course Lawrence."
"Why bother? Why did Russell do it? Was there something wrong with
math? I mean, two plus two equals four, right?"
Alan picked up two bottlecaps and set them down on the ground. "Two.
One two. Plus " He set down two more. "Another two. One two. Equals four.
One two three four."
"What's so bad about that?" Lawrence said.
"But Lawrence when you really do math, in an abstract way, you're not
counting bottlecaps, are you?"
"I'm not counting anything. "
Rudy broke the following news: "Zat is a very modern position for you
to take."
"It is?"
Alan said, "There was this implicit belief, for a long time, that math
was a sort of physics of bottlecaps. That any mathematical operation you
could do on paper, no matter how complicated, could be reduced in theory,
anyway to messing about with actual physical counters, such as bottlecaps,
in the real world."
"But you can't have two point one bottlecaps."
"All right, all right, say we use bottlecaps for integers, and for real
numbers like two point one, we use physical measurements, like the length of
this stick." Alan tossed the stick down next to the bottlecaps.
"Well what about pi, then? You can't have a stick that's exactly pi
inches long."
"Pi is from geometry ze same story," Rudy put in.
"Yes, it was believed that Euclid's geometry was really a kind of
physics, that his lines and so on represented properties of the physical
world. But you know Einstein?"
"I'm not very good with names."
"That white haired chap with the big mustache?"
"Oh, yeah," Lawrence said dimly, "I tried to ask him my sprocket
question. He claimed he was late for an appointment or something."
"That fellow has come up with a general relativity theory, which is
sort of a practical application, not of Euclid's, but of Riemann's geometry
"
"The same Riemann of your zeta function?"
"Same Riemann, different subject. Now let's not get sidetracked here
Lawrence "
"Riemann showed you could have many many different geometries that were
not the geometry of Euclid but that still made sense internally," Rudy
explained.
"All right, so back to P.M. then," Lawrence said.
"Yes! Russell and Whitehead. It's like this: when mathematicians began
fooling around with things like the square root of negative one, and
quaternions, then they were no longer dealing with things that you could
translate into sticks and bottlecaps. And yet they were still getting sound
results."
"Or at least internally consistent results," Rudy said.
"Okay. Meaning that math was more than a physics of bottlecaps."
"It appeared that way, Lawrence, but this raised the question of was
mathematics really true or was it just a game played with symbols? In other
words are we discovering Truth, or just wanking?"
"It has to be true because if you do physics with it, it all works out!
I've heard of that general relativity thing, and I know they did experiments
and figured out it was true."
"Ze great majority of mathematics does not lend itself to experimental
testing," Rudy said.
"The whole idea of this project is to sever the ties to physics," Alan
said.
"And yet not to be yanking ourselves."
"That's what P.M. was trying to do?"
"Russell and Whitehead broke all mathematical concepts down into
brutally simple things like sets. From there they got to integers, and so
on.
"But how can you break something like pi down into a set?"
"You can't," Alan said, "but you can express it as a long string of
digits. Three point one four one five nine, and so on."
"And digits are integers," Rudy said.
"But no fair! Pi itself is not an integer!"
"But you can calculate the digits of pi, one at a time, by using
certain formulas. And you can write down the formulas like so!" Alan
scratched this in the dirt:
"I have used the Leibniz series in order to placate our friend. See,
Lawrence? It is a string of symbols."
"Okay. I see the string of symbols," Lawrence said reluctantly.
"Can we move on? Gödel said, just a few years ago, 'Say! If you buy
into this business about mathematics being just strings of symbols, guess
what?' And he pointed out that any string of symbols such as this very
formula, here can be translated into integers."
"How?"
"Nothing fancy, Lawrence it's just simple encryption. Arbitrary. The
number '538' might be written down instead of this great ugly [sigma], and
so on.
"Seems pretty close to wanking, now."
"No, no. Because then Gödel sprang the trap! Formulas can act on
numbers, right?"
"Sure. Like 2x."
"Yes. You can substitute any number for x and the formula 2x will
double it. But if another mathematical formula, such as this one right here,
for calculating pi, can be encoded as a number, then you can have another
formula act on it. Formulas acting on formulas!"
"Is that all?"
"No. Then he showed, really through a very simple argument, that if
formulas really can refer to themselves, it's possible to write one down
saying 'this statement cannot be proved.' Which was tremendously startling
to Hilbert and everyone else, who expected the opposite result."
"Have you mentioned this Hilbert guy before?"
"No, he is new to this discussion, Lawrence."
"Who is he?"
"A man who asks difficult questions. He asked a whole list of them
once. Gödel answered one of them."
"And Türing answered another," Rudy said.
"Who's that?"
"It's me," Alan said. "But Rudy's joking. 'Turing' doesn't really have
an umlaut in it."
"He's going to have an umlaut in him later tonight," Rudy said, looking
at Alan in a way that, in retrospect, years later, Lawrence would understand
to have been smoldering.
"Well, don't keep me in suspense. Which one of his questions did you
answer?"
"The Entscheidungsproblem," Rudy said.
"Meaning?"
Alan explained, "Hilbert wanted to know whether any given statement
could, in principle, be found true or false."
"But after Gödel got finished, it changed," Rudy pointed out. "That's
true after Gödel it became 'Can we determine whether any given statement is
provable or non provable?' In other words, is there some sort of mechanical
process we could use to separate the provable statements from the
nonprovable ones?"
'Mechanical process' is supposed to be a metaphor, Alan. . .
"Oh, stop it, Rudy! Lawrence and I are quite comfortable with
machinery."
"I get it," Lawrence said.
"What do you mean, you get it?" Alan said.
"Your machine not the zeta function calculator, but the other one. The
one we've been talking about building "
"It is called Universal Turing Machine," Rudy said.
"The whole point of that gizmo is to separate provable from nonprovable
statements, isn't it?''
"That's why I came up with the basic idea for it," Alan said. "So
Hilbert's question has been answered. Now I just want to actually build one
so that I can beat Rudy at chess."
"You haven't told poor Lawrence the answer yet!" Rudy protested.
"Lawrence can figure it out," Alan said. "It'll give him something to
do."
***
Soon it became clear that Alan really meant: It'll give him something
to do while we're fucking. Lawrence shoved a notebook into the waistband of
his trousers and rode his bicycle a few hundred yards to the fire tower,
then climbed up the stairs to the platform at the top and sat down, back to
the setting sun, notebook propped up on his knees to catch the light.
He could not collect his thoughts, and then he was distracted by a
false sunrise that lit up the clouds off to the northeast. He thought at
first that some low clouds were bouncing fragments of the sunset back to
him, but it was too concentrated and flickering for that. Then he thought it
was lightning. But the color of the light was not blue enough. It fluctuated
sharply, modulated by (one had to assume) great, startling events that were
occulted by the horizon. As the sun went down on the opposite side of the
world, the light on the New Jersey horizon focused to a steady, lambent core
the color of a flashlight when you shine it through the palm of your hand
under the bedsheets.
Lawrence climbed down the stairs and got on his bicycle and rode
through the Pine Barrens. Before long he came to a road that led in the
general direction of the light. Most of the time he could not see anything,
not even the road, but after a couple of hours the glow bouncing off the low
cloud layer lit up flat stones in the road, and turned the barrens'
wandering rivulets into glowing crevices.
The road began to tend in the wrong direction and so Lawrence cut
directly into the woods, because he was very close now, and the light in the
sky was strong enough that he could see it through the sparse carpet of
scrubby pines black sticks that appeared to have been burned, though they
hadn't. The ground had turned into sand, but it was damp and compacted, and
his bicycle had fat tires that rode over it well. At one point he had to
stop and throw the bike over a barbed wire fence. Then he broke out of the
sticks and onto a perfectly flat expanse of white sand, stitched down with
tufts of beach grass, and just then he was dazzled by a low fence of quiet
steady flames that ran across a part of the horizon about as wide as the
harvest moon when it sinks into the sea. Its brightness made it difficult to
see anything else Lawrence kept riding into little ditches and creeks that
meandered across the flats. He learned not to stare directly at the flames.
Looking off to the sides was more interesting anyway: the table land was
marked at wide intervals by the largest buildings he had ever seen, cracker
box structures built by Pharaohs, and in the mile wide plazas between them,
gnomons of triangulated steel were planted in wide stances: the internal
skeletons of pyramids. The largest of these pierced the center of a
perfectly circular railway line a few hundred feet in diameter: two argent
curves scored on the dull ground, interrupted in one place where the tower's
shadow, a stopped sundial, told the time. He rode by a building smaller than
the others, with oval tanks standing next to it. Steam murmured from valves
on the tops of the tanks, but instead of rising into the air it dribbled
down the sides and struck the ground and spread out, coating the sea grass
with jackets of silver.
A thousand sailors in white were standing in a ring around the long
flame. One of them held up his hand and waved Lawrence down. Lawrence came
to a stop next to the sailor and planted one foot on the sand to steady
himself. He and the sailor stared at each other for a moment and then
Lawrence, who could not think of anything else, said, "I am in the Navy
also." Then the sailor seemed to make up his mind about something. He
saluted Lawrence through, and pointed him towards a small building off to
the side of the fire.
The building looked only like a wall glowing in the firelight, but
sometimes a barrage of magnesium blue light made its windowframes jump out
of the darkness, a rectangular lightning bolt that echoed many times across
the night. Lawrence started pedaling again and rode past that building: a
spiraling flock of alert fedoras, prodding at slim terse notebooks with
stately Ticonderogas, crab walking photogs turning their huge chrome
daisies, crisp rows of people sleeping with blankets over their faces, a
sweating man with Brilliantined hair chalking umlauted names on a
blackboard. Finally coming around this building he smelled hot fuel oil,
felt the heat of the flames on his face and saw beach glass curled toward it
and desiccated.
He stared down upon the world's globe, not the globe fleshed with
continents and oceans but only its skeleton: a burst of meridians, curving
backwards to cage an inner dome of orange flame. Against the light of the
burning oil those longitudes were thin and crisp as a draftsman's ink
strokes. But coming closer he saw them resolve into clever works of rings
and struts, hollow as a bird's bones. As they spread away from the pole they
sooner or later began to wander, or split into bent parts, or just broke off
and hung in the fire oscillating like dry stalks. The perfect geometry was
also mottled, here and there, by webs of cable and harnesses of electrical
wiring. Lawrence almost rode over a broken wine bottle and decided he should
now walk, to spare his bicycle's tires, so he laid the bike down, the front
wheel covering an aluminum vase that appeared to have been spun on a lathe,
with a few charred roses hanging out of it. Some sailors had joined their
hands to form a sort of throne, and were bearing along a human shaped piece
of charcoal dressed in a coverall of immaculate asbestos. As they walked the
toes of their shoes caught in vast, ramified snarls of ropes and piano
wires, cables and wires, creative furtive movements in the grass and the
sand dozens of yards every direction. Lawrence began planting his feet very
thoughtfully one in front of the other, trying to measure the greatness of
what he had come and seen. A rocket shaped pod stuck askew from the sand,
supporting an umbrella of bent back propellers. The duralumin struts and cat
walks rambled on above him for miles. There was a suitcase spilled open,
with a pair of women's shoes displayed as if in the window of a down town
store, and a menu that had been charred to an oval glow, and then some
tousled wall slabs, like a whole room that had dropped out of the sky these
were decorated, one with a giant map of the world, great circles arcing away
from Berlin to pounce on cities near and far, and another with a photograph
of a famous, fat German in a uniform, grinning on a flowered platform, the
giant horizon of a new Zeppelin behind him.
After a while he stopped seeing new things. Then he got on his bicycle
and rode back through the Pine Barrens. He got lost in the dark and so
didn't find his way back to the fire tower until dawn. But he didn't mind
being lost because while he rode around in the dark he thought about the
Turing machine. Finally he came back to the shore of the pond where they had
camped. The dawn light shining on the saucer of calm reddish water made it
look like a pool of blood. Alan Mathison Turing and Rudolf von Hacklheber
were lying together like spoons on the shore, still smudged a little bit
from their swim yesterday. Lawrence started a little fire and made some tea
and they woke up eventually.
"Did you solve the problem?" Alan asked him.
"Well you can turn that Universal Turing Machine of yours into any
machine by changing the presets "
"Presets?"
"Sorry, Alan, I think of your U.T.M. as being kind of like a pipe
organ."
"Oh."
"Once you've done that, anyway, you can do any calculation you please,
if the tape is long enough. But gosh, Alan, making a tape that's long
enough, and that you can write symbols on, and erase them, is going to be
sort of tricky Atanasoffs capacitor drum would only work up to a certain
size you'd have to "
"This is a digression," Alan said gently.
"Yeah, okay, well if you had a machine like that, then any given preset
could be represented by a number a string of symbols. And the tape that you
would feed into it to start the calculation would contain another string of
symbols. So it's Gödel's proof all over again if any possible combination of
machine and data can be represented by a string of numbers, then you can
just arrange all of the possible strings of numbers into a big table, and
then it turns into a Cantor diagonal type of argument, and the answer is
that there must be some numbers that cannot be computed."
"And ze Entscheidungsproblem?" Rudy reminded him.
"Proving or disproving a formula once you've encrypted the formula into
numbers, that is is just a calculation on that number. So it means that the
answer to the question is, no! Some formulas cannot be proved or disproved
by any mechanical process! So I guess there's some point in being human
after all!"
Alan looked pleased until Lawrence said this last thing, and then his
face collapsed. "Now there you go making unwarranted assumptions."
"Don't listen to him, Lawrence!" Rudy said. "He's going to tell you
that our brains are Turing machines."
"Thank you, Rudy," Alan said patiently. "Lawrence, I submit that our
brains are Turing machines."
"But you proved that there's a whole lot of formulas that a Turing
machine can't process!"
"And you have proved it too, Lawrence."
"But don't you think that we can do some things that a Turing machine
couldn't?"
"Gödel agrees with you, Lawrence," Rudy put in, "and so does Hardy."
"Give me one example," Alan said.
"Of a noncomputable function that a human can do, and a Turing machine
can't?"
"Yes. And don't give me any sentimental nonsense about creativity. I
believe that a Universal Turing Machine could show behaviors that we would
construe as creative."
"Well, I don't know then . . . I'll try to keep my eye out for that
kind of thing in the future.''
But later, as they were tiding back towards Princeton, he said, "What
about dreams?"
"Like those angels in Virginia?"
"I guess so."
"Just noise in the neurons, Lawrence."
"Also I dreamed last night that a zeppelin was burning."
***
Soon, Alan got his Ph.D. and went back to England. He wrote Lawrence a
couple of letters. The last of these stated, simply, that he would not be
able to write Lawrence any more letters "of substance" and that Lawrence
should not take it personally. Lawrence perceived right away that Alan's
society had put him to work doing something useful probably figuring out how
to keep it from being eaten alive by certain of its neighbors. Lawrence
wondered what use America would find for him .
He went back to Iowa State, considered changing his major to
mathematics, but didn't. It was the consensus of all whom he consulted that
mathematics, like pipe organ restoration, was a fine thing, but that one
needed some way to put bread on the table. He remained in engineering and
did more and more poorly at it until the middle of his senior year, when the
university suggested that he enter a useful line of work, such as roofing.
He walked straight out of college into the waiting arms of the Navy.
They gave him an intelligence test. The first question on the math part
had to do with boats on a river: Port Smith is 100 miles upstream of Port
Jones. The river flows at 5 miles per hour. The boat goes through water at
10 miles per hour. How long does it take to go from Port Smith to Port
Jones? How long to come back?
Lawrence immediately saw that it was a trick question. You would have
to be some kind of idiot to make the facile assumption that the current
would add or subtract 5 miles per hour to or from the speed of the boat.
Clearly, 5 miles per hour was nothing more than the average speed. The
current would be faster in the middle of the river and slower at the banks.
More complicated variations could be expected at bends in the river.
Basically it was a question of hydrodynamics, which could be tackled using
certain well known systems of differential equations. Lawrence dove into the
problem, rapidly (or so he thought) covering both sides of ten sheets of
paper with calculations. Along the way, he realized that one of his
assumptions, in combination with the simplified Navier Stokes equations, had
led him into an exploration of a particularly interesting family of partial
differential equations. Before he knew it, he had proved a new theorem. If
that didn't prove his intelligence, what would?
Then the time bell rang and the papers were collected. Lawrence managed
to hang onto his scratch paper. He took it back to his dorm, typed it up,
and mailed it to one of the more approachable math professors at Princeton,
who promptly arranged for it to be published in a Parisian mathematics
journal.
Lawrence received two free, freshly printed copies of the journal a few
months later, in San Diego, California, during mail call on board a large
ship called the U.S.S. Nevada. The ship had a band, and the Navy had given
Lawrence the job of playing the glockenspiel in it, because their testing
procedures had proven that he was not intelligent enough to do anything
else.
The sack of mail carrying Lawrence's contribution to the mathematical
literature arrived just in the nick of time. Lawrence's ship, and quite a
few of her sisters, had until then been based in California. But at just
this moment, all of them were transferred to some place called Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii, in order to show the Nips who was boss.
Lawrence had never really known what he wanted to do with his life, but
he quickly decided that being glockenspiel player on a battleship in Hawaii
during peacetime was a long way from the worst life you could possibly have.
The harshest part of the job was sometimes having to sit or march in very
warm conditions, and enduring occasional fluffed notes by other band
members. He had abundant free time, which he spent working on a series of
new theorems in the field of information theory. The field had been invented
and pretty much encompassed by his friend Alan, but there was much detail
work to be done. He and Alan and Rudy had sketched out a general plan of
what needed to be proved or disproved. Lawrence tore through the list. He
wondered what Alan and Rudy were up to in Britain and Germany, but he
couldn't write to them and find out, so he kept his work to himself. When he
wasn't playing the glockenspiel or working out theorems, there were bars and
dances to go to. Waterhouse did some penis work of his own, got the clap,
had it cured (1), bought condoms. All of the sailors did this.
They were like three year olds who shove pencils in their ears, discover
that it hurts, and stop doing it. Lawrence's first year went by almost
instantly. Time just blazed by. Nowhere could be sunnier, more relaxing,
than Hawaii.
Chapter 2 NOVUS ORDO SECLORUM
"Filipinos are a warm, gentle, caring, giving people," Avi says, "which
is a good thing since so many of them carry concealed weapons."
Randy is in Tokyo's airport, ambling down a concourse with a slowness
that is infuriating to his fellow travelers. They have all spent the last
half day strapped into bad chairs, stuffed into an aluminum tube aslosh with
jet fuel. Over the safety engineered nubs molded into the jetway floor,
their rolling suitcases drone like fighter planes. They graze the backs of
his knees as they bank around his husky columnar body. Randy is holding his
new GSM phone to the side of his head. Supposedly it works anywhere in the
world, except for the United States. This is his first chance to try it out.
"You sound clear as a bell," Avi says. "How was the flight over?"
"All right," Randy says. "They had one of those animated maps up on the
video screen."
Avi sighs. "All the airlines have those now," he announces
monotonically.
"The only feature between San Francisco and Tokyo was Midway Island."
"So?"
"It kind of hung there for hours. MIDWAY. Mute embarrassment all
around."
Randy reaches the departure gate for Manila, and pauses to admire a
five foot wide high definition TV set bearing the logo of a major Nipponese
consumer electronics company. It is running a video in which a wacky cartoon
professor and his adorable canine sidekick cheerfully tick off the three
transmission routes of the AIDS virus.
"I have a fingerprint for you," Randy says.
"Shoot."
Randy stares at the palm of his hand, on which he has written a string
of numbers and letters in ballpoint pen. "AF 10 06 E9 99 BA 11 07 64 C1 89
E3 40 8C 72 55."
"Got it," Avi says. "That's from Ordo, right?"
"Right. I e mailed you the key from SFO."
"The apartment situation is still resolving," Avi says. "So I just
reserved you a suite at the Manila Hotel."
"What do you mean, it's still resolving?"
"The Philippines is one of those post Spanish countries with no clear
boundaries between business and personal relationships," Avi says. "I don't
think you can secure lodgings there without marrying into a family with a
major street named after it."
Randy takes a seat in the departure area. Perky gate attendants in
jaunty, improbable hats zero in on Filipinos with too many carry ons, and
subject them to a public ritual of filling out little tags and surrendering
their possessions. The Filipinos roll their eyes and stare longingly out the
windows. But most of the waiting passengers are Nipponese some businessmen,
mostly vacationers. They are watching an educational video about how to get
mugged in foreign countries.
"Huh," Randy says, looking out the window, "got another 747 down to
Manila."
"In Asia, no decent airline bothers to dick around anything smaller
than a 747," Avi snaps. "If someone tries to pack you on board a 737 or god
forbid an Airbus, run, don't walk, away from the boarding lounge, and call
me on my Sky Pager and I'll send in a chopper to evacuate you."
Randy laughs.
Avi continues. "Now, listen. This hotel you're going to is very old,
very grand, but it's in the middle of nowhere."
"Why would they build a grand hotel in the middle of nowhere?"
"It used to be a happening place it's on the waterfront, right on the
edge of Intramuros."
Randy's high school Spanish is enough to translate that: Inside the
Walls.
"But Intramuros was annihilated by the Nipponese in 1945," Avi
continues. "Systematically. All of the business hotels and office buildings
are in a new neighborhood called Makati, much closer to the airport."
"So you want to put our office in Intramuros."
"How'd you guess?" Avi says, sounding a little spooked. He prides
himself on unpredictability.
"I'm not an intuitive guy generally," Randy says, "but I've been on a
plane for thirteen hours and my brain has been turned inside out and hung up
to dry."
Avi rattles off canned justifications: office space is much cheaper in
Intramuros. Government ministries are closer. Makati, the gleaming new
business district, is too isolated from the real Philippines. Randy pays no
attention to it.
"You want to work out of Intramuros because it was systematically
annihilated, and because you're obsessed with the Holocaust," Randy finally
says, quietly and without rancor.
"Yeah. So?" Avi says.
***
Randy stares out the window of the Manila bound 747, sipping on a
fluorescent green Nipponese soft drink made from bee extracts (at least, it
has pictures of bees on it) and munching on something that a flight
attendant handed him called Japanese Snack. Sky and ocean are the same
color, a shade of blue that makes his teeth freeze. The plane is so high
that, whether he looks up or down, he sees foreshortened views of boiling
cumulonimbus stacks. The clouds erupt from the hot Pacific as if immense
warships were exploding all over the place. The speed and power of their
growth is alarming, the forms they adopt as bizarre and varied as those of
deep sea organisms, and all of them, he supposes, are as dangerous to an
airplane as punji stakes to a barefoot pedestrian. The red orange meatball
painted on the wingtip startles him when he notices it. He feels like he's
been thrown into an old war film.
He turns on his laptop. Electronic mail from Avi, encrypted to a fare
thee well, has been piling up in his in box. It is a gradual accumulation of
tiny files, thrown at him by Avi whenever a thought popped into his head
over the last three days; it would be obvious, even if Randy didn't know it,
that Avi owns a portable e mail machine that talks to the Internet by radio.
Randy fires up a piece of software that is technically called Novus Ordo
Seclorum but that everyone calls Ordo for short. It is a fairly strained pun
based on the fact that Ordo's job, as a piece of cryptographic software, is
to put a message's bits in a New Order and that it will take Centuries for
nosy governments to decrypt it. A scanned image of a Great Pyramid appears
in the middle of his screen, and a single eye gradually materializes at its
apex.
Ordo can handle this in one of two ways. The obvious way is to decrypt
all of the messages and convert them into plaintext files on his hard disk,
which he can then read any time he wants. The problem with this (if you are
paranoid) is that anyone who gets his hands on Randy's hard disk can then
read the files. For all he knows, the customs officials in Manila will
decide to ransack his computer for child pornography. Or, fogged by jet lag,
he'll leave his laptop in a taxi. So instead he puts Ordo into a streaming
mode where it will decrypt the files just long enough for him to read them
and then, when he closes the windows, expunge the plaintext from the
computer's memory and from its hard drive.
The subject heading of Avi's first message is: "Guideline 1."
We look for places where the math is right. Meaning what? Meaning that
pop. is about to explode we can predict that just by looking at age
histogram and per capita income is about to take off the way it did in
Nippon, Taiwan, Singapore. Multiply those two things together and you get
the kind of exponential growth that should get us all into fuck you money
before we turn forty.
This is an allusion to a Randy/Avi conversation of two years ago
wherein Avi actually calculated a specific numerical value for "fuck you
money." It was not a fixed constant, however, but rather a cell in a
spreadsheet linked to any number of continually fluctuating economic
indicators. Sometimes when Avi is working at his computer he will leave the
spreadsheet running in a tiny window in the corner so that he can see the
current value of "fuck you money" at a glance.
The second message, sent a couple of hours later, is called "Guideline
2."
Two: pick a tech where no one can compete with us. Right now,
that=networking. We're kicking the crap out of everyone else in the world
when it comes to networking. It's not even funny.
The next day, Avi sent a message called, simply, "More." Perhaps he had
lost track of the number of guidelines he'd issued so far.
Another principle: this time we retain control of the corporation. That
means that we keep at least fifty percent of the shares which means little
to no outside investment until we've built up some value.
"You don't have to convince me," Randy mumbles to himself as he reads
this.
This shapes the kinds of businesses we can get into. Forget anything
that requires a big initial investment.
Luzon is green black jungle mountains gouged with rivers that would
appear to be avalanches of silt. As the navy blue ocean verges on its khaki
beaches, the water takes on the shocking iridescent hue of a suburban
swimming pool. Farther south, the mountains are swidden scarred the soil
beneath is bright red and so these parts look like fresh lacerations. But
most is covered with foliage that looks like the nubby green stuff that
model railroaders put over their papier mâché hills, and in vast stretches
of the mountains there are no signs whatsoever that human beings have ever
existed. Closer to Manila, some of the slopes are deforested, sprinkled with
structures, ribboned with power line cuts. Rice paddies line the basins. The
towns are accretions of shanties, nucleated around large cross shaped
churches with good roofs.
The view gets blurry as they belly down into the pall of sweaty smog
above the city. The plane begins to sweat like a giant glass of iced tea.
The water streams off in sheets, collects in crevices, whips off the flaps'
trailing edges.
Suddenly they are banking over Manila Bay, which is marked with endless
streaks of brilliant red some kind of algal bloom. Oil tankers trail long
time delayed rainbows that flourish in their wakes. Every cove is jammed
with long skinny boats with dual outriggers, looking like brightly painted
water skaters.
And then they are down on the runway at NAIA, Ninoy Aquino
International Airport. Guards and cops of various stripes are ambling around
with M 16s or pistol handled pump shotguns, wearing burnooses fashioned from
handkerchiefs clamped to the head with American baseball caps. A man dressed
in a radiant white uniform stands below the ragged maw of the jetway holding
his hands downwards with fluorescent orange sticks in them, like Christ
dispensing mercy on a world of sinners. Sulfurous, fulminating tropical air
begins to leak in through the jumbo's air vents. Everything moistens and
wilts.
He is in Manila. He takes his passport out of his shirt pocket. It
says,
RANDALL LAWRENCE WATERHOUSE.
***
This is how Epiphyte Corporation came into existence:
"I am channeling the bad shit!" Avi said.
The number came through on Randy's pager while he was sitting around a
table in a grubhouse along the coast with his girlfriend's crowd. A place
where, every day, they laser printed fresh menus on 100% recycled imitation
parchment, where oscilloscope tracings of neon colored sauces scribbled
across the plates, and the entrees were towering, architectonic stacks of
rare ingredients carved into gemlike prisms. Randy had spent the entire meal
trying to resist the temptation to invite one of Charlene's friends (any one
of them, it didn't matter) out on the sidewalk for a fistfight.
He glanced at his pager expecting to see the number of the Three
Siblings Computer Center, which was where he worked (technically, still
does). The fell digits of Avi's phone number penetrated the core of his
being in the same way that 666 would a fundamentalist's.
Fifteen seconds later, Randy was out on the sidewalk, swiping his card
through a pay phone like an assassin drawing a single edged razor blade
across the throat of a tubby politician.
"The power is coming down from On High," Avi continued. "Tonight, it
happens to be coming through me you poor bastard."
"What do you want me to do?" Randy asked, adopting a cold, almost
hostile tone to mask sick excitement.
"Buy a ticket to Manila," Avi said.
"I have to talk it over with Charlene first," Randy said.
"You don't even believe that yourself," Avi said.
"Charlene and I have a long standing relationsh "
"It's been ten years. You haven't married her. Fill in the fucking
blanks."
(Seventy two hours later, he would be in Manila, looking at the One
Note Flute.)
"Everyone in Asia is wondering when the Philippines is finally going to
get its shit together," Avi said, "it's the question of the nineties."
(The One Note Flute is the first thing you see when you make it through
Passport Control.)
"I flashed on this when I was standing in line at Passport Control at
Ninoy Aquino International Airport," Avi said, compressing that entire name
into a single, sharply articulated burst. "You know how they have different
lanes?"
"I guess so," Randy said. A parallelpiped of seared tuna did a barrel
roll in his gullet. He felt a perverse craving for a double ice cream cone.
He did not travel as much as Avi, and had only a vague idea of what he meant
by lanes.
"You know. One lane for citizens. One for foreigners. Maybe one for
diplomats."
(Now, standing there waiting to have his passport stamped, Randy can
see it clearly. For once he doesn't mind the wait. He gets in a lane next to
the OCW lane and studies them. They are Epiphyte Corp.'s market. Mostly
young women, many of them fashionably dressed, but still with a kind of
Catholic boarding school demureness. Exhausted from long flights, tired of
the wait, they slump, then suddenly straighten up and elevate their fine
chins, as if an invisible nun were making her way up the line whacking their
manicured knuckles with a ruler.)
But seventy two hours ago he hadn't really understood what Avi meant by
lanes, so he just said, "Yeah, I've seen the lane thing."
"At Manila, they have a whole lane just for returning OCWs!"
"OCWs?"
"Overseas Contract Workers. Filipinos working abroad because the
economy of the Philippines is so lame. As maids and nannies in Saudi. Nurses
and anesthesiologists in the States. Singers in Hong Kong, whores in
Bangkok."
"Whores in Bangkok?" Randy had been there, at least, and his mind
reeled at the concept of exporting prostitutes to Thailand.
"The Filipino women are more beautiful," Avi said quietly, "and have a
ferocity that makes them more interesting, to the innately masochistic
business traveler, than all those grinning Thai bimbos." Both of them knew
that this was complete bullshit; Avi was a family man and had no firsthand
experience whereof he spoke. Randy didn't call him on it, though. As long as
Avi retained this extemporaneous bullshitting ability there was a better
than even chance of all of them making fuck you money.
(Now that he's here, it is tempting to speculate as to which of the
girls in the OCW lane are hustlers. But he can't see that going anywhere but
wrong, so he squares his shoulders and marches toward the yellow line.
The government has set up glass display cases in the concourse leading
from Passport Control to the security barrier. The cases contain artifacts
demonstrating the glories of pre Magellan Filipino culture. The first one of
these contains the pièce de résistance: a rustic hand carved musical
instrument labeled with a long and unreadable name in Tagalog. Underneath
that, in smaller letters, is the English translation: ONE NOTE FLUTE.)
"See? The Philippines is innately hedged," Avi said. 'You know how rare
that is? When you find an innately hedged environment, Randy, you lunge into
it like a rabid ferret going into a pipe full of raw meat."
A word about Avi: his father's people had just barely gotten out of
Prague. As Central European Jews went, they were fairly typical. The only
thing about them that was really anomalous was that they were still alive.
But his mother's people were unbelievably peculiar New Mexican crypto Jews
who had been living on mesas, dodging Jesuits, shooting rattlesnakes and
eating jimsonweed for three hundred years; they looked like Indians and
talked like cowboys. In his relations with other people, therefore, Avi
dithered. Most of the time he was courtly and correct in a way that was
deeply impressive to businesspeople Nipponese ones expecially but there were
these eruptions, from time to time, as if he'd been dipping into the loco
weed. Randy had learned to deal with it, which is why Avi called him at
times like this.
"Oh, calm down!" Randy said. He watched a tanned girl rollerblade past
him, on her way up from the beach. "Innately hedged?"
"As long as the Philippines don't have their shit together, there'll be
plenty of OCWs. They will want to communicate with their families the
Filipinos are incredibly family oriented. They make Jews look like a bunch
of alienated loners."
"Okay. You know more about both groups than I do."
"They are sentimental and affectionate in a way that's very easy for us
to sneer at."
"You don't have to be defensive," Randy said, "I'm not sneering at
them."
"When you hear their song dedications on the radio, you'll sneer," Avi
said. "But frankly, we could take some pointers from the Pinoys on this
front."
"You are so close to being sanctimonious right now "
"I apologize," Avi said, with absolute sincerity. Avi's wife had been
pregnant almost continuously for the four years they'd been married. He was
getting more religiously observant daily and couldn't make it through a
conversation without mentioning the Holocaust. Randy was a bachelor who was
just about to break up with the chick he'd been living with.
"I believe you, Avi," Randy said. "Is it a problem with you if I buy a
business class ticket?"
Avi didn't hear him, so Randy assumed that meant yes. "As long as
that's the case, there will be a big market for Pinoy grams."
"Pinoy grams?"
"For god's sake, don't say it out loud! I'm filling out the trademark
application as we speak," Avi said. Randy could hear a rattling sound in the
background, computer keys impacting so rapidly it sounded like Avi was
simply holding the keyboard between his pale, spindly hands and shaking it
violently up and down. "But if the Filipinos do get their shit together,
then we see explosive growth in telecoms, as in any other Arday."
"Arday?"
"R D A E. Rapidly Developing Asian Economy. Either way, we win."
"I gather you want to do something with telecoms?"
"Bingo." In the background, a baby began to cough and cry. "Gotta go,"
Avi said, "Shlomo's asthma is spiking again. Take down this fingerprint."
"Fingerprint?"
"For my encryption key. For e mail."
"Ordo?"
"Yeah."
Randy took out a ballpoint pen and, finding no paper in his pocket,
poised it over the palm of his hand. "Shoot."
"67 81 A4 AE FF 40 25 9B 43 OE 29 8D 56 60 E3 2F." Then Avi hung up the
phone.
Randy went back into the restaurant. On his way back, he asked the
waiter to bring him a half bottle of good red wine. Charlene heard him, and
glowered. Randy was still thinking about innate ferocity, and did not see it
in her face; only a schoolmarmishness common among all of her friends. My
god! I have to get out of California, he realized.
Chapter 3 SEAWEED
Woman holds baby Eyes pale as a muzzle flash Band chimes frozen tears
The fourth marines is marching downhill to the strains of John Philip
Sousa, which ought to be second nature to a Marine. But the Fourth Marines
have been in Shanghai (which ain't no halls of Montezuma nor shores of
Tripoli) for too long, longer than Marines should ever stay in one place,
and Bobby's already seen his sergeant, one Frick, throw up from opium
withdrawal.
A Marine band is several Shanghai blocks ahead. Bobby's platoon can
hear the thumpity thump of the big drums and the piercing noises from
piccolos and glockenspiels but he can't follow the tune. Corporal Shaftoe is
effectively their leader, because Sergeant Frick is useless.
Shaftoe marches alongside the formation, supposedly to keep an eye on
his men, but mostly he's just staring at Shanghai.
Shanghai stares back, and mostly gives them a standing ovation. Of
course there is a type of young street rowdy who makes it a point of honor
to let the Marines know he isn't scared of them, and they are jeering the
Marines from a safe distance, and setting off strings of fire crackers,
which does nothing to steady anyone's nerves. The Europeans are applauding a
whole chorus line of Russian dancing girls from Delmonte's is showing thigh
and blowing kisses. But most of the Chinese look pretty stonefaced, which
Bobby suspects means they're scared shitless.
The worst thing is the women carrying half white babies. A few of these
women are rabid, hysterical, throwing themselves into formations of massed
Marines, undeterred by rifle butts. But most of them are stoic: they stand
with their light eyed babies and glare, searching the ranks and files for
the guilty party. They've all heard about what happened upriver in Nanjing
when the Nips came there, and they know that when it's all over, the only
trace that they and their babies ever existed may be a really bad memory in
the mind of some American Marine.
It works for Shaftoe: he has hunted deer in Wisconsin and seen them
limping across the snow, bleeding to death. He saw a man die in basic
training at Parris Island. He has seen whole tangles of bodies in the
Yangtze, downstream of where the Nipponese were prosecuting the China
Incident, and he has seen refugees from places like Nanjing starve to death
in the gutters of Shanghai. He has himself killed people who were trying to
storm the riverboats it was his duty to protect. He thinks that he has never
seen, and will never see, anything as terrible as those stone faced Chinese
women holding their white babies, not even blinking as the firecrackers
explode all around them.
Until, that is, he looks into the faces of certain Marines who stare
into that crowd and see their own faces looking back at them, pudgy with
baby fat and streaked with tears. Some of them seem to think it's all a
joke. But many of the Marines who march out of their empty barracks that
morning sane and solid men, have, by the time they reach the gunboats
waiting for them at the Bund, gone mad. They don't show it. But Shaftoe can
see in their eyes that something has given way inside.
The very best men in the regiment are in a foul mood. The ones like
Shaftoe, who didn't get involved with the Chinese women, are still leaving
plenty behind: houses with maids and shoeshine boys and coolies, with women
and opium for almost nothing. They don't know where they are being shipped
off to, but it's safe to say that their twenty one dollars a month won't go
as far. They'll be in barracks and they'll have to learn to polish their own
boots again. When the gangplanks are drawn in from the stone edge of the
Bund, they are cut off from a whole world that they'll never see again, a
world where they were kings. Now they are Marines again, It's okay with
Shaftoe, who wants to be a Marine. But many of the men have become middle
aged here, and don't.
The guilty men duck belowdecks. Shaftoe remains on the deck of the
gunboat, which casts off from the Bund, headed for the cruiser Augusta,
which awaits in mid channel.
The Bund is jammed with onlookers in a riot of differently colored
clothing, so one patch of uniform drab catches his eye: a group of Nip
soldiers who've come down to bid their Yank counterparts a sarcastic
farewell. Shaftoe scans the group looking for someone tall and bulky, and
picks him out easily. Goto Dengo's waving to him.
Shaftoe takes his helmet off and waves back. Then, on impulse, just for
the hell of it, he winds up and flings the helmet directly at Goto Dengo's
head. The throw goes awry and Goto Dengo has to knock down about a dozen of
his comrades in order to catch it. All of them seem to think that it is a
high honor, as well as tremendously amusing, to be knocked down by Goto
Dengo.
Twenty seconds later, a comet sails up out of the flesh cosmos of the
Bund and bounces on the wooden deck of the gunboat a hell of a throw. Goto
Dengo is showing off his follow through. The projectile is a rock with a
white streamer wrapped around it. Shaftoe runs over and snatches it. The
streamer is one of those thousand stitch headbands (supposedly; he's taken a
few off of unconscious Nips, but he's never bothered to count the stitches)
that they tie around their heads as a good luck charm; it has a meatball in
the center and some Nip writing to either side. He unties it from around the
rock. In so doing he realizes, suddenly, that it's not a rock after all; it
is a hand grenade! But good old Goto Dengo was just joking he didn't pull
the pin. A nice souvenir for Bobby Shaftoe.
***
Shaftoe's first haiku (December 1940) was a quick and dirty adaptation
of the Marine Creed:
This is my rifle
There are many like it but
This rifle is mine.
He wrote it under the following circumstances: Shaftoe and the rest of
Fourth Marines were stationed in Shanghai so that they could guard the
International Settlement and work as muscle on the gunboats of the Yangtze
River Patrol. His platoon had just come back from the Last Patrol: a
thousand mile reconnaissance in force all the way up past what was left of
Nanjing, to Hankow, and back. Marines had been doing this ever since the
Boxer Rebellion, through civil wars and everything else. But towards the end
of 1940, what with the Nips (1) basically running all of
northeast China now, the politicians back in D.C. had finally thrown in the
towel and told the China Marines not to steam up the Yangtze any more.
Now, the Old Breed Marines like Frick claimed they could tell the
difference between organized brigands; armed mobs of starving peasants;
rogue Nationalists; Communist guerrillas; and the irregular forces in the
pay of warlords. But to Bobby Shaftoe they were all just crazy, armed slopes
who wanted a piece of the Yangtze River Patrol. The Last Patrol had been a
wild trip. But it was over and they were back in Shanghai now, the safest
place you could be in China, and about a hundred times more dangerous than
the most dangerous place you could be in America. They had climbed off the
gunboat six hours ago, gone to a bar, and not come out until just now, when
they had decided it was high time they went to a whorehouse. On their way,
they happened to pass this Nip restaurant.
Bobby Shaftoe had looked in the windows of the place before, and
watched the man with the knife, trying to figure out what the hell he was
doing. It looked a hell of a lot like he was cutting up uncooked fish and
putting the raw meat on bullets of rice and handing it over to the Nips on
the other side of the counter, who were wolfing it down.
It had to be some kind of optical illusion. The fish must have been
precooked in the back room.
This had been nagging at Shaftoe for about a year. As he and the other
horny drunk Marines went by the place, he slowed down to peer through the
window, trying to gather more evidence. He could swear that some of that
fish looked ruby red, which it wouldn't have been if it were cooked.
One of his buddies, Rhodes from Shreveport, noticed him looking. He
dared Shaftoe to go in there and sit down at that bar. Then another private,
Gowicki from Pittsburgh, double dared him!
Shaftoe sucked his teeth and considered the matter. He had already made
up his mind that he was going to do it. He was a sniper scout, and it was in
his nature to do crazy shit like this; but it was also part of his training
to scan the terrain carefully before venturing in.
The restaurant was three quarters full, and everyone in the place was a
uniformed member of the Nipponese military. At the bar where the man was
cutting up the apparently raw fish, there was a marked concentration of
officers; if you only had one grenade, that's where you'd throw it. Most of
the place was filled with long tables where enlisted men sat, drinking
noodle soup from steaming urns. Shaftoe paid particular attention to these,
because they were the ones who were going to be beating the shit out of him
in about sixty seconds. Some were there alone, with reading material. A
cluster of them, back in one corner, were paying attention to one fellow who
was apparently telling a joke or story.
The longer Shaftoe spent reconnoitering the place, the more convinced
Rhodes and Gowicki became that he was actually going to do it. They became
excited and called for the other Marines, who had gone ahead of them down
the block, headed for that whorehouse.
Shaftoe saw the others coming back his tactical reserve. "What the
fuck," he said, and went into the restaurant. Behind him, he could hear the
others shouting excitedly; they couldn't believe he was doing it. When
Shaftoe stepped over the threshold of that Nip restaurant, he passed into
the realm of legend.
All the Nips looked up at him when he came in the door. If they were
surprised, they didn't show it. The chef behind the counter began to holler
out some kind of ritual greeting, which faltered and trailed off as he got a
look at what had just come in. The fellow in the back of the room a husky,
pink cheeked Nip continued telling his joke or story or whatever it was.
Shaftoe nodded to no one in particular, then stepped to the nearest
empty chair at the bar and sat down.
Other Marines would have waited until the whole squad had assembled.
Then they would have invaded the restaurant en masse, knocked over a few
chairs, spilled some soup. But Shaftoe had seized the initiative before the
others could do any such thing and gone in by himself as a sniper scout was
supposed to do. It was not just because be was a sniper scout, though. It
was also because he was Bobby Shaftoe, and he was sincerely curious about
this place, and if he could, he wanted to spend a few calm minutes in here
and learn a few things about it before the fun started.
It helped, of course, that Shaftoe was a quiet and contemplative drunk,
not a dangerous explosive drunk. He must have reeked of beer (those Krauts
in Tsingtao cranked out a brew whose taste took him right back to Wisconsin,
and he was homesick). But he wasn't hollering or knocking things over.
The chef was busy crafting one of his little morsels and pretended to
ignore Shaftoe. The other men at the counter stared coldly at Shaftoe for a
while, then turned their attentions back to their food. Shaftoe looked at
the array of raw fish laid out on shaved ice behind the bar, then looked
around the room. The guy back in the corner was talking in short bursts,
reading from a notebook. He would speak maybe ten or twenty words, and then
his little audience would turn to one another and grin, or grimace, or
sometimes even make a patter of applause. He wasn't delivering his material
like a dirty joke. He spoke precisely and expressively.
Fuck! He was reading poetry! Shaftoe had no idea what he was saying,
but he could tell, by the sound of it, that it must be poetry. Didn't rhyme
though. But the Nips did everything queerly.
He noticed that the chef was glaring at him. He cleared his throat,
which was useless since he couldn't speak Nip. He looked at some of that
ruby red fish behind the bar, pointed to it, held up two fingers.
Everyone was startled that the American had actually placed an order.
The tension was broken, only a little. The chef went to work and produced
two morsels, which he served up on a wooden pedestal.
Shaftoe had been trained to eat insects, and to bite the heads off
chickens, so he figured he could handle this. He picked the morsels up in
his fingers, just like the Nips were doing, and ate them. They were good. He
ordered two more, of another variety. The guy in the corner kept reading
poetry. Shaftoe ate his morsels and then ordered some more. For perhaps ten
seconds, between the taste of the fish and the sound of the poetry, he
actually felt comfortable here, and forgot that he was merely instigating a
vicious racial brawl.
The third order looked different: laid over the top of the raw fish
were thin translucent sheets of some kind of moist, glistening material. It
looked sort of like butcher paper soaked in oil. Shaftoe gawked at it for a
while, trying to identify it, but it looked like no foodstuff he knew of. He
glanced left and right, hoping that one of the Nips had ordered the same
stuff, so that he could watch and learn the right way to eat it. No luck.
Hell, they were officers. Maybe one of them spoke a little English. "
'Scuse me. What's this?" Shaftoe said, peeling up one corner of the eerie
membrane.
The chef looked up at him nervously, then scanned the bar, polling the
customers. Discussion ensued. Finally, a Nip officer at the end of the bar,
a naval lieutenant, stood up and spoke to Bobby Shaftoe.
"Seaweed."
Shaftoe did not particularly like the lieutenant's tone of voice
hostile and sullen. This, combined with the look on his face, seemed to say,
You'll never understand it, you farmer, so why don't you just think of it as
seaweed.
Shaftoe folded his hands primly in his lap, regarded the seaweed for a
few moments, and then looked up at the lieutenant, who was still gazing at
him expressionlessly. "What kind of seaweed, sir?" he said.
Significant glances began flying around the restaurant, like semaphores
before a naval engagement. The poetry reading seemed to have stopped, and a
migration of enlisted men had begun from the back of the room. Meanwhile the
lieutenant translated Shaftoe's inquiry to the others, who discussed it in
some detail, as if it were a major policy initiative from Franklin Delano
Roosevelt.
The lieutenant and the chef exchanged words. Then the lieutenant looked
at Shaftoe again. "He say, you pay now." The chef held up one hand and
rubbed his fingers and thumb together.
A year of working the Yangtze River Patrol had given Bobby Shaftoe
nerves of titanium, and unlimited faith in his comrades, and so he resisted
the impulse to turn his head and look out the window. He already knew
exactly what he would see: Marines, shoulder to shoulder, ready to die for
him. He scratched the new tattoo on his forearm: a dragon. His dirty
fingernails, passing over the fresh scabs, made a rasping sound in the
utterly silent restaurant.
"You didn't answer my question," Shaftoe said, pronouncing the words
with a drunk's precision.
The lieutenant translated this into Nipponese. More discussion. But
this time it was curt and decisive. Shaftoe could tell that they were about
to bounce him. He squared his shoulders.
The Nips were good; they mounted an organized charge out the door, onto
the sidewalk, and engaged the Marines, before anyone actually laid a hand on
Shaftoe. This spoiling attack prevented the Marines from invading the
restaurant proper, which would have disturbed the officers' meal and, with
any luck, led to untold property damage. Shaftoe then felt himself being
grabbed from behind by at least three people and hoisted into the air. He
made eye contact with the lieutenant while this was happening, and shouted:
"Are you bullshitting me about the seaweed?"
As brawls went, the only remarkable part of this one was the way he was
carried out to the street before he could actually get started. Then it was
like all the other street fights he'd been in with Nip soldiers in Shanghai.
These all came down to American brawn (you didn't get picked for the Fourth
Regiment unless you were an impressive looking six footer) versus that
Nipponese chop socky.
Shaftoe wasn't a boxer. He was a wrestler. This was to his advantage.
The other Marines would put up their dukes and try to fight it out Marquis
of Queensberry style no match for chop socky. Shaftoe had no illusions about
his boxing, so he would just put his head down and charge like a bull, take
a few blows to the face on his way in, but usually get a solid hold on his
opponent and slam him into the cobblestones. Usually that shook the Nip up
enough that Shaftoe could get him in a full nelson or a hammerlock and get
him to cry uncle.
The guys who were carrying him out of the restaurant got jumped by
Marines as soon as they were in the open. Shaftoe found himself going up
against an opponent who was at least as tall as he was, which was unusual.
This one had a solid build, too. Not like a sumo wrestler. More like a
football player a lineman, with a bit of a gut. He was a strong S.O.B. and
Shaftoe knew right away that he was in for a real scrape. The guy had a
different style of wrestling from the American, which (as Shaftoe learned
the hard way) included some illegal maneuvers: partial strangulation and
powerful, short punches to major nerve centers. The gulf between Shaftoe's
mind and body, already wedged open by alcohol, was yanked open to a chasm by
these techniques. He ended up lying on the sidewalk, helpless and paralyzed,
staring up into the chubby face of his opponent. This was (he realized) the
same guy who'd been sitting in the corner of the restaurant reading poetry.
He was a good wrestler for a poet. Or maybe vice versa.
" It is not seaweed ," said the big Nip. He had a look on his face like
a naughty schoolkid getting away with something. "The English word is maybe
calabash? " Then he turned and walked back into the restaurant.
So much for legend. What none of the other Marines knows is that this
was not the last encounter between Bobby Shaftoe and Goto Dengo. The
incident left Shaftoe with any number of nagging questions about subjects as
diverse as seaweed, poetry, and chop socky. He sought out Goto Dengo after
that, which was not that hard he just paid some Chinese boys to follow the
conspicuous Nip around town and file daily reports. From this he learned
that Goto Dengo and some of his comrades gathered every morning in a certain
park to practice their chop socky. After making sure that his will was in
order and writing a last letter to his parents and siblings in Oconomowoc.
Shaftoe went to that park one morning, reintroduced himself to the surprised
Goto Dengo, and made arrangements to serve as human punching bag. They found
his self defense skills hilariously primitive but admired his resilience,
and so, for the small cost of a few broken ribs and digits, Bobby Shaftoe
got a preliminary course in the particular type of chop socky favored by
Goto Dengo, which is called judo. Over time, this even led to a few social
engagements in bars, and restaurants, where Shaftoe learned to recognize
four types of seaweed, three types of fish eggs, and several flavors of Nip
poetry. Of course he had no idea what the fuck they were saying, but he
could count syllables, which, as far as he could tell, is about all there is
to Nip poetry appreciation.
Not that this or any other knowledge of their culture is going to do
him any good now that it will soon be his job to kill them.
In return, Shaftoe taught Goto Dengo how not to throw like a girl. A
lot of the Nips are good at baseball and so it was hilarious, even to them,
to see their burly friend pushing ineffectually at a baseball. But it was
Shaftoe who taught Goto Dengo to stand sideways, to rotate his shoulders,
and to follow through. He's paid a lot of attention to the big Nip's
throwing form during the last year, and maybe that's why the image of Goto
Dengo planting his feet on the ashlars of the Bund, winding up, throwing the
streamer wrapped grenade, and following through almost daintily on one
combat booted foot stays in Shaftoe's mind all the way to Manila and beyond.
***
A couple of days into the voyage it becomes apparent that Sergeant
Frick has forgotten how to shine his boots. Every night he puts them on the
deck beside his bunk, like he's expecting a coolie to come around and shine
them up during the night. Every morning he wakes up and finds them in a
sorrier state than before. After a few days he starts to draw reprimands
from On High, starts to get a lot of potato peeling duty.
Now in and of itself this is forgivable. Frick started out his career
chasing bandolier draped desperadoes away from mail trains on the High
Chaparral, for God's sake. In '27 he got shipped off to Shanghai on very
short notice, and no doubt had to display some adaptability. Fine. And now
he's on this miserable pre Great War cruiser and it's a little hard on him.
Fine. But he does not take all of this with the dignity that is demanded of
Marines by Marines. He whines about it. He lets himself get humiliated. He
gets angry. A lot of the other old China Marines see things his way.
One day Bobby Shaftoe is up on the deck of the destroyer tossing the
old horsehide around with a couple of the other young Marines when he sees a
few of these older guys accumulating into a sort of human booger on the
afterdeck. He can tell by the looks on their faces and by their gestures
that they are bellyaching.
Shaftoe hears a couple of the ship's crew talking to each other nearby
"What the hell is wrong with those Marines?" one of them says. The other one
shakes his head sadly, like a doctor who has just seen a patient's eyeballs
roll up into their sockets. "Those poor bastards have gone Asiatic." he
says.
And then they turn and look at Shaftoe.
That evening, at mess, Bobby Shaftoe gulps his food down double time,
then stands up and approaches the table where those Old Breed Marines are
sullenly gathered. "Begging your pardon, Sergeant!" he hollers. "Request
permission to shine your boots, Sarge!"
Frick's mouth drops open, revealing a half chewed plug of boiled beef.
"Whud you say, Corporal?"
The mess has gone silent. "Respectfully request permission to shine
your boots, Sarge!"
Frick is not the quickest guy in the world even when he's sober, and
it's pretty obvious, just from looking at his pupils, that he and his
comrades have brought some opium aboard. "Wull, uh, I guess so," he says. He
looks around at his crew of gripers, who are a little confused and a little
amused. He unlaces his boots. Bobby Shaftoe takes those disgraceful things
away and returns a bit later with them resplendently shined. By this time,
Frick has gotten high and mighty. "Wull, those boots look real good,
Corporal Shaftoe," he says in a brassy voice. "Darned if you ain't as good a
shoe shiner as my coolie boy was."
At lights out, Frick and crew are short sheeted. Various other, ruder
practical jokes ensue during the nighttime. One of them gets jumped in his
bunk and beaten by unspecified attackers. The brass call a surprise
inspection the next morning and cuss them out. The "gone Asiatic" crew spend
most of the next day gathered in a cluster, watching each other's backs.
Around midday, Frick finally gets it through his head that all of this
was triggered by Shaftoe's gesture, and that Shaftoe knew, all along, what
was going to happen. So he rushes Bobby Shaftoe up on the deck and tries to
throw him over the rail.
Shaftoe's warned at the last minute by one of his compadres, and spins
around just enough to throw off Frick's attack. Frick caroms off the rail,
turns around, and tries to grab Shaftoe's nuts. Shaftoe pokes him in the
eye, which straightens him right up. They back away from each other. The
opening formalities having been finished; they put up their dukes.
Frick and Shaftoe box for a couple of rounds. A large crowd of Marines
gathers. On most of their cards, Frick is winning the fight. Frick was
always dim witted, and is now crazy to boot, but he knows his way around a
boxing ring, and he has forty pounds on Shaftoe.
Shaftoe puts up with it until Frick socks him pretty hard in the mouth
and gives him a bloody lip.
"How far are we from Manila?" Shaftoe hollers. This question, as usual,
leaves Sergeant Frick confused and bewildered, and straightens him up for a
moment.
"Two days," answers one of the ship's officers.
"Well, goddamn," Bobby Shaftoe says. "How'm I gonna kiss my girl with
this fat lip?"
Frick answers, "Just go out and find a cheaper one."
That's all he needs. Shaftoe puts his head down and charges in on
Frick, hollering like a Nip. Before Frick can get his brain in gear, Bobby
Shaftoe has him wrapped up in one of those chop socky holds that Goto Dengo
taught him in Shanghai. He works his way up Frick's body to a choke hold and
then clamps down until Sergeant Frick's lips turn the color of the inside of
an oyster shell. Then he hangs Frick over the rail, holding him upside down
by the ankles, until Frick recovers enough to shout, "Uncle!"
A disciplinary proceeding is hastily called. Shaftoe is found guilty of
being courteous (by shining Frick's boots) and defending the life of a
Marine (himself) from a crazed attacker. The crazed attacker goes straight
to the brig. Within a few hours, the noises Frick makes lets all of the
Marines know what opium withdrawal feels like.
So Sergeant Frick does not get to see their entrance into Manila Bay.
Shaftoe almost feels sorry for the poor bastard.
The island of Luzon lies to port all day long, a black hulk barely
visible through the haze, with glimpses of palm trees and beaches down
below. All of the Marines have been this way before and so they can pick out
the Cordillera Central up north, and later the Zambales Mountains, which
eventually plunge down to meet the sea near Subic Bay. Subic triggers a
barrage of salty anecdotes. The ship does not put in there, but continues to
swing southward around Bata'an, turning inland toward the entrance of Manila
Bay. The ship reeks of shoe polish, talcum powder, and after shave lotion;
the Fourth Marines may have specialized in whoring and opium abuse, but
they've always been known as the best looking Marines in the Corps.
They pass by Corregidor. An island shaped like a bead of water on a
waxed boot, it is gently rounded in the middle but steeply sloping into the
water. It has a long, bony, dry tail that trails off at one end. The Marines
know that the island is riddled with tunnels and bristling with terrible
guns, but the only sign of these fortifications is the clusters of concrete
barracks up in the hills, housing the men who serve the weapons. A tangle of
antennas rises up above Topside. Their shapes are familiar to Shaftoe,
because many of the same antennas rose above Station Alpha in Shanghai, and
he had to take them apart and load them into the truck.
There is a giant limestone cliff descending nearly into the sea, and at
the base of it is the entrance to the tunnel where all the spooks and radio
men have their hideaway. Nearby is a dock, quite busy at the moment, with
supplies being offloaded from civilian transports and stacked right there on
the beach. This detail is noticed by all of the Marines as a positive sign
of approaching war. Augusta drops anchor in the cove, and all of that tarp
wrapped radio stuff is unloaded into launches and taken to that dock, along
with all of the odd pencil necked Navy men who tended that gear in Shanghai.
The swell dies as they pass Corregidor and enter the bay. Greenish
brown algae floats in swirls and curlicues near the surface. Navy ships lay
brown ropes of smoke across the still sea. Undisturbed by wind, these unfold
into rugged shapes like translucent mountain ranges. They pass the big
military base at Cavite a sheet of land so low and flat that its boundary
with the water would be invisible except for the picket line of palm trees.
A few hangars and water towers rise from it, and low dark clusters of
barracks farther inland. Manila is dead ahead of them, still veiled in haze,
It is getting on toward evening.
Then the haze dissolves, the atmosphere suddenly becomes as limpid as a
child's eyes, and for about an hour they can see to infinity. They are
steaming into an arena of immense thunderheads with lightning cork screwing
down through them all around. Flat grey clouds like shards of broken slate
peek out between anvils. Behind them are higher clouds vaulting halfway to
the moon, glowing pink and salmon in the light of the setting sun. Behind
that, more clouds nestled within banks of humidity like Christmas ornaments
wrapped in tissue paper, expanses of blue sky, more thunderheads exchanging
bolts of lightning twenty miles long. Skies nested within skies nested
within skies.
It was cold up there in Shanghai, and it's gotten warmer every day
since. Some days it's even been hot and muggy. But around the time Manila
heaves into view, a warm breeze springs up over the deck and all of the
Marines sigh, as if they have all ejaculated in unison.
Manila's perfume
Fanned by the coconut palms
The thighs of Glory
Manila's spreading tile roofs have a mestizo shape about them, half
Spanish and half Chinese. The city has a concave seawall with a flat
promenade on the top. Strollers turn and wave to the Marines; some of them
blow kisses. A wedding party is gushing down the steps of a church and
across the boulevard to the seawall, where they are getting their pictures
taken in the flattering peach colored light of the sunset. The men are in
their fancy, gauzy Filipino shirts, or in U.S. military uniforms. The women
are in spectacular gowns and dresses. The Marines holler and whistle at them
and the women turn towards them, hitching up their skirts slightly so that
they won't trip, and wave enthusiastically. The Marines get woozy and
practically fall overboard.
As their ship is easing into its dock, a crescent shaped formation of
flying fish erupts from the water. It moves away like a dune being blown
across the desert. The fish are silver and leaf shaped. Each one strikes the
water with a metallic click, and the clicks merge into a crisp ripping
noise. The crescent glides beneath a pier, flowing around its pilings, and
disappears in the shadows underneath.
Manila, the Pearl of the Orient, early on a Sunday evening, the 7th of
December, 1941. In Hawaii, on the other side of the Date Line, it is only
just past midnight. Bobby Shaftoe and his comrades have a few hours of
freedom. The city is modern, prosperous, English speaking, and Christian, by
far the wealthiest and most advanced city in Asia, practically like being
back home in the States. For all its Catholicity, it has areas that seem to
have been designed, from the foundation stones upwards, to the
specifications of horny sailors. You get to those parts of town by turning
right once your feet are on dry land.
Bobby Shaftoe turns left, politely excuses himself past a legion of
excited prostitutes, and sets his course on the looming walls of Intramuros.
He stops only to buy a sheaf of roses from a vendor in the park, who is
doing land office business. The park and the walls above it are crowded with
strolling lovers, the men mostly in uniforms and the women in demure but
stunning dresses, twirling parasols on their shoulders.
A couple of fellows driving horse drawn taxis want to do business with
Bobby Shaftoe but he turns them down. A taxi will only get him there faster,
and he is too nervous to get there fast. He walks through a gate in the wall
and into the old Spanish city.
Intramuros is a maze of buff colored stone walls rising abruptly from
narrow streets. The first floor windows along the sidewalks are guarded by
black ironwork cages. The bars swell, swirl, and sprout finedly hammered
leaves. The second stories hang out overhead, sporting gas lights that are
just now being lit by servants with long, smoking poles. The sound of
laughter and music drifts out of the windows above, and when he passes by
the archways that open into the inner courtyards, he can smell flowers back
in the gardens.
Damned if he can tell these places apart. He remembers the street name
of Magallanes, because Glory told him once it was the same thing as
"Magellan." And he remembers the view of the cathedral from the Pascuals'
window. He wanders around a block a couple of times, certain that he is
close. Then he hears an exaltation of girlish laughter coming from a second
story window, and moves toward it like a jellyfish sucked into an intake
pipe. It all comes together. This is the place. The girls are all gossiping,
in English, about one of their instructors. He does not hear Glory's voice
but he thinks he hears her laughter.
"Glory!" he says. Then he says it louder. If they hear him, they pay
him no mind. Finally he winds up and flings the bouquet of roses like a
potato masher grenade over the wooden railing, through a narrow gap between
the mother of pearl shutters, and into the room.
Miraculous silence from within the room, and then gales of laughter.
The nacre shutters part with slow, agonizing coyness. A girl of nineteen
steps out onto the balcony. She is dressed in the uniform of a nursing
student. Iris as white as starlight shining on the North Pole. She has let
her long black hair down to brush it, and it stirs languidly in the evening
breeze. The last ruddy light of the sunset makes her face glow like a coal.
She hides behind the bouquet for a moment, buries her nose in it, inhales
deeply, peeking out at him over the blossoms with her black eyes. Then she
lowers the bouquet gradually to reveal her high cheeks, her perfect little
nose, the fantastic sculpture of her lips, and teeth, white but fetchingly
crooked, barely visible. She is smiling.
"Jesus H. Christ," Bobby Shaftoe says, "your cheekbones are like a
fucking snowplow."
She puts her finger to her lips. The gesture of anything touching
Glory's lips puts an invisible spear through Shaftoe's chest. She eyes him
for a while, establishing, in her own mind, that she has the boy's attention
and that he is not going anywhere. Then she turns her back on him. The light
grazes her buttocks, showing nothing but suggesting cleavage. She goes back
inside and the shutter glides shut behind her.
Suddenly the room full of girls becomes quiet, except for occasional
ripples of suppressed laughter. Shaftoe bites his tongue. They are screwing
it all up. Mr. or Mrs. Pascual will notice their silence and become
suspicious.
Ironwork clangs and a big gate swings open. The potter beckons him
inside. Shaftoe follows the old fellow down the black, arched tunnel of the
porte cochere. The hard soles of his shiny black shoes skid on the
cobblestones. A horse back in the stable whinnies at the smell of his
aftershave. Sleepy American music, slow dance stuff from the Armed Forces
station, spills tinnily from a radio in the porter's nook.
Flowering vines grow up the stone walls of the courtyard. It is a tidy,
quiet, enclosed world, almost like being indoors. The porter waves him in
the direction of one of the stairways that lead up to the second floor.
Glory calls it the entresuelo and says that it's really a floor between the
floors, but it looks like a full fledged, regular floor to Bobby Shaftoe. He
mounts the steps and looks up to see Mr. Pascual standing there, a tiny bald
man with glasses and a trim little mustache. He is wearing a short sleeved
shirt, American style, and khaki trousers, and slippers, and is holding a
glass of San Miguel in one hand and a cigarette in the other. "Private
Shaftoe! Welcome back," he says.
So. Glory has decided to play this one by the book. The Pascuals have
been alerted. A few hours of socializing now stand between Bobby Shaftoe and
his girl. But a Marine is never fazed by such setbacks.
"Begging your pardon, Mr. Pascual, but I am a corporal now."
Mr. Pascual puts his cigarette in his mouth and shakes Corporal
Shaftoe's hand. "Well, congratulations! I just saw your uncle Jack last
week. I don't think he had any idea you were on your way back."
"It was a surprise to everyone, sir," Bobby Shaftoe says.
Now they are on a raised walkway that runs around the courtyard. Only
livestock and servants live at ground level. Mr. Pascual leads them around
to a door that takes them into the entresuelo. The walls here are rough
stone, the ceilings are simple painted planks. They pass through a dark,
somber office where Mr. Pascual's father and grandfather used to receive the
managers of the family's haciendas and plantations. For a moment, Bobby
Shaftoe gets his hopes up. This level has a few rooms that back in the old
days were apartments for high ranking servants, bachelor uncles, and
spinster aunts. Now that the hacienda business ain't what it used to be, the
Pascuals are renting them out to female students. Perhaps Mr. Pascual is
leading him directly to Glory.
But this goes the way of all foolish, horny illusions as Shaftoe finds
himself at the foot of a vast staircase of polished nara wood. He can see
pressed tin ceiling up there, chandeliers, and the imposing superstructure
of Mrs. Pascual, contained within a mighty bodice that looks like some thing
dreamed up by naval engineers. They ascend the stairs into the antesala,
which according to Glory is strictly for casual, drop in visitors but is
fancier than any room Bobby Shaftoe has ever seen. There are big vases and
pots all over the place, supposedly old, and supposedly from Japan and
China. A fresh breeze runs through; he looks out a window and sees, neatly
framed in it, the green dome of the cathedral with its Celtic cross on top,
just as he remembered it. Mrs. Pascual holds out her band and Shaftoe clasps
it. "Mrs. Pascual," he says, "thank you for welcoming me into your home."
"Please sit down," she says, "we want to hear everything."
Shaftoe sits in a fancy chair next to the piano, adjust his trousers a
bit so that they will not cramp his erect penis, checks his shave. It
probably has a few good hours left. A wing of airplanes drones overhead.
Mrs. Pascual is giving instructions to the maid in Tagalog. Shaftoe examines
the crusted lacerations on his knuckles and wonders whether Mrs. Pascual has
the slightest idea of what she would be in for if he really told her
everything. Perhaps a little anecdote about hand to hand combat with Chinese
river pirates on the banks of the Yangtze would break the ice. Through a
door and down the hall, he can see a corner of the family chapel, all Gothic
arches, a gilded altar, and in front of it an embroidered kneeler worn
threadbare by the patellas of Mrs. Pascual.
Cigarettes are brought round, stacked in a large lacquer box like
artillery shells in a crate. They drink tea and exchange small talk for what
seems like about thirty six hours. Mrs. Pascual wants to be reassured, over
and over again, that everything is fine and that there will not be a war.
Mr. Pascual obviously believes that war is just around the corner, and
mostly broods. Business has been good lately. He and Jack Shaftoe, Bobby's
uncle, have been shipping a lot of stuff between here and Singapore. But
business will get a lot worse soon, he thinks.
Glory appears. She has changed out of her student's uniform and into a
dress. Bobby Shaftoe nearly topples backward out of the window. Mrs. Pascual
formally reintroduces them. Bobby Shaftoe kisses Glory's hand in what he
thinks is more than likely a very gallant gesture. He's glad he did, because
Glory is palming a tiny wadded up note which ends up in his hand.
Glory takes a seat and is duly issued her own teacup. Another eternity
of small talk. Mr. Pascual asks him for the eighty seventh time whether he
has touched base with Uncle Jack yet, and Shaftoe reiterates that he
literally just stepped off the boat and will certainly see Uncle Jack
tomorrow morning. He excuses himself to the bathroom, which is an old
fashioned two holer mounted above deep shafts that must descend all the way
to hell. He unwads and reads Glory's note, memorizes the instructions, tears
it up and sprinkles it down the hole.
Mrs. Pascual allows the two young lovers a full half hour of "private"
time together, meaning that the Pascuals leave the room and only come back
every five minutes or so to check up on them. There is a painfully elaborate
and lengthy good bye ceremony which ends in Shaftoe returning to the street
and Glory waving to him from her balcony.
Half an hour later, they are doing tongue judo in the back of a horse
drawn taxi galloping over the cobblestones toward the nightclubs of Malate.
The extraction of Glory from the Pascual residence was a simple matter for a
highly motivated China Marine and a squadron of saucy nursing students.
But Glory must be kissing him with her eyes open because all of a
sudden she wriggles loose and says to the taxi driver, "Stop! Please stop,
sir!"
"What is it?" Shaftoe says blurrily. He looks around and sees nothing
but a great big old stone church looming up above them. This brings a
preliminary stab of fear. But the church is dark, there's no Filipinas in
long dresses, no Marines in dress uniforms, it can't be his wedding.
"I want to show you something," Glory says, and clambers down out of
the taxi. Shaftoe has to pursue her into the place the Church of San
Augustin. He's gone by this pile many times but he never reckoned he would
come inside on a date.
She stands at the bottom of a huge staircase and says, "See?"
Shaftoe looks up into darkness, thinks there might be a stained glass
window or two up there, maybe a Laceration of Christ or an Impalement of the
Blessed Thorax, but
"Look down ," Glory says, and taps one miniature foot against the first
tread of the staircase. It is a single great big huge slab of granite.
"Looks like ten or twenty tons of rock there I'd estimate," he says
authoritatively.
"It came from Mexico."
"Ah, go on!"
Glory smiles at him. "Carry me up the stairs." And in case Shaftoe's
thinking of refusing, she sort of falls into him, and he has no choice but
to catch her up in his arms. She traps his nape in the crook of her arm, the
better to pull her face close to his, but what he remembers is how the silk
of her sleeve feels against the freshly shaved skin of his neck. He begins
the ascent. Glory doesn't weigh much, but after four steps he has broken a
fine sweat. She is watching him, from four inches away, for signs of
fatigue, and he feels himself blushing. Good thing that the whole staircase
is lit up by about two candles. There's a lovely bust of a thorn crowned
Jesus with long parallel blood drops running down his face, and on the right
"These giant stones you are walking on were quarried in Mexico,
centuries and centuries ago, before America was even a country. They were
brought over in the bottoms of the Manila Galleons, as ballast." She
pronounces it bayast.
"I'll be damned."
"When those galleons arrived, the stones were brought out of their
bellies, one by one, and taken here to the Church of San Augustin, and piled
up. Each stone on top of the last year's stone. Until finally after many,
many years this staircase was finished."
After a while it seems to Shaftoe as though it's going to take at least
that many years to reach the top of the damn thing. The summit is adorned
with a life sized Jesus carrying a cross that appears to be at least as
heavy as one of those stair treads. So who's he to complain? Then Glory
says, "Now carry me down, so you will remember the story."
'"You think I'm some horny jarhead who won't remember a story unless
it's got a pretty girl in it?"
'"Yes," Glory says, and laughs in his face. He carries her down to the
bottom again. Then, before she goes off on some other tangent, he carries
her straight out the door and into the taxi.
Bobby Shaftoe is not one to lose his cool in the heat of action, but
the rest of the evening is a blurry fever dream to him. Only a few
impressions penetrate the haze: alighting from the taxi in front of a
waterfront hotel; all of the other boys gaping at Glory; Bobby Shaftoe
glaring at them, threatening to teach them some manners. Slow dancing with
Glory in the ballroom, Glory's silk clad thigh gradually slipping between
his legs, her firm body pressing harder and harder against his. Strolling
along the seawall, hand in hand beneath the starlight. Noticing that the
tide is out. Exchanging a look. Carrying her down from the seawall to the
thin strip of rocky beach beneath it.
By the time he is actually fucking her, he has more or less lost
consciousness, he is off in some fantastic, libidinal dream. He and Glory
fuck without the slightest hesitation, without any doubts, without any
troublesome thinking whatsoever. Their bodies have spontaneously merged,
like a pair of drops running together on a windowpane. If he is thinking
anything at all, it is that his entire life has culminated in this moment.
His upbringing in Oconomowoc, high school prom night, deer hunting in the
Upper Peninsula, Parris Island boot camp, all of the brawls and struggles in
China, his duel with Sergeant Frick, they are wood behind the point of a
spear.
Sirens are blowing somewhere. He startles back to awareness. Has he
been here all night long, holding Glory up against the seawall, her thighs
wrapped around his waist? That would not be possible. The tide hasn't come
in at all.
"What is it?" she says. Her hands are clasped around the back of his
neck. She lets go and runs them down his chest.
Still holding her up, his hands making a sling under her warm and
flawless ass, Shaftoe backs away from the seawall and turns around on the
beach, looking at the sky. He sees searchlights beginning to come on. And it
ain't no Hollywood premiere.
"It's war, baby," he says.
Chapter 4 FORAYS
The lobby of the Manila Hotel is about the size of a football field. It
smells like last year's perfume, rare tropical orchids, and bug spray. There
is a metal detector set up at the front door, because the Prime Minister of
Zimbabwe happens to be staying here for a couple of days. Big Africans in
good suits stand around the place in clusters of two and three. Mini throngs
of Nipponese tourists, in their Bermuda shorts, sandals and white socks,
have lodged themselves in the deep, thick, wide sofas and sit quietly,
waiting for a prearranged signal. Upper class Filipino children brandish
cylindrical potato chip canisters like tribal chieftains carrying ceremonial
maces. A dignified old bellman carrying a hand pumped tank circulates around
the defensive perimeter and silently sprays insecticide against the
baseboard. Enter Randall Lawrence Waterhouse, in a turquoise polo shirt
embroidered with the logo of one of the bankrupt high tech companies that he
and Avi have founded, and relaxed fit blue jeans held up with suspenders,
and bulky athletic shoes that once were white.
As soon as he got through the formalities at the airport, he perceived
that the Philippines are, like Mexico, one of those countries where Shoes
Matter. He approaches the registration counter quickly so that the ravishing
young woman in the navy blue uniform will not see his feet. A couple of
bellhops are engaged in a pathetic, Sisyphean contest with his bag, which
has roughly the dimensions and mass of a two drawer filing cabinet. "You
will not be able to find technical books there," Avi told him, "bring
anything you might conceivably need."
Randy's suite is a bedroom and living room, both with fourteen foot
ceilings, and a corridor along one side containing several closets and
various plumbing related technologies. The entire thing is lined in some
kind of tropical hardwood stained to a lovely glowing auburn, which would be
dismal in the northern latitudes but, here, gives it a cozy and cool
feeling. The two main rooms each have huge windows with tiny signs by the
latch handles warning of tropical insects. Each room is defended from its
windows by a multilayered system of interlocking barriers: incredibly
massive wooden shutters that rumble back and forth on tracks, like freight
trains maneuvering in a switching yard; a second layer of shutters
consisting of two inch squares of nacre held in a polished wooden grid,
sliding on its own set of tracks; window sheers, and finally, heavy gauge
blackout curtains, each suspended from its own set of clanging industrial
rails.
He orders up a large pot of coffee, which barely keeps him awake long
enough to unpack. It is late afternoon. Purple clouds tumble out of the
surrounding mountains with the palpable momentum of volcanic mudflows and
turn half of the sky into a blank wall striped with vertical bolts of
lightning; the walls of the hotel room flash with it as though paparazzi are
working outside the window. Below, food vendors in Rizal Park run up and
down the sidewalks to get out of the rain, which falls, as it has been doing
for about half a millennium, on the sloping black walls of Intramuros. If
those walls did not run in straight lines they could be mistaken for a
natural freak of geology: ridges of bare, dark volcanic rock erupting from
the grass like teeth from gums. The walls have dovetail shaped notches that
converge to old gun emplacements, providing interlocking fields of fire
across a dry moat.
Living in the States, you never see anything older than about two and a
half centuries, and you have to visit the eastern fringe of the country to
see that. The business traveler's world of airports and taxicabs looks the
same everywhere. Randy never really believes he's in a different country
until he sees something like Intramuros, and then he has to stand there like
an idiot for a long time, ruminating.
***
Right now, across the Pacific Ocean, in a small, tasteful Victorian
town located a third of the way from San Francisco to Los Angeles, computers
are seizing up, crucial files are disappearing, and e mail is careening into
intergalactic space, because Randy Waterhouse is not there to keep an eye on
things. The town in question sports three small colleges: one founded by the
State of California and two founded by Protestant denominations that are now
actively reviled by the majority of their faculty. Taken together these
colleges the Three Siblings comprise an academic center of middling
importance. Their computer systems are linked into one. They exchange
teachers and students. From time to time they host academic conferences.
This part of California has beaches, mountains, redwood forests, vineyards,
golf courses, and sprawling penal facilities all over the place. There are
plenty of three– and four star hotel rooms, and the Three Siblings,
taken together, have enough auditoria and meeting rooms to host a conference
of several thousand.
Avi's telephone call, some eighty hours ago, arrived in the middle of a
major interdisciplinary conference called "The Intermediate Phase (1939 45)
of the Global Hegemony Struggle of the Twentieth Century (Common Era)." This
is a bit of a mouthful and so it has been given a pithy nickname: "War as
Text."
People are coming from places like Amsterdam and Milan. The
conference's organizing committee which includes Randy's girlfriend,
Charlene, who actually gives every indication of being his ex girlfriend now
hired an artist in San Francisco to come up with a poster. He started with a
black and white halftone photo of a haggard World War II infantryman with a
cigarette dangling from his lower lip. He worked this image over using a
photocopier, blowing the halftone dots up into rough lumps, like rubber
balls chewed by a dog, and wreaking any number of other distortions on it
until it had an amazingly stark, striking, jagged appearance; the soldier's
pale eyes turned an eerie white. Then he added a few elements in color: red
lipstick, blue eyeshadow, and a trace of a red brassiere strap peeking out
from the soldier's unbuttoned uniform shirt.
The poster won some kind of an award almost the moment it came out.
This led to a press release, which in turn led to the poster's being
enshrined by the news media as an Official Object of Controversy. An
enterprising journalist managed to track down the soldier depicted in the
original photograph a decorated combat veteran and retired tool and die
maker who, as it happened, was not merely alive but in excellent health,
and, since the death of his wife from breast cancer, had spent his
retirement roaming around the Deep South in his pickup truck, helping to
rebuild black churches that had been torched by drunken yahoos.
The artist who had designed the poster then confessed that he had
simply copied it from a book and had made no effort whatsoever to obtain
permission the entire concept of getting permission to use other people's
work was faulty, since all art was derivative of other art. High powered
trial lawyers converged, like dive bombers, on the small town in Kentucky
where the aggrieved veteran was up on the roof of a black church with a
mouthful of nails, hammering down slabs of A/D exterior plywood and mumbling
"no comment" to a horde of reporters down on the lawn. After a series of
conferences in a room at the town's Holiday Inn, the veteran emerged,
accompanied by one of the five most famous lawyers on the face of the
planet, and announced that he was filing a civil suit against the Three
Siblings that would, if it succeeded, turn them and their entire community
into a flat, smoking abrasion in the earth's crust. He promised to split the
proceeds between the black churches and various disabled veterans' and
breast cancer research groups.
The organizing committee pulled the poster from circulation, which
caused thousands of bootleg copies to go up on the World Wide Web and, in
general, brought it to the attention of millions who never would have seen
it otherwise. They also filed suit against the artist, whose net worth could
be tallied up on the back of a ticket stub: he had assets of about a
thousand dollars and debts (mostly student loans) amounting to sixty five
thousand.
All of this happened before the conference even began. Randy was aware
of it only because Charlene had roped him into providing computer support
for the conference, which meant setting up a Web site and e mail access for
the attendees. When all of this hit the news, e mail began to flood in, and
quickly jammed up all of the lines and filled up all of the disk capacity
that Randy had spent the last month setting up.
Conferees began to arrive. A lot of them seemed to be sleeping in the
house where Randy and Charlene had been living together for seven years. It
was a big old Victorian house and there was plenty of room. They stumbled in
from Heidelberg and Paris and Berkeley and Boston, then sat around Randy and
Charlene's kitchen table drinking coffee and talking at great length about
the Spectacle. Randy inferred that the Spectacle meant the poster furor, but
as they went on and on about it, he sensed that they were using the word not
in a conventional sense but as part of some academic jargon; that it carried
a heavy load of shadings and connotations to them, none of which Randy would
ever understand unless he became one of them.
To Charlene, and to all of the people attending War as Text, it was
self evident that the veteran who filed the lawsuit was the very worst kind
of human being just the sort they had gathered together to debunk, burn in
effigy, and sweep into the ash bin of posthistorical discourse. Randy had
spent a lot of time around these people, and thought he'd gotten used to
them, but during those days he had a headache all the time, from clenching
his teeth, and he kept jumping to his feet in the middle of meals or
conversations and going out for solitary walks. This was partly to keep
himself from saying something undiplomatic, and partly as a childish but
fruitless tactic to get the attention he craved from Charlene.
He knew the whole poster saga was going to be a disaster from early on.
He kept warning Charlene and the others. They listened coolly, clinically,
as if Randy were a test subject on the wrong side of a one way mirror.
***
Randy forces himself to stay awake long enough for it to get dark. Then
he lies in bed for a few hours trying to sleep. The container port is just
north of the hotel, and all night long, Rizal Boulevard, along the base of
the old Spanish wall, is jammed from one end to the other with container
carrying semis. The whole city is a cauldron of internal combustion. Manila
seems to have more pistons and exhaust pipes than the rest of the world
combined. Even at two in the morning the hotel's seemingly unshakable mass
hums and rattles from the seismic energy pouring from all of those motors.
The noise detonates car alarms down in the hotel's lot. The noise of one
alarm triggers others, and so on. It is not the noise that keeps Randy awake
so much as the insane stupidity of this chain reaction. It is an object
lesson: the kind of nightmarish, snowballing technological fuck up that
keeps hackers awake at night even when they can't hear the results.
He paws open a Heineken from his minibar and stands in front of the
window, looking. Many of the trucks are adorned with brilliant displays of
multicolored lights not quite as flashy as those of the few jeepneys that
scurry and jostle among them. Seeing so many people awake and working puts
sleep out of the question.
He is too jet lagged to accomplish anything that requires actual
thought but there is one important job he can do, which requires no thinking
whatsoever. He starts up his laptop again. Seeming to levitate in the center
of his dark room, the screen is a perfect rectangle of light the color of
diluted milk, of a Nordic dawn. This light originates in small fluorescent
tubes imprisoned in the polycarbonate coffin of his computer's display. It
can only escape through a pane of glass, facing Randy, which is entirely
covered by small transistors arranged in a grid, which let photons through,
or don't, or let through only those of a particular wavelength, cracking the
pale light into colors. By turning those transistors on and off according to
some systematic plan, meaning is conveyed to Randy Waterhouse. A good
filmmaker could convey a whole story to Randy by seizing control of those
transistors for a couple of hours.
Unfortunately, there are a lot more laptop computers floating around
than there are filmmakers worth paying attention to. The transistors are
almost never put into the hands of human beings. They are controlled,
instead, by software. Randy used to be fascinated by software, but now he
isn't. It's hard enough to find human beings who are interesting.
The pyramid and the eyeball appear. Randy spends so much time using
Ordo now that he has his machine boot it up automatically.
Nowadays the laptop has only one function for Randy: he uses it to
communicate with other people, through e mail. When he communicates with
Avi, he has to use Ordo, which is a tool for taking his ideas and converting
them into streams of bits that are almost indistinguishable from white
noise, so that they can be sent to Avi in privacy. In exchange, it receives
noise from Avi and converts it into Avi's thoughts. At the moment, Epiphyte
has no assets other than information it is an idea, with some facts and data
to back it up. This makes it eminently stealable. So encryption is
definitely a good idea. The question is: how much paranoia is really
appropriate?
Avi sent him encrypted e mail:
When you get to Manila t would like you to generate a 4O96 bit key pair
and keep it on a floppy disk that you carry on your person at all times. Do
not keep it on your hard disk. Anyone could break into your hotel room while
you're out and steal that key.
Now, Randy pulls down a menu and picks an item labeled: "New key. . ."
A box pops up giving him several KEY LENGTH options: 768 bits, 1024,
1536, 2048, 3072, or Custom. Randy picks the latter option and then,
wearily, types in 4096.
Even a 768 bit key requires vast resources to break. Add one bit, to
make it 769 bits long, and the number of possible keys doubles, the problem
becomes much more difficult. A 770 bit key is that much more difficult yet,
and so on. By using 768 bit keys, Randy and Avi could keep their
communications secret from nearly every entity in the world for at least the
next several years. A 1024 bit key would be vastly, astronomically more
difficult to break.
Some people go so far as to use keys 2048 or even 3072 bits in length.
These will stop the very best codebreakers on the face of the earth for
astronomical periods of time, barring the invention of otherworldly
technologies such as quantum computers. Most encryption software even stuff
written by extremely security conscious cryptography experts can't even
handle keys larger than that. But Avi insists on using Ordo, generally
considered the best encryption software in the world, because it can handle
keys of unlimited length as long as you don't mind waiting for it to crunch
all the numbers.
Randy begins typing. He is not bothering to look at the screen; he is
staring out the window at the lights on the trucks and the jeepneys. He is
only using one hand, just flailing away loosely at the keyboard.
Inside Randy's computer is a precise clock. Whenever he strikes a key,
Ordo uses that clock to record the current time, down to microseconds. He
hits a key at 03:03:56.935788 and he hits another one at 03:05:57.290664, or
about .354876 seconds later. Another .372307 seconds later, he hits another
one. Ordo keeps track of all of these intervals and discards the more
significant digits (in this example the .35 and the .37) because these parts
will tend to be similar from one event to the next.
Ordo wants randomness. It only wants the least significant digits say,
the 76 and the 07 at the very ends of these numbers. It wants a whole lot of
random numbers, and it wants them to be very, very random. It is taking
somewhat random numbers and feeding them through hash functions that make
them even more random. It is running statistical routines on the results to
make sure that they contain no hidden patterns. It has breathtakingly high
standards for randomness, and it will not stop asking Randy to whack on the
keyboard until those standards are met.
The longer the key you are trying to generate, the longer this takes.
Randy is trying to generate one that is ridiculously long. He has pointed
out to Avi, in an encrypted e mail message, that if every particle of matter
in the universe could be used to construct one single cosmic supercomputer,
and this computer was put to work trying to break a 4096 bit encryption key,
it would take longer than the lifespan of the universe.
"Using today's technology," Avi shot back. "that is true. But what
about quantum computers? And what if new mathematical techniques are
developed that can simplify the factoring of large numbers?"
"How long do you want these messages to remain secret?" Randy asked, in
his last message before leaving San Francisco. "Five years? Ten years?
Twenty five years?"
After he got to the hotel this afternoon, Randy decrypted and read
Avi's answer. It is still hanging in front of his eyes, like the afterimage
of a strobe:
I want them to remain secret for as long as men are capable of evil.
The computer finally beeps. Randy rests his tired hand. Ordo politely
warns him that it may be busy for a while, and then goes to work. It is
searching the cosmos of pure numbers, looking for two big primes that can be
multiplied by each other to produce a number 4096 bits long.
If you want your secrets to remain secret past the end of your life
expectancy, then, in order to choose a key length, you have to be a
futurist. You have to anticipate how much faster computers will get during
this time. You must also be a student of politics. Because if the entire
world were to become a police state obsessed with recovering old secrets,
then vast resources might be thrown at the problem of factoring large
composite numbers.
So the length of the key that you use is, in and of itself, a code of
sorts. A knowledgeable government eavesdropper, noting Randy's and Avi's use
of a 4096 bit key, will conclude one of the following:
– Avi doesn't know what he's talking about. This can be ruled out
with a bit of research into his past accomplishments. Or,
– Avi is clinically paranoid. This can also be ruled out with
some research. Or,
– Avi is extremely optimistic about the future development of
computer technology, or pessimistic about the political climate, or both.
Or,
– Avi has a planning horizon that extends over a period of at
least a century.
Randy paces around his room while his computer soars through number
space. The shipping containers on the backs of those trucks bear exactly the
same logos as the ones that used to fill the streets of South Seattle when a
ship was unloading. To Randy this is oddly satisfying, as if by making this
crazy lunge across the Pacific, he has brought some kind of antipodal
symmetry to his life. He has gone from the place where things are consumed
to where they are produced, from a land where onanism has been enshrined at
the highest levels of the society to one where cars have "NO to
contraception!" stickers in their windows. It feels bizarrely right. He has
not felt this way since Avi and he founded their first doomed business
venture twelve years ago.
***
Randy grew up in a college town in eastern Washington State, graduated
from the University of Washington in Seattle, and landed a Clerk Typist II
job at the library there specifically the Interlibrary Loan Department where
his job was to process incoming loan requests mailed in from smaller
libraries all over the region and, conversely, to mail out requests to other
libraries. If nine year old Randy Waterhouse had been able to look into the
future and see himself in this career, he would have been delighted beyond
measure: the primary tool of the Interlibrary Loan Department was the Staple
Remover. Young Randy had seen one of these devices in the hands of his
fourth grade teacher and been enthralled by its cunning and deadly
appearance, so like the jaws of some futuristic robot dragon. He had, in
fact, gone out of his way to staple things incorrectly just so he could
prevail on his teacher to unstaple them, giving him another glimpse of the
blood chilling mandibles in action. He had gone so far as to steal a staple
remover from an untended desk at church and then incorporate it into an
Erector set robot hunter killer device with which he terrorized much of the
neighborhood; its pit viper yawn separated many a cheap plastic toy from its
parts and accessories before the theft was discovered and Randy made an
example of before God and man. Now, in the Interlibrary Loan office, Randy
had not just one but several staple removers in his desk drawer and was
actually obligated to use them for an hour or two a day.
Since the UW library was well endowed, its patrons didn't request books
from other libraries unless they had been stolen from their own or were, in
some way, peculiar. The ILL office (as Randy and his coworkers
affectionately called it) had its regulars people who had a whole lot of
peculiar books on their wish lists. These people tended to be either tedious
or scary or both. Randy always ended up dealing with the "both" subgroup,
because Randy was the only Clerk Typist in the office who was not a lifer.
It seemed clear that Randy, with his astronomy degree and his extensive
knowledge of computers, would one day move on, whereas his coworkers did not
harbor further ambitions. His larger sphere of interests, his somewhat
broader concept of normalcy, was useful when certain patrons came into the
office.
By the standards of many, Randy was himself a tedious, scary, obsessed
character. He was not merely obsessed with science but also with fantasy
role playing games. The only way he could tolerate working at such a stupid
job for a couple of years was that his off time was completely occupied with
enacting fantasy scenarios of a depth and complexity that exercised all of
the cranial circuitry that was so conspicuously going to waste in the ILL
office. He was part of a group that would meet every Friday night and play
until sometime on Sunday. The other stalwarts in the group were a computer
science/music double major named Chester, and a history grad student named
Avi.
When a new master's degree candidate named Andrew Loeb walked into the
ILL office one day, with a certain glint in his eye, and produced a three
inch thick stack of precisely typed request forms from his shitty old
knapsack, he was recognized immediately as being of a particular type, and
shunted in the direction of Randy Waterhouse. It was an instant meeting of
minds, though Randy did not fully realize this until the books that Loeb had
requested began to arrive on the trolley from the mail room.
Andy Loeb's project was to figure out the energy budgets of the local
Indian tribes. A human body has to expend a certain amount of energy just to
keep breathing and to maintain its body temperature. This figure goes up
when it gets cold or when the body in question is doing work. The only way
to obtain that energy is by eating food. Some foods have a higher energy
content than others. For example, trout is highly nutritious but so low in
fat and carbohydrates that you can starve to death eating it three times a
day. Other foods might have lots of energy, but might require so much work
to obtain and prepare that eating them would be a losing proposition, BTU
wise. Andy Loeb was trying to figure out what foods had historically been
eaten by certain Northwest Indian tribes, how much energy they expended to
get these foods and how much they obtained by eating them. He wanted to do
this calculation for coastal Indians like the Salish (who had easy access to
seafood) and for inland ones like the Cayuse (who didn't) as part of an
extremely convoluted plan to prove some sort of point about the relative
standards of living of these tribes and how this affected their cultural
development (coastal tribes made lots of fantastically detailed art and
inland ones occasionally scratched stick figures on rocks).
To Andrew Loeb it was an exercise in meta historical scholarship. To
Randy Waterhouse, it sounded like the beginnings of a pretty cool game.
Strangle a muskrat and you get 136 Energy Points. Lose the muskrat and your
core temp drops another degree.
Andy was nothing if not methodical and so he had simply looked up every
book that had ever been written on such topics, and every book mentioned in
those books' bibliographies, yea, even unto four or five generations;
checked out all of them that were available locally; and ordered the rest
from ILL. All of the latter passed across Randy's desk. Randy read some and
skimmed all. He got to learn about how much blubber the Arctic explorers had
to eat in order to keep from starving to death. He perused detailed
specifications for Army C rations. After a while, he actually began sneaking
into the photocopy room and making copies of key data.
In order to run a realistic fantasy role playing game, you had to keep
track of how much food the imaginary characters were getting and how much
trouble was involved in getting it. Characters passing across the Gobi
desert in November of the year 5000 B.C. would have to spend more time
worrying about food than, say, ones who were traveling across central
Illinois in 1950.
Randy was hardly the first game designer to notice this. There were a
few incredibly stupid games in which you didn't have to think about food,
but Randy and his friends disdained them. In all of the games that he
participated in, or that he himself designed, you had to devote a realistic
amount of effort to getting food for your character. But it was not easy to
determine what was realistic. Like most designers, Randy got over the
problem by slapping together a few rudimentary equations that he basically
just pulled out of thin air. But in the books, articles, and dissertations
that Andrew Loeb was borrowing through ILL, he found exactly the raw data
that a mathematically inclined person would need to come up with a
sophisticated rules system based on scientific fact.
Simulating all of the physical processes going on in each character's
body was out of the question, especially in a game where you might be
dealing with armies of a hundred thousand men. Even a crude simulation,
tracking only a few variables and using simple equations, would involve a
nightmarish amount of paperwork if you did it all by hand. But all of this
was happening in the mid 1980s, when personal computers had become cheap and
ubiquitous. A computer could automatically track a large database and tell
you whether each character was well fed or starving. There was no reason not
to do it on a computer.
Unless, like Randy Waterhouse, you had such a shitty job that you
couldn't afford a computer.
Of course, there's a way to dodge any problem. The university had lots
of computers. If Randy could get an account on one of them, he could write
his program there and run it for free.
Unfortunately, accounts were only available to students or faculty
members, and Randy was neither.
Fortunately, he started dating a grad student named Charlene at just
about this time.
How the hell did a generally keg shaped guy, a hard scientist, working
a dead end Clerk Typist job, and spending all his spare time in the
consummately nerdy pastime of fantasy role playing games, end up in a
relationship with a slender and not unattractive young liberal arts student
who spent her spare time sea kayaking and going to foreign films? It must
have been one of those opposites attract kind of deals, a complementary
relationship. They met, naturally, in the ILL office, where the highly
intelligent but steady and soothing Randy helped the highly intelligent but
scattered and flighty Charlene organize a messy heap of loan requests. He
should have asked her out then and there, but he was shy. Second and third
opportunities came along when the books she'd requested began to filter up
from the mailroom, and finally he asked her out and they went to see a film
together. Both of them turned out to be not just willing but eager, and
possibly even desperate. Before they knew it, Randy had given Charlene a key
to his apartment, and Charlene had given Randy the password to her free
university computer account, and everything was just delightful.
The university computer system was better than no computer at all. But
Randy was humiliated. Like every other high powered academic computing
network, this one was based on an industrial strength operating system
called UNIX, which had a learning curve like the Matterhorn, and lacked the
cuddly and stylish features of the personal computers then coming into
vogue. Randy had used it quite a bit as an undergraduate and knew his way
around. Even so, learning how to write good code on the thing required a lot
of time. His life had changed when Charlene had come along, and now it
changed more: he dropped out of the fantasy role playing game circuit
altogether, stopped going to meetings of the Society for Creative
Anachronism, and began to spend all of his free time either with Charlene or
in front of a computer terminal. All in all, this was probably a change for
the better. With Charlene, he did things he wouldn't have done otherwise,
like getting exercise, or going to see live music. And at the computer, he
was learning new skills, and he was creating something. It might be
something completely useless, but at least he was creating.
He spent a lot of time talking to Andrew Loeb, who actually went out
and did the stuff he was writing programs for; he'd disappear for a few days
and come back all wobbly and haggard, with fish scales caught in his
whiskers or dried animal blood under his fingernails. He'd ram down a couple
of Big Macs, sleep for twenty four hours, then meet Randy in a bar (Charlene
wasn't comfortable with having him in the house) and talk learnedly of the
difficulties of day to day life, aboriginal style. They argued about whether
aborigines would eat the more disgusting parts of certain animals or throw
them away. Andrew voted for yes. Randy disagreed just because they were
primitive didn't mean they couldn't have taste. Andrew accused him of being
a romantic. Finally, to settle it, they went up into the mountains together,
armed with nothing but knives and Andrew's collection of exquisitely crafted
vermin snares. By the third night, Randy found himself seriously thinking
about eating some insects. "Q.E.D.," Andrew said.
Anyway, Randy finished his software after a year and a half. It was a
success; Chester and Avi liked it. Randy was moderately pleased at having
built something so complicated that actually worked, but he bad no illusions
about its being good for anything. He was sort of embarrassed at having
wasted so much time and mental energy on the project. But he knew that if he
hadn't been writing code, he'd have spent the same amount of time playing
games or going to Society for Creative Anachronism meetings in medieval
drag, so it all zeroed out in the end. Spending the time in front of the
computer was arguably better, because it had honed his programming skills,
which had been pretty sharp to begin with. On the other hand, he'd done it
all on the UNIX system, which was for scientists and engineers not a savvy
move in an age when all the money was in personal computers.
Chester and Randy had nicknamed Avi "Avid," be cause he really, really
liked fantasy games. Avi had always claimed that he played them as a way of
understanding what it was really like to live in ancient times, and he was a
maniac about historical authenticity. That was okay; they all had half assed
excuses, and Avi's historical acumen frequently came in handy.
Not long after this, Avi graduated and disappeared, and popped up a few
months later in Minneapolis, where he had gotten a job with a major
publisher of fantasy role playing games. He offered to buy Randy's game
software for the astonishingly large sum of $1000 plus a small cut of future
profits. Randy accepted the offer in its general outlines, asked Avi to send
him a contract, then went out and found Andrew boiling some fish guts in a
birchbark kettle atop a Weber grill on the roof of the apartment building
where he lived. He wanted to give Andrew the good news, and to cut him in on
the proceeds. What ensued was a really unpleasant conversation, standing up
there in a pelting, spitting, wind blown rain.
To begin with, Andrew took this deal far more seriously than Randy did.
Randy saw it as a windfall, a lark. Andrew, who was the son of a lawyer,
treated it as if it were a major corporate merger, and asked many tedious
and niggling questions about the contract, which did not exist yet and which
would probably cover a single piece of paper when it did. Randy didn't
realize it at the time, but by asking so many questions for which Randy had
no answers, Andrew was, in effect, arrogating to himself the role of
Business Manager. He was implicitly forming a business partnership with
Randy that did not, in fact, exist.
Furthermore, Andrew didn't have the first notion of how much time and
effort Randy had put into writing the code. Or (as Randy was to realize
later) maybe be did. In any case, Andrew assumed from the get go that he
would share a fifty fifty split with Randy, which was wildly out of
proportion to the work he'd actually done on the project. Basically, Andrew
acted as if all of the work he'd ever done on the subject of aboriginal
dining habits was a part of this undertaking, and that it entitled him to an
equal split.
By the time Randy extricated himself from this conversation, his mind
was reeling. He had gone in with one view of reality and been radically
challenged by another one that was clearly preposterous; but after an hour
of Andrew's browbeating he was beginning to doubt himself. After two or
three sleepless nights, he decided to call the whole thing off. A paltry few
hundred dollars wasn't worth all of this agony.
But Andrew (who was, by now, represented by an associate of his
father's Santa Barbara law firm) vehemently objected. He and Randy had,
according to his lawyer, jointly created something that had economic value,
and a failure on Randy's part to sell it at market value amounted to taking
money out of Andrew's pocket. It had become an unbelievable Kafkaesque
nightmare, and Randy could only withdraw to a corner table at his favorite
pub, drink pints of stout (frequently in the company of Chester) and watch
this fantastic psychodrama unfold. He had, he now realized, blundered into
some serious domestic weirdness involving Andrew's family. It turned out
that Andrew's parents were divorced and, long ago, had fought savagely over
custody of him, their only child. Mom had turned into a hippie and joined a
religious cult in Oregon and taken Andrew with her. It was rumored that this
cult engaged in sexual abuse of children. Dad had hired private dicks to
kidnap Andrew back and then showered him with material possessions to
demonstrate his superior love. There had followed an interminable legal
battle in which Dad had hired some rather fringey psychotherapists to
hypnotize Andrew and get him to dredge up repressed memories of unspeakable
and improbable horrors.
This was just the executive summary of a weird life that Randy only
learned about in bits and pieces as the years went on. Later, he was to
decide that Andrew's life had been fractally weird. That is, you could take
any small piece of it and examine it in detail and it, in and of itself,
would turn out to be just as complicated and weird as the whole thing in its
entirety.
Anyway Randy had blundered into this life and become enveloped in the
weirdness. One of the young eager beavers in Andrew's dad's law firm
decided, as a preemptive move, to obtain copies of all of Randy's computer
files, which were still stored on the UW computer system. Needless to say,
he went about it in a heavy handed way, and when the university's legal
department began to receive his sullen letters, it responded by informing
both Andrew's lawyer, and Randy, that anyone who used the university's
computer system to create a commercial product had to split the proceeds
with the university. So now Randy was getting ominous letters from not one
but two groups of deadly lawyers. Andrew then threatened to sue him for
having made this blunder, which had halved the value of Andrew's share!
In the end, just to cut his losses and get out of it clean, Randy had
to hire a lawyer of his own. The final cost to him was a hair more than five
thousand dollars. The software was never sold to anyone, and indeed could
not have been; it was so legally encumbered by that point that it would have
been like trying to sell someone a rusty Volkswagen that had been dismantled
and its parts hidden in attack dog kennels all over the world.
It was the only time in his life when he had ever thought about
suicide. He did not think about it very hard, or very seriously, but he did
think about it.
When it was all over, Avi sent him a handwritten letter saying, "I
enjoyed doing business with you and look forward to continuing our
relationship both as friends and, should opportunities arise, as creative
partners."
Chapter 5 INDIGO
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse and the rest of the band are up on the
deck of the Nevada one morning, playing the national anthem and watching the
Stars and Stripes ratchet up the mast, when they are startled to find
themselves in the midst of one hundred and ninety airplanes of unfamiliar
design. Some of them are down low, traveling horizontally, and others are up
high, plunging nearly straight down. The latter are going so fast that they
appear to be falling apart; little bits are dropping off of them. It is
terrible to see some training exercise gone miserably awry. But they pull
out of their suicidal trajectories in plenty of time. The bits that have
fallen off of them plunge smoothly and purposefully, not tumbling and
fluttering as chunks of debris would. They are coming down all over the
place. Perversely, they all seem to be headed for the berthed ships. It is
incredibly dangerous they might hit someone! Lawrence is outraged.
There is a short lived phenomenon taking place in one of the ships down
the line. Lawrence turns to look at it. This is the first real explosion
he's ever seen and so it takes him a long time to recognize it as such. He
can play the very hardest glockenspiel parts with his eyes closed, and The
Star Spangled Banner is much easier to ding than to sing.
His scanning eyes fasten, not on the source of the explosion, but on a
couple of airplanes that are headed right toward them, skimming just above
the water. Each drops a long skinny egg and then their railplanes visibly
move and they angle upwards and pass overhead. The rising sun shines
directly through the glass of their canopies. Lawrence is able to look into
the eyes of the pilot of one of the planes. He notes that it appears to be
some sort of Asian gentleman.
This is an incredibly realistic training exercise even down to the
point of using ethnically correct pilots, and detonating fake explosives on
the ships. Lawrence heartily approves. Things have just been too lax around
this place.
A tremendous shock comes up through the deck of the ship, making his
feet and legs feel as if he had just jumped off a ten foot precipice onto
solid concrete. But he's just standing there flatfooted. It makes no sense
at all.
The band has finished playing the national anthem and is looking about
at the spectacle. Sirens and horns are speaking up all over the place, from
the Nevada, from the Arizona in the next berth, from buildings onshore.
Lawrence doesn't see any antiaircraft fire going up, doesn't see any
familiar planes in the air. The explosions just keep coming. Lawrence
wanders over to the rail and stares across a few yards of open water towards
the Arizona.
Another one of those plunging airplanes drops a projectile that shoots
straight down onto Arizona's deck but then, strangely, vanishes. Lawrence
blinks and sees that it has left a neat bomb shaped hole in the deck, just
like a panicky Warner Brothers cartoon character passing at high speed
through a planar structure such as a wall or ceiling. Fire jets from that
hole for about a microsecond before the whole deck bulges up,
disintegrating, and turns into a burgeoning globe of fire and blackness.
Waterhouse is vaguely aware of a lot of stuff coming at him really fast. It
is so big that he feels more like he is falling into it. He freezes up. It
goes by him, over him, and through him. A terrible noise pierces his skull,
a chord randomly struck, discordant but not without some kind of deranged
harmony. Musical qualities aside, it is so goddamned loud that it almost
kills him. He claps his hands over his ears.
Still the noise is there, like red hot knitting needles through the ear
drums. Hell's bells. He spins away from it, but it follows him. He has this
big thick strap around his neck, sewn together at groin level where it
supports a cup. Thrust into the cup is the central support of his
glockenspiel, which stands in front of him like a lyre shaped breastplate,
huge fluffy tassels dangling gaily from the upper corners. Oddly, one of the
tassels is burning. That isn't the only thing now wrong with the
glockenspiel, but he can't quite make it out because his vision keeps
getting obscured by something that must be wiped away every few moments. All
he knows is that the glockenspiel has eaten a huge quantum of pure energy
and been kicked up to some incredibly high state never before achieved by
such an instrument; it is a burning, glowing, shrieking, ringing, radiating
monster, a comet, an archangel, a tree of flaming magnesium, strapped to his
body, standing on his groin. The energy is transmitted down its humming,
buzzing central axis, through the cup, and into his genitals, which would be
tumescing in other circumstances.
Lawrence spends some time wandering aimlessly around the deck.
Eventually he has to help open a hatch for some men, and then he realizes
that his hands are still clapped over his ears, and have been for a long
time except for when he was wiping stuff out of his eyes. When he takes them
off, the ringing has stopped, and he no longer hears airplanes. He was
thinking that he wanted to go belowdecks, because the bad things are coming
from the sky and he would like to get some big heavy permanent seeming stuff
between him and it, but a lot of sailors are taking the opposite view. He
hears that they have been hit by one and maybe two of something that rhymes
with "torpedoes," and that they are trying to raise steam. Officers and
noncoms, black and red with smoke and blood, keep deputizing him for
different, extremely urgent tasks that he doesn't quite understand, not
least because he keeps putting his hands over his ears.
Probably half an hour goes by before he hits upon the idea of
discarding his glockenspiel, which is, after all, just getting in the way.
It was issued to him by the Navy with any number of stern warnings about the
consequences of misusing it. Lawrence is conscientious about this kind of
thing, dating back to when he was first given organ playing privileges in
West Point, Virginia. But at this point, for the first time in his life, as
he stands there watching the Arizona burn and sink, he just says to himself
Well, to heck with it! He takes that glockenspiel out of its socket and has
one last look at it, it is the last time in his life he will ever touch a
glockenspiel. There is no point in saving it now anyway, he realizes;
several of the bars have been bent. He flips it around and discovers that
chunks of blackened, distorted metal have been impact welded onto several of
the bars. Really throwing caution to the winds now, he flings it overboard
in the general direction of the Arizona, a military lyre of burnished steel
that sings a thousand men to their resting places on the bottom of the
harbor.
As it vanishes into a patch of burning oil, the second wave of
attacking airplanes arrives. The Navy's antiaircraft guns finally open up
and begin to rain shells down into the surrounding community and blow up
occupied buildings. He can see human shaped flames running around in the
streets, pursued by people with blankets.
The rest of the day is spent, by Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse and the
rest of the Navy, grappling with the fact that many two dimensional
structures on this and other ships, which were put into place to prevent
various fluids from commingling (e.g. fuel and air) have holes in them, and
not only that but a lot of shit is on fire too and things are more than a
little smoky. Certain objects that are supposed to (a) remain horizontal and
(b) support heavy things have ceased to do either.
Nevada's engineering section manages to raise steam in a couple of
boilers and the captain tries to get the ship out of the harbor. As soon as
she gets underway, she comes under concerted attack, mostly by dive bombers
who are eager to sink her in the channel and block the harbor altogether.
Eventually, the captain runs her aground rather than see this happen.
Unfortunately, what Nevada has in common with most other naval vessels is
that she is not really engineered to work from a stationary position, and
consequently she is hit three more times by dive bombers. So it is a pretty
exciting morning overall. As a member of the band who does not even have his
instrument any more, Lawrence's duties are quite poorly defined, and he
spends more time than he should watching the airplanes and the explosions.
He has gone back to his earlier train of thought regarding societies and
their efforts to outdo each other. It is very clear to him, as wave after
wave of Nipponese dive bombers hurl themselves, with calligraphic precision,
at the ship he is standing on, and as the cream of his society's navy burns
and explodes and sinks, putting up virtually no resistance, that his society
is going to have to rethink a thing or two.
***
At some point he burns his hand on something. It is his right hand,
which is preferable he is left handed. Also, he becomes more clearly aware
that a portion of Arizona has tried to take his scalp off. These are minor
injuries by Pearl Harbor standards and he does not stay long in the
hospital. The doctor warns him that the skin on his hand might contract and
limit his fingers' range of motion. As soon as he can withstand the pain,
Lawrence begins to play Bach's Art of Fugue in his lap whenever he is not
otherwise occupied. Most of those tunes start out simple; you can easily
picture old Johann Sebastian sitting there on the bench on a cold morning in
Leipzig, one or two blockflöte stops yanked out, left hand in his lap, a fat
choirboy or two over in the corner heaving away on the bellows, faint
gasping noises coming from all the leaks in the works, and Johann's right
hand wandering aimlessly across the forbidding simplicity of the Great
manual, stroking those cracked and yellowed elephant tusks, searching for
some melody he hadn't already invented. That is good stuff for Lawrence
right now, and so he makes his right hand go through the same motions as
Johann's, even though it is a gauze wrapped hand and he is using an upside
down dinner tray as a substitute for the keyboard, and he has to hum the
music under his breath. When he really gets into it, his feet skid around
and piston under the sheets, playing imaginary pedals, and his neighbors
complain.
He is out of the hospital in a few days, just in time for him and the
rest of Nevada's band to begin their new, wartime assignment. This was
evidently something of a poser for the Navy's manpower experts. These
musicians were (from a killing Nips point of view) completely useless to
begin with. As of 7 December, they no longer have even a functioning ship
and most of them have lost their clarinets.
Still, it isn't all about loading shells and pulling triggers. No large
organization can kill Nips in any kind of systematic way without doing a
nearly unbelievable amount of typing and filing. It is logical to suppose
that men who can play the clarinet will not botch that kind of work any
worse than anyone else. And so Waterhouse and his bandmates receive orders
assigning them to what would appear to be one of the typing and filing
branches of the Navy.
This is located in a building, not a ship. There are quite a few Navy
people who sneer at the whole idea of working in a building, and Lawrence
and some of the other recent recruits, eager to fit in, have gotten into the
habit of copping the same attitude. But now that they have seen what happens
to a ship when you detonate hundreds of pounds of high explosive on, in, and
around it, Waterhouse and many, others are reassessing their feelings about
working in buildings. They report to their new post with high morale.
Their new commanding officer is not so cheerful, and his feelings
appear to be shared by everyone in the entire section. The musicians are
greeted without being welcomed and saluted without being honored. The people
who have been working in this building far from being overawed by their
status as guys who not only worked on an actual ship until recently but
furthermore have been very close to things that were exploding, burning,
etc., and not as the result of routine lapses in judgment but because bad
men deliberately made it happen do not seem to feel that Lawrence and his
bandmates deserve to be entrusted with this new work, whatever the hell it
is.
Glumly, almost despairingly, the commanding officer and his
subordinates get the musicians squared away. Even if they don't have enough
desks to go around, each man can at least have a chair at a table or
counter. Some ingenuity is displayed in finding places for all the new
arrivals. It is clear that these people are trying their best at what they
consider to be a hopeless task.
Then there is some talk about secrecy. A great deal of talk about it.
They run through drills intended to test their ability to throw things away
properly. This goes on for a long time and the longer it continues, without
an explanation as to why, the more mysterious it becomes. The musicians, who
were at first a little put out by their chilly reception, start to speculate
amongst themselves as to what kind of an operation they have gotten
themselves into now.
Finally, one morning, the musicians are assembled in a classroom in
front of the cleanest chalkboard Waterhouse has ever seen. The last few days
have imbued him with just enough paranoia that he suspects it is that clean
for a reason erasing chalkboards is not to be taken lightly during wartime.
They are seated in little chairs with desks attached to them, desks
designed for right handers. Lawrence puts his notepad in his lap, then rests
his bandaged right hand on the desk and begins to play a ditty from Art of
Fugue, grimacing and even grunting with pain as his burned skin stretches
and slides over his knuckles.
Someone chucks him on the shoulder. He opens his eyes to see that he is
the only person in the room sitting down; an officer is on the deck. He
stands up and his weak leg nearly buckles. When he finally gets himself
fully to his feet, he sees that the officer (if he even is an officer) is
out of uniform. Way out of uniform. He's wearing a bathrobe and smoking a
pipe. The bathrobe is extraordinarily worn, and not in the sense of, say, a
hospital or hotel bathrobe that gets laundered frequently. This thing hasn't
been laundered in a long time, but boy has it seen some use. The elbows are
worn out and the bottom of the right sleeve is ashy grey and slippery with
graphite from being dragged back and forth, tens of thousands of times,
across sheets of paper dense with number two pencil work. The terrycloth has
a dandruffy appearance, but it has nothing to do with exfoliation of the
scalp; these flakes are way too big, and too geometric: rectangles and
circular dots of oaktag, punched out of cards and tape respectively. The
pipe went out a long time ago and the officer (or whatever he is) is not
even pretending to worry about getting it relit. It is there just to give
him something to bite down on, which he does as vigorously as a civil war
infantryman having a leg sawed off.
Some other fellow one who actually bothered to shave, shower, and put
on a uniform introduces bathrobe man as Commander Shane spelled s c h o e n,
but Schoen is having none of it; he turns his back on them, exposing the
back side of his bathrobe, which around the buttocks is worn transparent as
a negligee. Reading from a notebook, he writes out the following in block
letters:
19 17 17 19 14 20 23 18 19 8 12 16 19 8 3
21 8 25 18 14 18 6 31 8 8 15 18 22 18 11
Around the time that the fourth or fifth number is going up on the
chalkboard, Waterhouse feels the hairs standing up on the back of his neck.
By the time the third group of five numbers is written out, he has not
failed to notice that none of them is larger than 26 that being the number
of letters in the alphabet. His heart is pounding more wildly than it did
when Nipponese bombs were tracing parabolic trajectories toward the deck of
the grounded Nevada. He pulls a pencil out of his pocket. Finding no paper
handy, he writes down the numbers from 1 to 26 on the surface of his little
writing desk.
By the time the man in the bathrobe is done writing out the last group
of numbers, Waterhouse is already well into his frequency count. He wraps it
up as Bathrobe Man is saying something along the lines of "this might look
like a meaningless sequence of numbers to you, but to a Nip naval officer it
might look like something entirely different." Then the man laughs
nervously, shakes his head sadly, squares his jaw resolutely, and runs
through a litany of other emotion laden expressions not a single one of
which is appropriate here.
Waterhouse's frequency count is simply a tally of how frequently each
number appears on the blackboard. It looks like this:
2
3 II
4
5
6 I
7
8 IIII
9
10
11 I
12 I
13
14 II
15 I
16 I
17 II
18 IIIIII
19 IIII
20 I
21 I
22 I
23 I
24
25 I
26
The most interesting thing about this is that ten of the possible
symbols (viz. 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 13, 24, and 26) are not even used. Only
sixteen different numbers appear in the message. Assuming each of those
sixteen represents one and only one letter of the alphabet, this message has
(Lawrence reckons in his head) 111136315345735680000 possible meanings. This
is a funny number because it begins with four ones and ends with four
zeroes; Lawrence snickers, wipes his nose, and gets on with it.
The most common number is 18. It probably represents the letter E. If
he substitutes E into the message everywhere he sees an 18, then Well, to be
honest, then he'll have to write out the whole message again, substituting
Es for 18s, and it will take a long time, and it might be time wasted
because he might have guessed wrong. On the other hand, if he just retrains
his mind to construe 18s as Es an operation that he thinks of as being
loosely analogous to changing the presets on a pipe organ's console then
what he sees in his mind's eye when he looks at the blackboard is
19 17 17 19 14 20 23 E 19 8 12 16 19 8 3
21 8 25 E 14 E 6 3 E 8 15 E 22 E 11
which only has 10103301395066880000 possible meanings. This is a funny
number too because of all those ones and zeroes but it is an absolutely
meaningless coincidence.
"The science of making secret codes is called cryptography," Commander
Schoen says, "and the science of breaking them is cryptanalysis." Then he
sighs, grapples visibly with some more widely divergent emotional states,
and resignedly plods into the mandatory exercise of breaking these words
down into their roots, which are either Latin or Greek (Lawrence isn't
paying attention, doesn't care, only glimpses the stark word CRYPTO written
in handsized capitals).
The opening sequence "19 17 17 19" is peculiar. 19, along with 8, is
the second most common number in the list. 17 is only half as common. You
can't have four vowels or four consonants in a row (unless the words are
German) so either 17 is a vowel and 19 a consonant or the other way round.
Since 19 appears more frequently (four times) in the message, it is more
likely to be the vowel than 17 (which only appears twice). A is the most
common vowel after E, so if he assumes that 19 is A, he gets
A 17 17 A 14 20 23 E A 8 12 16 A 8 3
21 8 25 E 14 E 6 3 E 8 15 E 22 E 11
This narrows it down quite a bit, to a mere 841941782922240000 possible
answers. He's already reduced the solution space by a couple of orders of
magnitude!
Schoen has talked himself up into a disturbingly heavy sweat, now, and
is almost bodily flinging himself into a historical overview of the science
of CRYPTOLOGY, as the union of cryptography and cryptanalysis is called.
There's some talk about an English fellow name of Wilkins, and book called
Cryptonomicon that he wrote hundreds of years ago, but (perhaps because he
doesn't rate the intelligence of his audience too highly) he goes very easy
on the historical background, and jumps directly from Wilkins to Paul
Revere's "one if by land, two if by sea" code. He even makes a mathematics
in joke about this being one of the earliest practical applications of
binary notation. Lawrence dutifully brays and snorts, drawing an appalled
look from the saxophonist seated in front of him.
Earlier in his talk, the Schoen mentioned that this message was (in
what's obviously a fictional scenario ginned up to make this mathematical
exercise more interesting to a bunch of musicians who are assumed not to
give a shit about math) addressed to a Nip naval officer. Given that
context, Lawrence cannot but guess that the first word of the message is
ATTACK. This would mean that 17 represented T, 14 C, and 20 K. When he fills
these in, he gets
A T T A C K 23 E A 8 12 16 A 8 3
21 8 25 E C E 6 3 E 8 15 E 22 E 11
and then the rest is so obvious he doesn't bother to write it out. He
cannot restrain himself from jumping to his feet. He's so excited he forgets
about the weak legs and topples over across a couple of his neighbors'
desks, which makes a lot of noise.
"Do you have a problem, sailor?" says one of the officers in the
corner, one who actually bothered to wear a uniform.
"Sir! The message is, 'Attack Pearl Harbor December Seven!' Sir!"
Lawrence shouts, and then sits down. His whole body is quivering with
excitement. Adrenaline has taken over his body and mind. He could strangle
twenty sumo wrestlers on the spot.
Commander Schoen is completely impassive except that he blinks once,
very slowly. He turns to one of his subordinates, who is standing against
the wall with his hands clasped behind his back, and says, "Get this one a
copy of the Cryptonomicon. And a desk as close to the coffee machine as
possible. And why don't you promote the son of a bitch as long as you're at
it."
***
The part about the promotion turns out to be either military humor or
further evidence of Commander Schoen's mental instability. Other than that
small bit of drollery, the story of Waterhouse past this point, for the next
ten months, is not much more complicated than the story of a bomb that has
just been released from the belly of a plunging airplane. The barriers
placed in his path (working his way through the Cryptonomicon , breaking the
Nipponese Air Force Meteorological Code, breaking the Coral naval attache
machine cipher, breaking Unnamed Nipponese Army Water Transport Code 3A,
breaking the Greater East Asia Ministry Code) present about as much
resistance as successive decks of a worm eaten wooden frigate. Within a
couple of months he is actually writing new chapters of the Cryptonomicon.
People speak of it as though it were a book, but it's not. It is basically a
compilation of all of the papers and notes that have drifted up in a
particular corner of Commander Schoen's office over the roughly two year
period that he's been situated at Station Hypo, as this place is called
(1). It is everything that Commander Schoen knows about breaking
codes, which amounts to everything that the United States of America knows.
At any moment it could have been annihilated if a janitor had stepped into
the room for a few minutes and tidied the place up. Understanding this,
Commander Schoen's colleagues in the officers' ranks of Station Hypo have
devised strenuous measures to prevent any type of tidying or hygienic
operations, of any description, in the entire wing of the building that
contains Commander Schoen's office. They know enough, in other words, to
understand that the Cryptonomicon is terribly important, and they have the
wit to take the measures necessary to keep it safe. Some of them actually
consult it from time to time, and use its wisdom to break Nipponese
messages, or even solve whole cryptosystems. But Waterhouse is the first guy
to come along who is good enough to (at first) point out errors in what
Schoen has written, and (soon) assemble the contents of the pile into
something like an orderly work, and (eventually) add original material onto
it.
At some point Schoen takes him downstairs and leads him to the end of a
long windowless corridor to a slab of a door guarded by hulking Myrmidons
and lets him see the second coolest thing they've got at Pearl Harbor, a
roomful of machinery from the Electrical Till Corporation that they use
mainly for doing frequency counts on Nip intercepts.
The most remarkable machine (2) at Station Hypo, however and
the first coolest thing in Pearl Harbor is even deeper in the cloaca of the
building. It is contained in something that might be likened to a bank vault
if it weren't all wired up with explosives so that its contents can be
vaporized in the event of a total Nip invasion.
This is the machine that Commander Schoen made, more than a year ago,
for breaking the Nipponese cipher called Indigo. Apparently, as of the
beginning of 1940, Schoen was a well adjusted and mentally healthy young man
into whose lap was dumped some great big long lists of numbers compiled from
intercept stations around the Pacific (perhaps, Waterhouse thinks, Alpha,
Bravo, etc.). These numbers were Nipponese messages that had been encrypted
somehow circumstantial evidence suggested that it had been done by some kind
of machine. But absolutely nothing was known about the machine: whether it
used gears or rotary switches or plugboards, or some combination thereof, or
some other kind of mechanism that hadn't even been thought of by white
people yet; how many such mechanisms it did or didn't use; specific details
of how it used them. All that could be said was that these numbers, which
seemed completely random, had been transmitted, perhaps even incorrectly.
Other than that, Schoen had nothing nothing to work on.
As of the middle of 1941, then, this machine existed in this vault,
here at Station Hypo. It existed because Schoen had built it. The machine
perfectly decrypted every Indigo message that the intercept stations picked
up, and was, therefore, necessarily an exact functional duplication of the
Nipponese Indigo code machine, though neither Schoen nor any other American
had ever laid eyes on one. Schoen had built the thing simply by looking at
those great big long lists of essentially random numbers, and using some
process of induction to figure it out. Somewhere along the line he had
become totally debilitated psychologically, and begun to suffer nervous
breakdowns at the rate of about one every week or two.
As of the actual outbreak of war with Nippon, Schoen is on disability,
and taking lots of drugs. Waterhouse spends as much time with Schoen as he
is allowed to, because he's pretty sure that whatever happened inside of
Schoen's head, between when the lists of apparently random numbers were
dumped into his lap and when he finished building his machine, is an example
of a noncomputable process.
Waterhouse's security clearance is upgraded about once a month, until
it reaches the highest conceivable level (or so he thinks) which is
Ultra/Magic. Ultra is what the Brits call the intelligence they get from
having broken the German Enigma machine. Magic is what the Yanks call the
intelligence they get from Indigo. In any case, Lawrence now gets to see the
Ultra/Magic summaries, which are bound documents with dramatic, alternating
red and black paragraphs printed on the front cover. Paragraph number three
states:
NO ACTION IS TO BE TAKEN ON INFORMATION HEREIN REPORTED, REGARDLESS OF
TEMPORARY ADVANTAGE, IF SUCH ACTION MIGHT HAVE THE EFFECT OF REVEALING THE
EXISTENCE OF THE SOURCE TO THE ENEMY.
Seems clear enough, right? But Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse is not so
damn sure.
IF SUCH ACTION MIGHT HAVE THE EFFECT OF REVEALING...
At about the same time, Waterhouse has made a realization about
himself. He has found that he works best when he is not horny, which is to
say in the day or so following ejaculation. So as a part of his duty to the
United States he has begun to spend a lot of time in whorehouses. But he
can't have that much actual sex on what is still a glockenspiel player's pay
and so he limits himself to what are euphemistically called massages.
ACTION... EFFECT... REVEALING...
The words stay with him like the clap. He lies on his back during these
massages, arms crossed over his eyes, mumbling the words to himself.
Something bothers him. He has learned that when something bothers him in
this particular way it usually leads to his writing a new paper. But first
he has to do a lot of hard mental pick and shovel work.
It all comes to him, explosively, during the Battle of Midway, while he
and his comrades are spending twenty four hours a day down among those ETC
machines, decrypting Yamamoto's messages, telling Nimitz exactly where to
find the Nip fleet.
What are the chances of Nimitz finding that fleet by accident? That's
what Yamamoto must be asking himself.
It is all a question (oddly enough!) of information theory.
...ACTION...
What is an action? It might be anything. It might be something obvious
like bombing a Nipponese military installation. Everyone would agree that
this would constitute an action. But it might also be something like
changing the course of an aircraft carrier by five degrees or not doing so.
Or having exactly the right package of forces off Midway to hammer the
Nipponese invasion fleet. It could mean something much less dramatic, like
canceling plans for an action. An action, in a certain sense, might even be
the total absence of activity. Any of these might be rational responses, on
the part of some commander, to INFORMATION HEREIN REPORTED. But any of them
might be observable by the Nipponese and hence any of them would impart
information to the Nipponese. How good might those Nips be at abstracting
information from a noisy channel? Do they have any Schoens?
...EFFECT...
So what if the Nips did observe it? What would the effect be exactly?
And under what circumstances might the effect be REVEALING THE EXISTENCE OF
THE SOURCE TO THE ENEMY?
If the action is one that could never have happened unless the
Americans were breaking Indigo, then it will constitute proof, to the
Nipponese, that the Americans have broken it. The existence of the source
the machine that Commander Schoen built will be revealed.
Waterhouse trusts that no Americans will be that stupid. But what if it
isn't that clear cut? What if the action is one that would merely be really
improbable unless the Americans were breaking the code? What if the
Americans, in the long run, are just too damn lucky?
And how closely can you play that game? A pair of loaded dice that
comes up sevens every time is detected in a few throws. A pair that comes up
sevens only one percent more frequently than a straight pair is harder to
detect you have to throw the dice many more times in order for your opponent
to prove anything.
If the Nips keep getting ambushed if they keep finding their own
ambushes spoiled if their merchant ships happen to cross paths with American
subs more often than pure probability would suggest how long until they
figure it out?
Waterhouse writes papers on the subject, keeps pestering people with
them. Then, one day, Waterhouse receives a new set of orders.
The orders arrive encrypted into groups of five random looking letters,
printed out on the blue tissue paper that is used for top secret cablegrams.
The message has been encrypted in Washington using a one time pad, which is
a slow and awkward but, in theory, perfectly unbreakable cipher used for the
most important messages. Waterhouse knows this because he is one of the only
two persons in Pearl Harbor who has clearance to decrypt it. The other one
is Commander Schoen, and he is under sedation today. The duty officer opens
up the appropriate safe and gives him the one time pad for the day, which is
basically a piece of graph paper covered with numbers printed in groups of
five. The numbers have been chosen by secretaries in a basement in
Washington by shuffling cards or drawing chits out of a hat. They are pure
noise. One copy of the pure noise is in Waterhouse's hands, and the other
copy is used by the person who encrypted this message in Washington.
Waterhouse sits down and gets to work, subtracting noise from
ciphertext to produce plaintext.
The first thing he sees is that this message's classification is not
merely Top Secret, or even Ultra, but something entirely new: ULTRA MEGA.
The messages states that after thoroughly destroying this message, he
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse is to proceed to London, England, by the
fastest available means. All ships, trains, and airplanes, even submarines,
will be made available to him. Though a member of the U.S. Navy, he is even
to be provided with an extra uniform an Army uniform in case it simplifies
matters for him.
The one thing he must never, ever do is place himself in a situation
where he could be captured by the enemy. In this sense, the war is suddenly
over for Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse.
Chapter 6 THE SPAWN OF ONAN
A network of chunnel sized air ducts as vast and unfathomable as the
global Internet ramifies through the thick walls and ceilings of the hotel
and makes dim, attenuated noises that suggest that hidden deep within that
system are jet engine proving grounds, Iron Age smithys, wretched prisoners
draped with clanging chains, and writhing clumps of snakes. Randy knows that
the system is not a closed loop that it is somewhere connected to the
earth's atmosphere because faint street smells drift in from outside. For
all he knows, they may take an hour to work their way into his room. After
he has been living there for a couple of weeks, the smells come to function
as an olfactory alarm clock. He sleeps to the smell of diesel exhaust
because the traffic conditions of Manila require that the container ships
load and unload only at night. Manila sprawls along a warm and placid bay
that is an infinite reservoir of mugginess, and because the atmosphere is as
thick and opaque and hot as a glass of milk straight from the cow's udder,
it begins to glow when the sun rises. At this, Manila's regiments and
divisions of fighting cocks, imprisoned in makeshift hutches on every
rooftop, balcony and yard, begin to crow. The people come awake and begin to
burn coal. Coal smoke is the smell that wakes Randy up.
Randy Waterhouse is in merely decent physical condition. His doctor
ritualistically tells him that he could lose twenty pounds, but it's not
obvious where that twenty pounds would actually come from he has no beer
gut, no flagrant love handles. The offending pounds seem to be spread evenly
over his keglike torso. Or so he tells himself every morning, standing in
front of the billboard sized mirror of his suite. Randy and Charlene's house
in California contains practically no mirrors and he had lost track of what
he looks like. Now he sees that he has become atavistically hairy, and his
beard glints, because it is shot through with grey hairs.
Every day, he dares himself to shave that beard off. In the tropics,
you want to have as much skin as possible exposed to the air, with sweat
sheeting down it.
One evening when Avi and his family had been over for dinner, Randy had
said, "I'm the beard, Avi's the suit," as a way of explaining their business
relationship, and from that point Charlene had been off and running.
Charlene has recently finished a scholarly article, deconstructing beards.
In particular, she was aiming at beard culture in the Northern California
high tech community Randy's crowd. Her paper began by demolishing, somehow,
the assumption that beards were more "natural" or easier to maintain than
clean shavenness she actually published statistics from Gillette's research
department comparing the amount of time that bearded and beardless men spent
in the bathroom each day, proving that the difference was not statistically
significant. Randy had any number of objections to the way in which these
statistics were gathered, but Charlene was having none of it. "It is
counterintuitive," she said.
She was in a big hurry to move on to the meat of her argument. She went
up to San Francisco and bought a few hundred dollars' worth of pornography
at a boite that catered to shaving fetishists. For a couple of weeks, Randy
couldn't come home in the evening without finding Charlene sacked out in
front of the TV with a bowl of popcorn and a Dictaphone, watching a video of
a straight razor being drawn along wet, soapy flesh. She taped a few lengthy
interviews with some actual shaving fetishists who described in great detail
the feeling of nakedness and vulnerability shaving gave them, and how erotic
that was, especially when freshly shaved areas were slapped or spanked. She
worked up a detailed comparison of the iconography of shaving fetishist porn
and that of shaving product commercials shown on national TV during football
games, and proved that they were basically indistinguishable (you could
actually buy videotapes of bootleg shaving cream and razor ads in the same
places that sold the out and out pornography).
She pulled down statistics on racial variation in beard growth.
American Indians didn't grow beards, Asians hardly did, Africans were a
special case because daily shaving gave them a painful skin condition. "The
ability to grow heavy, full beards as a matter of choice appears to be a
privilege accorded by nature solely to white males," she wrote.
Alarm bells, red lights, and screaming klaxons went off in Randy's mind
when he happened across that phrase.
"But this assertion buys into a specious subsumption. 'Nature' is a
socially constructed discourse, not an objective reality [many footnotes
here]. That is doubly true in the case of the 'nature' that accords full
beards to the specific minority population of northern European males. Homo
sapiens evolved in climatic zones where facial hair was of little practical
use. The development of an offshoot of the species characterized by densely
bearded males is an adaptive response to cold climates. These climates did
not 'naturally' invade the habitats of early humans rather, the humans
invaded geographical regions where such climates prevailed. This
geographical transgression was strictly a sociocultural event and so all
physical adaptations to it must be placed in the same category including the
development of dense facial hair."
Charlene published the results of a survey she had organized, in which
a few hundred women were asked for their opinions. Essentially all of them
said that they preferred clean shaven men to those who were either stubbly
or bearded. In short order, Charlene proved that having a beard was just one
element of a syndrome strongly correlated to racist and sexist attitudes,
and to the pattern of emotional unavailability so often bemoaned by the
female partners of white males, especially ones who were technologically
oriented.
"The boundary between Self and Environment is a social con[struct]. In
Western cultures this boundary is supposed to be sharp and distinct. The
beard is an outward symbol of that boundary, a distancing technique. To
shave off the beard (or any body hair) is to symbolically annihilate the
(essentially specious) boundary separating Self from Other . . ."
And so on. The paper was rapturously received by the peer reviewers and
immediately accepted for publication in a major international journal.
Charlene is presenting some related work at the War as Text conference:
"Unshavenness as Signifier in World War II Movies." On the strength of
her beard work, three different Ivy League schools are fighting over who
will get to hire her.
Randy does not want to move to the East Coast. Worse yet, he has a full
beard, which makes him feel dreadfully incorrect whenever he ventures out
with her. He proposed to Charlene that perhaps he should issue a press
release stating that he shaves the rest of his body every day. She did not
think it was very funny. He realized, when he was halfway over the Pacific
Ocean, that all of her work was basically an elaborate prophecy of the doom
of their relationship.
Now he is thinking of shaving his beard off. He might do his scalp and
his upper body, while he's at it.
He is in the habit of doing a lot of vigorous walking. By the standards
of the body nazis who infest California and Seattle, this is only a marginal
improvement over (say) sitting in front of a television chain smoking
unfiltered cigarettes and eating suet from a tub. But he has stuck to his
walking doggedly while his friends have taken up fitness fads and dropped
them. It has become a point of pride with him, and he's not about to stop
just because he is living in Manila.
But damn, it's hot. Hairlessness would be a good thing here.
***
Only two good things came out of Randy's ill fated First Business Foray
with the food gathering software. First, it scared him away from trying to
do any kind of business, at least until he had the foggiest idea of what he
was getting into. Second, he developed a lasting friendship with Avi, his
old gaming buddy, now in Minneapolis, who displayed integrity and a good
sense of humor.
At the suggestion of his lawyer (who by that point was one of his major
creditors), Randy declared personal bankruptcy and then moved to central
California with Charlene. She had gotten her Ph.D. and landed a teaching
assistant job at one of the Three Siblings. Randy enrolled at another
Sibling with the aim of getting his master's degree in astronomy. This made
him a grad student, and grad students existed not to learn things but to
relieve the tenured faculty members of tiresome burdens such as educating
people and doing research.
Within a month of his arrival, Randy solved some trivial computer
problems for one of the other grad students. A week later, the chairman of
the astronomy department called him over and said, "So, you're the UNIX
guru." At the time, Randy was still stupid enough to be flattered by this
attention, when he should have recognized them as bone chilling words.
Three years later, he left the Astronomy Department without a degree,
and with nothing to show for his labors except six hundred dollars in his
bank account and a staggeringly comprehensive knowledge of UNIX. Later, he
was to calculate that, at the going rates for programmers, the department
had extracted about a quarter of a million dollars' worth of work from him,
in return for an outlay of less than twenty thousand. The only compensation
was that his knowledge didn't seem so useless anymore. Astronomy had become
a highly networked discipline, and you could now control a telescope on
another continent, or in orbit, by typing commands into your keyboard,
watching the images it produced on your monitor.
Randy was now superbly knowledgeable when it came to networks. Years
ago, this would have been of limited usefulness. But this was the age of
networked applications, the dawn of the World Wide Web, and the timing
couldn't have been better.
In the meantime, Avi had moved to San Francisco and started a new
company that was going to take role playing games out of the nerd ghetto and
make them mainstream. Randy signed on as the head technologist. He tried to
recruit Chester, but he'd already taken a job with a software company back
up in Seattle. So they brought in a guy who had worked for a few video game
companies, and later they brought in some other guys to do hardware and
communications, and they raised enough seed money to build a playable
prototype. Using that as their dog and pony show, they went down to
Hollywood and found someone to back them to the tune of ten million dollars.
They rented out some industrial space in Gilroy, filled it full of graphics
workstations, hired a lot of sharp programmers and a few artists, and went
to work.
Six months later, they were frequently mentioned as among Silicon
Valley's rising stars, and Randy got a little photograph in Time magazine in
an article about Siliwood the growing collaboration between Silicon Valley
and Hollywood. A year after that, the entire enterprise had crashed and
burned.
This was an epic tale not worth telling. The conventional wisdom circa
the early nineties had been that the technical wizards of Northern
California would meet the creative minds of Southern California halfway and
create a brilliant new collaboration. But this was rooted in a naive view of
what Hollywood was all about. Hollywood was merely a specialized bank a
consortium of large financial entities that hired talent, almost always for
a flat rate, ordered that talent to create a product, and then marketed that
product to death, all over the world, in every conceivable medium. The goal
was to find products that would keep on making money forever, long after the
talent had been paid off and sent packing. Casablanca, for example, was
still putting asses in seats decades after Bogart had been paid off and
smoked himself into an early grave.
In the view of Hollywood, the techies of Silicon Valley were just a
particularly naive form of talent. So when the technology reached a certain
point the point where it could be marketed to a certain large Nipponese
electronics company at a substantial profit the backers of Avi's company
staged a lightning coup that had obviously been lovingly planned. Randy and
the others were given a choice: they could leave the company now and hold on
to some of their stock, which was still worth a decent amount of money. Or
they could stay in which case they would find themselves sabotaged from
within by fifth columnists who had been infiltrated into key positions. At
the same time they would be besieged from without by lawyers demanding their
heads for the things that were suddenly going wrong.
Some of the founders stayed on as court eunuchs. Most of them left the
company, and of that group, most sold their stock immediately because they
could see it was going nowhere but down. The company was gutted by the
transfer of its technology to Japan, and the empty husk eventually dried up
and blew away.
Even today, bits and pieces of the technology keep popping up in the
oddest places, such as advertisements for new video game platforms. It
always gives Randy the creeps to see this. When it all started to go wrong,
the Nipponese tried to hire him directly, and he actually made some money
flying over there to work, for a week or a month at a time, as a consultant.
But they couldn't keep the technology running with the programmers they had,
and so it hasn't lived up to its potential.
Thus ended Randy's Second Business Foray. He came out of it with a
couple of hundred thousand dollars, most of which he plowed into the
Victorian house he shares with Charlene. He hadn't trusted himself with that
much liquid cash, and locking it up in the house gave him a feeling of
safety, like reaching home base in a frenzied game of full contact tag.
He has spent the years since running the Three Siblings' computer
system. He hasn't made much money, but he hasn't had much stress either.
***
Randy was forever telling people, without rancor, that they were full
of shit. That was the only way to get anything done in hacking. No one took
it personally.
Charlene's crowd most definitely did take it personally. It wasn't
being told that they were wrong that offended them, though it was the
underlying assumption that a person could be right or wrong about anything.
So on the Night in Question the night of Avi's fateful call Randy had done
what he usually did, which was to withdraw from the conversation. In the
Tolkien, not the endocrinological or Snow White sense, Randy is a Dwarf.
Tolkien's Dwarves were stout, taciturn, vaguely magical characters who spent
a lot of time in the dark hammering out beautiful things, e.g. Rings of
Power. Thinking of himself as a Dwarf who had hung up his war ax for a while
to go sojourning in the Shire, where he was surrounded by squabbling Hobbits
(i.e., Charlene's friends), had actually done a lot for Randy's peace of
mind over the years. He knew perfectly well that if he were stuck in
academia, these people, and the things they said, would seem momentous to
him. But where he came from, nobody had been taking these people seriously
for years. So he just withdrew from the conversation and drank his wine and
looked out over the Pacific surf and tried not to do anything really obvious
like shaking his head and rolling his eyes.
Then the topic of the Information Superhighway came up, and Randy could
feel faces turning in his direction like searchlights, casting almost
palpable warmth on his skin.
Dr. G. E. B. Kivistik had a few things to say about the Information
Superhighway. He was a fiftyish Yale professor who had just flown in from
someplace that had sounded really cool and impressive when he had gone out
of his way to mention it several times. His name was Finnish, but he was
British as only a non British Anglophile could be. Ostensibly he was here to
attend War as Text. Really he was there to recruit Charlene, and really
really (Randy suspected) to fuck her. This was probably not true at all, but
just a symptom of how wacked out Randy was getting by this point. Dr. G. E.
B. Kivistik had been showing up on television pretty frequently. Dr. G. E.
B. Kivistik had a couple of books out. Dr. G. E. B. Kivistik was, in short,
parlaying his strongly contrarian view of the Information Superhighway into
more air time than anyone who hadn't been accused of blowing up a day care
center should get.
A Dwarf on sojourn in the Shire would probably go to a lot of dinner
parties where pompous boring Hobbits would hold forth like this. This Dwarf
would view the whole thing as entertainment. He would know that he could
always go back out into the real world, so much vaster and more complex than
these Hobbits imagined, and slay a few Trolls and remind himself of what
really mattered.
That was what Randy always told himself, anyway. But on the Night in
Question, it didn't work. Partly because Kivistik was too big and real to be
a Hobbit probably more influential in the real world than Randy would ever
be. Partly because another faculty spouse at the table a likable, harmless
computerphile named Jon decided to take issue with some of Kivistik's
statements and was cheerfully shot down for his troubles. Blood was in the
water.
Randy had ruined his relationship with Charlene by wanting to have
kids. Kids raise issues. Charlene, like all of her friends, couldn't handle
issues. Issues meant disagreement. Voicing disagreement was a form of
conflict. Conflict, acted out openly and publicly, was a male mode of social
interaction the foundation for patriarchal society which brought with it the
usual litany of dreadful things. Regardless, Randy decided to get
patriarchal with Dr. G. E. B. Kivistik.
"How many slums will we bulldoze to build the Information
Superhighway?" Kivistik said. This profundity was received with thoughtful
nodding around the table.
Jon shifted in his chair as if Kivistik had just dropped an ice cube
down his collar. "What does that mean?" he asked. Jon was smiling, trying
not to be a conflict oriented patriarchal hegemonist. Kivistik in response,
raised his eyebrows and looked around at everyone else, as if to say Who
invited this poor lightweight? Jon tried to dig himself out from his
tactical error, as Randy closed his eyes and tried not to wince visibly.
Kivistik had spent more years sparring with really smart people over high
table at Oxford than Jon had been alive. "You don't have to bulldoze
anything. There's nothing there to bulldoze," Jon pleaded.
"Very well, let me put it this way," Kivistik said magnanimously he was
not above dumbing down his material for the likes of Jon. "How many on ramps
will connect the world's ghettos to the Information Superhighway?"
Oh, that's much clearer, everyone seemed to think. Point well taken,
Geb! No one looked at Jon, that argumentative pariah. Jon looked helplessly
over at Randy, signaling for help.
Jon was a Hobbit who'd actually been out of the Shire recently, so he
knew Randy was a dwarf. Now he was fucking up Randy's life by calling upon
Randy to jump up on the table, throw off his homespun cloak, and whip out
his two handed ax.
The words came out of Randy's mouth before he had time to think better
of it. "The Information Superhighway is just a fucking metaphor! Give me a
break!" he said.
There was a silence as everyone around the table winced in unison.
Dinner had now, officially, crashed and burned. All they could do now was
grab their ankles, put their heads between their knees, and wait for the
wreckage to slide to a halt.
"That doesn't tell me very much," Kivistik said. "Everything is a
metaphor. The word 'fork' is a metaphor for this object." He held up a fork.
"All discourse is built from metaphors."
"That's no excuse for using bad metaphors," Randy said.
"Bad? Bad? Who decides what is bad?" Kivistik said, doing his killer
impression of a heavy lidded, mouth breathing undergraduate. There was
scattered tittering from people who were desperate to break the tension.
Randy could see where it was going. Kivistik had gone for the usual
academician's ace in the hole: everything is relative, it's all just
differing perspectives. People had already begun to resume their little side
conversations, thinking that the conflict was over, when Randy gave them all
a start with: "Who decides what's bad? I do. "
Even Dr. G. E. B. Kivistik was flustered. He wasn't sure if Randy was
joking. "Excuse me?"
Randy was in no great hurry to answer the question. He took the
opportunity to sit back comfortably, stretch, and take a sip of his wine. He
was feeling good. "It's like this," he said. "I've read your book. I've seen
you on TV. I've heard you tonight. I personally typed up a list of your
credentials when I was preparing press materials for this conference. So I
know that you're not qualified to have an opinion about technical issues.''
"Oh," Kivistik said in mock confusion, "I didn't realize one had to
have qualifications."
"I think it's clear," Randy said, "that if you are ignorant of a
particular subject, that your opinion is completely worthless. If I'm sick,
I don't ask a plumber for advice. I go to a doctor. Likewise, if I have
questions about the Internet, I will seek opinions from people who know
about it."
"Funny how all of the technocrats seem to be in favor of the Internet,"
Kivistik said cheerily, milking a few more laughs from the crowd.
"You have just made a statement that is demonstrably not true," Randy
said, pleasantly enough. "A number of Internet experts have written well
reasoned books that are sharply critical of it."
Kivistik was finally getting pissed off. All the levity was gone.
"So," Randy continued, "to get back to where we started, the
Information Superhighway is a bad metaphor for the Internet, because I say
it is. There might be a thousand people on the planet who are as conversant
with the Internet as I am. I know most of these people. None of them takes
that metaphor seriously. Q.E.D."
"Oh. I see," Kivistik said, a little hotly. He had seen an opening. "So
we should rely on the technocrats to tell us what to think, and how to
think, about this technology."
The expressions of the others seemed to say that this was a telling
blow, righteously struck.
"I'm not sure what a technocrat is," Randy said. "Am I a technocrat?
I'm just a guy who went down to the bookstore and bought a couple of
textbooks on TCP/IP, which is the underlying protocol of the Internet, and
read them. And then I signed on to a computer, which anyone can do nowadays,
and I messed around with it for a few years, and now I know all about it.
Does that make me a technocrat?"
"You belonged to the technocratic elite even before you picked up that
book," Kivistik said. "The ability to wade through a technical text, and to
understand it, is a privilege. It is a privilege conferred by an education
that is available only to members of an elite class. That's what I mean by
technocrat."
"I went to a public school," Randy said. "And then I went to a state
university. From that point on, I was self educated."
Charlene broke in. She had been giving Randy dirty looks ever since
this started and he had been ignoring her. Now he was going to pay. "And
your family?" Charlene asked frostily.
Randy took a deep breath, stifled the urge to sigh. "My father's an
engineer. He teaches at a state college."
"And his father?"
"A mathematician."
Charlene raised her eyebrows. So did nearly everyone else at the table.
Case closed.
"I strenuously object to being labeled and pigeonholed and stereotyped
as a technocrat," Randy said, deliberately using oppressed person's
language, maybe in an attempt to turn their weapons against them but more
likely (he thinks, lying in bed at three A.M. in the Manila Hotel) out of an
uncontrollable urge to be a prick. Some of them, out of habit, looked at him
soberly; etiquette dictated that you give all sympathy to the oppressed.
Others gasped in outrage to hear these words coming from the lips of a known
and convicted white male technocrat. "No one in my family has ever had much
money or power," he said.
"I think that the point that Charlene's making is like this," said
Tomas, one of their houseguests who had flown in from Prague with his wife
Nina. He had now appointed himself conciliator. He paused long enough to
exchange a warm look with Charlene. "Just by virtue of coming from a
scientific family, you are a member of a privileged elite. You're not aware
of it but members of privileged elites are rarely aware of their
privileges."
Randy finished the thought. "Until people like you come along to
explain to us how stupid, to say nothing of morally bankrupt, we are."
"The false consciousness Tomas is speaking of is exactly what makes
entrenched power elites so entrenched," Charlene said.
"Well, I don't feel very entrenched," Randy said. "I've worked my ass
off to get where I've gotten."
"A lot of people work hard all their lives and get nowhere," someone
said accusingly. Look out! The sniping had begun.
"Well, I'm sorry I haven't had the good grace to get nowhere," Randy
said, now feeling just a bit surly for the first time, "but I have found
that if you work hard, educate yourself and keep your wits about you, you
can find your way in this society."
"But that's straight out of some nineteenth century Horatio Alger
book," Tomas sputtered.
"So? Just because it's an old idea doesn't mean it's wrong." Randy
said.
A small strike force of waitpersons had been forming up around the
fringes of the table, arms laden with dishes, making eye contact with each
other as they tried to decide when it was okay to break up the fight and
serve dinner. One of them rewarded Randy with a platter carrying a wigwam
devised from slabs of nearly raw tuna. The pro consensus, anti confrontation
elements then seized control of the conversation and broke it up into
numerous small clusters of people all vigorously agreeing with one another.
Jon cast a watery look at Randy, as if to say, was it good for you too?
Charlene was ignoring him intensely; she was caught up in a consensus
cluster with Tomas. Nina kept trying to catch Randy's eye, but he studiously
avoided this because he was afraid that she wanted to favor him with a
smoldering come hither look, and all Randy wanted to do right then was to go
thither. Ten minutes later, his pager went off, and he looked down to see
Avi's number on it.
Chapter 7 BURN
The American base at Cavite, along the shore of Manila Bay, burns real
good once the Nips have set it on fire, Bobby Shaftoe and the rest of the
Fourth Marines get a good long look at it as they cruise by, sneaking out of
Manila like thieves in the night. He has never felt more personally
disgraced in his life, and the same thing goes for the other Marines. The
Nips have already landed in Malaya and are headed for Singapore like a
runaway train, they are besieging Guam and Wake and Hong Kong and God knows
what else, and it should be obvious to anyone that they are going to hit the
Philippines next. Seems like a regiment of hardened China Marines might
actually come in handy around here.
But MacArthur seems to think he can defend Luzon all by himself,
standing on the walls of Intramuros with his Colt .45. So they are shipping
out. They have no idea where to. Most of them would rather hit the beaches
of Nippon itself than stay here in Army territory.
The night the war began, Bobby Shaftoe had first gotten Glory back into
the bosom of her family.
The Altamiras live in the neighborhood of Malate, a couple of miles
south of Intramuros, and not too far from the place where Shaftoe has just
had his half hour of Glory along the seawall. The city has gone mad, and
it's impossible to get a car. Sailors, marines, and soldiers are spewing
from bars, nightclubs, and ballrooms and commandeering taxis in groups of
four and six it's as crazy as Shanghai on Saturday night like the war's
already here. Shaftoe ends up carrying Glory halfway home, because her shoes
aren't made for walking.
The family Altamira is vast enough to constitute an ethnic group unto
itself and all of them live in the same building practically in the same
room. Once or twice, Glory had begun to explain to Bobby Shaftoe how they
are all related. Now there are many Shaftoes mostly in Tennessee but the
Shaftoe family tree still fits on a cross stitch sampler. The family Shaftoe
is to the Altamira clan as a single, alienated sapling is to a jungle.
Filipino families, in addition to being gigantic and Catholic, are massively
crosslinked by godparent/godchild relationships, like lianas stretched from
branch to branch and tree to tree. If asked, Glory is happy, even eager, to
talk for six hours nonstop about how the Altamiras are related to one
another, and that is just to give a general overview. Shaftoe's brain always
shuts off after the first thirty seconds.
He gets her to the apartment, which is usually in a state of hysterical
uproar even when the nation is not under military assault by the Empire of
Nippon. Despite this, the appearance of Glory, shortly after the outbreak of
war, borne in the arms of a United States Marine, is received by the
Altamiras in much the same way as if Christ were to materialize in the
center of their living room with the Virgin Mary slung over his back. All
around him, middle aged women are thudding down onto their knees, as if the
place has just been mustard gassed. But they are just doing it to shout
hallelujah! Glory alights nimbly upon her high heels, tears exploring the
exceptional geometry of her cheeks, and kisses everyone in the entire clan.
All of the kids are wide awake, though it is three in the morning. Shaftoe
happens to catch the eye of a squad of boys, aged maybe three to ten, all
brandishing wooden rifles and swords. They are all staring at Bobby Shaftoe,
replendent in his uniform, and they are perfectly thunderstruck; he could
throw a baseball into the mouth of each one from across the room. In his
peripheral vision, he sees a middle aged woman who is related to Glory by
some impossibly complex chain of relationships, and who already has one of
Glory's lipstick marks on her cheek, vectoring toward him on a collision
course, grimly determined to kiss him. He knows that he must get out of this
place now or he will never leave it. So, ignoring the woman, and holding the
gaze of those stunned boys, he rises to attention and snaps out a perfect
salute.
The boys salute back, raggedly, but with fantastic bravado. Bobby
Shaftoe turns on his heel and marches out of the room, moving like a bayonet
thrust. He reckons that he will come back to Malate tomorrow, when things
are calmer, and check up on Glory and the rest of the Altamiras.
He does not see her again.
He reports back to his ship, and is not granted any more shore leave.
He does manage to have a conversation with Uncle Jack, who pulls up
alongside in a small motorboat long enough for them to shout a few sentences
back and forth. Uncle Jack is the last of the Manila Shaftoes, a branch of
the family spawned by Nimrod Shaftoe of the Tennessee Volunteers. Nimrod
took a bullet in his right arm somewhere around Quingua, courtesy of some
rebellious Filipino riflemen. Recovering in a Manila hospital, old Nimrod,
or 'Lefty" as he was called by that point, decided that he liked the pluck
of these Filipino men, in order to kill whom a whole new class of
ridiculously powerful sidearm (the Colt .45) had had to be invented. Not
only that, he liked the looks of their women. Promptly discharged from the
service, he found that full disability pay would go a long way on the local
economy. He set up an export business along the Pasig riverfront, married a
half Spanish woman, and sired a son (Jack) and two daughters. The daughters
ended up in the States, back in the Tennessee mountains that have been the
ancestral wellspring of all Shaftoes ever since they broke out of the
indentured servitude racket back in the 1700s. Jack stayed in Manila and
inherited Nimrod's business, but never married. By Manila standards he makes
a decent amount of money. He has always been an odd combination of salty
waterfront trader and perfumed dandy. He and Mr. Pascual have been in
business together forever, which is how Bobby Shaftoe knows Mr. Pascual, and
which is how he originally met Glory.
When Bobby Shaftoe repeats the latest rumors, Uncle Jack's face
collapses. No one hereabouts is willing to face the fact that they are about
to be besieged by Nips. His next words ought to be, "Shit then, I'm getting
the hell out of here, I'll send you a postcard from Australia." But instead
he says something like "I'll come by in a few days to check up on you."
Bobby Shaftoe bites his tongue and does not say what he's thinking,
which is that he is a Marine, and he is on a ship, and this is a war, and
Marines on ships in wars are not known for staying put. He just stands there
and watches as Uncle Jack putt putts away on his little boat, turning back
every so often to wave at him with his fine Panama hat. The sailors around
Bobby Shaftoe watch with amusement, and a bit of admiration. The waterfront
is churning insanely as every piece of military gear that's not set in
concrete gets thrown onto ships and sent to Bata'an or Corregidor, and Uncle
Jack, standing upright in his boat, in his good cream colored suit and
Panama hat, weaves through the traffic with aplomb. Bobby Shaftoe watches
him until he disappears around the bend into the Pasig River, knowing that
he is probably the last member of his family who will ever see Uncle Jack
alive.
Despite all of those premonitions, he's surprised when they ship out
after only a few days of war, pulling out of their slip in the middle of the
night without any of the traditional farewell ceremonies. Manila is
supposedly lousy with Nip spies, and there's nothing the Nips would like
better than to sink a transport ship stuffed with experienced Marines.
Manila disappears behind them into the darkness. The awareness that he
hasn't seen Glory since that night is like a slow hot dentist's drill. He
wonders how she's doing. Maybe, once the war settles down a little bit, and
the battle lines firm up, he can figure out a way to get stationed in this
part of the world. MacArthur's a tough old bastard who will put up a hell of
a fight when the Nips come. And even if the Philippines fall, FDR won't let
them remain in enemy hands for very long. With any luck, inside of six
months, Bobby Shaftoe will be marching up Manila's Taft Avenue, in full
dress uniform, behind a Marine Band, perhaps nursing a minor war wound or
two. The parade will come to a section of the avenue that is lined, for a
distance of about a mile, with Altamiras. About halfway along, the crowd
will part, and Glory will run out and jump into his arms and smother him
with kisses. He'll carry the girl straight up the steps of some nice little
church where a priest in a white cassock is waiting with a big grin on his
face That dream image dissolves in a mushroom cloud of orange fire rising up
from the American base at Cavite. The place has been burning all day, and
another fuel dump has just gone up. He can feel the heat on his face from
miles away. Bobby Shaftoe is on the deck of the ship, all bundled up in a
life vest in case they get torpedoed. He takes advantage of the flaring
light to look down a long line of other Marines in life vests, staring at
the flame with stunned expressions on their tired, sweaty faces.
Manila is only half an hour behind them, but it might as well be a
million miles away.
He remembers Nanking, and what the Nips did there. What happened to the
women.
Once, long ago, there was a city named Manila. There was a girl there.
Her face and name are best forgotten. Bobby Shaftoe starts forgetting just
as fast as he can.
Chapter 8 PEDESTRIAN
RESPECT THE PEDESTRIAN, say the street signs of metro Manila. As soon
as Randy saw those he knew that he was in trouble.
For the first couple of weeks he spent in Manila, his work consisted of
walking. He walked all over the city carrying a handheld GPS receiver,
taking down latitudes and longitudes. He encrypted the data in his hotel
room and e mailed it to Avi. It became part of Epiphyte's intellectual
property. It became equity.
Now, they had secured some actual office space. Randy walks to it,
doggedly. He knows that the first time he takes a taxi there, he'll never
walk again.
RESPECT THE PEDESTRIAN, the signs say, but the drivers, the physical
environment, local land use customs, and the very layout of the place
conspire to treat the pedestrian with the contempt he so richly deserves.
Randy would get more respect if he went to work on a pogo stick with a
propeller beanie on his head. Every morning the bellhops ask him if he wants
a taxi, and practically lose consciousness when he says no. Every morning
the taxi drivers lined up in front of the hotel, leaning against their cars
and smoking, shout "Taxi? Taxi?" to him. When he turns them down, they say
witty things to each other in Tagalog and roar with laughter.
Just in case Randy hasn't gotten the message yet, a new red and white
chopper swings in low over Rizal Park, turns around once or twice like a dog
preparing to lie down, and settles in, not far from some palm trees, right
in front of the hotel.
Randy has gotten into the habit of reaching Intramuros by cutting
through Rizal Park. This is not a direct route. The direct route passes over
a no man's land, a vast, dangerous intersection lined with squatters huts
(it is dangerous because of the cars, not the squatters). If you go through
the park, on the other hand, you only have to brush off a lot of whores. But
Randy's gotten good at that. The whores cannot conceive of a man rich enough
to stay at the Manila Hotel who voluntarily walks around the city every day,
and they have given him up as a maniac. He has passed into the realm of
irrational things that you must simply accept, and in the Philippines this
is a nearly infinite domain.
Randy could never understand why everything smelled so bad until he
came upon a large, crisp rectangular hole in the sidewalk, and stared down
into a running flume of raw sewage. The sidewalks are nothing more than lids
on the sewers. Access to the depths is provided by concrete slabs with rebar
lifting loops protruding from them. Squatters fashion wire harnesses onto
those loops so that they can pull them up and create instant public
latrines. These slabs are frequently engraved with the initials, team name,
or graffiti tag of the gentlemen who manufactured them, and their competence
and attentiveness to detail vary, but their esprit de corps is fixed at a
very high level.
There are only so many gates that lead into Intramuros. Randy must run
a daily gauntlet of horse drawn taxis, some of whom have nothing better to
do than follow him down the street for a quarter of an hour muttering, "Sir?
Sir? Taxi? Taxi?" One of them, in particular, is the most tenacious
capitalist Randy has ever seen. Every time he draws alongside Randy, a rope
of urine uncoils from his horse's belly and cracks into the pavement and
hisses and foams. Tiny comets of pee strike Randy's pant legs. Randy always
wears long pants no matter how hot it is.
Intramuros is a strangely quiet and lazy neighborhood. This is mostly
because it was destroyed during the war, and hasn't been undestroyed yet.
Much of it is open weed farms still, which is very odd in the middle of a
vast, crowded metropolis.
Several miles south, towards the airport, amid nice suburban
developments, is Makati. This would be the logical place to base Epiphyte
Corp. It's got a couple of giant five star luxury hotels on every block, and
office towers that look clean and cool, and modern condos. But Avi, with his
perverse real estate sense, has decided to forgo all of that in favor of
what he described on the phone as texture. "I do not like to buy or lease
real estate when it is peaking," he said.
Understanding Avi's motives is like peeling an onion with a single
chopstick. Randy knows there is much more to it: perhaps he's earning a
favor, or repaying one, to a landlord. Perhaps he's been reading some
management guru who counsels young entrepreneurs to get deeply involved in a
country's culture. Not that Avi has ever been one for gurus. Randy's latest
theory is that it all has to do with lines of sight the latitudes and
longitudes.
Sometimes Randy walks along the top of the Spanish wall. Around Calle
Victoria, where MacArthur had his headquarters before the war, it is as wide
as a four lane street. Lovers nestle in the trapezoidal gunslits and put up
umbrellas for privacy. Below him, to the left, is the moat, a good city
block or two in width, mostly dry. Squatters have built shacks on it. In the
parts that are still submerged, they dig for mud crabs or string improvised
nets among the purple and magenta lotus blossoms.
To the right is Intramuros. A few buildings poke up out of a jumbled
wilderness of strewn stone. Ancient Spanish cannon are sprinkled around the
place, half buried. The rubble fields have been colonized by tropical
vegetation and squatters. Their clothesline poles and television antennas
are all wrapped up in jungle creepers and makeshift electrical wiring.
Utility poles jut into the air at odd angles, like widowmakers in a burned
forest, some of them almost completely obscured by the glass bubbles of
electrical meters. Every dozen yards or so, for no discernable reason, a
pile of rubble smolders.
As he goes by the cathedral, children follow him, whining and begging
piteously until he puts pesos in their hands. Then they beam and sometimes
give him a bright "Thank you!" in perfect American scented shopping mall
English. The beggars in Manila never seem to take their work very seriously,
for even they have been infected by the cultural fungus of irony and always
seem to be fighting back a grin, as if they can't believe they're doing
anything so corny.
They do not understand that he is working. That's okay.
Ideas have always come to Randy faster than he could use them. He spent
the first thirty years of his life pursuing whatever idea appealed to him at
the moment, discarding it when a better one came along.
Now he is working for a company again, and has some kind of
responsibility to use his time productively. Good ideas come to him as fast
and thick as ever, but he has to keep his eye on the ball. If the idea is
not relevant to Epiphyte, he has to jot it down and forget about it for now.
If it is relevant, he has to restrain his urge to dive into it and consider:
has anyone else come up with this idea before him? Is it possible to just go
out and buy the technology? Can he delegate the work to a contract coder in
the States?
He walks slowly, partly because otherwise he will suffer heatstroke and
fall dead in the gutter. Worse yet, he may fall through an open hatch into a
torrent of sewage, or brush against one of the squatters's electrical wires,
which dangle from overhead like patient asps. The constant dangers of sudden
electrocution from above or drowning in liquid shit below keep him looking
up and down as well as side to side. Randy has never felt more trapped
between a capricious and dangerous heaven and a hellish underworld. This
place is as steeped in religion as India, but all of it is Catholic.
At the northern end of Intramuros is a little business district. It is
sandwiched between Manila Cathedral and Fort Santiago, which the Spaniards
constructed to command the outlet of the Pasig River. You can tell it's a
business district because of the phone wires. As in other Rapidly Developing
Asian Economies, it is difficult to tell whether these are pirate wires, or
official ones that have been incredibly badly installed. They are a case
study in why incrementalism is bad. The bundles are so thick in some places
that Randy probably could not wrap both arms around them. Their weight and
tension have begun to pull the phone poles over, especially at curves in the
roads, where the wires go round a corner and exert a net sideways force on
the pole.
All of these buildings are constructed in the least expensive way
conceivable: concrete poured in place in wooden forms, over grids of hand
tied rebar. They are blocky, grey, and completely indistinguishable from one
another. A couple of much taller buildings, twenty or thirty stories, loom
over the district from a big intersection nearby, wind and birds circulating
through their broken windows. They were badly shaken up in an earthquake
during the 1980s and have not been put to rights yet.
He passes by a restaurant with a squat concrete blockhouse in front,
its openings covered with blackened steel grates, rusty exhaust pipes
sticking out the top to vent the diesel generator locked inside. NO BROWN
OUT has been proudly stenciled all over it. Beyond that is a postwar office
building, four stories high, with an especially thick sheaf of telephone
wires running into it. The logo of a bank is bolted to the front of the
building, down low. There is angle parking in front. The two spaces in front
of the main entrance are blocked off with hand painted signs: RESERVED FOR
ARMORED CAR and RESERVED FOR BANK MANAGER. A couple of guards stand in front
of the entrance clutching the fat wooden pistol grips of riot guns, weapons
that have the hulking, cartoonish appearance of action figure accessories.
One of the guards remains behind a bulletproof podium with a sign on it:
PLEASE DEPOSIT GUNS/FIREARMS TO THE GUARD.
Randy exchanges nods with the gunmen and goes into the building's
lobby, which is just as hot as outside. Bypassing the bank, ignoring the
unreliable elevators, he goes through a steel door that takes him into a
narrow stairwell. Today, it is dark. The building's electrical system is a
patchwork several different systems coexisting in the same space, controlled
by different panels, some on generators and some not. So blackouts begin and
end in phases. Somewhere near the top of the stairwell, small birds chirp,
competing with the sound of car alarms being set off outside.
Epiphyte Corp. rents the building's top floor, although he is the only
person working there so far. He keys his way in. Thank god; the air
conditioning has been working. The money they paid for their own generator
was worth it. He disables the alarm systems, goes to the fridge, and gets
two one liter bottles of water. His rule of thumb, after a walk, is to drink
water until he begins to urinate again. Then he can consider other
activities.
He is too sweaty to sit down. He must keep moving so that the cold dry
air will flow around his body. He flicks globes of sweat out of his beard
and does an orbit of the floor, looking out the windows, checking out the
lines of sight. He pulls a ballistic nylon traveler's wallet out of his
trousers and lets it dangle from his belt loop so that the skin underneath
it can breathe. It contains his passport, a virgin credit card, ten crisp
new hundred dollar bills, and a floppy disk with his 4096 bit encryption key
on it.
Northwards he can survey the greens and ramparts of Fort Santiago,
where phalanxes of Nipponese tourists toil, recording their fun with
forensic determination. Beyond that is the Pasig River, choked with floating
debris. Across the river is Quiapo, a built up area: high rise apartment and
office buildings with corporate names emblazoned on their top storeys and
satellite dishes on the roofs.
Unwilling to stop moving just yet, Randy strolls clockwise around the
office. Intramuros is ringed with a belt of green, its former moat. He has
just walked up its western verge. The eastern one is studded with heavy
neoclassical buildings housing various government ministries. The Post and
Telecommunications Authority sits on the Pasig's edge, at a vertex in the
river from which three closely spaced bridges radiate into Quiapo. Beyond
the large new structures above the river, Quiapo and the adjoining
neighborhood of San Miguel are a patchwork of giant institutions: a train
station, an old prison, many universities, and Malacanang Palace, which is
farther up the Pasig.
Back on this side of the river, it is Intramuros in the foreground
(cathedrals and churches surrounded by dormant land), government
institutions, colleges, and universities in the middle ground, and, beyond
that, a seemingly infinite sprawl of low lying, smoky city. Miles to the
south is the gleaming business city of Makati, built around a square where
two big roads intersect at an acute angle, echoing the intersecting runways
at NAIA, a bit farther south. An emerald city of big houses perched on big
lawns spreads away from Makati: it is where the ambassadors and corporate
presidents live. Continuing his clockwise stroll he can follow Roxas
Boulevard coming toward him up the seawall, marked by a picket line of tall
palm trees. Manila Bay is jammed with heavy shipping, big cargo ships
filling the water like logs in a boom. The container port is just below him
to the west: a grid of warehouses on reclaimed land that is about as flat,
and as natural, as a sheet of particle board.
If he looks over the cranes and containers, due west across the bay, he
can barely make out the mountainous silhouette of the Bata'an Peninsula,
some forty miles distant. Following its black skyline southwards tracing the
route taken by the Nipponese in '42 he can almost resolve a lump lying off
its southern tip. That would be the island of Corregidor. This is the first
time he's ever been able to see it; the air is unusually clear today.
A fragment of historical trivia floats to the surface of his melted
brain. The galleon from Acapulco. The signal fire on Corregidor.
He punches in Avi's GSM number. Avi, somewhere in the world, answers
it. He sounds like he is in a taxi, in one of those countries where horn
honking is still an inalienable right. "What's on your mind, Randy?"
"Lines of sight," Randy says.
"Huh!" Avi blurts, as if a medicine ball has just slammed into his
belly. "You figured it out."
Chapter 9 GUADALCANAL
The marine raiders' bodies are no longer pressurized with blood and
breath. The weight of their gear flattens them into the sand. The
accelerating surf has already begun to shovel silt over them; comet trails
of blood fade back into the ocean, red carpets for any sharks who may be
browsing the coastline. Only one of them is a giant lizard. but all have the
same general shape: fat in the middle and tailing off at the ends,
streamlined by the waves.
A little convoy of Nip boats is moving down the slot, towing barges
loaded with supplies packed into steel drums. Shaftoe and his platoon ought
to be lobbing mortars at them right now. When the American planes show up
and begin to kick the shit out of them, the Nips will throw the drums
overboard and run away, and hope that some of them will wash ashore on
Guadalcanal.
The war is over for Bobby Shaftoe, and hardly for the first or last
time. He trudges among the platoon. Waves hit him in the knees, then spread
into magic carpets of foam and vegetable matter that skim along the beach so
that his footing appears to glide out from under him. He keeps twisting
around for no reason and falling on his ass.
Finally he reaches the corpsman's corpse, and divests it of anything
with a red cross on it. He turns his back on the Nip convoy and looks up a
long glacis toward the tideline. It might as well be Mt. Everest as seen
from a low base camp. Shaftoe decides to tackle the challenge on hands and
knees. Every so often, a big wave spanks him on the ass, rushes up between
his legs orgasmically and washes his face. It feels good and also keeps him
from pitching forward and falling asleep below the high tide mark.
The next couple of days are a handful of dirty, faded black and white
snapshots, shuffled and dealt over and over again: the beach under water.
positions of corpses marked by standing waves. The beach empty. The beach
under water again. The beach strewn with black lumps, like a slice of
Grandma Shaftoe's raisin bread. A morphine bottle half buried in the sand.
Small, dark people, mostly naked, moving along the beach at low tide and
looting the corpses.
Hey, wait a sec! Shaftoe is on his feet somehow, clutching his
Springfield. The jungle doesn't want to let go of him; creepers have
actually grown over his limbs in the time he has lain there. As he emerges.
dragging foliage behind him like a float in a ticker tape parade, the sun
floods over him like warm syrup of ipecac. He can see the ground headed his
way. He spins as he falls momentarily glimpsing a big man with a rifle and
then his face is pressed into the cool sand. The surf roars in his skull: a
nice standing ovation from a studio audience of angels, who having all died
themselves, know a good death when they see one.
Little hands roll him over onto his back. One of his eyes is frozen
shut by sand. Peering through the other he sees a big fellow with a rifle
slung over his shoulder standing over him. The fellow has a red beard, which
makes it just a bit less probable that he is a Nipponese soldier. But what
is he?
He prods like a doctor and prays like a priest in Latin, even. Silver
hair buzzed close to a tanned skull. Shaftoe scans the fellow's clothing for
some kind of insignia. He's hoping to see a Semper Fidelis but instead he
reads: Societas Eruditorum and Ignoti et quasi occulti.
"Ignoti et ... what the fuck does that mean?" he asks.
"Hidden and unknown more or less," says the man. He's got a weird
accent, sort of Australian, sort of German. He checks out Shaftoe's insignia
in turn. "What's a Marine Raider? Some kind of new outfit?"
"Like a Marine, only more so," Shaftoe says. Which might sound like
bravado. Indeed it partly is. But this comment is as heavy laden with irony
as Shaftoe's clothes are with sand, because at this particular moment in
history, a Marine isn't just a tough s.o.b. He is a tough S.O.B. stuck out
in the middle of nowhere (Guadalcanal) with no food or weapons (owing, as
every Marine can tell you, to a sinister conspiracy between General
MacArthur and the Nips) totally making everything up as he goes along,
improvising weapons from found objects, addled, half the time, by disease
and the drugs supplied to keep diseases at bay. And in every one of those
senses, a Marine Raider is (as Shaftoe says) like a Marine, only more so.
"Are you some kind of commando or something?" Shaftoe asks,
interrupting Red as he is mumbling.
"No. I live on the mountain."
"Oh, yeah? What do you do up there, Red?"
"I watch. And talk on the radio, in code." Then he goes back to
mumbling.
"Who you talkin' to, Red?"
"Do you mean, just now in Latin, or on the radio in code?"
"Both I reckon."
"On the radio in code, I talk to the good guys.
"Who are the good guys?"
"Long story. If you live, maybe I'll introduce you to some of them,"
says Red.
"How about just now in Latin?"
"Talking to God," Red says. "Last rites, in case you don't live."
This makes him think of the others. He remembers why he made that
insane decision to stand up in the first place. "Hey! Hey!" He tries to sit
up, and finding that impossible, twists around. "Those bastards are looting
the corpses!"
His eyes aren't focusing and he has to rub sand out of the one.
Actually, they are focusing just fine. What looked like steel drums
strewn around the beach turn out to be steel drums strewn around the beach.
The natives are pawing them out of the sucking sand, digging with their
hands like dogs, rolling them up the beach and into the jungle.
Shaftoe blacks out.
When he wakes up there's a row of crosses on the beach sticks lashed
together with vines, draped with jungle flowers. Red is pounding them in
with the butt of his rifle. All the steel drums, and most of the natives,
are gone. Shaftoe needs morphine. He says as much to Red.
"If you think you need it now," Red says, "just wait." He tosses his
rifle to a native, strides up to Shaftoe, and heaves him up over his
shoulders in a fireman's carry. Shaftoe screams. A couple of Zeroes fly
overhead, as they stride into the jungle. "My name is Enoch Root," says Red,
"but you can call me Brother."
Chapter 10 GALLEON
One morning, Randy Waterhouse rises early, takes a long hot shower,
plants himself before the mirror of his Manila Hotel suite, and shaves his
face bloody. He was thinking of farming this work out to a specialist: the
barber in the hotel's lobby. But this is the first time Randy's face will be
visible in ten years, and Randy wants to be the first person to see it. His
heart actually thumps, partly out of primal brute fear of the knife, and
partly from the sheer anticipation. It is like the scene in corny old movies
where the bandages are finally taken off of the patient's face, and a mirror
proffered.
The effect is, first of all, intense deja vu, as if the last ten years
of his life were but a dream, and he now has them to live over again.
Then he begins to notice subtle ways in which his face has been
changing since it was last exposed to air and light. He is mildly astonished
to find that these changes are not entirely bad. Randy has never thought of
himself as especially good looking, and has never especially cared. But the
blood spotted visage in the mirror is, arguably, better looking than the one
that faded into the deepening shade of stubble a decade ago. It looks like a
grownup's face.
***
It has been a week since he and Avi laid out the entire plan for the
high officials of the PTA: the Post and Telecoms Authority. PTA is a generic
term that telecom businessmen slap, like a yellow stickynote, onto what ever
government department handles these matters in whatever country they happen
to be visiting this week. In the Philippines, it is actually called
something else.
Americans brought, or at least accompanied, the Philippines into the
twentieth century and erected the apparatus of its central government.
Intramuros, the dead heart of Manila, is surrounded by a loose ring of giant
neoclassical buildings, very much after the fashion of the District of
Columbia, housing various parts of that apparatus. The PTA is headquartered
in one of those buildings, just south of the Pasig.
Randy and Avi get there early because Randy, accustomed to Manila
traffic, insists that they budget a full hour to cover the one– or two
mile taxi ride from the hotel. But traffic is perversely light and they end
up with a full twenty minutes to kill. They stroll around the side of the
building and up onto the green levee. Avi draws a bead on the Epiphyte Corp.
building, just to reassure himself that their line of sight is clear. Randy
is already satisfied of this, and just stands there with arms crossed,
looking at the river. It is choked, bank to bank, with floating debris: some
plant material but mostly old mattresses, cushions, pieces of plastic
litter, hunks of foam, and, most of all, plastic shopping bags in various
bright colors. The river has the consistency of vomit.
Avi wrinkles his nose. "What's that?"
Randy sniffs the air and smells, among everything else, burnt plastic.
He gestures downstream. "Squatter camp on the other side of Fort Santiago, '
he explains. "They sieve plastic out of the river and burn it for fuel."
"I was in Mexico a couple of weeks ago," Avi says. "They have plastic
forests there!"
"What does that mean?"
"Downwind of the city, the trees sort of comb the plastic shopping bags
out of the air. They get totally covered with them. The trees die because
light and air can't get through to the leaves. But they remain standing,
totally encased in fluttering, ragged plastic, all different colors."
Randy shrugs his blazer off, rolls up his sleeves; Avi does not seem to
notice the heat. "So that's Fort Santiago," Avi says, and starts walking
towards it.
"You've heard of it?" Randy asks, following him, and heaving a sigh.
The air is so hot that when it comes out of your lungs it has actually
cooled down by several degrees.
"It's mentioned in the video," Avi says, holding up a videotape
cassette and wiggling it.
"Oh, yeah."
Soon they are standing before the fort's entrance, which is flanked by
carvings of a pair of guards cut into the foamy volcanic tuff: halberd
brandishing Spaniards in blousy pants and conquistador helmets. They have
been standing here for close to half a millennium, and a hundred thousand
tropical thundershowers have streamed down their bodies and polished them
smooth.
Avi is working on a much shorter time horizon he has eyes only for the
bullet craters that have disfigured these soldiers far worse than time and
water. He puts his hands in them, like doubting Thomas. Then he steps back
and begins to mutter in Hebrew. Two ponytailed German tourists stroll
through the gate in rustic sandals.
"We have five minutes," Randy says.
"Okay, let's come back here later."
***
Charlene wasn't totally wrong. Blood seeps out of tiny, invisible
painless cuts on Randy's face and neck for ten or fifteen minutes after he
has shaved. Moments ago, that blood was accelerating through his ventricles,
or seeping through the parts of his brain that make him a conscious entity.
Now the same stuff is exposed to the air; he can reach up and wipe it off.
The boundary between Randy and his environment has been annihilated.
He gets out a big tube of heavy waterproof sunblock and greases his
face, neck, arms, and the small patch of scalp on the top of his head where
the hair is getting thin. Then he pulls on khakis, boat shoes, and a loose
cotton shirt, and a beltpack containing his GPS receiver and a couple of
other essentials like a wad of toilet paper and a disposable camera. He
drops his key off at the front desk, and the employees all do double takes
and grin. The bellhops seem particularly delighted by his makeover. Or
perhaps it is just that he is wearing leather shoes for once: topsiders,
which he's always thought of as the mark of effete preppies, but which are
actually a reasonable thing for him to wear today. Bellhops make ready to
haul the front door open, but instead, Randy cuts across the lobby towards
the back of the hotel, skirts the swimming pool, and walks through a line of
palm trees to a stone railing along the top of a seawall. Below him is the
hotel's dock, which sticks out into a small cove that opens onto Manila Bay.
His ride isn't here yet, so he stands at the railing for a minute. One
side of the cove is accessible from Rizal Park. A few gnarly Filipino
squatter types are lazing on the benches, staring back at him. Down below
the breakwater, a middle aged man, wearing only boxer shorts, stands in knee
deep water with a pointed stick, staring with feline intensity into the
lapping water. A black helicopter makes slow, banking circles against a
sugar white sky. It is a Vietnam vintage Huey, a wappity wap kind of chopper
that also makes a fierce reptilian hissing noise as it slithers overhead.
A boat materializes from the steam rising off the bay, cuts its
engines, and coasts into the cove, shoving a bow wave in front of it, like a
wrinkle in a heavy rug. A tall, slender woman is poised on the prow like a
living figurehead, holding a coil of heavy rope.
***
The big satellite dishes on the roof of the PTA's building are pointed
almost straight up, like birdbaths, because Manila is so close to the
equator. On its stone walls, spackle is coming loose from the bullet and
shrapnel craters into which it was troweled after the war. Window air
conditioners centered in the building's Roman arches drip water onto the
limestone balusters below, gradually melting them away. The limestone is
blackened with some kind of organic slime, and pitted by the root systems of
little plants that have taken root in them probably grown from seeds
conveyed in the shit of the birds that congregate there to bathe and drink,
the squatters of the aerial realm.
In a paneled conference room, a dozen people are waiting, equally
divided between table sitting big wheels and wall crawling minions. As Randy
and Avi enter a great flurry of hand shaking and card presenting ensues,
though most of the introductions zoom through Randy's short term memory like
a supersonic fighter blowing past shoddy Third World air defense systems. He
is left only with a stack of business cards. He deals them out on his patch
of table like a senescent codger playing Klondike on his meal tray. Avi, of
course, knows all of these people already seems to be on a first name basis
with most of them, knows their children's names and ages, their hobbies,
their blood types, chronic medical conditions, what books they are reading,
whose parties they have been going to. All of them are evidently delighted
by this, and all of them, thank god, completely ignore Randy.
Of the half dozen important people in the room, three are middle aged
Filipino men. One of these is a high ranking official in the PTA. The second
is the president of an upstart telecommunications company called FiliTel,
which is trying to compete against the traditional monopoly. The third is
the vice president of a company called 24 Jam that runs about half of the
convenience stores in the Philippines, as well as quite a few in Malaysia.
Randy has trouble telling these men apart, but by watching them converse
with Avi, and by using inductive logic, he is soon able to match business
card with face.
The other three are easy: two Americans and one Nipponese, and one of
the Americans is a woman. She is wearing lavender pumps color coordinated
with a neat little skirt suit, and matching nails. She looks as if she might
have stepped straight off the set of an infomercial for fake fingernails or
home permanents. Her card identifies her as Mary Ann Carson, and claims that
she is a V.P. with AVCLA, Asia Venture Capital Los Angeles, which Randy
knows dimly as a Los Angeles based firm that invests in Rapidly Developing
Asian Economies. The American man is blond and has a hard jawed quasi
military look about him. He seems alert, disciplined, impassive, which
Charlene's crowd would interpret as hostility born of repression born of
profound underlying mental disorder. He represents the Subic Bay Free Port.
The Nipponese man is the executive vice president of a subsidiary of a
ridiculously colossal consumer electronics company. He is about six feet
tall. He has a small body and a large head shaped like an upside down Bosc
pear, thick hair edged with gray, and wire rimmed glasses. He smiles
frequently, and projects the serene confidence of a man who has memorized a
two thousand page encyclopedia of business etiquette.
Avi wastes little time in starting the videotape, which at the moment
represents about seventy five percent of Epiphyte Corp.'s assets. Avi had it
produced by a hot multimedia startup in San Francisco, and the contract to
produce it accounted for one hundred percent of the startup's revenue this
year. "Pies crumble when you slice them too thin," Avi likes to say.
It starts with footage pilfered from a forgotten made for TV movie of a
Spanish galleon making headway through heavy seas. Superimpose title: SOUTH
CHINA SEA A.D. 1699. The soundtrack has been beefed up and Dolbyized from
its original monaural version. It is quite impressive.
("Half of the investors in AVCLA are into yachting," Avi explained.)
Cut to a shot (produced by the multimedia company, and seamlessly
spliced in) of a mangy, exhausted lookout in a crow's nest, peering through
a brass spyglass, hollering the Spanish equivalent of "Land ho!"
Cut to the galleon's captain, a rugged, bearded character, emerging
from his cabin to stare with Keatsian wild surmise at the horizon.
"Corregidor!" he exclaims.
Cut to a stone tower on the crown of a green tropical island, where a
lookout is sighting the (digitally inserted) galleon on the horizon. The
lookout cups his hands around his mouth and bellows, in Spanish, "It is the
galleon! Light the signal fire!"
("The family of the guy who runs the PTA is really into local history,"
Avi said, "they run the Museum of the Philippines.")
With a lusty cheer, Spaniards (actually, Mexican American actors) in
conquistador helmets plunge firebrands into a huge pile of dry wood which
evolves into a screaming pyramid of flame powerful enough to flash roast an
ox.
Cut to the battlements of Manila's Fort Santiago (foreground: carved
styrofoam; background: digitally generated landscape), where another
conquistador spies a light flaring up on the horizon. "Mira! El galleon!" he
cries.
Cut to a series of shots of Manila townsfolk rushing to the seawall to
adore the signal fire, including an Augustinian monk who clasps his rosary
strewn hands and bursts into clerical Latin on the spot ("the family that
runs FiliTel endowed a chapel at Manila Cathedral") as well as a clean cut
family of Chinese merchants unloading bales of silk from a junk ("24 Jam,
the convenience store chain, is run by Chinese mestizos").
A voiceover begins, deep and authoritative, English with a Filipino
accent ("The actor is the brother of the godfather of the grandson of the
man who runs the PTA"). Subtitles appear on the bottom of the screen in
Tagalog ("the PTA people have a heavy political commitment to the native
language").
"In the heyday of the Spanish Empire, the most important event of the
year was the arrival of the galleon from Acapulco, laden with silver from
the rich mines of America silver to buy the silks and spices of Asia, silver
that made the Philippines into the economic fountainhead of Asia. The
approach of the galleon was heralded by a beacon of light from the island of
Corregidor, at the entrance of Manila Bay."
Cut (finally!) from the beaming, greed lit faces of the Manila
townsfolk to a 3 D graphics rendering of Manila Bay, the Bata'an Peninsula,
and the small islands off the tip of Bata'an, including Corregidor. The
point of view swoops and zooms in on Corregidor where a hokily, badly
rendered fire blazes up. A beam of yellow light, like a phaser blast in Star
Trek, shoots across the bay. Our point of view follows it. It splashes
against the walls of Fort Santiago.
The signal fire was an ancient and simple technology. In the language
of modern science, its light was a form of electromagnetic radiation,
propagating in a straight line across Manila Bay, and carrying a single bit
of information. But, in an age starved for information, that single bit
meant everything to the people of Manila."
Cue that funky music. Cut to shots of teeming modern Manila. Shopping
malls and luxury hotels in Makati. Electronics factories, school children
sitting in front of computer screens. Satellite dishes. Ships unloading at
the big free port of Subic Bay. Lots and lots of grinning and thumbs up
gestures.
"The Philippines of today is an emerging economic dynamo. As its
economy grows, so does its hunger for information not single bits, but
hundreds of billions of them. But the technology for transmitting that
information has not changed as much as you might imagine."
Back to the 3 D rendering of Manila Bay. This time, instead of a
bonfire on Corregidor, there's a microwave horn up on a tower on the isle's
summit, gunning electric blue sine waves at the sprawl of Metro Manila.
"Electromagnetic radiation in this case, microwave beams propagating in
straight lines, over line of sight routes, can transmit vast quantities of
information quickly. Modern cryptographic technology makes the signal safe
from would be eavesdroppers."
Cut back to the galleon and lookout footage. "In the old days,
Corregidor's position at the entrance of Manila Bay made it a natural look
out a place where information about approaching ships could be gathered."
Cut to a shot of a barge in a cove somewhere, feeding thick tarry cable
overboard, divers at work with queues of round orange buoys. "Today,
Corregidor's geographical situation makes it an ideal place to land deep sea
fiberoptic cables. The information coming down these cables from Taiwan,
Hong Kong, Malaysia, Nippon, and the United States can from there be
transmitted directly into the heart of Manila. At the speed of light! "
More 3 D graphics. This time, it's a detailed rendering of the
cityscape of Manila. Randy knows it by heart because he gathered the data
for the damn thing by walking around town with his GPS receiver. The beam of
bits from Corregidor comes straight in off the bay and scores a bullseye on
the rooftop antenna of a nondescript four story office building between Fort
Santiago and the Manila Cathedral. It is Epiphyte's building, and the
antenna is discreetly labeled with the name and logo of Epiphyte Corp. Other
antennas then retransmit information to the PTA building and to other nearby
sites: skyscrapers in Makati, government offices in Quezon City, and an Air
Force base south of town.
***
Hotel staff throw a carpeted gangway across the gap between seawall and
boat. As Randy is walking across it, the woman extends her hand to him. He
reaches out to shake it. "Randy Waterhouse," he says.
She grabs his hand and pulls him on board not so much greeting him as
making sure he doesn't fall overboard. "Hi. Amy Shaftoe," she says. "Welcome
to Glory. "
"Pardon me?"
" Glory. The name of this junk is Glory ," she says. She speaks
forthrightly and with great clarity, as though communicating over a noisy
two way radio. "Actually, it's Glory IV," she continues. Her accent is
largely Midwestern, with a trace of Southern twang, and a little bit of
Filipino, too. If you saw her on the streets of some Midwestern town you
might not notice the traces of Asian ancestry around her eyes. She has dark
brown hair, sun streaked, just long enough to form a secure ponytail, no
longer.
"'Scuse me a sec," she says, pokes her head into the pilot house, and
speaks to the pilot in a mixture of Tagalog and English. The pilot nods,
looks around, and begins to manipulate the controls. The hotel staff pull
the gangway back. "Hey," Amy says quietly, and underhands a pack of
Marlboros across the gap to each one of them. They snatch them out of the
air, grin, and thank her. Glory IV begins to back away from the dock.
Amy spends the next few minutes walking around the deck, going through
some kind of mental checklist. Randy counts four men in addition to Amy and
the pilot two Caucasians and two Filipinos. All of them are fiddling around
with engines or diving gear in a way Randy recognizes, through many cultural
and technological barriers, as debugging. Amy walks past Randy a couple of
times, but avoids looking him in the eye. She's not a shy person. Her body
language is eloquent enough: "I am aware that men are in the habit of
looking at whatever women happen to be nearby, in the hopes of deriving
enjoyment from their physical beauty, their hair, makeup, fragrance, and
clothing. I will ignore this, politely and patiently, until you get over
it." Amy is a long limbed girl in paint stained jeans, a sleeveless t shirt,
and high tech sandals, and she lopes easily around the boat. Finally she
approaches him, meeting his eyes for just a second and then glancing away as
if bored.
"Thanks for giving me the ride," Randy says.
''It's nothing,'' she says.
"I feel embarrassed that I didn't tip the guys at the dock. Can I
reimburse you?"
"You can reimburse me with information," she says without hesitation.
Amy reaches up with one hand to rub the back of her neck. Her elbow pokes up
in the air. He notices about a month's growth of hair in her armpit, then
glimpses the corner of a tattoo poking out from under her shirt. "You're in
the information business, right?" She watches his face, hoping that he'll
take the cue and laugh, or at least grin. But he's too preoccupied to catch
it. She glances away, now with a knowing, sardonic look on her face you
don't understand me, Randy, which is absolutely typical, and I'm fine with
that. She reminds Randy of level headed blue collar lesbians he has known,
drywall hanging urban dykes with cats and cross country ski racks.
She takes him into an air conditioned cabin with a lot of windows and a
coffee maker. It has fake wood veneer paneling like a suburban basement, and
framed exhibits on the walls official documents like licenses and
registrations, and enlarged black and white photographs of people and boats.
It smells like coffee, soap, and oil. There is a boom box held down with
bungee cords, and a shoebox with a couple of dozen CDs in it, mostly albums
by American woman singer songwriters of the offbeat, misunderstood, highly
intelligent but intensely emotional school, getting rich selling music to
consumers who understand what it's like not to be understood (1).
Amy pours two mugs of coffee and sets them down on the cabin's bolted down
table, then fishes in the tight pockets of her jeans, pulls out a waterproof
nylon wallet, extracts two business cards, and shoots them across the table,
one after the other, to Randy. She seems to enjoy doing this a small,
private smile comes onto her lips and then vanishes the moment Randy sees
it. The cards bear the logo of Semper Marine Services and the name America
Shaftoe.
"Your name's America?" Randy asks.
Amy looks out the window, bored, afraid he's going to make a big deal
out of it. "Yeah," she says.
"Where'd you grow up?"
She seems to be fascinated by the view out the window: big cargo ships
strewn around Manila Bay as far as the eye can see, ships hailing from
Athens, Shanghai, Vladivostok, Cape Town, Monrovia. Randy infers that
looking at big rusty boats is more interesting than talking to Randy.
"So, would you mind telling me what's going on?" she asks. She turns to
face him, lifts the mug to her lips, and finally, looks him straight in the
eye.
Randy's a little nonplussed. The question is basically impertinent
coming from America Shaftoe. Her company, Semper Marine Services, is a
contractor at the very lowest level of Avi's virtual corporation only one of
a dozen boats and divers outfits that they could have hired so this is a bit
like being interrogated by one's janitor or taxi driver.
But she's smart and unusual, and, precisely because of all her efforts
not to be, she's cute. As an interesting female, and a fellow American, she
is pulling rank, demanding to be accorded a higher status. Randy tries to be
careful.
"Is there something bothering you?" he asks.
She looks away. She's afraid she's given him the wrong impression. "Not
in particular," she says, "I'm just nosy. I like to hear stories. Divers
always sit around and tell each other stories."
Randy sips his coffee. America continues, "In this business, you never
know where your next job is going to come from. Some people have really
weird reasons for wanting to get stuff done underwater, which I like to
hear." She concludes, "It's fun!" which is clearly all the motivation she
needs.
Randy views all of the above as a fairly professional bullshitting job.
He decides to give Amy press release material only. "All the Filipinos are
in Manila. That's where the information needs to go. It is somewhat awkward,
getting information to Manila, because it has mountains in back of it and
Manila Bay in front. The bay is a nightmare place to run submarine cables "
She's nodding. Of course she would know this already. Randy hits the
fast forward. "Corregidor's a pretty good place. From Corregidor you can
shoot a line of sight microwave transmission across the bay to downtown
Manila."
"So you are extending the North Luzon coastal festoon from Subic Bay
down to Corregidor," she says.
"Uh two things about what you just said," Randy says, and pauses for a
moment to get the answer queued up in his output buffer. "One, you have to
be careful about your pronouns what do you mean when you say 'you'? I work
for Epiphyte Corporation, which is designed from the ground up to work, not
on its own, but as an element in a virtual corporation, kind of like "
"I know what an epiphyte is," she says. "What's two?"
"Okay, good," Randy says, a little off balance. "Two is that the
extension of the North Luzon Festoon is just the first of what we hope will
be several linkups. We want to lay a lot of cable, eventually, into
Corregidor."
Some kind of machinery behind Amy's eyes begins to hum. The message is
clear enough. There will be work aplenty for Semper Marine, if they handle
this first job well.
"In this case, the entity that's doing the work is a joint venture
including us, FiliTel, 24 Jam, and a big Nipponese electronics company,
among others."
"What does 24 Jam have to do with it? They're convenience stores."
"They're the retail outlet the distribution system for Epiphyte's
product."
"And that is?"
"Pinoy grams." Randy manages to suppress the urge to tell her that the
name is trademarked.
"Pinoy grams?"
"Here's how it works. You are an Overseas Contract Worker. Before you
leave home for Saudi or Singapore or Seattle or wherever, you buy or rent a
little gizmo from us. It's about the size of a paperback book and encases a
thimble sized video camera, a tiny screen, and a lot of memory chips. The
components come from all over the place they are shipped to the free port at
Subic and assembled in a Nipponese plant there. So they cost next to
nothing. Anyway, you take this gizmo overseas with you. Whenever you feel
like communicating with the folks at home, you turn it on, aim the camera at
yourself and record a little video greeting card. It all goes onto the
memory chips. It's highly compressed. Then you plug the gizmo into a phone
line and let it work its magic."
"What's the magic? It sends the video down the phone line?"
"Right."
"Haven't people being messing around with video phones for a long
time?''
"The difference here is our software. We don't try to send the video in
real time that's too expensive. We store the data at central servers, then
take advantage of lulls, when traffic is low through the undersea cables,
and shoot the data down those cables when time can be had cheap. Eventually
the data winds up at Epiphyte's facility in Intramuros. From there we can
use wireless technology to send the data to 24 Jam stores all over Metro
Manila. The store just needs a little pie plate dish on the roof, and a
decoder and a regular VCR down behind the counter. The Pinoy gram is
recorded on a regular videotape. Then, when Mom comes in to buy eggs or Dad
comes in to buy cigarettes, the storekeeper says, 'Hey, you got a Pinoy gram
today,' and hands them the videotape. They can take it home and get the
latest news from their child overseas. When they're done, they bring the
videotape back to 24 Jam for reuse."
About halfway through this, Amy understands the basic concept, looks
out the window again and begins trying to work a fragment of breakfast out
of her teeth with the tip of her tongue. She does it with her mouth
tastefully closed, but it seems to occupy her thoughts more than the
explanation of Pinoy grams.
Randy is gripped by a crazy, unaccountable desire not to bore Amy. It's
not that he is getting a crush on her, because he puts the odds at fifty
fifty that she's a lesbian, and he knows better. She is so frank, so
guileless, that he feels he could confide anything in her, as an equal.
This is why he hates business. He wants to tell everyone everything. He
wants to make friends with people.
"So, let me guess," she says, "you are the guy doing the software."
"Yeah," he admits, a little defensive, "but the software is the only
interesting part of this whole project. All the rest is making license
plates.''
That wakes her up a little. "Making license plates?"
"It's an expression that my business partner and I use," Randy says.
"With any job, there's some creative work that needs to be done new
technology to be developed or whatever. Everything else ninety nine percent
of it is making deals, raising capital, going to meetings, marketing and
sales. We call that stuff making license plates."
She nods, looking out the window. Randy is on the verge of telling her
that Pinoy grams are nothing more than a way to create cash flow, so that
they can move on to part two of the business plan. He is sure that this
would elevate his stature beyond that of dull software boy. But Amy puffs
sharply across the top of her coffee, like blowing out a candle, and says,
"Okay. Thanks. I guess that was worth the three packs of cigarettes."
Chapter 11 NIGHTMARE
Bobby Shaftoe has become a connoisseur of nightmares.
Like a fighter pilot ejecting from a burning plane, he has just been
catapulted out of an old nightmare, and into a brand new, even better one.
It is creepy and understated; no giant lizards here.
It begins with heat on his face. When you take enough fuel to push a
fifty thousand ton ship across the Pacific Ocean at twenty five knots, and
put it all in one tank and the Nips fly over and torch it all in a few
seconds, while you stand close enough to see the triumphant grins on the
pilots' faces, then you can feel the heat on your face in this way.
Bobby Shaftoe opens his eyes, expecting that, in so doing, he is
raising the curtain on a corker of a nightmare, probably the final moments
of Torpedo Bombers at Two O'Clock! (his all time favorite) or the surprise
beginning of Strafed by Yellow Men XVII.
But the sound track to this nightmare does not seem to be running. It
is as quiet as an ambush. He is sitting up in a hospital bed surrounded by a
firing squad of hot klieg lights that make it difficult to see anything
else. Shaftoe blinks and focuses on an eddy of cigarette smoke hanging in
the air, like spilled fuel oil in a tropical cove. It sure smells good.
A young man is sitting near his bed. All that Shaftoe can see of this
man is an asymmetrical halo where the lights glance from the petroleum glaze
on his pompadour. And the red coal of his cigarette. As he looks more
carefully he can make out the silhouette of a military uniform. Not a Marine
uniform. Lieutenant's bars gleam on his shoulders, light shining through
double doors.
"Would you like another cigarette?" the lieutenant says. His voice is
hoarse but weirdly gentle.
Shaftoe looks down at his own hand and sees the terminal half inch of a
Lucky Strike wedged between his fingers.
'Ask me a tough one," he manages to say. His own voice is deep and
skirted, like a gramophone winding down.
The butt is swapped for a new one. Shaftoe raises it to his lips. There
are bandages on that arm, and underneath them, he can feel grievous wounds
trying to inflict pain. But something is blocking the signals.
Ah, the morphine. It can't be too bad of a nightmare if it comes with
morphine, can it?
"You ready?" the voice says. God damn it, that voice is familiar.
"Sir, ask me a tough one, sir!" Shaftoe says.
"You already said that."
"Sir, if you ask a Marine if he wants another cigarette, or if he's
ready, the answer is always the same, sir!"
"That's the spirit," the voice says. "Roll film."
A clicking noise starts up in the outer darkness beyond the klieg light
firmament. "Rolling," says a voice.
Something big descends towards Shaftoe. He flattens himself into the
bed, because it looks exactly like the sinister eggs laid in midair by Nip
dive bombers. But then it stops and just hovers there.
"Sound," says another voice.
Shaftoe looks harder and sees that it is not a bomb but a large bullet
shaped microphone on the end of a boom.
The lieutenant with the pompadour leans forward now, instinctively
seeking the light, like a traveler on a cold winter's night.
It is that guy from the movies. What's his name. Oh, yeah!
Ronald Reagan has a stack of three by five cards in his lap. He skids
up a new one: "What advice do you, as the youngest American fighting man
ever to win both the Navy Cross and the Silver Star, have for any young
Marines on their way to Guadalcanal?"
Shaftoe doesn't have to think very long. The memories are still as
fresh as last night's eleventh nightmare: ten plucky Nips in Suicide Charge!
"Just kill the one with the sword first."
"Ah," Reagan says, raising his waxed and penciled eyebrows, and cocking
his pompadour in Shaftoe's direction. "Smarrrt – you target them
because they're the officers, right?"
"No, fuckhead!" Shaftoe yells. "You kill 'em because they've got
fucking swords! You ever had anyone running at you waving a fucking sword ?"
Reagan backs down. He's scared now, sweating off some of his makeup,
even though a cool breeze is coming in off the bay and through the window.
Reagan wants to turn tail and head back down to Hollywood and nail a
starlet fast. But he's stuck here in Oakland, interviewing the war hero. He
flips through his stack of cards, rejects about twenty in a row. Shaftoe's
in no hurry, he's going to be flat on his back in this hospital bed for
approximately the rest of his life. He incinerates half of that cigarette
with one long breath, holds it, blows out a smoke ring.
When they fought at night, the big guns on the warships made rings of
incandescent gas. Not fat doughnuts but long skinny ones that twisted around
like lariats. Shaftoe's body is saturated with morphine. His eyelids
avalanche down over his eyes, blessing those orbs that are burning and
swollen from the film lights and the smoke of the cigarettes. He and his
platoon are racing an incoming tide, trying to get around a headland. They
are Marine Raiders and they have been chasing a particular unit of Nips
across Guadalcanal for two weeks, whittling them down. As long as they're in
the neighborhood, they've been ordered to make their way to a certain point
on the headland from which they ought to be able to lob mortar rounds
against the incoming Tokyo Express. It is a somewhat harebrained and
reckless tactic, but they don't call this Operation Shoestring for nothing;
it is all wacky improvisation from the get go. They are behind schedule
because this paltry handful of Nips has been really tenacious, setting
ambushes behind every fallen log, taking potshots at them every time they
come around one of these headlands. . .
Something clammy hits him on the forehead: it is the makeup artist
taking a swipe at him. Shaftoe finds himself back in the nightmare within
which the lizard nightmare was nested.
"Did I tell you about the lizard?" Shaftoe says.
"Several times," his interrogator says. "This'll just take another
minute." Ronald Reagan squeezes a fresh three by five card between thumb and
forefinger, fastening onto something a little less emotional: "What did you
and your buddies do in the evenings, when the day's fighting was done?"
"Pile up dead Nips with a bulldozer," Shaftoe says, "and set fire to
'em. Then go down to the beach with a jar of hooch and watch our ships get
torpedoed."
Reagan grimaces. "Cut!" he says, quietly but commanding. The clicking
noise of the film camera stops.
"How'd I do?" Bobby Shaftoe says as they are squeegeeing the Maybelline
off his face, and the men are packing up their equipment. The klieg lights
have been turned off, clear northern California light streams in through the
windows. The whole scene looks almost real, as if it weren't a nightmare at
all.
"You did great," Lieutenant Reagan says, without looking him in the
eye. "A real morale booster." He lights a cigarette. "You can go back to
sleep now."
"Haw!" Shaftoe says. "I been asleep the whole time. Haven't I?"
***
He feels a lot better once he gets out of the hospital. They give him a
couple of weeks of leave, and he goes straight to the Oakland station and
hops the next train for Chicago. Fellow passengers recognize him from his
newspaper pictures, buy him drinks, pose with him for snap shots. He stares
out the windows for hours, watching America go by, and sees that all of it
is beautiful and clean. There might be wildness, there might be deep forest,
there might even be grizzly bears and mountain lions, but it is cleanly
sorted out, and the rules (don't mess with bear cubs, hang your food from a
tree limb at night) are well known, and published in the Boy Scout Manual.
In those Pacific islands there is too much that is alive, and all of it is
in a continual process of eating and being eaten by something else, and once
you set foot in the place, you're buying into the deal. Just sitting in that
train for a couple of days, his feet in clean white cotton socks, not being
eaten alive by anything, goes a long way towards clearing his head up. Only
once, or possibly two or three times, does he really feel the need to lock
himself in the can and squirt morphine into his arm.
But when he closes his eyes, he finds himself on Guadalcanal, sloshing
around that last headland, racing the incoming tide. The big waves are
rolling in now, picking up the men and slamming them into rocks.
Finally they turn the corner and see the cove: just a tiny notch in the
coast of Guadalcanal. A hundred yards of tidal mudflats backed up by a
cliff. They will have to get across those mudflats and establish a foothold
on the lower part of the cliff if they aren't going to be washed out to sea
by the tide.
The Shaftoes are Tennessee mountain people miners, among other things.
About the time Nimrod Shaftoe went to the Philippines, a couple of his
brothers moved up to western Wisconsin to work in lead mines. One of them
Bobby's grandpa became a foreman. Sometimes he would go to Oconomowoc to pay
a visit to the owner of the mine, who had a summer house on one of the
lakes. They would go out in a boat and fish for pike. Frequently the mine
owner's neighbors owners of banks and breweries would come along. That is
how the Shaftoes moved to Oconomowoc, and got out of mining, and became
fishing and hunting guides. The family has been scrupulous about holding on
to the ancestral twang, and to certain other traditions such as military
service. One of his sisters and two of his brothers are still living there
with Mom and Dad, and his two older brothers are in the Army. Bobby's not
the first to have won a Silver Star, though he is the first to have won the
Navy Cross.
Bobby goes and talks to Oconomowoc's Boy Scout troop. He gets to be
grand marshal of the town parade. Other than that, he hardly budges from the
house for two weeks. Sometimes he goes out into the yard and plays catch
with his kid brothers. He helps Dad fix up a rotten dock. Guys and gals from
his high school keep coming round to visit, and Bobby soon learns the trick
that his father and his uncles and granduncles all knew, which is that you
never talk about the specifics of what happened over there. No one wants to
hear about how you dug half of your buddy's molars out of your leg with the
point of a bayonet. All of these kids seem like idiots and lightweights to
him now. The only person he can stand to be around is his great grandfather
Shaftoe, ninety four years of age and sharp as a tack, who was there at
Petersburg when Burnside blew a huge hole in the Confederate lines with
buried explosives and sent his men rushing into the crater where they got
slaughtered. He never talks about it, of course, just as Bobby Shaftoe never
talks about the lizard.
Soon enough his time is up, and then he gets a grand sendoff at the
Milwaukee train station, hugs Mom, hugs Sis, shakes hands with Dad and the
brothers, hugs Mom again, and he's off.
Bobby Shaftoe knows nothing of his future. All he knows is that he has
been promoted to sergeant, detached from his former unit (no great
adjustment, since he is the only surviving member of his platoon) and
reassigned to some unheard of branch of the Corps in Washington, D.C.
D.C.'s a busy place, but last time Bobby Shaftoe checked the
newspapers, there wasn't any combat going on there, and so it's obvious he's
not going to get a combat job. He's done his bit anyway, killed many more
than his share of Nips, won his medals, suffered from his wounds. As he
lacks administrative training, he expects that his new assignment will be to
travel around the country being a war hero, raising morale and suckering
young men into joining the Corps.
He reports, as ordered, to Marine Barracks, Washington, D.C. It's the
Corps's oldest post, a city block halfway between the Capitol and the Navy
Yard, a green quadrangle where the Marine Band struts and the drill team
drills. He half expects to see strategic reserves of spit and of polish
stored in giant tanks nearby.
Two Marines are in the office: a major, who is his new, nominal
commanding officer, and a colonel, who looks and acts like he was born here.
It is shocking beyond description that two such personages would be there to
greet a mere sergeant. Must be the Navy Cross that got their attention. But
these Marines have Navy Crosses of their own two or three apiece.
The major introduces the colonel in a way that doesn't really explain a
damn thing to Shaftoe. The colonel says next to nothing; he's there to
observe. The major spends a while fingering some typewritten documents.
"Says right here you are gung ho."
"Sir, yes sir!"
"What the hell does that mean?"
"Sir, it is a Chinese word! There's a Communist there, name of Mao, and
he's got an army. We tangled with 'em on more'n one occasion, sir. Gung ho
is their battle cry, it means 'all together' or something like that, so
after we got done kicking the crap out of them, sir, we stole it from them,
sir!"
"Are you saying you have gone Asiatic like those other China Marines,
Shaftoe?"
"Sir! On the contrary, sir, as I think my record demonstrates, sir!"
"You really think that?" the major says incredulously. "We have an
interesting report here on a film interview that you did with some soldier
(1) named Lieutenant Reagan."
"Sir! This Marine apologizes for his disgraceful behavior during that
interview, sir! This Marine let down himself and his fellow Marines, sir!"
"Aren't you going to give me an excuse? You were wounded. Shell
shocked. Drugged. Suffering from malaria."
"Sir! There is no excuse, sir!"
The major and the colonel nod approvingly at each other.
This "sir, yes sir" business, which would probably sound like horseshit
to any civilian in his right mind, makes sense to Shaftoe and to the
officers in a deep and important way. Like a lot of others, Shaftoe had
trouble with military etiquette at first. He soaked up quite a bit of it
growing up in a military family, but living the life was a different matter.
Having now experienced all the phases of military existence except for the
terminal ones (violent death, court martial, retirement), he has come to
understand the culture for what it is: a system of etiquette within which it
becomes possible for groups of men to live together for years, travel to the
ends of the earth, and do all kinds of incredibly weird shit without killing
each other or completely losing their minds in the process. The extreme
formality with which he addresses these officers carries an important
subtext: your problem, sir, is deciding what you want me to do, and my
problem, sir, is doing it. My gung ho posture says that once you give the
order I'm not going to bother you with any of the details and your half of
the bargain is you had better stay on your side of the line, sir, and not
bother me with any of the chickenshit politics that you have to deal with
for a living. The implied responsibility placed upon the officer's shoulders
by the subordinate's unhesitating willingness to follow orders is a
withering burden to any officer with half a brain, and Shaftoe has more than
once seen seasoned noncoms reduce green lieutenants to quivering blobs
simply by standing before them and agreeing, cheerfully, to carry out their
orders.
"This Lieutenant Reagan complained that you kept trying to tell him a
story about a lizard," the major says.
"Sir! Yes, sir! A giant lizard, sir! An interesting story, sir!"
Shaftoe says.
"I don't care," the major says. "The question is, was it an appropriate
story to tell in that circumstance?"
"Sir! We were making our way around the coast of the island, trying to
get between these Nips and a Tokyo Express landing site, sir!..." Shaftoe
begins.
"Shut up!"
"Sir! Yes sir!"
There is a sweaty silence that is finally broken by the colonel. "We
had the shrinks go over your statement, Sergeant Shaftoe."
''Sir! Yes, sir?''
"They are of the opinion that the whole giant lizard thing is a classic
case of projection."
"Sir! Could you please tell me what the hell that is, sir!"
The colonel flushes, turns his back, peers through blinds at sparse
traffic out on Eye Street. "Well, what they are saying is that there really
was no giant lizard. That you killed that Jap (2) in hand to hand
combat. And that your memory of the giant lizard is basically your id coming
out."
''Id, sir!''
"That there is this id thing inside your brain and that it took over
and got you fired up to kill that Jap bare handed. Then your imagination
dreamed up all this crap about the giant lizard afterwards, as a way of
explaining it."
"Sir! So you are saying that the lizard was just a metaphor, sir!"
"Yes."
"Sir! Then I would respectfully like to know how that Nip got chewed in
half, sir!"
The colonel screws up his face dismissively. "Well, by the time you
were rescued by that coastwatcher, Sergeant, you had been in that cove for
three days along with all of those dead bodies. And in that tropical heat
with all those bugs and scavengers, there was no way to tell from looking at
that Jap whether he had been chewed up by a giant lizard or run through a
brush chipper, if you know what I mean."
"Sir! Yes I do, sir!"
The major goes back to the report. "This Reagan fellow says that you
also repeatedly made disparaging comments about General MacArthur."
"Sir, yes sir! He is a son of a bitch who hates the Corps, sir! He is
trying to get us all killed, sir!"
The major and the colonel look at each other. It is clear that they
have, wordlessly, just arrived at some decision.
"Since you insist on reenlisting, the typical thing would be to have
you go around the country showing off your medals and recruiting young men
into the Corps. But this lizard story kind of rules that out."
"Sir! I do not understand, sir!"
"The Recruitment Office has reviewed your file. They have seen Reagan's
report. They are nervous that you are going to be in West Bumfuck, Arkansas,
riding in the Memorial Day parade in your shiny dress uniform, and suddenly
you are going to start spouting all kinds of nonsense about lizards and
scare everyone shitless and put a kink in the war effort."
"Sir! I respectfully "
"Permission to speak denied," the major says. "I won't even get into
your obsession with General MacArthur."
"Sir! The general is a murdering "
"Shut up!"
"Sir! Yes sir!"
"We have another job for you, Marine."
"Sir! Yes sir!"
"You're going to be part of something very special."
"Sir! The Marine Raiders are already a very special part of a very
special Corps, sir!"
"That's not what I mean. I mean that this assignment is . . . unusual."
The major looks over at the colonel. He is not sure how to proceed.
The colonel puts his hand in his pocket, jingles coins, then reaches up
and checks his shave.
"It is not exactly a Marine Corps assignment," he finally says. "You
will be part of a special international detachment. An American Marine
Raider platoon and a British Special Air Services squadron, operating
together under one command. A bunch of tough hombres who've shown they can
handle any assignment, under any conditions. Is that a fair description of
you, Marine?"
''Sir! Yes, sir!''
"It is a very unusual setup," the colonel muses, "not the kind of thing
that military men would ever dream up. Do you know what I'm saying,
Shaftoe?"
"Sir, no sir! But I do detect a strong odor of politics in the room
now, sir!"
The colonel gets a little twinkle in his eye, and glances out the
window towards the Capitol dome. "These politicians can be real picky about
how they get things done. Everything has to be just so. They don't like
excuses. Do you follow me, Shaftoe?"
''Sir! Yes, sir!''
"The Corps had to fight to get this. They were going to make it an Army
thing. We pulled a few strings with some former Naval persons in high
places. Now the assignment is ours. Some would say, it is ours to screw up.
"Sir! The assignment will not be screwed up, sir!"
"The reason that son of a bitch MacArthur is killing Marines like flies
down in the South Pacific is because sometimes we don't play the political
game that well. If you and your new unit do not perform brilliantly, that
situation will only worsen."
''Sir! You can rely on this Marine, sir!''
"Your commanding officer will be Lieutenant Ethridge. An Annapolis man.
Not much combat experience, but knows how to move in the right circles. He
can run interference for you at the political level. The responsibility for
getting things done on the ground will be entirely yours, Sergeant Shaftoe."
''Sir! Yes , sir!''
"You'll be working closely with British Special Air Service. Very good
men. But I want you and your men to outshine them."
"Sir! You can count on it, sir!"
"Well, get ready to ship out, then," the major says. "You're on your
way to North Africa, Sergeant Shaftoe."
Chapter 12 LONDINIUM
The massive British coinage clanks in his pocket like pewter dinner
plates. Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse walks down a street wearing the
uniform of a commander in the United States Navy. This must not be taken to
imply that he is actually a commander, or indeed that he is even in the
Navy, though he is. The United States part is, however, a safe bet, because
every time he arrives at a curb, he either comes close to being run over by
a shooting brake or he falters in his stride; diverts his train of thought
onto a siding, much to the disturbance of its passengers and crew; and
throws some large part of his mental calculation circuitry into the job of
trying to reflect his surroundings through a large mirror. They drive on the
left side of the street here.
He knew about that before he came. He had seen pictures. And Alan had
complained of it in Princeton, always nearly being run over as, lost in
thought, he stepped off curbs looking the wrong way.
The curbs are sharp and perpendicular, not like the American smoothly
molded sigmoid cross section curves. The transition between the side walk
and the street is a crisp vertical. If you put a green lightbulb on
Waterhouse's head and watched him from the side during the blackout, his
trajectory would look just like a square wave traced out on the face of a
single beam oscilloscope: up, down, up, down. If he were doing this at home,
the curbs would be evenly spaced, about twelve to the mile, because his home
town is neatly laid out on a grid.
Here in London, the street pattern is irregular and so the transitions
in the square wave come at random seeming times, sometimes very close
together, sometimes very far apart.
A scientist watching the wave would probably despair of finding any
pattern; it would look like a random circuit, driven by noise, triggered
perhaps by the arrival of cosmic rays from deep space, or the decay of
radioactive isotopes.
But if he had depth and ingenuity, it would be a different matter.
Depth could be obtained by putting a green light bulb on the head of
every person in London and then recording their tracings for a few nights.
The result would be a thick pile of graph paper tracings, each one as
seemingly random as the others. The thicker the pile, the greater the depth.
Ingenuity is a completely different matter. There is no systematic way
to get it. One person could look at the pile of square wave tracings and see
nothing but noise. Another might find a source of fascination there, an
irrational feeling impossible to explain to anyone who did not share it.
Some deep part of the mind, adept at noticing patterns (or the existence of
a pattern) would stir awake and frantically signal the dull quotidian parts
of the brain to keep looking at the pile of graph paper. The signal is dim
and not always heeded, but it would instruct the recipient to stand there
for days if necessary, shuffling through the pile of graphs like an autist,
spreading them out over a large floor, stacking them in piles according to
some inscrutable system, pencilling numbers, and letters from dead
alphabets, into the corners, cross referencing them, finding patterns, cross
checking them against others.
One day this person would walk out of that room carrying a highly
accurate street map of London, reconstructed from the information in all of
those square wave plots.
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse is one of those people.
As a result, the authorities of his country, the United States of
America, have made him swear a mickle oath of secrecy, and keep supplying
him with new uniforms of various services and ranks, and now have sent him
to London.
He steps off a curb, glancing reflexively to the left. A jingling
sounds in his right ear, bicycle brakes trumpet. It is merely a Royal Marine
(Waterhouse is beginning to recognize the uniforms) off on some errand; but
he has reinforcements behind him in the form of a bus/coach painted olive
drab and stenciled all over with inscrutable code numbers.
"Pardon me, sir!" the Royal Marine says brightly, and swerves around
him, apparently reckoning that the coach can handle any mopping up work.
Waterhouse leaps forward, directly into the path of a black taxi coming the
other way.
After making it across that particular street, though, he arrives at
his Westminster destination without further life threatening incidents,
unless you count being a few minutes' airplane ride from a tightly organized
horde of murderous Germans with the best weapons in the world. He has found
himself in a part of town that seems almost like certain lightless, hemmed
in parts of Manhattan: narrow streets lined with buildings on the order of
ten stories high. Occasional glimpses of ancient and mighty gothic piles at
street ends clue him in to the fact that he is nigh unto Greatness. As in
Manhattan, the people walk fast, each with some clear purpose in mind.
The amended heels of the pedestrians' wartime shoes pop metallically.
Each pedestrian has a fairly consistent stride length and clicks with nearly
metronomic precision. A microphone in the sidewalk would provide an
eavesdropper with a cacophony of clicks, seemingly random like the noise
from a Geiger counter. But the right kind of person could abstract signal
from noise and count the pedestrians, provide a male/female break down and a
leg length histogram
He has to stop this. He would like to concentrate on the matter at
hand, but that is still a mystery.
A massive, blocky modern sculpture sits over the door of the St.
James's Park tube station, doing twenty four hour surveillance on the
Broadway Buildings, which is actually just a single building. Like every
other intelligence headquarters Waterhouse had seen, it is a great
disappointment.
It is, after all, just a building orange stone, ten or so stories, an
unreasonably high mansard roof accounting for the top three, some smidgens
of classical ornament above the windows, which like all windows in London
are divided into eight tight triangles by strips of masking tape. Waterhouse
finds that this look blends better with classical architecture than, say,
gothic.
He has some grounding in physics and finds it implausible that, when a
few hundred pounds of trinitrotoluene are set off in the neighborhood and
the resulting shock wave propagates through a large pane of glass the people
on the other side of it will derive any benefit from an asterisk of paper
tape. It is a superstitious gesture, like hexes on Pennsylvania Dutch
farmhouses. The sight of it probably helps keep people's minds focused on
the war.
Which doesn't seem to be working for Waterhouse. He makes his way
carefully across the street, thinking very hard about the direction of the
traffic, on the assumption that someone inside will be watching him. He goes
inside, holding the door for a fearsomely brisk young woman in a
quasimilitary outfit who makes it clear that Waterhouse had better not
expect to Get Anywhere just because he's holding the door for her and then
for a tired looking septuagenarian gent with a white mustache.
The lobby is well guarded and there is some business with Waterhouse's
credentials and his orders. Then he makes the obligatory mistake of going to
the wrong floor because they are numbered differently here. This would be a
lot funnier if this were not a military intelligence headquarters in the
thick of the greatest war in the history of the world.
When he does get to the right floor, though, it is a bit posher than
the wrong one was. Of course, the underlying structure of everything in
England is posh. There is no in between with these people. You have to walk
a mile to find a telephone booth, but when you find it, it is built as if
the senseless dynamiting of pay phones had been a serious problem at some
time in the past. And a British mailbox can presumably stop a German tank.
None of them have cars, but when they do, they are three ton hand built
beasts. The concept of stamping out a whole lot of cars is unthinkable there
are certain procedures that have to be followed, Mt. Ford, such as the hand
brazing of radiators, the traditional whittling of the tyres from solid
blocks of cahoutchouc.
Meetings are all the same. Waterhouse is always the Guest; he has never
actually hosted a meeting. The Guest arrives at an unfamiliar building, sits
in a waiting area declining offers of caffeinated beverages from a
personable but chaste female, and is, in time, ushered to the Room, where
the Main Guy and the Other Guys are awaiting him. There is a system of
introductions which the Guest need not concern himself with because he is
operating in a passive mode and need only respond to stimuli, shaking all
hands that are offered, declining all further offers of caffeinated and
(now) alcoholic beverages, sitting down when and where invited. In this
case, the Main Guy and all but one of the Other Guys happen to be British,
the selection of beverages is slightly different, the room, being British,
is thrown together from blocks of stone like a Pharaoh's inner tomb, and the
windows have the usual unconvincing strips of tape on them. The Predictable
Humor Phase is much shorter than in America, the Chitchat Phase longer.
Waterhouse has forgotten all of their names. He always immediately
forgets the names. Even if he remembered them, he would not know their
significance, as he does not actually have the organization chart of the
Foreign Ministry (which runs Intelligence) and the Military laid out in
front of him. They keep saying "woe to hice!" but just as he actually begins
to feel sorry for this Hice fellow, whoever he is, he figures out that this
is how they pronounce "Waterhouse." Other than that, the one remark that
actually penetrates his brain is when one of the Other Guys says something
about the Prime Minister that implies considerable familiarity. And he's not
even the Main Guy. The Main Guy is much older and more distinguished. So it
seems to Waterhouse (though he has completely stopped listening to what all
of these people are saying to him) that a good half of the people in the
room have recently had conversations with Winston Churchill.
Then, suddenly, certain words come into the conversation. Water house
was not paying attention, but he is pretty sure that within the last ten
seconds, the word Ultra was uttered. He blinks and sits up straighter.
The Main Guy looks bemused. The Other Guys look startled.
"Was something said, a few minutes ago, about the availability of
coffee?" Waterhouse says.
"Miss Stanhope, coffee for Captain Woe To Hice," says the Main Guy into
an electrical intercom. It is one of only half a dozen office intercoms in
the British Empire. However, it is cast in a solid ingot from a hundred
pounds of iron and fed by 420 volt cables as thick as Waterhouse's index
finger. "And if you would be so good as to bring tea."
So, now Waterhouse knows the name of the Main Guy's secretary. That's a
start. From that, with a bit of research he might be able to recover the
memory of the Main Guy's name.
This seems to have thrown them back into the Chitchat Phase, and though
American important guys would be fuming and frustrated, the Brits seem
enormously relieved. Even more beverages are ordered from Miss Stanhope.
"Have you seen Dr. Shehrrrn recently?" the Main Guy inquires of
Waterhouse. He has a touch of concern in his voice.
"Who?" Then Waterhouse realizes that the person in question is
Commander Schoen, and that here in London the name is apt to be pronounced
correctly, Shehrrn instead of Shane.
"Commander Waterhouse?" the Main Guy says, several minutes later. On
the fly, Waterhouse has been trying to invent a new cryptosystem based upon
alternative systems of pronouncing words and hasn't said anything in quite a
while.
"Oh, yeah! Well, I stopped in briefly and paid my respects to Schoen
before getting on the ship. Of course, when he's, uh, feeling under the
weather, everyone's under strict orders not to talk cryptology with him."
"Of course."
"The problem is that when your whole relationship with the fellow is
built around cryptology, you can't even really poke your head in the door
without violating that order."
"Yes, it is most awkward."
"I guess he's doing okay." Waterhouse does not say this very
convincingly and there is an appropriate silence around the table.
"When he was in better spirits, he wrote glowingly of your work on the
Cryptonomicon," says one of the Other Guys, who has not spoken very much
until now. Waterhouse pegs him as some kind of unspecified mover and shaker
in the world of machine cryptology.
"He's a heck of a fella," Waterhouse says.
The Main Guy uses this as an opening. "Because of your work with Dr.
Schoen's Indigo machine, you are, by definition, on the Magic list. Now that
this country and yours have agreed at least in principle to cooperate in the
field of cryptanalysis, this automatically puts you on the Ultra list."
"I understand, sir," Waterhouse says.
"Ultra and Magic are more symmetrical than not. In each case, a
belligerent Power has developed a machine cypher which it considers to be
perfectly unbreakable. In each case, an allied Power has in fact broken that
cypher. In America, Dr. Schoen and his team broke Indigo and devised the
Magic machine. Here, it was Dr. Knox's team that broke Enigma and devised
the Bombe. The leading light here seems to have been Dr. Turing. The leading
light with you chaps was Dr. Schoen, who is, as you said, under the weather.
But he holds you up as comparable to Turing, Commander Waterhouse."
"That's pretty darn generous," Waterhouse says.
"But you studied with Turing at Princeton, did you not?"
"We were there at the same time, if that's what you mean. We rode
bikes. His work was a lot more advanced."
"But Turing was pursuing graduate studies. You were merely an
undergraduate."
"Sure. But even allowing for that, he's way smarter than me."
"You are too modest, Captain Waterhouse. How many undergraduates have
published papers in international journals?"
"We just rode bikes," Waterhouse insists. "Einstein wouldn't give me
the time of day."
"Dr. Turing has shown himself to be rather handy with information
theory," says a prematurely haggard guy with long limp grey hair, whom
Waterhouse now pegs as some sort of Oxbridge don. "You must have discussed
this with him.
The don turns to the others and says, donnishly, "Information Theory
would inform a mechanical calculator in much the same way as, say, fluid
dynamics would inform the hull of a ship." Then he turns back to Waterhouse
and says, somewhat less formally: "Dr. Turing has continued to develop his
work on the subject since he vanished, from your point of view, into the
realm of the Classified. Of particular interest has been the subject of just
how much information can be extracted from seemingly random data."
Suddenly all of the other people in the room are exchanging those
amused looks again. "I gather from your reaction," says the Main Guy, "that
this has been of continuing interest to you as well."
Waterhouse wonders what his reaction was. Did he grow fangs? Drool into
his coffee?
"That's good," says the Main Guy before Waterhouse can answer, "because
it is of the highest interest to us as well. You see, now that we are making
efforts and I must emphasize the preliminary and unsatisfactory level of
these efforts to this point to coordinate intelligence between America and
Britain, we find ourselves in the oddest situation that has ever faced a
pair of allies in a war. We know everything, Commander Waterhouse. We
receive Hitler's personal communications to his theater commanders,
frequently before the commanders do! This knowledge is obviously a powerful
tool. But just as obviously, it cannot help us win the war unless we allow
it to change our actions. That is, if, through Ultra, we become aware of a
convoy sailing from Taranto to supply Rommel in North Africa, the knowledge
does us no good unless we go out and sink that convoy."
"Clearly," Waterhouse says.
"Now, if ten convoys are sent out and all of them are sunk, even those
under cover of clouds and darkness, the Germans will ask themselves how we
knew where those convoys could be found. They will realize that we have
penetrated the Enigma cypher, and change it, and then this tool will be lost
to us. It is safe to say that Mr. Churchill will be displeased by such an
outcome." The Main Guy looks at all of the others, who nod knowingly.
Waterhouse gets the feeling that Mr. Churchill has been bearing down rather
hard on this particular point.
"Let us recast this in information theory terms," says the don.
"Information flows from Germany to us, through the Ultra system at Bletchley
Park. That information comes to us as seemingly random Morse code
transmissions on the wireless. But because we have very bright people who
can discover order in what is seemingly random, we can extract information
that is crucial to our endeavors. Now, the Germans have not broken our
important cyphers. But they can observe our actions the routing of our
convoys in the North Atlantic, the deployment of our air forces. If the
convoys always avoid the U boats, if the air forces always go straight to
the German convoys, then it is clear to the Germans I'm speaking of a very
bright sort of German here, a German of the professor type that there is not
randomness here. This German can find correlations. He can see that we know
more than we should. In other words, there is a certain point at which
information begins to flow from us back to the Germans."
"We need to know where that point is," says the Main Guy. "Exactly
where it is. We need then to stay on the right side of it. To develop the
appearance of randomness."
"Yes," Waterhouse says, "and it has to be a kind of randomness that
would convince someone like Rudolf von Hacklheber."
"Exactly the fellow we had in mind," the don says. "Dr. von Hacklheber,
as of last year."
"Oh!" Waterhouse says. "Rudy got his Ph.D.?" Since Rudy got called back
into the embrace of the Thousand Year Reich, Waterhouse has assumed the
worst: imagining him out there in a greatcoat, sleeping in drifts and
besieging Leningrad or something. But apparently the Nazis, with their sharp
eye for talent (as long as it isn't Jewish talent) have given him a desk
job.
Still, it's touch and go for a while after Waterhouse shows pleasure
that Rudy's okay. One of the Other Guys, trying to break the ice, jokes that
if someone had had the foresight to lock Rudy up in New Jersey for the
duration, there would be no need for the new category of secret known as
Ultra Mega. No one seems to think it's funny, so Waterhouse assumes it's
true.
They show him the organizational chart for RAE Special Detachment No.
2701, which contains the names of all of the twenty four people in the world
who are on to Ultra Mega. The top is cluttered with names such as Winston
Churchill and Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Then come some other names that
seem oddly familiar to Waterhouse perhaps the names of these very gents here
in this room. Below them, one Chattan, a youngish RAF colonel who
(Waterhouse is assured) accomplished some very fine things during the Battle
of Britain.
In the next rank of the chart is the name Lawrence Pritchard
Waterhouse. There are two other names: one is an RAF captain and the other
is a captain in the United States Marine Corps. There is also a dotted line
veering off to one side, leading to the name Dr. Alan Mathison Turing. Taken
as a whole, this chart may be the most irregular and bizarre ad hocracy ever
grafted onto a military organization.
In the bottom row of the chart are two groups of half a dozen names,
clustered beneath the names of the RAF captain and the Marine captain
respectively. These are the squads that represent the executive wing of the
organization: as one of the guys at the Broadway Building puts it, "the men
at the coal face," and as the one American Guy translates it for him, "this
is where the rubber meets the road."
"Do you have any questions?" the Main Guy asks.
"Did Alan choose the number?"
"You mean Dr. Turing?"
"Yes. Did he choose the number 2701?"
This level of detail is clearly several ranks beneath the station of
the men in the Broadway Buildings. They look startled and almost offended,
as if Waterhouse has suddenly asked them to take dictation.
"Possibly," says the Main Guy. "Why do you ask?"
"Because," Waterhouse says, "the number 2701 is the product of two
primes, and those numbers, 37 and 73, when expressed in decimal notation,
are, as you can plainly see, the reverse of each other."
All heads swivel toward the don, who looks put out. "We'd best change
that," he says, "it is the sort of thing that Dr. von Hacklheber would
notice." He stands up, withdraws a Mont Blanc fountain pen from his pocket,
and amends the organizational chart so that it reads 2702 instead of 2701.
As he is doing this, Waterhouse looks at the other men in the room and
thinks that they look satisfied. Clearly, this is just the sort of parlor
trick they have hired Waterhouse to perform.
Chapter 13 CORREGIDOR
There is no fixed boundary between the water of Manila Bay and the
humid air above it, only a featureless blue grey shroud hanging a couple of
miles away. Glory IV maneuvers cautiously through an immense strewing of
anchored cargo ships for about half an hour, then picks up speed and heads
out into the center of the bay. The air thins a bit, allowing Randy a good
view of Bata'an off to starboard: black mountains mostly veiled in haze and
speckled by the mushroom cap shaped clouds of ascending thermals. For the
most part, it has no beaches, just red cliffs plummeting the last few yards
into the sea. But as they work their way out to the end of the peninsula,
the land tails off more gently and supports a few pale green fields. At the
very tip of Bata'an are a couple of stabbing limestone crags that Randy
recognizes from Avi's video. But by this point he has eyes mostly for
Corregidor itself, which lies a few miles off the end of the peninsula.
America Shaftoe, or Amy as she likes to be called, spends most of the
voyage bustling around on the deck, engaging the Filipino and American
divers in bursts of serious conversation, sometimes sitting cross legged on
the deck plates to go over papers or charts. She has donned a frayed straw
cowboy hat to protect her head from solar radiation. Randy's in no hurry to
expose himself. He ambles around the air conditioned cabin, sipping his
coffee and looking at the photographs on the walls.
He is naively expecting to see pictures of divers landing submarine
cables on beaches. Semper Marine Services does a fair amount of cable work
and does it well, he checked their references before hiring them but they
apparently do not consider that kind of work interesting enough to
photograph. Most of these pictures are of undersea salvage operations:
divers, with enormous grins on their leathery faces, triumphantly holding up
barnacle encrusted vases, like hockey players brandishing the Stanley Cup.
From a distance, Corregidor is a lens of jungle bulging out of the
water with a flat shelf extending off to one side. From the maps, he knows
that it is really a sperm shaped affair. What looks like a shelf from this
angle is its tail, which snakes off to the east as if the sperm were trying
to swim out of Manila Bay to impregnate Asia.
Amy storms past and throws the cabin door open. "Come to the bridge,"
she says, "you should see this."
Randy follow's her. "Who's the guy in most of those pictures?" he asks.
"Scary, crew cut?"
"Yeah."
"That's my father," she says. "Doug."
"Would that be Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe?" Randy asks. He's seen the
name on some of the documents that he's exchanged with Semper Marine.
"The same."
"The ex SEAL?"
"Yeah. But he doesn't like to be referred to that way. It is such a
cliche."
"Why does he seem familiar to me?"
Amy sighs. "He had his fifteen minutes of fame back in 1975."
''I'm having trouble remembering."
"You know Comstock?"
"Attorney General Paul Comstock? Hates crypto?"
"I'm talking about his father. Earl Comstock."
"Cold War policy guy the brains behind the Vietnam War right?"
"I've never heard him described that way, but yeah, we're talking about
the same guy. You might remember that back in 1975, Earl Comstock fell, or
was pushed, off a ski lift in Colorado, and broke his arms."
"Oh, yeah. It's sort of coming back to me.
"My pop " Amy does a little head fake towards one of the photographs "
happened to be seated right next to him at the time."
"By accident, or "
"Total chance. Not planned."
"That's one way to look at it," Randy says, "but on the other hand, if
Earl Comstock went skiing frequently, the probability was actually rather
high that sooner or later he'd find himself sitting, fifty feet off the
ground, next to a Vietnam combat veteran."
"Whatever. All I'm saying is I don't want to talk about it, actually."
"Am I going to get to meet this character?" Randy asks, looking at the
photograph.
Amy bites her lip and squints at the horizon. "Ninety percent of the
time his presence is a sign that something really weird is going on." She
opens the hatch to the bridge and holds it for him, pointing out the high
step.
"The other ten percent?"
"He's bored, or on the outs with his girlfriend."
Glory's pilot is concentrating intensely and ignores them, which Randy
takes to be a sign of professionalism. The bridge has many counters
fashioned from doors or thick plywood, and all of the available space is
covered with electronic gear: a fax, a smaller machine that spews out
weather bulletins, three computers, a satellite phone, a few GSM phones
socketed into their chargers, depth sounding gear. Amy leads him over to a
machine with a big screen that is showing what looks like a black and white
photo of rugged terrain. "Sidescan sonar," she explains, "one of our best
tools for this kind of work. Shows us what's on the bottom." She checks one
of the computer screens for their current coordinates and then runs a quick
calculation in her head. "Ernesto, change course five degrees to starboard
please."
"Yes ma'am," Ernesto says, and makes it happen.
"What are you looking for?"
"This is a freebie like the cigarettes at the hotel," Amy explains.
"Just an extra added bonus for doing business with us. Sometimes we like to
play tour guide. See? Check that out." She uses her pinkie to point out
something that is just becoming visible on the screen. Randy hunches over
and peers at it. It is clearly a manmade shape: a jumble of straight lines
and right angles.
"Looks like a heap of debris," he says.
"It is now," Amy says, "but it used to be a good chunk of the Filipino
treasury."
"What?"
"During the war," Amy says, "after Pearl Harbor, but before the
Japanese took Manila, the government emptied out the treasury. They put all
the gold and silver into crates and shipped it to Corregidor for safekeeping
supposedly."
"What do you mean, supposedly?"
She shrugs. "This is the Philippines," she says. "I have the feeling a
lot of it ended up elsewhere. But a lot of the silver ended up there." She
straightens up and nods out the window at Corregidor. "At the time they
thought Corregidor was impregnable."
"When was this, roughly?"
"December '41 or January '42. Anyway, it became obvious that Corregidor
was going to fall. A submarine came and took away the gold at the beginning
of February. Then another sub came and took off guys they couldn't allow to
be captured, like codebreakers. But they didn't have enough subs to carry
away all the silver. MacArthur left in March. They started taking the silver
out, in crates, in the middle of the night, and dropping it into the water."
"You're shitting me!"
"They could always come back later and try to recover it," Amy says.
"Better to lose it all than let the Japanese take it, right?"
"I guess so."
"The Japanese recovered a lot of that silver they captured a bunch of
American divers on Bata'an and Corregidor, and made them go down, right down
below where we are at this moment, and recover it. But those same divers
managed to hide a lot of silver from their guards and get it to Filipinos,
who smuggled it into Manila, where it became so common that it totally
debased the Japanese occupation currency.
"So what are we seeing right now?"
"The remains of old crates that burst open when they hit the seafloor,"
Amy says.
"Was there any of that silver left when the war ended?"
"Oh, sure," Amy says breezily. "Most of it was dumped here, and those
divers got it, but some was dumped in other areas. My dad recovered some of
it as late as the 1970s."
"Wow. That doesn't make any sense!"
"Why not?"
"I can't believe that piles of silver just sat on the bottom of the
ocean for thirty years, free for the taking."
"You don't know the Philippines very well," Amy says.
"I know that it's a poor country. Why didn't someone come out and get
that silver?"
"Most of the treasure hunters in this part of the world are looking for
much bigger game," Amy says, "or easier."
Randy's nonplussed. "A pile of silver on the bottom of the bay seems
big and easy to me.
"It's not. Silver's not worth that much. A Sung Dynasty vase, cleaned
up, can go for more than its weight in gold. Gold. And it's easier to find
the vase you just scan the seafloor, looking for something shaped like a
junk. A sunken junk makes a distinctive image on sonar. Whereas an old
crate, all busted up and covered with coral and barnacles, tends to look
like a rock."
As they draw closer to Corregidor, Randy can see that the tail of the
island is lumpy, with big stacks of rock protruding from it here and there.
The color of the land fades gradually from dark jungle green to pale green
and then a sere reddish brown as the tail extends from the fat center of the
island out to the end, and the soil becomes dryer. Randy's gaze is fixed on
one of those rocky crags, which is surmounted by a new steel tower. Atop the
tower is a microwave horn aimed east, toward Epiphyte's building in
Intramuros.
"See those caves along the waterline?" Amy says. She seems to regret
having mentioned sunken treasure in the first place, and now wants to get
off the subject.
Randy tears himself away from the microwave antenna, of which he is
part owner, and looks in the direction Amy's pointing. The limestock flank
of the island, which drops vertically the last few meters into the water, is
riddled with holes.
"Yeah."
"Built by Americans to house beach defense guns. Enlarged by the
Japanese as launch sites for suicide boats."
"Wow."
Randy notices a deep gargling noise, and looks over to see that a boat
has fallen in alongside them. It is a canoe shaped affair maybe forty feet
long, with long outriggers on either side. A couple of ragged flags fly from
a short mast, and bright laundry flaps gaily from various lines strung here
and there. A big, naked diesel engine sits in the middle of the hull
flailing the atmosphere with black smoke. Forward of that, several
Filipinos, including women and children, are gathered in the shade of a
bright blue tarpaulin, eating. Aft, a couple of men are fiddling with diving
equipment. One of them is holding something up to his mouth: a microphone. A
voice blares from Glory's radio, speaking Tagalog. Ernesto stifles a laugh,
picks up the mike, and answers briefly. Randy doesn't know what they are
saying, but he suspects it is something like "Let's horse around later, our
client is on the bridge right now."
"Business associates," Amy explains dryly. Her body language says that
she wants to get away from Randy and back to work.
"Thanks for the tour," Randy says. "One question."
Amy raises her eyebrows, trying to look patient.
"How much of Semper Marine's revenue derives from treasure hunting?"
"This month? This year? The last ten years? Over the lifetime of the
company?" Amy says.
"Whatever."
"That kind of income is sporadic," Amy says. "Glory was paid for, and
then some, by pottery that we recovered from a junk. But some years we get
all of our revenue from jobs like this one."
"In other words, boring jobs that suck?" Randy says. He just blurts it
out. Normally he controls his tongue a little better. But shaving off his
beard has blurred his ego boundaries, or something.
He's expecting her to laugh or at least wink a him, but she takes it
very seriously. She has a pretty good poker face. "Think of it as making
license plates," she says.
"So you guys are basically a bunch of treasure hunters," Randy says.
"You just make license plates to stabilize your cash flow."
"Call us treasure hunters if you like," Amy says. "Why are you in
business, Randy?" She turns around and stalks out of the place.
Randy's still watching her go when he hears Ernesto cursing under his
breath, not so much angry as astonished. Glory is swinging around the tip of
Corregidor's tail now and the entire southern side of the island is becoming
visible for the first time. The last mile or so of the tail curves around to
form a semicircular bay. Anchored in the center of this bay is a white ship
that Randy identifies, at first, as a small ocean liner with rakish and
wicked lines. Then he sees the name painted on its stern: RUI FALEIRO SANTA
MONICA, CALIFORNIA
Randy goes and stands next to Ernesto and they stare at the white ship
for a while. Randy has heard about it, and Ernesto, like everyone else in
the Philippines, knows about it. But seeing it is another thing entirely. A
helicopter sits on its afterdeck like a toy. A dagger shaped muscle boat
hangs from a davit, ready for use as a dinghy. A brown skinned man in a
gleaming white uniform can be seen polishing a brass rail.
"Rui Faleiro was Magellan's cosmographer," Randy says.
"Cosmographer?"
"The brains of the operation," Randy says, tapping his head.
"He came here with Magellan?" Ernesto asks.
In most of the world, Magellan is thought of as the first guy who went
around the world. Here, everyone knows he only made it as far as Mactan
Island, where he was killed by Filipinos.
"When Magellan set out on his ship, Faleiro stayed behind in Seville,"
Randy says. "He went crazy."
"You know a lot about Magallanes, eh?" Ernesto says. "No," Randy says,
"I know a lot about the Dentist."
***
"Don't talk to the Dentist. Ever. Not about anything. Not even tech
stuff. Any technical question he asks you is just a stalking horse for some
business tactic that is as far beyond your comprehension as Gödel's Proof
would be to Daffy Duck."
Avi told Randy this spontaneously one evening, as they were tucking
into dinner at a restaurant in downtown Makati. Avi refuses to discuss
anything important within a mile of the Manila Hotel because he thinks every
room, and every table, is under surveillance.
"Thanks for the vote of confidence," Randy said.
"Hey," Avi said, "I'm just trying to stake out my turf here justify my
existence in this project. I'll handle the business stuff."
"You're not being a little paranoid?"
"Listen. The Dentist has at least a billion dollars of his own, and
another ten billion under management half the fucking orthodontists in
Southern California retired at age forty because he dectupled their IRAs in
the space of two or three years. You don't achieve those kinds of results by
being a nice guy."
"Maybe he just got lucky."
"He did get lucky. But that doesn't mean he's a nice guy. My point is
that he put that money into investments that were extremely risky. He played
Russian roulette with his investors' life savings, keeping them in the dark.
I mean, this guy would invest in a Mindanao kidnapping ring if it gave a
good rate of return."
"Does he understand that he was lucky, I wonder?"
"That's my question. I'm guessing no. I think he considers himself to
be an instrument of Divine Providence, like Douglas MacArthur."
***
Rui Faleiro is the pride of Seattle's superyacht industry, which has
been burgeoning, ever so discreetly, of late. Randy gleaned a few facts
about it from a marketing brochure that was published before the Dentist
actually bought the ship. So he knows that the helicopter and the speedboat
came included in the purchase price, which has never been divulged. The
vessel contains, among other things, ten tons of marble. The master bedroom
suite contains full his and hers bathrooms lined with black marble and pink
marble respectively, so that the Dentist and the Diva don't have to fight
over sink space when they are primping for a big event in the yacht's grand
ballroom.
"The Dentist?" Ernesto says.
"Kepler. Doctor Kepler," Randy says. "In the States, some people call
him the Dentist." People in the high tech industry.
Ernesto nods knowingly. "A man like that could have had any woman in
the world," he says. "But he picked a Filipina."
"Yes," Randy says cautiously.
"In the States, do people know the story of Victoria Vigo?"
"I must tell you that she is not as famous in the States as she is
here."
"Of course."
"But some of her songs were very popular. Many people know that she
came from great poverty."
"Do people in the States know about Smoky Mountain? The garbage dump in
Tondo, where children hunt for food?"
"Some of them do. It will be very famous when the movie about Victoria
Vigo's life shows on television."
Ernesto nods, seemingly satisfied. Everyone here knows that a movie
about the Diva's life is being made, starring herself. They generally don't
know that it's a vanity project, financed by the Dentist, and that it will
be aired only on cable television in the middle of the night.
But they probably know that it will leave out all the good parts.
***
"As far as the Dentist is concerned," Avi said, "our advantage is that,
when it comes to the Philippines, he will be predictable. Tame. Even
docile." He smiles cryptically.
"How so?"
"Victoria Vigo whored her way up out of Smoky Mountain, right?"
"Well, there seems to be a lot of nudging and winking to that effect,
but I've never heard anyone come out and say it before," Randy said,
glancing around nervously.
"Believe me, it's the only way she could have gotten out of there.
Pimping arrangements were handled by the Bolobolos. This is a group from
Northern Luzon that was brought into power along with Marcos. They run that
part of town police, organized crime, local politics, you name it.
Consequently, they own her they have photographs, videos from the days when
she was an underage prostitute and porn film starlet."
Randy shook his head in disgust and amazement. "How the hell do you get
this information?"
"Never mind. Believe me, in some circles it's as well known as the
value of pi."
"Not my circles."
"Anyway, the point is that her interests are aligned with the Bolobolos
and always will be. And the Dentist is always going to obediently do
whatever his wife tells him to."
"Can you really assume that?" Randy said. "He's a tough guy. He
probably has a lot more money and power than the Bolobolos. He can do
whatever he wants."
"But he won't," Avi says, smiling that little smile again. "He'll do
what his wife tells him to.
"How do you know that?"
"Look," Avi said, "Kepler is a major control freak just like most
powerful, rich men. Right?"
"Right."
"If you are that much of a control freak, what sexual preferences does
that translate into?"
"I hope I'll never know. I suppose you would want to dominate a woman.
"Wrong!" Avi said. "Sex is more complicated than that, Randy. Sex is a
place where people's repressed desires come out. People get most turned on
when their innermost secrets are revealed "
"Shit! Kepler's a masochist?"
"He is such a fucking masochist that he was famous for it. At least in
the Southeast Asian sex industry. Pimps and Madams in Hong Kong, Bangkok,
Shenzhen, Manila, they all had files on him they knew exactly what he
wanted. And that's how he met Victoria Vigo. He was in Manila, see, working
on the FiliTel deal. Spent a lot of time here, staying in a hotel that's
owned, and bugged, by the Bolobolos. They studied his mating habits like
entomologists watching the reproductive habits of ants. They groomed
Victoria Vigo their ace, their bombshell, their sexual Terminator to give
Kepler exactly what Kepler wanted. Then they sent her into his life like a
guided fucking missile and pow! true love."
"You'd think he would have been suspicious, or something. I'm surprised
he'd get that involved with a whore."
"He didn't know she was a whore! That's the beauty of the plan! The
Bolobolos set her up with a fake identity as a concierge at Kepler's hotel!
A demure Catholic school girl! It starts with her getting him tickets to a
play, and inside of a year. he's chained to his bed on that fucking mega
yacht of his with strap marks on his ass, and she's standing over him with a
wedding ring on her finger the size of a headlamp, the hundred and thirty
eighth richest woman in the world."
"Hundred and twenty fifth," Randy corrected him, "FiliTel stock has
been on a bull run lately."
***
Randy spends the next days trying not to run into the Dentist. He stays
at a small private inn up on the top of the island, eating continental
breakfast every morning with an assortment of American and Nipponese war
veterans who have come here with their wives to (Randy supposes) deal with
emotional issues a million times more profound than anything Randy's ever
had to contend with. The Rui Faleiro is nothing if not conspicuous, and
Randy can get a pretty good idea of whether the Dentist is aboard it by
watching the movements of the helicopter and the speedboat.
When he thinks it's safe, he goes down to the beach below the microwave
antenna and watches Amy's divers work on the cable installation. Some of
them are working out in the surf zone, bolting sections of cast iron pipe
around the cable. Some are working a couple of miles offshore coordinating
with a barge that is injecting the cable directly into the muddy seafloor
with a giant, cleaver like appendage.
The shore end of the cable runs into a new reinforced concrete building
set back about a hundred meters from the high tide level. It is basically
just a big room filled with batteries, generators, air conditioning units,
and racks of electronic equipment. The software running on that equipment is
Randy's responsibility, and so he spends most of his time in that building,
staring into a computer screen and typing. From there, transmission lines
run up the hill to the microwave tower.
The other end is being extended out towards a buoy that is bobbing in
the South China Sea a few kilometers away. Attached to that buoy is the end
of the North Luzon Coastal Festoon, a cable, owned by FiliTel, that runs up
the coast of the island. If you follow it far enough you reach a building at
the northern tip of the island, where a big cable from Taiwan comes in.
Taiwan, in turn, is heavily webbed into the world submarine cable network;
it is easy and cheap to get data into or out of Taiwan.
There is only one gap left in the private chain of transmission that
Epiphyte and FiliTel are trying to establish from Taiwan to downtown Manila,
and that gap gets narrower by the day, as the cable barge grinds its way
towards the buoy.
***
When it finally gets there, Rui Faleiro weighs anchor and glides out to
meet it. The helicopter and the speedboat, and a flotilla of hired boats, go
into action ferrying dignitaries and media crews out from Manila. Avi shows
up carrying two fresh tuxedos from a tailor shop in Shanghai ("All those
famous Hong Kong tailors were refugees from Shanghai"). He and Randy tear
off the tissue paper, put them on, and then ride in an un air conditioned
jeepney down the hill to the dock, where Glory awaits them.
Two hours later, Randy gets to lay eyes on the Dentist and the Diva for
the first time ever in the grand ballroom of the Rui Faleiro. To Randy the
party is like any other: he shakes hands with a few people, forgets their
names, finds a place to sit down, and enjoys the wine and the food in
blissful solitude.
The one thing that is special about this party is that two tar covered
cables, each about the thickness of a baseball bat, are running up onto the
quarterdeck. If you go to the rail and look down you can see them disappear
into the brine. The cable ends meet on a tabletop in the middle of the deck,
where a technician, flown in from Hong Kong and duded up in a tuxedo, sits
with a box of tools, working on the splice. He is also working on a big
hangover, but that is fine with Randy since he knows that it's all fake the
cables are just scraps, their loose ends trailing in the water alongside the
yacht. The real splice was performed yesterday and is already lying on the
bottom of the sea with bits running through it.
There is another man on the quarterdeck, mostly staring at Bata'an and
Corregidor but also keeping an eye on Randy. The moment Randy notices him,
this man nods as if checking something off a list in his head, stands up,
walks over, and joins him. He is wearing a very ornate uniform, the U.S.
Navy equivalent of black tie. He is mostly bald, and what hair he does have
is battleship grey, and shorn to a length of perhaps five millimeters. As he
walks toward Randy, several Filipinos watch him with obvious curiosity.
"Randy," he says. Medals clink together as he grips Randy's right hand
and shakes it. He looks to be around fifty, but he has the skin of an eighty
year old Bedouin. He has a lot of ribbons on his chest, and many of them are
red and yellow, which are colors that Randy vaguely associates with Vietnam.
Above his pocket is a little plastic nameplate reading, SHAFTOE. "Don't be
deceived, Randy," says Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe, "I'm not on active duty.
Retired eons ago. But I'm still entitled to wear this uniform. And it's a
hell of a lot easier than going out and trying to find a tuxedo that fits
me."
"Pleased to meet you."
"Pleasure's mine. Where'd you get yours, by the way?"
"My tuxedo?"
"Yeah."
"My partner had it made."
"Your business partner, or your sexual partner?"
"My business partner. At the moment, I am without a sexual partner."
Doug Shaftoe nods impassively. "It is telling that you have not obtained one
in Manila. As our host did, for example."
Randy looks into the ballroom at Victoria Vigo, who, if she were any
more radiant, would cause paint to peel from the walls and windowpanes to
sag like caramel.
"I guess I'm just shy, or something," Randy says.
"Are you too shy to listen to a business proposition?"
"Not at all."
"My daughter asserts that you and our host might lay some more cables
around here in coming years."
"In business, people rarely plan to do a thing only once," Randy says.
"It messes up the spreadsheets."
"You are aware, by now, that the water in this area is shallow."
"Yeah."
"You know that cables cannot be laid in shallow water without extremely
detailed, high resolution sidescan sonar surveys."
"Yes."
"I would like to perform those surveys for you, Randy."
"I see."
"No, I don't think you do see. But I want you to see, and so I'm going
to explain it."
"Okay," Randy says. "Should I bring my partner out?"
"The concept I am about to convey to you is very simple and does not
require two first rate minds in order to process it," Doug Shaftoe says.
"Okay. What is the concept?"
"The detailed survey will be just chock full of new information about
what is on the floor of the ocean in this part of the world. Some of that
information might be valuable. More valuable than you imagine."
"Ah," Randy says. "You mean that it might be the kind of thing that
your company knows how to capitalize on."
"That's right," says Doug Shaftoe. "Now, if you hire one of my
competitors to perform your survey, and they stumble on this kind of
information, they will not tell you about it. They will exploit it
themselves. You will not know that they have found anything and you will not
profit from it. But if you hire Semper Marine Services, I will tell you
about whatever I find, and I will cut you and your company in on a share of
any proceeds."
"Hmmmm," Randy says. He is trying to figure out how to do a poker face,
but he knows that Shaftoe sees right through him.
"On one condition," Doug Shaftoe says.
"I suspected there might be a condition."
"Every hook that's worth a damn has a barb. This is the barb."
"What is it?" Randy asks.
"We keep it a secret from that son of a bitch," Doug Shaftoe says,
jerking his thumb at Hubert Kepler. "Because if the Dentist finds out, then
he and the Bolobolos will just split the entire thing up between them and
we'll see nothing. There's even a chance we would end up dead."
"Well, the being dead part is something that we will certainly have to
think about," Randy says, "but I will convey your proposal to my partner."
Chapter 14 TUBE
Waterhouse and a few dozen strangers are standing and sitting in an
extraordinarily long, narrow room that rocks from side to side. The room is
lined with windows but no light comes into them, only sound: a great deal of
rumbling, rattling, and screeching. Everyone is pensive and silent, as if
they were sitting in church waiting for the service to kick off.
Waterhouse is standing up gripping a ceiling mounted protuberance that
keeps him from being rocked right onto his can. For the last couple of
minutes he has been staring at a nearby poster providing instructions on how
to put on a gas mask. Waterhouse, like everyone else, is carrying one such
device with him in a small dun canvas shoulder bag. Waterhouse's looks
different from everyone else's because it is American and military. It has
drawn a stare or two from the others.
On the poster is a lovely and stylish woman with white skin, and auburn
hair which appears to have been chemically melted and reset into its current
shape at a quality salon. She stands upright, her spine like a flagpole,
chin in the air, elbows bent, hands ritualistically posed: fingers splayed,
thumbs sticking straight up in the air just in front of her face. A sinister
lump dangles between her hands, held in a cat's cradle of khaki strapping.
Her upthrust thumbs are the linchpins of this tidy web.
Waterhouse has been in London for a couple of days now and so he knows
the next part of the story. He would know this pose anywhere. This woman is
poised for the chin thrust. If gas ever falls on the capital, the gas
rattles will sound and the tops of the massive mailboxes, which have all
been treated with special paint, will turn black. Twenty million thumbs will
point into the greenish, poison sky, ten million gas masks will dangle from
them, ten million chins will thrust. He can just imagine the crisp luscious
sound of this woman's soft white skin forcing itself into the confining
black rubber.
Once the chin thrust is complete, all is well. You have to get the
straps neatly arranged atop your auburn permanent and get indoors, but the
worst danger is past. The British gas masks have a squat round fitting on
the front to allow exhalation, which looks exactly like the snout of a pig,
and no woman would be caught dead in such a thing if the models in the gas
mask posters were not such paragons of high caste beauty.
Something catches his eye out in the darkness beyond the window. The
train has reached one of those parts of the Underground where dim gun barrel
colored light sifts down, betraying the stygian secrets of the Tube.
Everyone in the car blinks, glances, and draws breath. The World has
rematerialized around them for a moment. Fragments of wall, encrusted
trusses, bundles of cable hang in space out there, revolving slowly, like
astronomical bodies, as the train works its way past.
The cables catch Waterhouse's eye: neatly bracketed to the stone walls
in parallel courses. They are like the creepers of some plutonic ivy that
spreads through the darkness of the Tube when the maintenance men aren't
paying attention, seeking a place to break out and up into the light.
When you walk along the street, up there in the Overground, you see the
first tendrils making their way up the ancient walls of the buildings.
Neoprene jacketed vines that grow in straight lines up sheer stone and
masonry and inject themselves through holes in windowframes, homing in
particularly on offices. Sometimes they are sheathed in metal tubes.
Sometimes the owners have painted them over. But all of them share a common
root system that flourishes in the unused channels and crevices of the
Underground, converging on giant switching stations in deep bomb proof
vaults.
The train invades a cathedral of dingy yellow light, and groans to a
stop, hogging the aisle. Lurid icons of national paranoia glow in the niches
and grottoes. An angelic chin thrusting woman anchors one end of the moral
continuum. At the opposite we have a succubus in a tight skirt, sprawled on
a davenport in the midst of a party. smirking through her false eyelashes as
she eavesdrops on the naive young servicemen gabbing away behind her.
Signs on the wall identify this as Euston in a tasteful sans serif that
screams official credibility. Waterhouse and most of the other people get
off the train. After fifteen minutes or so of ricocheting around the
station's precincts, asking directions and puzzling out timetables,
Waterhouse finds himself sitting aboard an intercity train bound for
Birmingham. Along the way, it is promised, it will stop at a place called
Bletchley.
Part of the reason for the confusion is that there is another train
about to leave from an adjacent siding, which goes straight to Bletchley,
its final destination, with no stops in between. Everyone on that train, it
seems, is a female in a quasimilitary uniform.
The RAF men with the Sten guns, standing watch by each door of that
train, checking papers and passes, will not let him aboard. Waterhouse looks
through the yellowing influence of the windows at the Bletchley girls in the
train, facing each other in klatsches of four and five, getting their
knitting out of their bags, turning balls of Scottish wool into balaclavas
and mittens for convoy crews in the North Atlantic, writing letters to their
brothers in the service and their mums and dads at home. The RAF gunmen
remain by the doors until all of them are closed and the train has begun to
move out of the station. As it builds speed, the rows and rows of girls,
knitting and writing and chatting, blur together into something that
probably looks a good deal like what sailors and soldiers the world over are
commonly seeing in their dreams. Waterhouse will never be one of those
soldiers, out on the front line, out in contact with the enemy. He has
tasted the apple of forbidden knowledge. He is forbidden to go anywhere in
the world where he might be captured by the enemy.
***
The train climbs up out of the night and into a red brick arroyo,
headed northwards out of the city. It is about three in the afternoon; that
special BP train must have been carrying swing shift gals.
Waterhouse has the feeling he will not be working anything like a
regular shift. His duffel bag which was packed for him is pregnant with
sartorial possibilities: thick oiled wool sweaters, tropical weight Navy and
Army uniforms, black ski mask, condoms.
The train slowly pulls free of the city and passes into a territory
patched with small residential towns. Waterhouse feels heavy in his seat,
and suspects a slight uphill tendency. They pass through a cleft that has
been made across a low range of hills, like a kerf in the top of a log, and
enter into a lovely territory of subtly swelling emerald green fields strewn
randomly with small white capsules that he takes to be sheep.
Of course, their distribution is probably not random at all it probably
reflects local variations in soil chemistry producing grass that the sheep
find more or less desirable. From aerial reconnaissance, the Germans could
draw up a map of British soil chemistry based upon analysis of sheep
distribution.
The fields are enclosed by old hedges, stone fences, or, especially in
the uplands, long swaths of forest. After an hour or so, the forest comes
right up along the left side of the train, covering a bank that rises up
gently from the railway siding. The train's brakes come on gassily, and the
train grumbles to a stop in a whistle stop station. But the line has forked
and ramified quite a bit, more than is warranted by the size of the station.
Waterhouse stands, plants his feet squarely, squats down in a sumo
wrestler's stance, and engages his duffel bag. Duffel appears to be winning
as it seemingly pushes Waterhouse out the door of the train and onto the
platform.
There is a stronger than usual smell of coal, and a good deal of noise
coming from not far away. Waterhouse looks up the line and discovers a heavy
industrial works unfurled across the many sidings. He stands and stares for
a couple of minutes, as his train pulls away, headed for points north, and
sees that they are in the business of repairing steam locomotives here at
Bletchley Depot. Waterhouse likes trains.
But that is not why he got a free suit of clothes and a ticket to
Bletchley, and so once again Waterhouse engages Duffel and gets it up the
stairs to the enclosed bridge that flies over all of the parallel lines.
Looking toward the station, he sees more Bletchley girls, WAAFs and WRENs,
coming towards him; the day shift, finished with their work, which consists
of the processing of ostensibly random letters and digits on a heavy
industrial scale. Not wanting to appear ridiculous in their sight, he
finally gets Duffel maneuvered onto his back, gets his arms through the
shoulder straps, and allows its weight to throw him forward across the
bridge.
The WAAFs and WRENs are only moderately interested in the sight of a
newly arriving American officer. Or perhaps they are only being demure. In
any case, Waterhouse knows he is one of the few, but not the first. Duffel
shoves him through the one room station like a fat cop chivvying a
hammerlocked drunk across the lobby of a two star hotel. Waterhouse is
ejected into a strip of open territory running along the north south road.
Directly across from him the woods rise up. Any notion that they might be
woods of the inviting sort is quickly dissolved by a dense spray of gelid
light glinting from the border of the wood as the low sun betrays that the
place is saturated with sharpened metal. There is an orifice in the woods,
spewing WAAFs and WRENs like the narrow outlet of a giant yellowjacket nest.
Waterhouse must either move forward or be pulled onto his back by
Duffel and left squirming helplessly in the parking lot like a flipped
beetle, so he staggers forward, across the street and onto the wide footpath
into the woods. The Bletchley girls surround him. They have celebrated the
end of their shift by applying lipstick. Wartime lipstick is necessarily
cobbled together from whatever tailings and gristle were left over once all
of the good stuff was used to coat propeller shafts. A florid and cloying
scent is needed to conceal its unspeakable mineral and animal origins.
It is the smell of War.
Waterhouse has not even been given the full tour of BP yet, but he
knows the gist of it. He knows that these demure girls, obediently shuffling
reams of gibberish through their machines, shift after shift, day after day,
have killed more men than Napoleon.
He makes slow and apologetic progress against the tide of the departing
day shift. At one point he simply gives up, steps aside, body slams Duffel
into the ivy, lights up a cigarette, and waits for a burst of a hundred or
so girls to go by him. Something pokes at his ankle: a wild raspberry cane,
furious with thorns. It supports an uncannily small and tidy spider web
whose geodesic strands gleam in a beam of low afternoon light. The spider in
the center is an imperturbable British sort, perfectly unruffled by
Waterhouse's clumsy Yank antics.
Waterhouse reaches out and catches a yellow brown elm leaf that happens
to fall through the air before him. He hunkers down, plants his cigarette in
his mouth, and, using both hands for steadiness, draws the sawtooth rim of
the elm leaf across one of the web's radial strands, which, he knows, will
not have any sticky stuff on it. Like a fiddle bow on a string, the leaf
sets up a fairly regular vibration in the web. The spider spins to face it,
rotating instantly, like a character in a badly spliced movie. Waterhouse is
so startled by the speed of the move that he starts back just a bit, then he
draws the leaf across the web again. The spider tenses, feeling the
vibrations.
Eventually it returns to its original position and carries on as
before, ignoring Waterhouse completely.
Spiders can tell from the vibrations what sort of insect they have
caught, and home in on it. There is a reason why the webs are radial, and
the spider plants itself at the convergence of the radii. The strands are an
extension of its nervous system. Information propagates down the gossamer
and into the spider, where it is processed by some kind of internal Turing
machine. Waterhouse has tried many different tricks, but he has never been
able to spoof a spider. Not a good omen!
The rush hour seems to have ended during Waterhouse's science
experiment. He engages Duffel once more. The struggle takes them another
hundred yards down the path, which finally empties out into a road just at
the point where it is barred by an iron gate slung between stupid obelisks
of red brick. The guards are, again, RAF men with Sten guns, and right now
they are examining the papers of a man in a canvas greatcoat and goggles,
who has just ridden up on an Army green motorcycle with panniers slung over
the rear wheel. The panniers are not especially full, but they have been
carefully secured; they contain the ammunition that the girls feed into the
chattering teeth of their ravenous weapons.
The motorcyclist is waved through, and makes an immediate left turn
down a narrow lane. Attention falls upon Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse, who
after a suitable exchange of salutes, presents his credentials.
He has to choose among his several sets, which he doesn't manage to
hide from the guards. But the guards do not seem alarmed or even curious
about this, which sets them distinctly apart from most whom Waterhouse has
dealt with. Naturally, these men are not on the Ultra Mega list, and so it
would be a grave breach of security to tell them that he was here on Ultra
Mega business. They appear to have greeted many other men who can't state
their real business, however, and don't bat an eyelash when Lawrence
pretends to be one of the naval intelligence liaisons in Hut 4 or Hut 8.
Hut 8 is where they decrypt naval Enigma transmissions. Hut 4 accepts
the decrypts from Hut 8 and analyzes them. If Waterhouse pretends to be a
Hut 4 man the disguise will not last for long, because those fellows have to
actually know something about the Navy. He perfectly fits the profile of a
Hut 8 man, who need not know anything except pure math.
One of the RAF men peruses his papers, then steps into a small
guardhouse and stirs the crank on a telephone. Waterhouse stands there
awkwardly, marveling at the weapons slung from the shoulders of the RAP men.
They are, as far as he can tell, nothing more than steel pipes with a
trigger mounted toward one end. A small window cut through the pipe provides
a view of a coil spring nested inside. A few handles and fittings bolted on
from place to place do not make the Sten gun look any less like an ill
conceived high school metal shop project.
"Captain Waterhouse? You are to proceed to the Mansion," says the guard
who had spoken on the telephone. "You can't miss it."
Waterhouse walks for about fifty feet and finds that the Mansion is,
indeed, tragically unmissable. He stands and stares at it for a minute,
trying to fathom what the architect had been thinking. It is a busy piece of
work, with an excessive number of gables. He can only suppose that the
designer wanted to build what was really a large, single dwelling, but
sought to camouflage it as a line of at least half a dozen wildly mismatched
urban row houses inexplicably crammed together in the middle of six hundred
acres of Buckinghamshire farmland.
The place has been well looked after, but as Waterhouse draws closer,
he can see black lianas climbing up the brickwork. The root system that he
glimpsed in the Underground has spread beneath forest and pasture even to
this place and has begun to throw its neoprene creepers upwards. But this
organism is not phototropic it does not grow towards the light, always
questing towards the sun. It is infotropic. And it has spread to this place
for the same reason that infotropic humans like Lawrence Pritchard
Waterhouse and Dr. Alan Mathison Turing have come here, because Bletchley
Park has roughly the same situation in the info world as the sun does in the
solar system. Armies, nations, prime ministers, presidents and geniuses fall
around it, not in steady planetlike orbits but in the crazy careening
ellipses and hyperbolae of comets and stray asteroids.
Dr. Rudolf von Hacklheber can't see Bletchley Park, because it is the
second best kept secret in the world, after Ultra Mega. But from his office
in Berlin, sifting through dispatches from the Beobachtung Dienst, he can
glimpse fragments of those trajectories, and dream up hypotheses to explain
why they are just so. If the only logical hypothesis is that the Allies have
broken Enigma, then Detachment 2702 will have failed.
Lawrence displays further credentials and enters between a pair of
weathered gryphons. The mansion is nicer once you can no longer see its
exterior. Its faux rowhouse design provides many opportunities for bay
windows, providing sorely needed light. The hall is held up by gothic arches
and pillars made of a conspicuously low grade of brown marble that looks
like vitrified sewage.
The place is startlingly noisy; there is a rushing, clattering noise,
like rabid applause, permeating walls and doors, carried on a draft of hot
air with a stinging, oily scent. It is the peculiar scent of electric
teletypes or teleprinters, as the Brits call them. The noise and the heat
suggest there must be dozens of them in one of the mansion's lower rooms.
Waterhouse climbs a paneled stairway to what the Brits call the first
floor, and find it quieter and cooler. The high panjandrums of Bletchley
have their offices here. If the organization is run true to bureaucratic
form, Waterhouse will never see this place again once his initial interview
is finished. He finds his way to the office of Colonel Chattan, who
(Waterhouse's memory jogged by the sight of the name on the door) is the
fellow at the top of the chart of Detachment 2702.
Chattan rises to shake his hand. He's strawberry blond, blue eyed, and
probably would be rosy cheeked if he didn't have such a deep desert tan at
the moment. He is wearing a dress uniform; British officers have their
uniforms tailor made, it is the only way to obtain them. Waterhouse is
hardly a clothes horse, but he can see at a glance that Chattan's uniform
was not thrown together by Mummy in a few evenings in front of a flickering
coal grate. No, Chattan has himself an honest to god tailor somewhere. Yet,
when he speaks Waterhouse's name, he does not say "woe to hice" like the
Broadway Buildings crowd. The R comes through hard and crackling and the
"house" part is elongated into some thing like "hoos." He has some kind of a
wild ass accent on him, this Chattan.
With Chattan is a smaller man in British fatigues tight at the wrists
and ankles, otherwise blousy, of thick khaki flannel that would be
intolerably hot if these people couldn't rely on a steady ambient
temperature, indoors and out, of about fifty five degrees. The overall
effect always reminds Waterhouse of Dr. Dentons. This fellow is introduced
as Leftenant Robson, and he is the leader of one of 2702's two squads the
RAE one. He has a bristly mustache, trimmed very short, of silver and auburn
whiskers. He is a cheerful sort, at least in the presence of higher ranks,
and smiles frequently. His teeth splay out radially from the gumline so that
each mandible has the appearance of a coffee can in which a small grenade
has been detonated.
"This the fellow we've been waiting for," Chattan says to Robson. "The
one we could've used in Algiers."
"Yes!" Robson says. "Welcome to Detachment 2701, Captain Waterhouse."
"2702," Waterhouse says.
Chattan and Robson look ever so mildly startled.
"We can't use 2701 because it is the product of two primes."
"I beg your pardon?" Robson says.
One thing Waterhouse likes about these Brits is that when they don't
know what the hell you are talking about, they are at least open to the
possibility that it might be their fault. Robson has the look of a man who
has come up through the ranks. A Yank of that type would already be scornful
and blustery.
"Which ones?" Chattan says. That is encouraging; he at least knows what
a prime number is.
"73 and 37," Waterhouse says.
This makes a profound impression on Chattan. "Ah, yes, I see." He
shakes his head. "I shall have to give the Prof a good chaffing about this."
Robson has cocked his head far to one side so that it is almost resting
upon the thick woolly beret chucked into his epaulet. He is squinting, and
has an aghast look about him. His hypothetical Yank counterpart would
probably demand, at this point, a complete explanation of prime number
theory, and when it was finished, denounce it as horseshit. But Robson just
lets it go by. "Am I to understand that we are changing the number of our
Detachment?"
Waterhouse swallows. It seems clear from Robson's reaction that this is
going to involve a great deal of busy work for Robson and his men: weeks of
painting and stenciling and of trying to propagate the new number throughout
the military bureaucracy. It will be a miserable pain in the ass.
"2702 it is," Chattan says breezily. Unlike Waterhouse, he has no
difficulty issuing difficult, unpopular commands.
"Right then, I must see to some things. Pleasure making your
acquaintance, Captain Waterhouse."
"Pleasure's mine."
Robson shakes Waterhouse's hand again and excuses himself.
"We have a billet for you in one of the huts to the south of the
canteen," Chattan says. "Bletchley Park is our nominal headquarters, but we
anticipate that we will spend most of our time in those theaters where
heaviest use is being made of Ultra."
"I take it you've been in North Africa," Waterhouse says.
"Yes." Chattan raises his eyebrows, or rather the ridges of skin where
his eyebrows are presumably located; the hairs are colorless and
transparent, like nylon monofilament line. "Just got out by the skin of our
teeth there, I'm afraid."
"Had a close shave, did you?"
"Oh, I don't mean it that way," Chattan says. "I'm talking about the
integrity of the Ultra secret. We are still not sure whether we have
survived it. But the Prof has done some calculations suggesting that we may
be out of the woods."
"The Prof is what you call Dr. Turing?"
"Yes. He recommended you personally, you know."
"When the orders came through, I speculated as much."
"Turing is presently engaged on at least two other fronts of the
information war, and could not be part of our happy few."
"What happened in North Africa, Colonel Chattan?"
"It's still happening," Chattan says bemusedly. "Our Marine squad is
still in theater, widening the bell curve.
"Widening the bell curve?"
"Well, you know better than I do that random things typically have a
bell shaped distribution. Heights, for example. Come over to this window,
Captain Waterhouse."
Waterhouse joins Chattan at a bay window, where there is a view across
acres of what used to be gently undulating farmland. Looking beyond the
wooded belt to the uplands miles away, he can see what Bletchley Park
probably used to look like: green fields dotted with clusters of small
buildings.
But that is not what it looks like now. There is hardly a piece of land
within half a mile that has not been recently paved or built upon. Once you
get beyond the Mansion and its quaint little outbuildings, the park consists
of one story brick structures, nothing more than long corridors with
multiple transepts: +++++++, and new +'s being added as fast as the masons
can slap bricks on mud (Waterhouse wonders, idly, whether Rudy has seen
aerial reconnaissance photos of this place, and deduced from all of those
+'s the mathematical nature of the enterprise). The tortuous channels
between buildings are narrow, and each is made twice as narrow by an eight
foot high blast wall running down the middle of it, so that the Jerries will
have to spend at least one bomb for each building.
"In that building there," Chattan says, pointing to a small building
not far away a truly wretched looking brick hovel "are the Turing Bombes.
That's 'bombe' with an 'e' on the end. They are calculating machines
invented by your friend the Prof."
"Are they true universal Turing machines?" Waterhouse blurts. He is in
the grip of a stunning vision of what Bletchley Park might, in fact, be: a
secret kingdom in which Alan has somehow found the resources needed to
realize his great vision. A kingdom ruled not by men but by information,
where humble buildings made of + signs house Universal Machines that can be
configured to perform any computable operation.
"No," Chattan says, with a gentle, sad smile.
Waterhouse exhales for a long time. "Ah."
"Perhaps that will come next year, or the next."
"Perhaps."
"The bombes were adapted, by Turing and Welchman and others, from a
design dreamed up by Polish cryptanalysts. They consist of rotating drums
that test many possible Enigma keys with great speed. I'm sure the Prof will
explain it to you. But the point is that they have these vast pegboards in
the back, like telephone switchboards, and some of our girls have the job of
putting the right pegs into the right holes and wiring the things up every
day. Requires good eyesight, careful attention, and height."
"Height?"
"You'll notice that the girls who are assigned to that particular duty
are unusually tall. If the Germans were to somehow get their hands on the
personnel records for all of the people who work at Bletchley Park, and
graph their heights on a histogram, they would see a normal bell shaped
curve, representing most of the workers, with an abnormal bump on it
representing the unusual population of tall girls whom we have brought in to
work the plug boards."
"Yes, I see," Waterhouse says, "and someone like Rudy Dr. von
Hacklheber would notice the anomaly, and wonder about it."
"Precisely," Chattan says. "And it would then be the job of Detachment
2702 the Ultra Mega Group to plant false information that would throw your
friend Rudy off the scent." Chattan turns away from the window, strolls over
to his desk, and opens a large cigarette box, neatly stacked with fresh
ammunition. He offers one to Waterhouse with a deft hand gesture, and
Waterhouse accepts it, just to be social. As Chattan is giving him a light,
he gazes through the flame into Waterhouse's eye and says, 'I put it to you
now. How would you go about concealing from your friend Rudy that we had a
lot of tall girls here?'
"Assuming that he already had the personnel records?"
"Yes."
"Then it would be too late to conceal anything."
"Granted. Let us instead assume that he has some channel of information
that is bringing him these records, a few at a time. This channel is still
open and functioning. We cannot shut it down. Or perhaps we choose not to
shut it down, because even the absence of this channel will tell Rudy
something important."
"Well, there you go then," Waterhouse says. "We gin up some false
personnel records and plant them in the channel."
There is a small chalkboard on the wall of Chattan's office. It is a
palimpsest, not very well erased; the housekeeping detail here must have a
standing order never to clean it, lest something important be lost. As
Waterhouse approaches it, he can see older calculations layered atop each
other, fading off into the blackness like transmissions of white light
propagating into deep space.
He recognizes Alan's handwriting all over the place. It takes a
physical effort not to stand there and try to reconstruct Alan's
calculations from the ghosts lingering on the slate. He draws over them only
with reluctance.
Waterhouse slashes an abscissa and an ordinate onto the board, then
sweeps out a bell shaped curve. On top of the curve, to the right of the
peak, he adds a little hump.
"The tall girls," he explains. "The problem is this notch." He points
to the valley between the main peak and the bump. Then he draws a new peak
high and wide enough to cover both:
"We can do that by planting fake personnel records in Rudy's channel,
giving heights that are taller than the overall average, but shorter than
the bombe girls."
"But now you've dug yourself another hole," Chattan says. He is leaning
back in his officer's swivel chair, holding the cigarette in front of his
face, regarding Waterhouse through a motionless cloud of smoke.
Waterhouse says, "The new curve looks a little better because I filled
in that gap, but it's not really bell shaped. It doesn't tail off right, out
here at the edges. Dr. von Hacklheber will notice that. He'll realize that
someone's been tampering with his channel. To prevent that from happening I
would have to plant more fake records, giving some unusually large and small
values."
"Invent some fake girls who were exceptionally short or tall," Chattan
says.
"Yes. That would make the curve tail off in the way that it should.'
Chattan continues to look at him expectantly.
Waterhouse says, "So, the addition of a small number of what would
otherwise be bizarre anomalies makes it all look perfectly normal."
"As I said," Chattan says, "our squad is in North Africa even as we
speak widening the bell curve. Making it all look perfectly normal."
Chapter 15 MEAT
Okay, so Private First Class Gerald Hott, late of Chicago, Illinois,
did not exactly shoot up through the ranks during his fifteen year tenure in
the United States Army. He did, how ever, carve a bitchin' loin roast. He
was as deft with a boning knife as Bobby Shaftoe is with a bayonet. And who
is to say that a military butcher, by conserving the limited resources of a
steer's carcass and by scrupulously observing the mandated sanitary
practices, might not save as many lives as a steely eyed warrior? The
military is not just about killing Nips, Krauts, and Dagoes. It is also
about killing livestock and eating them. Gerald Hott was a front line
warrior who kept his freezer locker as clean as an operating room and so it
is only fitting that he has ended up there.
Bobby Shaftoe makes this little elegy up in his head as he is shivering
in the sub Arctic chill of a formerly French, and now U.S. Army, meat locker
the size and temperature of Greenland, surrounded by the earthly remains of
several herds of cattle and one butcher. He has attended more than a few
military funerals during his brief time in the service, and has always been
bowled over by the skill of the chaplains in coming up with moving elegies
for the departed. He has heard rumors that when the military inducts 4 Fs
who are discovered to have brains, it teaches them to type and assigns them
to sit at desks and type these things out, day after day. Nice duty if you
can get it.
The frozen carcasses dangle from meathooks in long rows. Bobby Shaftoe
gets tenser and tenser as he works his way up and down the aisles, steeling
himself for the bad thing he is about to see. It is almost preferable when
your buddy's head suddenly explodes just as he is puffing his cigarette into
life buildup like this can drive you nuts.
Finally he rounds the end of a row and discovers a man slumbering on
the floor, locked in embrace with a pork carcass, which he was apparently
about to butcher at the time of his death. He has been there for about
twelve hours now and his body temp is hovering around minus ten degrees
Fahrenheit.
Bobby Shaftoe squares himself to face the body and draws a deep breath
of frosty, meat scented air. He clasps his cyanotic hands in front of his
chest in a manner that is both prayerful and good for warming them up. "Dear
Lord," he says out loud. His voice does not echo; the carcasses soak it up.
"Forgive this marine for these, his duties, which he is about to perform,
and while you are at it, by all means forgive this marine's superiors whom
You in Your infinite wisdom have seen fit to bless him with, and forgive
their superiors for getting the whole deal together."
He considers going on at some length but finally decides that this is
no worse than bayonetting Nips and so let's get on with it. He goes to the
locked bodies of PFC Gerald Hott and Frosty the Pig and tries to separate
them without success. He squats by them and gives the former a good look.
Hott is blond. His eyes are half closed, and when Shaftoe shines a
flashlight into the slit, he can see a glint of blue. Hott is a big man,
easily two twenty five in fighting trim, easily two fifty now. Life in a
military kitchen does not make it easy for a fellow to keep his weight down,
or (unfortunately for Hott) his cardiovascular system in any kind of
dependable working order.
Hott and his uniform were both dry when the heart attack happened, so
thank god the fabric is not frozen onto the skin. Shaftoe is able to cut
most of it off with several long strokes of his exquisitely sharpened V 44
"Gung Ho" knife. But the V 44's machetelike nine and a half inch blade is
completely inappropriate for close infighting viz., the denuding of the
armpits and groin and he was told to be careful about inflicting scratches,
so there he has to break out the USMC Marine Raider stiletto, whose slender
double edged seven and a quarter inch blade might have been designed for
exactly this sort of procedure, though the fish shaped handle, which is made
of solid metal, begins freezing to the sweaty palm of Shaftoe's hand after a
while.
Lieutenant Ethridge is hovering outside the locker's tomblike door.
Shaftoe barges past him and heads straight for the building's exit, ignoring
Ethridge's queries: "Shaftoe? How 'bout it?"
He does not stop until he is out of the shade of the building. The
North African sunshine breaks over his body like a washtub of morphine. He
closes his eyes and turns his face into it, holds his frozen hands up to cup
the warmth and let it trickle down his forearms, drip from his elbows.
"How 'bout it?" Ethridge says again.
Shaftoe opens his eyes and looks around.
The harbor's a blue crescent with miles of sere jetties snaking around
each other like diagrams of dance steps. One of them's covered with worn
stumps of ancient bastions and next to it a French battleship lies half
sunk, still piping smoke and steam into the air. All around it, the ships of
Operation Torch are unloading shit faster than you can believe. Cargo nets
rise from the holds of the transports and splat onto the quays like giant
loogies. Longshoremen haul, trucks carry, troops march, French girls smoke
Yankee cigarettes, Algerians propose joint ventures.
Between those ships, and the Army's meat operation, up here on this
rock, is what Bobby Shaftoe takes to be the City of Algiers. To his
discriminating Wisconsinan eye it does not appear to have been built so much
as swept up on the hillside by a tidal wave. A lot of acreage has been
devoted to keeping the fucking sun off, so from above, it has a shuttered up
look about it lots of red tile, decorated with flowers and Arabs. Looks like
a few modern concrete structures (e.g. this meat locker) have been thrown up
by the French in the wake of some kind of vigorous slum clearing offensive.
Still, there's a lot of slums left to be cleared target number one being
this human beehive or anthill just off to Shaftoe's left, the Casbah, they
call it. Maybe it's a neighborhood. Maybe it's a single poorly organized
building. Has to be seen to be believed. Arabs packed into the place like
fraternity pledges into a telephone booth.
Shaftoe turns around and looks again at the meat locker, which is
dangerously exposed to enemy air attack here, but no one gives a fuck
because who cares if the Krauts blow up a bunch of meat?
Lieutenant Ethridge, almost as desperately sunburned as Bobby Shaftoe,
squints.
"Blond," Shaftoe says.
"Okay."
"Blue eyed."
"Good."
"Anteater not mushroom."
"Huh?"
"He's not circumcised, sir!"
"Excellent! How 'bout the other thing?"
"One tattoo, sir!"
Shaftoe is enjoying the slow buildup of tension in Ethridge's voice:
"Describe the tattoo, Sergeant!"
"Sir! It is a commonly seen military design, sir! Consisting of a heart
with a female's name in it."
"What is that name, Sergeant?" Ethridge is on the verge of pissing his
pants.
"Sir! The name inscribed on the tattoo is the following name: Griselda.
Sir!"
"Aaaah!" Lieutenant Ethridge lets loose deep from the diaphragm. Veiled
women turn and look. Over in that Casbah, starved looking, shave needing
ragheads lean out of spindly towers yodeling out of key.
Ethridge shuts up and contents himself with clenching his fists until
they go white. When he speaks again, his voice is hushed with emotion.
"Battles have hinged on lesser strokes of luck than this one, Sergeant!"
"You're telling me!?" Shaftoe says. "When I was on Guadalcanal, sir, we
got trapped in this little cove and pinned down "
"I don't want to hear the lizard story, Sergeant!"
"Sir! Yes, sir!"
***
Once when Bobby Shaftoe was still in Oconomowoc, he had to help his
brother move a mattress up a stairway and learned new respect for the
difficulty of manipulating heavy but floppy objects. Hott, may God have
mercy on his soul, is a heavy S.O.B., and so it is excellent luck that he is
frozen solid. After the Mediterranean sun has its way with him, he is sure
enough going to be floppy. And then some.
All of Shaftoe's men are down in the detachment's staging area. This is
a cave built into a sheer artificial cliff that rises from the
Mediterranean, just above the docks. These caves go on for miles and there
is a boulevard running over the top of them. But even the approaches to
their particular cave have been covered with tents and tarps so that no one,
not even Allied troops, can see what they are up to: namely, looking for any
equipment with 2701 painted on it, painting over the last digit, and
changing it to 2. The first operation is handled by men with green paint and
the second by men with white or black paint.
Shaftoe picks one man from each color group so that the operation as a
whole will not be disrupted. The sun is stunningly powerful here, but in
that cavern, with a cool maritime breeze easing through, it's not really
that bad. The sharp smell of petroleum distillates comes off all of those
warm painted surfaces. To Bobby Shaftoe, it is a comforting smell, because
you never paint stuff when you're in combat. But the smell also makes him a
little tingly, because you frequently paint stuff just before you go into
combat.
Shaftoe is about to brief his three handpicked Marines on what is to
come when the private with black paint on his hands, Daniels, looks past him
and smirks. "What's the lieutenant looking for now do you suppose, Sarge?"
he says.
Shaftoe and Privates Nathan (green paint) and Branph (white) look over
to see that Ethridge has gotten sidetracked. He is going through the
wastebaskets again.
"We have all noticed that Lieutenant Ethridge seems to think it is his
mission in life to go through wastebaskets," Sergeant Shaftoe says in a low,
authoritative voice. "He is an Annapolis graduate."
Ethridge straightens up and, in the most accusatory way possible, holds
up a fistful of pierced and perforated oaktag. "Sergeant! Would you identify
this material?"
"Sir! It is general issue military stencils, Sir!"
"Sergeant! How many letters are there in the alphabet?"
"Twenty six, sir!" responds Shaftoe crisply.
Privates Daniels, Nathan and Branph whistle coolly at each other this
Sergeant Shaftoe is sharp as a tack.
"Now, how many numerals?"
"Ten, sir!"
"And of the thirty six letters and numerals, how many of them are
represented by unused stencils in this wastebasket?"
"Thirty five, sir! All except for the numeral 2, which is the only one
we need to carry out your orders, sir!"
"Have you forgotten the second part of my order, Sergeant?"
"Sir, yes, sir!" No point in lying about it. Officers actually like it
when you forget their orders because it reminds them of how much smarter
they are than you. It makes them feel needed.
"The second part of my order was to take strict measures to leave
behind no trace of the changeover!"
"Sir, yes, I do remember that now, sir!"
Lieutenant Ethridge, who was just a bit huffy first, has now calmed
down quite a bit, which speaks well of him and is duly, silently noted by
all of the men, who have known him for less than six hours. He is now
speaking calmly and conversationally, like a friendly high school teacher.
He is wearing the heavy rimmed black military eyeglasses known in the trade
as RPGs, or Rape Prevention Glasses. They are strapped to his head by a hunk
of black elastic. They make him look like a mental retard. "If some enemy
agent were to go through the contents of this wastebasket, as enemy agents
have been known to do, what would he find?"
"Stencils sir!"
"And if he were to count the numerals and letters, would he notice
anything unusual?"
"Sir! All of them would be clean except for the numeral twos which
would be missing or covered with paint, sir!"
Lieutenant Ethridge says nothing for a few minutes, allowing his
message to sink in. In reality no one knows what the fuck he is talking
about. The atmosphere becomes tinderlike until finally, Sergeant Shaftoe
makes a desperate stab. He turns away from Ethridge and towards the men. "I
want you Marines to get paint on all of those goddamn stencils!" he barks.
The Marines charge the wastebaskets as if they were Nip pillboxes, and
Lieutenant Ethridge seems mollified. Bobby Shaftoe, having scored massive
points, leads Privates Daniels, Nathan, and Branph out into the street
before Lieutenant Ethridge figures out that he was just guessing. They head
for the meat locker up on the ridge, double time.
These Marines are all lethal combat veterans or else they never would
have gotten into a mess this bad trapped on a gratuitously dangerous
continent (Africa) surrounded by the enemy (United States Army troops).
Still, when they get into that locker and take their first gander at PFC
Hott, a hush comes over them.
Private Branph clasps his hands, rubbing them together surreptitiously.
"Dear Lord "
"Shut up, Private!" Shaftoe says, "I already did that."
"Okay, Sarge."
"Go find a meat saw!" Shaftoe says to Private Nathan.
The privates all gasp.
"For the fucking pig!" Shaftoe clarifies. Then he turns to Private
Daniels, who is carrying a featureless bundle, and says, "Open it up!"
The bundle (which was issued by Ethridge to Shaftoe) turns out to
contain a black wetsuit. Nothing GI; some kind of European model. Shaftoe
unfolds it and examines its various parts while Privates Nathan and Branph
dismember Frosty the Pig with vigorous strokes of an enormous bucksaw.
They are all working away silently when a new voice interrupts. "Dear
Lord," the voice begins, as they all look up to see a man standing nearby,
hands clasped prayerfully. His words, sacramentally condensed into an
outward and visible cloud of steam, veil his face. His uniform and rank are
obscured by an Army blanket thrown over his shoulders. He'd look like a
camel riding Holy Land prophet if he were not clean shaven and wearing Rape
Prevention Glasses.
"Goddamn it!" Shaftoe says. "I already said a fucking prayer."
"But are we praying for Private Hott, or for ourselves?" the man says.
This is a poser. Everything becomes quiet as the meat saw stops moving.
Shaftoe drops the wetsuit and stands up. Blanket Man's got very short
grizzly hair, or maybe that's frost coalescing on his scalp. His ice colored
eyes meet Shaftoe's through the mile thick lenses of his RPGs, as if he's
really expecting an answer. Shaftoe takes a step closer and realizes that
the man is wearing a clerical collar.
"You tell me, Rev," Shaftoe says.
Then he recognizes Blanket Man. He's about to let fly with a lusty What
in the fuck are you doing here, but something makes him hold back. The
chaplain's eyes make a sideways dart so small and so fast that only Shaftoe,
who's practically rubbing noses with him, could possibly see it.
The message being: Shut up, Bobby, we'll talk later.
"Private Hott is with God now or wherever people go after they die,"
says Enoch "You can call me Brother" Root.
"What kind of an attitude is that!? Course he's with God. Jesus Christ!
'Wherever they go when they die.' What kind of a chaplain are you?"
"I guess I'm a Detachment 2702 kind of chaplain," the chaplain says.
Lieutenant Enoch Root finally breaks eye contact with Shaftoe and turns his
gaze to where the action is. "As you were, fellows," he says. "Looks like
bacon tonight, huh?"
The men chuckle nervously and resume sawing.
Once they get the pig's carcass disentangled from Hott's, each of the
Marines grabs a limb. They carry Hott out into the butcher shop, which has
been temporarily evacuated for purposes of this operation, so that Hott's
former comrades in shanks will not spread rumors.
Hasty evacuation of a butcher shop after one of its workers has been
found dead on the floor could spawn a few rumors in and of itself. So the
cover story du jour, freshly spun by Lieutenant Ethridge, is that Detachment
2702 is (contrary to all outward appearances) an elite, crack medical team
concerned that Hott had been struck down by a rare new form of North African
food poisoning. Maybe even something deliberately left behind by the French,
who are, by accounts, a little irritable about having their battleship sunk.
Anyway, the whole shop (the story goes) has to be shut down for the day and
gone over with a nit comb. Hott's corpse will be cremated before being sent
back to the family, just to make sure that the dreaded affliction does not
spread into Chicago the planetary abbatoir capital where its incalculable
consequences could alter the outcome of the war.
There is a GI coffin laid out on the floor, just to preserve the
fiction. Shaftoe and his men ignore it completely and begin dressing the
body, first in an appalling pair of swim trunks, then various components of
the wetsuit.
"Hey!" Ethridge says. "I thought you were going to do the gloves last."
"Sir, we're doing them first, by your leave, sir!" Bobby Shaftoe says.
"On account of his fingers will thaw out first and once that happens we
are screwed, sir!"
"Well, slap this on him first," Ethridge says, and hands over a wrist
watch. Shaftoe hefts it and whistles. It's a beaut: a Swiss chronometer in
solid uranium, its jewel laden movement throbbing away like the heart beat
of a small mammal. He swings it on the end of its wristband, made in
cunningly joined armor plates. It is heavy enough to stun a muskellunge.
"Nice," Shaftoe says, "but it doesn't tell time too good."
"In the time zone where we are going," Ethridge says, "it does."
The chastened Shaftoe sets about his work. Meanwhile, Lieutenants
Ethridge and Root are making themselves useful. They carry the crudely sawed
remains of Frosty the Pig into the butcher shop and throw them on a gigantic
scale. They add up to some thirty kilograms, whatever the fuck that means.
Enoch Root, showing an appetite for physical labor that is duly and silently
noted by the men, hauls in another pig carcass, stiff as a Radio Flyer, and
dumps it onto the scale, bringing the total up to seventy. Ethridge does the
breaststroke through clouds of flies to gather up all the cuts of meat that
were on the chopping blocks when the place was evacuated. He throws them on
the scale and the needle swings up to near the one hundred mark. From that
point they are able to bring it up to one thirty by ferrying hams and roasts
in from the freezer one at a time. Enoch Root who seems to be conversant
with exotic systems of measurement has made a calculation, and checked it
twice, establishing that the weight of Gerald Hott, converted into
kilograms, is one hundred and thirty.
All the meat goes into the coffin. Ethridge slams the lid shut,
trapping some flies who have no idea what they are in for. Root goes around
with a clawhammer, driving in sixteen penny nails with sure, powerful,
Carpenter of Nazareth like strokes. Meanwhile, Ethridge has taken a GI
manual out of his briefcase. Shaftoe is close enough to read the title,
printed in block letters on its olive drab cover:
COFFIN SEALING PROCEDURES
PART III: TROPICAL ENVIRONMENTS
VOL. II: HIGH DISEASE RISK SITUATIONS (BUBONIC PLAGUE, ETC.)
The two lieutenants devote a good hour to following the instructions in
that manual. The instructions are not that complicated, but Enoch Root keeps
noticing syntactical ambiguities and wants to explore their ramifications.
First this rattles Ethridge, then his emotions tend towards impatience and,
finally, extreme pragmatism. To make the chaplain shut up, Ethridge
confiscates the manual and starts Root on stenciling Hott's name on the
coffin and pasting it up with red stickers printed with medical warnings so
appalling that the topic headings alone induce faint nausea. By the time
Root is finished, the only person who can legally open this coffin is
General George C. Marshall himself, and even he would have to first get
special permission from the Surgeon General and evacuate all living things
within a hundred mile radius.
"Chaplain talks kind of funny," says Private Nathan at one point,
listening, slackjawed, to one of these Root/Ethridge debates.
"Yeah!" exclaims Private Branph, as if the accent took a really keen
listener to notice. "What kind of an accent is that anyway?"
All eyes turn to Bobby Shaftoe, who pretends to listen for a bit and
then says, "Well, fellas, I would guess that this Enoch Root is the
offspring of a long line of Dutch and possibly German missionaries in the
South Sea Islands, interbred with Aussies. And furthermore, I would guess
that being as how he grew up in territories controlled by the British that
he carries a British passport and was drafted into their military when the
war started and is now part of ANZAC."
"Haw!" roars Private Daniels, "if you got all of that right, I'll give
you five bucks ."
"Deal," Shaftoe says.
Ethridge and Root finish sealing the coffin at about the same time
Shaftoe and his Marines are wrestling the last bits of the wetsuit into
place. It takes a shitload of talcum powder, but they get it done. Ethridge
supplies them with the talcum powder, which is not GI talc; it is from
somewhere in Europe. Some of the letters on the label have pairs of dots
over them, which Shaftoe knows to be a characteristic of the German
language.
A truck backs up to the loading dock, smelling the fresh paint (it is a
Detachment 2702 truck). In go the sealed coffin and the now vulcanized dead
butcher.
"I'm going to stay behind and check the wastebaskets," Lieutenant
Ethridge tells Shaftoe. "I'll meet you at the airfield in one hour."
Shaftoe imagines one hour in the back of a hot truck with this cargo.
"You want me to keep him on ice, sir?" he asks.
Ethridge has to think about this one for a while. He sucks his teeth,
checks his watch, hems and haws. But when he finally answers, he sounds
definite. "Negative. It is imperative, for purposes of this mission, that we
now get him into a thawed mode."
PFC General Hott and his meat laden coffin occupy the center of the
truck's bed. The Marines sit to the sides, arranged like pallbearers.
Shaftoe finds himself staring across the carnage into the face of Enoch
Root, which is wearing an expression of forced nonchalance.
Shaftoe knows he ought to wait, but he just can't stand it. "What are
you doing here?" he finally says.
"The detachment is relocating," the Rev says. "Closer to the front."
"We just got off the fucking boat," Shaftoe says. "Of course we're
going closer to the goddamn front we can't go any farther unless we swim ."
"As long as we're pulling up stakes," Root says coolly, "I'll be coming
along for the ride."
"I don't mean that," Bobby Shaftoe says. "I mean, why should the
detachment have a chaplain?"
"You know the military," Root says. "Every unit has to have one."
"It's bad luck."
"It's bad luck to have a chaplain? Why?"
"It means the waffle butts are expecting a lot of funerals, is why."
"So you are taking the position that the only thing a cleric can do is
to preside over funerals? Interesting."
"And weddings and baptisms," Shaftoe says. All of the other Marines
chortle.
"Could it be you're feeling a little anxious about the unusual nature
of Detachment 2702's first mission?" Root inquires, casting a significant
glance at the late Hott, then staring directly into Shaftoe's eyes.
"Anxious? Listen, Rev, I done some things on Guadalcanal that make this
look like Emily Fucking Post."
All of the other Marines think this is a great line, but Root is
undeterred.
"Did you know why you were doing those things on Guadalcanal?"
"Sure! To stay alive."
"Do you know why you're doing this?"
"Fuck no."
"Doesn't that irritate you a little bit? Or are you too much of a
stupid jarhead to care?"
"Well, you kind of backed me into a corner there, Rev," Shaftoe says.
After a pause he goes on, "I'll admit to being a little curious.
"If there were someone in Detachment 2702 who could help answer your
questions about why, would that be useful?"
"I guess so," Shaftoe grumbles. "It just seems weird to have a
chaplain."
"Why does it seem weird?"
"Because of what kind of unit this is."
"What kind of unit is it?" Root asks. He asks it with a certain
sadistic pleasure.
"We're not supposed to talk about it," Shaftoe says. "And anyway, we
don't know."
Down the hill, immense zigzagging ramps descend pompously over rows of
tiger striped arches to the strand of ramifying railway lines that feed the
port from the south. "It's like standing in the drain of a fucking pinball
machine," says B. Shaftoe, looking up at the way they have just come,
thinking about what might come rolling down out of the Casbah. They head
south along those railway lines and come into a zone of ore dumps and coal
heaps and smokestacks, clearly recognizable to Great Lakes Eagle Scout
Shaftoe, but here operated through some kind of cross cultured gear train
about a million meshings deep. They pull up in front of the Société
Algérienne d'Éclairage et de Force, a double smokestacked behemoth with the
biggest coal pile of all. They're in the middle of nowhere, but it's obvious
that they are expected. Here as everywhere else that Detachment 2702 goes a
strange Rank Inflation Effect is taking place. The coffin is carried into
the SAEF by two lieutenants, a captain, and a major, overseen by a colonel!
There is not a single enlisted man in sight, and Bobby Shaftoe, a mere
sergeant, worries about what sort of work they'll find for him. There is
also a Paperwork Negation Effect going on here; whenever Shaftoe expects to
be stalled by the usual half an hour's worth of red tape, an anxious officer
runs up and waves his hands furiously and he is allowed to proceed.
An Arab, wearing what appears to be a red coffee can on his head, hauls
an iron door open; flames lunge at him and he beats them back with a
blackened iron stick. The pallbearers center the head of the coffin in the
opening and then shove it through, like ramming a big shell home into a
sixteen inch gun, and the man with the can on his head clangs the door shut,
a tassel on the top of his can whipping around crazily. Before he's even got
it latched he's yodeling just like those guys up in the Casbah. The officers
all stand around agreeing with each other and signing their names on
clipboards.
So with a dearth of complications that can only strike combat veteran
Bobby Shaftoe as eerie, the truck leaves the Société Algérienne d'Éclairage
et de Force behind and heads back up those damn ramps into Algiers. The
climb's steep a first gear project all the way. Vendors with push carts
loaded with boiling oil are not only keeping up with them but cooking
fritters along the way. Three legged dogs run and fight underneath the
actual drive train of the truck. Detachment 2702 is also dogged by coffee
can wearing natives threatening to play guitars made of jerry cans, and by
orange vendors and snake charmers, and a few blue eyed burnoose wearers
holding up lumps of unwrapped and unlabelled dark stuff. Like hailstones,
these may be classified by analogy to fruits and sporting goods. Typically
they range from grape to baseball. At one point, the chaplain impulsively
trades a Hershey bar for a golf ball of the stuff.
"What is that? Chocolate?" Bobby Shaftoe asks.
"If it was chocolate," Root says, "that guy wouldn't have taken a
Hershey bar for it."
Shaftoe shrugs. "Unless it's shitty chocolate."
"Or shit!" blurts Private Nathan, provoking incredible hilarity.
"You heard of Mary Jane?" Root asks.
Shaftoe role model, leader of men stifles the impulse to say, Heard of
her? I've fucked her!
"This is the concentrated essence," says Enoch Root.
"How would you know, Rev?" says Private Daniels.
The Rev is not rattled. "I'm the God guy here, right? I know the
religious angle?"
"Yes, sir!"
"Well, at one time, there was a group of Muslims called the hashishin
who would eat this stuff and then go out and kill people. They were so good
at it, they became famous or infamous. Over time the pronunciation of the
name has changed we know them as assassins."
There is an appropriately respectful silence. Finally, Sergeant Shaftoe
says, "What the hell are we waiting for?"
They eat some. Shaftoe, being the highest ranking enlisted man present,
eats more than the others. Nothing happens. "Only person I feel like
assassinating is that guy who sold it to us," he says.
***
The airfield, eleven miles out of town, is busier than it was ever
intended to be. This is nice grape– and olive growing land, but stony
mountains are visible farther inland, and beyond 'em is a patch of sand the
size of the United States most of which seems to be airborne and headed
their way. Countless airplanes predominantly Dakota transports, a.k.a.
Gooney Birds stir up vast, tongue coating, booger nucleating dust clouds. It
doesn't occur to Shaftoe for quite some time that his dry eyes and mouth may
not be entirely the result of dust in the air. His saliva has the
consistency of tile adhesive.
The detachment is so damn secret that no one at the airfield even knows
that they exist. There are a lot of Brits here, and in the desert, Brits
wear shorts, which makes Shaftoe want to punch them in the nose. He controls
the urge. But his obvious hostility towards men in short pants, combined
with the fact that he is demanding to be pointed in the direction of a unit
that is so secret that he cannot specify it by name or even vaguely describe
it, leads to a lot of bafflement, a lot of incredulity, and generally gets
the Anglo American alliance off on the wrong foot.
Sergeant Shaftoe, however, now understands that anything to do with
this detachment is liable to be way off to one side, shrouded in black tarps
and awnings. Like any other military unit, Detachment 2702 is rich in some
supplies and poor in others, but they do appear to control about fifty
percent of last year's total U.S. tarpage production. When Shaftoe mentions
this fact, and goes on about it to his comrades at great length, some of the
men look at him a little funny. It's left to Enoch Root to say, "Between the
giant lizards and the black tarps some people might think you were acting a
little paranoid."
"Let me tell you about paranoid," Shaftoe says, and he does, not
forgetting to mention Lieutenant Ethridge and his wastebaskets. By the time
he's had his say, the whole detachment has assembled on the far side of
those tarps, and everyone is nice and tense except for their newest recruit,
who, as Shaftoe notes approvingly, is beginning to relax. Lying on the bed
of the truck in his wetsuit, he adjusts, rather than bounces, when they go
over bumps.
Even so, he is still stiff enough to simplify the problem of getting
him out of the truck and into their assigned Gooney Bird: a bare knuckled
variant of the DC 3, militarized and (to Shaftoe's skeptical eye) rendered
somewhat less than airworthy by a pair of immense cargo doors gouged into
one side, nearly cutting the airframe in half. This particular Dakota has
been flying around in the fucking desert so long that all the paint's been
sand blasted off its propeller blades, the engine cowling, and the leading
edges of the wings, leaving burnished metal that will make an inviting
silver gleam for any Luftwaffe pilots within three hundred miles. Worse:
diverse antennas sprout from the skin of the fuselage, mostly around the
cockpit. Not just whip antennas but great big damn barbecue grills that make
Shaftoe wish he had a hacksaw. They are eerily like the ones that Shaftoe
humped down the stairway from Station Alpha in Shanghai a memory that has
somehow gotten all mangled together, now, with the other images in his head.
When he tries to recollect it, all he can see is a bloodied Jesus carrying a
high frequency dual band dipole down a stone staircase in Manila, and he
knows that can't be right.
Though they are on the precincts of a busy airfield, Ethridge refuses
to let this operation go forward when there is as much as a single airplane
in the sky. Finally he says, "Okay, NOW!" In the truck, they lift the body
up, just in time to hear Ethridge shout, "No, WAIT!" at which point they put
him down again. Long after it has stopped being grimly amusing, they put a
tarp on Gerald Hott and get him carried on board, and shortly thereafter are
airborne. Detachment 2072 is headed for a rendezvous with Rommel.
Chapter 16 CYCLES
It is early in November of 1942 and a simply unbelievable amount of
shit is going on, all at once, everywhere. Zeus himself would not be able to
sort it all out, not even if he mobilized the caryatids tell them never mind
what we told you, just drop those loads. Temples collapsing everywhere, like
spyglasses, he'd send those caryatids and any naiads and dryads he could
scare up to library school, issue them green visors, dress them in the prim
asexual uniforms of the OPAMS, the Olympian Perspective Archive Management
Service, put them to work filling out three by five cards round the clock.
Get them to use some of that vaunted caryatid steadfastness to tend
Hollerith machines and ETC card readers. Even then, Zeus would probably
still lack a handle on the situation. He'd be so pissed off he would hardly
know which hubristical mortals to fling his thunderbolts at, nor which pinup
girls and buck privates to molest.
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse is as Olympian as anyone right now.
Roosevelt and Churchill and the few others on the Ultra Mega list have the
same access, but they have other cares and distractions. They can't wander
around the data flow capital of the planet, snooping over translators'
shoulders and reading the decrypts as they come, chunkity chunkity whirr,
out of the Typex machines. They cannot trace individual threads of the
global narrative at their whim, running from hut to hut patching connections
together, even as the WRENs in Hut 11 string patch cables from one bombe
socket to another, fashioning a web to catch Hitler's messages as they speed
through the ether.
Here are some of the things Waterhouse knows: the Battle of El Alamein
is won, and Montgomery is chasing Rommel westwards across Cyrenaica at what
looks like a breakneck pace, driving him back toward the distant Axis
stronghold of Tunis. But it's not the rout it appears to be. If Monty would
only grasp the significance of the intelligence coming through the Ultra
channel, he would be able to move decisively, to surround and capture large
pockets of Germans and Italians. But he never does, and so Rommel stages an
orderly retreat, preparing to fight another day, and plodding Monty is
roundly cursed in the watch rooms of Bletchley Park for his failure to
exploit their priceless but perishable gems of intelligence.
The largest sealift in history just piled into Northwest Africa. It is
called Operation Torch, and it's going to take Rommel from behind, serving
as anvil to Montgomery's hammer, or, if Monty doesn't pick up the pace a
bit, maybe the other way around. It looks brilliantly organized but it's not
really; this is the first time America has punched across the Atlantic in
any serious way and so a whole grab bag of stuff is included on those ships
including any number of signals intelligence geeks who are storming
theatrically onto the beaches as if they were Marines. Also included in the
landing is the American contingent of Detachment 2702 a hand picked wrecking
crew of combat hardened leathernecks.
Some of these Marines learned what they know on Guadalcanal, a
basically useless island in the Southwest Pacific where the Empire of Nippon
and the United States of America are disputing with rifles each other's
right to build a military airbase. Early returns suggest that the Nipponese
Army, during its extended tour of East Asia, has lost its edge. It would
appear that raping the entire female population of Nanjing, and bayoneting
helpless Filipino villagers, does not translate into actual military
competence. The Nipponese Army is still trying to work out some way to kill,
say, a hundred American Marines without losing, say, five hundred of its own
soldiers.
The Japanese Navy is a different story they know what they are doing.
They have Yamamoto. They have torpedoes that actually explode when they
strike their targets, in stark contrast to the American models which do
nothing but scratch the paint of the Japanese ships and then sink
apologetically. Yamamoto just made another attempt to wipe out the American
fleet off the Santa Cruz Islands, sank Hornet and blew a nice hole in
Enterprise. But he lost a third of his planes. Watching the Japanese rack up
losses, Waterhouse wonders if anyone in Tokyo has bothered to break out the
abacus and run the numbers on this Second World War thing.
The Allies are doing some math of their own, and they are scared
shitless. There are 100 German U boats in the Atlantic now, operating mostly
from Lorient and Bordeaux, and they are slaughtering convoys in the North
Atlantic with such efficiency that it's not even combat, just a Lusitanian
level murder spree. They are on a pace to sink something like a million tons
of shipping this month, which Waterhouse cannot really comprehend. He tries
to think of a ton as being roughly equivalent to a car, and then tries to
imagine America and Canada going out into the middle of the Atlantic and
simply dropping a million cars into the ocean just in November. Sheesh!
The problem is Shark.
The Germans call it Triton. It is a new cypher system, used exclusively
by their Navy. It is an Enigma machine, but not the usual three wheel
Enigma. The Poles learned how to break that old thing a couple of years ago,
and Bletchley Park industrialized the process. But more than a year ago, a
German U boat was beached intact on the south coast of Iceland and gone over
pretty thoroughly by men from Bletchley. They discovered an Enigma box with
niches for four not three wheels.
When the four wheel Enigma had gone into service on February 1st, the
entire Atlantic had gone black. Alan and the others have been going after
the problem very hard ever since. The problem is that they don't know how
the fourth wheel is wired up.
But a few days ago, another U boat was captured, more or less intact,
in the Eastern Mediterranean. Colonel Chattan, who happened to be in the
neighborhood, went there with sickening haste, along with some other
Bletchleyites. They recovered a four wheel Enigma machine, and though this
doesn't break the code, it gives them the data they need to break it.
Hitler must be feeling cocky, anyway, because he's on tour at the
moment, preparatory to a working vacation at his alpine retreat. That didn't
prevent him from taking over what was left of France apparently something
about Operation Torch really got his goat, so he occupied Vichy France in
its entirety, and then dispatched upwards of a hundred thousand fresh
troops, and a correspondingly stupendous amount of supplies, across the
Mediterranean to Tunisia. Waterhouse imagines that you must be able to cross
from Sicily to Tunisia these days simply by hopping from the deck of one
German transport ship to another.
Of course, if that were true, Waterhouse's job would be a lot easier.
The Allies could sink as many of those ships as they wanted to without
raising a single blond Teutonic eyebrow on the information theory front. But
the fact is that the convoys are few and far between. Just exactly how few
and how far between are parameters that go into the equations that he and
Alan Mathison Turing spend all night scribbling on chalkboards.
After a good eight or twelve hours of that, when the sun has finally
come up again, there's nothing like a brisk bicycle ride in the
Buckinghamshire countryside.
***
Spread out before them as they pump over the crest of the rise is a
woods that has turned all of the colors of flame. The hemispherical crowns
of the maples even contribute a realistic billowing effect. Lawrence feels a
funny compulsion to take his hands off the handlebars and clamp them over
his ears. As they coast into the trees, however, the air remains
delightfully cool, the blue sky above unsmudged by pillars of black smoke,
and the calm and quiet of the place could not be more different from what
Lawrence is remembering.
"Talk, talk, talk!" says Alan Turing, imitating the squawk of furious
hens. The strange noise is made stranger by the fact that he is wearing a
gas mask, until he becomes impatient and pulls it up onto his forehead.
"They love to hear themselves talk." He is referring to Winston Churchill
and Franklin Roosevelt. "And they don't mind hearing each other talk up to a
point, at least. But voice is a terribly redundant channel of information,
compared to printed text. If you take text and run it through an Enigma
which is really not all that complicated the familiar patterns in the text,
such as the preponderance of the letter E, become nearly undetectable." Then
he pulls the gas mask back over his face in order to emphasize the following
point: "But you can warp and permute voice in the most fiendish ways
imaginable and it will still be perfectly intelligible to a listener." Alan
then suffers a sneezing fit that threatens to burst the khaki straps around
his head.
"Our ears know how to find the familiar patterns," Lawrence suggests.
He is not wearing a gas mask because (a) there is no Nazi gas attack in
progress, and (b) unlike Alan, he does not suffer from hay fever.
"Excuse me." Alan suddenly brakes and jumps off his bicycle. He lifts
the rear wheel from the pavement, gives it a spin with his free hand, then
reaches down and gives the chain a momentary sideways tug. He is watching
the mechanism intently, interrupted by a few aftersneezes.
The chain of Turing's bicycle has one weak link. The rear wheel has one
bent spoke. When the link and the spoke come into contact with each other,
the chain will part and fall onto the road. This does not happen at every
revolution of the wheel otherwise the bicycle would be completely useless.
It only happens when the chain and the wheel are in a certain position with
respect to each other.
Based upon reasonable assumptions about the velocity that can be
maintained by Dr. Turing, an energetic bicyclist (let us say 25 km/hr) and
the radius of his bicycle's rear wheel (a third of a meter), if the chain's
weak link hit the bent spoke on every revolution, the chain would fall off
every one third of a second.
In fact, the chain doesn't fall off unless the bent spoke and the weak
link happen to coincide. Now, suppose that you describe the position of the
rear wheel by the traditional [theta]. Just for the sake of simplicity, say
that when the wheel starts in the position where the bent spoke is capable
of hitting the weak link (albeit only if the weak link happens to be there
to be hit) then [theta] = 0. If you're using degrees as your unit, then,
during a single revolution of the wheel, [theta] will climb all the way up
to 359 degrees before cycling back around to 0, at which point the bent
spoke will be back in position to knock the chain off And now suppose that
you describe the position of the chain with the variable C, in the following
very simple way: you assign a number to each link on the chain. The weak
link is numbered 0, the next is 1, and so on, up to l – 1 where l is
the total number of links in the chain. And again, for simplicity's sake,
say that when the chain is in the position where its weak link is capable of
being hit by the bent spoke (albeit only if the bent spoke happens to be
there to hit it) then C = 0.
For purposes of figuring out when the chain is going to fall off of Dr.
Turing's bicycle, then, everything we need to know about the bicycle is
contained in the values of [theta] and of C. That pair of numbers defines
the bicycle's state. The bicycle has as many possible states as there can be
different values of ([theta], C) but only one of those states, namely (0,
0), is the one that will cause the chain to fall off onto the road.
Suppose we start off in that state; i.e., with ([theta] = 0, C = 0),
but that the chain has not fallen off because Dr. Turing (knowing full well
his bicycle's state at any given time) has paused in the middle of road
(nearly precipitating a collision with his friend and colleague Lawrence
Pritchard Waterhouse, because his gas mask blocks his peripheral vision).
Dr. Turing has tugged sideways on the chain while moving it forward
slightly, preventing it from being hit by the bent spoke. Now he gets on the
bicycle again and begins to pedal forward. The circumference of his rear
wheel is about two meters, and so when he has moved a distance of two meters
down the road, the wheel has performed a complete revolution and reached the
position [theta] = 0 again that being the position, remember, when its bent
spoke is in position to hit the weak link.
What of the chain? Its position, defined by C, begins at 0 and reaches
1 when its next link moves forward to the fatal position, then 2 and so on.
The chain must move in synch with the teeth on the sprocket at the center of
the rear wheel, and that sprocket has n teeth, and so after a complete
revolution of the rear wheel, when [theta] = 0 again, C = n. After a second
complete revolution of the rear wheel, once again [theta] = 0 but now C =
2n. The next time it's C = 3n and so on. But remember that the chain is not
an infinite linear thing, but a loop having only l positions; at C = l it
loops back around to C = 0 and repeats the cycle. So when calculating the
value of C it is necessary to do modular arithmetic that is, if the chain
has a hundred links (l = 100) and the total number of links that have moved
by is 135, then the value of C is not 135 but 35. Whenever you get a number
greater than or equal to l you just repeatedly subtract l until you get a
number less than 1. This operation is written, by mathematicians, as mod I.
So the successive values of C, each time the rear wheel spins around to
[theta] = 0, are
[C sub i] = n mod l, 2n mod l, 3n mod l,...,in mod l
where i = (1, 2, 3, ... [infinity]) more or less, depending on how
close to infinitely long Turing wants to keep riding his bicycle. After a
while, it seems infinitely long to Waterhouse.
Turing's chain will fall off when his bicycle reaches the state
([theta] = 0, C = 0) and in light of what is written above, this will happen
when (which is just a counter telling how many times the rear wheel has
revolved) reaches some hypothetical value such that in mod l = 0, or, to put
it in plain language, it will happen if there is some multiple of n (such
as, oh, 2n, 3n, 395n or 109,948,368,443n) that just happens to be an exact
multiple of l too. Actually there might be several of these so called common
multiples, but from a practical standpoint the only one that matters is the
first one the least common multiple, or LCM because that's the one that will
be reached first and that will cause the chain to fall off.
If, say, the sprocket has twenty teeth (n 20) and the chain has a
hundred teeth (l 100) then after one turn of the wheel we'll have C 20,
after two turns C = 40, then 60, then 80, then 100. But since we are doing
the arithmetic modulo 100, that value has to be changed to zero. So after
five revolutions of the rear wheel, we have reached the state ([theta] = 0,
C = 0) and Turing's chain falls off. Five revolutions of the rear wheel only
gets him ten meters down the road, and so with these values of l and n the
bicycle is very nearly worthless. Of course, this is only true if Turing is
stupid enough to begin pedaling with his bicycle in the chain falling off
state. If, at the time he begins pedaling, it is in the state ([theta] = 0,
C = 1) instead, then the successive values will be C 21, 41, 61, 81, 1, 21,
. . . and so on forever the chain will never fall off. But this is a
degenerate case, where "degenerate," to a mathematician, means "annoyingly
boring." In theory, as long as Turing put his bicycle into the right state
before parking it outside a building, no one would be able to steal it the
chain would fall off after they had ridden for no more than ten meters.
But if Turing's chain has a hundred and one links (l = 101) then after
five revolutions we have C = 100, and after six we have C = 19, then
C = 39, 59, 79, 99, 18, 38, 58, 78, 98, 17, 37, 57, 77, 97, 16, 36, 56,
76, 96, 15, 35, 55, 75, 95, 14, 34, 54, 74, 94, 13, 33, 53, 73, 93, 12, 32,
52, 72, 92, 11, 31, 51, 71, 91, 10, 30, 50, 70, 90, 9, 29, 49, 69, 89, 8,
28, 48, 68, 88, 7, 27, 47, 67, 87, 6, 26, 46, 66, 86, 5, 25, 45, 65, 85, 4,
24, 44, 64, 84, 3, 23, 43, 63, 83, 2, 22, 42, 62, 82, 1, 21, 41, 61, 81, 0
So not until the 101st revolution of the rear wheel does the bicycle
return to the state ([theta] = 0, C = 0) where the chain falls off. During
these hundred and one revolutions, Turing's bicycle has proceeded for a
distance of a fifth of a kilometer down the road, which is not too bad. So
the bicycle is usable. However, unlike in the degenerate case, it is not
possible for this bicycle to be placed in a state where the chain never
falls off at all. This can be proved by going through the above list of
values of C, and noticing that every possible value of C every single number
from 0 to 100 is on the list. What this means is that no matter what value C
has when Turing begins to pedal, sooner or later it will work its way round
to the fatal C = 0 and the chain will fall off. So Turing can leave his
bicycle anywhere and be confident that, if stolen, it won't go more than a
fifth of a kilometer before the chain falls off.
The difference between the degenerate and nondegenerate cases has to do
with the properties of the numbers involved. The combination of (n = 20, I =
100) has radically different properties from (n = 20, l = 101). The key
difference is that 20 and 101 are "relatively prime" meaning that they have
no factors in common. This means that their least common multiple, their
LCM, is a large number it is, in fact, equal to l x n = 20 x 101 = 2020.
Whereas the LCM of 20 and 100 is only 100. The 101 bicycle has a long period
– it passes through many different states before returning back to the
beginning whereas the l = 100 bicycle has a period of only a few states.
Suppose that Turing's bicycle were a cipher machine that worked by
alphabetic substitution, which is to say that it would replace each of the
26 letters of the alphabet with some other letter. An A in the plaintext
might become a T in the ciphertext, B might become F, C might be come M, and
so on all the way through to Z. In and of itself this would be an absurdly
easy cipher to break kids in treehouses stuff. But suppose that the
substitution scheme changed from one letter to the next. That is, suppose
that after the first letter of the plaintext was enciphered using one
particular substitution alphabet, the second letter of plaintext was
enciphered using a completely different substitution alphabet, and the third
letter a different one yet, and so on. This is called a polyalphabetic
cipher.
Suppose that Turing's bicycle were capable of generating a different
alphabet for each one of its different states. So the state ([theta] = 0, C
= 0) would correspond to, say, this substitution alphabet:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Q G U W B I Y T F K V N D O H E P X L Z R C A S J M
but the state ([theta] = 180, C = 15) would correspond to this
(different) one:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
B O R I X V G Y P F J M T C Q N H A Z U K L D S E W
No two letters would be enciphered using the same substitution alphabet
until, that is, the bicycle worked its way back around to the initial state
([theta] = 0, C = 0) and began to repeat the cycle. This means that it is a
periodic polyalphabetic system. Now, if this machine had a short period, it
would repeat itself frequently, and would therefore be useful, as an
encryption system, only against kids in treehouses. The longer its period
(the more relative primeness is built into it) the less frequently it cycles
back to the same substitution alphabet, and the more secure it is.
The three wheel Enigma is just that type of system (i.e., periodic
polyalphabetic). Its wheels, like the drive train of Turing's bicycle,
embody cycles within cycles. Its period is 17,576, which means that the
substitution alphabet that enciphers the first letter of a message will not
be used again until the 17,577th letter is reached. But with Shark the
Germans have added a fourth wheel, bumping the period up to 456,976. The
wheels are set in a different, randomly chosen starting position at the
beginning of each message. Since the Germans' messages are never as long as
450,000 characters, the Enigma never reuses the same substitution alphabet
in the course of a given message, which is why the Germans think it's so
good.
A flight of transport planes goes over them, probably headed for the
aerodrome at Bedford. The planes make a weirdly musical diatonic hum, like
bagpipes playing two drones at once. This reminds Lawrence of yet another
phenomenon related to the bicycle wheel and the Enigma machine. "Do you know
why airplanes sound the way they do?" he says.
"No, come to think of it." Turing pulls his gas mask off again. His jaw
has gone a bit slack and his eyes are darting from side to side. Lawrence
has caught him out.
"I noticed it at Pearl. Airplane engines are rotary," Lawrence says.
"Consequently they must have an odd number of cylinders."
"How does that follow?"
"If the number were even, the cylinders would be directly opposed, a
hundred and eighty degrees apart, and it wouldn't work out mechanically."
"Why not?"
"I forgot. It just wouldn't work out."
Alan raises his eyebrows, clearly not convinced.
"Something to do with cranks," Waterhouse ventures, feeling a little
defensive.
"I don't know that I agree," Alan says.
"Just stipulate it think of it as a boundary condition," Waterhouse
says. But Alan is already hard at work, he suspects, mentally designing a
rotary aircraft engine with an even number of cylinders.
"Anyway, if you look at them, they all have an odd number of
cylinders," Lawrence continues. "So the exhaust noise combines with the
propeller noise to produce that two tone sound."
Alan climbs back onto his bicycle and they ride into the woods for some
distance without any more talking. Actually, they have not been talking so
much as mentioning certain ideas and then leaving the other to work through
the implications. This is a highly efficient way to communicate; it
eliminates much of the redundancy that Alan was complaining about in the
case of FDR and Churchill.
Waterhouse is thinking about cycles within cycles. He's already made up
his mind that human society is one of these cycles within cycles things
(1) and now he's trying to figure out whether it is like Turing's
bicycle (works fine for a while, then suddenly the chain falls off, hence
the occasional world war) or like an Enigma machine (grinds away
incomprehensibly for a long time, then suddenly the wheels line up like a
slot machine and everything is made plain in some sort of global epiphany
or, if you prefer, apocalypse) or just like a rotary airplane engine (runs
and runs and runs; nothing special happens; it just makes a lot of noise).
"It's somewhere around . . . here!" Alan says, and violently brakes to
a stop, just to chaff Lawrence, who has to turn his bicycle around, a chancy
trick on such a narrow lane, and loop back.
They lean their bicycles against trees and remove pieces of equipment
from the baskets: dry cells, electronic breadboards, poles, a trenching
tool, loops of wire. Alan looks about somewhat uncertainly and then strikes
off into the woods.
"I'm off to America soon, to work on this voice encryption problem at
Bell Labs," Alan says.
Lawrence laughs ruefully. "We're ships passing in the night, you and
I."
"We are passengers on ships passing in the night," Alan corrects him.
"It is no accident. They need you precisely because I am leaving. I've been
doing all of the 2701 work to this point."
"It's Detachment 2702 now," Lawrence says.
"Oh," Alan says, crestfallen. "You noticed."
"It was reckless of you, Alan."
"On the contrary!" Alan says. "What will Rudy think if he notices that,
of all the units and divisions and detachments in the Allied order of
battle, there is not a single one whose number happens to be the product of
two primes?"
"Well, that depends upon how common such numbers are compared to all of
the other numbers, and on how many other numbers in the range are going
unused . . ." Lawrence says, and begins to work out the first half of the
problem. "Riemann Zeta function again. That thing pops up everywhere."
"That's the spirit!" Alan says. "Simply take a rational and common
sense approach. They are really quite pathetic."
"Who?"
"Here," Alan says, slowing to a stop and looking around at the trees,
which to Lawrence look like all the other trees. "This looks familiar." He
sits down on the bole of a windfall and begins to unpack electrical gear
from his bag. Lawrence squats nearby and does the same. Lawrence does not
know how the device works it is Alan's invention and so he acts in the role
of surgical assistant, handing tools and supplies to the doctor as he puts
the device together. The doctor is talking the entire time, and so he
requests tools by staring at them fixedly and furrowing his brow.
"They are well, who do you suppose? The fools who use all of the
information that comes from Bletchley Park!"
"Alan!"
"Well, it is foolish! Like this Midway thing. That's a perfect example,
isn't it?"
"Well, I was happy that we won the battle," Lawrence says guardedly.
"Don't you think it's a bit odd, a bit striking, a bit noticeable, that
after all of Yamamoto's brilliant feints and deceptions and ruses, this
Nimitz fellow knew exactly where to go looking for him? Out of the entire
Pacific Ocean?"
"All right," Lawrence says, "I was appalled. I wrote a paper about it.
Probably the paper that got me into this mess with you."
"Well, it's no better with us Brits," Alan says.
"Really?"
"You would be horrified at what we've been up to in the Mediterranean.
It is a scandal. A crime.
"What have we been up to?" Lawrence asks. "I say 'we' rather than 'you'
because we are allies now."
"Yes, yes," Alan says impatiently. "So they claim." He paused for a
moment, tracing an electrical circuit with his finger, calculating
inductances in his head. Finally, he continues: "Well, we've been sinking
convoys, that's what. German convoys. We've been sinking them right and
left."
"Rommel's?"
"Yes, exactly. The Germans put fuel and tanks and ammunition on ships
in Naples and send them south. We go out and sink them. We sink nearly all
of them, because we have broken the Italian C38m cipher and we know when
they are leaving Naples. And lately we've been sinking just the very ones
that are most crucial to Rommel's efforts, because we have also broken his
Chaffinch cipher and we know which ones he is complaining loudest about not
having."
Turing snaps a toggle switch on his invention and a weird, looping
squeal comes from a dusty black paper cone lashed onto the breadboard with
twine. The cone is a speaker, apparently scavenged from a radio. There is a
broomstick with a loop of stiff wire dangling from the end, and a wire
running from that loop up the stick to the breadboard. He swings the
broomstick around until the loop is dangling, like a lasso, in front of
Lawrence's midsection. The speaker yelps.
"Good. It's picking up your belt buckle," Alan says.
He sets the contraption down in the leaves, gropes in several pockets,
and finally pulls out a scrap of paper on which several lines of text have
been written in block letters. Lawrence would recognize it anywhere: it is a
decrypt worksheet. "What's that, Alan?"
"I wrote out complete instructions and enciphered them, then hid them
under a bridge in a benzedrine container," Alan says. "Last week I went and
recovered the container and decyphered the instructions." He waves the paper
in the air.
"What encryption scheme did you use?"
"One of my own devising. You are welcome to take a crack at it, if you
like."
"What made you decide it was time to dig this stuff up?"
"It was nothing more than a hedge against invasion," Alan says.
"Clearly, we're not going to be invaded now, not with you chaps in the war."
"How much did you bury?"
"Two silver bars, Lawrence, each with a value of some hundred and
twenty five pounds. One of them should be very close to us." Alan stands up,
pulls a compass out of his pocket, turns to face magnetic north, and squares
his shoulders. Then he rotates a few degrees. "Can't remember whether I
allowed for declination," he mumbles. "Right! In any case. One hundred paces
north." And he strides off into the woods, followed by Lawrence, who has
been given the job of carrying the metal detector.
Just as Dr. Alan Turing can ride a bicycle and carry on a conversation
while mentally counting the revolutions of the pedals, he can count paces
and talk at the same time too. Unless he has lost count entirely, which
seems just as possible.
"If what you are saying is true," Lawrence says, "the jig must be up
already. Rudy must have figured out that we've broken their codes."
"An informal system has been in place, which might be thought of as a
precursor to Detachment 2701, or 2702 or whatever we are calling it," Alan
says. "When we want to sink a convoy, we send out an observation plane
first. It is ostensibly an observation plane. Of course, to observe is not
its real duty we already know exactly where the convoy is. Its real duty is
to be observed that is, to fly close enough to the convoy that it will be
noticed by the lookouts on the ships. The ships will then send out a radio
message to the effect that they have been sighted by an Allied observation
plane. Then, when we come round and sink them, the Germans will not find it
suspicious at least, not quite so monstrously suspicious that we knew
exactly where to go.
Alan stops, consults his compass, turns ninety degrees, and begins
pacing westwards.
"That strikes me as being a very ad hoc arrangement," Lawrence says.
"What is the likelihood that Allied observation planes, sent out purportedly
at random, will just happen to notice every single Axis convoy?"
"I've already calculated that probability, and I'll bet you one of my
silver bars that Rudy has done it too," Turing says. "It is a very small
probability."
"So I was right," Lawrence says, "we have to assume that the jig is
up."
"Perhaps not just yet," Alan says. "It has been touch and go. Last
week, we sank a convoy in the fog."
"In the fog?"
"It was foggy the whole way. The convoy could not possibly have been
observed. The imbeciles sank it anyway. Kesselring became suspicious, as
would anyone. So we ginned up a fake message in a cypher that we know the
Nazis have broken addressed to a fictitious agent in Naples. It
congratulated him on betraying that convoy to us. Ever since, the Gestapo
have been running rampant on the Naples waterfront, looking for the fellow."
"We dodged a bullet there, I'd say."
"Indeed." Alan stops abruptly, takes the metal detector from Lawrence,
and turns it on. He begins to walk slowly across a clearing, sweeping the
wire loop back and forth just above the ground. It keeps snagging on
branches and getting bent out of shape, necessitating frequent repairs, but
remains stubbornly silent the whole time, except when Alan, concerned that
it is no longer working, tests it on Lawrence's belt buckle.
"The whole business is delicate," Alan muses. "Some of our SLUs in
North Africa "
"SLUs?"
"Special Liaison Units. The intelligence officers who receive the Ultra
information from us, pass it on to field officers, and then make sure it is
destroyed. Some of them learned, from Ultra, that there was to be a German
air raid during lunch, so they took their helmets to the mess hall. When the
air raid came off as scheduled, everyone wanted to know why those SLUs had
known to bring their helmets."
"The entire business seems hopeless," Lawrence says. "How can the
Germans not realize?"
"It seems that way to us because we know everything and our channels of
communication are free from noise," Alan says. "The Germans have fewer, and
much noisier, channels. Unless we continue to do stunningly idiotic things
like sinking convoys in the fog, they will never receive any clear and
unmistakable indications that we have broken Enigma."
"It's funny you should mention Enigma," Lawrence says, "since that is
an extremely noisy channel from which we manage to extract vast amounts of
useful information."
"Precisely. Precisely why I am worried."
"Well, I'll do my best to spoof Rudy," Waterhouse says.
"You'll do fine. I'm worried about the men who are carrying out the
operations."
"Colonel Chattan seems pretty dependable," Waterhouse says, though
there's probably no point in continuing to reassure Alan. He's just in a
fretting mood. Once every two or three years, Waterhouse does something that
is socially deft, and now's the time: he changes the subject: "And
meanwhile, you'll be working it out so that Churchill and Roosevelt can have
secret telephone conversations?"
"In theory. I rather doubt that it's practical. Bell Labs has a system
that works by breaking the waveform down into several bands..." and then
Alan is off on the subject of telephone companies. He delivers a complete
dissertation on the subject of information theory as applied to the human
voice, and how that governs the way telephone systems work. It is a good
thing that Turing has such a large subject on which to expound, for the
woods are large, and it has become increasingly obvious to Lawrence that his
friend has no idea where the silver bars are buried.
Unburdened by any silver, the two friends ride home in darkness, which
comes surprisingly early this far north. They do not talk very much, for
Lawrence is still absorbing and digesting everything that Alan has disgorged
to him about Detachment 2702 and the convoys and Bell Labs and voice signal
redundancy. Every few minutes, a motorcycle whips past them, saddlebags
stuffed with encrypted message slips.
Chapter 17 ALOFT
Any way that livestock can travel, Bobby Shaftoe has too, boxcars, open
trucks, forced cross country marches. Military has now invented the airborne
equivalent of these in the form of the Plane of a Thousand Names: DC 3,
Skytrain, C 47, Dakota Transport, Gooney Bird. He'll survive. The exposed
aluminum ribs of the fuselage are trying to beat him to death, but as long
as he stays awake, he can fend them off.
The enlisted men are jammed into the other plane. Lieutenants Ethridge
and Root are in this one, along with PFC Gerald Hott and Sergeant Bobby
Shaftoe. Lieutenant Ethridge got dibs on all of the soft objects in the
plane and arranged them into a nest, up forward near the cockpit, and
strapped himself down. For a while he pretended to do paperwork. Then he
tried looking out the windows. Now he has fallen asleep and is snoring so
loudly that he is, no fooling, drowning out the engines.
Enoch Root has wedged himself into the back of the fuselage, where it
gets narrow, and is perusing two books at once. It strikes Shaftoe as
typical he supposes that the books say completely different things and that
the chaplain is deriving great pleasure from pitting them against each
other, like those guys who have a chessboard on a turntable so that they can
play against themselves. He supposes that when you live in a shack on a
mountain with a bunch of natives who don't speak any of your half dozen or
so languages, you have to learn to have arguments with yourself.
There's a row of small square windows on each side of the plane.
Shaftoe looks out to the right and sees mountains covered with snow and gets
scared shitless for a moment thinking maybe they've strayed into the Alps.
But off to the left, it still looks like the Mediterranean, and eventually
it gives way to Devil's Tower type outcroppings rising up out of stony
scrubland, and then after that it is just rocks and sand, or sand without
the rocks. Sand puckered here and there, for no particular reason, by
clutches of dunes. Damn it, they are still in Africa! You ought to be able
to see lions and giraffes and rhinos! Shaftoe goes forward to lodge a
complaint with the pilot and copilot. Maybe he can get a card game together.
Maybe the view out the front of the plane is something to write home about.
He is, on all counts, thrown back in stinging defeat. He sees
immediately that the project of finding a better view is doomed. There are
only three things in the whole universe: sand, sea, and sky. As a Marine, he
knows how boring the sea is. The other two are little better. There is a
line of clouds far ahead of them a front of some description. That's all
there is.
He gets a general notion of their flight plan before the chart is
snatched away and stashed out of his view. They seem to be attempting to fly
across Tunisia, which is kind of funny, because last time Shaftoe checked,
Tunisia was Nazi territory the anchor, in fact, of the Axis presence on the
African continent. Today's general flight plan seems to be that they'll cut
across the straits between Bizerta and Sicily, then head east to Malta.
All of Rommel's supplies and reinforcements come across those very
straits from Italy, and land at Tunis or Bizerta. From there, Rommel can
strike out east towards Egypt or west towards Morocco. In the several weeks
since the British Eighth Army kicked the crap out of him at El Alamein
(which is way, way over there in Egypt) he has been retreating westwards
back towards Tunis. In the few weeks since the Americans landed in Northwest
Africa, he's been fighting on a second front to his west. And Rommel has
been doing a damn good job of it, as far as Shaftoe can tell from listening
between the stentorian lines of the Movietone newsreels, so laden with
sinister cheer, whence the above facts were gleaned.
All this means that down below them, vast forces ought to be spread out
across the Sahara in readiness for combat. Perhaps there is even a battle
going on right now. But Shaftoe sees nothing. Just the occasional line of
yellow dust thrown up by a convoy, a dynamite fuse sputtering across the
desert.
So he talks to those flyboys. It's not until he notices them giving
each other looks that he realizes he's going on at great length. Those
Assassins must've killed their victims by talking them to death.
The card game, he realizes, is completely out of the question. These
flyboys don't want to talk. He practically has to dive in and grab the
control yoke to get them to say anything. And when they do, they sound
funny, and he realizes that these guys are not guys nor fellas. They are
blokes. Chaps. Mates. They are Brits.
The only other thing he notices about them, before he gives up and
slinks back into the cargo hold, is that they are fucking armed to the
teeth. Like they were expecting to have to kill twenty or thirty people on
their way from the airplane to the latrine and back. Bobby Shaftoe has met a
few of these paranoid types during his tour, and he doesn't like them very
much. That whole mindset reminds him too much of Guadalcanal.
He finds a place on the floor next to the body of PFC Gerald Hott and
stretches out. The teeny revolver in his waistband makes it impossible for
him to lie on his back, so he takes it out and pockets it. This only
transfers the center of discomfort to the Marine Raider stiletto holstered
invisibly between his shoulder blades. He realizes that he is going to have
to curl up on his side, which doesn't work because on one side he has a
standard issue Colt semiautomatic, which he doesn't trust, and on the other,
his own six shooter from home, which he does. So he has to find places to
stash those, along with the various ammo clips, speed loaders, and
maintenance supplies that go with them. The V 44 "Gung Ho" jungle clearing,
coconut splitting, and Nip decapitating knife, strapped to the outside of
his lower leg, also has to be removed, as does the derringer that he keeps
on the other leg for balance. The only thing that stays with him are the
grenades in his front pockets, since he doesn't plan to lie down on his
stomach.
They make their way around the headland just in time to avoid being
washed out to sea by the implacable tide. In front of them is a muddy tidal
flat, forming the floor of a box shaped cove. The walls of the box are
formed by the headland they've just gone round, another, depressingly
similar headland a few hundred yards along the shore, and a cliff rising
straight up out of the mudflats. Even if it were not covered with
relentlessly hostile tropical jungle, this cliff would seal off access to
the interior of Guadalcanal just because of its steepness. The Marines are
trapped in this little cove until the tide goes back out.
Which is more than enough time for the Nip machine gunner to kill them
all.
They all know the sound of the weapon by now and so they throw
themselves down to the mud instantly. Shaftoe takes a quick look around.
Marines lying on their backs or sides are probably dead, those on their
stomachs are probably alive. Most of them are on their stomachs. The
sergeant is conspicuously dead; the gunner aimed for him first.
The Nip or Nips have only one gun, but they seem to have all the
ammunition in the world the fruits of the Tokyo Express, which has been
coming down the Slot with impunity ever since Shaftoe and the rest of the
Marines landed early in August. The gunner rakes the mudflats leisurely,
zeroing in quickly on any Marine who tries to move.
Shaftoe gets up and runs towards the base of the cliff.
Finally, he can see the muzzle flashes from the Nip gun. This tells him
which way it's pointed. When the flashes are elongated it's pointed at
someone else, and it's safe to get up and run. When they become
foreshortened, it is swinging around to bear on Bobby Shaftoe He cuts it too
close. There is very bad pain in his lower right abdomen. His scream is
muffled by mud and silt as the weight of his web and helmet drive him face
first into the ground.
He loses consciousness for a while, perhaps. But it can't have been
that long. The firing continues, implying that the Marines are not all dead
yet. Shaftoe raises his head with difficulty, fighting the weight of the
helmet, and sees a log between him and the machine gun a piece of wave
burnished driftwood flung far up the beach by a storm.
He can run for it or not. He decides to run. It's only a few steps. He
realizes, halfway there, that he's going to make it. The adrenaline is
finally flowing; he lunges forward mightily and collapses in the shelter of
the big log. Half a dozen bullets thunk into the other side of it, and wet,
fibrous splinters shower down over him. The log is rotten.
Shaftoe has gotten himself into a bit of a hole, and cannot see forward
or back without exposing himself. He cannot see his fellow Marines, only
hear some of them screaming.
He risks a peek at the machine gun nest. It is well concealed by jungle
vegetation, but it is evidently built into a cave a good twenty feet above
the mudflat. He's not that far from the base of the cliff he might just
reach it with another sprint. But climbing up there is going to be murder.
The machine gun probably can't depress far enough to shoot down at him, but
they can roll grenades at him until the cows come home, or just pick him off
with small arms as he gropes for handholds.
It is, in other words, grenade launcher time. Shaftoe rolls onto his
back, extracts a flanged metal tube from his web gear, fits it onto the
muzzle of his ought three. He tries to clamp it down, but his fingers slip
on the bloody wing nut. Who's the pencil neck that decided to use a fucking
wing nut in this context? No point griping about it here and now. There is
actually blood all over the place, but he is not in pain. He drags his
fingers through the sand, gets them all gritty, tightens that wing nut down.
Out of its handy pouch comes one Mark II fragmentation grenade, a.k.a.
pineapple, and with a bit more groping he's got the Grenade Projection
Adapter, M1. He engages the former into the latter, yanks out the safety
pin, drops it, then slips the fully prepped and armed Grenade Projection
Adapter, Ml, with its fruity payload, over the tube of the grenade launcher.
Finally: he opens up one specially marked cartridge case, fumbles through
bent and ruptured Lucky Strikes, finds one brass cylinder, a round of
ammunition sans payload, crimped at the end but not endowed with an actual
bullet. Loads same into the Springfield's firing chamber.
He creeps along the log so that he can pop up and fire from an
unexpected location and perhaps not get his head chewed off by the machine
gun. Finally raises this Rube Goldberg device that his Springfield has
become, jams the butt into the sand (in grenade launcher mode the recoil
will break your collarbone), points it toward the foe, pulls the trigger.
Grenade Projection Adapter, M1 is gone with a terrible pow, trailing a damn
hardware store of now superfluous parts, like a soul discarding its corpse.
The pineapple is now soaring heavenward, even its pin and safety lever gone,
its chemical fuse aflame so that it even has a, whattayoucallit, an inner
light. Shaftoe's aim is true, and the grenade is heading where intended. He
thinks he's pretty damn smart until the grenade bounces back, tumbles down
the cliff, and blows up another rotten log. The Nips have anticipated Bobby
Shaftoe's little plan, and put up nets or chicken wire or something.
He lies on his back in the mud, looking up at the sky, saying the word
"fuck" over and over. The entire log throbs, and something akin to peat moss
showers down into his face as the bullets chew up the rotten wood. Bobby
Shaftoe says a prayer to the Almighty and prepares to mount a banzai charge.
Then the maddening sound of the machine gun stops, and is replaced by
the sound of a man screaming. His voice sounds unfamiliar. Shaftoe levers
himself up on his elbow and realizes that the screaming is coming from the
direction of the cave.
He looks up into the big, sky blue eyes of Enoch Root.
The chaplain has moved from his nook at the back of the plane and is
squatting next to one of the little windows, holding onto whatever he can.
Bobby Shaftoe, who has rolled uncomfortably onto his stomach, looks out a
window on the opposite side of the plane. He ought to see the sky, but
instead he sees a sand dune wheeling past. The sight makes him instantly
nauseated. He does not even consider sitting up.
Brilliant spots of light are streaking wildly around the inside of the
plane, like ball lightning, but and this is far from obvious at first they
are actually projected against the wall of the plane, like flashlight beams.
He back traces the beams, taking advantage of a light haze of vaporized
hydraulic fluid that has begun to accumulate in the air; and finds that they
originate in a series of small circular holes that some asshole has punched
through the skin of the plane while he was sleeping. The sun is shining
through these holes, always in the same direction of course; but the plane
is going every which way.
He realizes that he has actually been lying on the ceiling of the
airplane ever since he woke up, which explains why he was on his stomach.
When this dawns on him, he vomits.
The bright spots all vanish. Very, very reluctantly, Shaftoe risks a
glance out the window and sees only greyness.
He thinks he is on the floor now. He is next to the corpse, at any
rate, and the corpse was strapped down.
He lies there for several minutes, just breathing and thinking. Air
whistles through the holes in the fuselage, loud enough to split his head.
Someone some madman is up on his feet, moving about the plane. It is
not Root, who is in his little nook dealing with a number of facial
lacerations that he picked up during the aerobatics. Shaftoe looks up and
sees that the moving man is one of the British flyboys.
The Brit has yanked off his headgear to expose black hair and green
eyes. He's in his mid thirties, an old man. He has a knobby, utilitarian
face in which all of the various lumps, knobs and orifices seem to be there
for a reason, a face engineered by the same fellows who design grenade
launchers. It is a simple and reliable face, by no means handsome. He is
kneeling next to the corpse of Gerald Hott and is examining it minutely with
a flashlight. He is the very picture of concern; his bedside manner is
flawless.
Finally he slumps back against the ribbed wall of the fuselage. "Thank
god," he says, "he wasn't hit."
"Who wasn't?" Shaftoe says.
"This chap," the flyboy says, slapping the corpse.
"Aren't you going to check me?"
"No need to."
"Why not? I'm still alive. "
"You weren't hit," the flyboy says confidently. "If you'd been hit,
you'd look like Lieutenant Ethridge."
For the first time, Shaftoe hazards movement. He props himself up on
one elbow, and finds that the floor of the plane is slick and wet with red
fluid.
He had noticed a pink mist in the cabin, and supposed that it was
produced by a hydraulic fluid leak. But the hydraulic system now seems hunky
dory, and the stuff on the floor of the plane is not a petroleum product. It
is the same red fluid that figured so prominently in Shaftoe's nightmare. It
is streaming downhill from the direction of Lieutenant Ethridge's cozy nest,
and the Lieutenant is no longer snoring.
Shaftoe looks at what is left of Ethridge, which bears a striking
resemblance to what was lying around that butcher shop earlier today. He
does not wish to lose his composure in the presence of the British pilot,
and indeed, feels strangely calm. Maybe it's the clouds; cloudy days have
always had a calming effect on him.
"Holy cow," he finally says, "that Kraut twenty millimeter is some
thing else."
"Right," the flyboy says, "we've got to get spotted by a convoy and
then we'll proceed with the delivery."
Cryptic as it is, this is the most informative statement Bobby's ever
heard about the intentions of Detachment 2702. He gets up and follows the
pilot back to the cockpit, both of them stepping delicately around several
quivering giblets that were presumably flung out of Ethridge.
"You mean, by an allied convoy, right?" Shaftoe asks.
"An allied convoy?" the pilot asks mockingly. "Where the hell are we
going to find an allied convoy? This is Tunisia ."
"Well, then, what do you mean, we've got to get spotted by a convoy?
You mean we have to spot a convoy, right?"
"Very sorry," the flyboy says, "I'm busy."
When he turns back, he finds Lieutenant Enoch Root kneeling by a
relatively large piece of Ethridge, going through Ethridge's attache case.
Shaftoe cops a look of exaggerated moral outrage and points the finger of
blame.
"Look, Shaftoe," Root shouts, "I'm just following orders. Taking over
for him."
He pulls out a small bundle, all wrapped in thick, yellowish plastic
sheeting. He checks it over, then glances up reprovingly, one more time, at
Shaftoe.
"It was a fucking joke!" Shaftoe says. "Remember? When I thought those
guys were looting the corpses? On the beach?"
Root doesn't laugh. Either he's pissed off that Shaftoe successfully
bullshitted him, or he doesn't enjoy corpse looting humor. Root carries the
wrapped bundle back to that other body, the one in the wetsuit. He stuffs
the bundle inside the suit.
Then he squats by the body and ponders. He ponders for a long time.
Shaftoe kind of gets a kick out of watching Enoch ponder, which is like
watching an exotic dancer shake her tits.
The light changes again as they descend from the clouds. The sun is
setting, shining redly through the Saharan haze. Shaftoe looks out a window
and is startled to see that they are over the sea now. Below them is a
convoy of ships each making a neat white V in the dark water, each lit up on
one side by the red sun.
The airplane banks and makes a slow loop around the convoy. Shaftoe
hears distant pocking noises. Black flowers bloom and fade in the sky around
them. He realizes that the ships are trying to hit them with ack ack. Then
the plane ascends once more into the shelter of the clouds, and it gets
nearly dark.
He looks at Enoch Root for the first time in a while. Root is sitting
back in his little nook, reading by flashlight. A bundle of papers is open
on his lap. It is the plastic wrapped bundle that Root took out of
Ethridge's attache case and shoved into Gerald Hott's wetsuit. Shaftoe
figures that the encounter with convoy and ack ack finally pushed Root over
the edge, and that he yanked the bundle right back out again to have a look
at it.
Root glances up and locks eyes with Shaftoe. He does not seem nervous
or guilty. It is a strikingly calm and cool look.
Shaftoe holds his gaze for a long moment. If there were the slightest
trace of guilt or nervousness there, he would turn the chaplain in as a
German spy. But there isn't Enoch Root ain't working for the Germans. He
ain't working for the Allies either. He's working for a Higher Power.
Shaftoe nods imperceptibly, and Root's gaze softens.
"They're all dead, Bobby," he shouts. "Those islanders. The ones you
saw on the beach on Guadalcanal."
So that explains why Root is so touchy about corpse looting jokes.
"Sorry," Shaftoe says, moving aft so they don't have to scream at each
other. "How'd it happen?"
"After we got you back to my cabin, I transmitted a message to my
handlers in Brisbane," Root says. "Enciphered it using a special code. Told
them I'd picked up one Marine Raider, who looked like he might actually
live, and would someone please come round and collect him."
Shaftoe nods. He remembers that he'd heard lots of dots and dashes, but
he had been out of whack with fevers and morphine and whatever home remedies
Root had pulled out of his cigar box.
"Well, they responded," Root went on, "and said 'We can't go there, but
would you please take him to such and such place and rendezvous with some
other Marine Raiders.' Which, as you'll recall, is what we did."
"Yeah," Shaftoe says.
"So far so good. But when I got back to the cabin after handing you
over, the Nipponese had been through. Killed every islander they could find.
Burned the cabin. Burned everything. Set booby traps around the place that
nearly killed me. I just barely got out of the damn place alive."
Shaftoe nods, as only a guy who's seen the Nips in action can nod.
"Well they evacuated me to Brisbane where I started making a stink
about codes. That's the only way they could have found me obviously our
codes had been broken. And after I'd made enough of a stink, someone
apparently said, 'You're British, you're a priest, you're a medical doctor,
you can handle a rifle, you know Morse code, and most importantly of all,
you're a fucking pain in the ass so off you go!" And next thing I know, I'm
in that meat locker in Algiers."
Shaftoe glances away and nods. Root seems to get the message, which is
that Shaftoe doesn't know anything more than he does.
Eventually, Enoch Root wraps the bundle up again, just like it was
before. But he doesn't put it back in the attache case. He stuffs it into
Gerald Hott's wetsuit.
Later they emerge from the clouds again, close to a moonlit port, and
dip down very close to the ocean, going so slow that even Shaftoe, who knows
nothing about planes, senses they are about to stall. They open the side
door of the Dakota and, one two three NOW, throw the body of PFC Gerald Hott
out into the ocean. He makes what would be a big splash in the Oconomowoc
town pool, but in the ocean it doesn't come to much.
An hour or so later they land the same Gooney Bird on an airstrip in
the midst of a stunning aerial bombardment. They abandon the Skytrain at the
end of the airstrip, next to the other C 47, and run through darkness,
following the lead of the British pilots. Then they go down a stairway and
are underground in a bomb shelter, to be precise. They can feel the bombs
now but can't hear them.
"Welcome to Malta," someone says. Shaftoe looks around and sees that he
is surrounded by men in British and American uniforms. The Americans are
familiar it's the Marine Raider squad from Algiers, flown in on that other
Dakota. The Brits are unfamiliar, and Shaftoe pegs them as the SAS men that
those fellows in Washington were telling him about. The only thing they all
have in common is that each man, somewhere on his uniform, is wearing the
number 2702.
Chapter 18 NON DISCLOSURE
Avi shows up on time, idling his fairly good, but not disgustingly
ostentatious, Nipponese sports car gingerly up the steep road, which has
crazed into a loose mosaic of asphalt flagstones.
Randy watches from the second floor deck, staring fifty feet almost
straight down through the sunroof. Avi is clad in the trousers of a good
tropical weight business suit, a tailored white Sea Island cotton shirt,
dark ski goggles, and a wide brimmed canvas hat.
The house is a tall, isolated structure rising out of the middle of a
California grassland that slopes up from the Pacific, a few kilometers away.
Chilly air climbs up the slope, rising and falling in slow surges, like surf
on a beach. When Avi gets out of his car the first thing he does is pull on
his suit jacket.
He hauls two oversized laptop cases out of the tiny luggage compartment
in the car's nose, walks into the house without knocking (he has not been to
this particular house before, but he has been to others run along similar
principles), finds Randy and Eb waiting in one of its many rooms, and hauls
about fifteen thousand dollars worth of portable computer gear out of the
bags. He sets them up on a table. Avi hits the start button on two laptops
and, as they crawl through the boot process, plugs them into the wall so
that the batteries won't drain. A power conduit, with grounded three prong
outlets spaced every eighteen inches, has been screwed down remorselessly
along every inch of every wall, spanning drywall; holes in the drywall;
primeval op art contact paper; fake wood grain paneling; faded Grateful Dead
posters; and even the odd doorway.
One of the laptops is connected to a tiny portable printer, which Avi
loads with a few sheets of paper. The other laptop starts up a few lines of
text running across the screen, then beeps and stops. Randy ambles over and
looks at it curiously. It is displaying a prompt:
FILO.
Which Randy knows is short for Finux Loader, a program that allows you
to choose which operating system you want to run.
"Finux," Avi mumbles, answering Randy's unspoken question.
Randy types "Finux" and hits the return key. "How many operating
systems you have on this thing?"
"Windows 95, for games and when I need to let some lamer borrow my
computer temporarily," Avi says. "Windows NT for office type stuff. BeOS for
hacking, and screwing around with media. Finux for industrial strength
typesetting."
"Which one do you want now?"
"BeOS. Going to display some JPEGs. I assume there's an overhead
projector in this place?"
Randy looks over at Eb, the only person in the room who actually lives
here. Eb seems bigger than he is, and maybe it's because of his detonating
hair: two feet long, blond with a faint reddish glow, thick and wavy and
tending to congeal into ropy strands. No ponytail holder can contain it, so
when he bothers to tie it back, he uses a piece of string. Eb is doodling on
one of those little computers that uses a stylus so that you can write on
the screen. In general, hackers don't use them, but Eb (or rather, one of
Eb's defunct corporations) wrote the software for this model and so he has a
lot of them lying around. He seems to be absorbed in whatever he's doing,
but after Randy has been looking in his direction for two seconds, he senses
it, and looks up. He has pale green eyes and wears a luxuriant red beard,
except when he's in one of his shaving phases, which usually coincide with
serious romantic involvements. Right now his beard is about half an inch
long, indicating a recent breakup, and implying a willingness to take new
risks.
"Overhead projector?" Randy says.
Eb closes his eyes, which is what he does during memory access, then
gets up and walks out of the room.
The tiny printer begins to eke paper. The first line of text, centered
at the top of the page, is: NONDISCLOSURE AGREEMENT. More lines follow.
Randy has seen them, or ones like them, so many times that his eyes glaze
over and he turns away. The only thing that ever changes is the name of the
company: in this case: EPIPHYTE(2) CORP.
"Nice goggles."
"If you think these are weird, you should see what I'm going to put on
when the sun goes down," Avi says. He rummages in a bag and pulls out a
contraption that looks like a pair of glasses without lenses, with a
dollhouse scale light fixture mounted above each eye. A wire runs down to a
battery pack with belt loops. He slides a tiny switch on the battery pack
and the lights come on: expensive looking blue white halogen.
Randy raises his eyebrows.
"It's all jet lag avoidance," Avi explains. "I'm adjusted to Asian
time. I'm going back there in two days. I don't want my body to get back on
Left Coast time while I'm here."
"So the hat and goggles "
"Simulate night. This thing simulates daylight. See, your body takes
its cues from the light, adjusts its clock accordingly. Speaking of which,
would you mind closing the blinds?"
The room has west facing windows, affording a view down the grassy
slope to Half Moon Bay. It is late afternoon and the sun is pouring through.
Randy savors the view for a moment, then drops the blinds.
Eb stalks back into the room with an overhead projector dangling from
one hand, looking for a moment like Beowulf brandishing a monster's severed
arm. He puts it on the table and aims it at the wall. There is no need for a
screen, because above the ubiquitous power strips, every wall in the house
is covered with whiteboards. Many of the whiteboards are, in turn, covered
with cryptical incantations, written in primary colors. Some of them are
enclosed in irregular borders and labeled DO NOT ERASE! or simply DNE or NO!
In front of where Eb has put the overhead projector, there is a grocery
list, a half erased fragment of a flowchart, a fax number in Russia, a
couple of dotted quads Internet addresses and a few words in German, which
were presumably written by Eb himself. Dr. Eberhard Föhr scans all of this,
finds that none of it is enclosed in a DNE border, and wipes it away with an
eraser.
Two more men come into the room, deeply involved in a conversation
about some exasperating company in Burlingame. One of them is dark and lean
and looks like a gunfighter; he even wears a black cowboy hat. The other is
tubby and blond and looks like he just got out of a Rotary Club meeting.
They have one detail in common: each is wearing a bright silver bracelet on
his wrist.
Randy takes the NDAs out of the printers and passes them out, two
copies each, each pair preprinted with a name: Randy Waterhouse, Eberhard
Föhr, John Cantrell (the guy in the black cowboy hat) and Tom Howard (the
fair haired Middle American). As John and Tom reach for the pages, the
silver bracelets intercept stray beams of light sneaking through the blinds.
Each is printed with a red caduceus and several lines of text.
"Those look new," Randy says. "Did they change the wording again?"
"Yeah!" John Cantrell says. "This is version 6.0 just out last week."
Anywhere else, the bracelets would mean that John and Tom were
suffering from some sort of life threatening condition, such as an allergy
to common antibiotics. A medic hauling them out of a wrecked car would see
the bracelet and follow the instructions. But this is Silicon Valley and
different rules apply. The bracelets say, on one side:
IN CASE OF DEATH SEE REVERSE FOR BIOSTASIS PROTOCOL FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS
COLLECT REWARD $100,000
and on the other:
CALL NOW FOR INSTRUCTIONS I 800 NNN NNNN
PUSH 50,000 U HEPARIN IV AND DO CPR WHILE COOLING WITH ICE TO 10C.KEEP
PH 7.5
NO AUTOPSY OR EMBALMING
It is a recipe for freezing a dead, or nearly dead, person. People who
wear this bracelet believe that, if this recipe is followed, the brain and
other delicate tissues can be iced without destroying them. A few decades
down the line, when nanotechnology has made it possible to be immortal, they
hope to be thawed out. John Cantrell and Tom Howard believe that there is a
reasonable chance that they will still be having conversations with each
other a million years from now.
The room gets quiet as all of the men scan the forms, their eyes
picking out certain familiar clauses. They have probably signed a hundred
NDA forms between them. Around here, it is like offering someone a cup of
coffee.
A woman comes into the room, burdened with tote bags, and beams an
apology for being late. Beryl Hagen looks like a Norman Rockwell aunt, an
apron wearing, apple pie toting type. In twenty years, she's been the chief
financial officer of twelve different small high tech companies. Ten of them
have gone out of business. Except in the case of the second one, this was
through no fault of Beryl's. The sixth was Randy's Second Business Foray.
One was absorbed by Microsoft, one became a successful, independent company
in its own right. Beryl made enough money from the latter two to retire. She
consults and writes while she looks for something interesting enough to draw
her back into action, and her presence in this room suggests that
Epiphyte(2) Corp. must not be completely bogus. Or maybe she's just being
polite to Avi. Randy gives her a bearhug, lifting her off the floor, and
then hands her two copies of the NDA with her name on them.
Avi has detached the screen from his big laptop and laid it flat on the
surface of the overhead projector, which shines light through the liquid
crystal display and projects a color image on the whiteboard. It is a
typical desktop: a couple of terminal windows and some icons. Avi goes
around and picks up the signed NDAs, scans them all, hands one copy back to
each person, files the rest in the outer pocket of a laptop bag. He begins
to type on the laptop's keyboard, and letters spill across one of the
windows. "Just so you know," Avi mumbles, "Epiphyte Corp., which I'll call
Epiphyte(1) for clarity, is a Delaware corporation, one and one half years
old. The shareholders are myself, Randy, and Springboard Capital. We're in
the telecoms business in the Philippines. I can give you details later if
you want. Our work there has positioned us to be aware of some new
opportunities in that part of the world. Epiphyte(2) is a California
corporation, three weeks old. If things go the way we are hoping they will
go, Epiphyte(1) will be folded into it according to some kind of stock
transfer scheme the details of which are too boring to talk about now.
Avi hits the return key. A new window opens on the desktop. It is a
color map scanned in from an atlas, tall and narrow. Most of it is oceanic
blue. A rugged coastline juts in through the top border, with a few cities
labeled: Nagasaki, Tokyo. Shanghai is in the upper left corner. The
Philippine archipelago is dead center. Taiwan is directly north of it, and
to the south is a chain of islands forming a porous barrier between Asia and
a big land mass labeled with English words like Darwin and Great Sandy
Desert.
"This probably looks weird to most of you," Avi says. "Usually these
presentations begin with a diagram of a computer network, or a flowchart or
something. We don't normally deal with maps. We're all so used to working in
a purely abstract realm that it seems almost bizarre to go out into the real
world and physically do something.
"But I like maps. I've got maps all over my house. I'm going to suggest
to you that the skills and knowledge we have all been developing in our work
especially pertaining to the Internet have applications out here." He taps
the whiteboard. "In the real world. You know, the big round wet ball where
billions of people live."
There is a bit of polite snickering as Avi skims his hand over his
computer's trackball, whacks a button with his thumb. A new image appears:
the same map, with bright color lines running across the ocean, looping from
one city to the next, roughly following the coastlines.
"Existing undersea cables. The fatter the line, the bigger the pipe,"
Avi says. "Now, what is wrong with this picture?"
There are several fat lines running east from places like Tokyo, Hong
Kong, and Australia, presumably connecting them with the United States.
Across the South China Sea, which lies between the Philippines and Vietnam,
another fat line angles roughly north south, but it doesn't connect either
of those two countries: it goes straight to Hong Kong, then continues up the
China coast to Shanghai, Korea, and Tokyo.
"Since the Philippines are in the center of the map," John Cantrell
says, "I predict that you are going to point out that hardly any fat lines
go to the Philippines."
"Hardly any fat lines go to the Philippines!" Avi announces briskly. He
points out the one exception, which runs from Taiwan south to northern
Luzon, then skips down the coast to Corregidor. "Except for this one, which
Epiphyte(l) is involved with. But it's not just that. There is a general
paucity of fat lines in a north south direction, connecting Australia with
Asia. A lot of data packets going from Sydney to Tokyo have to be routed
through California. There's a market opportunity."
Beryl breaks in. "Avi, before you get started on this," she says,
sounding cautious and regretful, "I have to say that laying long distance,
deep sea cables is a difficult business to break into."
"Beryl is right!" Avi says. "The only people who have the wherewithal
to lay those cables are AT&T, Cable & Wireless, and Kokusai Denshin
Denwa. It's tricky. It's expensive. It requires massive NRE."
The abbreviation stands for "non recoverable expenses," meaning
engineering work to complete a feasibility study that would be money down
the toilet if the idea didn't fly.
"So what are you thinking?" Beryl says.
Avi clicks up another map. This one is the same as the previous, except
that new lines have been drawn in: a whole series of short island to island
links. A bewilderingly numerous chain of short hops down the length of the
Philippine archipelago.
"You want to wire the Philippines and patch them into the Net via your
existing link to Taiwan," says Tom Howard, in a heroic bid to short circuit
what he senses will be a lengthy part of Avi's presentation.
"The Philippines are going to be hot shit informationally speaking,"
Avi says. "The government has its flaws, but basically it's a democracy
modeled after Western institutions. Unlike most Asians, they do ASCII. Most
of them speak English. Longstanding ties to the United States. These guys
are going to be big players, sooner or later, in the information economy."
Randy breaks in. "We've already established a foothold there. We know
the local business environment. And we have cash flow."
Avi clicks up another map. This one's harder to make out. It looks like
a relief map of a vast region of high mountains interrupted by occasional
plateaus. Its appearance in the middle of this presentation without any
labels or explanation from Avi makes it an implicit challenge to the mental
acumen of the other people in the room. None of them is going to ask for
help anytime soon. Randy watches them squint and tilt their heads from side
to side. Eberhard Föhr, who is good at odd puzzles, gets it first.
"Southeast Asia with the oceans drained," he says. "That high ridge on
the right is New Guinea. Those bumps are the volcanoes of Borneo."
"Pretty cool, huh?" Avi says. "It's a radar map. U.S. military
satellites gathered all this data. You can get it for next to nothing."
On this map the Philippines can be understood, not as a chain of
separate islands, but as the highest regions of a huge oblong plateau
surrounded by deep gashes in the earth's crust. To get from Luzon up to
Taiwan by going across the ocean floor you would have to plunge into a deep
trench, flanked by parallel mountain ranges, and follow it northwards for
about three hundred miles. But south of Luzon, in the region where Avi is
proposing to lay a network of inter island cables, it's all shallow and
flat.
Avi clicks again, superimposing transparent blue over the parts that
are below sea level, green on the islands. Then he zooms in on an area in
the center of the map, where the Philippine plateau extends two arms
southwest toward northern Borneo, embracing, and nearly enclosing, a diamond
shaped body of water, three hundred and fifty miles across. "The Sulu Sea,"
he announces. "No relation to the token Asian on Star Trek ."
No one laughs. They are not really here to be entertained they are
concentrating on the map. All of the different archipelagos and seas are
confusing, even for smart people with good spatial relations. The
Philippines form the upper right boundary of the Sulu Sea, north Borneo
(part of Malaysia) the lower left, the Sulu Archipelago (part of the
Philippines) the lower right, and the upper left boundary is one extremely
long skinny Philippine island called Palawan.
"This reminds us that national boundaries are artificial and silly,"
Avi says. "The Sulu Sea is a basin in the middle of a larger plateau shared
by the Philippines and Borneo. So if you're wiring up the Philippines, you
can just as easily wire Borneo up to that network at the same time, just by
outlining the Sulu Sea with shallow, short hop cables. Like this."
Avi clicks again and the computer draws in more colored lines.
"Avi, why are we here?" Eberhard asks.
"That is a very profound question," Avi says.
"We know the economics of these startups," Eb says. "We begin with
nothing but the idea. That's what the NDA is for to protect your idea. We
work on the idea together put our brainpower into it and get stock in
return. The result of this work is software. The software is copyrightable,
trademarkable, perhaps patentable. It is intellectual property. It is worth
some money. We all own it in common, through our shares. Then we sell some
more shares to an investor. We use the money to hire more people and turn it
into a product, to market it, and so on. That's how the system works, but
I'm beginning to think you don't understand it."
"Why do you say that?"
Eb looks confused. "How can we contribute to this? How can we turn our
brainpower into equity that an investor will want to own a part of?"
Everyone looks at Beryl. Beryl's nodding agreement with Eb. Tom Howard
says, "Avi. Look. I can engineer big computer installations. John wrote Ordo
he knows everything about crypto. Randy does Internet, Eb does weird stuff,
Beryl does money. But as far as I know, none of us knows diddly about
undersea cable engineering. What good will our resumes do you when you go up
in front of some venture capitalists?"
Avi's nodding. "Everything you say is true," he concedes smoothly.
"We would have to be crazy to get involved in running cables through
the Philippines. That is a job for FiliTel, with whom Epiphyte(1) has been
joint venturing."
"Even if we were crazy, Beryl says, "we wouldn't have the opportunity,
because no one would give us the money."
"Fortunately we don't need to worry about that," Avi says, "because
it's being done for us." He turns to the whiteboard, picks up a red magic
marker, and draws a fat line between Taiwan and Luzon, his hands picking up
a leprous, mottled look from the shaded relief of the ocean floor that is
being projected against his skin. "KDD, which is anticipating major growth
in the Philippines, is already laying another big cable here." He moves down
and begins to draw smaller, shorter links between islands in the
archipelago. "And FiliTel, which is funded by AVCLA Asia Venture Capital Los
Angeles is wiring the Philippines."
"What does Epiphyte(l) have to do with that?" Tom Howard asks.
"To the extent they want to use that network for Internet Protocol
traffic, they need routers and network savvy," Randy explains.
"So, to repeat my question: why are we here?" Eberhard says, patiently
but firmly.
Avi works with his pen for a while. He circles an island at one corner
of the Sulu Sea, centered in the gap between North Borneo and the long
skinny Philippine island called Palawan. He labels it in block letters:
SULTANATE OF KINAKUTA.
"Kinakuta was run by white sultans for a while. It's a long story. Then
it was a German colony," Avi says. "Back then, Borneo was part of the Dutch
East Indies, and Palawan like the rest of the Philippines was first Spanish
and then American. So this was the Germans' foothold in the area."
"Germans always ended up holding the shittiest colonies," Eb says
ruefully.
"After the First World War, they handed it over to the Japanese, along
with a lot of other islands much farther to the east. All of these islands,
collectively, were called the Mandates because Japan controlled them under a
League of Nations Mandate. During the Second World War the Japanese used
Kinakuta as a base for attacks on the Dutch East Indies and the Philippines.
They retained a naval base and airfield there. After the war, Kinakuta
became independent, as it had been before the Germans. The population is
Muslim or ethnic Chinese around the edges, animist in the center, and it's
always been ruled by a sultan even while occupied by the Germans and the
Japanese, who both co opted the sultans but kept them in place as
figureheads. Kinakuta had oil reserves, but they were unreachable until the
technology got better and prices went up, around the time of the Arab oil
embargo, which was also when the current sultan came into power. That sultan
is now a very rich man not as rich as the Sultan of Brunei, who happens to
be his second cousin, but rich."
"The sultan is backing your company?" Beryl asks.
"Not in the way you mean," Avi says.
"What way do you mean?" Tom Howard asks, impatient.
"Let me put it this way," Avi says. "Kinakuta is a member of the United
Nations. It is every bit as much an independent country and member of the
community of nations as France or England. As a matter of fact, it is
exceptionally independent because of its oil wealth. It is basically a
monarchy the sultan makes the laws, but only after extensive consultation
with his ministers, who set policy and draft legislation. And I've been
spending a lot of time, recently, with the Minister of Posts and
Telecommunications. I have been helping the minister draft a new law that
will govern all telecommunications passing through Kinakutan territory."
"Oh, my god!" John Cantrell says. He is awestruck.
"One free share of stock to the man in the black hat!" Avi says. "John
has figured out Avi's secret plan. John, would you like to explain to the
other contestants?"
John takes his hat off and runs his hand back through his long hair. He
puts his hat back on and heaves a sigh. "Avi is proposing to start a data
haven," he says.
A little murmur of admiration runs through the room. Avi waits for it
to subside and says, "Slight correction: the sultan's starting the data
haven. I'm proposing to make money off it."
Chapter 19 ULTRA
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse goes into battle armed with one third of
a sheet of British typing paper on which has been typed some words that
identify it as a pass to Bletchley Park. His name and some other things have
been scribbled on it in some upper class officer's Mont Blanc blue black,
the words ALL SECTIONS circled, and a stamp smashed across it, blurred into
a red whore's kiss, with sheer carelessness conveying greater Authority and
Power than the specious clarity of a forger.
He finds his way round the mansion to the narrow lane that runs between
it and its row of red brick garages (or stables, as his grandparents would
be likely to peg them). He finds it a very pleasant place for a cigarette.
The lane is lined with trees, a densely planted hedge of them. The sun is
just setting now. It is still high enough to snipe through any small defects
that it finds in the defensive perimeter of the horizon, so narrow red beams
strike him surprisingly in the eye as he ambles back and forth. He knows one
is shining invisibly through the clear air several feet above him, because
it is betraying an aerial: a strand of copper wire stretched from the wall
of the mansion to a nearby cypress. It catches the light in precisely the
same way as the strand of the spiderweb that Waterhouse was playing with
earlier.
The sun will be down soon; it is already down in Berlin, as in most of
the hellish empire that Hitler has built from Calais to the Volga. Time for
the radio operators to begin their work. Radio does not, in general, go
around corners. This can be a real pain when you are conquering the world,
which is inconveniently round, placing all of your most active military
units over the horizon. But if you use shortwave, then you can bounce the
information off the ionosphere. This works a good deal better when the sun
is not in the sky, sluicing the atmosphere with wideband noise. So radio
telegraphers, and the people who eavesdrop on them (what the Brits call the
Y Service) are, alike, nocturnal beings.
As Waterhouse has just observed, the mansion has an aerial or two. But
Bletchley Park is a huge and ravenous spider that requires a web the size of
a nation to feed it. He has seen enough evidence, from the black cables
climbing the mansion's walls and the smell and hiss of the massed teletypes,
to know that the web is at least partly made of copper wires. Another piece
of the web is made of rude stuff like concrete and asphalt.
The gate swings open and a man on a green motorcycle banks steeply into
the lane, the two cylinders of his machine blatting away, the noise stinging
Waterhouse's nose as he rides by. Waterhouse strides after him for some
distance, but loses his trail after a hundred yards or so. That is
acceptable; more of them will be along soon, as the Wehrmacht's nervous
system awakens and its signals are picked up by the Y Service.
The motorcyclist went through a quaint little gate that joins two old
buildings. The gate is topped by a tiny cupola with a weathervane and a
clock. Waterhouse goes through it and finds himself in a little square that
evidently dates back to when Bletchley Park was a precious Buckinghamshire
farmstead. To the left, the line of stables continues. Small gables have
been set into the roof, which is stained with bird shit. The building is
quivering with pigeons. Directly in front of him is a nice little red brick
Tudor farmhouse, the only thing he has seen so far that is not
architecturally offensive. Off to his right is a one story building. Strange
information is coming out of this building: the hot oil smell of teletypes,
but no typing noises, just a high mechanical whine.
A door opens on the stable building and a man emerges carrying a large
but evidently lightweight box with a handle on the top. Cooing noises come
from the box and Waterhouse realizes that it contains pigeons. Those birds
living up in the gables are not feral; they are homing pigeons. Carriers of
information, strands of Bletchley Park's web.
He homes in on the building that smells of hot oil and gazes into a
window. As evening falls, light has begun to leak out of it, betraying
information to black German reconnaissance planes, so a porter is strutting
about the courtyard slamming the black shutters closed.
Some information comes into Waterhouse's eyes at least: on the other
side of that window, men are gathered around a machine. Most of them are
wearing civilian clothes, and they have been too busy, for too long, to
trifle much with combs and razors and shoe polish. The men are intensely
focused upon their work, which all has to do with this large machine. The
machine consists of a large framework of square steel tubing, like a
bedstead set up on one end. Metal drums with the diameter of dinner plates,
an inch or so thick, are mounted at several locations on this framework.
Paper tape has been threaded in a bewilderingly loopy trajectory from drum
to drum. It looks as if a dozen yards of tape are required to thread the
machine.
One of the men has been working on a rubber drive belt that goes around
one of the drums. He steps back from it and makes a gesture with his hand.
Another man flips a switch and the drums all begin to spin at once. The tape
begins to fly through the system. Holes punched in the tape carry data; it
all blurs into a grey streak now, the speed creating an illusion in which
the tape appears to dissolve into a ribbon of smoke.
No, it is not an illusion. Real smoke is curling up from the spinning
drums. The tape is running through the machine so fast that it is catching
fire before the eyes of Waterhouse and the men inside, who watch it calmly,
as if it were smoking in an entirely new and interesting way.
If there is a machine in the world capable of reading data from a tape
that fast, Waterhouse has never heard of it.
The black shutter slams home. Just as it does, Waterhouse gets one
fragmentary glimpse of another object standing in the corner of the room: a
steel rack in which a large number of grey cylindrical objects are stored in
neat rows.
Two motorcyclists come through the courtyard at once, running in the
darkness with their headlights off. Waterhouse jogs after them for a bit,
leaving the picturesque old courtyard behind and entering into the world of
the huts, the new structures thrown up in the last year or two. "Hut" makes
him think of a tiny thing, but these huts, taken together, are more like
that new Pentagon thing that the War Department has been putting up across
the river from D.C. They embody a blunt need for space unfiltered through
any aesthetic or even human considerations.
Waterhouse walks to an intersection of roads where he thought he heard
the motorcycles making a turn, and stops, hemmed in by blast walls. On an
impulse, he clambers to the top of a wall and takes a seat. The view from
here is no better. He knows that thousands of people are at work all around
him in these huts, but he sees none of them, there are no signposts.
He is still trying to work out that business that he saw through the
window.
The tape was running so fast that it smoked. There is no point of
driving it that fast unless the machine can read the information that fast
transforming the pattern of holes in the tape into electrical impulses.
But why bother, if those impulses had nowhere to go? No human mind
could deal with a stream of characters coming in at that speed. No teletype
that Waterhouse knew of could even print them out.
It only makes sense if they are constructing a machine. A mechanical
calculator of some sort that can absorb the data and then do something with
it perform some calculation presumably a cipher breaking type of
calculation.
Then he remembers the rack he glimpsed in the corner, its many rows of
identical grey cylinders. Viewed end on, they looked like some kind of
ammunition. But they are too smooth and glossy for that. Those cylinders,
Waterhouse realizes, are made of blown glass.
They are vacuum tubes. Hundreds of them. More tubes in one place than
Waterhouse has ever seen.
Those men in that room are building a Turing machine!
***
It is no wonder, then, that the men in the room accept the burning of
the tape so calmly. That strip of paper, a technology as old as the
pyramids, is merely a vessel for a stream of information. When it passes
through the machine, the information is abstracted from it, transfigured
into a pattern of pure binary data. That the mere vessel burns is of no
consequence. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust the data has passed out of the
physical plane and into the mathematical, a higher and purer universe where
different laws apply. Laws, a few of which are dimly and imperfectly known
to Dr. Alan Mathison Turing and Dr. John von Neumann and Dr. Rudolf von
Hacklheber and a few other people Waterhouse used to hang around with in
Princeton. Laws about which Waterhouse himself knows a thing or two.
Once you have transfigured the data into the realm of pure information,
all that is required is a tool. Carpenters work with wood and carry a box of
technology for measuring it, cutting it, smoothing it, joining it.
Mathematicians work with information and need a tool of their own.
They have been building these tools, one at a time, for years. There
is, just to name one example, a cash register and typewriter company called
the Electrical Till Corporation that makes a dandy punched card machine for
tabulating large quantities of data. Waterhouse's professor in Iowa was
tired of solving differential equations one at a time and invented a machine
to solve them automatically by storing the information on a capacitor
covered drum and cranking through a certain algorithm. Given enough time and
enough vacuum tubes, a tool might be invented to sum a column of numbers,
and another one to keep track of inventories, and another one to alphabetize
lists of words. A well equipped business would have one of each: gleaming
cast iron monsters with heat waves rising out of their grilles, emblazoned
with logos like ETC and Siemens and Hollerith, each carrying out its own
specialized task. Just as a carpenter had a miter box and a dovetail jig and
a clawhammer in his box.
Turing figured out something entirely different, something unspeakably
strange and radical.
He figured out that mathematicians, unlike carpenters, only needed to
have one tool in their toolbox, if it were the right sort of tool. Turing
realized that it should be possible to build a meta machine that could be
reconfigured in such a way that it would do any task you could conceivably
do with information. It would be a protean device that could turn into any
tool you could ever need. Like a pipe organ changing into a different
instrument every time you hit a preset button.
The details were a bit hazy. This was not a blueprint for an actual
machine, rather a thought experiment that Turing had dreamed up in order to
resolve an abstract riddle from the completely impractical world of pure
logic. Waterhouse knows this perfectly well. But he cannot get one thing out
of his mind as he sits there atop the blast walls at the dark intersection
in Bletchley Park: the Turing machine, if one really existed, would rely
upon having a tape. The tape would pass through the machine. It would carry
the information that the machine needed to do its work.
Waterhouse sits there staring off into the darkness and reconstructs
Turing's machine in his mind. More of the details are coming back to him.
The tape, he now recollects, would not move through the Turing machine in
one direction; it would change direction frequently. And the Turing machine
would not just read the tape; it would be able to erase marks or make new
ones.
Clearly you cannot erase holes in a paper tape. And just as clearly the
tape only moves through this Bletchley Park machine in one direction. So,
much as Waterhouse hates to admit this fact to himself, the rack of tubes he
just spied is not a Turing machine. It is some lesser device a special
purpose tool like a punched card reader or Atanasoffs differential equation
solver.
It is still bigger and more fiendishly terrific than anything
Waterhouse has ever seen.
A night train from Birmingham blows through, carrying bullets to the
sea. As its sound dies away to the south, a motorcycle approaches the park's
main gate. Its engine idles as the rider's papers are checked, then
Waterhouse hears a Bronx cheer as it surges forward and cuts the sharp turn
into the lane. Waterhouse climbs to his feet at the intersection of the
walls, and watches carefully as the bike sputters past him and homes in on a
"hut" a couple of blocks away. Light suddenly leaks from an open door as the
cargo changes hands. Then the light is snuffed and the bike stretches a long
loud raspberry down the road to the park's exit.
Waterhouse lets himself down to earth and gropes his way down the road
through the moonless night. He stops before the entrance to the hut and
listens to it teem for a minute. Then, working up his courage, he steps
forward and pushes the wooden door open.
It is unpleasantly hot in here, and the atmosphere is a nauseating
distillation of human and machine odors, held in and concentrated by the
coffin doors slabbed down over all the windows. Many people are in here,
mostly women working at gargantuan electrically powered typewriters. He can
see even through his squint that the place is a running sluice for scraps of
paper, maybe four by six inches each, evidently brought in by the
motorcyclists. Near the door, they have been sorted and stacked up in wire
baskets. Thence they go to the women at their giant typewriters.
One of the few men in the place has risen to his feet and is homing in
on Waterhouse. He is about Waterhouse's age, that is, in his early twenties.
He is wearing a British Army uniform. He has the air of a host at a wedding
reception who wants to make sure that even the most long lost, far flung
members of the family are properly greeted. Obviously he is no more a real
military man than is Waterhouse himself. No wonder this place is surrounded
by so much barbed wire and RAF men with machine guns.
"Good evening, sir. Can I help you?"
"Evening. Lawrence Waterhouse."
"Harry Packard. Pleased to meet you." But he has no idea who Waterhouse
is; he is privy to Ultra, but not to Ultra Mega.
"Pleasure's mine. I imagine you'll want to have a look at this."
Waterhouse hands him the magic pass. Packard's pale eyes travel over it
carefully, then jump around to focus on a few sites of particular interest:
the signature at the bottom, the smeared stamp. The war has turned Harry
Packard into a machine for scanning and processing slips of paper and he
goes about his work calmly and without fuss in this case. He excuses
himself, works the crank on a telephone, and speaks to someone; his posture
and facial expression suggest it is someone important. Waterhouse cannot
hear the words above the clicking and thrumming of the massed typewriters,
but he sees interest and bemusement on Packard's young, open, pink face.
Packard gives Waterhouse a sidelong glance or two while he is listening to
the person at the other end of the line. Then he says something respectful
and reassuring into the phone and rings off.
"Right. Well, what would you like to see?"
"I'm trying to get an overall sense of how the information flows."
"Well, we are close to the beginning of it here these are the
headwaters. Our wellsprings are the Y Service military and amateur radio
operators who listen in on Jerry's radio transmissions, and provide us with
these." Packard takes a slip from a motorcyclist's pannier and hands it to
Waterhouse.
It is a form with various boxes at the top in which someone has written
in a date (today's) and time (a couple of hours ago) and a few other data
such as a radio frequency. The body of the form is mostly occupied by a
large open space in which the following has been printed in hasty block
letters:
A Y W B P R O J H K D H A O B Q T M D L T U S H I
Y P I J S L L E N J O P S K Y V Z P D L E M A O U
T A MO G T M O A H E C
the whole thing preceded by two groups of three letters each:
"This one came in from one of our stations in Kent," Packard says. "It
is a Chaffinch message."
"So one of Rommel's?"
"Yes. This intercept came in from Cairo. Chaffinch gets top priority,
which is why this message is on the top of the pile."
Packard leads Waterhouse down the central aisle of the hut, between the
rows of typists. He picks out one girl who is just finishing up with a
message, and hands her the slip. She sets it up next to her machine and
commences typing it in.
At first glance, Waterhouse had thought that the machines represented
some British concept of how to build an electric typewriter as big as a
dinner table, wrapped up in two hundred pounds of cast iron, a ten horse
motor turning over under the hood, surrounded by tall fences and armed
guards. But now that he is closer he sees that it is something much more
complicated. Instead of a platen, it has a large flat reel on it carrying a
roll of narrow paper tape. This is not the same kind of tape he saw earlier,
smoking through the big machine. This is narrower, and when it emerges from
the machine, it does not have holes punched through it for a machine to
read. Instead, every time the girl slams down one of the keys on the
keyboard copying the text printed on the slip a new letter is printed on the
tape. But not the same letter that she typed.
It does not take her long to type in all of the letters. Then she tears
the tape from her machine. It has a sticky backing which she uses to paste
it directly onto the original intercept slip. She hands it to Packard,
giving him a demure smile. He responds with something between a nod and a
smart little bow, the kind of thing no American male could ever get away
with. He glances at it and hands it to Waterhouse.
The letters on the tape say
EINUNDZWANZIGSTPANZERDIVISIONBERICHTET
KEINEBESONDEREEREIGNISSE
"In order to obtain those settings, you have to break the code which
changes every day?"
Packard smiles in agreement. "At midnight. If you stay here " he checks
his watch " for another four hours, you will see fresh intercepts coming in
from the Y Service that will produce utter gibberish when we run them
through the Typex, because the Jerries will have changed all their codes on
the stroke of midnight. Rather like Cinderella's magic carriage turning back
into a pumpkin. We must then analyze the new intercepts using the bombes,
and figure out the day's new codes."
"How long does that take?"
"Sometimes we are lucky and have broken the day's codes by two or three
o'clock in the morning. Typically it does not happen until after noon or
evening. Sometimes we do not succeed at all."
"Okay, this is a stupid question, but I want to be clear. These Typex
machines which merely do a mechanical deciphering operation are a completely
different thing from the bombes, which actually break the codes."
"The bombes, compared to these, are of a completely different,
enormously higher order of sophistication," Packard agrees. "They are almost
like mechanical thinking machines."
"Where are they located?"
"Hut 11. But they won't be running just now."
"Right," Waterhouse says, "not until after midnight when the carriage
turns back into a pumpkin, and you need to break tomorrow's Enigma
settings."
"Precisely."
Packard steps over to a small wooden hatch set low into one of the
hut's exterior walls. Next to it sits an office tray with a cup hook screwed
into each end, and a string tied to each cup hook. One of the strings is
piled up loose on the floor. The wall hatch has been slid shut on the other
string. Packard puts the message slip on top of a pile of similar ones that
has accumulated in the tray, then slides the hatch open, revealing a narrow
tunnel leading away from the hut.
"Okay, your pull!" he shouts.
"Okay, my pull!" comes an answering voice a moment later. The string
goes taught and the tray slides into the tunnel and disappears.
"On its way to Hut 3," Packard explains.
"Then so am I," Waterhouse says.
***
Hut 3 is only a few yards away, on the other side of the inevitable
blast wall. GERMAN MILITARY SECTION has been scrawled on the door in
cursive; Waterhouse presumes that this is as opposed to "NAVAL" which is in
Hut 4. The ratio of men to women seems higher here. During wartime it is
startling to see so many hale young men in one room together. Some are in
Army or RAF uniforms, some in civvies, and there is even one Naval officer.
A large horseshoe shaped table dominates the center of the building,
with a rectangular table off to the side. Each chair at each table is
occupied by intent workers. The intercept slips are pulled into the hut on
the wooden tray and then move from chair to chair according to some highly
organized scheme that Waterhouse can only vaguely grasp at this point.
Someone explains to him that the bombes just broke the day's codes around
sundown, and so the entire day's load of intercepts has just come down the
tunnel from Hut 6 during the last couple of hours.
He decides to think of the hut as a mathematical black box for the time
being that is, he'll concentrate only on its inputs and outputs of
information and ignore the internal details. Bletchley Park, taken in its
entirety, is a black box of sorts: random letters stream into it, strategic
intelligence streams out, and the internal particulars are of no interest to
most of the people on the Ultra distribution list. The question that
Waterhouse is here to figure out is: is there another vector of information
coming out of this place, hidden subliminally in the teletype signals and
the behaviors of the Allied commanders? And does it point to Rudolf von
Hacklheber, Ph.D.?
Chapter 20 KINAKUTA
Whoever laid out the flight paths into the sultan's new airport must
have been in cahoots with the Kinakuta Chamber of Commerce. If you're lucky
enough to be in a window seat on the left side of the plane, as Randy
Waterhouse is, the view during the final approach looks like a propaganda
flyby.
Kinakuta's matted green slopes surge out of a mostly calm blue sea, and
eventually soar high enough to be dusted with snow at the summits, even
though the island is only seven degrees north of the equator. Randy sees
right away what Avi meant when he said that the place was Muslim around the
edges and animist in the middle. The only places you could hope to build
anything like a modern city are along the coast, where there's an
intermittent fringe of nearly flat land a beige rind clinging to a giant
emerald. The biggest and best flat place is on the northeastern corner of
the island, where the main river, several miles inland, bottoms out into a
flood plain that broadens to an alluvial delta that reaches out into the
Sulu Sea for a mile or two.
Randy gives up counting the oil rigs ten minutes before Kinakuta City
even comes into sight. From high above they look like flaming tank traps
scattered in the surf to deter incoming Marines. As the plane sheds altitude
they begin to look more like factories on stilts, topped with high stacks
where troublesome natural gas is flamed off. This gets more alarming as the
plane gets closer to the water, and it begins to seem as if the pilot is
threading his way between pillars of fire that would roast the 777 like a
pigeon on the wing.
Kinakuta City looks more modern than anything in the States. He has
been trying to read about the place but has found precious little: a couple
of encyclopedia entries, a few fleeting mentions in World War II histories,
some puckish but basically glowing articles in the Economist. Putting his
rusty interlibrary loan skills to work, he paid the Library of Congress to
make him a photocopy of the one book he could find specifically about
Kinakuta: one of about a million out of print World War II memoirs that must
have been penned by G.I.s during the late forties and fifties. So far, he
hasn't had time to read it, and so the two inch stack of pages is just dead
weight in his luggage.
In any case, none of the maps he has seen tallies with the reality of
the modem Kinakuta City. Anything that was there during the war has been
torn down and replaced with new. The river has been dredged into a new
channel. An inconvenient mountain called Eliza Peak has been dynamited, and
the rubble shoved into the ocean to make several new square miles of real
estate, most of which has been gobbled by the new airport. The dynamitings
were so loud that they prompted complaints from the governments of the
Philippines and of Borneo, hundreds of miles away. They also brought down
the wrath of Greenpeace, which was afraid that the sultan was scaring whales
in the central Pacific. So Randy expects half of Kinakuta City to be a
smoking crater, but of course it's not. The stump of Eliza Peak has been
neatly paved over and used as the foundation of the sultan's new Technology
City. All of the glass walled skyscrapers there, and in the rest of the
city, have pointy tops, recalling a traditional architecture that has long
since been bulldozed and used to fill in the harbor. The only building Randy
can see that looks to be more than ten years old is the sultan's palace,
which is ancient. Surrounded by miles of blue glass skyscrapers, it's like a
reddish beige mote frozen in a tray of ice.
Once Randy fixes on that, everything snaps into its proper orientation.
He bends forward, risks the censure of the cabin crew by pulling his bag out
from under the seat ahead of him, and pulls out his photocopied G.I. memoir.
One of its first pages is a map of Kinakuta City as it appeared in 1945, and
dead center is the Sultan's Palace. Randy rotates it before his face in the
way of a panicky driver with a steering wheel, and gets it to line up with
his view. There's the river. There's Eliza Peak, where the Nipponese used to
have a signals intelligence detachment and a radar station, all built with
slave labor. There's the former site of the Japanese Naval Air Force field,
which became the Kinakuta Airport until the new one was built. Now it is a
flock of yellow cranes above a blue nebula of rebar, lit from within by a
constellation of flickering white stars arc welders at work.
Next to it is something that doesn't belong: a patch of emerald green,
maybe a couple of city blocks, surrounded by a stone wall. Inside, there's a
placid pond toward one end the 777 is now so low that Randy can count the
lily pads a tiny Shinto temple hewn from black stone, and a little bamboo
teahouse. Randy presses his face to the window and keeps turning his head to
follow it, until suddenly his view is blocked by a high rise apartment
building just off the wingtip. Through an open kitchen window, he gets a
microsecond's glimpse of a slender lady swinging a hatchet towards a
coconut.
That garden looked like it belonged a thousand miles farther north in
Nippon. When Randy finally realizes what it was, the hairs stand up on the
back of his neck.
Randy got on this plane a couple of hours ago at Ninoy Aquino
International Airport in Manila. The flight was delayed and so he had plenty
of time to look at the other passengers: three Westerners including himself,
a couple of dozen Malay types (either Kinakutan or Filipino), and everyone
else Nipponese. Some of the latter looked like businessmen, traveling on
their own or in twos and threes, but most belonged to some kind of an
organized tour group that marched into the boarding lounge precisely forty
five minutes before scheduled takeoff, queued behind a young woman in a navy
blue skirt suit holding up a neat little logo on a stick. Retirees.
Their destination is not the Technology City, or any of the peculiar
pointy topped skyscrapers in the financial district. They are all going to
that walled Nipponese garden, which is built on top of a mass grave
containing the bodies of three and a half thousand Nipponese soldiers, who
all died on August 23, 1945.
Chapter 21 QWGHLM HOUSE
Waterhouse eddies up and down the quiet side street, squinting at brass
plaques on sturdy white row houses:
SOCIETY FOR THE UNIFICATION OF HINDUISM AND ISLAM
ANGLO LAPP SOLIDARITY SOCIETY
FULMINANTS ASSOCIATION
CHIANG TZSE MUTUAL BENEVOLENT SOCIETY
ROYAL COMMITTEE ON MITIGATION OF MARINE CRANKSHAFT WEAR
BOLGER DAMSELFLY PROPAGATION FOUNDATION
ANTI WELCH LEAGUE
COMITY FOR [theta]E REFORMASHUN OF ENGLISH OR[theta]OGRAFY
SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO VERMIN
CHURCH OF VEDANTIC ETHICAL QUANTUM CONSCIOUSNESS
IMPERIAL MICA BOARD
At first he mistakes Qwghlm House for the world's tiniest and most
poorly located department store. It has a bow window that looms over the
sidewalk like the thrusting ram of a trireme, embarnacled with Victorian
foofawfery, and housing a humble display: a headless mannequin dressed in
something that appears to have been spun from steel wool (perhaps a tribute
to wartime austerity?); a heap of sallow dirt with a shovel in it; and
another mannequin (a recent addition shoehorned into one corner) dressed in
a Royal Navy uniform and holding a wooden cutout of a rifle.
Waterhouse found a worm eaten copy of the Encyclopedia Qwghlmiana in a
bookshop near the British Museum a week ago and has been carrying it around
in his attache case since then, imbibing a page or two at a time, like doses
of strong medicine. The overriding Themes of the Encyclopedia are three, and
they dominate its every paragraph as totally as the Three Sgrhs dominate the
landscape of Outer Qwghlm. Two of these themes are wool and guano, though
the Qwghlmians have other names for them, in their ancient, sui generis
tongue. In fact, the same linguistic hyperspecialization occurs here that
supposedly does with the Eskimos and snow or Arabs and sand, and the
Encyclopedia Qwghlmiana never uses the English words "wool" and "guano"
except to slander the inferior versions of these products that are exported
by places like Scotland in a perfidious effort to confuse the naive buyers
who apparently dominate the world's commodity markets. Waterhouse had to
read the encyclopedia almost cover to cover and use all his cryptanalytic
skills to figure out, by inference, what these products actually were.
Having learned so much about them, he is fascinated to find them
proudly displayed in the heart of the cosmopolitan city: a mound of guano
and a woman dressed in wool (1). The woman's outfit is entirely
grey, in keeping with Qwghlmian tradition, which scorns pigmentation as a
loathsome and whorish innovation of the Scots. The top part of the ensemble
is a sweater which appears, at a glance, to be made of felt. A closer look
reveals that it is knit like any other sweater. Qwghlmian sheep are the
evolutionary product of thousands of years' massive weather related die off.
Their wool is famous for its density, its corkscrewlike fibers, and its
immunity to all known chemical straightening processes. It creates a matted
effect which the Encyclopedia describes as being supremely desirable and for
which there is an extensive descriptive vocabulary.
The third theme of the Encyclopedia Qwghlmiana is hinted at by the
mannequin with the gun.
Propped up against the stonework next to the building's entrance is a
gaffer dressed in an antique variant of the Home Guard uniform, involving
knickerbockers. His lower legs are encased in formidable socks made of one
of the variants of Qwghlmian wool, and lashed in place, just below the knee,
with tourniquets fashioned from thick cords woven together in a vaguely
Celtic interlace pattern (on almost every page, the Encyclopedia restates
that the Qwghlmians are not Celts, but that they did invent the best
features of Celtic culture). These garters are the traditional ornament of
true Qwghlmians; gentlemen wear them hidden underneath the trousers of their
suits. They were traditionally made from the long, slender tails of the
Skrrgh, which is the predominant mammal native to the islands, and which the
Encyclopedia defines as "a small mammal of the order Rodentia and the order
Muridae, common in the islands, subsisting primarily on the eggs of sea
birds, capable of multiplying with great rapidity when that or any other
food is made available to it, admired and even emulated by Qwghlmians for
its hardiness and adaptability."
After Waterhouse has been standing there for a few moments, enjoying a
cigarette and examining those garters, this mannequin moves slightly.
Waterhouse thinks that it is falling over in a gust of wind, but then he
realizes that it is alive, and not exactly falling over, but just shifting
its weight from foot to foot.
The gaffer takes note of him, smiles blackly, and utters some word of
greeting in his language, which, as has already become plain, is even less
suited than English to transcription into the Roman alphabet.
"Howdy," Waterhouse says.
The gaffer says something longer and more complicated. After a while,
Waterhouse (now wearing his cryptanalyst hat, searching for meaning midst
apparent randomness, his neural circuits exploiting the redundancies in the
signal) realizes that the man is speaking heavily accented English. He
concludes that his interlocutor was saying, "What part of the States are you
from, then?"
"My family's done a lot of traveling around," Waterhouse says. "Let's
say South Dakota."
"Ahh," the gaffer says ambiguously whilst flinging himself against the
slab of door. After a while it begins to move inwards, hand hammered iron
hinges grinding ominously as they pivot round inch thick tholes. Finally the
door collides with some kind of formidable Stop. The gaffer remains leaning
against it, his entire body at a forty five degree angle to prevent its
swinging back and crushing Waterhouse, who scurries past. Inside, a tiny
anteroom is dominated by a sculpture: two nymphets in diaphanous veils
kicking the crap out of a scurrying hag, entitled Fortitude and Adaptability
Driving Out Adversity .
This operation is repeated a few times with doors that are successively
lighter but more richly decorated. The first room, it becomes clear, was
actually a preäntepenultimate room, so it is a while before they can be said
to be definitely inside Qwghlm House. By that time they seem to be deep in
the center of the block, and Waterhouse half expects to see an underground
train screech by. Instead he finds himself in a windowless paneled room with
a crystal chandelier that is painfully bright but does not seem to actually
illuminate anything. His feet sink so deeply into the gaudy carpet that he
nearly blows out a ligament. The far end of the room is guarded by a staunch
Desk with a stout Lady behind it. Here and there are large ebony Windsor
chairs, with the spindly but dangerous look of aboriginal game snares.
On the walls, diverse oil paintings. At a first glance Waterhouse sorts
them into ones that are higher than they are wide, and others. The former
category is portraits of gentlemen, all of whom seem to share a grievous
genetic flaw that informs the geometry of the skull. The latter category is
landscapes or, just as often, seascapes, all in the bleak and rugged
category. These Qwghlmian painters are so fond of the locally produced blue
green grey paint (1) that they apply it as if with the back of a
shovel.
Waterhouse fights through the miring shag of the Carpet until he nears
the Desk, where he is greeted by the Lady, who shakes his hand and pinches
her face together in a sort of allusion to a smile. There is a long exchange
of polite, perfunctory speech of which all Waterhouse remembers is: "Lord
Woadmire will see you shortly," and: "Tea?"
Waterhouse says yes to the tea because he suspects that this lady (he
has forgotten her name) is not really earning her keep. Clearly disgruntled,
she ejects herself from her chair and loses herself in deeper and narrower
parts of the building. The gaffer has already gone back to his post out
front.
A photograph of the king hangs on the wall behind the desk. Waterhouse
hadn't known, until Colonel Chattan discreetly reminded him, that His
Majesty's full title was not simply By the Grace Of God of England King, but
B.T.G.O.G. of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, the
Isle of Man, Guernsey, Jersey, Outer Qwghlm, and Inner Qwghlm King.
Next to it is a smaller photograph of the man he is about to meet. This
fellow and his family are covered rather sketchily by the Encyclopedia ,
which is decades old, and so Waterhouse has had to do some additional
background research. The man is related to the Windsors in a way so
convoluted that it can only be expressed using advanced genealogical
vocabulary.
He was born Graf Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Otto Friedrich von Überset
Zenseehafenstadt, but changed his name to Nigel St. John Gloamthorpby,
a.k.a. Lord Woadmire, in 1914. In his photograph, he looks every inch a von
Übersetzenseehafenstadt, and he is entirely free of the cranial geometry
problem so evident in the older portraits. Lord Woadmire is not related to
the original ducal line of Qwghlm, the Moore family (Anglicized from the
Qwghlmian clan name Mnyhrrgh) which had been terminated in 1888 by a
spectacularly improbable combination of schistosomiasis, suicide, long
festering Crimean war wounds, ball lightning, flawed cannon, falls from
horses, improperly canned oysters, and rogue waves.
The tea takes some time in coming and Lord Woadmire does not seem to be
in any particular hurry to win the war either, so Waterhouse makes a circuit
of the room, pretending to care about the paintings. The biggest one depicts
a number of bruised and lacerated Romans dragging their sorry asses up onto
a rocky and unwelcoming shore as splinters of their invasion fleet wash up
around them. Front and center is a particular Roman who looks no less noble
for wear and tear. He is seated wearily on a high rock, a broken sword
dangling from one enervated hand, gazing longingly across several miles of
rough water towards a shining, paradisiacal island. This isle is richly
endowed with tall trees and flowering meadows and green pastures, but even
so it can be identified as Outer Qwghlin by the Three Sghrs towering above
it. The isle is guarded by a forbidding castle or two; its pale, almost
Caribbean beaches are lined with the colorful banners of a defending host
which (one can only assume) has just given the Roman invaders a bit of rough
handling which they will not soon forget. Waterhouse does not bother to bend
down and squint at the plaque; he knows that the subject of the painting is
Julius Cæsar's failed and probably apocryphal attempt to add the
Qwghlm Archipelago to the Roman Empire, the farthest from Rome he ever got
and the least good idea he ever had. To say that the Qwghlmians have not
forgotten the event is like saying that Germans can sometimes be a little
prickly.
"Where Caesar failed, what hope has Hitler?"
Waterhouse turns towards the voice and discovers Nigel St. John
Gloamthorpby a.k.a. Lord Woadmire, a.k.a. the Duke of Qwghlm. He is not a
tall man. Waterhouse goose steps through the carpet to shake his hand.
Though Colonel Chattan briefed him on proper forms of address when meeting a
duke, Waterhouse can no more remember this than he can diagram the duke's
family tree, so he decides to structure all of his utterances so as to avoid
referring to the duke by name or pronoun. This will be a fun game and make
the time go faster.
"It is quite a painting," Waterhouse says, "a heck of a deal."
"You will find the islands themselves no less extraordinary, and for
the same reasons," the duke says obliquely.
The next time Waterhouse is really aware of what's going on, he is
sitting in the duke's office. He thinks that there has been some routine
polite conversation along the way, but there is never any point in actually
monitoring that kind of thing. Tea is offered to him, and is accepted, for
the second or third time, but fails to materialize.
"Colonel Chattan is in the Mediterranean, and I have been sent in his
place," Waterhouse explains, "not to waste time covering logistical details,
but to convey our enormous gratitude for the most generous offer made in
regards to the castle." There! No pronouns, no gaffe.
"Not at all!" The duke is taking the whole thing as an affront to his
generosity. He speaks in the unhurried, dignified cadences of a man who is
mentally thumbing through a German English dictionary. "Even setting aside
my own... patriotic obligations... cheerfully accepted, of course..., it has
almost become almost... terribly fashionable to have a whole... crew...
of... uniformed fellows and whatnot running around in one's... pantry.
"Many of the great houses of Britain are doing their bit for the War,"
Waterhouse agrees.
"Well... by all means, then... use it!" the duke says. "Don't be...
reticent! Use it... thoroughly! Give it a good... working over! It has...
survived... a thousand Qwghlm winters and it will... survive your worst."
"We hope to have a small detachment in place very soon," Waterhouse
says agreeably.
"May I... know..., to satisfy my own... curiosity..., what sort of...
?" the duke says, and trails off.
Waterhouse is ready for this. He is so ready that he has to hold back
for a moment and try to make a show of discretion. "Huffduff."
"Huffduff?"
"HFDF. High Frequency Direction Finding. A technique for locating
distant radio transmitters by triangulating from several points."
"I should have... thought you knew where all the... German...
transmitters were."
"We do, except for the ones that move."
"Move!?" The duke furrows his brow tremendously, imagining a giant
radio transmitter building, tower and all mounted on four parallel rail road
tracks like Big Bertha, creeping across a steppe, drawn by harnessed
Ukrainians.
"Think U boats," Waterhouse says delicately.
"Ah!" the duke says explosively. "Ah!" He leans back in his creaky
leather chair, examining a whole new picture with his mind's eye. "They...
pop up, do they, and send out... wireless?"
"They do."
"And you... eavesdrop."
"If only we could!" Waterhouse says. "No, the Germans have used all of
that world famous mathematical brilliance of theirs to invent ciphers that
are totally unbreakable. We don't have the first idea what they are saying.
But, by using huffduff, we can figure out where they are saying it from, and
route our convoys accordingly."
"Ah."
"So what we propose to do is mount big rotating antennas, or aerials as
you call them here, on the castle, and staff the place with huffduff
boffins."
The duke frowns. "There will be proper... safeguards for lightning?"
"Naturally."
"And you are aware that you may... anticipate... ice storms as late in
the year as August?"
"The Royal Qwghlm Meteorological Station's reports, as a body of work,
don't leave a heck of a lot to the imagination."
"Fine, then!" the duke blusters, warming to the concept. "Use the
castle, then! And give them... give them hell!"
Chapter 22 ELECTRICAL TILL CORPORATION
As evidence of the allies' slowly developing plan to kill the Axis by
smothering them under a mountain of manufactured goods, there's this one
pier in Sydney Harbor that is piled high with wooden crates and steel
barrels: stuff that has been disgorged from the holds of ships from America,
Britain, India and just left to sit there because Australia doesn't know how
to digest it yet. It is not the only pier in Sydney that is choked with
stuff. But because this pier isn't good for much else, it is mounded higher
and the stuff is older, rustier, more infested with rats, more rimed with
salt, more thickly frosted and flagrantly streaked with gull shit.
A man is picking his way over the pile, trying not to get any more of
that gull shit on his khakis. He is wearing the uniform of a major in the
United States Army and is badly encumbered by a briefcase. His name is
Comstock.
Inside the briefcase are various identity papers, credentials, and an
impressive letter from the office of The General in Brisbane. Comstock has
had occasion to show all of the above to the doddering and yet queerly
formidable Australian guards who, with their doughboy helmets and rifles,
infest the waterfront. These men do not speak any dialect of the English
language that the major can recognize and vice versa, but they can all read
what is on those papers.
The sun is going down and the rats are waking up. The major has been
clambering over docks all day long. He has seen enough of war and the
military to know that what he is looking for will be found on the last pier
that he searches, which happens to be this one. If he begins searching that
pier at the near end, what he is looking for will be at the far end, and
vice versa. All the more reason to stay sharp as he works his way along.
After casting an eye around to make sure there are no leaking stacks of
drums of aviation fuel nearby, he lights up a cigarette. War is hell, but
smoking cigarettes makes it all worthwhile.
Sydney Harbor is beautiful at sunset, but he's been looking at it all
day and can't really see it anymore. For lack of anything better to do, he
opens up his briefcase. There's a paperback novel in there, which he's
already read. And there is a clipboard which contains, in yellowed,
crackling, sedimentary layers, a fossil record that only an archaeologist
could unravel. It is the story of how The General, just after he got out of
Corregidor and reached Australia in April, sent out a request for some
stuff. How that request got forwarded to America and bounced pinball like
through the cluttered infinitude of America's military and civilian
bureaucracies; how the stuff in question was duly manufactured, procured,
trucked hither and yon, and caused to be placed on a ship; and finally, some
evidence to the effect that said ship was in Sydney Harbor several months
ago. There's no evidence that this ship ever unloaded the stuff in question,
but unloading stuff is what ships always do when they reach port and so
Comstock is going with that assumption for a while.
After Major Comstock finishes his cigarette, he resumes his search.
Some of the papers on his clipboard specify certain magic numbers that ought
to be stenciled on the outside of the crates in question; at least, that's
what he's been assuming since he started this search at daybreak, and if
he's wrong, he'll have to go back and search every crate in Sydney Harbor
again. Actually getting a look at each crates' numbers means squeezing his
body through narrow channels between crate piles and rubbing away the grease
and grime that obscures the crucial data. The major is now as filthy as any
combat grunt.
When he gets close to the end of the pier, his eye picks out one
cluster of crates that appear to be all of the same vintage insofar as their
salt encrustations are of similar thickness. Down low where the rain pools,
their rough sawn wood has rotted. Up where it is roasted by the sun, it has
warped and split. Somewhere these crates must have numbers stenciled onto
them, but something else has caught his eye, something that stirs Comstock's
heart, just as the sight of the Stars and Stripes fluttering in the morning
sun might do for a beleaguered infantryman. Those crates are proudly marked
with the initials of the company that Major Comstock (and most of his
comrades in arms up in Brisbane) worked for, before they were shunted, en
masse, into the Army's Signal Intelligence Service. The letters are faded
and grimy, but he would recognize them anywhere in the world: they form the
logo, the corporate identity, the masthead, of ETC the Electrical Till
Corporation.
Chapter 23 CRYPT
The terminal is supposed to echo the lines of a row of Malay longhouses
jammed together side by side. A freshly painted jetway gropes out like a
giant lamprey and slaps its neoprene lips onto the side of the plane. The
elderly Nipponese tour group makes no effort to leave the plane,
respectfully leaving the aisles clear for the businessmen: You go ahead, the
people we're going to visit won't mind waiting.
On his march up the jetway, humidity and jet fuel condense onto Randy's
skin in equal measure, and he begins to sweat. Then he's in the terminal,
which notwithstanding the Malay longhouses allusion has been engineered
specifically to look like any other brand new airport terminal in the world.
The air conditioning hits like a spike through the head. He puts his bags
down on the floor and stands there for a moment, collecting his wits beneath
a Leroy Neiman painting the dimensions of a volleyball court, depicting the
sultan in action on a polo pony. Trapped in a window seat during a short and
choppy flight, he had never made it out to the lavatory, so he goes to one
now and pees so hard that the urinal emits a sort of yodeling noise.
As he steps back, perfectly satisfied, he becomes conscious of a man
backing away from an adjacent urinal one of the Nipponese businessmen who
just got off the plane. A couple of months ago, the presence of this man
would have ruled out Randy's taking a leak at all. Today, he didn't even
notice that the guy was there. As a longtime bashful kidney sufferer, Randy
is delighted to have stumbled upon the magic remedy: not to convince
yourself that you are a dominating Alpha Male, but rather to be too lost in
your thoughts to notice other people around you. Bashful kidney is your
body's way of telling you that you're thinking too hard, that you need to
get off the campus and go get a fucking job.
"You were looking at the Ministry of Information site?" the businessman
says. He is in a perfect charcoal grey pinstripe suit, which he wears just
as easily and comfortably as Randy does his souvenir t shirt from the fifth
Hackers Conference, surfer's jams, and Teva sandals.
"Oh!" Randy blurts, annoyed with himself. "I completely forgot to look
for it." Both men laugh. The Nipponese man produces a business card with
some deft sleight of hand. Randy has to rip open his nylon and velcro wallet
and delve for his. They exchange cards in the traditional Asian two handed
style, which Avi has forced Randy to practice until he gets it nearly right.
They bow at each other, triggering howls from the nearest couple of
computerized self flushing urinals. The bath room door swings open and an
aged Nip wanders in, a precursor of the silver horde.
Nip is the word used by Sergeant Sean Daniel McGee, U.S. Army, Retired,
to refer to Nipponese people in his war memoir about Kinakuta, a photocopy
of which document Randy is carrying in his bag. It is a terrible racist
slur. On the other hand, people call British people Brits, and Yankees
Yanks, all the time. Calling a Nipponese person a Nip is just the same
thing, isn't it? Or is it tantamount to calling a Chinese person a Chink?
During the hundreds of hours of meetings, and megabytes of encrypted e mail
messages, that Randy, Avi, John Cantrell, Tom Howard, Eberhard Föhr, and
Beryl have exchanged, getting Epiphyte(2) off the ground, each of them has
occasionally, inadvertently, used the word Jap as shorthand for Japanese in
the same way as they used RAM to mean Random Access Memory. But of course
Jap is a horrible racist slur too. Randy figures it all has to do with your
state of mind at the time you utter the word. If you're just trying to
abbreviate, it's not a slur. But if you are fomenting racist hatreds, as
Sean Daniel McGee occasionally seems to be not above doing, that's
different.
This particular Nipponese individual is identified, on his card, as
GOTO Furudenendu ("Ferdinand Goto"). Randy, who has spent a lot of time
recently puzzling over organizational charts of certain important Nipponese
corporations, knows already that he is a vice president for special projects
(whatever that means) at Goto Engineering. He also knows that organizational
charts of Nipponese companies are horseshit and that job titles mean
absolutely nothing. That he has the same surname as the guy who founded the
company is presumably worth taking note of.
Randy's card says that he is Randall L. WATERHOUSE ("Randy") and that
he is vice president for network technology development at Epiphyte
Corporation.
Goto and Waterhouse stroll out of the washroom and start to follow the
baggage claim icons that are strung across the terminal like bread crumbs.
"You have jet lag now?" Goto asks brightly following (Randy assumes) a
script from an English textbook. He's a handsome guy with a winning smile.
He's probably in his forties, though Nipponese people seem to have a whole
different aging algorithm so this might be way off.
"No," Randy answers. Being a nerd, he answers such questions badly,
succinctly, and truthfully. He knows that Goto essentially does not care
whether Randy has jet lag or not. He is vaguely conscious that Avi, if he
were here, would use Goto's question as it was intended as an opening for
cheery social batter. Until he reached thirty, Randy felt bad about the fact
that he was not socially deft. Now he doesn't give a damn. Pretty soon he'll
probably start being proud of it. In the meantime, just for the sake of the
common enterprise, he tries his best. "I've actually been in Manila for
several days, so I've had plenty of time to adjust."
"Ah! Did your activities in Manila go well?" Goto fires back.
"Yes, very well, thank you," Randy lies, now that his social skills,
such as they are, have had a moment to get unlimbered. "Did you come
directly from Tokyo?"
Goto's smile freezes in place for a moment, and he hesitates before
saying, "Yes.''
This is, at root, a patronizing reply. Goto Engineering is
headquartered in Kobe and they would not fly out of the Tokyo airport. Goto
said yes anyway, because, during that moment of hesitation, he realized that
he was just dealing with a Yank, who, when he said "Tokyo," really meant
"the Nipponese home islands" or "wherever the hell you come from."
"Excuse me," Randy says, "I meant to say Osaka."
Goto grins brilliantly and seems to execute a tiny suggestion of a bow.
"Yes! I came from Osaka today."
Goto and Waterhouse drift apart from each other at the luggage claim,
exchange grins as they breeze through immigration, and run into each other
at the ground transportation section. Kinakutan men in brilliant white
quasinaval uniforms with gold braid and white gloves are buttonholing
passengers, proffering transportation to the local hotels.
"You are staying at the Foote Mansion also?" Goto says. That being the
luxury hotel in Kinakuta. But he knows the answer already tomorrow's meeting
has been planned as exhaustively as a space shuttle launch.
Randy hesitates. The largest Mercedes Benz he's ever seen has just
pulled up to the curb, condensed moisture not merely fogging its windows but
running down them in literal streamlines. A driver in Foote Mansion livery
has erupted from it to divest Mr. Goto of his luggage, Randy knows that he
need only make a subtle move toward that car and he will be whisked to a
luxury hotel where he can take a shower, watch TV naked while drinking a
hundred dollar bottle of French wine, go swimming, get a massage.
Which is precisely the problem. He can already feel himself wilting in
the equatorial heat. It's too early to go soft. He's only been awake for six
or seven hours. There's work to be done. He forces himself to stand up at
attention, and the effort makes him break a sweat so palpably that he almost
expects to moisten everything within a radius of several meters. "I would
enjoy sharing a ride to the hotel with you," he says, "but I have one or two
errands to run first."
Goto understands. "Perhaps drinks this evening."
"Leave me a message," Randy says. Then Goto's waving at him through the
smoked glass of the Mercedes as it pulls seven gees away from the curb.
Randy does a one eighty, goes back inside to the halal Dunkin' Donuts, which
accepts eight currencies, and sates himself. Then he reemerges and turns
imperceptibly toward a line of taxis. A driver hurls himself bodily towards
Randy and tears his garment bag loose from his shoulder. "Ministry of
Information," Randy says.
In the long run, it may, or may not, be a good idea for the Sultanate
of Kinakuta to have a gigantic earthquake , volcano , tsunami , and
thermonuclear weapon proof Ministry of Information with a cavernous sub sub
basement crammed with high powered computers and data switches. But the
sultan has decided that it would be sort of cool. He has hired some alarming
Germans to design it, and Goto Engineering to build it. No one, of course,
is more familiar with staggering natural disasters than the Nipponese, with
the possible exception of some peoples who are now extinct and therefore
unable to bid on jobs like this. They also know a thing or two about having
the shit bombed out of them, as do the Germans.
There are subcontractors, of course, and a plethora of consultants.
Through some miraculous feat of fast talking, Avi managed to land one of the
biggest consulting contracts: Epiphyte(2) Corporation is doing "systems
integration" work, which means plugging together a bunch of junk made by
other people, and overseeing the installation of all the computers,
switches, and data lines.
The drive to the site is surprisingly short. Kinakuta City isn't that
big, hemmed in as it is by steep mountain ranges, and the sultan has endowed
it with plenty of eight lane superhighways. The taxi blasts across the plain
of reclaimed land on which the airport is built, swings wide around the
stump of Eliza Peak, ignoring two exits for Technology City, then turns off
at an unmarked exit. Suddenly they are stuck in a queue of empty dump trucks
Nipponese behemoths emblazoned with the word GOTO in fat macho block
letters. Coming towards them is a stream of other trucks that are identical
except that these are fully laden with stony rubble. The taxi driver pulls
onto the right shoulder and zooms past trucks for about half a mile. They're
heading up Randy's ears pop once. This road is built on the floor of a
ravine that climbs up into one of the mountain ranges. Soon they are hemmed
in by vertiginous walls of green, which act like a sponge, trapping an
eternal cloud of mist, through which sparks of brilliant color are sometimes
visible. Randy can't tell whether they are birds or flowers. The contrast
between the cloud forest's lush vegetation and the dirt road, battered by
the house sized tires of the heavy trucks, is disorienting.
The taxi stops. The driver turns and looks at him expectantly. Randy
thinks for a moment that the driver has gotten lost and is looking to Randy
for instructions. The road terminates here, in a parking lot mysteriously
placed in the middle of the cloud forest. Randy sees half a dozen big air
conditioned trailers bearing the logos of various Nipponese, German, and
American firms; a couple of dozen cars; as many buses. All the accoutrements
of a major construction site are here, plus a few extras, like two monkeys
with giant stiff penises fighting over some booty from a Dumpster, but there
is no construction site. Just a wall of green at the end of the road, green
so dark it's almost black.
The empty trucks are disappearing into that darkness. Full ones come
out, their headlights emerging from the mist and gloom first, followed by
the colorful displays that the drivers have built onto the radiator grilles,
followed by the highlights on their chrome and glass, and finally the trucks
themselves. Randy's eyes adjust, and he can see now that he is staring into
a cavern, lit up by mercury vapor lamps.
"You want me to wait?" the driver asks.
Randy glances at the meter, does a quick conversion, and figures out
that the ride to this point has cost him a dime. "Yes," he says, and gets
out of the taxi. Satisfied, the driver kicks back and lights up a cigarette.
Randy stands there and gapes into the cavern for a minute, partly
because it's a hell of a thing to look at and partly because a river of cool
air is draining out of it, which feels good. Then he trudges across the lot
and goes to the trailer marked "Epiphyte."
It is staffed by three tiny Kinakutan women who know exactly who he is,
though they've never met him before, and who give every indication of being
delighted to see him. They wear long, loose wraps of brilliantly colored
fabric on top of Eddie Bauer turtlenecks to ward off the nordic chill of the
air conditioners. They are all fearsomely efficient and poised. Everywhere
Randy goes in Southeast Asia he runs into women who ought to be running
General Motors or something. Before long they have sent out word of his
arrival via walkie talkie and cell phone, and presented him with a pair of
thick knee high boots, a hard hat, and a cellular phone, all carefully
labeled with his name. After a couple of minutes, a young Kinakutan man in
hard hat and muddy boots opens the trailer's door, introduces himself as
"Steve," and leads Randy into the entrance of the cavern. They follow a
narrow pedestrian board walk illuminated by a string of caged lightbulbs.
For the first hundred meters or so, the cave is just a straight passage
barely wide enough to admit two Goto trucks and the pedestrian lane. Randy
trails his hand along the wall. The stone is rough and dusty, not smooth
like the surface of a natural cavern, and he can see fresh gouges wrought by
jackhammers and drills.
He can tell by the echo that something's about to change. Steve leads
him out into the cavern proper. It is, well, cavernous. Big enough for a
dozen of the huge trucks to pull around in a circle to be laden with rock
and muck. Randy looks up, trying to find the ceiling, but all he sees is a
pattern of bluish white high intensity lights, like the ones in gymnasiums,
perhaps ten meters above. Beyond that it's darkness and mist.
Steve goes off in search of something and leaves Randy alone for a few
minutes, which is useful since it takes a long time for him to get his
bearings.
Some of the cavern wall is smooth and natural; the rest of it is rough,
marking the enlargements conceived by the engineers and executed by the
contractor. Likewise, some of the floor is smooth, and not quite level. Some
places it has been drilled and blasted to bring it down, others it has been
filled in to bring it up.
This, the main chamber, looks to be about finished. The offices of the
Ministry of Information will be here. There are two other, smaller chambers,
deeper inside the mountain, still being enlarged. One will contain the
engineering plant (power generators and so forth) and the other will be the
systems unit.
A burly blond man in a white hard hat emerges from a hole in the
chamber wall: Tom Howard, Epiphyte Corporation's vice president for systems
technology. He takes his hard hat off and waves to Randy, then beckons him
over.
The passageway that leads to the systems chamber is big enough that you
could drive a delivery van down it, but it's not as straight or as level as
the main entryway. It is mostly occupied by a conveyor system of terrifying
power and speed, which is carrying tons of dripping grey muck out towards
the main chamber to be dumped into the Goto trucks. In terms of apparent
cost and sophistication, it beats the same relationship to a normal conveyor
belt as an F 15 does to a Sopwith Camel. It is possible to speak but
impossible to be heard when you are near it, and so Tom and Randy and the
Kinakutan who calls himself Steve trudge silently down the passage for
another hundred or so meters until they reach the next cavern.
This one is only large enough to contain a modest one story house. The
conveyor passes right through the middle of it and disappears down another
hole; the muck is coming from deeper yet in the mountain. It's still too
loud in here to talk. The floor has been leveled by pouring in concrete, and
conduits rise from it every few meters with orange cables dangling from
their open tops: optical fiber lines.
Tom walks towards another opening in the wall. It appears that several
subsidiary caverns branch away from this one. Tom leads Randy through the
opening, then turns to put a hand on his arm and steady him: they are at the
top of a steep wooden staircase that has been built down a nearly vertical
shaft that descends a good five meters or so.
"What you just saw is the main switch room," Tom says. "That'll be the
largest router in the world when it's finished. We're using some of these
other chambers to install computers and mass storage systems. The world's
largest RAID, basically, buffered with a big, big RAM cache."
RAID means Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks; it is a way to store
vast quantities of information cheaply and reliably, and exactly the kind of
thing you would want to have in a data haven.
"So we're still cleaning out some of these other chambers," Tom
continues. "We discovered something, down here, that I thought you'd find
interesting." He turns around and begins to descend the staircase. "Did you
know that these caves were used as an air raid shelter by the Japanese,
during the war?"
Randy has been carrying the map page from his photocopied book around
in his pocket. He unfolds it and holds it up near a lightbulb. Sure enough,
it includes a site, up in the mountains, labeled ENTRANCE TO AIR RAID
SHELTER & COMMAND POST.
"And a command post?" Randy says.
"Yeah. How'd you know that?"
"Interlibrary loan," Randy says.
"We didn't know it until we got here and found all of these old cables
and electrical shit strung around the place. We had to tear it out so we
could string in our own."
Randy begins to descend the steps.
"This shaft was full of rocks," Tom says, "but we could see wires going
down into it, so we knew something had to be down here."
Randy looks nervously at the ceiling. "Why was it full of rocks? Was
there a cave in?"
"No," Tom says, "the Japanese soldiers did it. They threw rocks down
the shaft until it was full. It took a dozen of our laborers two weeks to
pull all the rocks out by hand."
"So, what did the wires lead to?"
"Lightbulbs," Tom says, "they were just electrical wires no
communications."
"Then what was it they were trying to hide down here?" Randy asks. He
has almost reached the bottom of the staircase, and he can see that there is
a room sized cavity.
"See for yourself" Tom says, and flicks a light switch.
The cavity is about the size of a one car garage, with a nice level
floor. There is a wooden desk, chair, and filing cabinet, fuzzy with fifty
years' growth of grey green fungus. And there is a metal footlocker, painted
olive drab, stenciled with Nipponese characters.
"I forced the lock on this thing," Tom says. He steps over to the
footlocker and flips the lid open. It is filled with books.
"You were expecting maybe gold bars?" Tom says, laughing at the
expression on Randy's face.
Randy sits down on the floor and grabs his ankles. He's staring open
mouthed at the books in the chest.
"You okay?" Tom asks. "Heavy, heavy deja vu," Randy says. "From this?"
"Yeah," Randy says, "I've seen this before."
"Where?"
"In my grandmother's attic."
***
Randy finds his way up out of the network of caverns and into the
parking lot. The warm air feels good on his skin, but by the time he has
reached the Epiphyte Corp. trailer to turn in his hard hat and boots, he has
begun to sweat again. He bids good bye to the three women who work there,
and once again is struck by their attentiveness, their solicitousness. Then
he remembers that he is not just some interloper. He is a shareholder, and
an important officer, in the corporation that employs them he is paying them
or oppressing them, take your pick.
He trudges across the parking lot, moving very slowly, trying not to
get that metabolic furnace het up. A second taxi has pulled alongside the
one that is waiting for Randy, and the drivers are leaning out of their
windows shooting the breeze.
As Randy approaches his taxi, he happens to glance back towards the
entrance of the cavern. Framed in its dark maw, and dwarfed by the
mountainous shapes of the Goto dump trucks, is a solitary man, silver
haired, stooped, but trim and almost athletic looking in a warmup suit and
sneakers. He is standing with his back to Randy, facing the cavern, holding
a long spray of flowers. He seems rooted in the mud, perfectly motionless.
The front door of the Goto Engineering trailer flies open. A young
Nipponese man in a white shirt, striped tie, and orange hard hat descends
the stairs and moves briskly towards the old man with the flowers. When he
is still some distance away, he stops, puts his feet together, and executes
a bow. Randy hasn't spent enough time around Nipponese to understand the
minutiae, but this looks to him like an extraordinarily major bow. He
approaches the old man with a bright smile and holds one beckoning hand out
towards the Goto trailer. The old man seems disoriented maybe the cavern
doesn't look like it used to but after a few moments he returns a
perfunctory bow and allows the young engineer to lead him out of the stream
of traffic.
Randy gets in his taxi and says, "Foote Mansion," to the driver.
He has been harboring an illusion that he will read Sean Daniel McGee's
war memoir slowly and thoroughly, from beginning to end, but this has now
gone the way of all illusions. He hauls the photocopied stack out of his bag
during the drive to the hotel and begins ruthless triage. Most of it has
nothing to do with Kinakuta at all it's about McGee's experiences fighting
in New Guinea and the Philippines. McGee is no Churchill, but he does have a
distant blarney tinged narrative talent, which makes even banal anecdotes
readable. His skills as raconteur must have made him a big hit around the
bar at the NCOs' Club; a hundred tipsy sergeants must have urged him to
write some of this shit down if he ever made it back to South Boston alive.
He did make it back, but unlike most of the other GIs who were in the
Philippines on V J day, he didn't go straight back home. He took a little
detour to the Sultanate of Kinakuta, which was still home to almost four
thousand Nipponese troops. This explains an oddity about his book. In most
war memoirs, V E Day or V J Day happens on the last page, or at least in the
last chapter, and then our narrator goes home and buys a Buick. But V J day
happens about two thirds of the way through Sean Daniel McGee's book. When
Randy sets aside the pre August 1945 material, an ominously thick stack of
pages remains. Clearly, Sergeant McGee has something to get off his chest.
The Nipponese garrison on Kinakuta had long since been bypassed by the
war, and like the other bypassed garrisons, had turned what energies they
had left to vegetable farming, and waiting for the extremely sporadic
arrivals of submarines, which, towards the close of the war, the Nipponese
used to haul the most extremely vital cargo and to ferry certain desperately
needed specialists, like airplane mechanics, from one place to another. When
they got Hirohito's broadcast from Tokyo, ordering them to lay down their
arms, they did so dutifully but (one has to suspect) gladly.
The only hard part was finding someone to surrender to. The Allies had
concentrated on planning the invasion of the Nipponese home islands, and it
took them a while to get troops out to the bypassed garrisons like Kinakuta.
McGee's account of the confusion in Manila is mordant at this point in the
book McGee starts to lose his patience, and his charm. He starts to rail.
Twenty pages later, he's sloshing ashore at Kinakuta City. He stands at
attention while his company captain accepts the surrender of the Nipponese
garrison. He posts a guard around the entrance to the cavern, where a few
diehard Nips have refused to surrender. He organizes the systematic
disarming of the Nipponese soldiers, who are terribly emaciated, and sees to
it that their rifles and ammunition are dumped into the ocean even as food
and medical supplies are brought ashore. He helps a small contingent of
engineers string barbed wire around the airfield, turning it into an
internment camp.
Randy flips through all of this during the drive to the hotel. Then,
words like "impaled" and "screams" and "hideous" catch his eye, so he flips
back a few pages and begins to read more carefully.
***
The upshot is that the Nipponese had, since 1940, marched thousands of
tribesmen out of the cool, clean interior of the island to its hot,
pestilential edge, and put them to work. These slaves had enlarged the big
cavern where the Nipponese built their air raid shelter and command post;
improved the road to the top of Eliza Peak, where the radar and direction
finding stations were perched; built another runway at the air field; filled
in more of the harbor; and died by thousands of malaria, scrub typhus,
dysentery, starvation, and overwork. These same tribesmen, or their bereaved
brothers, had then watched, from their redoubts high in the mountains, as
Sean Daniel McGee and his comrades came and stripped the Nipponese of their
armaments and concentrated them all in the airfield, guarded by a few dozen
exhausted GIs who were frequently drunk or asleep. Those tribesmen worked
around the clock, up there in the jungle, making spears, until the next full
moon illuminated the sleeping Nipponese like a searchlight. Then they poured
out of the forest in what Sean Daniel McGee describes as "a horde," "a
plague of wasps," "a howling army," "a black legion unleashed from the gates
of Hell," "a screaming mass," and in other ways he could never get away with
now. They flattened and disarmed the GI's, but did not hurt them. They flung
tree limbs over the barbed wire until the fence had become a highway, and
then swarmed into the airfield with their spears at the ready. McGee's
account goes on for about twenty pages, and, as much as anything else, is
the story of the night that one affable sergeant from South Boston became
permanently unhinged.
"Sir?"
Randy is startled to realize that the taxi's door is open. He looks
around and finds that he's under the awning of the Hotel Foote Mansion. The
door is being held open for him by a wiry young bellhop with a different
look than most of the Kinakutans Randy has encountered so far. This kid
perfectly matches Sean Daniel McGee's description of a tribesman from the
interior.
"Thank you," Randy says, and makes a point of tipping the fellow
generously.
His room is all done up in furniture designed in Scandinavia but
assembled locally from various endangered hardwoods. The view is towards the
interior mountains, but if he goes onto his tiny balcony he can see a bit of
water, a containership being unloaded, and most of the memorial garden built
by the Nipponese on the site of the massacre.
Several messages and faxes await him: mostly the other members of
Epiphyte Corp., notifying him that they have arrived, and letting him know
in which room they can be found. Randy unpacks his bags, takes a shower, and
sends his shirts down to the laundry for tomorrow. Then he makes himself
comfortable at his little table, boots his laptop, and pulls up the Epiphyte
(2) Corporation Business Plan.
Chapter 24 LIZARD
Bobby Shaftoe and his buddies are just out for a nice little morning
drive through the countryside.
In Italy.
Italy! He cannot fucking believe it. What gives?
Not his job to know. His job has been very clearly described to him. It
has to be clearly described, because it makes no sense.
In the good old days, back on Guadalcanal, his commanding officer would
say something like "Shaftoe, eradicate that pillbox!" and from there on out,
Bobby Shaftoe was a free agent. He could walk, run, swim or crawl. He could
sneak up and lob in a satchel charge, or he could stand off at a distance
and hose the objective down with a flame thrower. Didn't matter as long as
he accomplished the goal.
The goal of this little mission is completely beyond Shaftoe's
comprehension. They awaken him; Lieutenant Enoch Root; three of the other
Marines, including the radio man; and several of the SAS blokes in the
middle of the night, and hustle them down to one of the few docks in Malta
that hasn't been blasted away by the Luftwaffe. A submarine waits. They
climb aboard and play cards for about twenty four hours. Most of the time
they are on the surface, where submarines can go a hell of a lot faster, but
from time to time they dive, evidently for the best of reasons.
When next they are allowed up on the flat top of the submarine, it is
the middle of the night again. They are in a little cove in a parched,
rugged coastline; Shaftoe can see that much by the moonlight. Two trucks are
waiting for them. They open hatches in the sub's deck and begin to take
stuff out: into one of the trucks, the U.S. Marines load a bunch of cloth
sacks bulging with what appears to be all kinds of trash. Meanwhile, the
British Special Air Service are at work with wrenches, rags, grease and much
profanity in the back of the other truck, assembling something from crates
that they have brought up from another part of the submarine. This is
covered up by a tarp before Shaftoe can get a good look, but he recognizes
it as something you'd rather have pointed away from you.
There are a couple of dark men with mustachioes hanging around the dock
smoking and arguing with the skipper of the submarine. After all of the
stuff is unloaded, the skipper appears to pay them with more crates from the
submarine. The men pry a couple of them open for inspection, and appear to
be satisfied.
At this point Shaftoe still doesn't even know what continent they are
on. When he first saw the landscape he figured Northern Africa. When he saw
the men, he figured Turkey or something.
It is not until the sun comes up on their little convoy, and (lying in
the back of the truck on top of the sacks of trash, peeking out from under
the tarp) he is able to see road signs and Christian churches, that he
realizes it has to be Italy or Spain. Finally he sees a sign pointing the
way to ROMA and figures it's Italy. The sign points away from the midmorning
sun, so they must be somewhere south or southeast of Rome. They are also
south of some burg called Napoli.
But he doesn't spend a lot of time looking. It is not encouraged. The
truck is being driven by some fellow who speaks the language, and who stops
from time to time to converse with the natives. Some of the time this sounds
like friendly banter. Sometimes it sounds like arguments over highway
etiquette. Sometimes it is quieter, more guarded. Shaftoe figures out,
slowly, that during these exchanges the truck driver is bribing someone to
let them go through.
He finds it shocking that in a country actively embroiled in the middle
of the greatest war in history in a country run by belligerent Fascists for
God's sake two truckloads of heavily armed enemy soldiers can just drive
around freely, protected by nothing except a couple of five dollar tarps.
Criminy! What kind of a sorry operation is this? He feels like leaping to
his feet, casting the tarp aside, and giving these Eyties a good dressing
down. The whole place needs a good scrubbing with toothbrushes anyway. It's
like these people aren't even trying. Now, the Nips, think of them what you
will, at least when those guys declare war on you they mean it.
He resists the temptation to upbraid the Italians. He thinks it goes
against the orders he had thoroughly memorized before the shock of figuring
out that he was driving around in an Axis country jangled everything loose
from his brain. And if they hadn't come from the lips of Colonel Chattan
himself the chap or bloke who's the commanding officer of Detachment 2702 he
wouldn't have believed them anyway.
They are going to be putting in some bivouac time. They are going to
play a lot of cards for a while. During this time, the radio man is going to
be very busy. This phase of the operation might last as long as a week. At
some point, it is likely that strenuous, concerted efforts to kill them will
be made by a whole lot of Germans and, if they happen to be feeling
impetuous that day, Italians. When this happens, they are to send out a
radio message, torch the joint, drive to a certain field that passes for an
airstrip, and be picked up by those jaunty SAS flyboys.
Shaftoe didn't believe a word of it at first. He pegged it as some kind
of British humor thing, some kind of practical joke/hazing ritual. In
general he doesn't know what to make of the Brits because they appear (in
his personal observation) to be the only other people on the face of the
earth, besides Americans, who possess a sense of humor. He has heard rumors
that some Eastern Europeans can do it, but he hasn't met any of them, and
they don't have much to yuk it up about at the moment. In any case, he can
never quite make out when these Brits are joking.
Any thought that this was just a joke evaporated when he saw the
quantity of armaments they were being issued. Shaftoe has found that, for an
organization devoted to shooting and blowing up people on a large scale, the
military is infuriatingly reticent about passing out weapons. And most of
the weapons they do pass out are for shit. It is for this reason that
Marines have long found it necessary to buy their own tommy guns from home:
the Corps wants them to kill people, but they just won't give them the stuff
they need!
But this Detachment 2702 thing is a whole different outfit. Even the
grunts are carrying trench brooms! And if that didn't get their attention,
the cyanide capsules sure did. And the lecture from Chattan on the correct
way to blow your own head off ("you would be astonished at how many
otherwise competent chaps botch this apparently simple procedure").
Now, Shaftoe realizes that there is an unspoken codicil to Chattan's
orders: oh, yeah, and if any of the Italians, who actually live in Italy,
and who run the place, and who are Fascists and who are at war with us if
any of them notice you and, for some reason, object to your little plan,
whatever the fuck it is, then by all means kill them. And if that doesn't
work, please, by all means, kill yourself, because you'll probably do a
neater job of it than the Fascists will. Don't forget suntan lotion!
Actually, Shaftoe doesn't mind this mission. It is certainly no worse
than Guadalcanal. What bothers him (he decides, making himself comfortable
on the sacks of mysterious trash, staring up at a crack in the tarp) is not
understanding the purpose of it all.
The rest of the platoon may or may not be dead; he thinks he can still
hear some of them crying out, but it's hard to tell between the pounding of
the incoming surf and the relentless patter of the machine gun. Then he
realizes that some of them must be alive or else the Nips would not continue
to fire their gun.
Shaftoe knows that he is closer to the gun than any of his buddies. He
is the only one who has a chance.
It is at this point that Shaftoe makes his Big Decision. It is
surprisingly easy but then, really stupid decisions are always the easiest.
He crawls along the log to the point that is closest to the machine
gun. Then he draws a few deep breaths in a row, rises to a crouch, and
vaults over the log! He has a clear view of the cave entrance now, the comet
shaped muzzle flash of the machine gun tesselated by the black grid of the
net that they put up to reject incoming grenades. It is all remarkably
clear. He looks back over the beach and sees motionless corpses.
Suddenly he realizes they are still firing the gun, not because any of
his buddies are alive, but to use up all of their excess ammunition so that
they will not have to pack it out. Shaftoe is a grunt, and understands.
Then the muzzle swings abruptly towards him he has been sighted. He is
in the clear, totally exposed. He can dive into the jungle foliage, but they
will sweep it with fire until he is dead. Bobby Shaftoe plants his feet,
aims his .45 into the cave, and begins pulling the trigger. The barrel of
the machine gun is pointing at him now.
But it does not fire.
His .45 clicks. It's empty. Everything is silent except for the surf,
and for the screaming. Shaftoe holsters his .45 and pulls out his revolver.
The voice that is doing the screaming is unfamiliar. It's not one of
Shaftoe's buddies.
A Nipponese Imperial Marine bolts from the mouth of the cave, up above
the level of Shaftoe's head. The pupil of Shaftoe's right eye, the sights of
his revolver, and this Nip are all arranged briefly along the same line for
a moment, during which Shaftoe pulls the trigger a couple of times and
almost certainly scores a hit.
The Imperial Marine gets caught in the netting and plunges to the
ground in front of him.
A second Nip dives out of the cave a moment later, grunting
incoherently, apparently speechless with horror. He lands wrong and breaks
one of his leg bones; Shaftoe can hear it snap. He begins running towards
the surf anyway, hobbling grotesquely on the bad leg. He completely ignores
Shaftoe. There is terrible bleeding from his neck and shoulder, and loose
chunks of flesh flopping around as he runs.
Bobby Shaftoe holsters his revolver. He ought to shoulder his rifle and
plug the guy, but he is too confused to do anything for the moment.
Something red flickers in the mouth of the cave. He glances up that way
and sees nothing clear enough to register against the deafening visual noise
of the jungle.
Then he sees the flash of red again, and it disappears again. It was
shaped like a sharpened Y. It was shaped like the forked tongue of a
reptile.
Then a moving slab of living jungle explodes from the mouth of the cave
and crashes into the foliage below. The tops of the plants shake and topple
as it moves.
It is out, free and clear, on the beach. It is low to the ground,
moving on all fours. It pauses for a moment and flicks its tongue towards
the Imperial Marine who is now hobbling into the Pacific Ocean some fifty
feet distant.
Sand erupts into the air, like smoke from the burning tires of a drag
racer, and the lizard is rocketing across the beach. It covers the distance
to the Imperial Marine in one, two, three seconds, takes him in the backs of
the knees, takes him down hard into the surf. Then the lizard is dragging
the dead Nip back up onto the land. It stretches him out there among the
dead Americans, walks around him a couple of times, flicking its tongue, and
finally starts to eat him.
"Sarge! We're here!" says Private Flanagan. Before he even wakes up,
Bobby Shaftoe notices that Flanagan is speaking in a normal voice and does
not sound scared or excited. Wherever "here" is, it's not someplace
dangerous. They are not under attack.
Shaftoe opens his eyes just as the tarp is being peeled back from the
open top of the truck. He stares straight up into a blue Italian sky torn
around the edges by the scrabbling branches of desperate trees. "Shit!" he
says.
"What's wrong, Sarge?"
"I just always say that when I wake up," Shaftoe says.
***
Their new home turns out to be an old stone farm building in an olive
farm, plantation, orchard or whatever the fuck you call a place where olives
are grown. If this building were in Wisconsin, any cheesehead who passed by
would peg it as abandoned. Here, Shaftoe is not so sure. The roof has partly
collapsed into the building under the killing weight of its red clay tiles,
and the windows and doorways yawn, open to the elements. It's a big
structure, big enough that after several hours of sledgehammer work they are
able to drive one of the trucks inside and conceal it from airborne snoops.
They unload the sacks of trash from the other truck. Then the Italian guy
drives it away and never comes back.
Corporal Benjamin, the radio man, gets busy clambering up olive trees
and stringing copper wires around the place. The blokes of the SAS go out
and reconnoiter while the guys of the Marine Corps open the sacks of trash
and start spreading them around. There are several months' worth of Italian
newspapers. All of them have been opened, rearranged, haphazardly refolded.
Articles have been torn out, other articles circled or annotated in pencil.
Chattan's orders are beginning to filter back into Shaftoe's brain; he heaps
these newspapers in the corners of the barn, oldest ones first, newer ones
on top.
There is a whole sack filled with cigarette butts, carefully smoked to
the nub. They are of a Continental brand unfamiliar to Shaftoe. Like a
farmer broadcasting seeds, he carries this sack around the premises tossing
handfuls onto the ground, concentrating mostly on places where people will
actually work: Corporal Benjamin's table and another makeshift table they
have set up for eating and playing poker. Likewise with a salad of wine
corks and beer caps. An equal number of wine and beer bottles are flung, one
by one, into a dark and unused corner of the barn. Bobby Shaftoe can see
that this is the most satisfying work he will ever get, so he takes it over,
and flings those bottles like a Green Bay Packer quarterback firing spiral
passes into the sure hands of his plucky tight ends.
The blokes come back from reconnoitering and there is a swappage of
roles; the Marines now go out to familiarize themselves with the territory
while the SAS continue unloading garbage. In an hour's worth of wandering
around, Sergeant Shaftoe and Privates Flanagan and Kuehl determine that this
olive ranch is on a long skinny shelf of land that runs roughly north south.
To the west, the territory rises up steeply toward a conical peak that looks
suspiciously like a volcano. To the east, it drops, after a few miles, down
towards the sea. To the north, the plateau dead ends in some nasty,
impassable scrubland, and to the south it opens up on more farming
territory.
Chattan wanted him to find a vantage point on the bay, as convenient as
possible to the barn. Toward sunset, Shaftoe finds it: a rocky outcropping
on the slopes of the volcano, half an hour's walk northeast of the barn and
maybe five hundred feet above it in altitude.
He and his Marines almost don't find their way back to the barn because
it has been so well hidden by this point. The SAS have put up blackout
shades over every opening, even the small chinks in the collapsed roof. On
the inside, they have settled in comfortably to the pockets of usable space.
With all of the litter (now enhanced with chicken feathers and bones,
tonsorial trimmings and orange peels) it looks like they've been living
there for a year, which, Shaftoe guesses, is the whole point.
Corporal Benjamin has about a third of the place to himself. The SAS
blokes keep calling him a lucky sod. He has his transmitter set up now, the
tubes glowing warmly, and he has an unbelievable amount of paperwork. Most
of it's old and fake, just like the cigarette butts. But after dinner, when
the sun is down not only here but in London, he begins tapping out the Morse
code.
Shaftoe knows Morse code, like everyone else in the place. As the guys
and the blokes sit around the table, anteing up for what promises to be an
all night Hearts marathon, they keep one ear cocked towards Corporal
Benjamin's keying. What they hear is gibberish. Shaftoe goes and looks over
Benjamin's shoulder at one point, just to verify that he isn't crazy, and
sees he's right:
XYHEL ANAOG GFQPL TWPKI AOEUT
and so on and so forth, for pages and pages.
The next morning they dig a latrine and then proceed to fill it halfway
with a couple of barrels of genuine U.S. Mil. Spec. General Issue 100% pure
certified Shit. As per Chattan's instructions, they pour the shit in a
dollop at a time, throwing in handfuls of crumpled Italian newspapers after
each dollop to make it look like it got there naturally. With the possible
exception of being interviewed by Lieutenant Reagan, this is the worst
nonviolent job Shaftoe has ever had to do in the service of his country. He
gives everyone the rest of the day off, except for Corporal Benjamin, who
stays up until two in the morning banging out random gibberish.
The next day they make the observation post look good. They take turns
marching up there and back, up and back, up and back, wearing a trail into
the ground, and they scatter some cigarette butts and beverage containers up
there along with some general issue shit and general issue piss. Flanagan
and Kuehl hump a footlocker up there and hide it in the lee of a volcanic
rock. The locker contains books of silhouettes of various Italian and German
naval and merchant ships, and similar spotter's guides for airplanes, as
well as some binoculars, telescopes, and camera equipment, empty notepads,
and pencils.
Even though Sergeant Bobby Shaftoe is for the most part running this
show, he finds it uncannily difficult to arrange a moment alone with
Lieutenant Enoch Root. Root has been avoiding him ever since their eventful
flight on the Dakota. Finally, on about the fifth day, Shaftoe tricks him;
he and a small contingent leave Root alone at the observation point, then
Shaftoe doubles back and traps him there.
Root is startled to see Shaftoe come back, but he doesn't get
particularly upset. He lights up an Italian cigarette and offers Shaftoe
one. Shaftoe finds, irritatingly enough, that he is the nervous one. Root's
as cool as always.
"Okay," Shaftoe says, "what did you see? When you looked through the
papers we planted on the dead butcher what did you see?"
"They were all written in German," Root says.
"Shit!"
"Fortunately," Root continues, "I am somewhat familiar with the
language."
"Oh, yeah your mom was a Kraut, right?"
"Yes, a medical missionary," Root says, "in case that helps dispel any
of your preconceptions about Germans."
"And your Dad was Dutch."
"That is correct."
"And they both ended up on Guadalcanal why?"
"To help those who were in need."
"Oh, yeah."
"I also learned some Italian along the way. There's a lot of it going
around in the Church."
"Fuck me," Shaftoe exclaims.
"But my Italian is heavily informed by the Latin that my father
insisted that I learn. So I would probably sound rather old fashioned to the
locals. In fact, I would probably sound like a seventeenth century alchemist
or something."
"Could you sound like a priest? They'd eat that up."
"If worse comes to worst," Root allows, "I will try hitting them with
some God talk and we'll see what happens."
They both puff on their cigarettes and look out across the large body
of water before them, which Shaftoe has learned is called the Bay of Naples.
"Well anyway," Shaftoe says, "what did it say on those papers?"
"A lot of detailed information about military convoys between Palermo
and Tunis. Evidently stolen from classified German sources," Root says.
"Old convoys, or..."
"Convoys that were still in the future," Root says calmly. Shaftoe
finishes his cigarette, and does not speak for a while. Finally he says,
"Fuckin' weird." He stands up and begins walking back towards the barn.
Chapter 25 THE CASTLE
Just as Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse detrains, some rakehell hits him
full in the face with a turn of brackish ice water. The barrage continues as
he walks a gauntlet of bucket slinging ne'er do wells. But then he realizes
no one's there. This is just an intrinsic quality of the local atmosphere,
like fog in London.
The staircase that leads over the tracks to Utter Maurby Terminal is
enclosed with roof and walls, forming a gigantic organ pipe that resonates
with an infrasonic throb as it is pummeled by wind and water. As he walks
into the lower end of the staircase, the storm is suddenly peeled away from
his face and he is able to stand there for a moment and give this phenom the
full appreciation it deserves.
Wind and water have been whipped into an essentially random froth by
the storm. A microphone held up in the air would register only white noise a
complete absence of information. But when that noise strikes the long tube
of the staircase, it drives a physical resonance that manifests itself in
Waterhouse's brain as a low hum. The physics of the tube extract a coherent
pattern from meaningless noise! If only Alan were here!
Waterhouse experiments by singing the harmonics of this low fundamental
tone: octave, fifth, fourth, major third, and so on. Each one resonates in
the staircase to a greater or lesser degree. It is the same series of notes
made by a brass instrument. By hopping from one note to another, Waterhouse
is able to play some passable bugle calls on the staircase. He does a pretty
decent reveille.
"How lovely!"
He spins around. A woman is standing behind him, lugging a portmanteau
the size of a hay bale. She is perhaps fifty years old, with the physique of
a stove, and she had a nice new big city permanent until a few seconds ago
when she stepped out of the train. Salt water is running down her face and
neck and disappearing beneath her sturdy frock of grey Qwghlm wool.
"Ma'am," Waterhouse says. Then he busies himself with hauling her
portmanteau up to the top of the stairs. This puts the two of them, and all
of their luggage, on a narrow covered bridge that leads across the tracks
and into the terminal building. The bridge has windows in it, and Waterhouse
suffers a nauseating attack of vertigo as he looks through them, and through
the half inch of rain and saltwater that is streaming down them at any given
moment, towards the North Atlantic Ocean. This major body of water is only a
stone's throw away and is trying vigorously to get much closer. This must be
an optical illusion, but the tops of the waves appear to be level with the
plane on which they're standing despite the fact that it's at least twenty
feet off the ground. Each one of those waves must weigh as much as all of
the freight trains in Great Britain combined, and they are rolling towards
them relentlessly, simply hammering the living daylights out of the rocks.
It all makes Waterhouse want to pitch a fit, fall down, and throw up. He
plugs his ears.
"Are you a bandsman, then, I take it?" the lady enquires.
Waterhouse turns to look at her. Her gaze is darting back and forth
around the front of his uniform, checking the insignia. Then she looks up
into his face and gives him a grandmotherly smile.
Waterhouse realizes, in that instant, that this woman is a German spy.
Holy cow!
"Only in peacetime, ma'am," he says. "The Navy has other uses, now, for
men with good ears."
"Oh!" she exclaims, "you listen to things, do you?"
Waterhouse smiles. "Ping! Ping!" he says, mimicking sonar.
"Ah!" she says. "I am Harriett Qrtt." She holds out her hand.
"Hugh Hughes," Waterhouse says, and shakes.
"Pleasure.
"All mine.
"You'll be needing a place to stay, I suppose." She blushes
ostentatiously. "Forgive me. I just assume you are bound for Outer." That's
Outer, as in Outer Qwghlm. Right now, they are on Inner Qwghlm.
"Quite right, actually," Waterhouse says.
Like every other place name in the British Isles, Inner and Outer
Qwghlm represent a gross misnomer with ancient and probably comical origins.
Inner Qwghlm is hardly even an island; it is joined to the main land by a
sandbar that used to come and go with the tides, but that has been beefed up
with a causeway that carries a road and the railway line. Outer Qwghlm is
twenty miles away.
"My husband and I operate a small bed and breakfast," Mrs. Qrtt says.
"We should be honored to have an Asdic man stay with us." Asdic is simply
the British acronym for what Yanks refer to as sonar, but every time the
word is mentioned in the presence of Alan, he gets a naughty look on his
face and goes on an unstoppable punning tear.
So he ends up at the Qrtt residence. Waterhouse and Mr. and Mrs. Qrtt
spend the evening huddled round the only source of heat: a coal burning
toaster that has been bricked into the socket of an old fireplace. Every so
often Mr. Qrtt opens the door and pelts the ashes with a mote of coal. Mrs.
Qrtt ferries out the chow and spies on Waterhouse. She notices his slightly
asymmetrical walk and manages to ferret out that he had a spot of polio at
one point. He plays the organ they have a pedal powered harmonium in the
parlor and she remarks on that.
***
Waterhouse first sees Outer Qwghlm through a scupper. He doesn't even
know what a scupper is, except a modality of vomiting. The ferry crew gave
him and the other half dozen passengers detailed vomiting instructions
before they fought past the Utter Maurby breakwater, the salient point being
that if you leaned over the rail, you would almost certainly be swept
overboard. Much better to get down on all fours and aim at a scupper. But
half the time when Waterhouse peers down one of these, he sees not water but
some distant point on the horizon, or seagulls chasing the ferry, or the
distinctive three pronged silhouette of Outer Qwghlm.
The prongs, called Sghrs, are basaltic columns. This being the middle
of the Second World War, and Outer Qwghlm being the part of the British
Isles closest to the action of the Battle of the Atlantic, they are now
flecked with little white radio shacks and hairy with antennas. There is a
fourth sghr, much lower than the others and easily mistaken for a mere
hillock, that rises above Outer Qwghlm's only harbor (and, indeed, only
settlement, not counting the naval base on the other side). On top of this
fourth sghr is the castle that is the nominal home of Nigel St. John
Gloamthorpby Woadmire and that is to be the new headquarters of Detachment
2702.
Five minutes' walk encompasses the whole town. A furious rooster chases
a feeble sheep down the main street. There is snow at the higher elevations,
but just grey slush down here, which is indistinguishable from the grey
cobblestones until you step on it and fall down on your ass. The
Encyclopedia Qwghlmiana had made much use of the definite article the Town,
the Castle, the Hotel, the Pub, the Pier. Waterhouse stops in at the
Shithouse to deal with some aftershocks of the sea voyage, and then walks up
the Street. The Automobile pulls up alongside and offers him a ride; it
turns out to be the Taxi, too. It takes him round the Park where he notices
the Statue (ancient Qwghlmians thrashing hapless Vikings); this gesture that
does not go unnoted by the Taxi Driver, who veers into the Park to give him
a better look.
The Statue is the sort that has a great deal to say and covers a
correspondingly large expanse of real estate. Its pedestal is a slab of
native basalt, covered on at least one side with what Waterhouse recognizes,
from the Encyclopedia, as Qwghlmian runes. To an ignorant philistine, these
might look like an endless, random series of sans serif Xs, Is, Vs, hyphens,
asterisks, and upside down Vs. But it is an enduring source of pride to
"We didn't care for those Romans and that Julius Caesar fellow,"
observes the taxi driver, "and we weren't too taken with their alphabet
either."
Indeed the Encyclopedia Qwghlmiana features a lengthy article about the
local system of runes. The author of this article has such a chip on his
shoulder that the thing is almost physically painful to read. The Qwghlmian
practice of eschewing the use of curves and loops, forming all glyphs out of
straight lines, far from being crude as some English scholars have asserted
gives the script a limpid austerity. It is an admirably functional style of
writing in a place where (after all the trees were cut down by the English)
most of the literate intellectual class suffered from chronic bilateral
frostbite.
Waterhouse has rolled down the window so that he can get a clearer
view; apparently someone has lost the Squeegee. The chill breeze washing
over his face finally begins to clear away his seasickness, to the point
where he begins to wonder how he should go about making contact with the
Whore.
Then he realizes, with some disappointment, that if the Whore has half
a brain in her head, she's across the island at the naval base.
"Who's the wretch?" Waterhouse asks. He points to a corner of the
statue, where a scrawny, downtrodden loser, with an iron collar welded
around his neck and a chain dangling from that, quivers and quails at the
carnage being meted out by the strapping Qwghlmian he men. Waterhouse
already knows the answer, but he can't resist asking.
"Hakh!" blurts the taxi driver, as if he is working up a loogie. "He is
from Inner Qwghlm, I can only suppose."
"Of course."
This exchange seems to have put the driver into a foul and vengeful
mood that can only be assuaged with some fast driving. There are a dozen or
more switchbacks in the road up to the Castle, each one glazed with black
ice and fraught with mortal danger. Waterhouse is glad he's not walking it,
but the switchbacks and the skating motion of the taxi revive his motion
sickness.
"Hakh!" the driver says, when they are about three quarters of the way
up, and nothing has been said for several minutes. "They practically laid
out the welcome mat for the Romans. They spread their legs for the Vikings.
There are probably Germans over there now!"
"Speaking of bile," Waterhouse says, "I need you to pull over. I'll
walk from here."
The driver is startled and miffed, but he relents when Waterhouse
explains that the alternative is a lengthy cleanup job. He even drives
Duffel up to the top of the sghr and drops it off.
Detachment 2702 arrives at the Castle some fifteen minutes later in the
person of Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse USN, who is serving as the advance
party. The walk gives him time to get his story straight, to get himself
into character. Chattan has warned him that there will be servants, and that
they will notice things, and that they will gossip. It would be much more
convenient if the servants could simply be packed off to the mainland for
the duration, but this would be a discourtesy to the duke. "You will,"
Chattan said, "have to work out a modus vivendi." Once Waterhouse had looked
this term up, he agreed heartily.
The castle is a mound of rubble about the size of the Pentagon. The lee
corner has been fitted out with a functional roof, electrical wiring, and a
few other frills such as doors and windows. In this area, which is all
Waterhouse gets to see for that first afternoon and evening, you can forget
you are on Outer Qwghlm and pretend that you are in some greener and balmier
place such as the Scottish Highlands.
The next morning, accompanied by the butler, Ghnxh, he strikes out into
other parts of the building and is delighted to find that you can't even
reach them without going outside; the internal connecting passages have been
mortared shut to stanch the seasonal migrations of skrrghs (pronounced
something like "skerries"), the frisky, bright eyed, long tailed mammals
that are the mascot of the islands. This compartmentalization, while
inconvenient, will be good for security.
Both Waterhouse and Ghnxh are encased in planklike wrappings of genuine
Qwghlm wool, and the latter carries the GALVANICK LUCIPHER. The Galvanick
Lucipher is of antique design. Ghnxh, who is about a hundred years old, can
only smile in condescension at Waterhouse's U.S. Navy flashlight. In the
sotto voce tones one might use to correct an enormous social gaffe, he
explains that the galvanick lucipher is of such a superior design as to make
any further reference to the Navy model a grating embarrassment for everyone
concerned. He leads Waterhouse back to a special room behind the room behind
the room behind the room behind the pantry, a room that exists solely for
maintenance of the galvanick lucipher and the storage of its parts and
supplies. The heart of the device is a hand blown spherical glass jar
comparable in volume to a gallon jug. Ghnxh, who suffers from a pretty
advanced case of either hypothermia or Parkinson's, maneuvers a glass funnel
into the neck of the jar. Then he wrestles a glass carboy from a shelf. The
carboy, labeled AQUA REGIA, is filled with a fulminant orange liquid. He
removes its glass stopper, hugs it, and heaves it over so that the orange
fluid begins to glug out into the funnel and thence into the jar. Where it
splashes out onto the tabletop, something very much like smoke curls up as
it eats holes just like the thousands of other holes already there. The
fumes get into Waterhouse's lungs; they are astoundingly corrosive. He
staggers out of the room for a while.
When he ventures back, he finds Ghnxh whittling an electrode from an
ingot of pure carbon. The jar of aqua regia has been capped off now, and a
variety of anodes, cathodes, and other working substances are suspended in
it, held in place by clamps of hammered gold. Thick wires, in insulating
sheathes of hand knit asbestos, twist out of the jar and into the business
end of the galvanick lucipher: a copper salad bowl whose mouth is closed off
by a Fresnel lens like the ones on a lighthouse. When Ghnxh gets his carbon
whittled to just the right size and shape, he fits it into a little hatch in
the side of this bowl, and casually throws a Frankensteinian blade switch. A
spark pops across the contacts like a firecracker.
For a moment, Waterhouse thinks that one wall of the building has
collapsed, exposing them to the direct light of the sun. But Ghnxh has
simply turned on the galvanick lucipher, which soon becomes about ten times
brighter, as Ghnxh adjusts a bronze thumbscrew. Crushed with shame,
Waterhouse puts his Navy flashlight back into its prissy little belt
holster, and precedes Ghnxh out of the room, the galvanick lucipher casting
palpable warmth on the back of his neck. "We've got about two hours before
she goes dead on us," Ghnxh says significantly.
They work out a modus vivendi, all right: Waterhouse kicks an old door
open and then Ghnxh strides into the room that is on the other side and
sweeps the beam of the lantern around as if it were a flame thrower, driving
back dozens or hundreds of squealing skerries. Waterhouse clambers
cautiously into the room, typically making his way over the collapsed
remnants of whatever roof or story used to be overhead. He gives the place a
quick inspection, trying to gauge how much effort would be required to make
it liveable for any more advanced organism.
Half of the castle has, at one point or another, been burned down by a
combination of Barbary corsairs, lightning bolts, Napoleon, and smoking in
bed. The Barbary corsairs did the best job of it (probably just trying to
stay warm), or maybe it's just that the elements have had longer to
decompose what little was left behind by the flames. In any case, in that
section of the castle, Waterhouse finds a place where there's not too much
rubble to shovel out, and where they can quickly enclose an adequate space
with a combination of tarps and planks. It is diametrically opposed to the
part of the castle that is still inhabited, which exposes it to winter
storms but protects it from the prying eyes of the staff. Waterhouse paces
off some rough measurements, then goes to his room, leaving Ghnxh to see to
the decommissioning of the galvanick lucipher.
Waterhouse sketches out some plans for the upcoming work, at long last
putting his hitherto misspent engineering skills to some use. He draws up a
bill of required materials, naturally involving a good many numbers:
100 8' 2 x 4s is a typical entry. He writes out the list a second time,
in words not numbers: ONE HUNDRED EIGHT FOOT TWO BY FOURS. This wording is
potentially confusing, so he changes it to TWO BY FOUR BOARDS ONE HUNDRED
COUNT LENGTH EIGHT FEET.
Next he pulls a sheet of what looks like ledger paper, divided
vertically into groups of five columns. Into these columns he transcribes
the message, ignoring spaces:
TWOBY FOURB OARDS ONEHU NDRED
COUNT LENGT HEIGH TFEET
and so on. Wherever he encounters a letter J he writes I in its stead,
so that JOIST comes out as IOIST. He only uses every third line of the page.
Ever since he left Bletchley Park, he has been carrying several sheets
of onionskin paper around in his breast pocket; when he sleeps, he puts them
under his pillow. Now he takes them out and selects one page, which has a
serial number typed across the top and is otherwise covered with neatly
typed letters like this:
ATHOP COGNQ DLTUI CAPRH MULEP
and so on, all the way down to the bottom of the page.
These sheets were typed up by a Mrs. Tenney, an aged vicar's wife who
works at Bletchley Park. Mrs. Tenney has a peculiar job which consists of
the following: she takes two sheets of onionskin paper and puts a sheet of
carbon paper between them and rolls them into a typewriter. She types a
serial number at the top. Then she turns the crank on a device used in bingo
parlors, consisting of a spherical cage containing twenty five wooden balls,
each with a letter printed on it (the letter J is not used). After spinning
the cage the exact number of times specified in the procedure manual, she
closes her eyes, reaches through a hatch in the cage, and removes a ball at
random. She reads the letter off the ball and types it, then replaces the
ball, closes the hatch, and repeats the process. From time to time, serious
looking men come into the room, exchange pleasantries with her, and take
away the sheets that she has produced. These sheets end up in the possession
of men like Waterhouse, and men in infinitely more desperate and dangerous
circumstances, all over the world. They are called one time pads.
He copies the letters from the one time pad into the empty lines
beneath his message:
TWOBY FOURB OARDS ONEHU NDRED ATHOP COGNQ DLTUI CAPRH MULEP
When he is finished, two out of every three lines are occupied.
Finally, he returns to the top of the page one last time and begins to
consider the letters two at a time. The first letter in the message is T.
The first letter from the one time pad, directly below it in the same
column, is A.
A is the first letter in the alphabet and so Waterhouse, who has been
doing this cipher stuff for much too long, thinks of it as being synonymous
with the number 1. In the same way, T is equivalent to 19 if you are working
in a J less alphabet. Add 1 to 19 and you get 20, which is the letter U. So,
in the first column beneath T and A, Waterhouse writes a U.
The next vertical pair is W and T, or 22 and 19, which in normal
arithmetic add up to 41, which has no letter equivalent; it's too large. But
it has been many years since Waterhouse did normal arithmetic. He has
retrained his mind to work in modular arithmetic specifically, modulo 25,
which means that you divide everything by 25 and consider only the
remainder. 41 divided by 25 is 1 with a remainder of 16. Throw away the 1
and the 16 translates into the letter Q, which is what Waterhouse writes in
the second column. In the third column, O and H give 14 + 8 = 22 which is W.
In the fourth, B and O give 2 + 14 = 16 which is Q. And in the fifth, Y and
P give 24 + 15 which is 39. 39 divided by 25 is 1 with a remainder of 14.
Or, as Waterhouse would phrase it, 39 modulo 25 equals 14. The letter for 14
is O. So the first code group looks like
By adding the random sequence ATHOP onto the meaningful sequence TWOBY,
Waterhouse has produced undecipherable gibberish. When he has enciphered the
entire message in this way, he takes out a new page and copies out only the
ciphertext UQWQO and so on.
The duke has a cast iron telephone which he has put at Waterhouse's
disposal. Waterhouse heaves it out of its cradle, rings the operator, places
a call across the island to the naval station, and gets through to a radio
man. He reads the ciphertext message to him letter by letter. The radio man
copies it down and informs Waterhouse that it will be transmitted forthwith.
Very soon, Colonel Chattan, down in Bletchley Park, will receive a
message that begins with UQWQO and goes on in that vein. Chattan possesses
the other copy of Mrs. Tenney's one time pad. He will write out the
ciphertext first, using every third line. Beneath the ciphertext he will
copy in the text from the one time pad:
He will then perform a subtraction where Waterhouse performed an
addition. U minus A means 20 minus 1 which equals 19 which gives the letter
T. Q minus T means 16 minus 19 which equals 3, giving us 22 which is W. And
so on. Having deciphered the whole message, he'll get to work, and
eventually two by fours one hundred count will show up at the Pier.
Chapter 26 WHY
Epiphyte Corp.'s business plan is about an inch thick, neither fat nor
skinny as these things go. The interior pages are slickly and groovily
desktop published out of Avi's laptop. The covers are rugged hand laid paper
of rice chaff, bamboo tailings, free range hemp, and crystalline glacial
meltwater made by wizened artisans operating out of a mist shrouded temple
hewn from living volcanic rock on some island known only to aerobically
gifted, Spandex sheathed Left Coast travel bores. An impressionistic map of
the South China Sea has been dashed across these covers by molecularly
reconstructed Ming Dynasty calligraphers using brushes of combed unicorn
mane dipped into ink made of grinding down charcoal slabs fashioned by blind
stylite monks from hand charred fragments of the True Cross.
The actual content of the business plan hews to a logical structure
straight out of the Principia Mathematica. Lesser entrepreneurs purchase
business plan writing software: packages of boilerplate text and spread
sheets, craftily linked together so that you need only go through and fill
in a few blanks. Avi and Beryl have written enough business plans between
the two of them that they can smash them out from brute memory. Avi's
business plans tend to go something like this:
MISSION: At [name of company] it is our conviction that [to do the
stuff we want to do] and to increase shareholder value are not merely
complementary activities they are inextricably linked.
PURPOSE: To increase shareholder value by [doing stuff]
EXTREMELY SERIOUS WARNING (printed on a separate page, in red letters
on a yellow background): Unless you are as smart as Johann Karl Friedrich
Gauss, savvy as a half blind Calcutta bootblack, tough as General William
Tecumseh Sherman, rich as the Queen of England, emotionally resilient as a
Red Sox fan, and as generally able to take care of yourself as the average
nuclear missile submarine commander, you should never have been allowed near
this document. Please dispose of it as you would any piece of high level
radioactive waste and then arrange with a qualified surgeon to amputate your
arms at the elbows and gouge your eyes from their sockets. This warning is
necessary because once, a hundred years ago, a little old lady in Kentucky
put a hundred dollars into a dry goods company which went belly up and only
returned her ninety nine dollars. Ever since then the government has been on
our asses. If you ignore this warning, read on at your peril you are dead
certain to lose everything you've got and live out your final decades
beating back waves of termites in a Mississippi Delta leper colony.
Still reading? Great. Now that we've scared off the lightweights, let's
get down to business.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: We will raise [some money], then [do some stuff] and
increase shareholder value. Want details? Read on.
INTRODUCTION: [This trend], which everyone knows about, and [that
trend], which is so incredibly arcane that you probably didn't know about it
until just now, and [this other trend over here] which might seem, at first
blush, to be completely unrelated, when all taken together, lead us to the
(proprietary, secret, heavily patented, trademarked, and NDAed) insight that
we could increase shareholder value by [doing stuff]. We will need $ [a
large number] and after [not too long] we will be able to realize an
increase in value to $ [an even larger number], unless [hell freezes over in
midsummer].
DETAILS:
Phase 1: After taking vows of celibacy and abstinence and forgoing all
of our material possessions for homespun robes, we (viz, appended resumes)
will move into a modest complex of scavenged refrigerator boxes in the
central Gobi Desert, where real estate is so cheap that we are actually
being paid to occupy it, thereby enhancing shareholder value even before we
have actually done anything. On a daily ration consisting of a handful of
uncooked rice and a ladleful of water, we will [begin to do stuff].
Phase 2, 3, 4, . . . , n 1: We will [do more stuff, steadily enhancing
shareholder value in the process] unless [the earth is struck by an asteroid
a thousand miles in diameter, in which case certain assumptions will have to
be readjusted; refer to Spreadsheets 397 413].
Phase n: before the ink on our Nobel Prize certificates is dry, we will
confiscate the property of our competitors, including anyone foolish enough
to have invested in their pathetic companies. We will sell all of these
people into slavery. All proceeds will be redistributed among our
shareholders, who will hardly notice, since Spreadsheet 265 demonstrates
that, by this time, the company will be larger than the British Empire at
its zenith.
SPREADSHEETS: [Pages and pages of numbers in tiny print, conveniently
summarized by graphs that all seem to be exponential curves screaming
heavenward, albeit with enough pseudo random noise in them to lend
plausibility].
RESUMES: Just recall the opening reel of The Magnificent Seven and you
won't have to bother with this part; you should crawl to us on hands and
knees and beg us for the privilege of paying our salaries.
***
To Randy and the others, the business plan functions as Torah, master
calendar, motivational text, philosophical treatise. It is a dynamic, living
document. Its spreadsheets are palimpsests, linked to the company's bank
accounts and financial records so that they automatically adjust whenever
money flows in or out. Beryl handles that stuff. Avi handles the words the
underlying, abstract plan, and the concrete details, that inform those
spreadsheets interpreting the numbers. Avi's part of the plan mutates too,
from week to week, as he gets new input from articles in the Asian Wall
Street Journal, conversations with government officials in flyblown Shenzhen
karaoke bars, remote sensing data pouring in from satellites, and obscure
technical journals analyzing the latest advances in optical fiber
technology. Avi's brain also digests the ideas of Randy and the other
members of the group and incorporates them into the plan. Every quarter,
they take a snapshot of the business plan in its current state, trowel some
Maybelline onto it, and ship out new copies to investors.
Plan Number Five is about to be mailed simultaneous with the company's
first anniversary. An early draft had been sent to each of them a couple of
weeks ago in an encrypted e mail message, which Randy hadn't bothered to
read, assuming he knew its contents. But little cues that he's picked up in
the last few days tell him that he'd better find out what the damn thing
actually says.
He fires up his laptop, plugs it into a telephone jack, opens up his
communications software, and dials a number in California. This last turns
out to be easy, because this is a modern hotel and Kinakuta has a modern
phone system. If it hadn't been easy, it probably would have been
impossible.
In a small, stuffy, perpetually dark, hot plastic scented wiring
closet, in a cubicled office suite leased by Novus Ordo Seclorum Systems
Incorporated, sandwiched between an escrow company and a discount travel
agent in the most banal imaginable disco era office building in Los Altos,
California, a modem wakes up and spews noise down a wire. The noise
eventually travels under the Pacific as a pattern of scintillations in a
filament of glass so transparent that if the ocean itself were made out of
the same stuff, you'd be able to see Hawaii from California. Eventually the
information reaches Randy's computer, which spews noise back. The modem in
Los Altos is one of half a dozen that are all connected to the back of the
same computer, an entirely typical looking tower PC of a generic brand,
which has been running, night and day, for about eight months now. They
turned its monitor off about seven months ago because it was just wasting
electricity. Then John Cantrell (who is on the board of Novus Ordo Seclorum
Systems Inc., and made arrangements to put it in the company's closet)
borrowed the monitor because one of the coders who was working on the latest
upgrade of Ordo needed a second screen. Later, Randy disconnected the
keyboard and mouse because, without a monitor, only bad information could be
fed into the system. Now it is just a faintly hissing off white obelisk with
no human interface other than a cyclopean green LED staring out over a dark
landscape of empty pizza boxes.
But there is a thick coaxial cable connecting it to the Internet.
Randy's computer talks to it for a few moments, negotiating the terms of a
Point to Point Protocol, or PPP connection, and then Randy's little laptop
is part of the Internet, too; he can send data to Los Altos, and the lonely
computer there, which is named Tombstone, will route it in the general
direction of any of several tens of millions of other Internet machines.
Tombstone, or tombstone.epiphyte.com as it is known to the Internet,
has an inglorious existence as a mail drop and a cache for files. It does
nothing that a thousand online services couldn't do for them more easily and
cheaply. But Avi, with his genius for imagining the most horrific
conceivable worst case scenarios, demanded that they have their own machine,
and that Randy and the others go through its kernel code one line at a time
to verify that there were no security holes. In every book store window in
the Bay Area, piled in heaps, were thousands of copies of three different
books about how a famous cracker had established total control over a couple
of well known online services. Consequently, Epiphyte Corp. could not
possibly use such an online service for its secret files while with a
straight face saying that it was exerting due diligence on its shareholders'
behalf. Thus tombstone.epiphyte.com.
Randy logs on and checks his mail: forty seven messages, including one
that came two days ago from Avi (avi@epiphyte.com) that is labeled:
epiphyteBizPlan.5.4.ordo. Epiphyte Business Plan, 5th edition, 4th
draft, in a file format that can only be read by [Novus] Ordo [Seclorum],
which is wholly owned by the company of the same name, but whose hard parts
were written, as it happens, by John Cantrell.
He tells the computer to begin downloading that file it's going to take
a while. In the meantime, he scrolls through the list of other messages,
checking the names of their senders, subject headings, and sizes, trying to
figure out, first of all, how many of these can simply be thrown away
unread.
Two messages jump out because they are from an address that ends with
aol.com, the cyberspace neighborhood of parents and children but never of
students, hackers, or people who actually work in high tech. Both of these
are from Randy's lawyer, who is trying to get Randy's financial affairs
disentangled from Charlene's with as little rancor as possible. Randy feels
his blood pressure spiking, millions of capillaries in the brain bulging
ominously. But they are very short files, and the subject headings seem
innocuous, so he calms down and decides not to worry about them now.
Five messages originate from computers with extremely familiar names
systems that are part of the campus computer network he used to run. The
messages come from system administrators who took over the reins when Randy
left, guys who long ago asked him all the easy questions, such as What's the
best place to order pizza? and Where did you hide the staples? and have now
gotten to the point of e mailing him chunks of arcane code that he wrote
years ago with questions like, Was this an error, or something incredibly
clever I haven't figured out yet? Randy declines to answer those messages
just now.
There are about a dozen messages from friends, some of them just
passing along Net humor that he's already seen a hundred times. Another
dozen from other members of Epiphyte Corp., mostly concerning the details of
their itineraries as they all converge on Kinakuta for tomorrow's meeting.
That leaves a dozen or so other messages which belong in a special
category that did not exist until a week ago, when a new issue of TURING
Magazine came out, containing an article about the Kinakuta data haven
project, and a cover photo of Randy on a boat in the Philippines. Avi had
gone to some lengths to plant this article so that he would have something
to wave in the faces of the other participants in tomorrow's meeting. TURING
is such a visual magazine that it cannot be viewed without the protection of
welding goggles, and so they insisted on a picture. A photographer was
dispatched to the Crypt, which was found visually wanting. A tizzy ensued.
The photographer was diverted to Manila Bay where he captured Randy standing
on a boat deck next to a big reel of orange cable, a volcano rising from the
smog in the back ground. The magazine won't even be on newsstands for
another month, but the article is on the Web as of a week ago, where it
instantly became a subject of discussion on the Secret Admirers mailing
list, which is where all of the cool guys like John Cantrell hang out to
discuss the very latest hashing algorithms and pseudo random number
generators. Because Randy happened to be in the picture, they have
mistakenly fastened upon him as being more of a prime mover than he really
is. This has spawned a new category of messages in Randy's mailbox:
unsolicited advice and criticism from crypto freaks worldwide. At the moment
there are fourteen such messages in his in box, eight of them from a person,
or persons, identifying himself, or themselves, as Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto.
It would be tempting to ignore these, but the problem is that a solid
majority of people on the Secret Admirers mailing list are about ten times
as smart as Randy. You can check the list anytime you want and find a
mathematics professor in Russia slugging it out with another mathematics
professor in India, kilobyte for kilobyte, over some stupefyingly arcane
detail in prime number theory, while an eighteen year old, tube fed math
prodigy in Cambridge jumps in every few days with an even more stupefying
explanation of why they are both wrong.
So when people like this send him mail, Randy tries to at least skim
it. He is a little leery of the ones who identify themselves as Admiral
Isoroku Yamamoto, or with the number 56 (which is a code meaning Yamamoto).
But just because they are political verging on flaky doesn't mean they don't
know their math.
To: randy@tombstone.epiphyte.com
From: 56@laundry.org
Subject: data haven
Do you have public key somewhere posted? I would like to exchange mail
with you but I don't want Paul Comstock to read it:) My public key if you
care to respond is
– BEGIN ORDO PUBLIC KEY BLOCK – (lines and lines of
gibberish)
– END ORDO PUBLIC KEY BLOCK
Your concept of data haven is good but has important limits. What if
Philippine government shuts down your cable? Or if the good Sultan changes
his mind, decides to nationalize your computers, read all the disks? What is
needed is not ONE data haven but a NETWORK of data havens more robust, just
like Internet is more robust than single machine.
Signed,
The Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto who signs his messages thus:
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK – (lines and lines of
gibberish)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
Randy closes that one without responding. Avi doesn't want them talking
to Secret Admirers for fear that they will later be accused of stealing
someone's ideas, so the reply to all of these e mails is a form letter that
Avi paid some intellectual property lawyer about ten thousand dollars to
draft.
He reads another message simply because of the return address:
From: root@pallas.eruditorum.org
On a UNIX machine, "root" is the name of the most godlike of all users,
the one who can read, erase, or edit any file, who can run any program, who
can sign up new users and terminate existing ones. So receiving a message
from someone who has the account name "root" is like getting a letter from
someone who has the title "President" or "General" on his letterhead.
Randy's been root on a few different systems, some of which were worth tens
of millions of dollars, and professional courtesy demands he at least read
this message.
I read about your project.
Why are you doing it?
followed by an Ordo signature block.
One has to assume this is an attempt to launch some sort of
philosophical debate. Arguing with anonymous strangers on the Internet is a
sucker's game because they almost always turn out to be or to be
indistinguishable from self righteous sixteen year olds possessing infinite
amounts of free time. And yet the "root" address either means that this
person is in charge of a large computer installation, or (much more likely)
has a Finux box on his desk at home. Even a home Finux user has got to be
several cuts above your average Internet surfing dilettante. Randy opens up
a terminal window and types
whois eruditorum.org
and a second later gets back a block of text from the InterNIC:
eruditorum.org (Societas Eruditorum)
followed by a mailing address: a P.O. Box in Leipzig, Germany.
After that a few contact numbers are listed. All of them have the
Seattle area code. But the three digit exchanges, after the area code, look
familiar to Randy, and he recognizes them as gateways into a forwarding
service, popular among the highly mobile, that will bounce your voice mail,
faxes, etc. to wherever you happen to be at the moment. Avi, for example,
uses it all the time.
Scrolling down, Randy finds:
Record last updated on 18 Nov 98.
Record created on 1 Mar 90.
The "90" jumps out. That's a prehistoric date by Internet standards. It
means that Societas Eruditorum was way ahead of the game. Especially for a
group based in Leipzig, which was part of East Germany until about then.
Domain servers in listed order:
NS.SF.LAUNDRY.ORG
followed by the dotted quad for laundry.org, which is a packet
anonymizer used by many Secret Admirers to render their communications
untraceable.
It all adds up to nothing, yet Randy can't get away with assuming that
this message came from a bored sixteen year old. He should probably make
some token response. But he's afraid that it'll turn out to be a come on for
some kind of business proposition: probably some mangy high tech company
that's looking for capital.
In the latest version of the business plan, there is probably some
explanation of why Epiphyte(2) is building the Crypt. Randy can simply cut
and paste it into an e mail reply to root@pallas.eruditorum.org. It'll be
something vaporous and shareholder pleasing, and therefore kind of
alienating. With any luck it will discourage this person from pestering him
anymore. Randy double clicks on Ordo's eyeball/pyramid icon, and it opens up
a little text window on the screen, where he is invited to type commands.
Ordo's also got a lovely graphical user interface, but Randy scorns it. No
menus or buttons for him. He types
>decrypt epiphyteBizPlan.5.4.ordo
The computer responds
verify your identity: enter the pass phrase or 'bio' to opt for
biometric verification.
Before Ordo will decrypt the file, it needs to have the private key:
all 4096 bits of it. The key is stored on Randy's hard disk. But bad guys
can break into hotel rooms and read the contents of hard disks, so the key
itself has been encrypted. In order to decrypt it, Ordo needs the key to the
key, which (in Cantrell's one concession to user friendliness) is a pass
phrase: a string of words, easier to remember than 4096 binary digits. But
it has to be a long phrase or else it's too easy to break.
The last time Randy changed his pass phrase, he was reading another
World War II memoir. He types:
>with hoarse shouts of "banzai!" the drunken Nips swarmed out of
their trenches, their swords and bayonets flashing in the beams of our
searchlights
and hits the "return" key. Ordo responds:
incorrect pass phrase
reenter the pass phrase or "bio" to use biometric verification.
Randy curses and tries it a few more times, with slight changes in
punctuation. Nothing works.
In desperation and out of curiosity, he tries:
bio
and the software responds:
unable to locate biometric configuration file. Talk to Cantrell : /
Which is of course not a normal part of the software. Ordo does not
come with biometric verification, nor do its error messages refer to John
Cantrell, or anyone else, by name. Cantrell has apparently written a plug in
module, a little add on, and distributed it to his friends in Epiphyte(2).
"Fine," Randy says, picks up his phone, and dials John Cantrell's room
number. This being a brand new, modern hotel, he gets a voice mail box in
which John has actually bothered to record an informative greeting.
"This is John Cantrell of Novus Ordo Seclorum and Epiphyte
Corporations. For those of you who have reached me using my universal phone
number and consequently have no idea where I am: I am in the Hotel Foote
Mansion in the Sultanate of Kinakuta please consult a quality atlas. It is
four o'clock in the afternoon, Thursday March twenty first. I'm probably
down in the Bomb and Grapnel."
***
The Bomb and Grapnel is the pirate themed hotel bar, which is not as
cheesy as it sounds. It is decorated with (among other museum grade
memorabilia) several brass cannons that seem authentic. John Cantrell is
seated at a corner table, looking as at home here as a man in a black cowboy
hat possibly can. His laptop is open on the table next to a rum drink that
has been served up in a soup tureen. A two foot long straw connects it to
Cantrell's mouth. He sucks and types. Watching incredulously is a cadre of
tough looking Chinese businessmen sitting at the bar; when they see Randy
coming in, carrying his own laptop, they buzz up. Now there's two of them!
Cantrell looks up and grins something he cannot do without looking
fiendish. He and Randy shake hands triumphantly. Even though they've only
been riding around on 747s, they feel like Stanley and Livingstone.
"Nice tan," Cantrell says puckishly, all but twirling his mustache.
Randy's caught off guard, starts and stops talking twice, finally shakes his
head in defeat. Both men laugh.
"I got the tan on boats," Randy says, "not by the hotel pool. The last
couple of weeks, I've been putting out fires all over the place."
"Nothing that'll impact shareholder value, I hope," Cantrell deadpans.
Randy says, "You're looking encouragingly pale."
"Everything's fine on my end," Cantrell says. "It's like I predicted
lots of Secret Admirers want to work on a real data haven."
Randy orders a Guinness and says, "You also predicted that a lot of
those people would turn out to be squirrelly and undisciplined."
"Didn't hire those," Cantrell says. "And with Eb to handle the weird
stuff, we've been able to roll right over the few speed bumps we've
encountered."
"Have you seen the Crypt?"
Cantrell raises an eyebrow and shoots him a flawless imitation of a
paranoid glance. "It's like that NORAD command bunker in Colorado Springs,"
he says.
"Yeah!" Randy laughs. "Cheyenne Mountain."
"It's too big," Cantrell announces. He knows Randy is thinking the same
thing.
So Randy decides to play devil's advocate. "But the sultan does
everything big. There are big paintings of him in the big airport."
Cantrell shakes his head. "The Information Ministry is a serious
project. The sultan didn't just make it up. His technocrats conceived it."
"I'm told Avi did a little bit of deft turkey baster work ..."
"Whatever. But the people behind it, like Mohammed Pragasu, are all
Stanford B School types. Oxford and Sorbonne graduates. It's been engineered
to the doorstops by Germans. That cave is not a monument to the sultan."
"No, it's not a vanity project," Randy agrees, thinking of the chilly
machine room that Tom Howard is building a thousand feet below the cloud
forest.
"So there must be some rational explanation for how big it is."
"Maybe it's in the business plan?" ventures Randy.
Cantrell shrugs; he hasn't read it either. "The last one I read cover
to cover was Plan One. A year ago," admits Randy.
"That was a good business plan," Cantrell says. (1)
Randy changes the subject. "I forgot my pass phrase. Need to do that
biometric thing with you."
"It's too noisy here," Cantrell says, "it works by listening to your
voice, doing Fourier shit, remembering a few key numbers. We'll do it in my
room later."
Feeling some need to explain why he hasn't been keeping up with his e
mail, Randy says, "I have been totally obsessed, interfacing with these
AVCLA people in Manila."
"Yup. How's that going?"
"Look. My job's pretty simple," Randy says. "There's that big Nipponese
cable from Taiwan down to Luzon. A router at each end. Then there's the
network of short run, interisland cables that the AVCLA people are laying in
the Philippines. Each cable segment begins and ends at a router, as you
know. My job is to program the routers, make sure the data will always have
a clear path from Taiwan to Kinakuta."
Cantrell glances away, worried that he's about to get bored. Randy
practically lunges across the table, because he knows it's not boring.
"John! You are a major credit card company!"
"Okay." Cantrell meets his gaze, slightly unnerved.
"You are storing your data in the Kinakuta data haven. You need to
download a terabyte of crucial data. You begin the process your encrypted
bytes are screaming up through the Philippines at a gigabyte per second, to
Taiwan, from there across to the States." Randy pauses and swigs Guinness,
building the drama. "Then a ferry capsizes off Cebu."
"So?"
"So, in the space of ten minutes, a hundred thousand Filipinos all pick
up their telephones simultaneously."
Cantrell actually whacks his forehead. "Oh, my god!"
"Now you understand! I've been configuring this network so that no
matter what happens, the data continues to flow to that credit card company.
Maybe at a reduced speed but it flows."
"Well, I can see how that would keep you busy."
"And that's why all I'm really up to speed on is these routers. And
incidentally they're good routers, but they just don't have enough capacity
to feed a Crypt of that size, or justify it economically."
"The gist of Avi and Beryl's explanation," Cantrell says, "is that
Epiphyte is no longer the sole carrier into the Crypt."
"But we're laying the cable here from Palawan "
"The sultan's minions have been out drumming up business," Cantrell
says. "Avi and Beryl are being vague, but from comparing notes with Tom, and
reading tea leaves, methinks there's one, maybe two other cables coming into
Kinakuta."
"Wow!" Randy says. It's all he can think of. "Wow!" He drinks about
half of his Guinness. "It makes sense. If they're doing it once with us,
they can do it again, with other carriers.
"They used us as leverage to bring in others," Cantrell says.
"Well . . . the question is, then, is the cable through the Philippines
still needed? Or wanted?"
"Yup," Cantrell says.
"It is?"
"No. I mean, yup, that's the question, all right."
Randy considers it. "Actually, this could be good news for your phase
of the operation. More pipes into the Crypt means more business in the long
run.
Cantrell raises his eyebrows, a little worried about Randy's feelings.
Randy leans back in his chair and says, "We've had debates before about
whether it makes sense for Epiphyte to be screwing around with cables and
routers in the Philippines."
Cantrell says, "The business plan has always maintained that it would
make economic sense to be running a cable through the Philippines even if
there weren't a Crypt at the end of it."
"The business plan has to say the Intra Philippines network could be
spun off as an independent business, and still survive," Randy says, "to
justify our doing it."
Neither one of them needs to say any more. They've been concentrating
on each other pretty intensely for a while, shutting out the rest of the bar
with their postures, and now, spontaneously, both of them lean back,
stretch, and begin looking around. The timing's fortuitous, because Goto
Furudenendu has just come in with a posse of what Randy guesses are civil
engineers: healthy looking, clean cut Nipponese men in their thirties. Randy
invites him over with a smile, then flags down their waiter and orders a few
of those great big bottles of bitterly cold Nipponese beer.
"This reminds me the Secret Admirers are really on my case," Randy
says.
Cantrell grins, showing some affection for those crazy Secret Admirers.
"Smart, rabidly paranoid people are the backbone of cryptology," he says,
"but they don't always understand business."
"Maybe they understand it too well," Randy says. He is left with some
residual annoyance that he came down to the Bomb and Grapnel party in order
to answer the question posed by root@eruditorum.org ("Why are you doing
it?") and he still doesn't know. As a matter of fact, he knows less now than
he did before.
Then the men from Goto join them, and it just happens that Eberhard
Föhr and Tom Howard show up at just the same time. There is a combinatorial
explosion of name card exchanges and introductions. It seems like protocol
demands a lot of serious social drinking now Randy's inadvertently
challenged these guys' politeness by ordering them beer, and they have to
demonstrate that they will not be bested in any such contest. Tables get
pushed together and everything gets just unbelievably jovial. Eb has to
order some beer for everyone too. Pretty soon things have degenerated into
karaoke. Randy gets up and sings "Me and You and a Dog Named Boo." It's a
good choice because it's a mellow, laid back song that doesn't demand lots
of emoting. Or singing ability, for that matter.
At some point Tom Howard puts his beefy arm up on the back of
Cantrell's chair, the better to shout into his ear. Their matched Eutropian
bracelets, engraved with "Hello Doctor, please freeze me as follows"
messages, are glittery and conspicuous, and Randy's nervous that the
Nipponese guys are going to notice this and ask questions that will be
exceedingly difficult to answer. Tom is reminding Cantrell of something (for
some reason they always refer to Cantrell in this way; some people are just
made to be called by last names). Cantrell nods and shoots Randy a quick and
somewhat furtive look. When Randy looks back at him, Cantrell glances down
apologetically and takes to chivvying his beer bottle nervously between his
hands. Tom just keeps looking at Randy kind of interestedly. All of this
motivated glancing finally brings Randy and Tom and Cantrell together at the
farthest end of the bar from the karaoke speakers.
"So, you know Andrew Loeb," Cantrell says. It's clear he's basically
dismayed by this and yet sort of impressed too, as if he'd just learned that
Randy had once beaten a man to death with his bare hands and then just never
bothered to mention it.
"It's true," Randy says. "As well as anyone can know a guy like that."
Cantrell is paying undue diligence to the project of picking the label
off of his beer bottle and so Tom picks up the thread now. "You were in
business together?"
"Not really. Can I ask how you guys are aware of this? I mean, how do
you even know that Andrew Loeb exists in the first place? Because of the
Digibomber thing?"
"Oh, no it was after that. Andy became a figure of note in some of the
circles where Tom and I both hang out," Cantrell says.
"The only circles I can imagine that Andy'd be a part of would be
primitive survivalists, and people who believe they've been Satanically
ritually abused."
Randy says this mindlessly, as if his mouth is a mechanical teletype
hammering out a weather forecast. It kind of hangs there.
"That helps fill in a few gaps," Tom finally says.
"What did you think when the FBI searched his cabin?" Cantrell asks,
his grin returned.
"I didn't know what to think," Randy says. "I remember watching the
videotape on the news the agents coming out of that shack with boxes of
evidence, and thinking my name must be on papers in them. That somehow I'd
get mixed up in the case as a result."
"Did the FBI ever contact you?" Tom asks.
"No. I think that once they searched through all of his stuff, they
figured out pretty quickly that he wasn't the Digibomber, and crossed him
off the list."
"Well, not long after that happened, Andy Loeb showed up on the Net,"
Cantrell says.
"I find that impossible to believe."
"So did we. I mean, we'd all received copies of his manifestoes printed
on this grey recycled paper that was like the sheets of fuzz that you peel
off a clothes dryer's lint trap."
"He used some kind of organic, water based ink that flaked off like
black dandruff," Tom says.
"We used to joke about having Andy grit all over our desks," Cantrell
says. "So when this guy called Andy Loeb showed up on the Secret Admirers
mailing list, and the Eutropia newsgroup, posting all of these long rants,
we refused to believe it was him."
"We thought that someone had just written really brilliant parodies of
his prose style," Cantrell says.
"But when they kept coming, day after day, and he started getting into
these long dialogs with people, it became obvious that it really was him,"
Tom grumbles.
"How did he square that with being a Luddite?"
Cantrell: "He said that he'd always thought of computers as a force
that alienated and atomized society."
Tom: "But as the result of being the number one Digibomber suspect for
a while, he'd been forcibly made aware of the Internet, which changed
computers by connecting them."
"Oh, my god!" Randy says.
"And he'd been mulling over the Internet while he was doing whatever
Andrew Loeb does," Tom continues.
Randy: "Squatting naked in icy mountain streams strangling muskrats
with his bare hands."
Tom: "And he'd realized computers could be a tool to unite society."
Randy: "And I'll bet he was just the guy to unite it."
Cantrell: "Well, that's actually not far away from what he said."
Randy: "So, are you about to tell me that he became a Eutropian?"
Cantrell: "Well, no. It's more like he discovered a schism in the
Eutropian movement we didn't know was there, and created his own splinter
group.
Randy: "I think of the Eutropians as being totally hard core
individuals, pure libertarians."
"Well, yeah!" Cantrell says. "But the basic premise of Eutropianism is
that technology has made us post human. That Homo sapiens plus technology is
effectively a whole new species: immortal, omnipresent because of the Net,
and headed towards omnipotence. Now, the first people to talk that way were
libertarians."
Tom says, "But the idea has attracted all kinds of people including
Andy Loeb. He showed up one day and started yammering about hive minds."
"And of course he was flamed to a crisp by most of the Eutropians,
because that concept was anathema to them," Cantrell says.
Tom: "But he kept at it, and after a while, some people started
agreeing with him. Turned out there was really a pretty substantial faction
within the Eutropians who didn't especially care for libertarianism and who
found the idea of a hive mind attractive."
"So, now Andy's the leader of that faction?" Randy asks.
"I would suppose so," Cantrell says. "They split away and formed their
own newsgroup. We haven't heard much from them in the last six months or
so."
"So how did you become aware of a connection between Andy and me?"
"He stills pops into the Secret Admirers newsgroup from time to time,"
Tom says. "And there's been a lot of discussion there about the Crypt
lately."
Cantrell says, "When he found out that you and Avi were involved, he
posted this vast rant twenty or thirty K of run on sentences. Not very
complimentary."
"Well, Jesus. What's his beef? He won the case. Completely bankrupted
me. You'd think he'd have something better to do than beat this dead horse,"
Randy says, thumping himself on the chest. "Doesn't he have a day job?"
"He's some kind of a lawyer now," Cantrell says.
"Ha! Figures."
"He's been denouncing us," Tom says. "Capitalist roader. Atomizing
society. Making the world safe for drug traffickers and Third World
kleptocrats."
"Well, at least he got something right," Randy says. He's delighted to
have an answer, finally, to the question of why they're building the Crypt.
Chapter 27 RETROGRADE MANEUVER
Sio is a mud cemetery. Those who have already given their lives for the
emperor compete for mire space with those who intend to. Bizarre forktailed
American planes dive out of the sun every day to murder them with terrible
glowing rains of cannon fire and the mind crushing detonations of bombs, so
they sleep in open topped graves and only come out at night. But their pits
are full of reeking water that chums with hostile life, and when the sun
goes down, rain beats them, carrying into their bones the deadly chill of
high altitudes. Every man in the 20th Division knows that he will not leave
New Guinea alive, so it remains only to choose the method of death:
surrender to be tortured, then massacred by the Australians? Put grenades to
their heads? Remain where they are to be killed by the airplanes all day,
and all night by malaria, dysentery, scrub typhus, starvation, and
hypothermia? Or walk two hundred miles over mountains and flooding rivers to
Madang, which is tantamount to suicide even when it is peacetime and you
have food and medicine...?
But that is what they are ordered to do. General Adachi flies to Sio it
is the first friendly plane they have seen in weeks and lands on the rutted
septic field that they call an airstrip, and orders the evacuation. They are
to move inland in four detachments. Regiment by regiment, they bury their
dead, pack up what is left of their equipment, hoard what little food is
left, wait for dark, and trudge towards the mountains. The later echelons
can find their path by smell, following the reek of dysentery and of the
corpses dropped behind the pathfinder groups like breadcrumbs.
The top commanders stay to the end, and the radio platoon stays with
them; without a powerful radio transmitter, and the cryptographic
paraphernalia that goes with it, a general is not a general, a division is
not a division. Finally they go off the air, and begin breaking the
transmitter down into the smallest pieces they can, which unfortunately are
not all that small; a divisional radio transmitter is a powerful beast, made
for lighting up the ionosphere. It has an electrical generator,
transformers, and other components that cannot be made light. The men of the
radio platoon, who would find it difficult to move even the weight of their
own skeletons over the mountains and across the surging rivers, will carry
the additional burdens of engine blocks, fuel tanks, and transformers.
And the big steel trunk with all of the Army codebooks. These books
were heavy as death when they were bone dry; now they are sodden. To carry
them out is beyond imagining. The rules dictate that they must therefore be
burned.
The men of the 20th Division's radio platoon are not much inclined to
humor of any kind at the moment, not even the grim sardonic humor universal
among soldiers. If anything in the world is capable of making them laugh at
this moment, it is the concept of trying to construct a bonfire out of
saturated codebooks in a swamp during a rainstorm. They might be able to
burn them if they used a lot of aviation fuel more than they actually have.
Then the fire would produce a towering column of smoke that would draw P 38s
as the scent of human flesh draws mosquitoes.
Burning them can't be necessary. New Guinea is a howling maelstrom of
decay and destruction; the only things that endure are rocks and wasps. They
rip off the covers to bring home as proof that they have been destroyed,
then pack the books into their trunk and bury it in the bank of an
especially vindictive river.
It's not a very good idea. But they have been getting bombed a lot.
Even if the shrapnel misses you, the bomb's shock wave is like a stone wall
moving at seven hundred miles an hour. Unlike a stone wall, it passes
through your body, like a burst of light through a glass figurine. On its
way through your flesh, it rearranges every part of you down to the
mitochondrial level, disrupting every process in every cell, including
whatever enables your brain to keep track of time and experience the world.
A few of these detonations are enough to break the thread of consciousness
into a snarl of tangled and chopped filaments. These men are not as human as
they were when they left home; they cannot be expected to think clearly or
to do things for good reasons. They throw mud on the trunk not as a sane
procedure for getting rid of it but as a kind of ritual, just to demonstrate
the proper respect for its lode of strange information.
Then they shoulder their burdens of iron and rice and begin to strain
up into the mountains. Their comrades have left a trampled path that is
already growing back into jungle. The mileposts are bodies by now just
stinking battlegrounds disputed by frenzied mobs of microbes, bugs, beasts,
and birds never catalogued by scientists.
Chapter 28 HUFFDUFF
The huffduff mast is planted before they even have a roof on the new
headquarters of Detachment 2702, and the huffduff antenna is raised before
there is any electricity to run it.
Waterhouse does his best to pretend as if he cares. He lets the workers
know: vast tank armadas clashing in the African desert might be dashing and
romantic, but the real battle of this war (ignoring, as always, the Eastern
Front) is the Battle of the Atlantic. We can't win the Battle of the
Atlantic without sinking some U boats, and we can't sink them until we find
them, and we need a way of finding them other than the tried and true
approach of letting our convoys steam through them and get blown to bits.
That way, men, is to get this antenna in action as soon as humanly possible.
Waterhouse is no actor, but when the second ice storm of the week blows
through and inflicts grievous damage on the antenna, and he has to stay up
all night repairing it by the light of the Galvanick Lucifer, he is pretty
sure that he has them hooked. The castle staff work late shifts to keep him
supplied with hot tea and brandy, and the builders give him some zesty hip
hip hoorays the next morning when the patched antenna is winched back up to
the top of the mast. They are all so sure that they are saving lives in the
North Atlantic that they would probably lynch him if they knew the truth.
This huffduff story is ridiculously plausible. It is so plausible that
if Waterhouse were working for the Germans, he'd be suspicious. The antenna
is a highly directional model. It receives a strong signal when pointed
towards the source and a weak signal otherwise. The operator waits for a U
boat to begin transmitting and then swings the antenna back and forth until
it gives the maximum reading; the direction of the antenna then gives the
azimuth to the source. Two or more such readings, supplied by different
huffduff stations, can be used to triangulate the origin of the signal.
In order to keep up appearances, the station needs to be manned 24
hours a day, which almost kills Waterhouse during the first weeks of 1943.
The rest of Detachment 2702 has not shown up on schedule, so it is up to
Waterhouse to preserve the illusion in the meantime.
Everyone within ten miles basically, the entire civilian population of
Qwghlm, or, to put it another way, the entire Qwghlmian race can see the new
huffduff antenna rising from the mast on the castle. They are not stupid
people and some of them, at least, must understand that the damn thing
doesn't do any good if it is always pointed in the same direction. If it's
not moving, it's not working. And if it's not working, then just what the
hell is going on up there in the castle anyway?
So Waterhouse has to move it. He lives in the chapel, sleeping when he
sleeps in a hammock strung at a perilous altitude above the floor
("skerries" are excellent jumpers, he has found).
If he sleeps during the daytime, even casual observers in the town will
notice that the antenna does not move. That's no good. But he can't sleep at
night, when the Germans bounce their transmissions off the ionosphere
between the U boats in the North Atlantic and their bases in Bordeaux and
Lorient because a really close observer say an insomniacal castle worker, or
a German spy up in the rocks with a pair of binoculars will suspect that the
immobile huffduff antenna is just a cover story. So Waterhouse tries to
split the difference by sleeping for a few hours around dusk and another few
hours around dawn a plan that does not go over well with his body. And when
he gets up, he has absolutely nothing to look forward to besides sitting at
the huffduff console for eight or twelve hours at a stretch, watching the
breath come out of his mouth, twiddling the antenna, listening to nothing!
He freely stipulates that he is a selfish bastard for feeling sorry for
himself when other men are being blown to bits.
Having gotten that out of the way, what is he going to do to stay sane?
He has got his routine down pat: leave the antenna pointed generally
westwards for a while, then swing it back and forth in diminishing arcs,
pretending to zero in on a U boat, then leave it sitting for a while and do
jumping jacks to warm back up. He has ditched his uniform for raiments of
warm Qwghlmian wool. Every once in a while, at totally unpredictable
intervals, members of the castle staff will burst in on him with an urn of
soup or tea service or simply to see how he is doing and tell him what a
fine chap he is. Once a day, he writes down a bunch of gibberish his
purported results and dispatches it over to the naval base.
He divides his time between thinking about sex and thinking about
mathematics. The former keeps intruding upon the latter. It gets worse when
the stout fiftyish cook named Blanche, who has been bringing him his meals,
comes down with dropsy or ague or gout or colic or some other Shakespearian
ailment and is replaced by Margaret, who is about twenty and quite fetching.
Margaret really messes up his head. When it gets really intolerable, he
goes to the latrine (so that the staff will not break in on him at an
inopportune moment) and executes a Manual Override. But one thing he learned
in Hawaii was that a Manual Override is unfortunately not the same as the
real thing. The effect wears off too soon.
While he's waiting for it to wear off, he gets a lot of solid math
done. Alan provided him with some notes on redundancy and entropy, relating
to the voice encryption work he is currently doing in New York City.
Waterhouse works through that stuff and comes up with some nice lemmas which
he lamentably cannot send to Alan without violating both common sense and
any number of security procedures. This done, he turns his attention to
cryptology, pure and raw. He spent enough time at Bletchley Park to realize
just how little of this art he really understood.
The U boats talk on the radio way too much and everyone in the German
Navy knows it. Their security experts have been nagging their brass to
tighten up their security, and they finally did it by introducing the four
rotor version of the Enigma machine, which has knocked Bletchley Park on its
ass for about a year...
Margaret has to walk round the castle out of doors to bring Waterhouse
his meals, and by the time she gets here, her cheeks have turned rosy red.
The steam coming from her mouth floats around her face like a silken veil
Stop that, Lawrence! The subject of today's lecture is the German Naval
four wheel Enigma, known to them as Triton and to the Allies as Shark.
Introduced on 2 February of last year (1942), it wasn't until the recovery
of the beached German U boat U 559 on 30 October that Bletchley Park got the
material they needed to break the code. A couple of weeks ago, on 13
December, Bletchley Park finally busted Shark, and the internal
communications of the German Navy became an open book to the Allies once
more.
The first thing they have learned, as a result, is that the Germans
have broken our merchant shipping codes wide open, and that all year long
they have known exactly where to find the convoys.
All of this information has been provided to Lawrence Pritchard
Waterhouse within the last few days, via the totally secure one time pad
channel. Bletchley is telling him this stuff because it raises a question of
information theory, which is his department and his problem. The question
is: how quickly can we replace our busted merchant shipping codes without
tipping the Germans off to the fact that we have broken Shark?
Waterhouse does not have to think about this one for very long before
he concludes that it is far too tricky to play games with. The only way to
handle the situation is to concoct an incident of some sort that will
explain to the Germans why we have totally lost faith in our own merchant
shipping codes and are changing them. He writes up a message to this effect,
and begins to encrypt it using the one time pad that he shares with Chattan.
"Is everything quite all right?"
Waterhouse stands and whirls around, heart thrashing.
It is Margaret, standing there veiled in the steam of her own breath, a
grey wool overcoat thrown over her maid's uniform, supporting a tray of tea
and scones with grey wool mittens. The only parts of her not encased in wool
are her ankles and her face. The former are well turned; Margaret is not
above wearing heels. The latter has never been exposed to the direct rays of
the sun and brings to mind rose petals strewn over Devonshire clotted cream.
"Oh! Let me take it!" Waterhouse blurts, and lunges forward with a
jerkiness born of passion blended with hypothermia. While taking the tray
from her hands, he inadvertently pulls off one of her mittens, which falls
to the floor. "Sorry!" he says, realizing he has never seen her hands
before. She has red polish on the nails of the offended hand, which she cups
over her mouth and blows on. Her large green eyes are looking at him, full
of placid expectation.
"Beg pardon?" Waterhouse says.
"Is everything quite all right?" she repeats.
"Yes! Why shouldn't it be?"
"The antenna," Margaret says. "It hasn't moved in over an hour."
Waterhouse is so flummoxed he can barely remain standing.
Margaret is still breathing through her lacquered fingertips, so that
Waterhouse can only see her green eyes, which now angle and twinkle
mischievously. She glances towards his hammock. "Been napping on the job,
have we?"
Waterhouse's first impulse is to deny it and to explain the truth,
which is that he was thinking about sex and crypto and forgot to move the
antenna. But then he realizes that Margaret has supplied him with a better
excuse. "Guilty as charged," he says. "Was up late last night."
"That tea will keep you alert," Margaret says. Then her eyes return to
the hammock. She pulls her mitten back on. "What is it like?"
"What is what like?"
"Sleeping in one of those. Is it comfortable?"
"Very comfortable."
"Can I just see what it's like?"
"Ah. Well, it's very difficult to get in at that height."
"You manage it, though, don't you?" she says chidingly. Waterhouse
feels himself blushing. Margaret walks over to the hammock and kicks off her
heels. Waterhouse winces to see her bare feet on the stone floor, which has
not been warm since the Barbary Corsairs burned the place down. Her toenails
are also painted red. "I don't mind it," Margaret says, "I'm a farmer's
daughter. Come on, give me a leg up!"
Waterhouse has completely lost whatever control he might ever have had
over the situation and himself. His tongue seems to be made of erectile
tissue. So he lumbers over, bends down, and makes a stirrup of his hands.
She puts her foot into it and launches herself into the hammock,
disappearing with a whoop and a giggle into his bulky nest of grey wool
blankets. The hammock swings back and forth across the center of the chapel,
like a censer dispersing a faint lavender scent. It swings once, twice. It
swings five times, ten times, twenty. Margaret is silent and motionless.
Waterhouse stands as if his feet were planted in mortar. For the first time
in weeks he does not know exactly what is going to happen next, and the loss
of control leaves him stunned and helpless.
"It's dreamy," she says. Dreamily. Then, finally, she shifts.
Waterhouse sees her little face peeking out over the edge, shrouded in the
grey cowl of a blanket. "Ooh!" she screams, and flips flat on her back
again. The sudden movement puts an eccentric jiggle into the rhythmic motion
of the hammock.
"What's wrong?" Waterhouse says hopelessly.
"I'm afraid of heights!" she exclaims. "I'm so sorry, Lawrence, I
should have warned you. Is it all right if I call you Lawrence?" She sounds
as if she would be terribly hurt if he said no. And how can Lawrence wound
the feelings of a pretty, barefoot, acrophobic girl, helpless in a hammock?
"Please. By all means," he says. But he knows perfectly well that the
ball is still in his court. "Can I be of any assistance?"
"I should be so obliged," Margaret says.
"Well, would you like to climb down onto my shoulders, or some thing?"
Waterhouse essays.
"I'm really far too terrified," she says.
There is only one way out. "Well. Would you take it the wrong way if I
came up there to help?"
"It would be so heroic of you!" she says. "I should be unspeakably
grateful."
"Well, then . . ."
"But I insist that you continue with your duties first!"
"Beg pardon?"
"Lawrence," Margaret says, "when I get down from this hammock I shall
go to the kitchen and mop the floor which is already quite clean enough,
thank you. You, on the other hand, have important work to do work that might
save the lives of hundreds of men on some Atlantic convoy! And I know that
you have been very naughty in sleeping on the job. I refuse to allow you up
here until you have made amends."
"Very well," Waterhouse says, "you leave me no alternative. Duty
calls." He squares his shoulders, spins on his heel, and marches back to his
desk. Skerries have already made off with all of Margaret's scones, but he
pours himself some tea. Then he resumes encrypting his instructions to
Chattan: ONLY BRUTE FORCE APPROACH WILL BE SAFE PUT CODE BOOK ON SHIP INSERT
SHIP IN MURMANSK CONVOY WAIT FOR FOG RAM NORWAY.
The one time pad encryption takes a while. Lawrence can do mod 25
arithmetic in his sleep, but doing it with an erection is a different
matter. "Lawrence? What are you doing?" Margaret asks from her nest in the
hammock, which, Lawrence imagines, is getting warmer and cozier by the
minute. He glances surreptitiously at her discarded high heels.
"Preparing my report," Lawrence says. "Doesn't do me any good to make
observations if I don't send them out."
"Quite right," Margaret says thoughtfully.
This is an excellent time to stoke the chapel's pathetic iron stove. He
puts in a few scoops of precious coal, his worksheet, and the page from the
one time pad that he has just used to do the encryption. "Should warm up
now," he says.
"Oh, lovely," Margaret says, "I'm all shivery."
Lawrence recognizes this as his cue to initiate a rescue operation.
About fifteen seconds later, he is up there in the hammock with Margaret. To
the great surprise of neither one of them, the quarters are awkward and
tight. There is some flopping around which ends with Lawrence on his back
and Margaret on top of him, her thigh between his.
She is shocked to discover that he has an erection. Ashamed,
apparently, that she did not anticipate his need. "You poor dear!" she
exclaims. "Of course! How could I have been so dense! You must have been so
lonely here." She kisses his cheek, which is nice since he is too stunned to
move. "A brave warrior deserves all the support we civilians can possibly
give him," she says, reaching down with one hand to open his fly.
Then she pulls the grey wool over her head and burrows to a new
position. Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse is stunned by what happens next. He
gazes up at the ceiling of the chapel through half closed eyes and thanks
God for having sent him what is obviously a German spy and an angel of mercy
rolled into one adorable package.
When it's finished, he opens his eyes again and takes a deep breath of
cold Atlantic air. He is seeing everything around him with newfound clarity.
Clearly, Margaret is going to do wonders for his productivity on the
cryptological front if he can only keep her coming back.
Chapter 29 PAGES
It has been a long time since horses ran at the Ascot Racetrack in
Brisbane. The infield's a commotion of stretched khaki. The grass has died
from lack of sun and from the trampling feet of enlisted men. The field has
been punctured with latrines, mess tents have been pitched. Three shifts a
day, the residents trudge across the track, round back of the silent and
empty stables. In the field where the horses used to stretch their legs, two
dozen Quonset huts that have popped up like mushrooms. The men work in those
huts, sitting before radios or typewriters or card files all day long,
shirtless in the January heat.
It has been just as long since whores sunned themselves on the long
veranda of the house on Henry Street, and passing gentlemen, on their way to
or from the Ascot Racetrack, peered at their charms through the white
railing, faltered, checked their wallets, forgot their scruples, turned on
their heels, and climbed up the house's front stairs. Now the place is full
of male officers and math freaks: mostly Australians on the ground floor,
mostly Americans upstairs, and a sprinkling of lucky Brits who were spirited
out of Singapore before General Yamashita, the Tiger of Malaya and the
conqueror of that city, was able to capture them and mine their heads for
crucial data.
Today the old bordello has been turned upside down; everyone with Ultra
clearance is out in the garage, which thrums and roars with the sound of
fans, and virtually glows with contained heat. In that garage is a rusted
steel trunk, still spattered with riverbank mud that partially obscures the
Nipponese characters stenciled on its sides. Had a Nipponese spy glimpsed
the trunk during its feverish passage from the port to the whorehouse's
garage, he would have recognized it as belonging to the radio platoon of the
20th Division, which is currently lost in the jungles of New Guinea.
The rumor, shouted over the sound of the fans, is that a digger an
Australian grunt found it. His unit was sweeping the abandoned headquarters
of the 20th Division for booby traps when his metal detector went nuts along
the banks of a river.
The codebooks are stacked inside as neatly as gold bars. They are wet
and mildewed and their front covers are all missing, but this is mint
condition by the standards of wartime. Stripped to the waist and streaming
with sweat, the men raise the books out one by one, like nurses lifting
newborn infants from the bassinette, and carry them to tables where they
slice away the rotten bindings and peel the sodden pages off the stacks one
by one, hanging them from improvised clotheslines strung overhead. The
stench and damp of New Guinea saturate the air as the river water trapped in
those pages is lifted out by the rushing air; it all vents to the outside
eventually, and half a mile downwind, pedestrians wrinkle their noses. The
whorehouse's closets still redolent of French perfume, powder, hairspray and
jism, but now packed to the ceiling with office supplies are raided for more
string. The web of clotheslines grows, new layers crisscrossing above and
below the old ones, every inch of string claimed by a wet page as soon as it
is stretched. Each page is a grid, a table with hiragana or katakana or
kanji in one box, a group of digits or Romanji in another box, and the pages
all cross referenced to other pages in a scheme only a cryptographer could
love.
The photographer comes in, trailed by assistants who are burdened with
miles of film. All he knows is that each page must be photographed
perfectly. The malarial reek practically flattens him the moment he walks in
the door, but when he recovers, his eyes scan the garage. All he can see,
stretching as if to infinity, are pages dripping and curling, turning white
as they dry, casting their grids of information into sharp relief, like the
reticules of so many bomb sights, the graven crosshairs of so many
periscopes, plunging through cloud and fog to focus, distinctly on the
abdomens of Nipponese troopships, pregnant with North Borneo fuel, alive
with burning steam.
Chapter 30 RAM
"Sir! Would you mind telling me where we are going, sir!"
Lieutenant Monkberg heaves a deep, quivering sigh, his rib cage
shuddering like a tin shack in a cyclone. He executes a none too snappy
pushup. His hands are planted on the rim, and so this action extricates his
head from the bowl, of a toilet or "head," as it is referred to in this
context: an alarmingly rundown freighter. He jerks down a strip of abrasive
Euro bumwad and wipes his mouth before looking up at Sergeant Robert
Shaftoe, who has braced himself in the hatchway.
And Shaftoe does need some serious bracing, because he is carrying
close to his own weight in gear. All of it was issued to him thoughtfully
prepacked.
He could have left it that way. But this is not how an Eagle Scout
operates. Bobby Shaftoe has gone through and unpacked all of it, spread it
out on the deck, examined it, and repacked it.
This allowed Shaftoe to do some serious inferring. To be specific, he
infers that the men of Detachment 2702 are expected to spend most of the
next three weeks trying as hard as they can not to freeze to death. This
will be punctuated by trying to kill a lot of well armed sons of bitches.
German, most likely.
"N N N Norway," Lieutenant Monkberg says. He looks so pathetic that
Shaftoe considers offering him some m m m morphine, which induces a mild
nausea of its own but holds back the greater nausea of seasickness. Then he
comes to his senses, remembers that Lieutenant Monkberg is an officer whose
duty it is to send him off to die, and decides that he can just go fuck
himself sideways.
"Sir! What is the nature of our mission in Norway, sir?"
Monkberg unloads a rattling belch. "Ram and run," he says.
"Sir! Ram what, sir?"
''Norway."
"Sir! Run where, sir?"
"Sweden."
Shaftoe likes the sound of this. The perilous sea voyage through U boat
infested waters, the collision with Norway, the desperate run across frozen
Nazi occupied territory, all seem trivial compared with the shining goal of
dipping into the world's largest and purest reservoir of authentic Swedish
poontang.
"Shaftoe! Wake up!"
''Sir! Yes, sir!"
"You have noticed the way we are dressed." Monkberg refers to the fact
that they have discarded their dog tags and are all wearing civilian or
merchant marine clothing.
"Sir! Yes, sir!"
"We don't want the Nuns, or anyone else, to know what we really are."
"Sir! Yes, sir!"
"Now, you might ask yourself, if we're supposed to look like civilians,
then why the hell are we carrying tommy guns, grenades, demolition charges,
et cetera."
"Sir! That was going to be my next question, sir!"
"Well, we have a cover story all worked out for that. Come with me."
Monkberg looks enthusiastic all of a sudden. He clambers to his feet
and leads Shaftoe down various passageways and stairs to the freighter's
cargo hold. "You know those other ships?"
Shaftoe looks blank.
"Those other ships around us? We are in the middle of a convoy, you
know."
"Sir, yes sir!" Shaftoe says, a little less certainly. None of the men
has been abovedecks very much in the hours since they were delivered, via
submarine, to this wallowing wreck. Even if they had gone up for a look
around they would have seen nothing but darkness and fog.
"A Murmansk convoy," Monkberg continues. "All of these ships are
delivering weapons and supplies to the Soviet Union. See?"
They have reached a cargo hold. Monkberg turns on an overhead light,
revealing crates. Lots and lots and lots of crates.
"Full of weapons," Monkberg says, "including tommy guns, grenades,
demolition charges, et cetera. Get my drift?"
"Sir, no sir! I do not get the lieutenant's drift!"
Monkberg comes one step closer to him. Unsettlingly close. He speaks,
now, in a conspiratorial tone. "See, we're all just crew members on this
merchant ship, making the run to Murmansk. It gets foggy. We get separated
from our convoy. Then, boom! We slam into fucking Norway. We are stuck on
Nazi held territory. We have to make a break for Sweden! But wait a second,
we say to ourselves. What about all those Germans between us and the Swedish
border? Well, we had better be armed to the teeth, is what. And who is in a
better position to arm themselves to the teeth than the crew of this
merchant ship that is jam packed with armaments? So we run down into the
cargo hold and hastily pry open a few crates and arm ourselves."
Shaftoe looks at the crates. None of them have been pried open.
"Then," Monkberg continues, "we abandon ship and head for Sweden."
There is a long silence. Shaftoe finally rouses himself to say, "Sir!
Yes, sir!"
"So get prying."
''Sir! Yes, sir!"
"And make it look hasty! Hasty! C'mon! Shake a leg!"
"Sir! Yes, sir!"
Shaftoe tries to get into the spirit of the thing. What's he going to
use to pry a crate open? No crowbars in sight. He exits the cargo hold and
strides down a passageway. Monkberg following him closely, hovering, urging
him to be hastier: "You're in a hurry! The Nazis are coming! You have to arm
yourself! Think of your wife and kids back in Glasgow or Lubbock or wherever
the fuck you're from!"
"Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, sir!" Shaftoe says indignantly.
"No, no! Not in real life! In your pretend role as this stranded
merchant son of a bitch! Look, Shaftoe! Look! Salvation is at hand!"
Shaftoe turns around to see Monkberg pointing at a cabinet marked
FIRE.
Shaftoe pulls the door open to find, among other implements, one of
those giant axes that firemen are always carrying in and out of burning
structures.
Thirty seconds later, he's down in the cargo hold, Paul Bunyaning a
crate of .45 caliber ammunition. "Faster! More haphazard!" Monkberg shouts.
"This isn't a precise operation, Shaftoe! You are in a blind panic!" Then he
says, "Goddamn it!" and runs forward and seizes the ax from Shaftoe's hands.
Monkberg swings wildly, missing the crate entirely as he adjusts to the
tremendous weight and length of the implement. Shaftoe hits the deck and
rolls to safety. Monkberg finally gets his range and azimuth worked out, and
actually makes contact with the crate. Splinters and chips skitter across
the deck.
"See!" Monkberg says, looking over his shoulder at Shaftoe, "I want
splinteriness! I want chaos!" He is swinging the ax at the same time as he's
talking and looking at Shaftoe, and he's moving his feet too because the
ship is rocking, and consequently the blade of the weapon misses the crate
entirely, overshoots, and comes down right on Monkberg's ankle.
"Gadzooks!" Lieutenant Monkberg says, in a quiet, conversational tone.
He is looking down at his ankle in fascination. Shaftoe comes over to see
what's so interesting.
A good chunk of Monkberg's lower left leg has been neatly cross
sectioned. In the beam of Shaftoe's flashlight, it is possible to see
severed blood vessels and ligaments sticking out of opposite sides of the
meaty wound, like sabotaged bridges and pipelines dangling from the sides of
a gorge.
"Sir! You are wounded, sir!" Shaftoe says. "Let me summon Lieutenant
Root!"
"No! You stay here and work!" Monkberg says. "I can find Root myself."
He reaches down with both hands and squeezes his leg above the wound,
causing blood to gush out onto the deck. "This is perfect!" he says
meditatively. "This adds so much realism."
After several repetitions of this order, Shaftoe reluctantly goes back
to crate hacking. Monkberg hobbles and staggers around the hold for a few
minutes, bleeding on everything, then drags himself off in search of Enoch
Root. The last thing he says is, "Remember! We are aiming for a ransacked
effect!"
But the bit with the leg wound gets the idea across to Shaftoe more
than Monkberg's words ever could. The sight of the blood brings up memories
of Guadalcanal and more recent adventures. His last dose of morphine is
wearing off, which makes him sharper. And he's staffing to get really
seasick, which makes him want to fight it by doing some hard work.
So he more or less goes berserk with that ax. He loses track of what is
going on.
He wishes that Detachment 2702 could have stayed on dry land preferably
dry warm land such as that place they stayed, for two sunny weeks, in Italy.
The first part of that mission had been hard work, what with humping
those barrels of shit around. But the remainder of it (except for the last
few hours) had been just like shore leave, except that there weren't any
women. Every day they'd taken turns at the observation site, looking out
over the Bay of Naples with their telescopes and binoculars. Every night,
Corporal Benjamin sat down and radioed more gibberish in Morse code.
One night, Benjamin received a message and spent some time deciphering
it. He announced the news to Shaftoe: "The Germans know we're here."
"What do you mean, they know we're here?"
"They know that for at least six months we have had an observation post
overlooking the Bay of Naples," Benjamin said.
"We've been here less than two weeks."
''They're going to begin searching this area tomorrow."
"Well, then let's get the fuck out of here," Shaftoe said.
"Colonel Chattan orders you to wait," Benjamin said, "until you know
that the Germans know that we are here."
"But I do know that the Germans know that we are here," Shaftoe said,
"you just told me."
"No, no no no no," Benjamin said, "wait until you would know that the
Germans knew even if you didn't know from being told by Colonel Chattan over
the radio."
"Are you fucking with me?"
"Orders," Benjamin said, and handed Shaftoe the deciphered message as
proof.
As soon as the sun came up they could hear the observation planes
crisscrossing the sky. Shaftoe was ready to execute their escape plan, and
he made sure that the men were too. He sent some of those SAS blokes down to
reconnoiter the choke points along their exit route. Shaftoe himself just
laid down on his back and stared up at the sky, watching those planes.
Did he know that the Germans knew now?
Ever since he'd woken up, a couple of SAS blokes had been following him
around, staring at him. Shaftoe finally looked in their direction and
nodded. They ran away. A moment later he heard wrenches crashing against the
insides of toolboxes.
The Germans had observation planes all over the fucking sky. That was
pretty strong circumstantial evidence that the Germans knew. And those
planes were clearly visible to Shaftoe, so he could, arguably, know that
they knew. But Colonel Chattan had ordered him to stay put "until positively
sighted by Germans," whatever that meant.
One of those planes, in particular, was coming closer and closer. It
was searching very close to the ground, cutting only a narrow swath on each
pass. Waiting for it to pass over their position, Shaftoe wanted to scream.
This was too stupid to be real. He wanted to send up a flare and get this
over with.
Finally, in midafternoon, Shaftoe, lying on his back in the shade of a
tree, looked straight up into the air and counted the rivets on the belly of
that German airplane: a Henschel Hs 126 (1) with a single swept
back wing mounted above the fuselage, so as not to block the view downwards,
and with ladders and struts and giant awkward splay footed landing gear
sticking out all over. One German encased in a glass shroud and flying the
plane, another out in the open, peering down through goggles and fiddling
with a swivel mounted machine gun. This one did all but look Shaftoe in the
eye, then tapped the pilot on the shoulder and pointed down.
The Henschel altered its normal search pattern, cutting the pass short
to swing round and fly over their position again.
"That's it," Shaftoe said to himself. He stood up and began walking
towards the dilapidated barn. "That's it!" he shouted. "Execute!"
The SAS guys were in the back of the truck, under a tarp, working with
their wrenches. Shaftoe glanced in their direction and saw gleaming parts
from the Vickers laid out on clean white fabric. Where the hell had these
guys gotten clean white fabric? They'd probably been saving it for today.
Why couldn't they have got the Vickers in good working order before? Because
they'd had orders to assemble it hastily, at the last possible minute.
Corporal Benjamin hesitated, one hand poised above his radio key.
"Sarge, are you sure they know we're here?"
Everyone turned to see how Shaftoe would respond to this mild
challenge. He had been slowly gathering a reputation as a man who needed
watching.
Shaftoe turned on his heel and strolled out into the middle of a
clearing a few yards away. Behind him, he could hear the other men of
Detachment 2702 jockeying for position in the doorway, trying to get a clear
view of him.
The Henschel was coming back for another pass, now so close to the
ground that you could probably throw a rock through its windshield.
Shaftoe unslung his tommy gun, pulled back the bolt, cradled it, swung
it up and around, and opened fire.
Now some might complain that the trench broom lacked penetrating power,
but he was positive he could see pieces of crap flying out of the Henschel's
motor. The Henschel went out of control almost immediately. It banked until
its wings were vertical, veered, banked some more until it was upside down,
shed what little altitude it had to begin with, and made an upside down
pancake landing in the olive trees no more than a hundred yards distant. It
did not immediately burst into flame: something of a letdown there.
There was perfect silence from the other men. The only sound was the
beepity beep of Corporal Benjamin, his question now answered, sending out
his little message. Shaftoe was able to follow the Morse code for once this
message was going out plaintext. "WE ARE DISCOVERED STOP EXECUTING PLAN
TORUS."
As their first contribution to Plan Torus, the other men climbed onto
the truck, which pulled out from its hidey hole in the barn and idled in the
trees nearby. When Benjamin was finished, he abandoned his radio and joined
them.
As his first task of Plan Torus, Shaftoe walked around the premises in
a neat crisscross pattern echoing that of the searching reconnaissance
planes. He was carrying an upside down gasoline can with no lid on it.
He left the can about one third full, standing upright in the middle of
the barn. He pulled the pin from a grenade, dropped it into the gasoline,
and ran out of the building. The truck was already pulling away when he
caught up with it and dove into the waiting arms of his unit, who pulled him
on board. He got himself situated in the back of the truck just in time to
see the building go up in a satisfying fireball.
"Okay," Shaftoe said to the men. "We got a few hours to kill."
All the men in the truck except for the SAS blokes working on the
Vickers looked at each other like did he really just say that?
"Uh, Sarge," one of them finally said, "could you explain that part
about killing some time?"
"The airplane's not going to be here for a while. Orders."
"Was there a problem or "
"Nope. Everything's going fine. Orders.
Beyond that the men didn't want to gripe, but a lot more looks were
exchanged across the bed of the truck. Finally, Enoch Root spoke up, "You
men are probably wondering why we couldn't kill time for a few hours first,
before alerting the Germans to our presence, and rendezvous with the plane
just in the nick of time."
"Yeah!" said a whole bunch of guys and blokes, vigorously nodding.
"That's a good question," said Enoch Root. He said it like he already
knew the answer, which made everyone in the truck want to slug him.
The Germans had deployed some ground units to secure the area's road
intersections. When Detachment 2702 arrived at the first crossroads, all of
the Germans were freshly dead, and all they had to do was to slow down
momentarily so that some Marine Raiders could run out of hiding and jump on
board.
The Germans at the second intersection had no idea what was going on.
This was obviously the result of some kind of internal Wehrmacht
communications fuckup, clearly recognizable as such even across cultural and
linguistic boundaries. Detachment 2702 were able to simply open fire from
underneath the tarp and tear them to pieces, or at least drive them into
hiding.
The next Germans they ran into weren't having any of it; they had
formed a roadblock out of a truck and two cars, and were lined up on the
other side of it, pointing weapons at them. All of their weapons looked to
be small arms. But by this time the Vickers had finally been put together,
calibrated, fine tuned, inspected, and loaded. The tarp came off Private
Mikulski, a surly, brooding two hundred and fifty pound Polish British SAS
man, commenced operations with the Vickers at about the same time that the
Germans did with their rifles.
Now when Bobby Shaftoe had gone through high school, he'd been slotted
into a vocational track and ended up taking a lot of shop classes. A certain
amount of his time was therefore, naturally, devoted to sawing large pieces
of wood or metal into smaller pieces. Numerous saws were available in the
shop for that purpose, some better than others. A sawing job that would be
just ridiculously hard and lengthy using a hand saw would be accomplished
with a power saw. Likewise, certain cuts and materials would cause the
smaller power saws to overheat or seize up altogether and therefore called
for larger power saws. But even with the biggest power saw in the shop,
Bobby Shaftoe always got the sense that he was imposing some kind of stress
on the machine. It would slow down when the blade contacted the material, it
would vibrate, it would heat up, and if you pushed the material through too
fast it would threaten to jam. But then one summer he worked in a mill where
they had a bandsaw. The bandsaw, its supply of blades, its spare parts,
maintenance supplies, special tools and manuals occupied a whole room. It
was the only tool he had ever seen with infrastructure. It was the size of a
car. The two wheels that drove the blade were giant eight spoked things that
looked to have been salvaged from steam locomotives. Its blades had to be
manufactured from long rolls of blade stuff by unreeling about half a mile
of toothed ribbon, cutting it off, and carefully welding the cut ends
together into a loop. When you hit the power switch, nothing would happen
for a little while except that a subsonic vibration would slowly rise up out
of the earth, as if a freight train were approaching from far away, and
finally the blade would begin to move, building speed slowly but inexorably
until the teeth disappeared and it became a bolt of pure hellish energy
stretched taut between the table and the machinery above it. Anecdotes about
accidents involving the bandsaw were told in hushed voices and not usually
commingled with other industrial accident anecdotes. Anyway, the most
noteworthy thing about the bandsaw was that you could cut anything with it
and not only did it do the job quickly and coolly but it didn't seem to
notice that it was doing anything. It wasn't even aware that a human being
was sliding a great big chunk of stuff through it. It never slowed down.
Never heated up.
In Shaftoe's post high school experience he had found that guns had
much in common with saws. Guns could fire bullets all right, but they kicked
back and heated up, got dirty, and jammed eventually. They could fire
bullets in other words, but it was a big deal for them, it placed a certain
amount of stress on them, and they could not take that stress forever. But
the Vickers in the back of this truck was to other guns as the bandsaw was
to other saws. The Vickers was water cooled. It actually had a fucking
radiator on it. It had infrastructure, just like the bandsaw, and a whole
crew of technicians to fuss over it. But once the damn thing was up and
running, it could fire continuously for days as long as people kept
scurrying up to it with more belts of ammunition. After Private Mikulski
opened fire with the Vickers, some of the other Detachment 2702 men, eager
to pitch in and do their bit, took potshots at those Germans with their
rifles, but doing so made them feel so small and pathetic that they soon
gave up and just took cover in the ditch and lit up cigarettes and watched
the slow progress of the Vickers' bullet stream across the roadblock.
Mikulski hosed down all of the German vehicles for a while, yawing the
Vickers back and forth like a man playing a fire extinguisher against the
base of a fire. Then he picked out a few bits of the roadblock that he
suspected people might be standing behind and concentrated on them for a
while, boring tunnels through the wreckage of the vehicles until he could
see what was on the other side, sawing through their frames and breaking
them in half. He cut down half a dozen or so roadside trees behind which he
suspected Germans were hiding, and then mowed about half an acre of grass.
By this time it had become evident that some Germans had retreated
behind a gentle swell in the earth just off to one side of the road and were
taking potshots from there, so Mikulski swung the muzzle of the Vickers up
into the air at a steep angle and shot the bullet stream into the sky so
that the bullets plunged down like mortar shells on the other side of the
rise. It took him a while to get the angle just right, but then he patiently
distributed bullets over the entire field, like a man watering his lawn. One
of the SAS blokes actually did some calculations on his knee, figuring out
how long Mikulski should keep doing this to make sure that bullets were
distributed over the ground in question at the right density say, one per
square foot. When the territory had been properly sown with lead slugs,
Mikulski turned back to the roadblock and made sure that the truck pulled
across the pavement was in small enough pieces that it could be shoved out
of the way by hand.
Then he ceased firing at last. Shaftoe felt like he should make an
entry in a log book, the way ships' captains do when they pull a man of war
into port. When they drove past the wreckage, they slowed down for a bit to
gawk. The brittle grey iron of the German vehicles' engine blocks had
shattered like glass and you could look into the engines all neatly cross
sectioned and see the gleaming pistons and crankshafts exposed to the sun,
bleeding oil and coolant.
They passed through what was left of the roadblock and drove onwards
into a sparsely populated inland area that made excellent strafing territory
for the Luftwaffe. The first two fighters that came around were torn apart
in midair by Mikulski and his Vickers. The next pair managed to destroy the
truck, the big gun, and Private Mikulski in one pass. No one else was hurt;
they were all in the ditch, watching as Mikulski sat placidly behind the
controls of his weapon, playing chicken with two Messerschmidts and
eventually losing.
By now it was getting dark. The detachment began to make its way cross
country on foot, carrying Mikulski's remains on a stretcher. They ran into a
German patrol and fought it out with them; two of the SAS men were wounded,
and one of these had to be carried the rest of the way. Finally they reached
their rendezvous point, a wheat field where they laid down road flares to
outline a landing strip for a U.S. Army DC 3, which executed a deft landing,
took them all on board, and flew them to Malta without further incident.
And that was where they were introduced to Lieutenant Monkberg for the
first time.
No sooner had they been debriefed than they were on another submarine,
bound for parts unknown or at least unspecified. But when they turned in
their warm weather gear for ten pound oiled wool sweaters, they started to
get an idea. A few claustrophobic days later, they had been transferred onto
this freighter.
The vessel itself is such a pathetic heap that they have been amusing
themselves by substituting the word "shit" for "ship" in various nautical
expressions, e.g.: let's get this cabin shit shape! Where in hell does the
shit's master think he's taking us? And so on.
Now, in the shit's hold, an impassioned Bobby Shaftoe is doing his best
to create a ransacked effect. He strews rifles and tommy guns around the
deck. He opens boxes of .45 cartridges and flings them all over the place.
He finds some skis, too they'll be needing skis, right? He plants mines here
and there, just to throw a scare into whatever German happens along to
investigate this shitwreck. He opens crates of grenades. These do not look
very ransacked, sitting there full, so he pulls out dozens of them, carries
them abovedecks, and throws them overboard. He tosses out some skis also
maybe they will wash up on shore somewhere and contribute to the overall
sense of chaos that is so important to Lieutenant Monkberg.
He is on his way across the upper deck, carrying an armload of skis,
when something catches his eye out there in the fog. He flinches, of course.
Many strafings have turned Bobby Shaftoe into a big flincher. He flinches so
hard that he drops all of those skis on the deck and comes this close to
throwing himself down among them. But he holds his ground long enough to
focus in on this thing in the fog. It is directly in front of them, and
somewhat higher than the bridge of the freighter, and (unlike plunging Zeros
or Messerschmidts) it is not moving fast just hanging there. Like a cloud in
the sky. As if the fog had coagulated into a dense clump, like his mother's
mashed potatoes. It gets brighter and brighter as he stands there watching
it, and the edges get more and more sharply defined, and he starts to see
other stuff around it.
The other stuff is green.
Hey, wait a minute! He is looking at a green mountainside with a big
white snowfield in the middle of it.
"Heads up!" he screams, and throws himself down on the deck.
He is hoping to be surprised by the gradualness, the gentleness of
their collision with the earth's crust. He has in mind the kind of deal
where you run a little motorboat at a sandy beach, cut the motor and tilt it
out of the water at the last minute, and glide up gently onto the cushioning
sand.
This turns out to be a very poor analogy for what happens next. The
freighter is actually going a lot faster than your typical putt putt fishing
boat. And instead of gliding up onto a sandy beach, they have a nearly head
on collision with a vertical granite wall. There is a really impressive
noise, the prow of the vessel actually bends upwards, and suddenly, Bobby
Shaftoe finds that he is sliding on his belly across the ice glazed deck at
a high speed.
He is terrified, for a moment, that he's going to slide right off the
deck and go flying into the drink, but he manages to steer himself into an
anchor chain, which proves an effective stopper. Down below, he can hear
approximately ten thousand other small and large objects finding their own
obstacles to slam into.
There follows a brief and almost peaceful interlude of near total
silence. Then a hue and cry rises up from the extremely sparse crew of the
freighter: "ABANDON SHIT! ABANDON SHIT!"
The men of Detachment 2702 head for the lifeboats. Shaftoe knows that
they can take care of themselves, so he heads for the bridge, looking for
the few oddballs who always find a way to make things interesting:
Lieutenants Root and Monkberg, and Corporal Benjamin.
The first person he sees is the skipper, slumped in a chair, pouring
himself a drink and looking like a guy who just bled to death. This poor son
of a bitch is a Navy lifer who got detached from his regular unit solely for
the purpose of doing what he just did. It clearly does not sit well with
him.
"Nice job, sir!" Shaftoe says, not knowing what else to say. Then he
follows the sound of an argument into the signals cabin.
The dramatis personae are Corporal Benjamin, holding up a large Book,
in a pose that recalls an exasperated preacher sarcastically acquainting his
wayward parishioners with the unfamiliar sight of the Bible; Lieutenant
Monkberg, semireclined in a chair, his damaged Limb up on a table; and
Lieutenant Root, doing some needle and thread work on same.
"It is my sworn duty " Benjamin begins.
Monkberg interrupts him. "It is your sworn duty, Corporal, to follow my
orders!"
Root's medical supplies are scattered all over the deck because of the
collision. Shaftoe begins to pick them up and sort them out, keeping an
especially sharp eye out for any small bottles that may have gone astray.
Benjamin is very excited. Clearly, he is not getting through to
Monkberg, and so he opens up the hefty Book at random and holds it up above
his head. It contains line after line, column after column, of random
letters. "This," Benjamin says, "is the Allied MERCHANT SHIPPING CODE! A
copy of THIS BOOK is on EVERY SHIP of EVERY CONVOY in the North Atlantic! It
is used by those ships to BROADCAST THEIR POSITIONS! Do you UNDERSTAND what
is going to HAPPEN if THIS BOOK falls into the hands of THE GERMANS?!"
"I have given you my order," Lieutenant Monkberg says.
They go on in this vein for a couple of minutes as Shaftoe scours the
deck for medical debris. Finally he sees what he's looking for: it has
rolled beneath a storage cabinet and appears to be miraculously unscathed.
"Sergeant Shaftoe!" says Root peremptorily. It is the closest he has
ever come to sounding like a military officer. Shaftoe straightens up
reflexively.
"Sir! Yes, sir!"
"Lieutenant Monkberg's dose of morphine may wear off pretty soon. I
need you to find my morphine bottle and bring it to me right away."
"Sir! Yes, sir!" Shaftoe is a Marine, which means he's really good at
following orders even when his body is telling him not to. Even so, his
fingers do not want to release their grip on the little bottle, and Root
almost has to pry it loose.
Benjamin and Monkberg, locked in their dispute, are oblivious to this
little exchange. "Lieutenant Root!" Benjamin says, his voice now high and
trembly.
"Yes, Corporal," Root says absent mindedly.
"I have reason to believe that Lieutenant Monkberg is a German spy and
that he should be relieved of his command of this mission and placed under
arrest!"
"You son of a bitch!" Monkberg shouts. As well he might, since Benjamin
has just accused him of treason, for which he could face a firing squad. But
Root has Monkberg's leg clamped in place up there on the table, and he can't
move.
Root is completely unruffled. He seems to welcome this unbelievably
serious accusation. It is an opportunity to talk about something with more
substance than, for example, finding ways to substitute the word "shit" for
"ship" in nautical expressions.
"I'll see you court martialed for this, you bastard!" Monkberg hollers.
"Corporal Benjamin, what grounds do you have for this accusation?" says
Enoch Root in a lullaby voice.
"The lieutenant has refused to allow me to destroy the codebooks, which
it is my sworn duty to do!" Benjamin shouts. He has completely lost his
temper.
"I am under very specific and clear orders from Colonel Chattan!"
Monkberg says, addressing Root. Shaftoe is startled by this. Monkberg seems
to be recognizing Root's authority in the matter. Or maybe he's scared, and
looking for an ally. The officers closing ranks against the enlisted men. As
usual.
"Do you have a written copy of those orders I could examine?" Root
says.
"I don't think it's appropriate for us to be having this discussion
here and now," Monkberg says, still pleading and defensive.
"How would you suggest that we handle it?" Root says, drawing a length
of silk through Monkberg's numbed flesh. "We are aground. The Germans will
be here soon. We either leave the code books or we don't. We have to decide
now."
Monkberg goes limp and passive in his chair.
"Can you show me written orders?" Root asks.
"No. They were given verbally," Monkberg says.
"And did these orders specifically mention the code books?" Root asks.
"They did," Monkberg says, as if he's a witness in a courtroom.
"And did these orders state that the code books were to be allowed to
fall into the hands of the Germans?"
"They did."
There is silence for a moment as Root ties off a suture and begins
another one. Then he says, "A skeptic, such as Corporal Benjamin, might
think that this business of the code books is an invention of yours."
"If I falsified my own orders," Monkberg says, "I could be shot."
"Only if you, and some witnesses to the event, all made their way back
to friendly territory, and compared notes with Colonel Chattan," says Enoch
Root, coolly and patiently.
"What the fuck is going on!?" says one of the SAS blokes, bursting in
through a hatch down below and charging up the gangway. "We're all waiting
in the fucking lifeboats!" He bursts into the room, his face red with cold
and anxiety, and looks around wildly.
"Fuck off," Shaftoe says.
The SAS bloke pulls up short. "Okay, Sarge!"
"Go down and tell the men in the boats to fuck off too," Shaftoe says.
"Right away, Sarge!" the SAS man says, and makes himself scarce. "As those
anxious men in the lifeboats will attest," Enoch Root continues, "the
likelihood of you and several witnesses making it back to friendly territory
is diminishing by the minute. And the fact that you just happened to suffer
a grievous self inflicted leg wound, just a few minutes ago, complicates our
escape tremendously. Either we will all be captured together, or else you
will volunteer to be left behind and captured. Either way, you are saved
assuming that you are a German spy from the court martial and the firing
squad."
Monkberg can't believe his ears. "But but it was an accident,
Lieutenant Root! I hit myself in the leg with a fucking ax you don't think I
did that deliberately!?"
"It is very difficult for us to know," Root says regretfully.
"Why don't we just destroy the code books? It's the safest thing to
do," Benjamin says. "I'd just be following a standing order nothing wrong
with that. No court martial there."
"But that would ruin the mission!" Monkberg says.
Root thinks this one over for a moment. "Has anyone ever died," he
says, "because the enemy stole one of our secret codes and read our
messages?"
"Absolutely," Shaftoe says.
"Has anyone on our side ever died," Root continues, "because the enemy
didn't have one of our secret codes?"
This is quite a poser. Corporate Benjamin makes his mind up soonest,
but even he has to think about it. "Of course not!" he says.
"Sergeant Shaftoe? Do you have an opinion?" Root asks, fixing Shaftoe
with a sober and serious gaze.
Shaftoe says, "This code business is some tricky shit."
Monkberg's turn. "I ... I think... I believe I could come up with a
hypothetical situation in which someone could die, yes."
"How about you, Lieutenant Root?" Shaftoe asks.
Root does not say anything for a long time now. He just works with his
silk and his needles. It seems like several minutes go by. Perhaps it's not
that long. Everyone is nervous about the Germans.
"Lieutenant Monkberg asks me to believe that it will prevent Allied
soldiers from dying if we turn over the Allied merchant shipping code books
to. the Germans today," Root finally says. Everyone jumps nervously at the
sound of his voice. "Actually, since we must use a sort of calculus of death
in these situations, the real question is, will this some how save more
lives than it will lose?"
"You lost me there, padre," says Shaftoe. "I didn't even make it
through algebra."
"Then let's start with what we know: turning over the codes will lose
lives because it will enable the Germans to figure out where our convoys
are, and sink them. Right?"
"Right!" Corporal Benjamin says. Root seems to be leaning his way.
"That will be true," Root continues, "until such time as the Allies
change the code systems which they will probably do as soon as possible. So,
on the negative side of the calculus of death, we have some convoy sinkings
in the short term. What about the positive side?" Root asks, raising his
eyebrows in contemplation even as he stares down into Monkberg's wound. "How
might turning over the codes save some lives? Well, that is an
imponderable."
"A what?" Shaftoe says.
"Suppose, for example, that there is a secret convoy about to cross
over from New York, and it contains thousands of troops, and some new weapon
that will turn the tide in the war and save thousands of lives. And suppose
that it is using a different code system, so that even after the Germans get
our code books today they will not know about it. The Germans will focus
their energies on sinking the convoys that they do know about killing,
perhaps, a few hundred crew members. But while their attention is on those
convoys, the secret convoy will slip through and deliver its precious cargo
and save thousands of lives."
Another long silence. They can hear the rest of Detachment 2702
shouting now, down in the lifeboats, probably having a detailed discussion
of their own: if we leave all of the fucking officers behind on a grounded
ship, does it qualify as mutiny?
"That's just hypothetical," Root says. "But it demonstrates that it is
at least theoretically possible that there might be a positive side to the
calculus of death. And now that I think about it, there might not even be a
negative side."
"What do you mean?" Benjamin says. "Of course there's a negative side!"
"You are assuming that the Germans have not already broken that code,"
Root says, pointing a bloody and accusing finger at Benjamin's big tome of
gibberish. "But maybe they have. They've been sinking our convoys left and
right, you know. If that's the case, then there is no negative in letting it
fall into their hands."
"But that contradicts your theory about the secret convoy!" Benjamin
says.
"The secret convoy was just a Gedankenexperiment," Root says.
Corporal Benjamin rolls his eyes; apparently, he actually knows what
that means. "If they've already broken it, then why are we going to all of
this trouble, and risking our lives to GIVE IT TO THEM!?"
Root ponders that one for a while. "I don't know."
"Well, what do you think, Lieutenant Root?" Bobby Shaftoe asks a few
excruciatingly silent minutes later.
"I think that in spite of my Gedankenexperiment, that Corporal
Benjamin's explanation i.e., that Lieutenant Monkberg is a German spy is
more plausible."
Benjamin lets out a sigh of relief. Monkberg stares up into Root's
face, paralyzed with horror.
"But implausible things happen all the time," Root continues.
"Oh, for pete's sake!" Benjamin shouts, and slams his hand down on the
book.
"Lieutenant Root?" Shaftoe says.
"Yes, Sergeant Shaftoe?"
"Lieutenant Monkberg's injury was an accident. I seen it happen."
Root looks up into Shaftoe's eyes. He finds this interesting. "Really?"
"Yes, sir. It was an accident all the way."
Root breaks open a package of sterile gauze and begins to wind it
around Monkberg's leg; the blood soaks through immediately, faster than he
can wind new layers around it. But gradually, Root starts to get the better
of it, and the gauze stays white and clean. "Guess it's time to make a
command decision," he says. "I say we leave the code books behind, just like
Lieutenant Monkberg says."
"But if he's a German spy " Benjamin begins.
"Then his ass is grass when we get back on friendly soil," Root says.
"But you said yourself the chances of that were slim."
"I shouldn't have said that," Enoch Root says apologetically. "It was
not a wise or a thoughtful comment. It did not reflect the true spirit of
Detachment 2702. I am convinced that we will prevail in the face of our
little problem here. I am convinced that we will make it to Sweden and that
we will bring Lieutenant Monkberg along with us."
"That's the spirit!" Monkberg says.
"If at any point, Lieutenant Monkberg shows signs of malingering, or
volunteers to be left behind, or in any way behaves so as to increase our
risk of capture by the Germans, then we can all safely assume that he is a
German spy."
Monkberg seems completely unfazed. "Well, let's get the fuck out of
here, then!" he blurts, and gets to his feet, somewhat unsteady from blood
loss.
"Wait!" Sergeant Shaftoe says.
"What is it now, Shaftoe?" Monkberg shouts, back in command again.
"How are we going to know if he's increasing our risk of capture?"
"What do you mean, Sergeant Shaftoe?" Root says.
"Maybe it won't be obvious," Shaftoe says. "Maybe there's a German
detachment waiting to capture us at a certain location in the woods. And
maybe Lieutenant Monkberg is going to lead us directly to the trap."
"Atta boy, Sarge!" Corporal Benjamin says.
"Lieutenant Monkberg," says Enoch Root, "as the closest thing we have
to a ship's doctor, I am relieving you of your command on medical grounds."
"What medical grounds!?" Monkberg shouts, horrified.
"You are short on blood, and what blood you do have is tainted with
morphine," says Lieutenant Enoch Root. "So the second in command will have
to take over for you and make all decisions as to which direction we will
take."
"But you're the only other officer!" Shaftoe says. "Except for the
skipper, and he can't be a skipper without a boat."
"Sergeant Shaftoe!" Root barks, doing such an effective impersonation
of a Marine that Shaftoe and Benjamin both stiffen to attention.
"Sir! Yes sir!" Shaftoe returns.
"This is the first and last order I am going to give you, so listen
carefully!" Root insists.
"Sir! Yes sir!"
"Sergeant Shaftoe, take me and the rest of this unit to Sweden!"
"Sir! Yes sir!" Shaftoe hollers, and marches out of the cabin,
practically knocking Monkberg aside. The others soon follow, leaving the
code books behind.
After about half an hour of screwing around with lifeboats, Detachment
2702 finds itself on the ground again, in Norway. The snowline is about
fifty feet above sea level; it is fortunate that Bobby Shaftoe knows what to
do with a pair of skis. The SAS blokes also know this particular drill, and
they even know how to rig up a sort of sled arrangement that they can use to
pull Lieutenant Monkberg. Within a few hours, they are deep in the woods,
headed east, not having seen a single human being, German or Norwegian,
since they ran aground. Snow begins to fall, filling in their tracks.
Monkberg is behaving himself not demanding to be left behind, not sending up
flares. Shaftoe begins to think that making it out to Sweden might be one of
Detachment 2702's easier missions. The only hard part, as usual, is
understanding what the fuck is going on.
Chapter 31 DILIGENCE
Maps of Southeast Asia are up on the walls, and even covering the
windows, lending a bunkerlike ambience to Avi's hotel room. Epiphyte Corp.
has assembled for its first full on shareholder's meeting in two months. Avi
Halaby, Randy Waterhouse, Tom Howard, Eberhard Föhr, John Cantrell, and
Beryl Hagen crowd into the room and pillage the minibar for snacks and soft
drinks. Some of them sit on the bed. Eberhard sits barefoot and crosslegged
on the floor with his laptop up on a footstool. Avi remains standing. He
crosses his arms and leans back, eyes closed, against the endangered
mahogany doors of his entertainment center. He is wearing a brilliantly
laundered white shirt, so freshly and heavily starched that it still cracks
when he moves. Until fifteen minutes ago he was wearing a t shirt he hadn't
taken off his body for forty eight hours.
Randy thinks for a minute that Avi may have fallen asleep in the
unorthodox standing position. But "Look at that map," Avi says suddenly, in
a quiet voice. He opens his eyes and swivels them in their sockets towards
same, not wasting precious energy by turning his head. "Singapore, the
southern tip of Taiwan, and the northernmost point of Australia form a
triangle."
"Avi," says Eb solemnly, "any three points form a triangle." Generally
they don't look to Eberhard to leaven the proceedings with humor, but a
chuckle passes around the room, and Avi grins not so much because it's funny
as because it's evidence of good morale.
"What's in the middle of the triangle?"
Everyone looks again. The correct answer is a point in the middle of
the Sulu Sea, but it's clear what Avi is getting at. "We are," Randy says.
"That's correct," Avi says. "Kinakuta is ideally situated to act as an
electronic crossroads. The perfect place to put big routers."
"You're talking shareholderese," Randy warns.
Avi ignores him. "Really it makes a lot more sense this way."
"What way?" Eb asks sharply.
"I've become aware that there are other cable people here. There is a
group from Singapore and a consortium from Australia and New Zealand. In
other words: we used to be the sole carriers into the Crypt. As of later
today, I suspect we will be one of three."
Tom Howard grins triumphantly: he works in the Crypt, he probably knew
before anyone. Randy and John Cantrell exchange a look.
Eb sits up stiffly. "How long have you known about this?" he asks,
Randy sees a look of annoyance flash across Beryl's face. She does not like
being probed.
"Would the rest of you excuse Eb and me for a minute?" Randy says,
getting to his feet.
Dr. Eberhard Föhr looks startled, then gets up and follows Randy out of
the room. "Where are we going?"
"Leave your laptop," Randy says, escorting him out into the hallway.
"We're just going here."
"Why?"
"It's like this," Randy says, pulling the door closed but not letting
it lock. "People like Avi and Beryl, who have been in business a lot, have
this noticeable preference for two person conversations like the one you and
I are having right now. Not only that, they rarely write things down."
"Explain."
"It's kind of an information theory thing. See, if worse comes to
worst, and there is some kind of legal action "
"Legal action? What are you talking about?"
Eb came from a small city near the border with Denmark. His father was
a high school mathematics teacher, his mother an English teacher. His
appearance would probably make him an outcast in his home town, but like
many of the people who still live there, he believes that things should be
done in a plain, open, and logical fashion.
"I don't mean to alarm you," Randy says, "I'm not implying that any
such thing is happening, or about to. But America being the way it is right
now, you'd be amazed how often business ventures lead to lawsuits. When that
happens, any and all documents are disclosable. So people like Avi and Beryl
never write anything down that they wouldn't want to see in open court.
Furthermore, anyone can be asked, under oath, to testify about what
happened. That's why two person conversations, like this one, are best."
"One person's word against another. I understand this."
"I know you do."
"We should anyway have been discreetly told."
"The reason that Avi and Beryl didn't tell us about this until now was
that they wanted to work out the problem face to face, in two person
conversations. In other words, they did it to protect us not to hide
anything from us. Now they are formally presenting us with the news."
Eberhard is no longer suspicious. Now he is irked, which is worse. Like
a lot of techies, he can become obstreperous when he decides that others are
not being logical. Randy holds up his hands, palms out, in surrender.
"I stipulate that this does not make sense," Randy says.
Eb glares into the distance, not mollified.
"Will you agree with me that the world is full of irrational people,
and crazy situations?"
"Jaaaa " Eb says guardedly.
"If you and I are going to hack and get paid for it, people have to
hire us, right?"
Eb considers it carefully. "Yes."
"That means dealing with those people, at some level, unpleasant as it
may be. And accepting a whole lot of other nonsense, like lawyers and PR
people and marketroids. And if you or I tried to deal with them, we would go
out of our minds. True?"
"Most likely, yes."
"It is good, then, that people like Avi and Beryl have come into
existence, because they are our interface." An image from the Cold War comes
into Randy's head. He reaches out with both hands and gropes in the air.
"Like those glove boxes that they use to handle plutonium. See?"
Eberhard nods. An encouraging sign.
"But that doesn't mean that it's going to be like programming
computers. They can only filter and soften the irrational nature of the
world beyond, so Avi and Beryl may still do things that seem a little
crazy."
Eb has been getting a more and more faraway look in his eyes. "It would
be interesting to approach this as a problem in information theory," he
announces. "How can data flow back and forth between nodes in an internal
network" Randy knows that by this Eb means people in a small corporation
– "but not exist to a person outside?"
"What do you mean, not exist?"
"How could a court subpoena a document if, from their reference frame,
it had never existed?"
"Are you talking about encrypting it?"
Eb looks slightly pained by Randy's simple mindedness. "We are already
doing that. But someone could still prove that a document, of a certain
size, had been sent out at a certain time, to a certain mailbox."
"Traffic analysis."
"Yes. But what if one jams it? Why couldn't I fill my hard drive with
random bytes, so that individual files would not be discernible? Their very
existence would be hidden in the noise, like a striped tiger in tall grass.
And we could continually stream random noise back and forth to each other."
"That would be expensive."
Eberhard waves his hand dismissively. "Bandwidth is cheap."
"That is more an article of faith than a statement of fact," Randy
says, "but it might be true in the future."
"But the rest of our lives will happen in the future, Randy, so we
might as well get with the program now.
"Well," Randy says, "could we continue this discussion later?"
"Of course."
They go back into the room. Tom, who has spent the most time here, is
saying: "The five footers with yellowish brown spots on an aqua background
are harmless and make great pets. The six footers with brownish yellow spots
on a turquoise background kill you with a single bite, in ten minutes,
unless you commit suicide in the meantime to escape the intolerable pain."
This is all a way of letting Randy and Eb know that the others have not
been discussing business while they were out of the room.
"Okay," Avi says, "the upshot is that the Crypt is going to be
potentially much bigger than we thought at first, so this is good news. But
there is one thing that we have to deal with." Avi has known Randy forever,
and knows that Randy won't really be bothered by what is to come.
All eyes turn towards Randy, and Beryl picks up the thread. She has
arrogated to herself the role of worrying about people's feelings, since the
other people in the company are so manifestly unqualified, and she speaks
regretfully. "The work Randy's been doing in the Philippines, which is very
fine work, is no longer a critical part of this corporation's activities."
"I accept that," Randy says. "Hey, at least I got my first tan in ten
years."
Everyone seems immediately relieved that Randy is not pissed off.
Tom, typically, gets right to brass tacks: "Can we pull out of our
relationship with the Dentist? Just make a clean break?"
The rhythm of the conversation is abruptly lost. It's like a power
failure in a discotheque.
"Unknown," Avi finally says. "We looked at the contracts. But they were
written by the Dentist's lawyers."
"Aren't some of his partners lawyers?" Cantrell asks.
Avi shrugs impatiently, as if that's not the half of it. "His partners.
His investors. His neighbors, friends, golfing buddies. His plumber is
probably a lawyer."
"The point being that he is famously litigious," Randy says.
"The other potential problem," Beryl says, "is that, if we did find a
way to extract ourselves from the deal with AVCLA, we would then lose the
short term cash flow that we were counting on from the Philippines network.
The ramifications of that turn out to be uglier than we had expected."
"Damn!" Randy says, "I was afraid of that."
"What are the ramifications?" Tom says, hewing as ever to the bottom
line.
"We would have to raise some more money to cover the shortfall," Avi
says. "Diluting our stock."
"Diluting it how much?" John asks.
"Below fifty percent."
This magic figure touches off an epidemic of sighing, groaning and
shifting around among the officers of Epiphyte Corp., who collectively hold
over fifty percent of the company's stock. As they work through the
ramifications in their heads, they begin to look significantly at Randy.
Finally Randy stands, and holds out his hands as if warding them off.
"Okay, okay, okay," he says. "Where does this take us? The business plan
states, over and over, that the Philippines network makes sense in and of
itself that it could be spun off into an independent business at any time
and still make money. As far as we know, that's still true, right?"
Avi thinks this over before issuing the carefully engineered statement:
"It is as true as it ever was."
This elicits a titter, and a bit of sarcastic applause, from the
others. Clever Avi! Where would we be without him?
"Okay," Randy says. "So if we stick with the Dentist even though his
project is now irrelevant to us we hopefully make enough money that we don't
need to sell any more stock. We can retain control over the company. On the
other hand, if we break our relationship with AVCLA, the Dentist's partners
start to hammer us with lawsuits which they can do at virtually no cost, or
risk. We get mired in court in L.A. We have to fly back there and testify
and give depositions. We spend a ton of money on lawyers."
"And we might even lose," Avi says.
Everyone laughs.
"So we have to stay in," Randy concludes. "We have to work with the
Dentist whether we want to or not."
No one says anything.
It's not that they disagree with Randy; on the contrary. It's just that
Randy is the guy who's been doing the Philippines stuff, and who is going to
end up handling this unfortunate situation. Randy's going to take all the
force of this blow personally. It is better that he volunteer than that it
be forced on him. He is volunteering now, loudly and publicly, putting on a
performance. The other actors in the ensemble are Avi, Beryl, Tom, John, and
Eb. The audience consists of Epiphyte Corp.'s minority shareholders, the
Dentist, and various yet to be empaneled juries. It is a performance that
will never come to light unless someone files a lawsuit against them and
brings them all to the witness box to recount it under oath.
John decides to trowel it on a little thicker. "AVCLA's financing the
Philippines on spec, right?"
"Correct," Avi says authoritatively, playing directly to the
hypothetical juries of the future. "In the old days, cable layers would sell
capacity first to raise capital. AVCLA's building it with their own capital.
When it's finished, they'll own it outright, and they'll sell the capacity
to the highest bidder."
"It's not all AVCLA's money they're not that rich," Beryl says. "They
got a big wad from NOHGI."
"Which is?" Eb asks.
"Niigata Overseas Holding Group Inc.," three people say in unison.
Eb looks baffled.
"NOHGI laid the deep sea cable from Taiwan to Luzon," Randy says.
"Anyway," John says, "my point is that since the Dentist is wiring the
Philippines on spec, he is highly exposed. Anything that delays the
completion of that system is going to cause him enormous problems. It
behooves us to honor our obligations."
John is saying to the hypothetical jury in Dentist v. Epiphyte Corp.:
we carefully observed the terms of our contract with AVCLA.
But this is not necessarily going to look so good to the hypothetical
jury in the other hypothetical minority shareholder lawsuit, Springboard
Group v. Epiphyte Corp. So Avi hastens to add, "As I think we've
established, through a careful discussion of the issues, honoring our
obligations to the Dentist is part and parcel of our obligation to our own
shareholders. These two goals dovetail."
Beryl rolls her eyes and heaves a deep sigh of relief.
"Let us therefore go forth and wire the Philippines," Randy says.
Avi addresses him in formal tones, as if his hand were resting, even
now, on a Gideon Bible. "Randy, do you feel that the resources allotted to
you are sufficient for you to meet our contractual obligations to the
Dentist?"
"We need to have a meeting about that," Randy says.
"Can it wait until after tomorrow?" Avi says.
"Of course. Why shouldn't it?"
"I have to use the bathroom," Avi says.
This is a signal that Avi and Randy have used many times in the past.
Avi gets up and goes into the bathroom. A moment later, Randy says, "Come to
think of it . . ." and follows him in there.
He is startled to find that Avi is actually pissing. On the spur of the
moment, Randy unzips and starts pissing right along with him. It doesn't
occur to him how remarkable this is until he's well into it.
"What's up?" Randy asks.
"I went down to the lobby to change money this morning," Avi says, "and
guess who came stalking into the hotel, fresh from the airport?"
"Oh, shit," Randy says.
"The Dentist himself."
"No yacht?"
"The yacht's following him."
"Did he have anyone with him?"
"No, but he might later."
"Why is he here?"
"He must have heard."
"God. He's the last guy I want to run into tomorrow."
"Why? Is there a problem?"
"Nothing I can put my finger on," Randy says. "Nothing dramatic."
"Nothing that, if it came to light later, would make you look
negligent?"
"I don't think so," Randy says. "It's just that this Philippines thing
is complicated and we need to talk about it."
"Well, for God's sake," Avi says, "if you run into the Dentist
tomorrow, don't say anything about your work. Keep it social."
"Got it," Randy says, and zips up. But what he's really thinking is:
why did I waste all those years in academia when I could have been doing
great shit like this?
Which then reminds him of something: "Oh, yeah. Got a weird e mail."
Avi immediately says "From Andy?"
"How'd you guess?"
"You said it was weird. Did you really get e mail from him?"
"I don't really know who it was from. Probably not Andy. It wasn't
weird in that way."
"Did you respond to it?"
"No. But dwarf@siblings.net did."
"Who's that? Siblings.net is the system you used to administer, right?"
"Yeah. I still have some privileges there. I created a new account
there, name of dwarf, which can't be traced to me. Sent anonymous e mail
back to this guy telling him that until he proves otherwise, I'm assuming he
is an old enemy of mine."
"Or a new one."
Chapter 32 SPEARHEAD
The young Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse, visiting his grandparents in
Dakota, follows a plow across a field. The diving blades of the plow heave
the black soil up out of the furrows and pile it into ridges, rough and
jumbled when seen up close but mathematically clean and straight, like the
grooves of a phonograph record, when viewed from a distance. A tiny
surfboard shaped object projects from the crest of one of those earthen
waves. Young Waterhouse bends down and plucks it out. It is an Indian
spearhead neatly chipped out of flint.
U 553 is a black steel spear point thrusting into the air about ten
miles north of Qwghlm. The grey rollers pick it up and slam it down, but
other than that, it does not move; it is grounded on a submerged out
cropping known to the locals as Caesar's Reef, or Viking's Grief, or the
Dutch Hammer.
On the prairie, those flint arrowheads can be found lodged in every
sort of natural matrix: soil, sod, the mud of a riverbank, the heartwood of
a tree. Waterhouse has a talent for finding them. How can he walk across a
field salted, by the retreat of the last glacier, with countless stones, and
pick out the arrowheads? Why can the human eye detect a tiny artificial form
lost in nature's torn and turbulent cosmos, a needle of data in a haystack
of noise? It is a sudden, sparking connection between minds, he supposes.
The arrowheads are human things broken loose from humanity, their organic
parts perished, their mineral forms enduring crystals of intention. It is
not the form but the lethal intent that demands the attention of a selfish
mind. It worked for young Waterhouse, hunting for arrowheads. It worked for
the pilots of the airplanes that hounded U 553 this morning. It works for
the listeners of the Beobachtung Dienst, who have trained their ears to hear
what is being said by Churchill and FDR on what are supposed to be scrambled
telephones. But it doesn't work very well with crypto. That is too bad for
everyone except the British and the Americans, who have devised mathematical
systems for picking out arrowheads amid pebbles.
Caesar's Reef gashed the underside of U 553's bow section open while
shoving the entire boat up and partly out of the water. Momentum almost
carried her over the hump, but she got hung up in the middle, stranded, a
wave battered teeter totter. Her bows have mostly filled with water now, and
so it is the sharp stern that projects up above the crests of the seas. She
has been abandoned by her crew, which means that according to the traditions
of maritime law, she is up for grabs. The Royal Navy has called dibs. A
screen of destroyers patrols the area, lest some sister U boat slip in and
torpedo the wreck.
Waterhouse had been collected from the castle in unseemly haste. Dusk
is now falling like a lead curtain, and wolf packs hunt at night. He is on
the bridge of a corvette, a tiny escort ship that, in any kind of chop, has
the exact hydrodynamics of an empty oil drum. If he stays down below he'll
never stop vomiting, and so he stands abovedecks, feet braced wide, knees
bent, holding onto a rail with both hands, watching the wreck come closer.
The number 553 is painted on her conning tower, beneath a cartoon of a polar
bear hoisting a beer stein.
"Interesting," he says to Colonel Chattan. "Five five three is the
product of two prime numbers seven and seventy nine."
Chattan manages an appreciative smile, but Waterhouse can tell that
it's nothing more than a spectacular display of breeding.
The remainder of Detachment 2702 is, meanwhile, finally arriving.
Having just finished with the successful Norway ramming mission, they were
on their way to their new base of operations on Qwghlm when they received
word of U 553's grounding. They rendezvoused with Waterhouse right here on
this boat haven't even had a chance to sit down yet, much less unpack.
Waterhouse has told them several times how much they are going to like
Qwghlm and has run out of other things to say the crew of this corvette
lacks Ultra Mega clearance, and there is nothing that Waterhouse could
conceivably talk about with Chattan and the others that is not classified at
the Ultra Mega level. So he's trying gamely with prime number chitchat.
Some of the detachment the Marine lieutenant and most of the enlisted
men were dropped off in Qwghlm so that they could settle into their new
quarters. Only Colonel Chattan and a noncom named Sergeant Robert Shaftoe
have accompanied Waterhouse to the U boat.
Shaftoe has a wiry build, bulging Alley Oop forearms and hands, and
blond hair in a buzz cut that makes his big blue eyes look bigger. He has a
big nose and a big Adam's apple and big acne scars and some other scars
around the orbits of his eyes. The large features in the trim body give him
an intense presence; it is hard not to keep looking over in his direction.
He seems like a man with powerful emotions but an even more powerful
discipline that keeps them under control. He stares directly and
unblinkingly into the eyes of whoever is talking. When no one is talking, he
stares at the horizon and thinks. When he is thinking, he twiddles his
fingers incessantly. Everyone else is using their fingers to hold on to
something, but Shaftoe is planted on the deck like a fat geezer waiting in
line for a movie. He, like Waterhouse, but unlike Chattan, is dressed in
heavy foul weather gear that they have borrowed from the stores of this
torpedo boat.
It is known, and word has gone out to all present, that the U boat's
skipper the last man to abandon ship had the presence of mind to bring the
boat's Enigma machine with him. The RAF planes, still circling overhead,
watched the skipper rise to a precarious kneel in his life raft and fling
the wheels of the machine in different directions, into the steep pitches of
hill sized waves. Then the machine itself went overboard.
The Germans know that the machine will never be recovered. What they do
not know is that they will never even be looked for, because there is a
place called Bletchley Park that already knows all that there is to know
about the four wheel naval Enigma. The Brits will make a show of looking
anyway, in case anyone is watching.
Waterhouse is not looking for Enigma machines. He is looking for stray
arrowheads.
The corvette first approaches the U boat head on, thinks better of it
and swings far around astern of the wreck, then beats upwind towards it.
That way, Waterhouse reckons, the wind will tend to blow them away from the
reef. Seen from underneath, the U boat is actually kind of fat cheeked. The
part that's supposed to be above water, when it's surfaced, is neutral grey,
and it's as skinny as a knife. The part that's supposed to be below, when it
hasn't just crashed into a great big rock, is wide and black. She has been
boarded by adventuresome Royal Navy men who have cheekily raised a White
Ensign from her conning tower.
They have apparently reached her in a shallow draft whaler that is tied
up alongside, loosely bound to her by a sparse web of lines, kept away by
bald tires slung over the rail. The corvette carrying the members of
Detachment 2702 edges towards the U boat cautiously; each rolling wave
nearly slams the boats together.
"We're definitely in a non Euclidean spatial geometry now!" Waterhouse
says puckishly. Chattan bends towards him and cups a hand to his ear. "Not
only that but it's real time dependent, definitely something that has to be
tackled in four dimensions not three!"
"I beg your pardon?"
Any closer and they'll be grounded on the reef themselves. The sailors
launch an actual rocket that carries a line between the vessels, and devote
some time to rigging up a ship to ship transfer system. Waterhouse is afraid
they're going to put him on it. Actually he's more resentful than afraid,
because he was under the impression that he wouldn't be put in any more
danger for the rest of the war. He tries to kill time looking at the
underside of the U boat and watching the sailors. They've formed a sort of
bucket brigade to haul books and papers up out of the wreck to the conning
tower and from there down into the whaler. The conning tower has a
complicated spidery look with gun barrels and periscopes and antennas
sticking out all over the place.
Waterhouse and Shaftoe are indeed sent over to U 553 on a sort of
trolley contraption that rolls along a stretched cable. The sailors put life
jackets on them first, as a sort of hilarious token gesture, so that if they
avoid being smashed to bits they can die of hypothermia instead of drowning.
When Waterhouse is halfway across, the trough of a wave passes beneath
him, and he looks down into the sucking cavity and sees the top of Caesar's
Reef, momentarily exposed, covered with an indigo fur of mussels. You could
go down there and stand on it. For an instant. Then thousands of tons of
really cold water slams into the cavity and rises up and punches him in the
ass.
He looks up at U 553, entirely too much of which is above him. His
basic impression is that it's hollow, more colander than warship. The hull
is perforated with rows of oblong slots arranged in swirling patterns like
streamlines tattooed onto the metal. It seems impossibly flimsy. Then he
peers through the slots light is shining all the way through from more slots
in the deck and perceives the silhouette of the pressure hull nested inside,
curved and much more solid looking than the outer hull. She's got two triple
bladed brass propellers, maybe a yard across, dinged here and there from
contact with who knows what. Right now they are thrust up into the air, and
looking at them Waterhouse feels the same absurd embarrassment he felt
looking at dead guys in Pearl Harbor whose private parts were showing.
Diving planes and rudders stick out of the hull downstream of the
propellers, and aft of those, near the apex of the stern, are two crude
hatchlike slabs of metal which, Waterhouse realizes, must be where the
torpedoes come out.
He slides the last twenty feet at terrifying speed and is caught and
held, in various places, by eight strong hands who lift him to what passes
for safety: the deck of the U boat, just aft of the conning tower, sort of
nestled underneath an antiaircraft gun. Way up at the boat's stern, there's
a big T shaped stanchion with cables coming out of the ends of the crossbar
and stretched tight all the way to the conning tower railing, near to hand.
Following the example of a Royal Navy officer who appears to be his
appointed guardian, Waterhouse climbs uphill i.e. towards the stern using
one of those cables as a sort of banister, and follows him down a hatch in
the afterdeck and into the interior of the boat. Shaftoe follows a few
moments later.
It is the worst place Waterhouse has ever been. Like the corvette he
has just left, it rises smoothly on each roller, but unlike the corvette it
comes down with a crash on the rocks, nearly throwing him to the deck. It is
like being sealed up in a garbage can that is being beaten with a
sledgehammer. U 553 is about half full of a rich brew of cheap wine, diesel
fuel, battery acid, and raw sewage. Because of the way she is pitched, this
soup quickly gets deeper as you go forward, but it rolls aft in a drenching
tsunami every time her midsection slams down on the rocks. Fortunately,
Waterhouse is now far beyond nausea, in some kind of transcendent state
where his mind has become even more divorced from his body than usual.
The officer in charge waits for the noise to subside and then says, in
a startlingly quiet voice, "Is there anything in particular you'd like to
inspect, sir?"
Waterhouse is still trying to get some idea of where he is by shining
his flashlight beam around the place, which is kind of like peering through
a soda straw. He can't get any synoptic view of his surroundings, just
narrow glimpses of pipes and wires. Finally he tries holding his head still
and sort of scribbling the flashlight beam around really fast. A picture
emerges: they are in a narrow crawl space, obviously designed by and for
engineers, intended to give access to a few thousand linear miles of pipes
and wires that have been forced through some kind of bottleneck.
"We are looking for the skipper's papers," Waterhouse says. The boat
goes into free fall again; he leans against something slippery, claps his
hands over his ears, closes his eyes and mouth, and exhales through his nose
so that none of the soup will force its way into his body. The thing he's
leaning against is really hard and cold and round. It's greasy. He shines
his light on it; it's made of brass. The light scribbling trick produces the
image of a brass spaceship of some sort, nestled underneath (unless he's
mistaken) a bunk. He's just on the verge of making a total ass of himself by
asking what it is, when he identifies it as a torpedo.
In the next quiet interlude, he asks, "Is there anything like a private
cabin where he might have . ."
"It's forward," the officer says. Forward is not an encouraging view.
"Fuck!" Sergeant Shaftoe says. It's the first thing he has said in
about half an hour. He begins to slosh forward, and the British officer has
to hurry to catch up. The deck falls out from beneath their feet again and
they stop and turn around so that the wave of sewage will hit them in the
backs.
They travel downhill. Every step's a pitched battle vs. prudence and
sound judgment, and they take a lot of steps. What Waterhouse had pegged as
a bottleneck goes on and on all the way, apparently, to the bow. Eventually
they find something that gives them an excuse to stop: a cabin, or maybe (at
about four by six feet) a corner of a cabin. There's a bed, a little fold
out table, and cabinets made of actual wood. These in combination with the
photographs of family and friends give it a cozy, domestic flavor which is,
however, completely ruined by the framed picture of Adolf Hitler on the
wall. Waterhouse finds this to be in shockingly poor taste until he
remembers it's a German boat. The mean high tide level of the sewage angles
across the cabin and cuts it approximately in half. Papers and other
bureaucratic detritus are floating every where, written in the occult Gothic
script that Waterhouse associates with Rudy.
"Take it all," Waterhouse says, but Shaftoe and the officer are already
sweeping their arms through the brew and bringing them up wrapped in
dripping papier mâché. They stuff it all into a canvas sack.
The skipper's bunk is on the aft or uphill end of the cabin. Shaftoe
strips it, looks under the pillow and under the mattress, finds nothing.
The fold out table is on the totally submerged end. Waterhouse wades
into it carefully, trying not to lose his footing. He finds the desk with
his feet, reaches down into the murk with his hands, explores as a blind man
would. He finds a few drawers which he is able to pull out of the desk
entirely and hand off to Shaftoe, who dumps their contents into the sack.
Within a short time he is pretty sure that there's nothing left in the desk.
The boat rises and slams down. As the sewage rolls forward, it exposes,
for just a moment, something in the corner of the cabin, something attached
to the forward bulkhead. Waterhouse wades over to identify it.
"It's a safe!" he says. He spins the dial. It's heavy. A good safe.
German. Shaftoe and the British officer look at each other.
A British sailor appears in the open hatchway. "Sir!" he announces.
"Another U boat has been sighted in the area."
"I'd love to have a stethoscope," Waterhouse hints. "This thing have a
sickbay?"
"No," says the British officer. "Just a box of medical gear. Should be
floating around somewhere."
"Sir! Yes sir!" Shaftoe says, and vanishes from the room. A minute
later he's back holding a German stethoscope up above his head to keep it
clean. He tosses it across the cabin to Waterhouse, who snares it in the
air, sockets it into his ears, and thrusts the business end down through the
sewage to the front of the safe.
He has done a little of this before, as an exercise. Kids who are
obsessed with locks frequently turn into adults who are obsessed with
crypto. The manager of the grocery store in Moorhead, Minnesota, used to let
the young Waterhouse play with his safe. He broke the combination, to the
manager's great surprise, and wrote a report about the experience for
school.
This safe is a lot better than that one was. Since he can't see the
dial anyway, he closes his eyes.
He is vaguely conscious that the other fellows on the submarine have
been shouting and carrying on about something for a while, as if some
sensational news has just come in. Perhaps the war is over. Then the head of
the stethoscope is wrenched loose from his grasp. He opens his eyes to see
Sergeant Shaftoe lifting it to his mouth as if it were a microphone. Shaftoe
stares at him coolly and speaks into the stethoscope: "Sir, torpedoes in the
water, sir." Then Shaftoe turns and leaves Waterhouse alone in the cabin.
Waterhouse is about halfway up the conning tower ladder, looking up at
a disk of greyish black sky, when the whole vessel jerks and booms. A piston
of sewage rises up beneath him and propels him upwards, vomiting him out
onto the top deck of the boat, where his comrades grab him and very
considerately prevent him from rolling off into the ocean.
The movement of the U 553 with the waves has changed. She's moving a
lot more now, as if she's about to break free from the reef.
It takes Waterhouse a minute to get his bearings. He is starting to
think he may have suffered some damage during all of that. Something is
definitely wrong with his left arm, which is the one he landed on.
Powerful light sweeps over them: a searchlight from the British
corvette that brought them here. The British sailors curse. Waterhouse
levers himself up on his good elbow and sights down the hull of the U boat,
following the beam of the searchlight to a bizarre sight. The boat has been
blown open just beneath the waterline, shards of her hull peeled back from
the wound and projecting jaggedly into the air. The foul contents of the
hull are draining out, staining the Atlantic black.
"Fuck!" Sergeant Shaftoe says. He shrugs loose from a small but heavy
looking knapsack that he's been carrying around, pulls it open. His sudden
activity draws the attention of the Royal Navy men who help out by pointing
their flashlights at his furious hands.
Waterhouse, who may be in some kind of delirium by this point, can't
quite believe what he sees: Shaftoe has pulled out a bundle of neat brownish
yellow cylinders, as thick as a finger and maybe six inches long. He also
takes out some small items, including a coil of thick, stiff red cord. He
jumps to his feet so decisively that he nearly knocks someone down, and runs
to the conning tower and disappears down the ladder.
"Jesus," an officer says, "he's going to do some blasting." The officer
thinks about this for a very small amount of time; the ship moves
terrifyingly with the waves and makes scraping noises which might indicate
it's sliding off the reef. "Abandon ship!" he hollers.
Most of them get into the whaler. Waterhouse is bundled back onto the
trolley contraption. He is about halfway across to the torpedo boat when he
feels, but scarcely hears, a sharp shock.
For the rest of the way over he can't really see diddly, and even after
he's back on the torpedo boat, all is confusion, and someone named Enoch
Root insists on taking him below and working on his arm and his head.
Waterhouse did not know until now that his head was damaged, which stands to
reason, in that your head is where you know things, and if it's damaged, how
can you know it? "You'll get at least a Purple Heart for this," Enoch Root
says. He says it with a marked lack of enthusiasm, as if he couldn't care
less about Purple Hearts, but is condescending to suppose that it will be a
big thrill for Waterhouse. "And Sergeant Shaftoe probably has another major
decoration coming too, damn him."
Chapter 33 MORPHIUM
Shaftoe still sees the word every time he closes his eyes. It would be
a lot better if he were paying attention to the work at hand: packing
demolition charges around the gussets that join the safe to the U boat.
MORPHIUM. It is printed thus on a yellowed paper label. The label is
glued to a small glass bottle. The color of the glass is the same deep
purple that you see when your eyes have been dazzled by a powerful light.
Harvey, the sailor who has volunteered to help him, keeps shining his
flashlight into Shaftoe's eyes. It is unavoidable; Shaftoe is wedged into a
surpassingly awkward position beneath the safe, working with the charges,
trying to set the primers with slimy fingers drained of warmth and strength.
This would not even be possible if the boat hadn't been torpedoed; before,
this cabin was half full of sewage and the safe was immersed in it. Now it
has been conveniently drained.
Harvey is not wedged into anything; he is being flung around by the
paroxysms of the U boat, which like a beached shark, is trying stupidly but
violently to thrash its way loose from the reef. The beam of his flashlight
keeps sweeping across Shaftoe's eyes. Shaftoe blinks, and sees a cosmos of
purple: tiny purple bottles labeled MORPHIUM.
"God damn it!" he hollers.
"Is everything all right, Sergeant?" Harvey says.
Harvey doesn't get it. Harvey thinks that Shaftoe is cursing at some
problem with the explosives.
The explosives are just fucking great. There's no problem with the
explosives. The problem is with Bobby Shaftoe's brain.
He was right there. Waterhouse sent him to find a stethoscope, and
Shaftoe went chambering through the U boat until he found a wooden box. He
opened it up and saw right away it was full of medic stuff. He pawed through
it, looking for what Waterhouse wanted, and there was the bottle, plain as
day, right in front of his face. His hand brushed against it, for god's
sake. He saw the label as the beam of his flashlight swept across it:
MORPHIUM.
But he didn't grab it. If it had said MORPHINE he would have grabbed it
in a second. But it said MORPHIUM. And it wasn't until about thirty seconds
later that he realized that this was a fucking German boat and of course the
words would all be different and there was about a 99 percent chance that
MORPHIUM was, in fact, exactly the same stuff as MORPHINE. When he realized
that he planted his feet in the passageway of the darkened U boat and let
out a deep long scream from way down in his gut. With the noise of the
waves, no one heard him. Then he continued onwards and carried out his duty,
handing over the stethoscope to Waterhouse. He carried out his duty because
he is a Marine.
Blowing this fucking safe off the wall is not his duty. It's just an
idea that popped into his head. They've been training him how to use these
explosives; why not put it into practice? He's blowing this safe up, not
because he is a Marine, but because he is Bobby Shaftoe. And also because
it's a great excuse to go back for that morphium.
The U boat bucks and sends Harvey sprawling to the deck. Shaftoe waits
for the motion to subside, then flails for handholds and pulls himself out
from under the safe. His weight is mostly on his feet now, but it wouldn't
be correct to say he's standing up. In this place, the best you can hope for
is to scramble for balance somewhat faster than you are falling on your
Keister. Harvey has just lost that race and Shaftoe is winning it for the
moment.
"Fire in the hole!" Shaftoe hollers. Harvey finds his feet! Shaftoe
gives him a helpful shove out into the passageway. Harvey turns left and
heads uphill for the conning tower and the exit. Shaftoe turns right. He
heads downhill. Towards the bow. Towards Davy Jones's Locker. Towards the
box with the MORPHIUM.
Where the fuck is that box? When he found it before, it was bobbing in
the soup. Maybe horrible thought maybe it just drained out of the hole made
by the torpedo. He passes through a couple of bulkheads. The boat's angle is
getting steeper all the time and he ends up walking backwards, like he's
descending a ladder, making handholds out of pipes, electrical cables, and
the chains that suspend the submarines' bunks. This boat is so damn long.
It seems like a strange way to kill people. Shaftoe's not sure if he
approves of everything that is implied by this U boat. Shaftoe has killed
Chinese bandits on the banks of the Yangtze by stabbing them in the chest
with a bayonet. He thinks he killed one, once, just by hitting him pretty
hard in the head. On Guadalcanal he killed Nips by shooting at them with
several different kinds of arms, by rolling rocks down on them, by
constructing large bonfires at the entrances to caves where they were holed
up, by sneaking up on them in the jungle and cutting their throats, by
firing mortars into their positions, even by picking one up and throwing him
off a cliff into the pounding surf. Of course he has known for a long time
that this face to face style of killing the bad guys is kind of old
fashioned, but it's not like he's spent a lot of time thinking about it. The
demonstration of the Vickers machine gun that he witnessed in Italy did sort
of get him thinking, and now here he is, inside one of the most famous
killing machines in the whole war, and what does he see? He sees valves. Or
rather the cast iron wheels that are used for opening and closing valves.
Entire bulkheads are covered with iron wheels, ranging from a couple of
inches to over a foot in diameter, packed in as densely as barnacles on a
rock, in what looks like a completely random and irregular fashion. They are
painted either red or black, and they are polished to a gleam from the
friction of men's hands.
And where it's not valves it's switches, huge Frankenstein movie ones.
There is one big rotary switch, half green and half red, that's a good two
feet in diameter. And it's not like this boat has a lot of windows in it.
It's got no windows at all. Just a periscope that can only be used by one
guy at a time. And so for these guys, the war comes down to being sealed up
in an airtight drum full of shit and turning valve wheels and throwing
switches on command, and from time to time maybe some officer comes back and
tells them that they just killed a bunch of guys.
There's that box it ended up on a bunk. Shaftoe yanks it closer and
hauls it open. The contents are all jumbled up, and there's more than one
purple bottle in there, and he panics for a moment, thinking he'll have to
read all of the labels in their creepy Germanic script, but in a few seconds
he finds the MORPHIUM, grabs it, pockets it.
He's on his way back up towards the conning tower when a big roller
slams into the outside of the boat and knocks him off balance. He tumbles
downhill for a long, long ways, doing backward somersaults straight down the
middle of the boat, before he gets himself under control. Everything has
gone black; he's lost his flashlight.
He comes very close to panicking now. It's not that he's a panicky guy,
just that it's been a while since he had morphine, and when he gets this
way, his body reacts badly to things. He's half blinded by a powerful flash
of blue light that is gone before his eyes have time to blink. There's a
sizzling noise down below. He moves his left hand and feels a tug on his
wrist: the flashlight's lanyard, which he had the presence of mind to wrap
around himself. The light scrapes and clanks against the steel grating on
which Shaftoe is now spreadeagled, like a saint on the gridiron. There's
another flash of blue light, reticulated by black lines, accompanied by a
sizzling noise. Shaftoe smells electricity. He raps the flashlight against
the grating a couple of times and it comes on again, flickeringly.
The grid's woven from pencil thick rods spaced a couple of inches
apart. He's facedown on it, looking into a hold that, if this U boat were
level, would be below him. The hold is a disaster, its neatly stacked and
crated contents now Osterized into a slumgullion of shattered glass,
splintered wood, foodstuffs, high explosives, and strategic minerals, all
mingled with seawater so that it sloshes back and forth with the rocking of
the dead U boat. A perfect, quivering globe of silver fills through the
grating right near his head and descends through his flashlight beam and
explodes against a piece of debris. Then another. He looks uphill and sees a
rain of silver globules bouncing and rolling down the deckplates toward him:
the mercury columns that they use to measure pressure must have been
ruptured. There's another blinding blue flash: an electrical spark with a
lot of power behind it. Shaftoe looks down through the grid again and
perceives that the hold is filled with huge metal cabinets with giant bolts
sticking out of them. Every so often a piece of wet debris will bridge the
gap between a couple of those bolts and a spark will light the place up: the
cabinets are batteries, they are what enable the U boat to run underwater.
As Sergeant Robert Shaftoe lies there with his face pressed against
that chilly grid, taking a few deep breaths and trying to regain his nerve,
a big wave rocks the boat back so hard that he's afraid he's going to fall
backwards and plummet all the way to the submerged bow. The swill in the
battery hold rolls downhill, gathering power and velocity as it falls, and
batters the forward bulkhead of the hold with terrifying power; he can hear
rivets giving way under the impact. As this happens, most of the battery
hold is exposed to the beam of Bobby Shaftoe's flashlight, all the way down
to the bottom. And that is when he sees the splintered crates down there
very small crates, such as might be used to contain very heavy supplies.
They have been busted open. Through the gaps in the wreckage, Shaftoe can
see yellow bricks, once neatly stacked, now scattered. They look exactly
like he would imagine gold bars. The only thing wrong with that theory is
that there are way too many of them down there for them to be gold bars. It
is like when he turned over rotten logs in Wisconsin and found thousands of
identical insect eggs sown on the dark earth, glowing with promise.
For a moment, he's tempted. The amount of money down there is beyond
calculation. If he could get his hands on just one of those bars The
explosives must have detonated, because Bobby Shaftoe has just gone deaf.
That's his cue to get the fuck out of here. He forgets about the gold
morphine's good enough plunder for one day. He half scrambles and half
climbs up the grid, up the passageway, up the skipper's cabin, smoke pouring
out of its hatch, its bulkheads now weirdly ballooned by the blast wave.
The safe has broken loose! And the cable that he and Harvey attached to
it, though it's damaged, is still intact. Someone must be hauling away on it
up abovedecks because it is stubbornly and annoying taut. Right now the safe
is caught up on jagged obstructions. Shaftoe has to pry it loose. The safe
jerks onward and upward, drawn by the taut cable, until it gets caught in
something else. Shaftoe follows the safe out of the cabin, up the
passageway, up the conning tower ladder, and finally levers himself up out
of the submarine and into the teeth of the storm, to a hearty cheer from the
waiting sailors.
No more than five minutes later, the U boat goes away. Shaftoe imagines
it tumbling end over end down the side of the reef, headed for an undersea
canyon, scattering gold bars and mercury globules into the black water like
fairy dust. Shaftoe's back on the corvette and everyone is pounding him on
the back and toasting him. He just wants to find a private place to open up
that purple bottle.
Chapter 34 SUIT
Randy's posture is righteous and alert: it is all because of his suit.
It is trite to observe that hackers don't like fancy clothes. Avi has
learned that good clothes can actually be comfortable the slacks that go
with a business suit, for example, are really much more comfortable than
blue jeans. And he has spent enough time with hackers to obtain the insight
that is it not wearing suits that they object to, so much as getting them
on. Which includes not only the donning process per se but also picking them
out, maintaining them, and worrying whether they are still in style this
last being especially difficult for men who wear suits once every five
years.
So it's like this: Avi has a spreadsheet on one of his computers,
listing the necks, inseams, and other vital measurements of every man in his
employ. A couple of weeks before an important meeting, he will simply fax it
to his tailor in Shanghai. Then, in a classic demonstration of the Asian
just in time delivery system as pioneered by Toyota, the suits will arrive
via Federal Express, twenty four hours ahead of time so that they can be
automatically piped to the hotel's laundry room. This morning, just as Randy
emerged from the shower, he heard a knock at his door, and swung it open to
reveal a valet carrying a freshly cleaned and pressed business suit,
complete with shirt and tie. He put it all on (a tenth generation photocopy
of a bad diagram of the half Windsor knot was thoughtfully provided). It fit
perfectly. Now he stands in a lobby of the Foote Mansion, watching electric
numbers above an elevator count down, occasionally sneaking a glance at
himself in a big mirror. Randy's head protruding from a suit is a sight gag
that will be good for grins at least through lunchtime.
He is pondering the morning's e mail.
To: dwarf@siblings.net
From: root@eruditorum.org
Subject: Re: Why?
Dear Randy,
I hope you don't mind if I address you as Randy, since it's quite
obvious that you are you, despite your use of an anonymous front. This is a
good idea, by the way. I applaud your prudence.
Concerning the possibility that I am ''an old enemy'' of yours. I'm
dismayed that one so young can already have old enemies. Or perhaps you are
referring to a recently acquired enemy of advanced years? Several candidates
come to mind. But I suspect you are referring to Andrew Loeb. I am not he.
This would be obvious to you if you had visited his website recently.
Why are you building the Crypt? Signed.
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK – (etc., etc.)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
It is not at all interesting to watch the numbers over the elevators
and try to predict which one will arrive first, but it is more interesting
than just standing there. One of them has been stuck on the floor above
Randy's for at least a minute; he can hear it buzzing angrily. In Asia many
business men especially some of the overseas Chinese would think nothing of
commandeering one of the hotel's elevators around the clock for their own
personal use, stationing minions in it, in eight hour shifts, to hold their
thumbs on the DOOR OPEN button, ignoring its self righteous alarm buzzer.
Ding. Randy spins around on the balls of his feet (just try that little
maneuver in a pair of sneakers!). Once again he has backed the wrong horse:
the winner is an elevator that was on the very top floor of the hotel last
time he scanned it. This is an elevator with purpose, a fast track lift. He
walks towards the green light. The doors part. Randy stares squarely into
the face of Dr. Hubert (the Dentist) Kepler, D.D.S.
Or perhaps you are referring to a recently acquired enemy of advanced
years?
"Good morning, Mr. Waterhouse! When you stand with your mouth open like
that, you remind me of one of my patients."
"Good morning, Dr. Kepler." Randy hears his words from the other end of
a mile long bumwad tube, and immediately reviews them in his own mind to
make sure he has not revealed any proprietary corporate information or given
Dr. Kepler any reason to file a lawsuit.
The doors start to close and Randy has to whack them open with his
laptop case.
"Careful! That's an expensive piece of equipment, I'd wager," says the
Dentist.
Randy is about to say I go through laptops like a transvestite goes
through nylons though maybe like a high speed drill through a necrotic molar
would be more thematically apropos, but instead he clams up and says nothing
at all, finding himself in dangerous territory: he is carrying proprietary
AVCLA information on this thing, and if the Dentist gets the impression that
Randy's being cavalier with it, he might spew out a barrage of torts, like
Linda Blair and the pea soup.
"It's, uh, a pleasant surprise to see you in Kinakuta," Randy stammers.
Dr. Kepler wears eyeglasses the size of a 1959 Cadillac's windshield.
They are special dentist eyeglasses, as polished as the Palomar mirror,
coated with ultrareflective material so that you can always see the
reflection of your own yawning maw in them, impaled on a shaft of hot light.
The Dentist's own eyes merely haunt the background, like a childhood memory.
They are squinty grey blue eyes, turned down at the edges as if he is tired
of the world, with Stygian pupils. A trace of a smile always seems to be
playing around his withered lips. It is the smile of a man who is worrying
about how to meet his next malpractice insurance payment while patiently
maneuvering the point of his surgical steel crowbar under the edge of your
dead bicuspid, but who has read in a professional magazine that patients are
more likely to come back, and less likely to sue you, if you smile at them.
"Say," he says, "I wonder if I could have a quick huddle with you sometime
later."
Spit, please.
Saved by the bell! They have reached the ground floor. The elevator
doors open to reveal the endangered marble lobby of the Foote Mansion.
Bellhops, disguised as wedding cakes, glide to and fro as if mounted on
casters. Not ten feet away is Avi, and with him are two beautiful suits from
which protrude the heads of Eb and John. All three heads turn towards them.
Seeing the Dentist, Eb and John adopt the facial expressions of B movie
actors whose characters have just taken small caliber bullets to the center
of the forehead. Avi, by contrast, stiffens up like a man who stepped on a
rusty nail a week ago and has just felt the first stirrings of the tetanus
infection that will eventually break his spine.
"We've got a busy day ahead of us," Randy says. "I guess my answer is
yes, subject to availability."
"Good. I'll hold you to it," says Dr. Kepler, and steps out of the
elevator. "Good morning, Mr. Halaby. Good morning, Dr. Föhr. Good morning,
Mr. Cantrell. Nice to see you all looking so very much like gentlemen."
Nice to see you acting like one.
"The pleasure is ours," Avi says. "I take it we'll be seeing you
later?"
"Oh, yes," says the Dentist, "you'll be seeing me all day." This
procedure will be a lengthy one, I'm afraid. He turns his back on them and
walks across the lobby without further pleasantries. He is headed for a
cluster of leather chairs nearly obscured by an explosion of bizarre
tropical flowers. The occupants of those chairs are mostly young, and all
smartly dressed. They snap to attention as their boss glides towards them.
Randy counts three women and two men. One of the men is obviously a gorilla,
but the women inevitably referred to as Fates, Furies, Graces, Norns, or
Harpies are rumored to have bodyguard training, and to carry weapons, too.
"Who are those?" John Cantrell asks. "His hygienists?"
"Don't laugh," Avi says. "Back when he was in practice, he got used to
having a staff of women do the pick and floss work for him. It shaped his
paradigm."
"Are you shitting me?" Randy asks.
"You know how it works," Avi says. "When you go to the dentist, you
never actually see the dentist, right? Someone else makes the appointment.
Then there's always this elite coterie of highly efficient women who scrape
the plaque out of the way, so that the dentist doesn't have to deal with it,
and take your X rays. The dentist himself sits in the back somewhere and
looks at the X rays he deals with you as this abstract greyscale image on a
little piece of film. If he sees holes, he goes into action. If not, he
comes in and exchanges small talk with you for a minute and then you go
home."
"So, why is he here?" demands Eberhard Föhr.
"Exactly!" Avi says. "When he walks into the room, you never know why
he's here to drill a hole in your skull, or just talk about his vacation in
Maui."
All eyes turn to Randy. "What went on in that elevator?"
"I nothing!" Randy blurts.
"Did you discuss the Philippines project at all?"
"He just said he wanted to talk to me about it."
"Well, shit." Avi says. "That means we have to talk about it first."
"I know that," Randy says, "so I told him that I might talk to him if I
had a free moment."
"Well, we'd best make damn sure you have no free moments today," Avi
says. He thinks for a moment and continues, "Did he have a hand in his
pocket at any time?"
"Why? You expecting him to pull out a weapon?"
"No," Avi says, "but someone told me, once, that the Dentist is wired."
"You mean, like a police informant?" John asks incredulously.
"Yeah," Avi says, like it's no big deal. "He makes a habit of carrying
a tiny digital recorder the size of a matchbook around in his pocket.
Perhaps with a wire running up inside his shirt to a tiny microphone
somewhere. Perhaps not. Anyway, you never know when he's recording you."
"Isn't that illegal or something?" Randy asks.
"I'm not a lawyer," Avi says. "More to the point, I'm not a Kinakutan
lawyer. But it wouldn't matter in a civil suit if he slapped us with a tort,
he could introduce any kind of evidence he wanted."
They all look across the lobby. The Dentist is standing flatfooted on
the marble, arms folded over his chest, chin pointed at the floor as he
absorbs input from his aides.
"He might have put his hand in his pocket. I don't remember," Randy
says. "It doesn't matter. We kept it extremely general. And brief."
"He could still subject the recording to a voice stress analysis, to
figure out if you were lying," John points out. He relishes the sheer
unbridled paranoia of this. He's in his element.
"Not to worry," Randy says, "I jammed it."
"Jammed it? How?" Eb asks, not catching the irony in Randy's voice. Eb
looks surprised and interested, It is clear from the look on his face that
Eb longs to get into a conversation about something arcane and technical.
"I was joking," Randy explains. "If the Dentist analyzes the recording,
he'll find nothing but stress in my voice."
Avi and John laugh sympathetically. But Eb is crestfallen. "Oh," Eb
says. "I was thinking that we could absolutely jam his device if we so
wanted."
"A tape recorder doesn't use radio," John says. "How could we jam it?"
"Van Eck phreaking," Eb says.
At this point, Tom Howard emerges from the cafe with a thoroughly
ravished copy of the South China Morning Post under his arm, and Beryl
emerges from an elevator, prepped for combat in a dress and makeup. The men
avert their eyes shyly and pretend not to notice. Greetings and small talk
ensue. Then Avi looks at his watch and says, "Let's head over to the
sultan's palace," as if he were proposing they go grab some french fries at
Mickey Ds.
Chapter 35 CRACKER
Waterhouse has to keep an eye on that safe; Shaftoe is itching to blow
it open with high explosives, and Chattan (who firmly overrules Shaftoe)
intends to ship it back to London so that it can be opened by experts at the
Broadway Buildings. Waterhouse only wants to have another crack at opening
it himself, just to see if he can do it.
Chattan's position is the correct one. Detachment 2702 has a very clear
and specialized mission which most certainly does not include opening safes
from U boats. For that matter, it does not include going onto abandoned U
boats to recover safes, or other crypto data, in the first place. The only
reason they did that was because they happened to be the only people with
Ultra clearance who were in the neighborhood, and U 553's precarious
position did not give Bletchley Park time to send out its own experts.
But Waterhouse's desire to open the safe himself has nothing to do with
Detachment 2702's mission, or his own personal duties, or even,
particularly, with winning the war. It is something that Lawrence Pritchard
Waterhouse is driven to do. His is not to reason why. Even as he was reeling
down that stretched line from U 553 to the torpedo boat, battered by waves
and wind and rain, with a busted arm and a busted head, not knowing from one
moment to the next whether he would make it back to the boat or plunge into
the Atlantic, he was remembering the infinitesimal tremors picked up by the
half frozen neurons in his fingertips as he twiddled the safe's submerged
dial. Even as Enoch Root patched him up on board the boat, Waterhouse was
constructing a crude mental model of how the safe's tumblers might be
constructed, visualizing the thing in his mind's eye. And even as the rest
of Detachment 2702 collapses into their cots and hammocks and sleeping bags
around the chapel of Qwghlm Castle, the splinted and bandaged Waterhouse
stalks the polished corridors of that building's better corner, looking for
a couple of used razor blades and a hunk of carbon.
The razors he finds in a rubbish bin and the carbon he steals from the
closet where Ghnxh keeps the galvanick lucipher. He brings them, plus a
brick sized crystal of hard glue and a blowtorch, back to the chapel, where
everyone else is sleeping. Enlisted men are in the nave, as befits Marines
who are basically a naval organization. Officers are in the transept:
Chattan has the south arm of it all to himself, Waterhouse and Root and the
SAS and USMC lieutenants have bunk beds in the north. A small moiety of
Detachment 2702's astounding tarp supply has, then, been hung up across the
eastern end of the place, partitioning off the chancel, Holy of Holies,
where once the Body and Blood of Christ were housed. Now it contains a
Hallicrafters Model S 27 15 tube superheterodyne radio receiver using state
of the art acorn tubes in its front end, capable of tuning VHF from 27 to
143 Megahertz and of receiving AM, FM, and CW, and including a signal
strength meter which would come in handy if they were really operating a
huffduff station here, which they aren't.
The lights are burning behind those tarps and one of the Marines is
snoring away in a chair in front of the altar. Waterhouse wakes him up and
sends him to bed. The Marine is ashamed; he knows he was supposed to be
awake, twiddling that antenna convincingly.
The radio itself has hardly been used they only turn it on when someone
comes to visit who is not in on the Secret. It sits there on the altar,
pristine, as if it had just come from the Hallicrafters factory in Chicago,
Illinois. All of the altar's fancy bits (if it ever had them) have long
since succumbed to fire, rot, plunder, or the gnawing tusks of nest building
skerries. What remains is a rectangular monolith of basalt, featureless
except for some marks from the tools that were used to quarry and shape it.
It is a perfect foundation for tonight's experiment.
Waterhouse gets the safe up there at some cost to the disks and
ligaments in his lower back. It is tubular in shape, like an excerpt of
naval gun barrel. He stands it up on its back end so that its round door,
with the round dial in the center, is staring up at the ceiling like a blind
eye, the radial lines on the dial looking very much like the striations of
an iris.
Behind that dial is a bunch of mechanical stuff that has gotten
Waterhouse completely pissed off, driven him into a frantic state. By
manipulating this dial in some way, he should be able to tease that
mechanical stuff into some configuration that allows the door to be opened.
That's all there is to it. That this door remains locked is an outrage. Why
should the tiny volume inside this safe much less than a single cubic foot
be so different from the space that Waterhouse moves through at will? What
the hell is inside there?
The glue looks like bad amber, flawed and bubbled but still beautiful.
He fires up the little blowtorch and plays the flame over one end of it. The
glue softens, melts, and drips onto the door of the safe, next to the dial,
forming a little puddle about the size of a silver dollar.
Working quickly, Waterhouse sets two single edged razor blades into it,
the blades dangerously upward facing, parallel and somewhat less than an
inch apart. He holds them in place for a few moments while the frigid metal
of the safe sucks the heat out of that glue and makes it hard again. He has
employed a pair of toothpicks as spacers to make sure that the blunt backs
of the blades do not actually touch the door of the safe; he does not want
an electrical connection between them.
He solders a wire onto each of the razor blades and runs the wires
across the altar toward the radio. Then he takes a little chunk of carbon
and lays it across the two blades, forming a bridge between them.
He tears open the back of the radio and does a bit of rewiring. Most of
the rig is already set up the way he needs it; basically he's looking for
something that will convert electrical impulses into sound and pump that
sound into the headphones, which is what a radio does. But the source of the
signal is no longer a transmitter on a U boat but rather the current flowing
up one of Waterhouse's wires, into the left razor blade, across the carbon
bridge, into the right razor blade, and back down the other wire.
Getting this hooked up the way he wants it takes some doing. When he
blunders down a blind alley and gets frustrated, he will go over and twiddle
the antenna for a while, pretending to zero in on a U boat. Then an idea
will occur to him and he will go back to work.
Sometime around dawn, he hears a squeal from the headphones: a pair of
Bakelite cups bridged by a contraption that looks like a primitive surgical
device, hooked up to the radio by a twisted pair of black and red wires. He
turns the volume down and claps the phones over his head.
He reaches out and lays one fingertip on the safe, and hears a painful
thud in his ears. He slides the fingertip over the surface of the cold metal
and hears a rasping sound. Any vibrations cause the bridge of carbon to
tremble on the razor blades, making and breaking the electrical connection,
modulating the electrical current. The blades and the carbon are a
microphone, and the microphone works almost too well.
He takes his hand off the safe and just sits there and listens for a
while. He can hear the footfalls of skerries going through the detachment's
rations. He can hear the impact of waves on the shore, miles away, and the
thump of the Taxi's bald tires on chuckholes out on the Road. Sounds like
the Taxi has a little alignment problem! He can hear the scrub, scrub of
Margaret cleaning the floor of the kitchen, and some minor arrhythmias in
the heartbeats of the enlisted men, and the boom of glaciers calving on the
coast of Iceland, and the squirrely drone of hastily machined propellers on
approaching convoy ships. Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse is plugged into the
Universe in a way that exceeds even what Bletchley Park has to offer.
The center of that particular universe is the Safe from U 553, and its
axis passes up through the center of the Dial, and now Waterhouse has his
hand on it. He turns the volume way down before he touches any thing so that
he won't blow his eardrums out. The Dial spins heavily but easily, as if
mounted on gas bearings. Still, there is mechanical friction in there which
is not perceptible to Waterhouse's admittedly frozen fingers but which comes
through in his earphones like a rockslide.
When the tumblers move, it sounds like Waterhouse is shooting the main
bolt on the Gate of Hell. It takes him a little while, and a few more false
starts, to get his bearings; he doesn't know how many numbers are in the
combination, or which way he should turn the dial to begin with. But with
experimentation, some patterns begin to show through, and eventually he
works out the following combination:
23 right 37 left 7 right 31 left 13 right and then there's a really
meaty click and he knows in his marrow that he can take off the headphones.
He spins a little wheel that is mounted on the front of the safe adjacent to
the dial. This withdraws the radial dogs that have been holding the door
shut. He hauls the door up, careful not to slash his hand on the twin
razors, and looks into the safe.
His feeling of disappointment that accompanies this action has nothing
to do with the contents of the safe. He is disappointed because he has
solved the problem, and has gone back to the baseline state of boredom and
low level irritation that always comes over him when he's not doing
something that inherently needs to be done, like picking a lock or breaking
a code.
He sticks his arm all the way down to the bottom of the safe and finds
a metal object about the size of a hot dog bun. He knew it would be there
because, like children investigating wrapped presents in the days before
Christmas, they have been tilting the safe this way and that, and when they
did, they heard something sliding from one end to the other going tink,
tonk, tink, tonk – and wondered what it was.
This object is so cold, and sucks the heat out of his hands so
efficiently, that it hurts to touch it. He shakes his hand to bring
circulation back, then grasps the thing, yanks it out briskly, and throws it
down on the altar. It bounces once, twice in a seesawing motion, and rings
piercingly as it does the closest thing to a musical sound that has shaken
the air of this chapel in many centuries. It shines gaudily under the
electric lights they have set up around the chancel. The glittering light
catches the eye of Waterhouse, who has been living on grey and cloudy Qwghlm
for weeks, wearing and sleeping in things that are black or khaki or olive
drab. He is mesmerized by this thing, simply because of its brightness and
beauty against the dull and rude basalt, even before his mind identifies it
as a bar of solid gold.
It makes a heck of a paperweight, which is a good thing, because the
chapel is nothing if not drafty, and the important contents of the safe
consist of onionskin pages that fly away in the tiniest breeze. The pages
are ruled with faint horizontal and vertical lines, dividing each one into a
grid, and the grids are filled in with hand printed letters in groups of
five.
"Well, look what you found!" says a quiet voice. Waterhouse looks up
into the unsettlingly calm and placid gaze of Enoch Root.
"Yes. Encrypted messages," Waterhouse says. "Non Enigma."
"No," Root says. "I was referring to the Root of All Evil, here." He
tries to pick up the gold bar, but his fingers merely slip off of it. He
gets a firmer grip and hefts it up off the altar. Something about it catches
his eye, and he turns to bring it under one of the electric lights, frowning
at it with the critical intensity of a diamond cutter.
"It's got Hanzi characters stamped on it," Root says.
"Beg pardon?"
"Chinese or Japanese. No, Chinese there's the chop of a bank in
Shanghai. And here are some figures the fineness and the serial number."
Showing unexpected familiarity with such matters for a missionary priest.
Until this point, the gold bar has signified nothing to Waterhouse it's
just a bulk sample of a chemical element, like a lead weight or a flask of
mercury. But the fact that it might convey information is quite interesting.
He absolutely has to stand up and go look at it. Root is correct: the bar
has been neatly marked with small Oriental characters, applied with a stamp.
The tiny facets of the ideograms glitter under the light, sparks jumping the
gap between the two halves of the Axis.
Root sets the gold bar down on the altar. He saunters over to a table
where they keep stationery, and pulls out a sheet of onionskin and a fresh
pencil. Returning to the altar, he lays the frail page over the top of the
gold bar, then rubs the side of the pencil lead back and forth over it,
turning it all black except for where the stamped numbers and characters are
underneath. Within a few moments he has a perfect little rubbing, showing
the inscription in full detail. He folds the page up and pockets it, then
returns the pencil to the table.
Waterhouse has long since gone back to his examination of the pages
from the safe. The numbers are all written in the same hand. Now, since they
dredged all manner of other paperwork out of the sewage sloshing through the
U boat skipper's cabin, Waterhouse can recognize the captain's hand easily
enough; these sheets were written by someone else.
The format of the messages makes it clear that they were not encrypted
with an Enigma machine. Enigma messages always begin with two groups of
three letters each, which tell the receiving clerk how to set the wheels on
his machine. Those groups are missing on all of these sheets, so some other
cipher system must have been used. Like every other modern nation, the
Germans have a plethora of different cipher systems, some based on books and
some on machines. Bletchley Park has broken most of them.
Still, it looks like an interesting exercise. Now that the rest of
Detachment 2702 has arrived, making further trysts with Margaret
impractical, Waterhouse has nothing to look forward to. Trying to crack the
code used on these sheets will be a perfect puzzle to fill the gaping void
that opened up as soon as Waterhouse broke the combination of the safe. He
steals some paper of his own, sits down at the desk, and busies himself for
an hour or two copying out the ciphertext from the skipper's pages,
double– and triple checking each code group to make sure he's got an
accurate copy.
On the one hand, this is a pain in the ass. On the other, it gives him
a chance to go through the ciphertext by hand, at the very lowest level,
which might be useful later. The ineffable talent for finding patterns in
chaos cannot do its thing unless he immerses himself in the chaos first. If
they do contain patterns, he does not see them just now, in any rational
way. But there may be some subrational part of his mind that can go to work,
now that the letters have passed before his eyes and through his pencil, and
that may suddenly present him with a gift wrapped clue or even a full
solution a few weeks from now while he is shaving or antenna twiddling.
He has been dimly aware, for a while, that Chattan and the others are
awake now. Enlisted men are not allowed into the chancel, but the officers
get to gather round and admire the gold bar.
"Breaking the code, Waterhouse?" Chattan says, ambling over to the
desk, warming his hands with a mug of coffee.
"Making a clean copy," Waterhouse says, and then, because he is not
without a certain cunning, adds: "in case the originals are destroyed in
transit."
"Very prudent," Chattan nods. "Say, you didn't hide a second gold bar
anywhere, did you?"
Waterhouse has been in the military long enough that he does not rise
to the bait. "The pattern of sounds made when we tilted the safe back and
forth indicated that there was only a single heavy object inside, sir."
Chattan chuckles and takes a sip of his coffee. "I shall be interested
to see whether you can break that cipher, Lieutenant Waterhouse. I am
tempted to put money on it."
"I sure appreciate that, but it would be a lousy bet, sir," Waterhouse
replied. "The chances are very good that Bletchley Park has already broken
this cipher, whatever it may be."
"What makes you say that?" Chattan asks absently.
The question is so silly, coming from a man in Chattan's position, that
it leaves Waterhouse disoriented. "Sir, Bletchley Park has broken nearly all
of the German military and governmental codes."
Chattan makes a face of mock disappointment. "Waterhouse! How
unscientific. You are making assumptions."
Waterhouse thinks back and tries to work out the meaning of this. "You
think that this cipher might not be German? Or that it might not be military
or governmental?"
"I am merely cautioning you against making assumptions," Chattan says.
Waterhouse is still thinking this one over as they are approached by
Lieutenant Robson, the commanding officer of the SAS squad. "Sir," he says,
"for the benefit of the fellows down in London, we would like to know the
combination."
"The combination?" Waterhouse asks blankly. This word, devoid of
context, could mean almost anything.
"Yes, sir," Robson says precisely. "To the safe."
"Oh!" Waterhouse says. He is faintly irritated that they would ask him
this question. There seems little point in writing down the combination when
the equipment needed to break into the safe is sitting right there. It is
much more important to have a safe breaking algorithm than to have one
particular solution to a safe breaking problem. "I don't know," he says. "I
forgot."
"You forgot?" Chattan says. He says it on behalf of Robson who appears
to be violently biting his tongue. "Did you perhaps write it down before you
forgot it?"
"No," Waterhouse says. "But I remember that it consists entirely of
prime numbers."
"Well! That narrows it down!" Chattan says cheerfully. Robson does not
seem mollified, though.
"And there are five numbers in all, which is interesting since "
"Since five is itself a prime number!" Chattan says. Once again,
Waterhouse is pleased to see his commanding officer displaying signs of a
tasteful and expensive education.
"Very well," Robson announces through clenched teeth. "I shall inform
the recipients."
Chapter 36 SULTAN
The Grand Wazir of Kinakuta leads them into the offices of his boss,
the sultan, and leaves them alone for a few minutes at one corner of the
conference table, to build which a whole species of tropical hardwoods had
to be extinguished. After that, it is a race among the founders of Epiphyte
Corp. to see who can blurt out the first witticism about the size of the
sultan's home office deduction. They are in the New Palace, three arms of
which wrap around the exotic gardens of the ancient and magnificent Old
Palace. This meeting room has a ten meter high ceiling. The walls facing
onto the garden are made entirely of glass, so the effect is like looking
into a terrarium that contains a model of a sultan's palace. Randy has never
known much about architecture, and his vocabulary fails him abjectly. The
best he could say is that it's sort of like a cross between the Taj Mahal
and Angkor Wat.
To get here, they had to drive down a long boulevard of palm trees,
enter a huge vaulted marble entrance hall, submit to metal detection and
frisking, sit in an anteroom for a while sipping tea, take their shoes off,
have warm rose water poured over their hands by a turbaned servant wielding
an ornate ewer, and then walk across about half a mile of polished marble
and oriental carpets. As soon as the door wafts shut behind the grand
wazir's ass, Avi says, "I smell a con job."
"A con job?" Randy scoffs. "What, you think this is a rear screen
projection? You think this table is made of Formica?"
"It's all real," Avi admits sourly. "But whenever someone gives you the
treatment like this, it's because they're trying to impress you."
"I'm impressed," Randy says. "I admit it. I'm impressed."
"That's just a euphemism for, 'I'm about to do something moronic,'" Avi
says.
"What are we going to do? This isn't the kind of meeting where anything
actually gets done, is it?"
"If you mean, are we going to sign contracts, is money going to change
hands, then no, nothing is going to get done. But plenty is going to
happen."
The door opens again and the grand wazir leads a group of Nipponese men
into the room. Avi lowers his voice. "Just remember that, at the end of the
day, we're back in the hotel, and the sultan is still here, and all of this
is just a memory to us. The fact that the sultan has a big garden has no
relevance to anything."
Randy starts to get irked: this is so obvious it's insulting to mention
it. But part of the reason he's irked is because he knows Avi saw right
through him. Avi's always telling him not to be romantic. But he wouldn't be
here, doing this, if not for the romance.
Which leads to the question: why is Avi doing it? Maybe he has some
romantic delusions of his own, carefully concealed. Maybe that's why he can
see through Randy so damn well. Maybe Avi is cautioning himself as much as
he is the other members of Epiphyte Corp.
Actually this new group is not Nipponese, but Chinese probably from
Taiwan. The grand wazir shows them their assigned seats, which are far
enough away that they could exchange sporadic gunfire with Epiphyte Corp.
but not converse without the aid of bullhorns. They spend a minute or so
pretending to give a shit about the gardens and the Old Palace. Then, a
compact, powerfully built man in his fifties pivots towards Epiphyte Corp.
and strides over to them, dragging out a skein of aides. Randy's reminded of
a computer simulation he saw once of a black hole passing through a galaxy,
entraining a retinue of stars. Randy recognizes the man's face vaguely: it
has been printed in business journals more than once, but not often enough
for Randy to remember his name.
If Randy were something other than a hacker, he'd have to step forward
now and deal with protocol issues. He'd be stressed out and hating it. But,
thank god, all that shit devolves automatically on Avi, who steps up to meet
this Taiwanese guy. They shake hands and go through the rote exchange of
business cards. But the Chinese guy is looking straight through Avi,
checking out the other Epiphyte people. Finding Randy wanting, he moves on
to Eberhard Föhr. "Which one is Cantrell?" he says.
John's leaning against the window, probably trying to figure out what
parametric equation generated the petals on that eight foot tall,
carnivorous plant. He turns around to be introduced. "John Cantrell."
"Harvard Li. Didn't you get my e mail?"
Harvard Li! Now Randy is starting to remember this guy. Founder of
Harvard Computer Company, a medium sized PC clone manufacturer in Taiwan.
John grins. "I received about twenty e mail messages from an unknown
person claiming to be Harvard Li."
"Those were from me! I do not understand what you mean that I am an
unknown person." Harvard Li is extremely brisk, but not exactly pissed off.
He is, Randy realizes, not the kind of man who has to coach himself not to
be romantic before a meeting.
"I hate e mail," John says.
Harvard Li stares him in the eye for a while. "'What do you mean?"
"The concept is good. The execution is poor. People don't observe any
security precautions. A message arrives claiming to be from Harvard Li, they
believe it's really from Harvard Li. But this message is just a pattern of
magnetized spots on a spinning disk somewhere. Anyone could forge it."
"Ah. You use digital signature algorithm."
John considers this carefully. "I do not respond to any e mail that is
not digitally signed. Digital signature algorithm refers to one technique
for signing them. It is a good technique, but it could be better."
Harvard Li begins nodding about halfway through this, acknowledging the
point. "Is there a structural problem? Or are you concerned by the five
hundred and twelve bit key length? Would it be acceptable with a one
thousand twenty four bit key?"
About three sentences later, the conversation between Cantrell and Li
soars over the horizon of Randy's cryptographic knowledge, and his brain
shuts down. Harvard Li is a crypto maniac! He has been studying this shit
personally not just paying minions to read the books and send him notes, but
personally going over the equations, doing the math.
Tom Howard is grinning broadly. Eberhard is looking about as amused as
he ever gets, and Beryl's biting back a grin. Randy is trying desperately to
get the joke. Avi notes the confusion on Randy's face, turns his back to the
Taiwanese, and rubs his thumb and fingers together: money.
Oh, yeah. It had to be something to do with that.
Harvard Li cranked out a few million PC clones in the early nineties
and loaded them all with Windows, Word, and Excel but somehow forgot to
write any checks to Microsoft. About a year ago, Microsoft kicked his ass in
court and won a huge judgment. Harvard claimed bankruptcy: he doesn't have a
penny to his name. Microsoft has been trying to prove he still has the odd
billion or two salted away.
Harvard Li has clearly been thinking very hard about how to put money
where guys like Microsoft can't get it. There are many time honored ways:
the Swiss bank account, the false front corporation, the big real estate
project in deepest, darkest China, bars of gold in a vault somewhere. Those
tricks might work with the average government, but Microsoft is ten times
smarter, a hundred times more aggressive, and bound by no particular rules.
It gives Randy a little frisson just to imagine Harvard Li's situation:
being chased across the planet by Microsoft's state of the art hellhounds.
Harvard Li needs electronic cash. Not the lame stuff that people use to
buy t shirts on the Web without giving away their credit card numbers. He
needs the full on badass kind, based on hard crypto, rooted in an offshore
data haven, and he needs it bad. So nothing's more logical than that he is
sending lots of e mail to John Cantrell.
Tom Howard sidles up to him. "The question is, is it just Harvard Li,
or does he think he's discovered a new market?"
"Probably both," Randy guesses. "He probably knows a few other people
who'd like to have a private bank."
"The missiles," Tom says.
"Yeah." China's been taking potshots at Taiwan with ballistic missiles
lately, sort of like a Wild West villain shooting at the good guy's feet to
make him dance. "There have been bank runs in Taipei."
"In a way," Tom says, "these guys are tons smarter than us, because
they've never had a currency they could depend on." He and Randy look over
at John Cantrell, who has crossed his arms over his chest and is unloading a
disquisition on the Euler totient function while Harvard Li nods intently
and his nerd de camp frantically scrawls notes on a legal pad. Avi stands
far to one side, staring at the Old Palace, as in his mind the ramifications
of this bloom and sprawl and twine about each other like a tropical garden
run riot.
Other delegations file into the room behind the grand wazir and stake
out chunks of the conference table's coastline. The Dentist comes in with
his Norns or Furies or Hygienists or whatever the hell they are. There's a
group of white guys talking in Down Underish accents. Other than that, they
are all Asians. Some of them talk amongst themselves and some pull on their
chins and watch the conversation between Harvard Li and John Cantrell. Randy
watches them in turn: Bad Suit Asians and Good Suit Asians. The former have
grizzled buzz cuts and nicotine tanned skin and look like killers. They are
wearing bad suits, not because they can't afford good ones, but because they
don't give a shit. They are from China. The Good Suit Asians have high
maintenance haircuts, eyeglasses from Paris, clear skin, ready smiles. They
are mostly from Nippon.
"I want to exchange keys, right now, so we can e mail," Li says, and
gestures to an aide, who scurries to the edge of the table and unfolds a
laptop. "Something something Ordo," Li says in Cantonese. The aide points
and clicks.
Cantrell is gazing at the table expressionlessly. He squats down to
look under it. He strolls over and feels under the edge with his hand.
Randy bends and looks too. It's one of these high tech conference
tables with embedded power and communications lines, so that visitors can
plug in their laptops without having to string unsightly cables around and
fight over power outlets. The slab must be riddled with conduits. No visible
wires connect it to the world. The connections must run down hollow legs and
into a hollow floor. John grins, turns to Li, and shakes his head. "Normally
I'd say fine," he says, "but for a client with your level of security needs,
this is not an acceptable place to exchange keys."
"I'm not planning on using the phone," Li says, "we can exchange them
on floppies."
John knocks on wood. "Doesn't matter. Have one of your staff look into
the subject of Van Eck phreaking. That's with a 'p h,' not an 'f,' " he says
to the aide who's writing it down. Then, sensing Li's need for an executive
summary, he says, "They can read the internal state of your computer by
listening to the faint radio emissions coming out of the chips."
"Ahhhhh," Li says, and exchanges hugely significant looks with his
technical aides, as if this explains something that has been puzzling the
shit out of them.
Someone begins hollering wildly at the far end of the room not the end
by which the guests entered, but the other one. It is a chap in a getup
similar to, but not quite as ornate as, the grand wazir's. At some point he
switches to English the same dialect of English spoken by flight attendants
for foreign airlines, who have told passengers to insert the metal tongue
into the buckle so many times that it rushes out in one phlegmy garble.
Small Kinakutan men in good suits begin filing into the room. They take
seats across the head end of the table, which is wide enough for a Last
Supper tableau. In the Jesus position is a really big chair. It is the kind
of thing you'd get if you went to a Finnish designer with a shaved head,
rimless glasses, and twin Ph.D.s in semiotics and civil engineering, wrote
him a blank check, and asked him to design a throne. Behind is a separate
table for minions. All of it is backed up by tons of priceless artwork: an
eroded frieze, amputated from a jungle ruin somewhere.
All the guests gravitate instinctively towards their positions around
the table, and remain standing. The grand wazir glares at each one in turn.
A small man slips into the room, staring vacantly at the floor in front of
him, seemingly unaware that other people are present. His hair is lacquered
down to his skull, his appearance of portliness minimized by Savile Row
legerdemain. He eases into the big chair, which seems like a shocking
violation of etiquette until Randy realizes that this is the sultan.
Suddenly everyone is sitting down. Randy pulls his chair back and falls
into it. The leathery depths swallow his ass like a catcher's mitt accepting
a baseball. He's about to pull his laptop out of its bag, but in this
setting, both the nylon bag and the plastic computer have a strip mall
tawdriness. Besides, he has to resist this sophomoric tendency to take notes
all the time. Avi himself said that nothing was going to happen at this
meeting; all the important stuff is going to be subtextual. Besides, there
is the matter of Van Eck phreaking, which Cantrell probably mentioned just
to make Harvard Li paranoid, but which has Randy a bit rattled too. He opts
for a pad of graph paper the engineer's answer to the legal pad and a fine
point disposable pen.
The sultan has an Oxford English accent with traces of garlic and red
pepper still wedged in its teeth. He speaks for about fifteen minutes.
The room contains a few dozen living human bodies, each one a big sack
of guts and fluids so highly compressed that it will squirt for a few yards
when pierced. Each one is built around an armature of 206 bones connected to
each other by notoriously fault prone joints that are given to obnoxious
creaking, grinding, and popping noises when they are in other than pristine
condition. This structure is draped with throbbing steak, inflated with
clenching air sacks, and pierced by a Gordian sewer filled with burbling
acid and compressed gas and asquirt with vile enzymes and solvents produced
by the many dark, gamy nuggets of genetically programmed meat strung along
its length. Slugs of dissolving food are forced down this sloppy labyrinth
by serialized convulsions, decaying into gas, liquid, and solid matter which
must all be regularly vented to the outside world lest the owner go toxic
and drop dead. Spherical, gel packed cameras swivel in mucus greased ball
joints. Infinite phalanxes of cilia beat back invading particles,
encapsulate them in goo for later disposal. In each body a centrally located
muscle flails away at an eternal, circulating torrent of pressurized gravy.
And yet, despite all of this, not one of these bodies makes a single sound
at any time during the sultan's speech. It is a marvel that can only be
explained by the power of brain over body, and, in turn, by the power of
cultural conditioning over the brain.
Their host is trying to be appropriately sultanic: providing vision and
direction without getting sucked down into the quicksand of management. The
basic vision (or so it seems at first) is that Kinakuta has always been a
crossroads, a meeting place of cultures: the original Malays. Foote and his
dynasty of White Sultans. Filipinos with their Spanish, American and
Nipponese governors to the east. Muslims to the west. Anglos to the south.
Numerous Southeast Asian cultures to the north. Chinese everywhere as usual.
Nipponese whenever they are in one of their adventurous moods, and (for what
it's worth) the neolithic tribesmen who inhabit the interior of the island.
Hence nothing is more natural than that the present day Kinakutans
should run big fat optical fiber cables in every direction, patch into every
major national telco within reach, and become a sort of digital bazaar.
All of the guests nod soberly at the sultan's insight, his masterful
ability to meld the ancient ways of his country with modern technology.
But this is nothing more than a superficial analogy, the sultan
confesses. Everyone nods somewhat more vigorously than they did before:
indeed, everything that the sultan was just saying was, in fact, horseshit.
Several people jot down notes, lest they lose the Sultan's thread.
After all, the sultan says, physical location no longer matters in a
digitized, networked world. Cyberspace knows no boundaries.
Everyone nods vigorously except for, on the one hand, John Cantrell,
and, on the other, the grizzled Chinese guys.
But hey, the sultan continues, that's just dizzy headed cyber
cheerleading! What bullshit! Of course locations and boundaries matter!
At this point the room is plunged into dimness as the light pouring in
through the window wall is throttled by some kind of invisible mechanism
built into the glass: liquid crystal shutters or something. Screens descend
from slots cunningly hidden in the room's ceiling. This diversion saves the
cervical vertebrae of many guests, who are about to whiplash themselves by
nodding even more vigorously at the sultan's latest hairpin turn. Goddamn
it, does location matter in cyberspace or doesn't it? What's the bottom line
here? This isn't some Oxford debating society! Get to the point!
The sultan is whipping some graphics on them: a map of the world in one
of those politically correct projections that makes America and Europe look
like icebound reefs in the high Arctic. A pattern of straight lines is
superimposed on the map, each joining two major cities. The web of lines
gets denser and denser as the sultan talks, nearly obscuring the land
masses, and the oceans as well.
This, the sultan explains, is the conventional understanding of the
Internet: a decentralized web connecting each place with all the other
places, with no bottlenecks or, if you will, choke points.
But it's more bullshit! A new graphic comes up: same map, different
pattern of lines. Now we have webs within countries, sometimes within
continents. But between countries, and especially between continents, there
are only a few lines. It's not weblike at all.
Randy looks at Cantrell, who's nodding slyly.
"Many Net partisans are convinced that the Net is robust because its
lines of communication are spread evenly across the planet. In fact, as you
can see from this graphic, nearly all intercontinental Web traffic passes
through a small number of choke points. Typically these choke points are
controlled and monitored by local governments. Clearly, then, any Internet
application that wants to stand free of governmental interference is
undermined, from the very beginning, by a fundamental structure problem."
free of governmental interference. Randy can't believe he's hearing
this. If the sultan was a scruffy hacker talking to a room full of crypto
anarchists, that'd be one thing. But the sultan is a government, for god's
sake, and the room is full of card carrying Establishment types.
Like those Chinese buzz cuts! Who the hell are they? Don't try to tell
Randy those guys aren't part of the Chinese government, in some sense.
"Bottlenecks are only one of the structural barriers to the creation of
a free, sovereign, location independent cyberspace," the sultan continues
blithely.
Sovereign!?
"Another is the heterogeneous patchwork of laws, and indeed of legal
systems, that address privacy, free speech, and telecoms policy."
Another map graphic appears. Each country is colored, shaded, and
patterned according to a scheme of intimidating complexity. A half assed
stab at explaining it is made by a complex legend underneath. Instant
migraine. That, of course, is the whole point.
"The policy of any given legal system toward privacy issues is
typically the result of incremental changes made over centuries by courts
and legislative bodies," the sultan says. "With all due respect, very little
of it is relevant to modern privacy issues.
The lights come back on, sun waxes through the windows, the screens
disappear silently into the ceiling, and everyone's mildly surprised to see
that the sultan is on his feet. He is approaching a large and (of course)
ornate and expensive looking Go board covered with a complex pattern of
black and white stones. "Perhaps I can make an analogy to Go though chess
would work just as well. Because of our history, we Kinakutans are well
versed in both games. At the beginning of the game, the pieces are arranged
in a pattern that is simple and easy to understand. But the game evolves.
The players make small decisions, one turn at a time, each decision fairly
simple in and of itself, and made for reasons that can be easily understood,
even by a novice. But over the course of many such turns, the pattern
develops such great complexity that only the finest minds or the finest
computers can comprehend it." The sultan is gazing down thoughtfully at the
Go board as he says this. He looks up and starts making eye contact around
the room. "The analogy is clear. Our policies concerning free speech,
telecommunications and cryptography have evolved from a series of simple,
rational decisions. But they are today so complex that no one can understand
them, even in one single country, to say nothing of all countries taken
together."
The sultan pauses and walks broodingly around the Go board. The guests
have mostly given up on the obsequious nodding and jotting by this point. No
one is being tactical now, they are all listening with genuine interest,
wondering what he's going to say next.
But he says nothing. Instead he lays one arm across the board and, with
a sudden violent motion, sweeps all the stones aside. They rain down into
the carpet, skitter across polished stone, clatter onto the tabletop.
There is a silence of at least fifteen seconds. The sultan looks stony.
Then, suddenly, he brightens up.
"Time to start over," he says. "A very difficult thing to do in a large
country, where laws are written by legislative bodies, interpreted by
judges, bound by ancient precedents. But this is the Sultanate of Kinakuta
and I am the sultan and I say that the law here is to be very simple: total
freedom of information. I hereby abdicate all government power over the flow
of data across and within my borders. Under no circumstances will any part
of this government snoop on information flows, or use its power to in any
way restrict such flows. That is the new law of Kinakuta. I invite you
gentlemen to make the most of it. Thank you."
The sultan turns and leaves the room to a dignified ovation. Those are
the ground rules, boys. Now run along and play.
Dr. Mohammed Pragasu, Kinakutan Minister of Information, now rises from
his chair (which is to the right hand of the sultan's throne, naturally) and
takes the conn. His accent is almost as American as the sultan's is British;
he did his undergrad work at Berkeley and got his doctorate at Stanford.
Randy knows several people who worked and studied with him during those
years. According to them, Pragasu rarely showed up for work in anything
other than a t shirt and jeans, and showed just as strong an appetite for
beer and sausage pizza as any non Mohammedan. No one had a clue that he was
a sultan's second cousin, and worth a few hundred million in his own right.
But that was ten years ago. More recently, in his dealings with
Epiphyte Corp., he's been better dressed, better behaved, but studiously
informal: first names only, please. Dr. Pragasu likes to be addressed as
Prag. All of their meetings have started with an uninhibited exchange of the
latest jokes. Then Prag inquires about his old school buddies, most of whom
are working in Silicon Valley now. He delves for tips on the latest and
hottest high tech stocks, reminisces for a few minutes about the wild times
he enjoyed back in California, and then gets down to business.
None of them has ever seen Prag in his true element until now. It's a
bit hard to keep a straight face as if some old school chum of theirs had
rented a suit, forged an ID card, and was now staging a prank at a stuffy
business meeting. But there is a solemnity about Dr. Pragasu's bearing today
that is impressive, verging on oppressive.
Those Chinese guys across the table look like the Maoist Mt. Rushmore;
it is impossible to imagine that any of them has ever smiled in his life.
They are getting a live translation of the proceedings through ear pieces,
connected through the mysterious table to a boiler room full of
interpreters.
Randy's attention wanders. Prag's talk is dull because it is covering
technical ground with which Randy is already painfully familiar, couched in
simple analogies designed to make some kind of sense even after being
translated with Mandarin, Cantonese, Nipponese, or what have you. Randy
begins looking around the table.
There is a delegation of Filipinos. One of them, a fat man in his
fifties, looks awfully familiar. As usual, Randy cannot remember his name.
And there's another guy who shows up late, all by himself, and is ushered to
a solitary chair down at the far end: he might be a Filipino with lots of
Spanish blood, but he's more likely Latin American or Southern European or
just an American whose forebears came from those places. In any case, he has
scarcely settled into his seat before he's pulled out a cellphone and
punched in a very long phone number and begun a hushed, tense conversation.
He keeps sneaking glances up the table, checking out each delegation in
turn, then blurting capsule descriptions into his cellphone. He seems
startled to be here. No one who sees him can avoid noticing his furtiveness.
No one who notices it can avoid speculating on how he acquired it. But at
the same time, the man has a sullen glowering air about him that Randy
doesn't notice until his black eyes turn to stare into Randy's like the twin
barrels of a derringer. Randy stares back, too startled and stupid to avert
his gaze, and some kind of strange information passes from the cellphone man
to him, down the twin shafts of black light coming out of the man's eyes.
Randy realizes that he and the rest of Epiphyte(2) Corp. have fallen in
among thieves.
Chapter 37 SKIPPING
It's a hot cloudy day in the Bismarck Sea when Goto Dengo loses the
war. The American bombers come in low and level. Goto Dengo happens to be
abovedecks on a fresh air and calisthenics drill. To breathe air that does
not smell of shit and vomit makes him feel euphoric and invulnerable.
Everyone else must be feeling the same way, because he watches the airplanes
for a long time before he begins to hear warning klaxons.
The emperor's soldiers are supposed to feel euphoric and invulnerable
all the time, because their indomitable spirit makes them so. That Goto
Dengo only feels that way when abovedecks, breathing clean air, makes him
ashamed. The other soldiers never doubt, or at least never show it. He
wonders where he went astray. Perhaps it was his time in Shanghai, where he
was polluted with foreign ideas. Or maybe he was polluted from the very
beginning the ancient family curse.
The troop transports are slow there is no pretence that they are
anything other than boxes of air. They have only the most pathetic
armaments. The destroyers escorting them are sounding general quarters.
Goto Dengo stands at the rail and watches the crews of the destroyers
scrambling to their positions. Black smoke and blue light sputter from the
barrels of their weapons, and much later he hears them opening fire.
The American bombers must be in some kind of distress. He speculates
that they are low on fuel, or desperately lost, or have been chased down
below the cloud cover by Zeros. Whatever the reason, he knows they have not
come here to attack the convoy because American bombers attack by flying
overhead at a great altitude, raining down bombs. The bombs always miss
because the Americans' bombsights are so poor and the crews so inept. No,
the arrival of American planes here is just one of those bizarre accidents
of war; the convoy has been shielded under heavy clouds since early
yesterday.
The troops all around Goto Dengo are cheering. What good fortune that
these lost Americans have blundered straight into the gunsights of their
destroyer escort! And it is a good omen for the village of Kulu too, because
half of the town's young men just happen to be abovedecks to enjoy the
spectacle. They grew up together, went to school together, at the age of
twenty took the military physical together, joined the army together and
trained together. Now they are on their way to New Guinea together. Together
they were mustered up onto the deck of the transport only five minutes ago.
Together they will enjoy the sight of the American planes softening into
cartwheels of flame.
Goto Dengo, at twenty six, is one of the old hands here he came back
from Shanghai to be a leader and an example to them and he watches their
faces, these faces he has known since he was a child, never happier than at
this moment, glowing like cherry petals in the grey world of cloud, ocean,
and painted steel.
Fresh delight ripples across their faces. He turns to look. One of the
bombers has apparently decided to lighten its load by dropping a bomb
straight into the ocean. The boys of Kulu break into a jeering chant. The
American plane, having shed half a ton of useless explosives, peels sharply
upward, self neutered, good for nothing but target practice. The Kulu boys
howl at its pilot in contempt. A Nipponese pilot would have crashed his
plane into that destroyer at the very least!
Goto Dengo, for some reason, watches the bomb instead of the air plane.
It does not tumble from the plane's belly but traces a smooth flat parabola
above the waves, like an aerial torpedo. He catches his breath for a moment,
afraid that it will never drop into the ocean, that it will skim across the
water until it hits the destroyer that stands directly across its path. But
once again the fortunes of war smile upon the emperor's forces; the bomb
loses its struggle with gravity and splashes into the water. Goto Dengo
looks away.
Then he looks back again, chasing a phantom that haunts the edge of his
vision. The wings of foam that were thrown up by the bomb are still
collapsing into the water, but beyond them, a black mote is speeding away
perhaps it was a second bomb dropped by the same airplane. This time Goto
Dengo watches it carefully. It seems to be rising, rather than falling a
mirage perhaps. No, no, he's wrong, it is losing altitude slowly now, and it
plows into the water and throws up another pair of wings all right.
And then the bomb rises up out of the water again. Goto Dengo, a
student of engineering, implores the laws of physics to take hold of this
thing and make it fall and sink, which is what big dumb pieces of metal are
supposed to do. Eventually it does fall again but then it rises up again.
It is skipping across the water like the flat rocks that the boys of
Kulu used to throw across the fish pond near the village. Goto Dengo watches
it skip several more times, utterly fascinated. Once again, the fortunes of
war have provided a bizarre spectacle, seemingly for no other reason than to
entertain him. He savors it as if it were a cigarette discovered in the
bottom of a pocket. Skip, skip, skip.
Right into the flank of one of the escorting destroyers. A gun turret
flies straight up into the air, tumbling over and over. Just as it slows to
its apogee, it is completely enveloped in a geyser of flame spurting out of
the ship's engine room.
The Kulu boys are still chanting, refusing to accept the evidence of
their own eyes. Something flashes in Goto Dengo's peripheral vision; he
turns to watch another destroyer being snapped in half like a dry twig as
its magazines detonate. Tiny black things are skip, skip, skipping all over
the ocean now, like fleas across the rumpled bedsheets of a Shanghai
whorehouse. The chant falters. Everyone watches silently.
The Americans have invented a totally new bombing tactic in the middle
of a war and implemented it flawlessly. His mind staggers like a drunk in
the aisle of a careening train. They saw that they were wrong, they admitted
their mistake, they came up with a new idea. The new idea was accepted and
embraced all the way up the chain of command. Now they are using it to kill
their enemies.
No warrior with any concept of honor would have been so craven. So
flexible. What a loss of face it must have been for the officers who had
trained their men to bomb from high altitudes. What has become of those men?
They must have all killed themselves, or perhaps been thrown into prison.
The American Marines in Shanghai weren't proper warriors either.
Constantly changing their ways. Like Shaftoe. Shaftoe tried to fight
Nipponese soldiers in the street and failed. Having failed, he decided to
learn new tactics from Goto Dengo. "The Americans are not warriors,"
everyone kept saying. "Businessmen perhaps. Not warriors."
Belowdecks, the soldiers are cheering and chanting. They have not the
faintest idea what is really going on. For just a moment, Goto Dengo tears
his eyes away from the sea full of exploding and sinking destroyers. He gets
a bearing on a locker full of life preservers.
The airplanes all seem to be gone now. He scans the convoy and finds no
destroyers in working order.
"Put on the life jackets!" he shouts. None of the men seem to hear him
and so he makes for the locker. "Hey! Put on the life jackets!" He pulls one
out and holds it up, in case they can't hear him.
They can hear him just fine. They look at him as if what he's doing is
more shocking than anything they've witnessed in the last five minutes. What
possible use are life jackets?
"Just in case!" he shouts. "So we can fight for the emperor another
day." He says this last part weakly.
One of the men, a boy who lived a few doors away from him when they
were children, walks up to him, tears the life jacket out of his hands, and
throws it into the ocean. He looks Goto up and down, contemptuously, then
turns around and walks away.
Another man shouts and points: the second wave of planes is coming in.
Goto Dengo goes to the rail to stand among his comrades, but they sidle
away. The American planes charge in unopposed and veer away, leaving behind
nothing but more skipping bombs.
Goto Dengo watches a bomb come directly toward him for a few bounces,
until he can make out the message painted on its nose: BEND OVER, TOJO!
"This way!" he shouts. He turns his back to the bomb and walks back
across the deck to the locker full of life preservers. This time a few of
the men follow him. The ones who don't perhaps five percent of the
population of the village of Kulu are catapulted into the ocean when the
bomb explodes beneath their feet. The wooden deck buckles up wards. One of
the Kulu boys falls with a four foot long splinter driven straight up
through his viscera. Goto Dengo and perhaps a dozen others make it to the
locker on hands and knees and grab life preservers.
He would not be doing this if he had not already lost the war in his
soul. A warrior would stand his ground and die. His men are only following
him because he has told them to do it.
Two more bombs burst while they are getting the life preservers on and
struggling to the rail. Most of the men below must be dead now. Goto Dengo
nearly doesn't make it to the railing because it is rising sharply into the
air; he ends up doing a chin up on it and throwing one leg over the side,
which is now nearly horizontal. The ship is rolling over! Four others get a
grip on the rail, the rest slide helplessly down the deck and vanish into a
pit of smoke. Goto Dengo ignores what his eyes are telling him and tries to
listen to his inner ear. He is standing up on the side of the ship now, and
looking toward the stern he can see one of the propellers spinning uselessly
in the air. He begins running uphill. The four others follow him. An
American fighter plane comes over. He doesn't even realize they are being
strafed until he turns around and sees that the bullets have essentially cut
one man in half and crippled another by exploding his knee, so that the
lower leg and foot dangle by a few shreds of gristle. Goto Dengo throws the
man over his shoulders like a sack of rice and turns to resume the uphill
race, but finds that there is no more uphill to race towards.
He and the other two are standing on the summit of the ship now, a
steel bulge that rises for no more than a man's height out of the water. He
turns around once, then twice, looking for a place to run and sees nothing
but water all around. The water bloops and fizzes angrily as air and smoke
jet from the interior of the wrecked hull. Sea rushes in towards them. Goto
Dengo looks down at the steel bubble supporting his feet and realizes that
he is still, just for a moment, perfectly dry. Then the Bismarck Sea
converges on his feet from all directions at once and begins to climb up his
legs. A moment later the steel plate, which has been pressing so solidly
against the soles of his boots, drops away. The weight of the wounded man on
his shoulders shoves him straight down into the ocean. He gulps fuel oil
into his sinuses, struggles out from beneath the wounded man, and comes to
the surface screaming. His nose, and the cavities of his skull, are filled
with oil. He swallows some of it and goes into convulsions as his body tries
to eject it from every orifice at once: sneezing, vomiting, hawking it up
out of his lungs. Reaching up to his face with one hand he feels the oil
coating his skin thickly and knows that he dare not open his eyes. He tries
to wipe the oil from his face with his sleeve, but the fabric is saturated
with it.
He has to get down in the water and wipe himself clean so that he can
see again, but the oil in his clothing makes him float. His lungs are
finally clear now and he begins to gasp in air. It smells of oil but at
least it's breathable. But the volatile chemicals in the oil have gotten
into his blood now and he feels them spread through his body like fire. It
feels as though a hot spatula is being shoved between his scalp and his
skull. The other men are howling and he realizes that he is too. Some of the
Chinese workers in Shanghai used to breathe gasoline to get high, and this
was the noise that they made.
One of the men near him screams. He hears a noise approaching, like a
sheet being torn in half to make bandages. Radiant heat strikes him in the
face like a hot frying pan, just before Goto Dengo dives and kicks
downwards. The motion exposes a band of flesh around his calf, between his
boot and his trouser leg, and in the moment that it's poking straight up out
of the water, it gets seared to a crisp.
He swims blind through an ocean of fuel oil. Then there is a change in
the temperature and the viscosity of the fluid streaming over his face.
Suddenly the life preserver begins to tug him upwards; he must be in water
now. He swims for a few more kicks and begins to wipe at his eyes. The
pressure on his ears tells him he's not that deep, maybe a couple of meters
beneath the surface. Finally he risks opening his eyes. Ghostly, flickering
light is illuminating his hands, making them glow a bright green; the sun
must have come out. He rolls over on his back and looks straight up. Above
him is a lake of rolling fire.
He rips the life preserver off over his head and lets it go. It shoots
straight up and bursts out of the surface, burning like a comet. His oil
soaked clothing is tugging him relentlessly upwards, so he rips his shirt
off and lets it tumble up towards the surface. His boots pull down, his oily
pants push up, and he reaches some sort of equilibrium.
***
He grew up in the mines.
Kulu is near the north coast of Hokkaido, on the shore of a freshwater
lake where rivers converge from the inland hills and commingle their waters
before draining to the Sea of Okhotsk. The hills rise sharply from one end
of that lake, looming over a cold silver creek that rushes down out of
forest inhabited only by apes and demons. There are small islands in that
part of the lake. If you dig down into the islands, or the hills, you will
find veins of copper ore, and sometimes you will find zinc and lead and even
silver. That is what the men of Kulu have done for many generations. Their
monument is a maze of tunnels that snake through the hills, not following
straight lines but tracking the richest veins.
Sometimes the tunnels dip below the level of the lake. When the mines
were working these tunnels were pumped out, but now that they are exhausted,
the water has been allowed to seek its level and has formed sumps. There are
cavities and tunnels back in the hills that can only be reached by boys who
are brave enough to dive into the cold black water and swim through the
darkness for ten, twenty, thirty meters.
Goto Dengo went to all of those places when he was a boy. He even
discovered some of them. Big, fat and buoyant, he was a pretty good swimmer.
He was not the best swimmer, or the best at holding his breath. He was not
even the bravest (the bravest did not put on life preservers, and went to
their deaths like warriors).
He went where the others wouldn't because he, alone among all the boys
of Kulu, was not afraid of the demons. When he was a boy, his father, a
mining engineer, would take him hiking up into the places in the mountains
where demons were said to live. They would sleep out under the stars and
wake up to find their blankets covered with frost, and sometimes their food
stolen by bears. But no demons.
The other boys believed that demons lived in some of those underwater
tunnels, and that this explained why some of the boys who swam back there
never returned. But Goto Dengo did not fear the demons and so he went back
there fearing only the cold and the dark and the water. Which was plenty to
fear.
Now he need only pretend that the fire is a stone ceiling. He swims
some more. But he did not breathe properly before diving, and he is close to
panic now. He looks up again and sees that the water is burning only in
patches.
He is quite deep, he realizes, and he can't swim well in trousers and
boots. He fumbles at his bootlaces, but they are tied in double knots. He
pulls a knife from his belt and slashes through the laces, kicks the boots
off, sheds his pants and drawers too. Naked, he forces himself to be calm
for ten more seconds, brings his knees to his chest and hugs them. His
body's natural buoyancy takes over. He knows that he must be rising slowly
toward the surface now, like a bubble. The light is growing brighter. He
need only wait. He lets go of the knife, which is only slowing him down.
His back feels cold. He explodes out of the fetal position and thrusts
his head up into the air, gasping for breath. A patch of burning oil is
almost close enough for him to touch, and the oil is trickling across the
top of the ocean as if it were a solid surface. Nearly invisible blue flames
seep from it, then turn yellow and boil off curling black smoke. He
backstrokes away from a reaching tendril.
A glowing silver apparition passes over him, so close he can feel the
warmth of its exhaust and read the English warning labels on its belly. The
tips of its wing guns are sparkling, flinging out red streaks.
They are strafing the survivors. Some try to dive, but the oil in their
uniforms pops them right back to the surface, legs flailing uselessly in the
air. Goto Dengo first makes sure he is nowhere near any burning oil, then
treads water, spinning slowly in the water like a radar dish, looking for
planes. A P 38 comes in low, gunning for him. He sucks in a breath and
dives. It is nice and quiet under the water, and the bullets striking its
surface sound like the ticking of a big sewing machine. He sees a few rounds
plunging into the water around him, leaving trails of bubbles as the water
cavitates in their wake, slowing virtually to a stop in just a meter or two,
then turning downwards and sinking like bombs. He swims after one of them
and plucks it out of the water. It is still hot from its passage. He would
keep it as a souvenir, but his pockets are gone with his clothes and he
needs his hands. He stares at the bullet for a moment, greenish silver in
the underwater light, fresh from some factory in America.
How did this bullet come from America to my hand?
We have lost. The war is over.
I must go home and tell everyone.
I must be like my father, a rational man, explaining the facts of the
world to the people at home, who are crippled by superstitions.
He lets the bullet go again, watches it drop towards the bottom of the
sea, where the ships, and all of the young men of Kulu, are bound.
Chapter 38 MUGS
Hey, it's an immature market.
The rationalizations have not actually begun yet Randy's still sitting
in the sultan's big conference room, and the meeting's just getting up to
speed.
Naturally the early adopters are not going to be your regular joes.
Tom Howard has taken the floor to explain his work. Randy doesn't have
much to do, so he's imagining tonight's conversation in the Bomb and
Grapnel.
It's like the Wild West a little unruly at first, then in a few years
it settles down and you've got Fresno.
Most of the delegations have brought hired guns: engineers and security
experts who'll get a bounty if they can find a flaw in Tom's system. One by
one, these guys stand up to take their shots.
Ten years from now, widows and paperboys will be banking in cyberspace.
Magnificent isn't the word you would normally use to describe Tom
Howard; he's burly and surly, completely lacking in social graces, and
doesn't apologize for it. Most of the time he sits silently, wearing an
expression of sphinxlike boredom, and so it's easy to forget how good he is.
But during this particular half hour of Tom Howard's life, it is of the
essence that he be magnificent. He is going blade to blade with the Seven
Samurai here: the nerdiest high octane Ph.D.s and the scariest private
security clicks that Asia can produce. One by one they come after him and he
cuts their heads off and stacks them on the table like cannon balls. Several
times he has to stop and think for sixty seconds before delivering the
deathblow. Once he has to ask Eberhard Föhr to make some calculations on his
laptop. Occasionally he has to call on the cryptographic expertise of John
Cantrell, or to look over at Randy for a nod or shake of the head. But
eventually, he shuts the hecklers up. Beryl wears a not very convincing
smile throughout the entire thing. Avi just grips the arms of his chair, his
knuckles going from blue to white to pink to a normal healthy glow over the
course of the final five minutes, when it's clear that the Samurai are
withdrawing in disarray. It makes Randy want to empty a six shooter into the
ceiling and holler, "Yeee haaw!" at the top of his lungs.
Instead he listens, just in case Tom gets tripped up in the briar patch
of plesiosynchronous protocol arcana, whence only Randy can drag him out.
This gives him some more time to survey the faces of the other people in the
room. But the meeting is a couple of hours old now, and they are all as
familiar to him as siblings.
Tom wipes his sword on his pantleg and thwacks his big ass resoundingly
into his leather chair. Minions scurry into the room bringing tea and coffee
and sugar/fat pods. Dr. Pragasu stands up and introduces John Cantrell.
Sheesh! So far, the agenda is revolving entirely around Epiphyte Corp.
What gives?
Dr. Pragasu, having developed a friendly relationship with these
California hackers, is pimping them to his big money contacts. That's what
gives.
This is very interesting from a business standpoint. But Randy finds it
a bit irksome and threatening, this one way flow of information. By the time
they go home, this assemblage of shady gmokes is going to know everything
about Epiphyte Corp., but Epiphyte will still be in the dark. No doubt
that's exactly how they want it.
It occurs to Randy to look over at the Dentist. Dr. Hubert Kepler is
sitting on the same side of the table as he is, and so it's hard to read his
face. But it's clear he's not listening to John Cantrell. He's covering his
mouth with one hand and staring into space. His Valkyries are furiously
passing notes back and forth, like naughty cheerleaders.
Kepler's just as surprised as Randy. He doesn't seem like the kind of
guy who delights in surprises.
What can Randy do right now to enhance shareholder value? Intrigue is
not his specialty; he'll leave that to Avi. Instead, he tunes out the
meeting, opens up his laptop, and begins to hack.
Hacking is an overly glorious word for this. Everyone in Epiphyte Corp.
has a laptop with a tiny built in video camera, so that they can do long
distance videoconferencing. Avi insisted on it. The camera is almost
invisible: just an orifice a couple of millimeters across, mounted in the
top center of the frame that surrounds the screen. It doesn't have a lens as
such it's a camera in the oldest sense, a camera obscura. One wall contains
the pinhole and the opposite wall is a silicon retina.
Randy has the source code the original program for the
videoconferencing software. It is reasonably clever in its use of bandwidth.
It looks at the stream of frames (individual still images) coming from the
pinhole camera and notices that, although the total amount of data in those
frames is rather large, the difference from one frame to the next is tiny.
It would be altogether different if Frame 1 were a talking head and Frame 2,
a fraction of a second later, were a postcard shot of a Hawaiian beach and
Frame 3 a diagram of a printed circuit and Frame 4 a closeup of a
dragonfly's head. But in fact, each frame is a talking head the same
person's head, with minor changes in position and expression. The software
can save on precious bandwidth by mathematically subtracting each new frame
from the previous one (since, to the computer, each image is just a long
number) and then transmitting only the difference.
What it all means is that this software has a lot of built in
capabilities for comparing one image with another, and gauging the magnitude
of the difference from one frame to the next. Randy doesn't have to write
that stuff. He just has to familiarize himself with these already existing
routines, learn their names and how to use them, which takes about fifteen
minutes of clicking around.
Then he writes a little program called Mugshot that will take a snap
shot from the pinhole camera every five seconds or so, and compare it to the
previous snapshot, and, if the difference is large enough, save it to a
file. An encrypted file with a meaningless, random name. Mugshot opens no
windows and produces no output of its own, so the only way you can tell it's
running is by typing the UNIX command
ps
and hitting the return key. Then the system will spew out a long list
of running processes, and Mugshot will show up somewhere in that list.
Just in case someone thinks of this, Randy gives the program a fake
name: VirusScanner. He starts it running, then checks its directory and
verifies that it has just saved an image file: one mug shot of Randy. As
long as he sits fairly still, it won't save any more mug shots; the pattern
of light that represents Randy's face striking the far wall of the camera
obscura won't change very much.
In the technology world, no meeting is complete without a demo.
Cantrell and Föhr have developed a prototype of the electronic cash system,
just to demonstrate the user interface and the built in security features.
"A year from now, instead of going to the bank and talking to a human being,
you will simply launch this piece of software from any where in the world,"
Cantrell says, "and communicate with the Crypt." He blushes as this word
seeps through the translators and into the ears of the others. "Which is
what we're calling the system that Tom Howard has been putting together."
Avi's on his feet, coolly managing the crisis. 'Mì fú," he says,
speaking directly to the Chinese guys, "is a better translation."
The Chinese guys look relieved, and a couple of them actually crack
smiles when they hear Avi speaking Mandarin. Avi holds up a sheet of paper
bearing the Chinese characters (1):
Painfully aware that he has just dodged a bullet, John Cantrell
continues with a thick tongue. "We thought you might want to see the
software in action. I'm going to demo it on the screen now, and during the
lunch break you should feel free to come around and try it out yourselves."
Randy fires up the software. He's got his laptop plugged into a video
jack on the underside of the table so that the sultan's lurking media geeks
can project a duplicate of what Randy's seeing onto a large projection
screen at the end of the room. It is running the front end to the cash demo,
but his mug shot program is still running in the background. Randy slides
the computer over to John, who runs through the demo (there should be a mug
shot of John Cantrell stored on the hard disk now).
"I can write the best cryptographic code possible, but it's all
worthless unless there is a good system for verifying the user's identity,"
John begins, regaining some poise now. "How does the computer know that you
are you? Passwords are too easy to guess, steal, or forget. The computer
needs to know something about you that is as unique to you as your
fingerprint. Basically it has to look at some part of your body, such as the
blood vessels in your retina or the distinctive sound of your voice, and
compare it against known values stored in its memory. This kind of
technology is called biometrics. Epiphyte Corp. boasts one of the top
biometrics experts in the world: Dr. Eberhard Föhr, who wrote what's
considered to be the best handwriting recognition system in the world." John
rushes through this encomium. Eb and everyone else in the room look bored by
it they've all seen Eb's resume. "Right now we're going with voice
recognition, but the code is entirely modular, so we could swap in some
other system, such as a hand geometry reader. That's up to the customer."
John runs the demo, and unlike most demos, it actually works and does
not crash. He even tries to fake it out by recording his own voice on a
pretty good portable digital tape recorder and then playing it back. But the
software is not fooled. This actually makes an impression on the Chinese
guys, who, up to the point, have looked like the contents of Madame
Tussaud's Dumpster after an exhibit on the Cultural Revolution.
Not everyone is such a tough sell. Harvard Li is a committed Cantrell
supporter, and the Filipino heavyweight looks like he can hardly wait to
deposit his cash reserves in the Crypt.
Lunchtime! Doors are hauled open to reveal a dining room with a buffet
along the far wall, redolent of curry, garlic, cayenne, and bergamot. The
Dentist makes a point of sitting at the same table with Epiphyte Corp., but
doesn't say very much just sits there with a dreadfully choleric expression
on his face, staring and chewing and thinking. When Avi finally asks him
what he thinks, Kepler says, levelly: "It's been informative."
The Three Graces cringe epileptically. Informative is evidently an
extremely bad word in the Dentist's lexicon. It means that Kepler has
learned something at this meeting, which means that he did not know
absolutely everything going into it, which would certainly rate as an
unforgivable intelligence failure on his scale of values.
There is an agonizing silence. Then Kepler says, "But not devoid of
interest."
Deep sighs of relief ventilate the blindingly white, plaque free
dentition of the Hygienists. Randy tries to imagine which is worse: that
Kepler suspects that the wool was pulled over his eyes, or that he sees a
new opportunity here. Which is more terrible, the paranoia or the avarice of
the Dentist? They are about to find out. Randy, with his sappy, romantic
instinct for ingratiation, almost says something like, "It's been
informative for us, too!" but he holds back, noticing that Avi has not said
it. Saying it would not enhance shareholder value. Best to play one's cards
close to the vest, let Kepler wonder whether Epiphyte Corp. knew the real
agenda.
Randy has chosen his seat tactically, so that he can look straight
through the door into the conference room and keep an eye on his laptop. One
by one, members of the other delegations excuse themselves, go into the
room, and run the demo, imprinting their own voices into the computer's
memory and then letting it recognize them. Some of the nerds even type
commands on Randy's keyboard; probably that ps command, snooping. Despite
the fact that Randy's got it set up so it can't be meddled with too much, it
bothers him at a deep level to see the fingertips of these strangers
prodding away at his keyboard.
It gnaws at him all through the afternoon session, which is all about
the communications links joining Kinakuta to the wide world. Randy ought to
be paying attention to this, since it impinges massively on the Philippines
project. But he doesn't. He broods over his keyboard, contaminated by a
foreign touch, and then he broods about the fact that he's brooding about
it, which demonstrates his unfitness for Biz. It's technically Epiphyte's
keyboard not even his and if it enhances shareholder value for sinister
Eastern nerds to poke around his files, he should be happy to let them do
it.
They adjourn. Epiphyte and the Nipponese dine together, but Randy's
bored and distracted. Finally, about nine P.M., he excuses himself and goes
to his room. He's mentally composing a response to root@eruditorum.org,
along the lines of because there seems to be a hell of a market for this
kind of thing, and it's better that I fill the niche, than someone frankly
and overly evil. But before his laptop has even had time to boot up, the
Dentist, clad in a white terrycloth robe and smelling like vodka and hotel
soap, knocks on Randy's door and invites himself in. He invades Randy (no;
the shareholders') bathroom and helps himself to a glass of water. He stands
at the shareholders' window and glowers down at the Nipponese cemetery for
several minutes before speaking.
"Do you realize who those people were?" he says. His voice, if
subjected to biometric analysis, would reflect disbelief, bewilderment,
maybe a trace of amusement.
Or maybe he's just faking it, trying to get Randy to let down his
guard. Maybe he is root@eruditorum.org.
"Yeah," Randy lies.
When Randy revealed the existence of Mugshot, after the meeting, Avi
gave him a commendation for deviousness, printed up the mugshots in his
hotel room, and Federal Expressed them to a private dick in Hong Kong.
Kepler turns around and gives Randy a searching look. "Either I had bad
information about you guys," he says, "or else you are in way over your
heads."
If this were the First Business Foray, Randy would piss his pants at
this point. If it were the Second, he would resign and fly back to
California tomorrow. But it's the third, and so he manages to maintain
composure. The light is behind him, so perhaps Kepler's momentarily dazzled
and can't read his face very well. Randy takes a swallow of water and
breathes deeply, asking, "In light of today's events," he says, "what's in
store for our relationship?"
"It is no longer about providing cheap long distance service to the
Philippines if, indeed, it ever was in the first place!" Kepler says darkly.
"The data flowing through the Philippines network now takes on entirely new
significance. It's a superb opportunity. At the same time, we're competing
against heavy hitters: those Aussies and the Singapore group. Can we compete
against them, Randy?"
It is a simple and direct question, the most dangerous kind. "We
wouldn't be risking our shareholders' money if we didn't think so."
"That's a predictable answer," Kepler snorts. "Are we going to have a
real conversation here, Randy, or should we invite our PR people into the
room and exchange press releases?"
During an earlier business foray, Randy would have buckled at this
point. Instead he says, "I'm not prepared to have a real conversation with
you, here and now."
"Sooner and later we have to have one," says the Dentist. Those wisdom
teeth will have to come out someday.
"Naturally."
"In the meantime, here is what you should be thinking about," Kepler
says, getting ready to leave. "What the hell can we offer, in the way of
telecommunications services, that stacks up competitively against the
Aussies and those Singapore boys? Because we can't beat 'em on price."
This being Randy's Third Business Foray, he doesn't blurt out the
answer: redundancy. "That question will certainly be on all of our minds,"
Randy says instead.
"Spoken like a flack," says Kepler, his shoulders sagging. He goes out
into the hallway and turns around, saying, "See you tomorrow at the Crypt."
Then he winks. "Or the Vault, or Cornucopia of Infinite Prosperity, or
whatever the Chinese word for it is." Having knocked Randy off balance with
this startling display of humanity, he walks away.
Chapter 39 YAMAMOTO
Tojo and his claque of imperial army boneheads said to him, in effect:
Why don't you go out and secure the Pacific Ocean for us, because we'll need
a convenient shipping lane, say, oh, about ten thousand miles wide, in order
to carry out our little plan to conquer South America, Alaska, and all of
North America west of the Rockies. In the meantime we'll finish mopping up
China. Please attend to this ASAP.
By then they were running the country. They had assassinated anyone in
their way, they had the emperor's ear, and it was hard to tell them that
their plan was full of shit and that the Americans were just going to get
really pissed off and annihilate them. So, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, a
dutiful servant of the emperor, put a bit of thought into the problem,
sketched out a little plan, sent out one or two boats on a small jaunt
halfway across the fucking planet, and blew Pearl Harbor off the map. He
timed it perfectly, right after the formal declaration of war. It was not
half bad. He did his job.
One of his aides later crawled into his office in the nauseatingly
craven posture that minions adopt when they are about to make you really,
really unhappy and told him that there had been a mix up in the embassy in
Washington and that the diplomats there had not gotten around to delivering
the declaration of war until well after the American Pacific Fleet had gone
to the bottom.
To those Army fuckheads, this is nothing just a typo, happens all the
time. Isoroku Yamamoto has given up on trying to make them understand that
the Americans are grudge holders on a level that is inconceivable to the
Nipponese, who learn to swallow their pride before they learn to swallow
solid food. Even if he could get Tojo and his mob of shabby, ignorant thugs
to comprehend how pissed off the Americans are, they'd laugh it off. What're
they going to do about it? Throw a pie in your face, like the Three Stooges?
Ha, ha, ha! Pass the sake and bring me another comfort girl!
Isoroku Yamamoto spent a lot of time playing poker with Yanks during
his years in the States, smoking like a chimney to deaden the scent of their
appalling aftershave. The Yanks are laughably rude and uncultured, of
course; this hardly constitutes a sharp observation. Yamamoto, by contrast,
attained some genuine insight as a side effect of being robbed blind by
Yanks at the poker table, realizing that the big freckled louts could be
dreadfully cunning. Crude and stupid would be okay perfectly understandable,
in fact.
But crude and clever is intolerable; this is what makes those red
headed ape men extra double super loathsome. Yamamoto is still trying to
drill the notion into the heads of his partners in the big Nipponese scheme
to conquer everything between Karachi and Denver. He wishes that they would
get the message. A lot of the Navy men have been around the world a few
times and seen it for themselves, but those Army guys have spent their
careers mowing down Chinamen and raping their women and they honestly
believe that the Americans are just the same except taller and smellier.
Come on guys, Yamamoto keeps telling them, the world is not just a big
Nanjing. But they don't get it. If Yamamoto were running things, he'd make a
rule: each Army officer would have to take some time out from bayoneting
Neolithic savages in the jungle, go out on the wide Pacific in a ship, and
swap 16 inch shells with an American task force for a while. Then maybe,
they'd understand they're in a real scrap here.
This is what Yamamoto thinks about, shortly before sunrise, as he
clambers onto his Mitsubishi G4M bomber in Rabaul, the scabbard of his sword
whacking against the frame of the narrow door. The Yanks call this type of
plane "Betty," an effeminatizing gesture that really irks him. Then again,
the Yanks name even their own planes after women, and paint naked ladies on
their sacred instruments of war! If they had samurai swords, Americans would
probably decorate the blades with nail polish.
Because the plane's a bomber, the pilot and copilot are crammed into a
cockpit above the main tube of the fuselage. The nose of the plane, then, is
a blunt dome of curving struts, like the meridians and parallels of a globe,
the trapezoids between them filled with sturdy panes of glass. The plane has
been parked pointing east, so the glass nose is radiant with streaky dawn,
the unreal hues of chemicals igniting in a lab. In Nippon nothing happens by
accident, so he has to assume that this is a deliberate morale building tip
o' the helmet to the Rising Sun. Making his way up to the greenhouse, he
straps himself in where he can stare out the windows as this Betty, and
Admiral Ugaki's, take off.
In one direction is Simpson's Harbor, one of the best anchorages in the
Pacific, an asymmetrical U wrapped in a neat grid of streets, conspicuously
blighted by a fucking British cricket oval! In the other direction, over the
ridge, lies the Bismarck Sea. Somewhere down there, the corpses of a few
thousand Nipponese troops lie pickled in the wrinkled hulls of their
transport ships. A few thousand more escaped to life rafts, but all of their
weapons and supplies went to the bottom, so the men are just useless mouths
now.
It's been like this for almost a year, ever since Midway, when the
Americans refused to bite on Yamamoto's carefully designed feints and ruses
up Alaska way, and just happened to send all of their surviving carriers
directly into the path of his Midway invasion force. Shit. Shit Shit. Shit.
Slit. Shit. Shit. Yamamoto's chewing on a thumbnail, right through his
glove.
Now those clumsy, reeking farmhands are sinking every transport ship
that the Army sends to New Guinea. Double shit! Their observation planes are
everywhere always showing up in the right place at the right time tally
hoing the emperor's furtive convoys in the sawing twang of bloody gummed
Confederates. Their coast watchers infest the mountains of all these
godforsaken islands, despite the Army's efforts to hunt them down and flush
them out. All of their movements are known.
The two planes fly southeastwards across the tip of New Ireland and
enter the Solomon Sea. The Solomon Islands spread out before them, fuzzy
jade humps rising from a steaming ocean, 6,500 feet below. A couple of small
humps and then a much bigger one, today's destination: Bougainville.
Have to show the flag, go out on these inspection tours, give the
frontline troops a glimpse of glory, build morale. Yamamoto frankly has
better things to do with his time, so he tries to pack as many of these
obligatory junkets into a single day as possible. He left his naval citadel
at Truk and flew to Rabaul last week so that he could supervise his latest
big operation: a wave of massed air attacks on American bases from New
Guinea to Guadalcanal.
The air raids were purportedly successful; kind of. The surviving
pilots reported vast numbers of sinkings, whole fleets of American aircraft
destroyed on their mucky airstrips. Yamamoto knows perfectly well that these
reports will turn out to be wildly exaggerated. More than half of his planes
never came back the Americans, and their almost equally offensive cousins,
the Australians, were ready for them. But the Army and the Navy alike are
full of ambitious men who will do everything they can to channel good news
the emperor's way, even if it's not exactly the truth. Accordingly, Yamamoto
has received a personal telegram of congratulations from none other than the
sovereign himself. It is his duty, now, to fly round to his various
outposts, hop out of his Betty, wave the sacred telegram in the air, and
pass on the blessings of the emperor.
Yamamoto's feet hurt like hell. Like everyone else within a thousand
miles, he has a tropical disease; in his case, beriberi. It is the scourge
of the Nipponese and especially of the Navy, because they eat too much
polished rice, not enough fish and vegetables. His long nerves have been
corroded by lactic acid, so his hands quiver. His failing heart can't shove
fluid through his extremities, so his feet swell. He needs to change his
shoes several times a day, but he doesn't have room here; he is encumbered
not only by the curvature of the plane's greenhouse, but also by his sword.
They are approaching the Imperial Navy airbase at Bougainville, right
on schedule, at 9:35. A shadow passes overhead and Yamamoto glances up to
see the silhouette of an escort, way out of position, dangerously close to
them. Who is that idiot? Then the green island and the blue ocean rotate
into view as his pilot puts the Betty into a power dive. Another plane
flashes overhead with a roar that cuts through the noise of the Betty's
engines, and although it is nothing more than a black flash, its odd
forktailed silhouette registers in his mind. It was a P 38 Lightning, and
the last time Admiral Yamamoto checked, the Nipponese Air Force wasn't
flying any of those.
The voice of Admiral Ugaki comes through on the radio from the other
Betty, right behind Yamamoto's, ordering Yamamoto's pilot to stay in
formation. Yamamoto cannot see anything in front of them except for the surf
washing ashore on Bougainville, and the wall of trees, seeming to grow
higher and higher, as the plane descends the tropical canopy now actually
above them. He is Navy, not an Air Force man, but even he knows that when
you can't see any planes in front of you in a dogfight, you have problems.
Red streaks flash past from behind, burying themselves in the steaming
jungle ahead, and the Betty begins to shake violently. Then yellow light
fills the corners of both of his eyes: the engines are on fire. The pilot is
heading directly for the jungle now; either the plane is out of control, or
the pilot is already dead, or it is a move of atavistic desperation: run,
run into the trees!
They enter the jungle in level flight, and Yamamoto is astonished how
far they go before hitting anything big. Then the plane is bludgeoned wide
open by mahogany trunks, like baseball bats striking a wounded sparrow, and
he knows it's over. The greenhouse disintegrates around him, the meridians
and parallels crumpling and rending which isn't quite as bad as it sounds
since the body of the plane is suddenly filled with flames. As his seat
tears loose from the broken dome and launches into space, he grips his
sword, unwilling to disgrace himself by dropping his sacred weapon, blessed
by the emperor, even in this last instant of his life. His clothes and hair
are on fire as he tumbles like a meteor through the jungle, clenching his
ancestral blade.
He realizes something: The Americans must have done the impossible:
broken all of their codes. That explains Midway, it explains the Bismarck
Sea, Hollandia, everything. It especially explains why Yamamoto who ought to
be sipping green tea and practicing calligraphy in a misty garden is, in
point of fact, on fire and hurtling through the jungle at a hundred miles
per hour in a chair, closely pursued by tons of flaming junk. He must get
word out! The codes must all be changed! This is what he is thinking when he
flies head on into a hundred foot tall Octomelis sumatrana.
Chapter 40 ANTAEUS
When Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse sets foot on the Sceptered Isle for
the first time in several months, at the ferry terminal in Utter Maurby, he
is startled to find allusions to springtime all over the place. The locals
have installed flower boxes around the pier, and all of them are abloom with
some sort of pre Cambrian decorative cabbage. The effect is not exactly
cheerful, but it does give the place a haunted Druidical look, as if
Waterhouse is looking at the northwesternmost fringe of some cultural
tradition from which a sharp anthropologist might infer the existence of
actual trees and meadows several hundred miles farther south. For now,
lichens will do they have gotten into the spirit and turned greyish purple
and greyish green.
He and Duffel, their old companionship renewed, tussle their way over
to the terminal and fight each other for a seat aboard the disconcertingly
quaint two car Manchester bound whistle stop. It will sit there for another
couple of hours raising steam before leaving, giving him plenty of time to
take stock.
He's been working on some information theoretical problems occasioned
by the Royal and U.S. Navies' recent (1) propensity to litter the
floor of the Atlantic with bombed and torpedoed milchcows. These fat German
submarines, laden with fuel, food, and ammunition, loiter in the Atlantic
Ocean, using radio rarely and staying well away from the sea lanes, and
serve as covert floating supply bases so that the U boats don't have to go
all the way back to the European mainland to refuel and rearm. Sinking lots
of 'em is great for the convoys, but must seem conspicuously improbable to
the likes of a Rudolf von Hacklheber.
Usually, just for the sake of form, the Allies send out a search plane
beforehand to pretend to stumble upon the milchcow. But, setting aside some
of their blind spots in the political realm, the Germans are bright chaps,
and cannot be expected to fall for that ruse forever. If we are going to
keep sending their milchcows to the bottom, we need to come up with a
respectable excuse for the fact that we always know exactly where they are!
Waterhouse has been coming up with excuses as fast as he can for most
of the late winter and early spring, and frankly he is tired of it. It has
to be done by a mathematician if it's to be done correctly, but it's not
exactly mathematics. Thank god he had the presence of mind to copy down the
crypto worksheets that he discovered in the U boat's safe, which give him
something to live for.
In a sense he is wasting his time; the originals have long since gone
off to Bletchley Park where they were probably deciphered within hours. But
he's not doing it for the war effort per se, just trying to keep his mind
sharp and maybe add a few leaves to the next edition of the Cryptonomicon.
When he arrives at Bletchley, which is his destination of the moment, he
will have to ask around and find out what those messages actually said.
Usually, he is above such cheating. But the messages from U 553 have
him completely baffled. They were not produced on an Enigma machine, but
they are at least that difficult to decrypt. He does not even know, yet,
what kind of cipher he is dealing with. Normally, one begins by figuring
out, based on certain patterns in the ciphertext, whether it is, for
example, a substitution or a transposition system, and then further
classifying it into, say, an aperiodic transposition cipher in which keying
units of constant length encipher plaintext groups of variable length, or
vice versa. Once you have classified the algorithm, you know how to go about
breaking the code.
Waterhouse hasn't even gotten that far. He now strongly suspects that
the messages were produced using a one time pad. If so, not even Bletchley
Park will be able to break them, unless they have somehow obtained a copy of
the pad. He is half hoping that they will tell him that this is the case so
that he can stop ramming his head against this particular stone wall.
In a way, this would raise even more questions than it would answer.
The Triton four wheel naval Enigma was supposedly considered by the Germans
to be perfectly impregnable to cryptanalysis. If that was the case, then why
was the skipper of U 553 employing his own private system for certain
messages?
The locomotive starts hissing and sputtering like the House of Lords as
Inner Qwghlmians emerge from the terminal building and take their seats on
the train. A gaffer comes through the car, selling yesterday's newspapers,
cigarettes, candy, and Waterhouse purchases some of each.
The train is just beginning to jerk forward when Waterhouse's eye falls
on the lead headline of yesterday's newspaper: YAMAMOTO'S PLANE SHOT DOWN IN
PACIFIC ARCHITECT OF PEARL HARBOR THOUGHT TO BE DEAD.
"Malaria, here I come," Waterhouse mumbles to himself. Then, before
reading any further, he sets the newspaper down and opens up his pack of
cigarettes. This is going to take a lot of cigarettes.
***
One day, and a whole lot of tar and nicotine later, Waterhouse climbs
off the train and walks out the front door of Bletchley Depot into a
dazzling spring day. The flowers in front of the station are blooming, a
warm southern breeze is blowing, and Waterhouse almost cannot bear to cross
the road and enter some windowless hut in the belly of Bletchley Park. He
does it anyway and is informed that he has no duties at the moment.
After visiting a few other huts on other business, he turns north and
walks three miles to the hamlet of Shenley Brook End and goes into the Crown
Inn, where the proprietress, Mrs. Ramshaw, has, during these last three and
a half years, made a tidy business out of looking after stray, homeless
Cambridge mathematicians.
Dr. Alan Mathison Turing is seated at a table by a window, sprawled
across two or three chairs in what looks like a very awkward pose but which
Waterhouse feels sure is eminently practical. A full pint of some thing
reddish brown is on the table next to him; Alan is too busy to drink it. The
smoke from Alan's cigarette reveals a prism of sunlight coming through the
window, centered in which is a mighty Book. Alan is holding the book with
one hand. The palm of his other hand is pressed against his forehead, as if
he could get the data from book to brain through some kind of direct
transference. His fingers curl up into the air and a cigarette projects from
between them, ashes dangling perilously over his dark hair. His eyes are
frozen in place, not scanning the page, and their focus point is somewhere
in the remote distance.
"Designing another Machine, Dr. Turing?"
The, eyes finally begin to move, and swivel around towards the sound of
the visitor's voice. "Lawrence," Alan says once, quietly, identifying the
face. Then, once more warmly: "Lawrence!" He scrambles to his feet, as
energetic as ever, and steps forward to shake hands. "Delighted to see you!"
"Good to see you, Alan," Waterhouse says. "Welcome back." He is, as
always, pleasantly surprised by Alan's keenness, the intensity and purity of
his reactions to things.
He is also touched by Alan's frank and sincere affection for him. Alan
did not give this easily or lightly, but when he decided to make Waterhouse
his friend, he did so in a way that is unfettered by either American or
heterosexual concepts of manly bearing. "Did you walk the entire distance
from Bletchley? Mrs. Ramshaw, refreshment!"
"Heck, it's only three miles," Waterhouse says.
"Please come and join me," Alan says. Then he stops, frowns, and looks
at him quizzically. "How on earth did you guess I was designing another
machine? Simply a guess based on prior observations?"
"Your choice of reading material," Waterhouse says, and points to
Alan's book: RCA Radio Tube Manual.
Alan gets a wild look. "This has been my constant companion," he says.
"You must learn about these valves, Lawrence! Or tubes as you would call
them. Your education is incomplete otherwise. I cannot believe the number of
years I wasted on sprockets! God!"
"Your zeta function machine? I thought it was beautiful," Lawrence
says.
"So are many things that belong in a museum," Alan says.
"That was six years ago. You had to work with the available
technology," Lawrence says.
"Oh, Lawrence! I'm surprised at you! If it will take ten years to make
the machine with available technology, and only five years to make it with a
new technology, and it will only take two years to invent the new
technology, then you can do it in seven years by inventing the new
technology first!"
"Touché"
"This is the new technology," Alan says, holding up the RCA Radio Tube
Manual like Moses brandishing a Tablet of the Law. "If I had only had the
presence of mind to use these, I could have built the zeta function machine
much sooner, and others besides."
"What sort of a machine are you designing now?" Lawrence asks.
"I've been playing chess with a fellow named Donald Michie a
classicist," Alan says. "I am wretched at it. But man has always constructed
tools to extend his powers why not a machine that will help me play chess?"
"Does Donald Michie get to have one, too?"
"He can design his own machine!" Alan says indignantly.
Lawrence looks carefully around the pub. They are the only customers,
and he cannot bring himself to believe that Mrs. Ramshaw is a spy. "I
thought it might have something to do with " he says, and nods in the
direction of Bletchley Park.
"They are building I have helped them build a machine called Colossus."
"I thought I saw your hand in it."
"It is built from old ideas ideas we talked about in New Jersey, years
ago," Alan says. Brisk and dismissive is his tone, gloomy is his face. He is
hugging the RCA Radio Tube Manual to himself with one arm, doodling in a
notebook with the other. Waterhouse thinks that really the RCA Radio Tube
Manual is like a ball and chain holding Alan back. If he would just work
with pure ideas like a proper mathematician he could go as fast as thought.
As it happens, Alan has become fascinated by the incarnations of pure ideas
in the physical world. The underlying math of the universe is like the light
streaming in through the window. Alan is not satisfied with merely knowing
that it streams in. He blows smoke into the air to make the light visible.
He sits in meadows gazing at pine cones and flowers, tracing the
mathematical patterns in their structure, and he dreams about electron winds
blowing over the glowing filaments and screens of radio tubes, and, in their
surges and eddies, capturing something of what is going on in his own brain.
Turing is neither a mortal nor a god. He is Antaeus. That he bridges the
mathematical and physical worlds is his strength and his weakness.
"Why are you so glum?" Alan says. "What have you been working on?"
"Same stuff, different context," Waterhouse says. With these four words
he conveys, in full, everything that he has been doing on behalf of the war
effort. "Fortunately, I came upon something that is actually rather
interesting."
Alan looks delighted and fascinated to hear this news, as if the world
had been completely devoid of interesting things for the last ten years or
so, and Waterhouse had stumbled upon a rare find. "Tell me about it," he
insists.
"It's a cryptanalysis problem," Waterhouse says. "Non Enigma." He goes
on to tell the story about the messages from U 553. "When I got to Bletchley
Park this morning," he concludes, "I asked around. They said that they had
been butting their heads against the problem as long as I had, without any
success."
Suddenly, Alan looks disappointed and bored. "It must be a one time
pad," he says. He sounds reproachful.
"It can't be. The ciphertext is not devoid of patterns," Waterhouse
says.
"Ah," replies Alan, perking up again.
"I looked for patterns with the usual Cryptonomicon techniques. Found
nothing clear just some traces. Finally, in complete frustration, I decided
to start from a clean slate, trying to think like Alan Turing. Typically
your approach is to reduce a problem to numbers and then bring the full
power of mathematical analysis to bear on it. So I began by converting the
messages into numbers. Normally, this would be an arbitrary process. You
convert each letter into a number, usually between one and twenty five, and
then dream up some sort of arbitrary algorithm to convert this series of
small numbers into one big number. But this message was different it used
thirty two characters a power of two meaning that each character had a
unique binary representation, five binary digits long."
"As in Baudot code," Alan says (1). He looks guardedly
interested again.
"So I converted each letter into a number between one and thirty two,
using the Baudot code. That gave me a long series of small numbers. But I
wanted some way to convert all of the numbers in the series into one large
number, just to see if it would contain any interesting patterns. But this
was easy as pie! If the first letter is R, and its Baudot code is 01011, and
the second letter is F, and its code is 10111, then I can simply combine the
two into a ten digit binary number, 0101110111. And then I can take the next
letter's code and stick that onto the end and get a fifteen digit number.
And so on. The letters come in groups of five that's twenty five binary
digits per group. With six groups on each line of the page, that's a hundred
and fifty binary digits per line. And with twenty lines on the page, that's
three thousand binary digits.
So each page of the message could be thought of not as a series of six
hundred letters, but as an encoded representation of a single number with a
magnitude of around two raised to the three thousandth power, which works
out to around ten to the nine hundredth power."
"All right," Alan says, "I agree that the use of thirty two letter
alphabet suggests a binary coding scheme. And I agree that the binary coding
scheme, in turn, lends itself to a sort of treatment in which individual
groups of five binary digits are mooshed together to make larger numbers,
and that you could even take it to the point of mooshing together all of the
data on a whole page that way, to make one extremely large number. But what
does that accomplish?"
"I don't really know," Waterhouse admits. "I just have an intuition
that what we are dealing with here is a new encryption scheme based upon a
purely mathematical algorithm. Otherwise, there would be no point in using
the thirty two letter alphabet! If you think about it, Alan, thirty two
letters are all well and good as a matter of fact, they are essential for a
teletype scheme, because you have to have special characters like line feed
and carriage return."
"You're right," Alan says, "it is extremely odd that they would use
thirty two letters in a scheme that is apparently worked out using pencil
and paper."
"I've been over it a thousand times," Waterhouse says, "and the only
explanation I can think of is that they are converting their messages into
large binary numbers and then combining them with other large binary numbers
one time pads, most likely to produce the ciphertext."
"In which case your project is doomed," Alan says, "because you can't
break a one time pad."
"That is only true," Waterhouse says, "if the one time pad is truly
random. If you built up that three thousand digit number by flipping a coin
three thousand times and writing down a one for heads and a zero for tails,
then it would be truly random and unbreakable. But I do not think that this
is the case here."
"Why not? You think there were patterns in their one time pads?"
"Maybe. Just traces."
"Then what makes you think it is other than random?"
"Otherwise it makes no sense to develop a new scheme," Waterhouse says.
"Everyone in the world has been using one time pads forever. There are
established procedures for doing it. There's no reason to switch over to
this new, extremely odd system right now, in the middle of a war."
"So what do you suppose is the rationale for this new scheme?" asks
Alan, clearly enjoying himself a great deal.
"The problem with one time pads is that you have to make two copies of
each pad and get them to the sender and the recipient. I mean, suppose
you're in Berlin and you want to send a message to someone in the Far East!
This U boat that we found had cargo on board gold and other stuff from
Japan! Can you imagine how cumbersome this must be for the Axis?"
"Ahh," Alan says. He gets it now. But Waterhouse finishes the
explanation anyway:
"Suppose that you came up with a mathematical algorithm for generating
very large numbers that were random, or at least random looking."
"Pseudo random."
"Yeah. You'd have to keep the algorithm secret, of course. But if you
could get it the algorithm, that is around the world to your intended
recipient, then they could, from that day forward, do the calculation
themselves and figure out the one time pad for that particular day, or
whatever."
A shadow passes over Alan's otherwise beaming countenance. "But the
Germans already have Enigma machines all over the place," he says. "Why
should they bother to come up with a new scheme?"
"Maybe," Waterhouse says, "maybe there are some Germans who don't want
the entire German Navy to be able to decipher their messages."
"Ah," Alan says. This seems to eliminate his last objection. Suddenly
he is all determination. "Show me the messages!"
Waterhouse opens up his attache case, splotched and streaked with salt
from his voyages to and from Qwghlm, and draws out two manila envelopes.
"These are the copies I made before I sent the originals down to Bletchley
Park," he says, patting one of them. "They are much more legible than the
originals " he pats the other envelope " which they were kind enough to lend
me this morning, so that I could study them again."
"Show the originals!" Alan says. Waterhouse slides the second envelope,
encrusted with TOP SECRET stamps, across the table.
Alan opens the envelope so hastily that he tears it, and jerks out the
pages. He spreads them out on the table. His mouth drops open in purest
astonishment.
For a moment, Waterhouse is fooled; the expression on Alan's face makes
him think that his friend has, in some Olympian burst of genius, deciphered
the messages in an instant, just by looking at them.
But that's not it at all. Thunderstruck, he finally says, "I recognize
this handwriting."
"You do?" Waterhouse says.
"Yes. I've seen it a thousand times. These pages were written out by
our old bicycling friend, Rudolf von Hacklheber. Rudy wrote those pages."
***
Waterhouse spends much of the next week commuting to London for
meetings at the Broadway Buildings. Whenever civilian authorities are going
to be present at a meeting especially civilians with expensive sounding
accents Colonel Chattan always shows up, and before the meeting starts,
always finds some frightfully cheerful and oblique way to tell Waterhouse to
keep his trap shut unless someone asks a math question. Waterhouse is not
offended. He prefers it, actually, because it leaves his mind free to work
on important things. During their last meeting at the Broadway Buildings,
Waterhouse proved a theorem.
It takes Waterhouse about three days to figure that the meetings
themselves make no sense he reckons that there is no imaginable goal that
could be furthered by what they are discussing. He even makes a few stabs at
proving that this is so, using formal logic, but he is weak in this area and
doesn't know enough of the underlying axioms to reach a Q.E.D.
By the end of the week, though, he has figured out that these meetings
are just one ramification of the Yamamoto assassination. Winston Spencer
Churchill is very fond indeed of Bletchley Park and all its works, and he
places the highest priority on preserving its secrecy, but the interception
of Yamamoto's airplane has blown a gaping hole in the screen of deception.
The Americans responsible for this appalling gaffe are now trying to cover
their asses by spreading a story that native islander spies caught wind of
Yamamoto's trip and radioed the news to Guadalcanal, whence the fatal P 38s
were dispatched. But the P 38s were operating at the extreme limit of their
fuel range and would have had to be sent out at precisely the correct time
in order to make it back to Guadalcanal, so the Japanese would have to have
their heads several feet up their asses to fall for that. Winston Churchill
is pissed off in the extreme, and these meetings represent a prolonged
bureaucratic hissy fit intended to produce some meaningful and enduring
policy shift.
Every evening after the meetings, Waterhouse takes the tube to Euston
and the train to Bletchley, and sits up late working on Rudy's numbers. Alan
has been working on them during the daytime, so the two of them, combining
their efforts, can almost pound away on it round the clock.
Not all of the riddles are mathematical. For example, why the hell do
the Germans have Rudy copying out big long numbers by hand? If the letters
do indeed represent big numbers that would indicate that Dr. Rudolf von
Hacklheber had been assigned to a job as a mere cipher clerk. This would not
be the stupidest move ever made by a bureaucracy, but it seems unlikely. And
what little intelligence they've been able to gather from Germany suggests
that Rudy has in fact been given a rather important job important enough to
keep extremely secret.
Alan's hypothesis is that Waterhouse has been making an understandable
but totally wrong assumption. The numbers are not ciphertext. They are,
rather, one time pads that the skipper of U 553 was supposed to have used to
encrypt certain messages too sensitive to go out over the regular Enigma
channel. These one time pads were, for some reason, drawn up personally by
Rudy himself.
Usually, making one time pads is just as lowly a job as enciphering
messages a job for clerks, who use decks of cards or bingo machines to
choose letters at random. But Alan and Waterhouse are now operating on the
assumption that this encryption scheme is a radical new invention
presumably, an invention of Rudy's in which the pads are generated not at
random but by using some mathematical algorithm.
In other words, there is some calculation, some equation that Rudy has
dreamed up. You give it a value probably the date, and possibly some other
information as well, such as an arbitrary key phrase or number. You crank
through the steps of the calculation, and the result is a number, some nine
hundred digits long, which is three thousand binary digits, which gives you
six hundred letters (enough to cover one sheet of paper) when you convert it
using the Baudot code. The nine hundred digit decimal number, the three
thousand digit binary number, and the six hundred letters are all the same
abstract, pure number, encoded differently.
Meanwhile, your counterpart, probably on the other side of the world,
is going through the same calculation and coming up with the same one time
pad. When you send him a message encrypted using the day's pad, he can
decipher it.
If Turing and Waterhouse can figure out how the calculation works, they
can read all of these messages too.
Chapter 41 PHREAKING
The dentist is gone, the door locked, the phone unplugged. Randall
Lawrence Waterhouse lies naked on the starched, turned down sheets of his
king sized bed. His head is propped up on a pillow so that he can peer
through the vee of his feet at a BBC World Service newscast on the
television. A ten dollar minibar beer is near at hand. It's six in the
morning in America and so rather than a pro basketball game, he has to
settle for this BBC newscast, which is strongly geared to South Asian
happenings. A long and very sober story about a plague of locusts on the
India/Pakistan border follows a piece on a typhoon about to nail Hong Kong.
The king of Thailand is calling in some of his government's more corrupt
officials to literally prostrate themselves before him. Asian news always
has this edge of the fantastic to it, but it's all dead serious, no nods or
winks anywhere. Now he's watching a story about a nervous system disease
that people in New Guinea come down with as a consequence of eating other
people's brains. Just your basic cannibal story. No wonder so many Americans
come here on business and never really go home again it's like stepping into
the pages of Classics Comics.
Someone is knocking on his door. Randy gets up and puts on his plush
white hotel bathrobe. He peers through the peephole, half expecting to see a
pygmy standing there with a blowpipe, though he wouldn't mind a seductive
Oriental courtesan. But it's just Cantrell. Randy opens the door. Cantrell
is already holding up his hands, palms out, in a cheerful "shut up already"
gesture. "Don't worry," Cantrell says, "I'm not here to talk about Biz."
"In that case I won't break this beer bottle over your head," Randy
says. Cantrell must feel exactly the same way Randy does, which is that so
much wild shit happened today that the only way to deal with it is not to
talk about it at all. Most of the brain's work is done while the brain's
owner is ostensibly thinking about something else, so sometimes you have to
deliberately find something else to think and talk about.
"Come to my room," Cantrell says. "Pekka is here."
"The Finn who got blown up?"
"The same."
"Why is he here?"
"Because there's no reason not to be. After he got blown up he adopted
a technomadic lifestyle."
"So it's just a coincidence, or "
"Nah," Cantrell says. "He's helping me win a bet."
"What kind of bet?"
"I was telling Tom Howard about Van Eck phreaking a few weeks ago. Tom
said it sounded like bullshit. He bet me ten shares of Epiphyte stock that I
couldn't make it actually work outside of a laboratory."
"Is Pekka good at that kind of thing?"
By way of saying yes, Cantrell adopts a serious look and says, "Pekka
is writing a whole chapter about it for the Cryptonomicon. Pekka feels that
only by mastering the technologies that might be used against us can we
defend ourselves."
This sounds almost like a call to arms. Randy would have to be some
kind of loser to retreat to his bed after that, so he backs into the room
and steps into his trousers, which are standing there telescoped into the
floor where he dropped them upon his return from the sultan's palace. The
sultan's palace! The television is now broadcasting a news story about
pirates plying the waters of the South China Sea, making freighter crews
walk the plank. "This whole continent is like fucking Disneyland without the
safety precautions," Randy observes. "Am I the only person who finds it
surreal?"
Cantrell grins, but says, "If we begin talking about surreal, we'll end
up talking about today."
"You got that right," Randy says. "Let's go."
***
Before Pekka became known around Silicon Valley as the Finn Who Got
Blown Up, he was known as Cello Guy, because he had a nearly autistic
devotion to his cello and took it with him everywhere, always trying to
stuff it into overhead luggage racks. Not coincidentally, he was an analog
kind of guy from way back whose specialty was radio.
When packet radio started to get big as an alternative to sending data
down wires, Pekka moved to Menlo Park and joined a startup. His company
bought their equipment at used computer stores, and Pekka ended up scoring a
pretty nice nineteen inch high res multisync monitor perfectly adequate for
his adaptable twenty four year old eyes. He hooked it up to a slightly used
Pentium box jammed full of RAM.
He also installed Finux, a free UNIX operating system created by Finns,
almost as a way of proclaiming to the rest of the world "this is how weird
we are," and distributed throughout the world on the Net. Of course Finux
was fantastically powerful and flexible and enabled you, among other things,
to control the machine's video circuitry to the Nth degree and choose many
different scanning frequencies and pixel clocks, if you were into that kind
of thing. Pekka most definitely was into it, and so like a lot of Finux
maniacs he set his machine up so that it could display, if he chose, a whole
lot of tiny little pixels (which displayed a lot of information but was hard
on the eyes) or, alternatively, fewer and larger pixels (which he tended to
use after he had been hacking for twenty four hours straight and lost ocular
muscle tone), or various settings in between. Every time he changed from one
setting to another, the monitor screen would go black for a second and there
would be an audible clunk from inside of it as the resonating crystals
inside locked in on a different range of frequencies.
One night at three A.M., Pekka caused this to happen, and immediately
after the screen went black and made that clunking noise, it exploded in his
face. The front of the picture tube was made of heavy glass (it had to be,
to withstand the internal vacuum) which fragmented and sped into Pekka's
face, neck, and upper body. The very same phosphors that had been glowing
beneath the sweeping electron beam, moments before, conveying information
into Pekka's eyes, were now physically embedded in his flesh. A hunk of
glass took one of his eyes and almost went through into his brain. Another
one gouged out his voicebox, another zinged past the side of his head and
bit a neat triangular hunk out of his left ear.
Pekka, in other words, was the first victim of the Digibomber. He
almost bled to death on the spot, and his fellow Eutropians hovered around
his hospital bed for a few days with tanks of Freon, ready to jump into
action in case he died. But he didn't, and he got even more press because
his startup company lacked health insurance. After a lot of hand wringing in
local newspapers about how this poor innocent from the land of socialized
medicine had not had the presence of mind to buy health insurance, some rich
high tech guys donated money to pay his medical bills and to equip him with
a computer voicebox like Stephen Hawking's.
And now here is Pekka, sitting in Cantrell's hotel room. His cello
stands in the corner, dusty around the bridge from powdered rosin. He is
facing a blank wall to which he has duct taped a bunch of wires in precise
loops and whorls. These lead to some home brewed circuit boards which are in
turn hooked up to his laptop.
"Hello Randy congratulations on your success," says a computer
generated voice as soon as the door is shut behind Randy and Cantrell. This
is a little greeting that Pekka has obviously typed in ahead of time,
anticipating his arrival. None of the foregoing seems particularly odd to
Randy except for the fact that Pekka seems to think that Epiphyte has
already achieved some kind of success.
"How are we doing?" Cantrell asks.
Pekka types in a response. Then he cups one hand to his mutilated ear
while using his other hand to cue the voice generator: "He showers." Indeed,
it's possible now to hear the pipes hissing in the wall. "His laptop
radiates."
"Oh," Randy says, "Tom Howard's room is right next door?"
"Just on the other side of that wall," Cantrell says. "I specifically
requested it, so that I could win this bet. See, his room is a mirror image
of this one, so his computer is only a few inches away, just on the other
side of this wall. Perfect conditions for Van Eck phreaking."
"Pekka, are you receiving signals from his computer right now?" Randy
asks.
Pekka nods, types, and fires back, "I tune. I calibrate." The input
device for his voice generator is a one handed chord board strapped to his
thigh. He puts his right hand on it and makes flopping and groping motions.
Moments later speech emerges, "I require Cantrell."
"Excuse me," Cantrell says, and goes to Pekka's side. Randy watches
over their shoulders for a bit, understanding vaguely what they're doing.
If you lay a sheet of white paper on an old gravestone, and sweep the
tip of a pencil across it, you get one horizontal line, dark in some places
and faint in others, and not very meaningful. If you move downwards on the
page by a small distance, a single pencil line width, and repeat, an image
begins to emerge. The process of working your way down the page in a series
of horizontal sweeps is what a nerd would call raster scanning, or just
rastering. With a conventional video monitor a cathode ray tube the electron
beam physically rasters down the glass something like sixty to eighty times
a second. In the case of a laptop screen like Randy's, there is no physical
scanning; the individual pixels are turned on or off directly. But still a
scanning process is taking place; what's being scanned and made manifest on
the screen is a region of the computer's memory called the screen buffer.
The contents of the screen buffer have to be slapped up onto the screen
sixty to eighty times every second or else (1) the screen flickers and (2)
the images move jerkily.
The way that the computer talks to you is not by controlling the screen
directly but rather by manipulating the bits contained in that buffer,
secure in the knowledge that other subsystems inside the machine handle the
drudge work of pipelining that information onto the actual, physical screen.
Sixty to eighty times a second, the video system says shit! time to refresh
the screen again, and goes to the beginning of the screen buffer which is
just a particular hunk of memory, remember and it reads the first few bytes,
which dictate what color the pixel in the upper left hand corner of the
screen is supposed to be. This information is sent on down the line to
whatever is actually refreshing the screen, whether it's a scanning electron
beam or some laptop style system for directly controlling the pixels. Then
the next few bytes are read, typically for the pixel just to the right of
that first one, and so on all the way to the right edge of the screen. That
draws the first line of the grave rubbing.
Since the right edge of the screen has now been reached, there are no
more pixels off in that direction. It is implicit that the next bytes read
from memory will be for the leftmost pixel in the second raster line down
from the top. If this is a cathode ray tube type of screen, we have a little
timing problem here in that the electron beam is currently at the right edge
of the screen and now it's being asked to draw a pixel at the left edge. It
has to move back. This takes a little while not long, but much longer than
the interval of time between drawing two pixels that are cheek by jowl. This
pause is called the horizontal retrace interval. Another one will occur at
the end of every other line until the rastering has proceeded to the last
pixel at the bottom right hand corner of the screen and completed a single
grave rubbing. But then it's time to begin the process all over again, and
so the electron beam (if there is one) has to jump diagonally all the way up
to the upper left hand pixel. This also takes a little while and is called
the vertical retrace interval.
These issues all stem from inherent physical limitations of sweeping
electron beams through space in a cathode ray tube, and basically disappear
in the case of a laptop screen like the one Tom Howard has set up a few
inches in front of Pekka, on the other side of that wall. But the video
timing of a laptop screen is still patterned after that of a cathode ray
tube screen anyway. (This is simply because the old technology is
universally understood by those who need to understand it, and it works
well, and all kinds of electronic and software technology has been built and
tested to work within that framework, and why mess with success, especially
when your profit margins are so small that they can only be detected by
using techniques from quantum mechanics, and any glitches vis à vis
compatibility with old stuff will send your company straight into the
toilet.)
On Tom's laptop, each second of time is divided into seventy five
perfectly regular slices, during which a full grave rubbing is performed
followed by a vertical retrace interval. Randy can follow Pekka and
Cantrell's conversation well enough to gather that they have already figured
out, from analyzing the signals coming through the wall, that Tom Howard has
his screen set up to give him 768 lines, and 1,024 pixels on each line. For
every pixel, four bytes will be read from the video buffer and sent on down
the line to the screen. (Tom is using the highest possible level of color
definition on his screen, which means that one byte apiece is needed to
represent the intensity of blue, green, and red and another is basically
left over, but kept in there anyway because computers like powers of two,
and computers are so ridiculously fast and powerful now that, even though
all of this is happening on a timetable that would strike a human being as
rather aggressive, the extra bytes just don't make any difference.) Each
byte is eight binary digits or bits and so, 1,024 times a line, 4 x 8 = 32
bits are being read from the screen buffer.
Unbeknownst to Tom, his computer happens to be sitting right next to an
antenna. The wires Pekka taped to the wall can read the electromagnetic
waves that are radiating out of the computer's circuitry at all times.
Tom's laptop is sold as a computer, not as a radio station, and so it
might seem odd that it should be radiating anything at all. It is all a
byproduct of the fact that computers are binary critters, which means that
all chip to chip, subsystem to subsystem communication taking place inside
the machine everything moving down those flat ribbons of wire, and the
little metallic traces on the circuit boards consists of transitions from
zero to one and back again. The way that you represent bits in a computer is
by switching the wire's voltage back and forth between zero and five volts.
In computer textbooks these transitions are always graphed as if they were
perfect square waves, meaning that you have this perfectly flat line at V 0,
representing a binary zero, and then it makes a perfect right angle turn and
jumps vertically to V 5 and then executes another perfect right angle turn
and remains at five volts until it's time to go back to zero again, and so
on.
This is the Platonic ideal of how computer circuitry is supposed to
operate, but engineers have to build actual circuits in the grimy analog
world. The hunks of metal and silicon can't manifest the Platonic behavior
shown in those textbooks. Circuits can jump between zero and five volts
really, really abruptly but if you monitor them on an oscilloscope, you can
see that it's not a perfectly square wave. Instead you get some thing that
looks like this:
The little waves are called ringing; these transitions among binary
digits hit the circuitry like a clapper striking a bell. The voltage jumps,
but after it jumps it oscillates back and forth around the new value for a
little while. Whenever you have an oscillating voltage in a conductor like
this, it means that electromagnetic waves are propagating out into space.
Consequently each wire in a running computer is like a little radio
transmitter. The signals that it broadcasts are completely dependent upon
the details of what's going on inside the machine. Since there are a lot of
wires in there, and the particulars of what they are doing are fairly
unpredictable, it is difficult for anyone monitoring the transmissions to
make head or tail of them. A great deal of what comes out of the machine is
completely irrelevant from a surveillance point of view. But there is one
pattern of signals that is (1) totally predictable and (2) exactly what
Pekka wants to see, and that is the stream of bytes being read from the
screen buffer and sent down the wire to the screen hardware. Amid all the
random noise coming from the machine, the ticks of the horizontal and
vertical retrace intervals will stand out as clearly as the beating of a
drum in a teeming jungle. Now that Pekka has zeroed in on that beat, he
should be able to pick up the radiation emanating from the wire that
connects screen buffer to video hardware, and translate it back into a
sequence of ones and zeroes that can be dumped out onto their own screen.
They will be able to see exactly what Tom Howard sees, through the kind of
surveillance called Van Eck phreaking.
That's what Randy knows. When it comes to the details, Cantrell and
Pekka are way out of his league, so after a few minutes he feels himself
losing interest. He sits down on Cantrell's bed, which is the only place
left to sit, and discovers a little palmtop computer on the bedside table.
It is already up and running, patched into the world over a telephone wire.
Randy's heard of this product. It is supposed to be a first stab at a
network computer, and so it's running a Web browser whenever it is turned
on; the Web browser is the interface.
"May I surf?" Randy asks, and Cantrell says, "Yes," without even
turning around. Randy visits one of the big Web searching sites, which takes
a minute because the machine has to establish a Net connection first. Then
he searches for Web documents containing the terms ((Andy OR Andrew) Loeb)
AND "hive mind." As usual, the search finds tens of thousands of documents.
But it's not hard for Randy to pick out the relevant ones.
WHY RIST 9303 IS A MEMBER IN GOOD STANDING OF THE CALIFORNIA BAR
ASSOCIATION
RIST 11A4 has experienced ambivalent feelings over the fact that RIST
9E03 (insofar as s/he is construed, by atomized society, as an individual
organism) is a lawyer. No doubt the conflicted feelings of RIST 11A4 are
quite normal and natural. Part of RIST 11A4 abhors lawyers, and the legal
system in general, as symptoms of the end stage terminal disease of atomized
society. Another part understands that disease can improve the health of the
meme pool if it slays an organism that is old and unfit for ongoing
propagation of its memotype. Make no mistake about it: the legal system in
its current form is the worst imaginable system for society to resolve its
disputes. It is appallingly expensive in terms of money and in terms of the
intellectual talent that goes to waste pursuing it as a career. But part of
RIST 11A4 feels that the goals of RIST 11A4 may actually be served by
turning the legal system's most toxic features against the rotten body
politic of atomized society and in so doing hasten its downfall.
Randy clicks on RIST 9E03 and gets
RIST 9E03 is the RIST that RIST 11A4 denotes by the arbitrarily chosen
bit pattern that, construed as an integer, is 9E03 (in hexadecimal
notation). Click here for more about the system of bit pattern designators
used by RIST 11A4 to replace the obsolescent nomenclature systems of
"natural languages." Click here if you would like the designator RIST 9E03
to be automatically replaced by a conventional designator (name) as you
browse this web site.
Click.
From now on. the expression RIST 9E03 will be replaced by the
expression Andrew Loeb. Warning: we consider such nomenclature fundamentally
invalid, and do not recommend its use, but have provided it as a service to
first time visitors to this Web site who are not accustomed to thinking in
terms of RISTs.
Click.
You have clicked on Andrew Loeb which is a designator assigned by
atomized society to the memome of RIST 9E03 . .
Click.
memome is the set of all memes that define the physical reality of a
carbon based RIST. Memes can be divided into two broad categories: genetic
and semantic. Genetic memes are simply genes (DNA) and are propagated
through normal biological reproduction. Semantic memes are ideas
(ideologies, religions, fads, etc.) and are propagated by communications.
Click.
The genetic part of the memome of Andrew Loeb shares 99% of its
contents with the data set produced by the Human Genome Project. This should
not be construed as endorsing the concept of speciation (i.e. that the
continuum of carbon based life forms can or should be arbitrarily
partitioned into paradigmatic species) in general, or the theory that there
is a species called "Homo sapiens" in particular.
The semantic part of the memome of Andrew Loeb is still unavoidably
contaminated with many primitive viral memes, but these are being gradually
and steadily supplanted by new semantic memes generated ab initio by
rational processes.
Click.
RIST stands for Relatively Independent Sub Totality. It can be used to
refer to any entity that, from one point of view, seems to possess a clear
boundary separating it from the world (as do cells in a body) but that, in a
deeper sense, is inextricably linked with a larger totality (as are cells in
a body). For example, the biological entities traditionally known as "human
beings" are nothing more than Relatively Independent Sub Totalities of the
social organism in which they are embedded.
A dissertation written under the name Andrew Loeb, who is now
designated RIST 9E03, indicates that even in those parts of RIST 0577 having
temperate climates and abundant food and water, the life of an organism such
as the type designated, in old meme systems, as "Homo sapiens," would have
been primarily occupied with attempting to eat other RISTs. This narrow
focus would inhibit the formation of advanced semantic meme systems (viz,
civilization as that word is traditionally construed). RISTs of this type
can only attain higher levels of functioning insofar as they are embedded in
a larger society, the most logical evolutionary end point of which is a hive
mind.
Click.
A hive mind is a social organization of RISTs that are capable of
processing semantic memes ("thinking"). These could be either carbon based
or silicon based. RISTs who enter a hive mind surrender their independent
identities (which are mere illusions anyway). For purposes of convenience,
the constituents of the hive mind are assigned bit pattern designators.
Click.
A bit pattern designator is a random series of bits used to uniquely
identify a RIST. For example, the organism traditionally designed as Earth
(Terra, Gaia) has been assigned the designator 0577. This Web site is
maintained by 11A4 which is a hive mind. RIST 11A4 assigns bit pattern
designators with a pseudo random number generator. This departs from the
practice used by that soi disant "hive mind" known to itself as the East Bay
Area Hive Mind Project but designated (in the system of RIST 11A4) as RIST
E772. This "hive mind" resulted from the division of "Hive Mind One"
(designated in the system of RIST 11A4 as RIST 4032) into several smaller
"hive minds" (the East Bay Area Hive Mind Project, the San Francisco Hive
Mind, Hive Mind IA, the Reorganized San Francisco Hive Mind, and the
Universal Hive Mind) as the result of an irreconcilable contradiction
between several different semantic memes that competed for mind share. One
of these semantic memes asserted that bit pattern designators should be
assigned in numerical order, so that (for example) Hive Mind One would be
designated RIST 0001 and so on. Another meme asserted that numbers should be
organized in order of importance, so that (for example) the RIST
conventionally known as the planet Earth would be RIST 0001. Another
semantic meme agreed with this one but disagreed as to whether the counting
should begin with 0000 or 0001. Within both the 0000 and 0001 camps, there
was disagreement about what RIST should be assigned the first number: some
asserted that Earth was the first and most important RIST, others that some
larger system (the solar system, the Universe, God) was in some sense more
inclusive and fundamental.
This machine has an e mail interface. Randy uses it.
To: root@eruditorum.org
From: dwarf@siblings.net
Subject: Re(2) Why?
Saw the website. Am willing to stipulate that you are not RIST 9E03.
Suspect that you are the Dentist, who yearns for honest exchange of views.
Anonymous, digitally signed e mail is the only safe vehicle for same.
If you want me to believe you are not the Dentist, provide plausible
explanation for your question regarding why we are building the Crypt.
Yours truly,
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK – (etc.)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
"We've got bits," Cantrell says. "Are you in the middle of something?"
"Nothing I'm not eager to get out of," Randy says, putting the palm top
down. He gets off the bed and stands behind Pekka. The screen of Pekka's
computer has a number of windows on it, of which the biggest and frontmost
is the image of another computer's screen. Nested within that are various
other windows and icons: a desktop. It happens to be a Windows NT desktop,
which is noteworthy and (to Randy) bizarre because Pekka's computer isn't
running Windows NT, it's running Finux. A cursor is moving around on that
Windows NT desktop, pulling down menus and clicking on things. But Pekka's
hand is not moving. The cursor zooms over to a Microsoft Word icon, which
changes color and expands to form a large window.
This copy of Microsoft Word is registered to THOMAS HOWARD.
"You did it!" Randy says.
"We see what Tom sees," Pekka says.
A new document window opens up, and words begin to spill across it.
Note to myself: let's see "Letters to Penthouse" print this!
I don't suppose that graduate students of either gender are exactly
sought out by sexual connoisseurs for their great fucking skills. We think
about it too much. Everything has to be verbalized. A person who believes
that fucking is a sexual discourse is simply never going to be any good in
the sack.
I have a thing about stockings. They have to be sheer black stockings,
preferably with seams up the back. When I was thirteen years old I actually
shoplifted some black pantyhose from a grocery store just so that I could
play with them. Walking out of that store with those L'eggs in my backpack,
my heart was pounding, but the excitement of the crime was nothing compared
to opening up the package and pulling them out, rubbing them against my
fuzzy, adolescent cheeks. I even tried pulling them on, but this just looked
grotesque what with my hairy legs and did absolutely nothing for me. I
didn't want to wear them. I wanted someone else to. I masturbated four times
that day.
It disturbed the shit out of me when I thought about it. I was a smart
boy. Smart boys are supposed to be rational. So, when I was in college I
figured out a rationalization for this. There wasn't that many women who
wore sheer black stockings in college, but sometimes I would go into the
city and see the well dressed office workers walking down the street on
their lunch breaks and make scientific observations of their legs. I noticed
that where the stocking stretched itself thin to go over a wide part of the
leg, such as the muscle of the calf, it became paler. just as a colored
balloon becomes paler when it is inflated. Conversely, it was darker in
narrow regions such as the ankle. This made the calf look more shapely and
the ankle look more slender. The legs, as a whole, looked healthier,
implying that just above the place where they joined together, a higher
class of DNA was to be found.
Q.E.D. My thing about black stockings was a highly rational adaptation.
It merely proved how smart I was, how rational even the most irrational
parts of my brain were. Sex held no power over me. It was nothing to fear.
This was quintessentially sophomoric thinking, but nowadays most
educated people hold quintessentially sophomoric opinions well into their
thirties and so this stuck with me for a long time. My wife Virginia
probably had some equally self serving rationalization for her own sexual
needs of which I was not to become aware for many years. So it's no surprise
that our premarital sex life was mediocre. Neither one of us admitted it was
mediocre, of course. If I had admitted it, I would have had to admit that it
was mediocre because Virginia didn't like to wear stockings, and at the time
I was too concerned with being a Sensitive New Age Guy to admit such heresy,
I loved Virginia for her mind. How could I be so shallow, so insensitive, so
perverse as to spurn her because she didn't like to pull filmy tubes of
nylon over her legs? As a pudgy nerd, I was lucky to have her.
Five years into our marriage, I attended the Comdex convention as
president of a small new high tech company. I was a little less pudgy and a
little less nerdy. I met a marketing girl for a big software distribution
chain. She was wearing sheer black stockings. We ended up fucking in my
hotel room. It was the best sex I'd ever had. I went home baffled and
ashamed. After that, my sex life with Virginia was pretty miserable. We had
sex maybe a dozen times over the next couple of years.
Virginia's grandmother died and we went back to upstate New York for
the funeral. Virginia had to wear a dress, which meant she had to shave her
legs and wear stockings something she'd done on only a handful of occasions
since our marriage. I practically fell over when I saw her, and suffered
through the funeral with a big, scratchy erection, trying to figure out how
I could get her alone.
Now, Granny had lived by herself in a big old house on a hill until a
couple of months earlier when she had fallen down and broken her hip, and
been moved into a nursing home. All of her children, grandchildren, and
great grandchildren came together for the funeral, and that house became the
central gathering place. It was a nice place full of good old furniture, but
in her declining years Granny had become something of a compulsive pack rat
and so there were heaps of newspapers and accumulated mail squirreled away
everywhere. In the end we had to haul away several truckloads of junk.
In some other ways, Granny had been pretty well organized and had left
behind a very specific last will and testament. Each one of her descendants
knew exactly which pieces of furniture, dishes, rugs, and curios they were
going to take home. She had a lot of possessions, but she also had a lot of
descendants, and so the loot had to be sliced pretty thin. Virginia ended up
with a black walnut dresser which was stored in an unused bedroom. We went
up there to have a look at it, and I ended up fucking her there. I stood up
with the flimsy trousers of my dark suit collapsed around my ankles while
she sat on top of that dresser with her legs wrapped around me and her
stocking clad heels digging into my butt cheeks. It was the best fuck we'd
ever had, bar none. Fortunately there were a lot of people eating, drinking,
and talking downstairs or they would have heard her moaning and hollering.
I finally came clean to her about the stockings. It felt good. I'd been
reading a lot about how the brain develops and had finally come to accept my
stocking kink. It seems that when you are a certain age, somewhere between
about two and five years, your mind just gels. The part of it that's
responsible for sex becomes set into a pattern that you'll carry with you
for the rest of your life. All of the gay people I've ever discussed it with
have told me that they knew they were gay, or at least different, years
before they even began thinking about sex, and all of them agree that
gayness cannot be converted into straightness, or vice versa, no matter how
hard you might try.
The part of your brain that handles sex frequently gets cross wired
into other, seemingly irrelevant areas at this age. This is when people pick
up an orientation towards sexual dominance or submission, or when a lot of
guys pick up highly specific kinks say, rubber, feathers, or shoes. Some of
them are unfortunate enough to get turned on by little kids, and those guys
are essentially doomed from that point onwards there is nothing to do except
castrate them or lock them up. No therapy will unkink the brain once it has
kinked.
So, all things considered, being turned on by black stockings wasn't
such a bad sexual card to have been dealt. I laid this all out to Virginia
during the trip home. I was surprised by how calmly she accepted it. I was
too big of a jerk to realize that she was thinking about how it all applied
to her.
After we got back home, she gamely went out and bought some stockings
and tried to wear them on occasion. This was not easy. Stockings imply a
whole lifestyle. They look stupid with jeans and sneakers. A woman in
stockings has to wear a dress or a skirt, and not just a blue denim skirt
but something nicer, more formal. She also has to wear the type of shoes
that Virginia didn't own and didn't like to wear. Stockings are not really
compatible with riding a bicycle to work. They were not even really
compatible with our house. During our frugal grad student days we had
accumulated a lot of furniture from Goodwill, or I had hammered it together
myself out of two by fours. This furniture turned out to be riddled with
hidden snags that a person in blue jeans would never notice but that would
destroy a pair of stockings in a moment. Likewise, our half finished house
and our old junker cars had many small sharp edges that were death to
stockings. On the other hand, when we went away for an anniversary trip to
London, getting around in black taxis, staying in a nice hotel, and eating
in good restaurants, we spent a whole week moving in a world that was
perfectly adapted to stockings. It just went to show us how radically we
would have to change our circumstances in order for her to dress that way
routinely.
So, much money was spent on stockings in a fit of good intentions. Some
good sex was had, though I seemed to enjoy it much more than Virginia did.
She never achieved the shocking, animal intensity she had shown at Granny's
house after the funeral . Attrition reduced her supply of stockings very
quickly, sheer inconvenience prevented her from renewing it, and within a
year after the funeral we were back to square one.
Other things were changing, though. I made a lot of money by cashing in
some stock options, and we bought a new house up in the hills. We hired some
movers to come pick up all of our junky furniture and move it into that
house, where it looked much shabbier. Virginia's new job forced her to
commute in a car. I didn't think our old junker was safe, and so I bought
her a nice little Lexus with leather seats and wool carpet, all of it nicely
snag free. Soon, kids came along and I traded in my old beater pickup truck
for a minivan.
Still, I couldn't bring myself to begin spending money on furniture
until my back started going bad on me, and I realized it was because of the
slack, twenty year old Goodwill mattress that Virginia and I were sleeping
on. We had to buy a new bed. Since it was my back at stake, I went out and
did the shopping.
I 'd rather stub out cigarettes on my tongue than go shopping. The idea
of hitting every big furniture store in the area, comparing beds, made me
want to die. All I wanted was to go to one place and buy a bed and have done
with it. But I didn't want a shitty bed that I'd be sick of in a year, or a
cheap mattress that would mess up my back again in five years.
So I went straight down to my local Gomer Bolstrood Home Gallery. I had
heard people talk about Gomer Bolstrood furniture. Women, in particular,
seemed to speak of it in hushed, religious tones. Their factory was said to
be up in some New England town where they had been based for the last three
hundred years. It was said that loose curls of walnut and oak from Gomer
Bolstroods block plane had been used as tinder beneath the pyres of
convicted witches. Gomer Bolstrood was the answer to a question I'd been
ruminating over ever since Granny's funeral, namely: where does all of this
high quality grandma furniture come from? In every family, young people go
to grandma's house for Thanksgiving, or other obligatory visits, and lust
over the nice antique furniture, wondering which pieces they will take home
when the old lady kicks the bucket. Some people lose patience and go to
estate sales or antique stores and buy the stuff.
But if the supply of old, high grade, heirloom quality furniture is
fixed, then where will the grannys of the future come from? I could see a
situation, half a century in the future, when Virginia's and my descendants
would all be squabbling over that one black walnut dresser, while bringing
in Ryder trucks to haul the rest of our stuff straight to the dump. As the
population grows, and the supply of old furniture remains constant, this
kind of thing is inevitable. There must be a source for new granny grade
furniture, or else the Americans of tomorrow will all end up sitting in
vinyl beanbag chairs, leaking little foam beads all over the floor.
The answer is Gomer Bolstrood, and the price is high. Each Gomer
Bolstrood chair and table really ought to come in a little felt lined box,
like a piece of jewelry. But at the time, I was rich and impatient. So I
drove to Gomer Bolstrood and stormed through the door, only to be brought up
short by a receptionist. I felt tacky in my white tennis shoes and jeans.
She had probably seen a lot of high tech millionaires come through those
doors, and took it pretty calmly. Before I knew it a middle aged woman had
emerged from the back of the store and appointed herself my personal design
consultant. Her name was Margaret. "Where are the beds?" I asked. She
stiffened and informed me that this not the kind of place where you could
walk into a Bed Room and see a row of beds lined up like pig's feet at a
butcher shop. A Gomer Bolstrood Home Design Gallery consists of a series of
exquisitely decorated rooms, some of which happen to be bedrooms and to
contain beds. Once we had that all straightened out. Margaret showed me the
bedrooms. As she led me from one room to the next. I couldn't help noticing
that she was wearing black stockings with seams up the back perfectly
straight seams.
My erotic feelings for Margaret made me uncomfortable. For a while, I
had to restrain the impulse to say "just sell me the biggest, most expensive
bed you have." Margaret showed me beds in different styles. The names of the
styles meant nothing to me. Some looked modern and some looked old
fashioned. I pointed to a very large, high four poster that looked like
granny furniture and said. "I'll take one of those."
There was a three month delay while the bed was hand carved by New
England craftsmen working at the same wage as plumbers or psychotherapists.
Then it showed up at our house and was assembled by technicians in white
coveralls, like the guys who work in semiconductor chip fabrication plants.
Virginia came home from work. She was wearing a denim skirt, heavy wool
socks, and Birkenstocks. The kids were still at school. We had sex on the
bed. I performed dutifully enough, I suppose. I could not really sustain an
erection and ended up with my head stuck between her bristly thighs. Even
with my ears blocked by her quadriceps. I could hear her moaning and
screaming. She went into erotic convulsions near the end, and almost snapped
my neck. Her climax must have lasted for two or three full minutes. This was
the moment when I first came to terms with the fact that Virginia could not
achieve orgasm unless she was in close proximity to preferably on top of a
piece of heirloom grade furniture that she owned.
The window containing the image of Tom Howard's desktop vanishes. Pekka
has clicked it into oblivion.
"I could not stand it any more," he says, in his electronically
generated deadpan.
"I predict a ménage à trois Tom, his wife, and Margaret doing it on a
bed at the furniture store, after hours," Cantrell says ruminatively.
"Is it Tom? Or a fictional character of Tom's?" Pekka asks.
"Does this mean you win the bet?" Randy asks.
"If only I can figure out how to collect on it," Cantrell says.
Chapter 42 AFLOAT
A brown miasma has settled across the Bismarck Sea, smelling of oil and
barbecue. American torpedo boats hurtle out of this reeking fog, their fat
hulls barely touching the water, their giant motors curving white scars into
the sea as they line up their targets: the few remaining ships in Goto
Dengo's troop convoy, whose decks are now covered with a dark mat of
soldiers, like moss on an old rock. The torpedos spring into the air like
crossbow bolts, driven by compressed gas from tubes on the boats' decks.
They belly flop into the water, settle to a comfortable depth where the
water is always calm, and draw bubble trails across the sea, heading
directly for the ships. The crowds on the ships' decks fluidize and gush
over the edges. Goto Dengo turns away and hears but doesn't see the
explosions. Hardly any of the Nipponese troops know how to swim.
Later, the airplanes come back to strafe them some more. Swimmers who
have the wit and the ability to dive are invulnerable. Those who don't are
dead very soon. The airplanes leave. Goto Dengo strips a life preserver off
a shattered corpse. He has the worst sunburn of his life and it is only
midafternoon, so he pilfers a uniform blouse, too, and ties it around his
head like a burnoose.
The ones who are still alive, and who can swim, try to converge on each
other. They are in a complicated strait between New Guinea and New Britain,
and tidal currents rushing through it tend to pull them apart. Some men
drift slowly away, calling out to their comrades. Goto Dengo ends up on the
fringes of a dissolving archipelago of maybe a hundred swimmers. Many of
them clutch life preservers or bits of wood to stay afloat. The seas are
considerably higher than their heads and so they can't see very far.
Before sunset, the haze lifts for an hour. Goto Dengo can clearly fix
the sun's position, so for the first time all day he knows west from east,
north from south. Better, he can see peaks rising above the southern
horizon, slathered with blue white glaciers.
"I will swim to New Guinea," he shouts, and begins doing it. There is
no point in trying to discuss it with the others. The ones who are inclined
to follow him, do: maybe a few dozen in all. The timing is right the sea has
become miraculously calm. Goto Dengo settles into a slow, easy sidestroke.
Most of the others are moving in an improvised dogpaddle. If they are making
any progress at all it is totally imperceptible. As the stars begin to come
out, he rolls over into a backstroke and gets a fix on Polaris. As long as
he swims away from that, it is physically impossible for him to miss New
Guinea.
Darkness falls. Dim light is shed by the stars and by a half moon. The
men call to one another, trying to stay bunched together. Some of them get
lost; they can be heard but not seen, and those in the main group can do
nothing but listen to their pleadings dwindle.
It must be around midnight when the sharks come. The first victim is a
man who had lacerated his forehead on a hatch frame when scrambling out of a
sinking ship, and who has been bleeding ever since, drawing a thin pink line
across the sea, leading the sharks straight to them. The sharks do not know
yet what they are dealing with, and so they kill him slowly, worrying him to
death in small bites. When he turns out to be easy prey, they explode into
some kind of berserk rage that is all the more fantastic for being hidden
beneath the black water. Men's voices are cut off in mid cry as they are
jerked straight down. Sometimes a leg or head will suddenly burst free from
the surface. The water splashing into Goto Dengo's mouth begins to taste of
iron.
The attack goes on for several hours. It appears that the noise and
smell have attracted some rival shark packs, because sometimes there is a
lull followed by renewed ferocity. A severed shark tail bumps up against
Goto Dengo's face; he hangs onto it. The sharks are eating them; why
shouldn't he retaliate? In Tokyo restaurants charge a lot of money for shark
sashimi. The skin of the shark tail is tough, but hunks of muscle are
hanging out of the torn edge. He buries his face in the meat and feasts on
it.
When Goto Dengo was young, his father had owned a fedora with English
writing on its ivory silk liner, and a briar pipe, and tobacco that he
bought through the mail from America. He would sit on a rock up in the hills
and snug his fedora down to keep the chilly air from the bald spot on top of
his head and smoke his pipe and just look at the world. "What are you
doing?" Dengo would ask him.
"Observing," father would say.
"But how long can you observe the same thing?"
"Forever. Look over there." Father pointed with the stem of his pipe. A
thread of white smoke piped out of the mouthpiece, like a silk thread being
unwound from a cocoon. "That band of dark rock is mineral bearing. We could
get copper out of there, probably some zinc and lead too. We would run a cog
railway up the valley to that flat spot there, then sink an angle shaft
parallel to the face of the deposit Then Dengo would get into the act and
decide where the workers would live, where the school would be built for
their children, where the playing field would be. By the time they were
finished they would have populated the whole valley with an imaginary city.
Goto Dengo has plenty of time to make observations this night. He
observes that severed body parts almost never get attacked. The men who swim
most violently are always the first to get it. So, when the sharks come in,
he tries to float on his back and not move a muscle, even when the jagged
ends of someone's ribs poke him in the face.
Dawn arrives, one or two hundred hours after the previous sunset. He
has never stayed awake all night long before, and finds it shocking to see
something as big as the sun go down on one side of the planet and come up on
the opposite. He is a virus, a germ living on the surface of unfathomably
giant bodies in violent motion. And, amazingly enough, he is still not
alone: three other men have survived the night of the sharks. They converge
on one another and turn to face the ice covered mountains of New Guinea,
salmon colored in the dawn light.
"They have not gotten any closer," one of the men says.
"They are deep in the interior," Goto Dengo says. "We are not swimming
to the mountains only to the shore much closer. Let's go before we die of
dehydration!" And he plunges forward into a sidestroke.
One of the others, a boy who speaks with an Okinawan accent, is an
excellent swimmer. He and Goto Dengo can easily outdistance the others. For
most of the day, they try to stay together with the other two anyway. The
waves come up and make it difficult even for good swimmers to move.
One of the slower swimmers has been fighting diarrhea since long before
his ship was sunk out from under him and was probably dehydrated to begin
with. Around midday, when the sun is coming straight down on top of them
like a flamethrower, he goes into convulsions, gets some water into his
lungs, and disappears.
The other slow swimmer is from Tokyo. He's in much better physical
condition he simply doesn't know how to swim. "There is no better time or
place to learn," Goto Dengo says. He and the Okinawan spend an hour or so
teaching him the sidestroke and backstroke, and then they resume swimming
southwards.
Around sunset, Goto Dengo catches the Okinawan gulping down mouthful
after mouthful of seawater. It is painful to watch, mostly because he
himself has been wanting to do it. "No! It will make you sick!" he says. His
voice is weak. The effort of filling his lungs, expanding his ribcage
against the relentless pressure of the water, is ruining him; every muscle
in his torso is rigid and tender.
The Okinawan has already started retching by the time Goto Dengo
reaches him. With the help of the Tokyo boy, he sticks his fingers down the
Okinawan's throat and gets him to vomit it all up.
He is very sick anyway, and until late at night cannot do anything
except float on his back and mumble deliriously. But just as Goto Dengo is
about to abandon him, he becomes lucid, asking "Where is Polaris?"
"It is cloudy tonight," Goto Dengo says. "But there is a bright spot in
the clouds that might be the moon."
Based on the position of that bright spot, they guess the position of
New Guinea and resume swimming. Their arms and legs are like sacks of clay,
and all of them are hallucinating.
The sun seems to be coming up. They are in a nebula of vapor, radiant
with peach colored light, as if hurtling through a distant part of the
galaxy.
"I smell something rotten," says one of them. Goto Dengo cannot tell
which.
"Gangrene?" guesses the other.
Goto Dengo fills his nostrils, an act that consumes about half of his
remaining energy reserves. "It is not rotten flesh," he says. "It is
vegetation."
None of them can swim anymore. If they could, they wouldn't know which
direction to choose, because the mist glows uniformly. If they picked a
direction, it wouldn't matter, because the current is taking them where it
will.
Goto Dengo sleeps for a while, or maybe he doesn't.
Something bumps his leg. Thank god; the sharks have come to finish
them.
The waves have grown aggressive. He feels another bump. The burned
flesh on his leg screams. It is something very hard, rough, and sharp.
Something is projecting out of the water just ahead, something bumpy
and white. A coral head.
A wave breaks behind them, picks them up, and flings them forward
across the coral, half flaying them. Goto Dengo breaks a finger and counts
himself lucky. The next breaker takes what little skin he has left and
flings him into a lagoon. Something forces his feet upwards, and because his
body is just a limp sack of shit at this point, doubles him over head first
into the water. His face strikes a bed of sharp coral sand. Then his hands
are in it too. His limbs have forgotten how to do any thing except swim, and
so it takes him a while to plant them in the bottom and lift his head out of
the water. Then he begins to crawl on his hands and knees. The odor of
rotten vegetation is overpowering now, as if a whole division's food
supplies had been left out in the sun for a week.
He finds some sand that is not covered with water, turns around, and
sits down on it. The Okinawan is right behind him, also on hands and knees,
and the Tokyo boy has actually clambered to his feet and is wading ashore,
being knocked this way and that by incoming waves. He is laughing.
The Okinawan boy collapses on the sand next to Goto Dengo, not even
trying to sit up.
A wave knocks the Tokyo boy off balance. Laughing, he collapses
sideways into the surf, throwing out one hand to break his fall.
He stops laughing and jerks back sharply. Something is dangling from
his forearm: a wriggling snake. He snaps it like a whip and it flies off
into the water.
Scared and sober, he splashes the last half dozen steps up onto the
beach and then falls flat on his face. By the time Goto Dengo reaches him,
he is stone dead.
Goto Dengo gathers his forces for some period of time that is difficult
to measure. He may have fallen asleep sitting up. The Okinawan boy is still
lying on the sand, raving. Goto Dengo gets his feet underneath himself and
staggers off in search of fresh water.
This is not a proper beach, merely a sandbar maybe ten meters long and
three wide, with some tall grassy stuff sprouting out of the top. On the
other side of it is a brackish lagoon that meanders between banks, not of
earth, but of living things all tangled together. That tangle is obviously
too thick to penetrate. So, notwithstanding what just happened to the Tokyo
boy, Goto Dengo wades into the lagoon, hoping that it will lead inland to a
freshwater stream.
He wanders for what seems like an hour, but the lagoon takes him back
to the edge of the sea again. He gives up and drinks the water he's wading
in, hoping it will be a little less salty. This leads to a great deal of
vomiting but makes him feel slightly better somehow. Again he wades into the
swamp, trying to keep the sound of the surf behind him, and after an hour or
so he finds a rivulet of water that is actually fresh. When he has finished
drinking from that, he feels strong enough to go back and carry the Okinawan
boy here, if need be.
He gets back to the beach in midafternoon and finds that the Okinawan
is gone. But the sand is all churned up by footprints. The sand is dry and
so the footprints are too indistinct to read. They must have made contact
with a patrol! Surely their comrades must have heard about the attack on the
convoy and are combing beaches for survivors. There must be a bivouac in the
jungle not far away!
Goto Dengo follows the trail into the jungle. After he's proceeded a
mile or so, the track crosses a small, open mud flat where he gets a good
look at the footprints, all made by bare feet with enormous, bizarrely
splayed toes. Footprints of people who have never worn shoes in their lives.
He proceeds more cautiously for another few hundred meters. He can hear
voices now. The Army taught him all about jungle infiltration tactics, how
to creep through the enemy's lines in the middle of the night without making
a sound. Of course, when they practiced it in Nippon they weren't being
eaten alive by ants and mosquitoes the whole time. But it hardly matters to
him now. An hour of patient work gets him to a vantage point from which he
can see into a flat clearing with a stagnant creek wandering through it.
Several long dark houses are built on tree trunk stilts to keep them up out
of the ooze, and roofed with bushy heaps of palm fronds.
Before he finds the Okinawan, Goto Dengo needs to get some food. In the
middle of the clearing, white porridge is steaming in a pot over an open
fire, but it's being tended by several tough looking women, naked except for
short fringes of fibrous stuff tied round their waists and just barely
concealing their genitals.
Smoke is rising from some of the long buildings too. But to get inside
one of them, he would have to clamber up its heavy, slanting ladder and then
worm through what looks like a rather small doorway. A child, standing
inside one of those doorways with a stick, could prevent an intruder from
coming in. Hanging outside some of the doorways are sacks, improvised from
lengths of fabric (so at least they have textiles!) and filled with big
round lumps: coconuts, possibly or some kind of preserved food set up to
keep it away from the ants.
Perhaps seventy people are gathered around something of interest in the
middle of the clearing. As they move around, Goto Dengo gets occasional
momentary glimpses of someone, possibly Nipponese, who is sitting at the
base of a palm tree with his hands behind his back. There's a lot of blood
on his face and he's not moving. Most of these people are men, and they tend
to carry spears. They have those fringes of hairy stuff (sometimes dyed red
or green) concealing their private parts, and some of the bigger and older
ones have decorated themselves by tying strips of fabric around their arms.
Some have painted designs on their skin in pale mud. They have shoved
various objects, some of them quite large, sideways through their nasal
septums.
The bloodied man seems to have captured everyone's attention, and Goto
Dengo reckons that this will be his only chance to steal some food. He picks
the longhouse farthest away from where the villagers have gathered, clambers
up its ladder, and reaches for the bulging sack that hangs by the entrance.
But the fabric is very old and it has rotted from the damp of the swamp, and
maybe from the attacks of the hundreds of flies that buzz around it, and so
when he grasps it his fingers go right through. A long swath of it tears
away and the contents tumble out around Goto Dengo's feet. They are dark and
sort of hairy, like coconuts, but their shape is more complicated, and he
knows intuitively that some thing is wrong even before he recognizes them as
human skulls. Maybe half a dozen of them. Scalp and skin still stuck on.
Some of them are dark skinned with bushy hair, like the natives, and others
look distinctly Nipponese.
Sometime later, he is able to think coherently again. He realizes that
he does not know how long he might have spent up here, in full view of the
villagers, gazing on the skulls. He turns around to look, but all attention
is still focused on the wounded man seated at the base of the tree.
From this vantage point Goto Dengo is able to see that it is indeed the
Okinawan, and that his arms have been tied together behind the tree trunk. A
boy of maybe twelve is standing over him, holding a spear. He steps forward
cautiously and suddenly pokes it into the midsection of the Okinawan, who
comes awake and thrashes from side to side. The boy's obviously startled by
this, and jumps back. Then an older man, his head decorated with a fringe of
cowrie shells, takes a stance behind and beside the boy, showing him how to
hold the spear, guiding him forward again. He adds his own strength to the
youngster's and they shove the spear straight into the Okinawan's heart.
Goto Dengo falls off the house.
The men become very excited and pick the boy up on their shoulders and
parade him around the clearing hollering and leaping and twirling, jabbing
their spears defiantly into the air. They are pursued by all but the very
youngest children. Goto Dengo, bruised but not damaged by the fall onto the
mucky ground, belly crawls into the jungle and looks for a place of
concealment. The women of the village carry pots and knives towards the
Okinawan's body and begin to cut it up with the conspicuous skill of a sushi
chef dismantling a tuna.
One of them is concentrating entirely on his head. Suddenly she jumps
into the air and begins to dance around the clearing, waving something
bright and glittery. "Ulab! Ulab! Ulab!" she cries ecstatically. Some women
and children begin following her around, trying to get a look at whatever it
is she's holding. Finally she stops and centers her hand in a rare shaft of
sunlight coming down through the trees. Resting in the palm of her hand is a
gold tooth.
"Ulab!" say the women and children. One of the kids tries to snatch it
out of her hand and she knocks him flat on his ass. Then one of the big
spear carrying men runs up and she hands the booty over to him.
Several of the men now gather round to marvel at the find.
The women go back to working over the Okinawan boy, and soon his body
parts are stewing in pots over an open fire.
Chapter 43 SHINOLA
Men who believe that they are accomplishing something by speaking speak
in a different way from men who believe that speaking is a waste of time.
Bobby Shaftoe has learned most of his practical knowledge how to fix a car,
butcher a deer, throw a spiral, talk to a lady, kill a Nip from the latter
type of man. For them, trying to do anything by talking is like trying to
pound in a nail with a screwdriver. Sometimes you can even see the
desperation spread over such a man's face as he listens to himself speak.
Men of the other type the ones who use speech as a tool of their work,
who are confident and fluent aren't necessarily more intelligent, or even
more educated. It took Shaftoe a long time to figure that out.
Anyway, everything was neat and tidy in Bobby Shaftoe's mind until he
met two of the men in Detachment 2702: Enoch Root and Lawrence Pritchard
Waterhouse. He can't put his finger on what bugs him about those two. During
the weeks they spent together on Qwghlm, he spent a lot of time listening to
them yammer at each other, and began to suspect that there might be a third
category of man, a kind so rare that Shaftoe never met any of them until
now.
Officers are discouraged from fraternizing with enlisted men and non
coms, which has made it more difficult for Shaftoe to pursue his research
into the matter. Sometimes, though, circumstances jumble all of the ranks
together willy nilly. A prime example would be this Trinidadian tramp
steamer.
Where do they get this stuff? wonders Shaftoe. Does the U.S. government
keep a bunch of Trinidadian tramp steamers riding at anchor at a naval yard
somewhere, just in case one is needed?
He thinks not. This one shows signs of a very recent and hasty change
of ownership. It is a mother lode of yellowed, ragged, multiethnic
pornography, some of it very run of the mill and some so exotic that he
mistook it for medical literature at first. There is a lot of stray
paperwork on the bridge and in certain cabins, most of which Shaftoe only
sees out of the corner of his eye as these areas tend to be the domain of
officers. The heads are still littered with their predecessors' curly black
pubic hairs, and the storage lockers are sparsely stocked with exotic
Caribbean foodstuffs, much of them rapidly going bad. The cargo hold is
filled with bales and bales of coarse brown fibrous material raw material
for life preservers or bran muffins, he supposes.
None of them much cares, because Detachment 2702 has been freezing its
ass off in the Far North ever since they left Italy a few months ago, and
now they are running around shirtless, of all things. One little airplane
ride, that's all it took, and they were in the balmy Azores. They did not
get any R and R there they went straight from the airfield to the
Trinidadian ship, in the dead of night, huddled under tarps in a covered
truck. But even the warm air that streamed in underneath the tarp felt like
an exotic massage in a tropical whorehouse. And once they steamed out of
sight of port, they were allowed to come up abovedecks and take in some sun.
This gives Bobby Shaftoe the opportunity to strike up a few
conversations with Enoch Root, partly just for the hell of it and partly so
that he can try to figure out this whole business about the third category
of men. Progress comes slowly.
"I don't like the word 'addict' because it has terrible connotations,"
Root says one day, as they are sunning themselves on the afterdeck. "Instead
of slapping a label on you, the Germans would describe you as
'Morphiumsüchtig.' The verb suchen means to seek. So that might be
translated, loosely, as 'morphine seeky' or even more loosely as 'morphine
seeking.' I prefer 'seeky' because it means that you have an inclination to
seek morphine."
"What the fuck are you talking about?" Shaftoe says.
"Well, suppose you have a roof with a hole in it. That means it is a
leaky roof. It's leaky all the time even if it's not raining at the moment.
But it's only leaking when it happens to be raining. In the same way,
morphine seeky means that you always have this tendency to look for
morphine, even if you are not looking for it at the moment. But I prefer
both of them to 'addict,' because they are adjectives modifying Bobby
Shaftoe instead of a noun that obliterates Bobby Shaftoe."
"So what's the point?" Shaftoe asks. He asks this because he is
expecting Root to give him an order, which is usually what men of the
talkative sort end up doing after jabbering on for a while. But no order
seems to be forthcoming, because that's not Root's agenda. Root just felt
like talking about words. The SAS blokes refer to this kind of activity as
wanking.
Shaftoe has had little direct contact with that Waterhouse fellow
during their stay on Qwghlm, but he has noticed that men who have just
finished talking to Waterhouse tend to walk away shaking their heads and not
in the slow way of a man saying "no," but in the sudden convulsive way of a
dog who has a horsefly in his middle ear. Waterhouse never gives direct
orders, so men of the first category don't know what to make of him. But
apparently men of the second category fare no better; such men usually talk
like they have an agenda in their heads and they are checking off boxes as
they go, but Waterhouse's conversation doesn't go anywhere in particular. He
speaks, not as a way of telling you a bunch of stuff he's already figured
out, but as a way of making up a bunch of new shit as he goes along. And he
always seems to be hoping that you'll join in. Which no one ever does,
except for Enoch Root.
After they've been out to sea for a day, the captain (Commander Eden
the same poor son of a bitch who got the job of ramming his previous command
into Norway) staggers out of his cabin, making use of every railing or other
handhold that comes within flailing distance. He announces in a slurred
voice that from here on out, according to orders from On High, anyone going
abovedecks must wear black turtle necks, black gloves, and black ski masks
underneath their other clothes. These articles are duly issued to the men.
Shaftoe gets the skipper really pissed off by asking him three times whether
he's sure he has the order worded correctly. One of the reasons Shaftoe is
so highly regarded by the enlisted men is that he knows how to ask these
kinds of questions without technically violating the rules of military
etiquette. The skipper, to his credit, doesn't just pull rank and yell at
him. He takes Shaftoe back to his cabin and shows him a khaki covered Army
manual, printed in black block letters:
TACTICAL NEGRO IMPERSONATION
VOLUME III: NEGROES OF THE CARIBBEAN
It is a pretty interesting order, even by Detachment 2702 standards.
Commander Eden's drunkenness is also kind of disturbing not the fact that he
is drunk, but the particular type of drunk the sort of drunk of say, a Civil
War soldier who knows that the surgeon is about to remove his femur with a
bucksaw.
After Shaftoe has finished getting the turtlenecks, gloves, and ski
masks passed out to the men, and told them to simmer down and do the
lifeboat drills again, Shaftoe finds Root in what passes for the sickbay.
Because he figures it is time to have one of those open ended conversations
in which you try to figure out a bunch of shit, Root is his man.
"I know you're expecting me to ask for morphine, but I'm not gonna,"
Shaftoe says. "I just want to talk."
"Oh," Root says. "Should I put on my chaplain hat, then?"
"I'm a fucking Protestant. I can talk to God myself whenever I god damn
well feel like it."
Root is startled and bewildered by Shaftoe's burst of hostility. "Well,
what do you want to talk about, Sergeant?"
"This mission."
"Oh. I don't know anything about the mission."
"Well, let's try to figure it out, then," Shaftoe says.
"I thought you were just supposed to follow orders," Root says.
"I'll follow 'em, all right."
"I know you will."
"But in the meantime I got a lot of time to kill, so I might as well
use that time to figure out what the fuck is going on. Now, the skipper says
to wear this stuff if we are abovedecks, where we might be seen. But who the
hell is going to see us, out here?"
"An observation plane?"
"Germans don't have no observation planes, not out there."
"Another ship?" Root asks rhetorically, getting into the spirit of the
thing.
"We'll see them at the same time they see us, and that'll give us
plenty of time to put that shit on."
"It would have to be a U boat that the skipper is worried about, then."
"Bingo," Shaftoe says, "because a U boat could look at us through its
periscope, and we'd never know we were being looked at."
But that day, they don't get much further in their attempt to figure
out the deeper question of why their commanding officers want them to make
themselves look like Negroes in the eyes of German U boat captains.
***
The next day, the skipper plants himself on the bridge, where he
evidently means to keep a close eye on things. He seems less drunk but no
happier. He is wearing a colorful short sleeved madras shirt over a long
sleeved black turtleneck, and rope sandals over black socks. Every so often
he puts on his black gloves and ski mask and goes out to scan the horizon
with binoculars.
The ship continues westwards for a few hours after sunrise, then turns
north for a short time, then heads east for an hour, then goes north again,
then turns back to the west. They are running a search pattern, and
Commander Eden does not appear to be looking forward to finding whatever it
is that they are searching for. Shaftoe runs another lifeboat drill, then
checks the lifeboats himself making sure that they are lavishly stocked.
Around noon, a lookout hollers. The ship changes course, headed roughly
northeast. The skipper emerges from the bridge and, with an air of
sepulchral finality, presents Bobby Shaftoe with a crate of dark brown shoe
polish and a sealed envelope containing detailed orders.
Minutes later, the men of Detachment 2702, under orders from Sergeant
Shaftoe, strip to their briefs and begin coating themselves with shoe
polish. They already own black Shinola, which they are ordered to massage
into their hair if it's not already black. Just another example of how the
military screws the little man Shinola ain't free.
"Do I look like a Negro yet?" Shaftoe asks Root.
"I have traveled a bit," Root says, "and you don't look like a Negro to
me. But to a German who has never seen the genuine article, and who's
looking through a periscope what the heck?" Then: "I take it you've figured
out the mission?"
"I read the fucking orders," Shaftoe says guardedly.
They are headed towards a ship. As they get closer, Shaftoe checks it
out with a borrowed spyglass, and is startled, but not really surprised, to
see that it's not one ship but two ships side by side. Both of these ships
have the long fatal lines of U boats, but one of them is fatter, and he
figures it's a milchcow.
Beneath his feet, he feels the engines throttling back to a dim idle.
The sudden quiet, and the palpable loss of momentum and power, are not
reassuring. He gets the usual sick, electric, nauseous, hyperactive feeling
that always makes combat such a stimulatin' experience.
***
The beat up Trinidadian steamer has plied the waters of the Atlantic
without incident throughout the war to date, running back and forth between
African and Caribbean ports, and occasionally venturing as far north as the
Azores. Perhaps it has been sighted, from time to time, by a patrolling U
boat, and judged to be not worth spending a torpedo on. But today its luck
has changed for the worse. They have, by random chance, blundered across a
milchcow a supply U boat of the Kriegsmarine of the Third Reich. The
steamer's normally jaunty crew of shoe brown Negroes has gathered at the
rails to peer across the ocean at this peculiar sight two ships tied
together in the middle of the ocean, going nowhere. But as they draw closer,
they realize that one of those ships is a killer, and that the other is
flying the battle flag of the Kriegsmarine. Too late, they cut their
engines.
There is wild confusion for a minute or so this might be an interesting
spectacle to the lowly, deck swabbing Negroes, but the smart Negroes up on
the bridge know they're in trouble they've seen something they shouldn't
have. They swing her around to the south and make a run for it! For an hour
they dash desperately across the seas. But they are trailed implacably by a
U boat, cutting through the waves like a Bowie knife. The U boat has its
whip aerial up, is monitoring the usual frequencies, and hears the
Trinidadian steamer fire up her radio and send out an SOS. In a short stream
of dits and dahs, the steamer broadcasts her location and that of the
milchcow, and in so doing taps out her own death warrant.
Pesky untermenschen! They've really gone and done it now! It won't be
twenty four hours before the milchcow is located and sunk by the Allies.
There is a good chance that a few U boats will be hounded to their deaths as
part of the bargain. That is not a good way to die being chased across the
ocean for several days, suffering the death of a thousand cuts from
strafings and bombings. Stuff like this really drives home, to the common
ordinary Obertorpedomaat, the wisdom of the Führer's plan to go out and find
all of the people who aren't Germans and kill them.
Meanwhile, our basic Kapitänleutnant has got to be asking himself: what
the hell are the chances that a tramp Trinidadian steamer is going to just
happen upon us and our milchcow, out in the vastness of the Atlantic Ocean?
You could probably work it out, given the right data:
N [sub n] = number of Negroes per square kilometer
N [sub m] = number of milchcows
A [sub a] =Area of the Atlantic Ocean
and so on. But wait a sec, neither Negroes nor milchcows are randomly
distributed, so the calculation becomes immensely more complicated. Far too
complicated for a Kapitänleutnant to mess around with, especially when he's
busy trying to effect a dramatic reduction in N [sub n]
The Trinidadian steamer is brought up short by a shell fired across her
bows from the U boat's deck gun. The Negroes gather on the decks, but they
hesitate, just for a moment, to launch the lifeboats. Perhaps the Germans
are going to give them a break.
Typical, sloppy, sentimental untermenschen thinking. The Germans
brought them up short so they would hold still to be torpedoed. As soon as
they realize this, the Negroes stage an impressive lifeboat drill. It's
remarkable that they even have enough lifeboats to go around, but the calm,
practiced skill with which they launch and board them is truly phenomenal.
It's enough to make a German naval officer reconsider, just for a moment,
his opinions about the shortcomings of darkies.
It is a textbook torpedoing! The torpedo is set to run nice and deep,
and as it passes underneath the ship, the detonation circuit senses a change
in the magnetic field and triggers the explosive, neatly snapping the ship's
keel, breaking its back, and sending it down with incredible speed. For the
next five or ten minutes, bales of brown stuff erupt from the water,
released from the cargo holds as the ship plummets towards the bottom. It
gives the whole scene an unexpectedly festive air.
Some U boat skippers would not be above machine gunning the survivors,
at this point, just to let off a little steam.
But the commander, Kapitänleutnant Günter Bischoff, is not yet a card
carrying member of the Nazi Party and probably never will be.
On the other hand, Bischoff is wrapped in a straightjacket and blasted
half out of his mind on drugs.
Acting commander of the U boat is Oberleutnant zur See Karl Beck. He is
a card carrying National Socialist, and, in other circumstances, he might be
game for a bit of punitive machine gunning, but at the moment he's exhausted
and pretty badly shook up. He is intensely conscious of the fact that he's
probably not going to live very long now that their location has been
reported.
So he doesn't. The Negroes are jumping out of the lifeboats, swimming
to the bales, and clinging to them with just their heads out of the water,
realizing it would take forever to hunt them all down. OL Beck knows the
Liberators and the Catalinas are already airborne and vectored towards him,
so he has to get the hell out of there. Since he has plenty of fuel, he
decides to head south for a while, planning to double back north in a day or
two, when the coast might be a bit clearer. It is the kind of thing that KL
Bischoff would do if he had not gone crazy, and everyone on the boat has
unlimited respect for the old man.
They run on the surface, as they always do when they are not making a
positive effort to sink a convoy, so they can send and receive radio
messages. Beck gives one to Oberfunkmaat Huffer, explaining what has just
happened, and Huffer gives it to one of his Funkmaats, who sits down in
front of U 691 's Enigma machine and encrypts it using the key for the day,
then taps it out on the radio.
An hour later, they get a message back, straight from U boat Command at
Wilhelmshaven, and when the Funkmaat runs it through the Enigma, what he
comes up with is: CAPTURE SURVIVING OFFICERS.
It's a classic example of military commandsmanship: if the order had
come in a more timely fashion it would have been easy to obey, but now that
they are an hour away it will be extremely difficult and dangerous. The
order doesn't make any sense, and no effort is made to clarify it.
Given the time lag, Beck figures he can get away with giving this one a
half assed try. He really should swing round and approach the wreck on the
surface, which would get him there faster, but which would be nearly
suicidal. So instead, he closes the hatches and descends to periscope depth
as he draws closer. This cuts the U boat's speed to a crawling seven knots,
so it takes them about three hours to get back to the atoll of bobbing brown
bales that marks the site.
A damn good thing, too, because another fucking submarine is there,
picking up survivors. It is a Royal Navy submarine.
This is so weird it makes the hairs on the back of Beck's neck stand up
and there's a lot of hair there, because like most submariners, Beck hasn't
shaved in weeks. There's nothing weird, though, that can't be settled with a
single well placed torpedo. Seconds later the submarine explodes like a
bomb; the torpedo must have touched off her munitions. Her crew, and most of
the rescued Negroes, are trapped within, and don't have a chance of getting
out even if they survived the explosions. The submarine drops off the
surface of the ocean like the wreckage of the Hindenberg tumbling down on
New Jersey.
"Gott in Himmel," Beck mumbles, watching this all through the
periscope. He'd been pleased by the success, until he'd remembered that he
had specific orders, and that killing everyone in sight was not one of them.
Will there be any survivors for him to pick up?
He takes the U boat up onto the surface, and climbs up on the conning
tower with his officers. First thing they do is scan the skies for
Catalinas. Finding none, they post lookouts, then begin to nose the U boat
through the sea of bales, which by now has spread out to cover at least a
square kilometer. It is getting dark, and they have to bring up
searchlights.
All looks rather dismal until one searchlight picks out a survivor just
a head, shoulders, and a pair of arms reaching up clenching a rope around a
bale. The survivor does not move or respond as they approach, and not until
a wave rolls the bale over is it revealed that everything below the man's
solar plexus has been bitten off by sharks. The sight sets even this
hardened crew of murderers to gagging. In the quiet that ensues, they hear
low voices echoing across the calm water. With a bit more searching, they
find two men, evidently talkative sorts, sharing a bale.
When the searchlight picks them out, one of the Negroes lets go of the
bale and dives beneath the surface. The other just stares calmly and
expectantly into the light. This Negro's eyes are pale, almost colorless,
and he has a skin condition: parts of him are turning white.
As they draw closer, the pale eyed Negro speaks to them in perfect
German. "My comrade attempts to drown himself," he explains.
"Is that even possible?" asks Kapitänleutnant Beck.
"He and I were just discussing that very question."
Beck checks his wristwatch. "He must want to kill himself very badly,"
he says.
"Sergeant Shaftoe takes his duty very seriously. It's kind of ironic.
His cyanide capsule dissolved in the seawater."
"I am afraid that all irony has become tedious and depressing to me,"
Beck says, as a body breaks the surface nearby. It is Shaftoe, and he seems
to be unconscious.
"You are?" Beck asks.
"Lieutenant Enoch Root."
"I'm only supposed to take officers," Beck says, casting a cold eye in
the direction of Sergeant Shaftoe's back.
"Sergeant Shaftoe has exceptionally broad responsibilities," says
Lieutenant Root calmly, "in some respects exceeding those of a junior
officer."
"Get them both. Fetch the medicine box. Revive the sergeant," Beck
says. "I will talk to you later, Lieutenant Root." And then he turns his
back on the prisoners, and heads for the nearest hatch. He is going to spend
the next week trying very hard to stay alive, in spite of the best efforts
of the Royal and United States Navies. It's going to be quite an interesting
challenge. He should be thinking about his strategy. But he can't get the
image of Sergeant Shaftoe's back out of his mind. His fucking head was still
underneath the water! If they weren't about to fish him out of the ocean, he
would have succeeded in drowning himself. So it was possible. At least for
one person.
Chapter 44 HOSTILITIES
As the vans, taxis, and limousines pull into the parking lot at the
Ministry of Information site, the members of Epiphyte Corp. are greeted by
smiling and bowing Nipponese virgins wearing, and bearing, gleaming white
Goto Engineering helmets. The time is about eight in the morning, and up
here on the mountain the temperature is still tolerable, though humid.
Everyone mills around before the cavern's maw, carrying their hardhats in
their hands, as no one wants to be the first to put his on and look stupid.
Some of the younger Nipponese executives are mugging hilariously with
theirs. Dr. Mohammed Pragasu circulates. He has an authentically used and
battered hardhat which he whirls absentmindedly around one finger as he
strolls from group to group.
"Has anyone simply asked Prag what the fuck is going on?" says Eb. He
rarely uses English profanity, so when he does, it's funny.
The only member of Epiphyte Corp. who does not at least crack a smile
is John Cantrell, who has been looking distant and tense ever since
yesterday. ("It's one thing to write a dissertation about mathematical
techniques in cryptography," he said, on the way up here, when someone asked
him what was bothering him. "And another to gamble billions of dollars'
worth of Other People's Money on it."
"We need a new category," Randy said. "Other, Bad People's Money."
"Speaking of which " Tom began, but Avi cut him off by glaring
significantly at the back of the driver's head.)
To: dwarf@siblings.net
From: root@eruditorum.org
Subject: Re(3) Why?
Randy,
You ask me to justify my interest in why you are building the Crypt.
My interest is a mark of my occupation. This is, in a sense, what I do
for a living.
You continue to assume that I am someone you know. Today you think I'm
the Dentist, yesterday you thought I was Andrew Loeb. This guessing game
will rapidly become tedious for both of us, so please believe me when I tell
you that we have never met.
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK – (etc.)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
To: root@eruditorum.org From: dwarf@siblings.net Subject: Re(4) Why?
Damn, after you said you did it for a living. I was going to guess that
you were Geb, or another one of my ex girlfriend's crowd.
Why don't you tell me your name?
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK – (etc.)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
To: dwarf@siblings.net From: root@eruditorum.org Subject: Re(5) Why?
Randy, I've already told you my name, and it meant nothing to you. Or
rather, it meant the wrong thing. Names are tricky that way. The best way to
know someone is to have a conversation with them.
Interesting that you assume I'm an academic.
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK – (etc.)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
To: root@eruditorum.org From: dwarf@siblings.net Subject: Re(6) Why?
Gotcha!
I didn't specify who Geb was. And yet you knew that he and my ex
girlfriend were academics. If (as you claim) I don't know you, then how do
you know these things about me?
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK – (etc.)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
Everyone now turns to look towards Prag, who seems to be having trouble
with his peripheral vision today. "Prag is avoiding us," Avi snaps.
"Which means it will be completely impossible for us to reach him until
after this is all over."
Tom steps towards Avi, drawing the corporate circle in closer. "The
investigator in Hong Kong?"
"Got some IDs, struck out on others," Avi says. "Basically, the heavy
set Filipino gentleman is Marcos's bagman. Responsible for keeping the
famous billions out of the hands of the Philippine government. The Taiwanese
guy not Harvard Li but the other one is a lawyer whose family has deep
connections to Japan, dating back to when Taiwan was part of their empire.
He has held down half a dozen government positions at various times, mostly
in finance and commerce now he's sort of a fixer who does jobs of all sorts
for high ranking Taiwanese officials."
"What about the scary Chinese guy?"
Avi raises his eyebrows and heaves a little sigh before answering.
"He's a general in the People's Liberation Army. Equivalent to a four star
rank. He's been working their investment arm for the last fifteen years."
"Investment arm? The Army!?" Cantrell blurts. Re's been getting
uneasier by the minute, and now looks mildly nauseated.
"The People's Liberation Army is a titanic business empire," Beryl
says. "They control the biggest pharmaceutical company in China. The biggest
hotel chain. A lot of the communications infrastructure. Railways.
Refineries. And, obviously, armaments."
"What about Mr. Cellphone?" Randy asks.
"Still working on him. My man in Hong Kong is sending his mug shot to a
colleague in Panama."
"I think that after what we saw in the lobby, we can make some
assumptions," Beryl says. (1)
To: dwarf@siblings.net
From: root@eruditorum.org
Subject: Re(7) Why?
Randy.
You ask how I know these things about you. There are many things I could
say, but the basic answer is surveillance.
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK – (etc.)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
Randy figures there's no better time to ask this question. And because
he's known Avi longer than anyone else, he's the only one who can get away
with asking it. "Do we really want to be involved with these people?" he
says. "Is this what Epiphyte Corp. is for? Is this what we are for?"
Avi heaves a big sigh and thinks about it for a while. Beryl looks at
him searchingly; Eb and John and Tom study their shoes, or search the triple
canopy jungle for exotic avians, while listening intently.
"You know, back in the forty niner days, every gold mining town in
California had a nerd with a scale," Avi says. "The assayer. He sat in an
office all day. Scary looking rednecks came in with pouches of gold dust.
The nerd weighed them, checked them for purity, told them what the stuff was
worth. Basically, the assayer's scale was the exchange point the place where
this mineral, this dirt from the ground, became money that would be
recognized as such in any bank or marketplace in the world, from San
Francisco to London to Beijing. Because of the nerd's special knowledge, he
could put his imprimatur on dirt and make it money. Just like we have the
power to turn bits into money.
"Now, a lot of the people the nerd dealt with were incredibly bad guys.
Peg house habitues. Escaped convicts from all over the world. Psychotic
gunslingers. People who owned slaves and massacred Indians. I'll bet that
the first day, or week, or month, or year, that the nerd moved to the gold
mining town and hung out his shingle, he was probably scared shitless. He
probably had moral qualms too very legitimate ones, perhaps," Avi adds,
giving Randy a sidelong glance. "Some of those pioneering nerds probably
gave up and went back East. But y'know what? In a surprisingly short period
of time, everything became pretty damn civilized, and the towns filled up
with churches and schools and universities, and the sort of howling maniacs
who got there first were all assimilated or driven out or thrown into
prison, and the nerds had boulevards and opera houses named after them. Now,
is the analogy clear?"
"The analogy is clear," Tom Howard says. He is less troubled by this
than any of them, with the possible exception of Avi. But then, his hobby is
collecting and shooting rare automatic weapons.
No one else will say anything; it is Randy's job to be troublesome.
"Uh, how many of those assayers got gunned down in the street after they
pissed off some psychotic gold miner?" he asks.
"I don't have any figures on that," Avi says.
"Well, I am not fully convinced that I really need this," Randy says.
"We all need to decide that question for ourselves," says Avi.
"And then vote, as a corporation whether to stay in or pull out right?"
Randy says.
Avi and Beryl look meaningfully at each other.
"Getting out, at this point, would be, uh, complicated," Beryl says.
Then, seeing a look on Randy's face, she hastens to add: "not for
individuals who might want to leave Epiphyte. That's easy. No problem. But
for Epiphyte to get out of this, uh . . ."
"Situation," Cantrell offers.
"Dilemma," Randy says.
Eb mumbles a word in German.
"Opportunity," Avi counters.
"...would be all but impossible," Beryl says.
"Look," Avi says, "I don't want anyone to feel compelled to stay in a
situation where they have moral qualms."
"Or fear imminent summary execution," Randy adds helpfully.
"Right. Now, we've all put a ton of work into this thing, and that work
ought to be worth something. To be totally above board and explicit, let me
reiterate what is already in the bylaws, which is that anyone can pull out;
we'll buy back your stock. After what's happened here the last couple of
days, I'm pretty confident that we could raise enough money to do so. You'd
make at least as much as if you had stayed home doing a regular salaried
job."
Younger, less experienced high tech entrepreneurs would have scoffed
bitterly at this. But everyone on this crew actually finds it impressive
that Avi can put a company together and keep it alive long enough to make it
worth the work they've put into it.
The black Mercedes cruises up. Dr. Mohammed Pragasu strides over to
meet it, greets the South Americans in fairly decent Spanish, makes a couple
of introductions. The scattered clumps of businessmen begin to draw closer
together, converging on the cavern's entrance. Prag is making a head count,
taking attendance. Someone's missing.
One of the Dentist's aides is maneuvering towards Prag in lavender
pumps, a cellphone clamped to her head. Randy breaks away from Epiphyte and
sets a collision course, reaching Prag's vicinity just in time to hear the
woman tell him, "Dr. Kepler will be joining us late some important business
in California. He sends his apologies."
Dr. Pragasu nods brightly, somehow avoids eye contact with Randy, who
is now close enough to floss Prag's teeth, and turns, clamping his hardhat
down on top of his glossy hair. "Please follow me, everyone," he announces,
"the tour begins."
It is a dull tour, even for those who have never been inside the place.
Whenever Prag leads them to a new spot, everyone looks around and gets their
bearings; conversation lulls for ten or fifteen seconds, then picks up
again; the high ranking executives stare unseeingly at the hewn stone walls
and mutter to each other while their engineering consultants converge on the
Goto engineers and ask them learned questions.
All of the construction engineers work for Goto and are, of course,
Nipponese. There is another who stands apart. "Who's the heavyset blond
guy?" Randy asks Tom Howard.
"German civil engineer on loan to Goto. He seems to specialize in
military issues."
" Are there any military issues?"
"At some point, about halfway into this project, Prag suddenly decided
he wanted the whole thing bombproof."
"Oh. Is that Bomb with a capital B, by any chance?"
"I think he's just about to talk about that," Torn says, leading Randy
closer.
Someone has just asked the German engineer whether this place is
nuclear hardened.
"Nuclear hardened is not the issue," he says dismissively. "Nuclear
hardened is easy it just means that the structure can support a brief
overpressure of so many megapascals. You see, half of Saddam's bunkers were,
technically, nuclear hardened. But this does no good against precision
guided, penetrating munitions as the Americans proved. And it is far more
likely this structure will be attacked in that way than that it would ever
be nuked we do not anticipate that the sultan will get involved in a nuclear
war."
This is the funniest thing that anyone has said all day, and it gets a
laugh.
"Fortunately," the German continues, "this rock above us is far more
effective than reinforced concrete. We are not aware of any earth
penetrating munitions currently in existence that could break through."
"What about the R and D the Americans have done on the Libyan
facility?" Randy asks.
"Ah, you are talking about the gas plant in Libya, buried under a
mountain," the German says, a bit uneasily, and Randy nods.
"That rock in Libya is so brittle," says the German, "you can shatter
it with a hammer. We are working with a different kind of rock here, in many
layers."
Randy exchanges a look with Avi, who looks as if he is about to bestow
another commendation for deviousness. At the same time Randy grins, he
senses someone's stare. He turns and locks eyes with Prag, who is looking
inscrutable, verging on pissed off. A great many people in this part of the
world would cringe and wither under the glare of Dr. Mohammed Pragasu, but
all Randy sees is his old friend, the pizza eating hacker.
So Randy stares right back into Prag's black eyes, and grins. Prag
prepares for the staredown. You asshole, you tricked my German for this you
shall die! But he can't sustain it. He breaks eye contact, turns away, and
raises one hand to his mouth, pretending to stroke his goatee. The virus of
irony is as widespread in California as herpes, and once you're infected
with it, it lives in your brain forever. A man like Prag can come home,
throw away his Nikes, and pray to Mecca five times a day, but he can never
eradicate it from his system.
The tour lasts for a couple of hours. When they emerge, the temperature
has doubled. Two dozen cellphones and beepers sing out as they exit the
radio silence of the cavern. Avi has a brief and clipped conversation with
someone, then hangs up and herds Epiphyte Corp. towards their car. "Small
change of plans," he says. "We need to break away for a little meeting." He
utters an unfamiliar name to the driver.
Twenty minutes later, they are filing into the Nipponese cemetery,
sandwiched between two busloads of elderly mourners.
"Interesting place for a meeting," says Eberhard Föhr.
"Given the people we're dealing with, we have to assume that all of our
rooms, our car, the hotel restaurant, are bugged," Avi snaps. No one speaks
for a minute, as Avi leads them down a gravel path towards a secluded corner
of the garden.
They end up in the corner of two high stone walls. A stand of bamboo
shields them from the rest of the garden, and rustles soothingly in a sea
breeze that does little to cool their sweaty faces. Beryl's fanning herself
with a Kinakuta street map.
"Just got a call from Annie in San Francisco," he says.
Annie in San Francisco is their lawyer.
"It's, uh ... seven P.M. there right now. Seems that just before the
close of business, a courier walked into her office, fresh off the plane
from LA, and handed her a letter from the Dentist's office."
"He's suing us for something," Beryl says.
"He's this far away from suing us."
"For what!?" Tom Howard shouts.
Avi sighs. "In a way, Tom, that is beside the point. When Kepler thinks
it's in his best interests to file a tactical lawsuit, he'll find a pretext.
We must never forget that this is not about legitimate legal issues, it is
about tactics."
"Breach of contract, right?" Randy says.
Everyone looks at Randy. "Do you know something we should know?" asks
John Cantrell.
"Just an educated guess," Randy says, shaking his head. "Our contract
with him states that we are to keep him informed of any changes in
conditions that may materially alter the business climate."
"That's an awfully vague clause," Beryl says reproachfully.
"I'm paraphrasing."
"Randy's right," Avi says. "The gist of this letter is that we should
have told the Dentist what was going on in Kinakuta."
"But we did not know," says Eb.
"Doesn't matter remember, this is a tactical lawsuit."
"What does he want?"
"To scare us," Avi says. "To rattle us. Tomorrow or the next day, he'll
bring in a different lawyer to play good cop to make us an offer."
"What kind of offer?" Tom asks.
"We don't know, of course," Avi says, "but I'm guessing that Kepler
wants a piece of us. He wants to own part of the company."
Light dawns on the face of everyone except Avi himself, who maintains
his almost perpetual mask of cool control. "So it's bad news, good news, bad
news. Bad news number one: Anne's phone call. Good news: because of what has
happened here in the last two days, Epiphyte Corp. is suddenly so desirable
that Kepler is ready to play hardball to get his hands on some of our
stock."
"What's the second bit of bad news?" Randy asks.
"It's very simple." Avi turns away from them for a moment, strolls away
for a couple of paces until he is blocked by a stone bench, then turns to
face them again. "This morning I told you that Epiphyte was worth enough,
now, that we could buy people out at a reasonable rate. You probably
interpreted that as a good thing. In a way, it was. But a small and valuable
company in the business world is like a bright and beautiful bird sitting on
a branch in a jungle, singing a happy song that can be heard from a mile
away. It attracts pythons." Avi pauses for a moment. "Usually, the grace
period is longer. You get valuable, but then you have some time weeks or
months to establish a defensive position, before the python manages to
slither up the trunk. This time, we happened to get valuable while we were
perched virtually on top of the python. Now we're not valuable any more."
"What do you mean?" Eb says. "We're just as valuable as we were this
morning."
"A small company that's being sued for a ton of money by the Dentist is
most certainly not valuable. It probably has an enormous negative value. The
only way to give it positive value again is to make the lawsuit go away.
See, Kepler holds all the cards. After Tom's incredible performance
yesterday, all of the other guys in that conference room probably wanted a
piece of us just as badly as Kepler did. But Kepler had one advantage: he
was already in business with us. Which gave him a pretext for filing the
lawsuit.
"So I hope you enjoyed our morning in the sun, even though we spent it
in a cave," Avi concludes. He looks at Randy, and lowers his voice
regretfully. "And if any of you were thinking of cashing out, let this be a
lesson to you: be like the Dentist. Make up your mind and act fast."
Chapter 45 FUNKSPIEL
Colonel Chattan's aide shakes him awake. The first thing Waterhouse
notices is that the guy is breathing fast and steady, the way Alan does when
he comes in from a cross country run.
"Colonel Chattan requests your presence in the Mansion most urgently."
Waterhouse's billet is in the vast, makeshift camp five minutes' walk from
Bletchley Park's Mansion. Striding briskly whilst buttoning up his shirt, he
covers the distance in four. Then, twenty feet from the goal, he is nearly
run over by a pack of Rolls Royces, gliding through the night as dark and
silent as U boats. One comes so close that he can feel the heat of its
engine; its muggy exhaust blows through his trouser leg and condenses on his
skin.
The old farts from the Broadway Buildings climb out of those Rolls
Royces and precede Waterhouse into the Mansion. In the library, the men
cluster obsequiously round a telephone, which rings frequently and, when
picked up, makes distant, tinny, shouting noises that can be heard, but not
understood, from across the room. Waterhouse estimates that the Rolls Royces
must have driven up from London at an average speed of about nine thousand
miles per hour.
Long tables are being looted from other rooms and chivvied into the
library by glossy haired young men in uniform, knocking flecks of paint off
the doorframes. Waterhouse takes an arbitrary chair at an arbitrary table.
Another aide wheels in a cart of wire baskets piled with file folders, still
smoking from the friction of being jerked out of Bletchley Park's infinite
archives. If this were a proper meeting, mimeographs might have been made up
ahead of time and individually served. But this is sheer panic, and
Waterhouse knows instinctively that he'd better take advantage of his early
arrival if he wants to know anything. So he goes over to the cart and grabs
the folder on the bottom of the stack, guessing that they'd have pulled the
most important one first. It is labeled: U 691.
The first few pages are just a form: a U boat data sheet consisting of
many boxes. Half of them are empty. The other half have been filled in by
different hands using different writing implements at different times, with
many erasures and cross outs and marginal notes written by bet hedging
analysts.
Then there is a log containing everything U 691 is ever known to have
done, in chronological order. The first entry is its launch, at
Wilhelmshaven on September 19, 1940, followed by a long list of the ships it
has murdered. There's one odd notation from a few months ago:
REFITTED WITH EXPERIMENTAL DEVICE (SCHNORKEL?). Since then, U 691 has
been tearing up and down like mad, sinking ships in the Chesapeake Bay,
Maracaibo, the approaches to the Panama Canal, and a bunch of other places
that Waterhouse, until now, has thought of only as winter resorts for rich
people.
Two more people come into the room and take seats: Colonel Chattan, and
a young man in a disheveled tuxedo, who (according to a rumor that makes its
way around the room) is a symphonic percussionist. This latter has clearly
made some effort to wipe the lipstick off his face, but has missed some in
the crevices of his left ear. Such are the exigencies of war.
Yet another aide rushes in with a wire basket filled with ULTRA message
decrypt slips. This looks like much hotter stuff; Waterhouse puts the file
folder back and begins leafing through the slips.
Each one begins with a block of data identifying the Y station that
intercepted it, the time, the frequency, and other minutiae. The heap of
slips boils down to a conversation, spread out over the last several weeks,
between two transmitters.
One of these is in a part of Berlin called Charlottenburg, on the roof
of a hotel at Steinplatz: the temporary site of U boat Command, recently
moved there from Paris. Most of these messages are signed by Grand Admiral
Karl Dönitz. Waterhouse knows that Dönitz has recently become the Supreme
Commander in Chief of the entire German Navy, but he has elected to hold
onto his previous title of Commander in Chief of U boats as well. Dönitz has
a soft spot for U boats and the men who inhabit them.
The other transmitter belongs to none other than U 691. These messages
are signed by her skipper, Kapitänleutnant Günter Bischoff.
Bischoff: Sank another merchantman. This newfangled radar shit is
everywhere.
Dönitz: Acknowledged. Well done.
Bischoff: Bagged another tanker. These bastards seem to know exactly
where I am. Thank god for the schnorkel.
Dönitz: Acknowledged. Nice work as usual.
Bischoff: Sank another merchantman. Airplanes were waiting for me. I
shot one of them down; it landed on me in a fireball and incinerated three
of my men. Are you sure this Enigma thing really works?
Dönitz: Nice work, Bischoff! You get another medal! Don't worry about
the Enigma, it's fantastic.
Bischoff: I attacked a convoy and sank three merchantmen, a tanker, and
a destroyer.
Dönitz: Superb! Another medal for you!
Bischoff: Just for the hell of it, I doubled back and finished off what
was left of that convoy. Then another destroyer showed up and dropped depth
charges on us for three days. We are all half dead, steeped in our own
waste, like rats who have fallen into a latrine and are slowly drowning. Our
brains are gangrenous from breathing our own carbon dioxide.
Dönitz: You are a hero of the Reich and the Führer himself has been
informed of your brilliant success! Would you mind heading south and
attacking the convoy at such and such coordinates? P.S. please limit the
length of your messages.
Bischoff: Actually, I could use a vacation, but sure, what the heck.
Bischoff (a week later): Nailed about half of that convoy for you. Had
to surface and engage a pesky destroyer with the deck gun. This was so
utterly suicidal, they didn't expect it. As a consequence we blew them to
bits. Time for a nice vacation now.
Dönitz: You are now officially the greatest U boat commander of all
time. Return to Lorient for that well deserved R & R.
Bischoff: Actually I had in mind a Caribbean vacation. Lorient is cold
and bleak at this time of year.
Dönitz: We have not heard from you in two days. Please report.
Bischoff: Found a nice secluded harbor with a white sand beach. Would
rather not specify coordinates as I no longer trust security of Enigma.
Fishing is great. Am working on my tan. Feeling somewhat better. Crew is
most grateful.
Dönitz: Günter, I am willing to overlook much from you, but even the
Supreme Commander in Chief must answer to his superiors. Please end this
nonsense and return home.
U 691: This is Oberleutnant zur See Karl Beck, second in command of U
691. Regret to inform you that KL Bischoff is in poor health. Request
orders. P.S. He does not know I am sending this message.
Dönitz: Assume command. Return, not to Lorient, but to Wilhelmshaven.
Take care of Günter.
Beck: KL Bischoff refuses to relinquish command.
Dönitz: Sedate him and get him back here, he will not be punished.
Beck: Thank you on behalf of me and the crew. We are underway, but
short of fuel.
Dönitz: Rendezvous with U 413 [a milchcow] at such and such
coordinates.
Now more people come into the room: a wizened rabbi; Dr. Alan Mathison
Turing; a big man in a herringbone tweed suit whom Waterhouse remembers
vaguely as an Oxford don; and some of the Naval intelligence fellows who are
always hanging around Hut 4. Chattan calls the meeting to order and
introduces one of the younger men, who stands up and gives a situation
report.
"U 691, a Type IXD/42 U boat under the nominal command of
Kapitänleutnant Günter Bischoff, and the acting command of Oberleutnant zur
See Karl Beck, transmitted an Enigma message to U boat Command at 2000 hours
Greenwich time. The message states that, three hours after sinking a
Trinidadian merchantman, U 691 torpedoed and sank a Royal Navy submarine
that was picking up survivors. Beck has captured two of our men: Marine
Sergeant Robert Shaftoe, an American, and Lieutenant Enoch Root, ANZAC."
"How much do these men know?" demands the don, who is making a
stirringly visible effort to sober up.
Chattan fields the question: "If Root and Shaftoe divulged everything
that they know, the Germans could infer that we were making strenuous
efforts to conceal the existence of an extremely valuable and comprehensive
intelligence source."
"Oh, bloody hell," the don mumbles.
An extremely tall, lanky, blond civilian, the crossword puzzle editor
of one of the London newspapers currently on loan to Bletchley Park, hustles
into the room and apologizes for being late. More than half of the people on
the Ultra Mega list are now in this room.
The young naval analyst continues. "At 2110, Wilhelmshaven replied with
a message instructing OL Beck to interrogate the prisoners immediately. At
0150, Beck replied with a message stating that in his opinion the prisoners
belonged to some sort of special naval intelligence unit."
As he speaks, carbon copies of the fresh message decrypts are being
passed round to all the tables. The crossword puzzle editor studies his with
a tremendously furrowed brow. "Perhaps you covered this before I arrived, in
which case I apologize," he says. "but where does the Trinidadian
merchantman come in to all of this?"
Chattan silences Waterhouse with a look, and answers: "I'm not going to
tell you." There is appreciative laughter all around, as if he had just
uttered a bon mot at a dinner party. "But Admiral Dönitz, reading these same
messages, must be just as confused as you are. We should like to keep him
that way."
"Datum 1: He knows a merchantman was sunk," pipes up Turing, ticking
off points on his fingers. "Datum 2: He knows a Royal Navy submarine was on
the scene a few hours later, and was also sunk. Datum 3: He knows two of our
men were pulled out of the water, and that they are probably in the
intelligence business, which is a rather broad categorization as far as I am
concerned. But he cannot necessarily draw any inferences, based upon these
extremely terse messages, about which vessel the merchantman or the
submarine our two men came from."
"Well, that's obvious, isn't it?" says Crossword Puzzle. "They came
from the submarine."
Chattan responds only with a Cheshire grin.
"Oh!" says Crossword Puzzle. Eyebrows go up all around the room.
"As Beck continues to send messages to Admiral Dönitz, the likelihood
increases that Dönitz will learn something we don't want him to know,"
Chattan says. "That likelihood becomes a virtual certainty when U 691
reaches Wilhelmshaven intact."
"Correction!" hollers the rabbi. Everyone is quite startled and there
is a long silence while the man grips the edge of the table with quivering
hands, and rises precariously to his feet. "The important thing is not
whether Beck transmits messages! It is whether Dönitz believes those
messages!"
"Hear, hear! Very astute!" Turing says.
"Quite right! Thank you for that clarification, Herr Kahn," Chattan
says. "Pardon me for just a moment," says the don, "but why on earth
wouldn't he believe them?"
This leads to a long silence. The don has scored a telling point, and
brought everyone very much back to cold hard reality. The rabbi begins to
mumble something that sounds rather defensive, but is interrupted by a
thunderous voice from the doorway: "FUNKSPIEL!"
Everyone turns to look at a fellow who has just come in the door. He is
a trim man in his fifties with prematurely white hair, extremely thick
glasses that magnify his eyes, and a howling blizzard of dandruff covering
his navy blue blazer.
"Good morning, Elmer!" Chattan says with the forced cheerfulness of a
psychiatrist entering a locked ward.
Elmer comes into the room and turns to face the crowd. "FUNKSPIEL!" he
shouts again, in an inappropriately loud voice, and Waterhouse wonders
whether the man is drunk or deaf or both. Elmer turns his back to them and
stares at a bookcase for a while, then turns round to face them again, a
look of astonishment on his face. "Ah was expectin' a chalkboard t'be
there," he says in a Texarkana accent. "What kind of a classroom is this?"
There is nervous laughter around the room as everyone tries to figure out
whether Elmer is cutting loose with some deadpan humor, or completely out of
his mind.
"It means 'radio games,' " says Rabbi Kahn.
"Thank, you, sir!" Elmer responds quickly, sounding pissed off. "Radio
games. The Germans have been playing them all through the war. Now it's our
turn."
Just moments ago, Waterhouse was thinking about how very British this
whole scene was, feeling very far from home, and wishing that one or two
Americans could be present. Now that his wish has come true, he just wants
to crawl out of the Mansion on his hands and knees.
"How does one play these games, Mr., uh..." says Crossword Puzzle.
"You can call me Elmer!" Elmer shouts. Everyone scoots back from him.
"Elmer!" Waterhouse says, "would you please stop shouting?"
Elmer turns and blinks twice in Waterhouse's direction. "The game is
simple," he says in a more normal, conversational voice. Then he gets
excited again and begins to crescendo. "All you need is a radio and a couple
of players with good ears, and good hands!" Now he's hollering. He waves at
the corner where the albino woman with the headset and the percussionist
with lipstick on his ear have been huddled together. "You want to explain
fists, Mr. Shales?"
The percussionist stands up. "Every radio operator has a distinctive
style of keying we call it his fist. With a bit of practice, our Y Service
people can recognize different German operators by their fists we can tell
when one of them has been transferred to a different unit, for example." He
nods in the direction of the albino woman. "Miss Lord has intercepted
numerous messages from U 691, and, is familiar with the fist of that boat's
radio operator. Furthermore, we now have a wire recording of U 691 's most
recent transmission, which she and I have been studying intensively." The
percussionist draws a deep breath and screws his courage up before saying,
"We are confident that I can forge U 691's fist."
Turing chimes in. "And since we have broken Enigma, we can compose any
message we want, and encrypt it just as U 691 would have."
"Splendid. Splendid!" says one of the Broadway Buildings guys.
"We cannot prevent U 691 from sending out her own, legitimate
messages," Chattan cautions, "short of sinking her. Which we are making
every effort to do. But we can muddy the waters considerably. Rabbi?"
Once again, the rabbi rises to his feet, drawing everyone's attention
as they wait for him to fall down. But he doesn't. "I have composed a
message in German naval jargon. Translated into English, it says, roughly,
'Interrogation of prisoners proceeding slowly request permission to use
torture' and then there are several Xs in a row and then is added the words
WARNING AMBUSH U 691 HAS BEEN CAPTURED BY BRITISH COMMANDOS'"
Sharp intakes of breath all around the room.
"Is contemporary German naval jargon a normal part of Talmudic
studies?" asks the don.
"Mr. Kahn has spent a year and a half analyzing naval decrypts in Hut
4," Chattan says. "He has the lingo down pat." He goes on: "we have
encrypted Mr. Kahn's message using today's naval Enigma key, and passed it
on to Mr. Shales, who has been practicing."
Miss Lord rises to her feet, like a child reciting her lessons in a
Victorian school, and says, "I am satisfied that Mr. Shales's rendition is
indistinguishable from U 691's."
All eyes turn towards Chattan, who turns towards the old farts from the
Broadway Buildings, who even now are on the phone relaying all this to
someone of whom they are clearly terrified.
"Don't the Jerrys have huffduff?" asks the Don, as if probing a flaw in
a student's dissertation.
"Their huffduff network is not nearly so well developed as ours,"
responds one of the young analysts. "It is most unlikely that they would
bother to triangulate a transmission that appeared to come from one of their
own U boats, so they probably won't figure out the message originated in
Buckinghamshire, rather than the Atlantic."
"However, we have anticipated your objection," Chattan says, "and made
arrangements for several of our own ships, as well as various aeroplanes and
ground units, to flood the air with transmissions. Their huffduff network
will have its hands full at the time of our fake U 691 transmission."
"Very well," mutters the don.
Everyone sits there in churchly silence while the most senior of the
Broadway Buildings contingent winds up his conversation with Who Is at the
Other End. Elmer hanging up the phone, he intones solemnly, "You are
directed to proceed."
Chattan nods at some of the younger men, who dash across the room, pick
up telephones, and begin to talk in calm, clinical voices about cricket
scores. Chattan looks at his watch. "It will take a few minutes for the
huffduff smokescreen to develop. Miss Lord, you will notify us when the
traffic has risen to a suitably feverish pitch?"
Miss Lord makes a little curtsey and sits down at her radio.
"FUNKSPIEL!" shouts Elmer, scaring everyone half out of their skins,
"We already done sent out some other messages. Made 'em look like Royal Navy
traffic. Used a code the Krauts just broke a few weeks ago. These messages
have to do with an operation a fictitious operation, y'know in which a
German U boat was supposedly boarded and seized by our commandos."
There is a whole lot of tinny shouting from the telephone. The gentle
man who has the bad luck to be holding it translates into what is probably
more polite English: "What if Mr. Shales's performance is not convincing to
the radio operators at Charlottenburg? What if they do not succeed in
decrypting Mr. Elmer's false messages?"
Chattan fields that one. He steps over to a map that has been set up on
an easel at the end of the room. The map depicts a swath of the Central
Atlantic bordered on the east by France and Spain. "U 691's last reported
position was here," he says, pointing to a pin stuck in the lower left
corner of the map. "She has been ordered back to Wllhelmshaven with her
prisoners. She will go this way," he says, indicating a length of red yarn
stretched in a north northeasterly direction, "assuming she avoids the
Straits of Dover." (1)
"There happens to be another milchcow here," Chattan continues,
indicating another pin. "One of our own submarines should be able to reach
it within twenty four hours, at which point it will approach at periscope
depth and engage it with torpedoes. Chances are excellent that the milchcow
will be destroyed immediately. If she has time to send out any
transmissions, she will merely state that she is being attacked by a
submarine. Once we have destroyed this milchcow, we will call once again
upon the skills of Mr. Shales, who will transmit a fake distress call that
will appear to originate from the milchcow, stating that they have come
under attack from none other than U 691."
"Splendid!" someone proclaims.
"By the time the sun rises tomorrow," Chattan concludes, "we will have
one of our very best submarine hunting task forces on the scene. A light
carrier with several antisubmarine planes will comb the ocean night and day,
using radar, visual reconnaissance, huffduff, and Leigh lights to hunt for U
691. The chances are excellent that she will be found and sunk long before
she can approach the Continent. But should she find her way past this
formidable barrier she will find the German Kriegsmarine no less eager to
hunt her down and destroy her. Any information she may transmit to Admiral
Dönitz in the meantime will be regarded with the most profound suspicion."
"So," Waterhouse says, "the plan, in a nutshell, is to render all
information from U 691 unbelievable, and subsequently to destroy her, and
everyone on her, before she can reach Germany."
"Yes," Chattan says, "and the former task will be greatly simplified by
the fact that U 691's skipper is already known to be mentally unstable."
"So it seems likely that our guys, Shaftoe and Root, will not survive,"
Waterhouse says slowly.
There is a long, frozen silence, as if Waterhouse had interrupted high
tea by making farting sounds with his armpit.
Chattan responds in a precise, arch tone that indicates he's really
pissed off. "There is the possibility that when U 691 is engaged by our
forces, she will be forced to the surface and will surrender."
Waterhouse studies the grain of the tabletop. His face is hot and his
chest is burning.
Miss Lord rises to her feet and speaks. Several important heads turn
toward Mr. Shales, who excuses himself and goes to a table in the corner of
the room. He fiddles with the controls on a radio transmitter for a few
moments, spreads the encrypted message out in front of himself, and takes a
deep breath, as though preparing for a big solo. Finally he reaches out,
rests one hand lightly on the radio key, and begins to tap out the message,
rocking from side to side and cocking his head this way and that. Mrs. Lord
listens with her eyes closed, concentrating intensely.
Mr. Shales stops. "Finished," he announces in a quiet voice, and looks
nervously at Mrs. Lord, who smiles. Then there is polite applause around the
library, as if they had just finished listening to a harpsichord concerto.
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse keeps his hands folded in his lap. He has just
heard the death warrant of Enoch Root and Bobby Shaftoe.
Chapter 46 HEAP
To: root@eruditorum.org
From: dwarf@siblings.net
Subject: Re(8) Why?
Let me just take stock of what I know so far: you say that asking
"why?" is part of what you do for a living; you're not an academic; and you
are in the surveillance business. I am having trouble forming a clear
picture.
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK – (etc.)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
To: dwarf@siblings.net
From: root@eruditorum.org
Subject: Re(9) Why?
Randy, I never said that I, myself, am in the surveillance business.
But I know people who are. Formerly public– and now private sector. We
stay in touch. The grapevine and all that. Nowadays, my involvement in such
things is limited to noodling around with novel cryptosystems, as a sort of
hobby.
Now, to get back to what I would consider to be the main thread of our
conversation. You guessed that I was an academic. Were you being sincere, or
was this purely an attempt to "gotcha" me?
The reason I ask is that I am, in fact, a man of the cloth, so
naturally I consider it my job to ask "why?" I assumed this would be fairly
obvious to you. But I should have taken into account that you are not the
churchy type. This is my fault.
It is conventional now to think of clerics simply as presiders over
funerals and weddings. Even people who routinely go to church (or synagogue
or whatever) sleep through the sermons. That is because the arts of rhetoric
and oratory have fallen on hard times, and so the sermons tend not to be
very interesting.
But there was a time when places like Oxford and Cambridge existed
almost solely to train ministers, and their job was not just to preside over
weddings and funerals but also to say something thought provoking to large
numbers of people several times a week. They were the retail outlets of the
profession of philosophy.
I still think of this as the priest's highest calling or at least the
most interesting part of the job hence my question to you, which I cannot
fail to notice, remains unanswered.
– BEGIN ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
(etc.)
– END ORDO SIGNATURE BLOCK
"Randy, what is the worst thing that ever happened?"
This is never a difficult question to answer when you are hanging
around with Avi. "The Holocaust," Randy says dutifully.
Even if he didn't know Avi, their surroundings would give him a hint.
The rest of Epiphyte Corp. have gone back to the Foote Mansion to prepare
for hostilities with the Dentist. Randy and Avi are sitting on a black
obsidian bench planted atop the mass grave of thousands of Nipponese in
downtown Kinakuta, watching the tour buses come and go.
Avi pulls a small GPS receiver out of his attache case, turns it on,
and sets it out on a boulder in front of them where it will have a clear
view of the sky. "Correct! And what is the highest and best purpose to which
we can devote our allotted lifespans?"
"Uh . . . enhancing shareholder value?"
"Very funny." Avi is annoyed. He is baring his soul, which he does
rarely. Also, he's in the midst of cataloging another small h holocaust
site, adding it to his archives. It is clear he would appreciate some
fucking solemnity here. "I visited Mexico a few weeks ago," Avi continues.
"Looking for a site where the Spanish killed a bunch of Aztecs?" Randy
asks.
"This is exactly the kind of thing I'm fighting," Avi says, even more
irritated. "No, I was not looking for a place where a bunch of Aztecs were
massacred. The Aztecs can go fuck themselves, Randy! Repeat after me: the
Aztecs can go fuck themselves,"
"The Aztecs can go fuck themselves," Randy says cheerfully, drawing a
baffled look from an approaching Nipponese tour guide.
"To begin with, I was hundreds of miles from Mexico City, the former
Aztec capital. I was on the outer fringes of the territory that the Aztecs
controlled." Avi scoops his GPS off the boulder and begins to punch keys on
its pad, telling it to store the latitude and longitude in its memory. "I
was looking," Avi continues, "for the site of a Nahuatl city that was raided
by the Aztecs hundreds of years before the Spanish even showed up. You know
what those fucking Aztecs did, Randy?"
Randy uses his hands to squeegee away sweat from his face. "Something
unspeakable?"
"I hate that word 'unspeakable.' We must speak of it."
"Speak then."
"The Aztecs took twenty five thousand Nahuatl captives, brought them
back to Tenochtitlan, and killed them all in a couple of days."
"Why?"
"Some kind of festival. Super Bowl weekend or something. I don't know.
The point is, they did that kind of shit all the time. But now, Randy, when
I talk about Holocaust type stuff happening in Mexico, you give me this shit
about the mean nasty old Spaniards! Why? Because history has been distorted,
that's why."
"Don't tell me you're about to come down on the side of the Spaniards."
"As the descendant of people who were expelled from Spain by the
Inquisition, I have no illusions about them," Avi says, "but, at their
worst, the Spaniards were a million times better than the Aztecs. I mean, it
really says something about how bad the Aztecs were that, when the
Spaniards, showed up and raped the place, things actually got a lot better
around there."
"Avi?"
"Yes."
"We are sitting here in the Sultanate of Kinakuta, trying to build a
data haven while fending off an oral surgeon turned hostile take over maven.
I have pressing responsibilities in the Philippines. Why are we discussing
the Aztecs?"
"I'm giving you a pep talk," Avi says. "You are bored. Dangerously so.
The Pinoy gram thing was cool for a while, but now it's up and running,
there's no new technology there."
"True."
"But the Crypt is amazingly cool. Tom and John and Eb are going nuts,
and every Secret Admirer in the world is spamming me with resumes. The Crypt
is exactly what you would like to be doing right now."
"Again, true."
"Even if you were working on the Crypt, though, philosophical issues
would be gnawing at you issues based on the types of people who you see
getting involved, who may be our first customers."
"I cannot deny that I have philosophical issues," Randy says. Suddenly
he has come up with a new hypothesis: Avi is actually root@eruditorum.org.
"Instead, you are laying cable in the Philippines. This is a job that
because of changes we just became aware of yesterday is basically irrelevant
to our corporate mission. But it's a lingering contractual obligation, and
if we put anyone less important than you on it, the Dentist will be able to
prove to the most half witted jury of tofu brained Californians that we are
malingering."
"Well, thank you for making it so clear why I should be miserable,"
Randy says forbearingly.
"So," Avi continues, "I wanted to let you know that you aren't
necessarily just making license plates here. And furthermore that the Crypt
is not a morally bankrupt endeavor. Actually, you are playing a big role in
the most important thing in the world."
Randy says, "You asked me earlier what is the highest and best purpose
to which we could dedicate our lives. And the obvious answer is 'to prevent
future Holocausts.'"
Avi laughs darkly. "I'm glad it's obvious to you, my friend. I was
beginning to think I was the only one."
"What!? Get over yourself, Avi. People are commemorating the Holocaust
all the time."
"Commemorating the Holocaust is not, not not not not not, the same
thing as fighting to prevent future holocausts. Most of the
commemorationists are just whiners. They think that if everyone feels bad
about past holocausts, human nature will magically transform, and no one
will want to commit genocide in the future."
"I take it you do not share this view, Avi?"
"Look at Bosnia!" Avi scoffs. "Human nature doesn't change, Randy.
Education is hopeless. The most educated people in the world can turn into
Aztecs or Nazis just like that." He snaps his fingers.
"So what hope is there?"
"Instead of trying to educate the potential perpetrators of holocausts,
we try to educate the potential victims. They will at least pay some fucking
attention."
"Educate them in what way?"
Avi closes his eyes and shakes his head. "Oh, shit, Randy, I could go
on for hours I have drawn up a whole curriculum."
"Okay, we'll get into that later."
"Definitely later. For now, the key point is that the Crypt is all
important. I can take all of my ideas and put them into a single pod of
information, but almost every government in the world would prevent
distribution to its citizens. It is essential to build the Crypt so that the
HEAP can be freely distributed throughout the world."
"HEAP?"
"Holocaust Education and Avoidance Pod."
"Oh, Jesus Christ!"
"This is the true meaning of what you are working on," Avi says, "and
so I urge you not to lose heart. Whenever you are about to get bored
stamping out those license plates in the Philippines, think of the HEAP.
Think of what those Nahuatl villagers could have done to those fucking
Aztecs if they'd had a holocaust prevention manual a handbook on guerilla
warfare tactics."
Randy sits and ponders for a while. "We have to go and buy some water,"
he finally says. "I've sweated away a few liters just sitting here."
"We can just go back to the hotel," Avi says, "I'm basically finished."
"You're finished. I haven't even started," Randy says.
"Started what?"
"Telling you why there's no chance I'm going to be bored in the
Philippines."
Avi blinks. "You met a girl?"
"No!" Randy says testily, meaning Yes, of course. "Come on, let's go."
They go to a nearby 24 Jam and purchase bluish plastic bottles of water
the size of cinderblocks. Then they wander around through streets crowded
with unbearably savory smelling food carts, guzzling the water.
"I got e mail from Doug Shaftoe a few days ago," Randy says. "From his
boat, via satellite phone."
"In the clear?"
"Yeah. I keep bothering him to get Ordo and encrypt his e mail, but he
won't."
"That is really unprofessional," Avi grumbles. "He needs to be more
paranoid."
"He's so paranoid that he doesn't even trust Ordo." Avi's scowl eases.
"Oh. That's okay then."
"His e mail contained a stupid joke about Imelda Marcos."
"You took me on this walk to tell me a joke?"
"No, no, no," Randy says. "The joke was a prearranged signal. Doug told
me that he would send me e mail containing an Imelda joke if a certain thing
happened."
"What certain thing?"
Randy takes a big swig of water, draws a deep breath, and composes
himself. "More than a year ago, I had a conversation with Doug Shaftoe
during that big party that the Dentist threw on board the Rui Faleiro. He
wanted us to hire his company, Semper Marine Services, to do the survey work
on all future cable lays. In return he offered to cut us in on any sunken
treasure he found while performing the survey."
Avi skids to a stop and clutches his water bottle in both hands as if
he's afraid he might drop it. "Sunken treasure, like, yo ho ho and a bottle
of rum? Pieces of six? That kind of thing?"
"Pieces of eight. Same basic idea," Randy says. "The Shaftoes are
treasure hunters. Doug is obsessed with the idea that there are vast hoards
of treasure in and around the Philippines."
"From where? Those Spanish galleons?"
"No. Well, yes, actually. But that's not what Doug's after." He and Avi
have begun walking again. "Most of it is either much older than that pottery
from sunken Chinese junks or much more recent Japanese war gold."
As Randy had expected, the mention of Japanese war gold makes a huge
impact on Avi. Randy keeps talking. "Rumor has it that the Nipponese left a
lot of gold in the area. Supposedly, Marcos recovered a big stash buried in
a tunnel somewhere that's where he got all his money. Most people think
Marcos was worth something like five, six billion dollars, but a lot of
people in the Philippines think he recovered more like sixty billion."
"Sixty billion!" Avi's spine stiffens. "Impossible."
"Look, you can believe the rumors or not, I don't care," Randy says.
"But since it looks like one of Marcos's bag men is going to be a founding
depositor in the Crypt, it is the kind of thing you should know."
"Keep talking," Avi says, suddenly ravenous for data.
"Okay. So people have been running all over the Philippines ever since
the war, digging holes and dredging the seafloor, trying to find the
legendary Nipponese war gold. Doug Shaftoe is one of those people. Problem
is, making a thorough sidescan sonar survey of the whole area is quite
expensive you can't just go out and do it on spec. He saw an opportunity
when we came along."
"I see. Very smart," Avi says approvingly. "He would do the survey work
that we needed anyway, in order to lay the cables."
"Perhaps a bit more than was strictly necessary, as long as he was out
there."
"Right. Now I remember some angry mail from the Dentist's due diligence
harpies because the survey was costing too much and taking too long. They
felt we could have hired a different company and gotten the same results
quicker and cheaper."
"They were probably right," Randy admits. "Anyway, Doug wanted to cut a
deal that gave us ten percent of whatever he found. More, if we wanted to
underwrite recovery operations."
All of a sudden Avi's eyes go wide and he swallows a big gulp of air.
"Oh, shit," he says. "He wanted to keep the whole thing a secret from the
Dentist."
"Exactly. Because the Dentist would end up taking all of it. And
because of the Dentist's peculiar domestic situation, that means that the
Bolobolos would know everything about it too. These guys would happily kill
to get their hands on gold."
"Wow!" Avi says, shaking his head. "Y'know, I don't want to seem like
one of those hackneyed Jews that you see in heartwarming movies. But at
times like this, all I can say is 'Oy, gevalt!' "
"I never told you about this deal, Avi, for two reasons. One of them is
just our general policy of not blabbing about things. The other reason is
that we decided to hire Semper Marine Services anyway just on their own
merits so Doug Shaftoe's proposition was irrelevant."
Avi thinks this one over. "Correction. It was irrelevant, as long as
Doug Shaftoe didn't find any sunken treasure."
"Right. And I assumed that he wouldn't."
"You assumed wrong."
"I assumed wrong," Randy admits. "Shaftoe has found the remains of an
old Nipponese submarine."
"How do you know that?"
"If he found a Chinese junk he was going to send me a joke about
Ferdinand Marcos. If he found World War II stuff, it was going to be Imelda.
If it was a surface ship, it was going to be about Imelda's shoes. If it was
a submarine, her sexual habits. He sent me a joke about Imelda's sexual
habits."
"Now, did you ever formally respond to Doug Shaftoe's proposition?" Avi
says.
"No. Like I said, it wasn't relevant, we were going to hire him any
way. But then, after the contracts were all signed and we were drawing up
the survey schedule, he told me about this code involving the Marcos jokes.
I realized then he believed that by hiring him, we had implicitly said yes
to his proposition."
"It's a funny way to do business," Avi says, wrinkling his nose. "You'd
think he would have been more explicit."
"He is the kind of guy who does deals on a handshake. On personal
honor," Randy says. "Once he had made the proposition, he would never
withdraw it."
"The problem with those honorable men," Avi says, "is that they expect
everyone else to be honorable in the same way."
"It is true."
"So he believes, now, that we are accomplices in this plan to hide the
existence of this sunken treasure from the Dentist and the Bolobolos," Avi
says.
"Unless we come clean to them right away."
"In which case we are betraying Doug Shaftoe," Avi says.
"Cravenly backstabbing the ex SEAL who served six years of combat duty
in Vietnam, and who has scary and well connected friends all over the
world," Randy adds.
"Damn, Randy! I thought I was going to freak you out by telling you
about the HEAP."
"You did."
"And then you spring this on me!"
"Life's rich pageant. And all that," Randy says.
Avi thinks for a minute. "Well, I guess it comes down to whom would we
rather have on our side in a bar fight."
"The answer can only be Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe," Randy says. "But
that doesn't mean we'll make it out of the bar alive."
Chapter 47 SEEKY
They have stuffed him into the narrow gap between the U boat's slotted
outer hull and the pressure hull within, so that bitterly cold, black water
streams through with the bludgeoning force of a firehose and wracks him with
malarial chills: bones cracking, joints freezing, muscles knotting. He is
wedged in tightly between uneven surfaces of hard rough steel, bending him
in ways he's not supposed to bend, and punishing him when he tries to move.
Barnacles are beginning to grow on him: sort of like lice but bigger and
capable of burrowing deeper into the flesh. Somehow he is able to fight for
breath anyway, just enough to stay alive and really savor just how
unpleasant the situation is. He's been breathing cold seawater for a long
time, it has made his windpipe raw, and he suspects that plankton or
something are eating his lungs from the inside out. He pounds on the
pressure hull but the impact makes no noise. He can sense the warmth and
heat inside, and he would like to get in and enjoy both of them. Finally
some kind of dream logic thing happens and he finds a hatch. The current
sweeps Shaftoe out, leaving him suspended alone in the watery cosmos, and
the U boat hisses away and abandons him. Shaftoe is lost now. He cannot tell
up from down. Something bashes him on the head. He sees a few black drumlike
things moving inexorably through the water with parallel comet trails of
bubbles behind them. Depth charges.
Then Shaftoe comes awake and knows that this was all just his body
desiring morphine. He is certain for a moment that he is back in Oakland and
that Lieutenant Reagan is looming over him, preparing for Phase 2 of the
interview.
"Good afternoon, Sergeant Shaftoe," Reagan says. He has adopted a heavy
German accent for some reason. A joke. These actors! Shaftoe smells meat,
and other things not so inviting. Something heavy, but not especially hard,
thuds into his face. Then it draws back. Then it hits him again.
***
"Your companion is morphium seeky?" says Beck.
Enoch Root is a bit taken aback; they've only been on the boat for
eight hours. "Is he already making a nuisance of himself?"
"He is semiconscious," Beck says, "and has a great deal to say about
giant lizards among other subjects."
"Oh, that's normal for him," Root says, relieved. "What makes you think
he is morphium seeky?"
"The morphium bottle and hypodermic syringe that were in his pocket,"
Beck says with that deadpan Teutonic irony, "and the needle marks in his
arms."
Root observes that the U boat is like a tunnel bored out of the sea and
lined with hardware. This cabin (if that's not too grand a word for it) is
by far the largest open space Root has seen, meaning that he can almost
stretch his arms out without hitting someone or inadvertently tripping a
switch or a valve. It even sports some wooden cabinetry, and has been sealed
off from the corridor by a leather curtain. When they first brought Root in
here, he thought it was a storage closet. But as he looks around the place,
he begins to realize that it's the nicest place on the whole boat: the
captain's private cabin. This is confirmed when Beck unlocks a desk drawer
and produces a bottle of Armagnac.
"Conquering France hath its privileges," Beck says.
"Yeah," Root says, "you blokes really know how to sack a place."
***
Lieutenant Reagan is back again, molesting Bobby Shaftoe with a
stethoscope that appears to have been kept in a bath of liquid nitrogen
until ready for use. "Cough, cough, cough!" he keeps saying. Finally he
takes the instrument away.
Something is fucking with Shaftoe's ankles. He tries to get up on his
elbows to look, and smashes his face into a blistering hot pipe. When he's
recovered from that, he peeks carefully down the length of his body and sees
a goddamn hardware store down there. The bastards have put him in leg irons!
He lies back down and gets slugged in the face by a dangling ham. Above
him is a firmament of pipes and cables. Where has he seen this before? On
the Dutch Hammer, that's where. Except the lights are on in this U boat, and
it doesn't appear to be sinking, and it's full of Germans. The Germans are
calm and relaxed. None of them is bleeding or screaming. Damn! The boat
rocks sideways, and a giant Blutwurst socks him in the belly.
He begins looking around, trying to get his bearings. There's not much
else to see except hanging meat. This cabin is a six foot long slice of U
boat, with a narrow gangway down the center, hemmed in by bunks. Or maybe
they are bunks. The one directly across from him is occupied by a dirty
canvas sack.
Fuck that. Where is the box with the purple bottles?
***
"It is amusing to read my communications from Charlottenburg," Beck
says to Root, changing the subject to the message decrypts on his table.
"They were perhaps written by that Jew Kafka."
"How so?"
"It seems that they do not expect that we will ever make it home
alive."
"What makes you say that?" Root says, trying not to savor the Armagnac
too much. When he brings it up to his nose and inhales, its perfume nearly
obliterates the reek of urine, vomit, rotten food, and diesel that suffuses
everything on the U boat down to the atomic level.
"They are pressing us for information about our prisoners. They are
very interested in you guys," Beck says.
"In other words," Root says carefully, "they want you to question us
now."
"Precisely."
"And send the results in by radio?"
"Yes," Beck says. "But I really should be concentrating on how to keep
us alive the sun will be up soon, and then we are in for some very bad
trouble. You'll remember that your ship radioed our coordinates before I
sunk it. Every allied plane and ship is now out looking for us."
"So, if I cooperate," Root says, "you can get back to the business of
keeping us all alive."
Beck tries to control a smile. His little tactic was crude and obvious
to begin with, and Root has already seen through it. Beck is, if any thing,
more uncomfortable than Root with this whole interrogation business.
"Suppose I tell you everything I know," Root says. "If you send it all
back to Charlottenburg, you'll be running your radio, on the surface, for
hours. Huffduff will pick you out in a few seconds and then every destroyer
and bomber within a thousand miles will jump on you."
"On us," Beck corrects him.
"Yes. So if I really want to stay alive, it's best if I shut up," Root
says.
***
"Are you looking for this?" says the German with the stethoscope, who
(Shaftoe has learned) is not a real doctor just the guy who happens to be in
charge of the box of medical stuff. Anyway, he is holding up just the thing.
The very thing.
"Gimme that!" Shaftoe says, making a weak grab for it. "That's mine!"
"Actually, it's mine," the medic says. "Yours is with the captain. I
might share some of mine with you, if you are cooperative."
"Fuck you," Shaftoe says.
"Very well then," the medic says, "I will by leave it." He puts the
syringe full of morphine on the bunk opposite and one level below Shaftoe's,
so that Shaftoe, by peering between a couple of Knockwursts, can see it. But
he can't reach it. Then the medic leaves.
***
"Why was Sergeant Shaftoe carrying a German morphine bottle and a
German syringe?" says Beck quizzically, doing his best to make it sound
conversational and not interrogational. But the effort is too much for him
and that smile tries to seize control of his lips again. It is the smile of
a whipped dog. Root finds this somewhat alarming, since Beck's the guy in
charge of keeping everyone on the boat alive.
"That's news to me," Root says.
"Morphine is closely regulated," Beck says. "Each bottle has a number.
We have already radioed the number on Sergeant Shaftoe's bottle to
Charlottenburg, and soon they'll know where it came from. Even though they
may not tell us."
"Good work. That should keep them busy for a while. Why don't you go
back to running the ship?" Root suggests.
"We are in the calm before the storm," Beck says, "and I have not so
much to do. So I try to satisfy my own curiosity about you."
***
"We're fucked, aren't we!?" says a German voice.
"Huh?" Shaftoe says.
"I said, we're fucked! You guys broke the Enigma!"
"What's the Enigma?"
"Don't play stupid," says the German.
Shaftoe feels prickly on the back of his neck. That sounds exactly like
the kind of thing a German would say before commencing torture.
Shaftoe composes his face into the cool, heavy lidded, dopey expression
that he always uses when he's trying to irritate an officer. As best he can
when his legs are bolted down, he rolls over on his side, towards the sound
of the voice. He is expecting to see an aquiline SS officer in a black
uniform, jackboots, death's head insignia, and riding crop, perhaps
twiddling a pair of thumbscrews in his black leather gloves.
Instead he sees no one at all. Shit! Hallucinations again!
Then the dirty canvas sail bag in the bunk opposite him begins to move
around. Shaftoe blinks and resolves a head sticking out of one end: straw
blond but prematurely half bald, contrasting black beard, catlike pale green
eyes. The man's canvas garment is not exactly a bag, but a voluminous
overcoat. He has his arms crossed over his body.
"Oh, well," the German mutters, "I was just trying to make
conversation." He turns his head and scratches his nose by nuzzling his
pillow for a while. "You can tell me any secret you want," he says. "See,
I've already notified Dönitz that the Enigma is shit. And it made no
difference. Except he ordered me a new overcoat. The man rolls over,
exposing his back to Shaftoe. The sleeves of the garment are sewn shut at
the ends and tied together behind his back. "It is more comfortable than you
would think, for the first day or two."
***
A mate pulls the leather curtain aside, nods apologetically, and hands
Beck a fresh message decrypt. Beck reads it, raises his eyebrows, and blinks
tiredly. He sets it down on the table and stares at the wall for fifteen
seconds. Then he picks it up and reads it again, carefully.
"It says that I am not to ask you any more questions."
"What!?"
"Under no circumstances," Beck says, "am I to extract any more
information from you."
"What the hell does that mean?"
"Probably that you know something I am not authorized to know," Beck
says.
***
It has been about two hundred years, now, since Bobby Shaftoe had a
trace of morphine in his system. Without it, he cannot know pleasure or even
comfort.
The syringe gleams like a cold star on the shelf underneath the crazy
German in the straitjacket. He'd rather that they just tore his fingernails
out or something.
He knows he's going to crack. He tries to think of a way to crack that
won't kill any Marines.
"I could bring you the syringe in my teeth," suggests the man, who has
introduced himself as Bischoff.
Shaftoe mulls it over. "In exchange for?"
"You tell me whether the Enigma has been decrypted."
"Oh." Shaftoe's relieved; he was afraid maybe Bischoff was going to
demand a blow job. "That's the code machine thingamajig you were telling me
about?" He and Bischoff have had a lot of time to shoot the breeze.
"Yeah."
Shaftoe's desperate. But he's also highly irritable, which serves him
well now. "You expect me to believe that you are just a crazy guy who is
curious about Enigma, and not a German naval officer who's dressed up in a
straitjacket to trick me?"
Bischoff is exasperated. "I already said that I've told Dönitz that
Enigma is crap! So if you tell me it's crap, that doesn't make any
difference!"
***
"Let me ask you a question, then," Root says.
"Yes?" Beck says, making a visible effort to raise his eyebrows and
look like he cares.
"What have you told Charlottenburg about us?"
"Names, ranks, serial numbers, circumstances of capture."
"But you told them that yesterday."
"Correct."
"What have you told them recently?"
"Nothing. Except for the serial number on the morphium bottle."
"And how long after you told them that did they send you the message to
stop extracting information from us?"
"About forty five minutes," Beck says. "So, yes, I would very much like
to ask you where that bottle came from. But it is against orders."
***
"I might consider answering your question about Enigma," Shaftoe says,
"if you tell me whether this pipe bomb is carrying any gold."
Bischoff's brow furrows; he's having translation problems. "You mean
money? Geld?"
"No. Gold. The expensive yellow metal."
"A little, maybe," Bischoff says.
"Not petty cash," Shaftoe says. "Tons and tons."
"No. U boats don't carry tons of gold," Bischoff says flatly.
"I'm sorry you said that, Bischoff. Because I thought you and I were
starting a good relationship. Then you went and lied to me you fuck!"
To Shaftoe's surprise and mounting irritation, Bischoff thinks that
it's absolutely hilarious to be called a fuck. "Why the hell should I lie to
you? For god's sake, Shaftoe! Since you bastards broke Enigma and put radar
on everything that moves, virtually every U boat that's put to sea has been
sunk! Why would the Kriegsmarine load tons of gold onto a ship that they
know is doomed! ?"
"Why don't you ask the guys who loaded it on board U 553?"
"Ha! This only proves you are full of shit!" Bischoff says. "U 553 was
sunk a year ago, during a convoy attack."
"Not so. I was on board it just a couple of months ago," Shaftoe says,
"off Qwghlm. It was full of gold."
"Bullshit," Bischoff says. "What was painted on its conning tower?"
"A polar bear holding a beer stein."
Long silence.
"You want to know more? I went into the captain's cabin," Shaftoe said,
"and there was a photo of him with some other guys, and now that I think of
it, one of them looked like you."
"What were we doing?"
"You were all in swimming trunks. You all had whores on your laps!"
Shaftoe shouts. "Unless those were your wives in which case I'm sorry your
wife is a whore!"
"Oh, ho ho ho ho ho!" Bischoff says. He rolls onto his back and stares
up into the plumbing for a while, considering this, and then continues. "Ho
ho ho ho ho ho ho!"
"What, did I just say something secret? Fuck you and your mother if I
did," Shaftoe says.
"Beck!" Bischoff screams. "Achtung!"
"What're you doing?" Shaftoe asks.
"Getting you your morphine."
"Oh. Thank you."
Half an hour later, the skipper's there. Pretty punctual by officer
standards. He and Bischoff talk for a while in German. Shaftoe hears the
word morphium several times. Finally, the skipper summons the medic, who
pokes the needle into Shaftoe's arm and injects about half of it.
"You have something to say?" the skipper asks Shaftoe. Seems like a
nice enough guy. They all seem like pretty nice guys, now.
First, Shaftoe addresses Bischoff. "Sir! I'm sorry I used harsh
language on you, sir!"
"It's okay," Bischoff replied, "she was a whore, like you said."
The skipper clears his throat impatiently.
"Yeah. I was just wondering," Shaftoe says turning to the skipper, "you
have any gold on this U boat?"
"The yellow metal?"
"Yeah. Bars of it."
The captain is still nonplussed. Shaftoe is beginning to feel a certain
mischievous satisfaction. Playing with officers' minds isn't as good as
having a brain saturated with highly refined opiates, but it will do in a
pinch. "I thought all these U boats carried it," he says.
Beck dismisses the medic. Then he and Bischoff talk about Shaftoe for a
while in German. In the middle of this conversation, Beck drops some kind of
a bomb on Bischoff. Bischoff is stunned, and refuses to believe it for a
while, and Beck keeps telling him it's true. Then Bischoff goes back into
that strange ho ho ho thing.
"He can't ask you questions," Bischoff says. "Orders from Berlin. Ho,
ho! But I can."
"Shoot," Shaftoe says.
"Tell us more about gold."
"Give me more morphine."
Beck summons the medic again, and the medic gives him the rest of the
syringe. Shaftoe's never felt better. What a fucking deal! He's getting
morphine out of the Germans in exchange for telling them German military
secrets.
Bischoff starts interrogating Shaftoe in depth, while Beck watches.
Shaftoe tells the whole story of U 553 about three times over. Bischoff is
fascinated, Beck looks sad and scared.
When Shaftoe mentions that the gold bars had Chinese characters stamped
on them, both Beck and Bischoff are floored. Their faces come aglow, as if
lit up by the scanning beam of a Leigh light on a moonless night. Beck
begins to sniffle, as if he's caught a cold, and Shaftoe's startled to
realize that he's actually crying. He is crying tears of shame. But Bischoff
is still fascinated and focused.
Then a mate bursts in and hands Beck a message. The mate is clearly
shocked and scared out of his wits. He keeps looking, not at Beck, but at
Bischoff.
Beck gets a grip on himself and reads the message. Bischoff lunges out
of his bunk, hooks his chin over Beck's shoulder, and reads it at the same
time. They look like a two headed circus geek who hasn't bathed since the
Hoover Administration. Neither speaks for at least a minute. Bischoff is
silent because his mental wheels are spinning like the gyroscope of a
torpedo. Beck is silent because he's on the verge of blacking out. Outside
the cabin, Shaftoe can hear the news, whatever it is, traveling up and down
the length of the U boat with the speed of sound.
Some of the men are shouting in rage, some sobbing, some laughing
hysterically. Shaftoe figures a big battle must have been won, or lost.
Maybe Hitler's been assassinated. Maybe Berlin's been sacked.
Beck is now visibly terrified.
The medic enters. He has adopted an erect military posture the first
time Shaftoe's seen such formality on the U boat. He addresses Beck briefly
in German. Beck nods continuously while the medic is talking. Then he helps
the doctor get Bischoff out of his straitjacket.
Bischoff's a bit stiff, a bit unsteady, but he limbers up fast. He's
shorter than average, with a strong frame and a trim waist, and as he
pounces from bunk to deck, he reminds Shaftoe of a jaguar deploying itself
from a tree. He shakes hands heartily with the medic, and with the miserable
Beck. Then he opens the hatch that leads towards the control room. Half the
crew is jammed into the gangway, watching that door, and when they see
Bischoff, ecstasy floods over their faces and they erupt into wild cheering.
Bischoff accepts handshakes from all of them, making his way towards his
duty station like a politician through an adoring crowd. Beck slinks out the
other hatch and loses himself among the hammering diesels.
Shaftoe has no idea what the fuck's going on until Root shows up a
quarter of an hour later. Root picks the message up off the deck and reads
it. His perpetually bemused affect, normally so annoying, serves him well at
times like this. "This is a broadcast to all ships at sea from German
supreme naval command, Tirpitzufer, Berlin. It says that U 691 which is this
boat we're on, Bobby has been boarded and captured by Allied commandos, and
has already attacked and sunk a milchcow in the Atlantic. Now it appears to
be on its way towards continental Europe where it will presumably try to
infiltrate German naval bases and sink more ships. All German naval and air
forces are ordered to be on the lookout for U 691 and to destroy it on
sight."
"Shit," Shaftoe says.
"We are on the wrong boat at the wrong time," Root says.
"What's the deal with that Bischoff character?"
"He was relieved of command earlier. Now he's back."
"That maniac's running the boat?"
"He is the captain," Root says.
"Well, where's he going to take us?"
"I'm not sure if even he knows that."
***
Bischoff goes to his cabin and pours himself a slug of that Armagnac.
Then he goes to the chart room, which he's always preferred to his cabin.
The chart room is the only civilized place on the whole boat. It's got a
beautiful sextant in a polished wooden box, for example. Speaking tubes
converge here from all over the boat, and even though no one is speaking
into them directly, he can hear snatches of conversation from them, the
distant clamor of the diesels, the zap of a deck of cards being shuffled,
the hiss of fresh eggs hitting the griddle. Fresh eggs! Thank god they
managed to rendezvous with the milchcow before she was sunk.
He unrolls a small scale chart that encompasses the whole Northeast
Atlantic, divided into numbered and lettered grid squares for convoy
hunting. He should be looking at the southern part of the chart, which is
where they are now. But eyes are drawn, again and again, northwards to the
Qwghlm Archipelago.
Put it at the center of a clock. Then Great Britain is at five and six
o'clock, and Ireland is at seven o'clock. Norway is due east, at three
o'clock. Denmark is just south of Norway, at four o'clock, and at the base
of Denmark, where it plugs into Germany, is Wilhelmshaven. France, home to
so many U boats, is far, far to the south completely out of the picture.
A U boat that was headed from the open sea towards a safe port on
Fortress Europe would just go to the French ports on the Bay of Biscay
Lorient, most likely. Getting to Germany's North Sea and Baltic ports would
be a far longer and more complicated and dangerous trip. The U boat would
have to get around Great Britain somehow. To the south, it would have to
make a dash up the Channel, which (setting aside that it's a bottleneck,
crackling with British radar) has been turned into a maze of sunken block
ships and minefields by those Royal Navy spoil sports. There is a lot more
room up north.
Assuming Shaftoe's story is true and there must be some truth in it, or
else where would he have gotten the morphine bottle then it should have been
a reasonably simple matter for U 553 to get around Great Britain via the
northern route. But U boats almost always had mechanical problems to some
degree, especially after they had been at sea for a while. This might cause
a skipper to hug the coast rather than taking to the open seas, where there
would be no hope of survival if the engines shut down entirely. During the
last couple of years, stricken U boats had been abandoned on the coasts of
Ireland and Iceland.
But supposing that an ailing, coast hugging U boat happened to pass
near the Royal Navy base at Qwghlm at just the time some other U boat was
staging a raid there, as Shaftoe claimed. Then the dragnet of destroyers and
airplanes that was sent out to capture the raiders could quite easily
capture U 553, especially if her ability to maneuver were impaired to begin
with.
There are two implausibilities in Shaftoe's story. One, that a U boat
would be carrying a trove of solid gold. Two, that a U boat would be headed
for German ports instead of one of the French ports.
But these two together are more plausible than either one of them by
itself. A U boat carrying that much gold might have very good reasons for
going straight to the Fatherland. Some highly placed person wanted to keep
this gold secret. Not just secret from the enemy, but secret from other
Germans as well.
Why are the Japanese giving gold to Germans? The Germans must be giving
them something they need in return: strategic materials, plans for new
weapons, advisors, something like that.
He writes out a message:
Dönitz!
It is Bischoff. I am back in command. Thank you for the pleasant
vacation. Now I am refreshed.
How uncivilized for you to order that we should be sunk. There must be
a misunderstanding. Can we not discuss it face to face?
A drunken polar bear told me some fascinating things. Perhaps I will
broadcast this information in an hour or so. Since I do not trust the Enigma
anyway, I will not bother to encrypt it.
Yours respectfully,
Bischoff
***
A flock of white Vs migrates north from Gibraltar across a sunlit sea.
At the apex of each V is a nitlike mote. The motes are ships, hauling
megatons of war crap, and thousands of soldiers from North Africa (where
their services are no longer needed) to Great Britain. That's how it looks
to the pilots of the airplanes over the Bay of Biscay. All of those pilots
and all of those planes are English or American the Allies own Biscay now
and have turned it into a crucible for U boat crews.
Most of the Vs track straight parallel courses northwards, but a few of
them curl and twist incessantly: these are destroyers, literally running
circles around the plodding transports, pinging. Those tin cans will protect
the convoys; the pilots of the airplanes who are trying to find U 691 can
therefore search elsewhere.
The powerful sun casts a deep shadow in front of each ship; the eyes of
the lookouts, irised down to pinpoints and squinting against the maritime
glare, can no more penetrate that shade than they could see through plywood.
If they could, they might notice that one of the big transports in the front
rank has got some kind of unusual attachment: a pipe sticking vertically out
of the water just in front and to one side of its bow.
Actually it is a cluster of pipes, one sucking in air, another spewing
diesel exhaust, another carrying a stream of information in the form of
prismatically reflected light. Follow that data stream a few yards down into
the water and you will enter the optic nerve of one Kapitänleutnant Günter
Bischoff. This in turn leads to his brain, which is highly active.
In the age of sonar, Bischoffs U boat was a rat in a dark, cluttered,
infinite cellar, hiding from a man who had neither torch nor lantern: only
two rocks that would spark when banged together. Bischoff sank a lot of
ships in those days.
One day, while he was on the surface, trying to make some time across
the Caribbean, a Catalina appeared out of nowhere. It came from a clear blue
sky and so Bischoff had plenty of time to dive. The Catalina dropped a few
depth charges and then went away; it must have been at the end of its range.
Two days later, a front moved in, the sky became mostly cloudy, and
Bischoff made the mistake of relaxing. Another Catalina found them: this one
used the clouds to conceal his approach, waited until U 691 was crossing a
patch of sunlit water, and then dove, centering his own shadow on the U
boat's bridge. Fortunately, Bischoff had double sun sector air lookouts.
This was a jargonic way of saying that at any given moment, two shirtless,
stinking, unshaven, sunburned men were standing on the deck, casting shadows
over their eyes with their outstretched hands. One of these men said
something in a quizzical tone of voice, which alerted Bischoff. Then both
lookouts were torn apart by a rocket. Five more of Bischoffs men were
wounded by cannon fire and rockets before Bischoff could get the boat under
the surface.
The next day, the front had covered the sky with low blue grey clouds
from horizon to horizon. U 691 was far out of sight of land. Even so,
Bischoff had Holz, his chief engineer, take her up to periscope depth first.
Bischoff scanned the horizon meticulously. Satisfied that they were
perfectly alone, he had Holz bring her to the surface. They fired up the
diesels and pointed the boat east. Their mission was finished, their boat
was damaged, it was time to go home.
Two hours later a flying boat bellied down through the cloud layer and
dropped a skinny black egg on them. Bischoff was up on the bridge, enjoying
some fresh air, and had the presence of mind to scream some thing about
evasive action into the speaking tube. Metzger, the helms man, instantly
took it hard to starboard. The bomb plunged into the water exactly where the
deck of U 691 would have been.
It continued in that vein until they got far away from land. When they
finally limped back to their base at Lorient, Bischoff told this story to
his superiors in tones of superstitious awe, when they finally broke the
news to him that the enemy had this new thing called radar.
Bischoff studied it and read the intelligence reports: the Allies were
even putting the shit on airplanes now! It could see your periscope!
His U boat is no longer a rat in a dark cellar. Now it is a wingless
horsefly dragging itself across an immaculate tablecloth in the streaming
light of the afternoon sun.
Dönitz, bless him, is trying to build new U boats that can stay
submerged all the time. But he has to beg for every ton of steel and for the
services of every engineer. In the meantime there is this stopgap measure,
the Schnorkel, which is just plumbing: a pipe that sticks up out of the
water and enables you to run on diesel power, just beneath the surface. Even
the Schnorkel will show up on radar, but less brilliantly. Every time U 691
surfaces for more than an hour, Holz is up there working on the Schnorkel,
welding new bits on, grinding old bits off, wrapping it in rubber or some
other stuff that he hopes will absorb the radar. The engineers who installed
the Schnorkel in Lorient six months ago wouldn't recognize it now because it
has evolved, like shrews evolving into tigers. If Bischoff can just get U
691 back to a safe port, others can learn from Holz's innovations, and the
few U boats that haven't been sunk can derive some benefit from the
experiment.
He snaps out of it. This must be how officers die, and get their men
killed: they spend more time reviewing the past than planning for the
future. It is nothing short of masturbation for Bischoff to be thinking
about all of this. He must concentrate.
He doesn't have to worry so much about being sunk by Germans. As soon
as he sent Dönitz the message threatening to broadcast the information about
the gold, Dönitz retracted his general order to sink U 691. But there is the
possibility that some ship might have received the first order but missed
the second one, so he still has to watch himself.
Big deal. There is hardly any German Navy left to sink him anyway. He
can worry about being sunk by the Allies instead. They will be intently
irritated when they figure out that he has been shadowing this convoy for
two whole days. Bischoff is pretty irritated himself, it is a fast convoy
that protects itself by zigzagging, and if U 691 does not zigzag in perfect
unison with the ship above it, it will either be crushed by her, or blunder
out of her shadow and be noticed. This has put quite a strain on skipper and
crew, and quite a drain on the boat's supply of benzedrine. But they've
covered five hundred miles! Soon, fatal Biscay will be behind them, Brittany
will be off to starboard, and Bischoff will have a choice: hang a right into
the English Channel, which would be suicidal; head north between Britain and
Ireland, which would be suicidal; or veer to the west around Ireland, which
would be suicidal.
Of course there's always France, which is friendly territory, but it is
a siren whose allure must be sternly resisted. It's not enough for Bischoff
just to run the U boat aground on a godforsaken beach somewhere; he wants to
get the thing back to a proper base. But the skies above the proper bases
are infested with Catalinas, illuminating the sea with the satanic light of
their radars. It is much cleverer to make them think that he's headed for
France, and then head for a German port instead.
Or at least it seemed that way two days ago. Now the complexities of
the plan are weighing on him.
The shadow of the ship above them suddenly seems much longer and
deeper. This means either that the earth's rotation has just sped up
tremendously, moving the sun around to a different angle, or that the ship
has veered towards them. "Hard to starboard," Bischoff says quietly. His
voice travels down a pipe to the man who controls the rudder. "Anything on
the radio?"
"Nothing," says the Funkmaat. That's weird; usually when the ships are
zigzagging, they coordinate it on the radio. Bischoff spins the periscope
around and gets a load of the transport, still trying to shoulder its way
into them. He checks his course; the bitch has veered a full ninety degrees!
"They've seen us," Bischoff says. "We'll dive in just a moment." But
before he loses his ability to use the periscope, he does one more three
sixty, just to verify that his mental map of the convoy is accurate. It is,
more or less; why, there's a destroyer, right there where he thought it was.
He steadies the 'scope, calls out target bearings. The Torpedomaat echoes
the digits while dialing them into the targeting computer: the very latest
fully analog technology. The computer grinds through some calculations and
sets the gyroscopes on a couple of torpedoes. Bischoff says: fire, fire,
dive. It happens, almost that fast. The diesels' anvil chorus, which has
been subtly driving them all insane for a couple of days, is replaced by a
startling silence. They are running on batteries now.
As has always been the case, and as will continue to be the case for at
least another half century, batteries suck. The convoy seems to bolt forward
as U 691's speed drops to a pathetic wallow. The destroyers can go about
five times as fast as they can now. Bischoff hates this part.
"The destroyer is taking evasive action," says the sound man.
"Did we have time to get the weather forecast?" he asks.
"Storm front moving in this evening. Foul weather tomorrow."
"Let's see if we can stay alive until the storm hits," Bischoff says.
"Then we'll run this bucket of shit straight up the middle of the English
Channel, right up Winston Churchill's fat ass, and if we die, we'll die like
men."
A terrible clamor radiates through the water and pierces the hull. The
men cheer sullenly; they have just sunk another ship. Whoopdy doo!
"I think it was the destroyer," says the sound man, as if he can hardly
believe their luck.
"Those homing torpedoes are bastards," Bischoff says, "when they don't
turn round and home in on you."
One destroyer down, three to go. If they can sink another one, they
have a chance of escaping the remaining two. But it's nearly impossible to
escape from three destroyers.
"There's no time like the present," he says. "Periscope depth! Let's
see what the fuck is going on, while we've got them rattled."
It is like this: one of the destroyers is sinking and another is
heading towards it to render assistance. The other two are converging on
where U 691 was about thirty seconds ago, but they are hindered by having to
make their way through the middle of the convoy. Almost immediately, they
begin to fire their guns. Bischoff looses a spread of torpedoes towards the
assisting destroyer. Water is spouting up all around them now as they are
straddled by shells from the other two. He does another three sixty, fixing
the image of the convoy in his mind's eye.
"Dive!" he says.
Then he has a better idea. "Belay that! Surface and go to flank speed."
Any other U boat crew would cut his throat at this moment, then surrender.
But these guys don't even hesitate; either they really do love him, or
they've all decided they're going to die anyway.
Twenty seconds of raw terror ensue. U 691 is screaming across the
surface, banking like a Messerschmidt as shells pound into the water all
around her. Crewmen are spilling out of her hatches, looking like prison
camp inmates in the bright sun, trying not to slide off the deck as it tilts
this way and that, diving to snap the carabiners of their safety lines onto
cables before they are blown out of their shoes by the waterspouts from the
exploding shells. They are manning the guns.
Then there's a big transport ship between them and the two destroyers.
They're safe now, for a minute. Bischoff's up on the conning tower. He turns
aft and gets a load of the other destroyer, spiraling crazily in an effort
to shake off those homing torpedoes.
When they come out from behind the shelter of the big transport,
Bischoff sees that his mental map of the convoy was more or less accurate.
He speaks more orders to the rudder and the engines. Before the two
attacking destroyers have a chance to open up with their guns again,
Bischoff has got himself positioned between them and a troop transport: a
decrepit ocean liner covered with a hasty coat of wartime camo. They can't
shoot at him now without blowing hundreds of their own troops to shreds. But
he can shoot at them. When Bischoff's men see the liner above them, and gaze
across the water at the impotent destroyers, they actually break out into
song: a congratulatory beer hall ditty.
U 691 is topheavy with weaponry, armed to the teeth because of the
aircraft threat. Bischoffs crew opens fire on the destroyers with all of the
small and medium sized stuff, to give the deck gun crew a chance to line up
its shot. At this range, the danger is that the shell will pass all the way
through the destroyer's hull, and out the other side, without detonating.
You have to be patient, take your time, aim for the engines. Bischoff's crew
knows this.
A skull cracking explosion sounds from the barrel of the deck gun; the
shell skims the water, hits the closest destroyer right in the boilers. The
destroyer doesn't blow up, but it does go dead in the water. They take a few
more shots at the other destroyer and manage to knock out one of its guns
and one of its depth charge launchers. Then the lookouts see airplanes
headed their way, and it's time to dive. Bischoff does one final periscope
scan before they go under, and is surprised to see that the destroyer that
was trying to evade the torpedoes managed to do so; apparently two of them
curved back and hit transport ships instead.
They go straight down to a hundred and sixty meters. Destroyers drop
depth charges on them for eight hours. Bischoff takes a nap. When he wakes
up, depth charges are booming all over the place and everything is fine. It
should be dark and stormy up there now: bad weather for Catalinas. He evades
the destroyers by (in a nutshell) doing clever things he has learned the
hard way. The U boat is as thin as a knitting needle, and when you turn it
directly toward or away from the source of a ping, it makes almost no
reflection. All that's required is a clear mental map of where you are with
respect to the destroyers.
After another hour, the destroyers give up and leave. Bischoff takes U
691 up to schnorkel depth and points her straight up the middle of the
English Channel, as advertised. He also uses the periscope to verify that
the weather is, also as advertised, awful.
Those bastards have a big fat red pin on the map marking his position
as last reported by those destroyers. Around that pin, as the hours go by,
they will draw circles of steadily increasing radius, widening gyres
enclosing the set of all points in the ocean where U 691 could possibly be
at the moment, based on their assumptions about her speed. The square
mileage that must be searched will increase as the square of that radius.
Going up the Channel, while submerged, just isn't going to work they'll
run into one of the block ships that the Brits sank there to prevent U boats
from doing just that. The surface is the only way, and it's a hell of a lot
faster too. This raises the airplane issue. Airplanes search not for the
boat itself, which is tiny and dark, but for its wake, which is white and
spreads for miles on calm water. There will be no wake behind U 691 tonight
or rather, there will be, but it will be lost in random noise of much higher
amplitude. Bischoff decides that covering distance is more important than
being subtle at the moment, and so he brings her up to the surface and then
pins the throttle. This will burn fuel insanely, but U 691 has a range of
eleven thousand miles.
Sometime around noon the next day, U 691, battering its way through a
murderous storm, lances the Straits of Dover and breaks through into the
North Sea. She must be lighting up every radar screen in Europe, but
airplanes can't do much in this weather.
"The prisoner Shaftoe wishes to speak to you," says Beck, who has gone
back to being his second in command, as if nothing had ever been different.
War gives men good ignoring skills. Bischoff nods.
Shaftoe enters the control room, accompanied by Root, who will
apparently serve as translator, spiritual guide, and/or wry observer. "I
know a place where we can go," Shaftoe says.
Bischoff is floored. He hasn't thought about where they were actually
going in days. The concept of having a coherent goal is almost beyond his
comprehension.
"It is " Bischoff gropes " touching that you have taken an interest."
Shaftoe shrugs. "I heard you were in deep shit with Dönitz."
"Not as bad as I was," Bischoff says, immediately perceiving the folksy
wisdom of this American barnyard metaphor. "The depth is the same, but now I
am head up instead of head down."
Shaftoe chuckles delightedly. They are all buddies now. "You have any
charts of Sweden?"
This strikes Bischoff as a good but half witted idea. Seeking temporary
refuge in a neutral country: fine. But much more likely is that they run the
boat aground on a rock.
"There's a bay there, by this little town," Shaftoe says. "We know the
depths."
"How could that be?"
"Because we charted the fucking thing ourselves, a couple of months
ago, with a rock on a string."
"Was this before or after you boarded the mysterious U boat full of
gold?" Bischoff asks.
"Just before."
"Would it be out of line for me to inquire what an American Marine
Raider and an ANZAC chaplain were doing in Sweden, a neutral country,
performing bathymetric surveys?"
Shaftoe doesn't seem to think it's out of line at all. He's in such a
good mood from the morphine. He tells another yam. This one begins on the
coast of Norway (he is deliberately vague about how he got there) and is all
about how Shaftoe led Enoch Root and a dozen or so men, including one who
had a serious ax wound to the leg (Bischoff raises his eyebrows) all the way
across Norway on skis, slaying pursuing Germans right and left, and into
Sweden. The story then bogs down for a while because there are no more
Germans to kill, and Shaftoe, sensing that Bischoffs attention is beginning
to wander, tries to inject some lurid thrills into the narrative by
describing the progress of the gangrene up the leg of the officer who ran
afoul of the ax (who, as far as Bischoff can make out, was under suspicion
as a possible German spy). Shaftoe keeps encouraging Root to jump in and
tell the story of how Root performed several consecutive amputations of the
officer's leg, all the way up to the pelvis. Just as Bischoff is finally
starting to actually care about this poor bastard with the gangrenous leg,
the story takes another zigzag: they reach a little fishing town on the Gulf
of Bothnia. The gangrenous officer is delivered into the hands of the town
doctor. Shaftoe and his comrades hole up in the woods and strike up what
sounds like an edgy relationship with a Finnish smuggler and his lissome
daughter. And now it's clear that Shaftoe has reached his favorite part of
the story, which is this Finnish girl. And indeed, up to this point his
story telling style has been as rude and blunt and functional as the inside
of a U boat. But now he relaxes, begins to smile, and becomes damn near
poetic to the point where a few members of Bischoff's crew, who speak a
little bit of English, start to loiter within earshot. Essentially the story
goes totally off the rails at this point, and while it's entertaining
material, it appears to be headed exactly nowhere. Bischoff finally
interrupts with "What about the guy with the bad leg?" Shaftoe frowns and
bites his lip. "Oh, yeah," he finally says, "he died."
"The rock on the string," prompts Enoch Root. "Remember? That's why you
were telling the story."
"Oh, yeah," Shaftoe says, "they came and picked us up with a little
submarine. That's how we got to Qwghlm and saw the U boat with the gold. But
before they could enter the harbor, they had to have a chart. So Lieutenant
Root and I went out on a fucking rowboat with a rock on a string and charted
it."
"And you still have a copy of this chart with you?" Bischoff asks
skeptically.
"Nah," Shaftoe says, with a flip coolness that in a less charismatic
man would be infuriating. "But the lieutenant remembers it. He's really good
at remembering numbers. Aren't you, sir?"
Enoch shrugs modestly. "Where I grew up, memorizing the digits of pi
was the closest thing we had to entertainment."
Chapter 48 CANNIBALS
Goto Dengo flees through the swamp. He is fairly certain that he is
being chased by the cannibals who just cooked up the friend with whom he had
washed ashore. He climbs up a tangle of vines and hides himself several
meters above the ground; men with spears search the general area, but they
do not find him.
He passes out. When he wakes up, it's dark, and some small animal is
moving in the branches nearby. He is so desperate for food that he grabs at
it blindly. The creature has a body the size of a house cat, but long
leathery arms: some kind of huge bat. It bites him several times on the
hands before he crushes it to death. Then he eats it raw.
The next day he goes forth into the swamp, trying to put more distance
between himself and the cannibals. Around midday he finds a stream the first
one he's seen. For the most part the water just seeps out of New Guinea
though marshes, but here is an actual river of cold, fresh water, just
narrow enough to jump across.
A few hours later he finds another village that is similar to the first
one, but only about half as big. The number of dangling heads is much
smaller; maybe these headhunters are not quite as fearsome as the first
group. Again there is a central fire where white stuff is being cooked in a
pot: in this case, it appears to be a wok, which they must have gotten
though trade. The people of this village don't know a starving Nipponese
soldier is lurking in the vicinity, so they are not very vigilant. Around
twilight, when the mosquitoes come out of the swamps in a humming fog, they
all retire into their longhouses. Goto Dengo runs out into the middle of the
compound, grabs the wok, and makes off with it. He forces himself not to
take any of the food until he is far away, hidden in a tree again, and then
he gorges himself. The food is a rubbery gel of what would appear to be pure
starch. Even to a ravenous man, it has no flavor at all. Nevertheless he
licks the wok clean. While he is doing so, an idea comes to him.
The next morning, when the sun's bubble bursts out of the sea, Goto
Dengo is kneeling in the bed of the river, scooping sand up into the wok and
swirling it around, hypnotized by the maelstrom of dirt and foam, which
slowly develops a glittering center.
The next morning Dengo is standing on the edge of the village bright
and early, shouting: "Ulab! Ulab! Ulab!" which is what the people in the
first village called gold.
The villagers wriggle out of their tiny front doors, bewildered at
first, but when they see his face and the wok dangling from one hand, rage
flashes over them like the sun burning out from behind a cloud. A man
charges with a spear, sprinting straight across the clearing. Goto Dengo
dances back and takes half shelter behind a coconut tree, holding the wok up
over his chest like a shield. "Ulab! Ulab!" he cries again. The warrior
falters. Goto Dengo holds out his fist, swings it to and fro until it finds
a warm shaft of sunlight, and then loosens it slightly. A tiny cascade of
glittering flakes trickles out, catching the sun, then plunges into shadow,
hissing as it strikes the leaves below.
It gets their attention. The man with the spear stops. Someone behind
him says something about patah.
Goto Dengo levels the wok, resting it on his forearm, and sprinkles the
entire handful of gold dust into it. The village watches, transfixed. There
is a great deal more whispering about patah. He steps forward into the
clearing, holding the wok out before him as an offering to the warrior,
letting them see his nakedness and his pitiful condition. Finally he
collapses to his knees, bows his head very low, and sets the wok on the
ground at the warrior's feet. He remains there, head bowed, letting them
know that they can kill him now if they want to.
If they want to choke off their newly discovered gold supply, that is.
The matter will require some discussion. They tie his elbows together behind
his back with vines, put a noose around his neck, and tie that to a tree.
All of the kids in the village stand around him and stare. They have purple
skin and frizzy hair. Flies swarm around their heads.
The wok is taken into a hut that is decorated with more human heads
than any of the other huts. All of the men go in there. Furious discussion
ensues.
A mud daubed woman with long skinny breasts brings Goto Dengo half a
shell of coconut milk and a handful of white, knuckle sized grubs wrapped up
in leaves. Her skin is a tangle of overlapping ringworm scars and she is
wearing a necklace that consists of a single human finger strung on a piece
of twine. The grubs squirt when Goto Dengo bites down on them.
The children abandon him to watch a pair of American P 38s fly by, out
over the ocean. Bored with airplanes, Goto Dengo squats on his haunches and
observes the menagerie of arthropods that have converged on him in hopes of
sucking his blood, taking a bite of his flesh, eating his eyeballs out of
his skull, or impregnating him with their eggs. The haunch position is a
good one because every five seconds or so he has to bash his face against
one knee, then the other, in order to keep the bugs out of his eyes and
nostrils. A bird drops out of a tree, lands clumsily on his head, pecks
something out of his hair, and flies away. Blood jets out of his anus and
pools hotly under the arches of his feet. Creatures with many legs gather at
the edge of the pool and begin to feast. Goto Dengo moves away, and leaving
them to it, gets a few minutes' respite.
The men in the hut arrive at some sort of agreement. The tension is
broken. There is laughter, even. He wonder what counts as funny to these
guys.
The guy who wanted to impale him earlier comes across the clearing,
takes his leash, and tugs Goto Dengo to a standing position. "Patah," he
says.
He looks at the sky. It is getting late, but he does not relish trying
to explain to them that they should simply wait until tomorrow. He stumbles
across the clearing to the cooking fire and nods at a pan full of brain
stew. "Wok," he says.
It doesn't work. They think he wants to trade gold for the wok.
There follows about eighteen hours of misunderstandings and failed
attempts to communicate. Goto Dengo almost dies; at least he feels like he
might. Now that he is not on the move, the last few days are really catching
up with him. But finally, in the middle of the next morning, he gets to show
his magic. Squatting in the nearby stream, his elbows unbound, the wok in
his hands, surrounded by skeptical village fathers still keeping a tight
grip on his rustic noose, he begins to pan for gold. Within a few minutes he
has managed to summon a few flakes of the stuff out of the riverbed,
demonstrating the basic concept.
They want to learn it themselves. He was expecting this. He tries to
show one of them how it's done, but (as Goto Dengo himself learned long ago)
it is one of those harder than it looks deals.
Back to the village. He actually gets a place to sleep this night: they
stuff him into a long skinny sack of woven grass and tie it shut above his
head this is how they keep themselves from being eaten alive by insects
while they are asleep. Malaria hits him now: alternating waves of chill and
heat swamping his body with the force of riptides.
Time goes out of whack for a while. Later, he realizes he has been here
for a while now, because his broken forefinger is now solid and gnarled, and
the abrasions that he got from the coral head are now a field of fine,
parallel scars, like the grain in a piece of wood. His skin is covered with
mud and he smells of coconut oil and of the smoke that they fill their huts
with to chase away the bugs. His life is simple: when malaria has him
teetering on the brink of death, he sits in front of a felled palm tree and
chips away at it mindlessly for hours, slowly creating a heap of fibrous
white stuff that the women use to make starch. When he is feeling stronger,
he drags himself over to the river and pans for gold. In return they do what
they can to keep New Guinea from killing him. He's so weak they do not even
bother to send a chaperone with him when he goes out.
It would be an idyllic tropical paradise if not for the malaria, the
insects, the constant diarrhea and resulting hemorrhoids, and the fact that
the people are dirty and smell bad and eat each other and use human heads
for decoration. The one thing that Goto Dengo thinks about, when he's
capable of thinking, is that there is a boy in this village who looks to be
about twelve years old. He remembers the twelve year old who was initiated
by driving a spear through his companion's heart, and wonders who's going to
be used for this boy's initiation rite.
From time to time the village elders pound on a hollow log for a while,
then stand around listening to other hollow logs being pounded in other
villages. One day there is an especially long episode of pounding, and it
would seem that the villagers are pleased by what they have heard. The next
day, they have visitors: four men and a child who speak a completely
different language; their word for gold is gabitisa. The child whom they
have brought with them is about six years old, and obviously retarded. There
is a negotiation. Some of the gold that Goto Dengo has panned out of the
stream is exchanged for the retarded child. The four visitors disappear into
the jungle with their gabitisa. Within a few hours, the retarded child has
been tied to a tree and the twelve year old boy has stabbed it to death and
become a man. After some parading around and dancing, the older men sit on
top of the younger man and cut long complicated gashes into his skin and
pack dirt into them so that they will heal as decorative welts.
Goto Dengo cannot do very much except gape in numb astonishment. Every
time he begins to think beyond the next fifteen minutes, tries to formulate
a plan of action, the malaria comes back, flattens him for a week or two,
scrambles his brain and forces him to start again from scratch. Despite all
of this he manages to extract a few hundred grams of gold dust from that
stream. From time to time the village is visited by relatively light skinned
traders who move up and down the coast in outrigger canoes and who speak yet
another different language. These traders begin to come more frequently, as
the village elders start trading the gold dust for betel nuts, which they
chew because it makes them feel good, and for the occasional bottle of rum.
One day, Goto Dengo is on his way back from the river, carrying a
teaspoon of gold dust in the wok, when he hears voices from the village
voices speaking in a cadence that used to be familiar.
All of the men of the village, some twenty in all, are standing up with
their backs to coconut trees, their arms secured behind the trees with
ropes. Several of these men are dead, with their intestines spilling down
onto the ground, already black with flies. The ones who are not dead yet are
being used for bayonet practice by a few dozen gaunt, raving Nipponese
soldiers. The women ought to be standing around screaming, but he doesn't
see them. They must be inside the huts.
A man in a lieutenant's uniform swaggers out of a hut, smiling broadly,
wiping blood off of his penis with a rag, and almost trips over a dead
child.
Goto Dengo drops the wok and puts his hands up in the air. "I am
Nipponese!" he shouts, even though all he wants to say at this moment is I
am not Nipponese.
The soldiers are startled, and several of them try to swing their
rifles around in his direction. But the Nipponese rifle is an awful thing,
nearly as long as the average soldier is tall, too heavy to maneuver even
when its owner is in perfect health. Luckily all of these men are clearly
starving to death and half crippled by malaria and bloody flux, and their
minds work quicker than their bodies. The lieutenant bellows, "Hold your
fire!" before anyone can get off a shot in the direction of Goto Dengo.
There follows a long interrogation in one of the huts. The lieutenant
has many questions, and asks most of them more than once. When he repeats a
question for the fifth or thirteenth time, he adopts a grand magnanimity, as
if giving Goto Dengo the opportunity to retract his earlier lies. Goto Dengo
tries to ignore the screams of the bayoneted men and the raped women, and
concentrate on giving the same answer each time without variation.
"You surrendered to these savages?"
"I was incapacitated and helpless. They found me in this condition."
"What efforts did you make to escape?"
"I have been building my strength and learning from them how to survive
in the jungle what foods I can eat.
"For six months?"
"Pardon me, sir?" He hasn't heard this question before.
"Your convoy was sunk six months ago."
"Impossible."
The lieutenant steps forward and slaps him across the face. Goto Dengo
feels nothing but tries to cringe anyway, so as not to humiliate the man.
"Your convoy was coming to reinforce our division!" bellows the
lieutenant. "You dare to question me?"
"I humbly apologize, sir!"
"Your failure to arrive forced us to make a retrograde maneuver!
(1) We are marching overland to rendezvous with our forces at
Wewak!"
"So, you are the advance guard for the division?" Goto Dengo has seen
perhaps two dozen men, a couple of squads at most.
"We are the division," the lieutenant says matter of factly. "So,
again, you surrendered to these savages?"
***
When they march out the following morning, no one remains alive in the
village; all of them have been used for bayonet practice or shot while
trying to run away.
He is a prisoner. The lieutenant had decided to execute him for the
crime of having surrendered to the enemy, and was in the act of drawing his
sword when one of the sergeants prevailed upon him to wait for a while.
Impossible as it might seem, Goto Dengo is in far better physical condition
than any of the others and therefore useful as a pack animal. He can always
be properly executed in front of a large audience when they reach a larger
outpost. So he marches in the middle of the group now, unfettered, the
jungle serving the purpose of chains and bars. They have loaded him down
with the one remaining Nambu light machine gun, which is too heavy for
anyone else to carry, and too powerful for them to fire; any man who pulled
the trigger on this thing would be shaken to pieces by it, the jungle rotted
flesh scattering from jittering bones.
After a few days have gone by, Goto Dengo requests permission to learn
how to operate the Nambu. The lieutenant's reply is to beat him up though he
does not have the strength to beat anyone up properly so Goto Dengo has to
help him, crying out and doubling over when the lieutenant thinks he has
landed a telling blow.
Every couple of days, when the sun comes up in the morning, this or
that soldier is found to have more bugs on him than any of the others. This
means that he is dead. Lacking shovels or the strength to dig, they leave
him where he lies and march onward. Sometimes they get lost, march back over
the same territory, and find these corpses all swollen and black; when they
begin to smell rotting human flesh, they know that they have just wasted a
day's effort. But in general they are gaining altitude now, and it is
cooler. Ahead of them, their route is blocked by a ridge of snow capped
peaks that runs directly to the sea. According to the lieutenant's maps,
they will have to climb up one side of it and down the other in order to
reach Nipponese controlled territory.
The birds and plants are different up here. One day, while the
lieutenant is urinating against a tree, the foliage shakes and an enormous
bird runs out. It looks vaguely like an ostrich, but more compact and more
colorful. It has a red neck, and a cobalt blue head with a giant helmetlike
bone sticking out of the top of its skull, like the nose of an artillery
shell. It prances straight up to the lieutenant and kicks him a couple of
times, knocking him flat on his ass, then bends his long neck down, shrieks
in his face, and runs back into the jungle, using its head bone as a kind of
battering ram to clear a path through the brush.
Even if the men were not dying on their feet, they would be too
startled to raise their weapons and take a shot at it. They laugh giddily.
Goto Dengo laughs until he cries. The bird must have delivered a powerful
kick, though, because the lieutenant lies there for a long time, clutching
his stomach.
Finally one of the sergeants regains his composure and walks over to
help the poor man. As he draws closer, he suddenly turns around to face the
rest of the group. His face has gone slack.
Blood is fountaining out of a couple of deep stab wounds in the
lieutenant's belly, and his body is already going limp when the rest of the
group gathers around him. They sit and watch until they are pretty sure he
is dead, and then they march onwards. That evening, the sergeant shows Goto
Dengo how to disassemble and clean the Nambu light machine gun.
They are down to nineteen. But it seems as though all of the men who
were susceptible to dying in this place have now died, because they go for
two, three, five, seven days without losing any more. This is in spite of,
or maybe because of, the fact that they are climbing up into the mountains.
It is brutal work, especially for the heavily laden Goto Dengo. But the cold
air seems to clear up their jungle rot and quench the ravenous internal
fires of malaria.
One day they break their march early at the edge of a snowfield, and
the sergeant orders double rations for everyone. Black stone peaks rise
above them, with an icy saddle in between. They sleep huddled together,
which does not prevent some of them waking up with frostbitten toes. They
eat most of what remains of their food supply and then set out towards the
pass.
The pass turns out to be almost disappointingly easy; the slope is so
gentle that they're not really aware that they've reached the summit until
they notice that the snow is sloping downwards beneath their feet. They are
above the clouds, and the clouds cover the world.
The gentle slope stops abruptly at the edge of a cliff that drops
almost vertically at least a thousand feet down then it passes through the
cloud layer, so there's no way of knowing its true height. They find the
memory of a trail traversing the slope. It seems to head down more
frequently than it heads up and so they follow it. It is new and exciting at
first, but then it grows just as brutally monotonous as every other
landscape where soldiers have ever marched. As the hours go by, the snow
gets patchier, the clouds get closer. One of the men falls asleep on his
feet, stumbles, and tumbles end over end down the slope, occasionally
bounding into free fall for several seconds. By the time he vanishes through
the cloud layer, he's too far away to see.
Finally the eighteen descend into a clammy mist. Each sees the one in
front of him only when very close, and then only as a grey, blurred form,
like an ice demon in a childhood nightmare. The landscape has become jagged
and dangerous and the lead man has to grope along practically on hands and
knees.
They are working their way around a protruding rib of fog slicked stone
when the lead man suddenly cries out: "Enemy!"
Some of the eighteen actually laugh, thinking it is a joke.
Goto Dengo distinctly hears a man speaking English, with an Australian
accent. The man says, "Fuck 'em."
Then a noise starts up that seems powerful enough to split the mountain
in half. He actually thinks it is a rock avalanche for awhile until his ears
adjust, and he realizes that it is a weapon: something big, and fully
automatic. The Australians are firing at them.
They try to retreat, but they can only move a few steps every minute.
Meanwhile, thick lead slugs are hurtling through the fog all around them,
splintering against the rock, sending stone shards into their necks and
faces. "The Nambu!" someone shouts. "Get the Nambu!" But Goto Dengo can't
fire the Nambu until he finds a decent place to stand.
Finally he gets to a ledge about the size of a large book, and unslings
the weapons. But all he can see is fog.
There is a lull of a few minutes. Goto Dengo calls out the names of his
comrades. The three behind him are accounted for. The others do not seem to
answer his calls. Finally, one man struggles back along the path. "The
others are all dead," he says, "you may fire at will."
So he begins to fire the Nambu into the fog. The recoil almost knocks
him off the mountain, so he learns to brace it against an outcropping. Then
he sweeps it back and forth. He can tell when he's hitting the rock because
it makes a different sound from hitting fog. He aims for the rock.
He spends several clips without getting any results. Then he begins
walking forward along the path again.
The wind gusts, the fog swirls and parts for a moment. He sees a blood
covered path leading directly to a tall Australian man with a red mustache,
carrying a tommy gun. Their eyes meet. Goto Dengo is in a better position
and fires first. The man with the tommy gun falls off the cliff.
Two other Australians, concealed on the other side of the rock rib, see
this happen, and begin cursing.
One of Goto Dengo's comrades scampers down the path, shouts, "Banzai!"
and disappears around the corner, carrying a fixed bayonet. There is a
shotgun blast and two men scream in unison. Then there is the now familiar
sound of bodies tumbling down the rock face. "God damn it!" hollers the one
remaining Aussie. "Fucking Nips."
Goto Dengo has only one honorable way out of this. He follows his
comrade around the corner and opens up with the Nambu, pouring it into the
fog, sweeping the rock face with lead. He stops when the magazine is empty.
Nothing happens after that. Either the Aussie retreated down the path or
else Goto Dengo shot him off the cliff.
By nightfall, Goto Dengo and his three surviving comrades are back down
in the jungle again.
Chapter 49 WRECK
To: root@eruditorum.org
From: randy@epiphyte.com
Subject: answer
That you are a retail level philosopher who just happens to have
buddies who are in the surveillance business is simply too big a coincidence
for me to accept.
So I'm not going to tell you why.
But in case you are worried, let me assure you that we have our reasons
for building the Crypt. And it's not just to make money though it will be
very good for our share holders. Did you think we were just a bunch of nerds
who stumbled into this and got in over our heads? We aren't.
P.S. What do you mean when you say that you "noodle around with novel
cryptosystems?" Give me an example.
Randall Lawrence Waterhouse
Current meatspace coordinates, hot from the GPS receiver card in my
laptop:
8 degrees, 52.33 minutes N latitude 117 degrees, 42.75 minutes E
longitude
Nearest geographical feature: Palawan, the Philippines
To: randy@epiphyte.com
From: root@eruditorum.org
Subject: Re: answer
Randy.
Thank you for your oddly defensive note. Very pleased you have a good
reason. Never thought otherwise. Of course you should not feel obligated to
share it with me.
My having friends in the world of electronic intelligence gathering is
not the big coincidence you make it out to be.
How did you come to be a founder of the Crypt? By being good at science
and math.
How did you come to be good at science and math? By standing on the
shoulders of the ones who came before you.
Who were those people?
We used to call them natural philosophers.
Likewise, my friends in the surveillance business owe their skills to
the practical application of philosophy. They have the wit to understand
this, and to give credit where credit is due.
P.S. You forgot to use the "dwarf@siblings.net" front address. I assume
this was deliberate?
P.P.S. You say you want an example of a novel cryptosystem that I am
working on. This sounds like a test. You and I both know, Randy, that the
history of crypto is strewn with the wreckage of cryptosystems invented by
arrogant dilettantes and soon demolished by clever codebreakers. You
probably suspect that I don't know this that I'm just another arrogant
dilettante. Quite cleverly, you ask me to stick my neck out, so that you and
Cantrell and his like minded friends can cut it off. You are testing me
trying to find my level
Very well. I'll send you another message in a few days. I'd love to
have the Secret Admirers take a crack at my scheme anyway.
In a narrow hulled double outrigger boat in the South China Sea,
America Shaftoe stands astride a thwart, her body pointing straight up at
the sun, despite the rollers, as if she is gyroscopically stabilized. She is
wearing a sleeveless diving vest that reveals strong, deeply tanned
shoulders, the walnut brown skin etched with a couple of black tattoos and
brilliantly jeweled with beads of water. The handle of a big knife projects
from a shoulder holster. The blade is that of a regular diving knife but the
handle is that of a kris, an ornate traditional weapon of Palawan. A tourist
can buy a kris at the duty free shop at NAIA, but this one appears to be
less flashy but better made than the tourist shop jobs, and worn from use.
She has a gold chain around her neck with a gnarled black pearl dangling
from it. She has just emerged from the water holding a tiny jeweler's
screwdriver between her teeth. Her mouth is open to breathe, displaying
crooked, bright white teeth with no fillings. For this brief moment she is
in her element, completely absorbed in what she is doing, totally unself
conscious. At this moment Randy thinks he understands her: why she spends
most of her time living here, why she didn't bother with going to college,
why she left behind her mother's family, who raised her, lovingly, in
Chicago, to be in business with her father, the wayward veteran who walked
out of the household when America was nine years old.
Then she turns to scan the approaching launch, and sees Randy on it
staring at her. She rolls her eyes, and the mask falls down over her face
again. She says something to the Filipino men who are squatting in the boat
around her and two of them go into action, scampering down the outrigger
poles, like balance beam artists, to stand on the outrigger pontoon. They
hold their arms out as shock absorbers to ease the contact between the
launch which Doug Shaftoe has cheerfully christened Mekong Memory –
and the much longer, much narrower pamboat.
One of the other Filipinos plants his bare foot against the top of a
small Honda portable generator and pulls on the ripcord, the tendons and
wiry muscles popping out of his arm and back for a moment like so many
ripcords themselves. The generator starts instantly, with a nearly inaudible
purr. It is good stuff, part of the capital improvements that Semper Marine
made as part of its contract with Epiphyte and Filitel. Now they are using
it, effectively, to defraud the Dentist.
"She lies one hundred and fifty four meters below that buoy," says Doug
Shaftoe, pointing to a gallon plastic milk jug bobbing on the swells. "She
was lucky, in a way."
"Lucky?"
Randy clambers off the launch and rests his weight on the outrigger,
shoving it down so that the warm water comes up to his knees. Holding out
his arms like a tightrope walker, he makes his way down an arm toward the
canoe hull in the center.
"Lucky for us," Shaftoe corrects himself. "We're on the flank of a
seamount. The Palawan Trough is nearby." He's following Randy, but without
all of the teetering and arm waving. "If she had sunk in that, she'd have
gone down so deep that she'd be hard to reach, and the pressure down there
would've crushed her. But at two hundred meters, there wouldn't've been such
an implosion." Reaching the boat's hull, he makes dramatic crushing motions
with his hands.
"Do we care?" Randy asks. "Gold and silver don't implode."
"If her hull is intact, getting the goods out is a hell of a lot
easier," says Doug Shaftoe.
Amy has vanished beneath the pamboat's canopy. Randy and Doug follow
her into its shade, and find her sitting crosslegged on a fiberglass
equipment case that is encrusted with airport baggage stickers. Her face is
socketed into the top of a black rubber pyramid whose base is the screen of
a ruggedized cathode ray tube. "How's the cable business?" she mutters.
Months ago, she gave up even trying to hide her scorn for the dull work of
cable laying. Pretenses are shabby things that, like papier mâché houses,
must be energetically maintained or they will dissolve. Another case in
point: some time ago, Randy gave up pretending that he was not completely
fascinated with Amy Shaftoe. This is not exactly the same thing as being in
love with her, but it has quite a few things in common with that. He has
always had a weird, sick fascination with women who smoked and drank a lot.
Amy does neither, but her complete disregard of modern skin cancer
precautions puts her in the same category: people too busy leading their
lives to worry about extending their life expectancy.
In any case, he has a desperate craving to know what Amy's dream is.
For a while he thought it was treasure hunting in the South China Sea. This
she definitely enjoys, but he is not sure if it gives her satisfaction
entire.
"Been adjusting the trim on those dive planes again," she explains. "I
don't think those pushrod things were engineered very well." She pulls her
head out of the black rubber cowl and gives Randy a quick sidelong look,
holding him responsible for the shortcomings of all engineers. "I hope it'll
run now without corkscrewing all over the place."
"Are you ready?" her father asks.
"Whenever you are," she answers, slamming the ball back into his court.
Doug rises to a crouch and duck walks out from under the low canopy.
Randy follows him, wanting to see the ROV for himself.
It rests in the water alongside the pamboat's center hull: a stubby
yellow torpedo with a glass dome for a nose, held in place by a Filipino
crewman who leans over the gunwale to grip it with both hands. Pairs of
stunted wings are mounted at the nose and at the tail, each wing supporting
a miniature propeller mounted in a cowl. Randy is reminded of a dirigible
with its outlying engine gondolas.
Noting Randy's interest, Doug Shaftoe squats alongside it to point out
the features. "It's neutrally buoyant, so when we have it alongside like
this, we have it in this foam cradle, which we will now take off." He begins
jerking loose some quick release bungee cords, and molded segments of foam
peel away from the ROV's hull. It drops lower in the water, nearly pulling
the crewman over the side with it, and he lets go, keeping his arms extended
so he can prevent it from bumping into them with each swell. "You'll notice
there's no umbilical," Doug says. "Normally that is mandatory for an ROV.
You need the umbilical for three reasons."
Randy grins, because he knows that Doug Shaftoe is about to enumerate
the three reasons. Randy has spent almost no time around military people,
but he is finding that he gets along with them surprisingly well.
His favorite thing about them is their compulsive need to educate every
one around them, all the time. Randy does not need to know anything about
the ROV, but Doug Shaftoe is going to give him a short course anyway. Randy
supposes that when you are in a war, practical knowledge is a good thing to
spread around.
"One," says Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe, "to provide power to the ROV.
But this ROV carries its own power source an oxygen/natural gas swash plate
motor, adapted from torpedo technology, and part of our peace dividend"
(that is the other thing Randy likes about military people their mastery of
deadpan humor) "that generates enough electricity to run all of the
thrusters. Two, for communications and control. But this unit uses blue
green lasers to communicate with the control console which Amy is manning.
Three, for emergency recovery in the event of total systems failure. But if
this unit fails, it is smart enough, supposedly, to inflate a bladder and
float up to the surface where it will activate a strobe light so that we can
go recover it."
"Jeez," Randy says, "isn't this thing incredibly expensive?"
"It is incredibly expensive," Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe says, "but the
guy who runs the company that makes it is an old buddy of mine we were at
the Naval Academy together he loans it to me sometimes, when I have a
pressing need."
"Does your friend know what the pressing need is in this case?"
"He does not know specifically," says Doug Shaftoe, mildly offended,
"but I suppose he is not a stupid man either."
"Clear!" shouts Amy Shaftoe, sounding rather impatient.
Her father takes a good look at each of the thrusters in turn. "Clear,"
he responds. A moment later, something begins to thrum inside the ROV, and a
stream of bubbles spurts from an orifice on its tail, and then the thrusters
begin to spin around. They swivel on the ends of their stubby wings until
they are facing downwards, throwing fountains into the air, and the ROV
sinks rapidly. The fountains diminish and become slight upwellings in the
sea. Seen through the water's rough surface, the ROV is a yellow splatter.
It shortens as the vehicle's nose pitches down, then rapidly disappears as
the thrusters drive it straight down. "Always kinda takes my breath away to
see something that costs so much going off to who knows where," Doug Shaftoe
says meditatively.
The water around the boat has begun to emit a kind of dreadful, sickly
light, like radiation in a low budget horror film. "Jeez! The laser?" Randy
says.
"Mounted to the bottom of the hull, in a little dome," Doug says.
"Punches through even turbid water with ease."
"What kind of bandwidth can you transmit on it?"
"Amy is seeing decent monochrome video on her little screen right now,
if that is what you mean. It is all digital. All packetized. So if some of
the data doesn't make it through, the image gets a little choppy, but we do
not lose visuals altogether."
"Cool."
"Yes, it is cool," Doug Shaftoe allows. "Let us go and watch TV."
They crouch beneath the canopy. Doug turns on a small Sony portable
television, a ruggedized waterproof model encased in yellow plastic, and
patches its input cable into a spare output jack on the back of Amy's rig.
He turns it on and they begin to see a bit of what Amy is seeing. They do
not have the benefit of the dark cowl that Amy is using, and so the glare of
the sun washes out everything but a straight white line emerging from the
dark center of the picture and expanding towards the edge. It is moving.
"I am following the buoy line down," she explains. "Kind of boring."
Randy's calculator watch beeps twice. He checks the time; it is three
in the afternoon.
"Randy?" Amy says, in a velvet voice.
"Yes?"
"Could you give me the square root of three thousand eight hundred
twenty three on that thing?"
"Why do you want that?"
"Just do it."
Randy holds his wrist up so that he can see the watch's digital
display, takes a pencil out of his pocket, and begins using its eraser to
press the tiny little buttons. He hears a metallic snicking noise, but pays
it no mind.
Something cool and smooth glides along the underside of his wrist.
"Hold still," Amy says. She bites her lip and pulls. The watch falls off,
and comes away in her left hand, its vinyl band neatly severed. She's
holding the kris in her right, the edge of its blade still decorated with a
few of Randy's arm hairs. "Huh. Sixty one point eight three oh four. I
would've guessed higher." She tosses the watch over her shoulder and it
disappears into the South China Sea. "Square roots are tricky that way."
"Amy, you're losing the rope!" says her father impatiently, focused
entirely on the screen of the TV.
Amy jams the kris back into its sheath, smiles sweetly at Randy, and
plugs her face back into the rig. Randy is speechless for a while.
The question of whether or not she is a lesbian is rapidly becoming
more than purely academic. He performs a quick mental review of all of the
lesbians he has known. Usually they are mid level, nine to five city
dwellers with sensible haircuts. In other words, they are just like most of
the other people Randy knows. Amy is too flagrantly exotic, too much like a
horny film director's idea of what a lesbian would be. So maybe there is
some hope here.
"If you're gonna stare at my daughter that way," Doug Shaftoe says,
"you'd better start boning up on your ballroom dancing."
"Is he starin' at me? I can never tell when I have my face stuck in
this thing," Amy says.
"He was in love with his watch. Now he has no object for his
affections," Doug says. "So, hold on to your hats!"
Randy can tell when someone is trying to rattle him. "What is it that
offended you so much about my watch? The alarm?"
"The whole package was pretty annoying," Amy says, "but the alarm is
what made me psychotic."
"You should have said something. Being a true geek, I actually know how
to turn that alarm off."
"Then why didn't you?"
"I don't want to lose track of time."
"Why? Got a cake in the oven?"
"The Dentist's due diligence people will be all over me."
Doug shifts position and screws up his face curiously. "You mentioned
that before. What is due diligence?"
"It's like this. Alfred has some money that he wants to invest."
"Who's Alfred?"
"A hypothetical person whose name begins with A."
"I don't understand."
"In the crypto world, when you are explaining a cryptographic protocol,
you use hypothetical people. Alice, Bob, Carol, Dave, Evan, Fred, Greg, and
so on."
"Okay."
"Alfred invests his money in a company that is run by Barney. When I
say 'run by' what I mean is that Barney has ultimate responsibility for what
that company does. So, perhaps Barney is the chairman of the board of
directors in this case. He's been chosen, by Alfred, Alice, Agnes, Andrew,
and the other investors, to look after the company. He and the other
directors hire corporate officers such as Chuck, who is the president. Chuck
and the other officers hire Drew to run one of the company's divisions. Drew
hires Edgar, the engineer, and so on and so forth. So, in military terms,
there is a whole chain of command that extends down to the guys in the
trenches, like Edgar."
"And Barney's the man at the top of the chain of the command," Doug
says.
"Right. So, just like a general, he is ultimately responsible for
everything that is done below him. Alfred has personally entrusted Barney
with that money. Barney is legally required to exercise due diligence in
seeing that the money is spent responsibly. If Barney fails to show due
diligence, he is in major legal trouble."
"Ah."
"Yeah. That gets Barney's attention. Alfred's lawyers might show up at
any moment and demand proof that due diligence is being exercised. Barney
needs to stay on his toes, make sure that his ass is covered at all times."
"Barney in this case is the Dentist?"
"Yeah. Alfred, Agnes, and the others are all of the people in his
investment club half of the orthodontists in Orange County."
"And you are Edgar the Engineer."
"No, you are Edgar the Engineer. I am a corporate officer of Epiphyte.
I am more like Chuck or Drew."
Amy breaks in. "But what does the Dentist have over you? You don't work
for him."
"I'm sorry to tell you that is no longer the case, as of yesterday."
This gets the Shaftoes' attention.
"The Dentist now owns ten percent of Epiphyte."
"How did that come about? Last I was informed of anything," Doug says
accusingly, "the son of a bitch was suing you."
"He was suing us," Randy says, "because he wanted in. None of our stock
was for sale, and we were not planning to go public anytime soon, so the
only way he could get in was by essentially blackmailing us with a lawsuit."
"You said it was a bogus lawsuit!" Amy exclaims, the only person here
who is bothering to show, or feel, any moral outrage.
"It was. But it would have cost so much to litigate it that it would
have bankrupted us. On the other hand, when we offered to sell the Dentist
some stock, he dropped the suit. We got our hands on some of his money,
which is always useful."
"But now you are beholden to his due diligence people."
"Yeah. They are on the cable ship even as we speak they came out on a
tender this morning."
"What do they think you are doing?"
"I told them that the sidescan sonar revealed some fresh anchor scars
near the cable route, which needed to be assessed."
"Very routine."
"Yeah. Due diligence people are easy to manipulate. You just have to
act really diligent. They eat it up."
"We're there," Amy says, and hauls back on a joystick, twisting her
body to put a little English on the maneuver.
Doug and Randy look at the TV screen. It is completely dark. Digits
along the bottom state that the pitch is five degrees and the roll is eight,
which means that the ROV is nearly level. The yaw number is spinning around
rapidly, meaning that the ROV is rotating around its vertical axis like a
fishtailing car. "Should come into view at around fifty degrees," Amy
mutters.
The yaw numbers slow down, dropping through a hundred degrees, ninety,
eighty. At around seventy degrees, something rotates into view at the edge
of the screen. It looks like a rugged, particolored sugarloaf rising from
the seafloor. Amy gooses the controls a couple of times and the rotation
drops to a crawl. The sugarloaf glides into the center of the screen and
then stops. "Locking in the gyros," Amy says, whacking a button. "All
forward." The sugarloaf slowly begins to get bigger. The ROV is moving
towards it, its direction automatically stabilized by its built in
gyroscopes.
"Swing wide around it to starboard," Doug says. "I want a different
angle on this." He pays some attention to a VCR that's supposed to be
recording this feed.
Amy lets the joystick come back to neutral, then executes a series of
moves that causes them to lose the image of the wreck for a minute. All they
can see are coral formations passing beneath the ROV's cameras. Then she
yaws it around to the left and there it is again: the same streamlined
projectile shape. But from this angle, they can see it's actually projecting
from the seafloor at a forty five degree angle.
"It looks like the nose of an airplane. A bomber," Randy says. "Like a
B 29."
Doug shakes his head. "Bombers had to have a circular cross section
because they were pressurized. This thing does not have a circular cross
section. It is more eliptical."
"But I don't see all of the railings and guns and, and "
"Crap that a classic German U boat would have hanging off of it. This
is a more modern streamlined shape," Doug says. He shouts something in
Tagalog at one of his crew, over on Glory IV.
"Looks pretty crusty," Randy says.
"There will be plenty of crap growing on her," Doug says, "but she's
still recognizable. There was not a catastrophic implosion."
A crew member runs onto the pamboat carrying an old picture book from
Glory IV's small but idiosyncratic library: a pictorial history of German U
boats. Doug flips past the first three quarters of the book and stops at a
photograph of a sub whose lines are strikingly familiar.
"God, that looks just like the Beatles' Yellow Submarine," Randy says.
Amy pulls her head out of the viewer and crowds him out of the way to look.
"Except it's not yellow," Doug says. "This was the new generation.
Hitler could've won the war if he'd made a few dozen of these." He flips
forward a few pages. There are pictures of more U boats with similar lines,
but much larger.
A cross sectional diagram shows a thin walled, elliptical outer hull
enclosing a thick walled, perfectly circular inner hull. "The circle is the
pressure hull. Always kept at one atmosphere and full of air, for the crew.
Outside of it, an outer hull, smooth and streamlined, with room for fuel and
hydrogen peroxide tanks "
"It carried its own oxidizer? Like a rocket?"
"Sure for running submerged. Any interstices in this outer hull would
have been filled with seawater, pressurized to match the external pressure
of the ocean, to keep it from collapsing."
Doug holds the book up beneath the television monitor and rotates it,
comparing the lines of a U boat to the shape on the screen. The latter is
rugged and furry with coral and other growths, but the similarity is
obvious.
"Why isn't it lying flat on the bottom, I wonder?" Randy says.
Doug grabs a plastic water bottle, which is still mostly full, and
tosses it overboard. It floats upside down.
"Why isn't it lying flat, Randy?"
"Because there's an air bubble trapped in one end," Randy says
sheepishly.
"She suffered damage at the stern. The bow pitched up. There was a
partial collapse. Seawater, rushing into the breach at the stern, forced all
of the air into the bow. The depth is a hundred and fifty four meters,
Randy. That's fifteen atmospheres of pressure. What does Boyle's Law tell
you?"
"That the volume of the air must have been reduced by a factor of
fifteen."
"Bingo. Suddenly, fourteen fifteenths of the boat is full of water, and
the other fifteenth is a pocket of compressed air, capable of supporting
life briefly. Most of her crew dead, she fell fast and settled hard onto the
bottom, breaking her back and leaving the bow section pointing upwards, as
you see her. If anyone was still alive in the bubble, they died a long, slow
death. May God have mercy on their souls."
In other circumstances, the religious reference would make Randy
uncomfortable, but here it seems like the only appropriate thing to say.
Think what you will about religious people, they always have something to
say at times like this. What would an atheist come up with? Yes, the
organisms inhabiting that submarine must have lost their higher neural
functions over a prolonged period of time and eventually turned into pieces
of rotten meat. So what?
"Closing in on what passes for the conning tower," Amy says. According
to the book, this U boat isn't going to have the traditional high vertical
tower rising out of its back: just a low streamlined bulge. Amy has piloted
the ROV very close to the U boat now, and once again she brings it to a stop
and yaws it around. The hull pans into the screen, a variegated mountain of
coral growths, completely unrecognizable as a man made object until
something dark enters the screen. It turns into a perfectly circular hole.
An eel comes snaking out of it and snaps angrily at the camera for a moment,
its teeth and gullet filling the screen. When it swims away, they can see a
dome shaped hatch cover hanging from its hinges next to the hole.
"Someone opened the hatch," Amy says.
"My god," says Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe. "My god." He leans away from
the TV as if he can't handle the image any more. He crawls out from under
the canopy and stands up, staring out across the South China Sea. "Someone
got out of that U boat."
Amy is still fascinated, and one with her joysticks, like a thirteen
year old boy in a video arcade. Randy rubs the strange empty place on his
wrist and stares at the screen, but he is not seeing anything now except
that perfect round hole.
After a minute or so, he goes out to join Doug, who is ritualistically
lighting up a cigar. "This is a good time to smoke," he mumbles. "Want one?"
"Sure. Thanks." Randy pulls out a folding multipurpose tool and cuts
the end from the cigar, a pretty impressive looking Cuban number. "Why do
you say it's a good time to smoke?"
"To fix it in your memory. To mark it." Doug tears his gaze from the
horizon and looks at Randy searchingly, almost beseeching him to understand.
"This is one of the most important moments in your life. Nothing will ever
be the same. We might get rich. We might get killed. We might just have an
adventure, or learn something. But we have been changed. We are standing
close to the Heracitean fire, feeling its heat on our faces." He produces a
flaring safety match from his cupped palms like a magician, and holds it up
before Randy's eyes, and Randy puffs the cigar alive, staring into the
flame.
"Well, here's to it," Randy says.
"And here's to whoever got out," replies Doug.
Chapter 50 SANTA MONICA
The United States Military (Waterhouse has decided) is first and
foremost an unfathomable network of typists and file clerks, secondarily a
stupendous mechanism for moving stuff from one part of the world to another,
and last and least a fighting organization. For the last couple of weeks he
has been owned by the second group. They put him on a luxury liner too swift
to be caught by U boats though this is a moot point since, as Waterhouse and
a few other people know, Dönitz has declared defeat in the Battle of the
Atlantic, and pulled his U boats off the map until he can build the new
generation, which will run on rocket fuel and need never come to the
surface. In this way Waterhouse got to New York. From Penn Station he took
trains to the Midwest, where he spent a week with his family and reassured
them for the ten thousandth time that, because of what he knew, he could
never be sent into actual combat.
Then it was trains again to Los Angeles, and now he waits for what
sounds like it will be a killing series of airplane flights halfway round
the world to Brisbane. He is one of about a million young men and women in
uniform and on leave, wandering around Los Angeles looking for some
entertainment.
Now, they say that this city is the entertainment capital and so
entertainment shouldn't be hard to find. Indeed you can hardly walk down a
city block without bumping into half a dozen prostitutes and passing an
equal number of night spots, movie theaters, and pool halls. Waterhouse
samples all of these during his four day layover, and is distressed to find
that he is no longer entertained by any of them. Not even the whores!
Maybe this is why he is walking along the bluff north of the Santa
Monica Pier, looking for a way down to the beach, which is completely empty
the only thing in Los Angeles that isn't generating commissions and
residuals for someone. The beach lures but does not pander. The plants up
here, standing watch over the Pacific, are like something from another
planet. No, they do not even look like real plants from any conceivable
planet. They are too geometric and perfect. They are schematic diagrams for
plants sketched out by some impossibly modern designer with a strong eye for
geometry but who has never been out in a woods and seen a real plant. They
don't even grow out of any recognizable organic matrix, they are embedded in
the sterile ochre dust that passes for soil in this part of the country.
Waterhouse knows that this is just the beginning, that it will only get
weirder from here on out. He heard enough from Bobby Shaftoe to know that
the other side of the Pacific is going to be indescribably strange.
The sun is preparing to go down and the pier, down the beach to his
left, is alight, a gaudy galaxy; the zoot suits of the carnival barkers
stand out from a mile away, like emergency flares. But Waterhouse is in no
hurry to reach it. He can see ignorant armies of soldiers, sailors, marines
milling around, distinguishable by the hues of their uniforms.
The last time he was in California, before Pearl Harbor, he was no
different from all of those guys on the pier just a little smarter, with a
knack for numbers and music. But now he understands the war in a way that
they never will. He is still wearing the same uniform, but only as a
disguise. He believes now that the war, as those guys understand it, is
every bit as fictional as the war movies being turned out across town in
Hollywood.
They say that Patton and MacArthur are daring generals; the world
watches in anticipation of their next intrepid sortie behind enemy lines.
Waterhouse knows that Patton and MacArthur, more than anything else, are
intelligent consumers of Ultra/Magic. They use it to figure out where the
enemy has concentrated his forces, then loop around them and strike where he
is weakest. That's all.
They say that Montgomery is a steady hand, cagey and insightful.
Waterhouse has no use for Monty; Monty's an idiot; Monty doesn't read his
Ultra; he ignores it, in fact, to the detriment of his men and of the war
effort.
They say that Yamamoto was killed by a lucky accident when some roving
P 38s just happened across an anonymous flight of Nipponese planes and shot
them down. Waterhouse knows that Yamamoto's death warrant was hammered out
by an Electrical Till Corporation line printer in a Hawaiian cryptanalysis
factory, and that the admiral was the victim of a straightforward political
assassination.
Even his concept of geography has changed. When he was home, he sat
down with his grandparents and they looked at the globe, spinning it around
until all they saw was blue, tracing his route across the Pacific, from one
lonely volcano to the next godforsaken atoll. Waterhouse knows that those
little islands, before the war, had only one economic function: information
processing. The dots and dashes traveling along the undersea cable are
swallowed up by the earth currents after a few thousand miles, like ripples
in heavy surf. The European powers colonized those islands at about the same
time as the long cables were being laid, and constructed power stations
where the dots and dashes coming down the line were picked up, amplified,
and sent on to the next chain of islands.
Some of those cables must plunge into the deep not far from this beach.
Waterhouse is about to follow the dots and dashes over the western horizon,
where the world ends.
He finds a ramp that leads down to the beach and lets gravity draw him
towards sea level, gazing to the south and west. The water is pacific and
colorless beneath a hazy sky, the horizon line is barely discernable.
The fine dry sand plumps under his feet in fat circular waves that
crest around his ankles, so he has to stop and unlace his hard leather
shoes. Sand has become trapped in the matrix of his black socks and he pulls
them off too and stuffs them in his pockets. He walks towards the water
carrying one shoe in each hand. He sees others who have tied their shoes
together through belt loops, leaving their hands free. But the asymmetry of
this offends him, so he carries his shoes as if preparing to invert himself
and wade on his hands with his head dangling into the water.
The low sun shines flatly across the sand, grazing the chaos and
creating a knife sharp terminator at the crest of each dunelet. The curves
flirt and osculate with one another in some pattern that is, Waterhouse
guesses, deeply fascinating and significant but too challenging for his
tired mind to attack. Some areas have been stomped level by seagulls.
The sand at the surf line has been washed flat. A small child's
footprints wander across it, splaying like gardenia blossoms on thin shafts.
The sand looks like a geometric plane until a sheet of ocean grazes it. Then
small imperfections are betrayed by swirls in the water. Those swirls in
turn carve the sand. The ocean is a Turing machine, the sand is its tape;
the water reads the marks in the sand and sometimes erases them and some
times carves new ones with tiny currents that are themselves a response to
the marks. Plodding through the surf, Waterhouse strikes deep craters in the
wet sand that are read by the ocean. Eventually the ocean erases them, but
in the process its state has been changed, the pattern of its swirls has
been altered. Waterhouse imagines that the disturbance might somehow
propagate across the Pacific and into some super secret Nipponese
surveillance device made of bamboo tubes and chrysanthemum leaves; Nip
listeners would know that Waterhouse had walked that way. In turn, the water
swirling around Waterhouse's feet carries information about Nip propeller
design and the deployment of their fleets if only he had the wit to read it.
The chaos of the waves, gravid with encrypted data, mocks him.
The land war is over for Waterhouse. Now he is gone, gone to the sea.
This is the first time he's taken a good look at it the sea, that is since
he reached Los Angeles. It looks big to him. Before, when he was at Pearl,
it was just a blank, a nothing. Now it looks like an active participant and
a vector of information. Fighting a war out on that thing could turn you
into some kind of a maniac, make you deranged. What must it be like to be
the General? To live for years among volcanoes and alien trees, to forget
about oaks and cornfields and snowstorms and football games? To fight the
terrible Nipponese in the jungle, burning them out of caves, driving them
off cliffs into the sea? To be an oriental potentate the supreme authority
over millions of square miles, hundreds of millions of people. Your only
tether to the real world a slender copper fiber rambling across the ocean
floor, a faint bleating of dots and dashes in the night? What kind of man
would this make you?
Chapter 51 OUTPOST
When their sergeant was aerosolized by the Australian with the tommy
gun, Goto Dengo and his surviving comrades were left mapless, and mapless in
the jungles of New Guinea during a war is bad, bad, bad.
In another country, they might have been able to keep walking downhill
until they reached the ocean, and then follow the coastline to their
destination. But travel along the coast is even more nearly impossible than
travel in the interior, because the coast is a chain of pestilential
headhunter infested marshes.
In the end, they find a Nipponese outpost by simply following the sound
of the explosions. They may not have maps, but the American Fifth Air Force
does.
The relentless bombing is reassuring, in a way, to Goto Dengo. After
their encounter with the Australians, he entertains an idea that he dare not
voice: that by the time they reach their destination, it might already have
been overrun by the enemy. That he can even conceive of such a possibility
proves beyond all doubt that he is no longer fit to be a soldier of the
emperor.
In any case, the drone of the bombers' engines, the tympanic thuds of
the explosions, the flashes on the night horizon give them plenty of helpful
hints as to where the Nipponese people are located. One of Goto Dengo's
comrades is a farmboy from Kyushu who seems to be capable of substituting
enthusiasm for food, water, sleep, medicine, and any other bodily needs. As
they trudge onwards through the jungle, this boy keeps his spirits up by
looking forward to the day when they draw close enough to hear the sound of
the antiaircraft batteries and see the American planes, torn open by
shellfire, spiraling into the sea.
That day never arrives. As they get closer, though, they can find the
outpost with their eyes closed, simply by following the reek of dysentery
and decaying flesh. Just as the stench draws close enough to be
overpowering, the enthusiastic boy makes an odd grunting sound. Goto Dengo
turns to see a peculiar, small, oval shaped entrance wound in the center of
the boy's forehead. The boy falls down and lies on the ground quivering.
"We are Nipponese!" Goto Dengo says.
***
The tendency of bombs to fall out of the sky and blow up among them
whenever then sun is up dictates that bunkers and foxholes be dug.
Unfortunately ground coincides with water table. Footprints fill up with
water before the foot has even been worried loose from the clutching mud.
Bomb craters are neat, circular ponds. Slit trenches are zigzagging canals.
There are no wheeled vehicles and no beasts of burden, no livestock, no
buildings. Those pieces of charred aluminum must have been parts of
airplanes once. There are a few heavy weapons, but their barrels are cracked
and warped from explosions, and pocked with small craters. Palm trees are
squat stumps crowned with a few jagged splinters radiating away from the
site of the most recent explosion. The expanse of red mud is flecked with
random clutches of gulls tearing at bits of food; Goto Dengo suspects
already what they're eating, and confirms this when he cuts his bare foot on
an excerpt of a human jawbone. The sheer volume of high explosive that has
detonated here has suffused every molecule of the air, water, and earth with
the chemical smell of TNT residue. This smell reminds Goto Dengo of home;
the same stuff is good for pulverizing any rock that is standing between you
and a vein of ore.
A corporal escorts Goto Dengo and his one surviving comrade from the
perimeter to a tent that has been pitched out on the mud, its ropes tied not
to stakes but to jagged segments of tree trunks, or heavy fragments of
ruined weapons. Inside, the mud is paved with the lids of wooden crates. A
shirtless man of perhaps fifty sits crosslegged on top of an empty
ammunition box. His eyelids are so heavy and swollen that it is difficult to
tell whether he is awake. He breathes erratically. When he inhales, his skin
retracts into the interstices between ribs, producing the illusion that his
skeleton is trying to burst free from his doomed body. He has not shaved in
a long time, but doesn't have enough whiskers to muster a real beard. He is
mumbling to a clerk, who squats on his haunches atop a crate lid stenciled
MANILA and copies down his words.
Goto Dengo and his comrade stand there for perhaps half an hour,
desperately trying to master their disappointment. He expected to be lying
in a hospital bed drinking miso soup by now. But these people are in worse
shape than he is; he is afraid that they might ask him for help.
Still, it is good just to be under canvas, and standing in the presence
of someone who has authority, who is taking charge. Clerks enter the tent
carrying message decrypts, which means that somewhere around here is a
functioning radio station, and a staff with codebooks. They are not totally
cut off.
"What do you know how to do?" says the officer, when Goto Dengo is
finally granted the opportunity to introduce himself.
"I am an engineer," says Goto Dengo.
"Ah. You know how to build bridges? Airstrips?"
The officer is engaging in a bit of whimsy here; bridges and airstrips
are as far beyond their grasp as intergalactic starships. All of his teeth
have fallen out and so he gums his words, and sometimes must pause to draw
breath two or three times in the course of a sentence.
"I will build such things if it is my commander's wish, though for such
things, others have skill far better than mine. My specialty is underground
works."
"Bunkers?"
A wasp stings him on the back of the neck and he inhales sharply. "I
will build bunkers if it is my commander's wish. My specialty is tunnels, in
earth or in rock, but especially in rock."
The officer stares at Goto Dengo fixedly for a few moments, then
directs a glance at his clerk, who nods a little bow and takes it down.
"Your skills are useless here," he says offhandedly, as if this is true of
just about everyone.
"Sir! Also, I am proficient with the Nambu light machine gun."
"The Nambu is a poor weapon. Not as good as what the Americans and
Australians have. Still, useful in jungle defense."
"Sir! I will defend our perimeter to my last breath "
"Unfortunately they will not attack us from the jungle. They bomb us.
But the Nambu cannot hit a plane. When they come, they will come from the
ocean. The Nambu is useless against an amphibious assault."
"Sir! I have lived in the jungle for six months."
"Oh?" For the first time, the officer seems interested. "What have you
been eating?"
"Grubs and bats, sir!"
"Go and find me some."
"At once, sir!"
***
He untwists some old rope to make twine, and knots the twine into nets,
and hangs the nets in trees. Once that is done, his life is simple: every
morning he climbs up into the trees to collect bats from the nets. Then he
spends the afternoon digging grubs out of rotten logs with a bayonet. The
sun goes down and he stands in a foxhole full of sewage until it comes up
again. When bombs go off nearby, the concussion puts him into a state of
shock so profound as to separate mind from body entirely; for several hours
afterwards, his body goes around doing things without his telling it to.
Stripped of its connections to the physical world, his mind runs in circles
like an engine that has sheared its driveshaft and is screaming along at
full throttle, doing no useful work while burning itself up. He usually does
not emerge from this state until someone speaks to him. Then more bombs
fall.
***
One night he notices that there is sand beneath his feet. Strange.
The air smells clean and fresh. Unheard of.
Others are walking on the sand with him.
They are being escorted by a couple of shambling privates, and a
corporal bent under the weight of a Nambu. The corporal is peering into Goto
Dengo's face strangely. "Hiroshima," he says.
"Did you say something to me?"
"Hiroshima."
"But what did you say before you said 'Hiroshima'?"
"In?"
"In Hiroshima."
"What did you say before you said 'in Hiroshima'?"
"Aunt."
"You were talking to me about your aunt in Hiroshima?"
"Yes. Her too."
"What do you mean, her too?"
"The same message."
"What message?"
"The message that you memorized for me. Give her the same message."
"Oh," Goto Dengo says.
"You remember the whole list?"
"The list of people I'm supposed to give the message to?"
"Yes. Recite the list again."
The corporal has an accent from Yamaguchi, which is where most of the
soldiers posted here came from. He seems more rural than urban. "Uh, your
mother and father back on the farm in Yamaguchi."
"Yes!"
"And your brother, who is in the Navy?"
"Yes!"
"And your sister, who is "
"A schoolteacher in Hiroshima, very good!"
"As well as your aunt who is also in Hiroshima."
"And don't forget my uncle in Kure."
"Oh, yeah. Sorry."
"That's okay! Now tell me the message again, just to make sure you
won't forget it."
"Okay," says Goto Dengo, and draws a deep breath. He is really starting
to come around now. They are trudging down to the sea: he and half a dozen
others, all unarmed and carrying small bundles, accompanied by the corporal
and privates. Below, in the gentle surf, a rubber boat awaits them.
"We're almost there! Tell me the message! Tell it back to me!"
"My beloved family," Goto Dengo begins.
"Very good perfect so far!" says the corporal.
"My thoughts are with you as always," Goto Dengo guesses.
The corporal looks a bit crestfallen. "Close enough keep going."
They have reached the boat. The crew shoves it out into the surf a few
paces. Goto Dengo stops talking for a few moments as he watches the others
wade out to it and climb in. Then the corporal prods him in the back. Goto
Dengo staggers out into the ocean. No one has started yelling at him yet in
fact they reach for him, pulling him in. He tumbles into the bottom of the
boat and clambers up to a kneeling position as the crew begin to row it out
into the surf. He locks eyes with the corporal, back on the beach.
"This is the last message you will receive from me, for by now I have
long since gone to my rest on the sacred soil of the Yasukuni Shrine."
"No! No! That's totally wrong!" hollers the corporal.
"I know that you will visit me there and remember me fondly, as I
remember you."
The corporal splashes into the surf, trying to chase the boat, and the
privates plunge in after him and grab him by the arms. The corporal shouts,
"Soon we will deal the Americans a smashing defeat and then I will march
home through the streets of Hiroshima in triumph along with my comrades!" He
recites it like a schoolboy doing his lessons.
"Know that I died bravely, in a magnificent battle, and never for one
moment shirked my duty!" Goto Dengo shouts back.
"Please send me some strong thread so that I can mend my boots!" the
corporal cries.
"The Army has looked after us well, and we have lived the last months
of our lives in such comfort and cleanliness that you would hardly guess we
had ever left the Home Islands!" Goto Dengo shouts, knowing that he must be
difficult to hear now above the surf. "When the final battle came, it came
quickly, and we went to our deaths in the full flower of our youth, like the
cherry blossoms spoken of in the emperor's rescript, which we all carry
against our breasts! Our departure from this world is a small price to pay
for the peace and prosperity that we have brought to the people of New
Guinea!"
"No, that's totally wrong!" wails the corporal. But his comrades are
dragging him up the beach now, back towards the jungle, where his voice is
lost in an eternal cacophony of hoots, screeches, twitters and eerie cries.
Goto Dengo smells diesel and stale sewage. He turns around. The stars
behind them are blocked out by something long and black and shaped kind of
like a submarine.
"Your message is much better," someone mumbles. It is a young fellow
carrying a toolbox: an airplane mechanic who has not seen a Nipponese
airplane in half a year.
"Yes," says another man also a mechanic, apparently. "His family will
find your message much more comforting."
"Thank you," Goto Dengo says. "Unfortunately I have no idea what the
kid's name is."
"Then go to Yamaguchi," says the first mechanic, "and pick some old
couple at random."
Chapter 52 METEOR
"You sure don't fuck like a smart girl," says Bobby Shaftoe, his voice
suffused with awe.
The wood stove glows in the corner, even though it's only September for
crissakes, in Sweden, where Shaftoe has spent the last six months.
Julieta is dark and lanky. She reaches one long arm far across the bed,
gropes on the nightstand for a cigarette.
"Could you reach that jiz rag?" Shaftoe says, eyeing a neatly folded
United States Marine Corps handkerchief next to the cigarettes. His arm is
too short.
"Why?" Julieta speaks great English like all the other Finns. Shaftoe
sighs in exasperation and buries his face in her black hair. The Gulf of
Bothnia whooshes and foams down below them, like a badly tuned radio pulling
in strange information.
Julieta is given to asking big questions.
"I just don't want there to be a big mess when I execute my withdrawal,
ma'am," he says.
He hears the flint of Julieta's lighter itching once, twice, thrice
behind his ear. Then her chest pushes him up as her lungs fill with smoke.
"Take your time," she purrs, her vocal cords syrupy with condensed tar.
"What are you going to do, go for a swim? Invade Russia?"
Somewhere out there, across the Gulf, is Finland. There are Russians
there, and Germans.
"See, even when you mention going for a swim, my dick gets smaller,"
Shaftoe says. "So it's going to come out. Inevitably." He thinks he
pronounces this last word correctly.
"Then what will happen?" Julieta says.
"We'll get a wet spot."
"So? It's natural. People have been sleeping on wet spots as long as
beds have existed."
"God damn it," Shaftoe says, and lunges heroically for the Semper Fi
handkerchief Julieta digs her fingernails into one of the sensitive spots
that she has located during her exhaustive cartographic survey of his body.
He squirms to no avail; all the Finns are great athletes. He pops out. Too
late! He knocks his wallet onto the floor while grabbing the hanky, then
rolls off Julieta and wraps it around himself, a flag on a broken pole, the
only flag of surrender Bobby Shaftoe will ever wave.
Then he just lies there for a while, listening to the surf, and the
popping of the wood in the stove. Julieta rolls away from him and lies
curled up on her side, avoiding the wet spot, even though it is natural, and
enjoying her cigarette, even though it isn't.
Julieta smells like coffee. Shaftoe likes to nuzzle and smell her
coffee scented flesh.
"The weather is not too bad. Uncle Otto should be back before night,"
she says. She is lazily regarding a map of Scandinavia. Sweden dangles like
a flaccid, circumcised phallus. Finland bulges scrotally underneath. Its
eastern border, with Russia, no longer bears any resemblance to reality.
This illusive frontier is furiously crosshatched with pencil marks, the axes
of Stalin's repeated efforts to castrate Scandinavia, obsessively recorded
and annotated by Julieta's uncle, who like all Finns is an expert skier,
crack shot, and indomitable warrior.
Still they despise themselves. Shaftoe thinks it's because they
eventually farmed out the defense of their country to the Germans. Finns
excelled at an old fashioned, personalized, retail style of Russian killing,
but when they started to run low on Finns, they had to call in the Germans,
who are more numerous and who have perfected a wholesale Russian
slaughtering operation.
Julieta scoffs at this simple minded theory: the Finns are a million
times more complex than Bobby Shaftoe can ever understand. Even if the war
had never happened, there would be an infinity of reasons for them to be
depressed all the time. There is no point even in trying to explain it all.
She can only provide him with the haziest glimpses into Finnish psychology
by fucking his brains out once every couple of weeks.
He has been lying there for too long. Soon the left over jism in his
tract will harden like epoxy. This peril spurs him to action. He slides out
of bed, cringes from the chill, hops across cold planks to the rug, scurries
instinctively toward the warmth of the stove.
Julieta rolls over onto her back to watch this. She looks at him
appraisingly. "Be a man," she says. "Make me some coffee."
Shaftoe snatches the cabin's cast iron kettle, which could double as a
ship anchor if need arose. He throws a blanket over his shoulders and runs
outside. He stops at the brink of the seawall, knowing that the splintery
pier will not be kind to his bare feet, and pisses down onto the beach. The
yellow arc is veiled in steam, redolent of coffee. He squints across the
gulf and sees a tug pulling a boom of logs down the coast, and a couple of
sails, but not Uncle Otto's.
Behind the cabin is a standpipe that is fed from a spring in the hills.
Shaftoe fills the kettle, snatches a couple of hunks of firewood and
scampers back inside, maneuvering between stacked bricks of foil packed java
and crates of Suomi machine pistol ammunition. He sets the kettle on the
iron stove and then stokes it up with the wood.
"You use too much wood," Julieta says, "Uncle Otto will be noticing."
"I'll chop more," Shaftoe says. "This whole fucking country is full of
nothing but wood."
"You'll be chopping wood all day if Uncle Otto gets angry at you."
"So it's okay for me to sleep with Otto's niece, but burning a couple
of sticks of wood to make her coffee is grounds for dismissal?"
"Grounds," Julieta says. "Coffee grounds."
The entire country of Finland (to hear Otto tell it) has been plunged
into an endless night of existential despair and suicidal depression. The
usual antidotes have been exhausted: self flagellation with steeped birch
twigs, mordant humor, week long drinking bouts. The only thing to save
Finland now is coffee. Unfortunately the government of that country has been
short sighted enough to raise taxes and customs duties through the roof.
Supposedly it is to pay for killing Russians, and for resettling the
hundreds of thousands of Finns who have to pull up stakes and move whenever
Stalin, in a drunken lunge, or Hitler, in a psychotic fit, attacks a map
with a red Crayola. It just has the effect of making coffee harder to
obtain. According to Otto, Finland is a nation of unproductive zombies,
except in areas that have been penetrated by the distribution networks of
coffee smugglers. Finns are generally strangers to the entire concept of
good fortune, however they are lucky enough to live right across the Gulf of
Bothnia from a neutral, reasonably prosperous country famous for its coffee.
With this background, the existence of a small Finnish colony in
Norrsbruck becomes pretty much self explanatory. The only thing that is
missing is muscle to load the coffee onto the boat, and to unload whatever
swag Otto brings back. Needed: one muscular lunkhead willing to be paid off
the record in whatever specie Otto comes up with.
Sergeant Bobby Shaftoe, USMC, pours some beans into the grinder and
starts to belabor the crank. A black flurry begins to accumulate in the
coffeepot below. He has learned to make this stuff the Swedish way, using an
egg to settle the grounds.
Chopping wood, fucking Julieta, grinding coffee, fucking Julieta,
pissing on the beach, fucking Julieta, loading and unloading Otto's ketch.
This has been pretty much it for Bobby Shaftoe during the last half year. In
Sweden he has found the calm, grey green eye of the blood hurricane that is
the world.
Julieta Kivistik is the central mystery. They do not have a love
affair; they have a series of love affairs. At the beginning of each affair,
they are not even speaking to each other, they do not even know each other,
Shaftoe is just a drifter who loads for her uncle. At the end of each affair
they are in bed fucking. In between, there is anywhere from one to three
weeks of tactical maneuver, false starts, and arduous cut and thrust
flirtation.
Other than that, each affair is completely different, like a whole new
relationship between two entirely different people. It is crazy. Probably
because Julieta is crazy much crazier than Bobby Shaftoe. But there's no
reason for Shaftoe not to be crazy, here and now.
He boils the coffee, does the trick with the egg, pours her a mug. This
is nothing more than a courtesy: their affair just ended and the new one
hasn't started yet.
When he brings her the mug, she is sitting up in bed, smoking another
cigarette, and (just like a woman) cleaning out his wallet, which is
something that he has not done since well, since he first made it, ten years
ago, in Oconomowoc, in fulfillment of the requirements for the
Leatherworking merit badge. Julieta has pulled the stuffing out of the thing
and is going through it as if it were a paperback book. Much of the stuff in
there has been ruined by seawater. But she is looking, analytically, at a
snapshot of Glory.
"Gimme that!" he says, and snatches it from her.
If she were his lover, she would try to play keep away with him, there
would be silliness and, perhaps, more sex at the end of it. But she is a
stranger now and she lets him have the wallet.
She watches him set down the coffee, as if he's a waiter in a cafe.
"You have a girlfriend where? In Mexico?"
"Manila," Bobby Shaftoe says, "if she's even still alive."
Julieta nods, completely impassive. She is neither jealous of Glory,
nor worried about Glory's fate at the hands of the Nips. What's happening in
the Philippines can't be any worse than what she's seen in Finland. And why
should she care, anyway, about the past romantic entanglements of her
uncle's stevedore, young what's his name?
Shaftoe pulls on boxers, wool pants, a shirt and a sweater. "I'm going
into town," he says. "Tell Otto I'll be back to unload the boat."
Julieta says nothing.
As a last, polite gesture, Shaftoe stops at the door, reaches behind a
stack of crates, hauls out the Suomi machine pistol (1) and
checks it: clean, loaded, ready for action, just like it was about an hour
ago, the last time he checked it. He puts it back in its place, turns
around, locks eyes with Julieta for a moment. Then he goes out and pulls the
door shut. Behind him, he can hear her naked feet on the cold floor, and the
satisfying sound of the door's bolts being rammed home.
He steps into a pair of tall rubber boots and then begins to trudge
south along the beach. The boots are Otto's and are a couple of sizes too
big for his feet. They make him feel like a little boy, splashing through
puddles in Wisconsin. This is what a boy of his age ought to be doing:
working, hard and honest, at a simple job. Kissing girls. Walking into town
to buy some smokes and maybe have a beer. The idea of flying around on
heavily armed warplanes and using modern weapons systems to kill hundreds of
foreign homicidal maniacs now strikes him as dated and inappropriate.
He slows down every few hundred yards to look at a steel drum, or other
war debris, cast up by the waves, half buried in sand, stenciled cryptically
in Cyrillic or Finnish or German. They remind him of the Nipponese drums on
that Guadalcanal beach.
Moon lifts sea, but not the ones who sleep on the beach Each wave a
shovel
A lot of stuff gets wasted in a war not just stuff that comes in crates
and drums. It frequently happens, for example, that men are called upon to
die willingly that others may live. Shaftoe learned on Guadalcanal that you
can never tell when circumstances will make you into that guy. You can go
into battle with the clearest, simplest, smartest plan ever devised, worked
out by Annapolis trained, battle hardened Marine officers, and based upon
tons of intelligence. But ten seconds after the first trigger has been
pulled, shit is happening all over the place, people are running around like
maniacs. The battle plan that was genius a minute ago suddenly looks as
sweetly naive as the inscriptions in your high school year book. Guys are
dying. Some of them are dying because a shell happens to fall on them, but
surprisingly often, they are dying because they are ordered to.
It was like that with U 691. That whole thing with the Trinidadian
steamer was probably a brilliant plan (Waterhouse's, he suspects) at some
point. But then it all went wrong, and some Allied commander gave the order
that Shaftoe and Root, along with the crew of U 691, were to die.
He should have died on the beach on Guadalcanal, along with his
buddies, and he didn't. Everything between then and U 691 was just sort of
an extra bonus life. He got a chance to go home and see his family, sort of
like Jesus after the Resurrection.
Now Bobby Shaftoe is dead for sure. This is why he walks so slowly down
the beach, and takes such a brotherly interest in these items, because Bobby
Shaftoe is, too, a corpse washed up on the beach in Sweden.
He is thinking about this when he sees the Heavenly Apparition.
The sky here is like a freshly galvanized bucket that has been inverted
over the world to block out inconvenient sunlight; if someone lights up a
cigarette half a mile away, it blazes like a nova. By those standards, the
Heavenly Apparition looks like a whole galaxy falling out of orbit to graze
the surface of the world. You could almost mistake it for an air plane,
except that it does not make the requisite chesty, droning thrum. This thing
emits a screaming whine and a long trail of fire. Besides, it goes too fast
for an airplane. It comes streaking in from the Gulf of Bothnia and crosses
the shoreline a couple of miles north of Otto's cabin, gradually losing
altitude and slowing down. But as it slows down, the flames burgeon, and
claw their way forward up the thing's black body, which resembles the
crumpled, curling wick at the root of a candle flame.
It disappears behind trees. Around here, everything disappears behind
trees sooner or later. A ball of fire erupts from those trees, and Bobby
Shaftoe says, "One thousand one, one thousand two, one thousand three, one
thousand four, one thousand five, one thousand six, one thousand seven" and
then stops, hearing the explosion. Then he turns around and walks into
Norrsbruck, going faster now.
Chapter 53 LAVENDER ROSE
Randy wants to go down and look at the U boat in person. Doug says
evenly that Randy is welcome to do so, but he needs to draw up a valid dive
plan first, and reminds him that the depth of the wreck is one hundred and
fifty four meters. Randy nods as if he had, of course, expected to draw up a
dive plan.
He wants everything to be like driving cars, where you just hop in and
go. He knows a couple of guys who fly airplanes, and he can still remember
how he felt when he learned that you can't just get in a plane (even a small
one) and take off you have to have a flight plan, and it takes a whole
briefcase full of books and tables and specialized calculators, and access
to weather forecasts above and beyond the normal consumer grade weather
forecasts, to come up with even a bad, wrong flight plan that will surely
kill you. Once Randy had gotten used to this idea, he grudgingly admitted it
made sense.
Now Doug Shaftoe's telling him he needs a plan just to strap some tanks
on his back and swim a hundred and fifty four meters (straight down,
admittedly) and back. So Randy yanks a couple of diving books off the
bungeed shelves of Glory IV and tries to come up with even a vague idea of
what Doug's talking about. Randy has never gone scuba diving in his life,
but he's seen them doing it on Jacques Cousteau and it seems straightforward
enough.
The first three books he consults contain more than enough detail to
perfectly reproduce the crestfallenness that Randy experienced when he
learned about flight plans. Before he'd opened the books Randy had gotten
out his mechanical pencil and his graph paper in preparation for making
marks on the page; half an hour later he's still trying to get a handle on
the contents of the tables, and he hasn't made any marks at all. He notes
that the depths in these tables only go down as far as a hundred and thirty,
and at that level they only talk in terms of staying down there five or ten
minutes. And yet he knows that Amy, and the Shaftoe's colorful and ever
enlarging cast of polyethnic scuba divers, are spending much longer at this
depth, and are in fact beginning to come up to the surface with artifacts
from the wreck. There is, for example, an aluminum briefcase wherein Doug
hopes to find clues as to who was on this U boat and why it was on the wrong
side of the planet.
Randy begins to fear that the entire wreck is going to be stripped bare
before he even makes any marks on his piece of graph paper. The divers show
up, one or two each day, on speedboats or outrigger canoes from Palawan.
Blond surf boys, taciturn galoots, cigarette smoking Frenchmen, Nintendo
playing Asians, beer can crumpling ex Navy guys, blue collar hillbillies.
They all have diving plans. Why doesn't Randy have a diving plan?
He starts sketching one out based on the depth of one hundred and
thirty, which seems reasonably close to one hundred and fifty four. After
working on it for about an hour (long enough to imagine all sorts of
specious details) he happens to notice that the table he's been using is in
feet, not meters, which means that all of these divers have been going down
to a depth that is way more than three times as deep as the maximum that is
even talked about on these tables.
Randy closes up all of the books and looks at them peevishly for a
while. They are all nice new books with color photographs on the covers. He
picked them off the shelf because (getting introspective here) he is a
computer guy, and in the computer world any book printed more than two
months ago is a campy nostalgia item. Investigating a little more, he finds
that all three of these shiny new books have been personally autographed by
the authors, with long personal inscriptions: two addressed to Doug, and one
to Amy. The one to Amy has obviously been written by a man who is
desperately in love with her. Reading it is like moisturizing with Tabasco.
He concludes that these are all consumer grade diving books written for
rum drenched tourists, and furthermore that the publishers probably had
teams of lawyers go over them one word at a time to make sure there would
not be liability trouble. That the contents of these books, therefore,
probably represent about one percent of everything that the authors actually
know about diving, but that the lawyers have made sure that the authors
don't even mention that.
Okay, so divers have mastered a large body of occult knowledge. That
explains their general resemblance to hackers, albeit physically fit
hackers.
Doug Shaftoe is not going down to the wreck himself. As a matter of
fact he looked surprised, bordering on contemptuous, when Randy asked him
whether he would go down. Instead, he's going over the stuff that is brought
up from the wreck by the younger divers. They began by doing a photographic
survey, using digital cameras, and Doug's been printing out blowups of the
inside of the U boat on his laser printer and pasting them up around the
walls of his personal wardroom on Glory IV.
Randy does a sorting procedure on the diving books now: he ignores
anything that has color photographs, or that appears to have been published
within the last twenty years, or that has any quotes on the back cover
containing the words stunning, superb, user friendly, or, worst of all, easy
to understand. He looks for old, thick books with worn out bindings and
block lettered titles like DIVE MANUAL. Anything with angry marginal notes
written by Doug Shaftoe gets extra points.
To: randy@epiphyte.com
From: root@eruditorum.org
Subject: Pontifex
Randy,
For now, let's use "Pontifex" as the working title of this
cryptosystem. It is a post war system. What I mean by that is that, after
seeing what Turing and company did to Enigma, I came to the (now obvious)
conclusion that any modern system had better be resistant to machine
cryptanalysis. Pontifex uses a 54 element permutation as its key one key per
message, mind you! and it uses that permutation (which we will denote as T)
to generate a keystream which is added, modulo 26, to the plaintext (P), as
in a one time pad. The process of generating each character in the keystream
alters T in a reversible but more or less "random" fashion.
At this point, a diver comes up with a piece of actual gold, but it's
not a bar: it's a sheet of hammered gold, maybe eight inches on a side and
about a quarter of a millimeter thick, with a pattern of tiny neat holes
punched through it, like a computer card. Randy spends a couple of days
obsessing over this artifact. He learns that it came out of a crate stored
in the hold of the U boat, and that there are thousands more of them.
Now all of a sudden he's reading stuff by guys whose names are preceded
by naval ranks and succeeded by M.D.s and Ph.D.s and they are going on for
dozens of pages about the physics of nitrogen bubble formation in the knee,
for example. There are photographs of cats strapped down in benchtop
pressure chambers. Randy learns that the reason Doug Shaftoe doesn't dive to
one hundred and fifty four meters is that certain age related changes in the
joints tend to increase the likelihood of bubble formation during the
decompression process. He comes to terms with the fact that the pressure at
the depth of the wreck is going to be fifteen or sixteen atmospheres,
meaning that as he ascends to the surface, any nitrogen bubbles that happen
to be rattling around in his body are going to get fifteen or sixteen times
as large as they were to begin with and that this is true whether those
bubbles happen to be in his brain, his knee, the little blood vessels of the
eyeball, or trapped underneath his fillings. He develops a sophisticated
layman's understanding of dive medicine, which amounts to little because
everyone's body is different hence the need for each diver to have a
completely different dive plan. Randy will need to figure out his body fat
percentage before he can even begin marking up his sheet of graph paper.
It is also path dependent. These divers' bodies get partly saturated
with nitrogen every time they go down, and not all of it goes out of their
bodies when they come back up all of them, sitting around Glory IV playing
cards, drinking beer, talking to their girlfriends on their GSM phones, are
all outgassing all the time nitrogen is seeping out of their bodies into the
atmosphere, and each one of them knows more or less how much nitrogen's
stuffed into his body at any given moment and understands, in a deep and
nearly intuitive way, just exactly how that information propagates through
any dive plan that he might be cooking up inside the powerful dive planning
supercomputer that each of these guys apparently carries around in his
nitrogen saturated brain.
One of the divers comes up with a plank from the crate that contained
the stacks of gold sheets. It is in very bad shape, and it's still fizzing
as gas comes out of it. Fizzing in a way that Randy has no trouble imagining
his bones would do if he made any errors in working out his dive plan. There
is some stenciled lettering just barely visible on the wood: NIZ ARCH.
Glory IV has compressors for pumping air up to insanely high pressures
to fill the scuba tanks. Randy develops an awareness that the pressure has
to be insanely high or it won't even emerge from the tanks while these guys
are down at depth. The divers are all being suffused with this pressurized
gas; he half expects that one of these divers is going to bump into
something and explode into a pink mushroom cloud.
To: randy@epiphyte.com
From: cantrell@epiphyte.com
Subject: Pontifex
You forwarded me a message about a cryptosystem called Pontifex. Was
this invented by a friend of yours? In its general outlines (viz, an n
element permutation that is used to generate a keystream, and that slowly
evolves) it is similar to a commercial system called RC4, which enjoys a
complicated reputation among Secret Admirers it seems secure, and has not
been broken, but it makes us nervous because it is basically a single rotor
system, albeit a rotor that evolves. Pontifex evolves in a much more
complicated & asymmetrical way than RC4 and so might be more secure.
Some things about Pontifex are slightly peculiar.
(1) He talks about generating "characters" in the key stream and then
adding them, modulo 26, to the plaintext. This is how people talked 50 years
ago when ciphers were worked out using pencil and paper. Today we talk in
terms of generating bytes and adding them modulo 256. Is your friend pretty
old?
(2) He speaks of T as a 54 element permutation. There is nothing wrong
with that but Pontifex would work just as well with 64 or 73 or 699
elements, so it makes more sense to describe it as an n element permutation
where n could be 54 or any other integer. I can't figure out why he settled
on 54. Possibly because it is twice the number of letters in the alphabet
but this makes no particular sense.
Conclusion: the author of Pontifex is cryptologically sophisticated but
shows possible signs of being an elderly crank. I need more details in order
to deliver a verdict.
– Cantrell
"Randy?" says Doug Shaftoe, and beckons him into his wardroom.
The inside of the wardroom door is decorated with a big color
photograph of a massive stone staircase in a dusty church. They stand in
front of it. "Are there a lot of Waterhouses?" Doug asks. "Is it a common
name?"
"Uh, well, it's not a rare name."
"Is there anything you'd like to share with me about your family
history?"
Randy knows that as a possible suitor to Amy, he will be undergoing
thorough scrutiny at all times. The Shaftoes are doing due diligence on him.
"What kind of thing are you looking for? Something terrible? I don't think
there's anything worth hiding from you."
Doug stares at him distractedly for a while, then turns to face the now
open aluminum briefcase from the U boat. Randy supposes that merely opening
it required coming up with a detailed plan. Doug has spread out
miscellaneous contents on a tabletop to be photographed and cataloged. Ex
Navy SEAL Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe has, at the peak of his career, become a
sort of librarian.
Randy sees a pair of gold rimmed spectacles, a fountain pen, a few
rusty paper clips. But it looks as though a lot of sodden paper was taken
out of that briefcase too, and Doug Shaftoe has been carefully drying it out
and trying to read it. "Most wartime paper was crap," he says. "It probably
dissolved into mush within days of the sinking. The paper in this briefcase
was at least protected from marine critters, but most of it's gone. However,
the owner of this briefcase was apparently some sort of aristocrat. Check
out the glasses, the pen."
Randy checks them out. The divers have found teeth and fillings in the
wreck, but nothing that qualifies as a body. The places where people died
are marked by these trails of hard, inert remains, such as eyeglasses. Like
the debris footprint of an exploded airliner.
"So what I'm getting at is that he had a few scraps of good paper in
his briefcase," Doug continues. "Personal stationery. So we suspect his name
was Rudolf von Hacklheber. Does that name ring any bells with you?"
"No. But I could do a web search . . ."
"I tried that," Doug says. "Turned up just a few hits. There was a man
by that name who wrote a couple of mathematics papers back in the thirties.
And there are some organizations in and around Leipzig, Germany, that use
the name: a hotel, a theater, a defunct reinsurance company. That's about
it."
"Well, if he was a mathematician, he might have had some connection
with my grandfather. Is that why you were asking about my family?"
"Check this out," Doug says, and pings one fingernail against a glass
tray full of a transparent liquid. An envelope, unglued and spreadeagled, is
floating in it. Randy bends over and peers at it. Something has been written
on the back in pencil, but it's impossible to read because the flaps of the
envelope have been spread apart. "May I?" he asks. Doug nods and hands him a
couple of latex surgical gloves. "I don't have to file a diving plan for
this, do I?" Randy asks, wiggling his fingers into the gloves.
Doug is not amused. "It is deeper than it looks," he says.
Randy flips the envelope over, then folds the flaps back together,
reassembling the inscription. It says:
WATERHOUSE LAVENDER ROSE.
Chapter 54 BRISBANE
Through a small dusty window Xed with masking tape, Lawrence Pritchard
Waterhouse gazes out at downtown Brisbane. Bustling it ain't. A taxi limps
down the street and pulls into the drive of the nearby Canberra Hotel, which
is home to many mid ranking officers. The taxi smokes and reeks it is
powered by a charcoal burner in the trunk. Marching feet can be heard
through the window. It's not the tromp, tromp of combat boots, but the
whack, whack of sensible shoes worn by sensible women: local volunteers.
Waterhouse instinctively leans closer to the window to get a look at them,
but he's wasting his time. Dressed in those uniforms, you could march a
regiment of pinup girls through all the cabins and gangways of an active
battleship and not draw a single wolf whistle, lewd suggestion, or butt
grab.
A delivery truck creeps out of a side street and backfires alarmingly
as it tries to accelerate onto the main drag. Brisbane is still worried
about attack from the air, and no one likes sudden loud noises. The truck
looks like it is being attacked by an amoeba: on its back is a billowing
rubberized canvas balloon full of natural gas.
He's on the third floor of a commercial building so nondescript that
the most interesting observation one can make about it is that it has four
stories. There is a tobacconist on the ground floor. The rest of the place
must have been empty until The General beaten like a red headed stepchild by
those Nips came to Brisbane from Corregidor, and made this city into the
capital of the Southwest Pacific Theater. There must have been an incredible
amount of surplus office space around here before The General showed up,
because a lot of Brisbaners had fled south, expecting an invasion.
Waterhouse has had plenty of time to familiarize himself with Brisbane
and its environs. He's been here for four weeks, and he's been given nothing
to do. When he was in Britain, they couldn't shuffle him around fast enough.
Whatever his job was at the moment, he did it feverishly until he received
top secret, highest priority orders to rush, by any available means of
transportation, to his next assignment.
Then they brought him here. The Navy flew him across the Pacific,
hopping from one island base to the next in an assortment of flying boats
and transports. He crossed the equator and the international date line on
the same day. But when he reached the boundary between Nimitz's Pacific
Theater and The General's Southwest Pacific Theater, it was like he'd glided
into a stone wall. It was all he could do to talk himself onboard a troop
transport to New Zealand, and then to Fremantle. The transports were almost
unbelievably hellish: steel ovens packed with men, baked by the sun, no one
allowed to go abovedecks for fear they'd be sighted, and marked for
slaughter, by a Nip submarine. Even at night they couldn't get a breeze
through there, because all openings had to be covered with blackout
curtains. Waterhouse couldn't really complain; some of the men had traveled
this way all the way from the East Coast of the United States.
The important thing was that he made it to Brisbane, as per his orders,
and reported to the right officer, who told him to await further orders.
Which he's been doing until this morning, when he was told to show up at
this office upstairs of the tobacconist. It is a room full of enlisted men
typing up forms, trundling them around in wire baskets, and filing them. In
Waterhouse's experience with the military, he has found that it's not a good
sign when one is ordered to report to a place like this.
Finally he is allowed into the presence of an Army major who has
several other conversations, and various pieces of important paperwork going
on at the same time. That is okay; Waterhouse doesn't need to be a
cryptanalyst to get the message loud and clear, which is that he is not
wanted here.
"Marshall sent you here because he thinks that The General is sloppy
with Ultra," the major says.
Waterhouse flinches to hear this word spoken aloud, in an office where
enlisted men and women volunteers are coming and going. It's almost as if
the major wishes to make it clear that The General is, in fact, quite sloppy
with Ultra, and rather likes it that way, thank you very much.
"Marshall's afraid that the Nips will get wise to us and change their
codes. It's all because of Churchill." The major refers to General George C.
Marshall and Sir Winston Churchill as if they were bullpen staff for a farm
league baseball team. He pauses to light a cigarette. "Ultra is Churchill's
baby. Oh yeah, Winnie just luuuuuves his Ultra. He thinks we're going to
blow his secret and ruin it for him because he thinks we're idiots." The
major takes a very deep lungful of smoke, sits back in his chair, and
carefully puffs out a couple of smoke rings. It is a convincing display of
insouciance. "So he's always nagging Marshall to tighten up security, and
Marshall throws him a bone every so often, just to keep the Alliance on an
even keel." For the first time, the major looks Waterhouse in the eye. "You
happen to be the latest bone. That's all."
There is a long silence, as if Waterhouse is expected to say something.
He clears his throat. No one ever got court martialed for following his
orders. "My orders state that "
"Fuck your orders, Captain Waterhouse," the major says.
There is a long silence. The major tends to one or two other
distracting duties. Then he stares out the window for a few moments, trying
to compose his thoughts. Finally he says, "Get this through your head. We
are not idiots. The General is not an idiot. The General appreciates Ultra
as much as Sir Winston Churchill. The General uses Ultra as well as any
commander in this war."
"Ultra's no good if the Japanese learn about it."
"As you can appreciate, the General does not have time to meet with you
personally. Neither does his staff. So you will not have an opportunity to
instruct him on how to keep Ultra a secret," says the major. He glances down
a couple of times at a sheet of paper on his blotter, and indeed he is now
speaking like a man who is reading a prepared statement. "From time to time,
since we learned that you were being sent to us, your existence has been
brought to the General's attention. During the brief periods of time when he
is not occupied with more pressing matters, he has occasionally voiced some
pithy thoughts about you, your mission, and the masterminds who sent you
here."
"No doubt," Waterhouse says.
"The general is of the opinion that persons not familiar with the
unique features of the Southwest Pacific Theater may not be entirely
competent to judge his strategy," says the major. "The General feels that
the Nips will never learn about Ultra. Never. Why? Because they are
incapable of comprehending what has happened to them. The General has
speculated that he could go down to the radio station tomorrow and broadcast
a speech announcing that we had broken all of the Nip codes and were reading
all of their messages, and nothing would happen. The General's words were
something to the effect that the Nips will never believe how totally we have
fucked them, because when you get fucked that badly, it's your own goddamn
fucking fault and it makes you look like a fucking shithead."
"I see," Waterhouse says.
"But The General said all of that at much greater length and without
using a single word of profanity, because that is how The General expresses
himself."
"Thank you for boiling it down," Waterhouse says.
"You know those white headbands that the Nips tie around their
foreheads? With the meatball and the Nip characters printed on them?"
"I've seen pictures of them."
"I've seen them for real, tied around the heads of pilots of Nip
fighter planes that were about fifty feet away firing machine guns at me and
my men," says the major.
"Oh, yeah! Me too. At Pearl Harbor," Waterhouse says. "I forgot."
This appears to be the most irritating thing that Waterhouse has said
all day. The major has to spend a moment composing himself. "That headband
is called a hachimaki."
"Imagine this, Waterhouse. The emperor is meeting with his general
staff. All of the top generals and admirals in Nippon parade into the room
in full dress uniforms and bow down solemnly before the emperor. They have
come to report on the progress of the war. Each of these generals and
admirals is wearing a brand new hachimaki around his forehead. These
hachimakis are printed with phrases saying things like, 'I am a dipshit' and
'Through my personal incompetence I killed two hundred thousand of our own
men' and 'I handed our Midway plans over to Nimitz on a silver platter.'
The major now pauses and takes a phone call so that Waterhouse can
savor this image for a while. Then he hangs up, lights another cigarette,
and continues. "That's what it would look like for the Nips to admit at this
point in the war that we have Ultra."
More smoke rings. Waterhouse has nothing to say. So the major
continues. "See, we've gone over the watershed line of this war. We won
Midway. We won North Africa. Stalingrad. The Battle of the Atlantic.
Everything changes when you go over the watershed line. The rivers all flow
a different direction. It's as if the force of gravity itself has changed
and is now working in our favor. We've adjusted to that. Marshall and
Churchill and all those others are still stuck in an obsolete mentality.
They are defenders. But The General is not a defender. As a matter of fact,
just between you and me, The General is lousy on defense, as he demonstrated
in the Philippines. The General is a conqueror.
"Well," Waterhouse finally says, "what do you suggest I do with myself,
seeing as how I'm here in Brisbane?"
"I'm tempted to say you should connect up with all of the other Ultra
security experts Marshall sent out before you, and get a bridge group
together," the major says.
"I don't care for bridge," Waterhouse says politely.
"You're supposed to be some expert codebreaker, right?"
"Right."
"Why don't you go to Central Bureau. The Nips have a zillion different
codes and we haven't broken all of them yet."
"That's not my mission."
"You don't worry about your fucking mission," the major says. "I'll
make sure that Marshall thinks you're doing your mission, because if
Marshall doesn't think that, he'll give us no end of hassles. So you're
clean with the higher ups."
"Thank you."
"You can consider your mission accomplished," the major says.
"Congratulations."
"Thank you."
"My mission is to beat the stuffing out of the fucking Nips, and that
mission is not accomplished just yet, and so I have other matters to attend
to," the major says significantly.
"Shall I just see myself out then?" Waterhouse asks.
Chapter 55 DÖNITZ
Once, when Bobby Shaftoe was eight years old, he went to Tennessee to
visit Grandma and Grandpa. One boring afternoon he began skimming a letter
that the old lady had left lying on an end table. Grandma gave him a stern
talking to and then recounted the incident to Grandpa, who recognized his
cue and gave him forty whacks. That and a whole series of roughly parallel
childhood experiences, plus several years in the Marine Corps, have made him
into one polite fellow.
So he doesn't read others' mail. It be against the rules.
But here he is. The setting: a plank paneled room above a pub in
Norrsbruck, Sweden. The pub is a sailorly kind of place, catering to
fishermen, which makes it congenial for Shaftoe's friend and drinking buddy:
Kapitänleutnant Günter Bischoff, Kriegsmarine of the Third Reich (retired).
Bischoff gets a lot of interesting mail, and leaves it strewn all over
the room. Some of the mail is from his family in Germany, and contains
money. Consequently Bischoff, unlike Shaftoe, will not have to work even if
this war continues, and he remains in Sweden cooling his boilers for another
ten years.
Some of the mail is from the crew of U 691, according to Bischoff.
After Bischoff got them all here to Norrsbruck in one piece, his second in
command, Oberleutnant zur See Karl Beck, cut a deal with the Kriegsmarine in
which the crew were allowed to return to Germany, no hard feelings, no
repercussions. All of them except for Bischoff climbed on board what was
left of U 691 and steamed off in the direction of Kiel.
Only days later, the mail began to pour in. Every member of the crew,
to a man, sent Bischoff a letter describing the heroes' welcome they had
received: Dönitz himself met them at the pier and handed out hugs and kisses
and medals and other tokens in embarrassing profusion. They can't stop
talking about how much they want dear Günter to come back home.
Dear Günter isn't budging; he's been sitting in his little room for a
couple of months now. His world consists of pen, ink, paper, candles, cups
of coffee, bottles of aquavit, the soothing beat of the surf. Every crash of
wave on shore, he says, reminds him that he is above sea level now, where
men were meant to live. His mind is always back there a hundred feet below
the surface of the gelid Atlantic, trapped like a rat in a sewer pipe,
cringing from the explosions of the depths charges. He lived a hundred years
that way, and spent every moment of those hundred years dreaming of the
Surface. He vowed, ten thousand times, that if he ever made it back up to
the world of air and light, he would enjoy every breath, revel in every
moment.
That's pretty much what he's been doing, here in Norrsbruck. He has his
personal journal, and he's been going through it, page by page, filling in
all of the details that he didn't have time to jot down, before he forgets
them. Someday, after the war, it'll make a book: one of a million war
memoirs that will clog libraries from Novosibirsk to Gander to Sequim to
Batavia.
The pace of incoming mail dropped dramatically after the first weeks.
Several of his men still write to him faithfully. Shaftoe is used to seeing
their letters scattered around the place when he comes to visit. Most of
them are written on scraps of cheap, greyish paper.
Directionless silver light infiltrates the room through Bischoff's
window, illuminating what looks like a rectangular pool of heavy cream on
his tabletop. It is some kind of official Hun stationery, surmounted by a
raptor clenching a swastika. The letter is handwritten, not typed. When
Bischoff sets his wet glass down on it, the ink dissolves.
And when Bischoff goes to empty his bladder, Shaftoe can't keep his
eyes away from it. He knows that this is bad manners, but the Second World
War has led him into all sorts of uncouth behavior, and there don't seem to
be any angry grandpas lurking in the trenches with doubled belts; no
consequences at all for the wicked, in fact. Maybe that will change in a
couple of years, if the Germans and the Nips lose the war. But that
reckoning will be so great and terrible that Shaftoe's glance at Bischoff's
letter will probably go unnoticed.
It came in an envelope. The first line of the address is very long, and
consists of "Günter BISCHOFF" preceded by a string of ranks and titles, and
followed by a series of letters. The return address has been savaged by
Bischoffs letter opener, but it's somewhere in Berlin.
The letter itself is an impossible snarl of Germanic cursive. It is
signed, hugely, with a single word. Shaftoe spends some time trying to make
out that word; he whose John Hancock this is. Must have an ego that ranks
right up there with the General's.
When Shaftoe figures out the signature belongs to Dönitz, he gets all
tingly. That Dönitz is an important guy Shaftoe's even seen him on a
newsreel, congratulating a grimy U boat crew, fresh from a salty spree.
Why's he writing love notes to Bischoff? Shaftoe can't read this stuff
any better than he could Nipponese. But he can see a few figures. Dönitz is
talking numbers. Perhaps tons of shipping sunk, or casualties on the Eastern
Front. Perhaps money.
"Oh, yes!" Bischoff says, having somehow reappeared in the room without
making any noise. When you're down in a U boat, running silent, you learn
how to walk quietly. "I have come up with a hypothesis on the gold."
"What gold?" Shaftoe says. He knows, of course, but having been caught
in an act of flagrant naughtiness, his instinct is to play innocent.
"That you saw down in the batteries of U 553," Bischoff says. "You see,
my friend, anyone else would say that you are simply a crazy jughead."
"The correct term is Jarhead."
"They would say, first of all, that U 553 sank many months before you
claim to have seen it. Secondly, they would say that such a boat could not
have been loaded with gold. But I believe that you saw it."
"So?"
Bischoff glances at the letter from Dönitz looking mildly seasick. "I
must tell you something about the Wehrmacht of which I am ashamed, first."
"What? That they invaded Poland and France?"
"No.
"That they invaded Russia and Norway?"
"No, not that."
"That they bombed England and . . . "
"No, no, no," Bischoff says, the very model of forbearance. "Something
you did not know about."
"What?"
"It seems that, while I have been sneaking around the Atlantic, doing
my duty the Führer has come up with a little incentive program."
"What do you mean?"
"It seems that duty and loyalty are not enough for certain high ranking
officers. That they will not carry out their orders to the fullest unless
they receive . . . special awards."
"You mean, like medals?"
Bischoff is smiling nervously. "Some generals on the Eastern Front have
been given estates in Russia. Very, very large estates."
"Oh."
"But not everyone can be bribed with land. Some people require a more
liquid form of compensation."
"Booze?"
"No, I mean liquid in the financial sense. Something you can carry with
you, and that is accepted in any whorehouse on the planet."
"Gold," says Shaftoe, quietly.
"Gold would suffice," Bischoff says. It has been a long time since he
looked Shaftoe in the eye. He's staring out the window instead. His green
eyes might be a little moist. He takes a deep breath, blinks, and gets the
bitter irony under control before continuing: "Since Stalingrad, it has not
gone well on the Eastern Front. Let us say that Ukrainian real estate is no
longer worth what it used to be, if the deed to the land happens to be
written in German and issued in Berlin."
"It's getting harder to bribe a general by promising him a chunk of
Russian land," Shaftoe translates. "So Hitler needs lots of gold."
"Yes. Now, the Japanese have lots of gold consider that they sacked
China. As well as many other places. But they are lacking in certain things.
They need wolframite. Mercury. Uranium."
"What's uranium?"
"Who the hell knows? The Japanese want it, we provide it. We provide
them technology too blueprints for new turbines. Enigma machines." At this
point Bischoff breaks off and laughs, painfully and darkly, for a long time.
When he gets it under control, he continues: "So we have been shipping them
these things, in U boats."
"And the Nips pay you in gold."
"Yes. It is a dark economy, hidden beneath the ocean, trading small but
valuable items over vast distances. You got a glimpse of it."
"You knew this was going on but you didn't know about U 553," Shaftoe
points out.
"Ah, Bobby, there are many, many things going on in the Third Reich
that a mere U boat captain does not know about. You are a soldier, you know
this is true."
"Yes," Shaftoe says, recalling the peculiarities of Detachment 2702. He
looks down at the letter. "Why is Dönitz telling you all of this now?"
"He is not telling me anything," Bischoff says reprovingly. "I have
figured this out myself" He gnaws on a lip for a while. "Dönitz is making me
a proposition."
"I thought you'd retired."
Bischoff considers it. "I have retired from killing people. But the
other day I sailed a little sloop around the inlet."
"So?"
"So it seems that I have not retired from going down to the sea in
ships." Bischoff heaves a sigh. "Unfortunately, all of the really
interesting ships are owned by major governments."
Bischoff is getting a little spooky, so Shaftoe opts for a little
change in the subject. "Hey, speaking of really interesting things..." and
he tells the story of the Heavenly Apparition that he saw while he was
walking down here.
Bischoff is delighted by the story, which revives the hunger for
excitement that he has kept pickled in salt and alcohol ever since reaching
Norrsbruck. "You are sure it was manmade?" he asks.
"It whined. Chunks of shit were falling out of it. But I've never seen
a meteor so I don't know."
"How far away?"
"It crashed seven kilometers from where I was standing. So, ten clicks
from here."
"But ten kilometers is nothing for an Eagle Scout and a Hitler Youth!"
"You weren't a Hitler Youth."
Bischoff broods over this for a moment. "Hitler so embarrassing. I
hoped that if I ignored him he would go away. Perhaps if I had joined the
Hitler Youth, they would have given me a surface ship."
"Then you'd be dead."
"Right!" Bischoff's mood brightens considerably. "Ten kilometers is
still nothing. Let's go!"
"It's already dark."
"We will follow the flames."
"They will have gone out."
"We will follow the trail of debris, like Hansel and Gretel."
"It didn't work for Hansel and Gretel. Didn't you even read the fucking
story?"
"Don't be such a defeatist, Bobby," says Bischoff, diving into a hearty
fisherman's sweater. "Normally you are not like this. What is troubling
you?"
Glory. It is October and the days are growing short. Shaftoe and
Bischoff, both mired in the yet to be discovered emotional dumps of Seasonal
Affective Disorder, are like two brothers trapped in the same pit of
quicksand, each keeping a sharp eye on the other.
"Eh? Was ist los, buddy?"
"Guess I'm just feeling at loose ends."
"You need an adventure. Let's go!"
"I need an adventure like Hitler needs an ugly little toothbrush
mustache," says Bobby Shaftoe. But he drags himself up out of his chair and
follows Bischoff out the door.
***
Shaftoe and Bischoff are trudging through the dark Swedish woods like a
pair of lost souls trying to find the side entrance to Limbo. They take
turns carrying the kerosene lantern, which has an effective range about as
long as a grown man's arm. Sometimes they go for a whole hour without
talking, each man alone with his own struggle against suicidal depression.
Then one of them (usually Bischoff) will perk up and say something, like:
"Haven't seen Enoch Root recently. What has he been up to since he
finished curing you of your morphine addiction?" Bischoff asks.
"Don't know. He was such a fucking pain in the ass during that project
that I never wanted to see him again. But I think he got a Russian radio
transmitter from Otto and took it into that church basement where he lives;
he's been messing around with it ever since."
"Yes. I remember. He was changing the frequencies. Did he ever get it
to work?"
"Beats me," Shaftoe says, "but when big pieces of burning shit start
falling out of the sky in my neighborhood, makes me wonder."
"Yes. Also he goes to the post office quite frequently," Bischoff says.
"I chatted with him there once. He is carrying on a heavy correspondence
with others around the world."
"Other what?"
"That is my question, too."
Eventually they find the wreck only by following the sound of a
hacksaw, which reverberates through the pines like the shriek of some
extraordinarily stupid and horny bird. This enables them to home in on it in
a general way. Final coordinates are provided by a sudden, strobelike
flashing light, devastating noise, and a sap scented rain of amputated
foliage. Shaftoe and Bischoff both hit the dirt and lie there listening to
fat pistol slugs ricocheting from tree trunk to tree trunk. The hacksawing
noise continues with no break in rhythm.
Bischoff starts talking Swedish, but Shaftoe shushes him. "That was a
Suomi," he says. "Hey, Julieta! Knock it off! It's just me and Günter."
There is no answer. Then, Shaftoe remembers that he has recently fucked
Julieta, and therefore needs to remember his manners. "Excuse me, ma'am," he
says, "but I gather from the sound of your weapon that you are of the
Finnish nation, for which I have unbounded admiration, and I wanted to let
you know that I, former Sergeant Robert Shaftoe, and my friend, former
Kapitänleutnant Günter Bischoff, mean you no harm."
Julieta, homing in on the sound of his voice in the darkness, responds
with a controlled burst of fire that passes about a foot over Bobby
Shaftoe's head. "Don't you belong in Manila?" she asks.
Shaftoe groans, and rolls over on his back as if he has been shot in
the gut.
"What does she mean by this?" asks the bewildered Günter Bischoff.
Seeing that his friend has been (emotionally) incapacitated, he tries: "This
is Sweden, a peaceful and neutral country! Why are you trying to machine gun
us?"
"Go away!" Julieta must be with Otto, because they hear her talk to him
before saying, "We do not want representatives of the American Marines and
the Wehrmacht here. You are not welcome."
"Sounds like you are sawing away on something that is pretty damn
heavy," Shaftoe finally retorts. "How you gonna haul it out of these woods?"
This leads to an animated conversation between Julieta and Otto. "You
may approach," Julieta finally says.
They find the Kivistiks, Julieta and Otto, standing in a pool of
lantern light around the severed, charred wing of an airplane. Most Finns
are hard to tell apart from Swedes, but Otto and Julieta both have black
hair and black eyes, and could pass for Turks. The tip of the airplane wing
is painted with the black and white cross of the Luftwaffe. An engine is
mounted to that wing. If Otto's hacksaw has its way, it won't be for much
longer. The engine has recently been set on fire and then used to knock down
a large number of pine trees. But even so Shaftoe can see it's like no
engine he has ever seen before. There is no propeller, but there are a lot
of little fan blades.
"It looks like a turbine," says Bischoff, "but for air, rather than
water." Otto straightens up, squeezes his lower back theatrically, and hands
Shaftoe the hacksaw. Then he hands him a bottle of benzedrine tablets for
good measure. Shaftoe eats a few tablets, strips off his shirt to reveal
splendid musculature, does a couple of USMC approved stretching exercises,
grabs the hacksaw, and sets to work. After a couple of minutes he looks up
nonchalantly at Julieta, who is standing there holding the machine pistol
and watching him with a look that is simultaneously frosty and smoldering,
like baked Alaska. Bischoff stands off to the side, reveling in this.
Dawn is slapping her chapped and reddened fingers against a frostbitten
sky, attempting to restore some circulation, when the remains of the turbine
finally fall away from the wing. Pumped on benzedrine, Shaftoe has been
operating the hacksaw for six hours; Otto has stepped in to change blades
several times, a major capital investment on his part. Next, they devote
half of the morning to dragging the engine through the woods and down a
creek bed to the sea, where Otto's boat is waiting, and Otto and Julieta
take their prize away. Bobby Shaftoe and Günter Bischoff trudge back up to
the site of the wreck. They have not discussed this openly yet it would be
unnecessary but they intend to find the part of the airplane that contains
the body of the pilot, and see to it that he gets a proper burial.
"What is in Manila, Bobby?" Bischoff asks.
"Something that morphine made me forget," Shaftoe answers, "and that
Enoch Root, that fucking bastard, made me remember."
Not fifteen minutes later they come to the gash in the woods that was
carved by the plunging airplane, and hear a man's voice wailing and sobbing,
completely out of his mind with grief. "Angelo! Angelo! Angelo! Mein
liebchen!"
They cannot see the man who is crying out in this way, but they do see
Enoch Root, standing there and brooding. He looks up alertly as they
approach, and produces a semiautomatic from his leather jacket. Then he
recognizes them, and relaxes.
"What the fuck is going on here?" Shaftoe says never one to beat around
in the bush. "Is that a fucking German you're with?"
"Yes, I am with a German," Root says, "as are you."
"Well, why is your German making such a fucking spectacle of himself?"
"Rudy is crying over the body of his lover," Root says, "who died in an
attempt to reunite with him."
"A woman was flying that plane?" says the flabbergasted Shaftoe.
Root rolls his eyes and heaves a sigh. "You have forgotten to allow for
the possibility that Rudy might be a homosexual."
It takes Shaftoe a long time to stretch his mind around this large,
inconveniently shaped concept. Bischoff, in typical European fashion, seems
completely unruffled. But he still has questions to ask. "Enoch, why are you
. . . here?"
"Why has my spirit been incarnated into a physical body in this world
generally? Or specifically, why am I here in a Swedish forest, standing on
the wreck of a mysterious German rocket plane while a homosexual German sobs
over the cremated remains of his Italian lover?
"Last rites," Root answers his own question. "Angelo was Catholic."
Then, after a while, he notices that Bischoff is staring at him, looking
completely unsatisfied. "Oh. I am here, in a larger sense, because Mrs.
Tenney, the vicar's wife, has become sloppy, and forgotten to close her eyes
when she takes the balls out of the bingo machine."
Chapter 56 CRUNCH
The condemned man showers, shaves, puts on most of a suit, and realizes
that he is ahead of schedule. He turns on the television, gets a San Miguel
out of the fridge to steady his nerves, and then goes to the closet to get
the stuff of his last meal. The apartment only has one closet and when its
door is open it appears to have been bricked shut, Cask of Amontillado
style, with very large flat red oblongs, each imprinted with the image of a
venerable and yet oddly cheerful and yet somehow kind of hauntingly sad
naval officer. The whole pallet load was shipped here several weeks ago by
Avi, in an attempt to lift Randy's spirits. For all Randy knows more are
still sitting on a Manila dockside ringed with armed guards and dictionary
sized rat traps straining against their triggers, each baited with a single
golden nugget.
Randy selects one of the bricks from this wall, creating a gap in the
formation, but there is another, identical one right behind it, another
picture of that same naval officer. They seem to be marching from his closet
in a peppy phalanx. "Part of this complete balanced breakfast," Randy says.
Then he slams the door on them and walks with a measured, forcibly calm step
to the living room where he does most of his dining, usually while facing
his thirty six inch television. He sets up his San Miguel, an empty bowl, an
exceptionally large soup spoon so large that most European cultures would
identify it as a serving spoon and most Asian ones as a horticultural
implement. He obtains a stack of paper napkins, not the brown recycled ones
that can't be moistened even by immersion in water, but the flagrantly
environmentally unsound type, brilliant white and cotton fluffy and
desperately hygroscopic. He goes to the kitchen, opens the fridge, reaches
deep into the back, and finds an unopened box bag pod unit of UHT milk. UHT
milk need not, technically, be refrigerated, but it is pivotal, in what is
to follow, that the milk be only a few microdegrees above the point of
freezing. The fridge in Randy's apartment has louvers in the back where the
cold air is blown in, straight from the freon coils. Randy always stores his
milk pods directly in front of those louvers. Not too close, or else the
pods will block the flow of air, and not too far away either. The cold air
becomes visible as it rushes in and condenses moisture, so it is a simple
matter to sit there with the fridge door open and observe its flow
characteristics, like an engineer testing an experimental minivan in a River
Rouge wind tunnel. What Randy would like to see, ideally, is the whole milk
pod enveloped in an even, jacketlike flow to produce better heat exchange
through the multilayered plastic and foil skin of the milk pod. He would
like the milk to be so cold that when he reaches in and grabs it, he feels
the flexible, squishy pod stiffen between his fingers as ice crystals spring
into existence, summoned out of nowhere simply by the disturbance of being
squished.
Today the milk is almost, but not quite, that cold. Randy goes into his
living room with it. He has to wrap it in a towel because it is so cold it
hurts his fingers. He launches a videotape and then sits down. All is in
readiness.
This is one of a series of videotapes that are shot in an empty
basketball gym with a polished maple floor and a howling, remorseless
ventilation system. They depict a young man and a young woman, both
attractive, svelte, and dressed something like marquee players in the Ice
Capades, performing simple ballroom dance steps to the accompaniment of
strangled music from a ghetto blaster set up on the free throw line. It is
miserably clear that the video has been shot by a third conspirator who is
burdened with a consumer grade camcorder and reeling from some kind of inner
ear disease that he or she would like to share with others. The dancers
stomp through the most simple steps with autistic determination. The camera
operator begins in each case with a two shot, then, like a desperado
tormenting a milksop, aims his weapon at their feet and makes them dance,
dance, dance. At one point the pager hooked to the man's elastic waistband
goes off and a scene has to be cut short. No wonder: he is one of the most
sought after ballroom dance instructors in Manila. His partner would be too,
if more men in this city were interested in learning to dance. As it is, she
must scrape by earning maybe a tenth of what the male instructor pulls down,
giving lessons to a small number of addled or henpecked stumblebums like
Randy Waterhouse.
Randy takes the red box and holds it securely between his knees with
the handy stay closed tab pointing away from him. Using both hands in unison
he carefully works his fingertips underneath the flap, trying to achieve
equal pressure on each side, paying special attention to places where too
much glue was laid down by the gluing machine. For a few long, tense
moments, nothing at all happens, and an ignorant or impatient observer might
suppose that Randy is getting nowhere. But then the entire flap pops open in
an instant as the entire glue front gives way. Randy hates it when the box
top gets bent or, worst of all possible words, torn. The lower flap is
merely tacked down with a couple of small glue spots and Randy pulls it back
to reveal a translucent, inflated sac. The halogen down light recessed in
the ceiling shines through the cloudy material of the sac to reveal gold
everywhere the glint of gold. Randy rotates the box ninety degrees and holds
it between his knees so its long axis is pointed at the television set, then
grips the top of the sac and carefully parts its heat sealed seam, which
purrs as it gives way. Removal of the somewhat milky plastic barrier causes
the individual nuggets of Cap'n Crunch to resolve, under the halogen light,
with a kind of preternatural crispness and definition that makes the roof of
Randy's mouth glow and throb in trepidation.
On the TV, the dancing instructors have finished demonstrating the
basic steps. It is almost painful to watch them doing the compulsories,
because when they do, they must willfully forget everything they know about
advanced ballroom dancing, and dance like persons who have suffered strokes,
or major brain injuries, that have wiped out not only the parts of their
brain responsible for fine motor skills but also blown every panel in the
aesthetic discretion module. They must, in other words, dance the way their
beginning pupils like Randy dance.
The gold nuggets of Cap'n Crunch pelt the bottom of the bowl with a
sound like glass rods being snapped in half Tiny fragments spall away from
their corners and ricochet around on the white porcelain surface. World
class cereal eating is a dance of fine compromises. The giant heaping bowl
of sodden cereal, awash in milk, is the mark of the novice. Ideally one
wants the bone dry cereal nuggets and the cryogenic milk to enter the mouth
with minimal contact and for the entire reaction between them to take place
in the mouth. Randy has worked out a set of mental blueprints for a special
cereal eating spoon that will have a tube running down the handle and a
little pump for the milk, so that you can spoon dry cereal up out of a bowl,
hit a button with your thumb, and squirt milk into the bowl of the spoon
even as you are introducing it into your mouth. The next best thing is to
work in small increments, putting only a small amount of Cap'n Crunch in
your bowl at a time and eating it all up before it becomes a pit of
loathsome slime, which, in the case of Cap'n Crunch, takes about thirty
seconds.
At this point in the videotape he always wonders if he's inadvertently
set his beer down on the fast forward button, or something, because the
dancers go straight from their vicious Randy parody into something that
obviously qualifies as advanced dancing. Randy knows that the steps they are
doing are nominally the same as the basic steps demonstrated earlier, but
he's damned if he can tell which is which, once they go into their creative
mode. There is no recognizable transition, and that is what pisses Randy
off, and has always pissed him off, about dancing lessons. Any moron can
learn to trudge through the basic steps. That takes all of half an hour. But
when that half hour is over, dancing instructors always expect you'll take
flight and go through one of those miraculous time lapse transitions that
happen only in Broadway musicals and begin dancing brilliantly. Randy
supposes that people who are lousy at math feel the same way: the instructor
writes a few simple equations on the board, and ten minutes later he's
deriving the speed of light in a vacuum.
He pours the milk with one hand while jamming the spoon in with the
other, not wanting to waste a single moment of the magical, golden time when
cold milk and Cap'n Crunch are together but have not yet begun to pollute
each other's essential natures: two Platonic ideals separated by a boundary
a molecule wide. Where the flume of milk splashes over the spoon handle, the
polished stainless steel fogs with condensation. Randy of course uses whole
milk, because otherwise why bother? Anything less is indistinguishable from
water, and besides he thinks that the fat in whole milk acts as some kind of
a buffer that retards the dissolution into slime process. The giant spoon
goes into his mouth before the milk in the bowl has even had time to seek
its own level. A few drips come off the bottom and are caught by his freshly
washed goatee (still trying to find the right balance between beardedness
and vulnerability, Randy has allowed one of these to grow). Randy sets the
milk pod down, grabs a fluffy napkin, lifts it to his chin, and uses a
pinching motion to sort of lift the drops of milk from his whiskers rather
than smashing and smearing them down into the beard. Meanwhile all his
concentration is fixed on the interior of his mouth, which naturally he
cannot see, but which he can imagine in three dimensions as if zooming
through it in a virtual reality display. Here is where a novice would lose
his cool and simply chomp down. A few of the nuggets would explode between
his molars, but then his jaw would snap shut and drive all of the
unshattered nuggets straight up into his palate where their armor of razor
sharp dextrose crystals would inflict massive collateral damage, turning the
rest of the meal into a sort of pain hazed death march and rendering him
Novocain mute for three days. But Randy has, over time, worked out a really
fiendish Cap'n Crunch eating strategy that revolves around playing the
nuggets' most deadly features against each other. The nuggets themselves are
pillow shaped and vaguely striated to echo piratical treasure chests.
Now, with a flake type of cereal, Randy's strategy would never work.
But then, Cap'n Crunch in a flake form would be suicidal madness; it would
last about as long, when immersed in milk, as snowflakes sifting down into a
deep fryer. No, the cereal engineers at General Mills had to find a shape
that would minimize surface area, and, as some sort of compromise between
the sphere that is dictated by Euclidean geometry and whatever sunken
treasure related shapes that the cereal aestheticians were probably
clamoring for, they came up with this hard to pin down striated pillow
formation. The important thing, for Randy's purposes, is that the individual
pieces of Cap'n Crunch are, to a very rough approximation, shaped kind of
like molars. The strategy, then, is to make the Cap'n Crunch chew itself by
grinding the nuggets together in the center of the oral cavity, like stones
in a lapidary tumbler. Like advanced ballroom dancing, verbal explanations
(or for that matter watching videotapes) only goes so far and then your body
just has to learn the moves.
By the time he has eaten a satisfactory amount of Cap'n Crunch (about a
third of a 25 ounce box) and reached the bottom of his beer bottle, Randy
has convinced himself that this whole dance thing is a practical joke. When
he reaches the hotel, Amy and Doug Shaftoe will be waiting for him with
mischievous smiles. They will tell him they were just teasing and then take
him into the bar to talk him down.
Randy puts on the last few bits of his suit. Any delaying tactics are
acceptable at this point, so he checks his e mail.
To: randy@epiphyte.com
From: root@eruditorum.org
Subject: The Pontifex Transform, as requested
Randy,
You are right, of course as the Germans learned the hard way, no new
cryptosystem can be trusted until it has been published, so that people like
your Secret Admirer friends can have a go at breaking it. I would be in your
debt if you would do this with Pontifex.
The transform at the heart of Pontifex has various asymmetries and
special cases that make it difficult to express in a few clean, elegant
lines of math. It almost has to be written down as pseudo code. But why
settle for pseudo when you can have the real thing? What follows is Pontifex
written as a Perl script. The variable $D contains the 54 element
permutation. The subroutine e generates the next keystream value whilst
evolving $D.
#!/usr/bin/perl s
$f=$d? 1:1;$D=pack('C*'.33..86);$p=shift;
$p=~y/a z/A Z/;$U='$D=~s/(.*)U$/U$1/;
$D=~s/U(.)/$1U/;';($V=$U)=~s/U/V/g;
$p=~s/[A Z]/$k=ord($&) 64,&e/eg;$k=0;
while(<>){y/a z/A Z/;y/A Z//dc;$o.=$_}$o.='X'
while length ($o)%5&&!$d;
$o=~s/./chr(($f*&e+ord($&) l3)%26+65)/eg;
$o=~s/X*$// if $d;$o=~s/.{5}/$& /g;
print"$o\n";sub v{$v=ord(substr($D,$_[0])) 32;
$v>53?53:$v}
sub w{$D=~s/(.{$_[0]})(.*)(.)/$2$1$3/}
sub e{eval"$U$V$V";$D=~s/(.*)([UV].*[UV])(.*)/$3$2$l/;
&w(&v(53));$k?(&w($k)):($c=&v(&v(0)),$c>52?&e:$c)}
There is also one message from his palimony lawyer in California, which
he prints and puts into his breast pocket to savor while he is stuck in
traffic. He takes the elevator downstairs and catches a taxi to the Manila
Hotel. This (riding in a taxi through Manila) would be one of the more
memorable experiences of his life if this were the first time he had ever
done it, but is the millionth time and so nothing registers. For example, he
sees two cars smashed together directly beneath a giant road sign that says
NO SWERVING, but he doesn't really take note.
Dear Randy,
The worst is over. Charlene and (more importantly) her lawyer seem to
have accepted, finally, that you are not sitting on top of a huge pile of
gold in the Philippines! Now that your imaginary millions are no longer
confusing the picture, we can figure out how to dispose of the assets you
actually have: primarily, your equity in the house. This would be much more
complicated if Charlene wanted to remain there, however it now appears that
she has landed that Yale job, which means that she is just as eager to
liquidate the house as you are. The question, then, will be how the proceeds
of the sale should be divided between you and her. Their position appears
(not surprisingly) to be that the huge increase in the house's value since
you bought it is a consequence of changes in the real estate market never
mind the quarter million you spent shoring up the foundation, replacing the
plumbing, etc., etc.
I assume you kept all of the receipts, cancelled checks and other proof
of how much money you spent on improvements, because that's the kind of guy
you are. It would help me very much if I could pull these out and wave them
around during my next round of discussions with Charlene's lawyer. Can you
produce them? I realize that this will be something of an inconvenience for
you. However, since you have invested most of your net worth into that
house, the stakes are high.
Randy puts the page into his breast pocket and begins planning a trip
to California.
Most of the ballroom dancing freaks in this town belong to the social
class that can afford cars and drivers. The cars are lined up all the way
down the hotel's drive and out into the street, waiting to discharge their
passengers, whose bright gowns are visible even through tinted windows.
Attendants blow whistles and gesture with their white gloves, vectoring cars
into the parking lot, where they are sintered into a tight mosaic. Some of
the drivers don't even bother getting out, and lean their seats back for a
nap. Others gather beneath a tree at one end of the lot to smoke, joke, and
shake their heads in dazed amusement at the world in the way that only your
hardened future shocked Third Worlders can.
Since he has been dreading this so much, you'd think Randy might just
sit back and savor the delay. But, like jerking a bandage off a hairy part
of the body, it is a deed best done quickly and suddenly. As they pull to a
stop at the back of the line of limos, he shoves money at his surprised
driver, opens the door, and walks the last block to the hotel. He can feel
the eyes of the gowned and perfumed Filipinas playing across his husky back
like laser sights on commandos' rifles.
Aging Filipinas in prom dresses have come and gone across the lobby of
the Manila Hotel for as long as Randy has known the place. He hardly noticed
them during the early months when he was actually living there. The first
time they appeared, he assumed that some function was underway in the grand
ballroom: perhaps a wedding, perhaps a class action suit being filed by
aging beauty contest contestants against the synthetic fibers industry. That
was about as far as he got before he stopped burning out his mental circuits
trying to figure everything out. Pursuing an explanation for every strange
thing you see in the Philippines is like trying to get every last bit of
rainwater out of a discarded tire.
The Shaftoes are not waiting by the door to tell him it was all a joke,
so Randy squares his shoulders and stomps doggedly across the vast lobby,
all alone, like a Confederate infantryman in Pickett's Charge, the last man
of his regiment. A photographer in a Ronald Reagan pompadour and a white
tuxedo is planted before the door to the grand ballroom, shooting pictures
of people on the way in, hoping that they will pay for copies on the way
out. Randy shoots him such a fell look that the man's shutter finger cringes
back from the button. Then it's through the big doors and into the ballroom,
where, beneath swirling, colored lights, hundreds of Filipinas are dancing,
mostly with much younger men, to the strains of a reprocessed Carpenters
tune generated by a small orchestra in the corner. Randy shells out some
pesos for a corsage of sampaguita flowers. Holding it at arm's length so
that he will not be plunged into a diabetic coma by its fumes, he commences
a Magellanian circumnavigation of the dance floor, which is surrounded by an
atoll of round tables that are adorned with white linen tablecloths,
candles, and glass ashtrays. A man with a thin mustache sits alone at one of
those tables, back against the wall, a cellphone against his head, one side
of his face illuminated fluoroscopically by the eerie green light of its
keypad. A cigarette juts from his fist.
Grandma Waterhouse insisted that seven year old Randy take ballroom
dance lessons because one day it would certainly come in handy. He begged to
differ. Her Australian accent had turned lofty and English in the decades
since she had come to America, or maybe that was his imagination. She sat
there, bolt upright as always, on her floral chintz Gomer Bolstrood settee,
the sere hills of the Palouse visible through lace curtains behind her,
sipping tea from a white china cup decorated with was it lavender roses?
When she tilted the cup back, seven year old Randy must have been able to
read the name of the china pattern off the bottom. The information must be
stored in his subconscious memory somewhere. Perhaps a hypnotist could
extract it.
But seven year old Randy had other things on his mind: protesting, in
the strongest possible terms, the assertion that ballroom dance skills could
ever be of any use. At the same time, he was being patterned. Implausible,
even ludicrous ideas were suffusing his brain, invisible and odorless as
carbon monoxide gas: that the Palouse was a normal landscape. That the sky
was this blue everywhere. That a house should look this way: with lace
curtains, leaded glass windows, and room after room full of Gomer Bolstrood
furniture.
"I met your grandfather Lawrence at a dance, in Brisbane," Grandma
announced. She was trying to tell him that he, Randall Lawrence Waterhouse,
would not even exist had it not been for the practice of ballroom dancing.
But Randy did not even know where babies came from yet and probably wouldn't
have understood even if he did. Randy straightened up, remembering his
posture, and asked her a question: did this encounter in Brisbane happen
when she was seven years old, or, perhaps, a little later?
Perhaps if she had lived in a mobile home, the grown up Randy would
have sunk his money into a mutual fund, instead of paying ten thousand
dollars to a soi disant artisan from San Francisco to install leaded glass
windows around his front door, like at Grandma's house.
He provides tremendous, long lasting amusement to the Shaftoes by
walking right past their table without recognizing them. He looks right at
Doug Shaftoe's date, a striking Filipina, probably in her forties, who is in
the middle of making some forceful point. Without taking her eyes off Doug
and Amy Shaftoe, she reaches out with one long graceful arm and snags
Randy's wrist as he goes by, yanking him back like a dog on a meat leash.
She then holds him there while she finishes her sentence, then looks up at
him with a brilliant smile. Randy smiles back dutifully, but he does not
give her the full attention she seems accustomed to, because he is a bit
preoccupied by the spectacle of America Shaftoe in a dress.
Fortunately, Amy has not gone in for the prom queen look. She is
wearing a form fitting black number with long sleeves that hide her tattoos,
and black tights, as opposed to stockings. Randy gives her the flowers, like
a quarterback handing off the pigskin to a runner. She accepts them with a
crooked expression, like a wounded soldier biting down on a bullet. Irony
aside, she has a gleam in her eye that he has never seen before. Or maybe
that is just light from the mirrored ball, reflecting off cigarette smoke
induced tears. He senses in his gut that he did the right thing by showing
up. As with all gut feelings, only time will tell whether this it is
pathetic self delusion. He was kind of afraid that she would go through some
Hollywoodesque transfiguration into a radiant goddess, which would have the
same effect on Randy as an ax to the base of the skull. The fact of the
matter is that she looks quite good, but arguably, just as out of place as
Randy is in his suit.
He is hoping that they can get the dancing over right away so that he
can flee the building in Cinderellan obloquy, but they bid him sit down. The
orchestra takes a break and the dancers return to their tables. Doug Shaftoe
is comfortably sprawled back in his chair with the masculine confidence of a
man who has not only killed people but who is, furthermore, escorting the
most beautiful woman in the room. Her name is Aurora Taal, and she casts her
flawlessly Lancomed gaze over the other Filipinas with the controlled
amusement of one who has lived in Boston, Washington, and London, and seen
it all, and come back to live in Manila anyway.
"So, did you learn anything more about this Rudolf von Hacklheber
character?" Doug asks, after a few minutes of small talk. It follows that
Aurora must be in on the whole secret. Doug mentioned, weeks ago, that a
small number of Filipinos knew about what they were doing, and that they
could be trusted.
"He was a mathematician. He was from a wealthy Leipzig family. He was
at Princeton before the war. His years there did, in fact, overlap with my
grandfather's."
"What kind of math did he do, Randy?"
"Before the war he did number theory. Which tells us nothing about what
he did during the war. It wouldn't be surprising if he'd ended up working in
the Third Reich's crypto apparatus."
"Which wouldn't explain how he ended up here."
Randy shrugs. "Maybe he did engineering work on the new generation of
submarines. I don't know."
"So the Reich got him involved in some kind of classified work, which
killed him eventually," Doug says. "We could have guessed that for
ourselves, I suppose."
"Why did you mention crypto, then?" Amy asks. She has some kind of
emotional metal detector that screams whenever it comes near buried
assumptions and hastily stifled impulses.
"I guess I have crypto on the brain. And, if there was some kind of
connection between von Hacklheber and my grandfather "
"Was your grandfather a crypto guy, Randy?" Doug asks.
"He never said anything about what he did during the war."
"Classic."
"But he had this trunk up in the attic. A war souvenir. It actually
reminds me of a trunk full of Nipponese crypto materials that I recently saw
in a cave in Kinakuta." Doug and Amy stare at him. "It doesn't amount to
anything, probably," Randy concedes.
The orchestra starts in with a Sinatra tune. Doug and Aurora smile at
each other and rise to their feet. Amy rolls her eyes and looks the other
way, but it's put up or shut up time now, and Randy cannot conceive of any
way out. He stands up and extends his hand to the one he fears and hopes
for, and she, without looking, reaches out and puts her hand into his.
Randy shuffles, which is no way to dance beautifully but does rule out
snapping his partner's metatarsals. Amy is essentially no better at this
than he is, but she has a better attitude. By the time they get to the end
of the first dance, Randy has at least reached the point where his face is
no longer burning, and has gone for some thirty seconds without having to
apologize for anything, and sixty without asking his partner whether she
will be needing medical attention. Then the song is over, and circumstances
dictate that he has to dance with Aurora Taal. This is less intimidating;
even though she is glamorous and a really good dancer, their relationship is
not one that allows for the possibility of grotesque pre erotic fumbling.
Also, Aurora smiles a lot, and she has a really spectacular smile, where
Amy's face was intense and preoccupied. The next dance is announced as
ladies' choice, and Randy is still trying to make eye contact with Amy when
he finds this tiny middle aged Filipina standing there asking Aurora if she
would mind terribly. Aurora consigns him to the other lady like a pork belly
futures contract on the commodity exchange, and suddenly Randy and the lady
are dancing the Texas two step to the strains of a pre disco Bee Gees tune.
"So, have you found wealth in the Philippines yet?" asks the lady,
whose name Randy did not quite catch. She acts as if she expects him to know
her.
"Uh, my partners and I are exploring business opportunities," Randy
says. "Maybe wealth will follow."
"I understand you are good with numbers," the lady says.
Randy is really racking his brain now. How does this woman know he's a
numbers kind of guy? "I'm good with math," he finally says.
"Isn't that what I said?"
"Nah, mathematicians stay away from actual, specific numbers as much as
possible. We like to talk about numbers without actually exposing ourselves
to them that's what computers are for."
The lady will not be denied; she has a script and she's sticking to it.
"I have a math problem for you," the lady says.
"Shoot."
"What is the value of the following information: fifteen degrees,
seventeen minutes, forty one point three two seconds north, and a hundred
and twenty one degrees, fifty seven minutes, zero point five five seconds
east?"
"Uh. . . I don't know. It sounds like a latitude and longitude.
Northern Luzon, right?"
The lady nods.
"You want me to tell you the value of those numbers?"
"Yes."
"Depends on what's there, I guess."
"I suppose it does," the lady says. And that's all she says, for the
rest of the dance. Other than complimenting Randy on his balletic skills,
which is just as hard to interpret.
Chapter 57 GIRL
Flats are harder and harder to find in Brisbane, which has become a spy
boomtown Bletchley Park Down Under. There's Central Bureau, which has set up
out at the Ascot Racetrack, and another entity in a different part of town
called Allied Intelligence Bureau. The people who work at Central Bureau
tend to be pallid mathematics experts. The AIB people, on the other hand,
remind Waterhouse very much of those Detachment 2702 fellows: tense, tanned,
and taciturn.
Half a mile from the Ascot Racetrack, he sees one of the latter
tripping lightly down the steps of a nice gingerbready rooming house,
carrying a five hundred pound duffel bag on his back. The man is dressed for
a long trip. A grandmotherish lady in an apron is on the veranda, waving a
tea towel at him. It is like a scene from a movie; you wouldn't even know
that only a few hours' flight from here, men are turning black like
photographic paper in a developer tray as their living flesh is converted
into putrid gas by Clostridium bacteria.
Waterhouse does not stop to estimate the probability that he, who needs
a place to live, should happen along at the exact moment that a room has
become available. Cryptanalysts wait for lucky breaks, then exploit them.
After the departing soldier has disappeared round the corner, he knocks on
the door and introduces himself to the lady. Mrs. McTeague says (to the
extent Waterhouse can penetrate her accent) that she likes his looks. She
sounds distinctly astonished. It seems clear that the improbability of
Waterhouse's having happened upon this vacant room is nothing compared to
the improbability of having his looks liked by Mrs. McTeague. Thus, Lawrence
Pritchard Waterhouse joins a small elite group of young men (four in all)
whose looks Mrs. McTeague likes. They sleep, two to a room, in the bedrooms
where Mrs. McTeague's offspring grew from the brightest and most beautiful
children ever born into the finest adults who walk the earth except for the
King of England, the General, and Lord Mountbatten.
Waterhouse's new roommate is out of town just now, but by glancing over
his personal effects, Waterhouse estimates that he is paddling a black kayak
from Australia to Yokosuka Naval Base, where he will slip on board a
battleship and silently kill its entire crew with his bare hands before
doing an Olympic qualifying dive into the bay, punching out a few sharks,
climbing back into his kayak and paddling back to Australia for a beer.
The next morning, at breakfast, he meets the fellows in the next room:
a redheaded British naval officer who shows all the earmarks of working at
Central Bureau, and a fellow named Hale, whose nationality cannot be pegged
because he's not in uniform and he's too hung over to speak.
Having accomplished his mission (according to his understanding with
the General's minions), found a place to live, and settled his other
personal affairs, Waterhouse begins hanging around the Ascot Racetrack and
the adjacent whorehouse, trying to find some way to make himself useful.
Actually he would rather sit in his room all day and work on his new
project, which is to design a high speed Turing machine. But he has a duty
to contribute to the war effort. Even if he didn't, he suspects that when
his new roommate gets back from his mission, and finds him sitting indoors
all day drawing circuit diagrams, he will thrash Waterhouse to the point
where Mrs. McTeague will no longer like his looks.
To put it mildly, Central Bureau is not the kind of place where a
stranger can just wander in, check the place out, introduce himself and find
a job. Even the wandering in part is potentially fatal. Fortunately,
Waterhouse has Ultra Mega clearance, the highest clearance in the Entire
World.
Unfortunately, this category of secrecy is itself so secret that its
very existence is secret, and so he can't actually reveal it to anyone
unless he finds someone else with Ultra Mega clearance. There are only a
dozen people with Ultra Mega clearance in all of Brisbane. Eight of them
comprise the top of the General's command hierarchy, three work at Central
Bureau, and one is Waterhouse.
Waterhouse sniffs out the nerve center in the old whorehouse.
Superannuated Australian Territorial Guards in jaunty asymmetrical hats ring
the place, clutching blunderbusses. Unlike Mrs. McTeague, they don't like
his looks. On the other hand they are used to this kind of thing: smart boys
from far away showing up at the gate with long and, in the end, boring
stories about how the military screwed up their orders, put them in the
wrong boat, sent them to the wrong place, gave them tropical diseases, threw
their belongings overboard, left them to fend for themselves. They don't
shoot him, but they don't let him in.
He hangs around and makes a nuisance of himself for a couple of days
until he finally recognizes, and is recognized by, Abraham Sinkov. Sinkov is
a top American cryptanalyst; he helped Schoen break Indigo. He and
Waterhouse have crossed paths a few times, and though they aren't friends,
per se, their minds work the same way. This makes them brothers in a weird
family that has only a few hundred members, scattered about the world. In a
way, it is a clearance that is rarer, harder to come by, and more mysterious
than Ultra Mega. Sinkov writes him a new set of papers, giving him a
clearance that is very high, but not so high that he can't reveal it.
Waterhouse gets a tour. Shirtless men sit in Quonset huts made stifling
by the red hot tubes of their radios. They pluck the Nipponese Army's
messages out of the air and hand them off to legions of young Australian
women who punch the intercepted messages onto ETC cards.
There is a cadre of American officers composed entirely of a whole
department of the Electrical Till Corporation. One day, early in 1942, they
put their white shirts and blue suits into mothballs, donned Army uniforms,
and climbed on ships to Brisbane. Their ringleader is a guy named Lieutenant
Colonel Comstock, and he has gotten the whole code breaking process totally
automated. The cards punched by the Aussie girls come into the machine room
stacked into ingots which are fed through the machines. Decrypts fly out of
a line printer on the other end and are taken off to another hut where
American nisei, and some white men trained in Nipponese, translate them.
A Waterhouse is the last thing these guys need. He's beginning to
understand what the major said to him the other day: they have passed over
the watershed line. The codes are broken.
Which reminds him of Turing. Ever since Alan got back from New York
he's been distancing himself from Bletchley Park. He has moved up to another
installation, a radio center called Hanslope in north Buckinghamshire, a
place of reinforced concrete, wires, antennas, more military formal in its
atmosphere.
At the time, Waterhouse could not understand why Alan would want to
move away from Bletchley. But now he knows how Alan must have felt after
they turned decryption into a mechanical process, industrializing Bletchley
Park. He must have felt that the battle was won, and with it the war. The
rest might seem like glorious conquest to people like the General, but to
Turing, and now to Waterhouse, it just looks like tedious mopping up. It is
exciting to discover electrons and figure out the equations that govern
their movement; it is boring to use those principles to design electric can
openers. From here on out, it's all can openers.
Sinkov provides Waterhouse with a desk in the whorehouse and begins to
feed him the messages that Central Bureau hasn't been able to decrypt. There
are still dozens of minor Nipponese codes that remain to be broken. Maybe,
by breaking one or two, and teaching the ETC machines to read them,
Waterhouse can shorten the war by a single day, or save a single life. This
is a noble calling that he undertakes willingly, but in essence it is no
different from being an Army butcher who saves lives by keeping his knives
clean, or a lifeboat inspector in the Navy.
Waterhouse cracks those minor Nip codes one after the other. One month
he even flies up to New Guinea, where Navy divers are salvaging code books
from a sunken Nip submarine. He lives in the jungle for two weeks and tries
not to die, comes back to Brisbane, and puts those recovered codebooks to
good but dull use. Then one day the dullness of his work becomes irrelevant.
On that day, he returns to Mrs. McTeague's boardinghouse in the
evening, goes to his room, and finds a large man snoring in the upper bunk.
A lot of clothing and equipment is scattered about the place, emanating
sulfurous reek.
The man sleeps for two days and then comes down late for breakfast one
morning, peering around the room with Atabrine yellow eyes. He introduces
himself as Smith. His oddly familiar accent is not made any easier to
understand by the fact that his teeth are chattering violently. He doesn't
seem especially bothered by this. He sits down and paws an Irish linen
napkin into his lap with a hand that is stiff and raw. Mrs. McTeague fusses
over him to the extent that all of the men at the table must resist the
impulse to slug her. She pours him tea with plenty of milk and sugar. He
takes a few sips, then excuses himself and goes to the WC, where he crisply
and politely vomits. He comes back, eats a soft boiled egg from a bone china
egg cup, turns green, leans back in his chair, and closes his eyes for about
ten minutes.
When Waterhouse returns from work that evening, he blunders into the
parlor and interrupts Mrs. McTeague having tea with a young lady.
The young lady's name is Mary Smith; she is the cousin of Waterhouse's
roommate, who is upstairs shivering and sweating in his bunk bed.
Mary stands up to be introduced, which is not technically necessary;
but she is a girl from the outback and has no use for effete refinement. She
is a petite girl dressed in a uniform.
She is the only woman Waterhouse has ever seen. She is the only other
human being in the universe actually, and when she stands up to shake his
hand, his peripheral vision shuts down as if he has been sucking on a
tailpipe. Black curtains converge across a silver cyclorama, shuttering down
his cosmos to a vertical shaft of carbon arc glory, a pillar of light, a
heavenly follow spot targeted upon Her.
Mrs. McTeague, knowing the score, bids him sit down.
Mary is a tiny, white skinned, red headed person who is often seized by
little fits of self consciousness. When this happens she averts her eyes
from his and swallows, and when she swallows there is a certain cord in her
white neck, rounding the concavity from shoulder to ear, that stands out for
a moment. It draws attention both to her vulnerability and to the white
flesh of her neck, which is not white in a pallid sick way but in another
way that Waterhouse could never have understood until recently: viz., from
his little stint in New Guinea, where everything is either dead and
decaying, or bright and threatening, or unobtrusive and invisible,
Waterhouse knows that anything this tender and translucent is too vulnerable
and tempting to hold its own in a world of violently competing destroyers,
that it can only be sustained for a moment (let alone years) by the life
force within. In the South Pacific where the forces of Death are so
powerful, it leaves him vaguely intimidated. Her skin, as unmarked as clear
water, is an extravagant display of vibrant animal power. He wants his
tongue on it. The whole curve of her neck, from collarbone to earlobe, would
make a perfect cradle for his face.
She sees him looking at her, and swallows again. The cord flexes,
stretching the living skin of her neck out for just a moment, and then
relaxes, leaving nothing but smoothness and calm. She may just as well have
caved his head in with a stone and tied his penis round a hitching rail. The
effect must be calculated. But apparently she has not ever done it to anyone
else, or there would be a band of gold round her pale left ring finger.
Mary Smith is beginning to get annoyed with him. She lifts the teacup
to her lips. She has turned so that the light is grazing her neck in a new
way, and this time when she swallows he can see her Adam's apple moving up.
Then it comes down like a pile driver on what is left of his good judgment.
There is a thumping noise upstairs; her cousin has just regained
consciousness. "Excuse me," she says, and she's gone, leaving only Mrs.
McTeague's bone china as a reminder.
Chapter 58 CONSPIRACY
Dr. Rudolf Von Hacklheber is not much older than sergeant Bobby
Shaftoe, but even emotionally crushed, he has a certain bearing about him
that men in Shaftoe's world don't acquire until they are in their forties,
if then. His eyeglasses have tiny rimless lenses that look like they were
scavenged from a sniper's telescopic sights. Behind them is a whole paintbox
of vivid colors: blond lashes, blue eyes, red veins, lids swollen and purple
from weeping. Even so, he has a perfect shave, and the silvery Nordic light
coming in through the tiny windows of Enoch Root's church cellar glances
from the planes of his face so as to highlight an interesting terrain of big
pores, premature creases, and old dueling scars. He has tried to grease his
hair back, but it misbehaves and keeps tumbling down over his brow. He is
wearing a white dress shirt and a very long, heavy overcoat on top of that
to ward off the cellar's chill. Shaftoe, who hiked back to Norrsbruck with
him several days ago, knows that the long legged von Hacklheber has the
makings of a half decent jock. But he can tell that rude sports like
football would be out of the question; this Kraut would be a fencer or a
mountain climber or a skier.
Shaftoe was only startled not bothered by von Hacklheber's
homosexuality. Some of the China Marines in Shanghai had a lot more young
Chinese boys hanging around their flats than they really needed to shine
their boots and Shanghai is far from the strangest or most far flung place
where Marines made themselves at home between the wars. You can worry about
morality when you're off duty, but if you are always stewing and fretting
over what the other guys are doing in the sack, then what the hell are you
going to do when you're presented with an opportunity to hit a Nip squad
with a flamethrower?
They buried the remains of Angelo, the pilot, two weeks ago, and only
now is von Hacklheber feeling in any kind of shape to talk. He has rented a
cottage outside of town, but he has come into Norrsbruck to meet with Root,
Shaftoe, and Bischoff on this day, partly because he is convinced that
German spies are watching it. Shaftoe shows up with a bottle of Finnish
schnapps, Bischoff brings a loaf of bread, Root breaks out a tin of fish.
Von Hacklheber brings information. Everyone brings cigarettes.
Shaftoe smokes early and often, trying to kill the mildewy smell of the
cellar, which reminds him of being locked up there with Enoch Root, kicking
his morphine habit. During that time, the pastor once had to come downstairs
and ask him please to stop screaming for a while because they were trying to
do a wedding upstairs. Shaftoe hadn't known he was screaming.
Rudolf von Hacklheber's English is, in some respects, better than
Shaftoe's. He sounds unnervingly like Bobby's junior high school drafting
teacher, Mr. Jaeger. "Before the war I worked under Dönitz for the
Beobachtung Dienst of the Kriegsmarine. We broke some of the most secret
codes of the British Admiralty even before the outbreak of hostilities. I
was responsible for some advances in this field, involving the use of
mechanical calculation. When war broke out there was much reorganization and
I became like a bone that several dogs are fighting over. I was moved into
Referat Iva of Gruppe IV, Analytical Cryptanalysis, which was part of
Hauptgruppe B, Cryptanalysis, which reported ultimately to Major General
Erich Feilgiebel, Chief of Wehrmachtnachrichtungen verbindungen."
Shaftoe looks around at the others, but none of them laughs, or even
grins. They must not have heard it. "Come again?" Shaftoe asks, proddingly,
like a man in a bar trying to get a shy friend to tell a sure fire thigh
slapper.
"Wehrmachtnachrichtungenverbindungen," von Hacklheber says, very
slowly, as if repeating nursery rhymes to a toddler. He blinks once, twice,
three times at Shaftoe, then sits forward and says, brightly: "Perhaps I
should explain the organization of the German intelligence hierarchy, since
it will help you all to understand my story."
A BRIEF TRIP INTO HELL'S DEMO with HERR DOKTOR PROFESSOR RUDOLF VON
HACKLHEBER ensues.
Shaftoe only hears the first couple of sentences. At about the point
when von Hacklheber tears a sheet out of a notebook and begins to diagram
the organizational tree of the Thousand Year Reich, with "Der Führer" at the
top, Shaftoe's eyes take on a heavy glaze, his body goes slack, he becomes
deaf, and he accelerates up the throat of a nightmare, like the butt of a
half digested corn dog being reverse peristalsed from the body of an addict.
He has never been through this experience before, but he knows intuitively
that this is how the trip to Hell works: no leisurely boat ride across the
scenic Styx, no gradual descent into that trite tourist trap, Pluto's
Cavern, no stops along the way to buy fishing licenses for the Lake of Fire.
Shaftoe is not (though he should be) dead, and so this is not hell. It
is closely modeled after hell, though. It is like a mock up slapped together
from tar paper and canvas, like the fake towns where they practiced house to
house warfare during boot camp. Shaftoe is gripped with a sort of giddy
queasiness that, he knows, is the most pleasant thing he will feel here.
"Morphine takes away the body's ability to experience pleasure," says the
booming voice of Enoch Root, his wry, annoying Virgil, who for purposes of
this nightmare has adopted the voice and physical shape of Moe, the mean,
dark haired Stooge. "It may be some time before you feel physically well."
The organizational tree of this nightmare begins, like von
Hacklheber's, with Der Führer, but then branches out widely and crazily.
There is an Asian branch, headed up by the General, and including, among
other things, a Hauptgruppe of giant carnivorous lizards, a Referat of
Chinese women holding up pale eyed babies, and several Abteilungs of
plastered Nips with swords. In the center of their domain is the city of
Manila, where, in a tableau that Shaftoe would identify as Boschian if he
had not spent his high school art class out behind the school leg fucking
cheerleaders, a heavily pregnant Glory Altamira is being forced to do blow
jobs on syphilitic Nipponese troops.
The voice of Mr. Jaeger, his drafting teacher the most boring man
Shaftoe had ever known, until perhaps today fades in for a moment with the
words, "but all of the organizational structures I have detailed to this
point became obsolete at the outbreak of hostilities. The hierarchy was
shuffled and several of the entities changed their names, as follows . . ."
Shaftoe hears a new sheet of paper being torn from the notebook, but what he
sees is Mr. Jaeger tearing up a diagram of a table leg bracket that the
young Bobby Shaftoe had spent a week drafting. Everything has been
reorganized, General MacArthur is still very high in the tree, walking a
brace of giant lizards on steel leashes, but now the hierarchy is filled
with grinning Arabs holding up lumps of hashish, frozen butchers, dead or
doomed lieutenants, and that fucking weirdo, Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse,
dressed in a black, hooded robe, heading up a whole legion of pencil necked
Signals geeks, also in robes, holding bizarrely shaped antennas above their
heads, wading through a blizzard of dollar bills printed on old Chinese
newspapers. Their eyes glow, flashing on and off in Morse code.
"What are they saying?" Bobby says.
"Please, stop screaming," says Enoch Root. "Just for a little while."
Bobby's lying on a cot in a thatched hut in Guadalcanal. Swedish
tribesmen run around in loincloths, gathering food: every so often, a ship
gets blown up out in the Slot, and fish shrapnel rains down and gets hung up
in the branches, along with the occasional severed human arm or hunk of
skull. The Swedes ignore the human bits and harvest the fish, taking it off
to make lutefisk in black steel drums.
Enoch Root has an old cigar box on his lap. Golden light is shining out
of the crack around its lid.
But he's not in the thatched hut anymore; he's inside a cold black
metal phallus that has been probing around down below the surface of the
nightmare: Bischoff's submarine. Depth charges are going off all over the
place and it's filling up with sewage. Something clocks him on the side of
the head: not a ham this time, but a human leg. The sub's lined with tubes
that carry voices: in English, German, Arabic, Nipponese, Shanghainese, but
confined and muffled in the plumbing so that they mingle together like the
running of water. Then a pipe is ruptured by a near miss from a depth
charge; from its jagged end issues a German voice:
"The foregoing may be taken as a rather coarse grained treatment of the
general organization of the Reich and particularly the military.
Responsibility for cryptanalysis and cryptography is distributed among a
large number of small Amts and Diensts attached to various tendrils of this
structure. These are continually being reorganized and rearranged, however I
may be able to provide you with a reasonably accurate and detailed picture .
. ."
Shaftoe, chained to a bunk in the submarine by fetters of gold, feels
one of his small, concealed handguns pressing into the small of his back,
and wonders whether it would be bad form to shoot himself in the mouth. He
paws wildly at the broken tube and manages to slap it down into the rising
sewage; bubbles come out, and von Hacklheber's words are trapped in them,
like word balloons in a comic strip. When the bubbles reach the surface and
burst, it sounds like screaming.
Root is sitting on the opposite bunk with the cigar box on his lap. He
holds up his hand in a V for Victory, then levels it at Shaftoe's face and
pokes him in the eyes. "I cannot help you with your inability to find
physical comfort it is a problem of body chemistry," he says. "It poses
interesting theological questions. It reminds us that all the pleasures of
the world are an illusion projected into our souls by our bodies."
A lot of the other speaking tubes have ruptured now, and screaming
comes from most of them; Root has to lean close in order to shout into
Bobby's ear. Shaftoe takes advantage of it to reach over and make a grab for
the cigar box, which contains the stuff he wants: not morphine. Something
better than morphine. Morphine is to the stuff in the cigar box what a
Shanghai prostitute is to Glory.
The box flies open and blinding light comes out of it. Shaftoe covers
his face. The salted and preserved body parts suspended from the ceiling
tumble into his lap and begin to writhe, reaching out for other parts,
assembling themselves into living bodies. Mikulski comes back to life, aims
his Vickers at the ceiling of the U boat, and cuts an escape hatch. Instead
of black water, golden light rushes through.
"What was your position in all this, then?" asks Root, and Shaftoe
nearly jumps out of his chair, startled by the sound of a voice other than
von Hacklheber's. Given what happened the last time someone (Shaftoe) asked
a question, this is heroic but risky. Starting with Hitler, von Hacklheber
works his way down the chain of command.
Shaftoe doesn't care: he's on a rubber raft, along with various
resurrected comrades from Guadalcanal and Detachment 2702. They are rowing
across a still cove lit by giant flaming klieg lights in the sky. Standing
behind the klieg lights is a man talking in a German accent: "My immediate
supervisors, Wilhelm Fenner, from St. Petersburg, who headed all German
military cryptanalysis from 1922 onwards, and his chief deputy, Professor
Novopaschenny."
All of these names sound alike to Shaftoe, but Root says, "A Russian?"
Shaftoe is really coming around now, reemerging into the World. He sits up
straight, and his body feels stiff, like it hasn't moved in a long time. He
is about to apologize for the way he has been behaving, but since no one is
looking at him funny, Shaftoe sees no reason to fill them in on what he's
been doing these last few minutes.
"Professor Novopaschenny was a Czarist astronomer who knew Fenner from
St. Petersburg. Under them, I was given broad authority to pursue researches
into the theoretical limits of security. I used tools from pure mathematics
as well as mechanical calculating devices of my own design. I looked at our
own codes as well as those of our enemies, looking for weaknesses."
"What did you find?" Bischoff asks.
"I found weaknesses everywhere," von Hacklheber says. "Most codes were
designed by dilettantes and amateurs with no grasp of the underlying
mathematics. It is really quite pitiable."
"Including the Enigma?" Bischoff asks.
"Don't even talk to me of that shit," von Hacklheber says. "I dispensed
with it almost immediately."
"What do you mean, dispensed with it?" Root asks.
"Proved that it was shit," von Hacklheber says.
"But the entire Wehrmacht still uses it," Bischoff says.
Von Hacklheber shrugs and looks at the burning tip of his cigarette.
"You expect them to throw all those machines away because one mathematician
writes a paper?" He stares at his cigarette a while longer, then puts it to
his lips, draws on it tastefully, holds the smoke in his lungs, and finally
exhales it slowly through his vocal cords whilst simultaneously causing them
to emit the following sounds: "I knew that there must be people working for
the enemy who would figure this out. Turing. Von Neumann. Waterhouse. Some
of the Poles. I began to look for signs that they had broken the Enigma, or
at least realized its weaknesses and begun trying to break it. I ran
statistical analyses of convoy sinkings and U boat attacks. I found some
anomalies, some improbable events, but not enough to make a pattern. Many of
the grossest anomalies were later accounted for by the discovery of
espionage stations and the like.
"From this I drew no conclusion. Certainly if they were smart enough to
break the Enigma they would be smart enough to conceal the fact from us at
any cost. But there was one anomaly they could not cover up. I refer to
human anomalies."
"Human anomalies?" Root asks. The phrase is classic Root bait.
"I knew perfectly well that only a handful of people in the world had
the acumen to break the Enigma and then to cover up the fact that they had
broken it. By using our intelligence sources to ascertain where these men
were, and what they were doing, I could make inferences." Von Hacklheber
stubs out his cigarette, sits up straight, and drains a half shot of
schnapps, warming to the task. "This was a human intelligence problem not
signals intelligence. This is handled by a different branch of the service "
and he's off again talking about the structure of the German bureaucracy.
Terrified, Shaftoe flees from the room, runs outside, and uses the outhouse.
When he gets back, von Hacklheber is just winding up. "It all came down to a
problem of sifting through large amounts of raw data lengthy and tedious
work."
Shaftoe cringes, wondering what something would have to be like in
order to qualify as lengthy and tedious to this joker.
"After some time," von Hacklheber continues, "I learned, through some
of our agents in the British Isles, that a man matching the general
description of Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse had been stationed to a castle
in Outer Qwghlm. I was able to arrange for a young lady to place this man
under the closest possible surveillance," he says dryly. "His security
precautions were impeccable, and so we learned nothing directly. In fact, it
is quite likely that he knew that the young woman in question was an agent,
and so took added precautions. But we did learn that this man communicated
through one time pads. He would read his encrypted messages over the
telephone to a nearby naval base whence they would be telegraphed to a
station in Buckinghamshire, which would respond to him with messages
encrypted using the same system of one time pads. By going through the
records of our various radio intercept stations we were able to accumulate a
stack of messages that had been sent by this mysterious unit, using this
series of one time pads, over a period of time beginning in the middle of
1942 and continuing up to the present day. It was interesting to note that
this unit operated in a variety of places:
Malta, Alexandria, Morocco, Norway, and various ships at sea. Extremely
unusual. I was very interested in this mysterious unit and so I began trying
to break their special code."
"Isn't that impossible?" Bischoff asks. "There is no way to break a one
time pad, short of stealing a copy."
"That is true in theory," von Hacklheber says. "In practice, this is
only true if the letters that make up the one time pad are chosen perfectly
randomly. But, as I discovered, this is not true of the one time pads used
by Detachment 2702 which is the mysterious unit that Waterhouse, Turing, and
these two gentlemen all belong to."
"But how did you figure this out?" Bischoff asks.
"A few things helped me. There was a lot of depth many messages to work
with. There was consistency the one time pads were generated in the same
way, always, and always exhibited the same patterns. I made some educated
guesses which turned out to be correct. And I had a calculating machine to
make the work go faster."
"Educated guesses?"
"I had a hypothesis that the one time pads were being drawn up by a
person who was rolling dice or shuffling a deck of cards to produce the
letters. I began to consider psychological factors. An English speaker is
accustomed to a certain frequency distribution of letters. He expects to see
a great many e's, t's, and a's, and not so many z's and q's and x's. So if
such a person were using some supposedly random algorithm to generate the
letters, he would be subconsciously irritated every time a z or an x came
up, and, conversely, soothed by the appearance of e or t. Over time, this
might skew the frequency distribution."
"But Herr Doctor von Hacklheber, I find it unlikely that such a person
would substitute their own letters for the ones that came up on the cards,
or dice, or whatever."
"It is not very likely. But suppose that the algorithm gave the person
some small amount of discretion." Von Hacklheber lights another cigarette,
pours out more schnapps. "I set up an experiment. I got twenty volunteers
middle aged women who wanted to do their part for the Reich. I set them to
work drawing up one time pads using an algorithm where they drew slips out
of a box. Then I used my machinery to run statistical calculations on the
results. I found that they were not random at all."
Root says, "The one time pads for Detachment 2702 are being created by
Mrs. Tenney, a vicar's wife. She uses a bingo machine, a cage filled with
wooden balls with a letter stamped on each ball. She is supposed to close
her eyes before reaching into the cage. But suppose she has become sloppy
and no longer closes her eyes when she reaches into it."
"Or," von Hacklheber says, "suppose she looks at the cage, and sees how
the balls are distributed inside of it, and then closes her eyes. She will
subconsciously reach toward the E and avoid the Z. Or, if a certain letter
has just come up recently, she will try to avoid choosing it again. Even if
she cannot see the inside of the cage, she will learn to distinguish among
the different balls by their feel being made of wood, each ball will have a
different weight, a different pattern in the grain."
Bischoff's not buying it. "But it will still be mostly random!"
"Mostly random is not good enough!" von Hacklheber snaps. "I was
convinced that the one time pads of Detachment 2702 would have a frequency
distribution similar to that of the King James Version of the Bible, for
example. And I strongly suspected that the content of those messages would
include words such as Waterhouse, Turing, Enigma, Qwghlm, Malta. By putting
my machinery to work, I was able to break some of the one time pads.
Waterhouse was careful to burn his pads after using them once, but some
other parts of the detachment were careless, and used the same pads again
and again. I read many messages. It was obvious that Detachment 2702 was in
the business of deceiving the Wehrmacht by concealing the fact that the
Enigma had been broken."
Shaftoe knows what an Enigma is, if only because Bischoff won't shut up
about them. When von Hacklheber explains this, everything that Detachment
2702 ever did suddenly makes sense.
"So, the secret is out then," Root says. "I assume you made your
superiors aware of your discovery?"
"I made them aware of absolutely nothing," von Hacklheber snarls,
"because by this time I had long since fallen into a snare of
Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring. I had become his pawn, his slave, and had
ceased to feel any loyalty whatsoever towards the Reich."
***
The knock on Rudolf von Hacklheber's door had come at four o'clock in
the morning, a time exploited by the Gestapo for its psychological effect.
Rudy is wide awake. Even if bombers had not been pounding Berlin all night
long, he would have been awake, because he has neither seen nor heard from
Angelo in three days. He throws a dressing gown over his pajamas, steps into
slippers, and opens the door of his flat to reveal, predictably, a small,
prematurely withered man backed up by a couple of classic Gestapo killers in
long black leather coats.
"May I proffer an observation?" says Rudy von Hacklheber.
"But of course, Herr Doktor Professor. As long as it is not a state
secret, of course."
"In the old days the early days when no one knew what the Gestapo was,
and no one was afraid of it, this four in the morning business was clever. A
fine way to exploit man's primal fear of the darkness. But now it is 1942,
almost 1943, and everyone is afraid of the Gestapo. Everyone. More than they
are of the dark. So, why don't you work during the daytime? You are stuck in
a rut."
The bottom half of the withered man's face laughs. The top half doesn't
change. "I will pass your suggestion up the chain of command," he says.
"But, Herr Doktor, we are not here to instill fear. We have come at this
inconvenient time because of the train schedules."
"Am I to understand that I am getting on a train?"
"You have a few minutes," the Gestapo man says, pulling back a cuff to
divulge a hulking Swiss chronometer. Then he invites himself in and begins
to pace up and down in front of Rudy's bookshelves, hands clasped behind his
back, bending at the waist to peer at the titles. He seems disappointed to
find that they are all mathematical texts not a single copy of the
Declaration of Independence in evidence, though you can never tell when a
copy of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion might be hidden between the
pages of a mathematical journal. When Rudy emerges, dressed but still
unshaven, he finds the man displaying a pained expression while trying to
read Turing's dissertation on the Universal Machine. He looks like a lower
primate trying to fly an aeroplane.
Half an hour later, they are at the train station. Rudy looks up at the
departures board as they go in, and memorizes its contents, so that he will
be able to deduce, from the track number, whether he's being taken in the
direction of Leipzig or Konigsberg or Warsaw.
It is a clever thing to do, but it turns out to be a waste of effort,
because the Gestapo men lead him to a track that is not listed on the board.
A short train waits there. It does not contain any boxcars, a relief to
Rudy, since he thinks that during the last few years he may have glimpsed
boxcars that appeared to be crammed full of human beings. These glimpses
were brief and surreal, and he cannot really sort out whether they really
happened, or were merely fragments of nightmares that got filed in the wrong
cranial drawer.
But all of the cars on this train have doors, guarded by men in
unfamiliar uniforms, and windows, shrouded on the inside with shutters and
heavy curtains. The Gestapo lead him to a coach door without breaking
stride, and just like that, he is through. And he is alone. No one checks
his papers, and the Gestapo do not enter behind him. The door is closed
behind his back.
Doktor Rudolf von Hacklheber is standing in a long skinny car decorated
like the anteroom of an upper class whorehouse, with Persian runners on the
polished hardwood floor, heavy furniture upholstered in maroon velvet, and
curtains so thick that they look bulletproof. At one end of the coach, a
French maid hovers over a table set with breakfast: hard rolls, slices of
meat and cheese, and coffee. Rudy's nose tells him that it is real coffee,
and the smell draws him down to the end of the car. The maid pours him a cup
with trembling hands. She has plastered thick foundation beneath her eyes to
conceal dark circles, and (he realizes, as she hands him the cup) she has
also painted it onto her wrists.
Rudy savors the coffee, stirring cream into it with a golden spoon
bearing the marque of a French family. He strolls up and down the length of
the car, admiring the art on the walls: a series of Dürer engravings, and,
unless his eyes deceive him, a couple of pages from a Leonardo da Vinci
codex.
The door opens again and a man enters clumsily, as if thrown on board,
and ends up sprawled over a velvet settee. By the time Rudy recognizes him,
the train has already begun to pull out of the station.
"Angelo!" Rudy sets his coffee down on an end table and throws himself
into the arms of his beloved.
Angelo returns the embrace weakly. He stinks, and he shudders
uncontrollably. He is wearing a coarse, dirty, pajamalike garment, and is
wrapped up in a grey wool blanket. His wrists are encircled by half scabbed
lacerations embedded in fields of yellow green bruises.
"Don't worry about it, Rudy," Angelo says, clenching and opening his
fists to prove that they still work. "They were not kind to me, but they
took care with my hands."
"Thou canst still fly?"
"I can still fly. But that is not why they were so careful with my
hands."
"Why, then?"
"Without hands, a man cannot sign a confession."
Rudy and Angelo gaze into each other's eyes. Angelo looks sad,
exhausted, but still has some kind of serene confidence about him. Like a
baptizing priest ready to receive the infant, he holds up his hands. He
silently mouths the words: But I can still fly!
A suit of clothes is brought in by a valet. Angelo cleans up in one of
the coach's lavatories. Rudy tries to peer out between the curtains, but
heavy shutters have been pulled down over the windows. They breakfast
together as the train maneuvers through the switching yards of greater
Berlin, perhaps working its way around some bombed out sections of track,
and finally accelerates into the open territory beyond.
Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring makes his way through the car, headed
towards the rear of the train, where the most ornate coach is located. His
body is about as big as the hull of a torpedo boat, draped in a circus tent
sized Chinese silk robe, the sash of which drags on the floor behind him,
like a leash trailing behind a dog. He has the largest belly of any man Rudy
has ever seen, and it is covered with golden hair that deepens as the belly
curves under, until it becomes a tawny thicket that completely conceals his
genitals. He is not really expecting to see two men sitting here eating
breakfast, but seems to consider Rudy and Angelo's presence here to be one
of life's small anomalies, not really worth noticing. Given that Göring is
the number two man in the Third Reich the designated successor to Hitler
himself Rudy and Angelo really should jump to attention and give him a "Heil
Hitler!" But they are too stunned to move. Göring stumbles down the middle
of the coach, paying them no mind. Halfway down, he begins talking, but he's
talking to himself, and his words are slurred. He slams open the door at the
end of the coach and proceeds into the next car.
Two hours later, a doctor in a white coat passes through, headed for
Göring's coach, carrying a silver tray with a white linen cloth on it.
Tastefully arrayed on this, like caviar and champagne, are a blue bottle and
a glass hypodermic syringe.
Half an hour after that, an aide in a Luftwaffe uniform passes through
carrying a sheaf of papers, and favors Rudy and Angelo with a crisp "Heil,
Hitler!"
Another hour goes by, and then Rudy and Angelo are escorted back
through the train by a servant. The coach at the rear of the train is darker
and more gentlemanly than the florid parlor where they have been cooling
their heels. It is paneled in darkly stained wood and contains an actual
desk a baronial monstrosity carved out of a ton of Bavarian oak. At the
moment, its sole function is to support a single sheet of paper, hand
written, and signed at the bottom. Even from a distance, Rudy recognizes
Angelo's handwriting.
They have to walk past the desk in order to reach Göring, who is spread
across an equally massive couch at the end of the car, underneath a Matisse,
and flanked between a couple of Roman busts on marble pedestals. He is
dressed in red leather jodhpurs, red leather boots, a red leather uniform
jacket, a red leather riding crop with a fat diamond set into the butt of
the handle. Bracelet sized gold rings, infected with big rubies, grip his
pudgy fingers. A red leather officer's cap is perched on his head, with a
gold death's head, with ruby eyes, centered above the bill. All of this is
illuminated only by a few striations of dusty light that have forced their
way in through tiny crevices between curtains and shutters; the sun is up
now, but Göring's blue eyes, dilated to dime sized pits by the morphine,
cannot face it. He has his cherry colored boots up on an ottoman; no doubt
he has trouble with circulation in his legs. He is drinking tea from a
thimble sized porcelain cup, encrusted with gold leaf, looted from a chateau
somewhere. Heavy cologne fails to mask his odor: bad teeth, intestinal
trouble, and necrotizing hemorrhoids.
"Good morning, gentlemen," he says brightly. "Sorry to have kept you
waiting. Heil Hitler! Would you like some tea?"
There is small talk. It goes on at length. Göring is fascinated with
Angelo's work as a test pilot. Not only that, he has any number of peculiar
ideas adapted from the Bavarian Illuminati, and is groping for some way to
tie these in with higher mathematics. Rudy is afraid, for a while, that this
task is about to be placed on his shoulders. But even Göring himself seems
impatient with this phase of the conversation. Once or twice he reaches out
with his riding crop to part a curtain slightly.
The outdoor light seems to cause him appalling pain and he quickly
looks away.
But finally the train slows, maneuvers through more switches, and
coasts to a gentle stop. They can see nothing, of course. Rudy strains his
ears, and thinks he hears activity around them: many feet marching, and
commands being shouted. Göring catches the eye of an aide and waves his
riding crop towards the desk. The aide springs forward, snatches up the
handwritten document, and bears it over to the Reichsmarschall, presenting
it with a small, neat bow. Göring reads through it quickly. Then he looks up
at Rudy and Angelo and makes tut tut tut noises, shaking his gigantic head
from side to side. Various layers of jowls, folds, and wattles follow,
always a few degrees out of phase. "Homosexuality," Göring says. "You must
be aware of the Führer's policy regarding this sort of behavior." He holds
up the sheet and shakes it. "Shame on you! Both of you. A test pilot who is
a guest in our country, and an eminent mathematician working on great
secrets. You must have known that the Sicherheitsdienst would get wind of
this." He heaves an exhausted sigh. "How am I going to patch this up?"
When Göring says this, Rudy knows for the first time since the knock on
his door that he is not going to die today. Göring has something else in
mind.
But first his victims need to be properly terrified. "Do you know what
could happen to you? Hmm? Do you?"
Neither Rudy nor Angelo answers. It is not the sort of question that
really needs answering.
Göring answers it for them by reaching out with his riding crop and
lifting up the curtain. Harsh blue light, reflected from snow, peals into
the coach. Göring shuts his eyes and looks the other way.
They are in the middle of an open area, surrounded by tall barbed wire
fences, filled with long rows of dark barracks. In the center, a tall stack
pours smoke into a white sky. SS troops in greatcoats and jackboots pace
around, blowing into their hands. Just a few yards away from them, on an
adjacent railway siding, a gang of wretches in striped clothing are at work
in, and around, a boxcar, unloading pale cargo. A large number of naked
human bodies have become all frozen together in a solid, tangled mass inside
the boxcar, and the prisoners are at work with axes, bucksaws, and prybars,
dismantling them and throwing the parts onto the ground. Because they are
frozen solid, there is no blood, and so the entire operation is startlingly
clean. The double glazed windows of Göring's coach block sound so
effectively that the impact of a big fire ax on a frozen abdomen comes
through as a nearly imperceptible thud.
One of the prisoners turns towards them, carrying a thigh toward a
wheelbarrow, and risks a direct look at the Reichsmarschall's train. This
prisoner has a pink triangle sewn to the breast of his uniform. The
prisoner's eyes are trying to probe through the window, past the curtain,
trying to make a human connection with someone on the inside of the coach.
Rudy stiffens in panic for a moment, thinking that the prisoner sees him.
Then Göring withdraws the riding crop and the curtain falls. A few moments
later, the train begins to move again.
Rudy looks at his lover. Angelo is sitting frozen, just like one of
those corpses, with his hands over his face.
Göring flicks his crop dismissively. "Get out," he says.
"What?" ask Rudy and Angelo simultaneously.
Göring laughs heartily. "No, no! I don't mean get out of the train! I
mean, Angelo, get out of this coach. I want to talk to Herr Doktor Professor
von Hacklheber in private. You may wait in the parlor car."
Angelo leaves eagerly. Göring waves his crop at a couple of hovering
aides, and they leave too. Göring and Rudy are alone together.
"I am sorry to show you these unpleasant things," Göring says. "I
simply wanted to impress upon you the importance of keeping secrets."
"I can assure the Reichsmarschall that "
Göring shushes him with a wave of the crop. "Don't be tedious. I know
that you have sworn any number of great oaths, and been through all of the
indoctrination concerning secrecy. I have no doubt of your sincerity. But it
is all just words, and not good enough for the work that I wish you to begin
doing for me. To work for me, you must see the thing I have shown you, so
that you can really understand the stakes."
Rudy looks at the floor, takes a deep breath, and forces out the words:
"It would be a great honor to work for you, Reichsmarschall. But since
you have access to so many of the great museums and libraries of Europe,
there is only one small favor I, as a scholar, might humbly request of you."
***
Back in the church basement in Norrsbruck, Sweden, Rudy yells, and
drops a cigarette on the floor, having allowed it to burn down to his
fingers, like a slow fuse, while relating this story. He puts his hand to
his mouth, sucks on the finger briefly, then remembers his manners and
composes himself. "Göring knew a surprising amount about cryptology, and was
aware of my work on the Enigma. He didn't trust the machine. He told me that
he wanted me to come up with the very best cryptosystem in the world, one
that could never be broken he wanted to communicate (he said) with U boats
at sea and with installations in Manila and Tokyo. And so, I came up with
such a system."
"And you handed it over," Bischoff says.
"Yes," Rudy says, and here, for the first time all day, he allows
himself a slight smile. "And it is a reasonably good system, despite the
fact that I crippled it before giving it to Göring."
"Crippled it?" Root asks. "What do you mean?"
"Imagine a new engine for an aeroplane. Imagine it has sixteen
cylinders. It is more powerful than any other engine in the world. Even so,
a mechanic can do certain things very simple things to kill its performance.
Such as pulling out half of the spark plug wires. Or tampering with the
timing. This is an analogy to what I did with Göring's cryptosystem."
"So what went wrong?" Shaftoe asks. "They figured out that you had
crippled it?"
Rudolf von Hacklheber laughs. "Not very likely. Maybe half a dozen
people in the world could figure that out. No, what went wrong was that you
fellows, you Allies, landed in Sicily, and then in Italy, and not long
afterwards, Mussolini was overthrown, the Italians withdrew from the Axis,
and Angelo, like all of the other hundreds of thousands of Italian nationals
living and working in the Reich, fell under suspicion. His services were
badly needed as a test pilot, but his situation was tenuous. He volunteered
for the most dangerous work of all flying the new Messerschmidt prototype,
with the turbine jet engine. This proved his loyalty in the eyes of some.
"Remember that, at the same time, I was decrypting the message traffic
of Detachment 2702. I kept these results to myself, as I no longer felt any
particular loyalty to the Third Reich. There had been a great burst of
activity around the middle of April, and then no messages for a while as if
the detachment had ceased to exist. At exactly the same time, Göring's
people were very active for a few days they were afraid that Bischoff was
going to broadcast the secret of U 553."
"So you know about that?" Bischoff asks.
"Natürlich. U 553 was Göring's treasure ship. Its existence was
supposed to be a secret. When you, Sergeant Shaftoe, turned up on board
Bischoff's U boat, talking about this thing, Göring was very concerned for a
few days. But then everything settled down, and there was no Detachment 2702
traffic through the late spring and early summer. Mussolini was overthrown
in late June. Then the troubles began for me and Angelo. The Wehrmacht was
defeated by the Russians at Kursk absolute proof, for those who needed it,
that the Eastern Front is lost. Since then Göring has redoubled his efforts
to get his gold, jewels, and art out of the country." Rudy looks at
Bischoff. "I am frankly surprised that he has not tried to recruit you."
"Dönitz has," Bischoff admits.
Rudy nods; it all fits.
"During all of this," Rudy continues, "I received only one message
intercept in the Detachment 2702 code. It took my machinery several weeks to
break it. It was a message from Enoch Root, stating that he and Sergeant
Shaftoe were in Norrsbruck, Sweden, and requesting further instructions. I
was aware that Kapitänleutnant Bischoff was also in the same town, and
became interested. I decided that this would be a good place for me and
Angelo to escape to."
"Why!?" Shaftoe says. "Of all the places "
"Enoch and I had never met. But there are certain old family
connections," Rudy says, "and certain shared interests."
Bischoff mutters something in German.
"The connections make a very long story. I would have to write a whole
fucking book," Rudy says irritably.
Bischoff looks only slightly appeased, but Rudy goes on anyway. "It
took us several weeks to make preparations. I packed up the Leibniz Archiv "
"Hold on the what?"
"Certain materials I use in my research. They had been scattered among
many libraries, all over Europe. Göring brought them all together for me it
makes men like him feel powerful, to do these little favors for their
slaves. I departed from Berlin last week, on the pretext of going to
Hannover, to do my Leibniz research. Instead I made my way to Sweden through
channels that were quite involved "
"No shit! How'd you manage that little stunt?" Shaftoe asks.
Rudy looks at Enoch Root as if expecting him to answer the question.
Root shakes his head minutely.
"It would be too tedious to explain here," Rudy says, sounding mildly
annoyed. "I found Enoch. We got a message to Angelo saying that I was safe
here. Angelo then tried to make his escape in the Messerschmidt prototype,
with the results that we have all seen."
A long pause.
"And now, here we are!" says Bobby Shaftoe.
"Here we are," agrees Rudolf von Hacklheber.
"What do you think we should do?" asks Shaftoe.
"I think we should form a secret conspiracy," says Rudolf von
Hacklheber offhandedly, as if proposing to go in together on a fifth of
bourbon. "We should all make our way separately to Manila and, once we
arrive, we should take some, if not all, of the gold that the Nazis and the
Nipponese have been hoarding there."
"What do you want with a shitload of gold?" Bobby asks. "You're already
rich."
"There are many deserving charities," Rudy says, looking significantly
at Root. Root averts his eyes.
There is another long pause.
"I can provide secure lines of communication, which is the sine qua non
of any secret conspiracy," says Rudolf von Hacklheber. "We will use the full
strength, uncrippled version of the same cryptosystem that I invented for
Göring. Bischoff can be our man on the inside, since Dönitz wants him so
badly. Sergeant Shaftoe can be "
"Don't even say it, I already know," says Bobby Shaftoe.
He and Bischoff look at Root, who's sitting on his hands, staring at
Rudy. Looking oddly nervous.
"Enoch the Red, your organization can get us to Manila," von Hacklheber
says.
Shaftoe snorts. "Don't you think the Catholic Church has its hands sort
of full right now?"
"I'm not talking about the Church," Rudy says. "I'm talking about
Societas Eruditorum."
Root freezes.
"Congratulations there, Rudy!" Shaftoe says. "You surprised the padre.
I didn't think it could be done. Now would you mind telling us what the fuck
you're talking about?"
Chapter 59 HOARD
Like a client of one of your less reputable pufferfish sushi chefs,
Randy Waterhouse does not move from his assigned seat for a full ninety
minutes after the jumbo leaves Ninoy Aquino International Airport. A can of
beer is embedded in the core of his spiraled hand. His arm lies on the extra
wide Business Class armrest, a shank on a slab. He does not turn his head,
or turret his eyeballs, even, to look out the window at northern Luzon. All
that's out there is jungle, which has two sets of connotations going for it
now. One is the spooky Tarzan/Stanley & Livingstone/"The horror, the
horror"/natives are restless/Charlie's out there somewhere waiting for us
kind. The second is the more modern and enlightened sort of Jacques
Cousteauian teeming repository of brilliant and endangered species lungs of
the planet kind. Neither really works for Randy anymore, which is why
despite the state of hibernatory torpor he shunted into the moment his ass
impacted on the navy blue leather of the seat, he feels a little spike of
irritation every time one of the other passengers, peering out a window,
pronounces the word "jungle." To him, it is just a shitload of trees now,
trees going on for miles and miles, up the little hilly willies and down the
little hilly willies. It is easy, now, for him to understand tropical
denizens' shockingly frank and blunt craving to drive through this sort of
territory in the largest and widest available bulldozers (the only parts of
his body that move during the first hour and a half of the flight are
certain facial muscles which pull the corners of his mouth back into an
ironic rictus when he imagines what Charlene would think of this it is just
too perfect Randy goes off on a Business Foray and comes back identifying
with people who bulldoze rainforests). Randy wants to bulldoze the jungle,
all of it. Actually, thermonuclear weapons, detonated at a suitable height,
would do the job faster. He needs to rationalize this urge. He will do so,
as soon as he solves the running out of planetary oxygen problem.
By the time it even occurs to him to lift the beer to his lips, the
heat of his body has gone into it, and his hand has become as chilly and
stiff as an uncooked rolled roast. For that matter, his whole body has
adjourned into some kind of metabolic recess, and his brain is not exactly
purring at high RPM's either. He feels kind of the way he does, sometimes,
the day before he comes down with a total body cold and flu scenario, one of
those crushing viral Tet Offensives that, every few years, swats you out of
the land of the fully living for a week or two. It is as if about three
quarters of his body's resources of nutrients and energy have been diverted
to the task of manufacturing quintillions of viruses. At the currency
exchange window of NAIA, Randy had stood behind a Chinese man who, just
before he stepped back from the window with his money, unloaded a Sneeze of
such titanic force that the rolling pressure wave turbulating outwards from
his raw, flapping facial orifices caused the wall of bulletproof glass
separating him from the moneychangers to flex slightly, so that the
reflection of the Chinese man, Randy behind him, the lobby of NAIA and the
sunlit passenger dropoff lane outside underwent a subtle warpage. The
viruses must have roiled back from the glass, reflected like light, and
enveloped Randy. So maybe Randy is the personal vector of this year's
version of the flu named after some city in East Asia that annually tours
the United States, just barely preceded by rush shipments of flu vaccine. Or
maybe it's Ebola.
Actually, he feels fine. Other than the fact that his mitochondria have
gone on strike, or that his thyroid seems to be failing (perhaps it was
secretly removed by black market organ transplanters? He makes a mental note
to check for new scars in the next mirror) he is not experiencing any viral
symptoms at all.
It is some kind of post stress thing. This is the first time he has
relaxed in a couple of weeks. Not once has he sat down in a bar with a beer,
or put his feet up on a desk, or just collapsed like a decaying corpse in
front of the television set. Now his body is telling him it's payback time.
He does not sleep; he does not feel drowsy at all. Actually, he's been
sleeping rather well. But his body refuses to move for an hour, and then
most of another hour, and to the extent his brain is working at all it can
only chase its tail.
But there is something that he could be doing. This is why laptops were
invented, so that important business persons would not fritter away long
flights relaxing. He can see it right there on the floor in front of him. He
knows he should reach for it. But it would break the spell. He feels as if
water condensed on his skin and froze into a carapace that will shatter as
soon as he moves any part of his body. This is, he realizes, exactly how a
laptop computer must feel when it drops into its power saving mode.
Then a flight attendant is there holding a menu in front of his face
and saying something that jolts him like a cattle prod. He nearly jumps out
of his seat, spills his beer a little, gropes for the menu. Before he can
drop back into his demi coma, he continues the motion and reaches down for
his laptop. The seat next to him is empty and he can put his dinner over
there while he works on the computer.
People around him are watching CNN live, from CNN Center in Atlanta not
a canned thing on tape. According to the plethora of pseudotechnical data
cards jammed into the seatbacks, which Randy is the only person who ever
reads, this plane has some kind of antenna that can keep a lock on a
communications satellite as it flies across the Pacific. Furthermore, it's
two way, so you can even transmit e mail. Randy spends a while familiarizing
himself with the instructions, checks the rates, as if he really gives a
shit how much it costs, then jacks the thing into the anus of his laptop. He
opens up the laptop and checks his e mail. Traffic is low because everyone
in Epiphyte knows he's en route somewhere.
Nevertheless, there are three messages from Kia, Epiphyte's only actual
employee, the administrative assistant for the whole company. Kia works in a
totally alienated, abstracted office in the Springboard Capital corporate
incubator complex in San Mateo. It is some sort of a federal regulation that
nascent high tech companies must not hire pudgy fifty year old support
staff, the way big established companies do. They must hire topologically
enhanced twenty year olds with names that sound like new models of cars.
Since most hackers are white males, their companies are disaster areas when
it comes to diversity, and it follows that all of the diversity must be
concentrated in the one or two employees who are not hackers. In the part of
a federal equal opportunity form where Randy would simply check a box
labeled CAUCASIAN, Kia would have to attach multiple sheets on which her
family tree would be ramified backwards through time ten or twelve
generations until reaching ancestors who could actually be pegged to one
specific ethnic group without glossing anything over, and those ethnic
groups would be intimidatingly hip ones not Swedes, let's say, but Lapps,
and not Chinese but Hakka, and not Spanish but Basque. Instead of doing
this, on her job app for Epiphyte she simply checked "other" and then wrote
in TRANS ETHNIC. In fact, Kia is trans– just about every system of
human categorization, and what she isn't trans– she is post .
Anyway, Kia does a great job (it is part of the unspoken social
contract with these people that they always do an absolutely fantastic job)
and she has sent e mail to Randy notifying him that she has recently fielded
four trans Pacific telephone calls from America Shaftoe, who wants to know
Randy's whereabouts, plans, state of mind, and purity of spirit. Kia has
informed Amy that Randy's on his way to California and has somehow
insinuated, or Amy has somehow figured out, that the purpose of the visit is
NOT BUSINESS. Randy senses a small pane of glass shattering over a
neurological alarm button somewhere. He is in trouble. This is divine
retribution for his having dared to sit still and not do anything for ninety
whole minutes. He uses his word processor to whip out a note explaining to
Amy that he needs to straighten out some paperwork in order to sever the
last clinging tendrils of his dead, dead, dead relationship with Charlene
(which was such a lousy idea to begin with that it causes him to lie awake
at night questioning his own judgment and fitness to live), and that he has
to be in California in order to do it. He faxes the note to Semper Marine in
Manila, and also faxes it to Glory IV in case Amy's out on the water.
He then does something that probably means he's certifiably crazy. He
gets up and strolls up and down the business class aisle on pretext of using
the bathroom, and checks out the people sitting nearby, paying special
attention to their luggage, the stuff they've jammed into the overhead
compartments, the bags under the seats in front of them. He is looking for
anything that might contain a Van Eck phreaking type of antenna. It is a
completely useless thing to do, because just about any type of luggage might
contain such an antenna and he would never know it. Furthermore, any actual
spy who had been planted on this plane to eavesdrop on his computer would
not be sitting there holding up a big antenna and peering at an
oscilloscope. But performing the check (like checking the rates for live
data transmissions to the satellite) is sort of an empty ritual that makes
him feel vaguely responsible and arguably non stupid.
Returning to his seat, he fires up OrdoEmacs, which is a marvelously
paranoid piece of software invented by John Cantrell. Emacs in its normal
form is the hacker's word processor, a text editor that offers little in the
way of fancy formatting capabilities but does the basic job of editing plain
text very well. Your normally cryptographically paranoid hacker would create
files using Emacs and then encrypt them with Ordo later. But if you forget
to encrypt them, or if your laptop gets stolen before you get a chance to,
or your plane crashes and you die but your laptop is sieved out of the muck
by baffled but dogged crash investigators and falls into the hands of
federal authorities, your files can be read. For that matter it is possible
even to find ghostly traces of old bits on a hard drive's sectors even after
the file has been overwritten with new data.
OrdoEmacs, on the other hand, works exactly like regular Emacs, except
that it encrypts everything before writing it out to disk. At no time is
plaintext ever laid down on a disk by OrdoEmacs the only place it exists in
its plain, readable form is in the pixels on the screen, and in the volatile
RAM of the computer, whence it vanishes the moment power is shut down. Not
only that, but it's coupled to a screensaver that uses the little built in
CCD camera in the laptop to check to see if you are actually there. It can't
recognize your face, but it can tell whether or not a vaguely human shaped
form is sitting in front of it, and if that vaguely human shaped form goes
away, even for a fraction of a second, it will drop into a screen saver that
will blank the display and freeze the machine until such time as you type in
a password, or biometrically verify your identity through voice recognition.
Randy opens up a document template that Epiphyte uses for internal
memoranda and begins to lay out certain facts that will be fresh, and no
doubt stimulating, to Avi, Beryl, John, Tom, and Eb.
MY TRIP TO THE JUNGLE
or
THE DRUMS OF THE HUKS
or
GET A LOAD OF THIS
or
HE SQUEEZED MY TESTICLES
or
THE WEIRD TURN PRO
a tale of adventure and discovery in the majestic rain forest of
northern Luzon
by
Randall Lawrence Waterhouse
As I stepped on this unknown middle aged Filipina's feet during an ill
advised ballroom dancing foray, she leaned close to me and uttered some
latitude and longitude figures with a conspicuously large number of
significant digits of precision, implying a maximum positional error on the
order of the size of a dinner plate. Gosh, was I ever curious! Subject
provided these numbers as part of a conversational gambit/thought experiment
concerning the inherent value (as in monetary) of information, a subject
(coincidentally?) of interest to us, the Management Team of Epiphyte(2)
Corp. Examination of high res maps of Luzon indicated that the lat. and
long, in question were in a hilly (let's just go ahead and call it
mountainous) region some 250 km north of Manila. For those of you not
familiar with WW2 history, this area was within the final perimeter
controlled by General Yamashita, the Tiger of Malaya and conqueror of
Singapore, at the end of that war, when Gen. MacArthur had driven him and
his approx. l0^5 troops out of the populated lowlands. And no, this is not
just a fundamentally irrelevant historical note, as we shall see.
Relayed said data to one Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe (refer to my
exceptionally colorful and readable status reports on cable survey for more
anecdotal material concerning same) who asserted " someone is trying to send
you a message" (note: all cheesy dialog hereinafter is DMS's) and offered
his assistance with a vigor bordering on scary aggressiveness. DMS is
energetic and enterprising to a degree that from time to time leaves certain
persons (e.g. those burdened with a petty fear of death or torture) uneasy
(see my prior speculation as to possibility DMS may have been born with a
redundant Y chromosome) Primary role of Yours Truly became as follows:
source of repetitious and evidently irritating counsels of caution,
restraint, other virtues given a low priority by DMS, who cites his
longevity (which unavoidably exceeds that of Yours Truly as he was born
before me), network of close personal relationships (murky, globe spanning,
reputedly puissant), financial prosperity (commodities, e.g. precious
metals, distributed among many locations DMS declines to reveal) and (as
trump card) the corporeal perfection of his girlfriend (she must carry an
umbrella while out of doors lest her face cause pilots of overflying
commercial airliners to pitch forward, dumb and inert, onto their control
yokes) all as proof that the ideas shared by Yours Truly vis a vis how to
avoid death, dismemberment, etc. need not be given more than the most
cursory attention. Yours Truly's only bargaining chips were appropriately
and ironically enough, information: namely the final few digits of the lat.
and long, which were with held from DMS lest he simply go there himself and
check them out (note: DMS is honest to a fault, and so the concern is not
that DMS might steal or appropriate anything but that situation would get
out of hand, to the extent it ever was in hand to begin with)
Plans were made for a journey ("mission" in DMS parlance) to said lat.
and long. Extra batteries were purchased for the GPS receiver (see attached
expense report). Drinking water, etc. laid in. A jeepney was retained.
Concept of jeepney is impossible to convey fully here: a minibus, usually
named after a pop star, Biblical figure, or abstract theological concept,
whose engine & frame come from American, or Nipponese auto company but
whose entire body, seats, upholstery, & encrustations of lurid decor are
locally manufactured by high spirited artisans. Jeepneys are normally made
outside of Manila in towns or barangays (semiautonomous neighborhoods) that
specialize in same; the design, materials, style, etc. of a jeepney reflect
its provenance just as good wine allegedly betrays climate, soil, etc. of
its terroir. Ours was (anomalously) a perfectly monochromatic jeepney mfged.
out of pure stainless steel in the stainless steel fabrication specialized
bgy. of San Pablo, with (unlike normal jeepneys) no colored decorations at
all everything either stainless steel colored or (where use was made of
electric lights) pure piercing halogen white with bluish tinge nicely
complementing hue of stainless steel. Seats in back were stainless steel
benches with surprisingly ergonomic lumbar support capabilities, Name of our
jeepney was THE GRACE OF GOD. Readers of this memo will be disappointed to
know that Bong Bong Gad (sic), designer/owner/driver/proprietor of the
vehicle, anticipated the inevitable "there but for THE GRACE OF GOD go I"
witticism by unloading same on Yours Truly while we were still shaking hands
(Filipinos go in for long handshakes, and the first party to initiate
termination of a handshake usually the non Filipino is invariably left with
a nagging feeling that he is a shithead)
Yours Truly, in discreet one on one mode with DMS, adverted to lack of
windows in the rear (passenger) section of THE GRACE OF GOD as prima facie
evidence that it lacked air conditioning, a technology widely adopted in
Philippine Islands. DMS evinced skepticism as to moral fiber of Yours Truly,
commenced with a series of probing questions aimed at establishing my
commitment to Mission, fiduciary resp. to Epiphyte shareholders, level of
physical & mental vigor, and overall level of "serious" ness (being
"serious" is some kind of umbrella concept strongly correlated with my
fitness to live, to have the privilege of knowing DMS, and to go on dates
with his daughter. This gives me an opening to mention what would normally
be no one's business but my own but which in these circumstances it is
ethically mandated that I disclose, namely, that I am infatuated with
daughter of DMS and that while not exactly reciprocating these feelings at
full strength she finds me sufficiently non loathsome to have dinner with me
from time to time. It has only occurred to me at this very moment that my
pursuit of rel'nship w/the female in question, one America (sic) by name,
would in context of modern U.S. society be classified as SEXUAL HARASSMENT
and that if desired culmination is achieved it might be classified as SEXUAL
ABUSE or RAPE owing to "power imbalance" existing between me and her. Viz,
Yours Truly is on Management Team of Corp that has retained Semper Marine
for large job & provided them with majority of their revenue during last
fiscal year. Anyone with thoughts of summoning federal authorities to
apprehend me upon arrival at SFO & expose my misdeeds & subject me
to public disgrace & compulsory consciousness raising workshops is
advised to acquaint him or herself with the Shaftoes first & to at least
remain open to possibility that Dad's martial prowess in combination with
traditional feelings of psychotic protectiveness toward his female
offspring, combined with Daughter's habit of carrying large Palawan stabbing
weapon known as a kris, and Daughter's overall psychic fierceness &
physical fitness & courage exceeding that of Yours Truly, mitigate any
perceived power imbalance, particularly given that most of our interactions
take place in settings which lend themselves admirably to discreet homicide
& corpse disposal. In other words, I make you aware of this amor stuff
not as confession of personal misdeeds but to make full disclosure of
situation that could influence my judgment vis a vis Semper Marine and
conceivably negatively impact shareholder value, or, much more plausibly,
that could be SEEN as doing so by minority shareholder lawyers who infest
our industry like guinea worms, and used as pretext for legal action).
Back to the question at hand, then. Yours Truly asserted calmly
(feeling that vigorous assertions would be perceived by DMS as defensiveness
& hence a de facto confession of lack of "serious" ness) that (1) a
couple of days' travel in open AC less vehicle through Philippine hinterland
would be a day at the beach, a picnic, a walk in the park, & a sunday
stroll all rolled into one, and (2) furthermore that even if it were the
most hideous torture Yours Truly would gladly undergo it given that the
stakes, for all concerned (incl. Epiphyte shareholders) were so high and
generally Serious. In retrospect, (1) and (2) in close succession seem to
betray some kind of hedging strategy on part of Yours Truly, however at the
time DMS was mollified, formally withdrew previous accusations as to moral
fiber, etc., and divulged that use of jeepney was tactical masterstroke on
his (DMS's) part in that, where we were going, a Merc with smoked glass or
fifty thousand dollar Land Rover, or (by extension) any vehicle with
extravagances such as upholstered seats, windows with glass in them, shock
absorbers dating from post Kennedy assassination era, etc., etc. would only
draw undesired attention to Mission.
America Shaftoe remained in Manila to stay in touch with Mission via
radio & (I supposed) to call in napalm strikes should we find selves
embroiled. Bong Bong Gad & his approx. 12 yr old son/business associate
Fidel occupied front seat. DMS & Yours Truly shared rear (passenger)
section with three mysterious, precisely packed G.I. green duffel bags;
approx. 100 kilos of drinking water in plastic bottles; & two Asian
gentlemen in their 30s or 40s who exhibited stereotypical
inscrutability/impassivity/dignity, etc., etc. during the first four hours
of the journey, which were spent simply trying to drive from center of
Manila to northern outskirts of same. Nationality of these two was not
immediately evident. Many Filipinos are, racially, almost pure Chinese even
though their families have been living here for centuries. Perhaps this
explained strongly Asian features of our traveling companions and (I now had
to assume) business associates.
Proverbial ice was broken as one consequence of pig truck incident
which occurred on four lane highway, narrowed by construction to two,
leading N from Manila. Casual obsvn. of Filipino swine suggests that their
ludicrous, pink, tabloid sized ears function as heat exchangers, as do,
e.g., the tongues of dogs. They are transported in vehicles consisting of
big cage constructed on bed of a straight (as opposed to semiarticulated)
truck. Construction of such vehicles appears to tax local resources to the
point where they are only economical when maximum conceivable number of
swine are packed into confines at all times. Heat buildup ensues. Pigs adapt
by fighting their way to perimeter of cage & hanging ear/heat exchangers
out over the side to flap in the wind of the truck's motion.
The appearance of such a vehicle when approached from behind can be
easily envisioned without further description. Readers who devote a few
moments' consideration to the subject of excreta need not be pounded over
the head vis a vis what flies, sprays, drips, etc. from such vehicles
either. The Pig Truck Incident was a humorous demonstration of applied
hydrodynamics, though since no actual water was involved perhaps
"excretodynamics" or "scatodynamics" might better fit. THE GRACE OF GOD had
been following a representative Pig Truck for some miles in the hopes of
passing it. The sheer quantity of excess body heat radiating from its vast
phased array of flapping pink ears caused several of our drinking water
bottles to achieve full rolling boil and explode. Bong Bong Gad maintained a
respectful distance because of excreta hazards, which in no way simplified
the problem of passing the truck. Tension climbed to a palpable level &
Bong Bong was subjected to steadily increasing stream of good natured
heckling and unsolicited driving advice from passenger area, esp. from DMS
who viewed lingering unwelcome presence of pig truck in our planned
trajectory as personal affront & hence challenge to be overcome w/all
due pluck, vigor, can do spirit, & other qualities known to be possessed
in abundance by DMS.
After some time Bong Bong made his move, using one hand to manipulate
steering wheel and other to time share equally important responsibilities of
shifting gears and depressing the horn button. As we drew alongside the Pig
Truck (which was on my side of the jeepney) the Truck slalomed toward us as
if perhaps swerving around some real or imagined roadside hazard. The
primary horn of THE GRACE OF GOD was apparently going unheard, possibly
because it was competing for audio bandwidth against large numbers of swine
voicing their displeasure in same frequency range. With aplomb normally seen
only among senescent English butlers, Bong Bong reached up with his
horn/gearshift hand and gripped a brilliant stainless steel chain flailing
from ceiling of cab with a stainless steel crucifix on the end of it and
jerked downwards, energizing the secondary, tertiary, and quaternary honking
systems: a trio of tuba sized stainless steel horns mounted to the roof of
THE GRACE OF GOD and collectively drawing so much power that our vehicle's
speed dropped by (I would estimate) ten km/hr as its energies were diverted
into decibel production. A demi hyperbolic swath of agricultural crops
twenty miles long was flattened to the ground by the blast, and, hundreds of
miles north, the Taiwanese government, its collective ears still ringing,
filed a diplomatic protest with the Philippine ambassador. Dead whales and
dolphins washed ashore on the beaches of Luzon for days, and sonar operators
in passing U.S. Navy submarines were sent into early retirement with blood
streaming from their ears.
Terrified by this sound, all of the pigs (I would suppose) voided their
bowels just as the driver of the Pig Truck swerved violently away from us.
Certain first year physics conservation of momentum issues dictated that I
be showered with former pig bowel contents in order to enhance shareholder
value. This was evidently the funniest thing that the two Asian looking
gentlemen had ever seen and rendered them helpless for several minutes. One
of them actually retched from laughing too hard (the first time that our
vehicle's lack of windows came in handy). The other extended his hand and
introduced himself as one Jean Nguyen. This is the French male name "zhohn"
and not the Anglo female name "jeen." Jean Nguyen looked at me expectantly
after telling me his name, as did DMS, as if they were expecting me to get a
fairly obvious joke. Perhaps preoccupied with hygienic issues. I failed to
get it. and they pointed out to me that when "Jean" is pronounced like
"John" and "Nguyen" is pronounced the way a lot of Americans mangle it, the
name sounds arguably like "John Wayne," which is how I was encouraged to
address this Jean Nguyen from that point onwards. It seemed in retrospect
that I was being given an opportunity to have a small chuckle at Jean
Nguyen's expense and thereby to even the scales, in some small but
symbolically important sense, for the pig shit incident. My failure to
exploit this opportunity left everyone feeling mildly uneasy and like they
still owed me one. The other gentle man was introduced as Jackie Woo. He
spoke English with a vaguely East Indian crackle which led me to peg him,
speculatively, as a Malay Peninsula native of Chinese descent, e.g.. from
Singapore or Penang.
First day's travel got us across the central Luzon plain (rice and
sugar cane) to the town of San Jose at the foot of the southernmost
extension of the Cordillera Central (trees and bugs). By this point it was
dark, and to my relief, neither DMS nor Bong Bong was eager to brave twisty
Cordillera roads in darkness. We stayed in a guest house. At this point,
having devoted much time to detailed Pig Truck description I will elide
various details concerning San Juan, its inhabitants (of various taxonomic
phyla some of which I had never encountered until that night), the character
building nature of our lodgings and, in particular, their fanciful plumbing
system which was a credit to the imagination, though not the hydrostatic
acumen, of its anonymous creator. It was the kind of hostel that makes a
traveler eager to get an early and explosively sudden start in the morning,
which we did.
A note now about the physical properties of space, as perceived by
human beings imprisoned within bodies of limited physical capabilities. I
have long noticed that space seems to be more compressed, more involuted,
some how psychically LARGER in some places than others. Covering a distance
of three or four miles in the totally open scrublands of central Washington
State is a simple matter, and takes less than an hour on foot. and only a
few minutes if you have some kind of vehicle. Covering the same distance in
Manhattan takes much longer. It's not just that the space in Manhattan is
more physically obstructed (though it definitely is) but that there is some
kind of psychological impact that alters the way you perceive and experience
distance. You cannot see as far, and what you do see is full of people,
buildings, goods, vehicles, and other stuff that it takes your brain some
amount of effort to sort through, to process. Even if you had some kind of
magic carpet that would glide past all of the physical obstructions the
distance would seem much longer, and would take longer to cover, simply
because your mind would have to deal with more stuff.
The same thing is true of a jungle type of environment as opposed to
the plains. Traversing the physical space is basically an ongoing battle
against hundreds of different combatants each one of which is, to a
traveler, an obstruction, a hazard, or both. I.e., no matter which one of
them predominates in a given ten square meter area, you are still screwed,
as far as getting across that ten square meters is concerned. There are
roads through the jungle, but even when they are in good repair they seem
more like bottlenecks than vectors of motion, and they are never in good
repair mudslides, fallen trees, huge chuckholes, and the like block them
every few hundred meters. Also the same perceptual thing is at work here you
can't see more than a few meters in any direction, and inputs, some of
which, like butterflies, are (okay, okay) beautiful. My reason for
mentioning this is that I know that everyone who reads this probably has
multiple maps of Luzon on their wall or in their computer, which, when
consulted, will cause it to seem as if we are dealing with a triflingly
small area, and covering minuscule distances. But you must try not to think
this way and instead imagine that Luzon is effectively as large as, say, the
United States west of the Mississippi. In terms of the time it takes to get
around the place, it is at least that big.
I mention this not out of some impulse to mewl and convince you all of
how strenuously I have worked, but because until you grasp this central fact
of the effectively vast size of this part of the world. you will be
completely unable to believe the dumbfounding facts that I am slowly getting
around to revealing.
We went into the mountains. Around midday, we encountered our first
military roadblock. Distance covered from San Juan was pathetic from
cartographic p.o.v. , but in terms of unexpected hassles creatively
surmounted, wrenchingly difficult decisions made, & pits of despair
climbed out of by the emotional fingernails, should be considered
magnificent achievement on par with any given day of the Lewis & Clark
expedition, (excluding, of course, anomalous days such as their first
encounters with Ursus horribilis & their epic, stocking foot traversal
of Bitterroot Range.) Roadblock was established in the low key Filipino
style: one man in military uniform (U.S. Army castoffs) standing by roadside
smoking & beckoning. We were at a rare wide spot in the road, a place
where oncoming Chicken playing vehicles could pull aside abjectly. Four
members of Army (later pegged by insignia savvy DMS as a first lieutenant, a
sergeant, and two privates) had ensconced selves on parked Humvee type
vehicle w/absurdly long whip antenna clamped to bumper. The privates, armed
with M 16s, stiffly unfolded selves from repose & adopted positions
flanking THE GRACE OF GOD from behind, keeping their weapons pointed vaguely
at the ground, as if more worried about entomological threats than our
little band of travelers. Sergeant was armed with what I first perceived as
L shaped nightstick fashioned from parts scavenged from plumbing aisle of
home improvement store & painted black, but on further examination
proved to be a submachine gun.
Said Sergeant approached Bong Bong Gad's door & conversed with same
in Tagalog. Lieutenant was armed only with sidearm & supervised these
operations from a shaded area near the Humvee, seeming to espouse a hands
off, as opposed to micromanaging, leadership style. This inspection was
limited to the Sergeant peering in through TGOG's glassless windows &
exchanging hearty greetings with DMS (evidently Jean Nguyen & Jackie Woo
spoke even less Tagalog than Yours Truly). We were then allowed to proceed,
although I noticed that the lieutenant immediately commenced a radio
transmission. "The sergeant say there are Nice People Around," Bong Bong Gad
explained to me, using a coy local euphemism for NPA, or New People's Army,
a supposedly revolutionary, but evidently somewhat feckless guerilla
organization descended in a direct line from the Hukbalahaps, or Huks, the
fighters who resisted the Nipponese occupation (but not so desultorily) in
WW2.
We then covered an amount of distance equivalent, in terms of Fear,
Uncertainty, and Doubt, to one more Lewis And Clark Expedition Day, a
convenient unit of distance, danger, perspirational weight loss, poor
sphincter control, wishing you were at home, exasperation, & emotional
toll which I will hereinafter abbreviate as LAC. So after 1 LAC we arrived
at another roadblock similar to the first except that here there was a troop
truck in addition to the Humvee, and some tents pitched, and a pit latrine,
whose odor & appearance suggested a long standing military presence in
this area. A luckless private was made to crawl underneath THE GRACE OF GOD
with a flashlight, inspecting its undercarriage. The three duffel bags were
removed and their contents spread out. I should mention that upon my joining
this expedition in Manila, DMS had gone through my bag with a level of
inquisitiveness annoying at the time, refused to allow me to bring certain
items (such as pharmaceuticals) and transferred remaining items to clear
plastic bags of Ziploc type which were placed in the duffels. Merits of this
highly modular approach now became clear as inspection of our cargo was
wondrously facilitated: duffels were simply upended over tarps spread on
ground & contents inspected by sight through transparent inner bags,
sometimes by feel to check for compositional inhomogeneities. Certain of
these bags contained cartons of American brand tobacco products which as
expected did not make it back into the duffels. Most of my DMS mandated
supply of alkaline AA batteries, which I had thought radically out of
proportion to projected demand, also vanished at this time. We were sent on
our way and after approx. 0.6 LAC (mostly occasioned by need to remove
downed tree from roadway) arrived at a town that appeared seemingly out of
nowhere in jungle valley, astride a river. Slept like a dead man in
startlingly decent guesthouse that night. Woke up next morning & looked
out window to observe large crowd of locals milling around in street below
in their best meshback caps & American basketball t shirts. Descended
stairs to discover DMS in dining room, strategically flanked by Jean Nguyen
& Jackie Woo, at other tables in corners of room, wearing climatically
inappropriate jackets & generally projecting the image of concealed
weapon equipped badass motherfuckers not to be trifled with.
Not wishing to interfere with this psychodrama, Yours Truly took
innocuous position at yet another table, well away from projected gunfire
corridors, accepted coffee from proprietor, declined local delicacies,
negotiated (see expense report) for loan of bowl & spoon, breakfasted
upon Cap'n Crunch & warm UHT milk from duffel bag (former had been
packed into a Ziploc that when fully loaded adopted the distinctive pillow
shape of an individual nugget of Cap'n Crunch, only much larger). Explosive
crunching noises of nuggets caused Yours Truly to feel conspicuous and
Western. Jean Nguyen & Jackie Woo had declined all refreshments except
tea, the better to project image of hair trigger alertness & potential
for instantaneous violence, DMS was eating an omelette with approx. diameter
of a Hula Hoop & engaging in one short conversation after another with
locals, who were admitted through front door of building one at a time by
proprietor and allowed to present their cases to DMS as if he were a
traveling magistrate. Between two such interviews, DMS noted my presence in
room & bade me join him. I moved my Cap'n Crunch infrastructure to
corner of table not occupied by omelette & sat with him during the next
couple of dozen interviews, which were conducted in mixture of English and
Tagalog. Crowd in street dwindled gradually as they were interviewed and
then dismissed by DMS.
Subject matter of interviews could be induced by Yours Truly only by
recognizing occasional English words & adopting a basically intuitive
pattern recognition approach not amenable to rational explication here. Most
common keywords: Nippon, the Nipponese, the War, Gold, Treasure,
Excavations, Yamashita, Mass Executions. Emotional tenor of these
conversations consisted of polite but extreme skepticism on part of DMS,
while confronted by desperate need to be believed on part of interviewees.
In the end DMS did not believe any of them as far as I could discern. They
either became obstreperous & had to be shown the door (glancing warily
at Jean Nguyen & Jackie Woo) or adopted a wounded & aggrieved
stance. DMS was amused by the former & disgusted by the latter. Yours
Truly mused silently upon inappropriateness of his own presence in this
setting & fondly remembered predictable comforts of home, even of
Manila. Upon completion of breakfast & of interviews, DMS divulged, in
response to my inquiries, that he had been at it for two hours before I had
arrived & that formation of this milling crowd occurs spontaneously
before doors of any lodgings he takes in the Philippines owing to his
reputation as treasure hunter. We had avoided it in San Juan only because he
goes there frequently and has already interviewed everyone in region with
Nipponese War Gold stories found 99.9% of them lacking credibility,
investigating the remaining .1% with occasionally lucrative results.
THE GRACE OF GOD had been washed and buffed by Fidel Gad in
magnificently insouciant gesture of defiance of jungle elements. We
proceeded across river. Racial variations were conspicuous on faces, and in
physiognomies, of townspeople. Philippines were settled by countless
overlapping waves of prehistoric migrants each racially & linguistically
incompatible with the last; this in combination with the spatial involution
phenom. which I have, I think sufficiently belabored by this point, makes
for your basic patchwork of different ethnic groups. The fork in the river
around which this town was nucleated was meeting point of unofficial turfs
of three such different cultures. Lure of bright lights, or even dim,
flickering ones, has drawn thousands down from mountains in recent
generations to establish several distinct barangays. This morning's
interviewees were migrants from the mountains, or their sons or grandsons,
who claimed to have first hand knowledge of sites of Yamashita's hoards, or
to have heard about same from late ancestors.
After covering about 1.6 LACs through jungle (roads, slopes, &
conditions getting worse all the time) we encountered another military
roadblock that had (somewhat incredibly to my mind) been established at a
pass over a ridge, overlooking some rice terraces that had (even more
incredibly) been hacked out of an essentially vertical south facing slope
thousands of years ago by the evidently fearsomely tenacious ancestors of
the locals. Here we were thoroughly searched. My testicles were squeezed at
some length by a sergeant with a pencil mustache, whose motives did not
appear to be sexual, but who simultaneously looked me searchingly in the
eye, awaiting a look of submission or hopelessness on the face of the
squeezed. The others were subjected to the same treatment and probably
endured it with more stoicism than Yours Truly. No lethal weapons were found
attached to any of our scrota, but (surprise!) Jean ("John Wayne") Nguyen
and Jackie Woo were discovered to be armed to the teeth, and DMS somewhat
less so. This is the part where Yours Truly expected to be shot in the nape
of the neck whilst kneeling above a shallow grave, but ironically the
authorities were far more interested in my cache of Cap'n Crunch than the
weaponry sported by my comrades. Negotiations took place between DMS and the
captain in charge of this outpost, in the privacy of a tent. DMS emerged
with a thinner wallet and full clearance to proceed, on the conditions that
(1) all supplies of Cap'n Crunch be donated to the officers' mess, and (2) a
full inventory of weapons and ammo would be taken upon our return &
compared with today's findings to make sure that we were not smuggling arms
to the Nice People Around.
Three days' excruciatingly slow travel, comprising maybe another 10
LACs, awaited us. According to my map and GPS we were circumnavigating a
cluster of active volcanoes that frequently spew out lahars (mud avalanches)
which, when they impact upon ruts in the jungle that I'm here calling roads,
cause logistical problems well into the realm of the absurd. We passed
entire towns that had been buried and abandoned. Church steeples projected
at angles from the grey mud, held up by the same flows that had knocked them
askew. Skulls of goats, dogs, etc. protruded from mud that had hardened
around living animals like concrete. We bedded down nightly at small
settlements after propitiating locals with gifts of penicillin (which
Filipinos use like aspirin), batteries, disposable lighters, & whatever
else had been left to us by the soldiers at the roadblocks. We slept on
benches, floor, roof, or front seats of THE GRACE OF GOD, beneath mosquito
nets.
Finally, when my GPS revealed that we were less than ten km. from our
mysterious destination, a local instructed us to wait in a nearby village.
We remained there for a day & a night resting up and reading books (DMS
is never without a milk crate of techno thrillers) until, at dawn, we were
approached by a trio of very young, short men, one of whom carried an AK 47.
He and his brethren climbed on the roof of THE GRACE OF GOD and we proceeded
into a jungle track so narrow that I would not have pegged it even as a
footpath. A couple of km. into the jungle we reached a point where we spent
more time pushing the jeepney than riding in it. Shortly thereafter we left
Bong Bong and Fidel and one of the duffels behind, the four of us taking
turns humping the two other duffels. I consulted the GPS & verified
that, although we had for a time (alarmingly) moved away from the
Destination, we were now moving toward it again. We were eight thousand
m(eters) away and proceeding at a rate that varied between about five
hundred and a thousand m per hour, depending on whether we were moving
steeply uphill or steeply downhill. It was around noon. Those of you with
even rudimentary math skills will have anticipated that when the sun went
down we were still a few thousand meters away.
The three Filipinos our guides, guards, captors, or whatever they were
wore the obligatory U.S. t shirts which make it so easy, nowadays, to
underestimate cultural differences. They had not yet, however, attained
transethnicity. While in town they were shod in flip flops, but in the
jungle they went barefoot (I have owned pairs of shoes less durable than the
calluses on their feet). They spoke a language that apparently had zero in
common with the Tagalog I'd heard ("Tagalog" is the old name; the government
is ragging on people to call it "Filipina," as if to imply that it is in
some sense a common language of the archipelago, which, as these guys
demonstrated, is not the case). DMS had to converse with them in English. At
one point he gave one a throwaway plastic ballpoint pen and their faces
absolutely lit up. Then we had to scrounge up two more pens for his
companions. It was like Christmas. Progress halted for several minutes while
they marveled at the pens' handy clicking mechanisms and doodled on the
palms of their hands. The American t shirts were, in other words, not worn
as Americans wear them but in the same spirit that the Queen of England wore
the exotic Koh I Noor Diamond on her crown. Not for the first time I was
overtaken by a strong not exactly in Kansas feeling.
We slogged through the inevitable late afternoon thunderstorm and kept
moving into the night. DMS produced U.S. Army MREs (Meals Ready to Eat) from
the duffels, only a couple of weeks past their stenciled expiration dates.
The Filipino men found these nearly as exciting as the ballpoint pen, and
saved the disposable foil trays for later use as roofing material. We
started slogging again. The moon came out, which represented a bit of luck.
I fell down a couple of times and banged myself up on trees, which ended up
being a good thing because it put me into a state of mild shock, dulling the
pain and jacking me up on adrenaline. Our guides, at one point, seemed a
little uncertain as to which way they should go. I took a fix with the GPS
(using the screen's nightlight function) and established that we were no
more than fifty meters away from the destination, almost too small an error
for my GPS to resolve. In any event, it told us roughly which direction to
proceed, and we trudged through the trees for another few moments. The
guides became animated and very cheerful finally they had gotten their
bearings, they knew where we were. I bumped into something heavy, cold, and
immovable that nearly broke my knee. I reached down to touch it, expecting
to find a rock outcropping, but instead felt some thing smooth and metallic.
It seemed to be a stack of smaller units, maybe comparable in size to loaves
of bread. "Is this what we're looking for?" I asked. DMS turned on a battery
powered lantern and whipped the beam around in my direction.
I was instantly blinded by a thigh high stack of gold bars, about a
meter and a half on a side, sitting out in the middle of the jungle,
unmarked and unguarded.
DMS came over and sat down on top of it and lit a cigar. After a while,
we counted the bars and measured them. They are trapezoidal in cross
section, about 10 cm wide and 10 high, and about 40 cm in length. This
enabled us to estimate their mass at about 75 kg. each, which works out to
2,400 troy ounces. Since gold is normally measured in troy ounces and not in
kilograms (!) I'm going to make a wild guess that these bars were intended
to weigh an even 2,500 troy ounces apiece. At current rates ($400/troy oz. )
this means each bar is worth a million dollars. There are 5 layers of bars
in the stack, each layer consisting of 24 bars, and so the value of the
stack is $120 million. Both the mass estimate and the value estimate presume
that the bars are nearly pure gold. I took a rubbing of the stamp from one
of the bars, which bears the mark of the Bank of Singapore. Each bar is
marked with a unique serial number and I copied down as many of those as I
could see.
Then we went back to Manila. All along the way, I tried to imagine the
logistics of getting even a single one of those gold bars from the jungle
out to the nearest bank where it could be turned into something useful, like
cash.
Let me transition to a Q&A format here.
Q: Randy, I get the feeling that you are about to lay out in detail all
of the hassles that would be involved in moving this gold overland, so let's
just cut to the chase and talk about helicopters.
A: There is no place for a helicopter to land. Terrain is extremely
rugged. The nearest sufficiently flat place is about one km. away. It would
have to be cleared. In Vietnam this was accomplished using 'blockbuster"
bombs, but this is probably not an option here. Trees would have to be cut
down, creating a gap in the jungles conspicuous from the air.
Q: Who cares if it's conspicuous? Who's going to see it?
A: As should be obvious from my anecdote, the people who control this
gold have connections in Manila. We may assume that the area is overflown by
the Philippine Air Force regularly, and kept under radar surveillance.
Q: What would be involved in getting the bars to the nearest decent
road?
A: They would have to be carried over the jungle trails I have
described. Each bar weighs as much as a full grown man.
Q: Couldn't they be cut up into smaller pieces?
A: DMS rates it as unlikely that the current owners would permit this.
Q: Is there any chance of smuggling the gold through the military
checkpoints?
A: Obviously not in the case of a mass shipment. The gold weighs a
total of around ten tons, and would require a truck that could not negotiate
most of the roads we saw. Concealing ten tons of goods from the inspectors
at these checkpoints is not possible.
Q: How about smuggling the bars out one at a time?
A: Still very tricky. Might be possible to hike the bars out to an
intermediate point somewhere, melt or chop them down, and somehow secrete
them in the body of a jeepney or other vehicle, then drive the vehicle to
Manila and extract the gold. This operation would have to be repeated a
hundred times. Driving the same vehicle past one of these checkpoints a
hundred (or even two) times would strike them as, to put it mildly, odd.
Even if this were possible there is the payment issue.
Q: What is the payment issue?
A: Obviously the people who control the gold want to be paid for it.
Paying them in more gold, or in precious gems, would be ludicrous. They do
not have bank accounts. They have to be paid in Philippine pesos. Anything
bigger than about a 500 peso note is useless in this area. A 500 peso note
is worth about $20, and so it would be necessary to bring six million of
them into the jungle to perform the transaction. Based on some rudimentary
calculations I have made here using a mechanic's caliper and the contents of
my wallet, the stack of 500 peso notes would be about (please wait while I
switch my calculator over to the "scientific notation" mode) 25,000 inches
high. Or, if you prefer the metric system, something like two thirds of a
kilometer. If you stacked the bills a meter high, you would need six or
seven hundred such stacks, which if jammed close together would cover an
area about three meters on a side. Basically we are talking about a large
Ryder box truck full of money. This would have to be transported into the
middle of the jungle, and obviously, melting down cash and secreting it
inside of a truck is not an option.
Q: Since the military seems to be the big obstacle here, why not simply
cut a deal with them? Let them keep a big cut of the proceeds in exchange
for not hassling us.
A: Because the money would go to the NPA which would use it to buy
weapons for the purpose of killing people in the military.
Q: There must be some way to use the value of this gold to leverage
some kind of extraction operation.
A: The gold is worthless to a bank until it has been assayed. Until
then it is only a blurry Polaroid of a stack of yellow objects in what seems
to be a jungle. In order to perform an assay you need to go into the jungle,
find the gold, bore out a sample, and transport it safely back to a large
city. But this proves nothing. Even if the potential backers believe that
your assay really came from the jungle (i.e., that you did not switch
samples along the way) all they know now is the purity of one end of one bar
in the stack. Basically it is not possible to obtain full value for this
gold until the entire stack has been extracted and taken to a vault where it
can be systematically assayed.
Q: Could you maybe just get the gold to some local bank and then sell
it at steep discount, so that the burden of transporting it would be on
someone else's shoulders?
A: DMS relates the tale of one such transaction, in a provincial town
in north Luzon, which was interrupted when local entrepreneurs literally
blew one of the bank's walls off with dynamite, came in, and grabbed both
the gold and the cash that was going to be used to pay for the gold. DMS
asserts he would rather slit his own throat quietly than walk into a small
town bank with anything worth more than a few tens of thousands of dollars.
Q: Is the situation basically impossible then?
A: It is basically impossible.
Q: Then what was the point of the whole exercise?
A: To come full circle to the first thing DMS said. It was to send us a
message.
Q: What is the message?
A: That money is not worth having if you can't spend it.
That certain people have a lot of money that they badly want to spend.
And that if we can give them a way to spend it, through the Crypt, that
these people will be very happy. and conversely that if we screw up they
will be very sad, and that whether they are happy or sad they will be eager
to share these emotions with us, the shareholders and management team of
Epiphyte Corp.
And now I am going to e mail this to all of you and then summon the
flight attendant and demand the array of alcoholic beverages I so richly
deserve. Cheers.
– R
Randall Lawrence Waterhouse
Current meatspace coordinates, hot from the GPS receiver card in my
laptop:
27 degrees, 14.95 minutes N latitude 143 degrees. 17.44 minutes E
longitude
Nearest geographical feature: the Bonin Islands
Chapter 60 ROCKET
Julieta has retreated somewhere far up beyond the Arctic Circle.
Shaftoe has been pursuing her like a dogged Mountie, slogging across the
sexual tundra on frayed snowshoes and leaping heroically from floe to floe.
But she remains about as distant, and about as reachable, as Polaris. She
has spent more time lately with Enoch Root than with him and Root's a
celibate priest or something. Or is he?!
On the few occasions Bobby Shaftoe has actually gotten Julieta to crack
a smile, she has immediately begun to ask difficult questions: Did you have
sex with Glory, Bobby? Did you use a condom? Is it possible that she might
have become pregnant? Can you absolutely rule out the possibility that you
have a child in the Philippines? How old would he or she be right now? Let's
see, you fucked her on Pearl Harbor Day, so the child would have been born
in early September of '42. Your child would be fourteen, fifteen months old
now perhaps just learning to walk! How precious!
It always gives Shaftoe the willies when tough girls like Julieta get
all fluttery and slip into baby talk. At first, he figures it's all a ruse
to keep him at arm's length. This smuggler's daughter, this atheist guerilla
intellectual what does she care about some girl in Manila? Snap out of it,
woman! There's a war on!
Then he comes up with a better explanation: Julieta's pregnant.
The day begins with the sound of a ship's horn in the harbor at
Norrsbruck. The town is a jumble of neat, wide houses packed onto a spur of
rock that sticks out into the Gulf of Bothnia, forming the southern shore of
a slender but deep inlet lined with wharves. Half the town now turns out
beneath an unsettling, turbulent peach and salmon dawn to see this quaint
harbor being deflowered by an inexorable steel phallus. It comes complete
with spirochetes: several score men in black dress uniforms stand on the top
of the thing, lined up neat as stanchions. As the blast of the horn fades
away, echoing back and forth between the stony ridges, it becomes possible
to hear the spirochetes singing: belting out a bawdy German sea chanty which
Bobby Shaftoe last heard during a convoy attack in the Bay of Biscay.
Two other people in Norrsbruck will recognize that tune. Shaftoe looks
for Enoch Root in his church cellar, but he is not present, his bed and lamp
are cold. Maybe the local chapter of Societas Eruditorum holds its meetings
before dawn or maybe he's found another welcoming bed. But trusty old Günter
Bischoff can be seen, leaning out the window of his seaside garret, elbows
in the air and his trusty Zeiss 735 binoculars clamped over his face,
scanning the lines of the invading ship.
The Swedes stand with arms folded for a minute or so, regarding this
apparition. Then they make some kind of collective decision that it does not
exist, that nothing has happened here. They turn their backs, pad grumpily
into their houses, begin to boil coffee. Being neutral is no less strange,
no less fraught with awkward compromises, than being a belligerent. Unlike
most of Europe, they can rest assured that the Germans are not here to
invade them or sink their ships. On the other hand, the vessel's presence is
a violation of their sovereign territory and they ought to run down there
with pitchforks and flintlocks and fight the Huns off. On the third hand,
this boat was probably made out of Swedish iron.
Shaftoe fails, at first, to recognize the German vessel as a U boat
because it is shaped all wrong. A regular U boat is shaped like a surface
vessel, except longer and skinnier. Which is to say it has a sort of V
shaped hull and a flat deck, studded with guns, from which rises a gigantic
conning tower that is covered with junk: ack ack guns, antennas, stanchions,
safety lines, spray shields. The Krauts would put cuckoo clocks up there too
if they had room. As a regular U boat plunges through the waves, thick black
smoke spews from its diesel engines.
This one is just a torpedo as long as a football field. Instead of a
conning tower there's a streamlined bulge on the top, hardly noticeable.
No guns, no antennas, no cuckoo clocks; the whole thing's as smooth as
a river rock. And it's not making smoke or noise, just venting a little bit
of steam. The diesels don't rumble. The fucking thing doesn't even seem to
have diesels. Instead there is a dim whine, like the sound that came out of
Angelo's Messerschmidt.
Shaftoe intercepts Bischoff just as the latter is coming down the steps
of the inn carrying a duffel bag the size of a dead sea lion. He's panting
with exertion, or maybe excitement. "That's the one," he gasps. He sounds
like he's talking to himself, but he's speaking English, so he must be
addressing Shaftoe. "That's the rocket."
"Rocket?"
"Runs on rocket fuel hydrogen peroxide, eighty five percent. Never has
to recharge its verdammt batteries! Clocks twenty eight knots submerged!
That's my baby." He's as fluttery as Julieta.
"Can I help you carry anything?"
"Footlocker upstairs," Bischoff says.
Shaftoe stomps up the narrow staircase to find Bischoff's room stripped
to the bedsprings, and a pile of gold coins on the table, weighing down a
thank you note addressed to the owners. The black locker rests in the middle
of the floor like a child's coffin. A wild hollering noise reaches his ears
through the open window.
Bischoff is down there, heading for the pier beneath his duffel bag,
and his men, up on the rocket, have caught sight of him. The U boat has
launched a dinghy, which is surging towards the pier like a racing scull.
Shaftoe heaves the locker up onto his shoulder and trudges down the
stairs. It reminds him of shipping out, which is what Marines are supposed
to do, and which he has not actually done in a long time. Vicarious
excitement is not as good as the real thing, he finds.
He follows Bischoff's tracks through a film of snow, down the
cobblestone street, and onto the pier. Three men in black scramble out of
the launch, onto the ladder, up to the pier. They salute Bischoff and then
two of them embrace him. Shaftoe's close enough and the salmon light is
bright enough, that he can recognize these two: members of Bischoff's old
crew. The third guy is taller, older, gaunter, grimmer, better dressed, more
highly decorated. All in all, more of a Nazi.
Shaftoe can't believe himself. When he picked up the locker he was just
being considerate to his friend Günter an ink stained retiree with pacifist
leanings. Now, all of a sudden, he's aiding and abetting the enemy! What
would his fellow Marines think of him if they knew?
Oh, yeah. Almost forgot. He is actually participating in the conspiracy
that he, Bischoff, Rudy von Hacklheber, and Enoch Root created in the
basement of that church. He comes to a dead stop and slams the locker down
right there, in the middle of the pier. The Nazi is startled by the noise
and raises his blue eyes in the direction of Shaftoe, who prepares to stare
him down.
Bischoff notices this. He turns towards Shaftoe and shouts something
cheerful in Swedish. Shaftoe has the presence of mind to break eye contact
with the chilly German. He grins and nods back. This conspiracy thing is
going to be a real pain in the ass if it means backing down from casual
fistfights.
A couple of sailors have come up the ladder now to handle Bischoff's
luggage. One of them strides down the pier to get the footlocker. Shaftoe
recognizes him, and he recognizes Shaftoe, at the same moment. Damn! The
guy's surprised, but not unpleasantly so, to see Shaftoe here. Then
something occurs to him and his face freezes up in horror and his eyes dart
sideways, back toward the tall Nazi. Shit! Shaftoe turns his back on all of
this, makes like he's strolling back into town.
"Jens! Jens!" Bischoff hollers, and then says something else in
Swedish. He's running after Shaftoe. Shaftoe keeps his back prudently turned
until Bischoff throws one arm around him with a final "JENS!" Then, sotto
voce, in English: "You have my family's address. If I don't see you in
Manila, let's get in touch after the war." He starts pounding Shaftoe on the
back, pulls some paper money out of his pocket, stuffs it into Shaftoe's
hand.
"Goddamn it, you'll see me there," Shaftoe says. "What is this shit
for?"
"I am tipping the nice Swedish boy who carried my luggage," Bischoff
says.
Shaftoe sucks his teeth and grimaces. He can tell he is not cut out for
this cloak and dagger nonsense. Questions come to his mind, among them How
is that big torpedo full of rocket fuel safer than what you were riding
around in before? but he just says, "Good luck, I guess."
"Godspeed, my friend," Bischoff says. "This will remind you to check
your mail." Then he punches Shaftoe in the shoulder hard enough to raise a
three day welt, turns around, and begins walking towards salt water. Shaftoe
walks towards snow and trees, envying him. The next time he looks at the
harbor, fifteen minutes later, the U boat is gone. Suddenly this town feels
just as cold, empty, and out in the middle of nowhere as it really is.
He's been getting his mail at the Norrsbruck post office, general
delivery. When the place opens up a couple of hours later, Shaftoe's waiting
by the door; venting steam from his nostrils, like he's rocket fuel powered.
He receives a letter from his folks in Wisconsin, and one large envelope,
posted yesterday from somewhere in Norrsbruck, Sweden, bearing no return
address but inscribed in Günter Bischoff's hand.
It is full of notes and documents concerning the new U boat, including
one or two letters personally signed by John Huncock himself. Shaftoe's
German is slightly better than it was before he went on his own U boat ride,
but he still can't follow most of it. He sees a lot of numbers there, a lot
of technical looking stuff.
It is your basic priceless naval intelligence. Shaftoe wraps the papers
up carefully, sticks them in his pants, begins walking up the beach towards
the Kivistik residence.
It is a long, cold, wet trudge. He has plenty of time to assess his
situation: stuck in a neutral country on the other side of the world from
where he wants to be. Alienated from the Corps. Lumped in with a vague
conspiracy.
Technically speaking, he has been AWOL for several months now. But if
he suddenly turns up at the American Embassy in Stockholm, carrying these
documents, all will be forgiven. So this is his ticket home. And "home" is a
very large country that includes places like Hawaii, which is closer to
Manila than is Norrsbruck, Sweden.
Otto's boat is fresh in from Finland, bobbing on an incoming tide, tied
up to his bird's nest of a jetty. The boat, he knows, is still loaded up
with whatever Finns are exchanging for coffee and bullets at the moment.
Otto himself is sitting in the cabin, drinking coffee naturally, red eyed
and plumb wrung out.
"Where's Julieta?" Shaftoe says. He's starting to worry that she moved
back to Finland or something.
Otto turns a bit greyer every time he drives his tub across the Gulf of
Bothnia. He looks especially grey today. "Did you see that monster?" he
says, then shakes his head in a combination of wonderment, disgust, and
world weariness that can only be attained by hardened Finns. "Those German
bastards!"
"I thought they were protecting you from the Russians."
This elicits a long thunder roll of dark, chortling laughter from Otto.
"Zdrastuytchye, tovarishch!" he finally says.
"Say what?"
"That means, 'Welcome, comrade' in Russian," Otto says. "I have been
practicing it."
"You should be practicing the Pledge of Allegiance," Shaftoe says.
"Soon as we get done taking down the Germans, I figure we'll just kick her
into high gear and beat the Russkies all the way back to Siberia."
More laughter from Otto, who knows naïveté when he sees it, but is not
above finding it charming. "I have buried the German air turbine in
Finland," he says. "I will sell it to the Russians or the Americans whoever
gets there, first."
"Where's Julieta?" Shaftoe asks again. Speaking of naïveté.
"In town," Otto says. "Shopping."
"So you've got cash."
Otto looks seasick. Tomorrow is payday.
Then Shaftoe's going to be on a bus, headed for Stockholm.
Shaftoe sits down across from Otto and they drink coffee and talk about
weather, smuggling, and the relative merits of various small fully automatic
weapons for a while. Actually, what they are talking about is whether
Shaftoe will get paid, and how much.
In the end, Otto issues a guarded promise to pay, provided that Julieta
does not spend all of the money on her "shopping" trip, and provided that
Shaftoe unloads the boat.
So Bobby Shaftoe spends the rest of the day carrying Soviet mortars,
rusty tins of caviar, bricks of black tea from China, Lapp folk art, a
couple of icons, cases of pine flavored Finnish schnapps, coils of vile
sausages, and bundles of pelts up out of the hold of Otto's boat, down the
dock, into the cabin.
Meanwhile, Otto goes into town, and still has not come back long after
night has fallen. Shaftoe sacks out in the cabin, tosses and turns for about
four hours, sleeps for about ten minutes, and then is awakened by a knocking
at the door.
He approaches the door on hands and knees, gets the Suomi machine
pistol out of its hiding place, then crawls to the far end of the cabin and
exits silently through a trap door in the floor. There is ice on the rocks
below, but his bare feet give him enough traction to clamber around and get
a good view of whoever is standing there, pounding on the door.
It is Enoch Root himself, nowhere to be seen this last week or so.
"Yo!" Shaftoe says.
"Bobby," Root says, turning around, "I gather you heard."
"Heard what?"
"That we are in danger."
"Nah," Shaftoe says, "this is just how I always answer the door."
They go into the cabin. Root declines to turn on any lights and keeps
looking out the windows like he's expecting someone. He smells faintly of
Julieta's perfume, a distinctive scent that Otto has been smuggling into
Finland by the fifty five gallon drum. Somehow, Shaftoe is not surprised by
this. He proceeds to make coffee.
"A very complex situation has arisen," Root says.
"I can see that."
Root is startled by this, and looks up blankly at Shaftoe, his eyes
glowing stupidly in the moonlight. You can be the smartest guy in the world,
but when a woman comes into the picture, you're just like any other sap.
"Did you come all this way to tell me that you're fucking Julieta?"
"Oh, no, no, no!" Root says. He stops for a moment, furrows his brow.
"I mean, I am. And I was going to tell you. But that's just the first part
of a more complicated business." Root gets up, shoves hands in pockets,
walks around the cabin again, looking out the windows. "You have any more of
those Finnish guns?"
"In that crate to your left," Shaftoe says. "Why? We gonna have a
shootout?"
"Maybe. Not between you and me! But other visitors may be coming."
"Cops?"
"Worse."
"Finns?" Because Otto has his rivals.
"Worse."
"Who then?" Shaftoe can't imagine worse.
"Germans. German."
"Oh, fuck!" Shaftoe hollers disgustedly. "How can you say they're worse
than Finns?"
Root looks taken aback. "If you're going to tell me that Finns are
worse, pound for pound, than Germans, then I agree with you. But the trouble
with Germans is that they tend to be in communication with millions of other
Germans."
"Okay," Shaftoe mutters.
Root hauls the lid off a crate, pulls out a machine pistol, checks the
chamber, aims the barrel at the moon, peers through it like a telescope. "In
any case, some Germans are coming to kill you."
"Why?"
"Because you know too much about certain things."
"What certain things? Günter and his new submarine?"
"Yes."
"And how, may I ask, do you know this? It has something to do with the
fact that you're fucking Julieta, right?" Shaftoe continues. He's bored
rather than pissed off. This whole Sweden thing is old and tired to him now.
He belongs in the Philippines. Anything that doesn't get him closer to the
Philippines just irritates him.
"Right." Root heaves a sigh. "She thinks highly of you, Bobby, but
after she saw that picture of your girlfriend "
"Snap out of it! She doesn't give a shit about you or me. She just
wants to have all of the good parts of being a Finn without the bad parts."
"What are the bad parts?"
"Having to live in Finland," Shaftoe says. "So she has to marry someone
with a good passport. Which nowadays means American or British. You might
have noticed that she didn't fuck Günter."
Root looks a little queasy.
"Well, maybe she did then," Shaftoe says, heaving a sigh. "Shit!" Root
has rooted an ammo clip out of another crate and figured out how to affix it
to the Suomi. He says, "You probably know that the Germans have a tacit
arrangement with the Swedes."
"What does 'tacit' mean?"
"Let's just say they have an arrangement."
"The Swedes are neutral, but they let the Krauts push them around."
"Yes. Otto has to deal with Germans at each end of his smuggling route,
in Sweden and in Finland, and he has to deal with their navy when he's out
on the water."
"I'm aware that the fucking Germans are all over Europe."
"Well, to make a long story short, the local Germans have prevailed
upon Otto to betray you," Root says.
"Did he?"
"Yes. He did betray you."
"Okay. Keep talking, I'm listening to you," Shaftoe says. He begins to
mount a ladder up into the attic, but then he thought better of it.
"I guess you could say he repented," Root says.
"Spoken like a true man of the cloth," Shaftoe mutters. He's into the
attic now, crawling on hands and knees over the rafters. He stops and sparks
up his Zippo. Most of its light is absorbed by a dark green slab: a crude
wooden crate with Cryllic letters stenciled on it.
Root's voice is filtering up from below: "He came to, uh, the place
where Julieta and I, uh, were."
Were fucking. "Get me the crowbar," Shaftoe shouts. "It's in Otto's
toolbox, under the table."
A minute later, the crowbar rises up through the hatch, like the head
of a cobra emerging from a basket. Shaftoe grabs it and begins assaulting
the crate.
"Otto was torn. He had to do what he did, or the German could have shut
down his livelihood. But he respects you. He couldn't bear it. He had to
talk to someone. So he came to us, and told Julieta what he had done.
Julieta understood."
"She understood!?"
"But she also was horrified at the same time."
"That is truly heartwarming."
"Um, at that point, the Kivistiks broke out the schnapps and began to
discuss the situation. In Finnish."
"I understand," Shaftoe says. Give those Finns a grim, stark, bleak
moral dilemma and a bottle of schnapps and you could pretty much forget
about them for forty eight hours. "Thanks for having the guts to come out
here."
"Julieta will understand."
"That's not what I mean."
"Oh, I don't think Otto would hurt me.
"No, I mean "
"Oh!" Root exclaims. "No, I had to tell you about Julieta sooner or
later "
"No, goddamn it, I mean the Germans."
"Oh. Well, I didn't even begin to think about them until I was almost
here. It was not courage so much as a lack of foresight."
Shaftoe's pretty good at foresight. "Take this." He hands down a heavy
steel tube of coffee can diameter, a few feet long. "It's heavy," he adds,
as Root's knees buckle.
"What is it?"
"A Soviet hundred and twenty millimeter mortar," Shaftoe says. "Oh."
Root remains silent for a while, as he lays the mortar down on the table.
When he speaks again, his voice sounds different. "I didn't realize Otto had
this kind of stuff."
"The lethal radius of this bitch is a good sixty feet," Shaftoe says.
He is hauling mortar bombs out of the crate and stacking them next to the
hatch. "Or maybe it's meters, I can't remember." The bombs look like fat
footballs with tailfins on one end.
"Feet, meters . . . the distinction is important," Root says. "Maybe
it's overkill. But we have to get back to Norrsbruck and take care of
Julieta."
"What do you mean, take care of her?" Root says warily.
"Marry her."
"What?"
"One of us has to marry her, and fast. I don't know about you, but I
kind of like her, and it'd be a shame if she spent the rest of her life
sucking Russian dick at gunpoint," Shaftoe says. "Besides, she might be
pregnant with one of our kids. Yours, mine, or Günter's."
"We, the conspiracy, have an obligation to look after our offspring,"
Root agrees. "We could establish a trust fund for them in London."
"There should be plenty of money for that," Shaftoe agrees. "But I
can't marry her, because I have to be available to marry Glory when I get to
Manila."
"Rudy can't do it," Root says.
"Because he's a fag?"
"No, they marry women all the time," Root says. "He can't do it because
he's German, and what's she going to do with a German passport?"
"It would not be savvy exactly," Shaftoe agrees.
"That leaves me," Root says. "I'll marry her, and she'll have a British
passport. Best in the world."
"Huh," Shaftoe says, "how does that square with your being a celibate
monk or priest or whatever the fuck you supposedly are?"
Root says, "I'm supposed to be celibate "
"But you're not," Shaftoe reminds him.
"But God's forgiveness is infinite," Root fires back, winning the
point. "So, as I was saying, I'm supposed to be celibate but that doesn't
mean I can't get married. As long as I don't consummate the marriage."
"But if you don't consummate it, it doesn't count!"
"But the only person, besides me, who will know that we didn't
consummate it, is Julieta."
"God will know," Shaftoe says.
"God doesn't issue passports," Root says.
"What about the church? They'll kick you out."
"Maybe I deserve to be kicked out."
"So let me get this straight," Shaftoe says, "when you really were
fucking Julieta, you said you weren't and so you were able to remain a
priest. Now you're going to marry her and not fuck her and say that you are.
"
"If you're trying to say that my relationship with the Church is very
complicated, I already knew that, Bobby."
"Let's go, then," Shaftoe says.
Shaftoe and Root haul the mortar and a boxload of bombs down onto the
beach, where they can take cover behind a stone retaining wall a good five
feet high. But the surf makes it impossible to hear anything, so Root goes
up and hides in the trees along the road, and leaves Shaftoe to fiddle with
the Soviet mortar.
There turns out to be not much fiddling necessary. An unlettered tundra
farmer with bilateral frostbite could get this thing up and running in ten
minutes. If he'd stayed up late the night before celebrating the fulfillment
of the last five year plan with a jug of wood alcohol maybe fifteen minutes.
Shaftoe consults the instructions. It does not matter that these are
printed in Russian, because they are made for illiterates anyway. A series
of parabolas is plotted out, the mortar supporting one leg and exploding
Germans supporting the opposite. Ask a Soviet engineer to design a pair of
shoes and he'll come up with something that looks like the boxes that the
shoes came in; ask him to make something that will massacre Germans, and he
turns into Thomas Fucking Edison. Shaftoe scans the terrain, picks out his
killing zone, then climbs up and paces off the distance, assuming one meter
per pace.
He's back down on the beach, adjusting the tube's angle, when he's
startled by a bulky form vaulting over the wall, so close it almost knocks
him down. Root's breathing fast. "Germans," he says, "coming in from the
main road."
"How do you know they're Germans? Maybe it's Otto."
"The engines sound like diesels. Huns love diesels."
"How many engines?"
"Probably two."
Root turns out to be right on the money. Two large black Mercedes issue
from the forest, like bad ideas emerging from the dim mind of a green
lieutenant. Their headlights are not illuminated. Each stops and then sits
there for a moment, then the doors open quietly, Germans climb out and stand
up. Several of them are wearing long black leather coats. Several are
carrying those keen submachine guns that are the trade mark of German
infantry, and the envy of Yanks and Tommies, who must go burdened with
primeval hunting rifles.
This is the moment, then. Nazis are right over there and it is the job
of Bobby Shaftoe, and to a lesser degree Enoch Root, to kill them all. Not
just a job but a moral requisite, because they are the living avatars of
Satan, who publicly acknowledge being just as bad and vicious as they really
are. It is a world, and a situation, to which Shaftoe and a lot of other
people are perfectly adapted. He heaves a bomb up out of the box, introduces
it to the muzzle of the fat tube, lets it go, and plugs his ears.
The mortar coughs like a kettledrum. The Germans look towards them. An
officer's monocle glints in the moonlight. A total of eight Germans have
gotten out of the cars. Three of them must be combat veterans because they
are down on their stomachs in a microsecond. The trench coated officers
remain standing, as do a couple of civilian clad goons, who immediately open
fire in their general direction with their submachine guns. This makes a lot
of noise but only impresses Shaftoe insofar as it is an impressive display
of stupidity. The bullets sail far over their heads. Before they have had
time to pepper the Gulf of Bothnia, the mortar bomb has exploded.
Shaftoe peeks over the top of the seawall. As he more or less expected,
all of the people who were standing up are now draped over the nearest
Mercedes, having been bodily lifted off their feet and flung sideways by a
moving curtain of shrapnel. But two of the survivors the veterans are belly
crawling towards Otto's cabin, whose thick log walls look extremely
reassuring in these circumstances. The third survivor is blasting away with
his submachine gun, but he has no idea where they are.
The ground is convex in a way that makes it hard to see those belly
crawling Germans. Shaftoe fires a couple more mortar rounds without much
effect. He hears the two Germans kicking down the door to Otto's cabin.
Since it is only a one room cabin, this would be a fine moment to be
armed with grenades. But Shaftoe has none, and he doesn't really want to
blow the place up anyway. "Why don't you kill the one German up there," he
tells Root, and then heads down the beach, hugging the seawall in case the
Germans are looking out the windows.
Indeed, when he's almost there the Germans smash the windows out and
begin firing in the direction of Enoch Root. Shaftoe creeps underneath the
cabin, opens the trap door, and emerges into the center of the room. The
Germans are standing there with their backs to him. He fires his Suomi into
their backs until they stop moving. Then he drags them over to the trapdoor
and dumps them down onto the beach so they won't bleed all over the floor.
The next high tide will carry them away, and with any luck they'll wash
ashore on the Fatherland in a couple weeks.
It is silent now, the way it's supposed to be at an isolated cabin by
the sea. But that doesn't mean anything. Shaftoe makes his way carefully up
into the trees and circles around behind the action, surveying the killing
zone from above. The one German is still crawling around on his elbows,
trying to figure out what's going on. Shaftoe kills him. Then he makes his
way down to the beach and finds Enoch Root bleeding into the sand. He has
taken a bullet just under the collarbone and there is a lot of blood, both
from the wound and from Root's mouth, when ever he exhales.
"I feel like I'm going to die," he says.
"Good," Shaftoe says, "that means you probably won't."
One of the Mercedes automobiles is still functional, though it has a
number of shrapnel holes and a flat tire. Shaftoe jacks it up and swaps in a
surviving tire from the other Mercedes, then drags Root over and gets him
laid out in the backseat. He drives into Norrsbruck, fast. The Mercedes is a
really great car and he wants to drive it all the way to Finland, Russia,
Siberia, down through China maybe stop for a little sushi in Shanghai then
on down through Siam and then Malaya, whence he could hop a sea gypsy's boat
to Manila, find Glory, and
The ensuing erotic reverie is cut short by the voice of Enoch Root,
bubbling through blood, or something. "Go to the church."
"Now padre, this is no time to be trying to convert me into a religious
nut. You take it easy."
"No, go now. Take me."
"What, so you can make your peace with god? Hell, Rev, you ain't gonna
die. I'll take you to the doctor's. You can go to church later."
Root drifts off into a coma, mumbling something about cigars.
Shaftoe ignores these ravings, burns rubber into Norrsbruck, and wakes
up the doctor. Then he goes and finds Otto and Julieta and takes them over
to the doctor's office. Finally, he goes round to the church and wakes up
the minister.
When they get back to the clinic, Rudolf von Hacklheber's arguing with
the doctor: Rudy (who's apparently speaking on behalf of Enoch, who can
hardly even talk) wants Enoch's wedding to Julieta to happen now, in case
Enoch dies on the table. Shaftoe is startled by how bad the patient suddenly
looks. But remembering what he and Enoch talked about earlier, he weighs in
on Rudy's side, and insists that marriage must come before surgery.
Otto produces a diamond ring literally out of his asshole he carries
valuables around in a polished metal tube shoved up his rectum and Shaftoe
serves as best man, uneasily holding that ring, still hot from Otto. Root's
too weak to thread it over Julieta's finger and so Rudy guides his hands. A
nurse serves as bridesmaid. Julieta and Enoch are joined in holy matrimony.
Root utters the words of the oath one at a time, pausing after each one to
cough blood into a stainless steel bowl. Shaftoe gets all choked up, and
actually sniffles.
The doctor etherizes Root, opens his chest, and goes in to repair the
damage. Combat surgery isn't his metier, and so he makes a few mistakes and
generally does a great job of keeping the tension level high. Some major
artery gives way, and it's necessary for Shaftoe and the minister to go out
and yank Swedes off the streets and persuade them to donate blood. Rudy is
nowhere to be found, and Shaftoe suspects for a few minutes that he has
blown town. But then suddenly he shows up at Root's bedside holding an
ancient Cuban cigar box, Spanish words all over it.
When Enoch Root dies, the only other people in the room are Rudolf von
Hacklheber, Bobby Shaftoe, and the Swedish doctor.
The doctor checks his watch, then steps out of the room.
Rudy reaches out and closes Enoch's eyes, then stands there with his
hand on the late padre's face, and looks at Shaftoe. "Go," he says, "and
make sure that the doctor files the death certificate."
In war, it happens pretty frequently that one of your buddies dies, and
you have to go right back into action, and save the waterworks for later.
"Right," Shaftoe says, and leaves the room.
The doctor's sitting in his little office, umlaut studded diplomas all
over the walls, filling out the death certificate. A skeleton dangles in one
corner. Bobby Shaftoe stands at attention on the opposite flank, he and the
skeleton sort of triangulating on the doctor and watching him scrawl out the
date and time of Enoch Root's demise.
When the doctor's finished, he leans back in his chair and rubs his
eyes.
"Can I buy you a cup of coffee?" asks Bobby Shaftoe.
"Thank you," says the doctor.
The young bride and her father are sprawled blearily in the doctor's
waiting room. Shaftoe offers to buy them coffee too. They leave Rudy to keep
watch over the body of their late friend and coconspirator, and walk down
the high street of Norrsbruck. Swedish people are beginning to come out of
their houses. They look exactly like American midwesterners, and Shaftoe's
always startled when they fail to speak English.
The doctor stops in at the courthouse to drop off the death
certificate. Otto and Julieta go on ahead to the cafe. Bobby Shaftoe loiters
outside, staring back up the street. After a minute or two he sees Rudy poke
his head out the door of the doctor's office and look one way, then the
other. He pulls his head back inside for a moment. Then he and another man
walk out of the office. The other man is wrapped in a blanket that covers
even his head. They climb into the Mercedes, Blanket Man lies down in the
back seat, and Rudy drives off in the direction of his cottage.
Bobby Shaftoe sits down in the cafe with the Finns.
"Later today I'm gonna get into that fucking Mercedes and drive into
Stockholm like a fucking bat out of hell," Shaftoe says. Though the Finns
will never appreciate it, he has chosen the "bat out of hell" phrase for a
good reason. He understands, now, why he has thought of himself as a dead
man ever since Guadalcanal. "Anyway, I hope y'all have a nice boat ride."
"Boat ride?" Otto says innocently.
"I gave you up to the Germans, just like you did to me," Shaftoe lies.
"You bastard!" Julieta begins. But Bobby cuts her off: "You got what
you wanted and then some. A British passport and " glancing out the window
he sees the doctor emerging from the courthouse " Enoch's survivor's
benefits on top of it. And maybe more later. As for you, Otto, your career
as a smuggler is over. I suggest you get the fuck out of here."
Otto's still too flabbergasted to be outraged, but he's sure enough
gonna be outraged pretty soon. "And go where!? Have you bothered to look at
a map?"
"Display some fucking adaptability," Shaftoe says. "You can figure out
a way to get that tub of yours to England."
Say what you will about Otto, he likes a challenge. "I could traverse
the Göta Canal from Stockholm to Göteborg no Germans there that would get me
almost to Norway but Norway's full of Germans! Even if I make it through the
Skagerrak you expect me to cross the North Sea? In winter? During a war?"
"If it makes you feel any better, after you get to England you have to
sail to Manila."
"Manila!?"
"Makes England seem easy, huh?"
"You think I am a rich yachtsman, who sails around the world for fun!?"
"No, but Rudolf von Hacklheber is. He's got money, he's got
connections. He's got a line on a good yacht that makes your ketch look like
a dinghy," Shaftoe says. "C'mon, Otto. Stop whining, pull some more diamonds
out of your asshole, and get it done. It beats being tortured to death by
Germans." Shaftoe stands up and chucks Otto encouragingly on the shoulder,
which Otto does not like at all. "See you in Manila."
The doctor's coming in the door. Bobby Shaftoe slaps some money down on
the table. He looks Julieta in the eye. "Got some miles to cover now," he
says, "Glory's waiting for me."
Julieta nods. So in the eyes of one Finnish girl, anyway, Shaftoe's not
such a bad guy. He bends over and gives her a big succulent kiss, then
straightens up, nods to the startled doctor, and walks out.
Chapter 61 COURTING
Waterhouse has been chewing his way through exotic Nip code systems at
the rate of about one a week, but after he sees Mary Smith in the parlor of
Mrs. McTeague's boarding house, his production rate drops to near zero.
Arguably, it goes negative, for sometimes when he reads the morning
newspaper, its plaintext scrambles into gibberish before his eyes, and he is
unable to extract any useful information.
Despite his and Turing's disagreements about whether the human brain is
a Turing machine, he has to admit that Turing wouldn't have too much trouble
writing a set of instructions to simulate the brain functions of Lawrence
Pritchard Waterhouse.
Waterhouse seeks happiness. He achieves it by breaking Nip code systems
and playing the pipe organ. But since pipe organs are in short supply, his
happiness level ends up being totally dependent on breaking codes.
He cannot break codes (hence, cannot be happy) unless his mind is
clear. Now suppose that mental clarity is designated by C [sub m], which is
normalized, or calibrated, in such a way that it is always the case that
0 <= C [sub m] < 1
where C [sub m] = 0 indicates a totally clouded mind and C [sub m] = 1
is Godlike clarity an unattainable divine state of infinite intelligence. If
the number of messages Waterhouse decrypts, in a given day, is designated by
then it will be governed by C [sub m] in roughly the following way:
Clarity of mind (C [sub m]) is affected by any number of factors, but
by far the most important is horniness, which might be designated by
[sigma], for obvious anatomical reasons that Waterhouse finds amusing at
this stage of his emotional development.
Horniness begins at zero at time t = t [sub 0] (immediately following
ejaculation) and increases from there as a linear function of time:
The only way to drop it back to zero is to arrange another ejaculation.
There is a critical threshold [sigma sub c] such that when [sigma] >
[sigma sub c] it becomes impossible for Waterhouse to concentrate on
anything, or, approximately,
which amounts to saying that the moment [sigma] rises above the
threshold [sigma sub c] it becomes totally impossible for Waterhouse to
break Nipponese cryptographic systems. This makes it impossible for him to
achieve happiness (unless there is a pipe organ handy, which there isn't).
Typically, it takes two to three days for [sigma] to climb above [sigma
sub c] after an ejaculation:
Critical, then, to the maintenance of Waterhouse's sanity is the
ability to ejaculate every two to three days. As long as he can arrange
this, [sigma] exhibits a classic sawtooth wave pattern, optimally with the
peaks at or near [sigma sub c] [see p. 546 top] wherein the grey zones
represent periods during which he is completely useless to the war effort.
So much for the basic theory. Now, when he was at Pearl Harbor, he
discovered something that, in retrospect, should have been profoundly
disquieting. Namely, that ejaculations obtained in a whorehouse (i.e.,
provided by the ministrations of an actual human female) seemed to drop
[sigma] below the level that Waterhouse could achieve through executing a
Manual Override. In other words, the post ejaculatory horniness level was
not always equal to zero, as the naive theory propounded above assumes, but
to some other quantity dependent upon whether the ejaculation was induced by
Self or Other: [sigma] =[sigma sub self] after masturbation but
[sigma]=[sigma sub other] upon leaving a whorehouse, where [sigma sub self]
> [sigma sub other] an inequality to which Waterhouse's notable successes
in breaking certain Nip naval codes at Station Hypo were directly
attributable, in that the many convenient whorehouses nearby made it
possible for him to go somewhat longer between ejaculations.
Note the twelve day period [above], 19 30 May 1942, with only one brief
interruption in productivity during which Waterhouse (some might argue)
personally won the Battle of Midway.
If he had thought about this, it would have bothered him, because
[sigma sub self] > [sigma sub other] has troubling implications
particularly if the values of these quantities w.r.t. the all important
[sigma sub c] are not fixed. If it weren't for this inequality, then
Waterhouse could function as a totally self contained and independent unit.
But [sigma sub self] > [sigma sub other] implies that he is, in the long
run, dependent on other human beings for his mental clarity and, therefore,
his happiness. What a pain in the ass!
Perhaps he has avoided thinking about this precisely because it is so
troubling. The week after he meets Mary Smith, he realizes that he is going
to have to think about it a lot more.
Something about the arrival of Mary Smith on the scene has completely
fouled up the whole system of equations. Now, when he has an ejaculation,
his clarity of mind does not take the upwards jump that it should. He goes
right back to thinking about Mary. So much for winning the war!
He goes out in search of whorehouses, hoping that good old reliable
[sigma sub other] will save his bacon. This is troublesome. When he was at
Pearl, it was easy, and uncontroversial. But Mrs. McTeague's boardinghouse
is in a residential neighborhood, which, if it contains whorehouses, at
least bothers to hide them. So Waterhouse has to travel downtown, which is
not that easy in a place where internal combustion vehicles are fueled by
barbecues in the trunk. Furthermore Mrs. McTeague is keeping her eye on him.
She knows his habits. If he starts coming back from work four hours late, or
going out after dinner, he'll have some explaining to do. And it had better
be convincing, because she appears to have taken Mary Smith under one
quivering gelatinous wing and is in a position to poison the sweet girl's
mind against Waterhouse. Not only that, he has to do much of his excuse
making in public, at the dinner table, which he shares with Mary's cousin
(whose first name turns out to be Rod).
But hey, Doolittle bombed Tokyo, didn't he? Waterhouse should at least
be able to sneak out to a whorehouse. It takes a week of preparations
(during which he is completely unable to accomplish meaningful work because
of the soaring [sigma] level), but he manages it.
It helps a little, but only on the [sigma] management level. Until
recently, that was the only level and so it would have been fine. But now
(as Waterhouse realizes through long contemplation during the hours when he
should be breaking codes) a new factor has entered the system of equations
that governs his behavior; he will have to write to Alan and tell him that
some new instructions will have to be added to the Waterhouse simulation
Turing machine. This new factor is F [sub MSp], the Factor of Mary Smith
Proximity.
In a simpler universe, F [sub MSp], would be orthogonal to [sigma],
which is to say that the two factors would be entirely independent of each
other. If it were thus, Waterhouse could continue the usual sawtooth wave
ejaculation management program with no changes. In addition, he would have
to arrange to have frequent conversations with Mary Smith so that F [sub
MSp] would remain as high as possible.
Alas! The universe is not simple. Far from being orthogonal, F [sub
MSp] and [sigma] are involved, as elaborately as the contrails of
dogfighting airplanes.
The old [sigma] management scheme doesn't work anymore. And a platonic
relationship will actually make F [sub MSp] worse, not better. His life,
which used to be a straightforward set of basically linear equations, has
become a differential equation.
It is the visit to the whorehouse that makes him realize this. In the
Navy, going to a whorehouse is about as controversial as pissing down the
scuppers when you are on the high seas the worst you can say about it is
that, in other circumstances, it might seem uncouth. So Waterhouse has been
doing it for years without feeling troubled in the slightest.
But he loathes himself during, and after, his first post Mary Smith
whorehouse visit. He no longer sees himself through his own eyes but through
hers and, by extension, those of her cousin Rod and of Mrs. McTeague and of
the whole society of decent God fearing folk to whom he has never paid the
slightest bit of attention until now.
It seems that the intrusion of F [sub MSp] into his happiness equation
is just the thin edge of a wedge which leaves Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse
at the mercy of a vast number of uncontrollable factors, and requiring him
to cope with normal human society. Horrifyingly, he now finds himself
getting ready to go to a dance.
The dance is being organized by an Australian volunteer organization he
doesn't know or care about the details. Mrs. McTeague evidently feels that
the rent she collects from her boarders obligates her to find them wives as
well as feeding and housing them, so she badgers all of them to go, and to
bring dates if possible. Rod finally shuts her up by announcing that he will
be attending with a large group, to include his country cousin Mary. Rod is
about eight feet tall, and so it will be easy to pick him out across a
crowded dance floor. With any luck, then, the diminutive Mary will be in his
vicinity.
So Waterhouse goes to the dance, ransacking his mind for opening lines
that he can use with Mary. He comes up with several possibilities:
"Do you realize that Nipponese industry is only capable of producing
forty bulldozers per year?" To be followed up with: "No wonder they use
slave labor to build their revetments!"
Or, "Because of antenna configuration limitations inherent in their
design, Nipponese naval radar systems have a blind spot to the rear you
always want to come in from dead astern."
Or, "The Nip Army's minor, low level codes are actually harder to break
than the important high level ones! Isn't that ironic?"
Or, "So, you're from the outback ... do you can a lot of your own food?
It might interest you to know that a close relative of the bacterium that
makes canned soup go bad is responsible for gas gangrene."
Or, "Nip battleships have started to blow up spontaneously, because the
high explosive shells in their magazines become chemically unstable over
time."
Or, "Dr. Turing of Cambridge says that the soul is an illusion and that
all that defines us as human beings can be reduced to a series of mechanical
operations."
And much more in this vein. So far he has not hit on anything that is
absolutely guaranteed to sweep her off her feet. He doesn't, in fact, have
the first idea what the fuck he's going to do. Which is how it's always been
with Waterhouse and women, which is why he has never really had a girlfriend
before.
But this is different. This is desperation.
What is there to say about the dance? Big room. Men in uniforms, mostly
looking smarter than they have a right to. Mostly looking smarter, in fact,
than Waterhouse. Women in dresses and hairdos. Lipstick, pearls, a big band,
white gloves, fist fights, a little bit o' kissin' and a wee bit o'
vomitin'. Waterhouse gets there late that transportation thing again. All
the gasoline is being used to hurl enormous bombers through the atmosphere
so that high explosives can be showered on Nips. Moving the wad of flesh
called Waterhouse across Brisbane so he can try to deflower a maiden is way
down the priority list. He has to do a lot of walking in his stiff, shiny
leather shoes, which become less shiny. By the time he gets there, he is
pretty sure that they are functioning only as tourniquets preventing
uncontrollable arterial bleeding from the wounds they've induced.
Rather late into the dance he finally picks out Rod on the dance floor
and stalks him, over the course of several numbers (Rod having no shortage
of dance partners), to a corner of the room where everyone seems to know
each other, and all of them seem to be having a perfectly fine time without
the intervention of a Waterhouse.
But finally he identifies Mary Smith's neck, which looks just as
unspeakably erotic seen from behind through thirty yards of dense cigarette
smoke as it did seen from the side in Mrs. McTeague's parlor. She is wearing
a dress, and a string of pearls that adorn the neck's architecture quite
nicely. Waterhouse sets his direction of march towards her and plods onward,
like a Marine covering the last few yards to a Nip pillbox where he knows
full well he's going to die. Can you get a posthumous decoration for being
shot down in flames at a dance?
He's just a few paces away, still forging along woozily towards that
white column of neck, when suddenly the tune comes to an end, and he can
hear Mary's voice, and the voices of her friends. They are chattering away
happily. But they are not speaking English.
Finally, Waterhouse places that accent. Not only that: he solves
another mystery, having to do with some incoming mail he has seen at Mrs.
McTeague's house, addressed to someone named cCmndhd.
It's like this: Rod and Mary are Qwghlmian! And their family name is
not Smith it just sounds vaguely like Smith. It's really cCmndhd. Rod grew
up in Manchester in some Qwghlmian ghetto, no doubt and Mary's from a branch
of the family that got into trouble (probably sedition) a couple of
generations back and got Transported to the Great Sandy Desert.
Let's see Turing explain this one! Because what this proves, beyond all
doubt, is that there is a God, and furthermore that He is a personal friend
and supporter of Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse. The opening line problem is
solved, neat as a theorem. Q. E. D., baby. Waterhouse strides forward
confidently, sacrificing another square centimeter of epidermis to his
ravenous shoes. As he later reconstructs it, he has, without meaning to,
interpolated himself between Mary cCmndhd and her date, and perhaps jostled
the latter's elbow and forced him to spill his drink. It is a startling move
that quiets the group. Waterhouse opens his mouth and says "Gxnn bhldh sqrd
m!"
"Hey, friend!" says Mary's date. Waterhouse turns towards the sound of
the voice. The sloppy grin draped across his face serves as a convenient
bulls eye, and Mary's date's fist homes in on it unerringly. The bottom half
of Waterhouse's head goes numb, his mouth fills with a warm fluid that
tastes nutritious. The vast concrete floor somehow takes to the air, spins
like a flipped coin, and bounces off the side of his head. All four of
Waterhouse's limbs seem to be pinned against the floor by the weight of his
torso.
Some sort of commotion is happening up on that remote plane of most
people's heads, five to six feet above the floor, where social interaction
traditionally takes place. Mary's date is being hustled off to the side by a
large powerful fellow it is hard to recognize faces from this angle, but a
good candidate would be Rod. Rod is shouting in Qwghlmian.
Actually, everyone is shouting in Qwghlmian even the ones who are
speaking in English because Waterhouse's speech recognition centers have a
bad case of jangly ganglia. Best to leave that fancy stuff for later, and
concentrate on more basic phylogenesis: it would be nice, for example, to be
a vertebrate again. After that quadrupedal locomotion might come in handy.
A perky Qwghlmian Australian fellow in an RAAF uniform steps up and
grabs his right anterior fin, jerking him up the evolutionary ladder before
he's ready. He is not doing Waterhouse a favor so much as he is getting
Waterhouse's face up where it can be better scrutinized. The RAAF fellow
shouts at him (because the music has started again):
"Where'd you learn to talk like that?"
Waterhouse doesn't know where to begin; god forbid he should offend
these people again. But he doesn't have to. The RAAF guy screws up his face
in disgust, as if he had just noticed a six foot tapeworm trying to escape
from Waterhouse's throat. "Outer Qwghlm?" he asks.
Waterhouse nods. The confused and shocked faces before him collapse
into graven masks. Inner Qwghlmians! Of course! The inner islanders are
perennially screwed, hence have the best music, the most entertaining
personalities, but are constantly being shipped off to Barbados to chop
sugar cane, or to Tasmania to chase sheep, or to well, to the Southwest
Pacific to be pursued through the jungle by starving Nips draped with live
satchel charges.
The RAAF chap forces himself to smile, chucks Waterhouse gently on the
shoulder. Someone in this group is going to have to take the unpleasant job
of playing diplomat, smoothing it all over, and with the true Inner
Qwghlmian's nose for a shit job, RAAF boy has just volunteered. "With us,"
he explains brightly, "what you just said isn't a polite greeting."
"Oh," Waterhouse says, "what did I say, then?"
"You said that while you were down at the mill to lodge a complaint
about a sack with a weak seam that sprung loose on Thursday, you were led to
understand, by the tone of the proprietor's voice, that Mary's great aunt, a
spinster who had a loose reputation as a younger woman, had contracted a
fungal infection in her toenails."
There is a long silence. Then everyone speaks at once. Finally a
woman's voice breaks through the cacophony: "No, no!" Waterhouse looks; it's
Mary. "I understood him to say that it was at the pub, and that he was there
to apply for a job catching rats, and that it was my neighbor's dog that had
come down with rabies."
"He was at the basilica for confession the priest angina " someone
shouts from the back. Then everyone talks at once: "The dockside Mary's half
sister leprosy Wednesday complaining about a loud party!"
There's a strong arm around Waterhouse's shoulders, turning him away
from all for this. He cannot turn his head to see who owns this limb,
because his vertebrae have again become unstacked. He figures out that it's
Rod, nobly taking his poor addled Yank roommate under his wing. Rod pulls a
clean hanky from his pocket and puts it up to Waterhouse's mouth, then takes
his hand away. The hanky sticks to his lip, which is now shaped like a
barrage balloon.
That's not the only decent thing he does. He even gets Waterhouse a
drink, and finds him a chair. "You know about the Navajos?" Rod asks.
"Huh?"
"Your marines use Navajo Indians as radio operators they can speak to
each other in their own language and the Nips have no idea what the fuck
they're saying."
"Oh. Yeah. Heard about that," Waterhouse says.
"Winnie Churchill heard about those Navajos. Liked the idea. Wanted His
Majesty's forces to do likewise. We don't have Navajos. But "
"You have Qwghlmians," Waterhouse says.
"There are two different programs underway," Rod says. "Royal Navy is
using Outer Qwghlmians. Army and Air Force are using Inner."
"How's it working out?"
Rod shrugs. "So so. Qwghlmian is a very pithy language. Bears no
relationship to English or Celtic its closest relatives are !Qnd, which is
spoken by a tribe of pygmies in Madagascar, and Aleut. Anyway, the pithier,
the better, right?"
"By all means," Waterhouse says. "Less redundancy harder to break the
code."
"Problem is, if it's not exactly a dead language, then it's lying on a
litter with a priest standing over it making the sign of the cross. You
know?"
Waterhouse nods.
"So everyone hears it a little differently. Like just now they heard
your Outer Qwghlmian accent, and assumed you were delivering an insult. But
I could tell you were saying that you believed, based on a rumor you heard
last Tuesday in the meat market, that Mary was convalescing normally and
would be back on her feet within a week."
"I was trying to say that she looked beautiful," Waterhouse protests.
"Ah!" Rod says. "Then you should have said, 'Gxnn bhldh sqrd m!'"
"That's what I said!"
"No, you confused the mid glottal with the frontal glottal," Rod says.
"Honestly," Waterhouse says, "can you tell them apart over a noisy
radio?"
"No," Rod says. "On the radio, we stick to the basics: 'Get in there
and take that pillbox or I'll fucking kill you.' And that sort of thing."
Before much longer, the band has finished its last set and the party's
over. "Well," Waterhouse says, "would you tell Mary what I really did mean
to say?"
"Oh, I'm sure there's no need," Rod says confidently. "Mary is a good
judge of character. I'm sure she knows what you meant. Qwghlmians excel at
nonverbal communication."
Waterhouse just barely restrains himself from saying I guess you'd have
to, which would probably just earn him another slug in the face. Rod shakes
his hand and departs. Waterhouse, marooned by his shoes, hobbles out.
Chapter 62 INRI
Goto Dengo lies on a cot of woven rushes for six weeks, under a white
cone of mosquito netting that stirs in the breezes from the windows. When
there is a typhoon, the nurses clasp mother of pearl shutters over the
windows, but mostly they are left open day and night. Outside the window, an
immense stairway has been hand carved up the side of a green mountain. When
the sun shines, the new rice on those terraces fluoresces; green light boils
into the room like flames. He can see small gnarled people in colorful
clothes transplanting rice seedlings and tinkering with the irrigation
system. The wall of his room is plain, cream colored plaster spanned with
forking deltas of cracks, like the blood vessels on the surface of an
eyeball. It is decorated only with a crucifix carved out of napa wood in
maniacal detail. Jesus's eyes are smooth orbs without pupil or iris, as in
Roman statues. He hangs askew on the crucifix, arms stretched out, the
ligaments probably pulled loose from their moorings now, the crooked legs,
broken by the butt of a Roman spear, unable to support the body. A pitted,
rusty iron nail transfixes each palm, and a third suffices for both feet.
Goto Dengo notices after a while that the sculptor has arranged the three
nails in a perfect equilateral triangle. He and Jesus spend many hours and
days staring at each other through the white veil that hangs around the bed;
when it shifts in the mountain breezes, Jesus seems to writhe. An open
scroll is fixed to the top of the crucifix; it says I.N.R.I. Goto Dengo
spends a long time trying to fathom this. I Need Rapid something? Initiate
Nail Removal Immediately?
The veil parts and a perfect young woman in a severe black and white
habit is standing in the gap, radiant in the green light coming off the
terraces, carrying a bowl of steaming water. She peels back his hospital
gown and begins to sponge him off. Goto Dengo motions towards the crucifix
and asks about it perhaps the woman has learned a little Nipponese. If she
hears him, she gives no sign. She is probably deaf or crazy or both; the
Christians are notorious for the way they dote on defective persons. Her
gaze is fixed on Goto Dengo's body, which she swabs gently but implacably,
one postage stamp sized bit at a time. Goto Dengo's mind is still playing
tricks with him, and looking down at his naked torso he gets all turned
around for a moment and thinks that he is looking at the nailed wreck of
Jesus. His ribs are sticking out and his skin is a cluttered map of sores
and scars. He cannot possibly be good for anything now; why are they not
sending him back to Nippon? Why haven't they simply killed him? "You speak
English?" he says, and her huge brown eyes jump just a bit. She is the most
beautiful woman he has ever seen. To her, he must be a loathsome thing, a
specimen under a glass slide in a pathology lab. When she leaves the room
she will probably go and wash herself meticulously and then do anything to
flush the memory of Goto Dengo's body out of her clean, virginal mind.
He drifts away into a fever, and sees himself from the vantage point of
a mosquito trying to find a way in through the netting: a haggard, wracked
body splayed, like a slapped insect, on a wooden trestle. The only way you
can tell he's Nipponese is by the strip of white cloth tied around his
forehead, but instead of an orange sun painted on it is an inscription:
I.N.R.I.
A man in a long black robe is sitting beside him, holding a string of
red coral beads in his hand, a tiny crucifix dangling from that. He has the
big head and heavy brow of those strange people working up on the rice
terraces, but his receding hairline and swept back silver brown hair are
very European, as are his intense eyes. "Iesus Nazarenus Rex Iudaeorum," he
is saying. "It is Latin. Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews."
"Jew? I thought Jesus was Christian," said Goto Dengo.
The man in the black robe just stares at him. Goto Dengo tries again:
"I didn't know Jews spoke Latin."
One day a wheeled chair is pushed into his room; he stares at it with
dull curiosity. He has heard of these things they are used behind high walls
to transport shamefully imperfect persons from one room to an other.
Suddenly these tiny girls have picked him up and dropped him into it! One of
them says something about fresh air and the next thing he knows he's being
wheeled out the door and into a corridor! They have buckled him in so he
doesn't fall out, and he twists uneasily in the chair, trying to hide his
face. The girl rolls him out to a huge verandah that looks out over the
mountains. Mist rises up from the leaves and birds scream. On the wall
behind him is a large painting of I.N.R.I. chained naked to a post, shedding
blood from hundreds of parallel whip marks. A centurion stands above him
with a scourge. His eyes look strangely Nipponese.
Three other Nipponese men are sitting on the verandah. One of them
talks to himself unintelligibly and keeps picking at a sore on his arm that
bleeds continuously into a towel on his lap. Another one has had his arms
and face burned off, and peers out at the world through a single hole in a
blank mask of scar tissue. The third has been tied into his chair with many
wide strips of cloth because he flops around all the time like a beached
fish and makes unintelligible moaning noises.
Goto Dengo eyes the railing of the verandah, wondering if he can muster
the effort to wheel himself over there and fling his body over the edge. Why
has he not been allowed to die honorably?
The crew of the submarine treated him and the other evacuees with an
unreadable combination of reverence and disgust.
When was he set apart from his race? It happened long before his
evacuation from New Guinea. The lieutenant who rescued him from the
headhunters treated him as a criminal and sentenced him to execution. Even
before then, he was different. Why did the sharks not eat him? Does his
flesh smell different? He should have died with his comrades in the Bismarck
Sea. He lived, partly because he was lucky, partly because he could swim.
Why could he swim? Partly because his body was good at it but partly
because his father raised him not to believe in demons.
He laughs out loud. The other men on the verandah turn to look at him.
He was raised not to believe in demons, and now he is one.
Black robe laughs out loud at Goto Dengo during his next visit. "I am
not trying to convert you," he says. "Please do not tell your superiors
about your suspicions. We have been strictly forbidden to proselytize, and
there would be brutal repercussions."
"You aren't trying to convert me with words," Goto Dengo admits, "but
just by having me here." His English does not quite suffice.
Black robe's name is Father Ferdinand. He is a Jesuit or something,
with enough English to run rings around Goto Dengo. "In what way does merely
having you in this place constitute proselytization?" Then, just to break
Goto Dengo's legs out from under him, he says the same thing in half decent
Nipponese.
"I don't know. The art."
"If you don't like our art, close your eyes and think of the emperor."
"I can't keep my eyes closed all the time."
Father Ferdinand laughs snidely. "Really? Most of your countrymen seem
to have no difficulty with keeping their eyes tightly shut from cradle to
grave."
"Why don't you have happy art? Is this a hospital or a morgue?"
"La Pasyon is important here," says Father Ferdinand.
"La Pasyon?"
"Christ's suffering. It speaks deeply to the people of the Philippines.
Especially now."
Goto Dengo has another complaint that he is not able to voice until he
borrows Father Ferdinand's Japanese English dictionary and spends some time
working with it.
"Let me see if I understand you," Father Ferdinand says. "You believe
that when we treat you with mercy and dignity, we are implicitly trying to
convert you to Roman Catholicism."
"You bent my words again," says Goto Dengo.
"You spoke crooked words and I straightened them," snaps Father
Ferdinand.
"You are trying to make me into one of you."
"One of us? What do you mean by that?"
"A low person."
"Why would we want to do that?"
"Because you have a low person religion. A loser religion. If you make
me into a low person, it will make me want to follow that religion."
"And by treating you decently we are trying to make you into a low
person?"
"In Nippon, a sick person would not be treated as well."
"You needn't explain that to us," Father Ferdinand says. "You are in
the middle of a country full of women who have been raped by Nipponese
soldiers."
Time to change the subject. "Ignoti et quasi occulti Societas
Eruditorum," says Goto Dengo, reading the inscription on a medallion that
hangs from Father Ferdinand's neck. "More Latin? What does it mean?"
"It is an organization I belong to. It is ecumenical."
"What does that mean?"
"Anyone can join it. Even you, after you get better."
"I will get better," Goto Dengo says. "No one will know that I was
sick."
"Except for us. Oh, I understand! You mean, no Nipponese people will
know. That's true."
"But the others here will not get better."
"It is true. You have the best prognosis of any patient here."
"You are receiving those sick Nipponese men into your bosoms."
"Yes. This is more or less dictated by our religion."
"They are low people now. You want them to join your low person
religion."
"Only insofar as it is good for them," says Father Ferdinand. "It's not
like those guys are going to run out and build us a new cathedral or
something."
The next day, Goto Dengo is deemed to be cured. He does not feel cured
at all, but he will do anything to get out of this rut: losing one staredown
after another with the King of the Jews.
He expects that they will saddle him with a duffel bag and send him
down to the bus terminal to fend for himself, but instead a car comes to get
him. As if that's not good enough, the car takes him to an airfield, where a
light plane picks him up. It is the first time he has ever flown in a plane,
and the excitement revives him more than six weeks in the hospital. The
plane takes off between two green mountains and heads south (judging from
the sun's position) and for the first time he understands where he's been:
in the center of Luzon Island, north of Manila.
Half an hour later, he's above the capital, banking over the Pasig
River and then the bay, chockablock with military transports. The corniche
is guarded by a picket line of coconut palms. Seen from overhead, their
branches writhe in the sea breeze like colossal tarantulas impaled on
spikes. Looking over the pilot's shoulder, he sees a pair of paved airstrips
in the flat paddy land just south of the city, crossing at an acute angle to
form a narrow X. The light plane porpoises through gusts. It bounces down
the airstrip like an overinflated soccer ball, taxiing past most of the
hangars and finally fishtailing to a stop near an isolated guard hut where a
man waits on a motorcycle with an empty sidecar. Goto Dengo is directed out
of the plane and into the sidecar by means of gestures; no one will speak to
him. He is dressed in an Army uniform devoid of rank and insignia.
A pair of goggles rests on the seat, and he puts them on to keep the
bugs out of his eyes. He is a little nervous because he does not have papers
and he does not have orders. But they are waved out of the airbase and onto
the road without any checks.
The motorcycle driver is a young Filipino man who keeps grinning
broadly, at the risk of getting insects stuck between his big white teeth.
He seems to think that he has the best job in the whole world, and perhaps
he does. He turns south onto a road that probably qualifies as a big highway
around these parts, and commences weaving through traffic. Most of this is
produce carts drawn by carabaos big oxlike things with imposing crescent
moon shaped horns. There are a few automobiles, and the occasional military
truck.
For the first couple of hours the road is straight, and runs across
damp table land used for growing rice. Goto Dengo catches glimpses of a body
of water off to the left, and isn't sure whether it is a big lake or part of
the ocean. "Laguna de Bay," says the driver, when he catches Goto looking at
it. "Very beautiful."
Then they turn away from the lake onto a road that climbs gently into
sugar cane territory. Suddenly, Goto Dengo catches sight of a volcano: a
symmetrical cone, black with vegetation, cloaked in mist as though protected
by a mosquito net. The sheer density of the air makes it impossible to judge
size and distance; it could be a little cinder cone just off the road, or a
huge stratovolcano fifty miles away.
Banana trees, coconut palms, oil palms, and date palms begin to appear,
sparsely at first, transforming the landscape into a kind of moist savannah.
The driver pulls into a shambolic roadside store to buy petrol. Goto Dengo
unfolds his jangled body from the sidecar and sits down at a table beneath
an umbrella. He wipes a crust of sweat and dirt from his forehead with the
clean handkerchief that he found in his pocket this morning, and orders
something to drink. They bring him a glass of ice water, a bowl of raw,
locally produced sugar, and a plate of pinball sized calamansi limes. He
squeezes the calamansis into the water, stirs in sugar, and drinks it
convulsively.
The driver comes and joins him; he has cadged a free cup of water from
the proprietors. He always wears a mischievous grin, as if he and Goto Dengo
are sharing a little private joke. He raises an imaginary rifle to his face
and makes a scratching motion with his trigger finger. "You soldier?"
Goto Dengo thinks it over. "No," he says, "I do not deserve to call
myself a soldier."
The driver is astonished. "No soldier? I thought you were soldier. What
are you?"
Goto Dengo thinks about claiming that he is a poet. But he does not
deserve that title either. "I am a digger," he finally says, "I dig holes."
"Ahh," the driver says, as if he understands. "Hey, you want?" He takes
two cigarettes out of his pocket.
Goto Dengo has to laugh at the smoothness of the gambit. "Over here,"
he says to the proprietor. "Cigarettes." The driver grins and puts his
cigarettes back where they came from.
The owner comes over and hands Goto Dengo a pack of Lucky Strikes and a
book of matches. "How much?" says Goto Dengo, and takes out an envelope of
money that he found in his pocket this morning. He takes the bills out and
looks at them: each is printed in English with the words THE JAPANESE
GOVERNMENT and then some number of pesos. There is a picture of a fat
obelisk in the middle, a monument to Jose P. Rizal that stands near the
Manila Hotel.
The proprietor grimaces. "You have silver?"
"Silver? Silver metal?"
"Yes," the driver says.
"Is that what people use?" The driver nods.
"This is no good?" Goto Dengo holds up the crisp, perfect bills.
The owner takes the envelope from Goto Dengo's hand and counts out a
few of the largest denomination of bills, pockets them, and leaves.
Goto Dengo breaks the seal on the pack of Lucky Strikes, raps the pack
on the tabletop a few times, and opens the lid. In addition to the
cigarettes, there is a printed card in there. He can just see the top part
of it: it is a drawing of a man in a military officer's cap. He pulls it out
slowly, revealing an eagle insignia on the cap, a pair of aviator
sunglasses, an enormous corncob pipe, a lapel bearing a line of four stars,
and finally, in block letters, the words I SHALL RETURN.
The driver is looking purposefully nonchalant. Goto Dengo shows him the
card and raises his eyebrows. "It is nothing," the driver says. "Japan very
strong. Japanese people will be here forever. MacArthur good only for
selling cigarettes."
When Goto Dengo opens the book of matches, he finds the same picture of
MacArthur, and the same words, printed on the inside.
After a smoke, they are back on the road. More black cones coalesce,
all around them now, and the road begins to ramble up over hills and down
into valleys. The trees get closer and closer together until they are riding
through a sort of cultivated and inhabited jungle: pineapples close to the
ground, coffee and cocoa bushes in the middle, bananas and coconuts
overhead. They pass through one village after another, each one a cluster of
dilapidated huts huddled around a great white church, built squat and strong
to survive earthquakes. They zigzag around heaps of fresh coconuts piled by
the roadside, spilling out into the right of way. Finally they turn off of
the main road and into a dirt track that winds through the trees. The track
has been rutted by the tires of trucks that are much too big for it. Freshly
snapped off tree branches litter the ground.
They pass through a deserted village. Stray dogs flit in and out of
huts whose front doors swing unlatched. Heaps of young green coconuts rot
under snarls of black flies.
Another mile down the road, the cultivated forest gives way to the wild
kind, and a military checkpoint bars the road. The smile vanishes from the
driver's face.
Goto Dengo states his name to one of the guards. Not knowing why he is
here, he can say nothing else. He is pretty sure now that this is a prison
camp and that he is about to become an inmate. As his eyes adjust he can see
a barrier of barbed wire strung from tree to tree, and a second barrier
inside of that. Peering carefully into the undergrowth he can make out where
they dug bunkers and established pillboxes, he can map out their
interlocking fields of fire in his mind. He sees ropes dangling from the
tops of tall trees where snipers can tie themselves into the branches if
need be. It has all been done according to doctrine, but it has a perfection
that is never seen on a real battlefield, only in training camps.
He is startled to realize that all of these fortifications are designed
to keep people out, not keep them in.
A call comes through on the field telephone, the barrier is raised, and
they are waved through. Half a mile into the jungle they come to a cluster
of tents pitched on platforms made from the freshly hewn logs of the trees
that were cut down to make this clearing. A lieutenant is standing in a
shady patch, waiting for them.
"Lieutenant Goto, I am Lieutenant Mori."
"You have arrived in the Southern Resource Zone recently, Lieutenant
Mori?"
"Yes. How did you know?"
"You are standing directly beneath a coconut tree."
Lieutenant Mori looks straight up in the air to see several wooly brown
cannonballs dangling high over his head. "Ah, so!" he says, and moves out of
the way. "Did you have any conversation with the driver on the way here?"
"Just a few words."
"What did you discuss with him?"
"Cigarettes. Silver."
"Silver?" Lieutenant Mori is very interested in this, so Goto Dengo
recounts their whole conversation.
"You told him that you were a digger?"
"Something like that, yes."
Lieutenant Mori backs off a step, turning to an enlisted man who has
been standing off to the side, and nods. The enlisted man picks the butt of
his rifle up off the ground, wheels the weapon around to a horizontal
position, and turns towards the driver. He covers the distance in about six
steps, accelerating to a full sprint, and cuts loose with a throaty roar as
he drives his bayonet into the driver's slim body. The victim is picked up
off his feet, then sprawls on his back with a low gasp. The soldier
straddles him and thrusts the bayonet into his torso several more times,
each stroke making a wet hissing sound as metal slides between walls of
meat.
The driver ends up sprawled motionless on the ground, jetting blood in
all directions.
"The indiscretion will not be held against you," says Lieutenant Mori
brightly, "because you did not know the nature of your new assignment.
"Pardon me?"
"Digging. You are here to dig, Goto san." He snaps to attention and
bows deeply. "Let me be the first to congratulate you. Your assignment is a
very important one."
Goto Dengo returns the bow, not sure how deep to make it. "So I'm not "
He gropes for words. In trouble? A pariah? Condemned to death? "I'm not a
low person here?"
"You are a very high person here, Goto san. Please come with me."
Lieutenant Mori gestures towards one of the tents.
As Goto Dengo walks away, he hears the young motorcycle driver mumble
something.
"What did he say?" Lieutenant Mori asks.
"He said, 'Father, into your hands I commend my spirit.' It's a
religious thing," Goto Dengo explains.
Chapter 63 CALIFORNIA
Half of the people who work at SFO, San Francisco International
Airport, now seem to be Filipino, which certainly helps to ease the shock of
reentry. Randy gets singled out, as he always does, for a thorough luggage
search by the exclusively Anglo customs officials. Men traveling by
themselves with practically no luggage seem to irritate the American
authorities. It's not so much that they think you are a drug trafficker as
that you fit, in the most schematic possible way, the profile of the most
pathologically optimistic conceivable drug trafficker, and hence practically
force them to investigate you. Irritated that you have forced their hand in
this manner, they want to teach you a lesson: travel with a wife and four
kids next time, or check a few giant trundling bags, or something, man! What
were you thinking? Never mind that Randy is coming in from a place where
DEATH TO DRUG TRAFFICKERS is posted all over the airport the way CAUTION:
WET FLOOR is here.
The most Kafkaesque moment is, as always, when the customs official
asks what he does for a living, and he has to devise an answer that will not
sound like the frantic improvisations of a drug mule with a belly full of
ominously swelling heroin stuffed condoms. "I work for a private
telecommunications provider" seems to be innocuous enough. "Oh, like a phone
company?" says the customs official, as if she's having none of it. "The
phone market isn't really that available to us," Randy says, "so we provide
other communications services. Mostly data."
"Does that involve a lot of traveling around from place to place then?"
asks the customs official, paging through the luridly stamped back pages of
Randy's passport. She makes eye contact with a more senior customs official
who sidles over towards them. Randy now feels himself getting nervous,
exactly the way your drug mule would, and fights the impulse to scrub his
damp palms against his pant legs, which would probably guarantee him a trip
through the magnetic tunnel of a CAT scanner, a triple dose of mint flavored
laxative, and several hours of straining over a stainless steel evidence
bucket. "Yes, it does," Randy says.
The senior customs official, trying to be unobtrusive and low key in a
way that makes Randy stifle a sort of gasping, pained outburst of laughter,
begins to flip through some appalling communications industry magazine that
Randy stuffed into his briefcase on his way out the door back in Manila. The
word INTERNET appears at least five times on the front cover. Randy stares
directly into the eyes of the female customs official and says, "The
Internet." Totally factitious understanding dawns on the woman's face, and
her eyes ping bosswards. The boss, still deeply absorbed in an article about
the next generation of high speed routers, shoves out his lower lip and
nods, like every other nineties American male who senses that knowing this
stuff is now as intrinsic to maleness as changing flat tires was to Dad. "I
hear that's really exciting now," the woman says in a completely different
tone of voice, and begins scooping Randy's stuff together into a big pile so
that he can repack it. Suddenly the spell is broken, Randy is a member in
good standing of American society again, having cheerfully endured this
process of being ritually goosed by the Government. He feels a strong
impulse to drive straight to the nearest gun store and spend about ten
thousand dollars. Not that he wants to hurt anyone; it's just that any kind
of government authority gives him the creeps now. He's probably been hanging
out too much with the ridiculously heavily armed Tom Howard. First a
hostility to rainforests, now a desire to own an automatic weapon; where is
this all going?
Avi is waiting for him, a tall pale figure standing at the velvet rope
surrounded by hundreds of Filipinas in a state of emotional riot,
brandishing gladiola spears like medieval pikemen. Avi has his hands in the
pockets of his floor skimming coat, and keeps his head turned in Randy's
direction but is sort of concentrating on a point about halfway between
them, frowning in an owlish way. This is the same frown that Randy's
grandmother used to wear when she was teasing apart a tangle of string from
her junk drawer. Avi adopts it when he is doing basically the same thing to
some new complex of information. He must have read Randy's e mail message
about the gold. It occurs to Randy that he missed a great opportunity for a
practical joke: he could have loaded up his bag with a couple of lead bricks
and then handed it to Avi and completely blown his mind. Too late. Avi
rotates around his vertical axis as Randy comes abreast of him and then
breaks into a stride that matches Randy's pace. There is some unarticulated
protocol that dictates when Randy and Avi will shake hands, when they will
hug, and when they will just act like they've only been separated for a few
minutes. A recent exchange of e mail seems to constitute a virtual reunion
that obviates any hand shaking or hugging. "You were right about the cheesy
dialog," is the first thing Avi says. "You're spending too much time with
Shaftoe, seeing things his way. This was not an attempt to send you a
message, at least not in the way Shaftoe means."
"What's your interpretation, then?"
"How would you go about establishing a new currency?" Avi asks.
Randy frequently overhears snatches of business related conversation
from people he passes in airports, and it's always about how did the big
presentation go, or who's on the short list to replace the departing CFO, or
something. He prides himself on what he believes to be the much higher
plane, or at least the much more bizarre subject matter, of his interchanges
with Avi. They are walking together around the slow arc of SFO's inner ring.
A whiff of soy sauce and ginger drifts out of a restaurant and fogs Randy's
mind, making him unsure, for a moment, which hemisphere he's in.
"Uh, it's not something I have given much thought to," he says. "Is
that what we are about now? Are we going to establish a new currency?"
"Well obviously someone needs to establish one that doesn't suck," Avi
says.
"Is this some exercise in keeping a straight face?" Randy asks.
"Don't you ever read the newspapers?" Avi grabs Randy by the elbow and
drags him over towards a newsstand. Several papers are running front page
stories about crashing Southeast Asian currencies, but this isn't all that
new.
"I know currency fluctuations are important to Epiphyte," Randy says.
"But my god, it's so tedious I just want to run away.
"Well, it's not tedious to her," Avi says, yanking out three different
newspapers that have all decided to run the same wire service photograph: an
adorable Thai moppet standing in a mile long queue in front of a bank,
holding up a single American dollar bill.
"I know it's a big deal for some of our customers," Randy says, "I just
didn't really think of it as a business opportunity."
"No, think about it," Avi says. He counts out a few dollar bills of his
own to pay for the newspapers, then swerves towards an exit. They enter a
tunnel that leads to a parking garage. "The sultan feels that "
"You've been just sort of hanging out with the sultan?"
"Mostly with Pragasu. Will you let me finish? We decided to set up the
Crypt, right?"
"Right."
"What is the Crypt? Do you remember its original stated function?"
"Secure, anonymous, unregulated data storage. A data haven."
"Yeah. A bit bucket. And we envisioned many applications for this."
"Boy, did we ever," Randy says, remembering many long nights around
kitchen tables and hotel rooms, writing versions of the business plan that
are now as ancient and as lost as the holographs of the Four Gospels.
"One of these was electronic banking. Heck, we even predicted it might
be one of the major applications. But whenever a business plan first makes
contact with the actual market the real world suddenly all kinds of stuff
becomes clear. You may have envisioned half a dozen potential markets for
your product, but as soon as you open your doors, one just explodes from the
pack and becomes so instantly important that good business sense dictates
that you abandon the others and concentrate all your efforts."
"And that's what happened with the e banking thing," Randy says.
"Yes. During our meetings at the Sultan's Palace," Avi says. "Before
those meetings, we envisioned well you know what we envisioned. What
actually happened was that the room was packed with these guys who were
exclusively interested in the e banking thing. That was our first clue.
Then, this!" He holds up his newspapers, whacks the dollar brandishing
moppet with the back of his hand. "So, that's the business we're in now."
"We are bankers," Randy says. He will have to keep saying this to
himself for a while in order to believe it, like, "We are striving with all
our might to uphold the goals of the 23rd Party Congress." We are bankers.
We are bankers.
"Banks used to issue their own currencies. You can see these old
banknotes in the Smithsonian. 'First National Bank of South Bumfuck will
remit ten pork bellies to the bearer,' or whatever. That had to stop because
commerce became nonlocal you needed to be able to take your money with you
when you went out West, or whatever."
"But if we're online, the whole world is local," Randy says.
"Yeah. So all we need is something to back the currency. Gold would be
good."
"Gold? Are you joking? Isn't that kind of old fashioned?"
"It was until all of the unbacked currencies in Southeast Asia went
down the toilet."
"Avi, so far I am still kind of confused, frankly. You seem to be
working your way around to telling me that my little trip to see the gold in
the jungle was no coincidence. But how can we use that gold to back our
currency?"
Avi shrugs as if it's such a minor detail he hasn't even bothered to
think about it. "That's just a deal making issue."
"Oh, god."
"These people who sent you a message want to get into business with us.
Your trip to see the gold was a credit check."
They are walking through a tunnel toward the garage, stuck behind an
extended clan of Southeast Asians in elaborate headdresses. Perhaps the
entire remaining gene pool of some nearly extinct mountain dwelling minority
group. Their belongings are in giant boxes wrapped in iridescent pink
synthetic twine, balanced atop airport luggage carts.
"A credit check." Randy always hates it when he gets so far behind Avi
that all he can do is lamely repeat phrases.
"You know how, when you and Charlene bought that house, the lender had
to look at it first?"
"I bought it for cash."
"Okay, okay, but in general, before a bank will issue a mortgage on a
house, they will inspect it. Not in great detail, necessarily. They'll just
have some executive of the bank drive by the property to verify that it
exists and is where the documents claim it is, and so on.
"So, that's what my journey to the jungle was about?"
"Yeah. Some of the potential, uh, participants in the project just
wanted to make it clear to us that they were, in fact, in possession of this
gold."
"I really have to wonder what 'possession' denotes in this case."
"Me too," Avi says. "I've been sort of puzzling over that one." Hence,
Randy thinks, the frowny look in the airport.
"I just thought they wanted to sell it," Randy says.
"Why? Why sell it?"
"To liquidate it. So they could buy real estate. Or five thousand pairs
of shoes. Or something."
Avi scrunches his face in disappointment. "Oh, Randy, that is really
unworthy, alluding to the Marcoses. The gold you saw is pocket change
compared to what Ferdinand Marcos dug up. The people who set up your trip to
the jungle are satellites of satellites of him."
"Well. Consider it a cry for help," Randy says. "Words seem to be
passing back and forth between us, but I understand less and less."
Avi opens his mouth to respond, but just then the animists trigger
their car alarm. Unable to propitiate it, they form a circle around the car
and grin at one another. Avi and Randy pick up their pace and get well away
from it.
Avi stops and straightens, as if pulled up short. "Speaking of not
understanding things," he says, "you need to communicate with that girl. Amy
Shaftoe."
"Has she been communicating with you?"
"In the course of twenty minutes' phone conversation, she has deeply
and eternally bonded with Kia," Avi says.
"I would believe that without hesitation."
"It wasn't even like they got to know each other. It was like they knew
each other in a previous life and had just gotten back in touch."
"Yeah. So?"
"Kia now feels bound by duty and honor to present a united front with
America Shaftoe."
"It all hangs together," Randy says.
"Acting sort of like Amy's emotional agent or lawyer, she has made it
clear to me that we, Epiphyte Corporation, owe Amy our full attention and
concern."
"And what does Amy want?"
"That was my question," Avi says, "and I was made to feel very bad for
asking it. Whatever it is that we that you owe to Amy is something so
obvious that merely manifesting a need to verbalize it is... just...
really..."
"Shabby. Insensitive."
"Coarse. Brutish."
"A really transparent, toddler level exercise in the cheapest kind of,
of. . ."
"Of evasion of personal responsibility for one's own gross misdeeds."
"Kia was rolling her eyes, I imagine. Her lip was sort of curled."
"She drew breath as if to give me a good piece of her mind but then
thought better of it."
"Not because you're her boss. But because you would never understand."
"This is just one of those evils that has to be sort of accepted and
swallowed, by any mature woman who's been around the block."
"Who knows the harsh realities. Yeah," Randy says.
"Okay, you can tell Kia that her client's needs and demands have been
communicated to the guilty party "
"Have they?"
"Tell her that the fact that her client has needs and demands has been
heavy handedly insinuated to me and that it is understood that the ball is
in my court."
"And we can stand down to some kind of detente while a response is
prepared?"
"Certainly. Kia can return to her normal duties for the time being."
"Thank you, Randy."
Avi's Range Rover is parked in the most remote part of the roof of the
parking ramp, in the center of about twenty five empty parking spaces that
form a sort of security buffer zone. When they have traversed about half of
the glacis, the car's headlights flutter, and Randy hears the preparatory
snap of a sound system being energized. "The Range Rover has picked us up on
Doppler radar," Avi says hastily.
The Range Rover speaketh in a fearsome Oz like voice cranked up to
burning bush decibel levels. "You are being tracked by Cerberus! Please
alter your course immediately!"
"I can't believe you bought one of these things," Randy says.
"You have encroached on the Cerberus defensive perimeter! Move back.
Move back," says the Range Rover. "An armed response team is being placed on
standby."
"It is the only cryptographically sound car alarm system," Avi says, as
if that settles the matter. He digs out a keychain attached to a black
polycarbonate fob with the same dimensions, and number of buttons, as a
television remote control. He enters a long series of digits and cuts off
the voice in the middle of proclaiming that Randy and Avi are being recorded
on a digital video camera that is sensitive into the near infra red range.
"Normally it doesn't do that," Avi says. "I had it set to its maximum
alert status."
"What's the worst that could happen? Someone would steal your car and
the insurance company would buy you a new one?"
"I couldn't care less if it gets stolen. The worst that could happen
would be a car bomb, or, not quite as bad, someone putting a bug in my car
and listening to everything I say."
Avi drives Randy over the San Andreas Fault to his place in Pacifica,
which is where Randy stores his car while he's overseas. Avi's wife Devorah
is in at the doctor's for a routine prenatal and all the kids are either at
school or being hustled around the neighborhood by their tag team duo of
tough Israeli nannies. Avi's nannies have the souls of war hardened Soviet
paratroopers in the bodies of nubile eighteen year old girls. The house has
been utterly abandoned to kid raising. The formal dining room has been
converted to a nanny barracks with bunk beds hammered together from
unfinished two by fours, the parlor filled with cribs and changing tables,
and every square centimeter of cheap shag carpet in the place has been
infused with a few dozen flakes of glitter, in various festive colors, which
if they even cared about getting rid of it could only be removed through
direct microsurgical extraction, one flake at a time. Avi plies Randy with a
sandwich of turkey bologna and ketchup on generic Wonderoid bread. It is
still too early in Manila for Randy to call Amy and make amends for whatever
he did wrong. Down below them, in Avi's basement office, a fax machine
shrieks and rustles like a bird in a coffee can. A laminated CIA map of
Sierra Leone is spread out on the table, peeking out here and there through
numerous overlying strata of dirty dishes, newspapers, coloring books, and
drafts of the Epiphyte(2) Business Plan. Post it notes are stuck to the map
from place to place. Written on each note, in Avi's distinctive triple ought
Rapidograph drafting pen hand, is a latitude and longitude with lots of
significant digits, and some kind of precis of what happened there: "5
women, 2 men, 4 children, with machetes photos:" and then serial numbers
from Avi's database.
Randy was a little groggy on the drive over, and was irritable about
the inappropriate daylight, but after the sandwich his metabolism tries to
get into the spirit of things. He has learned to surf these mysterious
endocrinological swells. "I'm going to get going," he says, and stands.
"Your overall plan, again?"
"First I go south," Randy says, superstitiously not even wanting to
utter the name of the place where he used to live. "For no more than a day,
I hope. Then jet lag will land on me like a plunging safe and I will hole up
somewhere and watch basketball through the vee of my feet for maybe a day.
Then I head north to the Palouse country."
Avi raises his eyebrows. "Home?"
"Yeah."
"Hey, before I forget could you look for information on the Whitmans
while you're up there?"
"You mean the missionaries?"
"Yeah. They came out to the Palouse to convert the Cayuse Indians, who
were these magnificent horsemen. They had the best of intentions, but they
accidentally gave them measles. Annihilated the whole tribe."
"Does that really land within the boundaries of your obsession?
Inadvertent genocide?"
"Anomalous cases have heightened utility in that they help us delineate
the boundaries of the field."
"I'll see what I can find about the Whitmans."
"May I inquire," Avi says, "why you are going up there? Family visit?"
"My grandmother is moving to a managed care facility. Her children are
convening to divide up her furniture and so on, which I find a little
ghoulish, but it's nobody's fault and it has to be done."
"And you are going to participate?"
"I am going to avoid it as much as I can, because it's probably going
to be a catfight. Years from now, family members will still not be speaking
to each other because they didn't get Mom's Gomer Bolstrood credenza."
"What is it with Anglo Saxons and furniture? Could you explain that to
me?"
"I am going because we found a piece of paper in a briefcase in a
sunken Nazi submarine in the Palawan Passage that says, 'WATERHOUSE LAVENDER
ROSE.'"
Avi looks baffled now, in a way that Randy finds satisfying. He gets up
and climbs into his car and starts driving south, down the coast, the slow
and beautiful way.
Chapter 64 ORGAN
Lawrence Waterhouse's libido is suppressed for about a week by the pain
and swelling in his jaw. Then the pain and swelling in his groin surges into
the fore, and he begins searching his memories of the dance, wondering if he
made any progress with Mary cCmndhd.
He wakes up suddenly at four o'clock one Sunday morning, clammily
coated from his nipples to his knees. Rod is still sleeping soundly, thank
god, and so if Waterhouse did any moaning or calling out of names during his
dream, Rod's probably not aware of it. Waterhouse begins trying to clean
himself off without making a lot of noise. He doesn't even want to think
about how he's going to explain the condition of the sheets to Who Will
Launder Them. "It was completely innocent, Mrs. McTeague. I dreamed that I
came downstairs in my pajamas and that Mary was sitting in the parlor in her
uniform, drinking tea, and she turned and looked me in the eye, and then I
just couldn't control myself and aaaaAAAHHH! HUH! HUH! HUH! HUH! HUH! HUH!
HUH! HUH! HUH! HUH! HUH! And then I woke up and just look at the mess.
Mrs. McTeague (and other old ladies like her all around the world) does
the laundry only because it is her role in the giant Ejaculation Control
Conspiracy which, as Waterhouse is belatedly realizing, controls the entire
planet. No doubt she has a clipboard down in the cellar, next to her mangle,
where she marks down the frequency and volume of the ejaculations of her
four boarders. The data sheets are mailed into some Bletchley Park type of
operation somewhere (Waterhouse guesses it's disguised as a large convent in
upstate New York), where the numbers from all round the world are tabulated
on Electrical Till Corporation machines and printouts piled up on carts that
are wheeled into the offices of the high priestesses of the conspiracy,
dressed in heavily starched white raiments, embroidered with the emblem of
the conspiracy: a penis caught in a mangle. The priestesses review the data
carefully. They observe that Hitler still isn't getting any, and debate
whether letting him have some would calm him down a little bit or just give
him license to run further out of control. It will take months for the name
of Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse to come to the top of the list, and months
for orders to be sent out to Brisbane and even then, the orders may condemn
him to another year of waiting for Mary cCmndhd to show up in his dreams
with a teacup.
Mrs. McTeague, and other ECC members (such as Mary cCmndhd and
basically all of the other young women) are offended by easy girls,
prostitutes, and whorehouses, not for religious reasons, but because they
provide a refuge where men can have ejaculations that are not controlled,
metered, or monitored in any way. Prostitutes are turncoats, collaborators.
All of this comes into Waterhouse's mind as he lies in his damp bed
between four and six o'clock in the morning, considering his place in the
world with the crystalline clarity that can only be obtained by getting a
good night's sleep and then venting several weeks' jism production. He has
reached a fork in the road.
Last night, before Rod turned in, he shined his shoes, explaining that
tomorrow morning he had to be up bright and early for church. Now,
Waterhouse knows what that means, having spent many a Sabbath on Qwghlm,
cringing and blushing under the glares of the locals, who were outraged that
he appeared to be running the huffduff equipment on the day of rest. He has
seen them shuffling into their morbid, thousand year old black stone chapel
on Sunday mornings for their three hour services. Hell, Waterhouse even
lived in a Qwghlmian chapel for several months. Its gloom suffused his whole
being.
Going to church with Rod would mean giving in to the ECC, becoming
their minion. The alternative is the whorehouse.
Even though he grew up in churches, raised by church people, Waterhouse
(as must be obvious by this point) never really understood their attitudes
about sex. Why did they get so hung up on that one issue, when there were
others like murder, war, poverty, and pestilence?
Now, finally, he gets it: the churches are merely one branch of the
ECC. And what they are doing, when they fulminate about sex, is trying to
make sure that all the young people fall in line with the ECC's program.
So, what is the end result of the ECC's efforts? Waterhouse stares at
the ceiling, which is starting to become fuzzily visible as the sun rises in
the west, or the north, or wherever the hell it rises here in the Southern
Hemisphere. He takes a quick inventory of the world and finds that basically
the ECC is running the entire planet, good countries and bad countries
alike. That all successful and respected men are minions of the ECC, or at
least are so scared of it that they pretend to be. Non ECC members live on
the fringes of society, like prostitutes, or have been driven deep
underground and must waste tremendous amounts of time and energy keeping up
a false front. If you knuckle under and become a minion of the ECC, you get
to have a career, a family, kids, wealth, house, pot roasts, clean laundry,
and the respect of all the other ECC minions. You have to pay dues in the
form of chronic nagging sexual irritation which can only be relieved by, and
at the discretion and convenience of, one person, the person designated for
this role by the ECC: your wife. On the other hand, if you reject the ECC
and its works, you can't, by definition, have a family, and your career
options are limited to pimp, gangster, and forty year enlisted sailor.
Hell, it's not even that bad of a conspiracy. They build churches and
universities, educate kids, install swingsets in parks. Sometimes they throw
a war and kill ten or twenty million people, but it's a drop in the bucket
compared to stuff like influenza which the ECC campaigns against by nagging
everyone to wash their hands and cover their mouths when sneezing.
The alarm clock. Rod rolls out of bed like it's a Nip air raid.
Waterhouse stares at the ceiling for another few minutes, dithering. But he
knows where he's going, and there's no point in wasting any more time. He's
going to church, and not exactly because he has renounced Satan and all his
works, but because he wants to fuck Mary. He almost can't help flinching
when he says (to himself) this terrible sounding thing. But the weird thing
about church is that it provides a special context within which it is
perfectly okay to want to fuck Mary. As long as he goes to church, he can
want to fuck Mary as much as he wants, he can spend all of his time, in and
out of church, thinking about fucking Mary. He can let her know that he
wants to fuck her as long as he finds a more oblique way of phrasing it. And
if he jumps through certain hoops (hoops of gold) he can even fuck Mary in
actuality, and it will all be perfectly acceptable at no time will he have
to feel the slightest trace of shame or guilt.
He rolls out of bed, startling Rod, who (being some sort of jungle
commando) is easily startled. "I'm going to fuck your cousin until the bed
collapses into a pile of splinters," Waterhouse says.
Actually, what he says is "I'm going to church with you." But
Waterhouse, the cryptologist, is engaging in a bit of secret code work here.
He is using a newly invented code, which only he knows. It will be very
dangerous if the code is ever broken, but this is impossible since there is
only one copy, and it's in Waterhouse's head. Turing might be smart enough
to break the code anyway, but he's in England, and he's on Waterhouse's
side, so he'd never tell
A few minutes later, Waterhouse and cCmndhd go downstairs, headed for
"church," which in Waterhouse's secret code, means "headquarters of the Mary
fucking campaign of 1944."
As they step out into the cool morning air they can hear Mrs. McTeague
bustling into their bedroom to strip their beds and inspect their sheets.
Waterhouse smiles, thinking that he has just gotten away with something; the
damning and overwhelming evidence found on his bed linens will be neatly
cancelled out by the fact that he got up early and went to church.
He is expecting a prayer group meeting in the basement of a dry goods
store, but it turns out that the Inner Qwghlmians got banished to Australia
in droves. Many of them settled in Brisbane. In the downtown they managed to
construct a United Ecclesiastical Church out of rough hewn beige sandstone.
It would look big, solid, and almost opulent if it were not directly across
the street from the Universal Ecclesiastical Church, which is twice as big
and made of smooth faced limestone. Outer Qwghlmians, dressed in dour blacks
and greys, and frequently in navy uniforms, shuffle up the wide, time
blackened steps of the Universal Ecclesiastical Church, occasionally turning
their heads to throw disapproving looks across the street at the Inner
Qwghlmians, who are actually dressed for the season (it is summer in
Australia) or in Army uniforms. Waterhouse can see that what really pisses
them off is the sound of the music that vents from the United Ecclesiastical
Church whenever its red enameled front doors are hauled open. The choir is
practicing and the organ is playing. But he can tell from half a block away
that something's wrong with the instrument.
The look of the Inner Qwghlmian women in their pastel dresses and
bright bonnets is reassuring. These do not look like people who engage in
human sacrifice. Waterhouse tries to spring lightly up the steps as if he
really wants to be here. Then he remembers that he does want to be here,
because it is all part of his plan to fuck Mary.
The churchgoers are all talking in Qwghlmian, greeting each other and
saying nice things to Rod, who is evidently well thought of. Waterhouse has
no idea what they are saying, and finds it comforting to know that most of
them don't either. He strolls into the central aisle of the church, stares
down its vault to the altar, the choir behind it, singing beautifully; Mary
is there, in the alto section, exercising those pipes of hers, which are
framed attractively by the satin stole of her chorister's uniform. Above and
behind the choir, a big old pipe organ spreads its tarnished wings, like a
stuffed and mounted eagle that's been sitting in a damp attic for fifty
years. It wheezes and hisses asthmatically, and emits bizarre, discordant
drones when certain stops are used; this happens when a valve is stuck open,
and it is called a cipher. Waterhouse knows all about ciphers.
Notwithstanding the pathetic organ, the choir is spectacular, and
builds to a stirring six part harmony climax as Waterhouse ambles up the
aisle, wondering whether his erection is visible. A shaft of light comes in
through the stained glass rosette above the organ pipes and pinions
Waterhouse in its gaudy beam. Or maybe it just feels that way, because
Waterhouse has it all figured out now.
Waterhouse is going to fix the church's organ. This project will be
sure to have side benefits for his own organ, a single pipe instrument that
needs attention just as badly.
It turns out that, like all ethnic groups that have been consistently
screwed for a long time, the Inner Qwghlmians have great music. Not only
that, they actually have fun in church. The minister actually has a sense of
humor. It's about as tolerable as church could ever be. Waterhouse hardly
pays attention because he is doing a lot of staring: first, at Mary, then at
the organ (trying to figure out how it is engineered) then back to Mary for
a while.
He is outraged and offended, after the service, when the powers that be
are reluctant to let him, a total stranger and a Yank to boot, begin ripping
off access panels and meddling with the inner workings of the organ. The
minister is a good judge of character a little too good to suit Waterhouse.
The organist (and hence ultimate authority on all matters organic) looks to
have been shipped over here with the very first load of convicts after
having been convicted, in the Old Bailey, of talking too loud, bumping into
things, not tying his shoelaces properly, and having dandruff so in excess
of Society's unwritten standards as to offend the dignity of the Queen and
of the Empire.
It all leads to an unbearably tense and complicated meeting in a Sunday
school classroom near the offices of the minister, who is called the Rev.
Dr. John Mnrh. He is a stout red faced chap who clearly would prefer to have
his head in a tun of ale but who is putting up with all of this because it's
good for his immortal soul.
This meeting essentially becomes a venue within which the organist, Mr.
Drkh, can vent his opinions on the sneakiness of the Japanese, why the
invention of the well tempered tuning system was a bad idea and how all
music written since has been a shabby compromise, the sterling qualities of
the General, the numerological significance of the lengths of various organ
pipes, how the excessive libido of American troops might be controlled with
certain dietary supplements, how the hauntingly beautiful modes of
traditional Qwghlmian music are particularly ill suited to the well tempered
tuning system, how the king's dodgy Germanic relatives are plotting to take
over the Empire and turn it over to Hitler, and, first and foremost, that
Johann Sebastian Bach was a bad musician, a worse composer, an evil man, a
philanderer, and the figurehead of a worldwide conspiracy, headquartered in
Germany, that has been slowly taking over the world for the last several
hundred years, using the well tempered tuning system as a sort of carrier
frequency on which its ideas (which originate with the Bavarian illuminati)
can be broadcast into the minds of everyone who listens to music especially
the music of Bach. And by the way how this conspiracy may best be fought off
by playing and listening to traditional Qwghlmian music, which, in case Mr.
Drkh didn't make this perfectly clear, is wholly incompatible with well
tempered tuning because of its haunting and beautiful, but numerologically
perfect, scale.
"Your thoughts on numerology are most interesting," Waterhouse says
loudly, running Mr. Drkh off the rhetorical road. "I myself studied with
Drs. Turing and von Neumann at the Institute for Advanced Studies in
Princeton."
Father John snaps awake, and Mr. Drkh looks as if he's just taken a
fifty caliber round in the small of his back. Clearly, Mr. Drkh has had a
long career of being the weirdest person in any given room, but he's about
to go down in flames.
In general, Waterhouse isn't good at just winging it, but he's tired
and pissed off and horny, and this is a fucking war, and sometimes you have
to. He mounts the podium, dives for a round of chalk, and starts hammering
equations onto the blackboard like an ack ack gun. He uses well tempered
tuning as a starting point, takes off from there into the deepest realms of
advanced number theory, circles back all of a sudden to the Qwghlmian modal
scale, just to keep them on their toes, and then goes screaming straight
back into number theory again. In the process, he actually stumbles across
some interesting material that he doesn't think has been covered in the
literature yet, and so he diverts from strict bullshitting for a few minutes
to explore this thing and actually prove something that he thinks could
probably be published in a mathematical journal, if he just gets around to
typing it up properly. It reminds him that he's not half bad at this stuff
when he's recently ejaculated, and that in turn just fuels his resolve to
get this Mary fucking thing worked out.
Finally, he turns around, for the first time since he started. Father
John and Mr. Drkh are both dumbfounded.
"Let me just demonstrate!" Waterhouse blurts, and strides out of the
room and doesn't bother looking back. Back in the church, he goes to the
console, blows the dandruff off the keys, hits the main power switch. The
electric motors come on, somewhere back behind the screen, and the
instrument begins to complain and whine. No matter it can all be drowned
out. He scans the rows of stops he already knows what this organ's got,
because he's listened and deconstructed. He starts yanking out knobs.
Now Waterhouse is going to demonstrate that Bach can sound good even
played on Mr. Drkh's organ, if you choose the right key. Just as Father John
and Mr. Drkh are about halfway up the aisle, Waterhouse slams into that old
chestnut, Toccata and Fugue in D Minor, except that he's transposing it into
C sharp minor as he goes along, because (according to a very elegant
calculation that just came into his head as he was running up the aisle of
the church) it ought to sound good that way when played in Mr. Drkh's
mangled tuning system.
The transposition is an awkward business at first and he hits a few
wrong notes, but then it comes naturally and he transitions from the toccata
into the fugue with tremendous verve and confidence. Gouts of dust and
salvos of mouse droppings explode from the pipes as Waterhouse invokes whole
ranks that have not been used in decades. Many of these are big bad loud
reed stops that are difficult to tune. Waterhouse senses the pumping
machinery straining to keep up with this unprecedented demand for power. The
choir loft is suffused with a brilliant glow as the dust flung out of the
choked pipes fills the air and catches the light coming through the rose
window. Waterhouse muffs a pedal line, spitefully kicks off his terrible
shoes and begins to tread the pedals the way he used to back in Virginia,
with his bare feet, the trajectory of the bass line traced out across the
wooden pedals in lines of blood from his exploded blisters. This baby has
some nasty thirty two foot reed stops in the pedals, real earthshakers,
probably put there specifically to irritate the Outer Qwghlmians across the
street. None of the people who go to this church have ever heard these stops
called into action, but Waterhouse puts them to good use now, firing off
power chords like salvos from the mighty guns of the battleship Iowa.
All during the service, during the sermon and the scripture readings
and the prayers, when he wasn't thinking about fucking Mary, he was thinking
about how he was going to fix this organ. He was thinking back to the organ
he worked on in Virginia, how the stops enabled the flow of air to the
different ranks of pipes and how the keys on the keyboards activated all of
the pipes that were enabled. He has this whole organ visualized in his head
now, and while he is pounding through to the end of the figure, the top of
his skull comes off, the filtered red light pours in, he sees the entire
machine in his mind, as if in an exploded draftsman's view. Then it
transforms itself into a slightly different machine an organ that runs on
electricity, with ranks of vacuum tubes here, and a grid of relays there. He
has the answer, now, to Turing's question, the question of how to take a
pattern of binary data and bury it into the circuitry of a thinking machine
so that it can be later disinterred.
Waterhouse knows how to make electric memory. He must go write a letter
to Alan instantly!
"Excuse me," he says, and runs from the church. On his way out, he
brushes past a small young woman who has been standing there gaping at his
performance. When he is several blocks away, he realizes two things: that he
is walking down the street barefoot, and that the young woman was Mary
cCmndhd. He will have to circle back later and get his shoes and maybe fuck
her. But first things first!
Chapter 65 HOME
Randy opens his eyes from out of a sliding nightmare. He was in his
car, driving down the Pacific Coast Highway, when something went wrong with
the steering. The car began to wander, first towards the vertical stone
cliff on the left and then towards the sheer drop to huge jagged rocks
projecting from thrashing waves on the right. Big rocks were rolling
nonchalantly across the highway. He could not steer; the only way to stop
moving is to open his eyes.
He is lying on a sleeping bag on a polished maple floor that is not
level, and that is why he had the sliding dream. The eye/inner ear conflict
makes his body spasm, he flails to plant both hands against the plane of the
floor.
America Shaftoe sits, jeaned and barefoot, in the blue light of a
window, bobby pins sprouting from chapped lips, looking at her face in an
isosceles triangle of mirror whose scalpel sharp edges depress but do not
cut the pink skin of her fingertips. A web of lead ropes sags in the empty
windowframe, a few lozenges of beveled glass still trapped in the
interstices. Randy lifts his head slightly and looks downhill, into the
corner of the room, and sees a great heap of swept shards. He rolls over,
looks out the door and across the hallway and into what used to be
Charlene's home office. Robin and Marcus Aurelius Shaftoe are sharing a
double mattress in there, a shotgun and a rifle, a couple of big black cop
flashlights, a Bible and a calculus textbook neatly arranged on the floor
next to them.
The nightmare's feeling of panic, of needing to go somewhere and do
something, subsides. Lying here in his ruined house listening to Amy's brush
whistle through her hair, throwing off electrostatic snaps, is one of the
calmer moments he's had.
"You just about ready to hit the road?" Amy says.
Across the hallway, one of the Shaftoe boys sits up without making any
sound. The other opens his eyes, lifts his head, glances towards the
weapons, lights, and Good Book, then relaxes again.
"I got a fire going out in the yard," Amy says, "and some water
boiling. Didn't think it was safe to use the fireplace."
Everyone slept in their clothes last night. All they have to do is put
their shoes on and piss out the windows. The Shaftoes move about the place
faster than Randy does, not because they are more surefooted, but because
they never saw this house when it was level and sound. But Randy lived here
for years and years when it was, and his mind thinks it knows its way around
the place. Going to bed last night, his biggest fear was that he would get
up drowsily in the middle of the night and try to go downstairs. The house
used to have a beautiful winding stairway which has now telescoped into the
basement. Last night, by dint of pulling the U Haul onto the front lawn and
aiming its headlights directly in through windows (whose cracks and jags and
facets refracted the light gorgeously), they were able to clamber into the
basement and find a ten foot aluminum extension ladder which they used to
get into the upstairs. Once they had gotten up, they pulled the ladder up
with them, like a drawbridge, so that even if looters did enter the
downstairs, the Shaftoe boys would be able to sit at the top of what used to
be the stairway and pick them off leisurely with the long guns (this
scenario seemed plausible last night, in the dark, but now strikes Randy as
a bumpkin's reverie).
Amy's turned some balusters from the veranda's railing into a nice
bonfire in the front yard. She stomps a crushed saucepan back into shape
with a small number of deftly aimed heel strokes and cooks oatmeal. The
Shaftoe boys throw whatever looks potentially useful into the back of the U
Haul, and check the oil in their hot rod.
All of Charlene's stuff is in New Haven now. In Dr. G. E. B. Kivistik's
house, to be specific. He has generously offered to let her stay there while
she looks for a house; Randy predicts she'll never leave. All of Randy's
stuff is in Manila or in Avi's basement, and all of the disputed items are
in a storage locker at the edge of town.
Randy spent most of yesterday evening cruising around town checking in
on various old friends to see if they were all right. Amy went with him,
taking a voyeuristic interest in this tour of his former life, and, from a
social point of view, complicating things incalculably. In any case, they
didn't make it back to the house until after dark, and so this is Randy's
first chance to see the damage in full daylight. He orbits it again and
again, amused, almost to the point of giggling, by how perfectly destroyed
it is, taking pictures with a disposable camera he borrowed from Marcus
Aurelius Shaftoe, trying to see if there is anything left that could
conceivably be worth money.
The house's stone foundation rises three feet above grade. The wooden
walls of the house were built on top of that, but not actually attached to
it (a common practice in the old days, which, at the time he blew town, was
on Randy's list of things to fix before the next earthquake). When the earth
began to oscillate side to side at 2:16 in the afternoon yesterday, the
foundation oscillated right along with it, but the house wanted to stay
where it was. Eventually the foundation wall moved right out from underneath
the house, one corner of which dropped three feet to the ground. Randy could
probably estimate the amount of kinetic energy the house picked up during
this fall, and convert it to an equivalent in pounds of dynamite or swings
of a wrecking ball, but it would be a nerdy exercise, since he can see the
effects for himself. Let's just say that when it smashed to earth the whole
structure suffered a vicious shock. The parallel, upright joists in the
floors all went horizontal, collapsing like dominoes. Every window and
doorframe instantly became a parallelogram, so all of the glass broke, and
in particular all of the leaded glass was rent asunder. The stairway fell
into the basement. The chimney, which had been in need of tuck pointing for
some time, sprayed bricks all over the yard. Most of the plumbing was
wrecked, which means that the heating system is history, since the house
used radiators. The plaster fell from the lath everywhere, cumulative tons
of old horse hair plaster just exploding out of the walls and ceilings and
mixing with the water from the busted plumbing to make a grey slurry that
congealed in the downhill corners of the rooms. The hand crafted Italian
tiles that Charlene picked out for the bathrooms are seventy five percent
broken. The granite counters in the kitchen are now seamed tectonic systems.
A few of the major appliances look repairable, but ownership of those was in
dispute anyway.
"It's a tear down, sir," says Robin Shaftoe. He has spent his whole
life in some Tennessee mountain town, living in trailers and cabins, but
even he has enough real estate acumen to sense this.
"Is there something you wanted to get out of the basement, sir?" says
Marcus Aurelius Shaftoe.
Randy laughs. "There's a filing cabinet down there . . . wait!" he
reaches out and puts a hand on Marcus's shoulder, to prevent him from
sprinting into the house and diving like Tarzan into the stairway pit. "The
reason I wanted it was because it contains every single receipt for every
penny I put into this house. See, it was a wreck when I bought it. Sort of
like it is now. Maybe not as bad."
"You need those papers for your dee vorce?"
Randy stops and clears his throat in mild exasperation. He has
explained to them five times that he was never married to Charlene and so
it's not a divorce. But this idea of living with a woman to whom one is not
married is so embarrassing to the Tennessee branch of the Shaftoes that they
simply cannot process it, and so they keep talking about "your ex wahf" and
"your dee vorce."
Noting Randy's hesitation, Robin says, "Or for the IN surance?"
Randy laughs with surprising heartiness.
"You did get IN surance, didn't you sir?"
"Earthquake insurance, around here, is basically unobtainable," Randy
says.
This is the first time it dawns on any of the Shaftoes that as of 2:16
P.M. yesterday afternoon, in an instant, Randy's net worth dropped by
something like three hundred thousand dollars. They skulk away from him and
leave him alone for a while, taking pictures to document the loss.
Amy comes over. "Oatmeal's ready," she says.
"Okay."
She stands close to him with her arms folded. The town is uncannily
quiet: the power is off and few vehicles are on the streets. "I'm sorry I
ran you off the road."
Randy looks at his Acura: the gouge, high on the left rear fender,
where the bumper of Amy's U Haul truck took him from behind, and the
crumpled front right bumper where he was forced into a parked Ford Fiesta.
"Don't worry about it."
"If I'd known Jesus. The last thing you need is a body shop bill on top
of everything else. I'll pay for it."
"Seriously. Don't worry about it."
"Well . . ."
"Amy, I know perfectly well you don't give a shit about my stupid car,
and when you pretend otherwise, the strain shows."
"You're right. But I'm sorry I misapprehended the situation."
"It was my fault," Randy says, "I should have explained why I was
coming here. Why the hell did you rent a U Haul, anyway?"
"They were all out of regular cars at the San Francisco Airport. Some
kind of big convention at the Moscone Center. So I displayed adaptability. "
(1)
"How the hell did you get here so fast? I thought I took the last
flight out of Manila."
"I got to NAIA only a few minutes after you did, Randy. Your flight was
full. I got on the next flight to Tokyo. I think my flight actually took off
before yours did."
"Mine was delayed on the ground."
"Then from Narita I just grabbed the next flight to SFO. Landed a
couple hours after you. So I was surprised that you and I pulled into town
here at the same time."
"I stopped over at a friend's house. And I took the scenic route."
Randy closes his eyes for a moment, remembering those loose boulders on the
Pacific Coast Highway, the roadway shaking beneath the tires of his Acura.
"See, when I saw your car, that's when I felt that God was with me, or
something," Amy said. "Or with you."
"God was with me? How do you figure?"
"Well, first of all, I have to tell you that I left Manila not out of
concern for you but out of burning rage, and a desire to just feed you your
ass on a plate."
"I figured."
"It's not even clear to me that you and I constitute a potential
couple. But you have started acting towards me in a way that indicates some
interest in that direction, so you have certain obligations." Amy has now
started to get pissed off and begun to move around the yard. The Shaftoe
boys eye her warily from across their steaming oatmeal bowls, ready to
Spring into action and wrestle her to the ground if she should fly out of
control. "It would be just ... totally... unacceptable for you to make those
kinds of representations to me and then jet off and cuddle with your
California sweetheart without coming to me first and going through certain
formalities, which would be awkward but which I would hope you would be man
enough to endure. Right?"
"Absolutely right. Never felt otherwise."
"So you can imagine how it looked."
"I guess so. Assuming you have no faith in me whatsoever."
"Well, I'm sorry for that, but I will say that on the flight over I
began to think that it wasn't your fault, that Charlene had somehow gotten
to you."
"What do you mean, gotten to me?"
Amy looks at the ground. "I don't know, she must have some kind of hold
over you."
"I think not." Randy sighs.
"Anyway, I thought that maybe you were just in the process of making a
big, stupid mistake. So when I got on that plane in Tokyo I was just going
to track you down and. . ." She draws a deep breath and mentally counts to
ten. "But when I got off that plane I was to boot just obsessed with this
disgusting image of you getting back together with this woman who obviously
was no damn good for you. And I felt that would be an unfortunate outcome
for you. And I thought I was too late to do anything about it. So, when I
got into town, and pulled around the corner and saw your Acura in the lane
right there in front of me, and you talking on your cellphone "
"I was leaving a message on your answering machine in Manila," Randy
says. "Explaining that I was just coming here to pick up some papers and
there'd been an earthquake only minutes before and so I might be a while."
"Well, I didn't have time to check my messages, which were placed on my
machine too late to accomplish any useful purpose," Amy says, "and so I had
to go on an imperfect knowledge of these events since no one had bothered to
fill me in."
"So..."
"I felt that cooler heads should prevail."
"And therefore you ran me off the road?"
Amy looks a little disappointed. She takes a patient, Montessori
preschool teacher tone of voice. "Now, Randy, think about priorities for
just a minute. I could see the way you were driving."
"I was in a hurry to find out whether I was totally destitute, or
merely bankrupt."
"But because of my imperfect knowledge of the situation I thought maybe
you were rushing into your poor little Charlene's arms. In other words, that
the emotional stress of the earthquake might induce you to who knows what,
relationship wise."
Randy presses his lips together and takes a huge breath through his
nose.
"Compared to that, a little bit of sheet metal just was not very
important to me. Of course, I know that a lot of guys would just stand back
and allow someone they cared about to do something extremely foolish and
damaging, only so that everyone concerned could then drive off to a
miserable and emotionally fucked up future in perfect, shiny cars."
Randy can do nothing but roll his eyes. "Well," he says, "I am sorry
that I blew up at you when I got out of the car."
"You are? Why, exactly? You should be pissed off when a truck driver
runs you off the road."
"I didn't know who you were. I didn't recognize you in this context. It
did not occur to me that you would do what you did with the airplanes."
Amy laughs in a goofy, mischievous way that doesn't seem right here.
Randy feels quizzical and mildly irritated. She looks at him knowingly.
"I'll bet you never blew up at Charlene."
"That's right," Randy says.
"You didn't? In all those years?"
"When we had issues, we talked them out."
Amy snorts. "I'll bet you had really boring " She stops herself.
"Boring what?"
"Never mind."
"Look, I think that in a good relationship, you have to have ways for
working out any issues that might come up." Randy says reasonably.
"And you don't consider ramming your car a good way, I'll bet."
"I can think of some problems with it."
"And you had ways of working out your problems with Charlene that were
very sophisticated. No voices were ever raised. No angry words exchanged."
"No cars rammed."
"Yeah. And that worked, right?"
Randy sighs.
"How about that thing that Charlene wrote about beards?" Amy asks.
"How did you know about that?"
"Looked it up on the Internet. Was that an example of how you guys
worked out your problems? By publishing totally oblique academic papers
blasting the other person?"
"I feel like having some oatmeal."
"So don't apologize to me for blowing up at me."
"That oatmeal would really hit the spot."
"For having, and showing, emotion."
"Chow time!"
"Because that's what it's all about. That's the name of the game, Randy
boy," she says, pulling abreast of him and whacking him between the shoulder
blades in a gesture inherited from her dad. "Mmm, that oatmeal does smell
good."
***
The caravan pulls out of town a little after noon: Randy leading the
way in his damaged Acura, Amy sitting in the passenger seat with her bare,
tanned feet up on the dashboard, spoked with white lines from the straps of
her high tech sandals, oblivious to the danger (alluded to by Randy) of her
legs being snapped by an air bag deployment. The souped up Impala is driven
by its owner of record and chief engineer, Marcus Aurelius Shaftoe. Bringing
up the rear, the almost totally empty U Haul truck, driven by Robin Shaftoe.
Randy has that moving through syrup feeling he gets when enacting some
emotionally huge transition in his life. He puts Samuel Barber's Adagio for
Strings on the Acura's stereo and drives very slowly down the main street of
the town, looking all around at the remains of the coffeehouses, bars, pizza
places, and Thai restaurants where, for many years, he prosecuted his social
life. He should have performed this little ceremony before he first left for
Manila, a year and a half ago. But then he fled as if from the scene of a
crime, or, at least, a grotesque personal embarrassment. He only had a day
or two before he got on the plane, and he spent most of it on the floor of
Avi's basement, dictating whole swathes of the business plan into a
microcassette recorder, as opposed to typing them, because his hands had
gone carpal.
He never even properly said good bye to most of the people he knew
here. He did not speak to them, and barely thought of them, until yesterday
evening, when he pulled up in front of their skewed and occasionally smoking
homes in his crumpled and U Haul orange streaked car with this strange,
wiry, tanned woman who, whatever strengths and shortcomings she might have,
was not Charlene. So, taking everything into account, it was not precisely
the way that Emily Post would have orchestrated a reunion with out of touch
friends. The evening's tour is still a flurry of odd, emotionally charged
images in his memory, but he's beginning to sort it out a little, to run the
numbers as it were, and he would say that of the people he ran into
yesterday people he had exchanged dinner invitations with and loaned tools
to, people whose personal computers he had debugged in exchange for six
packs of good beer, whom he had seen important movies with that at least
three quarters of these people have really no interest whatsoever in seeing
Randy's face again as long as they live, and were made to feel intensely
awkward by his totally unexpected reappearance in their front yards, where
they were throwing impromptu parties with salvaged beer and wine. This
hostility was pretty strongly gender linked, Randy is sad to conclude. Many
of the females wouldn't talk to him it all, or would come near him only the
better to fix him with frosty glares and appraise his presumed new
girlfriend. This only stands to reason, since, before she left for Yale,
Charlene had the better part of a year to popularize her version of events.
She has been able to structure the discourse to her advantage, just like a
dead white male. No doubt Randy has been classified as an abandoner, no
better than the married man who up and walks out on his wife and children
never mind that he was the one who wanted to marry her and have kids with
her. But his whining alert starts to buzz when he thinks about that, so he
backs up and tries another path.
He embodies (he realizes) just about the worst nightmare, for many
women, of what might happen in their lives. As for the men he saw last
night, they were pretty strongly incensed to back whatever stance their
wives adopted. Some of them really did, apparently, feel similarly. Others
eyed him with obvious curiosity. Some were openly friendly. Weirdly, the
ones who adopted the sternest and most terrible Old Testament moral tone
were the Modern Language Association types who believed that everything was
relative and that, for example, polygamy was as valid as monogamy. The
friendliest and most sincere welcome he'd gotten was from Scott, a chemistry
professor, and Laura, a pediatrician, who, after knowing Randy and Charlene
for many years, had one day divulged to Randy, in strict confidence, that,
unbeknownst to the academic community at large, they had been spiriting
their three children off to church every Sunday morning, and even had them
all baptized.
Randy had gone into their house once to help Scott wrestle a freshly
reconditioned clawfoot bathtub up the stairs, and had actually seen the word
GOD written on actual pieces of paper stuck to the walls of their house like
on the refrigerator door, and the walls of the children's bedrooms, where
juvenile art tends to be reposited. Little time wasting projects they had
done during Sunday school pages torn from coloring books, showing a somewhat
more multicultural Jesus than the one Randy had grown up with (curly hair,
e.g.), talking to little biblical kids or assisting disoriented Holy Land
livestock. The sight of this stuff around the house, commingled with normal
(i.e., secular) kid art junk from elementary school, Batman posters, etc.
made Randy feel grossly embarrassed. It was like going to the house of some
supposedly sophisticated people and finding a neon on black velvet Elvis
painting hanging above their state of the art Italian designer furniture.
Definitely a social class thing. And it wasn't like Scott and Laura were
deadly earnest types, and neither were they glassy eyed and foaming at the
mouth. They had after all managed to pass themselves off as members in good
standing of decent academic society for a number of years. They were a bit
quieter than many others, they took up less space in the room, but then that
was normal for people trying to raise three kids, and so they passed.
Randy and Amy had spent a full hour talking to Scott and Laura last
night; they were the only people who made any effort to make Amy feel
welcome. Randy hadn't the faintest idea what these people thought of him and
what he had done, but he could sense right away that, essentially that was
not the issue because even if they thought he had done something evil, they
at least had a framework, a sort of procedure manual, for dealing with
transgressions. To translate it into UNIX system administration terms
(Randy's fundamental metaphor for just about everything), the post modern,
politically correct atheists were like people who had suddenly found
themselves in charge of a big and unfathomably complex computer system (viz,
society) with no documentation or instructions of any kind, and so whose
only way to keep the thing running was to invent and enforce certain rules
with a kind of neo Puritanical rigor, because they were at a loss to deal
with any deviations from what they saw as the norm. Whereas people who were
wired into a church were like UNIX system administrators who, while they
might not understand everything, at least had some documentation, some FAQs
and How tos and README files, providing some guidance on what to do when
things got out of whack. They were, in other words, capable of displaying
adaptability.
"Yo! Randy!" says America Shaftoe. "M.A. is honking at you."
"Why?" Randy asks. He looks in the rearview, sees a reflection of the
ceiling of the Acura, and realizes he is slouched way down in his seat. He
sits up straight, and spots the Impala.
"I think it's because you're driving ten miles an hour," Amy says, "and
M.A. likes to go ninety."
"Okay," Randy says, and, just as simple as that, pushes down on the
accelerator pedal and drives out of town forever.
Chapter 66 BUNDOK
"The name of this place is Bundok," Captain Noda tells him confidently.
"We have chosen it carefully." Goto Dengo and Lieutenant Mori are the only
other persons present in the tent, but he speaks as if addressing a
battalion drawn up on a parade ground.
Goto Dengo has been in the Philippines long enough to understand that
in the local tongue bundok means any patch of rugged mountainous terrain,
but he does not reckon that Captain Noda is the sort who would appreciate
being brought up to speed by a subordinate. If Captain Noda says that this
place is called Bundok, then Bundok it is, and forever will be.
Captain is not an especially high rank, but Noda carries himself as if
he's a general. Somewhere, this man is important. He is pale skinned, as if
he's been spending the winter in Tokyo. His boots have not begun to rot on
his feet yet.
A hard leather attache case rests on the table. He opens one end and
draws out a large piece of folded white cloth. The two lieutenants scurry to
assist him in unfolding this across the tabletop. Goto Dengo is startled by
the feel of the linen. His fingertips are the only part of his body that
will ever touch bedsheets as fine as these. THE MANILA HOTEL is printed
along the selvedge.
A diagram has been sketched out on the bedsheet. Blue black fountain
pen marks, punctuated with spreading blotches where the hand hesitated,
reinforce an earlier stratum of graphite scratches. Someone terribly
important (probably the last person to sleep on this bedsheet) has come in
with a black grease pencil and reshaped the whole thing in his own image
with fat thrusting strokes and hasty notations that look like unraveled
braids in a woman's long hair. This work has been annotated politely by a
fastidious engineer, probably Captain Noda himself, working with ink and a
fine brush.
The heavy with the grease pencil has labeled the entire thing BUNDOK
SITE.
Lieutenants Mori and Goto affix the sheet to the canvas of the tent
with some small, rusty cotter pins that a private brings to them,
triumphantly, in a cracked porcelain coffee cup. Captain Noda watches
calmly, puffing on a cigarette. "Be careful," he jokes, "MacArthur slept on
that sheet!"
Lieutenant Mori dutifully cracks up. Goto Dengo is standing on tiptoe,
holding up the top edge of the sheet, examining the faint pencil marks
underlying the whole diagram. He sees a couple' of little crosses and,
having spent too long in the Philippines, supposes at first that they are
churches. In one place, three of them are clustered together and he imagines
Calvary.
Nearby, diggings have been indicated. He thinks Golgotha: The Place of
the Skull.
Lunatic! He needs to get his mind in order. Lieutenant Mori shoves pins
through the linen with faint popping noises. Goto Dengo steps away, keeping
his back to the Captain, closes his eyes, and gets his bearings. He is
Nipponese. He is in the Southern Resource Zone of Greater Nippon. The cross
shaped marks represent summits. The diggings are some sort of excavation in
which he is destined to play an important role.
The blue black fountain pen marks are rivers. Five of them sprawl from
the triple summit of Bundok. Two of the south going streams combine to make
a larger river. A third stream roughly parallels this one. But the man with
the black grease pencil has drawn a stout line across the stream with such
force that loose curls of black grease can still be seen dangling from the
linen. The fountain pen has been used to scratch out a bulge in the river
just upstream of this mark. Apparently they want to dam the river and make a
pool, or a pond, or a lake; it is difficult to get a sense of scale. It is
labeled, LAKE YAMAMOTO.
Looking more closely, he sees that the larger river the one formed by
the confluence of the two tributaries is also to be dammed, but much farther
south. This has been dubbed TOJO RIVER. But there is no LAKE TOJO. It
appears that this dam will thicken and deepen the Tojo River but not turn it
into an actual lake. Goto Dengo infers from this that the valley of the Tojo
River must be steep sided.
The same basic pattern is repeated everywhere on the bedsheet. Grease
pencil wants a complete perimeter security system. Grease pencil wants one
and only one road leading to this place. Grease pencil wants two areas for
barracks: one big area and one small area. The details have been worked out
by smaller men with better penmanship.
"Worker housing," explains Captain Noda, pointing to the big area with
his swagger stick. "Military barracks," he says, pointing to the small area.
Bending closer, Goto Dengo can see that the larger, worker area is to be
surrounded by an irregular polygon of barbed wire. Actually, two polygons,
one nested within the other, a barren space in between. The vertices of this
polygon are labeled with the names of weapons:
Nambu, Nambu, Model 89 field mortar.
A road or trail, or something, leads from there up the bank of the Tojo
River, past the dam, and terminates at the site of the proposed diggings.
Goto Dengo bends close and peers. The area including both Lake Yamamoto
and the diggings has been surrounded by a tidy square, neatly crosshatched
with Captain Noda's brush and ink, and labeled "special security zone."
He jerks back as Captain Noda shoves the end of his stick into the
narrow space between his nose and the bedsheet, and whacks on the Special
Security Zone a few times. Concentric ripples speed outwards, like shock
waves from dynamite. "This area is your responsibility, Lieutenant Goto." He
moves the pointer south and taps on the zone farther down the Tojo River,
with the worker housing and the barracks. "This is Lieutenant Mori's." He
circles the whole area, windmilling his arm to cover the entire security
perimeter and the road that gives access to it. "The entirety is mine. I
report to Manila. So, it is a very small chain of command for such a large
area. Secrecy is of paramount importance. Your first and highest order is to
preserve absolute secrecy at all costs."
Lieutenants Mori and Goto blurt "Hai!" and bow.
Addressing Mori, Captain Noda continues: "The housing area will appear
to be a prison camp for special prisoners. Its existence may be known to
some on the outside the local people will see trucks going in and out along
the road and will guess as much." Turning to Goto Dengo, he says: "The
existence of the Special Security Zone, however, will be totally unknown to
the outside world. Your work will proceed under the cover of the jungle,
which is extraordinarily dense here. It will be invisible to the enemy's
observation planes."
Lieutenant Mori jerks back as if a bug has just flown into his eye. To
him, the idea of enemy observation planes over Luzon is completely bizarre.
MacArthur is nowhere near the Philippines.
Goto Dengo, on the other hand, has been to New Guinea. He knows what
happens to Nipponese Army units who try to resist MacArthur in the jungles
of the Southwest Pacific. He knows that MacArthur is coming, and obviously
so does Captain Noda. More importantly, so do the men in Tokyo who sent Noda
down to accomplish this mission whatever it is.
They know. Everyone knows we are losing the war.
Everyone important, that is.
"Lieutenant Goto, you are not to discuss any details of your work with
Lieutenant Mori except insofar as they pertain to pure logistics: road
building, worker schedules, and so on." Noda is addressing this to both men;
the clear implication is that if Goto gets loose lipped, Mori is expected to
turn him in. "Lieutenant Mori, you are dismissed!"
Mori grunts out another "Hai!" and makes himself scarce.
Lieutenant Goto bows. "Captain Noda, please permit me to say that I am
honored to have been selected to construct these fortifications."
The stoic look on Noda's face dissolves for a moment. He turns away
from Goto Dengo and paces across the floor of the tent for a moment,
thinking, then turns to face him again. "It is not a fortification."
Goto Dengo is practically startled right out of his boots for a moment.
Then he thinks, a gold mine! They must have discovered an immense gold
deposit in this valley. Or diamonds?
"You must not think as if you were building a fortification," Noda says
solemnly.
"A mine?" Goto Dengo says. But he says it weakly. He is already
realizing that it does not make sense. It would be insane to put so much
effort into mining gold or diamonds at this point in the war. Nippon needs
steel, rubber, and petroleum, not jewelry.
Perhaps some new super weapon? His heart nearly bursts from excitement.
But Captain Noda's stare is as bleak as the fat muzzle of a tommy gun.
"It is a long term storage facility for vital war making materials,"
Captain Noda finally says.
He goes on to explain, in general terms, how the facility is to be
built. It is to be a network of intersecting shafts bored through hard
volcanic rock. Its dimensions are surprisingly small given the amount of
effort that will be spent on building it. They won't be able to store much
here: enough ammunition for a regiment to fight for a week, perhaps,
assuming that they make minimal use of heavy weapons, and get their food off
the land. But those supplies will be almost inconceivably well protected.
Goto Dengo sleeps that night in a hammock stretched between two trees,
protected by mosquito netting. The jungle emits a fantastic din.
Captain Noda's sketches looked familiar, and he is trying to place
them. Just as he's falling asleep, he remembers cutaway views of the
Pyramids of Egypt that his father had shown him in a picture book, showing
the design of the pharaoh's tombs.
A horrible thought comes to him then: he is building a tomb for the
emperor. When Nippon falls to MacArthur, Hirohito will carry out the rite of
seppuku. His body will be flown out of Nippon and brought to Bundok and
buried in the chamber that Goto Dengo is building. He has a nightmare of
being buried alive in a black chamber, the grey image of the emperor's face
fading to black as the last brick is rammed home on its bed of mortar.
He sits in absolute darkness, knowing that Hirohito is there with him,
afraid to move.
He is a little boy in an abandoned mine chamber, naked and soaked with
icy water. His flashlight has died. Before it flickered out, he thought he
saw the face of a demon. Now he hears only the drip, drip of ground water
into the sump. He can stay here and die, or he can dive into the water again
and swim back.
When he wakes up, it's raining and the sun has climbed free of the
horizon somewhere. He rolls out of his hammock and walks naked in the warm
rain to wash himself. Goto Dengo has a job to do.
Chapter 67 COMPUTER
Lieutenant Colonel Earl Comstock of The Electrical Till Corporation and
the United States Army, in that order, prepares for today's routine briefing
from his subordinate, Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse, much as a test pilot
readies himself to be ripped into the stratosphere with a hot rocket engine
under his ass. He turns in early the night before, wakes up late, talks to
his aide and makes sure that (a) plenty of hot coffee is available and (b)
none of it will be given to Waterhouse. He gets two wire recorders set up in
the room, in case either goes on the fritz, and brings in a team of three
crack stenographers with loads of technical savvy. He has a couple of
fellows in his section also ETC employees during peacetime who are real math
whizzes, so he brings them in too. He gives them a little pep talk:
"I do not expect you fellows to understand what the fuck Waterhouse is
talking about. I'm gonna be running after him as fast as I can. You just hug
his legs and hold on for dear life so that I can sort of keep his backside
in view as long as possible." Comstock is proud of this analogy, but the
math whizzes seem baffled. Testily, he fills them in on the always tricky
literal vs. figurative dichotomy. Only twenty minutes remain before
Waterhouse's arrival; right on schedule, Comstock's aide comes through the
room with a tray of benzedrine tablets. Comstock takes two, attempting to
lead by example. "Where's my darn chalkboard team?" he demands, as the
powerful stimulant begins to rev up his pulse. Into the room come two
privates equipped with blackboard erasers and damp chamois cloths, plus a
three man photography team. They set up a pair of cameras aimed at the
chalkboard, plus a couple of strobe lights, and lay in a healthy stock of
film rolls.
He checks his watch. They are running five minutes behind schedule. He
looks out the window and sees that his jeep has returned; Waterhouse must be
in the building. "Where is the extraction team?" he demands.
Sergeant Graves is there a few moments later. "Sir, we went to the
church as directed, and located him, and, uh " He coughs against the back of
his hand.
"And what?"
"And who is more like it, sir," says Sergeant Graves, sotto voce. "He's
in the lavatory right now, cleaning up, if you know what I mean." He winks.
"Ohhhh," says Earl Comstock, cottoning on to it.
"After all," Sergeant Graves says, "you can't blow out the rusty pipes
of your organ unless you have a nice little assistant to get the job
properly done."
Comstock tenses. "Sergeant Graves it is critically important for me to
know did the job get properly done?"
Graves furrows his brow, as if pained by the very question. "Oh, by all
means sir. We wouldn't dream of interrupting such an operation. That's why
we are late begging your pardon."
"Don't mention it," Comstock stays, slapping Graves heartily on the
shoulder. "That is why I try to give my men broad discretion. It has been my
opinion for quite some time that Waterhouse is badly in need of some
relaxation. He concentrates a little too hard on his work. Sometimes I
frankly cannot tell whether he is saying something very brilliant, or just
totally incoherent. And I think you have made a pivotal, Sergeant Graves, a
pivotal contribution to today's meeting by having the good sense to stand
off long enough for Waterhouse's affairs to be set in order." Comstock
realizes that he is breathing very fast, and his heart is pounding madly.
Perhaps he overdid the benzedrine?
Waterhouse drifts into the room ten minutes later on flaccid legs, as
if he had inadvertently left his own skeleton behind in bed. He barely makes
it to his designated seat and thuds into it like a sack of guts, popping a
few strands of wicker out of its bottom. He is breathing raggedly through
his mouth, blinking heavy eyelids frequently.
"Looks like today's going to be a milk run, men!" Comstock announces
brightly. Everyone except Waterhouse snickers. Waterhouse has been in the
building for a quarter of an hour, and it took at least that long for
Sergeant Graves to drive him here from the church, and so it has been at
least half an hour. And yet, to look at him, you'd think that it had
happened five seconds ago.
"Someone pour that man a cup of coffee!" Comstock orders. Someone does.
Being in the military is amazing; you give orders, and things happen.
Waterhouse does not drink, or even touch, the coffee, but at least it gives
his eyes something to focus on. Those orbs wander around under their rumpled
lids for a while, like ack ack guns trying to track a house fly, before
finally fixing on the white coffee mug. Waterhouse clears his throat at some
length, as if preparing to speak, and the room goes silent. It remains
silent for about thirty seconds. Then Waterhouse mumbles something that
sounds like "coy."
The stenographers take it down in unison.
"Beg pardon?" says Comstock.
One of the math whizzes says, "He might be talking about Coy Functions.
I think I saw them when I was flipping through a graduate math textbook
once."
"I thought he was saying 'quantum' something," says the other ETC man.
"Coffee," Waterhouse says, and heaves a deep sigh.
"Waterhouse," says Comstock, "how many fingers am I holding up?"
Waterhouse seems to realize that there are other people in the room now. He
closes his mouth, and his nostrils flare as air begins to rush through them.
He tries to move one of his hands, realizes that he is sitting on it, and
shifts heavily to and fro until it flops loose. He gets his eyes all the way
open, providing a really good, clear view of that coffee mug. He yawns,
stretches, and farts.
"The Nipponese cryptosystem that we call Azure is the same thing as the
German system that we call Pufferfish," he announces. "Both of them are also
related somehow to another, newer cryptosystem I have dubbed Arethusa. All
of these have something to do with gold. Probably gold mining operations of
some sort. In the Philippines."
Whammo! The stenographers go into action. The photographer fires off
his strobes, even though there's nothing to take pictures of just nerves.
Comstock glances beadily at his wire recorders, makes sure those reels are
spinning. He is a little unnerved by how rapidly Waterhouse is coming up to
speed. But one of the responsibilities of leadership is to mask one's own
fears, to project confidence at all times. Comstock grins and says, "You
sound awfully sure of yourself, Waterhouse! I wonder if you can get me to
feel that same level of confidence."
Waterhouse frowns at the coffee mug. "Well, it's all math," he says.
"If the math works, why then you should be sure of yourself. That's the
whole point of math."
"So you have a mathematical basis for making this assertion?"
"Assertions," Waterhouse says. "Assertion number one is that Pufferfish
and Azure are different names for the same cryptosystem. Assertion number
two is that Pufferfish/Azure is a cousin of Arethusa. Three: all of these
cryptosystems are related to gold. Four: mining. Five: Philippines."
"Maybe you could just chalk those up on the blackboard as you go
along," Comstock says edgily.
"Glad to," Waterhouse says. He stands up and turns toward the
blackboard, freezes for a couple of seconds, then turns back around, lunges
for the coffee mug, and drains it before Comstock or any of his aides can
rip it from his grasp. Tactical error! Then Waterhouse chalks up his
assertions. The photographer records it. The privates massage their chamois
cloths and glance nervously in Comstock's direction.
"Now, you have some sort of, er, mathematical proof for each one of
these assertions?" Comstock asks. Math isn't his bag, but running meetings
is, and what Waterhouse has just chalked up on that board looks, to him,
like the rudiments of an agenda. And Comstock feels a lot better when he has
an agenda. Without an agenda, he's like a grunt running around in the jungle
without a map or a weapon.
"Well, sir, that's one way to look at it," Waterhouse says after some
thought. "But it is much more elegant to view all of these as corollaries
stemming from the same underlying theorem."
"Are you telling me that you have succeeded in breaking Azure? Because
if so, congratulations are in order!" Comstock says.
"No. It is still unbroken. But I can extract information from it."
This is the moment where the joystick snaps off in Comstock's hand.
Still, he can pound haplessly on the control panel. "Well, would you mind
taking them one at a time, at least?"
"Well, let's just take, for example, Assertion Four, which is that
Azure/Pufferfish has something to do with mining." Waterhouse sketches out a
freehand map of the Southwest Pacific theater of operations, from Burma to
the Solomons, from Nippon to New Zealand. It takes him about sixty seconds.
Just for grins, Comstock pulls a printed map out of his clipboard and
compares it against Waterhouse's version. They are basically identical.
Waterhouse draws a circle with a letter A in it at the entrance to
Manila Bay. "This is one of the stations that transmits Azure messages."
"You know that from huffduff, correct?"
"That's right."
"Is that on Corregidor?"
"One of the smaller islands near Corregidor."
Waterhouse draws another circle A in Manila itself, one in Tokyo, one
in Rabaul, one in Penang, one in the Indian Ocean.
"What's that?" Comstock asks.
"We picked up an Azure transmission from a German U boat here,"
Waterhouse says.
"How do you know it was a German U boat?"
"Recognized the fist," Waterhouse says. "So, this is the spatial
arrangement of Azure transmitters not counting the stations in Europe that
are making Pufferfish transmissions, and hence, according to Assertion One,
are part of the same network. Anyway, now let us say that an Azure message
originates from Tokyo on a certain date. We don't know what it says, because
we haven't broken Azure yet. We just know that the message went out to these
places." Waterhouse draws lines radiating downward from Tokyo to Manila,
Rabaul, Penang. "Now, each one of these cities is a major military base.
Consequently, each is the source of a steady stream of traffic,
communicating with all of the Nipponese bases in its region." Waterhouse
draws shorter lines radiating from Manila to various locations in the
Philippines, and from Rabaul to New Guinea and the Solomons.
"Correction, Waterhouse," Comstock says. "We own New Guinea now."
"But I'm going back in time!" Waterhouse says. "Back to 1943, when
there were Nip bases all along the north coast of New Guinea, and through
the Solomons. So, let us say that within a brief window of time following
this Azure message from Tokyo, a number of messages are transmitted from
places like Rabaul and Manila to smaller bases in those areas. Some of them
are in ciphers that we have learned how to break. Now, it is not
unreasonable to suppose that some of these messages were sent out as a
consequence of whatever orders were contained in that Azure message."
"But those places send out thousands of messages a day," Comstock
protests. "What makes you think that you can pick out the messages that are
a consequence of the Azure orders?"
"It's just a brute force statistics problem," Waterhouse says. "Suppose
that Tokyo sent the Azure message to Rabaul on October 15th, 1943. Now,
suppose I take all of the messages that were sent out from Rabaul on October
14th and I index them in various ways: what destinations they were
transmitted to, how long they were, and, if we were able to decrypt them,
what their subject matter was. Were they orders for troop movements? Supply
shipments? Changes in tactics or procedures? Then, I take all of the
messages that were sent out from Rabaul on October 16th the day after the
Azure message came in from Tokyo and I run exactly the same statistical
analysis on them."
Waterhouse steps back from the chalkboard and turns into a blinding
fusillade of strobe lights. "You see, it is all about information flow.
Information flows from Tokyo to Rabaul. We don't know what the information
was. But it will, in some way, influence what Rabaul does afterwards. Rabaul
is changed, irrevocably, by the arrival of that information, and by
comparing Rabaul's observed behavior before and after that change, we can
make inferences."
"Such as?" Comstock says warily.
Waterhouse shrugs. "The differences are very slight. They hardly stand
out from the noise. Over the course of the war, thirty one Azure messages
have gone out from Tokyo, so I have that many data sets to work with. Any
one data set by itself might not tell me anything. But when I combine all of
the data sets together giving me greater depth then I can see some patterns.
And one of the patterns that I most definitely see is that, on the day after
an Azure message went out to, say, Rabaul, Rabaul was much more likely to
transmit messages having to do with mining engineers. This has ramifications
that can be traced all the way back until the loop is closed."
"Loop is closed?"
"Okay. Let's take it from the top. Azure message goes from Tokyo to
Rabaul," Waterhouse says, drawing a heavy line down the chalkboard joining
those two cities. "The next day, a message in some other crypto system one
that we have broken goes from Rabaul to a submarine operating out of a base
here, in the Moluccas. The message states that the submarine is to proceed
to an outpost on the north coast of New Guinea and pick up four passengers,
who are identified by name. From our archives, we know who these men are:
three aircraft mechanics and one mining engineer. A few days later, the
submarine transmits from the Bismarck Sea stating that it has picked those
men up. A few days after that, our waterfront spies in Manila inform us that
the same submarine has showed up there. On the same day, another Azure
message is transmitted from Manila back up to Tokyo," Waterhouse concludes,
adding a final line to the polygon, "closing the loop."
"But that could all be a series of random, unconnected events," says
one of Comstock's math whizzes, before Comstock can say it. "The Nips are
desperate for aircraft mechanics. There's nothing unusual about this kind of
message traffic."
"But there is something unusual about the patterns," Waterhouse says.
"If, a few months later, another submarine is sent, in the same way, to pick
up some mining engineers and some surveyors who have been trapped in Rabaul,
and, upon its arrival in Manila, another Azure message is sent from Manila
up to Tokyo, it begins to look very suspicious."
"I don't know," Comstock stays, shaking his head. "I'm not sure if I
can sell this to the General's staff. It's too much of a fishing
expedition."
"Correction, sir, it was a fishing expedition. But now I'm back from
the fishing expedition, and I've got the fish!" Waterhouse storms out of the
room and down the hall toward his lab half the fucking wing. Good thing
Australia is a big continent, because Waterhouse is going to take all of it
if he's not held sternly in check. Fifteen seconds later he's back with a
stack of ETC cards a foot high, which he pounds down on the tabletop. "It's
all right here."
Comstock has never fired a gun in his life, but he knows card punching
and reading machinery like a jarhead knows his Springfield, and he's not
impressed. "Waterhouse, that stack of cards carries about as much
information as a letter home to Mom. Are you trying to tell me "
"No, this is just the summary. The result of the statistical analysis."
"Why the hell did you punch it onto ETC cards? Why not just turn in a
plain old typed report like everyone else?"
"I didn't punch it," Waterhouse says. "The machine punched it."
"The machine punched it," Comstock says very slowly.
"Yes. When it was done performing the analysis." Waterhouse suddenly
breaks into his braying laugh. "You didn't think this was the raw inputs,
did you?"
"Well, I "
"The inputs filled several rooms. I had to run almost every message we
have intercepted through the whole war through this analysis. Re member all
those trucks I requisitioned a few weeks ago? Those trucks were just to
carry the cards back and forth from storage."
"Jesus Christ!" Comstock says. He remembers the trucks now, their
incessant comings and goings, fender benders in the motor pool, exhaust
fumes coming through his window, the enlisted men shoving heavy carts up and
down the hallways, laden with boxes. Running over people's feet. Scaring the
secretaries.
And the noise. The noise, the noise, from Waterhouse's goddamned
machine. Flowerpots vibrating their way off file cabinets, standing waves in
coffee cups.
"Wait a sec," says one of the ETC men, with the nasal skepticism of a
man who has just realized he's being bullshitted. "I saw those trucks. I saw
those cards. Are you trying to get us to believe that you were actually
running a statistical analysis on each and every single one of those message
decrypts?"
Waterhouse looks a little defensive. "Well, that was the only way to do
it!"
Comstock's math whiz is homing in for the kill now. "I agree that the
only way to accomplish the analysis that is implied by that" he waves at the
mandala of intersecting polygons on Waterhouse's map "is to go through all
of those truckloads of old decrypts one by one. That is clear. That is not
what we are objecting to."
"What are you objecting to, then?"
The whiz laughs angrily. "I'm just worried about the inconvenient fact
that there is no machine in the whole world that is capable of processing
all of that data, that fast."
"Didn't you hear the noise?" Waterhouse asks.
"We all heard the goddamn noise," Comstock says. "What does that have
to do with anything?"
"Oh," Waterhouse says, and rolls his eyes at his own stupidity. "That's
right. Sorry. Maybe I should have explained that part first."
"What part?" Comstock asks.
"Dr. Turing, of Cambridge University, has pointed out that bobbadah
bobbadah hoe daddy yanga langa furjeezama bing jingle oh yeah," Waterhouse
says, or words to that effect. He pauses for breath, and turns fatefully
towards the blackboard. "Do you mind if I erase this?" A private lunges
forward with an eraser. Comstock sinks into a chair and grips its arms. A
stenographer reaches for a benzedrine tablet. An ETC man chomps down on a
number two lead pencil like a dog on a drumstick. Strobes flash. Waterhouse
grabs a fresh stick of chalk, reaches up, and presses its tip to the
immaculate slate. The crisp edge of the stick fractures with a slight pop,
and a tiny spray of chalk particles drifts to the floor spreading into a
narrow parabolic cloud. Waterhouse bows his head for a minute, like a priest
getting ready to stride up the aisle, and then draws a deep breath.
The benzedrine wears off five hours later and Comstock finds himself
sprawled across a table in a room filled with haggard, exhausted men.
Waterhouse and the privates are pasty with chalk dust, giving them a
ghoulish appearance. The stenographers are surrounded with used pads, and
frequently stop writing to flap their limp hands in the air like white
flags. The wire recorders are spinning uselessly, one reel full and one
empty. Only the photographer is still going strong, hitting that strobe
every time Waterhouse manages to fill the chalkboard.
Everything smells like underarm sweat. Comstock realizes that
Waterhouse is looking at him expectantly. "See?" Waterhouse asks.
Comstock sits up and glances furtively at his own legal pad, where he
hoped to draw up an agenda. He sees Waterhouse's four assertions, which he
copied down during the first five minutes of the meeting, and then nothing
except a tangled field of spiky doodles surrounding the words BURY and
DISINTER.
It behooves Comstock to say something. "This thing, the, uh, the
burying procedure, that's the, uh "
"The key feature!" Waterhouse says brightly. "See, these ETC card
machines are great for input and output. We've got that covered. The logic
elements are straightforward enough. What was needed was a way to give the
machine memory, so that it could, to use Turing's terminology, bury data
quickly, and just as quickly disinter it. So I made one of those. It is an
electrical device, but its underlying principles would be familiar to any
organ maker."
"Could I, uh, see it?" Comstock asks.
"Sure! It's down in my lab."
Going to see it is more complicated. First everyone has to use the
toilet, then the cameras and strobes have to be moved down to the lab and
set up. When they've all filed in, Waterhouse is standing next to a giant
rack of pipes with thousands of wires hanging out of it.
"That's it?" Comstock says, when the group is finally assembled. Pea
sized drops of mercury are scattered around the floor like ball bearings.
The flat soles of Comstock's shoes explode them into bursts rolling in all
directions.
"That's it."
"What did you call it again?"
"The RAM," Waterhouse says. "Random Access Memory. I was going to put a
picture of a ram on it. Y'know, one of those sheeps with the big huge curly
horns?"
"Yes."
"But I didn't have time, and I'm not that good at drawing pictures."
Each pipe is four inches in diameter and thirty two feet long. There must be
a hundred of them, at least Comstock is trying to remember that requisition
that he signed, months ago Waterhouse had ordered enough drain pipe to plumb
a whole goddamn military base.
The pipes are laid out horizontally, like a rank of organ pipes that
has been knocked flat. Stuck into one end of each pipe is a little paper
speaker ripped from an old radio.
"The speaker plays a signal a note that resonates in the pipe, and
creates a standing wave," Waterhouse says. "That means that in some parts of
the pipe, the air pressure is low, and in other parts it is high." He is
backing down the length of one of the pipes, making chopping motions with
his hand. "These U tubes are full of mercury." He points to one of several U
shaped glass tubes that are plumbed into the bottom of the long pipe.
"I can see that very plainly, Waterhouse," Comstock says. "Could you
keep backing up to the next one?" he requests, peering over the
photographers' shoulder through the viewfinder. "You're blocking my view
that's better farther farther " because he can still see Waterhouse's
shadow. "That's good. Hit it!"
The photographer pulls the trigger, the strobe flares.
"If the air pressure in the organ pipe is high, it pushes the mercury
down a little bit. If it's low, it sucks the mercury up. I put an electrical
contact into each U tube just a couple of wires separated by an air gap. If
those wires are high and dry (like because high air pressure in the organ
pipe is shoving the mercury down away from them), no current flows. But if
they are immersed in the mercury (because low air pressure in the organ pipe
is sucking the mercury up to cover them), then current flows between them,
because mercury conducts electricity! So the U tubes produce a set of binary
digits that is like a picture of the standing wave a graph of the harmonics
that make up the musical note that is being played on the speaker. We feed
that vector back to the oscillator circuit that is driving the speaker, so
that the vector of bits keeps refreshing itself forever, unless the machine
decides to write a new pattern of bits into it."
"Oh, so the ETC machinery actually can control this thing?" Comstock
asks.
Again with the laugh. "That's the whole point! This is where the logic
boards bury and disinter the data!" Waterhouse says. "I'll show you!" And
before Comstock can order him not to, Waterhouse has nodded to a corporal
standing at the other end of the room, wearing the protective earmuffs that
are generally issued to the men who fire the very largest artillery. That
corporal nods and hits a switch. Waterhouse slams his hands over his ears
and grins, showing a little too much gum for Comstock's taste, and then time
stops, or something, as all of those pipes come alive playing variations on
the same low C.
It's all Comstock can do not to drop to his knees; he has his hands
over his ears, of course, but the sound's not really coming in through his
ears, it is entering his torso directly, like X rays. Hot sonic tongs are
rummaging through his viscera, beads of sweat being vibrated loose from his
scalp, his nuts are hopping around like Mexican jumping beans. The crescents
of mercury in all those U tubes are shifting up and down, opening and
closing the contacts, but systematically: it is not turbulent sloshing
around, but a coherent progression of discrete controlled shiftings,
informed by some program.
Comstock would draw his sidearm and put a bullet through Waterhouse's
head, but he'd have to take one hand off one ear. Finally it stops.
"The machine just calculated the first hundred numbers in the Fibonacci
sequence," Waterhouse says.
"As I understand it, this RAM is just the part where you bury and
disinter the data," Comstock says, trying to master the higher harmonics in
his own voice, trying to sound and act as if he saw this kind of thing
daily. "If you had to give a name to the whole apparatus, what would you
call it?"
"Hmmm," Waterhouse says. "Well, its basic job is to perform
mathematical calculations like a computer."
Comstock snorts. "A computer is a human being."
"Well ... this machine uses binary digits to do its computing. I
suppose you could call it a digital computer."
Comstock writes it out in block letters on his legal pad: DIGITAL
COMPUTER.
"Is this going to go into your report?" Waterhouse asks brightly.
Comstock almost blurts report? This is my report! Then a foggy memory
comes back to him. Something about Azure. Something about gold mines. "Oh,
yeah," he murmurs. Oh, yeah, there's a war on. He considers it. "Nah. Now
that you mention it, this isn't even a footnote." He looks significantly at
his pair of hand picked math whizzes, who are gazing at the RAM like a
couple of provincial Judean sheep shearers getting their first look at the
Ark of the Covenant. "We'll probably just keep these photos for the
archives. You know how the military is with its archives."
Waterhouse goes into that dreadful laugh again.
"Do you have anything else to report before we adjourn?" Comstock says,
desperate to silence him.
"Well, this work has given me some new ideas on information theory
which you might find interesting "
"Write them down. Send them to me."
"There's one other thing. I don't know if it is really germane here,
but "
"What is it, Waterhouse?"
"Uh, well ... it seems that I'm engaged to be married!"
Chapter 68 CARAVAN
Randy has lost all he owned, but gained an entourage. Amy has decided
that she might as well come north with him, as long as she happens to be on
this side of the Pacific Ocean.
This makes him happy. The Shaftoe boys, Robin and Marcus Aurelius,
consider themselves invited along like much else that in other families
would be the subject of extended debate, this goes without saying,
apparently.
This makes it imperative that they drive the thousand or so miles to
Whitman, Washington, because the Shaftoe boys are not really the sort who
are in position to simply drop the hot rod off at the Park 'n' Ride, run
into the airport, and demand tickets on the next flight to Spokane. Marcus
Aurelius is a college sophomore on an ROTC scholarship and Robin's attending
some kind of military prep school. But even if they did have that kind of
money rattling around in their pockets, actually spending it would offend
their native frugality. Or so Randy assumes, for the first couple of days.
It's the obvious assumption to make, given that the Cash Flow Issue seems
always to be on their mind. For example the boys made Herculean efforts to
consume every spoonful of the gut busting vat of oatmeal cooked by Amy the
morning after the quake, and finding it beyond their endurance they
carefully decanted the remainder into a Ziploc bag while fretting at length
about the high cost of Ziploc bags and didn't Randy have any old glass jelly
jars or something, some where in the basement, that might be unbroken and
usable for this purpose.
Randy has had plenty of time to disabuse himself of this fallacy
(namely that their airplane avoidance is dictated by financial constraints)
and to draw the real reason out of them after they have dropped Amy's U Haul
off near SFO and begun to caravan northwards in the Acura and the jacked up,
thundering Impala. People are rotated from car to car whenever they stop,
according to some system that no one is divulging to Randy, but that always
situates him alone in a car with either Robin or Marcus Aurelius. Both of
them are too dignified to spill their guts on light pretexts, and too polite
to assume that Randy gives a shit about anything they think, and perhaps too
basically suspicious of Randy to share a whole lot with him. Some kind of
bonding is required first. The ice doesn't start to break up until Day 2 of
the drive, after they have all slept in an Interstate 5 rest area near
Redding in the reclined seats of the vehicles (each of the Shaftoe boys
solemnly and separately informs him that the chain of lodgings known as
Motel 6 is one giant con game, that if those rooms ever did cost six dollars
a night, which is doubtful, they certainly don't now, and many are the
innocent young travelers who have been drawn in by the siren calls of those
fraudulent signs rising above interstate cloverleaves; they try to sound
impartial and wise about it, but the way their faces flush and their eyes
glance aside and their voices rise makes Randy suspect he is actually
listening to some thinly veiled personal and recent history). Again without
anyone saying anything, it is taken to be obvious that Amy, as the female,
will require her own car to sleep in, which puts Randy in the hot rod with
Robin and Marcus Aurelius; As the guest, Randy gets the reclining passenger
seat, the best bed in the house, and M.A. curls up on the back seat while
Robin, the youngest, sleeps behind the steering wheel. For about the first
thirty seconds after the dome light has gone off and the Shaftoes have
finished saying their prayers out loud, Randy lies there feeling the Impala
rock on its suspension from the wake blasts of passing long haul semis and
feels considerably more alienated than he did while trying to sleep in the
jeepney in the jungle town in northern Luzon. Then he opens his eyes and
it's morning, and Robin's out there doing one handed pushups in the dust.
"When we get there," Robin pants, after he's finished, "do you s'pose
you could show me that video on the Internet thing you were telling me
about?" He asks it with all due boyishness. Then suddenly he looks abashed
and adds, "Unless it's like real expensive or something."
"It's free. I'll show it to you," Randy says. "Let's get some
breakfast." It goes without saying that McDonald's and their ilk charge
scandalously more for, e.g., a dish of hash browns than one would pay for
the equivalent mass of potatoes in raw form at (if you think money grows on
trees) Safeway or (if you have any kind of decent regard for the value of a
buck) farmer's markets situated at lonely interchanges in the boon docks. So
for breakfast they must drive to a small town (grocery stores in big places
like Redding being a tipoff) and find an actual grocery store (convenience
stores being etc., etc., etc.) and purchase breakfast in the most elemental
form conceivable (deeply discounted well past their prime bananas that are
not even in a bunch but swept up from the floor, or something, and gathered
together in a gaily printed paper sack, and generic Cheerio knockoffs in a
tubular bag, and a box of generic powdered milk) and eat it from tin
military surplus messkits that the Shaftoes produce with admirable coolness
from the hot rod's trunk, a ferrous, oily chasm all a bang with tire chains,
battered ammo boxes, and, unless Randy's eyes are playing tricks on him, a
pair of samurai swords.
Anyway, this is all done pretty nonchalantly, and not like they are
trying to test Randy's mettle or anything, and so he doesn't imagine that it
qualifies as a true bonding experience. If, hypothetically, the Impala
throws a rod in the desert and they have to fix it with parts stolen from a
nearby junkyard guarded by rabid dogs and shotgun packing gypsies, that
would be a bonding experience. But Randy's wrong. On Day 2 the Shaftoes (the
male ones anyway) open up to him a bit.
It seems (and this is abstracted from many hours of conversation) that
when you are an able bodied young male Shaftoe and you are a stranger in a
strange land with a car that you have, with plenty of advice and elbow
grease from your extended family, fixed up pretty nicely, the idea of
parking it in favor of some other mode of conveyance is, in addition to
obvious financial folly, some kind of moral failure, pure and simple. That's
why they are driving to Whitman, Washington. But why (one of them finally
summons the boldness to inquire) why are they taking two cars? There is
plenty of room in the Impala for four. Randy has gotten the sense all along
that the Shaftoes are dismayed by Randy's insistence on taking the redundant
and repulsively scarred Acura, and that only their formidable politeness has
prevented them from pointing out the sheer madness of it. "I do not imagine
that we will stay together beyond Whitman," Randy says (after being around
these guys for a couple of days he has begun to fall out of the habit of
using contractions those tawdry shortcuts of the verbally lazy and
pathologically rushed). "If we have two cars, we can split up at that
point."
"The drive is not that far, Randall," says Robin, slapping the Impala's
gas pedal against the floor to rip the transmission into passing gear, and
careening around a gasoline tanker. From the initial "Sir" and "Mr.
Waterhouse," Randy has been able to talk them down into addressing him by
his first name, but they have agreed to it only on the condition
(apparently) that they use the full "Randall" instead of "Randy." Early
attempts to use "Randall Lawrence" as a compromise were vigorously denounced
by Randy, and so "Randall" it is for now. "M.A. and I would be happy to drop
you back off at the San Francisco Airport or, uh, wherever you elected to
park your Acura."
"Where else would I park it?" Randy says, not getting this last bit.
"Well, I mean that you could probably find a place where you could park
it free of charge for a few days, if you did some looking around. Assuming
you wanted to keep it." He adds encouragingly, "That Acura probably would
have some decent resale value even considering all the body work it needs."
Only at this point does Randy figure out that the Shaftoes believe him
to be utterly destitute, helpless, and adrift in the wide world. A total
charity case. He recalls, now, seeing them discard a whole sack of
McDonald's wrappers when they arrived at his house. This whole austerity
binge has been concocted to avoid putting financial pressure on Randy.
Robin and M.A. have been observing him carefully, talking about him,
thinking about him. They happen to have made some faulty assumptions, and
come to some wrong conclusions, but all the same, they have shown more
sophistication than Randy was giving them credit for. This causes Randy to
go back and review the conversations he has had with them the last couple of
days, just to get some idea of what other interesting and complicated things
might have been going on in their heads. M.A. is a pretty straightforward by
the book type, the kind who'll get good grades and fit well into any kind of
hierarchical organization. Robin, on the other hand, is more of a wild card.
He has the makings of either a total loser or a successful entrepreneur, or
maybe one of those guys who will oscillate between those two poles. Randy
realizes now, in retrospect, that he has spilled a hell of a lot of
information to Robin, in just a couple of days, about the Internet and
electronic money and digital currency and the new global economy. Randy's
mental state is such that he is prone to babbling aimlessly for hours at a
time. Robin has hoovered it all up.
To Randy it's just been aimless ventilating. He hasn't even considered,
until now, what effect it has been exerting on the trajectory of Robin
Shaftoe's life. Randall Lawrence Waterhouse hates Star Trek and avoids
people who don't hate it, but even so he has seen just about every episode
of the damn thing, and he feels, at this moment, like the Federation
scientist who beams down to a primitive planet and thoughtlessly teaches an
opportunistic pre Enlightenment yahoo how to construct a phaser cannon from
commonly available materials.
Randy still has some money. He cannot begin to guess how he can convey
this fact to these guys without committing some grievous protocol error, so
the next time they stop for gas, he asks Amy to convey it to them. He thinks
(based on his hazy understanding of the rotation system) that it's his turn
to be alone in a car with Amy, but if Amy is going to convey this data about
the money to one of the boys, she'll need to spend the next leg with him,
because it must be conveyed indirectly, which will take a while, and because
of that indirectness, time will then need to be allotted for it to sink in.
But three hours later, then, at the gas stop after that, it naturally
follows that M.A. and Robin must be placed together in the same car, so that
Robin (who now knows and understands, and who gets out of the Impala with a
big grin on his face and punches Randy affably on the shoulder) can pass the
message on to M.A., whose recent conversational gambits vis à vis Randy made
no sense at all until Randy figured out that they thought of him as a beggar
and that M.A. was trying in a really oblique way to find out if Randy needed
to share any of M.A.'s personal toiletry items. At any rate, Randy and Amy
get into the Acura and they head north into Oregon, trying to keep up with
the hot rod.
"Well, it's nice to have a chance to spend some time with you," Randy
says. His back is still a bit sore from where Amy struck him whilst
asserting, the other morning, that expressing one's feelings was "the name
of the game." So he figures he will express those aspects of his feelings
least likely to get him in serious trouble.
"Ah figgered you 'n' ah'ud have plenny a tahm to chew the rag," Amy
says, having reverted utterly to the tongue of her ancestors in the last
couple of days. "But it has been ages and ages since I saw those two boys,
and you've never seen 'em at all."
"Ages and ages? Really?"
"Yeah."
"How long?"
"Well, last time I saw Robin he was just starting kindergarten. And I
saw M.A. more recently he was probably eight or ten."
"And you are related to them how, one more time?"
"I think Robin is my second cousin. And I could explain M.A.'s
relationship to me, but you'd start shifting around and heaving great big
sighs before I got more'n halfway through it."
"So, to these guys, you are a shirttail relative they glimpsed once or
twice when they were tiny little boys."
Amy shrugs. "Yeah."
"So, like what possessed them to come out here?"
Amy looks blank.
"I mean," Randy says, "from the general attitude they copped, when they
fishtailed to a stop in the middle of my front yard and leapt out of their
red hot, bug encrusted vehicle, fresh from Tennessee, obviously the number
one mission objective was to ensure that the flower of Shaftoe womanhood was
being treated with all of the respect, decency, worshipfulness, et cetera,
properly owed it."
"Oh. That's not really the vibe that I got."
"Oh, it wasn't? Really?"
"No. Randy, my family sticks together. Just 'cause we haven't seen each
other for a while doesn't mean our obligations have lapsed."
"Well, you are making an implied comparison to my family here which I'm
not that crazy about and maybe we should talk about later. But as far as
those family obligations go, I do certainly think that one of those
obligations is to preserve your notional virginity."
"Who says it's notional?"
"It's got to be notional to them because they haven't seen you for most
of your life. That's all I mean."
"I think you are blowing the perceived sexual aspect of this thing way
out of proportion," Amy says. "Which is perfectly normal, for a guy, and I
don't think less of you for it."
"Amy, Amy. Have you done the math on this thing?"
"Math?"
"Counting the trip through Manila traffic to NAIA, the check in
procedure, and formalities at SFO, my entire journey from Manila to San
Francisco took me something like eighteen hours. Twenty for you. Another
four hours to get down to my house. Then eight hours after we got to my
house, in the middle of the night, Robin and Marcus Aurelius showed up. Now,
if we assume that the Shaftoe family grapevine functions at the speed of
light, it means that these guys, shooting hoops in front of their trailer in
Tennessee, received a news flash that a female Shaftoe was in some kind of
guy related personal distress at about the time you jumped off of Glory IV
and hopped in a taxi in Manila."
"I sent e mail from Glory," Amy says.
"To whom?"
"The Shaftoe mailing list."
"God!" Randy says, slapping himself in the face. "What did this e mail
say?"
"Can't remember," Amy says. "That I was headed for California. I might
have made some kind of backhanded remark about a young man I wanted to talk
to. I was kinda upset at the time and I can't remember exactly what I have
said."
"I think you said something like 'I am going to California where
Randall Lawrence Waterhouse, who has AIDS, is going to forcibly sodomize me
upon arrival.' "
"No, it was nothing of the kind."
"Well, I think that someone read it between the lines. So, anyway, Ma
or Auntie Em or someone emerges from the side door, shaking flour out of her
gingham apron I'm imagining this."
"I can tell."
"And she says, 'Boys, your umpteenth cousin thrice removed America
Shaftoe has sent us e mail from Uncle Doug's boat in the South China Sea
stating that she is having some kind of dispute with a young man and it's
not out of the question that she might need someone around to lend her a
hand. In California. Would you swing by and look in on her?' And they put
away their basketball and say, 'Yes ma'am, what city and address?' and she
says, 'Never you mind, just get on Interstate 40 and drive west not failing
to maintain an average speed of between one hundred and a hundred and twenty
percent of the legal speed limit and call me collect from a Texaco somewhere
and I will supply you with specific target coordinates later,' and they say,
'Yes ma'am' and thirty seconds later they are laying a patch in the driveway
as they pull five gees backing out of the garage and thirty hours
subsequently they are in my front yard, shining their twenty five D cell
flashlights into my eyes and asking me a lot of pointed questions. Do you
have any idea how far the drive is?"
"I have no idea."
"Well, according to M.A.'s Rand McNally Road Atlas, it is an even
twenty one hundred miles."
"So?"
"So that means that they maintained an average speed of seventy miles
an hour for a day and a half"
"A day and a quarter," Amy says.
"Do you have any idea how difficult that is to do?"
"Randy, you push on the gas pedal and keep it between the lines. How
hard is that?"
"I'm not saying it's an intellectual challenge. I'm saying that this
willingness to, e.g., urinate into empty McDonald's cups rather than stop
the car, suggests a kind of urgency. Passion, even. And being a guy, and
having had the experience of being a guy of the age of M.A. and Robin, I can
tell you that one of the few things that gets your blood boiling to that
extent is this notion of some female you love being done wrong by a strange
male."
"Well, what if they did?" Amy says. "Now they think you're okay."
"They do? Really?"
"Yeah. The financial disaster aspect makes you more human. More
approachable. And it excuses a lot."
"Do I need an excuse for something?"
"Not in my book."
"But to the extent they thought I was a rapist, it kind of palliates my
image problems."
A brief lull in the conversation ensues. Then Amy pipes up.
"So tell me about your family, Randy."
"In the next couple of days, you're going to learn a great deal more
than I would like you to about my family. And so am I. So let's talk about
something else."
"Okay. Let's talk about business."
"Okay. You go first."
"We got a German television producer coming out next week to have a
look at the U boat. They might do a documentary about it. We have already
hosted several German print journalists."
"You have?"
"It has caused a sensation in Germany."
"Why?"
"Because no one can figure out how it got there. Now, your turn."
"We are going to launch our own currency." By saying this, Randy is
divulging proprietary information to someone not authorized to hear it. But
he does it anyway, because opening himself up to Amy in this way, making
himself vulnerable to her, gives him a hard on.
"How do you go about that? Don't you have to be a government?"
"No. You have to be a bank. Why do you think they're called bank
notes?" Randy is fully aware of the insanity of divulging secret business
information to a woman solely for purposes of sexual self titillation but it
is in the nature of things, right now, that he doesn't especially care.
"Okay but still, usually it's done by government banks, right?"
"Only because people tend to respect the government banks. But
government banks in Southeast Asia have a huge image problem right now. That
image problem translates directly into crashing exchange rates."
"So, how do you do it?"
"Get a big pile of gold. Issue certificates saying 'this certificate
can be redeemed for such and such an amount of gold.' That's all there is to
it."
"What's wrong with dollars and yen and stuff?"
"The certificates the banknotes are printed on paper. We're going to
issue electronic banknotes."
"No paper at all?"
"No paper at all."
"So you can only spend it on the Net."
"Correct."
"What if you want to buy a sack of bananas?"
"Find a banana merchant on the Net."
"Seems like paper money'd be just as good."
"Paper money is traceable and perishable and has other drawbacks.
Electronic banknotes are fast and anonymous."
"What's an electronic banknote look like, Randy?"
"Like any other digital thing: a bunch of bits."
"Doesn't that make it kind of easy to counterfeit?"
"Not if you have good crypto," Randy says. "Which we do."
"How did you get it?"
"By hanging out with maniacs."
"What kind of maniacs?"
"Maniacs who think that having good crypto is of near apocalyptic
importance."
"How'd they get around to thinking any such thing?"
"By reading about people like Yamamoto who died because they had bad
crypto, and then projecting that kind of thing into the future."
"Do you agree with them?" Amy asks. It might be one of those pivotal
moment in the relationship questions.
"At two in the morning, when I'm lying awake in bed, I do," Randy says.
"In the light of day, it all seems like paranoia." He glances over at Amy,
who's looking at him appraisingly, because he hasn't actually answered the
question yet. He's got to pick one thing or the other. "Better safe than
sorry, I guess. Having good crypto can't hurt, and it might help."
"And it might make you a lot of money along the way," Amy reminds him.
Randy laughs. "At this point, it's not even about trying to make
money," he says. "I just don't want to be totally humiliated."
Amy smiles cryptically.
"What?" Randy demands.
"You sounded just like a Shaftoe when you said that," Amy says.
Randy drives the car in silence for about half an hour after that. He
was right, he suspects: it was a pivotal moment in the relationship. All he
can do now is totally screw it up. So he shuts up and drives.
Chapter 69 THE GENERAL
For two months he sleeps on a beach on New Caledonia, stretched out
under a mosquito net, dreaming of worse places, polishing his line.
In Stockholm, someone from the British Embassy got him to a certain
cafe. A gentleman he met in the cafe got him to a car. The car got him to a
lake where a floatplane just happened to be sitting with its motors running
and its lights off. The Special Air Service got him to London. Naval
Intelligence got him back to D.C., drained his brain, and turned him over to
the Marines with a big stamp on his papers saying that he must never again
be sent into combat; he Knew Too Much to be taken prisoner. The Marines
found that he Knew Too Little to serve as a Rear Echelon Motherfucker, and
gave him a choice: a one way ticket home, or higher education. He opted for
the ticket home, then talked a green officer into believing that his family
had moved, and home was now San Francisco.
You could practically cross San Francisco Bay by jumping from one Navy
ship to the next. The waterfront was lined with the Navy's piers, depots,
hospitals, and prisons. All of them were guarded by Shaftoe's military
brothers. Shaftoe's tattoos were obscured by civilian clothes and his
haircut grown out. But he only had to look a Marine in the eye from a
stone's throw, and that Marine would recognize him for a brother in need and
open any gate for him, break any regulation, probably even lay down his
life. Shaftoe stowed away on a ship bound for Hawaii so fast he didn't even
have time to get drunk. From Pearl, it took him four days to get on a ship
to Kwajalein. There, he was a legendary hero. His money was no good on Kwaj;
he smoked, drank and ate for a week without being allowed to spend a dime,
and finally his brothers got him on a plane that took him a couple of
thousand miles due south to Noumea, in New Caledonia.
They did so with great reluctance. They would willingly have hit a
beach with him, but this was different: they were sending him perilously
close to SOWESPAC, the Southwest Pacific Theater, the domain of The General.
Even now, a couple of years after The General had sent them into action,
poorly armed and poorly supported, on Guadalcanal, Marines still spent
approximately fifty percent of their waking hours talking about what a bad
guy he was. He secretly owned half of Intramuros. He had become a
billionaire from Spanish gold that his father had dug up when he'd been
governor of the Philippines. Quezon had secretly named him postwar dictator
of the archipelago. The General was running for president, and in order to
win, he was going to start throwing battles just to make F.D.R. look bad,
and blaming it all on the Marines. And if that didn't work he'd come back to
the States and stage a coup d'etat. Which would be beaten back, against
enormous odds, by the United States Marine Corps. Semper Fi!
Anyway, his brothers got him to New Caledonia. Noumea's a neat French
city of wide streets and tin roofed buildings, fronting on a big harbor
lined with mountainous dumps of nickel and chromium ore from gigantic mines
up island. The place is about one third Free French (there's pictures of de
Gaulle all over the place), one third American servicemen, and one third
cannibals. Word on the street is that the cannibals have not eaten any white
people in twenty seven years, so Bobby Shaftoe, sleeping out on that beach,
feels almost as safe as he did in Sweden.
But when he reached Noumea he slammed into a barrier more impervious
than any brick wall: the imaginary line between the Pacific theater
(Nimitz's turf) and SOWESPAC. Brisbane, The General's headquarters, is just
a short (by Pacific standards) hop almost due west. If he can just get there
and deliver his line, everything's going to be fine.
During his first couple of weeks on the beach, he's stupidly
optimistic. Then he's depressed for about a month, thinking he'll never get
off this place. Finally he starts to come around, starts to display
adaptability again. He's had no luck getting on board a ship. But the amount
of air traffic is incredible. Seems that The General likes airplanes.
Shaftoe starts tailing flyboys. The MPs won't give him the time of day, he
can't get into an Army NCOs' Club to save his life.
But an NCOs' Club offers strictly limited entertainments. Customers in
search of more profound satisfactions must leave the perimeter defined by
hardassed MPs and enter the civilian economy. And when horny, well paid
American flyboys are dropped into a culture defined half by cannibals and
half by Frenchmen, you get a hell of a civilian economy. Shaftoe finds a
vantage point outside an airbase gate, plants himself there, his pockets
loaded with cigarette packs (the Marines on Kwaj left him with a lifetime
supply) and waits. Flyboys come out in twos and threes. Shaftoe picks out
the sergeants, follows them to bars and whorehouses, sits down in their line
of sight, begins to chain smoke. Before long they've come over and started
to bum cigarettes off him. This leads to conversations.
Once he gets this routine figured out, he learns a lot about the Fifth
Air Force in a big hurry, makes a lot of friends. In a few weeks, he strikes
the jackpot. He goes over the airfield fence at 1:00 A.M. of a moonless
night, belly crawls for about a mile along the shoulder of a runway, and
just barely makes a rendezvous with the crew of the Tipsy Tootsie, a B 24
Liberator bound for Brisbane. In fairly short order, he finds himself
stuffed into the glass sphere at the tail of the plane: the rear ball
turret. Its purpose, of course, is to shoot down Zeroes, which tend to
attack from behind. But Tipsy Tootsie's crew seems to think that they are
about as likely to find Zeroes around here as they would be over central
Missouri.
They warned him to wear something warm, but he didn't have any thing of
that nature. Tipsy Tootsie has barely left the runway when he begins to
understand his mistake: the temperature drops like a five hundred pound
bomb. It is physically impossible for him to get out of the turret. Even if
he could, it would just lead to his getting arrested; he has been smuggled
on board without the knowledge of the officers who are actually flying the
plane. Calmly he decides to add prolonged hypothermia to his already
extensive knowledge of suffering. After a couple of hours, he either loses
consciousness or falls asleep, and this helps.
He is awakened by pink light that comes from every direction at once.
The plane has lost altitude, the temperature has risen, his body has thawed
out enough to bring him awareness. After a few minutes he's able to move his
arms. He reaches into the pink glow and rubs condensation off the inside of
the ball turret. He takes out a hanky, wipes the whole thing clean, and now
he's looking straight down the throat of a Pacific dawn.
The sky is streaked and mottled by black clouds, like jets of squid ink
in a Caribbean cove. For a while, it's as if he is under water with
Bischoff.
Puckered scars mar the Pacific in loops and lines, and he is reminded
of his own naked flesh. But the hard jagged pieces work their way out of the
scar tissue like old shrapnel: coral reefs emerging from a shallowing sea.
Warmer and warmer. He begins to shiver again.
Someone has dumped brown dust into the Pacific, made a great pile of
it. On the edge of the pile, is a city. The city swings around them, comes
closer. Warmer and warmer. It's Brisbane. A runway streaks up and he thinks
it's going to take his ass off, like the world's biggest belt sander. The
plane stops. He smells gasoline.
The pilot discovers him, loses his temper, and makes ready to call the
MPs. "I'm here to work for The General," Shaftoe mumbles through blue lips.
It just makes the pilot want to slug him. But after Shaftoe has uttered
these words, everything is different, the angry officers stand a pace or two
farther away from him, tone down their language, knock off the threats.
Shaftoe knows, from this, that The General does things differently.
He spends a day recovering in a flophouse, then rises, shaves, drinks a
cup of coffee, and strikes out in search of brass.
To his extreme chagrin, he learns that The General has relocated his
headquarters to Hollandia, in New Guinea. But his wife and son, and a bunch
of his staff, are still staying at Lennon's Hotel. Shaftoe goes there and
analyzes the traffic pattern: to pull into the hotel's horseshoe drive, the
cars have to come around a particular corner, just up the street. Shaftoe
finds a good loitering place near that corner, and waits. Looking through
the windows of the approaching cars, he can see the epaulets, count the
stars and eagles.
Seeing two stars, he decides to make his move. Jogging down the block,
he reaches the awning of the hotel just as this general's door is being
hauled open by his driver.
"'Scuse me, General, Bobby Shaftoe reporting for duty, sir!" he blurts,
snapping out the perfectest salute in military history.
"And who the hell might you be, Bobby Shaftoe?" says this general,
hardly batting an eye. He talks like Bischoff! This guy actually has a
German accent!
"I've killed more Nips than seismic activity. I'm trained to jump out
of airplanes. I speak a little Nip. I can survive in the jungle. I know
Manila like the back of my hand. My wife and child are there. And I'm kinda
at loose ends. Sir!"
In London, in D.C., he'd never have gotten this close, and if he had
he'd have been shot or arrested.
But this is SOWESPAC, and so the next morning at dawn he's on a B 17
bound for Hollandia, wearing Army green, no rank.
New Guinea is a nasty looking piece of work: a gangrenous dragon with a
wicked, rocky spine, covered with ice. Just looking at it makes Shaftoe
shiver from a queasy combination of hypothermia and incipient malaria. The
whole thing belongs to The General now. Shaftoe can plainly see that such a
country could only be conquered by a man who was completely fucking out of
his mind. A month in Stalingrad would be preferable to twenty four hours
down there.
Hollandia is on the north shore of this beast, facing, naturally,
towards the Philippines. It is well known throughout Marinedom that The
General has caused a palace to be built for himself there. Some credulous
fools actually believe the rumor that it is merely a complete 200% scale
replica of the Taj Mahal, built by enslaved Marines, but savvy jarheads know
that it is actually a much vaster compound built out of construction
materials stolen from Navy hospital ships, dotted with pleasure domes and
fuck houses for his string of Asiatic concubines, with a soaring cupola so
high that The General can go up there and see what the Nips are doing to his
extensive real estate holdings in Manila, 1,500 miles to the northwest.
Bobby Shaftoe sees no such thing out the windows of the B 17. He
glimpses one large and nice looking house up on a mountain above the sea. He
supposes that it is a mere sentry post, marking the benighted perimeter of
The General's domain. But almost immediately the B 17 bounces down on a
runway. The cabin is invaded by an equatorial miasma. It's like breathing
Cream O' Wheat direct from a blurping vat. Shaftoe feels his bowels
loosening up already. Of course there are many Marines who feel that Army
uniform trousers look best when feces stained. Shaftoe must put such
thoughts out of his head.
All the passengers (mostly colonels and better) move as to avoid
working up a sweat, even though they are already drenched. Shaftoe wants to
kick their fat, waffled butts downstairs he's in a hurry to get to Manila.
Pretty soon he is hitching a ride on the rear bumper of a jeep full of
brass. The airfield is still ringed with ack ack guns, and shows signs of
having been bombed and strafed not too long ago. Some of these signs are
obvious physical evidence like shell holes, but Shaftoe gets most of his
information from watching the men: their posture, their facial expressions
as they stare into the sky, tell him exactly what the threat level is.
No wonder, he thinks, remembering the sight of that big white house up
on the mountain. You can probably see that thing by moonlight, for
crissakes! It must be visible from Tokyo! It's just begging to be strafed.
Then, as the jeep begins to trundle up the mountain in first gear, he
figures it out: that thing's just a decoy. The General's real command post
must be a network of deep tunnels hidden beneath the jungle floor, and that
is where you would have to look for your Asiatic concubines, etc.
The trip up the mountain takes an eon. Shaftoe jumps off and soon
outpaces the whining jeep, and the one in front of it. Then he's on his own,
walking through the jungle. He'll just follow the tracks until they lead him
straight to the cleverly camouflaged mineshaft that leads down to The
General's HQ.
The walk gives him plenty of time to have a couple of smokes and savor
the unrelieved nightmarishness of the New Guinea jungle, compared to which
Guadalcanal, which he thought was the worst place on earth, seems like a
dewy meadow strewn with bunnies and butterflies. Nothing is more satisfying
than to consider that the Nips and the United States Army spent a couple of
years beating the crap out of each other here. Pity the Aussies had to get
mixed up in it, though.
The tracks take him straight to that big white clay pigeon of a house
up on the mountainside. They've gone way overboard in trying to make the
house look like someone's actually living there. Shaftoe can see furniture
and everything. The walls are crisscrossed by bullet trails. They have even
set up a mannequin on the balcony, in a pink silk dressing gown, corncob
pipe, and aviator sunglasses, scanning the bay through binoculars! As
reluctant as he is to approve of anything done by the Army, Shaftoe cannot
keep himself from laughing out loud at this witticism. Military humor at its
finest. He can't believe they got away with it. A couple of press
photographers are standing down below, taking pictures of the scene.
Standing in the middle of the house's mud parking lot, he plants his
feet wide and thrusts his middle finger up at that mannequin. Hey, asshole,
this one's from the Marines on Kwajalein! Damn, this feels good.
The mannequin swivels and aims its binoculars directly at Bobby
Shaftoe, who freezes solid in his bird flipping posture as if caught in the
gaze of a basilisk. Down below, air raid sirens begin to weep and wail.
The binoculars come away from the sunglasses. A puff of smoke blurts
out of the pipe. The General snaps out a sarcastic salute. Shaftoe remembers
to put his finger away, then stands there, rooted like a dead mahogany.
The General reaches up and removes the pipe from his mouth so he can
say, "Magandang gabi."
"You mean, 'magandang umaga,' " Shaftoe says. "Gabi means night and
umaga means morning."
The drone of airplane engines is now getting quite noticeable. The
press photographers decide to pack it in, and disappear into the house.
"When you're headed north from Manila towards Lingayen and you get to
the fork in the road at Tarlac and you take the right fork, there, and head
across the cane breaks towards Urdaneta, what's the first village you come
to?"
"It's a trick question," Shaftoe says. "North of Tarlac there are no
cane breaks, just rice paddies."
"Hmm. Very good," The General says grumpily. Down below, the
antiaircraft guns open up with a fantastic clattering; from this distance it
sounds as if the north coast of New Guinea is being jackhammered into the
sea. The General ignores it. If he were only pretending to ignore it, he
would at least look at the incoming the Zeroes, so that he could stop
pretending to ignore them when it got too dangerous. But he doesn't even do
so much as look. Shaftoe forces himself not to look either. The General asks
him a big long question in Spanish. He has a beautiful voice. He sounds like
he is standing in an anechoic sound booth in New York City or Hollywood,
narrating a newsreel about how great he is.
"If you're trying to find out if I hablo Español, the answer is,
un poquito," Shaftoe says.
The General cups a hand to his ear irritably. He can't hear anything
except for the pair of Zeroes converging on him and Shaftoe at three hundred
odd miles per hour, liquefying tons of biomass with dense streams of 12.7
millimeter slugs. He keeps a sharp eye on Shaftoe as a trail of bullets
thuds across the parking lot, spraying Shaftoe's trouser legs with mud. The
same line of bullets makes a sudden upwards right angle turn when it reaches
the wall of the General's house, climbs straight up the wall, tears out a
chunk of the balcony's railing about a foot away from where the General's
hand is resting, beats up a bunch of furniture back inside the house, and
then clears the roof of the house and vanishes.
Now that the planes have passed overhead, Shaftoe can look at them
without having to worry that he is giving The General the idea that he is
some kind of lily livered pansy. The meatballs on their wings broaden and
glower as they bank sharply, sharper than any American plane, and come round
for a second try.
"I said " The General begins. But then the atmosphere's riven by a
series of bizarre whizzing noises. One of the house's windows is suddenly
punched out of its frame. Shaftoe hears a thud from inside and some crockery
breaking. For the first time, The General shows some awareness that a
military action is taking place. "Warm up my jeep, Shaftoe," he says, "I
have a bone to pick with my triple A boys." Then he turns around and Shaftoe
gets a look at the back of his pink silk dressing gown. It is embroidered,
in black thread, with a giant lizard, rampant.
The General suddenly turns around. "Is that you screaming down there,
Shaftoe?"
"Sir, no sir!"
"I distinctly heard you scream." MacArthur turns his back on Shaftoe
again, giving him another look at the lizard (which on second thought might
be some sort of Chinese dragon design) and goes inside the house, mumbling
irritably to himself.
Shaftoe gets into the vehicle indicated and starts the engine.
The General emerges from the house and begins to plod across the lot
cradling an unexploded antiaircraft shell in his arms. The wind makes his
pink silk dressing gown billow all around him.
The Zeroes come back and strafe the parking lot again, cutting a truck
nearly in half. Shaftoe feels as if his intestines have dissolved and are
about to spurt from his body. He closes his eyes, puckers his anal
sphincter, and clenches his teeth. The General takes a seat next to him.
"Down the hill," he orders. "Drive towards the sound of the guns."
They have barely gotten onto the road when their progress is blocked by
the two jeeps that had been carrying all the brass up from the airfield.
They now sit empty on the road, their doors hanging open, engines still
running. The General reaches across in front of Shaftoe and honks the horn.
Colonels and brigadier generals begin to emerge from the shadows of the
jungle, like some especially bizarre native tribe, clutching their attache
cases talismanically. They salute The General, who ignores them testily.
"Move my vehicles!" he intones, jabbing at them with the stem of his pipe.
"This is the road. The parking lot is that way."
The Zeroes come back for a third pass. Shaftoe now realizes (as perhaps
The General has) that these pilots are not the best; it is late in the war
and all the good pilots are dead. Consequently they do not line their
trajectories up properly with the road; the strafing trails cut across it
diagonally. Still, a bullet bores through the engine block of one of the
jeeps. Hot oil and steam spray out of it.
"Come on, push it out of the way!" The General says. Shaftoe
instinctively begins to climb out of the jeep, but The General yanks him
back with a word: "Shaftoe! I need you to drive this vehicle."
Wielding his pipestem like a conductor's baton, The General gets his
staff back out on the road and they begin shoving the ruined jeep into the
jungle. Shaftoe makes the mistake of inhaling through his nose and gets a
strong diarrheal whiff at least one of these officers has shit his pants.
Shaftoe's still trying hard not to do the same, and probably would have if
he'd pushed the jeep. The Zeroes are trying to line up for another strafing
run, but a few American fighter planes have now appeared on the scene, which
complicates matters.
Shaftoe maneuvers them through a gap between the remaining jeep and a
huge tree, then guns it down the road. The General hums to himself for a
while, then says, "What's your wife's name?"
"Gory."
"I mean, Glory."
"Ah. Good. Good Filipina name. Filipinas are the most beautiful women
in the world, don't you think?"
Experienced world traveler Bobby Shaftoe screws up his face and begins
to review his experiences in a systematic way. Then he realizes that The
General probably does not actually want his considered opinion.
Of course, The General's wife is American, so this could be tricky. "I
guess the woman you love is always the most beautiful," Shaftoe finally
says.
The General looks mildly pissed off. "Of course, but..."
"But if you don't really give a shit about them, the Filipinas are the
most beautiful, sir!" Shaftoe says.
The General nods. "Now, your boy. What's his name, then?"
Shaftoe swallows hard and thinks fast. He doesn't even know if he has a
kid he fabricated that to make his line sound better and even if he does,
the chances are only fifty fifty that it's a boy. But if he does have a boy,
he knows already what the name will be. "His name well, sir, his name and I
hope you don't mind this but his name is Douglas." The General grins
delightedly and cackles, slapping the antiaircraft shell in his lap for
emphasis. Shaftoe flinches.
When they arrive at the airfield, a full fledged dogfight is in
progress overhead. The place is deserted because everyone except them is
hiding behind sandbags. The General has Shaftoe drive up and down the length
of the field, stopping at each gun emplacement so that he can peer over the
barrier.
"There's the fellow!" The General finally says, pointing his swagger
stick at a gun on the opposite side of the runway. "I just saw him poking
his head out, yammering on the telephone."
Shaftoe guns it across the runway. A flaming Zero, traveling at about
half the speed of sound, impacts the runway a few hundred feet away and
disintegrates into a howling cloud of burning spare parts that comes
skittering and rolling and bounding across the runway in their general
direction. Shaftoe falters. The General yells at him. Reckoning that he
can't avoid what he can't see, Shaftoe turns into the storm. Having seen
this kind of thing happen before, he knows that the first thing to come
their way will be the engine block, a red hot tombstone of fine Mitsubishi
iron. And indeed there it is, one of its exhaust manifolds still dangling
from it like a broken wing, spinning end over end and spading huge divots
out of the runway with each bounce. Shaftoe swings wide around it. He
identifies the fuselage and sees that it has plowed to a stop already. He
looks for the wings; they broke up into a few large pieces that are slowing
down rapidly, but the tires broke loose from the landing gear and are
bounding along towards them, burning wheels of red fire. Shaftoe maneuvers
the jeep between them, guns it across a small patch of flaming oil, then
makes another hard turn and continues towards their objective.
The explosion of the Zero sent everyone back down behind their
sandbags. The General has to climb out of the jeep and peer over the top of
the barrier. He holds the antiaircraft shell up above his head. "Say,
Captain," he says in his perfect radio announcer voice, "this arrived on my
end table with no return address, but I believe it came from your unit." The
captain's helmeted head pops into view over the top of the sandbags as he
jumps to attention. He is gaping at the shell. "Would you please look after
it, and make sure that it has been properly defused?" The General tosses the
shell at him sideways, like a watermelon, and the captain barely has the
presence of mind to catch it. "Carry on," The General says, "let's see if we
can actually shoot down some Nips next time." He waves disparagingly at the
burning wreckage of the Zero and climbs into the jeep with Shaftoe. "All
right, back up the hill, Shaftoe!"
"Yes, sir!"
"Now, I know that you hate me because you are a Marine."
Officers like it when you pretend to be straight with them. "Yes, sir,
I do hate you, sir, but I do not feel that this need be an impediment to our
killing some Nips together, sir!"
"We agree. But in the mission I have in mind for you, Shaftoe, killing
Nips will not be the primary objective."
Shaftoe's a bit off balance now. "Sir, with all due respect, I believe
that killing Nips is my strong point."
"I don't doubt it. And that is a fine skill for a Marine. Because in
this war, a Marine is a first rate fighting man under the command of
admirals who don't know the first thing about ground warfare, and who think
that the way to win an island is to hurl their men directly into the teeth
of the Nips' prepared defenses."
The General pauses here, as if giving Shaftoe an opportunity to
respond. But Shaftoe says nothing. He is remembering the stories that his
brothers told him on Kwajalein, about all the battles they had fought on
small Pacific islands, precisely as The General describes.
"Consequently, a Marine must be very good at killing Nips, as I have no
doubt you are. But now, Shaftoe, you are in the Army, and in the Army we
actually have certain wonderful innovations, such as strategy and tactics,
which certain admirals would be well advised to acquaint themselves with.
And so your new job, Shaftoe, is not simply to kill Nips, but to use your
head."
"Well, I know that you probably think I am a stupid jarhead, General,
but I do think that I have a good head on my shoulders."
"And on your shoulders is exactly where I would like it to stay!" The
General says, slapping him heartily on the back. "What we are trying to do
now is to create a tactical situation that is favorable to us. Once that is
accomplished, the actual killing of Nips can be handled by more efficient
means such as aerial bombardment, mass starvation, and the like. It will not
be necessary for you to personally cut the throat of every Nip you run into,
as eminently qualified as you might be for such an operation."
"Thank you, General, sir."
"We have millions of Filipino guerillas, and hundreds of thousands of
troops, to handle the essentially quotidian business of turning live Nips
into dead, or at least captive, Nips. But in order to coordinate their
activities, I need intelligence. That will be one of your missions. But the
country is already crawling with my spies, and so it will be a secondary
mission.
"And the primary mission, sir?"
"Those Filipinos need leadership. They need coordination. And perhaps
most of all, they need fighting spirit."
"Fighting spirit, sir?"
"There are many reasons for the Filipinos to be down in the dumps. The
Nips have not been kind to them. And although I have been very busy, here in
New Guinea, preparing the springboard for my return, the Filipinos don't
know about any of this, and many of them probably think I have forgotten
about them entirely. Now it is time to let them know I'm coming. That I
shall return but soon!"
Shaftoe snickers, thinking that The General is engaging in some self
mocking humor here yes, a bit of irony but then he notes that The General
does not seem especially amused. "Stop the vehicle!" he shouts.
Shaftoe parks the jeep at the apex of a switchback, where they can look
northwest across the outermost reaches of the Philippine Sea. The General
extends one arm toward Manila, hand slightly cupped, palm canted upward,
gesturing like a Shakespearean actor in a posed photo graph. "Go there,
Bobby Shaftoe!" says The General. "Go there and tell them that I am coming."
Shaftoe knows his cue, and he knows his line. "Sir, yes sir!"
Chapter 70 ORIGIN
From the point of view of admittedly privileged white male technocrats
such as Randy Waterhouse and his ancestors, the Palouse was like one big
live in laboratory for nonlinear aerodynamics and chaos theory. Not much was
alive there, and so one's observations were not forever being clouded by
trees, flowers, fauna, and the ploddingly linear and rational endeavors of
humans. The Cascades blocked any of those warm, moist, refreshing Pacific
breezes, harvesting their moisture to carpet ski areas for dewy skinned
Seattleites, and diverting what remained north to Vancouver or south to
Portland. Consequently the Palouse had to get its air shipped down in bulk
from the Yukon and British Columbia. It flowed across the blasted volcanic
scab land of central Washington in (Randy supposed) a more or less
continuous laminar sheet that, when it hit the rolling Palouse country,
ramified into a vast system of floods, rivers and rivulets diverging around
the bald swelling hills and recombining in the sere declivities. But it
never recombined exactly the way it was before. The hills had thrown entropy
into the system. Like a handful of nickels in a batch of bread dough this
could be kneaded from place to place but never removed. The entropy
manifested itself as swirls and violent gusts and ephemeral vortices. All of
these things were clearly visible, because all summer the air was full of
dust or smoke, and all winter it was full of windblown snow.
Whitman had dust devils (snow devils in the winter) in the way that
medieval Guangzhou presumably had rats. Randy followed dust devils to school
when he was a kid. Some were small enough that you could almost cup them in
your hand, and some were like small tornadoes, fifty or a hundred feet high,
that would appear on hilltops or atop shopping malls like biblical
prophecies as filtered through the low budget SFX technology and painfully
literal minded eye of a fifties epic film director. They at least scared the
bejesus out of newcomers. When Randy got bored in school, he would look at
the window and watch these things chase each other around the empty
playground. Sometimes a roughly car sized dust devil would glide across the
four square courts and between the swingsets and score a direct hit on the
jungle gym, which was an old fashioned, unpadded, child paralyzing unit
hammered together by some kind of Dark Ages ironmonger and planted in solid
concrete, a real school of hard knocks, survival of the fittest one. The
dust devil would seem to pause as it enveloped the jungle gym. It would
completely lose its form and become a puff of dust that would begin to
settle back down to the ground as all heavier than air things really ought
to. But then suddenly the dust devil would reappear on the other side of the
jungle gym and keep going. Or perhaps two dust devils would spin off in
opposite directions.
Randy spent plenty of time chasing and carrying out impromptu
experiments on dust devils while walking to and from school, to the point of
getting bounced off the grille of a shrieking Buick once when he chased a
roughly shopping cart sized one into the street in an attempt to climb into
the center of it. He knew that they were both fragile and tenacious. You
could stomp down on one of them and sometimes it would just dodge your foot,
or swirl around it, and keep going. Other times, like if you tried to catch
one in your hands, it would vanish but then you'd look up and see another
one just like it twenty feet away, running away from you. The whole concept
of matter spontaneously organizing itself into grotesquely improbable and
yet indisputably self perpetuating and fairly robust systems sort of gave
Randy the willies later on, when he began to learn about physics.
There was no room for dust devils in the laws of physics, as least in
the rigid form in which they were usually taught. There is a kind of
unspoken collusion going on in mainstream science education: you get your
competent but bored, insecure and hence stodgy teacher talking to an
audience divided between engineering students, who are going to be
responsible for making bridges that won't fall down or airplanes that won't
suddenly plunge vertically into the ground at six hundred miles an hour, and
who by definition get sweaty palms and vindictive attitudes when their
teacher suddenly veers off track and begins raving about wild and completely
nonintuitive phenomena; and physics students, who derive much of their self
esteem from knowing that they are smarter and morally purer than the
engineering students, and who by definition don't want to hear about
anything that makes no fucking sense. This collusion results in the
professor saying: (something along the lines of) dust is heavier than air,
therefore it falls until it hits the ground. That's all there is to know
about dust. The engineers love it because they like their issues dead and
crucified like butterflies under glass. The physicists love it because they
want to think they understand everything. No one asks difficult questions.
And outside the windows, the dust devils continue to gambol across the
campus.
Now that Randy's back in Whitman for the first time in several years,
watching (because it's winter) ice devils zigzagging across the Christmas
empty streets, he is inclined to take a longer view of the matter, which
goes a little something like this: these devils, these vortices, are a
consequence of hills and valleys that are probably miles and miles upwind.
Basically, Randy, who has blown in from out of town, is in a mobile frame of
mind, and is seeing things from the wind's frame of reference not the
stationary frame of reference of the little boy who rarely left town. From
the wind's frame of reference, it (the wind) is stationary and the hills and
valleys are moving things that crumple the horizon and then rush towards it
and then interfere with it and go away, leaving the wind to sort out
consequences later on down the line. And some of the consequences are dust
or ice devils. If there was more stuff in the way, like expansive cities
filled with buildings, or forests filled with leaves and branches, then that
would be the end of the story; the wind would become completely deranged and
cease to exist as a unitary thing, and all of the aerodynamic action would
be at the incomprehensible scale of micro vortices around pine needles and
car antennas.
A case in point would be the parking lot of Waterhouse House, which is
normally filled with cars and therefore a complete wind killer. You aren't
going to see dust devils at the downwind edge of a full parking lot, just a
generalized seepage of dead and decayed wind. But it is Christmas break and
there are all of three cars parked in this space, which doubles as football
overflow and hence is about the size of an artillery practice range. The
asphalt is dead monitor screen grey. A volatile gas of ice swirls across it
as freely as a sheen of fuel on warm water, except where it strikes the icy
sarcophagi of these three abandoned vehicles, which have evidently been
sitting in this otherwise empty lot for a couple of weeks now, since all of
the other cars went away on Christmas break. Each car has become the first
cause of a system of wakes and standing vortices that extends downstream for
hundreds of yards. The wind here is a glinting abrasive thing, a perpetual,
face shredding, eyeball poking tendency in the fabric of spacetime,
inhabited by vast platinum blond arcs of fire that are centered on the low
winter sun. Crystalline water is suspended in it all the time, is why:
shards of ice that are smaller than snowflakes probably just individual legs
of snowflakes that have been sheared off and borne into the air as the wind
snapped and rattled over the crests of Canadian snow dunes. Once airborne,
they stay airborne unless they find themselves ducted into some pocket of
dead air: the eye of a vortex or the still boundary layer of a dead car's
parking lot wake. And so over the weeks the vortices and standing waves have
become visible, like three dimensional virtual reality renderings of
themselves.
Waterhouse House rises above this tableau, a high rise dorm that no
person prominent enough to have a dorm named after him would want to have
named after him. Out of its climatically inappropriate acreage of picture
window shines the same embarrassing, greenish light radiated by algae
scummed domestic aquaria. Janitors are going through it with machines the
size of hot dog carts, wrangling these mile long coils of thumb thick orange
power cable, steaming beer vomit and artificial popcorn butter lipids up out
of the thin grey mats that, when Randy was there, seemed not so much like
carpet as references to carpeting or carpet signifiers. When Randy now pulls
into the main vehicle entrance, past the big tombstone that says WATERHOUSE
HOUSE, he cannot but look straight out the windshield and through the dorm's
front windows and straight at a large portrait of his grandfather, Lawrence
Pritchard Waterhouse one of a dozen or so figures, mostly departed now, who
compete for the essentially bogus title of "inventor of the digital
computer." The portrait is securely bolted to the cinderblock wall of the
lobby and imprisoned under a half inch thick slab of Plexiglas that must be
replaced every couple of years, as it fogs from repeated scrubbings and
petty vandalizations. Seen through this milky cataract, Lawrence Pritchard
Waterhouse is grimly resplendent in full doctoral robes. He has one foot up
on something, his elbow planted on the elevated knee, and has tucked his
robes back behind the other arm and planted his fist on his hip. It is meant
to be a sort of dynamic posture, but to Randy, who at the age of five was
present for its unveiling, it has a kind of incredulous what the hell are
those little people doing down there vibe about it.
Other than the three dead cars in their shells of hardened, dust
infused ice, there is nothing in the parking lot save about two dozen items
of antique furniture and a few other treasures such as a complete sterling
silver tea service and a dark, time wracked trunk. As Randy pulls in with
his Uncle Red and his Aunt Nina, he notes that the Shaftoe boys have
discharged the responsibilities for which they will be drawing minimum wage
plus twenty five percent all day long: namely they have moved all of these
items from where Uncle Geoff and Auntie Anne placed them back to the Origin.
In a gesture of companionship and/or uncle esque bonhomie, Uncle Red,
much to the evident resentment of Aunt Nina, has claimed the Acura's
passenger seat, leaving Aunt Nina marooned in the back where she evidently
feels much more psychically isolated than the situation would seem to
warrant. She makes lateral sliding motions trying to center the eyes of
first Randy, then Uncle Red, in the rearview minor. Randy has taken to
relying solely on the outside rearview mirrors during the ten minute drive
over from the hotel, because when he glances at the inside one he keeps
seeing Aunt Nina's dilated pupils aimed down his throat like twin shotgun
barrels. The blast of the heater/defroster forms a pocket of auditory
isolation back there which on top of her already prominent feelings of near
animal rage and stress have left her volatile and obviously dangerous.
Randy heads straight for the Origin, as in the intersection of the X
and Y axes, which is marked by a light pole with its very own multiton
system of wind deposited wakes and vortices.
"Look," says Uncle Red, "all we want to accomplish here is to make sure
that your mother's legacy, if that is the correct term for the possessions
of one who is not actually dead but merely moved into a long term care
facility, is equally divided among her five offspring. Am I right?"
This is not addressed to Randy, but he nods anyway, trying to show a
united front. He has been grinding his teeth for two days straight; the
places where his jaw muscles anchor to his skull have become the foci of
tremendous radiating systems of surging and pulsing pain.
"I think you'd agree that an equal division is all we want," Uncle Red
continues. "Correct?"
After a worrisomely long pause, Aunt Nina nods. Randy manages to
glimpse her face in the rearview as she makes another dramatic lateral move,
and sees there a look of almost nauseous trepidation, as if this equal
division concept might be some Jesuitical snare.
"Now, here's the interesting part," says Uncle Red, who is the chairman
of the mathematics department at Okaley College in Macomb, Illinois. "How do
we define 'equal'? This is what your brothers, and brothers in law, and
Randy and I were debating so late into the night last night. If we were
dividing up a stack of currency, it would be easy, because currency has a
monetary value that is printed right on its face, and the bills are
interchangeable no one gets emotionally attached to a particular dollar
bill."
"This is why we should have an objective appraiser "
"But everyone's going to disagree with what the appraiser says, Nina,
love," says Uncle Red. "Furthermore, the appraiser will totally miss out on
the emotional dimension, which evidently looms very large here, or so it
would seem, based on the, uh, let's say melodramatic character of the, uh,
discussion, if discussion isn't too dignified a term for what some might
perceive as more of a, well, catfight, that you and your sisters were
conducting all day yesterday."
Randy nods almost imperceptibly. He pulls up and parks next to the
furniture that is again clustered around the Origin. At the edge of the
parking lot, near where the Y axis (here denoting perceived emotional value)
meets a retaining wall, the Shaftoes' hot rod sits, all steamed up on the
inside.
"The question reduces," Uncle Red says, "to a mathematical one: how do
you divide up an inhomogeneous set of n objects among m people (or couples
actually); i.e., how do you partition the set into m subsets (S [sub 1],S
[sub 2], ... ,S [sub m]) such that the value of each subset is as close as
possible to being equal?"
"It doesn't seem that hard," Aunt Nina begins weakly. She is a
professor of Qwghlmian linguistics.
"It is actually shockingly difficult," Randy says. "It is closely akin
to the Knapsack Problem, which is so difficult to solve that it has been
used as the basis for cryptographic systems."
"And that's not even taking into account that each of the couples would
appraise the value of each of the n objects differently!" Uncle Red shouts.
By this point, Randy has shut off the car, and the windows have begun to
steam up. Uncle Red pulls off a mitten and begins to draw figures in the fog
on the windshield, using it like a blackboard. "For each of the m people (or
couples) there exists an n element value vector, V, where V [sub 1] is the
value that that particular couple would place on item number 1 (according to
some arbitrary numeration system) and V [sub 2] is the value they would
place on item number 2 and so on all the way up to item number n. These m
vectors, taken together, form a value matrix. Now, we can impose the
condition that each vector must total up to the same amount; i.e., we can
just arbitrarily specify some notional value for the entire collection of
furniture and other goods and impose the condition that
[img file for page 625 is not found (source)]
where [tau] is a constant."
"But we might all have different opinions as to what the total value
is, as well!" says Aunt Nina, gamely.
"That has no impact mathematically," Randy whispers.
"It is just an arbitrary scaling factor!" Uncle Red says witheringly.
"This is why I ended up agreeing with your brother Tom, though I didn't at
first, that we should take a cue from the way he and the other relativistic
physicists do it, and just arbitrarily set [tau] = 1. Which forces us to
deal with fractional values, which I thought some of the ladies, present
company excluded of course, might find confusing, but at least it emphasizes
the arbitrary nature of the scaling factor and helps to eliminate that
source of confusion." Uncle Tom tracks asteroids in Pasadena for the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory.
"There's the Gomer Bolstrood console," Aunt Nina exclaims, rubbing a
hole in the fog on her window, and then continuing to orbitally rub away
with the sleeve of her coat as if she is going to abrade an escape route
through the safety glass. "Just sitting out in the snow!"
"It's not actually precipitating," Uncle Red says, "this is just
blowing snow. It is absolutely bone dry, and if you go out and look at the
console or whatever you call it, you will find that the snow is not melting
on it at all, because it has been sitting out in the U Stor It ever since
your mother moved to the managed care facility and it has equilibrated to
the ambient temperature which I think we can all testify is well below zero
Celsius."
Randy crosses his arms over his abdomen, leans his head back, and
closes his eyes. The tendons in his neck are as stiff as subzero Silly Putty
and resist painfully.
"That console was in my bedroom from the time I was born until I left
for college," Aunt Nina says. "By any decent standard of justice, that
console is mine.
"Well, that brings me to the breakthrough that Randy and Tom and Geoff
and I finally came up with at about two A.M., namely that the perceived
economic value of each item, as complicated as that is in and of itself, viz
the Knapsack Problem, is only one dimension of the issues that have got us
all on such a jagged emotional edge. The other dimension and here I really
do mean dimension in a Euclidean geometry sense is the emotional value of
each item. That is, in theory we could come up with a division of the set of
all pieces of furniture that would give you, Nina, an equal share. But such
a division might leave you, love, just deeply, deeply unsatisfied because
you didn't get that console, which, though it's obviously not as valuable as
say the grand piano, has much greater emotional value to you.
"I don't think it's out of the question that I would commit physical
violence in order to defend my rightful ownership of that console," Aunt
Nina says, suddenly reverting to a kind of dead voiced frigid calm.
"But that's not necessary, Nina, because we have created this whole
setup here just so that you can give your feelings the full expression they
deserve!"
"Okay. What do I do?" Aunt Nina says, bolting from the car. Randy and
Uncle Red hastily gather up their gloves and mittens and hats and follow her
out. She is now hovering over the console, watching the dust of ice swirl
across the dark but limpid, virtually glowing surface of the console in the
turbulent wake of her body, forming little Mandelbrotian epi epi epi
vortices.
"As Geoff and Anne did before us, and the others will do afterwards, we
are going to move each of these items to a specific position, as in (x, y)
coordinates, in the parking lots. The x axis runs this way," Uncle Red says,
facing the Waterhouse House and holding his arms out in a cruciform
attitude, "and the y axis this way." He toddles around ninety degrees so
that one of his hands is now pointing at the Shaftoes' Impala. "Perceived
financial value is measured by x. The farther in that direction it is, the
more valuable you think it is. You might even assign something a negative x
value if you think it has negative value e.g., that over stuffed chair over
there which might cost more to re upholster than it is actually worth.
Likewise, the y axis measures perceived emotional value. Now, we have
established that the console has extreme emotional value to you and so I
think that we can just go right ahead and move it down the line over to
where the Impala is located."
"Can something have negative emotional value?" Aunt Nina says, sourly
and probably rhetorically.
"If you hate it so much that just owning it would cancel out the
emotional benefits of having something like the console, then yes, Uncle Red
says.
Randy hoists the console onto his shoulder and begins to walk in a
positive y direction. The Shaftoe boys are available to hump furniture at a
moment's notice, but Randy needs to mark a bit of territory here, just to
indicate that he is not without some masculine attributes himself and so he
ends up carrying more furniture than he probably needs to. Back at the
Origin, he can hear Red and Nina going at it. "I have a problem with this,"
Nina says. "What's to prevent her from just putting every thing down at the
extreme y axis claiming that everything is terribly emotionally important to
her?" Her in this case can only mean Aunt Rachel, the wife of Tom. Rachel is
a multiethnic East Coast urbanite who is not blessed or afflicted with the
obligatory Waterhousian diffidence and so has always been regarded as a sort
of living incarnation of rapacity, a sucking maw of need. The worst case
scenario here is that Rachel somehow goes home with everything the grand
piano, the silver, the china, the Gomer Bolstrood dining room set. Hence the
need for elaborate rules and rituals, and a booty division system that is
mathematically provable as fair.
"That's where [tau sub e] and [tau sub $] enter into it," Uncle Red
says soothingly.
[img file for page 628 is not found (source)]
"All of our choices will be mathematically scaled so that they add up
to the same total values on both the emotional and financial scales. So if
someone clumped everything together in the extreme corner, then, after
scaling, it'd be as if they never expressed any preferences at all."
Randy nears the steamed up Impala. One of the doors makes a crackling
noise as superannuated weatherstripping peels away from steel. Robin Shaftoe
emerges, breathes into his cupped hands, and takes a parade rest position,
signifying that he is available to discharge any responsibilities out here
on the Cartesian coordinate plane. Randy looks up over the Impala and the
retaining wall and the ice clogged xeriscape above that and into the lobby
of Waterhouse House, where Amy Shaftoe has her feet up on a coffee table and
is looking through some of the extremely sad Cayuse related literature that
Randy bought for Avi. She looks down and smiles at him and just barely, he
thinks, restrains the impulse to reach up and twirl one finger around her
ear.
"That's good, Randy!" shouts Uncle Red from the Origin, "now we need to
give it some x!" Meaning that the console is not devoid of economic value
either. Randy does a right face and begins to walk into the (+x, +y)
quadrant, counting the yellow lines. "Give it about four parking spaces!
That's good!" Randy plonks the console down, then pulls a pad of graph paper
out of his coat, whips back the first sheet, which contains the (x,y)
scatterplot of Uncle Geoff and Auntie Anne, and notes down the coordinates
of the console. Sound carries in the Palouse, and from the Origin he can
hear Aunt Nina saying to Uncle Red, "How much of our [tau sub e] have we
just spent on that console?"
"If we leave everything else down here at y equals zero, a hundred
percent after scaling," Uncle Red says. "Otherwise it depends on how we
distribute these things in the y dimension." Which is of course the correct
answer, albeit totally useless.
If these days in Whitman don't make Amy flee from Randy in terror,
nothing will, and so he's glad in a sick way that she is seeing this. The
subject of his family has not really come up until now. Randy is not given
to talking about his family because he feels there is nothing to report:
small town, good education, shame and self esteem doled out in roughly equal
quantities and usually where warranted. Nothing spectacular along the lines
of grotesque psychopathologies, sexual abuse, massive, shocking trauma, or
Satanic rallies in the backyard. So normally when people are talking about
their families, Randy just shuts up and listens, feeling that he has nothing
to say. His familial anecdotes are so tame, so pedestrian, that it would be
presumptuous even to relate them, especially after someone else has just
divulged something really shocking or horrific.
But standing there and looking at these vortices he starts to wonder.
Some people's insistence that "Today I: smoke/am overweight/have a shitty
attitude/am depressed because: my mom died of cancer/my uncle put his thumb
up my butt/my dad hit me with a razor strop" seems kind of overly
deterministic to Randy; it seems to reflect a kind of lazy or half witted
surrender to bald teleology. Basically, if everyone has a vested interest in
believing that they understand everything, or even that people are capable
in principle of understanding it (either because believing this dampens
their insecurities about the unpredictable world, or makes them feel more
intelligent than others, or both) then you have an environment in which
dopey, reductionist, simple minded, pat, glib thinking can circulate, like
wheelbarrows filled with inflated currency in the marketplaces of Jakarta.
But things like the ability of some student's dead car to spawn
repeating patterns of thimble sized vortices a hundred yards downwind would
seem to argue in favor of a more cautious view of the world, an openness to
the full and true weirdness of the Universe, an admission of our limited
human faculties. And if you've gotten to this point, then you can argue that
growing up in a family devoid of gigantic and obvious primal psychological
forces, and living a life touched by many subtle and even forgotten
influences rather than one or two biggies (e.g., active participation in the
Church of Satan) can lead, far downwind, to consequences that are not
entirely devoid of interest. Randy hopes, but very much doubts, that America
Shaftoe, sitting up there in the algae colored light reading about the
inadvertent extermination of the Cayuse, sees it this way.
Randy rejoins his aunt at the Origin. Uncle Red has been explaining to
her, somewhat condescendingly, that they must pay careful attention to the
distribution of items on the economic scale, and for his troubles he has
been sent on a long, lonely walk down the +x axis carrying the complete
silver tea service. "Why couldn't we just have stayed inside and worked this
all out on paper?" Aunt Nina asks.
"It was felt that there was value in physically moving this stuff
around, giving people a direct physical analog of the value assertions that
they were making," Randy says. "Also that it would be useful to appraise
this stuff literally in the cold light of day." As opposed to ten or twelve
emotionally fraught people clambering around a packed to the ceiling U Stor
It locker with flashlights, sniping at each other from behind the armoires.
"Once we've all made our choices, then what? You sit down and figure it
out on a spreadsheet, or something?"
"It is much too computationally intensive to be solved that way.
Probably a genetic algorithm is called for certainly there won't be a
mathematically exact solution. My father knows a researcher in Geneva who
has done work on problems isomorphic to this one, and sent him e mail last
night. With any luck we will be able to ftp some suitable software and get
it running on the Tera."
"The Terror?"
"Tera. As in Teraflops."
"That does me no good at all. When you say 'as in' you are supposed to
give me something more familiar to relate it to."
"It is one of the ten fastest computers on the planet. Do you see that
red brick building just to the right of the end of the y axis," Randy says,
pointing down the hill, "Just behind the new gym?"
"The one with all the antennas?"
"Yes. The Tera machine is in there. It was made by a company in
Seattle."
"It must have been very expensive."
"My dad talked them out of it."
"Yes!" says Uncle Red cheerfully, returning from high x value
territory. "The man is a legendary donation raiser."
"He must have a persuasive side to him that I have not been perceptive
enough to notice yet," Aunt Nina says, wandering curiously towards some
large cardboard boxes.
"No," Randy says, "it's more like he just goes in and flops around on
the conference table until they become so embarrassed for his sake that they
agree to sign the check."
"You've seen him do this?" Aunt Nina says skeptically, sizing up a box
labeled CONSTITUENTS OF UPSTAIRS LINEN CLOSET.
"Heard about it. High tech is a small town," Randy says.
"He's been able to make great capital of his father's work," Uncle Red
says. "'If my father had patented even one of his computer inventions,
Palouse College would be bigger than Harvard,' and so on."
Aunt Nina has got the box open now. It is almost completely filled by a
single Qwghlmian blanket, in a dark greyish brown on dark brownish grey
plaid. The blanket in question is about an inch thick, and, during
wintertime family reunions, was infamous as a booby prize of sorts among the
Waterhouse grandchildren. The smell of mothballs, mildew, and heavily oiled
wool causes Aunt Nina's nose to wrinkle, as it did Aunt Annie's before her.
Randy remembers bedding down beneath this blanket once at the age of about
nine, and waking up at two in the morning with bronchial spasms,
hyperthermia, and vague memories of a nightmare about being buried alive.
Aunt Nina slams the box flaps shut, turns around, and looks in the direction
of the Impala. Robin Shaftoe is already running towards them. Being not bad
at math himself, he was quick to pick up on this whole concept, and knows
from experience that the blanket box will have to be trundled deep out into
( x, y) territory.
"I guess I'm just worried," Aunt Nina says, "about having my
preferences mediated by this supercomputer. I have tried to make it clear
what I want. But will the computer understand that?" She has paused by the
CERAMICS box in a way that is tantalizing Randy, who badly wants to have a
look inside, but doesn't want to arouse suspicions. He's the referee and is
sworn to objectivity. "Forget the china," she says, "too old ladyish."
Uncle Red wanders over and disappears behind one of the dead cars,
presumably to take a leak. Aunt Nina says, "How about you, Randy? As the
eldest son of the eldest son, you must have some feelings about this."
"No doubt when my parents' time comes, they will pass on some of
Grandma and Grandpa's legacy to me," Randy says.
"Oh, very circumspect. Well done," Aunt Nina says. "But as the only
grandchild who has any memories of your grandfather at all, there must be
something here that you might like to have."
"There'll probably be some odds and ends that nobody wants," Randy
says. Then like an almost perfect moron like an organism genetically
engineered to be a total, stupid idiot Randy glances directly at the Trunk.
Then he tries to hide it, which only makes it more conspicuous. He guesses
that his mostly beardless face must be an open book, and wishes he had never
shaved. A bullet of ice strikes him in the right cornea with a nearly
audible splot. The ballistic impact blinds him and the thermal shock gives
him an ice cream headache. When he recovers enough to see again, Aunt Nina
is walking around the trunk, kind of spiraling in towards it in a rapidly
decaying orbit. "Hmm. What's in here?" She grips the handle at one end and
finds she can barely get it off the ground.
"Old Japanese code books. Bundles of ETC cards."
"Marcus?"
"Yes, ma'am!" says Marcus Aurelius Shaftoe, returning from the double
negative quadrant.
"What is the angle exactly in between the +x and +y axes?" Aunt Nina
asks. "I would ask the referee, here, but I'm beginning to have doubts about
his objectivity."
M.A. glances at Randy and decides he had best interpret this last
comment as good natured familial horsing around. "Would you like that in
radians or degrees, ma'am?"
"Neither. Just demonstrate it for me. Take this great big trunk on that
strong back of yours and just split the middle between +x and +y axes and
keep walking until I say when."
"Yes, ma'am. M.A. hefts the trunk and starts walking, frequently
looking back and forth to verify that he's exactly in the middle. Robin
stands off at a safe distance watching with interest.
Uncle Red, returning from his piss break, watches this in horror.
"Nina! Love! That's not worth the cost of shipping it home! What on earth
are you doing?"
"Making sure I get what I want," Nina says.
***
Randy gets a small part of what he wants two hours later, when his own
mother breaks the seal on the CERAMICS box to verify that the china is in
good condition. At the time, Randy and his father are standing next to the
Trunk. It is rather late in his parent's value plotting work and so pieces
of fine furniture are now widely scattered across the parking lot, looking
like the aftermath of one of those tornadoes that miraculously sets things
down intact after whirling them through the skies for ten miles. Randy is
trying to find a way to talk up the emotional value of this trunk without
violating his oath of objectivity. The chances of anyone other than Nina
ending up with this trunk are actually quite miserable, since she (to Red's
horror) left almost everything clumped around the Origin except for it and
the coveted Console. But if Dad would at least move the thing off dead
center which no one except Nina has done then, if the Tera awards it to him
tomorrow morning, Randy can plausibly argue that it's something other than a
computer error. But Dad is taking most of his cues from Mom and is having
none of it.
Mom has bitten her gloves off and is parting layer after layer of
crumpled newsprint with magenta hands. "Oh, the gravy boat!" she exclaims,
and hoists up something that is more of a heavy cruiser than a boat. Randy
agrees with Aunt Nina that the design is old ladyish in the extreme, but
that's kind of tautological since he has only seen it in the house of his
grandmother, who has been an old lady for as long as he has known her. Randy
walks towards his mother with his hands in his pockets, still trying to play
it cool for some reason. This obsession with secrecy may have gone a bit
far. He has seen this gravy boat maybe twenty times in his life, always at
family reunions, and seeing it now roils up a whole silt cloud of long
settled emotions. He reaches out, and Mom remits it to his mittened hands.
He pretends to admire it from the side, and then flips it over to read the
words glazed on the bottom.
ROYAL ALBERT LAVENDER ROSE.
For a moment he is sweating under a vertical sun, swaying to keep his
balance on a rocking boat, smelling the neoprene of hoses and flippers. Then
he's back in the Palouse. He begins thinking about how to sabotage the
computer program to ensure that Aunt Nina gets what she wants, so that
she'll give him what is rightfully his.
Chapter 71 GOLGOTHA
Lieutenant Ninomiya reaches Bundok about two weeks after Goto Dengo,
accompanied by several bashed and scraped wooden cases. "What is your
specialty?" asks Goto Dengo, and Lieutenant Ninomiya responds by opening up
one of the cases to reveal a surveyor's transit swaddled in clean, oiled
linen. Another case contains an equally perfect sextant. Goto Dengo gawks.
The gleaming perfection of the instruments is a marvel. But even more
marvelous is that they sent him a surveyor only twelve days after he
requested one. Ninomiya grins at the look on his new colleague's face,
revealing that he has lost all of his front teeth except for one, which
happens to be mostly gold.
Before any engineering can be done, all of this wilderness must be
brought into the realm of the known. Detailed maps must be prepared,
watersheds charted, soil sampled. For two weeks Goto Dengo has been going
around with a pipe and a sledgehammer taking core samples of the dirt. He
has identified rocks from the streambeds, estimated the flow rates of the
Yamamoto and Tojo Rivers, counted and catalogued trees. He has trudged
through the jungle and planted flags around the approximate boundaries of
the Special Security Zone. The whole time, he's been worrying about having
to perform the survey himself, using primitive, improvised tools. And all of
a sudden, here is Lieutenant Ninomiya with his instruments.
The three Lieutenants, Goto, Mori and Ninomiya, spend a few days
surveying the flat, semi open land straddling the lower Tojo River. The
year, 1944, is turning out to be dry so far, and Mori does not want to
construct his military barracks on land that will turn into a marsh after
the first big rain. He is not concerned about the comfort of the prisoners,
but he would at least like to ensure that they won't get washed away. The
lay of the land is also important in setting up the interlocking fields of
fire that will be necessary to put down any riots or mass escape attempts.
They put Bundok's few enlisted men to work gathering bamboo stakes, then
drive these in to mark the locations of roads, barracks, barbed wire fences,
guard towers, and a few carefully sited mortar emplacements from which the
guards will be able to fill the atmosphere in any chosen part of the camp
with shrapnel.
When Lieutenant Goto takes Lieutenant Ninomiya up into the jungle,
clambering up the steep valley of the Tojo, Lieutenant Mori must stay behind
in accordance with Captain Noda's orders. This is just as well, since Mori
has his work cut out for him down below. The captain has granted Ninomiya a
special dispensation to see the Special Security Zone.
"Elevations are of supreme importance in this project," Goto Dengo
tells the surveyor on the way up. They are burdened with surveying equipment
and fresh water, but Ninomiya clambers up the rocky gulch of the half
parched river just as ably as Goto Dengo himself. "We will begin by
establishing the level of Lake Yamamoto which does not exist yet and then
work downwards from there."
"I have also been ordered to obtain the precise latitude and
longitude," says Ninomiya.
Goto Dengo grins. "That's hard there is nowhere to see the sun."
"What about the three peaks?"
Goto Dengo turns to see if Ninomiya is joking. But the surveyor is
looking intently up the valley.
"Your dedication sets a good example," Goto Dengo says.
"This place is paradise compared to Rabaul."
"Is that where you were sent from?"
"Yes."
"How did you escape? It is cut off, isn't it?"
"It has been cut off for some time," Ninomiya says curtly. Then, he
adds: "They came and got me in a submarine." His voice is husky and faint.
Goto Dengo is silent for a while.
Ninomiya has a system all worked out in his head, which they put into
effect the next week, after they have done a rough survey of the Special
Security Zone. Early in the morning, they hoist an enlisted man into a tree
with a canteen, a watch, and a mirror. There is nothing special about this
tree except for a bamboo stake recently driven into the ground nearby,
labeled MAIN DRIFT.
Then Lieutenants Ninomiya and Goto climb to the top of the mountain,
which takes them about eight hours. It is dreadfully arduous, and Ninomiya
is shocked that Goto volunteers to go with him. "I want to see this place
from the top of Calvary," Goto Dengo explains. "Only then will I have the
insight to perform my duty well."
On the way up, they compare notes, New Guinea vs. New Britain. It seems
that the latter's only saving grace is the settlement of Rabaul, a formerly
British port complete with a cricket oval, now the linchpin of Nipponese
forces in Southwest Asia. "For a long time it was a great place to be a
surveyor," Ninomiya says, and describes the fortifications that they built
there in preparation for MacArthur's invasion. He has a draftsman's
enthusiasm for detail and at one point talks nonstop for an hour describing
a particular system of bunkers and pillboxes down to the last booby trap and
glory hole.
As the climb gets harder, the two vie with each other in belittling its
difficulty. Goto Dengo tells the tale of climbing over the snow covered
mountain range in New Guinea.
"Nowadays, on New Britain we climb volcanoes all the time," Ninomiya
says offhandedly.
"Why?"
"To collect sulfur."
"Sulfur? Why?"
"To make gunpowder."
After this they don't talk for a while.
Goto Dengo tries to dig them out of a conversational hole. "It'll be a
bad day for MacArthur when he tries to take Rabaul!"
Ninomiya trudges along silently for a bit, trying to control himself,
and fails. "You idiot," he says, "don't you see? MacArthur isn't coming.
There's no need."
"But Rabaul is the cornerstone of the whole theater!"
"It is a cornerstone of soft, sweet wood in a universe of termites,"
Ninomiya snaps. "All he has to do is ignore us for another year, and then
everyone will be dead of starvation or typhus."
The jungle thins out. The plants are wrestling for footholds on a loose
slope of volcanic cinders, and only smaller ones endure. This puts Goto
Dengo in the mind of writing a poem in which the small, tenacious Nipponese
prevail over the big, lumbering Americans, but it has been a long time since
he wrote a poem and he can't make the words go together.
Someday the plants will turn this cone of scoria and rubble into soil,
but not yet. Now that Goto Dengo can finally see for more than a few yards
he is beginning to understand the lay of the land. The numerical data that
he and Ninomiya have compiled over the last week is being synthesized,
within his mind, into a solid understanding of how this place works.
Calvary is an old cinder cone. It started as a fissure from which ash
and scoria were ejected, one fragment at a time, for thousands of years,
tumbling up and outwards in a family of mortar shell like parabolic curves,
varying in height and distance depending on the size of each fragment and
the direction of the wind. They landed in a wide ring centered on the
fissure. As the ring grew in height it naturally spread out into a broad,
truncated cone with a central pit gouged out of its top, with the spitting
fissure in the bottom of that pit.
The winds here tend to come from a little bit east of due south, and so
the ash tended to be pushed towards the north by northwest edge of the
cone's rim. That is still the highest point of the cinder cone. But the
fissure died out eons ago, or perhaps was plugged by its own emissions, and
the whole structure has been much eroded since then. The southern rim of the
cone is just a barrier of low hills perforated by the courses of the
Yamamoto River and the two tributaries that come together to form the Tojo
River. The central pit is a bowl of loathsome jungle, so saturated with
chlorophyll that it looks black from above. Birds cruise above the canopy,
looking like colored stars from up here.
The northern rim still rises a good five hundred meters above the bowl
of jungle, but its formerly smooth arc has been dissected by erosion to form
three distinct summits, each one a pile of red scoria half concealed by a
stubble of green vegetation. Without discussion, Ninomiya and Goto Dengo
head for the one in the middle, which is the highest. They reach it at about
two thirty in the afternoon, and immediately wish they hadn't because the
sun is beating almost straight down on top of them. But there is a cool
breeze up here, and once they have protected their heads with makeshift
burnooses, it's not so bad. Goto Dengo sets up the tripod and the transit
while Ninomiya uses his sextant to shoot the sun. He has a pretty good
German watch which he zeroed against the radio transmission from Manila this
morning, and this enables him to reckon the longitude. He works the
calculation out on a scrap of paper on his lap, then goes back and does it
again to double check the numbers, speaking them out loud. Goto Dengo copies
them down in his notebook, just in case Ninomiya's notes get lost.
At three o'clock sharp, the enlisted man down in the tree begins to
flash his mirror at them: a brilliant spark from a dark rug of jungle that
is otherwise featureless. Ninomiya centers his transit on this signal and
takes down more figures. In combination with various other data from maps,
aerial photos and the like, this should enable him to make an estimate of
the main shaft's latitude and longitude.
"I don't know how accurate this will be," he frets, as they trudge down
the mountain. "I have the peak exactly what did you call it? Cavalry?"
"Close enough."
"This means soldiers on horseback, correct?"
"Yes."
"But the site of the shaft I will not have very precisely unless I can
use better techniques."
Goto Dengo considers telling him that this is perfectly all right, that
the place was made to be lost and forgotten. But he keeps his mouth shut.
The survey work takes another couple of weeks. They figure out where
the shore of Lake Yamamoto will be and calculate its volume. It will be more
of a pond than a lake less than a hundred meters across but it will be
deceptively deep, and it will hold a lot of water. They calculate the angle
of the shaft that will connect the bottom of the lake to the main network of
tunnels. They figure out where all of the horizontal tunnels will emerge
from the walls of the Tojo River's gorge, and stake out the routes of roads
and railways that will lead to those openings, so that debris can be removed
and precious war material brought in for storage. They double– and
triple check all of it to make sure that no fragment of the works will be
visible from the air.
Meanwhile, down below, Lieutenant Mori and a small work detail have
planted some fenceposts and strung some barbed wire just enough to contain a
hundred or so prisoners, who arrive packed into a couple of military trucks.
When these are put to work, the camp expands very rapidly; the military
barracks go up in a few days and the double barbed wire perimeter is
completed. They never seem to lack for supplies here. Dynamite comes in by
the truckload, as if it weren't desperately needed in places like Rabaul,
and is carefully stored under the supervision of Goto Dengo. Prisoners carry
it into a special shed that has been constructed for this purpose in the
shade of the jungle. Goto Dengo has not been close to the prisoners before,
and is startled to realize that they are all Chinese. And they are not
speaking the dialect of Canton or of Formosa, but rather one that Goto Dengo
heard frequently when he was posted in Shanghai. These prisoners are
northern Chinese.
It is stranger and stranger all the time, this Bundok place.
The Filipinos, he knows, have been uniquely surly about their inclusion
in the Greater East Asia Coprosperity Sphere. They are well armed, and
MacArthur has been egging them on. Many thousands of them have been taken
prisoner. Within half a day's drive of Bundok there are more than enough
Filipino prisoners to fill Lieutenant Mori's camp and accomplish Lieutenant
Goto's project. And yet the powers that be have shipped hundreds of Chinese
people all the way down from Shanghai to do this work.
At times like this he begins to doubt his own sanity. He feels an urge
to discuss the matter with Lieutenant Ninomiya. But the surveyor, his friend
and confidant, has made himself scarce since his work was completed. One
day, Goto Dengo goes by Ninomiya's tent and finds it empty. Captain Noda
explains that the surveyor was called away suddenly to perform important
work elsewhere.
About a month later, when the road building work in the Special
Security Zone is well underway, some of the Chinese workers who are digging
begin shouting excitedly. Goto Dengo understands what they are saying.
They have uncovered human remains. The jungle has done its work and
practically nothing is left but bones, but the smell, and the legions of
ants, tell him that the corpse is a fairly recent one. He grabs a shovel
from one of the workers and pulls up a scoop of dirt and carries it over to
the river, dripping tangles of ants. He lowers it carefully into the running
water. The dirt dissolves into a brown trail in the river and the skull is
soon revealed: the dome of the head, the eye sockets still not entirely
empty, the nasal bone with some fragments of cartilage still attached, and
finally the jaws, pocked with old abcesses and missing most of their teeth,
except for one gold tooth in the middle. The current turns the skull over
slowly, as if Lieutenant Ninomiya is hiding his face in shame, and Goto
Dengo sees a neat hole punched through the base of the skull.
He looks up. A dozen Chinese are gathered above him on the riverbank,
watching him impassively.
"Do not speak of this to any of the other Nipponese," Goto Dengo says.
Their eyes go wide and their lips part in astonishment as they hear him
speaking the precise dialect of Shanghai prostitutes.
One of the Chinese workers is nearly bald. He seems to be in his
forties, though prisoners age rapidly and so it is always difficult to tell.
He is not scared like the others. He is looking at Goto Dengo appraisingly.
"You," Goto Dengo says, "pick two other men and follow me. Bring
shovels."
He leads them into the jungle, into a place where he knows there will
be no further digging, and shows them where to put Lieutenant Ninomiya's new
grave. The bald man is a good leader as well as a strong worker and he gets
the grave dug quickly, then transfers the remains without squeamishness or
complaint. If he has been through the China Incident and survived for this
long as a prisoner of war, he has probably seen and done much worse.
Goto Dengo does his part by distracting Captain Noda for a couple of
hours. They go up and tour the dam work on the Yamamoto River. Noda is
anxious to create Lake Yamamoto as soon as possible, before MacArthur's air
force makes detailed surveys of the area. The sudden appearance of a lake in
the jungle would probably not go unnoticed.
The site of the lake is a natural rock bowl, covered by jungle, with
the Yamamoto River running through the middle of it. Right next to the
riverbank, men are already at work with rock drills, placing dynamite
charges. "The inclined shaft will start here," Goto Dengo tells Captain
Noda, "and runs straight " turning his back on the river he makes one hand
into a blade and thrusts it into the jungle " straight down to Golgotha."
The Place of the Skull.
"Gargotta?" Captain Noda says.
"It is a Tagalog word," Goto Dengo says authoritatively. "It means
'hidden glade.' "
"Hidden glade. I like it! Very good. Gargotta!" Captain Noda says.
"Your work is proceeding very well, Lieutenant Goto."
"I am only striving to live up to the high standard that was set by
Lieutenant Ninomiya," says Goto Dengo.
"He was an excellent worker," Noda says evenly.
"Perhaps when I am finished here, I can follow him to wherever he was
sent."
Noda grins. "Your work is only beginning. But I can say with confidence
that when you are finished you will be reunited with your friend."
Chapter 72 SEATTLE
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse's widow and five children agree that Dad
did something in the war, and that's about all. Each of them seems to have a
different 1950s B movie, or 1940s Movietone newsreel, in his or her head,
portraying a rather different set of events. There is not even agreement on
whether he was in the Army or the Navy, which seems like a pretty
fundamental plot point to Randy. Was he in Europe or Asia? Opinions differ.
Grandma grew up on an Outback sheep farm. One might therefore think that, at
some point in her life, she might have been an earthy cuss the type of woman
who would not only remember which service her late husband had been in but
would be able to take down his rifle from the attic and field strip it
blindfolded. But she had evidently spent something like seventy five percent
of her waking hours in church (where she not only worshipped but went to
school and transacted essentially all of her social life), or in transit
thereto or therefrom, and her own parents quite explicitly did not want her
to wind up living on a farm, ramming her arm up livestock vaginas and
slapping raw steaks over the black eyes dished out by some husband. Farming
might have been an adequate sort of booby prize for one or at most two of
their sons, sort of a fallback for any offspring who happened to suffer
major head injuries or fall into chronic alcoholism. But the real purpose of
the cCmndhd kids was to restore the past and lost glories of the family, who
allegedly had been major wool brokers around the time of Shakespeare and
well on their way to living in Kensington and spelling their name Smith
before some combination of scrapie, long term climatic change, nefarious
conduct by jealous Outer Qwghlmians, and a worldwide shift in fashions away
from funny smelling thirty pound sweaters with small arthropods living in
them had driven them all into honest poverty and then not so honest poverty
and led to their forcible transportation to Australia.
The point here being that Grandma was incarnated, indoctrinated, and
groomed by her Ma to wear stockings and lipstick and gloves in a big city
somewhere. The experiment had succeeded to the point where Mary cCmndhd
could, at any point in her post adolescent life, have prepared and served
high tea to the Queen of England on ten minutes' notice, flawlessly, without
having to even glance in a mirror, straighten up her dwelling, polish any
silver, or bone up on any etiquette. It had been a standing joke among her
male offspring that Mom could walk unescorted into any biker bar in the
world and simply by her bearing and appearance cause all ongoing fistfights
to be instantly suspended, all grubby elbows to be removed from the bar,
postures to straighten, salty language to be choked off. The bikers would
climb over one another's backs to take her coat, pull her chair back,
address her as ma'am, etc. Though it had never been performed, this biker
bar scene was like a whole sort of virtual or notional comedy sketch that
was a famous moment in entertainment for the Waterhouse family, like the
Beatles on Ed Sullivan or Belushi doing his samurai bit on Saturday Night
Live. It was up there on their mental videocassette shelves right next to
their imaginary newsreels and B movies of what the Patriarch had done in the
war.
The bottom line was that the ability to run a house in the way Grandma
was legendary or infamous for doing, to keep the personal grooming up to
that standard, to send out a few hundred Christmas cards every year, each
written in flawless fountain pen longhand, etc., etc., that all of these
things taken together took up as much space in her brain as, say mathematics
might take up in a theoretical physicist's.
And so when it came to anything of a practical nature she was perfectly
helpless, and probably always had been. Until she had gotten too old to
drive, she had continued to tool around Whitman in the 1965 Lincoln
Continental, which was the last vehicle her husband had purchased, from
Whitman's Patterson Lincoln Mercury, before his untimely death. The vehicle
weighed something like six thousand pounds and had more moving parts than a
silo full of Swiss watches. Whenever any of her offspring came to visit,
someone would discreetly slip out to the garage to yank the dipstick, which
would always be mysteriously topped up with clear amber colored 10W40. It
eventually turned out that her late husband had summoned the entire living
male lineage of the Patterson family four generations of them into his
hospital room and gathered them around his deathbed and wrought some kind of
unspecified pact with them along the general lines of that, if at any point
in the future, the tire pressure in the Lincoln dropped below spec or the
maintenance in any other way lapsed, all of the Pattersons would not merely
sacrifice their immortal souls, but literally be pulled out of meetings or
lavatories and dragged off to hell on the spot, like Marlowe's Dr. Faustus.
He knew that his wife had only the vaguest idea of what a tire was, other
than something that from time to time a man would heroically jump out of the
car and change while she sat inside the car admiring him. The world of
physical objects seemed to have been made solely for the purpose of giving
the men around Grandma something to do with their hands; and not, mind you,
for any practical reason, but purely so that Grandma could twiddle those
men's emotional knobs by reacting to how well or poorly they did it. Which
was a fine setup as long as men were actually around, but not so good after
Grandpa died. So guerilla mechanic teams had been surveilling Randy's
grandmother ever since and occasionally swiping her Lincoln from the church
parking lot on Sunday mornings and taking it down to Patterson's for sub
rosa oil changes. The ability of the Lincoln to run flawlessly for a quarter
of a century without maintenance without even putting gasoline in the tank
had only confirmed Grandmother's opinions about the amusing superfluity of
male pursuits.
In any event, what it all came down to was that Grandma, whose grasp of
practical matters had only declined (if that was even possible) with
advanced age, was not the sort of person you would go to for information
about her late husband's war record. Defeating the Nazis was in the same
category as changing a flat tire: an untidy business that men were expected
to know how to do. And not just the men of yore, the supermen of her
generation; Randy was expected to know about these things too. If the Axis
reconstituted itself tomorrow, Grandma would expect Randy to be suited up
behind the controls of a supersonic fighter plane the day after that. And
Randy would sooner spiral into the ground at Mach 2 than bear her tidings
that he wasn't up to the job.
Luckily for Randy, who has recently become intensely curious about
Grandpa, an old suitcase has been unearthed. It's a rattan and leather
thing, sort of a snappy Roaring Twenties number complete with some badly
abraded hotel stickers plotting Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse's migration
from the Midwest to Princeton and back which is completely filled with small
black and white photographs. Randy's father dumps the contents out on a ping
pong table that inexplicably sits in the center of the rec room at Grandma's
managed care facility, whose residents are about as likely to play ping pong
as they are to get their nipples pierced. The photos are messed out into
several discrete piles which are in turn sorted through by Randy and his
father and his aunts and uncles. Most of them are photos of the Waterhouse
kids, so everyone's fascinated until they have found pictures of themselves
at a couple of different ages. Then the pile of photos begins to look
depressingly large. Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse was evidently a shutterbug
of sorts and now his offspring are paying the price.
Randy has a different set of motives, and so he stays there late, going
through pictures by himself. Ninety nine out of a hundred are snapshots of
Waterhouse brats from the 1950s. But some are older. He finds a photo of
Grandpa in a place with palm trees, in a military uniform, with a big white
disk shaped officer's cap on his head. Three hours later he comes across a
picture of a very young Grandpa, really just a turkey necked adolescent
costumed in grownup clothes, standing in front of a gothic building with two
other men: a grinning dark haired chap who looks vaguely familiar, and an
aquiline blond fellow in rimless glasses. All three men have bicycles;
Grandpa is straddling his, and the other two, perhaps considering this to be
not so dignified, are supporting theirs with their hands. Another hour goes
by, and then there's Grandpa in a khaki uniform with more palm trees in the
background.
The next morning he sits down next to his grandmother, after she has
finished her daily hourlong getting out of bed ritual. "Grandmother, I found
these two old photographs." He deals them out on the table in front of her
and gives her a few moments to switch contexts. Grandma doesn't turn on a
dime conversationally, and besides, those stiff old lady corneas take a
little while to shift focus.
"Yes, these are both Lawrence when he was in the service." Grandmother
has always had this knack for telling people the obvious in a way that is
scrupulously polite but that makes the recipient feel like a butthead for
having wasted her time. By this point she is obviously tired of IDing
photographs, a tedious job with an obvious subtext of "you're going to die
soon and we were curious who is this lady standing next to the Buick?"
"Grandmother," Randy says brightly, trying to rouse her interest, "in
this photo here, he is wearing a Navy uniform. And in this photo here, he is
wearing an Army uniform."
Grandma Waterhouse raises her eyebrows and looks at him with the
synthetic interest she would use if she were at a formal affair of some
kind, and some man she'd just met tried to give her a tutorial on tire
changing.
"It is, uh, I think, kind of unusual," Randy says, "for a man to be in
both the Army and the Navy during the same war. Usually it's one or the
other."
"Lawrence had both an Army uniform and a Navy uniform," Grandmother
says, in the same tone she'd used to say he had both a small intestine and a
large intestine, "and he would wear whichever one was appropriate."
"Of course he would," Randy says.
***
The laminar wind is gliding over the highway like a crisp sheet being
stripped from a bed, and Randy's finding it hard to keep the Acura on the
pavement. The wind isn't strong enough to blow the car around, but it
obscures the edges of the road; all he can see is this white, striated plane
sliding laterally beneath him. His eye tells him to steer into it, which
would be a bad idea since it would take him and Amy straight into the lava
fields. He tries to focus on a distant point: the white diamond of Mount
Rainier, a couple of hundred kilometers west.
"I don't even know when they got married," Randy says. "Isn't that
horrible?"
"September of 1945," Amy says. "I dragged it out of her."
"Wow."
"Girl talk."
"I didn't know you were even rigged for girl talk."
"We can all do it."
"Did you learn anything else about the wedding? Like "
"The china pattern?"
"Yeah."
"It was in fact Lavender Rose," Amy says.
"So it fits. I mean, it fits chronologically. The submarine went down
in May of 1945 off of Palawan four months before the wedding. Knowing my
grandmother, wedding preparations would have been well advanced by that
point they definitely would have settled on a china pattern."
"And you think you have a photo of your grandpa in Manila around that
time?"
"It's definitely Manila. And Manila wasn't liberated until March of
'45."
"So what do we have, then? Your grandpa must've had some kind of
connection with someone on that U boat, between March and May."
"A pair of eyeglasses was found on the U boat." Randy pulls a photo out
of his shirt pocket and hands it across to Amy. "I'd be interested to know
if they match the specs on that guy. The tall blond."
"I can check it out when I go back. Is the geek on the left your
grandpa?"
"Yeah."
"Who's the geek in the middle?"
"I think it's Turing."
"Turing, as in TURING Magazine?"
"They named the magazine after him because he did a lot of early work
with computers," Randy says.
"Like your grandpa did."
"Yeah."
"How about this guy we're going to see in Seattle? He's a computer guy
too? Ooh, you're getting this look on your face like 'Amy just said
something so stupid it caused me physical pain.' Is this a common facial
expression among the men of your family? Do you think it is the expression
that your grandfather wore when your grandmother came home and announced
that she had backed the Lincoln Continental into a fire hydrant?"
"I am sorry if I make you feel bad sometimes," Randy says. "The family
is full of scientists. Mathematicians. The least intelligent of us become
engineers. Which is sort of what I am."
"Excuse me, did you just say you were one of the least intelligent?"
"Least focused, maybe."
"My point is that precision, and getting things right, in the
mathematical sense, is the one thing we have going for us. Everyone has to
have a way of getting ahead, right? Otherwise you end up working at
McDonald's your whole life, or worse. Some are born rich. Some are born into
a big family like yours. We make our way in the world by knowing that two
plus two equals four, and sticking to our guns in a way that is kind of
nerdy and that maybe hurts people's feelings sometimes. I'm sorry."
"Hurts whose feelings? People who think that two plus two equals five?"
"People who put a higher priority on social graces than on having every
statement uttered in a conversation be literally true."
"Like, for example . . . female people?"
Randy grinds his teeth for about a mile, and then says, "If there is
any generalization at all that you can draw about how men think versus how
women think, I believe it is that men can narrow themselves down to this
incredibly narrow laser beam focus on one tiny little subject and think
about nothing else."
"Whereas women can't?"
"I suppose women can. They rarely seem to want to. What I'm
characterizing here, as the female approach, is essentially saner and
healthier.
"See, you are being a little paranoid here and focusing on the negative
too much. It's not about how women are deficient. It's more about how men
are deficient. Our social deficiencies, lack of perspective, or whatever you
want to call it, is what enables us to study one species of dragonfly for
twenty years, or sit in front of a computer for a hundred hours a week
writing code. This is not the behavior of a well balanced and healthy
person, but it can obviously lead to great advances in synthetic fibers. Or
whatever."
"But you said that you yourself were not very focused."
"Compared to other men in my family, that's true. So, I know a little
about astronomy, a lot about computers, a little about business, and I have,
if I may say so, a slightly higher level of social functioning than the
others. Or maybe it's not even functioning, just an acute awareness of when
I'm not functioning, so that I at least know when to feel embarrassed."
Amy laughs. "You're definitely good at that. It seems like you sort of
lurch from one moment of feeling embarrassed to the next."
Randy gets embarrassed.
"It's fun to watch," Amy says encouragingly. "It speaks well of you."
"What I'm saying is that this does set me apart. One of the most
frightening things about your true nerd, for many people, is not that he's
socially inept because everybody's been there but rather his complete lack
of embarrassment about it."
"Which is still kind of pathetic."
"It was pathetic when they were in high school," Randy says. "Now it's
something else. Something very different from pathetic."
"What, then?"
"I don't know. There is no word for it. You'll see."
***
Driving over the Cascades produces a climatic transition that would
normally require a four hour airplane flight. Warm rain spatters the wind
shield and loosens the rinds of ice on the wipers. The gradual surprises of
March and April are compressed into a terse executive summary. It is about
as tantalizing as a strip tease video played on fast forward. The landscape
turns wet, and so green it's almost blue, and bolts straight up out of the
soil in the space of about a mile. The fast lanes of Interstate 90 are
strewn with brown snow turds melted loose from homebound skiers' Broncos.
Semis plummet past them in writhing conical shrouds of water and steam.
Randy's startled to see new office buildings halfway up the foothills,
sporting high tech logos. Then he wonders why he's startled. Amy has never
been here, and she takes her feet down from the airbag deployment panel and
sits up straight to look, wishing out loud that Robin and Marcus Aurelius
had come along, instead of turning back towards Tennessee. Randy remembers
to glide over into the right lanes and slow down as they shed the last
thousand feet of altitude into Issaquah, and sure enough the highway patrol
is out there ticketing speeders. Amy's duly impressed by this display of
acumen. They are still miles outside of the city core, in the half forested
suburbs of the East Side, where street and avenue numbers are up in the
triple digits, when Randy pulls onto an exit ramp and drives them down a
long commercial strip that turns out to be just the sphere of influence of a
big mall. Several satellite malls have burst from the asphalt all around it,
wiping out old landmarks and screwing up Randy's navigation. Everything is
crowded because people are out returning their Christmas gifts. After a
little bit of driving around and cursing, Randy finds the core mall, which
looks a little shabby compared to its satellites. He parks in the far corner
of the lot, explaining that it is more logical to do this and then walk for
fifteen seconds than it is to spend fifteen minutes looking for a closer
space.
Randy and Amy stand behind the Acura's open trunk for a minute peeling
off layers of suddenly gratuitous Eastern Washington insulation. Amy frets
about her cousins and wishes that she and Randy had donated all of their
cold weather gear to them; when last seen they were circling the Impala like
a pair of carrier based fighter aircraft orbiting their mother ship in
preparation for landing, checking tire pressures and fluid levels with an
intensity, an alertness, that made it seem as if they were about to do
something much more exciting than settle their asses into bucket seats and
drive east for a couple of days. They have a gallant style about them that
must knock the girls dead back home. Amy hugged them both passionately, as
if she'd never see them again, and they accepted her hugs with dignity and
forbearance, and then they were gone; resisting the urge to lay a patch
until they were a couple of blocks distant.
They go into the mall, Amy still wondering aloud why they are here, but
game. Randy is a little bit turned around, but eventually homes in on a
dimly heard electronic cacophony digitized voices prophesying war and
emerges into the mall's food court. Navigating now partly by sound and
partly by smell, he comes to the corner where a lot of males, ranging from
perhaps ten to forty years old, are seated in small clusters, some
extracting quivering chopstick loads of Szechuan from little white boxes but
most fixated on what, from a distance, looks like some kind of paperwork. As
backdrop, the ultraviolet maw of a vast game arcade spews digitized and
sound lab sweetened detonations, whooshes, sonic booms and Gatling farts.
But the arcade seems nothing more than a defunct landmark around which has
gathered this intense cult of paperwork hobbyists. A wiry teenager in tight
black jeans and a black t shirt prowls among the tables with the provocative
confidence of a pool hustler, a long skinny cardboard box slung over his
shoulder like a rifle. "These are my ethnic group," Randy explains in
response to the look on Amy's face. "Fantasy role playing gamers. This is
Avi and me ten years ago.
"They look like they're playing cards." Amy looks again, and wrinkles
her nose. "Weird cards." Amy barges curiously into the middle of a four nerd
game. Almost anywhere else, the appearance of a female with discernible
waist among these guys would cause some kind of a stir. Their eyes would at
least travel rudely up and down her body. But these guys only think about
one thing: the cards in their hands, each contained in a clear plastic
sleeve to keep it mint condition, each decorated with a picture of a troll
or wizard or some other leaf on the post Tolkienian evolutionary tree, and
printed on the back with elaborate rules. Mentally, these guys are not in a
mall on the East Side of greater Seattle. They are on a mountain pass trying
to kill each other with edged weapons and numinous fire.
The young hustler is sizing Randy up as a potential customer. His box
is long enough to contain a few hundred cards, and it looks heavy. Randy
would not be surprised to learn something depressing about this kid, like
that he makes so much money from buying cards low and selling them high that
he owns a brand new Lexus he's too young to drive. Randy catches his eye and
asks, "Chester?"
"Bathroom."
Randy sits down and watches Amy watching the nerds play their game. He
thought he'd hit bottom in Whitman, out there on the parking lot, that
surely she would get scared and flee. But this is potentially worse. A bunch
of tubby guys who never go outside, working themselves into a frenzy over
elaborate games in which nonexistent characters go out and do pretend things
that mostly are not as interesting as what Amy, her father, and various
other members of her family do all the time without making any fuss about
it. It is almost like Randy is deliberately hammering away at Amy trying to
find out when she'll break and run. But her lip hasn't started to writhe
nauseously yet. She's watching the game impartially, peeking over the nerds'
shoulders, following the action, occasionally squinting at some abstraction
in the rules.
"Hey, Randy."
"Hey, Chester."
So Chester's back from the bathroom. He looks exactly like the Chester
of old, except spread out over a somewhat larger volume, like the classic
demo of the expanding universe theory in which a face, or some other figure,
is drawn on a partly inflated balloon which is then inflated some more. The
pores have gotten larger, and the individual shafts of hair farther apart,
which produces an illusion of impending baldness. It seems like even his
eyes have gotten farther apart and the flecks of color in the irises grown
into blotches. He is not necessarily fat he has the same rumpled heftiness
he used to. Since people do not literally grow after their late teens, this
must be an illusion. Older people seem to take up a larger space in the
room. Or maybe older people see more.
"How's Avid?"
"As avid as ever," Randy says, which is lame but obligatory. Chester is
wearing a sort of photographer's vest with a gratuitous number of small
pockets, each of which is stuffed with gaming cards. Maybe that's why he
seems big. He has like twenty pounds of cards strapped to him. "I note that
you have made the transition to card based RPGs," Randy says.
"Oh, yeah! It is so much better than the old pencil and paper way. Or
even computer mediated RPGs, with all due respect to the fine work that you
and Avi did. What are you working on now?"
"Something that might actually be relevant to this," Randy says. "I was
just realizing that if you have a set of cryptographic protocols suitable
for issuing an electronic currency that cannot be counterfeited which oddly
enough we do you could adapt those same protocols to card games. Because
each one of these cards is like a banknote. Some more valuable than others."
Chester nods all the way through this, but does not rudely interrupt
Randy as a younger nerd would. Your younger nerd takes offense quickly when
someone near him begins to utter declarative sentences, because he reads
into it an assertion that he, the nerd, does not already know the
information being imparted. But your older nerd has more self confidence,
and besides, understands that frequently people need to think out loud. And
highly advanced nerds will furthermore understand that uttering declarative
sentences whose contents are already known to all present is part of the
social process of making conversation and therefore should not be construed
as aggression under any circumstances. "It's already being done," Chester
says, when Randy's finished. "In fact, that company you and Avi worked for
in Minneapolis is one of the leaders "
"I'd like you to meet my friend, Amy," Randy interrupts, even though
Amy is a good distance away, and not paying attention. But Randy is afraid
that Chester's about to tell him that stock in that Minneapolis company is
now up to the point where its market capitalization exceeds that of General
Dynamics, and that Randy should've held onto his shares. "Amy, this is my
friend Chester," Randy says, leading Chester between tables. At this point
some of the gamers actually do look up interestedly not at Amy, but at
Chester, who (Randy infers) has probably got some one of a kind cards tucked
away in that vest, like THE THERMONUCLEAR ARSENAL OF THE UNION OF SOVIET
SOCIALIST REPUBLICS or YHWH. Chester exhibits a marked improvement in social
skills, shaking Amy's hand with no trace of awkwardness and dropping
smoothly into a pretty decent imitation of a mature and well rounded
individual engaging in polite small talk. Before Randy knows it, Chester has
invited them over to his house.
"I heard it wasn't done yet," Randy says.
"You must've seen the article in The Economist," Chester says.
"That's right."
"If you'd seen the article in The New York Times, you'd know that the
article in The Economist was wrong. I am now living in the house."
"Well, it'd be fun to see it," Randy says.
***
"Notice how well paved my street is?" Chester says sourly, half an hour
later. Randy has parked his hammered and scraped Acura in the guest parking
lot of Chester's house and Chester has parked his 1932 Dusenberg roadster in
the garage, between a Lamborghini and some other vehicle that would appear
to be literally an aircraft, built to hover on ducted fans.
"Uh, I can't say that I did," Randy says, trying not to gape at
anything. Even the pavement under his feet is some kind of custom made
mosaic of Penrose tiles. "I sort of vaguely remember it as being broad and
flat and not having any chuckholes. Well paved, in other words."
"This," Chester says, head faking towards his house, "was the first
house to trigger the LOHO."
"LOHO?"
"The Ludicrously Oversized Home Ordinance. Some malcontents rammed it
through the city council. You get these, like cardiovascular surgeons and
trust fund parasites who like to have big nice houses, but God forbid some
dirty hacker should try to build a house of his own, and send a few cement
trucks down their street occasionally."
"They made you repave the street?"
"They made me repave half the fucking town," Chester says. "I mean,
some of the neighbors were griping that the house was an eyesore, but after
we got off on the wrong foot my attitude was, to hell with 'em." Indeed,
Chester's house does resemble nothing so much as a regional trucking hub
with a roof made entirely of glass. He waves his arm down a patchily turfed
slab of mud that slopes down into Lake Washington. "Obviously the
landscaping hasn't even begun yet. So it looks like a science fair project
on erosion."
"I was going to say the Battle of the Somme," Randy says.
"Not as good an analogy because there are no trenches," Chester says.
He is still pointing down towards the lake. "But if you look near the
waterline you can just make out some railroad ties, half buried. That's
where we laid the tracks."
"Tracks?" Amy says, the only word she's been able to get out of her
mouth since Randy drove his Acura through the main gate. Randy told her, on
the way over here, that if he, Randy, had a hundred thousand dollars for
every order of magnitude by which Chester's net worth currently exceeds his,
then he (Randy) would never have to work again. This turned out to be more
clever than informative, and so Amy was not prepared for what they have
found here and is still steepling her eyebrows.
"For the locomotive," Chester says. "There are no railway lines nearby,
so we barged the locomotive in and then winched it up a short railway into
the foyer."
Amy just scrunches up her face, silent.
"Amy hasn't seen the articles," Randy says.
"Oh! Sorry," Chester says, "I'm into obsolete technology. The house is
a museum of dead tech. Stick your hand into these things."
Lined up before the front entrance are four waist high pedestals,
emblazoned with the Novus Ordo Seclorum eyeball/pyramid logo, with outlines
of hands stenciled onto their lids, and knobs in the lagoons between the
fingers. Randy fits his hand into place and feels the knobs slide in their
grooves, reading and memorizing the geometry of his hand. "The house knows
who you are now," Chester says, typing their names into a ruggedized,
weatherproofed keyboard, "and I'm giving you a certain privilege
constellation that I use for personal guests now you can come in through the
main gate and park your car and wander around the grounds whether or not I'm
home. And you can enter the house if I'm home, but if I'm not home, it'll be
locked to you. And you can wander freely in the house except for certain
offices where I keep proprietary corporate documents."
"You have your own company or something?" Amy says weakly.
"No. After Randy and Avi left town, I dropped out of college and
snagged a job with a local company, which I still have," Chester says.
The front door, a translucent crystal slab on a track, slides open.
Randy and Amy follow Chester into his house. As advertised, there is a
fullscale steam locomotive in the foyer.
"The house is patterned after flex space," Chester says.
"What's that?" Amy asks. She is completely turned off by the
locomotive.
"A lot of high tech companies get started in flex space, which just
means a big warehouse with no internal walls or partitions just a few
pillars to hold up the ceiling. You can drag partitions around to divide it
up into rooms."
"Like cubicles?"
"Same idea, but the partitions go up higher so you have a feeling of
being in a real room. Of course, they don't go all the way up to the
ceiling. Otherwise, there wouldn't be room for the TWA."
"The what?" Amy asks. Chester, who is leading them into the maze of
partitions, answers the question by tilting his head back and looking
straight up.
The roof of the house is made entirely of glass, held up by a trusswork
of white painted steel tubes. It is maybe forty or fifty feet above the
floor. The partitions rise to a height of maybe twelve feet. In the gap
above the partitions and below the ceiling, a grid has been constructed, a
scaffolding of red pipes, nearly as vast as the house itself. Thousands,
millions, of aluminum shreds are trapped in that space grid, like tom tufts
caught in a three dimensional screen. It looks like an artillery shell the
length of a football field that has exploded into shrapnel a microsecond ago
and been frozen in place; light filters through the metal scraps, trickles
down bundles of shredded wiring and glances flatly off the crusts of melted
and hardened upholstery. It is so vast and so close that when Amy and Randy
first look up at it they flinch, expecting it to fall on them. Randy already
knows what it is. But Amy has to stare at it for a long time, and prowl from
room to room, viewing it from different angles, before it takes shape in her
mind, and becomes recognizable as something familiar: a 747.
"The FAA and NTSB were surprisingly cool about it," Chester muses.
"Which makes sense. I mean, they've reconstructed this thing in a hangar,
right? Dredged up all the pieces, figured out where they go, and hung them
on this grid. They've gone over it and gathered all the forensic evidence
they could find, hosed out all the human remains and disposed of them
properly, sterilized the debris so that the crash investigation team doesn't
have to worry about getting AIDS from touching a bloody flange or something.
And they're done with it. And they're paying like rent on this hangar. They
can't throw it away. They have to store it somewhere. So all I had to do was
get the house certified as a federal warehouse, which was a pretty easy
legal hack. And if there's a lawsuit, I have to let the lawyers in to go
over it. But really it was not a problem to do this. The Boeing guys love
it, they're over here all the time."
"It's like a resource to them," Randy guesses.
"Yeah."
"You like to play that role."
"Sure! I have defined a privilege constellation specifically for
engineer types who can come here anytime they want to access the house as a
museum of dead tech. That's what I mean by the flex space analogy. To me and
my guests, it's a home. To these visitors . . . there's one right there."
Chester waves his arm across the room (it is a central room maybe fifty
meters on a side) at an engineer type who has set up a Hasselblad on a huge
tripod and is pointing it straight up at a bent landing gear strut ". . . to
them it's exactly like a museum in that there are places they can go and
other places that if they step over the line will set off alarms and get
them in trouble."
"Is there a gift shop?" Amy jokes.
"The gift shop is roughed in, but not up and running the LOHO throws up
all kinds of impediments," Chester grumbles.
They end up in a relatively cozy glass walled room with a view across
the churned mud to the lake. Chester fires up an espresso machine that looks
like a scale model of an oil refinery and generates a brace of lattes. This
room happens to be underneath the TWA's left wing tip, which is relatively
intact. Randy realizes, now, that the entire plane has been hung in a gentle
banking attitude, like it's making an imperceptible course change, which is
not really appropriate; a vertical dive would make more sense, but then the
house would have to be fifty stories high to accommodate it. He can see a
repeating pattern of tears in the wing's skin that seems to be an expression
of the same underlying math that generates repeating vortices in a wake, or
swirls in a Mandelbrot set. Charlene and his friends used to heckle him for
being a Platonist, but everywhere he goes he sees the same few ideal forms
shadowed in the physical world. Maybe he's just stupid or something.
The house lacks a woman's touch. Randy gathers, from hints dropped by
Chester, that the TWA has not turned out to be the conversation starter that
he had hoped it would be. He is considering building fake ceilings over some
of the house's partitions so that they will feel more like rooms, which, he
admits, might make "some people" feel more comfortable there and open the
possibility of their committing themselves to "an extended stay." So
evidently he is in early negotiations with some kind of female, which is
good news.
"Chester, two years ago you sent me e mail about a project you were
launching to build replicas of early computers. You wanted information about
my grandfather's work."
"Yeah," Chester says. "You want to see that stuff? It's been on the
back burner, but "
"I just inherited some of his notebooks," Randy says.
Chester's eyebrows go up. Amy glances out the window; her hair, skin,
and clothes take on a pronounced reddish tinge from Doppler effect as she
drops out of the conversation at relativistic velocity.
"I want to know if you have a functioning ETC card reader."
Chester snorts. "That's all?"
"That's all."
"You want a 1932 Mark III card reader? Or a 1938 Mark IV? Or a "
"Does it make any difference? They all read the same cards, right?"
"Yeah, pretty much."
"I have some cards from circa 1945 that I would like to have read out
onto a floppy disk that I can take home."
Chester picks up a cellphone the size of a gherkin and begins to prod
it. "I'll call my card man," he says. "Retired ETC engineer. Lives on Mercer
Island. Comes up here on his boat a couple times a week and tinkers with
this stuff. He'll be really excited to meet you."
While Chester is conversing with his card man, Amy meets Randy's eyes
and gives him a look that is almost perfectly unreadable. She seems a bit
deflated. Worn down. Ready to go home. Her very unwillingness to show her
feelings confirms this. Before this trip, Amy would have agreed that it
takes all kinds to make a world. She'd still assent to it now. But Randy's
been showing her some practical applications of that concept, in the last
few days, that are going to take her a while to fit into her world view. Or,
more importantly, into her Randy view. And sure enough, the moment Chester's
off the phone, she's asking if she can use it to call the airlines. There is
only a momentary upward flick of the eyes towards the TWA. And once Chester
gets over his astonishment that anyone still uses voice technology to make
airline reservations in this day and age, he takes her to the nearest
computer (there is a fully outfitted UNIX machine in every room) and patches
into the airline databases directly and begins searching for the optimal
route back home. Randy goes and stares out the window at the chilly
whitecaps slapping the mud shore and fights the urge to just stay here in
Seattle, which is a town where he could be very happy. Behind him Chester
and Amy keep saying "Manila," and it sounds ridiculously exotic and hard to
reach. Randy thinks that he is marginally smarter than Chester and would be
even richer if he'd only stayed here.
A fast white boat comes larruping around the point from the direction
of Mercer Island and banks towards him. Randy sets down his cold coffee and
goes out to his car and retrieves a certain trunk a lovely gift from a
delighted Aunt Nina. It is full of certain old treasures, like his
grandfather's high school physics notebooks. He sets aside (for example) a
box labeled HARVARD WATERHOUSE PRIME FACTOR CHALLENGE '49 52 to reveal a
stack of bricks, neatly wrapped in paper that has gone gold with age, each
consisting of a short stack of ETC cards, and each labeled ARETHUSA
INTERCEPTS with a date from 1944 or '45. They have been in suspended
animation for more than fifty years, stored on a dead medium, and now Randy
is going to breathe life into them again, and maybe send them out on the
Net, a few strands of fossil DNA broken out of their amber shells and
released in the world again.
Probably they will fail and die, but if they flourish, it should make
Randy's life a little more interesting. Not that it's devoid of interest
now, but it is easier to introduce new complications than to resolve the old
ones.
Chapter 73 ROCK
Bundok is good rock; whoever picked it must have known this. That
basalt is so strong that Goto Dengo can carve into it any system of tunnels
that he desires. As long as he observes a few basic engineering principles,
he need not worry about tunnels collapsing.
Of course, cutting holes into such rock is hard work. But Captain Noda
and Lieutenant Mori have provided him with an unlimited supply of Chinese
laborers. At first the chatter of their drills drowns out the sounds of the
jungle. Later, as they burrow into the earth, it fades to a thick tamping
beat, leaving only the buzzing drone of the air compressors. Even at night
they work by the dim light of lanterns, which cannot penetrate the canopy
overhead. Not that MacArthur is sending observation planes over Luzon in the
middle of the night, but work lights shining up on the mountain would be
noticed by the lowland Filipinos.
The inclined shaft connecting the bottom of Lake Yamamoto to Golgotha
is by far the longest part of the complex, but it need not have a very great
diameter: just big enough for a single worker to worm his way up to the end
and operate his drill. Before the lake is created, Goto Dengo has a crew dig
the extreme upper end of that shaft, tunneling out and down from the
riverbank with a dip angle of some twenty degrees. This excavation
continually fills up with water it is effectively a well and removing the
waste rock is murder, because it all has to be hauled uphill. So when it has
proceeded for some five meters, Goto Dengo has the opening sealed up with
stones and mortar.
Then he has the latrines' filled in, and the area around the lake
cleared of workers. They can do nothing now but contaminate the place with
evidence. Summer has arrived, the rainy season on Luzon, and he is worried
that rain will find the ruts worn into the soil by the Chinese workers' feet
and turn them into gullies, impossible to conceal. But the unusually dry
weather holds, and vegetation rapidly takes root on the bare ground.
Goto Dengo is faced with a challenge that would seem familiar to the
designer of a garden back home: he needs to create an artificial formation
that seems natural. It needs to look as though a boulder rolled down the
mountain after an earthquake and wedged itself in a bottleneck of the
Yamamoto River. Other rocks, and the logs of dead trees, piled up against
it, forming a natural dam that created the lake.
He finds the boulder he needs sitting in the middle of the riverbed
about a kilometer upstream. Dynamite would only shatter it, and so he brings
in a stout crew of workers with iron levers, and they get it rolling. It
goes a few meters and stops.
This is discouraging, but the workers have the idea now. Their leader
is Wing the bald Chinese man who helped Goto Dengo bury the corpse of
Lieutenant Ninomiya. He has the mysterious physical strength that seems to
be common among bald men, and he has a kind of mesmerizing leadership power
over the other Chinese. He somehow manages to get them excited about moving
the boulder. Of course, they have to move it, because Goto Dengo has let it
be known that he wants it moved, and if they don't, Lieutenant Mori's guards
will shoot them on the spot. But above and beyond this, they seem to welcome
the challenge. Certainly standing in cool running water beats working down
in the mineshafts of Golgotha.
The boulder is in place three days later. The water divides around it.
More boulders follow, and the river begins to pool. Trees do not naturally
sprout from lakes, and so Goto Dengo has workers fell the ones that are
standing here not with axes, though. He shows them how to excavate the roots
one at a time, like archaeologists digging up a skeleton, so that it looks
as if the trees were uprooted during a typhoon. These are piled up against
the boulders, and smaller stones and gravel follow. Suddenly the level of
Lake Yamamoto begins to rise. The dam leaks, but the leaks peter out as more
gravel and clay are dumped in behind it. Goto Dengo is not above plugging
troublesome holes with sheets of tin, as long as it's down where no one will
ever see it. When the lake has reached its desired level, the only sign it's
manmade is a pair of wires trailing up onto its shore, rooted in demolition
charges molded into the concrete plug on its bottom.
Golgotha is cut into a ridge of basalt that is flung out from the base
of the mountain like a buttress root from the trunk of a jungle tree that
separates the watersheds of the Yamamoto and Tojo Rivers. Moving southwards
from the summit of Calvary, then, one would pass through the teeming bowl of
its extinct crater first, over the remains of its southern rim, and then
onto the gradual downward slope of a much larger mountain on which Calvary's
cinder cone is just a blemish, like a wart on a nose. The small Yamamoto
River runs generally parallel to the Tojo on the other side of the basalt
ridge, but descends more gradually, so that its elevation gets higher and
higher above that of the Tojo River as both work their way down the
mountain. At the site of Lake Yamamoto, it is fifty meters above the Tojo.
By drilling the connecting tunnel in a southeasterly direction rather than
straight east underneath the ridge, one can bypass a chain of rapids and a
waterfall on the Tojo which drop that river's elevation to almost a hundred
meters beneath the bottom of the lake.
When The General comes to inspect the works, Goto Dengo astonishes him
by taking him up the Tojo River in the same Mercedes he used to drive down
from Manila. By this point, the workers have constructed a single lane road
that leads from the prison camp up the rocky bed of the river to Golgotha.
"Fortune has smiled on our endeavor by giving us a dry summer," Goto Dengo
explains. "With the water low, the riverbed makes an ideal roadway the rise
in altitude is gentle enough for the heavy trucks that we will be bringing
in. When we are finished, we will create a low dam near the site that will
conceal the most obvious signs of our work. When the river rises to its
normal height, there will be no visible trace that men were ever here."
"It is a good idea," The General concedes, then mumbles something to
his aide about using the same technique at the other sites. The aide nods
and hais and writes it down.
A kilometer into the jungle, the banks rise up into vertical walls of
stone that climb higher and higher above the water's level until they
actually overhang the river. There is a hollow in the stony channel where
the river broadens out; just upstream is the waterfall. At this point the
road makes a left turn directly into the rock wall, and stops. Everyone gets
out of the Mercedes: Goto Dengo, The General, his aide, and Captain Noda.
The river runs over their feet, ankle deep.
A mouse hole has been dug into the rock here. It has a flat bottom and
an arched ceiling. A six year old could stand upright in here, but anyone
taller will have to stoop. A pair of iron rails runs into the opening. "The
main drift," says Goto Dengo.
"This is it?"
"The opening is small so that we can conceal it later," Captain Noda
explains, cringing, "but it gets wider inside."
The General looks pissed off and nods. Led by Goto Dengo, all four men
squat and duck walk into the tunnel, pushed by a steady current of air.
"Notice the excellent ventilation," Captain Noda enthuses, and Goto Dengo
grins proudly.
Ten meters in, they are able to stand up. Here, the drift has the same
vaulted shape, but it's six feet high and six wide, buttressed by reinforced
concrete arches that they have poured in wooden forms on the floor. The iron
rails run far away into blackness. A train of three mine cars sits on them
sheet metal boxes filled with shattered basalt. "We remove waste by hand
tramming," Goto Dengo explains. "This drift, and the rails, are perfectly
level, to keep the cars from running out of control."
The General grunts. Clearly he has no respect for the intricacies of
mine engineering.
"Of course, we will use the same cars to move the, er, material into
the vault when it arrives," Captain Noda says.
"Where did this waste come from?" The General demands. He is pissed off
that they are still digging at this late stage.
"From our longest and most difficult tunnel the inclined shaft to the
bottom of Lake Yamamoto," says Goto Dengo. "Fortunately, we can continue to
extend that shaft even while the material is being loaded into the vault.
Outgoing cars will carry waste from the shaft work, incoming cars will carry
the material."
He stops to thrust his finger into a drill hole in the ceiling. "As you
can see, all of the holes are ready for the demolition charges. Not only
will those charges bring down the ceiling, but they will leave the
surrounding rock so rotten as to make horizontal excavation very difficult."
They walk down the main drift for fifty meters. "We are in the heart of
the ridge now," Goto Dengo says, "halfway between the two rivers. The
surface is a hundred meters straight up." In front of them, the string of
electric lights terminates in blackness. Goto Dengo gropes for a wall
switch.
"The vault," he says, and hits the switch.
The tunnel has abruptly broadened into a flat bottomed chamber with an
arched ceiling, shaped like a Quonset hut, lined with concrete, the concrete
massively ribbed every couple of meters. The floor of the vault is perhaps
the size of a tennis court. The only opening is a small vertical shaft
rising up from the middle of the ceiling, just barely big enough to contain
a ladder and a human body.
The General folds his arms and waits while the aide goes around with a
tape measure, verifying the dimensions.
"We go up," says Goto Dengo, and, without waiting for The General to
bristle, mounts the ladder up into the shaft. It only goes up for a few
meters, and then they are in another drift with another narrow gauge railway
on the floor. This one's shored up with timbers hewn from the surrounding
jungle.
"The haulage level, where we move rock around," Goto Dengo explains,
when they have all convened at the top of the ladder. "You asked about the
waste in those cars. Let me show you how it got there." He leads the group
down the tracks for twenty or thirty meters, past a train of battered cars.
"We are headed northwest, towards Lake Yamamoto."
They reach the end of the drift, where another narrow shaft pierces the
ceiling. A fat reinforced hose runs up into it, compressed air keening out
through tiny leaks. The sound of drills can be heard, from very far away. "I
would not recommend that you look up this shaft, because stray rocks
occasionally come down from where we are working," he warns. "But if you
looked straight up, you would see that, about ten meters above us, this
shaft comes up into the floor of a narrow inclined shaft that goes uphill
that way " he motions northwest " towards the lake, and downhill that way "
He turns a hundred and eighty degrees, back towards the vault.
"Toward the fool's chamber," The General says, with relish.
"Hai!" answers Goto Dengo. "As we extend the shaft up toward the lake,
we rake the broken rock downhill with an iron hoe drawn by a winch, and when
it reaches the top of this vertical shaft that you see here, it falls down
into waiting cars. From here we can drop it down into the main vault and
from there hand tram it to the exit."
"What are you doing with all the waste?" asks The General.
"Spreading some of it down the riverbed, using it to make the roadway
that we drove up on. Some of it is stored above to backfill various
ventilation shafts. Some is being crushed into sand for a trap which I will
explain later." Goto Dengo leads them back in the direction of the main
vault, but they pass by the ladder and turn into another drift, then
another. Then the drifts become narrow and cramped again, like the one at
the entrance. "Please forgive me for leading you into what seems like a
three dimensional maze," Goto Dengo says. "This part of Golgotha is
intentionally confusing. If a thief ever manages to break into the fool's
chamber from above, he will expect to find a drift through which the
material was loaded into it. We have left one there for him to find a false
drift that seems to lead away toward the Tojo River. Actually, a whole
complex of false drifts and shafts that will all be demolished by dynamite
when we are finished. It will be so difficult, not to mention dangerous, for
the thief to work his way through so much rotten rock, that he will probably
be satisfied with what he finds in the fool's chamber."
He keeps pausing and looking back at The General, expecting him to tire
of this, but clearly The General is getting a second wind. Captain Noda,
taking up the rear, gestures him onwards impatiently.
The maze takes some time to negotiate and Goto Dengo, like a
prestidigitator, tries to fill up the time with some convincing patter. "As
I'm sure you understand, shafts and drifts must be engineered to counteract
lithostatic forces."
"What?"
"They must be strong enough to support the rock overhead. Just as a
building must be strong enough to hold up its own roof."
"Of course," says The General.
"If you have two parallel drifts, one above the other like storeys in a
building, then the rock in between them the floor or the ceiling, depending
on which way you look at it must be thick enough to support itself. In the
structure we are walking through, the rock is just barely thick enough. But
when the demolition charges have been set off, the rock will be shattered so
that reconstructing these drifts will be a physical impossibility."
"Excellent!" says The General, and again tells his aide to make a note
of it apparently so that the other Goto Dengos in the other Golgothas can do
the same.
At one point a drift has been plugged by a wall made of rubble stuck
together with mortar. Goto Dengo shines his lantern on it, lets the General
see the iron rails disappearing beneath the masonry. "To a thief coming down
from the fool's chamber, this will look like the main drift," he explains.
"But if he demolishes that wall, he dies."
"Why?"
"Because on the other side of that wall is a shaft that connects to the
lake Yamamoto pipe. One blow from a sledgehammer and that wall will explode
from the water pressure that will be on the other side of it. Then Lake
Yamamoto rushes forth from that hole like a tsunami."
The General and his aide spend some time cackling over this one.
Finally they waddle down a drift into a vault, half the dimensions of
the main vault, that is illuminated from above by dim bluish sky light. Goto
Dengo turns on some electric lights as well. "The fool's vault," he
announces. He points up the vertical shaft in the ceiling. "Our ventilation
has been courtesy of this." The General peers upwards and sees, a hundred
meters above them, a circle of radiant green blue jungle quartered by the
spinning swastika of a big electric fan. "Of course, we would not want
thieves to find the fool's chamber too easily or it wouldn't fool anyone. So
we have added some features, up there, to make it interesting."
"What sorts of features?" asks Captain Noda, stepping crisply into his
role as straight man.
"Anyone who attacks Golgotha will attack from above to gain horizontal
access, the distance is too great. This means they will have to tunnel
downwards, either through fresh rock or through the column of rubble with
which this ventilation shaft will be filled. In either case, they will
discover, when they are about halfway down, a stratum of sand, three to five
meters in depth, spread across the whole area. I need hardly remind you
that, in nature, pockets of sand are never found in the middle of igneous
rock!"
Goto Dengo begins climbing up the ventilation shaft. Halfway to the
surface, it comes up into a network of small, rounded, interconnected
chambers, whittled out of the rock, with fat pillars left in place to hold
up the ceiling. The pillars are so thick and numerous that it's not possible
to see very far, but when the others have arrived, and Goto Dengo begins
leading them from room to room, they learn that this system of chambers
extends for a considerable distance.
He takes them to a place where an iron manhole is set into a hole in
the rock wall, sealed in place with tar. "There are a dozen of these," he
says. "Each one leads to the Lake Yamamoto shaft so pressurized water will
be behind it. The only thing holding them in place right now is tar
obviously not enough to hold back the pressure of the lake water. But when
we have filled these rooms with sand, the sand will hold the manholes in
place. But if a thief breaks in and removes the sand, the manhole explodes
out of its seat and millions of gallons of water force their way into his
excavation."
From there, another climb up the shaft takes them to the surface, where
Captain Noda's men are waiting to move the ventilation fan out of their way,
and his aide is waiting with bottles of water and a pot of green tea.
They sit at a folding table and refresh themselves. Captain Noda and
The General talk about goings on in Tokyo evidently The General just flew
down from there a few days ago. The General's aide performs calculations on
his clipboard.
Finally, they hike up over the top of the ridge to take a look at Lake
Yamamoto. The jungle is so thick that they almost have to fall into it
before they can see it. The General pretends to be surprised that it is an
artificial body of water. Goto Dengo takes this as a high commendation. They
stand, as people often will, at the edge of the water, and say nothing for a
few minutes. The General smokes a cigarette, squinting through the smoke
across the lake, and then turns to the aide and nods. This seems to
communicate much to the aide, who turns to face Captain Noda and pipes up
with a question: "What is the total number of workers?"
"Now? Five hundred."
"The tunnels were designed with this assumption?"
Captain Noda shoots an uneasy look at Goto Dengo. "I reviewed
Lieutenant Goto's work and found that it was compatible with that
assumption."
"The quality of the work is the highest we have seen," the aide
continues.
"Thank you!"
"Or expect to see," The General adds.
"As a result, we may wish to increase the amount of material stored at
this site."
"I see."
"Also . . . the schedule may have to be greatly accelerated."
Captain Noda looks startled.
"He has landed on Leyte with a very great force," The General says
bluntly, as if this had been expected for years.
"Leyte!? But that is so close."
"Precisely."
"It is insane," Noda raves. "The Navy will crush him it is what we have
been waiting for all these years! The Decisive Battle!"
The General and the aide stand uncomfortably for a few long moments,
seemingly unable to speak. Then The General fixes Noda with a long, frigid
stare. "The Decisive Battle was yesterday."
Captain Noda whispers, "I see." He suddenly looks about ten years
older, and he is not at a point in his life where he can spare ten years.
"So. We may accelerate the work. We may bring more workers for the
final phase of the operation," says the aide in a soft voice.
"How many?"
"The total may reach a thousand."
Captain Noda stiffens, grunts out a "Hai!" and turns towards Goto
Dengo. "We will need more ventilation shafts."
"But sir, with all due respect, the complex is very well ventilated."
"We will need more deep, wide ventilation shafts," Captain Noda says.
"Enough for an additional five hundred workers."
"Oh."
"Begin the work immediately."
Chapter 74 THE MOST CIGARETTES
To: randy@epiphyte.com
From: cantrell@epiphyte.com
Subject: Pontifex Transform: tentative verdict
Randy.
I forwarded the Pontifex transform to the Secret Admirers mailing list
as soon as you forwarded it to me, so it has been rattling around there for
a couple of weeks now. Several very smart people have analyzed it for
weaknesses, and found no obvious flaws. Everyone agrees that the specific
steps involved in this transform are a little bit peculiar, and wonders who
came up with them and how but that is not uncommon with good cryptosystems.
So the verdict, for now, is that root@eruditorum.org knows what he's
doing notwithstanding his strange fixation on the number 54.
– Cantrell
"Andrew Loeb," Avi says.
He and Randy are enduring some kind of a forced march up the beach in
Pacifica; Randy's not sure why. Over and over again, Randy is surprised by
Avi's physical vigor. Avi looks like he is wasting away from some vague
disease invented as a plot device by a screenwriter. He is kind of tall, but
this just makes him seem more perilously drawn out. His slender body is a
tenuous link between huge feet and a huge head; he has the profile of a lump
of silly putty that has been drawn apart until the middle part is just a
tendril. But he can stomp up a beach like a Marine. It is January, after
all, and according to the Weather Channel there is this flume of water vapor
originating in a tropical storm about halfway between Nippon and New Guinea
and jetting directly across the Pacific and taking a violent left turn just
about here. The waves thrashing the beach, not that far away, are so big
that Randy has to look slightly upwards to see their crests.
He has been telling Avi all about Chester, and Avi has (Randy thinks)
used this as a segue into reminiscing about the old days back in Seattle. It
is somewhat unusual for Avi to do this; he tends to be very disciplined
about having any given conversation be either business or personal, but
never both at once. "I'll never forget," Randy says, "going up to the roof
of Andrew's building to talk to him about the software, thinking to myself
'gosh, this is kind of fun,' and watching him just slowly and gradually go
berserk before my eyes. It could almost make you believe in demonic
possession."
"Well, his dad apparently believed in it," Avi says. "It was his dad,
right?"
"It's been a long time. Yeah, I think it was his mom who was the
hippie, who had him in this commune, and then his dad was the one who
extracted him from there, forcibly he brought in these paramilitary guys
from Northern Idaho to actually do the job they literally took Andrew out in
a bag and then put him through all kinds of repressed memory therapy to
prove that he'd been Satanically ritually abused."
This tweaks Avi's interest. "Do you think his dad was into the militia
thing?"
"I only met him once. During the lawsuit. He took my deposition. He was
just this Orange County white shoe lawyer, in a big practice with a bunch of
Asians and Jews and Armenians. So I assumed he was just using the Aryan
Nations guys because they were convenient, and for sale."
Avi nods, apparently finding that a satisfactory hypothesis. "So he was
probably not a Nazi. Did he believe in the Satanic ritual abuse?"
"I doubt it," Randy says. "Though after spending some time with Andrew
I found it highly plausible. Do we have to talk about this? Gives me the
creeps," Randy says. "Depresses me.
"I recently learned what became of Andrew," Avi says.
"I saw his web site a while ago."
"I'm speaking of very recent developments."
"Let me guess. Suicide?"
"Nope."
"Serial killer?"
"Nope."
"Thrown into prison for stalking someone?"
"He is not dead or in prison," Avi says.
"Hmmm. Is this anything to do with his hive mind?"
"Nope. Are you aware that he went to law school?"
"Yeah. Is this something to do with his legal career?"
"It is."
"Well, if Andrew Loeb is practicing law, it must be some really
annoying and socially nonconstructive form of it. Probably something to do
with suing people on light pretexts."
"Excellent," Avi says. "You're getting warm now."
"Okay, don't tell me, let me think," Randy says. "Is he practicing in
California?"
"Yes."
"Oh, well, I've got it, then."
"You do?"
"Yes. Andrew Loeb would be one of these guys who gins up minority
shareholder lawsuits against high tech companies."
Avi smiles with his lips pressed tightly together, and nods.
"He'd be perfect," Randy continues, "because he would be a true
believer. He wouldn't think that he was just out there being an asshole. He
would really, truly, sincerely believe that he was representing this class
of shareholders who had been Satanically ritually abused by the people
running the company. He would work thirty six hours at a stretch digging up
dirt on them. Corporate memories that had been repressed. No trick would be
too dirty, because he would be on the side of righteousness. He would only
sleep or eat under medical orders."
"I can see that you got to know him incredibly well," Avi says.
"Wow! So, whom is he suing at the moment?"
"Us," Avi says.
There is now this five minute stoppage in the conversation, and in the
hike, and possibly in some of Randy's neurological processes. The color map
of his vision goes out of whack: everything's in extremely washed out shades
of yellow and purple. Like someone's clammy fingers are around his neck,
modulating the flow in his carotids to the bare minimum needed to sustain
life. When Randy finally returns to full consciousness, the first thing he
does is to look down at his shoes, because he is convinced for some reason
that he has sunk into the wet sand to his knees. But his shoes are barely
making an impression on the firmly packed sand.
A big wave collapses into a sheet of foam that skims up the beach and
divides around his feet.
"Gollum," Randy says.
"Was that an utterance, or some kind of physiological transient?" Avi
says.
"Gollum. Andrew is Gollum."
"Well, Gollum is suing us."
"Us, as in you and me?" he asks. It takes Randy about a full minute of
time to get these words around his tongue. "He's suing us over the game
company?"
Avi laughs.
"It's possible!" Randy says. "Chester told me that the game company is
now like the size of Microsoft or something."
"Andrew Loeb has filed a minority shareholder lawsuit against the board
of directors of Epiphyte(2) Corporation," Avi says.
Randy's body has now finally had time to deploy a full on fight or
flight reaction part of his genetic legacy as a stupendous badass. This must
have been very useful when saber toothed tigers tried to claw their way into
his ancestors' caves but is doing him absolutely no good in these
circumstances.
"On behalf of whom?"
"Oh, come on, Randy. There aren't that many candidates."
"Springboard Capital?"
"You told me yourself that Andrew's dad was a white shoe Orange County
lawyer. Now, archetypally, where would a guy like that put his retirement
money?"
"Oh, shit."
"That's right. Bob Loeb, Andrew's dad, got in on AVCLA very early. He
and the Dentist have been sending each other Christmas cards for like twenty
years. And so when Bob Loeb's idiot son graduated from law school, Bob Loeb,
knowing full well that the kid was too much of a head case to be employable
anywhere else, paid a call on Dr. Hubert Kepler, and Andrew's been working
for him ever since.
"Fuck. Fuck!" Randy says. "All these years. Treading water."
"How's that?"
"That time in Seattle during the lawsuit was a fucking nightmare. I
came out of it dead broke, without a house, without anything except a
girlfriend and a knowledge of UNIX."
"Well, that's something," Avi says. "Normally those two are mutually
exclusive."
"Shut up," Randy says, "I'm trying to agonize."
"Well, I think that agonizing is so fundamentally pathetic that it
borders on funny," Avi says. "But please go ahead."
"Now, after all those years all that fucking work I'm back where I
started. A net worth of zero. Except this time I don't even have a
girlfriend per se."
"Well," Avi says, "to begin with, I think it's better to aspire to
having Amy than to actually have Charlene."
"Ouch! You are a cruel man."
"Sometimes wanting is better than having."
"Well, that's good news," Randy says brightly, "because "
"Look at Chester. Would you rather be Chester, or you?"
"Okay, okay."
"Also, you have a substantial amount of stock in Epiphyte, which I'm
quite convinced is worth something."
"Well, that all depends on the lawsuit, right?" Randy says. "Have you
actually seen any of the documents?"
"Of course I have," Avi says, irked. "I'm the president and CEO of the
fucking corporation."
"Well, what's his beef? What's the pretext for the lawsuit?"
"Apparently the Dentist is convinced that Semper Marine has stumbled
upon some kind of vast hoard of sunken war gold, as a direct byproduct of
the work they did for us."
"He knows this, or he suspects this?"
"Well," Avi says, "reading between the lines, I gather that he only
suspects it. Why do you ask?"
"Never mind for now but he's going after Semper Marine, too?"
"No! That would rule out the lawsuit he's filing against Epiphyte."
"What do you mean?"
"His point is that if Epiphyte had been competently managed if we had
exercised due diligence then we would have drawn up a much more thorough
contract with Semper Marine than we did."
"We've got a contract with Semper Marine."
"Yes," Avi says, "and Andrew Loeb is disparaging it as little better
than a handshake agreement. He asserts that we should have turned
negotiations over to a big time law firm with expertise in maritime and
salvage law. That such a law firm would have anticipated the possibility
that the sidescan sonar plots created by Semper Marine for the cable project
would reveal something like a sunken wreck."
"Oh, Jesus Christ!"
Avi gets a look of forced patience. "Andrew has produced, as exhibits,
actual copies of actual contracts that other companies made in similar
circumstances, which all contain such language. He argues it's practically
boilerplate stuff, Randy."
"I.e., that it's gross negligence to have failed to put it in our
contract with Semper."
"Precisely. Now, Andrew's lawsuit can't go anywhere unless there are
some damages. Can you guess what the damages are in this case?"
"If we'd made a better contract, then Epiphyte would own a share of
what is salvaged from the submarine. As it is, we, and the shareholders, get
nothing. Which constitutes obvious damages."
"Andrew Loeb himself could not have put it any better."
"Well, what do they expect us to do about it? It's not like the
corporation has deep pockets. We can't give them a cash settlement."
"Oh, Randy, it's not about that. It's not like the Dentist needs our
cigar box full of petty cash. It's a control thing."
"He wants a majority share in Epiphyte."
"Yes. Which is a good thing!"
Randy throws back his head and laughs.
"The Dentist can have any company he wants," says Avi, "but he wants
Epiphyte. Why? Because we are badass, Randy. We have got the Crypt contract.
We have got the talent. The prospect of running the world's first proper
data haven, and creating the world's first proper digital currency, is
fantastically exciting."
"Well, I can't tell you how excited I am."
"You should never forget what a fundamentally strong position we are
in. We are like the sexiest girl in the world. And all of this bad behavior
on the Dentist's part is just his way of showing that he wants to mate with
us."
"And control us."
"Yes. I'm sure that Andrew has been ordered to produce an outcome in
which we are found negligent, and liable for damage. And then upon looking
into our books the court will find that the damages exceed our ability to
pay. At which point the Dentist will magnanimously agree to take his payment
in the form of Epiphyte stock."
"Which will strike everyone as poetic justice because it will also
enable him to take control of the company and make sure it's managed
competently."
Avi nods.
"So, that's why he's not going up against Semper Marine. Because if he
recovers anything from them, it renders his beef against us null and void."
"Right. Although, that would not prevent him from suing them later,
after he's gotten what he wanted from us."
"So Jesus! This is perverse," Randy says. "Every valuable item that the
Shaftoes pull up from that wreck actually gets us in deeper trouble."
"Every nickel that the Shaftoes make is a nickel of damages that we
allegedly inflicted on the shareholders."
"I wonder if we can get the Shaftoes to suspend the salvage operation."
"Andrew Loeb has no case against us," Avi says, "unless he can prove
that the contents of that wreck are worth something. If the Shaftoes keep
bringing stuff up, that's easy. If they stop bringing stuff up, then Andrew
will have to establish the value of the wreck in some other way."
Randy grins. "That's going to be really difficult for him to do, Avi.
The Shaftoes don't even know what's down there. Andrew probably doesn't even
have the coordinates of the wreck."
"There is a latitude and longitude specified in the lawsuit."
"Fuck! To how many decimal places?"
"I don't remember. The precision didn't reach out and poke me in the
eye."
"How the hell did the Dentist learn about this wreck? Doug has been
trying to keep it secret. And he knows a few things about operational
secrecy."
"You yourself told me," Avi says, "that the Shaftoes have brought in a
German television producer. That doesn't sound like secrecy to me."
"But it is. They flew this woman into Manila, put her on board Glory
IV. Allowed her to take minimal baggage. Went through her stuff to verify
she didn't have a GPS. Took her out into the South China Sea and ran in
circles for a while so she couldn't even use dead reckoning. Then took her
to the site."
"I've been on Glory. It's got GPS readouts all over the place."
"No, they didn't let her see any of that stuff. There's no way a guy
like Doug Shaftoe would screw this up."
"Well," Avi says, "the Germans aren't the most plausible source for the
leak anyway. Do you remember the Bolobolos?"
"Filipino syndicate that used to pimp for Victoria Vigo, the Dentist's
wife. Probably set up the liaison between her and Kepler. Hence, presumably,
still has influence over the Dentist."
"I would phrase it differently. I would say that they have a long
standing relationship with the Dentist that probably works both ways. And
I'm thinking that they got wind of the salvage operation somehow. Maybe a
high ranking Bolobolo overheard something in the German television
producer's hotel. Maybe a low ranking one has been keeping an eye on the
Shaftoes, taking note of the special equipment they've been shipping in."
Randy nods. "That works. Supposedly the Bolobolos have a big presence
at NAIA. They would notice something like an underwater ROV being rush
shipped to Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe. So I'll buy that."
"Okay."
"But that wouldn't give them the latitude and longitude."
"I'll bet you half of my valuable stock in Epiphyte Corp. that they
used SPOT for that."
"SPOT? Oh. Rings a bell. French photo imaging satellite?"
"Yeah. You can buy time on SPOT for a very reasonable fee. And it's got
enough resolution to distinguish Glory IV from, say, a container ship or an
oil tanker. So all they had to do was wait until their spies on the
waterfront told them that Glory was out to sea, outfitted for salvage work,
and then use SPOT to locate them."
"What kind of precision can SPOT provide in terms of latitude and
longitude?" Randy asks.
"That's a very good question. I'll have someone look into it," Avi
says.
"If it's to within a hundred meters, then Andrew can find the wreck by
just sending some people there. If it's much more than that, he'll have to
go out and do a survey of his own."
"Unless he subpoenas the information from us," Avi says.
"I'd like to see Andrew Loeb go up against the Philippine legal
system."
"You aren't in the Philippines remember?"
Randy swallows and it comes out sounding like gollum again.
"Do you have any information about that wreck on your laptop?"
"If I do, it's encrypted."
"So he'll just subpoena your encryption key."
"What if I forget my encryption key?"
"Then it's further evidence of how incompetent you are as a manager."
"Still, it's better than "
"What about e mail?" Avi asks. "Have you ever sent the location of the
wreck in an e mail message? Have you ever put it into a file?"
"Probably. But it's all encrypted."
This doesn't seem to ease the sudden tension on Avi's face.
"Why do you ask?" Randy says.
"Because," Avi says, pivoting to face in the general direction of
downtown Los Altos. "All of a sudden I am thinking about Tombstone."
"Through which passeth all of our e mail," Randy says.
"On whose hard drives all of our files are stored," Avi says.
"Which is located in the State of California, within easy subpoena
range."
"Suppose you cc'd all of us on the same e mail message," Avi says.
"Cantrell's software, running on Tombstone, would have made multiple copies
of that message and encrypted each one separately using the recipient's
public key. These would have been mailed out to the recipients. Most of whom
keep copies of their old e mail messages on Tombstone."
Randy's nodding. "So if Andrew could subpoena Tombstone, he could find
all of those copies and insist that you, Beryl, Tom, John, and Eb supply
your decryption keys. And if all of you claimed you had forgotten your keys,
then you are obviously lying through your teeth."
"Contempt of court for the whole gang," Avi says.
"The most cigarettes," Randy says. This is a contraction of the phrase,
"We could end up in prison married to the guy with the most cigarettes,"
which Avi coined during their earlier Andrew related legal troubles and had
so many occasions to repeat that it was eventually reduced to this vestigial
three words. Hearing it come out of his own mouth takes Randy back a few
years, and fills him with a spirit of defiant nostalgia. Although he would
feel considerably more defiant if they had actually won that case.
"I am just trying to figure out whether Andrew would know of
Tombstone's existence," Avi says.
He and Randy begin following their own footprints back towards Avi's
house. Randy notices that his stride is longer now. "Why not? The Dentist's
due diligence people have been lodged in our butt cracks ever since we gave
them those shares."
"I detect some resentment in your voice, Randy."
"Not at all."
"Perhaps you disagree with my decision to settle the earlier breach of
contract lawsuit by giving the Dentist some Epiphyte shares."
"It was a sad day. But there was no other way out of the situation."
"Okay."
"If I'm going to resent you for that, Avi, then you should resent me
for not having made a better contract with Semper Marine."
"Ah, but you did! Handshake deal. Ten percent. Right?"
"Right. Let's talk about Tombstone."
"Tombstone's in a closet that we are subletting from Novus Ordo
Seclorum Systems," Avi says. "I can tell you the due diligence boys have
never been to Ordo."
"We must be paying rent to Ordo, then. They'd see the rent checks."
"A trivial amount of money. For storage space."
"The computer's a Finux box. A donated piece of junk running free
software. No paper trail there," Randy says. "What about the T1 line?"
"They would have to be aware of the T1 line," Avi says. "That is both
more expensive and more interesting than renting some storage space. And it
generates a paper trail a mile wide."
"But do they know where it goes?"
"They would only need to go to the telephone company and ask them where
the line is terminated."
"Which would give them what? The street address of an office building
in Los Altos," Randy says. "There are, what, five office suites in that
building."
"But if they were smart and I'm afraid that Andrew does have this
particular kind of intelligence they would notice that one of those suites
is leased by Novus Ordo Seclorum Systems Inc. a highly distinctive name that
also appears on those rent checks."
"And a subpoena against Ordo would follow immediately," Randy says.
"When did you first hear about this lawsuit, by the way?"
"I got the call first thing this morning. You were still sleeping. I
can't believe you drove down from Seattle in one push. It's like a thousand
miles."
"I was trying to emulate Amy's cousins."
"You described them as teenagers."
"But I don't think that teenagers are the way they are because of their
age. It's because they have nothing to lose. They simultaneously have a lot
of time on their hands and yet are very impatient to get on with their
lives."
"And that's kind of where you are right now?"
"It's exactly where I am."
"Horniness too."
"Yeah. But there are ways to deal with that."
"Don't look at me that way," Avi says. "I don't masturbate."
"Never?"
"Never. Formally gave it up. Swore off it."
"Even when you're on the road for a month?"
"Even then."
"Why on earth would you do such a thing, Avi?"
"Enhances my devotion to Devorah. Makes our sex better. Gives me an
incentive to get back home."
"Well, that's very touching," Randy says, "and it might even be a good
idea."
"I'm quite certain that it is."
"But it's more masochism than I'm really willing to shoulder at this
point in my life."
"Why? Are you afraid that it would push you into "
"Irrational behavior? Definitely."
"And by that," Avi says, "you mean, actually committing to Amy in some
way.
"I know you think that you just kicked me in the nuts rhetorically,"
Randy says, "but your premise is totally wrong. I'm ready to commit to her
at any time. But for god's sake, I'm not even sure she's heterosexual. It'd
be madness to put a lesbian in charge of my ejaculatory functions."
"If she were a lesbian exclusively she'd have had the basic decency to
tell you by now," Avi says. "My feeling about Amy is that she steers by her
gut feelings, and her gut feeling is that you just don't have the level of
passion that a woman like her probably would like to see as a prerequisite
for getting involved."
"Whereas, if I stopped masturbating, I would become such a deranged
maniac that she could trust me."
"Exactly. That's exactly how women think," Avi says.
"Don't you have some kind of rule against mixing business and personal
conversations?"
"This is essentially a business conversation in that it is about your
state of mind, and your current level of personal desperation, and what new
options it may have opened up for you," Avi says.
They walk for five minutes without saying anything.
Randy says, "I have a feeling that we are about to get into a
conversation about tampering with evidence."
"How interesting that you should bring that up. What's your feeling
about it?"
"I'm against it," Randy says. "But to beat Andrew Loeb, I would do
anything."
"The most cigarettes," Avi points out.
"First, we have to establish that it's necessary," Randy says. "If
Andrew already knows where the wreck is, why bother?"
"Agreed. But if he has only a vague idea," Avi says, "then Tombstone
becomes perhaps very important if the information is stored on Tombstone."
"It almost certainly is," Randy says. "Because of my GPS signature. I
know I sent at least one e mail message from Glory while we were anchored
directly over the wreck. The latitude and longitude will be right there."
"Well, if that's the case, then this could actually be kind of
significant," Avi says. "Because if Andrew gets the exact coordinates of the
wreck, he can send divers down and do an inventory and come up with some
actual figures to use in the lawsuit. He can do this all very quickly. And
if those figures exceed about half the value of Epiphyte, which frankly
wouldn't be very difficult, then we become indentured servants of the
Dentist."
"Avi, it's full of fucking gold bars," Randy says.
"It is?"
"Yes. Amy told me."
It is Avi's turn to come to a stop for a while and make swallowing
noises.
"Sorry, I would have mentioned it earlier," Randy says, "but I didn't
know it was relevant until now.
"How did Amy become aware of this?"
"Night before last, before she climbed on the plane at SeaTac, I helped
her check her e mail. Her father sent her a message saying that a certain
number of intact Kriegsmarine dinner plates had been found on the submarine.
This was a prearranged code for gold bars."
"You said 'full of fucking gold bars.' Could you translate that into an
actual number, like in terms of dollars?"
"Avi, who gives a shit? I think we can agree that if the same thing is
discovered by Andrew Loeb, we're finished."
"Wow!" Avi says. "So, in this, a hypothetical person who was not above
tampering with evidence would certainly have a strong motive."
"It is make or break," Randy agrees.
They stop conversing for a while because they now have to dodge cars
across the Pacific Coast Highway, and there is this unspoken agreement
between them that not getting hit by speeding vehicles merits one's full
attention. They end up running across the last couple of lanes in order to
exploit a fortuitous break in the northbound traffic. Then neither of them
especially feels like dropping back to a walk, so they run all the way
across the parking lot of the neighborhood grocery store and into the wooded
creek valley where Avi has his house. They are back at the house directly,
and then Avi points significantly at the ceiling, which is his way of saying
that they had better assume the house is bugged now. Avi walks over to his
answering machine, which is blinking, and ejects the incoming message tape.
He shoves it in his pocket and strides across the house's living room,
ignoring frosty glares from one of his Israeli nannies, who doesn't like him
to wear shoes inside the house. Avi scoops a brightly colored plastic box
off the floor. It has a handle, and rounded corners, and big bright buttons,
and a microphone trailing behind it on a coiled yellow cord. Avi continues
through the patio doors without breaking stride, the microphone bouncing up
and down behind him on its helical cord. Randy follows him outside, across a
strip of dead grass, and into a grove of cypress trees. They keep walking
until they have dropped into a little dell that shields them from view of
the street. Then Avi squats down and ejects a Raffi tape from the little kid
tape recorder and shoves in his incoming message tape, rewinds it, and plays
it.
"Hi, Avi? This is Dave? Calling from Novus Ordo Seclorum Systems? I'm
the, uh, president here, you might remember? You have this computer in our
wiring closet? Well, we just, like, got some visitors here? Like, guys in
suits? And they said that they wanted to see that computer? And, like, if we
handed it over to them right away they would be totally cool about it? But
if we didn't, they'd come back with a subpoena and with cops and turn the
place inside out and just take it? So, now we're playing stupid? Please call
me."
"The machine said there were two messages," Avi says.
"Hi, Avi? This is Dave again? Playing stupid didn't work, and so now we
told them to fuck off. The head suit is very mad at us. He called me out. We
had a really tense discussion in the McDonald's across the street. He says
that I am being stupid. That when they come and turn the place upside down
looking for Tombstone, that it will totally fuck up Ordo's corporate
operations and inflict major losses on our shareholders. He said that this
would probably be grounds for a minority shareholder lawsuit against me and
that he'd be happy to file that lawsuit. I haven't told him yet that Ordo
has only five shareholders and that all of us work here. The manager of the
McDonald's asked us to leave because we were disrupting some children's
Happy Meals. I acted scared and told him that I would go in and look at
Tombstone and see what would be involved in removing it. Instead, I am
calling you. Hal and Rick and Carrie are uploading the entire contents of
our own system to a remote location so that when these cops come and rip
everything out nothing will be lost. Please call me. Good bye."
"Gosh," Randy says, "I feel like shit for having inflicted all of this
on Dave and his crew.
"It'll be great publicity for them," Avi says. "I'm sure Dave has half
a dozen television crews poised in the McDonald's at this moment, stoking
themselves to the rim of insanity on thirty two ounce coffees."
"Well . . . what do you think we should do?"
"It is only fitting and proper that I should go there," Avi says.
"You know, we could just 'fess up. Tell the Dentist about the ten
percent handshake deal."
"Randy, get this through your head. The Dentist doesn't give a shit
about the submarine. The Dentist doesn't give a shit about the submarine."
"The Dentist doesn't give a shit about the submarine," Randy says.
"So, I am going to replace this cassette," Avi says, popping the tape
out of the machine, "and start driving really really fast."
"Well, I'm going to do what my conscience tells me to do," Randy says.
"The most cigarettes," Avi says.
"I'm not going to do it from here," Randy says, "I'm going to do it
from the Sultanate of Kinakuta."
Chapter 75 CHRISTMAS 1944
Goto Dengo has pointed wing out to Lieutenant Mori, and Mori's guard
troops, and made it clear that they are not to run their bayonets through
Wing's torso and wiggle the blades around in his vitals unless there is some
exceptionally good reason, such as suppressing all out rebellion. The same
qualities that make Wing valuable to Goto Dengo make him the most likely
leader of any organized breakout attempt.
As soon as the general and his aide have departed from Bundok, Goto
Dengo goes and finds Wing, who is supervising the boring of the diagonal
shaft towards Lake Yamamoto. He is one of those lead by example types and so
he is way up at the rock face, working a drill, at the end of a few hundred
meters of tunnel so narrow that it has to be negotiated on hands and knees.
Goto Dengo has to present himself at the Golgotha end of the tunnel and send
a messenger crawling up into it, wearing a rusty helmet to protect himself
from the shattered stone that drizzles down from the rock face.
Wing appears fifteen minutes later, black from the rock dust that has
condensed onto his sweaty skin, red where the skin has been abraded or
slashed by stone. He devotes a few minutes to methodically hawking dust up
out of his lungs. Every so often he rolls his tongue like a peashooter and
fires a jet of phlegm against the wall and clinically observes it run down
the stone. Goto Dengo stands by politely. These Chinese have an entire
medical belief system centering on phlegm, and working in the mines gives
them a lot to talk about.
"Ventilation not good?" Goto Dengo says. Whorehouse Shanghainese has
not equipped him with certain technical terms like "ventilation," so Wing
has taught him the vocabulary.
Wing grimaces. "I want to finish tunnel. I do not want to sink more
ventilation shaft. Waste of time!"
The only way to keep the workers at the rock face from suffocating is
by sinking vertical air shafts from the surface down to the diagonal shaft
at intervals. They have devoted as much effort to these as they have to the
diagonal itself, and were hoping they'd never have to dig another.
"How much farther?" Goto Dengo asks, as Wing finishes another paroxysm.
Wing looks thoughtfully at the ceiling. He has Golgotha mapped out in his
head better than its designer does. "Fifty meter."
The designer cannot help grinning. "Is that all? Excellent."
"We go fast now," Wing says proudly, his teeth gleaming for a moment in
the lamplight. Then he seems to remember that he is a slave laborer in a
death camp and the teeth disappear. "We can go faster if we dig in straight
line."
Wing is alluding to the fact that the diagonal to Lake Yamamoto:
is laid out in the blueprints like this. But Goto Dengo, without
changing the blueprints, has ordered that it actually be dug like this:
These bends increase the length of the tunnel by quite a bit.
Furthermore the rubble tends to pile up in the flatter western section and
must be raked along by hand. The only people who know about the existence of
these bends are him, Wing, and Wing's crew. The only person who understands
the true reason for their existence is Goto Dengo.
"Do not dig in a straight line. Keep digging as I said."
"Yes."
"Also, you will need a new ventilation shaft."
"More ventilation shaft! No . . ." Wing protests.
The ventilation shafts shown on the plans, awkward zig zags and all,
are bad enough.
But Goto Dengo has several times told Wing and his crew to begin work
on some additional "ventilation shafts," before changing his mind and
telling them to abandon the work with this result:
"These new ventilation shafts will be dug from the top down," says Goto
Dengo.
"No!" says Wing, still completely flabbergasted. This is utter madness
in that if you dig a vertical shaft from the top downwards, you have to haul
the rubble up out of the hole. If you do it the other way, the rubble falls
down and can be easily disposed of.
"You will get new helpers. Filipino workers."
Wing looks stunned. He is even more cut off from the world than Goto
Dengo. He must infer the progress of the war from maddeningly oblique hints.
He and his workers fit the crazily scattered evidence at their disposal into
elaborate theories. These theories are all so wildly wrong that Goto Dengo
would laugh out loud at them, if not for the fact that he is sympathetic.
Neither he nor Captain Noda knew that MacArthur had landed on Leyte, or that
the Imperial Navy had been crushed, until the general told them.
One thing that Wing and his men have got right is that Bundok employs
imported labor in order to ensure secrecy. If any of the Chinese workers do
manage to escape, they will find themselves on an island, far from home,
among people who do not speak their language, and who do not especially like
them. The fact that Filipino workers will soon be arriving gives them a lot
to think about. They will be up all night whispering to each other, trying
to reconstruct their theories.
"We don't need new workers. We are almost done," Wing says, his pride
hurt again.
Goto Dengo taps himself on both shoulders with both index fingers,
suggesting epaulets. It takes Wing only an instant to realize that he's
talking about the general, and then a profoundly conspiratorial look comes
over his face and he takes half a step closer. "Orders," Goto Dengo says.
"We dig lots of ventilation shafts now."
Wing was not a miner when he arrived at Bundok, but he is now. He is
baffled. As he should be. "Ventilation shafts? To where?"
"To nowhere," Goto Dengo says.
Wing's face is still blank. He thinks Goto Dengo's bad Shanghainese is
preventing understanding. But Goto Dengo knows that Wing will figure it out
soon, some night during the bad fretful moments that always come just before
sleep.
And then he will lead the rebellion, and Lieutenant Mori's men will be
ready for it; they will open fire with their mortars, they will detonate the
mines, use the machine guns, sweeping across their carefully plotted
interlocking fields of fire. None of them will survive.
Goto Dengo doesn't want that. So he reaches out and slaps Wing on the
shoulder. "I will give you instructions. We will make a special shaft." Then
he turns around and leaves; he has surveying to do. He knows that Wing will
put it all together in time to save himself.
***
Filipino prisoners arrive, in columns that have degenerated into ragged
skeins, shuffling on bare feet, leaving a wet red trail up the road. They
are prodded onwards by the boots and bayonets of Nipponese Army troops, who
look almost as wretched. When Goto Dengo sees them staggering into the camp,
he realizes that they must have been on their feet continuously since the
order was given by the general, two days ago. The general promised five
hundred new workers; slightly fewer than three hundred actually arrive, and
from the fact that none of them is being carried on stretchers a statistical
impossibility, given their average physical condition Goto Dengo assumes
that the other two hundred must have stumbled or passed out en route, and
been executed where they hit the ground.
Bundok is eerily well stocked with fuel and rations, and he sees to it
that the prisoners and the Army troops alike are well fed, and given a day
of rest.
Then he puts them to work. Goto Dengo has been commanding men long
enough, now, that he picks out the good ones right away. There is a
toothless, pop eyed character named Rodolfo with iron grey hair and a big
cyst on his cheek, arms that are too long, hands like grappling hooks, and
splay toed feet that remind him of the natives he lived with on New Guinea.
His eyes are no particular color they seem to have been put together from
shards of other people's eyes, scintillas of grey, blue, hazel, and black
all sintered together. Rodolfo is self conscious about his lack of teeth and
always holds one of his sprawling, prehensile paws over his mouth when he
speaks. Whenever Goto Dengo or another authority figure comes nearby, all of
the young Filipino men avert their gaze and look significantly at Rodolfo,
who steps forward, covers his mouth, and fixes his weird, alarming stare
upon the visitor.
"Form your men into half a dozen squads and give each squad a name and
a leader. Make sure each man knows the name of his squad and of his leader,"
Goto Dengo says rather loudly. At least some of the other Filipinos must
speak English. Then he bends closer and says quietly, "Keep a few of the
best and strongest men for yourself."
Rodolfo blinks, stiffens, steps back, removes his hand from his mouth
and uses it to snap out a salute. His hand is like an awning that throws a
shadow over his entire face and chest. It is obvious that he learned to
salute from Americans. He turns on his heel.
"Rodolfo."
Rodolfo turns around again, looking so irritated that Goto Dengo must
stifle a laugh.
"MacArthur is on Leyte."
Rodolfo's chest inflates like a weather balloon and he gains about
three inches in height, but the expression on his face does not change.
The news ramifies through the Filipino camp like lightning seeking the
ground. The tactic has the desired effect of giving the Filipinos a reason
to live again; they suddenly display great energy and verve. A supply of
badly worn drills and air compressors has arrived on carabao drawn carts,
evidently brought in from one of the other Bundok like sites around Luzon.
The Filipinos, experts at internal combustion, cannibalize some compressors
to fix others. Meanwhile the drills are passed around to Rodolfo's squads,
who drag them up onto the top of the ridge between the rivers and begin
sinking the new "ventilation shafts" while Wing's Chinese men put the last
touches on the Golgotha complex below.
The carts that brought in the equipment were simply grabbed off the
roads by the Nipponese Army, along with their drivers mostly farm boys and
pressed into service on the spot. The farmboys can never leave Bundok, of
course. The weaker carabaos are slaughtered for meat, the stronger ones put
to work on Golgotha, and the drivers are assimilated into the workforce. One
of these is a boy named Juan with a big round head and a distinctly Chinese
cast to his features. He turns out to be trilingual in English, Tagalog, and
Cantonese. He can communicate in a sort of pidgin with Wing and the other
Chinese, frequently by using a finger to draw Chinese characters on the palm
of his hand. Juan is small, healthy, and has a kind of wary agility that
Goto Dengo thinks may be useful in what is to come, and so he becomes one of
the special crew.
The submerged plumbing in Lake Yamamoto needs to be inspected. Goto
Dengo has Rodolfo ask around and see if there are any men among them who
have worked as pearl divers. He quickly finds one, a lithe, frail looking
fellow from Palawan, named Agustin. Agustin is weak from dysentery, but he
seems to perk up around water, and after a couple of days' rest is diving
down to the bottom of Lake Yamamoto with no trouble. He becomes another one
of Rodolfo's picked men.
There are really too many Filipinos for the number of tools and holes
that they have available, and so the work goes quickly at first as fresh men
are quickly rotated through by the squad leaders. Then, one night at about
two in the morning, an unfamiliar sound reverberates through the jungle,
filtering up from the lowlands where the Tojo River meanders through cane
fields and rice paddies.
It is the sound of vehicles. Masses of them. Since the Nipponese have
been out of fuel for months, Goto Dengo's first thought is that it must be
MacArthur.
He throws on a uniform and runs down to Bundok's main gate along with
the other officers. Dozens of trucks, and a few automobiles, are queued up
there, engines running, headlights off. When he hears a Nipponese voice
coming from the lead car, his heart sinks. He long ago stopped feeling bad
about wanting to be rescued by General Douglas MacArthur.
Many soldiers ride atop the trucks. When the sun rises, Goto Dengo
savors the novel and curious sight of fresh, healthy, well fed Nipponese
men. They are armed with light and heavy machine guns. They look like
Nipponese soldiers did way back in 1937, when they were rolling across
northern China. It gives Goto Dengo a strange feeling of nostalgia to
remember a day when a terrible defeat was not imminent, when they were not
going to lose everything horribly. A lump actually gathers in his throat,
and his nose begins to run.
Then he snaps out of it, realizing that the big day has finally
arrived. The part of him that is still a loyal soldier of the emperor has a
duty to see that the vital war materiel, which has just arrived, is stored
away in the big vault of Golgotha. The part of him that isn't a loyal
soldier anymore still has a lot to accomplish.
In war, no matter how much you plan and prepare and practice, when the
big day actually arrives, you still can't find your ass with both hands.
This day is no exception. But after a few hours of chaos, things get
straightened out, people learn their roles. The heavier trucks cannot make
it up the rough road that Goto Dengo has had built up the streambed of the
Tojo River, but a couple of the small ones can, and these become the
shuttles. So the big trucks pull, one by one, into a heavily fenced and
guarded area well sheltered from MacArthur's observation planes that was
built months ago. Filipinos swarm into these trucks and unload crates, which
are small, but evidently quite heavy. Meanwhile the smaller trucks shuttle
the crates up the Tojo River Road to the entrance of Golgotha, where they
are unloaded onto hand cars and rolled into the tunnel to the main vault. As
per the instructions handed down from on high, Goto Dengo sees to it that
every twentieth crate is diverted to the fool's chamber.
The unloading proceeds automatically from there, and Goto Dengo devotes
most of these days to supervising the final stages of the digging. The new
ventilation shafts are proceeding on schedule, and he only needs to check
them once a day. The diagonal is now only a few meters away from the bottom
of Lake Yamamoto. Groundwater has begun to seep through small cracks in the
bedrock and trickle down the diagonal into Golgotha, where it collects in a
sump that drains into the Tojo. Another few meters of cutting and they will
break through into the short stub tunnel that Wing and his men created many
months ago, digging downwards from what later became the bottom of the lake.
Wing himself is otherwise engaged these days. He and Rodolfo and their
special crew are completing final preparations. Rodolfo and company are
digging down from the top of the ridge, cutting what looks like just another
vertical ventilation shaft. Wing and company are directly below, engaged in
a complicated subterranean plumbing project.
Goto Dengo has entirely lost track of what day it is. About four days
after the trucks come, though, he gets a clue. The Filipinos spontaneously
break into song over their evening rice bowls. Goto Dengo recognizes the
tune vaguely; he occasionally heard the American Marines singing it in
Shanghai.
What child is this, Who laid to rest, On Mary's lap is sleeping?
The Filipinos sing that and other songs, in English and Spanish and
Latin, all evening long. After they get their lungs unlimbered they sing
astonishingly well, occasionally breaking into two– and three part
harmony. At first, Lieutenant Mori's guards get itchy trigger fingers,
thinking it's some kind of a signal for a mass breakout. Goto Dengo doesn't
want to see his work cut short by a massacre, and so he explains to them
that it is a religious thing, a peaceful celebration.
That night, another midnight truck convoy arrives and the workers are
rousted to unload it. They work cheerfully, singing Christmas carols and
making jokes about Santa Claus.
The whole camp stays up well past sunrise unloading trucks. Bundok has
gradually become a nocturnal place anyway, to avoid the gaze of observation
planes. Goto Dengo is just thinking of hitting the sack when a fusillade of
sharp crackling noises breaks out up above the camp on the Tojo River.
Ammunition being in short supply, hardly anyone actually fires guns anymore,
and he almost doesn't recognize the sound of the Nambu.
Then he jumps onto the running board of a truck and tells the driver to
head upstream. The shooting has died down as suddenly as it started. Beneath
the bald tires of the truck, the river has turned opaque and bright red.
About two dozen corpses lie in the water before the entrance to
Golgotha. Nipponese soldiers stand around them, up to their calves in the
red water, their weapons slung from their shoulders. A sergeant is going
around with a bayonet, stirring the guts of the Filipinos who are still
moving.
"What is going on?" Goto Dengo says. No one answers. But no one shoots
him, either; he will be allowed to figure it out himself.
The workers had clearly been unloading another small truck, which is
still parked there at the head of the road. Resting beneath its tailgate is
a wooden crate that was apparently dropped. Its heavy contents have exploded
the crate and spilled across the uneven conglomerate of river rocks, poured
concrete and mine tailings that make up the riverbed here.
Goto Dengo sloshes up to it and looks. He sees it clearly enough, but
he can't somehow absorb the knowledge until he feels it in his hands. He
bends down, wraps his fingers around a cold brick on the bottom of the
river, and heaves it up out of the water. It is a glossy ingot of yellow
metal, incredibly heavy, stamped with words in English: BANK OF SINGAPORE.
There is a scuffle behind him. The sergeant stands at the ready as two
of his men jerk the Filipino driver out of the cab of his truck that Goto
Dengo rode in on. Calmly looking almost bored the sergeant bayonets the
driver. The men drop him in the red water and he disappears. "Merry
Christmas" one of the soldiers cracks. Everyone laughs, except for Goto
Dengo.
Chapter 76 PULSE
As Avi walks back through his house, he utters something biblical
sounding in Hebrew that causes his kids to burst into tears, and his nannies
to rise from the kid mat and begin shoving stuff into bags. Devorah emerges
from a back room where she's been sleeping off some morning sickness. She
and Avi embrace tenderly in the hallway and Randy begins to feel like a
fleck of debris lodged in someone's eye. So he heads straight for an exit,
goes out to his car and starts driving. He winds through the hills over the
San Andreas Fault to Skyline and then heads south. Ten minutes later, Avi's
car howls past him in the left lane, doing ninety or a hundred. Randy barely
has time to read the bumper sticker: MEAN PEOPLE SUCK.
Randy's looking for a totally anonymous location where he can patch
into the Internet. A hotel doesn't work because a hotel keeps good records
of outgoing telephone calls. What he should really do is use this packet
radio interface he has for his laptop, but even that requires a place to sit
down and work undisturbed for a while. Which gets him thinking in terms of a
fast food joint, not to be found in the mid peninsular wasteland. By the
time he has reached the northern skirts of the Valley Menlo Park and Palo
Alto he has decided fuck it, he'll just go to the scene of the action. Maybe
he could be of some use there. So he gets off at the El Monte exit and heads
into the business district of Los Altos, a pretty typical mid twentieth
century American downtown gradually being metabolized by franchises.
A major street intersects, at something other than a ninety degree
angle, a smaller commercial street, defining two (smaller) acute angle lots
and two (larger) obtuse angle lots. On one side of the major street, the
obtuse angle lot is occupied by a two storey office building, home of Ordo's
offices and Tombstone. The acute angle lot is occupied by the McDonald's. On
the opposite side of the major street, the acute angle lot is occupied by,
weirdly enough, a 24 Jam, the only one Randy has ever seen in the Western
Hemisphere. The obtuse angle lot is occupied by a Park 'n' Lock, where you
can park for the old fashioned purpose of wandering around the business
district from store to store.
The parking lot of the McDonald's is full, and so Randy pulls through
its drive through window, chooses n, where n is a random number between one
and six, and asks for Value Meal n with super size fries. This having been
secured, he guns the Acura directly across the big street into the Park 'n'
Lock just in time to see its last available space being seized by a minivan
bearing the logo of a San Jose television station. Randy is not planning to
stray far from his car, so he just blocks in another car. But as he is
setting the parking brake, he notices movement inside it, and with a bit of
further attention realizes he is watching a man with long hair and a beard
methodically ramming shells into a pump shotgun. The man catches sight of
Randy in his rearview mirror and turns around with a scrupulously polite
pardon me sir but you seem to have blocked me in look. Randy recognizes him
as Mike or Mark, a graphics card hacker who farms ostriches in Gilroy
(quirky hobbies being de rigueur in the high tech world). He moves the
Acura, blocking in what looks like an abandoned van from the Starsky and
Hutch epoch.
Randy climbs up on the roof of his car with his laptop and his Value
Meal n. Until recently he would never have sat on top of his Acura because
his considerable mass would dimple the sheet metal. But after Amy rammed it
with the truck, Randy became much less anal, and now sees it as a tool to be
used until it is just a moraine of rusted shards. He happens to have a
twelve volt adapter for the laptop, so he runs that down into his cigarette
lighter socket. Finally, he's settled, and gets a chance to take a good look
around.
The parking lot of Novus Ordo Seclorum's office building is filled with
cop cars, and BMWs and Mercedes Benzes that Randy assumes belong to lawyers.
Avi's Range Rover is parked jauntily on top of some landscaping, and a few
TV camera crews have set up, as well. In front of the building's main
entrance a lot of people are jammed into the smallest possible space
screaming at each other. They are surrounded by ring after concentric ring
of cops, media, and law firm minions collectively, what Tolkien would call
Men and a few non– or post human creatures imbued with peculiar
physiognomies and vaguely magical powers: Dwarves (steady, productive,
surly) and Elves (brilliant in a more ethereal way). Randy, a Dwarf, has
begun to realize that his grandfather may have been an Elf. Avi is a Man
with a strong Elvish glow about him. Somewhere in the center of this whole
thing, presumably, is Gollum.
There is a little window on the screen of Randy's laptop showing a
cheesy 1940s newsreel style animation of a radio tower, with zigzaggy
conceptual radio waves radiating outwards from it over the whole earth,
which is shown ludicrously not to scale in this rendering the diameter of
the earth is about equal to the height of the radio tower. That these Jovian
info bolts are visible and moving is a visual cue that his radio adapter has
managed to patch itself into the packet radio network. Randy opens a
terminal window and types
telnet laundry.org
and in a few seconds bang! he gets a login prompt. Randy now has
another look at the animated window, and notes with approval that the info
bolts have been replaced with gouts of question marks. This means that his
computer has recognized laundry.org as a S/WAN machine running the Secure
Wide Area Network protocol which means that every packet going back and
forth between Randy's laptop and laundry.org is encrypted. Definitely a good
idea when you are about to do something illegal over the radio.
Mike or Mark gets out of his car, cutting a dramatic figure in a long
black Western style coat, a look rather spoiled by the t shirt he's got on
underneath it: black with a fat red question mark in the middle. He hitches
the strap of his shotgun up onto his shoulder and leans into his back door
to retrieve a large black cowboy hat, which he places on the roof of his
car. He thrusts his elbows into the air and gathers his long hair back
behind his ears, staring up at the sky, and then clamps the cowboy hat down
on his head. Tied loosely around his neck is a black bandanna with a
question mark pattern, which he now pulls up over the bridge of his nose so
that just an eye slit shows between it and the cowboy hat. Randy would be
really alarmed if it weren't for the fact that several of his friends, such
as John Cantrell, often go around looking this way. Mike or Mark strides
across the Park 'n' Lock, tracked carefully by a panning cameraman, and jogs
across the street to the 24 Jam.
Randy logs onto laundry.org using ssh "secure shell" a way of further
encrypting communications between two computers. Laundry.org is an
anonymizing service; all packets routed through it to another computer are
stripped of identifying information first, so that anyone down the line who
intercepts one of those packets has no way of knowing where it originated.
Once he's patched into the anonymizer, Randy types
telnet crypt.kk
and hits the return key and then actually, literally, prays. The Crypt
is still going through its shakedown period (which, indeed, is the only
reason that all of Tombstone's contents have not been moved onto it yet).
In the lot of the 24 Jam, Mike or Mark has joined three other
elvishlooking sorts in black cowboy hats and bandannas, whom Randy can
identify based on the length and color of their ponytails and beards.
There's Stu, a Berkeley grad student who is somehow mixed up in Avi's HEAP
project, and Phil, who invented a major programming language a couple of
years ago and goes helicopter skiing in his spare time, and Craig, who knows
everything there is to know about encrypted credit card transactions on the
Net and is a devotee of traditional Nipponese archery. Some of these guys
are wearing long coats and some aren't. There is a lot of Secret Admirers
iconography: t shirts bearing the number 56, which is a code for Yamamoto,
or just pictures of Yamamoto himself, or big fat question marks. They are
having an energetic and very happy conversation though it looks a bit forced
because, to a man, they are carrying long weapons out in plain sight. One of
them has a hunting rifle, and each of the others is slinging a rudimentary
looking gun with a banana clip sticking out of the side. Randy thinks, but
is not sure, that these are HEAP guns.
This scene, not surprisingly, has caught the attention of the police,
who have surrounded these four with squad cars, and who are standing at the
ready with rifles and shotguns. It is an oddity of the law in many
jurisdictions that, while carrying (say) a concealed one shot .22 derringer
requires a license, openly carrying (e.g.) a big game rifle is perfectly
legal. Concealed weapons are outlawed or at least heavily regulated, and
unconcealed ones are not. So a lot of Secret Admirers who tend to be gun
nuts have taken to going around conspicuously armed as a way of pointing out
the absurdity of those rules. Their point is this: who gives a shit about
concealed weapons anyway, since they are only useful for defending oneself
against assaults by petty criminals, which almost never happens? The real
reason the Constitution provides for the right to bear arms is defending
oneself against oppressive governments, and when it comes to that, your
handgun is close to useless. So (according to these guys) if you are going
to assert your right to keep and bear arms you should do it openly, by
packing something really big.
A bunch of junk scrolls up Randy's screen. WELCOME TO THE CRYPT, it
begins, and then there's a paragraph of information about what a great idea
the Crypt is and how anyone who gives a damn about privacy should get an
account here. Randy truncates the commercial message with the whack of a
key, and logs in as Randy. Then he enters the command
telnet tombstone.epiphyte.com
and gets two gratifying messages in return: one saying that a
connection has been established with Tombstone, and the next saying that a
S/WAN link has been automatically negotiated. Finally he gets
tombstone login:
which means that he is now free to log on to the machine right across
the street from him. And now Mr. Randy has a little decision to make.
So far, he's clean. The bits coming out of his laptop are encrypted; so
even if someone is monitoring the local packet radio net, all they know is
that some encrypted bits are flying around. They cannot trace any of those
bits to Randy's machine without bringing in an elaborate radio direction
finding rig and zeroing in on him most conspicuously. Those encrypted bits
are eventually finding their way to laundry.org up in Oakland, which is a
big Internet host that probably has thousands of packets rushing in and out
of it every second. If someone were tapping laundry.org's T3 line, which
would require an enormous investment in computers and communications gear,
they would detect a very small number of encrypted packets going out to
crypt.kk in Kinakuta. But these packets would have been stripped of any
identifying information before leaving laundry.org and so there would be no
way to tell where they originated. Now, crypt.kk is also an anonymizer, and
so an entity tapping its staggeringly enormous T5 line (a job on the order
of eavesdropping on a small country's telecommunications system) might
theoretically be able to detect a few packets going back and forth between
crypt.kk and Tombstone. But again, these would be stripped of identifying
information, and so it would be impossible to trace them even as far back as
laundry.org, to say nothing of tracing them all the way back to Randy's
laptop.
But in order for Randy to get into Tombstone and begin actually
tampering with the evidence, he must now log on. If it were a poorly secured
host of the type that used to be legion on the Internet, he could just
exploit one of its numerous security holes and crack his way into it, so
that if his activities on the machine were discovered, he could claim that
it wasn't him just some cracker who happened to break into the machine at
the very moment it was being seized by the cops. But Randy has spent the
last several years of his life making machines such as this one impregnable
to crackers, and he knows it's impossible.
Furthermore, there's no point in logging on as just any old user like
using a guest account. Guests are not allowed to tamper with system files.
In order to do any meaningful evidence tampering here, Randy has to log on
as the superuser. The name of the superuser account is, inconveniently,
"randy" and you can't actually log in as "randy" without entering a password
that only Randy would know. So after using the very latest in cryptographic
technology and trans oceanic packet switching communications to conceal his
identity, Randy now finds himself faced with the necessity of typing his
name into the fucking machine.
A little scenario flashes up in his head in which he sends an anonymous
broadcast message to all laundry.org users telling them that the password
for the "randy" account on "tombstone.epiphyte.com" is such and such and
urging them to spread this information all over the Internet as fast as
possible. This might have been a decent idea if he had thought of it an hour
ago. Now it is too late; any sentient prosecutor tracing the time stamps on
the messages would be able to prove that it was just a blind.
Besides, time is running low. The discussion across the street, which
is just a shrill hubbub at this distance, is rising to some sort of climax.
Randy has meanwhile booted up his browser and gone to the ordo.net home
page. Usually it's a pretty dull corporate home page, but today all of the
blurbs and quotidian press releases have been obliterated by a window
showing live color video of what is going on in front of the building (or
rather, what was going on a couple of seconds ago; coming over his miserable
low bandwidth radio link, the video changes frames about once every three
seconds). The video is originating from Ordo itself, where they've evidently
aimed a camera out the window and are slamming the images straight out over
their very own T3 line.
Randy glances up just in time to see the guy who invented the term
"virtual reality" walking across the lot, deep in conversation with the
executive editor of TURING Magazine. Not far behind them is Bruce, an
operating systems engineer who, in his spare time, records Tierra del Fuegan
folk music and makes it available for free over the Internet.
"Bruce!" Randy shouts.
Bruce falters and looks over in Randy's direction. "Randy," he says.
"Why are you here?"
"Word on the street is that the Feds were raiding Ordo," Bruce says.
"Interesting. . . . any particular Feds?"
"Comstock," Bruce says. Meaning Paul Comstock, who, by virtue of being
Attorney General of the United States, runs the FBI. Randy does not believe
this rumor, but in spite of himself he scans the area for people fitting the
general profile of FBI agents. The FBI hates and fears strong crypto.
Meanwhile another Secret Admirer type shouts, "I heard Secret Service!"
Which is even creepier, in a way, because the Secret Service is part of the
Treasury Department, and is charged with combating wire fraud and protecting
the nation's currency.
Randy says, "Would you be open to the possibility that it's all a Net
rumor? That what's really going on is that a piece of equipment inside
Ordo's offices is being seized as part of a legal squabble?"
"Then why are all these cops here?" Bruce says.
"Maybe the masked men with assault rifles drew them."
"Well, why did the Secret Admirers show up in the first place if it
wasn't a government raid?"
"I don't know. Maybe it's just some kind of spontaneous self organizing
phenomenon like the origin of life in the primordial soup."
Bruce says, "Isn't it just as possible that the legal squabble is a
pretext?"
"In other words that the squabble is sort of like a Trojan horse put
together by Comstock?"
"Yeah."
"Knowing all of the parties involved, I'd rate it as unlikely," Randy
says, "but let me think about it."
The noise and intensity of the argument in the Ordo parking lot spike
upwards. Randy looks at the video window, which unfortunately has no sound
track. The transactions between frames come as isolated blocks of new pixels
slapped up one at a time over the old, like a large billboard being posted
sections. High definition TV it ain't. But Randy definitely recognizes Avi,
standing there tall, pale, and calm, flanked by one guy who's probably Dave
the Ordo president, and another guy who's obviously a lawyer. They are
literally standing in the doorway of the building and facing off against two
cops and none other than Andrew Loeb, who is in rapid motion and hence poses
an insurmountable bandwidth problem. The Internet video gear is smart enough
not to mess with parts of an image that aren't changing very much, and so
the planted cops get refreshed maybe a couple of times a minute, and then
just in a few rectangular image shards. But Andrew Loeb is waving his arms
around, hopping up and down, lunging towards Avi from time to time, pulling
back and taking calls on his cellphone, and waving documents in the air. The
computers have identified him as a bunch of pixels that require a great deal
of attention and bandwidth, and so somewhere some poor algorithm is churning
through the high pressure slurry of compressed pixels that is the image of
Andrew Loeb, and doing its level best to freeze the most rapidly moving
parts into discrete frames and chop them up into checkerboard squares that
can be broadcast as packets over the Net. These packets arrive in Randy's
computer as the radio network passes them along, i.e., sporadically and in
the wrong order. So Andrew Loeb appears as a cubist digital video artifact,
a rectilinear amoeba of mostly trench coat beige pixels. From time to time
his eyes or his mouth will suddenly appear, disembodied, in the center of an
image block, and remain frozen there for a few seconds, crystallized in a
moment of howling rage.
This is weirdly mesmerizing until Randy's startled out of his reverie
by a clunk. He looks over to see that the van he's blocked in wasn't
abandoned after all; it was full of Dwarves, who have now thrown the back
doors open to reveal a nest of cables and wires. A couple of the Dwarves are
heaving a boxy apparatus up onto the roof of the van. Cables run out of it
to another boxy apparatus down below. The apparatus is electrical in nature
and doesn't appear capable of firing projectiles so Randy decides not to pay
it much attention for the moment.
Voices well up across the street. Randy sees some cops climbing out of
a cop van carrying a battering ram.
Randy types:
randy
and hits the return key. Tombstone answers:
password:
and Randy types it in. Tombstone informs him that he's logged on, and
that he has mail.
The fact that Randy has logged on has now been recorded by the system
in several locations on the hard drive. He has, in other words, just slapped
big greasy fingerprints all over a weapon that the police are moments away
from seizing as evidence. If Tombstone is shut down and grabbed by the cops
before Randy can erase those traces, they will know he has logged on at the
very moment that Tombstone was confiscated, and will put him in prison for
tampering with evidence. He very much wishes that Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe
could somehow be made aware of what a ballsy thing he is doing here. But
then Doug has probably done all kinds of ballsy things of which Randy will
never be aware, and Randy respects him anyway because of his bearing. Maybe
the way to get that kind of bearing is to go around doing ballsy things in
secret that somehow percolate up to the surface of your personality.
Randy could just reformat the hard drive with a single command, but (1)
it would take several minutes to execute and (2) it would not thoroughly
erase the incriminating bits, which could be lifted from the hard drive by a
motivated technician. Because he knows which files have recorded his log on,
he executes a command that finds those files on the hard drive. Then he
types another command that causes random numbers to be written over those
areas of the hard drive seven times in a row.
The cops are slamming the battering ram against the side door of the
office building when Randy's right pinky slams the Enter key and executes
that command. He is almost certainly safe from the tampering with evidence
charge now. But he hasn't actually tampered yet, which is the whole point of
this exercise. He needs to find all the copies of the e mail message that
specifies the latitude and longitude of the wreck, and do the same multiple
erase trick on them. If the damn things were not encrypted, he could search
for the critical strings of digits. As it is, he will have to search for
files that were created during a certain time period, around the time that
Randy was out on Glory, anchored over the wreck. Randy knows roughly what
day that was, and so he sets the limits of the search to give him any files
created five days either side of that, just to be safe, and limits it to
only those directories used for e mail.
The search takes forever, or maybe it just seems that way because the
cops have smashed the side door off its hinges now and are inside the
building. The video window catches Randy's eye as it changes dramatically;
he gets a veering montage of grainy frozen images of a room; a doorway; a
hallway; a reception area; and finally a barricade. The Ordo guys have
yanked their video camera out of the window and restationed it at their
front desk, recording a barrier built of cheap modular office furniture
piled against the glass entrance to the reception. The camera tilts up to
show that one of the four glass door slabs has already been crystallized by
(one supposes) the impact of the battering ram.
Randy's "find" command finally returns with a list of about a hundred
files. The half dozen or so critical ones are on the list somewhere, but
Randy doesn't have time to go through the list figuring out which is which.
He has the system generate a list of the disk blocks occupied by those
files, so that he can go back later and do a super erase. Once he's got that
information, he does a "rm" or "remove" command on all of them. This is a
paltry and miserable way to expunge secrets from a hard drive, but Randy's
afraid he may not have time to do it more thoroughly. The "rm" only takes a
few moments and then Randy goes back and has the system write random numbers
on top of those disk blocks seven times in a row, just as he did earlier. By
this time the barricade has been scattered all over Ordo's lobby and the
cops are inside. They have weapons drawn and pointed at the ceiling and they
don't look very happy.
There is one thing left to do. Actually it's a pretty big thing. The
Epiphyte people use Tombstone for all kinds of purposes, and there's no way
of telling whether other copies of that latitude and longitude exist on it
somewhere. Most of Epiphyte is made up of inveterate computer users who
would be just the sort to write little scripts to back up all of their old e
mail messages to an archive every week. So he whips up his own script that
will just write random information to every sector on the entire hard drive,
then go back and do it again, and again, and again, forever or until the
cops pull the plug. Just after he whacks the Enter key to send this command
in to Tombstone, he hears an electrical buzzing noise from the van that
makes his hair stand on end for a moment. He sees a cop in the video window,
frozen. Then the screen of his computer goes blank.
Randy looks over toward the old van. The Dwarves are high fiving each
other.
There is a screeching of tires, and the sound of a low speed collision,
out on the street. About a dozen cars have rolled quietly to a stop, and
some have been rear ended by others that are still functioning. The
McDonald's has gone dark. Television technicians are cursing inside their
mobile units. Police officers and lawyers are pounding their walkie talkies
and cellphones against their hands.
"Pardon me," Randy says to the Dwarves, "but would you gentlemen like
to share anything with me?"
"We just took out the whole building," says one of the Dwarves.
"Took it out, in what sense?"
"Nailed it with a big electromagnetic pulse. Fried every chip within
range.
"So it's a scorched earth kind of deal? Go ahead and confiscate that
gear, you damn Feds, it's all worthless junk now?"
"Yeah."
"Well, it certainly worked on those cars," Randy says, "and it
definitely worked on this piece of junk that used to be my computer."
"Don't worry it has no effect on hard drives," the Dwarf says, "so all
of your files are intact."
"I know you are expecting me to take that as good news," Randy says.
Chapter 77 BUDDHA
A car is coming. The engine noise is expensively muffled, but it sounds
like a diesel. Goto Dengo is awake, waiting for it, and so is the rest of
the camp. No one stirs at Bundok during the day anymore, except for the
radio men and those manning the anti aircraft guns. They have not been told
that MacArthur is on Luzon, but they all sense The General's presence. The
American planes rip across the sky all day long, glittering and proud, like
starships from a distant future that none of them will ever see, and the
earth rings like a bell from the impacts of distant naval guns. The
shipments have become smaller but more frequent: one or two broken down
lorries every night, their rear bumpers practically scraping the road under
crippling burdens of gold.
Lieutenant Mori has placed anther machine gun at the front gate,
concealed in the foliage, just in case some Americans happen to blunder up
this road in a jeep. Somewhere out there in the dark, the barrel of that
weapon is tracking this car as it jounces up the road. The men know every
dip and rise in that road, and can tell where the vehicles are by listening
for the scrape of their undercarriages against the hardpan, a signature
pattern of metallic dots and dashes.
The car's headlamps are off, of course, and the guards at the gate dare
not shine bright lights around. One of them risks opening up a kerosene
lantern, and aims its beam at the visitor. A silver Mercedes Benz hood
ornament springs forth from the blackness, supported by a chrome plated
radiator grille. The beam of the lantern fondles the car's black fenders,
its sweeping silver exhaust pipes, its running boards, clotted with the meat
of young coconuts it must have sideswiped a pile on its way up here. In the
driver's side window is the face of a Nipponese man in his forties, so
haggard and tired he looks as though he is about to burst into tears. But he
is just a driver. Next to him is a sergeant with a sawed off shotgun,
Nipponese rifles being generally too long to wield in the front seat of a
luxury car. Behind them, a drawn curtain conceals whatever, or whoever, is
in the backseat.
"Open!" demands the guard, and the driver reaches up behind his head
and parts the curtain. The lantern beam falls through the opening and
bounces back sharply from a pale face in the back seat. Several of the
soldiers shout. Goto Dengo steps back, rattled, then moves in for a better
look.
The man in the backseat has a very large head. But the strange thing
about him is that his skin is a rich yellow color not the normal Asian
yellow and it glitters. He is wearing a peculiar, pointed hat, and he has a
calm smile on his face an expression the likes of which Goto Dengo has not
seen since the war began.
More lantern beams come on, the ring of soldiers and officers closes in
on the Mercedes. Someone pulls the rear door open and then jumps back as if
he has burned his hand on it.
The passenger is sitting crosslegged on the backseat, which has been
crushed into a broad V beneath his weight.
It is a solid gold Buddha, looted from somewhere else in the Greater
East Asia Co Prosperity Sphere, coming to meditate in serene darkness atop
the hoard of Golgotha.
It turns out to be small enough to fit through the entrance, but too
big to go in one of the little railway cars, and so the strongest Filipino
men must spend the next hours shoving it down the tunnel one inch at a tame.
The early shipments were neatly crated, and the crates were stenciled
with labels identifying the contents as machine gun ammunition or mortar
rounds or the like. The crates that come later don't have the stencils. At a
certain point, the gold begins to arrive in cardboard boxes and rotten
steamer trunks. They fall open all the time, and the workers patiently
gather the gold up and carry it to the tunnel entrance in their arms and
throw it into the hand cars. The bars tumble end over end and smash into the
sheet metal with a din that scares clouds of birds out of the overhanging
trees. Goto Dengo cannot help looking at the bars. They come in different
sizes, some of them so large that it takes two men to carry one. They are
stamped with the names of central banks from a few places Goto Dengo has
been and many he's only heard of: Singapore, Saigon, Batavia, Manila,
Rangoon, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Canton. There is French gold that was
apparently shipped to Cambodia, and Dutch gold shipped to Jakarta, and
British gold shipped to Singapore all to keep it out of the hands of the
Germans.
But some shipments consist entirely of gold from the Bank of Tokyo.
They get five convoys in a row of the stuff. According to the tally that
Goto Dengo is keeping in his head, two thirds of the tonnage stored in
Golgotha ends up coming straight from Nippon's central reserves. All of it
is cold to the touch, and stored in good but old crates. He concludes that
it was shipped to the Philippines a long time ago and has been sitting in a
cellar in Manila ever since, waiting for this moment. They must have shipped
it here at about the same time that Goto Dengo was plucked off the beach in
New Guinea, way back in late 1943.
They have known. They have known for that long that they were going to
lose the war.
By the middle of January, Goto Dengo has begun to look back on the
Christmas Day massacre with something almost like nostalgia, missing the
atmosphere of naive innocence that made the killings necessary. Until that
morning, even he had managed to convince himself that Golgotha was an arms
cache that the emperor's soldiers would someday use to stage a glorious
reconquest of Luzon. He knows that the workers believed it too. Now everyone
knows about the gold, and the camp has changed. Everyone understands that
there will be no exit.
At the beginning of January, the workers are made up of two types:
those who are resigned to die here, and those who aren't. The latter group
make various escape attempts of a desultory and hopeless nature and are shot
by the guards. The era of hoarding ammunition seems to be over, or perhaps
the guards are just too sick and hungry to climb down out of the watch
towers and personally bayonet all of the people who present themselves to be
killed. So it is all done with bullets, and the bodies left to balloon and
blacken. Bundok is immanent with their stench.
Goto Dengo hardly notices, though, because the camp is suffused with
the crazy, sick tension that always precedes a battle. Or so he supposes; he
has seen a lot of excitement in this war, but he has never been in a proper
battle. The same is automatically true of most of the Nipponese here,
because essentially all of the Nipponese who go into battles wind up dead.
In this army you are either a greenhorn or a corpse.
Sometimes, a briefcase arrives along with the gold shipment. The
briefcase is always handcuffed to the wrist of a soldier who has grenades
dangling all over his body so that he can blow himself and it to powder if
the convoy should be assaulted by Huks. The briefcases go straight to the
Bundok radio station and their contents are placed in a safe. Goto Dengo
knows that they must contain codes not the usual books, but some kind of
special codes that are changed every day because every morning, after the
sun has come up, the radio officer performs a ceremony of burning a single
sheet of paper in front of the transmitter shack, and then rubbing the
withered leaf of ash between his hands.
It is through that radio station that they will receive the final
order. All is in readiness, and Goto Dengo goes through the complex once a
day checking everything.
The diagonal tunnel finally reached the stub tunnel at the bottom of
Lake Yamamoto a couple of weeks ago. The stub was filled with water that had
seeped past the concrete plug during the months since it had been put into
place, and so when the two tunnels were finally joined, several tons of
water ran down the diagonal into Golgotha. This was expected and planned
for; all of it went into a sump and drained from there into the Tojo River.
Now it is possible to go all the way up the diagonal and look at the
concrete plug from the underside. Lake Yamamoto is on the other side. Goto
Dengo goes up there every couple of days, ostensibly to check the plug and
its demolition charges, but really to check on the progress being made,
unbeknownst to Captain Noda, by Wing's and Rodolfo's crews. They are mostly
drilling upwards, making more of those short, vertical, dead end shafts, and
enlarging the chambers at their tops. The system (including the new
"ventilation shafts" ordered by The General, and dug from the top down just
to the east of the ridgeline) looks like this now:
Inside the primary storage complex is a small room that Captain Noda
has dubbed the Hall of Glory. It does not look very glorious right now. Most
of it is filled with a snarl of wires which have been run into it from all
parts of the Golgotha complex, and which dangle from the ceiling or trail on
the floor with hand lettered paper tags dangling from them, saying things
like MAIN ENTRANCE DEMOLITION CHARGES. There are several crates of lead acid
batteries to supply power for the detonations, and to give Goto Dengo a few
minutes of electric light by which to read those paper tags. Extra boxes of
dynamite and blasting caps are stacked at one end of the Hall of Glory in
case some tunnels need a little extra destruction, and coils of red fuse
cord in case the electrical system fails completely.
But the demolition order hasn't yet come, so Goto Dengo does the things
soldiers do while waiting to die. He writes letters to his family that will
never be delivered or even mailed. He smokes. He plays cards. He goes and
checks his equipment another time, and then another. A week goes by without
any gold deliveries. Twenty prisoners try to escape together. The ones who
don't get sprayed across the killing ground by mines get tangled in barbed
wire and are each shot by a team of two guards, one aiming a flashlight and
the other aiming a rifle. Captain Noda spends all night, every night, pacing
back and forth in front of the main gate and smoking cigarettes, then drinks
himself to sleep at dawn. The radio men sit in front of their rig watching
the tubes glow, jerking like electrified frog legs whenever a feeble string
of beeps comes in on their frequency. But the order does not come.
One night, then, the trucks come again, just as they did the first
time. The convoy must contain all that's left of the Nipponese motor pool on
Luzon. They all come together, making a rumble that can be heard half an
hour before they actually reach the gate. When their cargo has been taken
out and stacked on the ground, the soldiers guarding this convoy remain
behind at Bundok. The only people who leave are the drivers.
It takes two days to move this last hoard into the tunnels. One of
their shuttle trucks has broken down for good and been cannibalized to keep
the other one going. It is running on half of its cylinders and is so feeble
that it has to be pushed up the riverbed road by teams of workers and hauled
over the rough patches on ropes. It has finally begun to rain, and the Tojo
River is rising.
The main vault is nearly full of treasure, and so is the fool's vault.
The new shipment has to be packed in wherever it will fit; they break it out
of its crates and jam it into crannies. The crates are stenciled with double
headed eagles and swastikas, and the gold bars inside come from Berlin,
Vienna, Warsaw, Prague, Paris, Amsterdam, Riga, Copenhagen, Budapest,
Bucharest, Milan. There are also cardboard boxes filled with diamonds. Some
of the crates are still damp, and smell of the sea. Seeing this, Goto Dengo
knows that a big submarine must have arrived from Germany, filled with Nazi
treasure. So that explains the two week lull: they've been awaiting the
arrival of this U boat.
He works in the tunnels for two days, wearing a miner's headlamp,
shoving jewels and gold bars into crevices. He goes into a sort of trance
that is finally interrupted by a heavy thud reverberating through the rock.
Artillery, he thinks. Or a bomb from one of MacArthur's planes.
He comes up the main ventilation shaft to the top of the ridge, where
it's broad daylight. He is crushed to discover that there is no battle
underway. MacArthur isn't going to rescue him. Lieutenant Mori has brought
almost all of the workers up here, and they are hauling on ropes, dragging
Bundok's heavy equipment up and throwing it down into the recently dug
"ventilation shafts." Both of the trucks are up here, and men with torches
and sledgehammers are breaking them up into pieces small enough to drop down
the shafts. Goto Dengo arrives just in time to see the engine block of the
radio station's generator tumbling down a shaft into blackness. The rest of
the radio gear follows it directly.
Somewhere nearby, concealed in the trees, someone is grunting heavily,
doing some kind of hard physical labor. It is a practiced martial arts type
of grunt, from way down in the diaphragm.
"Lieutenant Goto!" says Captain Noda. He is daft with alcohol. "Your
duties are below."
"What was that loud noise?"
Noda beckons him over to an outcropping from which they can see down
into the valley of the Tojo River. Goto Dengo, unsteady for any number of
reasons, suffers a spell of dizziness and nearly falls off. The problem is
disorientation: he does not recognize the river. Until now, it has always
been a few trickles of water braided down a rocky bed. Even before they ran
a road up it, you could get up almost as far as the waterfall by hopping
from one dry rock to the next.
Now, all of a sudden, the river is wide, deep, and murky. The tips of a
few big rocks protrude from the surface here and there.
He remembers something he saw a hundred years ago, in a previous
incarnation, on another planet: a bedsheet from the Manila Hotel with a
crude map sketched on it. The Tojo River drawn in with a fat trail of blue
fountain pen ink.
"We dynamited the rockfall," Noda says, "according to the plan."
Long ago, they had poised rocks above a bottleneck in the river, ready
to create a little dam. But setting off that dynamite was supposed to be
almost the last thing they did before sealing themselves up inside.
"But we are not ready," Goto Dengo says.
Noda laughs. He seems quite high spirited. "You have been telling me
for a month that you are ready."
"Yes," Lieutenant Goto says, slowly and thickly, "you are right. We are
ready."
Noda slaps him on the back. "You must get to the main entrance before
it floods."
"My crew?"
"Your crew is waiting for you there."
Goto Dengo begins walking towards the trail that will take him down to
the main entrance. Along the way, he passes the top of another ventilation
shaft, Several dozen workers are queued up there, thumbs lashed together
behind their backs with piano wire, guarded by soldiers with fixed bayonets.
One by one, prisoners kneel at the lip of the shaft. Lieutenant Mori whips
his officer's sword into the nape of each neck with a terrific grunt. Head
and body tumble forward into the ventilation shaft and thud meatily into
other bodies, far below, a couple of seconds later. Every leaf and pebble
within a three meter radius of the shaft opening is saturated with bright
red blood, and so is Lieutenant Mori.
"Don't worry about that," Captain Noda says. "I will see to it that the
tops of the shafts are backfilled with rubble, as we discussed. The jungle
will grow over them long before the Americans ever find this place."
Goto Dengo averts his eyes and turns to leave.
"Lieutenant Goto!" says a voice. He turns around. It is Lieutenant
Mori, pausing for a moment to catch his breath. A Filipino kneels before
him, mumbling a prayer in Latin, fumbling with a rosary that dangles from
his bound hands.
"Yes, Lieutenant Mori."
"According to my roster, six prisoners are signed out to you. I will
need them."
"Those six prisoners are down below, helping to load in the last
shipment."
"But all of the shipment is inside the tunnels now."
"Yes, but not well placed. The entire purpose of the fool's vault is
ruined if we strew gold and diamonds around the place in such a way as to
lead thieves deeper into the caverns. I need these men to continue that
work."
"You take full responsibility for them?"
"I do," Goto Dengo says.
"If there are only six," Captain Noda says, "then your crew should be
able to keep them under control."
"I will see you at Yasukuni, Goto Dengo," says Lieutenant Mori.
"I will look forward to it," Goto Dengo says. He does not add that
Yasukuni must be a very crowded place by now, and they will probably have a
terrible time finding each other.
"I envy you. The end will be longer and harder for those of us on the
outside." Lieutenant Mori snaps his blade into the back of the Filipino's
head, cutting him off between an Ave and a Maria.
"Your heroism will not go unrewarded," Goto Dengo says.
Lieutenant Mori's crew awaits him down below, in front of the mouse
hole that leads into Golgotha: four hand picked soldiers. Each wears a
thousand stitch headband, and so each has an orange ball centered on his
forehead, reminding Goto Dengo not of the Rising Sun but of an exit wound.
The water is up to mid thigh now, and the entrance tunnel is half full. When
Goto Dengo arrives, followed closely by Captain Noda, the men all cheer him
politely.
Goto Dengo squats in the opening. Only his head and shoulders are above
the water. Before him the tunnel is black. It takes a powerful effort of
will for him to enter. But it is no worse than what he used to do in the
abandoned mines, back in Hokkaido.
Of course, the abandoned mines weren't going to be dynamited shut
behind him.
Going forward is his chance to survive. If he hesitates, Noda will kill
him on the spot, and all his crew, and others will be sent in to finish the
job. Noda made sure that others were trained to do it.
"See you at Yasukuni," he says to Captain Noda, and without waiting for
a response he sloshes forward into blackness.
Chapter 78 PONTIFEX
By the time Randy reaches the Air Kinakuta boarding lounge, he has
already forgotten how he reached the airport. He honestly can't remember.
Did he hail a taxi? Not likely in down town Los Altos. Did he get a ride
from some hacker? He couldn't have driven the Acura, because the Acura's
electronics had been burned to a crisp by the electromagnetic pulse gun. He
had pulled the title out of the glove compartment and signed it over to a
Ford dealer three blocks away, in exchange for five thousand dollars in
cash.
Oh, yeah. The Ford dealer gave him a ride to the airport.
He has always wanted to pull the stunt of walking up to the counter of
an exotic foreign airline and saying, "Get me on the next plane to X." But
now he's just done it and it wasn't cool and romantic as he had hoped. It
was sort of bleak and stressful and expensive. He had to buy a first class
ticket, which consumed most of the five thousand dollars. But he doesn't
feel like beating himself to death over how he is managing his assets just
now, i.e., at a time when his net worth is a negative number that can only
be expressed using scientific notation. The probability is high that he
failed to wipe Tombstone's hard drive before the cops seized it, and that
the Dentist's lawsuit will consequently succeed.
On his way down the concourse he stands and stares at a bank of
telephones for a while. He very much wants to notify the Shaftoes of recent
events. It would be a good thing if they could somehow strip the sunken sub
clean of treasure as fast as possible, reducing its value and hence the
damage that the Dentist can inflict on Epiphyte.
The math is pretty simple here. The Dentist has a way to claim damages
from Epiphyte. The amount of those damages is x, where x is what the
Dentist, as a minority shareholder, would have made in capital gains if
Randy had been responsible enough to write a better contract with Semper
Marine. If such a contract had specified a fifty fifty split, then x would
be equal to fifty percent of the cash value of the wreck times the one tenth
of Epiphyte that the Dentist owns minus a few percent for taxes and other
frictional effects of the real world. So if there's ten million dollars in
the wreck, then x works out to around half a million bucks.
In order for the Dentist to gain control of Epiphyte, he has to acquire
an additional forty percent of its stock. The price of that stock (if it
were for sale) is simply 0.4 times the total value of Epiphyte. Call it y.
If x > y, the Dentist wins. Because then the judge is going to say,
"You, Epiphyte, owe this poor aggrieved minority shareholder $x. But as I
look at the parlous state of the corporation's finances I see that there's
no way for you to raise that kind of money. And so the only way to settle
the debt is to give the plaintiff the one asset you have in abundance, which
is your crappy stock. And since the value of the whole corporation is
really, really close to being zero, you're going to have to give him almost
all of it."
So how to make x < y? Either reduce the value of the wreck, by
stripping it of its gold, or else increase the value of Epiphyte, by what,
exactly?
In better times they could maybe take the company public. But setting
up an IPO takes months. And no investor's going to touch it when it's
encumbered by a lawsuit from the Dentist.
Randy has this vision of driving through the jungle with an end loader
and scooping up that big pile of gold bars he found with Doug and taking it
straight to a bank and depositing it in Epiphyte's account. That'd do it.
The whole concept makes his body tingle as he stands there in the middle of
the international concourse.
Off to the left, some kind of huddled or teeming mass, heavy on the
women and children, passes, and Randy hears some familiar voices. His mind
has wrapped itself like a starving squid around this gold in the jungle
concept, and in order to address reality for just a second, he has to peel
the tentacles away, popping those suckers off of it one by one. He
eventually focuses in on the scuttling group and identifies it as Avi's
family: Devorah and a bunch of kids and the two nannies, clutching passports
and tickets in El Al jackets. The kids are small and prone to sudden darting
tactics, the adults are tense and not inclined to let them stray, so the
group's movement down the concourse has the general aspect of a sack of
beagles heading in the approximate direction of some fresh meat. Randy is
probably personally responsible for this exodus and would much rather slink
into the men's room and crawl down a toilet, but he has to say something. So
he catches up with Devorah and startles her by offering to carry the child
support bag that she has slung over her shoulder. This turns out to be
shockingly heavy: several gallons of apple juice, he would estimate, plus
complete asthma attack management infrastructure, and maybe a few bricks of
solid gold in case of some totalizing civil breakdown en route.
"So. Uh, going to Israel?"
"El Al doesn't fly to Acapulco." Pow! Devorah is in peak form.
"Did Avi give you any kind of rationale for this?"
"You're asking me? I kind of assumed you would know," Devorah says.
"Well, things have been, certainly, volatile," Randy says. "I don't
know if fleeing the country is warranted."
"Then why are you in the airport with an Air Kinakuta ticket sticking
out of your pocket?"
"Oh, you know ... some business issues need resolving."
"You seem really depressed. Do you have a problem?" Devorah asks.
Randy sighs. "That depends. Do you?"
"Do I what? Have a problem? Why should I have a problem?"
"Because you've been uprooted and sent packing on ten minutes' notice."
"We're going to Israel, Randy. That's not being uprooted. That's being
rerooted." Or perhaps she is saying "rerouted." Without a transcript, there
is no way for Randy to tell.
"Yeah, but it's still kind of a hassle "
"Compared to what?"
"Compared to staying at home and living your life."
"This is my life, Randy." Devorah is definitely kicking out a prickly
vibe here. Randy figures that she is incredibly pissed off, but under some
kind of emotional nondisclosure agreement. This is probably better than the
only other two alternatives Randy can think of, namely (1) dissolving into
hysterical recriminations and (2) beatific serenity. It is an I'll do my
job, you do yours, why are you in my face attitude. Randy feels like an
idiot, all of a sudden, for having taken Devorah's bag. She is clearly just
this side of aghast, wondering why the fuck Randy is toiling as a skycap at
this critical moment. Like she and the nannies are not capable of humping a
sack down a hallway. Has she, Devorah, offered to step in and help Randy
write any code lately? And if Randy really has nothing better to do, why
doesn't he be a man, and strap grenades all over his body and give the
Dentist a big hug?
Randy says, "I assume you'll be in touch with Avi before you take off.
Would you give him a message?"
"What's the message?"
"Zero."
"That's it?"
"That's it," Randy says.
Devorah is perhaps not familiar with Randy and Avi's practice of
conserving precious bandwidth by communicating in binary code, one bit at a
time, la Paul Revere and the Old North Church. In this case, "zero" means
that Randy did not succeed in wiping out all the data on Tombstone's hard
drive.
***
Air Kinakuta's first class lounge, with its free drinks and highly un
American concept of service, beckons. Randy avoids it because he knows he
will sink straight into a coma if he goes there, and they would have to load
him onto the 747 with a forklift. Instead he walks around the airport,
clutching his hip spastically every time he re realizes that his laptop
isn't dangling there. He is not adjusting very quickly to the fact that most
of the laptop is stuffed into a wastebasket at the Ford dealership where he
unloaded the Acura. While he was waiting for his man to scurry back from the
bank with the five grand, he used the screwdriver attachments on his
multipurpose pocket tool to extract the laptop's hard drive, and then threw
away the rest.
Very large television sets hang from the ceilings in the departure
lounge, showing the Airport Channel, which is a parade of news bits even
more punishingly flimsy than normal television news, mixed in with a great
deal of weather and stock quotes. Randy is struck, but not precisely
surprised, to see footage of black hatted Secret Admirers exercising their
Second Amendment rights in the streets of Los Altos, and of Ordo's barricade
avalanching towards the camera, and the police storming over it weapons
drawn. Paul Comstock is shown pausing, as he climbs into a limousine to say
something, looking hale and smug. The conventional wisdom about TV news is
that the image is everything and if that is the case then this is a big win
for Ordo, which looks like the victim of jackbooted thugs. Which gets
Epiphyte nowhere, since Ordo is, or ought to be, nothing more than a
bystander. This is supposed to be a private conflict between the Dentist and
Epiphyte and now it's become a public one between Comstock and Ordo, and
this makes Randy irritated and confused.
He goes and gets on his plane and starts eating caviar. Normally he
doesn't partake, but caviar has a decadent fiddling while Rome burns thing
going for it that works for him just now.
As is his nerdly custom, Randy actually reads the informational cards
that are stuffed in among the in flight magazines and vomit sacs. One of
these extols the fact that Sultan Class passengers (as first class
passengers are called) can not only make outgoing phone calls from their
seats but can also receive incoming ones. So Randy dials the number for
Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe's GSM telephone. It's an Australian phone number,
but it'll ring anywhere on the planet. Right now it's something like six
A.M. in the Philippines, but Doug is bound to be awake, and indeed he
answers his phone on the second ring. Randy can tell from the sound of horns
and diesels that he is stuck in Manila traffic, probably in the back of a
taxi.
"It's Randy. On a plane," says Randy. "An Air Kinakuta plane."
"Randy! Well I've just been watching you on television," Doug says. It
takes a minute for that to sink in; Randy has used a couple of vodkas to
cleanse his palate of the caviar.
"Yeah," Doug continues, "I turned on CNN when I woke up and glimpsed
you sitting on top of a car typing. What's going on?"
"Nothing! Nothing at all," Randy says. He figures that this is a big
stroke of luck. Now that Doug has seen him on CNN, he'll be more likely to
effect superbly dramatic measures out of sheer paranoia. Randy slurps vodka
and says, "Wow, this Sultan Class service is great. Anyway, if you do a Web
search on Ordo, you'll see this nonsense had absolutely nothing to do with
us. Nothing."
"That's funny, because Comstock is denying that it's a crackdown on
Ordo," Doug says. When speaking of official U.S. government denials, Vietnam
combat veterans like Doug are capable of summoning up a drawling irony that
is about as subtle as having automotive jumper cables connected directly to
your fillings, but much funnier. Vodka climbs about halfway up Randy's nose
before he controls it. "They say that it's just a little old civil suit,"
Doug says, now using a petal soft, wounded innocent tone.
"Ordo's status as purveyor of stuff that the government hates and fears
is just coincidental," Randy guesses.
"That's right."
"Well then, I'm sure there's nothing to it other than our troubles with
the Dentist," Randy says.
"What troubles are those, Randy?"
"Happened during the middle of the night, your time. I'm sure you will
have some interesting faxes awaiting you this morning."
"Well, maybe I should look at those faxes, then," Doug Shaftoe says.
"Maybe I'll give you a buzz when I reach Kinakuta," Randy says.
"You have a good flight, Randall."
"Have a nice day, Douglas."
Randy puts the phone back in its armrest cradle and prepares to sink
into a well deserved plane coma. But five minutes later the phone rings. It
is so disorienting to have one's phone ring on an airplane that he doesn't
know what to make of it for a while. When he finally realizes what's going
on, he has to consult the instruction card to figure out how to answer it.
When he finally has the thing turned on and at his ear, a voice says,
"You call that subtle? You think that you and Doug Shaftoe are the only two
people in the world who know that Sultan Class passengers can receive
incoming phone calls?" Randy is certain he's never heard this voice before.
It is the voice of an old man. Not a voice worn out or cracking with age,
but a voice that's been slowly worn smooth, like the steps of a cathedral.
"Um, who's this?"
"Am I right in thinking that you want Mr. Shaftoe to go to a pay
telephone somewhere and then call you back?"
"Who is this, please?"
"You think that's more secure than his GSM phone? It's not really." The
speaker pauses frequently before, during, and after sentences, as if he's
been spending a lot of time alone, and is having trouble hitting his
conversational stride.
"Okay," Randy says, "you know who I am and whom I was calling. So
obviously you are surveilling me. You're not working for the Dentist, I take
it. That leaves what? The United States Government? The NSA, right?"
The man laughs. "As a rule the Fort Meade boys don't bother to check in
with the people whose lines they are tapping." The caller has an un American
crispness in his voice, vaguely Northern European. "In your case the NSA
might make an exception, it's true when I was there, they were all great
admirers of your grandfather's work. In fact, they liked it so much they
stole it."
"No higher flattery, I guess."
"You should be a billionaire, Randy. Thank god you're not."
"Why do you say that?"
"Oh, because then you'd be a highly intelligent man who never has to
make difficult choices who never has to exert his mind. It is a state much
worse than being a moron."
"Did Grandpa work for you at the NSA?"
"He wasn't interested. Said he had a higher calling. So while he made
better and better computers to solve the Harvard Waterhouse Prime Factor
Challenge, my friends at the NSA watched him, and learned."
"And you did too."
"I? Oh, no, I have only modest skills with a soldering iron. I was
there to watch the NSA watching your grandfather."
"On behalf of whom? Don't tell me eruditorum.org?"
"Well done, Randy."
"What should I call you Root? Pontifex?"
"Pontifex is a nice word."
"It's true," Randy says. "I checked it out, looking for clues in the
etymology it's an old Latin word meaning 'priest.' "
"Catholics call the Pope 'Pontifex Maximus,' or pontiff for short,"
says Pontifex agreeably, "but the word was also used by pagans to denote
their priests, and Jews their rabbis it is ever so ecumenical."
"But the literal meaning of the word is 'bridge builder,' and so it's a
good name for a cryptosystem," Randy says.
"Or, I hope, for me," Pontifex says drily. "I am glad you feel that
way, Randy. Many people would think of a cryptosystem as a wall, rather than
a bridge."
"Well, gosh. It's nice to telephonically meet you, Pontifex."
"The pleasure is mutual."
"You've been so quiet on the e mail front recently."
"Didn't want to give you the creeps. I was afraid if I bothered you any
more, you'd think I was proselytizing."
"Not at all. By the way people in the know think your cryptosystem is
weird, but good."
"It's not weird at all, once you understand it," Pontifex says
politely.
"Well, uh, what occasions this phone call? Obviously your friends are
still surveilling me on behalf of whom, exactly?"
"I don't even know," Pontifex says. "But I do know that you're trying
to crack Arethusa."
Randy cannot even remember ever uttering the word "Arethusa." It was
printed on the wrappers on the bricks of ETC cards that he ran through
Chester's card reader. Now Randy pictures a box inside Grandpa's old trunk
labeled Harvard Waterhouse Prime Factor Challenge and dated in the early
1950s. So that at least gives him a date to peg on Pontifex. "You were at
NSA during the late forties and early fifties," Randy says. "You must have
worked on Harvest." Harvest was a legendary code breaking supercomputer,
three decades ahead of its time, built by ETC engineers working under an NSA
contract.
"I told you," Pontifex says, "your grandfather's work came in handy."
"Chester's got this retired ETC engineer working on his card
machinery," Randy says. "He helped me read the Arethusa cards. Saw the
wrappers. He's a friend of yours. He called you."
Pontifex chuckles. "Among our little band there is hardly a word with
more memories attached to it than Arethusa. He nearly hit the floor when he
saw it. Called me from the cellphone on his boat, Randy."
"Why? Why was Arethusa such a big deal?"
"Because we spent ten years of our lives trying to break the damned
code! And we failed!"
"It must have been really frustrating," Randy says, "you still sound
angry."
"I'm angry at Comstock."
"Not the "
"Not Attorney General Paul Comstock. His father. Earl Comstock."
"What!? The guy that Doug Shaftoe threw off the ski lift? The Vietnam
guy?"
"No, no! I mean, yes. Earl Comstock was largely responsible for our
Vietnam policy. And Doug Shaftoe did get his fifteen minutes of fame by
throwing him off a ski lift in, I believe, 1979. But all of that Vietnam
nonsense was just a coda to his real career."
"Which was?"
"Earl Comstock, to whom your grandfather reported in Brisbane during
World War II, was one of the founders of the NSA. And he was my boss from
1949 through about 1960. He was obsessed with Arethusa."
"Why?"
"He was convinced it was a Communist cipher. That if we could break it,
we could then exploit that break to get into some later Soviet codes that
were giving us difficulty. Which was ridiculous. But he believed it or
claimed to and so we battered our heads against Arethusa for years. Strong
men had nervous breakdowns. Brilliant men concluded that they were stupid.
In the end it turned out to be a joke."
"A joke? What do you mean by that?"
"We ran those intercepts through Harvest backwards and forwards. The
lights dimmed in Washington and Baltimore, we used to say, when we were
doing Arethusa work. I still have the opening groups memorized: AADAA FGTAA
and so on. Those double As! People wrote dissertations about their
significance. We concluded in the end that they were just flukes. We
invented entire new systems of cryptanalysis to attack it wrote new volumes
of the Cryptonomicon. The data were very nearly random. Finding patterns in
them was like trying to read a book that had been burned, and its ashes
mixed with all the cement that went into the Hoover Dam. We never got
anything that was worth a damn.
"After ten years or so, we began using it to haze incoming recruits. By
that time the NSA was getting fantastically huge, we were hiring all of the
most brilliant math prodigies in the United States, and when we got one who
was especially cocky we'd put him on the Arethusa project just to give him
the message that he wasn't as smart as he thought he was. We broke a lot of
kids on that wheel. But then, around 1959, this one kid came in the smartest
kid we had seen yet and he broke it."
"Well, I assume you didn't place this phone call just to keep me in
suspense," Randy says. "What did he find?"
"He found that the Arethusa intercepts did not represent coded messages
at all. They were simply the output of a particular mathematical function, a
Riemann zeta function, which has many uses one being that it is used in some
cryptosystems as a random number generator. He proved that if you set up
this function in a particular way, and then gave it, as input, a particular
string of numbers, it would crank out the exact sequence that was on those
intercepts. So that was all she wrote. And it almost ended Comstock's
career."
"Why?"
"Partly because of the insane amount of money and manpower he had
thrown into the Arethusa project. But mostly because the input string the
seed for the random number generator was the boss's name.
C O M S T O C K."
"You're kidding."
"We had the proof right there. It was impeccable from a pure math
standpoint. So, either Comstock had generated the Arethusa intercepts
himself, and been stupid enough to use his own name as the seed and believe
me, he really was that kind of guy or else someone had played an enormous
practical joke on him."
"Which do you think it was?"
"Well, he never divulged where he had gotten these intercepts in the
first place and so it was difficult to form a hypothesis. I am inclined
toward the joke theory, because he was the sort of man who gives his
subordinates a powerful urge to play practical jokes on him. But in the end
it didn't matter. He was drummed out of the NSA at the age of forty six. A
classic grey man, a war veteran, a technocrat with a high security clearance
and any number of high powered connections. He went more or less straight to
Kennedy's National Security Counsel from there, and the rest is history."
"Wow!" Randy says, kind of awed. "What a jerk!"
"No kidding," says Pontifex. "And now, his son well, don't get me
started on his son."
As Pontifex's voice trails off, Randy asks, "So, you are calling me now
for what purpose?"
Pontifex doesn't answer for a few moments, as if he's wrestling with
the question himself. But Randy doubts that's the case. Someone is trying to
send you a message. "I suppose that I am just appalled by the very idea of
more young bright men throwing themselves against Arethusa. Until I received
that call from a boat on Lake Washington, I had thought it was dead and
buried."
"But why should you care?"
"You've already been cheated out of a fortune in computer patents,"
Pontifex says. "It wouldn't be fair."
"So, it's pity, then."
"Furthermore as I said it is my friend's job to keep you under
surveillance. He's going to hear almost every word you say for the next few
months, or at least read transcripts. For you and Cantrell and those others
to spend that entire time yammering about Arethusa would be more than he
could bear. Hideous deja vu. Just intolerably Kafkaesque. So please, just
let it go."
"Well, thanks for the tip."
"You're welcome, Randy. And may I give you a word of advice?"
"That's what Pontifex is supposed to do."
"First a disclaimer: I've been out of circulation for a while. Have not
picked up the postmodern unwillingness to make value judgments."
"Okay, I am bracing myself."
"My advice: do try to build the best Crypt you possibly can. Your
clients some of them, anyway are, for all practical purposes, aborigines.
They will either make you rich or kill you, like something straight out of a
Joseph Campbell footnote."
"So you're talking about your basic Colombian drug lord types, here?"
"Yes, I am, but I'm also referring to certain white men in suits. It
only takes a single generation to revert to savagery."
"Well, we provide state of the art cryptographic services to all of our
clients even the ones with bones in their noses."
"Excellent! And now as much as I hate to sign off on a dark note I must
say good bye."
Randy hangs up, and the phone rings again almost immediately.
"Who the fuck are you?" Doug Shaftoe says, "I call you on the airplane,
and I get a busy signal."
"I have a funny story to tell you," Randy says, "about a guy you ran
into once while skiing. But unfortunately it will have to wait."
Chapter 79 GLORY
Bare chested, camouflage painted, trench knife in hand, Colt .45 stuck
in the waistband of his khaki trousers, Bobby Shaftoe moves like a cloud of
mist through the jungle. He stops when he can get a clear view of the Nip
Army truck, framed between the hairy, cluttered trunks of a couple of date
palms. A skirmish line of ants crawls over the skin of his sandaled foot. He
ignores them.
It has all the earmarks of a piss stop. Two Nipponese privates climb
out of the truck and confer for a few moments. One of them wades into the
jungle. The other leans against the truck's fender and lights up a
cigarette. Its glowing tip echoes the light of the sunset behind him. The
one in the jungle drops his trousers, squats, leans back against a tree to
take a shit.
At this moment they are supremely vulnerable. The contrast between the
brightness of the sunset and the dimness of the jungle renders them nearly
blind. The shitter is helpless, and the smoker looks exhausted. Bobby
Shaftoe sheds his sandals. He emerges from the jungle onto the road behind
the truck, strides forward on ant bitten feet, crouches behind the truck's
bumper. The weapon comes out of his hip pocket silently. Without taking his
eyes off the smoker's feet visible beneath the truck's chassis he peels away
the backing and slaps the payload onto the truck's tailgate. Then, just to
rub it in, he slaps up another one. Mission accomplished! Take that, Tojo!
Moments later, he's back in the jungle, watching as the Nip truck
drives away, now sporting two red, white, and blue stickers reading: I SHALL
RETURN! Bobby congratulates himself on another successful mission.
Long after dark, he reaches the Hukbalahap camp up on the volcano. He
works his way in through the booby trapped perimeter and makes plenty of
noise as he approaches, so that the Huk sentries won't shoot at him in the
darkness. But he needn't have bothered. Discipline has broken down, they are
all drunk and getting drunker, because of something they heard on the radio:
MacArthur has returned. The General has landed on Leyte.
Bobby Shaftoe's response is to boil up some powerful coffee and begin
pouring it into their signal man, Pedro. While the caffeine works its magic,
Shaftoe grabs a message pad and the stub of a pencil, and writes out his
idea for the seventh time: OPPORTUNITY EXISTS TO CONTACT AND SUPPLY
FILAMERICAN ELEMENTS IN CONCEPCION STOP I VOLUNTEER FOR SAME STOP AWAIT
INSTRUCTIONS STOP SIGNED SHAFTOE.
He gets Pedro to encrypt it and send it off. After that, all he can do
is wait and pray. This shit with the stickers has to stop.
He has been tempted, a thousand times, to desert, and to go into
Concepcion himself. But just because he's out in the boondocks with a band
of Huk irregulars doesn't mean he's beyond the reach of military discipline.
Deserters can still get shot or hanged, and despite the fact that he was one
in Sweden, Bobby Shaftoe believes that they deserve to be.
Concepcion is down in the lowlands north of Manila. From the high
places of the Zambales Mountains you can actually see the town lying amid
the green rice paddies. Those lowlands are still totally Nip controlled. But
when the General lands, he's probably going to land north of here at
Lingayen Gulf, just like the Nips did when they invaded in '41, and then
Concepcion is going to lie right in the middle of his route to Manila. He's
going to need eyes there.
Sure enough, the order comes through a couple of days later: RENDEZVOUS
TARPON POINT GREEN 5 NOVEMBER STOP CONVEY TRANSMITTER CONCEPCION STOP AWAIT
FURTHER ORDERS STOP.
Tarpon is the submarine that has been bringing them ammunition, medical
supplies, I SHALL RETURN stickers, cartons of American cigarettes with I
SHALL RETURN inserts in each pack, I SHALL RETURN matchbooks, I SHALL RETURN
coasters, and I SHALL RETURN condoms. Shaftoe has been stockpiling the
condoms because he knows they won't go over well in a Catholic country. He
figures that when he finds Glory he'll go through a long ton of condoms in
about a week.
Three days later, he and a squad of Huks are on hand to meet Tarpon at
"Point Green," which is their code name for a tiny cove on the west coast of
Luzon, down beneath Mount Pinatubo, not all that far north of Subic Bay. The
submarine glides in at around midnight, running on its electric motors so it
won't make any sound, and the Huks pull up alongside in rubber boats and
outrigger canoes and unload the cargo. Sure enough, the transmitter's there.
And this time there's none of those goddamn stickers or matchbooks. The
cargo is ammunition and a few fighting men: some Filamerican commandoes
fresh from a debriefing with MacArthur's intelligence chief, and a couple of
Americans MacArthur's advance scouts.
Over the next several days, Shaftoe and a few hand picked Huks carry
the transmitter up one slope of the Zambales Mountains and down the other.
They stop when the foothills finally give way to low lying paddy land. The
main north south road, from Manila up towards Lingayen Gulf, lies directly
across their path.
After a few days of scrambling and scrounging, they are able to load
the transmitter on board a farm cart and bury it in manure. They harness the
cart to a pathetic carabao, loaned by a loyal but poor farmer, and set out
across Nip country, headed for Concepcion.
At this point they have to split up, though, because there's no way
that blue eyed Shaftoe can travel in the open. Two Huks, pretending to be
farmboys, take the manure cart while Shaftoe begins making his way cross
country, traveling at night, sleeping in ditches or in the homes of trusted
American sympathizers.
It takes him a week and a half to cover the fifty kilometers, but in
time, with patience and perseverance, he reaches the town of Concepcion, and
knocks on the door of their local contact around midnight. The contact is a
prominent local citizen the manager of the town's only bank. Mr. Calagua is
astonished to see an American standing at his back door. This tells Shaftoe
that something must have gone wrong the boys with the transmitter should
have arrived a week ago. But the manager tells him that no one has shown up
though rumor has it that the Nips recently caught some boys trying to
smuggle contraband in a farm cart and executed them on the spot.
So Shaftoe is marooned in Concepcion with no way to get orders or to
send messages. He feels bad for the boys who died, but in a way, this isn't
such a bad situation for him. The only reason he wanted to be in Concepcion
is that the Altamira family comes from here. Half of the local farmers are
related to Glory in some way.
Shaftoe breaks into the Calaguas' stables and improvises a bed. They
would put him up in a spare bedroom if he asked, but he tells them that the
stables are safer if he gets caught, the Calaguas can at least claim
ignorance. He recuperates on a pile of straw for a day or two, then starts
trying to learn something about the Altamiras. He can't go out nosing around
by himself, but the Calaguas know everyone in town, and they have a good
sense of who can be trusted. So inquiries go out, and within a couple of
days, information has come back in.
Mr. Calagua explains it to him over glasses of bourbon in his study.
Wracked by guilt over the fact that his honored guest is sleeping on a pile
of hay in an outbuilding, he pushes bourbon at him all the time, which is
fine with Bobby Shaftoe.
"Some of the information is reliable, some is er farfetched," Mr.
Calagua says. "Here is the reliable part. First of all, your guess was
correct. When the Japanese took over Manila, many members of the Altamira
family came back to this area to stay with relatives. They believed it would
be safer."
"Are you telling me Glory is up here?"
"No," Mr. Calagua says sadly, "she is not up here. But she was
definitely here on September 13th, 1942."
"How do you know?"
"Because she gave birth to a baby boy on that day the birth certificate
is on file at the town hall. Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe."
"Well, I'll be fucked sideways," Shaftoe says. He starts calculating
dates in his head.
"Many of the Altamiras who fled here have since gone back to the city
supposedly to obtain work. But some of them are also serving as eyes and
ears for the resistance."
"I knew they would do the right thing," Shaftoe says.
Mr. Calagua smiles cautiously. "Manila is full of people who claim to
be the eyes and ears of the resistance. It is easy to be eyes and ears. It
is harder to be fists and feet. But some of the Altamiras are fighting, too
they have gone into the mountains to join the Huks."
"Which mountains? I didn't run across any of them up in the Zambales."
"South of Manila and Laguna de Bay are many volcanoes and heavy jungle.
This is where some of Glory's family are fighting."
"Is that where Glory is? And the baby? Or are they in the city?"
Mr. Calagua is nervous. "This is the part that may be far fetched. It
is said that Glory is a famous heroine of the fight against the Nips."
"Are you telling me she's dead? If she's dead, just tell me."
"No, I have no information that she is dead. But she is a heroine. This
is for certain."
The next day, Bobby Shaftoe's malaria comes back and keeps him laid up
for about a week. The Calaguas move him right into their house and bring in
the town doctor to look after him. It's the same doctor who delivered
Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe two years ago.
When he's feeling a little stronger, he lights out for the south. It
takes him three weeks to reach the northern outskirts of Manila, hitching
rides on trains and trucks, or sloshing through paddies in the middle of the
night. He kills two Nipponese soldiers stealthily, and three of them in a
firefight at an intersection. Each time, he has to go to ground for a few
days to avoid capture. But get to Manila he does.
He can't go into the heart of the city in addition to being really
stupid, it would just slow him down. Instead he skirts it, taking advantage
of the thriving resistance network. He is passed from one barangay to the
next, all the way around the outskirts of Manila, until he has reached the
coastal plain between Laguna de Bay and Manila Bay. At this point nothing is
left to the south except for a few miles of rice paddies and then the
volcanic mountains where Altamiras are making names for themselves as
guerilla fighters. During his trip he has heard a thousand rumors about
them. Most of them are patently false people telling him what he obviously
wants to hear. But several times he has heard what sounds like a genuine
scrap of information about Glory.
They say that she has a healthy young son, living in the apartment in
the Malate neighborhood of Manila, being cared for by the extended family
while his mother serves in the war.
They say that she has put her nursing skills to work, acting as a sort
of Florence Nightingale for the Huks.
They say that she is a messenger for the Fil American forces, that no
one surpasses her daring in crossing through Nipponese checkpoints carrying
secret messages and other contraband.
The last part doesn't make much sense to Shaftoe. Which is she, a nurse
or a messenger? Maybe they have her confused with someone else. Or maybe
she's both maybe she's smuggling medicine through the checkpoints.
The farther south he gets, the more information he hears. The same
rumors and anecdotes pop up over and over again, differing only in their
small details. He runs into half a dozen people who are dead certain that
Glory is south of here, working as a messenger for a brigade of Huk
guerillas in the mountains above Calamba.
He spends Christmas Day in a fisherman's hut on the shores of the big
lake, Laguna de Bay. There are plenty of mosquitoes. Another bout of malaria
strikes him then; he spends a couple of weeks wracked with fever dreams,
having bizarre nightmares about Glory.
Finally he gets well enough to move again, and hitches a boat ride into
the lakeside town of Calamba. The black volcanoes that loom above it are a
welcome sight. They look nice and cool, and they remind him of the ancestral
Shaftoe territory. According to their family lore, the first Shaftoes to
come to America worked as indentured servants in tobacco and cotton fields,
raising their eyes longingly towards those cool mountains as they stooped in
sweltering fields. As soon as they could get away, they did, and headed
uphill. The mountains of Luzon beckon Shaftoe in the same way away from the
malarial lowlands, up towards Glory. His journey's almost over.
But he gets stuck in Calamba, forced to hide in a boathouse, when the
city's Nipponese Air Force troops begin gathering their forces for some kind
of a move. Those Huks up on the mountain have been giving them a hard time,
and the Nips are getting crazed and vicious.
The leader of the local Huks finally sends an emissary to get Shaftoe's
story. The emissary goes away and several days pass. Finally a Fil American
lieutenant returns bearing two pieces of good news: the Americans have
landed in force at Lingayen Gulf, and Glory is alive and working with the
Huks only a few miles away.
"Help me get out of this town," Shaftoe pleads. "Take me out in a boat
on the lake, drop me off in the countryside, then I can move."
"Move where?" says the lieutenant, playing stupid.
"To the high ground! To join those Huks!"
"You would be killed. The ground is booby trapped. The Huks are
extremely vigilant."
"But "
"Why don't you go the other way?" the lieutenant asks. "Go to Manila."
"Why would I want to go there?"
"Your son is there. And that is where you are needed. Soon the big
battle will be in Manila."
"Okay," Shaftoe says, "I'll go to Manila. But first I want to see
Glory."
"Ah," the lieutenant says, as if light has finally dawned. "You say you
want to see Glory."
"I'm not just saying it. I do want to see Glory."
The lieutenant exhales a cloud of cigarette smoke and shakes his head.
"No you don't," he says flatly.
"What?"
"You don't want to see Glory."
"How can you say that? Are you fucking out of your mind?"
The lieutenant's face goes stony. "Very well," he says, "I will make
inquiries. Perhaps Glory will come here and visit you."
"That's crazy. It's much too dangerous."
The lieutenant laughs. "No, you don't understand," he says. "You are a
white man in a provincial city in the Philippines occupied by starving,
berserk Nips. It is impossible for you to show your face outside.
Impossible. Glory, on the other hand, is free to move."
"You said they're inspecting people almost every block."
"They will not bother Glory."
"Do the Nips ever you know. Molest women?"
"Ah. You are worried about Glory being raped." The lieutenant takes
another long draw on his cigarette. "I can assure you that this will not
happen." He rises to his feet, tired of the conversation. "Wait here," he
says. "Gather your strength for the Battle of Manila."
He walks out, leaving Shaftoe more frustrated than ever.
Two days later, the owner of the boathouse, who speaks very little
English, shakes Shaftoe awake before sunrise. He beckons Shaftoe into a
small boat and rows him out into the lake, then half a mile up the shore
toward a sandbar. The dawn is just breaking over the other side of the big
lake, illuminating planet sized cumulus clouds. It's as if the biggest fuel
dump in the whole world is being blown up in a sky diced into vast
trapezoids by the linear contrails of American planes on dawn patrol.
Glory is strolling out on the sandbar. He can't see her face because
she is wrapped in a silk scarf, but he would know the shape of her body
anywhere. She walks back and forth along the shore, letting the warm water
of the lake lap against her bare feet. She is really loving that sunrise she
keeps her back turned to Shaftoe so that she can enjoy it. What a flirt.
Shaftoe gets as hard as an oar. He pats his back pocket, making sure he's
well stocked with I SHALL RETURN condoms. It will be tricky, bedding down
with Glory on a sandbar with this old codger here, but maybe he can pay the
guy to go out and exercise his back for an hour.
The guy keeps looking over his shoulder to judge the distance to the
sandbar. When they are about a stone's throw away, he sits up and ships the
oars. They coast for a few yards and then come to a stop.
"What are you doing?" Shaftoe asks. Then he heaves a sigh. "You want
money?" He rubs his thumb and fingertips together. "Huh? Like that?"
But the guy is just staring into his face, with an expression as tough
and stony as anything that Shaftoe has seen on a hundred battlefields around
the world. He waits for Shaftoe to shut up, then cocks his head and jerks it
back in the direction of Glory.
Shaftoe looks up at Glory, just as she's turning around to face him.
She reaches up with clublike hands, all wrapped up in long strips of cloth
like a mummy's, and paws the scarf away from her face.
Or what used to be a face. Now it's just the front of her skull.
Bobby Shaftoe breathes in deep, and lets out a scream that can probably
be heard in downtown Manila.
The boatman casts an anxious look toward the town, then stands up,
blocking Shaftoe's view as he's drawing in another breath. One of the oars
is in his hands. Shaftoe is just cutting loose with another scream when the
oar clocks him in the side of the head.
Chapter 80 THE PRIMARY
The sun has made a long, skidding crash landing along the Malay
Peninsula a few hundred kilometers west, breaking open and spilling its
thermonuclear fuel over about half of the horizon, trailing out a wall of
salmon and magenta clouds that have blown a gash all the way through the
shell of the atmosphere and erupted into space. The mountain containing the
Crypt is just a charcoal shard against that backdrop. Randy is annoyed with
the sunset for making it difficult to see the construction site. By now the
scar in the cloud forest has mostly healed over, or, at least, some kind of
green stuff has taken over the bare, lipstick colored mud. A few GOTO
ENGINEERING containers still glower in the color distorting light of the
mercury vapor lamps around the entrance, but most of them have either moved
inside the Crypt or gone back to Nippon. Randy can make out the headlights
of one house sized Goto truck winding down the road, probably filled with
debris for another one of the sultan's land reclamation projects.
Seated up in the plane's nose, Randy can actually look forward out his
window and see that they are landing on the new runway, built partly on such
fill. The buildings of downtown are streaks of blue green light on either
side of the plane, tiny black human figures frozen in them: a man with a
phone clamped between his ear and his shoulder, a woman in a skirt hugging a
pile of books to her chest but thinking about something far away. The view
turns empty and indigo as the plane's nose tilts up for the landing, and
then Randy's looking out over the Sulu Sea at dusk, where the badjaos' kite
sailed boats are scuttling into port from a day's fishing, hung all about
with gutted stingrays, flying fresh sharks' tails like flags. Not long ago
it was ridiculously exotic to him, but now he feels more at home here then
he did in California.
For Sultan Class passengers, everything happens with cinematic, quick
cut speed. The plane lands, a beautiful woman hands you your jacket, and you
get off. The planes used by Asian airlines must have special chutes in the
tail where flight attendants are ejected into the stratosphere on their
twenty eighth birthdays.
Usually there's someone waiting for a Sultan Class passenger. This
evening it's John Cantrell, still ponytailed but now clean shaven;
eventually the heat has its way with everyone. He's even taken to shaving
the back of his neck, a good trick for shedding a couple of extra BTUs.
Cantrell greets Randy with an awkward simultaneous handshake and one armed
hug/body check maneuver.
"Good to see you, John," Randy says.
"You too, Randy," John says, and each man averts his eyes shyly.
"Who's where?"
"You and I are here in the airport. Avi checked into a hotel in
downtown San Francisco for the duration."
"Good. I didn't think he was safe in that house by himself."
Cantrell looks provoked. "Any particular reason? Have there been
threats?"
"None that I know of. But it's hard to ignore the high number of
vaguely terrifying people wrapped up in this."
"No victim Avi. Beryl's flying back to S.F. from Amsterdam actually
she's probably there by now."
"I heard she was in Europe. Why?"
"Strange government shit is going on there. I'll tell you later."
"Where's Eb?"
"Eb has been holed up in the Crypt for a week with his team, doing this
kind of incredible D Day like push to finalize the biometric identification
system. We won't bother him. Tom's been drifting back and forth between his
house and the Crypt, running various kinds of torture tests on the internal
Crypt network systems. Probing the inner trust boundaries. That's where
we're going now."
"To the inner trust boundaries?"
"No! Sorry. His house." Cantrell shakes his head. "It's ... well. It's
not the house I would build."
"I want to see it."
"His paranoia is getting just a little out of hand."
"Hey speaking of that.. ." Randy stops. He was about to tell Cantrell
about Pontifex, but they are very close to the halal Dunkin' Donuts, and
people are looking at them. There's no way of telling who might be
listening. "I'll tell you later."
Cantrell looks momentarily baffled and then grins wickedly. "Good one."
"We have a car?"
"I borrowed Tom's car. His Humvee. Not one of those cushy civilian
models. A real military one."
"Oh, that's great," Randy says. "Does it come complete with big machine
gun on the back?"
"He looked into it he could certainly get a license to own one in
Kinakuta but his wife drew the line at having an actual heavy machine gun in
their domicile."
"How about you? Where do you stand on this gun stuff?"
"I own them and know how to use them, as you are aware," Cantrell says.
They are winding their way down a gauntlet of duty free shops, really
more of a duty free shopping mall. Randy cannot figure out who actually buys
all of these large bottles of liquor and expensive belts. What kind of
blandly orgiastic lifestyle demands this particular selection of goods?
In the time that's thus passed Cantrell has evidently decided that a
more thorough answer to Randy's gun question is merited. "But the more I
practiced with them the more scared I got. Or maybe depressed."
"What do you mean?" This is Randy in unaccustomed sounding board mode,
psychotherapeutically prompting Cantrell for his feelings. It must have been
a weird day for John Cantrell, and no doubt there are some feelings that
need to be addressed.
"Holding one of those things in your hands, cleaning the barrel and
shoving the rounds into clips, really brings you face to face with what a
desperate, last ditch measure they really are. I mean, if it gets to the
point where we are shooting at people and vice versa, then we have
completely screwed up. So in the end, they only strengthened my interest in
making sure we could do without them."
"And hence the Crypt?" Randy asks.
"My involvement in the Crypt is arguably a direct result of a few very
bad dreams that I had about guns."
It is wonderfully healthy to be talking like this, but it is a
portentous departure from their usual hard core technical mode. They are
wondering about whether it is even worth it for them to be mixed up in this
stuff. Heedless certainty sure is easier.
"Well, what about those Secret Admirers who were hanging around outside
Ordo?" Randy asks.
"What about them? You're asking me about their state of mind?"
"Yeah. That is what we are talking about. States of mind."
Cantrell shrugs. "I don't know specifically who they were. I'd guess
there are one or two honest to god scary fanatics. Setting them aside, maybe
a third of them are just too young and immature to understand what's going
on. It was just a lark for them. The other two thirds probably had very
sweaty palms."
"They looked like they were trying awfully hard to keep up a cheerful
front."
"They were probably happy to get out of there, and to go sit in a dark
cool room and drink beer afterwards. Certainly a lot of them have been
sending me e mail about the Crypt since then."
"As an alternative to violent resistance to the United States
Government, I assume and hope you mean."
"Exactly. Sure. I mean, that's what the Crypt is becoming. Right?"
The question sounds a little querulous to Randy. "Right," he says. He
wonders why he feels so much more settled about this stuff than John
Cantrell does, and then recalls, that he has nothing left to lose.
Randy takes one last breath of dry, machine cooled air and holds it
refreshingly in his lungs as they step out into the heat of the evening. He
has learned to relax into the climate; you can't fight it. There is a
humming logjam of black Mercedes Benzes waiting to pick up the Sultan–
and Vizier Class passengers. Very few Wallah Class passengers get off at
Kinakuta; most of them are in transit to India. Because this is the kind of
place where everything works just perfectly, Randy and John are in the
Humvee about twenty seconds later, and twenty seconds after that driving at
a hundred and twenty kilometers per hour down a long horizontal shaft of
ghastly blue green freeway light.
"We have been assuming that this Humvee is not bugged," Cantrell says,
"so, if you were holding back on something, you can speak freely now."
Randy writes, Let's stop assuming anything of the kind on a notepad and
holds it up. Cantrell raises his eyebrows one notch but of course does not
seem especially surprised he spends all of his time around people trying to
outdo each other in paranoia. Randy writes We have been under srv'nce by a
former NSA hondo gone private. Then he adds, Prob. Working for 1 or more
Crypt clients.
How do you know? Cantrell mouths.
Randy sighs, then writes: I was contacted by a Wizard.
Then, as long as John's preoccupied with working his way around a left
lane fender bender, he adds, Think of it as due diligence, underworld style.
Cantrell says out loud, "Tom has been pretty scrupulous about making
sure his house is bug free. I mean, he built the thing, or had it built,
from the ground up." He veers off onto an exit ramp and plunges into the
jungle.
"Good. We can talk there," Randy says, then writes, Remember the new
U.S. Embassy in Moscow bugs mixed into the concrete by KGB had to be torn
down.
Cantrell grabs the pad and scribbles blind on the dashboard while
maneuvering the Humvee up a curving mountain road into the cloud forest.
What do you want to talk about that is so secret? Arethusa? Give me agenda
pls.
Randy: (1) Lawsuit & whether Epiphyte can continue to exist. (2)
That NSA tapper, and Wizard, exist. (3) Maybe Arethusa.
Cantrell grins and writes, I have good news re: Tombstone's /.
"/" in this context is UNIX for the root of the file system, which in
the case of Tombstone is synonymous with the hard drive that Randy tried to
wipe. Randy raises his eyebrows skeptically and Cantrell grins, nods, and
draws his thumb across his throat.
Chez Howard is a flat roofed concrete structure that from certain
angles looks like a very large drainage culvert set vertically in a mound of
grout on the top of a foothill. It becomes visible from one of those angles
about ten minutes before they actually arrive, because the road must make
several switchbacks across the broad slope of that foothill, which has been
involuted and fractalized by relentless drainage. Even when it's not raining
here, the mere condensation of moisture from the South Seas breezes gathers
on leaves and rains from their drip tips all the time. Between the rain and
the plant life, erosion must be a violent and ravenous force here, which
makes Randy a little uneasy about all of these mountains, because mountains
could only exist in such an environment if the underlying tectonic forces
were thrusting rock into the air at a rate that would make your ears pop
standing still. But then again, having just lost a house to a temblor, he is
naturally inclined to a conservative view.
Cantrell is now drawing an elaborate diagram, and has even slowed down,
almost to a stop, the better to draw it. It begins with a tall rectangle.
Set within that is a parallelogram, the same size, but skewed a little bit
downwards, and with a little circle drawn in the middle of one edge. Randy
realizes he's looking at a perspective view of a door frame with its door
hanging slightly ajar, the little circle being its knob. STEEL FRAME,
Cantrell writes, hollow metal channels. Quick meandering scribbles suggest
the matrix of wall surrounding it, and the floor underneath. Where the
uprights of the doorframe are planted in the floor, Cantrell draws small,
carefully foreshortened circles. Holes in the floor. Then he encircles the
doorframe in a continuous hoop, beginning at one of those circles and
climbing up one side of the doorframe, across the top, down the other side,
through the other hole in the floor, and then horizontally beneath the door,
then up through the first hole again, completing the loop. He draws one or
two careful iterations of this and then numerous sloppy ones until the whole
thing is surrounded in a vague, elongated tornado. Many turns of fine wire.
Finally he draws two leads away from this huge door sized coil and connects
them to a sandwich of alternating long and short horizontal lines, which
Randy recognizes as the symbol for a battery. The diagram is completed with
a huge arrow drawn vigorously through the center of the doorway, like an
airborne battering ram, labeled B which means a magnetic field. Ordo
computer room door.
"Wow," Randy says. Cantrell has drawn a classic elementary school
electromagnet, the kind of thing young Randy made by winding a wire around a
nail and hooking it up to a lantern battery. Except that this one is wound
around the outside of a doorframe and, Randy guesses, hidden inside the
walls and beneath the floor so that no one would know it was there unless
they tore the building apart. Magnetic fields are the styli of the modern
world, they are what writes bits onto disks, or wipes them away. The
read/write heads of Tombstone's hard drive are exactly the same thing, but a
lot smaller. If they are fine pointed draftsman's pens, then what Cantrell's
drawn here is a firehose spraying India ink. It probably would have no
effect on a disk drive that was a few meters away from it, but anything that
was actually carried through that doorway would be wiped clean. Between the
pulse gun fired into the building from outside (destroying every chip within
range) and this doorframe hack (losing every bit on every disk) the Ordo
raid must have been purely a scrap hauling run for whoever organized it
Andrew Loeb or (according to the Secret Admirers) Attorney General
Comstock's sinister Fed forces who were using Andy as a cat's paw. The only
thing that would have made it through that doorway intact would have been
information stored on CD ROM or other nonmagnetic media, and Tombstone had
none of that.
Finally they have made it up to the top of the hill, which Tom Howard
has shaved to the bedrock in a kind of monk's tonsure. Not because he hates
living things, though he probably has no particular affection for them, but
to hold at bay the forces of erosion and to create a defensive glacis across
which the movements of incredibly poisonous snakes, squirrel sized insects,
opportunistic lower primates, and villainous upper primates will be visible
on the array of video cameras he has built into fairly subtle recesses and
crevices up on the walls. Seen up close, the house is surprisingly not as
dour and fortresslike as it looked at first. It is not just a single large
culvert but a bundle of them in different diameters and lengths, like a
faggot of bamboo. There is a decent number of windows, particularly on the
north side where there's a view, down the slope that John and Randy have
just climbed, to a crescent shaped beach. The windows are set deeply into
the walls, partly to back them out of the nearly vertical rays of the sun
and partly because each one has a retractable steel shutter, hidden in the
wall, that can be dropped down in front of it. It is an okay house, and
Randy wonders if Tom Howard would be willing to deed it over to the Dentist
and hock his colossal suite of Gomer Bolstrood furniture and move his family
into a crowded apartment building just in order to retain control of
Epiphyte Corporation. But maybe that won't even be necessary.
John and Randy climb out of the Humvee to the sound of gunfire.
Artificial light radiates upwards from a slot neatly dissected out of the
jungle nearby. Humidity and clouds of insects make light a nearly solid and
palpable thing here. John Cantrell leads Randy across the perfectly sterile
parking slab and into a screened and fenced tunnel that has been stabbed
into the black vegetation. Underfoot is some kind of black plastic grid that
keeps the nude soil from becoming a glue trap. They walk down the tunnel,
until twenty or thirty paces later it opens up into an extremely long,
narrow clearing: the source of the light. At the far end of it, the ground
rises abruptly in a sort of berm, partly natural, Randy thinks, and partly
enhanced with fill dirt excavated from the house's foundation. Two large
paper targets in the shape of human silhouettes are clipped to a rack there.
At the near end, two men with ear protectors pulled down around their necks
are examining a gun. One of these men is Tom Howard. Randy is struck but not
really astonished by the fact that the other one is Douglas MacArthur
Shaftoe, evidently fresh in from Manila. The gun looks like exactly the same
model that some of the black hatted and bandanna masked posse were carrying
yesterday in Los Altos: a long pipe with a sickle shaped clip curving away
from one side, and a very simple stock made of a few bare metal parts bolted
together.
Doug is in the middle of saying something, and is not the type to
interrupt his train of thought and fall all over himself being friendly just
because Randy has recently traversed the Pacific Ocean. "I never knew my
father," he says, "but my Filipino uncles used to tell me stories that he
had told. When he was on Guadalcanal, they the Marines were still using
their Springfields, the ought three model, so four decades old when finally
the M 1 rifle began to show up. So they took one of each rifle and tossed it
into the water and rolled it around in the sand for a while and did God
knows what else to it but nothing that would be unusual in a real combat
situation, for a Marine and then tried to operate them and found that the
ought three still worked and the M 1 didn't. So they stuck to their
Springfields. And I would say that some testing along those lines would be
in order if you think you are really designing an insurgency weapon, as you
say. Good evening, Randy."
"Doug, how are you?"
"I am just fine, thank you!" Doug is one of these guys who always
interprets "how are you" as a literal request for information, not just an
empty formality, and always seems slightly touched that someone would care
enough to ask. "Mr. Howard here says that when you were sitting on top of
that car typing you were actually doing something clever. And dangerous. At
least from a legal point of view."
"Were you monitoring that?" Randy asks Tom.
"I saw packets moving through the Crypt, and later saw you on
television. I put two and two together," Tom says. "Nice job, Randy." He
lumbers forward and shakes Randy's hand. This is an almost embarrassing
outpouring of emotion by Tom Howard standards.
"What I did there probably failed," Randy says. "If Tombstone's disk
was blanked, it was blanked by the doorframe coil, and not by what I did."
"Well, you deserve recognition anyway, which is what your friend is
trying to give you," Doug says, mildly irked at Randy's obtuseness.
"I should offer you a drink, and a chance to relax, and all of that,"
Tom says, looking towards his house, "but on the other hand Doug says you
were flying Sultan Class."
"Let's talk out here," Randy says. "But actually there is one thing you
could get me."
"What's that?" Tom asks.
Randy pulls the little disembodied hard drive out of his pocket and
holds it up in the light, the wire ribbon adangle. "A laptop computer and a
screwdriver."
"Done," Tom says, and disappears down the tunnel. Doug meanwhile begins
dismantling the weapon, as if just to keep his hands busy. He takes the
parts out one by one and regards them curiously.
"What do you think of the HEAP gun?" Cantrell asks.
"I don't think it's as crazy as when I first heard of it," Doug says,
"but if your friend Avi thinks that people are going to be able to
manufacture rifled gun barrels in their basements to protect themselves
against ethnic cleansing, he's got another thing coming."
"Rifled barrels are hard," Cantrell says. "There's no way around it.
They'd have to be stockpiled and smuggled. But the idea is that anyone who
downloaded the HEAP, and who had access to some basic machine tools, could
build the rest of the weapon."
"I need to sit down with you sometime and explain everything else
that's wrong with the idea," Doug says.
Randy changes the subject. "How's Amy?"
Doug looks up and eyes Randy carefully. "You want my opinion? I think
she is lonely, and in need of reliable support and companionship."
Now that Doug has totally alienated both Randy and John, the gun range
is completely silent for a while, which is probably how Doug likes it. Tom
comes out with a laptop in one hand and, in the other, half a dozen blue
plastic water bottles all shrink wrapped together, already dribbling a trail
of condensation.
"I have an agenda," Cantrell says, holding up the notepad.
"Wow! You guys are organized," Tom says.
"Item the first: Lawsuit and whether Epiphyte can continue to exist."
Randy lays the laptop out on the same table where Doug is working with the
HEAP gun and begins to remove screws. "I assume you guys know of the lawsuit
and have worked out the implications of it yourself," he says. "If the
Dentist can prove that Doug discovered the wreck as a byproduct of work he
did for us, and if the value of that wreck is high enough compared to the
value of the company, then the Dentist owns us, and for all practical
purposes owns the Crypt."
"Whoa! Wait a minute. The Sultan owns the Crypt," Tom says. "If the
Dentist controls Epiphyte, all he gets out of it is a contract to provide
certain technical services in the Crypt."
Randy senses everyone's looking at him. He twirls screws out of the
computer, refusing to agree with this.
"Unless there's something here I'm not getting," Tom says.
"I guess I'm just being paranoid and sort of assuming that the Dentist
is somehow collaborating with forces in the U.S. government that are anti
privacy and anti crypto," Randy says.
"Attorney General Comstock's cabal, in other words," Tom says.
"Yeah. For which I have never actually seen any evidence at all. But in
the wake of the Ordo raid everyone seems to be assuming it. If that is the
case, and the Dentist ends up providing technical services to the Crypt,
then the Crypt is compromised. We have to assume, in that case, that
Comstock has a man on the inside."
"Not just Comstock," Cantrell says.
"Okay, the U.S. government."
"Not just the U.S. government," Cantrell says. "The Black Chamber."
"What the hell do you mean by that?" Doug asks.
"There was a high level conference a couple of weeks ago in Brussels.
Hastily organized we think. Chaired by Attorney General Comstock.
Representatives of all the G7 countries and a few others. We know people
from the NSA were there. People from Internal Revenue. Treasury people
Secret Service. Their counterparts in the other countries. And a lot of
mathematicians known to have been co opted by the government. The U.S. vice
president was there. Basically we think that they are planning to form some
kind of international body to clamp down on crypto and particularly on
digital money."
"The International Data Transfer Regulatory Organization," Tom Howard
says.
"The Black Chamber is a nickname for that?" Doug asks.
"That's what people on the Secret Admirers mailing list have started
calling it," Cantrell says.
"Why form this organization now?" Randy wonders.
"Because the Crypt is about to go hot, and they know it," Cantrell
says.
"They are scared shitless about their ability to collect taxes when
everyone is using systems like the Crypt," Tom explains to Doug.
"This has been the talk of the Secret Admirers mailing list for the
last week. And so when Ordo was raided, it really hit a raw nerve.
"Okay," Randy says, "I've been wondering why people showed up there
almost immediately with guns and stranger things." He has got the laptop
opened up now and disconnected its hard drive.
"You have wandered off the agenda," Doug says, pulling an oily rag down
the barrel of the HEAP gun. "The question is, does the Dentist have you guys
by the balls, or only by the short hairs? And that question basically
revolves around yours truly. Right?"
"Right!" Randy says, a little too forcefully he's feeling desperate for
a change in subject. The whole Kepler/Epiphyte/Semper Marine thing is
stressful enough all by itself, and the last thing he needs is to be hanging
around with people who believe it is nothing more than a skirmish in a war
to decide the fate of the Free World a preliminary round of the Apocalypse.
Avi's obsession with the Holocaust seemed fine to Randy as long as
Holocausts were things that happened long ago or far away being personally
involved in one is something Randy can do without. He should have stayed in
Seattle. But he didn't, and so the next best thing for him is to limit the
conversation to straightforward things like bars of gold.
"In order for him to have a claim, the Dentist needs to prove that
Semper Marine found that wreck when it was doing the cable survey. Right?"
Doug asks.
"Right," Cantrell says, before Randy can step in and say that it's a
bit more complicated than that.
"Well, I have been kicking around this part of the world for half of my
life, and I can always testify that I found the wreck on an earlier survey.
That son of a bitch can never prove that I'm lying," Doug says.
"Andrew Loeb his lawyer is smart enough to know that. He will not put
you on the stand," Randy says, screwing his own hard drive into place.
"Fine. Then all he's got is circumstantial evidence. Namely, the
proximity of the wreck to the cable survey corridor."
"Right. Which implies a correlation," Cantrell says.
"Well, it is not that damn close," Doug says. "I was cutting a very
wide swath at the time."
"I have bad news," Randy says. "First of all, it is a civil case and so
circumstantial evidence is all he needs to win. Secondly, I just heard from
Avi, on the plane, that Andrew Loeb is filing a second suit, for breach of
contract."
"What goddamn contract?" Doug demands.
"He has anticipated everything you just said," Randy says. "He still
doesn't know where the wreck is. But if it turns out to be miles and miles
away from the survey corridor, he will claim that by surveying such a wide
swath you were basically risking the Dentist's money in order to go
prospecting, and that thus the Dentist still deserves a share of the
proceeds."
"Why does the Dentist want a beef with me?" Doug says.
"Because then he can pressure you into testifying against Epiphyte. You
get to keep all the gold. That gold becomes damages which the Dentist
leverages into control of Epiphyte."
"Jesus fuckin' Christ!" Doug exclaims. "He can kiss my ass."
"I know that," Randy says, "but if he gets wind of that attitude, he'll
just come up with another tactic and file another suit."
Doug begins, "Well that's kind of defeatist "
"Where I'm headed with this," Randy says, "is that we cannot fight the
Dentist on his turf which is the courtroom any more than the Viet Cong could
have fought a pitched battle in the open against the U.S. Army. So there are
some really good reasons to get that gold out of the wreck surreptitiously,
before the Dentist can prove it's there."
Doug looks outraged. "Randy, have you ever tried to swim while holding
a gold bar in one hand?"
"There's got to be a way to do it. Little submarines or something."
Doug laughs out loud and mercifully decides not to debunk the concept
of little submarines. "Supposing it was possible. What do I do with the gold
then? If I deposit it in a bank account, or spend it on something, what's to
keep this Andrew Loeb guy from taking that as circumstantial evidence that
the wreck had a ton of money in it? You're saying I have to sit on this
money for the rest of my life in order to protect you from this lawsuit."
"Doug. You can do this," Randy says. "You get the gold. You put it on a
boat. My friends here can explain the rest." Randy fits the laptop's plastic
case back together and begins maneuvering the little screws back into their
recesses.
Cantrell says, "You bring the boat here."
Tom continues, "To that beach, right down the hill. I'll be waiting for
you with the Humvee."
"And you and Tom can drive it downtown and deposit that bullion in the
vaults of the Central Bank of Kinakuta." Cantrell concludes.
Someone has finally said something that actually knocked Doug Shaftoe
off balance. "And get what in return?" he asks suspiciously.
"Electronic cash from the Crypt. Anonymous. Untraceable. And
untaxable."
Doug's regained his composure now, and is back to belly laughs.
"What'll that buy me? Pictures of naked girls on the World Wide Web?"
"Soon enough, it'll buy you anything that money can buy," Tom says. "I
would have to know a little more about it," Doug says. "But once again we
are straying from the agenda. Let's leave it at this: you guys need me to
strip that wreck bare, quickly and secretly."
"It's not just what we need. It might be in your best interests, too,"
Randy says, groping on the back of the laptop for the power switch.
"Item the second: A former NSA hondo is surveilling us and something
about a Wizard?" John says.
"Yeah."
Doug's giving Randy a queer look and so Randy launches into a brief
summary of his classification system of Wizards, Elves, Dwarves, and Men not
to mention Gollums, which makes practically no sense to Doug, who hasn't
read Lord of the Rings. Randy goes on to tell them about his conversation
with Pontifex on the airplane phone. John Cantrell and Tom Howard are
interested in this, as Randy would expect them to be, but what surprises him
is how intently Doug Shaftoe listens.
"Randy!" Doug almost shouts. "Didn't you at any point ask this guy why
Old Man Comstock was so interested in the Arethusa messages?"
"Coincidentally, this is the third item on the agenda," Cantrell says.
"Why didn't you ask him on the ski lift?" Randy jokes.
"I was giving him a very closely reasoned explanation of why I was
about to sever the linkage between his ugly and perfumed corporeal self and
his eternally condemned soul," Doug says. "Seriously! You got the messages
from your grandpa's old war souvenirs. Right?"
"Right."
"And your grandpa Waterhouse picked them up where?"
"Judging from the dates, he must have been in Manila."
"Well, what do you imagine could have happened in Manila around that
time that would be so damned important to Earl Comstock?"
"I told you, Comstock thought it was a Communist code."
"But that's bullshit!" Doug says. "Jesus! Haven't you guys spent any
time at all around people like Comstock? Can't you recognize bullshit? Don't
you think it would be a useful item to add to your intellectual toolkits to
be capable of saying, when a ton of wet steaming bullshit lands on your
head, 'My goodness, this appears to be bullshit'? Now. What do you think is
the real reason Comstock wanted to crack Arethusa?"
"I have no idea," Randy says.
"The reason is gold," Doug says.
Randy snorts. "You have got gold on the brain."
"Did I or did I not take you out into the jungle and show you
something?" Doug demands.
"You did. Sorry."
"Gold is the only thing that could account for it. Because otherwise,
the Philippines just were not that important during the fifties, to justify
such an effort at the NSA."
"There was an ongoing Huk insurrection," Tom says. "But you're right.
The real focus around here anyway was Vietnam."
"You know something?" fires back Doug. "During the Vietnam war which
was Old Man Comstock's brainchild the American military presence in the
Philippines was huge. That son of a bitch had soldiers and marines crawling
over Luzon, supposedly on training missions. But I think they were looking
for something. I think they were looking for the Primary."
"As in primary gold repository?"
"You got it."
"Is that what Marcos eventually found?"
"Opinions differ," Doug says. "A lot of people think that the Primary
is still waiting to be discovered."
"Well, there isn't any information about the Primary, or anything else,
in these messages," Randy says. The laptop has booted up now, in UNIX mode,
with a torrent of error messages triggered by its inability to find various
pieces of hardware that were present on Randy's laptop (which is in a Ford
dealership's dumpster in Los Altos) but are not on Tom's. And yet the basic
kernel works to the point that Randy can look at the file system and makes
sure it's intact. The Arethusa directory is still there, with its long list
of short files, each file the result of running a different stack of cards
through Chester's card reader. Randy opens up the first one and finds
several lines of random capital letters.
"How do you know there's no information about the primary in those
messages, Randy?" Doug asks.
"The NSA couldn't decrypt these messages in ten years," Randy says. "It
all turned out to be a hoax. The output of a random number generator."
Randy jumps back out to the file listing and types
grep AADAA *
and hits the return key. It is a command to find the opening letter
group in the ETC card messages, the famous one to which Pontifex had
alluded. The machine answers back almost immediately with an empty prompt,
meaning that the search failed.
"Ho ly shit," Randy says.
"What?" everyone says at once.
Randy takes a long, deep breath. "These are not the same messages that
Earl Comstock spent ten years attempting to break."
Chapter 81 DELUGE
It takes Goto Dengo about half a minute to waddle up the narrow
entrance of the tunnel. He is trailing the fingers of one hand along the
stone ceiling just above his head, feeling the scars of the drills. Behind
him he can hear the four members of his crew making their way along,
muttering to each other calmly.
His fingers slide over a lip and rise up into empty, dark space; he's
into the main drift now. He stands up and wades forward. Perfect blackness
is cozy and reassuring to him in it, he can always pretend that he is still
a boy, back on Hokkaido. He can make believe that the last few years of his
life have never happened.
But in fact he is a grownup and he is trapped in a hole in the
Philippines and surrounded by armies of demons. He opens the valves on an
acetylene headlamp and sparks it into life. He is perfectly capable, by this
point, of finding his way around Golgotha in the dark, but his crew is not,
and he leaves them far behind. He stubs his toe brutally on a large gold bar
that has carelessly been left lying across the iron railway, and curses.
"Is everything okay, Lieutenant?" says one of his crew, fifty meters
behind him.
"Fine," Goto Dengo says, loudly and clearly. "You four be careful you
do not break your toes on this bar."
So now, Wing and Rodolfo and their men, waiting up ahead, know the
number of Nipponese soldiers they have to kill.
"Where are the last few workers?" one of the crew shouts.
"In the fool's vault."
It takes them several minutes to pick their way through the main vault,
because it is packed with treasure. The starry core of a galaxy must look
like this. They clamber up the shaft in its ceiling and make their way to
the Hall of Glory. Goto Dengo finds the bare wires that lead to the electric
light bulb and attaches them to the screw terminals on a battery. Running at
the wrong voltage, the bulb looks like a tangerine floating in ink.
"Shut off your headlamps," Goto Dengo says, "to conserve fuel. I will
leave mine burning in case there is an interruption in the power."
He pulls a fistful of white cotton from a sterile box. It is the
cleanest whitest thing he has seen in several years. He pulls it apart into
smaller wads, like Father Ferdinand breaking the bread of the mass, and
passes them out to the men, who stuff it ritualistically into their ears.
"There is no more time to waste," he hollers, "Captain Noda must be growing
impatient out there."
"Sir!" one of the men says, standing at attention and handing him a
pair of wires marked MAIN TUNNEL DEMOLITION.
"Very well," Goto Dengo says, and screws the wires down to a pair of
terminals on a wooden switch box.
It seems as though he should say something ceremonious, but nothing
comes to mind. Nipponese men are dying all over the Pacific without first
getting to make speeches.
He clenches his teeth together, shuts his eyes, and twists the switch
handle.
The shock wave comes through the floor first, whacking the soles of
their feet like a flying plank. A moment later it comes through the air and
strikes them like a moving wall of stone. The cotton in the ears seems to
accomplish nothing. Goto Dengo feels his eyes bounce off the backs of their
sockets. All of his teeth feel as though they have been crisply sheared off
at the gumline with cold chisels. The wind is all forced out of his lungs.
They are empty for the first time since the moment of his birth. Like
newborn infants, he and the other men can only writhe and look around
themselves in a panic until their bodies learn how to draw breath again.
One of the men brought a bottle of sake, which has shattered. They pass
around the jagged bottom of the bottle, each man taking a gulp of what
remains. Goto Dengo tries to pull the cotton out of his ears and finds that
the shock wave drove it in so deep that it cannot be extracted. So he merely
shouts: "Check your watches." They all do. "In two hours, Captain Noda will
demolish the plug on the bottom of the lake and flood the water traps. In
the meantime, we have work to do. You all know your jobs get to work!"
They all hai, turn on their heels, and go their separate ways. It is
the first time that Goto Dengo has actually sent men off to their deaths.
But they are all dead men anyway, and so he doesn't know how to feel about
it.
If he still believed in the emperor still believed in the war he would
think nothing of it. But if he still believed, he wouldn't be doing what he
is about to do.
It is important to keep up the appearance that this is a normal
operation, and so he descends to the vault to perform his next scheduled
duty: inspect what used to be the main drift. The vault is filled with a fog
of rock dust around which his windpipe clenches like a fist grabbing a rope.
His acetylene lamp only makes the dust glow, giving him a visibility of
perhaps six inches. All he can see is the bullion right in front of his
face, which still glimmers beneath a film of dust and smoke. The shock wave
has deranged his formerly neat stacks of crates and bricks and turned the
entire hoard into a rude mound that is still shedding avalanches, seeking
its angle of repose. A 75 kilogram gold brick slides down the pile like a
runaway boxcar, emerging suddenly from the cloud of dust, and he jumps out
of its way. Bits of rock are still sifting down from the crazed ceiling and
plinking against his helmet.
He scrambles carefully over the heap, breathing through a wad of
cotton, until he can see what used to be the main drift. The dynamite has
done the right thing: shattered the roof of the drift into billions of
shards. Collapsed on the floor, they occupy a larger volume than the same
mass of stone did when it was all in one piece. The drift is filled with
tons of loose stone, all the way down to the entrance along the Tojo River,
where Captain Noda's men are at work even now, concealing the tiny puncture
wound behind river rocks.
He feels, rather than hears, a small explosion, and knows that some
thing is going wrong. No one should be setting off explosions now.
Movement in this place is agonizingly slow, like a nightmare when you
are trying to run away from a demon. It takes him so long to get back to the
Hall of Glory that there is almost no point in doing it; whatever was
happening is over when he arrives.
What he sees, when he arrives, is a group of three men waiting for him:
Wing, Rodolfo, and the Filipino named Bong.
"The soldiers?"
"All dead," Rodolfo says flatly, irritated by the stupidity of the
question.
"The others?"
"One soldier set off a grenade. Killed himself and my two men, Wing
says.
"Another soldier heard the grenade and had a knife ready when Agustin
came for him," Bong says. He shakes his head sorrowfully. "I think that
Agustin was not ready to kill a man. He hesitated."
Goto Dengo stares at Bong, fascinated. "And you?"
Bong doesn't understand the question for a moment. Then light dawns.
"Oh, no, I did not hesitate, Lieutenant Goto. A Nipponese soldier hurt my
sister one time, in a very inappropriate way."
Goto Dengo stands there silently for a while, until he notices that the
other men are all looking at him expectantly. Then he checks his watch. He
is shocked to see that only half an hour has gone by since he set off the
dynamite.
"We have an hour and a half before the water traps are flooded. If we
are not in the Bubble by then, we will be sealed off, with no escape
possible," says Goto Dengo.
"We go there and wait," Wing suggests, in Shanghainese.
"No. Captain Noda listens, outside, for more explosions," Goto Dengo
says, also in Chinese; then, in English, tells the Filipinos, "We have to
set off the demolition charges at certain times or Noda san will grow
suspicious."
"Whoever sets them off will be trapped forever in this chamber,"
Rodolfo says, gesturing around them at the Hall of Glory.
"We will not set them off from here," says Goto Dengo, pulling the lid
from a crate. Inside are several long coils of two stranded telephone wire.
He hands the coils out to Rodolfo, Wing, and Bong. They understand, and
begin to splice the new wires onto the ones that terminate here.
They retreat through Golgotha in stages, lugging battery packs with
them and unrolling the wires as they go, dynamiting the tunnel sections
behind them one by one. As they do this, certain oddities of the tunnel
system finally become clear to Rodolfo, Wing, and Bong. It becomes fully
evident to them, for the first time, that the entire complex was carefully
designed by Goto Dengo to serve two entirely contradictory purposes. To a
loyal Nipponese engineer like Captain Noda it looks like precisely what he
was ordered to build: a vault laced with booby traps. But to the four men
sealed inside, Golgotha has a second function. It is an escape machine. As
the purposes of certain rooms, drifts, and other features suddenly become
clear, they straighten up, blinking, and turn to look at Goto Dengo, with
the same expressions as the soldiers wore, weeks ago, when they discovered
the Buddha in the Mercedes.
Their destination is the Bubble, a niche that Goto Dengo had them carve
out of the stone during the last couple of months. He claimed, to anyone who
asked, that it was a water reservoir, put there to increase the deadliness
of one of the traps. It is a wide vertical shaft, four meters in diameter,
that begins in the ceiling of a peripheral drift and goes straight up for a
few meters, then dead ends. Ladders still cling to its walls, and by
ascending, they can reach a rock ledge big enough to sit on. Canteens of
water and boxes of biscuits have already been stocked here by Wing and his
men.
By the time they reach their seats in the top of the Bubble, all of the
others are in awe of Goto Dengo, and ready to do whatever he says. He senses
this. It fills him with unutterable misery.
They have fifteen minutes to wait. The others spend it sipping water
and nibbling biscuits. Goto Dengo fills it with self recrimination. "I am a
loathsome worm," he says, "a traitor, a filthy piece of dog shit, not worthy
to clean out the latrines of true soldiers of Nippon. I am bereft totally
cut off from the nation I've betrayed. I am now part of a world of people
who hate Nippon and who therefore hate me but at the same time I am hateful
to my own kind. I will stay here and die."
"You are alive," Rodolfo says. "You have saved our lives. And you are
rich."
"Rich?"
Wing and Rodolfo and Bong look at each other, confused. "Yes, of
course!" Bong says.
Goto Dengo is still looking nonplussed. Reckoning that he has merely
gone deaf or daft from the explosions, Bong reaches into his trousers and
pulls out a hand sewn pouch, teases it open, and displays a healthy double
handful of diamonds. Wing and Rodolfo scarcely take note.
Goto Dengo looks away despondently. He himself has saved no treasure
except these men's lives. But that's not why he feels so bad. He had hoped
that being thus saved they would all be noble, and not think of the
treasure. But maybe that was too much to hope for.
A distant thump lifts them slightly off the ledge, just for a moment.
Goto Dengo feels a strange sensation in his head: the air pressure is
beginning to rise. The column of air trapped in the diagonal is being
compressed by a piston of water rushing down it from the lake. Captain Noda
has dynamited the plug.
Goto Dengo is so excited that he forgets to die.
He is an engineer, trapped inside one of his own machines. The machine
was designed to keep him alive, and he will never know whether it worked
unless it works. After he has achieved that satisfaction, he supposes, he
can always kill himself at leisure.
He pinches his nose shut, presses his lips together, and begins to blow
air into his Eustachian tubes, equalizing the pressure. The others follow
his lead.
All of Golgotha's traps are basically the same. All of them derive
their killing power from the pressure of the water communicated down to this
level from the bottom of Lake Yamamoto. In any number of places in the
complex, false walls have been constructed, designed to be pierced by greedy
thieves, or to collapse of their own accord when thieves dig out the sand
that holds them up. Then the water will rush in with explosive force and
probably crush them before they have a chance to drown.
At its Golgotha end, the diagonal tunnel forks again and again, like a
river breaking up into distributaries. Goto Dengo explained it to inspecting
officers by likening it to the plumbing inside a modern hotel, which is
supplied by a single main that is pressurized by a distant water tower, but
which divides into many different pipes that supply pressurized water to
taps all over the structure.
Golgotha seethes, hisses, and moans as every pipe in its ramified
system is pressurized by the deluge unleashed by Captain Noda's dynamite
charge. The bubbles of air trapped at the ends of those pipes are seeking
escape: some are leaking out through cracks in the walls and others are
bubbling away into the diagonal. The surface of Lake Yamamoto must be
boiling like a cauldron, and Captain Noda must be standing above it,
watching the air flee Golgotha, grinning with satisfaction. In moments, the
floors of the tunnels are obscured by whirling lagoons of dirty water, and
the barrels and railcars that were left there have begun to rise, bobbing
like corks and clanging together.
Most of the air trapped in the Golgotha does not, however, come
bubbling up out of Lake Yamamoto. Most of it rises towards the Bubble,
because that is how Goto Dengo planned it. He knows it's working because his
ears begin to pop.
Eventually the water rises up into the Bubble itself, but it rises
slowly, because the pressure of the air in here has become quite high
already. As the water climbs, it further pressurizes the bubble of air in
which Goto Dengo and the others are trapped. The pressure of the air rises
steadily until it becomes equal to the pressure of the water. Then balance
is achieved, and the water cannot rise any more. Another kind of balance is
being reached within their bodies, as the compressed air floods into their
chests, and the nitrogen in that air seeps through the membranes of their
lungs and dissolves into their bloodstreams.
"Now we wait," says Goto Dengo, and shuts off his acetylene lamp,
leaving them in darkness. "As long as we do not burn lamps, there is enough
air in this chamber to keep us alive for several days. Captain Noda and his
men will spend at least that long tidying up the Bundok site, erasing all
traces of our work, and killing themselves. So we must wait, or else his men
will only kill us when we appear on the shores of Lake Yamamoto. I would
like to spend the time educating you on the subject of caisson disease, also
known as the bends."
***
Two days later they set off one last, relatively small dynamite charge,
blowing a hole through the wall of the Bubble that is large enough to admit
a human being. On the other side, the diagonal to Lake Yamamoto begins.
Rodolfo is more terrified than anyone else, and so they send him first.
Then goes Bong, and then Wing. Finally Goto Dengo leaves the foul, used up
air of the Bubble behind. Within a few moments they have found their way
into the ascending diagonal tunnel. They begin to swim uphill through total
darkness. All of them are trailing their hands against the tunnel ceiling,
feeling for the opening of the first vertical shaft. Rodolfo is supposed to
stop when he feels it, but the others must also be alert in case Rodolfo
misses.
They thud into one another in the darkness like a loosely connected
train bumping to a halt. Rodolfo has stopped with any luck, he has found the
first vertical shaft. Wing finally moves forward, and Goto Dengo follows
straight up the vertical shaft and finally into a bulb at its top where a
bubble of air has been trapped. The bulb is just barely wide enough to
accommodate four men. They pause there, all jammed together in a cluster of
bodies, heaving as they exhale the nitrogen– and carbon dioxide
tainted air that they've been living on for the last sixty seconds, and
breathe in fresh lungfuls. Goto Dengo feels his ears popping as pressure is
relieved.
They have covered only a small fraction of the four hundred and fifty
meters that separate Golgotha from the lake horizontally. But half of the
hundred meter vertical distance has already been covered. That is, the
pressure of the air they are breathing in this chamber is only half of what
it was in the Bubble.
Goto Dengo is not a diver, and knows very little of diving medicine.
But his father used to speak of how caissons were used to send workers deep
underwater, to build things or to mine. That is how he learned about caisson
disease, and how he learned the rule of thumb that most men will not suffer
its symptoms if you have them decompress for a while at half the original
air pressure. If they stop and breathe for a while, the nitrogen will come
out of the tissues. Once this is done, the air pressure may be halved again.
In the Bubble, the air pressure was nine or ten atmospheres. Here in
the first chamber, it's more like five. But there's not much air in this one
just enough to let them breathe for fifteen or twenty minutes, and bleed
nitrogen out of their tissues, and get lungfuls of air for the next leg of
the swim.
"Okay," Goto Dengo says, "we go." He finds Rodolfo in the darkness and
slaps him encouragingly on the shoulder. Rodolfo takes a series of deep
breaths, getting ready, and Goto Dengo recites the numbers that they all
know by heart: "Twenty five strokes straight. Then the tunnel bends up.
Forty strokes up a steep hill. Where the tunnel bends again, you go straight
up to the next air chamber."
Rodolfo nods, crosses himself, and then does a somersault in the water
and kicks himself downwards. Then goes Bong, then Wing, and finally Goto
Dengo.
This leg is very long. The last fifteen meters is a vertical ascent
into the air chamber. Goto Dengo had hoped that the natural buoyancy of
their bodies would make this easy, even if they were on the verge of
drowning. But as he is kicking up the narrow shaft, pushing frantically on
the feet of Wing, who is above him and not going as fast as he would like,
he feels a growing panic in his lungs. Finally he understands that he must
fight the urge to hold his breath that his lungs are filled with air at a
much higher pressure than the water around him, and that if he doesn't let
some of that air out, his chest will explode. So against his instinct to
save that precious air, he lets it boil out of his mouth. He hopes that the
bubbles will pass by the faces of the men above him and give them the idea
too. But shortly after he does it, they all stop moving entirely.
For perhaps ten seconds Goto Dengo is trapped in total darkness in a
water filled vertical hole in the rock that is not much wider than his own
body. Of all the things he has experienced in the war, this is the worst.
But just as he gives up and prepares to die, they begin moving again. They
are half dead when they get to the breathing chamber.
If Goto Dengo's calculations were right, then the pressure in here
should be no more than two or three atmospheres. But he is beginning to
doubt those calculations. When he has breathed in enough air to restore full
consciousness, he's aware of sharp pains in his knees, and it's clear from
the sounds that the others are making that they are suffering the same way.
"This time we wait as long as we can," he says.
The next leg is shorter, but it's made more difficult by the pain in
their knees. Again Rodolfo goes first. But when Goto Dengo rises up into the
next air chamber, about one and a half atmospheres above normal, only Bong
and Wing are there.
"Rodolfo missed the opening," Bong says. "I think he went too far up
the ventilation shaft!"
Goto Dengo nods. Only a few meters beyond where they turned into this
passage is a ventilation shaft that goes all the way to the surface. It has
a sharp sideways jog in the middle that Goto put there so that when Captain
Noda filled it up with rubble (which he has presumably done by now), the
diagonal tunnel their escape route would not be blocked. If Rodolfo went up
that shaft, he found a cul de sac, with no air bubble in the top.
Goto Dengo doesn't have to tell the others that Rodolfo is dead. Bong
crosses himself and says a prayer. Then they stay for a while and take
advantage of the air that Rodolfo should be sharing. The pain in Goto
Dengo's knees becomes sharper, but after a while it plateaus.
"From here, only small changes in altitude, not much need to
decompress. Mostly we swim for distance now," he says. They still have more
than three hundred horizontal meters to cover, pierced with four more shafts
for air. The last of these doubles as a legitimate ventilation shaft.
So from there on it is just swimming and resting, swimming and resting,
until finally the walls of the tunnel peel away from them and they find
themselves in Lake Yamamoto.
Goto Dengo breaks the surface and does nothing for a long time but
tread water and breathe clean air. It is nighttime, and for the first time
in a year, Bundok is quiet, except for the sound of Bong, kneeling on the
shore of the lake, making the sign of the cross and mumbling prayers as fast
as his lips can move.
Wing has already departed, without so much as a good bye. This is
shocking to Goto Dengo until he realizes what it means: he, too, is free to
go. As far as the world knows, he is dead, all of his obligations
discharged. For the first time in his life, he can do whatever he wants.
He swims to the shore, gets up on his feet, and starts walking. His
knees hurt. He cannot believe that he has come through all of this, and his
only problem is sore knees.
Chapter 82 BUST
"Kopi," Randy says to the flight attendant, then reconsiders,
remembering that he is in steerage this time, and getting to a toilet might
not be so easy. It's just a little Malaysian Air 757. The flight attendant
sees the indecision on his face and wavers. Her face is framed in a gaudy,
vaguely Islamic scarf that is the most tokenistic nod to sexual modesty he
has ever seen. "Kopi nyahkafeina," Randy says, and she beams and pours from
the orange carafe. It is not that she doesn't speak English, just that Randy
is starting to feel comfortable with the local pidgin. He realizes that this
is the first step in a long process that will eventually turn him into one
of these cheerful, burly, sunburned expats who infest the airport bars and
Shangri La hotels of the Rim.
Outside his window, the long slender isle of Palawan lies parallel to
their flight path. A fogbound pilot could almost get from Kinakuta to Manila
by following Palawan's beaches, but that is a moot point on a day like this.
Those beaches slope gradually into the transparent waters of the South China
Sea. When you're down there planted in the sand, looking at a glancing angle
across the waves, it probably doesn't look like much, but from up here you
can see straight down through the water for many fathoms, and so all of the
islands, and even the coral heads, have skirts that start out dark brown or
dun near the water and blend into yellow and finally into swimming pool blue
before eventually fading into the deep blue of the ocean. Every little coral
head and sandbar looks like the iridescent eye on a peacock's plume.
After the conversation at Tom Howard's last night, Randy slept in his
guest room and then spent most of the day in Kinakuta buying a new laptop,
complete with a new hard drive, and transferring all of the data from the
drive he salvaged in Los Altos onto the new one, encrypting everything in
the process. Considering all of the completely boring and useless corporate
documents he has subjected to state of the art encryption, he can't believe
he carried the Arethusa stuff around on his hard drive, unencrypted, for
several days, and across a couple of national borders. Not to mention the
original ETC punch cards, which now reside in Tom Howard's basement safe. Of
course that stuff is encrypted to begin with, but that was done in 1945, and
so by modern standards it might as well have been enciphered with a cereal
box decoder ring. Or at least that is what Randy is kind of hoping. Another
thing he did this morning was to download the current version of the
Cryptonomicon from the ftp server where it lives in San Francisco. Randy's
never looked at it in detail, but he has heard it contains samples of code,
or at least algorithms, that he could use to attack Arethusa. With luck, the
very latest public code breaking techniques in the Cryptonomicon might match
up to the classified technology that Pontifex and his colleagues were
employing at the NSA thirty years ago. Those techniques didn't work against
the Arethusa messages that they were trying to decrypt, but this was
probably only because those messages were random numbers not the real
messages. Now that Randy has what he suspects are the real messages, he may
be able to accomplish what Earl Comstock tried and failed to do during the
fifties.
They are angling across the terminator not the robotic assassin of
moviedom, but the line between night and day through which our planet
incessantly rotates. Looking east, Randy can see over the rim of the world
to places where it is dusk, and the clouds catch only the reddest fraction
of the sun's light, squatting in darkness but glowing with sullen contained
fire like coals in their feathery ruffs of ash. The airplane is still in the
daylight, and is assiduously tracked by mysterious bars of rainbow, little
spectral doppelgangers probably some new NSA surveillance technology. Some
of the Palawan's rivers run blue and straight into the ocean and some carry
enormous plumes of eroded silt that feather out into the ocean and are swept
up the shore by currents. In Kinakuta there is less deforestation than there
is here, but only because they have oil instead. All of these countries are
burning resources at a fantastic rate to get their economies stoked up,
gambling that they'll be able to make the jump into hyperspace some kind of
knowledge economy, presumably before they run out of stuff to sell and turn
into Haiti.
Randy is paging his way through the opening sections of the
Cryptonomicon, but he can never concentrate when he's on an airplane. The
opening sections are stolen pages from World War II era military manuals.
These used to be classified until ten years ago, when one of Cantrell's
friends found copies just sitting in a library in Kentucky and drove there
with a shitload of dimes and photocopied them. That got public, civilian
cryptanalysis up to where the government was in the l940s. The Xeroxes have
been scanned and OCRed and converted to the HTML format used for Web pages
so that people can put in links and marginal notes and annotations and
corrections without messing with the original text, and this they have done
enthusiastically, which is all very well but makes it hard to read. The
original text is set in a deliberately crabbed, old fashioned typeface to
make it instantly distinguishable from the cyber era annotations. The
introduction to the Cryptonomicon was written, probably before Pearl Harbor,
by a guy named William Friedman, and is filled with aphorisms probably
intended to keep neophyte code breakers from slapping grenades to their
heads after a long week of wrestling with the latest Nipponese machine
ciphers.
The fact that the scientific investigator works 50 percent of his time
by nonrational means is, it seems, quite insufficiently recognized.
Intuition, like a flash of lightning, lasts only for a second. It
generally comes when one is tormented by a difficult decipherment and when
one reviews in his mind the fruitless experiments already tried. Suddenly
the light breaks through and one finds after a few minutes what previous
days of labor were unable to reveal.
And, Randy's favorite,
As to luck, there is the old miners' proverb: "Gold is where you find
it."
So far so good, but then with a few whacks of the Page Down key Randy's
looking at endless staggered grids of random letters (some kind of
predigital method for solving ciphers) which the author would not have put
into the document if they did not convey some kind of useful lesson to the
reader. Randy is miserably aware that until he has learned to read through
these grids he will not even be up to the level of competence of a World War
II novice cryptanalyst. The sample messages used are like ONE PLANE REPORTED
LOST AT SEA and TROOPS HAVING DIFFICULTY MAINTAINING CONNECTION WITH FORTY
FIFTH INFANTRY STOP which Randy finds kind of hokey until he remembers that
the book was written by people who probably didn't know what "hokey" meant,
who lived in some radically different pre hokiness era where planes really
did get lost at sea and the people in those planes never came back to see
their families and in which people who even raised the issue of hokeyness in
conversation were likely to end up pitied or shunned or maybe even
psychoanalyzed.
Randy feels like a little shit when he thinks about this stuff. He
wonders about Chester. Is the shattered 747 hanging from Chester's ceiling
just a monumental act of bad taste, or is Chester actually making a
Statement with that thing? Could it be that nerdy Chester is actually some
kind of deep thinker who has transcended the glibness and superficiality of
his age? This very subject has been debated by serious people at some
length, which is why learned articles about Chester's house keep showing up
in unexpected places. Randy wonders if he's ever had a serious experience in
his life, an experience that would be worth the time it would take to reduce
it to a pithy STOP punctuated message in capital letters and run it through
a cryptosystem.
They must have flown right by the site of the wreck. In a few days
Randy will turn right around and come halfway back to Kinakuta to make what
meager contribution he can to the job of dragging gold bars out of it. He's
only going to Manila to take care of some business there; some kind of
urgent meeting demanded by one of Epiphyte's Filipino partners. The stuff
that Randy came to Manila to do, a year and a half ago, mostly runs itself
now, and when it actually requires his attention he finds it fantastically
annoying.
He can see that the modern way of thinking about stuff, as applied to
the Cryptonomicon, isn't going to help him very much in his goal of
decrypting the Arethusa intercepts. The original writers of the
Cryptonomicon actually had to decrypt and read these goddamn messages in
order to save the lives of their countrymen. But the modern annotators have
no interest in reading other people's mail per se; the only reason they pay
attention to this subject at all is that they aspire to make new crypto
systems that cannot be broken by the NSA, or now this new IDTRO thing. The
Black Chamber. Crypto experts won't trust a cryptosystem until they have
attacked it, and they can't attack it until they know the basic
cryptanalytical techniques, and hence the demand for a document like this
modern, annotated version of the Cryptonomicon. But their attacks generally
don't go any further than demonstrating a system's vulnerabilities in the
abstract. All they want is to be able to say in theory this system could be
attacked in the following way because from a formal number theory stand
point it belongs to such and such class of problems, and those problems as a
group take about so many processor cycles to attack. And this all fits very
well with the modern way of thinking about stuff in which all you need to
do, in order to attain a sense of personal accomplishment and earn the
accolades of your peers, is to demonstrate an ability to slot new examples
of things into the proper intellectual pigeon holes.
But the gap between demonstrating the vulnerability of a cryptosystem
in the abstract, and actually breaking a bunch of messages written in that
cryptosystem, is as wide, and as profound, as the gap between being able to
criticize a film (e.g., by slotting it into a particular genre or movement)
and being able to go out into the world with a movie camera and a bunch of
unexposed film and actually make one. Of these issues the Cryptonomicon has
nothing to say until you tunnel down to its oldest and deepest strata. Some
of which, Randy suspects, were written by his grandfather.
The head flight attendant comes in on the intercom and says something
in various languages. Each transition to a new language is accompanied by a
sort of frisson of confusion running through the whole passenger
compartment: first the English speaking passengers all ask each other what
the English version of the announcement said and just as they are giving it
up as a lost cause the Cantonese version winds down and the Chinese speaking
passengers ask each other what it said. The Malay version gets no reaction
at all because no one actually speaks the Malay language, except maybe for
Randy when he is asking for coffee. Presumably the message has something to
do with the fact that the plane is about to land. Manila sprawls out below
them in the dark, vast patches of it flickering on and off as different
segments of the electrical power grid straggle with their own particular
challenges vis à vis maintenance and overload. In his mind, Randy is already
sitting in front of his TV tucking into a bowl of Cap'n Crunch. Maybe there
is a place in NAIA where he can purchase a brick of ice cold milk, so that
he will not even have to stop at a 24 Jam on the way home.
The Malaysian Air flight attendants all have big smiles for him on the
way out; as globe trotting expat technocrats all know, hospitality industry
people think it is just adorable, or pretend to think so, when you try to
use some language any language other than English, and they remember you for
it. Soon he is inside good old NAIA, which is sort of, but not fully, air
conditioned. There is a whole group of girls in identical windbreakers
gathered by his baggage carousel, chattering like an exaltation of larks
under a DEATH TO DRUG TRAFFICKERS sign. The bags take a long time to arrive
Randy wouldn't have checked baggage at all except that he acquired a lot of
books, and a few other souvenirs, on his trip some salvaged from the ruined
house and some inherited from his grandfather's trunk. And in Kinakuta he
bought some new diving gear that he hopes he will put to use very soon.
Finally he had to buy a big sort of duffel bag on wheels to carry it all.
Randy enjoys watching the girls, apparently some kind of high school or
college field hockey team on the road. For them, even waiting for the
baggage carousel to start up is a big adventure, full of thrills and chills;
e.g., when the carousel groans into action for a few moments and then shuts
down again. But finally it starts up for real, and out comes a whole row of
identical gym bags, color coordinated to match the girls' uniforms, and in
the middle of them is Randy's big duffel. He heaves it off the carousel and
checks the tiny combination padlocks: one on the zipper for the main
compartment and one on a smaller pocket at the end of the bag. There is one
more tiny pocket on the top of the bag which has no practical function that
Randy can think of; he didn't use it and so he didn't lock it.
He deploys the bag's telescoping handle, lifts it up onto its built in
wheels, and heads for customs. Along the way he gets mixed into the group of
field hockey players, who find this extremely titillating and hilarious,
which is slightly embarrassing for him until they start finding their own
hilarity hilarious. There are only a few customs lanes open, and there is a
sort of traffic director waving people this way and that; he shoos the girls
towards the green lane and then, inevitably, ducts Randy into a red one.
Looking through the lane, Randy can see the area on the other side
where people wait to greet arriving passengers. There is a woman in a nice
dress there. It's Amy. Randy comes to a complete stop the better to gape at
her. She looks fantastic. He wonders if it's totally presumptuous of him to
think that Amy put on a dress for no other reason than that she knew Randy
would enjoy looking at her in it. Whether it's presumptuous or not, that's
what he does think, and it almost makes him want to faint. He doesn't want
to let his mind run completely out of control here, but maybe there is
something better in store for him tonight than digging into a bowl of Cap'n
Crunch.
Randy steps into the lane. He wants to just bolt through and head
straight for Amy, but this would be a bad idea. But it's okay. Anticipation
never killed anyone. Anticipation can actually be kind of enjoyable. What
did Avi say? Sometimes wanting is better than having. Randy's pretty sure
that having Amy would not disappoint, but wanting ain't such a bad thing
either. He is holding his laptop bag out before him and drawing the big
duffel behind, slowing gradually to a stop so that it won't roll forward
under its own momentum and break his knees. There is the requisite long
stainless steel table and a bored fireplug shaped gentleman behind it
saying, "Nationality? Port of embarkation?" for the hundred thousandth time
in his life. Randy hands over his documents and answers the questions while
bending down to heft the duffel bag up onto the metal tabletop. "Remove the
locks please?" the customs inspector says. Randy bends down and squints at
the tiny brass wheels, trying to line them up into the right combination.
While he's doing that, he hears the customs inspector working right next to
his head, unzipping the tiny, empty pocket on the top of the duffel bag.
There is a rustling noise. "What is this?" the inspector asks. "Sir? Sir?"
"Yes, what is it?" Randy says, straightening up and looking the
inspector in the eye.
Like a model in an infomercial, the inspector holds up a small Ziploc
bag right next to his head and points to it with the other hand. A door
opens behind him and people come out. The Ziploc bag has been partly filled
with sugar, or something maybe confectioner's sugar and rolled into a cigar
shaped slug.
"What is this, sir?" the inspector repeats.
Randy shrugs. "How should I know? Where did it come from?"
"It came from your bag, sir," the inspector says, and points to the
little pocket.
"No, it didn't. That pocket was empty," Randy says.
"Is this your bag, sir?" the inspector says, reaching with one hand to
look at the paper claim check dangling from its handle. Quite a crowd has
gathered behind him, still indistinct to Randy who is understandably
focusing on the inspector.
"I should hope so I just opened the locks," Randy says. The inspector
turns around and gestures to the people behind him, who en masse move
forward into the light. They are wearing uniforms and most of them are
carrying guns. Very soon, some of them are behind him. They are, as a matter
of fact, surrounding him. Randy looks towards Amy, but sees only a pair of
abandoned shoes: she is sprinting barefoot toward a line of pay telephones.
He'll probably never see her in a dress again.
He wonders whether it would be a bad idea, from a narrowly tactical
point of view, to ask for a lawyer this soon.
Chapter 83 THE BATTLE OF MANILA
Bobby Shaftoe is awakened by the smell of smoke. It is not the smoke of
cookies left too long in the oven, piles of autumn leaves being burned, or
Boy Scout campfires. It is a mixture of other kinds of smoke with which he
has become quite familiar in the last couple of years: tires, fuel, and
buildings, for example.
He props himself up on one elbow and realizes that he is lying in the
bottom of a long skinny boat. Just above his head, a dirty canvas sail luffs
in a treacherous and foul smelling breeze. It is the middle of the night.
He turns his head to look upwind. His head doesn't like it. Fierce pain
is trying to batter down the doors of his mind. But the pain is not getting
in. He senses the muffled booms of the pain's hobnailed boots against his
front door, but that's about it.
Ah! Someone has given him morphine. Shaftoe grins appreciatively. Life
is good.
The world is dark a matte black hemisphere inverted over the plane of
the lake. But there is a horizontal crack around the edge, off to the boat's
port side, where yellow light is leaking through. The light glimmers and
sparkles like stars viewed through the heat waves above the hood of a black
automobile.
He sits up, peers at it, gradually getting an idea of scale. The ragged
trail of yellow light extends from the boat's eight o'clock, all the way
around past the bow, to about one o'clock. Maybe it is some incredibly weird
sunrise phenomenon.
"Myneela," says a voice behind him.
"Huh?"
"It is Manila," says another voice, closer to him, speaking the English
version of the name.
"Why's it all lit up?" Bobby Shaftoe has not seen a city lit up at
night since 1941, and has forgotten what it looks like.
"The Japanese have put it to the torch."
"The Pearl of the Orient!" someone says, farther back in the boat, and
there is rueful laughter.
Shaftoe's head is clearing now. He rubs his eyes and takes a better
look. A couple of miles off to port, a steel drum full of fuel takes off
into the sky like a rocket, and disappears. He begins to make out the bony
silhouettes of palm trees along the lake shore, standing out against the
flames. The boat moves on across the warm water quietly, tiny waves chiming
against its hull. Shaftoe feels as if he has just been born, a new person
coming into a new world.
Anyone else would ask why they are traveling into the burning city,
instead of running away from it. But Shaftoe doesn't ask, any more than a
newborn infant would ask questions. This is the world he has been born into,
and he looks at it wide eyed.
The man who has been speaking to him is sitting on a gunwale next to
Shaftoe, a pale face hovering above a black garment, a white rectangular
notch in his collar. The light of the burning city refracts warmly in a
string of amber beads from which depends, a heavy, swinging crucifix.
Shaftoe lies back down in the hull of the boat and stares up at him for
awhile.
"They gave me morphine."
"I gave you morphine. You were difficult to control."
"I apologize, sir," Shaftoe says with profound sincerity. He remembers
those China Marines who went Asiatic on the trip down from Shanghai, and how
they disgraced themselves.
"We could not tolerate noise. The Nipponese would have found us."
"I understand."
"Seeing Glory was a very bad shock for you."
"Level with me, padre," says Bobby Shaftoe. "My boy. My son. Is he a
leper too?"
The black eyes close, and the pale face moves back and forth in a no.
"Glory contracted the disease not long after the child was born, working in
a camp in the mountains. The camp was not a very clean place."
Shaftoe snorts. "No shit, Sherlock!"
There is a long, uncomfortable silence. Then the padre says, "I have
already taken confessions from the other men. Would you like me to take
yours now?"
"Is that what Catholics do when they're about to die?"
"They do it all the time. But yes, it is advisable to confess
immediately before death. It helps what is the expression grease the skids.
In the afterlife."
"Padre, it looks to me like we're only an hour or two away from hitting
the beach. If I start confessing my sins to you right now, I might get up to
stealing cookies from the cookie jar when I was eight years old."
The padre laughs. Someone hands Shaftoe a cigarette, already lit. He
takes a big suck on it.
"We wouldn't have time to get into any of the good stuff, like nailing
Glory and killing a whole lot of Nips and Krauts." Shaftoe thinks about it
for a minute, enjoying the cigarette. "But if this is one of those deals
where we are all going to die and it sure looks like one of those deals to
me there is one thing I gotta do. Is this boat going back to Calamba?"
"We hope that the owner can take some women and children back across
the lake."
"Anyone got a pencil and paper?"
Someone passes up a pencil stub, but there is no paper to be found.
Shaftoe searches his pockets and finds nothing but a skein of I SHALL RETURN
condoms. He opens one of them, peeling the halves of the wrapper apart
carefully, and tosses the rubber into the lake. Then he spreads the wrapper
out on the top of an ordnance crate and begins to write: "I, Robert Shaftoe,
being of sound mind and body, hereby leave all of my worldly goods,
including my military death benefits, to my natural born son, Douglas
MacArthur Shaftoe."
He looks up into the burning city. He considers adding something like,
"if he's still alive," but nobody likes a whiner. So he just signs the
fucking thing. The padre adds his signature as witness. Just to add some
extra credibility, Shaftoe pulls off his dog tags and wraps the will around
them, then wraps the dog tags' chain around the whole thing. He passes it
down to the stern of the boat, where the boatman pockets it and cheerfully
agrees to do the right thing with it when he gets back to Calamba.
The boat isn't wide, but it's very long and has a dozen Huks crammed
onto it. All of them are armed to the teeth with ordnance that has obviously
come off an American submarine recently. The weight of men and weaponry
keeps the boat so low in the water that waves occasionally splash over the
gunwales. Shaftoe paws through crates in the dark. He can't see for shit,
but his hands identify, the components of a few Thompson submachine guns
down in there.
"Parts for weapons," one of the Huks explains to him, "don't lose
those!"
"Parts, nothing!" Shaftoe says, a few busy seconds later. He produces a
fully assembled trench broom from the crate. The red coals of half a dozen I
SHALL RETURN cigarettes leap upwards into the Huks' mouths as they free
their hands for a light round of applause. Someone passes him a pie shaped
magazine, heavy with .45 caliber cartridges. "Y'know, they invented this
kind ammo just to knock down crazy Filipino bastards," Shaftoe announces.
"We know," one of the Huks says.
"It's overkill for Nips," Shaftoe continues, jacking the tommy gun and
the magazine together. The Huks all laugh nastily. One of them is moving up
from the stern, making the whole boat rock from side to side. He is a very
young, slight fellow. He holds out his hand to Bobby Shaftoe. "Uncle Robert,
do you remember me?"
Being called Uncle Robert is hardly the weirdest thing that has
happened to Shaftoe in the last few years, so he lets it slide. He peers at
the boy's face, which is dimly illuminated by the combustion of Manila.
"You're one of the Altamira boys," he guesses.
The boy salutes him crisply, and grins.
Then, Shaftoe remembers. Three years ago, the Altamira family
apartment, carrying the freshly impregnated Glory up the stairs as air raid
sirens wailed all around the city. An apartment filled with Altamiras. A
squad of boys with wooden swords and rifles, staring at Bobby Shaftoe in
awe. Shaftoe throwing them a salute, then running out of the place.
"All of us fought the Nips," the boy says. Then his face falls, and he
crosses himself. "Two are dead."
"Some of you were pretty damn young."
"The youngest ones are still in Manila," the boy says. He and Shaftoe
silently stare across the water into the flames, which have merged into a
wall now.
"In the apartment? In Malate?"
"I think so. My name is Fidel."
"Is my son in the same place?"
"I think so. Maybe not."
"We'll go find those kids, Fidel."
***
Half the population of Manila seems to be standing along the water's
edge, or in the water, waiting for a boat like theirs to show up. MacArthur
is coming down from the north, and the Nipponese Air Force troops are coming
up from the south, so the isthmus between Manila Bay and Laguna de Bay is
corked at both ends by great military forces waging total war. A ragged
Dunkirk style evacuation is in progress along the lake side of the isthmus,
but the number of boats is not adequate. Some of the refugees are behaving
like civilized human beings, but others are wading and swimming out towards
them trying to get first dibs. A wet hand reaches up out of the water and
grabs the boat's gunwale until Shaftoe crushes it with the butt of his
trench broom. The swimmer falls away, clutching his hand and screaming, and
Shaftoe tells him he's ugly.
There is about half an hour's more ugliness as the boat cruises back
and forth just out of swimming range and the padre handpicks an assortment
of women carrying small children. They are pulled up into the boat one by
one, and the Huks climb off the boat one by one, and when it's all finished
the boat turns around and glides off into the darkness. Shaftoe and the Huks
wade ashore, carrying crates of ammunition between them. By this point,
Shaftoe has grenades dangling off his body all over the place, like teats on
a pregnant sow, and most of the Huks are walking all slow and stiff legged,
trying not to collapse under the weight of the bandoliers in which they have
practically mummified themselves. They stagger into the city, bucking a tide
of smoky refugees.
This low land along the shore of the lake is not the city proper it is
a suburb of humble buildings made in the traditional style, of woven rattan
screens with thatched roofs. They burn effortlessly, throwing up the red
sheets of flame that they watched from the boat. Inland, and a few miles
north, is the city proper, with many masonry buildings. The Nipponese have
put it to the torch also, but it burns sporadically, as isolated towers of
flame and smoke.
Shaftoe and his band had been expecting to hit the beach like Marines
and get mowed down at the water's edge. Instead, they march for a good mile
and a half inland before they actually lay eyes on the enemy.
Shaftoe's actually glad to see some real Nips; he has been getting
nervous, because the lack of opposition has made the Huks giddy and
overconfident. Then half a dozen Nip Air Force troops spill out of a store
which they have evidently been looting they are all carrying liquor bottles
and stop on the sidewalk to set fire to the place, fashioning Molotov
cocktails from stolen bottles of firewater. Shaftoe pulls the pin on a
grenade and underhands it down the sidewalk, watches it skitter for a while,
and then ducks into a doorway. When he hears the explosion, and sees
shrapnel crack the windshield of a car parked along the street, he jumps out
onto the sidewalk, ready to open up with the tommy gun. But it's not
necessary; all of the Nips are down, thrashing weakly in the gutter. Shaftoe
and the other Huks all take cover and wait for more Nipponese troops to
arrive, and help their injured comrades, but it doesn't happen.
The Huks are elated. Shaftoe stands in the street brooding while the
padre administers last rites to the dead and dying Nipponese. Obviously,
discipline has completely broken down. The Nips know they are trapped. They
know MacArthur is about to run right over them, like a lawn mower plowing
through an anthill. They have become a mob. For Shaftoe, it's going to be
easier to fight mobs of drunken, deranged looters, but there's no telling
what they might be doing to civilians farther north.
"We're wasting our fucking time," Shaftoe says, "let's get to Malate
and avoid further engagements."
"You are not in command of this group," says one of the others. "I am."
"Who's that?" Shaftoe asks, squinting against the light of the burning
liquor store.
It turns out to be a Fil American lieutenant, who was sitting way back
in the boat, and who has been of no use at all to this point. Shaftoe knows
in his bones that this guy is not going to be a good combat leader. He
inhales deeply, trying to heave a sigh, then gags on smoke instead.
"Sir, yes sir!" he says, and salutes.
"I am Lieutenant Morales, and if you have any more suggestions, bring
them to me, or keep them to yourself."
"Sir, yes sir!" Shaftoe says. He doesn't bother to memorize the
lieutenant's name.
They work their way north through narrow, clogged streets for a couple
of hours. The sun comes up. A small airplane flies over the city, drawing
ragged fire from exhausted, drunken Nipponese troops.
"It is a P 51 Mustang!" Lieutenant Morales exclaims.
"It's a fucking Piper Cub, goddamn it!" Shaftoe says. He has been
holding his tongue to this point, but he can't help it now. "It's an
artillery spotter plane."
"Then why is it flying over Manila?" Lieutenant Morales asks smugly. He
enjoys this rhetorical triumph for about thirty seconds. Then the first
artillery rounds begin to bore in from the north and blast the shit out of
various buildings.
They get into their first serious firefight about half an hour later,
against a platoon of Nipponese Air Force troops holed up in a stone bank at
the vee formed by a couple of intersecting avenues. Lieutenant Morales comes
up with an extremely complicated plan that involves breaking up into three
smaller groups. Morales takes three men forward into the cover of a large
fountain that sits in the middle of the square. There, they are immediately
trapped by heavy fire from the Nipponese. They squat and huddle behind the
shelter of the fountain for about a quarter of an hour, at which point an
artillery shell glides in from the north, a black pellet easing downwards in
a flawless parabolic trajectory, and scores a direct hit on the fountain. It
turns out to be a high explosive shell, which does not blow up until it hits
something the fountain, in this case. The padre gives Lieutenant Morales and
his men last rites from a safe distance of a hundred yards or so, which is
as good a place as any, since there is nothing left of their physical
bodies.
Bobby Shaftoe is voted new squad leader by acclamation. He leads them
around the square, giving the whole intersection a wide berth. Way up north
somewhere, one of The General's batteries is doggedly trying to zero in on
that fucking bank, blowing up half the neighborhood in the process. A Piper
Cub banks overhead doing lazy figure eights, offering suggestions over the
radio: "Almost there a little to the left no, too far now bring it in a
little bit."
It takes Shaftoe's group a whole day to make another mile's progress
towards Malate. They could get there in no time by simply running up the
middle of major streets, but the artillery fire is coming in heavier and
heavier as they head north. Worse, much of it consists of antipersonnel
rounds with radar proximity fuses that blow up while they're still several
yards above the ground, the better to spray shrapnel all over the place. The
air bursts look like the splayed foliage of burned coconut palms.
Shaftoe sees no point in getting them all killed. So they take it a
block at a time, sprinting one by one from doorway to doorway, and scouting
the buildings with great care in case there are any Nips lying in wait to
shoot at them from the windows. When that happens, they have to hunker down,
scout the place out, count windows and doors, make guesses about the
building's floor plan, send men out to check various lines of sight.
Usually, it is not really difficult to root the Nips out of these buildings,
but it is time consuming.
They hole up in a half burned apartment building around sunset, and
take turns getting a couple of hours' sleep. Then they push on through the
night, when the artillery fire is less intense. Bobby Shaftoe gets the whole
remaining squad, nine men including the padre, into Malate at about four in
the morning. By the time dawn breaks, they have reached the street where the
Altamiras live, or lived. They arrive just in time to see the entire
apartment block being systematically blasted into rubble by round after high
explosive round.
No one runs out of it; no cries or screams can be heard in between the
explosions. The place is empty.
They break down the barricaded door of a drugstore across the street
and have a chat with the sole living occupants: a seventy five year old
woman and a six year old boy. The Nipponese came through the neighborhood a
couple of days ago, she says, heading north, in the direction of Intramuros.
They herded the women and children out of the buildings and marched them in
one direction. They pulled out all of the men, and the boys over a certain
age, and marched them off in another. She and her grandson escaped by hiding
in a cupboard.
Shaftoe and his squad emerge from the drugstore onto the street,
leaving the padre behind to grease some heavenly skids. Fifteen seconds
later, two of them are killed by shrapnel from an antipersonnel round that
detonates above the street nearby. The remainder of the squad backs right
into a group of marauding Nipponese stragglers coming around the corner, and
a completely insane close quarters firefight ensues. They have the Nips
heavily outgunned, but half of Shaftoe's men are too stunned to fight. They
are accustomed to the jungle. Some of them have never been to the city
before, even in peacetime, and they just stand there gaping. Shaftoe ducks
into a doorway and begins to make a fantastic amount of noise with his
trench broom. The Nips start throwing grenades around like firecrackers,
doing as much damage to themselves as to the Huks. The engagement is
ridiculously confused, and doesn't really end until another artillery round
comes in, kills several of the Nips, and leaves the rest so stunned that
Shaftoe is able to walk out in the open and dispatch them with shots from
his Colt.
They drag two of their wounded into the drugstore and leave them there.
One other man is dead. They are down to five fighting men and one
increasingly busy padre. Their firefight has brought down another barrage of
antipersonnel artillery, and so the best they can do for the rest of the day
is find a basement to hide in, and try to get some sleep.
Shaftoe sleeps hardly at all, and so when night falls he takes a couple
of benzedrine tablets, shoots a bit of morphine to take the edge off, and
leads his squad out into the streets. The next neighborhood to the north is
called Ermita. It has a lot of hotels. After Ermita is Rizal Park. The walls
of Intramuros rise up from Rizal Park's northern edge. After Intramuros is
the Pasig River, and MacArthur's on the far side of the Pasig. So if
Shaftoe's son and the rest of the Altamiras are still alive, they have to be
somewhere in the couple of miles between here and Fort Santiago on the near
bank of the Pasig.
Shortly after they cross into the neighborhood of Ermita, they happen
upon a stream of blood trickling out of a doorway, across the sidewalk, into
the gutter. They kick down the door of the building and discover that its
ground floor is filled with the corpses of Filipino men several dozen in
all. All of them have been bayoneted. One is still alive. Shaftoe and the
Huks carry him out onto the sidewalk and begin looking for some place to put
him while the padre circulates through the building, touching each corpse
briefly and muttering something in Latin. When he comes out, he is bloody up
to the knees.
"Any women? Children?" Shaftoe asks him. The padre shakes his head no.
They are only a few blocks from the Philippine General Hospital, so
they carry the wounded man in that direction. Coming around the corner they
see that the hospital's buildings have been half destroyed by MacArthur's
artillery, and the grounds are covered with human beings laid out on sheets.
Then they realize that the men circulating around the area, carrying rifles,
are Nipponese troops. A couple of shots are fired in their direction. They
have to duck into an alley and set the wounded man down. A few moments
later, a trio of Nipponese soldiers appears in hot pursuit. Shaftoe has had
enough time to think this one through, so he lets them get a good few paces
into the alley. Then he and the Huks kill them silently, with blades. By the
time reinforcements have been sent out after them, Shaftoe and his group
have disappeared into the alleyways of Ermita, which in many places are
running red with the blood of slaughtered Filipino men, and boys.
Chapter 84 CAPTIVITY
"Someone is trying to send you a message," Attorney Alejandro says,
scant minutes into his first interview with his new client.
Randy's ready for it. "Why does everyone here have these incredibly
cumbersome ways of sending me messages? Don't you people have e mail?"
The Philippines are one of those countries where "Attorney" is used as
a title, like "Doctor." Attorney Alejandro has a backswept grey pompadour
that gets a little curly down around the nape of his neck which, as he
probably well knows, makes him look distinguished in a nineteenth century
statesman kind of way. He smokes a lot, which bothers Randy hardly a bit
since he has been in places, for a couple of days, where everyone smokes.
You don't even need to bother with cigarettes and matches in a jail. Just
breathe, and you get the equivalent of one or two packs a day worth of
slightly pre owned tar and nicotine.
Attorney Alejandro decides to act as if Randy has never made this last
comment. He attends to a bit of business with his cigarette. If he wants
that cigarette up and burning between his lips, he can make it happen
without even moving his hands; suddenly it's just there, as if he had been
hiding it, already lit, inside his mouth. But if he needs to introduce a
caesura into the conversation, he can turn the selection, preparation, and
ignition of a cigarette into something that in terms of solemn ritual is
just this side of the cha no yu. It must knock 'em dead in the court room.
Randy's feeling better already.
"What do you suppose the message is? That they are capable of killing
me if they want to? Because I already know that. I mean, shit! How much does
it cost to have a man killed in Manila?"
Attorney Alejandro frowns fiercely. He has taken this question the
wrong way: as a suggestion that he is the kind of guy who would know such a
thing. Of course, given that he was personally recommended by Douglas
MacArthur Shaftoe, he probably is just precisely that kind of guy, but it is
probably rude to aver this. "Your imagination is running wild," he says.
"You have blown the death penalty aspect of this thing all out of
proportion." As Attorney Alejandro probably expected, this display of
blitheness renders Randy speechless long enough for him to execute another
bit of patter with a cigarette and a stainless steel lighter encrusted with
military regalia. Attorney Alejandro has mentioned, twice, that he was a
colonel in the Army and lived for years in the States. "We reinstated the
death penalty in '95 after a hiatus of ten years approximately." The word
approximately crackles and explodes from his mouth like a spark from a Tesla
coil. Filipinos enunciate better than Americans and they know it.
Randy and Alejandro are meeting in a high, narrow room somewhere in
between the jail and the courtroom in Makati. A prison guard loitered in the
room with them for a few minutes, hunched over with sheepishness, leaving
only when Attorney Alejandro went over and spoke to him in low, fatherly
tones and pressed something into his hand. There is an open window, and the
sound of honking horns comes through it from the street two stories below.
Randy's half expecting Doug Shaftoe and his comrades to rappel down from the
roof and enter suddenly in glittering and screaming cloaks of broken window
glass and extract Randy while Attorney Alejandro heaves his bulk against
this half ton nara table and uses it to block the door shut.
Coming up with fantasies like this one helps to break the tedium of
being in jail, and probably does a lot to explain Randy's jailmates' taste
in videos, which they cannot actually watch but which they talk about
incessantly in a mixture of English and Tagalog that he now almost
understands. The videos, or rather the lack of them, has given rise to some
kind of retrograde media evolution phenomenon: an oral storytelling rooted
in videos that these guys once saw. A particularly affecting description of,
for example, Stallone in Rambo III cauterizing his abdominal bullet wound by
igniting a torn open rifle cartridge and shooting gunpowder flames through
it will plunge all of the men into several moments of reverent awe. It is
about the only quiet time Randy gets now, and he has consequently begun
cooking up a new plan: he will exploit his Californian provenance by
asserting that he has seen martial arts films that have not yet been
bootlegged to the streets of Manila, and narrate them in terms so eloquent
that the entire jailhouse will for a few minutes become a place of monastic
contemplation, like the idealized Third World prison that Randy wishes he
were in. Randy read Papillon cover to cover a couple of times when he was a
kid and has always imagined Third World prisons as places of supreme and
noble isolation: steep tropical sunlight setting the humid and smoky air
aglow as it slants in over iron bars close set in thick masonry walls.
Sweaty, shirtless steppenwolves prowling back and forth in their cells,
brooding about where it all went wrong. Prison journals furtively scribbled
on cigarette papers.
Instead, the jail where they've been keeping Randy is just a really
crowded urban society where some of the people cannot actually leave.
Everyone there is extremely young except for Randy and an ever rotating
population of drunks. It makes him feel old. If he sees one more video
addled boy strutting around in a bootleg "Hard Rock Cafe" t shirt and
fronting hand gestures from American gangsta rappers, he may actually have
to become a murderer.
Attorney Alejandro says, rhetorically, "Why 'Death to Drug Smugglers'?"
Randy hasn't asked why, but Attorney Alejandro wants to share something with
him about why. "The Americans were very angry that some people in this part
of the world persisted in selling them the drugs that they want so very
badly."
"Sorry. What can I say? We suck. I know we suck."
"And so as a gesture of friendship between our peoples, we instituted
the death penalty. The law specified two, and only two, methods of
execution," Attorney Alejandro continues, "the gas chamber and the electric
chair. As you can see, we took our lead in this as in many other things,
some wise and some foolish from the Americans. Now, at the time, we did not
have a gas chamber anywhere in the Philippines. A study was made. Plans were
drawn up. Do you have any idea what is involved in constructing a proper gas
chamber?" Attorney Alejandro now goes off on a fairly lengthy riff, but
Randy finds it hard to concentrate until something in Attorney Alejandro's
tone tells him that a coda is approaching. ". . . prison service said, 'How
can you expect us to construct this space age facility when we have not even
the funds to purchase rat poison for the overcrowded prisons we already
have?' As you can see they were just whining for more funding. You see?"
Attorney Alejandro raises his eyebrows significantly and sucks in his
cheeks, as he reduces a good two or three centimeters of a Marlboro to ash.
That he feels it necessary to explain the underlying motivations of the
prison service so baldly seems to imply that his estimate of Randy's
intelligence is none too favorable, which given the way he was arrested at
the airport might be fair enough. "So this left only the electric chair. But
do you know what happened to the electric chair?"
"I can't imagine," Randy says.
"It burned. Faulty wiring. So we had no way to kill people." All of a
sudden Attorney Alejandro, who has betrayed no amusement thus far, remembers
to laugh. It is perfunctory, and by the time Randy has bestirred himself to
show a little polite amusement, it's over and Alejandro's back to being
serious. "But Filipinos are highly adaptable."
"Once again," Attorney Alejandro says, "we looked to America. Our
friend, our patron, our big brother. You are familiar with the expression
Ninong? Of course you are, I forget you have spent a whole lotta time here."
Randy is always impressed by the mixture of love, hate, hope,
disappointment, admiration, and derision that Filipinos express towards
America. Having actually been a part of the United States at one point, they
can take digs at it in a way that's usually reserved for lifelong U.S.
citizens. The failure of the United States to protect them from Nippon after
Pearl Harbor is still the most important thing that ever happened to them.
Probably just slightly more important than MacArthur's return to the country
a few years later. If that doesn't inculcate a love hate relationship...
"The Americans," Attorney Alejandro continues, "were also reeling under
the expense of executing people and having embarrassments with their
electric chairs. Maybe they should have jobbed it out."
"Pardon me?" Randy says. He gets the idea that Attorney Alejandro is
just checking to see if he's awake.
"Jobbed it out. To the Nipponese. Gone to Sony or Panasonic or one of
those guys and said (now reverting to a perfect American yokel accent), We
just love the VCRs that y'all've been sellin' us why don't you make an
electric chair that actually works?' Which the Nips would have done it is
the kind of thing they would excel at and then after they sold Americans all
of the electric chairs they needed, we could have purchased some factory
seconds at cut rate." Whenever Filipinos slag America in earshot of an
American, they usually try to follow it up with some really vile
observations about the Nipponese, just to put everything in perspective.
"Where are we going with this?" Randy says.
"Please forgive my digression. The Americans had gone over to executing
prisoners by lethal injection. And so we have once again decided to take a
cue from them. Why didn't we just hang people? We have plenty of rope this
is where rope comes from, you know "
"Yes."
" or shoot them? We have plenty of guns. But no, the congress wanted to
be modern like Uncle Sam, and so lethal injection it was. But then we sent a
delegation to see how the Americans lethally injected people, and you know
what they reported when they came back?"
"It takes all kinds of special equipment."
"It takes all kinds of special equipment, and a special room. This room
has not yet been constructed. So, you know how many people we have on death
row now?"
"I can't imagine."
"More than two hundred and fifty. Even if the room were built tomorrow,
most of them could not be executed, because it is illegal to carry out the
execution until one year has passed since the final appeal."
"Well, wait a minute! If you've lost your final appeal, then why wait a
whole year?"
Attorney Alejandro shrugs.
"In America, they usually do the final appeal while the prisoner is
lying strapped to the table with the needle in his arm."
"Maybe they wait in case there is a miracle during that year. We are a
very religious people even some of the death row prisoners are very
religious. But they are now begging to be executed. They cannot stand the
wait any longer!" Attorney Alejandro laughs and slaps the table. "Now,
Randy, all of these two hundred and fifty people are poor. All of them." He
stops significantly.
"I hear you," Randy says. "Did you know that my net worth is less than
zero, by the way?"
"Yes, but you are rich in friends and connections." Attorney Alejandro
starts frisking himself. A picture of a fresh pack of Marlboros appears over
his head in a little thought balloon. "I recently received a telephone call
from a friend of yours in Seattle."
"Chester?"
"Yes, he's the one. He has money."
"You could say that."
"Chester is seeking ways to put his financial resources to work on your
behalf. He feels frustrated and unsure of himself because while his
resources are quite significant, he does not know the fine points of how to
wield them in the context of the Philippine judicial system."
"That's him all over. Is there any chance that you might be able to
give him some pointers?"
"I'll talk to him."
"Let me ask you this," Randy says. "I understand that financial
resources, wielded properly, could free me. But what if some rich person
wanted to use his money to send me to death row?"
This one stops Attorney Alejandro dead for a minute. "There are more
efficient ways for a wealthy person to kill someone. For the reasons I have
described, a would be assassin would first look somewhere outside of the
Philippine capital punishment apparatus. That is why, in my opinion as your
lawyer, what is really going on here is that "
"Someone is trying to send me a message."
"Exactly. You see, now you are beginning to understand."
"Well, I'm wondering if you could give me a ballpark estimate of how
long I'm going to be locked up. I mean, do you want me to plead to a lesser
charge and then serve a few years?"
Attorney Alejandro looks pained and scoffs. He doesn't deign to answer.
"I didn't think so," says Randy. "But at what point in these proceedings do
you imagine I could get out? I mean, they refused to release me on bail."
"Of course! You are charged with a capital crime! Even though every one
knows it is a joke, proper respect must be shown."
"They pulled the planted drugs out of my bag there are a million
witnesses. It was a drug, right?"
"Malaysian heroin. Very pure," Attorney Alejandro says admiringly.
"So there are all of these people who can testify that a sack of heroin
was found in my luggage. That would seem to complicate the job of getting me
out of jail."
"We can probably get it dismissed before an actual trial is launched,
by pointing out flaws in the evidence," Attorney Alejandro says. Something
in his tone of voice, and the way he's staring out the window, suggests this
is the first time he's actually thought about how he's going to specifically
attack this problem. "Perhaps a baggage handler at NAIA will step forward
and testify that he saw a shadowy figure planting the drugs in your bag."
"A shadowy figure?"
"Yesss," says Attorney Alejandro irritably, anticipating sarcasm.
"Are there a lot of those hanging around backstage at NAIA?"
"We don't need a lot."
"How much time do you think might pass before this baggage handler's
conscience finally gets the better of him and he decides to step forward?"
Attorney Alejandro shrugs. "A couple of weeks, perhaps. For it to be
done properly. How are your accommodations?"
"They suck. But you know what? Nothing really bothers me anymore."
"There is concern among some of the officials of the prison service
that when you get out, you may say harsh things about the conditions."
"Since when do they care?"
"You are a little famous in America. Not very famous. A little. Do you
remember the American boy in Singapore, who was caned?"
"Of course."
"Very bad publicity for Singapore. So there are officials of the prison
service who would be sympathetic to the idea of putting you in a private
cell. Clean. Quiet."
Randy cops a questioning look, and holds up one hand and rubs his thumb
and fingers together in the "money" gesture.
"It is done already."
"Chester?"
"No. Someone else."
"Avi?"
Attorney Alejandro shakes his head.
"The Shaftoes?"
"I cannot answer your question, Randy, because I do not know. I was not
involved in this decision. But whoever did it was also listening to your
request for some way to kill the time. You requested books?"
"Yeah. Do you have some?"
"No. But they will allow this." Attorney Alejandro now opens up his
briefcase, reaches in with both hands, and pulls out Randy's new laptop. It
still has a police evidence sticker on it.
"Give me a fucking break!" Randy says.
"No! Take it!"
"Isn't it like evidence or something?"
"The police are finished. They have opened it up and looked for drugs
inside. Dusted it for fingerprints you can still see the dust. I hope that
it did not damage the delicate machinery."
"Yeah, me too. So, are you telling me that I'm free to take this to my
new, clean, quiet, private cell?"
"That is what I am telling you."
"And I can use it there? No restrictions?"
"They will give you an electrical socket. A plug in," Attorney
Alejandro says, and then adds significantly, "I asked them," which is
clearly a little reminder that any fees eventually paid to him will have
been richly earned.
Randy draws a nice deep breath, thinking, Well, it is just
fantastically generous in fact, a little bit startling that the powers that
want to convict and execute me are willing to go to such lengths to allow me
to dick around on my computer while I am awaiting my trial and death. He
exhales and says, "Thank god, at least I'll be able to get some work done."
Attorney Alejandro nods approvingly.
"Your girlfriend is waiting to see you," he announces.
"She's not really my girlfriend. What does she want?" Randy demands.
"What do you mean, what does she want? She wants to see you. To give
you emotional support. To let you know that you are not all alone."
"Shit!" Randy mutters. "I don't want emotional support. I want to get
the fuck out of jail."
"That is my department," Attorney Alejandro says proudly.
"You know what this is? It's one of those men are from Mars, women are
from Venus things."
"I have not heard of this phrase but I understand immediately what you
are saying."
"It's one of those American books where once you've heard the title you
don't even need to read it," Randy says.
"Then I won't."
"You and I see just that someone is trying to fuck me over and that I
need to get out of jail. Very simple and clean. But to her, it is much more
than that it is an opportunity to have a conversation!"
Attorney Alejandro just rolls his eyes and makes the universal "females
yammering" gesture: thumb and fingertips closing and opening like a
disembodied flapping jaw.
"To share deep feelings and emotionally bond," Randy continues, closing
his eyes.
"But this is not so bad," Attorney Alejandro says, radiating
insincerity like a mirrored ball in a disco.
"I'm doing okay in this jail. Surprisingly okay," Randy says, "but it's
all about keeping up a kind of emotionless front. Many barriers between me
and my surroundings. And so it just makes me crazy that she's picking this
particular moment to implicitly demand that I let my guard down."
"She knows you are weak," Attorney Alejandro says, and winks. "She
smells your vulnerability."
"That's not all she's going to smell. Is this new cell going to have a
shower?"
"Everything. Remember to put something heavy on the drain so that rats
do not climb up out of it during the night."
"Thanks. I'll just put my laptop there." Randy leans back in his chair
and wiggles his butt around. There is a problem now with an erection. It has
been at least a week for Randy. Three nights in the jail, the night before
that at Tom Howard's house, before that the airplane, before that Avi's
basement floor . . . actually it has probably been a lot more than a week.
Randy needs badly to get into that private cell if for no other reason than
it will give him an opportunity to vent that which is bearing down hard on
his prostate gland and get his mind back on an even keel. He prays to god
that he's only going to be seeing Amy through a thick glass partition.
Attorney Alejandro opens the door and says something to the waiting
guard, who leads them down a hallway toward another room. This one's bigger,
and has a number of long tables, with little familial clusters of Filipinos
scattered about. If these tables were ever intended to serve as barriers
against physical contact, it has long been forgotten; it would take
something more like the Berlin Wall to prevent Filipinos from showing
affection for each other. So Amy is there, already striding around the end
of one of the tables as a couple of guards pointedly look the other way
(though their eyes dart back to check out her ass after she has blown by
them). No dress this time. Randy predicts it will be a few years before he
sees Amy in a dress again. Last time he did, his dick got hard, his heart
pounded, he literally salivated, and then suddenly armed men were putting
handcuffs on him.
Right now, Amy's in old jeans ripped out at the knee, a tank top
undershirt and a black leather jacket, better to accommodate her concealed
weapons. Knowing the Shaftoes, they've probably gone to some very high
Defcon level, the one just short of all out nuclear exchange. Doug Shaftoe
probably showers with a SEAL knife clenched in his teeth now. Amy, who
normally goes for a low, one armed, sidelong type of hug, now throws both
arms up as if signaling a touchdown and crooks both elbows behind the nape
of Randy's neck and lets him feel everything. The flesh of his lower belly
can count the stitch marks in Amy's appendectomy scar. So that he has a
boner is probably about as obvious to her as that he smells bad. He might as
well have one of those long fluorescent orange bicycle flags lashed to the
shaft of his phallus and sticking up out of his pants.
She steps back, looks down at it, then very deliberately looks him in
the eye and says, "How do you feel?" which being as it is the obligatory
question of females, is hard to read deadpan/ironic or just sweetly naive?
"I miss you," he says, "and I apologize if my limbic system has
misinterpreted your gesture of emotional support."
She takes this levelly, shrugs, and says, "No need to apologize. It's
all a part of you, Randy. I don't have to get to know you in pieces, do I?"
Randy resists the impulse to check his watch, which would be pointless
because it has been confiscated anyway. She has undoubtedly set some kind of
world speed record here, in the male/female conversation category, for
working the subject around to Randy's own failure to be emotionally
available. To do it in this setting displays a certain chutzpah that he
cannot help but admire.
"You've talked to Attorney Alejandro," she says.
"Yeah. I assume he's imparted to me whatever he was supposed to
impart."
"I don't have much more for you," she says. Which on a pure tactical
level means a lot. If the wreck had been found by the Dentist's minions, or
their salvage work had been somehow interrupted, she'd say something. For
her to say nothing means that they are probably hauling gold out of that
submarine at this very moment.
So. She's busy working on the gold salvage operation, to which her
contributions are no doubt vital. She has absolutely no specific information
to impart to him about anything. So why has she made the long, alternately
dull and dangerous trek to Manila? In order to do what exactly? It is one of
these fiendish mind reading exercises. She has her arms crossed over her
bosom and is eyeing him coolly. Someone is trying to send you a message.
He suddenly gets the feeling that she's got him right where she wants
him. Maybe she's the one who planted the heroin in his bag. It's a power
thing, that's all.
A big slab of memory floats up to the surface of Randy's mind, like a
floe calved off the polar icecap. He and Amy and the Shaftoe boys were in
California, right after the earthquake, going through all the old crap in
the basement looking for a few key boxes of papers. Randy heard Amy
squealing with laughter and found her sitting in the corner on top of some
old book boxes, reading a paperback novel by flashlight. She had uncovered a
huge cache of paperback romance novels, none of which Randy had ever seen
before. Bodice rippers of the most incredibly cheesy sort. Randy assumed
they'd been left behind by the house's previous owners until he flipped
through a couple of them, checking the copyright dates: all from the years
when he and Charlene were living together. Charlene must have been reading
them at a rate of about one a week.
"Ooh baby," Amy said, and read him a passage about a rugged but
sensitive but tough but loving but horny but smart hero having his way with
a protesting but willing but struggling but yielding tempestuous female.
"God!" She frisbeed the book into a puddle on the basement floor.
"I always got the sense she had furtive reading habits."
"Well, now you know what she wanted," Amy said. "Did you give her what
she wanted, Randy?"
And Randy has been thinking about that ever since. And when he got over
his surprise that Charlene was a bodice ripper addict, he decided it wasn't
necessarily a bad thing, though in her circle, reading books like that would
be tantamount to wearing a tall pointy hat in the streets of Salem Village,
Mass. circa 1692. She and Randy had tried, awfully hard, to have an
egalitarian relationship. They had spent money on relationship counseling
trying to keep the egalitarian relationship alive. But she had become more
and more angry, without ever giving him a reason, and he had become more and
more confused. Eventually he stopped being confused and just got irritated,
and tired of her. After Amy discovered those books in the basement, Randy
slowly put a whole new and different story together in his head: that
Charlene's limbic system was simply hooked up in such a way that she liked
dominant men. Again, not in a whips and chains sense, just in the sense that
in most relationships someone's got to be active and someone's got to be
passive, and there's no particular logic to that, but there's nothing bad
about it either. In the end, the passive partner can have just as much
power, and just as much freedom.
Intuition, like a flash of lightning, lasts only for a second. It
generally comes when one is tormented by a difficult decipherment and when
one reviews in his mind the fruitless experiments already tried. Suddenly
the light breaks through and one finds after a few minutes what previous
days of labor were unable to reveal.
Randy has this very strong feeling that Amy doesn't read bodice ripper
novels. She goes the other way. She can't tolerate surrendering to any one.
Which makes it hard for her to function in polite society; she could not
have been happy sitting at home during her senior year of high school,
waiting for a boy to invite her to the prom. This feature of her personality
is extremely prone to misinterpretation, so she bailed out. She would rather
be lonely, and true to herself, and in control, in an out of the way part of
the world, with her music by intelligent female singer songwriters to keep
her company, than misinterpreted and hassled in America.
"I love you," he says. Amy looks away and heaves a big sigh like, At
last we're getting somewhere. Randy continues, "I've been infatuated with
you ever since we met."
Now she's back to looking at him expectantly.
"And the reason I've been slow to, uh, to actually show it, or do
anything about it, is first of all because I wasn't sure whether or not you
were a lesbian."
Amy scoffs and rolls her eyes.
". . . and later just because of my own reticence. Which is
unfortunately part of me too, just like this part." He glances down just for
a microsecond.
She's shaking her head at him in amazement.
"The fact that the scientific investigator works fifty percent of his
time by nonrational means is quite insufficiently recognized," Randy says.
Amy sits down on his side of the table, jacknifes, spins around neatly
on her ass, and comes to light on the other side. "I'll think about what you
said," she says. "Hang in there, sport."
"Smooth sailing, Amy."
Amy gives him a little smile over her shoulder, then walks straight to
the exit, turning around once in the doorway to make sure he's still looking
at her.
He is. Which, he feels quite confident, is the right answer.
Chapter 85 GLAMOR
A couple of squads of Nipponese Air Force soldiers, armed with rifles
and Nambus, pursue Bobby Shaftoe and his crew of Huks towards the Manila Bay
seawall. If it comes to the point where they must stand and slug it out,
they can probably kill a lot of Nips before they are overwhelmed. But they
are here to find and assist the Altamiras, not to die heroically, and so
they retreat through the neighborhood of Ermita. One of MacArthur's circling
Piper Cubs catches sight of one of those Nip squads as it is clambering over
the ruins of a collapsed building, and calls in a strike artillery rounds
spiral in from the north like long passes in a football game. Shaftoe and
the Huks try to time the incoming rounds, guessing at how many tubes are
firing on them, trying to run from one place of concealment to the next when
they think there's going to be a few seconds' pause in the shrapnel. Maybe
half of the Nips are killed or wounded by this barrage, but they are
fighting at such close quarters that two of Shaftoe's Huks are hit as well.
Shaftoe is trying to drag one of them out of danger when he looks down and
sees that he is stomping across a mess of shattered white crockery that is
marked with the name of a hotel the same hotel where he slow danced with
Glory on the night that the war started.
The wounded Huks are still capable of moving and so the retreat
continues. Shaftoe's calming down a bit, thinking about the situation with
more clarity. The Huks find a good defensive position and stall the
attackers for a few minutes while he gets his bearings, works out a plan.
Fifteen minutes later, the Huks abandon their position and fall back in
panic, or appear to. About half of the Nipponese squad rushes forward in
pursuit and finds that they have been lured into a killing ground, a cul de
sac created by the partial collapse of a building into an alley. One of the
Huks opens up with a tommy gun while Shaftoe who stayed behind, hiding in a
burned out car heaves grenades at the other half of the squad, pinning them
down and preventing them from coming to help their comrades who are being
noisily slaughtered.
But these Nips are relentless. They regroup under a surviving officer
and continue their pursuit. Shaftoe, now on his own, ends up being chased
around the foundations of another hotel, a luxury place that rises up above
the bay, near the American Embassy. He trips over the body of a young woman
who apparently leaped, fell, or was thrown from one of the windows.
Crouching behind some shrubbery for a breather, he hears a shrill keening
drifting out of the hotel's windows. The place is full of women, he
realizes, and all of them are either screaming or sobbing.
His pursuers seem to have lost track of him. The Huks have lost him,
too. Shaftoe stays there for a while, listening to all of those women,
wishing he could go inside and do something for them. But the place must be
filled with Nip soldiers, or else the women wouldn't be screaming as they
are.
He listens carefully for a while, trying to ignore the lamentations of
the women. A fourteen year old girl in a bloody nightgown plummets down from
the fifth floor of the hotel, thuds into the ground like a sack of cement,
and bounces once. Shaftoe closes his eyes and listens until he is absolutely
sure that he does not hear any children.
The picture's getting clearer now. The males are marched away and
killed. The women are marched off in another direction. Young women without
children are brought to this hotel. Women with children must have been taken
somewhere else. Where?
He hears tommy gun fire on the other side of the hotel. It must be his
buddies. He creeps around to a corner of the hotel and listens again, trying
to figure out where they are somewhere in Rizal Park, he thinks. But then
MacArthur's artillery opens up hell for leather and the world begins to
heave beneath him like a rug being shaken, and he can't hear trench brooms
or screaming women or anything. He has a view east and south towards the
parts of Ermita and Malate from which they have just come, and he can see
big pieces of debris spinning up from the ground over there, and gouts of
dust. He has seen enough of war to know what it means: the Americans are
advancing from the south now as well, pushing towards Intramuros. Shaftoe
and his band of Huks were operating on their own, but it appears that they
have inadvertently served as harbingers of a big infantry thrust.
Terrified by the barrage, a bunch of Nip soldiers stagger out of a side
exit of the hotel, almost too drunk to stand, some of them still pulling
their trousers up. Shaftoe disgustedly throws a grenade at them and then
gets the hell out without bothering to examine the results. It is getting to
the point where killing Nips is no fun anymore. There is no sense of
accomplishment in it. It is a tedious and dangerous job that never seems to
end. When will these stupid bastards knock it off? They are embarrassing
themselves in front of the whole world.
He finds his men in Rizal Park, beneath the shadow of Intramuros's
ancient Spanish wall, disputing possession of a baseball diamond with what
is left of the Nipponese squads that pursued them here. The timing is both
good and bad. Any earlier, and Nip reinforcements in the surrounding
neighborhood would have heard the skirmish, flooded into the park and wiped
them out. Any later, and the American infantry would be here. But Rizal Park
is in the middle of a deranged urban battleground right now, and nothing
makes any kind of sense. They have to impose their will on the situation,
the kind of thing Bobby Shaftoe has gotten fairly good at.
The one thing they have going for them is that the artillery is pointed
elsewhere for the time being. Shaftoe squats down behind a coconut tree and
tries to figure out how the hell he is going to reach that baseball diamond,
which is a couple of hundred yards away across totally flat, open ground.
He knows the place; Uncle Jack took him to a baseball game there.
Wooden bleachers rise along the left and right field lines. Beneath each one
is a dugout. Shaftoe knows how battles work, and so he knows that one of
those dugouts is full of Nips and one is full of Huks and that they are
pinned down in them by each other's fire just like Great War troops in their
opposing trenches. There are a few buildings under the bleachers, containing
toilets and a refreshment stand. The Nips and the Huks will be creeping
through those buildings right now, trying to get into a position from which
they can shoot into the dugouts.
A Nipponese grenade flies towards him from the direction of the left
field bleachers, making a stripping noise as it passes through the fronds of
a palm tree. Shaftoe ducks his head behind another tree so that he can't see
the grenade. It explodes and tears the clothing, and a good deal of the
skin, from one of his arms and one of his legs. But like all Nip grenades it
is poorly made and miserably ineffectual. Shaftoe turns around and uncorks a
spume of .45 caliber rounds in the general direction the grenade came from;
this should give the thrower something to think about while Shaftoe gets his
bearings.
This is actually a stupid idea, because he runs out of ammunition. He
has a few rounds in his Colt, and that's it. He also has one grenade left.
He considers throwing it towards the baseball diamond, but his throwing arm
is in pretty bad shape now.
Besides Jesus Christ! That baseball diamond is just too far away. Even
in peak condition he could not throw a grenade from here to there.
Perhaps one of those corpses out in the grass, between here and there,
isn't really a corpse. Shaftoe crawls towards them on his belly and
establishes that they are most definitely dead people.
Giving the field a wide berth, he begins working his way around behind
home plate toward the right field line, where his people are. He would love
to sneak up on the Nips from behind, but that grenade thrower really threw a
fright into him. Where the hell is he?
The firing from the dugouts has become sporadic. They have stalemated
now and are trying to conserve ammunition. Shaftoe risks rising to a crouch.
He runs for about three paces before he sees the door to the women's toilet
swing open and a man jump out, winding up like Bob Feller getting ready to
throw a fastball right down the middle of the plate. Shaftoe fires his .45
once, but the weapons' absurdly vicious recoil jerks it right out of his
lamed hand. The grenade comes flying towards him, perfectly on target.
Shaftoe dives to the ground and scrambles for his .45. The grenade actually
bounces off his shoulder and falls spinning into the dust, making a fizzing
noise. But it doesn't explode.
Shaftoe looks up. The Nip is standing framed in the women's room door.
His shoulders slump miserably. Shaftoe recognizes him; there's only one Nip
who could throw a grenade like that. He lies there for a few moments,
counting syllables on his fingers, then stands up, cups his hands around his
mouth, and hollers:
Pineapple fastball – Guns of Manila applaud – Hit by pitch
free base!
Goto Dengo and Bobby Shaftoe lock themselves inside the women's room
and share a nip from a bottle of port that the former has looted from a
store somewhere. They spend a few minutes catching up with each other in a
general way. Goto Dengo is already somewhat drunk, which makes his grenade
throwing performance all the more impressive. "I'm hyped to the gills on
benzedrine," Shaftoe says. "Keeps you going, but kind of screws up your aim.
"I noticed!" Goto Dengo says. He is so skinny and haggard he looks more
like some hypothetical sick uncle of Goto Dengo's.
Shaftoe pretends to take offense at this and drops into a judo stance.
Goto Dengo laughs uneasily and waves him off. "No more fighting," he says. A
rifle bullet passes through the women's room wall and digs a crater into a
porcelain sink.
"We gotta come up with a plan," Shaftoe says.
"The plan: You live, I die," Goto Dengo says.
"Fuck that," Shaftoe says. "Hey, don't you idiots know you're
surrounded?"
"We know," Goto Dengo says wearily. "We know for a long time."
"So give up, you fucking morons! Wave a white flag and you can all go
home."
"It is not Nipponese way."
"So come up with another fucking way! Show some fucking adaptability!"
"Why are you here?" Goto Dengo asks, changing the subject. "What is
your mission?"
Shaftoe explains that he's looking for his kid. Goto Dengo tells him
where all of the women and children are: in the Church of St. Agustin, in
Intramuros.
"Hey," Shaftoe says, "if we surrender to you, you'll kill us. Right?"
"Yes."
"If you guys surrender to us, we won't kill you. Promise. Scout's
honor."
"For us, living or dying is not the important thing," Goto Dengo says.
"Hey! Tell me something I didn't fucking already know!" Shaftoe says.
Even winning battles isn't important to you. Is it?"
Goto Dengo looks the other way, shamefaced.
"Haven't you guys figured out yet that banzai charges DON'T FUCKING
WORK?"
"All of the people who learned that were killed in banzai charges,"
Goto Dengo says.
As if on cue, the Nips in the left field dugout begin screaming
"Banzai!" and charge, as one, out onto the field. Shaftoe puts his eye up to
a bullet hole in the wall and watches them stumbling across the infield with
fixed bayonets. Their leader clambers up the pitcher's mound as if he's
going to plant a flag there, and takes a slug in the middle of his face. His
men are being dismantled all around him by thoughtfully placed rifle slugs
from the Huks' dugout. Urban warfare is not the metier of the Hukbalahaps,
but calmly slaughtering banzai charging Nipponese is old hat. One of the
Nips actually manages to crawl all the way to the first base coach's box.
Then a few pounds of meat come flying out of his back and he relaxes.
Shaftoe turns to see that Goto Dengo is aiming a revolver at him. He
chooses to ignore this for a moment. "See what I mean?"
"I have seen it many times before."
"Then why aren't you dead?" Shaftoe asks the question with all due
flippancy, but it has a terrible effect on Goto Dengo. His face scrunches up
and he begins to cry. "Aw, shit. You pull a gun on me and start bawling at
the same time? How unfair can you get? Why don't you kick some fucking dirt
in my eyes while you're at it?"
Goto Dengo lifts the revolver to his own temple. But Shaftoe sees that
one coming a mile away. He knows Nips well enough, by this point, to figure
out when they are about to go hari kari on you. Shaftoe jumps forward as
soon as the barrel of the revolver begins to move. By the time it is against
Goto Dengo's skull, Shaftoe has his finger stuck into the gap between the
hammer and the firing pin.
Goto Dengo collapses to the floor sobbing piteously. It just makes
Shaftoe want to kick him. "Knock it off!" he says. "What the fuck is eating
at you?"
"I came to Manila to redeem myself to get back my lost honor!" Goto
Dengo says. "I could have done it here. I could be dead on that field right
now, and my spirit going to Yasukuni. But then you came! You ruined my
concentration!"
"Concentrate on this, dumbshit!" Shaftoe says. "My son is in a church
right over on the far side of that wall, with a bunch of other helpless
women and children. If you want to redeem yourself, why not help me get 'em
out alive?"
Goto Dengo seems to have gone into a trance now. His face, which was
blubbering just a minute ago, has solidified into a mask. "I wish I could
believe what you believe," he says. "I have died, Bobby. I was buried in a
rock tomb. If I were a Christian, I could be born again now, and be a new
man. Instead, I must go on living, and accept my karma."
"Well, shit! There's a padre right out there in the dugout. He can
Christianize your ass in about ten seconds flat." Bobby Shaftoe strides
across the bathroom and swings the door open.
He is startled to see a man standing just a few paces away. The man is
dressed in an old but clean khaki uniform, devoid of insignia except for a
pentagon of stars on the collar. He has jammed a wooden match down into the
bowl of a corncob pipe and is puffing away futilely. But it's as if all of
the oxygen has been sucked out of the air by the burning of the city. He
throws the match away in disgust, then looks up into the face of Bobby
Shaftoe staring at him through a pair of dark aviator sunglasses that give
his gaunt face the appearance of a skull. His mouth forms into an 0 for a
moment. Then his jaw sets. "Shaftoe. . . Shaftoe! SHAFTOE!" he says.
Bobby Shaftoe feels his body stiffening to attention. Even if he had
been dead for a few hours, his body would do this out of some kind of dumb
ingrained reflex. "Sir, yes sir!" he says wearily.
The General composes his thoughts for half a second, and then says:
"You were supposed to be in Concepcion. You failed to be there. Your
superiors did not know what to think. They have been worried sick about you.
And the Department of the Navy has been positively insufferable ever since
they became aware that you were working for me. They assert, in the most
high handed way, that you know important secrets, and should never have been
placed in danger of capture. In short, your whereabouts and your status have
been the subject of the most intense, nay, feverish speculation for the last
several weeks. Many supposed that you were dead, or, worse, captured. This
distraction has been most unwelcome to me, inasmuch as the planning and
execution of the reconquest of the Philippine Islands have left me little
time to devote to such nagging distractions." An artillery shell rips
through the air and detonates in the bleachers, sending jagged fragments of
planks, about the size of canoe paddles, whirling through the air all around
them. One of them embeds itself like a javelin in the dirt between The
General and Bobby Shaftoe.
The General takes advantage of this to draw breath, and then continues,
as if he were reading this from a script. "And now, when I least expect it,
I encounter you, here, many leagues distant from your assigned post, out of
uniform, in a disheveled condition, accompanied by a Nipponese officer,
violating the sanctity of a ladies' powder room! Shaftoe, have you no sense
whatsoever of military honor? Do you not respect decorum? Do you not believe
that a representative of the United States military should comport himself
with more dignity?"
Shaftoe's kneecaps are joggling up and down uncontrollably. His guts
have become molten, and he feels strange bubbling processes going on in his
rectum. His molars are chattering together like a teletype machine. He
senses Goto Dengo behind him, and wonders what the poor bastard can possibly
be thinking.
"Begging your pardon, General, not to change the subject or anything,
but are you here all by yourself?"
The General juts his chin towards the men's room. "My aides are in
there relieving themselves. They were in a great hurry to do so, and it is
good that we came upon this place. But none of them considered invading the
powder room," he says severely.
"I apologize for that, sir," Bobby Shaftoe says hastily, "and for all
of those other things that you mentioned. But I still think of myself as a
Marine, and Marines do not make excuses, so I will not even try."
"That is not satisfactory! I need an explanation for where you've
been."
"I have been out in the world," Bobby Shaftoe says, "getting butt
fucked by Fortune."
The door of the men's room opens and one of The General's aides walks
out, woozy and bowlegged. The General ignores him; he is gazing right past
Shaftoe now.
"Pardon my manners, sir," Shaftoe says, turning sideways. "Sir, my
friend Goto Dengo. Goto san, say hi to General of the Army Douglas
MacArthur."
Goto Dengo has been standing there like a pillar of salt this whole
time, utterly dumbfounded, but now he snaps out of it, and bows very low.
MacArthur nods crisply. His aide is staring darkly at Goto Dengo and has
already drawn his Colt.
"Pleasure," The General says airily. "Pray tell, what sort of business
were you two gentlemen prosecuting in the ladies'?"
Bobby Shaftoe knows how to lunge for an opening. "Uh, it is very funny
you should ask that question, sir," he says offhandedly, "but Goto san, just
now, saw the light, and converted to Christianity."
Some Nips on top of the wall open up on them with a machine gun. The
flimsy, tumbling rounds crack through the air and thump into the ground.
General of the Army Douglas MacArthur stands motionless for a long time,
lips pursed. His sniffles once. Then he removes his aviator glasses
carefully and wipes his eyes on the immaculate sleeve of his uniform. He
pulls out a neatly folded white hankie and wraps it around his hawklike nose
and honks into it a few times. He folds it up carefully and puts it back in
his pocket, squares his shoulders, and then walks right up to Goto Dengo and
wraps him up in a big, manly bearhug. The remainder of The General's aides
emerge from the shitter en bloc and view the scene with reticence and
palpable tension all over their faces. Profoundly mortified, Bobby Shaftoe
looks down at his feet, wiggles his toes, and caresses the linear scab
running upside his head where the oar clocked him a few days ago. The
machine gun crew up on the wall are being picked off one by one by a sniper;
they writhe and scream operatically. The Huks have come up from the dugout
and stumbled into this little tableau; they all stand motionless with their
jaws hanging down around their navels.
Finally MacArthur unhands the stiff body of Goto Dengo, steps back
dramatically, and presents him to his staff. "Meet Goto san," he announces.
"You have all heard the expression, 'the only good Nip is a dead Nip'? Well,
this young fellow is a counterexample, and as we learned in mathematics, it
only takes one counterexample to disprove the theorem."
His staff observe cautious silence.
"It seems only fitting that we take this young fellow to the Church of
St. Agustin, over yonder in Intramuros, to carry out the sacrament of
baptism," The General says.
One of the aides steps forward, hunched over in that he's expecting to
get a slug between the shoulder blades any minute. "Sir, it is my duty to
remind you that Intramuros is still controlled by the enemy."
"Then it is high time we made our presence felt!" MacArthur says.
"Shaftoe will get us there. Shaftoe and these fine Filipino gentlemen." The
General throws one arm around Goto Dengo's neck in a highly affectionate,
companionable way, and begins strolling with him towards the nearest gate.
"I would like you to know, young man, that when I set up my headquarters in
Tokyo which, God willing, should be within a year I want you there bright
and early the first day!"
"Yes sir!" Goto Dengo says. All things considered, it is unlikely he
would say anything else.
Shaftoe draws a deep breath, tilts his head back, and stares up into a
smoky heaven. "God," he says, "usually I bow my head when I'm talking to
You, but I figure this is a good time for us to have a face to face. You see
and know all things and so I will not explain the situation to You. I would
just like to submit a request for You. I know You are getting requests from
lonely soldiers all over the fucking place at this time, but since this one
has to do with a shitload of women and children, and General MacArthur too,
maybe You can jump me to the top of the stack. You know what I want. Let's
get it done."
He borrows a small, straight twenty round tommy gun magazine from one
of his comrades and they set out for Intramuros. The gates are sure to be
guarded, so Shaftoe and the Huks run up the sloping walls instead, directly
beneath that wiped out machine gun nest. They turn the gun around into
Intramuros, and plant one of the wounded Huks there to operate it.
The first time Shaftoe gazes into the town, he nearly falls off the
wall. Intramuros is gone. If he didn't know where he was, he would never
recognize it. Essentially all of the buildings have been leveled. Manila
Cathedral and the Church of St. Agustin still stand, both with heavy damage.
A few of the fine old Spanish houses still exist as hasty, freehand sketches
of their former selves, missing roofs, wings, or walls. But most of the
blocks are just jumbles of masonry and shattered red roof tiles with smoke
and steam seething out of them. There are dead bodies all over the place,
sowed all over the neighborhood like timothy seed broadcast onto freshly
plowed soil. The artillery has mostly stopped there being nothing left to
destroy but small arms and machine gun fire sound on almost every block.
Shaftoe is thinking he'll have to assault one of the gates. But before
he can even come up with a plan, MacArthur is up there with the rest of his
group, having scrambled up the rampart behind them. This is evidently the
first time that The General has gotten a good look at Intramuros, because he
is stunned and, for once, speechless. He stands there for a long time with
his mouth open, and begins to draw fire from a few Nips hidden in the
wreckage below. The turned around machine gun silences them.
It takes them several hours to make their way up the street and into
the Church of St. Agustin. A bunch of Nips have barricaded themselves inside
the place along with what sounds like every hungry infant and irritable two
year old in Manila. The church is just one side of a large compound that
includes a monastery and other buildings. Many of the structures have been
torn open by artillery fire. The treasures hoarded in that place by the
monks over the course of the last five hundred years have tumbled out into
the street. Blown all over the neighborhood like shrapnel, and commingled
with the bayoneted corpses of Filipino boys, are huge oil paintings of
Christ being scourged, fantastic wooden sculptures of the Romans hammering
the spikes through his wrists and ankles, marbles of Mary holding the dead
and mangled Christ in her lap, tapestries of the whipping post and the cat
o' nine tails in action, blood coursing out of Christ's back through
hundreds of parallel gouges.
The Nips still inside the church defend its main doors with the
suicidal determination that Shaftoe has begun to find so tedious, but thanks
to The General's artillery, there are plenty of other ways, besides doors,
to get into the place now. So it is that, even while a company of American
infantry mount a frontal assault on the main entrance, Bobby Shaftoe and his
Huks, Goto Dengo, The General, and his aides are already kneeling in a
little chapel in what used to be part of the monastery. The padre leads them
through a couple of extremely truncated prayers of thanksgiving and baptizes
Goto Dengo with water from a font, with Bobby Shaftoe taking the role of
beaming parent and General of the Army Douglas MacArthur serving as
godfather. Shaftoe later remembers only one line of the ceremony.
"Do you reject the glamor of Evil, and refuse to be mastered by it?"
says the padre.
"I do!" says MacArthur with tremendous authority even as Bobby Shaftoe
is muttering, "Fuck yes!" Goto Dengo, nods, gets wet, and becomes a
Christian.
Bobby Shaftoe excuses himself and goes wandering through the compound.
It seems as big and crazy as that Casbah in Algiers, all gloomy and dusty on
the inside, and filled with still more La Pasyon art, made by artists who
had obviously witnessed whippings firsthand, and who didn't need any priest
spouting little homilies about the glamor of Evil. He goes up and down the
great stairway once, for old time's sake, remembering the night Glory took
him here.
There is a courtyard with a fountain in the center, surrounded by a
long shaded gallery where Spanish friars could stroll in the shade and look
out over the flowers and hear the birds singing. Right now the only things
singing are shells passing overhead. But little Filipino kids are running
races up and down the gallery, and their mothers and aunts and grannies are
encamped in the courtyard, drawing water from the fountain and cooking rice
over piles of burning chair legs.
A grey eyed two year old with a makeshift bludgeon is chasing some
bigger kids down a stone arcade. Some of his hairs are the color of Bobby's
and some are the color of Glory's, and Bobby Shaftoe can see Glory ness
shining almost fluoroscopically out of his face. The boy has the same bone
structure that he saw on the sandbar a few days ago, but this time it is
clothed in chubby pink flesh. The flesh admittedly bears bruises and
abrasions. No doubt honorably earned. Bobby squats down and looks the little
Shaftoe in the eye, wondering how to begin to explain everything. But the
boy says, "Bobby Shaftoe, you have boo boos," and drops his club and walks
up to examine the wounds on Bobby's arm. Little kids don't bother to say
hello, they just start talking to you, and Shaftoe figures that's a good way
to handle what would otherwise be pretty damn awkward. The Altamiras have
probably been telling little Douglas M. Shaftoe, since the day he was born,
that one day Bobby Shaftoe would come in glory from across the sea. That he
has now done so is just as routine and yet just as much of a miracle as that
the sun rises every day.
"I see that you and yours have displayed adaptability and that is
good," says Bobby Shaftoe to his son, but sees immediately that he's not
getting through to the kid at all. He feels a need to get something into the
kid's head that is going to stick, and this need is stronger than the
craving for morphine or sex ever was.
So he picks up the boy and carries him through the compound, down
semicollapsed hallways and over settling rubble heaps and between dead
Nipponese boys to that big staircase, and shows him the giant slabs of
granite, tells how they were laid, one on top of the next, year by year, as
the galleons full of silver came from Acapulco. Doug M. Shaftoe has been
playing with blocks, so he zeroes in on the basic concept right away. Dad
carries son up and down the stairway a few times. They stand at the bottom
and look up at it. The block analogy has struck deep. Without any prompting,
Doug M. raises both arms over his head and hollers "Soooo big" and the sound
echoes up and down the stairs. Bobby wants to explain to the boy that this
is how it's done, you pile one thing on top of the next and you keep it up
and keep it up sometimes the galleon sinks in a typhoon, you don't get your
slab of granite that year but you stick with it and eventually you end up
with something sooo big.
He wishes that he could also make some further point about Glory and
how she's been hard at work building her own staircase. Maybe if he was a
word man like Enoch Root he would be able to explain. But he knows that this
is going way over the toddler's head, just as it went over Bobby's head when
Glory first showed him the steps. The only thing that'll stick with Douglas
MacArthur Shaftoe is the memory that his father brought him here and carried
him up and down the staircase, and if he lives long enough and thinks hard
enough maybe he'll come to understand it too, the way Bobby does. That is a
good enough start.
Word has gotten around, among the women in the courtyard, that Bobby
Shaftoe has arrived better late than never! and so he does not have time for
meaningful speeches anyway. The Altamiras send him out on an errand: to find
Carlos, an eleven year old boy who was rounded up a few days ago when the
Nips swept through Malate. Shaftoe finds MacArthur and Goto Dengo first, and
excuses himself. Those two are deeply involved in a discussion of Goto
Dengo's tunnel building acumen, and how it might be put to use during the
rebuilding of Nippon, a project that The General is eager to launch as soon
as he finishes reducing the entire Pacific Rim to rubble.
"You have sins to atone for, Shaftoe," The General says, "and you can't
atone for them by getting down on your knees and saying Hail Marys."
"I understand that, sir," Shaftoe says.
"I have a little job that needs doing precisely the kind of thing for
which a Marine Raider with parachute training would be ideally suited."
"What's the Department of the Navy going to think of that, sir?"
"I have no intention of letting the swabbies know I've found you until
you have carried out this mission. But when you are finished all is
forgiven."
"I'll be right back," Shaftoe says.
"Where are you going, Shaftoe?"
"Got some other people who need to forgive me first."
He heads in the direction of Fort Santiago with a reconstituted, re
armed and beefed up squad of Huks. The old Spanish fort has been liberated,
within the last couple of hours, by the Americans. They have thrown open the
doors to the dungeons and the subterranean caverns along the Pasig River.
Finding eleven year old Carlos Altamira is, then, a problem of sorting
through several thousand corpses. Almost all of the Filipinos who were
herded into this place by the Nips died, either through out and out
execution, or by suffocating in the dungeons, or by drowning when the tide
came up the river and flooded the cells. Bobby Shaftoe doesn't really know
what Carlos looked like, and so the best he can do is cull out the young
looking corpses and present them to members of the Altamira family for
inspection. The benzedrine he took a couple of days ago has worn off, and he
feels half dead himself. He trudges through the Spanish dungeon with a
kerosene lantern, shining the dim yellow light on the faces of the dead,
muttering the words to himself like a prayer.
"Do you reject the glamor of Evil, and refuse to be mastered by it?"
Chapter 86 WISDOM
A few years ago, when Randy became tired of the ceaseless pressure in
his lower jaw, he went out onto the north central Californian oral surgery
market looking for someone to extract his wisdom teeth. His health plan
covered this, so price was not an obstacle. His dentist took one of those
big cinemascopic wraparound X rays of his entire lower head, the kind where
they pack your mouth with half a roll of high speed film and then clamp your
head in a jig and the X ray machine revolves around you spraying radiation
through a slit, as the entire staff of the dentist's office hits the deck
behind a lead wall, resulting in a printed image that is a none too
appetizing distortion of his jaw into a single flat plane. Looking at it,
Randy eschewed cruder analogies like "head of a man run over several times
by steamroller while lying flat on his back" and tried to think of it as a
mapping transformation just one more in mankind's long history of ill
advisedly trying to represent three D stuff on a flat plane. The corners of
this coordinate plane were anchored by the wisdom teeth themselves, which
even to the dentally unsophisticated Randy looked just a little disturbing
in that each one was about the size of his thumb (though maybe this was just
a distortion in the coordinate transform like the famously swollen Greenland
of Mercator) and they were pretty far away from any other teeth, which
(logically) would seem to put them in parts of his body not normally
considered to be within a dentist's purview, and they were at the wrong
angle not just a little crooked, but verging on upside down and backwards.
At first he just chalked all of this up to the Greenland phenomenon. With
his Jaw map in hand, he hit the streets of Three Siblings land looking for
an oral surgeon. It was already beginning to work on him psychologically.
Those were some big ass teeth! Brought into being by the workings of relict
DNA strands from the hunter gatherer epoch. Designed for reducing tree bark
and mammoth gristle to easily digestible paste. Now these boulders of living
enamel were horrifyingly adrift in a gracile cro magnon head that simply did
not have room for them. Think of the sheer extra weight he had been carrying
around. Think of the use that priceless head real estate could have been put
to. When they were gone, what would fill up the four giant molar shaped
voids in his melon? It was moot until he could find someone to get rid of
them. But one oral surgeon after another turned him down. They would put the
X ray up on their light boxes, stare into it and blanch. Maybe it was just
the pale light coming out of the light boxes but Randy could have sworn they
were blanching. Disingenuously as if wisdom teeth normally grew someplace
completely different they all pointed out that the wisdom teeth were buried
deep, deep, deep in Randy's head. The lowers were so far back in his jaw
that removing them would practically break the jawbone in twain
structurally; from there, one false move would send a surgical steel
demolition pick into his middle ear. The uppers were so deep in his skull
that the roots were twined around the parts of his brain responsible for
perceiving the color blue (on one side) and being able to suspend one's
disbelief in bad movies (on the other) and between these teeth and actual
air, light and saliva lay many strata of skin, meat, cartilage, major nerve
cables, brain feeding arteries, bulging caches of lymph nodes, girders and
trusses of bone, rich marrow that was working just fine thank you, a few
glands whose functions were unsettlingly poorly understood, and many of the
other things that made Randy Randy, all of them definitely falling into the
category of sleeping dogs.
Oral surgeons, it seemed, were not comfortable delving more than elbow
deep into a patient's head. They had been living in big houses and driving
to work in Mercedes Benz sedans long before Randy had dragged his sorry ass
into their offices with his horrifying X ray and they had absolutely nothing
to gain by even attempting to remove these not so much wisdom teeth in the
normal sense as apocalyptic portents from the Book of Revelations. The best
way to remove these teeth was with a guillotine. None of these oral surgeons
would even consider undertaking the extraction until Randy had signed a
legal disclaimer too thick to staple, something that almost had to come in a
three ring binder, the general import of which was that one of the normal
consequences of the procedure was for the patient's head to end up floating
in a jug of formaldehyde in a tourist trap just over the Mexican border. In
this manner Randy wandered from one oral surgeon's office to another for a
few weeks, like a teratomic outcast roving across a post nuclear waste land
being driven out of one village after another by the brickbats of wretched,
terrified peasants. Until one day when he walked into an office and the
nurse at the front desk almost seemed to expect him, and led him back into
an exam room for a private consult with the oral surgeon, who was busy doing
something in one of his little rooms that involved putting a lot of bone
dust into the air. The nurse bade him sit down, proffered coffee, then
turned on the light box and took Randy's X rays and stuck them up there. She
took a step back, crossed her arms, and gazed at the pictures in wonder.
"So," she murmured, "these are the famous wisdom teeth!"
That was the last oral surgeon Randy visited for a couple of years. He
still had that relentless 24 Jam pressure in his head, but now his attitude
had changed; instead of thinking of it as an anomalous condition easily
remedied, it became his personal cross to bear, and really not all that bad
compared to what some people had to suffer with. There, as in many other
unexpected situations, his extensive fantasy role playing game experience
came in handy, as while spinning out various epic scenarios he had inhabited
the minds, if not the bodies, of many characters who were missing limbs or
had been burned over some algorithmically determined percentages of their
bodies by dragon's breath or wizard's fireball, and it was part of the
ethics of the game that you had to think pretty hard about what it would
actually be like to live with such injuries and to play your character
accordingly. By those standards, feeling all the time like you had an
automotive jack embedded in your skull, ratcheting up the pressure one click
every few months, was not even worth mentioning. It was lost in the somatic
noise.
So Randy lived that way for several years, as he and Charlene
insensibly crept upwards on the socioeconomic scale and began finding
themselves at parties with people who had arrived in Mercedes Benzes. It was
at one of these parties where Randy overheard a dentist extolling some
brilliant young oral surgeon who had just moved to the area. Randy had to
bite his tongue not to start asking all kinds of questions about just what
"brilliant" meant in an oral surgery context questions that were motivated
solely by curiosity but that the dentist would be likely to take the wrong
way. Among coders it was pretty obvious who was brilliant and who wasn't,
but how could you tell a brilliant oral surgeon apart from a merely
excellent one? It gets you into deep epistemological shit. Each set of
wisdom teeth could only be extracted once. You couldn't have a hundred oral
surgeons extract the same set of wisdom teeth and then compare the results
scientifically. And yet it was obvious from watching the look on this
dentist's face that this one particular oral surgeon, this new guy, was
brilliant. So later Randy sidled up to this dentist and allowed as how he
might have a challenge he might personally embody a challenge that would put
this ineffable quality of oral surgery brilliance to some good use, and
could he have the guy's name please.
A few days later he was talking to this oral surgeon, who was indeed
young and conspicuously bright and had more in common with other brilliant
people Randy had known mostly hackers than he did with other oral surgeons.
He drove a pickup truck and kept fresh copies of TURING MAGAZINE in his
waiting room. He had a beard, and a staff of nurses and other female
acolytes who were all permanently aflutter over his brilliantness and
followed him around steering him away from large obstacles and reminding him
to eat lunch. This guy did not blanch when he saw Randy's Mercato roentgeno
gram on his light box. He actually lifted his chin up off his hand and stood
a little straighter and spake not for several minutes. His head moved
minutely every so often as he animadverted on a different corner of the
coordinate plane, and admired the exquisitely grotesque situation of each
tooth its paleolithic heft and its long gnarled roots trailing off into
parts of his head never charted by anatomists.
When he finally turned to face Randy, he had this priestlike aura about
him, a kind of holy ecstasy, a feeling of cosmic symmetry revealed, as if
Randy's jaw, and his brilliant oral surgery brain, had been carved out by
the architect of the Universe fifteen billion years ago specifically so that
they could run into each other, here and now, in front of this light box. He
did not say anything like, "Randy let me just show you how close the roots
of this one tooth are to the bundle of nerves that distinguishes you from a
marmoset," or "My schedule is incredibly full and I was thinking of going
into the real estate business anyway," or "Just a second while I call my
lawyer." He didn't even say anything like, "Wow, those suckers are really in
deep." The young brilliant oral surgeon just said, "Okay," stood there
awkwardly for a few moments, and then walked out of the room in a display of
social ineptness that totally cemented Randy's faith in him. One of his
minions eventually had Randy sign a legal disclaimer stipulating that it was
perfectly all right if the oral surgeon decided to feed Randy's entire body
into a log chipper, but this, for once, seemed like just a formality and not
the opening round in an inevitable Bleak House like litigational saga.
And so finally the big day came, and Randy took care to enjoy his
breakfast because he knew that, considering the nerve damage he was about to
incur, this might be the last time in his life that he would be able to
taste food, or even chew it. The oral surgeon's minions all looked at Randy
in awe when he actually walked in the door of their office, like My god he
actually showed up! then flew reassuringly into action. Randy sat down in
the chair and they gave him an injection and then the oral surgeon came in
and asked him what, if anything, was the difference between Windows 95 and
Windows NT. "This is one of these conversations the sole purpose of which is
to make it obvious when I have lost consciousness, isn't it?" Randy said.
"Actually, there is a secondary purpose, which is that I am considering
making the jump and wanted to get some of your thoughts about that," the
oral surgeon said.
"Well," said Randy, "I have a lot more experience with UNIX than with
NT, but from what I've seen, it appears that NT is really a decent enough
operating system, and certainly more of a serious effort than Windows." He
paused to draw breath and then noticed that suddenly everything was
different. The oral surgeon and his minions were still there and occupying
roughly the same positions in his field of vision as they had been when he
started to utter this sentence, but now the oral surgeon's glasses were
askew and the lenses misted with blood, and his face was all sweaty, and his
mask flecked with tiny bits of stuff that very much looked like it had come
from pretty far down in Randy's body, and the air in the room was murky with
aerosolized bone, and his nurses were limp and haggard and looked like they
could use makeovers, face lifts, and weeks at the beach. Randy's chest and
lap, and the floor, were littered with bloody wads and hastily torn open
medical supply wrappers. The back of his head was sore from being battered
against the head rest by the recoil of the young brilliant oral surgeon's
cranial jack hammer. When he tried to finish his sentence ("so if you're
willing to pay the premium I think the switch to NT would be very well
advised") he noticed that his mouth was jammed full of something that
prevented speech. The oral surgeon pulled his mask down off his face and
scratched his sweat soaked beard. He was staring not at Randy but at a point
very far away. He heaved a big, slow sigh. His hands were shaking.
"What day is it?" Randy mumbled through cotton.
"As I told you before," the brilliant young oral surgeon said, "we
charge for wisdom tooth extractions on a sliding scale, depending on the
degree of difficulty." He paused for a moment, groping for words. "In your
case I'm afraid that we will be charging you the maximum on all four." Then
he got up and shambled out of the room, weighed down, Randy thought, not so
much by the stress of his job as by the knowledge that no one was ever going
to give him a Nobel prize for what he had just accomplished.
Randy went home and spent, about a week lying on his couch in front of
the TV eating oral narcotics like jellybeans and moaning with pain, and then
he got better. The pressure in his skull was gone. Just totally gone. He
cannot even remember now what it used to feel like.
Now as he rides in the police car to his new private jail cell, he
remembers the whole wisdom tooth extraction saga because of its many points
in common with what he just went through emotionally with young America
Shaftoe. Randy's had a few girlfriends in his life not many but all of them
were like oral surgeons who just couldn't cut the mustard. Amy's the only
one who had the skill and the sheer balls to just look at him and say "okay"
and then tunnel into his skull and come back with the goods. It was probably
exhausting for her. She will extract a high price from him in exchange. And
it will leave Randy lying around moaning with pain for a good long while.
But he can tell already that the internal pressure has been relieved and he
is glad, so glad, that she came into his life, and that he finally had the
good sense and, arguably, guts to do this. He completely forgets, for a few
hours, that he has been marked for death by the Philippine government.
From the fact that he's in a car, he infers that his new, private cell
is in a different building. No one explains anything to him because he is,
after all, a prisoner. Since the bust at NAIA he's been in a jail down
south, a newish concrete block number on the edge of Makati, but now they
are taking him north into older parts of Manila, probably into some more
stylish and gothic prewar facility. Fort Santiago, on the banks of the
Pasig, had cells that were in the intertidal zone, so that prisoners locked
into them at low tide would be dead by high. Now it's a historical site, so
he knows they're not headed there.
The new jail cell is indeed in a big scary old building somewhere in
the torus of major governmental institutions that surrounds the dead hole of
Intramuros. It is not in, but it is right next to, a major court building.
They drive through alleys among these big old stone buildings for a while
and then present credentials at a guardhouse and wait for a big iron gate to
be rolled aside, and then they drive across a paved courtyard that hasn't
been swept out in a while and present more credentials and wait for an
actual portcullis to be winched up, clearing an orifice that ramps them down
beneath the building itself. Then the car stops and they are abruptly
surrounded by men in uniforms.
The process is uncannily like pulling up to the main entrance of an
Asian business hotel, except that the men in the uniforms carry guns and
don't offer to tote Randy's laptop. He has a chain around his waist and
manacles attached to that chain in front, and leg chains that shorten his
stride. The chain between his ankles is supported in the middle by another
chain that goes up to his waist so that it will not scrape the ground as he
walks. He has just enough manual dexterity to grip the laptop and keep it
pressed up against his lower abdomen. He's not just any chained wretch, he
is a digital chained wretch, Marley's Ghost on the Information Superhighway.
That a man in his situation is being allowed to have the laptop is so
grotesquely implausible that it causes him to doubt even his own supremely
cynical assessment of it, namely that Someone presumably the same Someone
who is Sending Him a Message has already discovered that everything on the
hard drive is encrypted, and is now trying to gull him into firing the
machine up and using it so that so that what? Maybe they've rigged up a
camera in his cell and will be peering over his shoulder. But that would be
easy for him to defeat; he just has to not be completely stupid.
The guards lead Randy down a corridor and through some prisoner check
in stuff that doesn't really apply to him since he has already filled out
the forms and turned over his personal effects at another jail. Then the
great big scary metal doors commence, and corridors that don't smell so
good, and he hears the generalized hubbub of a jail. But they take him past
the hubbub and into other corridors that seem to be older and less used, and
finally through an old fashioned jailhouse door of iron bars and into a long
vaulted stone room containing a single row of maybe half a dozen cells, with
a guard's passageway running along past the doors of the iron cages. Like a
theme park simulacrum of a jail. They take him all the way down to the last
cell and put him there. A single iron bedstead awaits him, a thin cotton
mattress with stained but clean sheets and an army blanket folded and
stacked on top of it. An old wooden filing cabinet and folding chair have
been moved into the cell and placed in one corner, right against the stone
wall that is the terminus of this long room. The filing cabinet is evidently
meant to serve as Randy's work table. The drawers are locked shut. This
cabinet has actually been locked into place with a few turns of heavy chain
and a padlock, so it's very clear that he is expected to use the computer
there, in that corner of the cell, and nowhere else. As Attorney Alejandro
promised, an extension cord has been plugged into a wall outlet near the
cellblock entrance and run down the passageway and securely knotted around a
pipe out of Randy's reach and the tail end of it allowed to trail across in
the direction of the filing cabinet. But it does not quite reach into
Randy's cell, so the only way to plug the computer in is to set it up on
that cabinet and stick the power cord into the back and then toss the other
end out through the iron bars to a guard, who can mate it with the extension
cord.
At first this appears to be just one of these maddening control freak
things, an exercise of power for the pure sadistic pleasure of it. But after
Randy's been unchained, and locked in his cell, and left alone for a few
minutes to run through it in his head, he thinks otherwise. Of course
normally Randy could leave the computer on the card table while the
batteries charged and then carry it over to his bed and use it there until
the batteries ran down. But the batteries were removed from the machine
before Attorney Alejandro gave it to him, and there don't seem to be any
ThinkPad battery packs lying around his cell. So he will have to keep it
plugged in all the time, and because of the way they have set up the filing
cabinet and the extension cord, he is forced by certain immutable properties
of three dimensional Euclidean spacetime to use the machine in one and only
one place: right there on top of that damn filing cabinet. He does not think
this is an accident.
He sits down on that filing cabinet and scans the wall and ceiling for
over the shoulder video cameras, but he doesn't look very hard and he
doesn't really expect to see one. To make out text on a screen they would
have to be very high resolution cameras, which would imply big and obvious;
subtle pinhole cameras wouldn't do it. There aren't any big cameras around
here.
Randy becomes almost certain that if he could unlock that filing
cabinet, he would find some electronic gear inside it. Directly underneath
his laptop there is probably an antenna to pick up Van Eck signals emanating
from the screen. Below that, there is some gear to translate those signals
into a digital form and transmit the results to a listening station nearby,
probably right on the other side of one of these walls. Down in the bottom
are probably some batteries to make it all run. He rocks the cabinet back
and forth as much as the chains will allow, and finds that it is indeed
rather bottom heavy, as if there's a car battery sitting in the bottom
drawer. Or maybe it's just his imagination. Maybe they are letting him have
his laptop just because they are nice guys.
So this is it then. This is the setup. This is the deal. It is all very
clean and simple. Randy fires up the laptop just to prove that it still
works. Then he makes his bed and goes and lies down on it, just because it
feels really good to lie down. It is the first time he's had anything like
privacy in at least a week. Notwithstanding Avi's bizarre admonition against
self abuse on the beach in Pacifica, it is high time that Randy took care of
something. He needs to concentrate really hard now, and a certain
distraction must be done away with. Replaying his last conversation with Amy
is enough to give him a good erection. He reaches down into his pants and
then abruptly falls asleep.
He wakes up to the sound of the cellblock door clanging open. A new
prisoner is being led in. Randy tries to sit up and finds that his hand is
still in his pants, having failed to accomplish its mission. He pulls it out
of there reluctantly and sits up. He swings his feet down off the bed and
onto the stone floor. Now he's got his back to the adjacent cell, which is a
mirror image of his; i.e., the beds and the toilets of the two cells are
right next to each other along their shared partition. He stands up and
turns around and watches this other prisoner being led into the cell next to
his. The new guy is a white man, probably in his sixties, maybe even
seventies, though you could make a case for fifties or eighties. Quite
vigorous, anyway. He's wearing a prison coverall just like Randy's, but
accessorized differently: instead of a laptop, he's got a crucifix dangling
from a rosary with great big fat amber beads, and some sort of medallion on
a silver chain, and he's clutching several books to his belly: a Bible, and
something big and in German, and a current bestselling novel.
The guards are treating him with extreme reverence; Randy assumes the
guy is a priest. They are talking to him in Tagalog, asking him questions
being, Randy thinks, solicitous to his needs and desires and the white man
answers them in reassuring tones and even tells a joke. He makes a polite
request; a guard scurries out and returns moments later with a deck of
cards. Finally the guards back out of the cell, practically bowing and
scraping, and lock him in with apologies that start to get a little
monotonous. The white man says something, forgiving them wittily. They laugh
nervously and leave. The white man stands there in the middle of his cell
for a minute, staring at the floor contemplatively, maybe praying or
something. Then he snaps out of it and starts looking around. Randy leans
into the partition and sticks his hand through the bars. "Randy Waterhouse,"
he says.
The white man frisbees his books onto the bed, glides towards him, and
shakes his hand. "Enoch Root," he says. "It's a pleasure to meet you in
person, Randy." His voice is unmistakably that of Pontifex
root@eruditorum.org.
Randy freezes up for a long time, like a man who has just realized that
a colossal practical joke is being played on him, but doesn't know just how
colossal it is, or what to do about it. Enoch Root sees that Randy is
paralyzed, and steps smoothly into the gap. He flexes the deck of cards in
one hand and shoots them across to the other; the queue of airborne cards
just hangs there between his hands for a moment, like an accordion. "Not as
versatile as ETC cards, but surprisingly useful," he muses. "With any luck,
Randy, you and I can make a bridge as long as you are just standing there
pontificating anyway."
"Make a bridge?" Randy echoes, feeling and probably sounding rather
stupid.
"I'm sorry, my English is a bit rusty I meant bridge as in a card game.
Are you familiar with it?"
"Bridge? No. But I thought it took four people."
"I have come up with a version that is played by two. I only hope this
deck is complete the game requires fifty four cards."
"Fifty four," Randy muses. "Is your game anything like Pontifex?"
"One and the same."
"I think I have the rules for Pontifex squirreled away on my hard drive
somewhere," Randy says.
"Then let's play," says Enoch Root.
Chapter 87 FALL
Shaftoe jumps out of the airplane. The air is bracingly cold up here,
and the wind chill factor is something else. It is the first time in a year
that he has not been loathsomely hot and sweaty.
Something jerks mightily on his back: the static line, still attached
to the airplane God forbid that American fighting men should be entrusted to
pull their own ripcords. He can just imagine the staff meeting where they
dreamed up the concept of the static line: "For God's sake, General, they're
just enlisted men! As soon as they jump out of the airplane they'll probably
start daydreaming about their girlfriends, take a few hits from their pocket
flasks, catch forty winks, and before you know it they'll all pile into the
ground at a couple of hundred miles an hour!"
The drogue chute flutters out, catches air, and then eviscerates his
main pack in one jerk. There's a bit of flopping and buffeting as Bobby
Shaftoe's body pulls the disorganized cloud of silk downwards, then it
thunks open and he is left hanging in space, his dark body forming a small
perfect bullseye in the center of the off white canopy for any Nipponese
riflemen down below.
No wonder those paratroopers think they are gods among men: they get
such a nice view of things, so much better than a poor Marine grunt stuck
down on the beach, who is always looking uphill into courses of pillboxes.
All of Luzon stretches out before him. He can see one or two hundred miles
north, across a mat of vegetation as dense as felt, to the mountains in the
far north where General Yamashita, the Lion of Malaya, is holed up with a
hundred thousand troops, each of whom would like nothing better than to
strap lots of explosives to his body, sneak through the lines at night, run
into the middle of a large concentration of American soldiers, and blow
himself up for his emperor. To Shaftoe's starboard is Manila Bay, and even
from this distance, some thirty miles, he can see the jungle suddenly turn
thin and brown as it nears the shore, like a severed leaf that is dying from
the edge inwards that would be what's left of the city of Manila. The fat
twenty mile long tongue of land protruding towards him is Bata'an. Just off
the tip of it is a rocky island shaped like a tadpole with a green head and
a bony brown tail: Corregidor. Smoke jets from many vents on the island,
which has been mostly reconquered by the Americans. Quite a few Nipponese
blew themselves up in their underground bunkers rather than surrender. This
heroic act has given someone in The General's chain of command a nifty idea.
A couple of miles from Corregidor, motionless on the water, is
something that looks like an absurdly squat, asymmetrical battleship, except
much bigger. It is encircled by American gunboats and amphibious landing
forces. From a source on its lid, a long wisp of red smoke trickles
downwind: a smoke bomb dropped out of Shaftoe's plane a few minutes ago, on
a parachute. As Shaftoe descends, and the wind blows him directly towards
it, he can see the grain of the reinforced concrete of which this prodigy is
made. It used to be a dry rock in Manila Bay. The Spanish built a fort
there, the Americans built a chain of gun emplacements on top of that, and
when the Nips showed up they turned the entire thing into a solid reinforced
concrete fortress with walls thirty feet thick, and a couple of double
barreled fourteen inch gun turrets on the top. Those guns have long since
been silenced; Shaftoe can see long cracks in their barrels, and craters,
like frozen splashes in the steel. Even though he is parachuting onto the
roof of an impregnable Nipponese fortress chock full of heavily armed men
who are desperately looking for a picturesque way to die, Shaftoe is
perfectly safe; every time a Nip pokes a rifle barrel or a pair of
binoculars out of a gun slit, half a dozen American antiaircraft gunners
open up on him at point blank range from the nearby ships.
A tremendous racket ensues as a small power boat pops out of a little
cave along the waterline of the island and heads directly towards an
American landing craft. A hundred guns open fire on it simultaneously.
Supersonic bits of metal crash into the water all around the little boat,
ton after ton of them. Each bit makes a splash. All of the splashes combine
into a jagged, volcanic eruption of white water centered on the little boat.
Bobby Shaftoe puts his fingers in his ears. Two thousand pounds of high
explosive packed into the little boat's nose detonate. The shock wave
flashes across the surface of the water, a powdery white ring expanding with
supernatural velocity. It hits Bobby Shaftoe like a baseball to the bridge
of the nose. He neglects to steer his chute for a while, and trusts the
winds to carry him to the right place.
The smoke bomb was dropped as proof of the concept that a man on a
parachute might actually be able to land on the roof of this fortress. Bobby
Shaftoe is, of course, the final and irrefutable test of this proposition.
As he gets closer, and his head clears from the explosion, Shaftoe sees that
the smoke bomb never actually reached the roof: its little chute got tangled
up in the briar patch of antennas growing out of the top of the thing.
All kinds of fucking antennas! Even during his days in Shanghai,
Shaftoe had a weird feeling around antennas. Those Station Alpha pencil
necks, in their little wooden roof shack with all the antennas sprouting
from it those were not soldiers, sailors, or Marines in the normal sense.
Corregidor was covered with antennas before the Nips came and took it. And
everywhere that Shaftoe went during his Detachment 2702 stint, there were
antennas.
He is going to spend the next few moments concentrating very hard on
those antennas, and so he turns his head for a moment to get a bearing on
the American LCM the landing craft that the Nip suicide boat was hoping to
destroy. It is exactly where it is supposed to be halfway between the
encircling force of naval ships and the sheer, forty foot high wall of the
fortress. Even if Shaftoe didn't already know the plan, he would, at a
glance, identify this vessel as a Landing Craft, Mechanized (Mark 3), a
fifty foot long steel shoebox designed to cough a medium sized tank up onto
a beach. It has a couple of fifty caliber machine guns on it which are
pounding away dutifully at various targets on the wall of the fortress which
Shaftoe cannot see. But from his vantage point On High he can see something
that the Nipponese can't: the LCM is not carrying a tank, in the sense of a
vehicle on caterpillar treads with a gun turret. It is carrying, rather, a
tank in the sense of a large steel container with pipes and hoses and stuff
attached to it.
The Nips in the fortress are taking potshots at the approaching LCM,
but the only target at which they have to aim is its front door, a piece of
metal that can flop down to become a ramp, and which was designed,
incredibly enough, on the assumption that doomed Nips would spend a lot of
time trying to blow holes in it with various projectile weapons. So the
defenders are not getting anywhere. Antiaircraft gunners on other ships have
begun raking the walls of the fortress insanely, making it hard for the
Nipponese to poke their heads and their gun barrels out. Shaftoe notes
fragments of antennas skittering and bouncing across the roof of the
fortress, and occasional streaks of tracers, and hopes that the men on those
ships have the presence of mind to hold their fire before he lands on the
fucking thing, which will be in a few seconds.
Shaftoe realizes that his mental concept of what this mission was going
to be like, as he reviewed it with the officers in the LCM, bears no
relationship to the reality. This is only about the five thousandth time
Shaftoe has experienced this phenomenon in the course of the Second World
War; you'd think he would no longer be surprised by it. The antennas, which
looked wispy and inconsequential on the reconnaissance photos, are in fact
sizable engineering works. Or they were until they got de engineered by the
naval gunfire that silenced those big guns. Now they are just wreckage of a
sort that is going to be peculiarly nasty to parachute down on top of. The
antennas were, and the wreckage is, made of all kinds of different shit:
spars of Philippine mahogany, sturdy columns of bamboo, welded steel
trusses. The most common bits are the ones that catch a parachutist's eye:
long metal poky things, and miles and miles of guy wire, snarled into a
briarpatch, some of it taut enough to cut a plummeting Marine's head off and
some of it all loose and tangly with sharp hovering ends.
It dawns on Shaftoe that this pile isn't just a gun emplacement; it's a
Nip intelligence headquarters. "Waterhouse, you fucking son of a bitch!"
Shaftoe hollers. As far as he knows, Waterhouse is still in Europe. But he
realizes, as he's clapping his hands protectively over his eyes and falling
into the nightmare, that Waterhouse must have something to do with this.
Bobby Shaftoe has landed. He tries to move and the wreckage moves with
him; he is one with it.
He opens his eyes carefully. His head is wrapped up in a snarl of heavy
wire a guy wire that broke under tension and whipped around him. Peering
between loops of wire, he sees three lengths of quarter inch metal tubing
projecting out of his torso. Another one has gone through his thigh, and yet
another through his upper arm. He's pretty sure he has a broken leg too.
He lies there for a while, listening to the sound of the guns all
around him.
There is work that needs to be done. All he can think of is the boy. He
gropes for the wire cutter with his free hand and begins to cut himself
loose from the snarl.
The jaws of the wire cutter just barely fit over the metal tubing of
the antenna. He reaches behind himself finds the places where the tubes poke
into his back, and cuts them off, snip, snip, snip. He cuts the tube that
has impaled his arm. He leans forward and cuts the one that goes through his
leg. Then he pulls the tubes out of his flesh and drops them on the
concrete, plink, plink, plink, plink, plink. Lots of blood follows.
He doesn't even try to walk. He just begins to drag himself across the
concrete roof of the fortress. The sun has warmed the concrete and it feels
good. He cannot see the LCM, but he can see the few antennas that stick out
of its top, and he knows it is in position now.
The rope should be there. Shaftoe props himself up on his elbows and
looks. Sure enough, there it is, a manila rope (natch!) tied to a grapnel,
one point of the grapnel lodged in a shell crater near the edge of the roof.
He gets to it eventually, and begins to pull on the rope. He closes his
eyes, but tries not to fall asleep. He keeps pulling, and eventually feels
something big and thick between his hands: the hose.
Almost finished. Lying on his back, hugging the end of the hose to his
chest, he rolls his head from side to side until he can see the air vent
that they picked out on the reconnaissance photos. It used to have a sheet
metal hood on the top of it, but that's long gone now, it's just a hole in
the roof with a few jagged bits of metal at its edges. He crawls over to it
and feeds in the end of the hose.
Someone must be watching him on one of the ships, because the hose
stiffens, like a serpent coming alive, and between his hands Bobby Shaftoe
can feel the fuel oil streaming through it. Ten thousand gallons of the
stuff. Straight down into the fortress. He can hear the Nips down there,
singing hoarse songs. By now they will have figured out what is about to
happen. General MacArthur is giving them exactly what they've been praying
for.
At this point, Bobby Shaftoe is supposed to abseil down a rope into the
LCM, but he knows it isn't going to happen. No one can reach him now, no one
can help him. When the fuel oil stops streaming through the hose, he summons
all the concentration he has left. Pretends, one last time, that he actually
gives a damn. Jerks the safety pin from a white phosphorus grenade, lets the
handle fly off and tinkle merrily across the roof. He can feel it come alive
in his hand, the thrumming animal fizz of its inner fuse. He drops it into
the air shaft: a circular pipe straight down, a black disk centered on a
field of dingy grey, like the ashes of a Nipponese flag.
Then, on an impulse, he dives in there after it.
Semper Fidelis Dawn star flares on disk of night I fall, sun rises
Chapter 88 METIS
The appearance of root@eruditorum.org in the cell right next to Randy's
is like the crowning plot twist in this Punch and Judy show that has been
performed for his benefit ever since his plane landed at NAIA. As with any
puppet show, he knows that there must be a lot of people hidden just outside
the range of his senses, in furious motion, trying to make it all happen.
For all he knows, some significant fraction of the Philippine gross national
product is being devoted to keeping up these pretenses for his benefit.
There is a meal waiting on the floor of Randy's cell, and a rat on top
of the meal. Randy usually reacts pretty badly to the sight of rats; they
rupture the containment system that his upbringing and his education built
around the part of his mind where the collective unconscious stuff dwells,
and send him straight into Hieronymus Bosch territory. But in these
circumstances it doesn't bother him any more than seeing one at the zoo
would. The rat has a surprisingly attractive buckskin colored pelt and a
tail about as thick as a pencil that has evidently run afoul of a farmer's
wife with a carving knife, and woggles stiffly in the air like the blunt
antenna of a cellphone. Randy is hungry, but he doesn't want to eat anything
that a rat has left footprints on, so he just watches it.
His body feels like it slept for a long time. He turns on his computer
and types in a command called "date." The nails of his left hand look funny,
as if they all got bruised. Focusing on them he sees a club drawn in blue
ballpoint pen ink on the nail of the index finger, a diamond on the
forefinger, a heart on the ring finger, a spade on the pinky. Enoch Root
told him that in Pontifex, as in bridge, each card in the deck has a
numerical value: clubs 1 13, diamonds 14 26, hearts 27 39, spades 40 52.
Randy drew the symbols on his nails so he wouldn't forget.
Anyway, "date" tells him that he apparently slept all of yesterday
afternoon and evening, all night, and about half of today. So this rat is
actually eating his lunch.
Randy's computer runs Finux, so when it boots up it gives him a black
screen with big fat white letters scrolling up it one line at a time, a real
circa 1975 type of user interface. Also presumably the easiest possible
thing to read through Van Eck phreaking. Randy types in "startx" and the
screen goes black for a moment and then turns a particular shade of indigo
that Randy happens to like, and beige windows appear on it with much smaller
and crisper black letters. So now he is running the X Windows System, or X
as people like Randy call it, which provides all of the graphical junk that
people expect in a user interface: menus, buttons, scroll bars, and so on.
As with anything else under UNIX (of which Finux is a variant), there are a
million options that only young, lonely, or obsessed people have the time
and patience to explore. Randy has been all three at various times of his
life and knows a lot about these options. For example, the background of his
screen happens to be a uniform indigo at the moment, but it could be an
image. Theoretically you could use a movie, so that all of your windows and
menus and so on would float around on top of, say, Citizen Kane running in
an endless loop. You can, in fact, take any piece of software and make it
into your screen background, and it will purr along happily, doing whatever
it does, and not even known that it's being used as window dressing. This
has given Randy some ideas on how to approach the Van Eck thing.
In its current state, this computer is just as vulnerable to Van Eck
phreaking as it was before Randy started up X. Before it was white letters
on a black background. Now it's black on beige. The letters are a little
smaller and they live in windows, but it makes no difference: the
electronics inside his computer still have to make these transitions between
zero and one, i.e. between high intensity (white or beige) and minimal
(black) as they trace out these patterns of dots on the screen.
Randy fundamentally does not know what the fuck is going on in his life
right now, and probably hasn't for a long time, even back in the days when
he thought that he did know. But his working hypothesis is that the people
who set this whole situation up (prime candidates: the Dentist and his
cohorts in the Bolobolo syndicate) know that he has some cool information on
his hard drive. How should they know this? Well, Pontifex the Wizard Enoch
Root whatever the fuck he's called when he phoned Randy on the plane, knew
that Randy had Arethusa, so God knows who else might know. Someone set up
the fake drug bust at NAIA so that they could nab his laptop and yank the
hard drive and make a copy of its contents. Then they found out that it was
all doubly encrypted. That is, the Arethusa intercepts are encrypted to
begin with in a pretty good World War II cryptosystem, which anyone should
be able to break nowadays, but on top of that they are furthermore encrypted
in a state of the art modern system that no one can break. If they know
what's good for them, they won't even try to break it. The only way for them
to get the information is to get Randy to decrypt it for them, which he can
do by biometrically identifying himself to his laptop (by talking to it) or
by typing in a pass phrase that only he knows. They are hoping that Randy
will decrypt the Arethusa intercept files and, like a moron, display their
contents on the screen. The moment that stuff appears on the screen, the
game is over. The Dentist's (or whoever's) surveillance guys can feed the
intercepts to some kind of a cryptanalytic supercomputer that will break
them open in no time.
That doesn't mean that Randy dare not open those files just that he
daren't display them on the screen. This distinction is crucial. Ordo can
read the encrypted files from the hard drive. It can write them into the
computer's memory. It can decrypt them, and write the results into another
region of the computer's memory, and leave that data there indefinitely, and
the Van Eck phreakers will never be the wiser. But as soon as Randy tells
the computer to show him that information in a window on the screen, the
Arethusa intercepts will belong to the Van Eck phreakers; and whoever they
are, they can probably break them faster than Randy can.
The fun and interesting thing is that Randy doesn't have to actually
see those intercepts in order to work on them. As long as they are sitting
in the computer's memory, he can subject them to every cryptanalystic
technique in the whole Cryptonomicon.
He starts tapping out some lines in a language called Perl. Perl's a
scripting language; useful for controlling your computer's functions and
automating repetitive tasks. A UNIX machine like this one is rooted in a
filesystem that contains tens of thousands of different files, mostly in
straight ASCII text format. There are many different programs for opening
these files, displaying them on the screen, and editing them. Randy intends
to write a Perl script that will roam through the filesystem choosing files
at random, opening each file in a randomly sized and located window, paging
through it for a while, and then closing it again. If you run the script
fast enough, the windows will pop open all over the place in a kind of
rectangularized fireworks burst that will go on forever. If this script is
used as the screen background, in place of solid indigo, then this will go
on underneath the one window on the screen where Randy's actually working.
The people monitoring his work will go crazy trying to track all of this.
Especially if Randy writes a script that will cause the real window to
change its shape and location at random every few seconds.
It would be really stupid to open the Arethusa intercepts in a window
he's not going to do that. But he can use this technique to conceal whatever
else he's doing in the way of decryption work. It occurs to him, however,
when he gets a few lines into writing this Perl script, that if he pulls a
stunt like that so early in his incarceration, the people surveilling him
will know right away that he is on to them. And maybe it's better if he lets
them believe, for a while, that he suspects nothing.
So he saves his Perl script and stops working on it for now. If he
writes it in short bursts, opening it once or twice a day to type in a few
lines and then closing it, it's unlikely that the surveillors will be able
to follow what he is up to, even if they happen to be hackers. Just to be an
asshole, he modifies his X Windows options in such a way that none of the
windows on the screen will have a title bar at the top. That way the
surveillance people won't be able to tell what file he is working on at any
given moment, which will make it a lot harder for them to string a long
series of observations together into a coherent picture of what's in his
Perl script.
Too, he opens up the old message from root@eruditorum.org giving the
Pontifex Transform, expressed as a few lines of Perl code. The steps that
looked so unwieldy when carried out by a computer seem straight forward
easy, even now that he construes them as manipulations of a deck of cards.
"Randy."
"Hmmm?" Randy looks up from the screen and is startled to find that he
is in a jail in the Philippines.
"Dinner is served."
It is Enoch Root, looking at him through the bars. He points at the
floor of Randy's cell where a new tray of food has just been slid in.
"Actually, it was served an hour ago you might want to have at it before the
rats come."
"Thank you," Randy says. Making sure all the windows on his screen have
been closed, he goes over and lifts his dinner up from the spatter of old
rat turds on the floor. It is rice and lechon, a simple and traditional pork
dish. Enoch Root finished eating a long time ago he sits on his bed, next to
Randy, and plays an unusual game of solitaire, pausing occasionally to mark
down a letter. Randy watches the manipulation of the deck carefully,
growingly certain that it is the same set of operations he was just reading
about in the old e mail message.
"So what are you in for?" Randy asks.
Enoch Root finishes counting through the deck, glances at a seven of
spades, closes his eyes for a few moments, and marks down a W on his napkin.
Then he says, "Disorderly conduct. Trespassing. Incitement to riot. I'm
probably guilty of the first two."
"Tell me about it."
"First tell me what you're in for."
"Heroin was found in my bag at the airport. I stand accused of being
the world's stupidest drug smuggler."
"Is someone angry at you?"
"That would make for a much longer story," Randy says, "but I think you
have the drift."
"Well, in my case, it's like this. I have been working at a mission
hospital up in the mountain."
"You're a priest?"
"Not anymore. I'm a lay worker."
"Where's your hospital?"
"South of here. Out in the boondocks," Enoch Root says. "The people
there cultivate pineapple, coffee, coconut, bananas, and a few other cash
crops. But their land is being torn apart by treasure hunters."
Funny that Enoch Root should suddenly be on the subject of buried
treasure. And yet he has been so tight lipped. Randy guesses he's intended
to play stupid. He takes a stab at it: "Is there supposed to be some
treasure down there?"
"The old timers say that many Nipponese trucks went down a particular
road during the last few weeks before MacArthur's return. Past a certain
point it was not possible to know where they went, because the road was
blocked, and minefields set up to discourage the curious."
"Or kill them," Randy says.
Enoch Root takes this in stride. "That road gives way to a rather vast
area in which gold might hypothetically have been hidden. Hundreds of square
miles. Much of it is jungle. Much has difficult topography. Lots of
volcanoes, some extinct, some vomiting up mudflows from time to time. But
some is flat enough to grow tropical crops, and in those places, people have
settled during the decades since the war, and put together the rudiments of
an economy."
"Who owns the land?"
"You've gotten to know the Philippines well," Enoch Root says. "You go
immediately to the central question."
"Around here, asking who owns the land is like complaining about the
weather in the Midwest," Randy muses.
Enoch Root nods. "I could spend a long time answering your question.
The answer is that patterns of ownership changed just after the war, and
then changed again under Marcos, and yet again in the last few years. So we
have several epochs, if you will. First epoch: before the war. Land owned by
certain families."
"Of course."
"Of course. Second epoch: the war. A vast area sealed off by the
Nipponese. Some of the families who owned the land prospered under the
occupation. Others went bankrupt. Third epoch: postwar. The bankrupt
families went away. The prosperous ones expanded their holdings. As did the
church and the government."
"Why?"
"The government made part of the land the jungle into a national park.
And after the eruptions, the church established the mission where I work."
"Eruptions?"
"In the early 1950s, just to make things interesting you know, things
are never interesting enough in the Philippines the volcanoes acted up. A
few lahars came through the area, wiped out some villages, redirected some
rivers, displaced many people. The church set up the hospital to help those
people."
"A hospital doesn't take up very much land," Randy observes.
"We also have farms. We are trying to help the locals become more self
reliant." Enoch Root acts like he basically does not want to talk about
this. "At any rate, things then settled down into a pattern that more or
less endured until the Marcos era, when various people were forced to sell
some of their holdings to Ferdinand and Imelda and various of their cousins,
nephews, cronies, and bootlicks."
"They were looking for Nipponese war gold."
"Certain of the locals have made a business of pretending to remember
where the gold is," Enoch Root says. "Once it was understood just how
remunerative this could be, it spread like a virus. Everyone claims to have
hazy memories of the war now, or of tales that Dad or Granddad told them.
The Marcos era treasure hunters did not display the cautious skepticism that
might have been expected from people with more piercing intellects. Many
holes were dug. No gold was found. Things settled down. Then, in the last
few years, the Chinese came in."
"Filipinos of Chinese ancestry, or "
"Chinese of Chinese ancestry," Enoch Root says. "Northern Chinese.
Robust ones who like spicy food. Not the usual gracile Cantonese speaking
fish eaters."
"These people are from where, then Shanghai?"
Root nods. "Their company is one of these post Maoist monstrosities.
Headed up by an actual Long March veteran. Wily survivor of many purges.
Name of Wing. Mr. Wing or General Wing as he likes to be addressed when he
is feeling nostalgic handled the transition to capitalism rather deftly.
Built hydroelectric projects with slave labor during the Great Leap Forward,
parlayed that into control of a very large government ministry which has now
become a sort of corporation. Mr. Wing has the ability to shut off the
electricity to just about any home or factory or even military base in
China, and by Chinese standards this makes him into a distinguished elder
statesman."
"What does Mr. Wing want there?"
"Land. Land. More land."
"What sort of land?"
"Land in the jungle. Oddly enough."
"Maybe he wants to build a hydroelectric project."
"Yes, and maybe you're a heroin smuggler. Say, Randy, don't think I'm
rude for saying so, but you have sauce in your beard." Enoch Root thrusts a
hand through the bars, proffering a paper napkin. Randy takes it and,
lifting it to his face, notes that the following letters are written on it:
OSKJJ JGTMW. Randy pretends to daub sauce off his beard.
"Now I've gone and done it," says Enoch Root, "given you my whole
supply of bumwad."
"Greater love hath no man," Randy says. "And I see you gave me your
other deck of cards too you are too generous."
"Not at all I thought you might want to play solitaire, just as I did."
"Don't mind if I do," Randy says, setting his dinner tray aside and
reaching for the deck.
The card on top is an eight of spades. Skimming it and a few more cards
out of the way, he finds a joker, with small stars in the corners; according
to hints that Enoch has already dropped, this is the A joker. It's the work
of a moment to slip it beneath the card below, which happens to be a Jack of
clubs. About two thirds of the way down into the pack he finds a big star
joker, and B stands for Big, so he knows that is Joker B; he moves it down
two cards, below the six of clubs and the nine of diamonds. Straightening up
the pack and then smearing though it once more, he sticks various fingers in
as he re finds those jacks, and ends up with a good half of the pack the
full inter Joker span, plus the two Jokers themselves trapped between his
index and forefingers. The thinner stacks above and below he pulls out and
swaps with each other. Enoch watches all of this and seems to approve.
Randy pushes out the bottom most card, now, and it turns out to be a
jack of clubs. On second thought he pulls that jack out and leaves it on his
knee for the time being, so he won't mess the next part up. According to the
mnemonic symbols he's marked on his fingernails, the numerical value of this
jack of clubs is simply 11. So, starting from the top of the deck, he counts
down to the eleventh card, cuts the deck below it, then swaps the two
halves, and finally takes the jack of clubs off his knee and puts it on the
bottom of the deck again.
The card on the top of the deck is now a joker. "What's the numerical
value for a joker?" he asks, and Enoch Root says, "it's fifty three, for
either one of them." So Randy gets a free ride this time; he knows that if
he begins counting down from the top of the deck, when he reaches 53 he'll
be staring at the last card. And that card happens to be the Jack of Clubs,
with a value of 11. Eleven, then is the first number in the keystream.
Now, the first letter in the ciphertext that Enoch Root wrote on the
napkin is O, and (setting the deck of cards down, now, so that he can count
through the alphabet on his fingers) O is letter fifteen. If he subtracts
eleven from that, he gets four, and he doesn't even have to count on his
fingers to know that letter number four is D. He has one letter deciphered.
Randy remarks, "We still haven't gotten to your being arrested."
"Yes! Well, it's like this," says Enoch Root. "Mr. Wing has been
digging some holes of his own up in the jungle lately. A lot of trucks have
been going through. Ruining the roads. Running over stray dogs, which as you
know are an important food source for these people. A boy was hit by one of
these trucks and has been in our hospital ever since. The runoff from Mr.
Wing's operations has been fouling the river that many people rely on for
fresh water. And there are questions of ownership too some feel that Mr.
Wing is encroaching on land that is properly owned by the government. Which
in some extremely attenuated sense, means it is owned by the people."
"Does he have a permit?"
"Ah! Once again your knowledge of local politics is evident. As you
know, the normal procedure is for local officials to approach people who are
digging large holes in the ground, or undertaking any kind of productive or
destructive activity whatsoever, and demand that they obtain a permit, which
simply means that they want a bribe or else they'll raise a stink about it.
Mr. Wing's company has not obtained a permit."
"Has a stink been raised?"
"Yes. But Mr. Wing has forged a very strong relationship with certain
Filipinos of Chinese ancestry who are well placed in the government, and so
the stink has been unavailing."
The second time through, the joker moving part went quickly since one
of the jokers started out on top. The King of Hearts ends up on the bottom,
and hence on Randy's knee. That son of a bitch has a numerical index of 39,
and so Randy has to count most of the way through the deck to reach the card
in the thirty ninth position, which is a ten of diamonds. He splits and
swaps the deck, then puts the King of Hearts back on the bottom. Top card is
now a four of diamonds, which translates to an index of seventeen. Counting
the seventeen top cards into his hand he stops and looks at the eighteenth,
which is a four of hearts. That works out to a value of 26 + 4 = 30. But
everything here is modulo 26, so adding the 26 was a waste of time, because
now he has to subtract it right off again. The result is four. The second
letter in Enoch's ciphertext is S, which is the nineteenth letter in the
alphabet, and subtracting four from that gives him O. So the plaintext, so
far, is "DO."
"I get the picture."
"I was sure that you would, Randy."
Randy doesn't know what to make of the Wing business. It puts him in
mind of Doug Shaftoe's yarns. Maybe Wing is looking for the Primary, and
maybe Enoch Root is too, and maybe the Primary is what Old Man Comstock was
trying to find by decrypting the Arethusa messages. Maybe, in other words,
the location of the Primary is sitting on Randy's hard drive right now, and
Root's worried that Randy, like an idiot, is going to give it away.
How'd he arrange to get into a cell next to Randy's? Presumably the
Church's internal lines of communication are first rate. Root could have
known for a few days that Randy was in the clink. Time enough to hatch a
plan.
"How'd you end up here, then?" Randy asks.
"We decided to raise a bit of a stink ourselves."
"We being the Church?"
"What do you mean by the Church? If you are asking me whether the
Pontifex Maximus and the College of Cardinals put on their pointy bifurcated
hats and sat down together in Rome and drew up plans for a stink, the answer
is no. If by 'church' you mean the local community in my neighborhood,
almost all of whom happen to be devout Catholics, then yes."
"So the community protested, or something, and you were the ring
leader."
"I was an example."
"An example?"
"It frequently does not occur to these people to challenge the powers
that be. When someone actually does, they always find it incredibly novel,
and derive much entertainment from it. That was my role. I had been making a
stink about Mr. Wing for quite some time."
Randy can almost guess what the next two letters are going to be, but
he has to keep working through the algorithm or the deck will get out of
whack. He generates a 23 and then a 47 which, modulo 26, is 21, and
subtracting the 23 and the 21 from the next two ciphertext letters K and J
(again, modulo 26) gives him N and O as expected. So he has "DONO"
deciphered. And continuing to work through it, one letter at a time, the
cards getting a little sweaty in his hands now, he eventually gets DONOTUSEP
and finally loses his place while trying to generate the last keystream
letter. So now the deck is out of whack and completely unrecoverable,
reminding him that he'd better be careful next time. But he can guess that
this message must be: DO NOT USE PC. Enoch is worried that Randy did not
anticipate Van Eck phreaking.
"So. There was a demonstration. You blocked a road or something?"
"We blocked roads, we lay down in front of bulldozers. Some people
slashed a few tires. The locals put their ingenuity to work, and things got
a bit out of hand. Mr. Wing's dear friends in the government took offense
and called out the Army. Seventeen people were arrested. Unreasonably high
bail was set for them as a punitive measure if these people can't get out of
jail they can't make money and their families suffer terribly. I could get
bailed out if I wanted to, but have elected to stay behind bars as a gesture
of solidarity."
It all seems like a plausible enough cover story to Randy. "But I'm
guessing that a lot of people in the government are appalled by the fact
that they have thrown a saint into jail," he says, "and so they have moved
you here, to the high prestige luxury jail with private cells."
"Once again your understanding of the local culture is conspicuous,"
Enoch Root says. He shifts position on the bed and his crucifix swings back
and forth ponderously. He also has a medallion around his neck with
something startling written on it.
"Do you have some occult symbol there?" Randy asks, squinting.
"I beg your pardon?"
"I can make out the word 'occult' on your medallion there."
"It says ignoti et quasi occulti, which means 'unknown and partly
hidden' or words to that effect," says Enoch Root. "It is the motto of a
society to which I belong. You must know that the word 'occult' does not
intrinsically have anything to do with Satanic rituals and drinking blood
and all of that. It "
"I was trained as an astronomer," Randy says. "So I learned all about
occultation the concealment of one body behind another, as during an
eclipse."
"Oh. Well, then, I'll shut up."
"In fact, I know more than you might think about occultation," Randy
says. It might seem like he's beating a dead horse, except that he catches
the eye of Enoch Root while he's saying it, and gives a significant sidelong
glance at his computer. Root processes this for a moment and then nods.
"Who's the lady in the middle? The Virgin Mary?" Randy asks.
Root fingers the medallion without looking at it, and says, "Reasonable
guess. But wrong. It's Athena."
"The Greek goddess?"
"Yes."
"How do you square that with Christianity?"
"When I phoned you the other day, how did you know it was me?"
"I don't know. I just recognized you."
"Recognized me? What does that mean? You didn't recognize my voice."
"Is this some roundabout way of answering my question about Athena
worship v. Christianity?"
"Doesn't it strike you as remarkable that you can look at a stream of
characters on the screen of your computer e mail from someone you've never
seen and later 'recognize' the same person on the phone? How does that work,
Randy?"
"I haven't the faintest idea. The brain can do some weird "
"Some complain that e mail is impersonal that your contact with me,
during the e mail phase of our relationship, was mediated by wires and
screens and cables. Some would say that's not as good as conversing face to
face. And yet our seeing of things is always mediated by corneas, retinas,
optic nerves, and some neural machinery that takes the information from the
optic nerve and propagates it into our minds. So, is looking at words on a
screen so very much inferior? I think not; at least then you are conscious
of the distortions. Whereas, when you see someone with your eyes, you forget
about the distortions and imagine you are experiencing them purely and
immediately."
"So what's your explanation of how I recognized you?"
"I would argue that inside your mind was some pattern of neurological
activity that was not there before you exchanged e mail with me. The Root
Representation. It is not me. I'm this big slug of carbon and oxygen and
some other stuff on this cot right next to you. The Root Rep, by contrast,
is the thing that you'll carry around in your brain for the rest of your
life, barring some kind of major neurological insult, that your mind uses to
represent me. When you think about me, in other words, you're not thinking
about me qua this big slug of carbon, you are thinking about the Root Rep.
Indeed, some day you might get released from jail and run into someone who
would say, 'You know, I was in the Philippines once, running around in the
boondocks, and I ran into this old fart who started talking to me about Root
Reps.' And by exchanging notes (as it were) with this fellow you would be
able to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the Root Rep in your brain
and the Root Rep in his brain were generated by the same actual slug of
carbon and oxygen and so on: me.
"And this has something to do, again, with Athena?"
"If you think of the Greek gods as real supernatural beings who lived
on Mount Olympus, no. But if you think of them as being in the same class of
entities as the Root Rep, which is to say, patterns of neurological activity
that the mind uses to represent things that it sees, or thinks it sees, in
the outside world, then yes. Suddenly, Greek gods can be just as interesting
and relevant as real people. Why? Because, in the same way as you might one
day encounter another person with his own Root Rep so, if you were to have a
conversation with an ancient Greek person, and he started talking about
Zeus, you might once you got over your initial feelings of superiority
discover that you had some mental representations inside your own mind that,
though you didn't name them Zeus and didn't think of them as a big hairy
thunderbolt hurling son of a Titan, nonetheless had been generated as a
result of interactions with entities in the outside world that are the same
as the ones that cause the Zeus Representation to appear in the Greek's
mind. And here we could talk about the Plato's Cave thing for a while the
Veg O Matic of metaphors it slices! it dices!"
"In which," Randy says, "the actual entities in the real world are the
three dimensional, real things that are casting the shadows, this Greek dude
and I are the wretches chained up looking at the shadows of those things on
the walls, and it's just that the shape of the wall in front of me is
different from the shape of the wall in front of the Grecian "
" so that given a shadow projected on your wall is going to adopt a
different shape from the same shadow projected on his wall, where the
different wall shapes here correspond to let's say your modern scientific
worldview versus his ancient pagan worldview."
"Yeah. That Plato's Cave metaphor."
At this very moment some wag of a prison guard, out in the corridor,
throws a switch and shuts off all of the lights. The only illumination now
is from the screensaver on Randy's laptop, which is running animations of
colliding galaxies.
"I think we can stipulate that the wall in front of you, Randy, is
considerably flatter and smoother, i.e., it generally gives you a much more
accurate shadow than his wall, and yet it's clear that he's still capable of
seeing the same shadows and probably drawing some useful conclusions about
the shapes of the things that cast them."
"Okay. So the Athena that you honor on your medallion isn't a
supernatural being "
" who lives on a mountain in Greece, et cetera, but rather whatever
entity, pattern, trend, or what have you that, when perceived by ancient
Greek people, and filtered through their perceptual machinery and their
pagan worldview, produced the internal mental representation that they
dubbed Athena. The distinction being quite important because Athena the
supernatural chick with the helmet is of course nonexistent, but 'Athena'
the external generator of the internal representation dubbed Athena by the
ancient Greeks must have existed back then, or else the internal
representation never would have been generated, and if she existed back
then, the chances are excellent that she exists now, and if all that is the
case, then whatever ideas the ancient Greeks (who, though utter shitheads in
many ways, were terrifyingly intelligent people) had about her are probably
still quite valid."
"Okay, but why Athena and not Demeter or someone?"
"Well, it's a truism that you can't understand a person without knowing
something about her family background, and so we have to do kind of a quick
Cliff's Notes number on the ancient Greek Theogony here. We start out with
Chaos, which is where all theogonies start, and which I like to think of as
a sea of white noise totally random broadband static. And for reasons that
we don't really understand, certain polarities begin to coalesce from this
Day, Night, Darkness, Light, Earth, Sea. Personally, I like to think of
these as crystals not in the hippy dippy Californian sense, but in the
hardass technical sense of resonators, that received certain channels buried
in the static of Chaos. At some point, out of certain incestuous couplings
among such entities, you get Titans. And it's arguably kind of interesting
to note that the Titans provide really the full complement of basic gods
you've got the sun god, Hyperion, and an ocean god, Oceanus, and so on. But
they all get overthrown in a power struggle called the Titanomachia and
replaced with new gods like Apollo and Poseidon, who end up filling the same
slots in the organizational chart, as it were. Which is kind of interesting
in that it seems to tie in with what I was saying about the same entities or
patterns persisting through time, but casting slightly different shaped
shadows for different people. Anyway, so now we have the Gods of Olympus as
we normally think of them: Zeus, Hera, and so on.
"A couple of basic observations about these: first, they all, with one
exception I'll get to soon, were produced by some kind of sexual coupling,
either Titan Titaness or God Goddess or God Nymph or God Woman or basically
Zeus and whom– or whatever Zeus was fucking on any particular day.
Which brings me to the second basic observation, which is that the Gods of
Olympus are the most squalid and dysfunctional family imaginable. And yet
there is something about the motley asymmetry of this pantheon that makes it
more credible. Like the Periodic Table of the Elements or the family tree of
the elementary particles, or just about any anatomical structure that you
might pull up out of a cadaver, it has enough of a pattern to give our minds
something to work on and yet an irregularity that indicates some kind of
organic provenance you have a sun god and a moon goddess, for example, which
is all clean and symmetrical, and yet over here is Hera, who has no role
whatsoever except to be a literal bitch goddess, and then there is Dionysus
who isn't even fully a god he's half human but gets to be in the Pantheon
anyway and sit on Olympus with the Gods, as if you went to the Supreme Court
and found Bozo the Clown planted among the justices.
"Now what I'm getting to here is that Athena was exceptional in every
way. To begin with she wasn't created through sexual reproduction in any
kind of normal sense; she sprang fully formed from the head of Zeus.
According to some versions of the story, this happened after Zeus fucked
Metis, about whom we'll hear more in due course. Then he was warned that
Metis would later give birth to a son who would dethrone him, and so he ate
her, and later Athena came out of his head. Whether you buy into the Metis
story or not, I think we can still agree that something a little peculiar
was going on with the nativity of Athena. She was also exceptional in that
she did not participate in the moral squalor of Olympus; she was a virgin."
"Aha! I knew that was a picture of a virgin on your medallion."
"Yes, Randy, you do have a keen eye for virgins. Hephaestus leg fucked
her once but did not achieve penetration. She's quite important in the
Odyssey, but there are really very few myths, in the usual sense of that
term, that involve her. The one exception really proves the rule: the story
of Arachne. Arachne was a superb weaver who became arrogant and began taking
credit herself, instead of attributing her talent to the gods. Arachne went
so far as to issue an open challenge to Athena, who was the goddess of
weaving, among other things.
"Now keep in mind that the typical Greek myth goes something like this:
innocent shepherd boy is minding his own business, an overflying god spies
him and gets a hard on, swoops down and rapes him silly; while the victim is
still staggering around in a daze, that god's wife or lover, in a jealous
rage, turns him the helpless, innocent victim, that is into let's say an
immortal turtle and e.g. power staples him to a sheet of plywood with a dish
of turtle food just out of his reach and leaves him out in the sun forever
to be repeatedly disemboweled by army ants and stung by hornets or
something. So if Arachne had dissed anyone else in the Pantheon, she would
have been just a smoking hole in the ground before she knew what hit her.
"But in this case, Athena appeared to her in the guise of an old woman
and recommended that she display the proper humility. Arachne declined her
advice. Finally Athena revealed herself as such and challenged Arachne to a
weaving contest, which you'll have to admit was uncommonly fair minded of
her. And the interesting thing is that the contest turned out to be a draw
Arachne really was just as good as Athena! Only problem was that her weaving
depicted the gods of Olympus at their shepherd raping, interspecies fucking
worst. This weaving was simply a literal and accurate illustration of all of
those other myths, which makes this into a sort of meta myth. Athena flew
off the handle and whacked Arachne with her distaff, which might seem kind
of like poor anger management until you consider that during the struggle
against the Giants, she wasted Enceladus by dropping Sicily on him! The only
effect was to cause Arachne to recognize her own hubris, at which she became
so ashamed that she hanged herself. Athena then brought her back to life in
the form of a spider.
"So anyway, you probably learned in elementary school that Athena wears
a helmet, carries a shield called Aegis, and is the goddess of war and of
wisdom, as well as crafts such as the aforementioned weaving. Kind of an odd
combination, to say the least! Especially since Ares was supposed to be the
god of war and Hestia the goddess of home economics why the redundancy? But
a lot's been screwed up in translation. See, the kind of wisdom that we
associate with old farts like yours truly, and which I'm trying to impart to
you here, Randy Waterhouse, was called dike by the Greeks. That's not what
Athena was the goddess of! She was the goddess of metis, which means cunning
or craftiness, and which you'll recall was the name of her mother in one
version of the story. Interestingly Metis (the personage, not the attribute)
provided young Zeus with the potion that caused Cronus to vomit up all of
the baby gods he'd swallowed, setting the stage for the whole Titanomachia.
So now the connection to crafts becomes obvious crafts are just the
practical application of metis."
"I associate the word 'crafts' with making crappy belts and ashtrays in
summer camp," Randy says. "I mean, who wants to be the fucking goddess of
macrame?"
"It's all bad translation. The word that we use today, to mean the same
thing, is really technology."
"Okay. Now we're getting somewhere."
"Instead of calling Athena the goddess of war, wisdom, and macrame,
then, we should say war and technology. And here again we have the problem
of an overlap with the jurisdiction of Ares, who's supposed to be the god of
war. And let's just say that Ares is a complete asshole. His personal aides
are Fear and Terror and sometimes Strife. He is constantly at odds with
Athena even though maybe because – they are nominally the god and
goddess of the same thing war. Heracles, who is one of Athena's human
proteges, physically wounds Ares on two occasions, and even strips him of
his weapons at one point! You see the fascinating thing about Ares is that
he's completely incompetent. He's chained up by a couple of giants and
imprisoned in a bronze vessel for thirteen months. He's wounded by one of
Odysseus's drinking buddies during the iliad. Athena knocks him out with a
rock at one point. When he's not making a complete idiot of himself in
battle, he's screwing every human female he can get his hands on, and get
this his sons are all what we would today call serial killers. And so it
seems very clear to me that Ares really was a god of war as such an entity
would be recognized by people who were involved in wars all the time, and
had a really clear idea of just how stupid and ugly wars are.
"Whereas Athena is famous for being the backer of Odysseus, who, let's
not forget, is the guy who comes up with the idea for the Trojan Horse.
Athena guides both Odysseus and Heracles through their struggles, and
although both of these guys are excellent fighters, they win most of their
battles through cunning or (less pejoratively) metis. And although both of
them engage in violence pretty freely (Odysseus likes to call himself
'sacker of cities') it's clear that they are being held up in opposition to
the kind of mindless, raging violence associated with Ares and his offspring
Heracles even personally rids the world of a few of Ares's psychopathic
sons. I mean, the records aren't totally clear it's not like you can go to
the Thebes County Courthouse and look up the death certificates on these
guys but it appears that Heracles, backed up by Athena all the way,
personally murders at least half of the Hannibal Lecterish offspring of
Ares.
"So insofar as Athena is a goddess of war, what really do we mean by
that? Note that her most famous weapon is not her sword but her shield
Aegis, and Aegis has a gorgon's head on it, so that anyone who attacks her
is in serious danger of being turned to stone. She's always described as
being calm and majestic, neither of which adjectives anyone ever applied to
Ares."
"I don't know, Enoch. Defensive versus offensive war, maybe?"
"The distinction is overrated. Remember when I said that Athena got leg
fucked by Hephaestus?"
"It generated a clear internal representation in my mind."
"As a myth should! Athena/Hephaestus is sort of an interesting coupling
in that he is another technology god. Metals, metallurgy, and fire were his
specialties the old fashioned Rust Belt stuff. So, no wonder Athena gave him
a hard on! After he ejaculated on Athena's thigh, she's all eeeeeyew! and
she wipes it off and throws the rag on the ground, where it somehow combines
with the earth and generates Erichthonius. You know who Erichthonius was?"
"No."
"One of the first kings of Athens. You know what he was famous for?"
"Tell me."
"Invented the chariot and introduced the use of silver as a currency."
"Oh, Jesus!" Randy clamps his head between his hands and makes moaning
noises, only for a little while.
"Now in many other mythologies you can find gods that have parallels
with Athena. The Sumerians had Enki, the Norse had Loki. Loki was an
inventor god, but psychologically he had more in common with Ares; he was
not only the god of technology but the god of evil too, the closest thing
they had to the Devil. Native Americans had tricksters creatures full of
cunning like Coyote and Raven in their mythologies, but they didn't have
technology yet, and so they hadn't coupled the Trickster with Crafts to
generate this hybrid Technologist god."
"Okay," Randy says, "so obviously where you're going with this is that
there must be some universal pattern of events that when filtered through
the sensory apparatus and the neural rigs of primitive, superstitious people
always gives rise to internal mental representations that they identify as
gods, heroes, etc."
"Yes. And these can be recognized across cultures, in the same way that
two persons with Root Reps in their mind might 'recognize' me by comparing
notes."
"So, Enoch, you want me to believe that these gods which aren't really
gods, but it's a nice concise word all share certain things in common
precisely because the external reality that generated them is consistent and
universal across cultures."
"That is right. And in the case of Trickster gods the pattern is that
cunning people tend to attain power that un cunning people don't. And all
cultures are fascinated by this. Some of them, like many Native Americans,
basically admire it, but never couple it with technological development.
Others, like the Norse, hate it and identify it with the Devil."
"Hence the strange love hate relationship that Americans have with
hackers."
"That's right."
"Hackers are always complaining that journalists cast them as bad guys.
But you think that this ambivalence is deeper seated."
"In some cultures. The Vikings to judge from their mythology would
instinctively hate hackers. But something different happened with the
Greeks. The Greeks liked their geeks. That's how we get Athena."
"I'll buy that but where does the war goddess thing come in?"
"Let's face it, Randy, we've all known guys like Ares. The pattern of
human behavior that caused the internal mental representation known as Ares
to appear in the minds of the ancient Greeks is very much with us today, in
the form of terrorists, serial killers, riots, pogroms, and aggressive
tinhorn dictators who turn out to be military incompetents. And yet for all
their stupidity and incompetence, people like that can conquer and control
large chunks of the world if they are not resisted."
"You must meet my friend Avi."
"Who is going to fight them off, Randy?"
"I'm afraid you're going to say we are."
"Sometimes it might be other Ares worshippers, as when Iran and Iraq
went to war and no one cared who won. But if Ares worshippers aren't going
to end up running the whole world, someone needs to do violence to them.
This isn't very nice, but it's a fact: civilization requires an Aegis. And
the only way to fight the bastards off in the end is through intelligence.
Cunning. Metis."
"Tactical cunning, like Odysseus and the Trojan Horse, or "
"Both that, and technological cunning. From time to time there is a
battle that is out and out won by a new technology like longbows at Crecy.
For most of history those battles happen only every few centuries you have
the chariot, the compound bow, gunpowder, ironclad ships, and so on. But
something happens around, say, the time that the Monitor, which the
Northerners believe to be the only ironclad warship on earth, just happens
to run into the Merrimack, of which the Southerners believe exactly the same
thing, and they pound the hell out of each other for hours and hours. That's
as good a point as any to identify as the moment when a spectacular rise in
military technology takes off it's the elbow in the exponential curve. Now
it takes the world's essentially conservative military establishments a few
decades to really comprehend what has happened, but by the time we're in the
thick of the Second World War, it's accepted by everyone who doesn't have
his head completely up his ass that the war's going to be won by whichever
side has the best technology. So on the German side alone we've got rockets,
jet aircraft, nerve gas, wire guided missiles. And on the Allied side we've
got three vast efforts that put basically every top level hacker, nerd, and
geek to work: the codebreaking thing, which as you know gave rise to the
digital computer; the Manhattan Project, which gave us nuclear weapons; and
the Radiation Lab, which gave us the modern electronics industry. Do you
know why we won the Second World War, Randy?"
"I think you just told me."
"Because we built better stuff than the Germans?"
"Isn't that what you said?"
"But why did we build better stuff, Randy?"
"I guess I'm not competent to answer, Enoch, I haven't studied that
period well enough."
"Well the short answer is that we won because the Germans worshipped
Ares and we worshipped Athena."
"And am I supposed to gather that you, or your organization, had
something to do with all that?"
"Oh, come now, Randy! Let's not allow this to degenerate into
conspiracy theories."
"Sorry. I'm tired."
"So am I. Goodnight."
And then Enoch goes to sleep. Just like that. Randy doesn't.
To the Cryptonomicon!
***
Randy is mounting a known ciphertext attack: the hardest kind. He has
the ciphertext (the Arethusa intercepts) and nothing else. He doesn't even
know the algorithm that was used to encrypt them. In modern cryptanalysis,
this is unusual; normally the algorithms are public knowledge. That is
because algorithms that have been openly discussed and attacked within the
academic community tend to be much stronger than ones that have been kept
secret. People who rely on keeping their algorithms secret are ruined as
soon as that secret gets out. But Arethusa dates from World War II, when
people were much less canny about such things.
This would be a hell of a lot easier if Randy knew some of the
plaintext that is encrypted within these messages. Of course, if he knew all
of the plaintext, he wouldn't even need to decrypt them; breaking Arethusa
in that case would be an academic exercise.
There is a compromise between the two extremes of, on the one hand, not
knowing any of the plaintext at all, and, on the other, knowing all of it.
In the Cryptonomicon that falls under the heading of cribs. A crib is an
educated guess as to what words or phrases might be present in the message.
For example if you were decrypting German messages from World War II, you
might guess that the plaintext included the phrase "HElL HITLER" or "SIEG
HElL." You might pick out a sequence of ten characters at random and say,
"Let's assume that this represented HEIL HITLER. If that is the case, then
what would it imply about the remainder of the message?"
Randy's not expecting to find any HEILHITLERs in the Arethusa messages,
but there might be other predictable words. He's been making a list of cribs
in his head: MANILA, certainly. WATERHOUSE, perhaps. And now he's thinking
GOLD and BULLION. So, in the case of MANILA he could pick out any six
character string from the intercepts and say, "What if these characters are
the encrypted form of MANILA?" and then work from there. If he were working
with an intercept only six characters long, then there would be only one
such six character segment to choose from. A seven character long message
would give him two possibilities: it could be the first six or the last six
characters. The upshot is that for a message intercept that is n characters
long, the number of six character long segments is equal to (n – 5).
In the case of a 105 character long intercept, he will have 100 different
possible locations for the word MANILA. Actually, a hundred and one: because
it's of course possible even likely that MANILA is not in there at all. But
each of these 100 guesses has its own set of ramifications vis à vis all of
the other characters in the message. What those ramifications are, exactly,
depends on what assumptions Randy is making about the underlying algorithm.
As far as that goes: the more he thinks about it, the more he believes
he has some good stuff to go on thanks to Enoch, who (in retrospect) has
been feeding him some useful clues when not spamming him through the bars
with theogonical analysis. Enoch mentioned that when the NSA started
attacking what later turned out to be the fake Arethusa intercepts, they
were going on the assumption that they were somehow related to another
cryptosystem dubbed Azure. And sure enough, Randy learns from the
Cryptonomicon that Azure was an oddball system used by both the Nipponese
and the Germans that employed a mathematical algorithm to generate a
different one time pad every day. This is awfully vague, but it helps Randy
rule out a lot. He knows for example that Arethusa isn't a rotor system like
Enigma. And he knows that if he can find two messages that were sent on the
same day, they will probably use the same one time pad.
What kind of mathematical algorithm was used? The contents of Grandpa's
trunk provide clues. He remembers the photograph of Grandpa with Turing and
von Hacklheber at Princeton, where all three of them were evidently fooling
around with zeta functions. And in the trunk were several monographs on the
same subject. And the Cryptonomicon states that zeta functions are even
today being used in cryptography, as sequence generators which is to say,
machines for spitting out series of pseudo random numbers, which is exactly
what a one time pad is. Everything points to that Azure and Arethusa are
siblings and that both are just implementations of zeta functions.
The big thing standing in his way right now is that he doesn't have any
textbooks on zeta functions sitting around his jail cell. The contents of
Grandpa's trunk would be an excellent resource but they are currently stored
in a room in Chester's house. But on the other hand, Chester's rich, and he
wants to help.
Randy calls for a guard and demands to see Attorney Alejandro. Enoch
Root goes very still for a few moments, and then shunts directly back into
the loping, untroubled sleep of a man who is exactly where he wants to be.
Chapter 89 SLAVES
People smell all kinds of ways before they have burned, but only one
way afterwards. As the Army boys lead Waterhouse down into the darkness, he
sniffs cautiously, hoping he won't smell that smell.
Mostly it smells like oil, diesel, hot steel, the brimstony tang of
burnt rubber and exploded munitions. These smells are overpoweringly strong.
He draws in a lungful of reek, blows it out. And that, of course, is when he
catches a whiff of barbecue and knows that this concrete coated island is,
among other things, a crematorium.
He is following the Army boys down black smudged tunnels bored through
a variegated matrix of concrete, masonry, and solid rock. The caves were
there first, eaten into the stone by rain and waves, then enlarged and
rationalized by Spaniards with chisels, jackhammers, blasting powder. Then
along came the Americans with bricks, and finally the Nipponese with
reinforced concrete.
As they work their way into the maze, they pass down some tunnels that
apparently acted like blowtorches: the walls have been scoured clean as if a
torrent had been running through it for a million years, silver pools lie on
the floor where guns or filing cabinets melted into puddles. Stored heat
still radiates from the walls, adding to the heat of the Philippine climate,
making all of them sweat even more, if that is possible.
Other corridors, other rooms were nothing more than backwaters in the
river of fire. Looking into doorways, Waterhouse can see books that were
charred but not consumed, blackened papers spilling from burst cabinets "One
moment," he says. His escort spins around just in time to see Waterhouse
ducking through a low door into a tiny room, where something has caught his
eye.
It's a heavy wooden cabinet, mostly transmuted into charcoal now, so it
looks like the cabinet's gone but its shadow persists. Someone has already
pulled one of its doors off its hinges, allowing black confetti to flood
into the room. The cabinet was filled with slips of paper, mostly burned
now, but thrusting his hand into the ash heap (slowly! Most of this place is
still hot) Waterhouse pulls out a bundle, nearly intact.
"What kind of money is that?" the Army guy asks.
Waterhouse pulls a bill from the top of the bundle. The top is printed
in Japanese characters and bears an engraved picture of Tojo. He flips it
over. The back is printed in English: TEN POUNDS.
"Australian currency," Waterhouse says.
"Don't look Australian to me," the Army guy says, glowering at Tojo.
"If the Nips had won..." Waterhouse says, and shrugs. He throws the
stack of ten pound notes onto the ash heap of history and carries his single
copy out into the corridor. A necklace of lightbulbs has been strung along
the ceiling. The light glances off what looks like pools of quicksilver on
the floor: the remains of guns, belt buckles, steel cabinets and doorknobs,
melted down into puddles in the holocaust, now congealed.
The fine print on the bill says, IMPERIAL RESERVE BANK, MANILA.
"Sir! You okay?" the Army guy says. Waterhouse realizes he's been
thinking for a while.
"Carry on," he says, and stuffs the bill in his pocket.
He was thinking about whether it was okay to take some of this money
with him. It's okay to take souvenirs, but not to loot. So he can take the
money if it's worthless, but not if it is real money.
Now, someone who was not so inclined to think and ponder everything to
the nth degree would immediately see that the money was worthless, because,
after all, the Japanese did not take Australia and never will. So that
money's just a souvenir, right?
Probably right. The money is effectively worthless. But if Waterhouse
were to find a real Australian ten pound note and read the fine print, it
would also probably bear the imprimatur of a reserve bank somewhere.
Two pieces of paper, each claiming to be worth ten pounds, each very
official looking, each bearing the name of a bank. One of them a worthless
souvenir and one legal tender for all debts public and private. What gives?
What it comes down to is that people trust the claims printed on one of
those pieces of paper but don't trust the other. They believe that you could
take the real Australian note to a bank in Melbourne, slide it over the
counter, and get silver or gold or something at least in exchange for it.
Trust goes a long way, but at some point, if you're going to sponsor a
stable currency, you must put up or shut up. Somewhere, you have to actually
have a shitload of gold in the basement. Around the time of the evacuation
from Dunkirk, when the Brits were looking at an imminent invasion of their
islands by the Germans, they took all of their gold reserves, loaded them on
board some battleships and passenger liners, and squirted them across the
Atlantic to banks in Toronto and Montreal. This would have enabled them to
keep their currency afloat even if the Germans had overrun London.
But the Japanese have to play by the same rules as everyone else. Oh,
sure, you can get a kind of submission from a conquered people by scaring
the shit out of them, but it doesn't work very well to hold a knife to
someone's throat and say, "I want you to believe that this piece of paper is
worth ten pounds sterling." They might say that they believe it, but they
won't really believe it. They won't act as if they believe it. And if they
don't act that way, then there is no currency, workers don't get paid (you
can enslave them, but you still have to pay the slavedrivers), the economy
doesn't work, you can't extract the natural resources that prompted you to
conquer the country in the first place. Basically, if you're going to run an
economy you have to have a currency. When someone walks into a bank with one
of your notes you have to be able to give them gold in exchange for it.
The Nipponese are maniacs for planning things out. Waterhouse knows
this; he has been reading their decrypted messages twelve, eighteen hours a
day for a couple of years now, he knows their minds. He knows, as surely as
he knows how to play a D major scale, that the Nipponese must have given
thought to this problem of backing their imperial currency not just for
Australia but New Zealand, New Guinea, the Philippines, Hong Kong, China,
Indochina, Korea, Manchuria.
How much gold and silver would you need in order to convince that many
human beings that your paper currency was actually worth some thing? Where
would you put it?
The escort takes him down a couple of levels and finally to a
surprisingly large room, deep down. If they are in the bowels of the island,
then this must be the vermiform appendix or something. It is glob shaped,
walls smooth and ripply in most places, chisel gnawed where men have seen
fit to enlarge it. The walls are still cool and so is the air.
There are long tables in this room, and at least three dozen empty
chairs so Waterhouse nips in tiny whiffs of air at first, terrified that he
will smell dead people. But he doesn't.
It figures. They're in the center of the rock. There's only one way
into the room. No way to get a good draft through this place no blowtorch
effect no burning at all, apparently. This room was bypassed. The air is as
thick as cold gravy.
"Found forty dead in this room," the escort says.
"Dead of what?"
"Asphyxiation."
"Officers?"
"One Japanese captain. The rest were slaves."
Before the war started, the term "slave" was, to Lawrence Waterhouse,
as obsolete as "cooper" or "chandler." Now that the Nazis and the Nipponese
have revived the practice, he hears it all the time. War's weird.
His eyes have been adjusting to the dim light ever since they stepped
into the chamber. There's a single 25 watt bulb for the whole cavern and the
walls absorb nearly all of the light.
He can see squarish things on the tables, one in front of each chair.
When he first came in he assumed that these were sheets of paper indeed,
some of them are. But as his vision gets better he can see that most of them
are hollow frames, sprinkled with abstract patterns of round dots.
He fumbles for his flashlight and nails the switch. Mostly all it does
is create a fuzzy yellow cone of oily smoke, swirling fatly and lazily in
front of him. He steps forward shooing the smoke out of his way, and bends
over the table.
It's an abacus, its beads still frozen in the middle of some
calculation. Two feet down the table is another. Then another.
He turns to face the Army guy. "What's the plural of abacus?"
"Beg pardon, sir?"
"Shall we say abaci?"
"Whatever you say, sir."
"Were any of these abaci touched by any of your men?"
There is a flurry of discussion. The Army guy has to confer with
several enlisted men, dispatch gofers to interview people, and make a couple
of phone calls. This is a good sign; there are a lot of men who would just
say "no, sir," or whatever they thought Waterhouse wanted to hear, and then
he would never know whether they were telling the truth. This guy seems to
understand that it's important for Waterhouse to get an honest answer.
Waterhouse walks up and down the rows of tables with his hands clasped
carefully behind his back, looking at the abaci. Next to most of them is a
sheet of paper, or a whole notebook, with a pencil handy. These are all
covered with numbers. From place to place, he sees a Chinese character.
"Did any of you see the bodies of these slaves?" he says to an enlisted
man.
"Yes, sir. I helped carry 'em out."
"Did they look like Filipinos?"
"No, sir. They looked like regular Asiatics."
"Chinese, Korean, something like that?"
"Yes, sir."
After a few minutes, the answer comes back: no one will admit to having
touched an abacus. This chamber was the last part of the fortress to be
reached by Americans. The bodies of the slaves were mostly found piled up
near the door. The body of the Nipponese officer was on the bottom of the
pile. The door had been locked from the inside. It is a metal door, and has
a slight outward bulge, as the fire upstairs apparently sucked all the air
out of the room in a big hurry.
"Okay," Waterhouse says, "I am going to go upstairs and report back to
Brisbane. I am personally going to take this room apart like an
archaeologist. Make sure that nothing is touched. Especially the abaci."
Chapter 90 ARETHUSA
Attorney Alejandro comes to see Randy the next day and they swap small
talk about the weather and the Philippine Basketball Association whilst
exchanging handwritten slips of paper across the table. Randy gives his
lawyer a note saying, "Give this note to Chester" and then another note
asking Chester to go though that trunk and find any old documents on the
subject of zeta functions and get them to Randy somehow. Attorney Alejandro
gives Randy a somewhat defensive and yet self congratulatory note itemizing
his recent efforts on Randy's behalf, which is probably meant to be
encouraging but which Randy finds to be unsettlingly vague. He had rather
expected some specific results by this point. He reads it and looks askance
at Attorney Alejandro, who grimaces and taps himself on the jaw, which is
code for "the Dentist" and which Randy interprets to mean that said
billionaire is interfering with whatever Attorney Alejandro is trying to
accomplish. Randy hands Attorney Alejandro another note saying, "Give this
note to Avi" and then yet another note asking Avi to find out whether
General Wing is one of the Crypt's clients.
Then nothing happens for a week. Since Randy lacks the information that
he needs about zeta functions, he can't do any actual codebreaking work
during this week. But he can lay the groundwork for the work he'll do later.
The Cryptonomicon contains numerous hunks of C code intended to perform
certain basic cryptanalytical operations, but a lot of it is folk code
(poorly written) and anyway needs to be translated into the more modern C++
language. So Randy does that. The Cryptonomicon also describes various
algorithms that will probably come in handy, and Randy implements those in
C++ too. It is scut work, but he has nothing else to do, and one of the good
things about this particular kind of scut work is that it acquaints you with
every little detail of the mathematics; if you don't understand the math you
can't write the code. As the days go by, his mind turns into some
approximation of a cryptanalyst's. This transformation is indexed by the
slow accretion of code in his code breaking library.
He and Enoch Root get into the habit of having conversations during and
after their meals. Both of them seem to have rather involved inner lives
that require lots of maintenance and so the rest of the day they ignore each
other. Anecdote by anecdote, Randy plots the trajectory of his life to date.
Likewise Enoch speaks vaguely of some wartime events, then about what it was
like to live in postwar England, and then in the U.S. in the fifties.
Apparently he was a Catholic priest for a while but got kicked out of the
Church for some reason; he doesn't say why, and Randy doesn't ask. After
that all is vague. He mentions that he began spending large amounts of time
in the Philippines during the Vietnam War, which fits in with Randy's
general hypothesis: if it's true that Old Man Comstock had U.S. troops
combing the Philippine boondocks for the Primary, then Enoch would have
wanted to be around, to interfere or at least keep an eye on them. Enoch
claims he's also been gadding about trying to bring Internet stuff to China,
but to Randy this just sounds like a cover story for something else.
It is hard not to get the idea that Enoch Root and General Wing may
have other reasons to be pissed off at each other.
"Like, if I can just play Plato's advocate here, what do you mean
exactly when you talk about defending civilization?"
"Oh, Randy, you know what I mean."
"Yeah, but China is civilized, right? Has been for a while."
"Yes."
"So maybe you and General Wing are actually on the same team."
"If the Chinese are so civilized, how come they never invent anything?"
"What paper, gunpowder "
"Anything in the last millennium I mean.
"Beats me. What do you think, Enoch?"
"It's like the Germans in the Second World War."
"I know that all the bright lights fled Germany in the thirties
Einstein, Born "
"And Schrödinger, and von Neumann, and others but do you know why they
fled?"
"Well, because they didn't like the Nazis, of course!"
"But do you know specifically why the Nazis didn't like them?"
"A lot of them were Jews."
"It goes deeper than mere anti Semitism. Hilbert, Russell, Whitehead,
Gödel, all of them were engaged in a monumental act of tearing mathematics
down and beginning from scratch. But the Nazis believed that mathematics was
a heroic science whose purpose was to reduce chaos to order just as National
Socialism was supposed to do in the political sphere."
"Okay," Randy says, "but what the Nazis didn't understand was that if
you tore it down and rebuilt it, it was even more heroic than before."
"Indeed. It led to a renaissance," Root says, "like in the seventeenth
century, when the Puritans tore everything to rubble and then slowly built
it back up from scratch. Over and over again we see the pattern of the
Titanomachia repeated the old gods are thrown down, chaos returns, but out
of the chaos, the same patterns reemerge."
"Okay. So again you were talking about civilization?"
"Ares always reemerges from the chaos. It will never go away. Athenian
civilization defends itself from the forces of Ares with metis, or
technology. Technology is built on science. Science is like the alchemists'
uroburos, continually eating its own tail. The process of science doesn't
work unless young scientists have the freedom to attack and tear down old
dogmas, to engage in an ongoing Titanomachia. Science flourishes where art
and free speech flourish."
"Sounds teleological, Enoch. Free countries get better science, hence
superior military power, hence get to defend their freedoms. You're
proclaiming a sort of Manifest Destiny here."
"Well, someone's got to do it."
"Aren't we beyond that sort of thing now?"
"I know you're just saying that to infuriate me. Sometimes, Randy, Ares
gets chained up in a barrel for a few years, but he never goes away. The
next time he emerges, Randy, the conflict is going to revolve around bio ,
micro , and nanotechnology. Who's going to win?"
"I don't know."
"Are you not just a bit unsettled by not knowing?"
"Look, Enoch, I'm trying my best here I really am but I'm broke, and
I'm locked up in this fucking cage, all right?"
"Oh, stop whining."
"What about you? Suppose you go back to your yam farm, or whatever, and
one day your shovel hits something that rings, and you suddenly dig up a few
kilotons of gold? You'd invest it all in high tech weapons?"
Root, not surprisingly, has an answer: the gold was stolen from all of
Asia by the Nipponese, who intended to use it as backing for a currency that
would become the legal tender of the Greater East Asia Co Prosperity Sphere,
and that while it goes without saying that those particular Nips were among
the most egregious buttheads in planetary history, some aspects of their
plan weren't such a shitty idea. That to the extent life still sucks for
many Asians, things would get a lot better, for a lot of people, if the
continent's economy could get jerked into the twenty first, or at least the
twentieth, century and hopefully stay there for a while instead of
collapsing whenever some dictator's nephew in charge of a central bank loses
control of his sphincters and wipes out a major currency. So maybe
stabilizing the currency situation would be a good thing to accomplish with
a shitload of gold, and that's the only moral thing to do with it anyway
considering whom it was stolen from you can't just go out and spend it.
Randy finds this answer appropriately sophisticated and Jesuitical and
eerily in sync with what Avi has written into the latest edition of the
Epiphyte(2) Business Plan.
After a decent number of days has gone by, Enoch Root comes right back
and asks Randy what he'd do with a few kilotons of gold, and Randy mentions
the Holocaust Education and Avoidance Pod. Turns out that Enoch Root already
knows about the HEAP, has already downloaded various revisions of it over
the gleaming new communications network that Randy and the Dentist strung
through the islands, thinks it's right in line with his ideas vis à vis
Athena, Aegis, etc., but has any number of difficult questions and trenchant
criticisms.
Shortly thereafter, Avi himself comes in for a visit and says very
little, but does let Randy know that, yes, General Wing is one of the
Crypt's clients. The grizzled Chinese gentlemen who sat around the table
with them in Kinakuta, and whose mugs were secretly captured by the pinhole
camera on Randy's laptop, are among Wing's chief lieutenants. Avi also lets
him know that the legal pressure has eased; the Dentist has suddenly reined
in Andrew Loeb and allowed any number of legal deadlines to be extended. The
fact that Avi says nothing at all about the sunken submarine would seem to
imply that the salvage operation is going well, or at least going.
Randy's still processing these pieces of news when he receives a visit
from none other than the Dentist himself.
"I assume that you think I had you framed," says Dr. Hubert Kepler.
He and Randy are alone in a room together, but Randy is conscious of
many aides, bodyguards, lawyers, and Furies or Harpies or whatever just on
the other side of the nearest door. The Dentist seems ever so slightly
amused, but Randy gradually collects that he is actually quite serious. The
Dentist's upper lip is permanently arched, or shorter than it ought to be,
or both, with the result that his glacier white incisors are always slightly
exposed, and depending on how the light is hitting his face he looks either
vaguely beaverish or else as if he's none too effectively fighting back a
sneering grin. Even a gentle soul like Randy cannot gaze upon such a face
without thinking how much better it would look with the application of some
knuckles. From the perfection of Hubert Kepler's dentition it is possible to
infer that he had a sheltered upbringing (full time bodyguards from the time
his adult teeth erupted from the gumline) or that his choice of careers was
motivated by a very personal interest in reconstructive oral surgery. "And I
know that you're probably not going to believe me. But I'm here to say that
I had nothing to do with what happened at the airport."
The Dentist now stops and gazes at Randy for a while, by no means one
of those guys who feels any need to nervously fill in gaps in conversation.
And so it is during the ensuing, lengthy pause that Randy figures out that
the Dentist isn't grinning at all, that his face is simply in its state of
natural repose. Randy shudders a bit just to think of what it must be like
to never be able to lose this alternatively beaverish and sneering look. For
your lover to gaze on you while you're sleeping and see this. Of course, if
the stories are to be believed, Victoria Vigo has her own ways of exacting
retribution, and so maybe Hubert Kepler really is suffering the abuse and
humiliation that his face seems to be asking for. Randy heaves a little sigh
when he thinks of this, sensing some trace of cosmic symmetry revealed.
Kepler is certainly correct in saying that Randy is not inclined to
believe a single word he says. The only way for Kepler to gain any
credibility is for him to show up in person at this jail and utter the words
face to face, which given all of the other things that he could be doing,
for fun or profit or both, at this moment, gives a lot of weight to what
he's saying. It is implicit that if the Dentist wanted to lie, badly and
baldly, to Randy, he could send his lawyers around to do it for him, or just
send him a fucking telegram, for that matter. So either he's telling the
truth, or else he's lying but it's very important to him that Randy should
believe in his lies. Randy cannot work out why on earth the Dentist should
give a flying fuck whether Randy believes in his lies or not, which pushes
him in the direction of thinking that maybe he really is telling the truth.
"Who framed me, then?" Randy asks, kind of rhetorically. He was just in
the middle of doing some pretty cool C++ coding when he got yanked out of
his cell to have this surprise encounter with the Dentist, and is surprising
himself with just how bored and irritated he is. He has reverted, in other
words, back into a pure balls to the wall nerdism rivaled only by his early
game coding days back in Seattle. The sheer depth and involution of the
current nerdism binge would be hard to convey to anyone. Intellectually, he
is juggling half a dozen lit torches, Ming vases, live puppies, and running
chainsaws. In this frame of mind he cannot bring himself to give a shit
about the fact that this incredibly powerful billionaire has gone to a lot
of trouble to come and F2F with him. And so he asks the above question as
nothing more than a perfunctory gesture, the subtext being I wish you'd go
away but minimal standards of social decency dictate that I should say
something. The Dentist, no slouch himself in the social ineptness
department, comes right back as if it were an actual request for
information. "I can only assume that you have somehow gotten embroiled with
someone who has a lot of influence in this country. It appears that someone
is trying to send you a "
"No! Just stop," Randy says. "Don't say it." Hubert Kepler is now
looking at him quizzically, so Randy continues. "The message theory doesn't
hold up."
Kepler looks genuinely baffled for a few moments, then actually does
grin a little bit. "Well, it certainly isn't an attempt to do away with you,
because "
"Obviously," Randy says.
"Yes. Obviously."
There is another one of those long pauses; Kepler seems unsure of
himself. Randy arches his back and stretches. "The chair in my cell is not
what you call ergonomic," he says. He holds his arms out and wiggles the
fingers. "My carpals are going to start acting up again. I can tell."
Randy is looking at Kepler pretty carefully when he says this, and
there's no doubt that genuine astonishment is now spreading across the
Dentist's face. The Dentist only has one facial expression (already
described) but it changes in intensity; it gets more so and less so
depending on his emotions. The Dentist's expression proves he had no idea,
until now, that Randy's been allowed to have a computer in his cell. In the
trying to figure out what the fuck is going on department, the computer is
the single most important datum, and Kepler didn't even know about it until
just now. So to whatever extent the Dentist actually gives a shit, he has a
lot of thinking to do. He excuses himself pretty soon after.
Not half an hour later, some twenty five year old American guy with a
ponytail shows up and has a brief audience with Randy. It turns out that he
works for Chester in Seattle and has just now flown across the Pacific on
Chester's personal jet and came here straight from the airport. He is
completely jazzed, totally in bat out of hell mode, and cannot shut up. The
sheer amazingness of his sudden flight across the ocean on a rich guy's
private jet has made a really, really deep impression on him and he
obviously needs someone to share it with. He has brought a "care package"
consisting of some junk food, a few trashy novels, the largest bottle of
Pepto Bismol Randy's ever seen, a CD Walkman, and a cubical stack of CDs.
This guy can't get over the battery thing; he was told to bring a lot of
extra batteries, and so he did, and sure enough, between the luggage guys at
the airport and the customs inspectors, all of the batteries disappeared en
route except for one package that he's got in the pocket of his long baggy
Seattle grunge boy shorts. Seattle's full of guys like this who flipped a
coin when they graduated from college (heads Prague, tails Seattle) and just
showed up with this expectation that because they were young and smart
they'd find a job and begin making money, and then appallingly enough did
exactly that. Randy can't figure out what the world must look like to a guy
like this. He has a hard time getting rid of the guy, who shares the common
assumption (increasingly annoying) that just because Randy's in jail, he
doesn't have a life, has nothing better to do than interface with visitors.
When Randy gets back to his cell, he sits crosslegged on his bed with
the Walkman and begins dealing out the CDs like cards in a solitaire game.
The selection is pretty reasonable: a two disc set of the Brandenburg
Concertos, a collection of Bach organ fugues (nerds have a thing about
Bach), some Louis Armstrong, some Wynton Marsalis, and then various
selections from Hammerdown Systems, which is a Seattle based record label in
which Chester is a major investor. It is a second generation Seattle scene
record label; all of its artists are young people who came to Seattle after
they graduated from college in search of the legendary Seattle music scene
and discovered that it didn't really exist it was just a couple of dozen
guys who sat around playing guitar in one another's basements and so who
were basically forced to choose between going home in ignominy or
fabricating the Seattle music scene of their imagination from whole cloth.
This led to the establishment of any number of small clubs, and the
foundation of many bands, that were not rooted in any kind of authentic
reality whatsoever but merely reflected the dreams and aspiration of pan
global young adults who had all flocked to Seattle on the same chimera hunt.
This second wave scene came in for a lot of abuse from those of the original
two dozen people who had not yet died of drug overdose or suicide. There was
something of a backlash; and yet, about thirty six hours after the backlash
reached its maximum intensity, there was an antibacklash backlash from young
immigrants who asserted their right to some kind of unique cultural identity
as people who had naively come to Seattle and discovered that there was no
there there and that they would have to create it themselves. Fueled by that
conviction, and by their own youthful libidinous energy, and by a few
cultural commentators who found this whole scenario fetchingly post modern,
they started a whole lot of second generation bands and even a couple of
record labels, of which Hammerdown Systems is the only one that didn't
either go out of business or get turned into a wholly owned subsidiary of an
L.A. or New York based major label inside of six months.
And so Chester has decided to favor Randy with those recent Hammerdown
selections of which he is most proud. Perversely, almost all of these are
from bands that are not even in Seattle at all but in small, prohibitively
hip college towns in North Carolina and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. But
Randy does find one from an evidently Seattle based band called Shekondar.
Evidently, that is, because on the back of the CD is a blurry photograph of
several band members drinking sixteen ounce lattes in cups bearing the logo
of a chain of coffee bars that as far as Randy knows has not yet burst free
from the city limits of Seattle to crush everything in its path worldwide in
the now wearisomely predictable manner of Seattle based companies. Now,
Shekondar happens to have been the name of an especially foul underworld
deity who played an important role in some of the game scenarios that Randy
played with Avi and Chester and the gang back in the old days. Randy opens
up the case of the CD and notes immediately that the disc has the golden hue
of a master, not the traditional silver of a mere copy. Randy puts that
golden master into his Walkman and hits the Play button and is treated to
some passable post Cobain mortem material, genetically engineered to have
nothing in common with what is traditionally thought of as the Seattle sound
and in that sense absolutely typical of Seattle du jour. He jumps forward
through a couple more tracks and then rips the earphones off his head,
cursing, as the Walkman attempts to translate a stream of pure digital
information, representing something other than music, into sound. This feels
a bit like needles of dry ice jabbed into his eardrums.
Randy moves the golden disc to the CD ROM drive that is built into his
laptop, and checks it out. Indeed it does sport a couple of audio tracks (as
he's discovered) but almost all of the disc's capacity is given over to
computer files. There are several directories, or folders, each named after
one of the documents that was in grandfather's trunk. Within each of these
directories is a long list of files named PAGE.001.jpeg, PAGE.002.jpeg, and
so on. Randy starts opening them up, using the same net browser software
that he uses to read the Cryptonomicon, and discovers that they are all
scanned image files. Evidently Chester had a bunch of minions de staple
those documents and feed them page by page through a scanner. At the same
time he must have had graphic artists, presumably people he knows through
Hammerdown Systems, hastily whipping up this fake Shekondar album cover.
It's even got a package insert, photographs of Shekondar in concert. What it
really is is a parody of the post Seattle Scene Seattle scene that aligns
perfectly with the faulty notions of same that could be expected in the
imagination of a Philippine airport customs inspector, who like everyone
else is fantasizing about moving to Seattle. The lead guitarist looks kind
of like Chester in a wig.
All of this sneaky stuff is probably gratuitous. It probably would have
been okay for Chester to just Fedex the fucking documents straight to the
jail. But Chester, sitting in his house by Lake Washington, is working on a
set of assumptions about Manila just as faulty as what half of the world
believes about Seattle. At least Randy gets a laugh out of it before diving
into zeta functions.
A word about libido: it's been something like three weeks for Randy
now. He was just beginning to address this situation when a highly
intelligent and perceptive Catholic ex priest was suddenly introduced into
the cell next to his and began sleeping six inches away from him. Since
then, masturbation per se has been pretty much out of the question. To the
extent Randy believes in any god at all, he's been praying for a nocturnal
emission. His prostate gland now has the size and consistency of a croquet
ball. He feels it all the time, and has begun to think of it as his Hunk of
Burning Love. Randy had a spot of prostate trouble once when he was
chronically drinking too much coffee, and it made everything between his
nipples and his knees hurt. The urologist explained that Little Man 'tate is
neurologically wired into just about every other part of your body, and he
didn't have to exert any rhetorical skill, or marshall any detailed
arguments, in order to make Randy believe that. Randy has believed, ever
since, that the ability of men to become moronically obsessed with
copulation is in some way a reflection of this wiring diagram; when you are
ready to give the external world the benefit of your genetic material, i.e.
when the 'tate is fully loaded, even your pinkies and eyelids know about it.
And so it might be expected that Randy would be thinking all the time
about America Shaftoe, his sexual target of choice, who (just to make things
a lot worse) has probably been spending a lot of time in wetsuits lately.
And indeed that is where his thoughts were directed at the moment Enoch Root
was dragged in. But since then it has become evident that he needs to
exercise some kind of iron mental discipline here and not think about Amy at
all. Whilst juggling all of those chainsaws and puppies, he is also walking
a sort of intellectual tightrope, with decryption of the Arethusa intercepts
at the end of that tightrope, and as long as he keeps his eyes fixed on that
goal and just keeps putting one foot in front of the other, he'll get there.
Amy in a wetsuit is down below somewhere, no doubt trying to be emotionally
supportive, but if he even glances in her direction he's a goner.
What he's reading here is a set of academic papers, dating to the 1930s
and early forties, that have been heavily marked up by his grandfather, who
went through them none too subtly gleaning anything that could be useful on
the cryptographic front. That it's none too subtle is a good thing for
Randy, whose grasp of pure number theory is just barely adequate here.
Chester's minions had to scan not only the fronts of these pages but the
backs too, which were originally blank but on which Grandpa wrote many
notes. For example there is a paper written by Alan Turing in 1937 in which
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse has found some kind of error, or at least,
something that Turing didn't go into in sufficient detail, forcing him to
cover several pages with annotations. Randy's blood absolutely runs cold at
the very idea that he is being so presumptuous as to participate in such a
colloquy. When he realizes just how deep over his head he is intellectually,
he turns off his computer and goes to bed and sleeps the bootless sleep of
the depressed for ten hours. Eventually he convinces himself that most of
the junk in these papers probably has no direct relevance to Arethusa and
that he just needs to calm down and filter the material carefully.
Two weeks pass. His prayers vis à vis the Hunk of Burning Love are
answered, giving him at least a couple of days of relief during which he can
admit the concept of Amy Shaftoe into his awareness, but only in a really
austere and passionless way. Attorney Alejandro shows up occasionally to
tell Randy that things are not going very well. Surprising obstacles have
arisen. All of the people he was planning to bribe have been preemptively
counter bribed by Someone. These meetings are tedious for Randy, who thinks
he has figured everything out. To begin with it's Wing, and not the Dentist,
who has caused all of this, and so Attorney Alejandro's working on faulty
assumptions.
Enoch, when he called Randy on the plane, said his old NSA buddy was
working for one of the Crypt's clients. It seems clear now that this client
is Wing. Consequently Wing knows that Randy has Arethusa. Wing believes that
the Arethusa intercepts contain information about the location of the
Primary. He wants Randy to decrypt those messages so that he'll know where
to dig. Hence the whole setup with the laptop.
All of Attorney Alejandro's efforts to spring Randy loose will be
unavailing until Wing has the information that he wants or thinks he does.
Then, all of a sudden, the ice will break, and Randy will unexpectedly be
cut loose on a technicality. Randy's so sure of this that he finds Attorney
Alejandro's visits annoying. He would like to explain all of this so that
Attorney Alejandro could knock it off with the wild goose chase, and his
increasingly bleak and dull situation reports on same. But then Wing, who
presumably surveils these attorney/client conferences, would know that Randy
had figured out the whole game, and Randy doesn't want Wing to know that. So
he nods through these meetings with his lawyer and then, for good measure,
goes back and tries to sound convincingly bewildered and depressed as he
gives Enoch Root the update.
He gets to the point, conceptually, where his grandfather was when he
commenced breaking the Arethusa messages. That is, he has a theory in mind
now of how Arethusa worked. If he doesn't know the exact algorithm, he knows
what family of algorithms it belongs to, and that gives him a search space
with many fewer dimensions than he had before. Certainly few enough for a
modern computer to explore. He goes on a forty eight hour hacking binge. The
nerve damage in his wrists has mounted to the point where he practically has
sparks shooting out of his fingertips. His doctor told him never again to
work on these nonergonomic keyboards. His eyes start to go out on him too,
and he has to invert the screen colors and work with white letters on a
black background, gradually increasing the size of the letters as he loses
the ability to focus. But at last he gets something that he thinks is going
to work, and he fires it up and sets it to running on the Arethusa
intercepts, which live inside the computer's memory but have never yet been
displayed upon its screen. He falls asleep. When he wakes up, the computer
is informing him that he's got a probable break into one of the messages.
Actually, three of them, all intercepted on 4 April 1945 and hence all
encrypted using the same keystream.
Unlike human codebreakers, computers can't read English. They can't
even recognize it. They can crank out possible decrypts of a message at
tremendous speed but given two character strings like
SEND HELP IMMEDIATELY
and
XUEBP TOAFF NMQPT
they have no inherent ability to recognize the first as a successful
decryption of a message and the second as a failure. But they can do a
frequency count on the letters. If the computer finds that E is the most
common, followed by T, and so on and so forth, then it's a pretty strong
indication that the text is some natural human language and not just random
gibberish. By using this and other slightly more sophisticated tests,
Randy's come up with a routine that should be pretty good at recognizing
success. And it's telling him this morning that 4 April 1945 is broken.
Randy dare not display the decrypted messages onscreen for fear that they
contain the information that Wing's looking for, and so he cannot actually
read these messages, as desperately as he'd like to. But by using a command
called grep, which searches through text files without opening them, he can
at least verify that the word MANILA occurs in two places.
Based on this break, with several more days' work Randy solves Arethusa
entirely. He comes up, in other words, with A(x) = K, such that for any
given date x he can figure out what K, the keystream for that day would be;
and just to prove it, he has the computer crank out K for every day in 1944
and 1945 and then use them to decrypt the Arethusa intercepts that came in
on those days (without displaying them) and does the frequency count on them
and verifies that it worked in each case.
So now he has decrypted all of the messages. But he cannot actually
read them without transmitting their contents to Wing. And so now, the
subliminal channel comes into play.
In cryptospeak, a subliminal channel is a trick whereby secret
information is subtly embedded in a stream of other stuff. Usually it means
something like manipulating the least significant bits of an image file to
convey a text message. Randy's drawn inspiration from the concept in his
labors here in jail. Yes, he has been working on decrypting Arethusa, and
that has involved screwing around with a tremendous number of files and
writing a lot of code. The number of separate files he's read, created, and
edited in the last few weeks is probably in the thousands. None of them have
had title bars on their windows, and so the Van Eck phreakers surveilling
him have presumably had a terrible time keeping track of which is which.
Randy can open a file by typing its title in a window and hitting the return
key, all of which happens so fast that the surveillance people probably
don't have time to read or understand what he has typed before it
disappears. This, he thinks, may have given him just a bit of leeway. He has
kept a subliminal channel going in the background: working on a few other
bits of code that have nothing to do with breaking Arethusa.
He got the idea for one of these when he was paging through the
Cryptonomicon and discovered an appendix that contained a listing of the
Morse code. Randy knew Morse code when he was a Boy Scout, and learned it
again a few years ago when he was studying for a ham radio license, and it
doesn't take him long to refresh his memory. And neither does it take him
very long to write a little bit of code that turns his computer's space bar
into a Morse code key, so that he can talk to the machine by whacking out
dots and dashes with his thumb. This might look a little conspicuous, if not
for the fact that Randy spends half of his time reading text files in little
windows on the screen, and the way you page through a text file in most UNIX
systems is by whacking the space bar. All he has to do is whack it in a
particular rhythm, a detail he's relying on the surveillance guys to miss.
The results all go into a buffer that is never displayed on the screen, and
get written out to files with completely meaningless names. So, for example,
Randy can whack out the following rhythm on his spacebar while pretending to
read a lengthy section of the Cryptonomicon:
dash dot dot dot (pause) dot dot dash (pause) dash dot (pause) dash dot
dot (pause) dash dash dash (pause) dash dot dash
which ought to spell out BUNDOK. He doesn't want to open the resulting
file on screen, but later, while he's in the middle of a long series of
other cryptic commands he can type
grep ndo (meaningless file name) > (another meaningless file name)
and grep will search through the first named file to see if it contains
the string "ndo" and put the results into the second named file, which he
can then check quite a bit later. He can also do "grep bun" and "grep dok"
and if the results of all of these greps are true then he can be pretty
confident that he has successfully coded the sequence "BUNDOK" into that one
file. In the same way he can code "COORDINATES" into some other file and
"LATITUDE" into another, and various numbers into others, and finally by
using another command called "cat" he can slowly combine these one word
files into longer ones. All of these demands the same ridiculous patience
as, say, tunneling out of a prison with a teaspoon, or sawing through iron
bars with a nail file. But there comes a point, after he's spent about a
month in jail, when suddenly he's able to make a window appear on the screen
that contains the following message:
COORDINATES OF PRIMARY STORAGE LOCATIONS
SITE BUNDOK: LATITUDE NORTH FOURTEEN DEGREES THIRTY TWO MINUTES . . .
LONGITUDE. EAST ONE TWO ZERO DEGREES FIFTY SIX MINUTES .
SITE MAKATI: (etc.)
SITE ELDORADO: (etc.)
All of which is total bullshit that he just made up. The coordinates
given for the Makati site are those of a luxury hotel in Manila, sited at a
major intersection that used to be the site of a Nipponese military airbase.
Randy happens to have these numbers in his computer because he took them
down during his very early days in Manila, when he was doing the GPS survey
work for siting Epiphyte's antennas. The coordinates given for SITE ELDORADO
are simply the location of the pile of gold bars that he and Doug Shaftoe
went to examine, plus a small random error factor. And those given for SITE
BUNDOK are the real coordinates of Golgotha plus a couple of random error
factors that should have Wing digging a deep hole in the ground about twenty
kilometers away from the real site.
How does Randy know that there is a site called Golgotha, and how does
he know its real coordinates? His computer told him using Morse code.
Computer keyboards have LEDs on them that are essentially kind of useless:
one to tell you when NUM LOCK is on, one for CAPS LOCK, and a third one
whose purpose Randy can't even remember. And for no reason other than the
general belief that every aspect of a computer should be under the control
of hackers, someone, some where, wrote some library routines called XLEDS
that make it possible for programmers to turn these things on and off at
will. And for a month, Randy's been writing a little program that makes use
of these routines to output the contents of a text file in Morse code, by
flashing one of those LEDs. And while all kinds of useless crap has been
scrolling across the screen of his computer as camouflage, Randy's been
hunched over gazing into the subliminal channel of that blinking LED,
reading the contents of the decrypted Arethusa intercepts. One of which
says:
THE PRIMARY IS CODE NAMED GOLGOTHA. COORDINATES OF THE MAIN DRIFT ARE
AS FOLLOWS: LATITUDE NORTH (etc.)
Chapter 91 THE BASEMENT
At this point in history (April of 1945) the word that denotes a person
who sits and performs arithmetical calculations is "computer." Waterhouse
has just found a whole room full of dead computers. Anyone in his right mind
anyone other than Waterhouse and some of his odd Bletchley Park friends,
like Turing would have taken one look at these computers and assumed that
they were the accounting department, or something, and that each slave in
the room was independently toting up figures. Waterhouse really ought to
remain open to this idea, because it is so obvious. But from the very
beginning he has had a hypothesis of his own, much more interesting and
peculiar.
It is that the slaves were functioning, collectively, as cogs in a
larger computation machine, each performing a small portion of a complex
calculation: receiving numbers from one computer, doing some arithmetic,
producing new numbers, passing them on to another computer.
Central Bureau is able to trace the identities of five of the dead
slaves. They came from places like Saigon, Singapore, Manila, and Java, but
they had in common that they were ethnic Chinese and they were shopkeepers.
Apparently the Nipponese had cast a wide net for expert abacus users and
brought them together, from all over the Co Prosperity Sphere, to this
island in Manila Bay.
Lawrence Waterhouse tracks down a computer of his own in the ruins of
Manila, a Mr. Gu, whose small import/export business was destroyed by the
war (it is hard to run such a business when you are on an island, and every
ship that leaves or approaches the island gets sunk by Americans).
Waterhouse shows Mr. Gu photos of the abaci as they were left by the dead
computers. Mr. Gu tells him what numbers are encoded in those bead
positions, as well as giving Waterhouse a couple of days' tutorial on basic
abacus technique. The important thing learned from this is not really abacus
skills but rather the remarkable speed and precision with which a computer
like Mr. Gu can churn out calculations.
At this point, Waterhouse has reduced the problem to pure data. About
half of it's in his memory and the other half scattered around on his desk.
The data includes all of the scratch paper left behind by the computers. To
match up the numbers on the scratch paper with the numbers left on the
abaci, and thus to compile a flash frozen image of the calculations that
were underway in that room when the apocalypse struck, is not that difficult
at least, by the standards of difficulty that apply during wartime, when,
for example, landing several thousand men and tons of equipment on a remote
island and taking it from heavily armed, suicidal Japanese troops with the
loss of only a few dozen lives is considered to be easy.
From this it is possible (though it approaches being difficult) to
generalize, and to figure out the underlying mathematical algorithm that
generated the numbers on the abaci. Waterhouse becomes familiar with some of
the computers' handwriting, and develops evidence that slips of scratch
paper were being handed from one computer to another and then to yet
another. Some of the computers had logarithm tables at their stations, which
is a really important clue as to what they were doing. In this way he is
able to draw up a map of the room, with each computer's station identified
by number, and a web of arrows interconnecting the stations, depicting the
flow of paper, and of data. This helps him visualize the collective
calculation as a whole, and to reconstruct what was going on in that
subterranean chamber.
For weeks it comes in bits and pieces, and then one evening, some
switch turns on in Lawrence Waterhouse's mind, and he knows, in some
preconscious way, that he's about to get it. He works for twenty four hours.
By that point he has come up with a lot of evidence to support, and none to
contradict, the hypothesis that this calculation is a variant of a zeta
function. He naps for six hours, gets up, and works for another thirty. By
that point he's figured out that it definitely is some kind of zeta
function, and he's managed to figure out several of its constants and terms.
He almost has it now. He sleeps for twelve hours, gets up and walks around
Manila to clear his head, goes back to work, and hammers away at it for
thirty six hours. This is the fun part, when big slabs of the puzzle,
painstakingly assembled from fragments, suddenly begin to lock together, and
the whole thing begins to make sense.
It all comes down to an equation written down on one sheet of paper.
Just looking at it makes him feel weirdly nostalgic, because it's the same
type of equation he used to work with back at Princeton with Alan and Rudy.
Another pause for sleep, then, because he has to be alert to do the
final thing.
The final thing is as follows: he goes into the basement of a building
in Manila. The building has been turned into a signals intelligence
headquarters by the United States Army. He is one of some half dozen people
on the face of the planet who are allowed to enter this particular room. The
room amounts to a bit more than a quarter of the basement's total square
footage, and in fact shares the basement with several other rooms, some of
which are larger than it is, and some of which are serving as offices for
men with higher rank than Waterhouse wears on his uniform. But there are a
few oddities connected with Waterhouse's room:
(1) At any given moment, no fewer than three United States Marines are
loitering directly in front of the door of this room, carrying pump shotguns
and other weapons optimized for close range indoor flesh shredding.
(2) Lots of power cables go into this room; it has its own fuse panel,
separate from the rest of the building's electrical system.
(3) The room emits muffled, yet deafening quasimusical noises.
(4) The room is referred to as the Basement, even though it's only part
of the basement. When "the Basement" is written down, it is capitalized.
When someone (let's say Lieutenant Colonel Earl Comstock) is going to
verbalize this, he will come to a complete stop in mid sentence, so that all
of the preceding words kind of pile into each other like cars in a colliding
train. He will, in fact, bracket "the Basement" between a pair of full one
second long caesuras. During the first of these, he will raise his eyebrows
and purse his lips simultaneously, altering the entire aspect ratio of his
face so that it becomes strikingly elongated in the vertical dimension, and
his eyes will dart sideways in case any Nipponese spies somehow managed to
escape the recent apocalypse and found a place to lurk around the fringes of
his peripheral vision. Then he will say "the" and then he will say
"Basement," drawing out the s and primly articulating the t. And then will
come another caesura during which he will incline his head towards the
listener and fix him with a sober, appraising look, seeming to demand some
kind of verbal or gestural acknowledgment from the listener that something
appallingly significant has just passed between them. And then he will
continue with whatever he was saying.
Waterhouse nods to the Marines, one of whom hauls the door open for
him. A really funny thing happened shortly after the Basement was
established, when it was still just a bunch of wooden crates and a stack of
32 foot long sewer pipe segments, and the electricians were still running in
the power lines: Lieutenant Colonel Earl Comstock tried to enter the
Basement to inspect it. But owing to a clerical error, Lieutenant Colonel
Earl Comstock's name was not on the list, and so a difference of opinion
ensued that culminated with one of the Marines drawing his Colt .45 and
taking the safety off and chambering a round, pressing the barrel of the
weapon directly into the center of Comstock's right thigh, and then
reminiscing about some of the spectacular femur bursting wounds he had
personally witnessed on places like Tarawa and in general trying to help
Comstock visualize just what his life would be like, both short– and
long term, if a large piece of lead were to pass through the middle of said
major bone. To everyone's surprise, Comstock was delighted with this
encounter, almost enchanted, and hasn't stopped talking about it since. Of
course, now his name's on the list.
The Basement is filled with ETC card machines and with several racks of
equipment devoid of corporate logos, inasmuch as they were designed and
largely built by Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse in Brisbane. When all of
these things are hooked together in just the right way, they constitute a
Digital Computer. Like a pipe organ, a Digital Computer is not so much a
machine as a meta machine that can be made into any of a number of different
machines by changing its internal configuration. At the moment, Lawrence
Pritchard Waterhouse is the only guy in the world who understands the
Digital Computer well enough to actually do this, though he's training a
couple of Comstock's ETC men to do it themselves. On the day in question, he
is turning the Digital Computer into a machine for calculating the zeta
function that he thinks is at the core of the cryptosystem called Azure or
Pufferfish.
The function requires a number of inputs. One of these is a date. Azure
is a system for generating one time pads that change every day, and
circumstantial evidence from the room of the dead abacus slaves tells him
that, at the moment of their death, they were working on the one time pad
for 6 August 1945, which is four months in the future. Waterhouse writes it
down in the European style (day of the month first, then month) as 06081945,
then lops off the leading zero to get 6,081,945 a pure quantity, an integer,
unmarred by decimal point, rounding error, or any of the other compromises
so abhorrent to number theorists. He uses this as one of the inputs to the
zeta function. The zeta function requires a few other inputs too, which the
person who designed this cryptosystem (presumably Rudy) was at liberty to
choose. Surmising which inputs Rudy used has occupied much of Waterhouse's
thoughts in the last week. He puts in the numbers he has guessed, anyway,
which is a matter of converting them to binary notation and then physically
incarnating those ones and zeros on a neat row of stainless steel toggle
switches: down for zero, up for one.
Finally he puts on his artilleryman's ear protectors and lets the
Digital Computer howl through the calculation. The room gets much hotter. A
vacuum tube burns out, and then another one. Waterhouse replaces them.
That's easy because Lieutenant Colonel Comstock has made a basically
infinite supply of tubes available to him quite a remarkable feat during
wartime. The filaments of all those massed tubes glow redly and shine
palpable radiant heat across the room. The smell of hot oil rises from the
louvers on the ETC card machines. The stack of blank cards in the input
hopper shortens mysteriously as they vanish into the machine. Cards skitter
into the output bin. Waterhouse pulls them out and looks at them. His heart
is pounding very hard.
It's quiet again. The cards have numbers on them, nothing more. They
just happen to be exactly the same numbers that were frozen on certain abaci
down in the room of the computer slaves.
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse has just demolished another enemy
cryptosystem: Azure/Pufferfish may now be mounted like a stuffed head on the
wall of the Basement. And indeed, looking at those numbers he feels the same
kind of letdown that a big game hunter must feel when he's stalked some
legendary beast halfway across Africa and finally brought it down with a
slug through the heart, walked up to the corpse, and discovered that after
all it's just a big, messy, pile of meat. It's dirty and it's got flies on
it. Is that all there is to it? Why didn't he solve this thing a long time
ago? All of the old Azure/Pufferfish intercepts can be decrypted now. He'll
have to read them, and they will turn out to be the usual numb mutterings of
giant bureaucracies trying to take over the world. He doesn't, frankly, care
anymore. He just wants to get the hell out of here and get married, play the
organ, and program his Digital Computer, and hopefully get someone to pay
him a salary to do one or the other. But Mary's in Brisbane and the war's
not over yet we haven't even gotten around to invading Nippon, for
crissakes, and conquering the place is going to take forever, with all those
plucky Nipponese women and children drilling on soccer fields with pointed
bamboo staves and it's probably going to be something like 1955 before he
can even get discharged from the military. The war is not over yet, and as
long as it goes on they will need him to stay down here in the Basement
doing more of what he just did.
Arethusa. He still hasn't broken Arethusa. Now that's a cryptosystem!
He's too tired. He can't break Arethusa just now.
What he really needs is someone to talk to. Not about anything in
particular. Just to talk. But there's only half a dozen people on the planet
he can really talk to, and none of them is in the Philippines. Fortunately,
there are long copper wires running underneath the oceans which made
geographical location irrelevant, as long as you have the right clearance.
Waterhouse does. He gets up and leaves the Basement and goes to have a chat
with his friend Alan.
Chapter 92 AKIHABARA
As Randy's plane banks into Narita, a low stratum of cloud screens the
countryside like a silk veil. It must be Nippon: the only two colors are the
orange of the earth moving equipment and the green of the earth that has not
yet been moved. Other than that, everything is greyscale: grey parking lots
divided into rectangles by white lines, the rectangles occupied with black,
white, or grey cars, fading off into silvery fog beneath a sky the color of
aviation alloy. Nippon is soothing, a good destination for a man who has
just been rousted from his jail cell, hauled up before a judge, tongue
lashed, driven to the airport, and expelled from the Philippines.
The Nipponese look more American than Americans. Middle class
prosperity is lapidary; the flow of cash rounds and smooths a person like
water does riverbed stones. The goal of all such persons seems to be to make
themselves cuddly and nonthreatening. The girls in particular are unbearably
precious, although perhaps Randy just thinks so because of that troublesome
neurological hookup between his brain and Little Man 'tate. The old folks,
instead of looking weathered and formidable, tend to wear sneakers and
baseball caps. Black leather, studs, and handcuffs as accessories are the
marks of the powerless lower classes, the people who tend to end up in the
pokey in Manila, and not of the persons who actually dominate the world and
crush everything in their path.
"The doors are about to close." "The bus is leaving in five minutes."
Nothing happens in Nippon without a perky, breathy woman's voice giving you
a chance to brace yourself. It is safe to say that this is not true of the
Philippines. Randy thinks about taking a bus into Tokyo until he comes to
his senses and remembers that he's carrying around in his head the precise
coordinates of a mine that probably contains not less than a thousand tons
of gold. He hails a taxi. On the way into town, he passes by a road
accident: a tanker truck has crossed the white line and flipped over on the
shoulder. But in Nippon, even traffic accidents have the grave precision of
ancient Shinto rituals. White gloved cops direct traffic, moon suited rescue
workers descend from spotless emergency vans. The taxi passes beneath Tokyo
Bay through a tunnel that was built, three decades ago, by Goto Engineering.
Randy ends up in a big old hotel, "old" meaning that the physical
structure was constructed during the fifties, when Americans competed with
Soviets to build the most brutalistic space age buildings out of the most
depressing industrial materials. And indeed one can easily imagine Ike and
Mamie pulling up to the front door in a five ton Lincoln Continental. Of
course the interior has been gutted and redone more frequently than many
hotels steam clean their carpets, and so everything is perfect. Randy has a
strong impulse to lie in bed like a sack of shit, but he is tired of being
confined. And there are many people he could talk to on the phone, but he is
supremely paranoid about telephone conversations now. Any talking that he
might do would have to be censored. Talking openly and freely is a pleasure,
talking carefully is work, and Randy doesn't feel like work. He calls his
parents to tell them everything's fine, calls Chester to thank him.
Then he takes his laptop downstairs and sits in the middle of the
hotel's lobby, which is ostentatiously vast by Tokyo standards; the value of
the land beneath the lobby alone probably exceeds that of Cape Cod. No one
can even get near him with a Van Eck antenna here, and even if they do there
will be plenty of interference from the nearby computers of the concierge
desk. He starts ordering drinks, alternating between brutally cold pale
Nipponese beer and hot tea, and writes a memo explaining more or less what
he has spent the last month accomplishing.
He writes it very slowly because his hands are practically immobilized
now by carpal tunnel syndrome, and any motion that even faintly resembles
typing causes him a lot of pain. He ends up cadging a pencil from the
concierge and then using its eraser to punch the keys one at a time. The
memo begins with the word "carpal" which is a little code that they have
developed to explain why the following text seems unnaturally terse and
devoid of capital letters. He's barely got that tapped out when he's
approached by a devastatingly cute and fluttery young thing in a kimono who
tells him that there is a staff of typists on call in the Business Center to
help him with this should he desire it. Randy declines as politely as he
knows how, which is probably not politely enough. Kimono Girl backs away in
tiny steps, bowing and uttering truncated sub vocal hais. Randy goes back to
work with the pencil eraser. He explains, as briefly and clearly as he can,
what he's been doing, and what he thinks is going on with General Wing and
Enoch Root. He leaves the subject of what the fuck's going on with the
Dentist open for speculation.
When he's done, he encrypts it and then goes up to his room to e mail
it. He can't get over the cleanliness of his lodgings. The sheets appear to
have been tightened around the mattress with turnbuckles, then dipped in
starch. This is the first time in over a month that he hasn't had the warm
wet reek of sewer gas climbing up his nostrils and the ammoniacal tang of
evaporating urine stinging his eyes. Somewhere in Nippon, a man in a clean
white coverall stands in a room with a fat hose fed gun vomiting freshly
chopped glass fibers slathered with polyester resin onto a curvaceous form;
peeled off the form, the result is bath rooms like this one: a single
topological surface pierced in at most two or three places by drains and
nozzles. While Randy's e mailing his memo he lets hot water run into the
largest and smoothest depression in the bathroom surface. Then he takes off
his clothes and climbs into it. He never takes baths, but between the
foulness that seems infused into his flesh now, and the throbbing of his
Hunk of Burning Love, there was never a better time.
The last few days were the worst. When Randy finished his project, and
displayed the bogus results on the screen, he expected that the cell door
would swing open immediately. That he'd walk out onto the streets of Manila
and that, just for extra bonus points, Amy might even be waiting for him.
But nothing at all happened for a whole day, and then Attorney Alejandro
came to tell him that a deal might be possible but that it would take some
work. And then it turned out that the deal was actually a pretty bad one:
Randy was not going to be exonerated as such. He was going to be deported
from the country under orders not to come back. Attorney Alejandro never
claimed that this was a particularly good deal, but something in his manner
made it clear that there was no point griping about it; The Decision Had
Been Made at levels that were not accessible.
He could very easily take care of the Hunk of Burning Love problem now
that he has privacy, but astonishes himself by electing not to. This may be
perverse; he's not sure. The last month and a half of total celibacy,
relieved only by nocturnal emissions at roughly two week intervals, has
definitely got him in a mental space he has never been to before, or come
near, or even heard about. When he was in jail he had to develop a fierce
mental discipline in order not to be distracted by thoughts of sex. He got
alarmingly good at it after a while. It's a highly unnatural approach to the
mind/body problem, pretty much the antithesis of every sixties and seventies
tinged philosophy that he ever imbibed from his Baby Boomer elders. It is
the kind of thing he associates with scary hardasses: Spartans, Victorians,
and mid twentieth century American military heroes. It has turned Randy into
something of a hardass in his approach to hacking, and meanwhile, he
suspects, it has got him into a much more intense and passionate head space
than he's ever known when it comes to matters of the heart. He won't really
know that until he comes face to face with Amy, which looks like it's going
to be a while, since he's just been kicked out of the country where she
lives and works. Just as an experiment, he decides he's going to keep his
hands off of himself for now. If it makes him a little tense and volatile
compared to his pathologically mellow West Coast self, then so be it. One
nice thing about being in Asia is that tense, volatile people blend right
in. It's not like anyone ever died from being horny.
So he arises from the bath unsullied and wraps himself in a vestal
white robe. His cell in Manila did not have a mirror. He knew he was
probably losing weight, but not until he climbs out of the bath and gives
himself a look in the mirror does he realize just how much. For the first
time since he was an adolescent, he has a waist, which makes a white
bathrobe into a quasi practical garment.
He's scarcely recognizable. Before the beginning of this the Third
Business Foray he kind of assumed that, going into his mid thirties, he had
figured out who he was, and that he'd keep being the way he was forever,
except with a gradually decaying body and gradually increasing net worth. He
didn't imagine it was possible to change so much, and he wonders where it's
going to end. But this is nothing more than an anomalous moment of
reflection. He shakes it off and gets back to his life.
The Nipponese have, and have always had, a marvelous skill with graphic
images this is clear in their manga and their anime, but reaches its fullest
expressive flower in safety ideograms. Licking red flames, buildings
splitting and falling as the jagged earth parts beneath them, a fleeing
figure silhouetted in a doorway, suspended in the stroboscopic flash of a
detonation. The written materials accompanying these images are, of course,
not understandable to Randy, and so there is nothing for his rational mind
to work on; the terrifying ideograms blaze, fragmentary nightmare images
popping up on walls, and in the drawers of his room's desk, whenever he lets
his guard down for a moment. What he can read is not exactly soothing.
Trying to sleep, he lies in bed, mentally checking the locations of his
bedside emergency flashlight and the pair of freebie slippers (much too
small) thoughtfully left there so that he can sprint out of the burning and
collapsing hotel without cutting his feet to sashimi when the next magnitude
8.0 tremblor shivers the windows out of their frames. He stares up at the
ceiling, which is fraught with safety equipment whose LEDs form a glowering
red constellation, a crouching figure known to the ancient Greeks as
Ganymede, the Anally Receptive Cup bearer, and to the Nipponese, as Hideo,
the Plucky Disaster Relief Worker, bending over to probe a pile of jagged
concrete slabs for anything that's squishy. All of this leaves him in a
state of free floating terror. He gets up at five in the morning, grabs two
capsules of Japanese Snack from his minibar, and leaves the hotel, following
one of the two emergency exit routes that he has memorized. He starts
wandering, thinking it would be fun to get lost. Getting lost happens in
about thirty seconds. He should have brought his GPS, and marked the
latitude and longitude of the hotel.
The latitude and longitude of Golgotha are expressed, in the Arethusa
intercept, in degrees, minutes, seconds, and tenths of a second of latitude
and longitude. A minute is a nautical mile, a second is about a hundred
feet. In the seconds figure, the Golgotha numbers have one digit after the
decimal point, which implies a precision of ten feet. GPS receivers can give
you that kind of precision. Randy's not so sure about the sextants that the
Nipponese surveyors presumably used during the war. Before he left, he wrote
the numbers down on a scrap of paper, but he rounded off the seconds part
and just expressed it in the form of "XX degrees and twenty and a half
minutes" implying a precision of a couple of thousand feet. Then he invented
three other locations in the same general vicinity, but miles away, and put
them all into a list, with the real location being number two on the list.
Above it he wrote "Who owns these parcels of land?" or, in crypto speak,
WHOOW NSTHE SEPAR etc. and then spent an almost unbelievably tedious evening
synchronizing the two decks of cards and encrypting the entire message with
the Solitaire algorithm. He gave the ciphertext and the unused deck to Enoch
Root, then swiped the plaintext through some of the leftover grease in his
dinner tray and left it by the open drain. Within the hour, a rat had come
around and eaten it.
He wanders all day. At first it is just bleak and depressing and he
thinks he's going to give up very soon, but then he gets into the spirit of
it, and learns how to eat: you approach gentlemen on streetcorners selling
little fried octopus balls and make neolithic grunting noises and proffer
yen until you discover food in your hands and then you eat it.
Through some kind of nerdish homing instinct he finds Akihabara, the
electronics district, and spends a while wandering through stores looking at
all of the consumer electronics that will go on sale in the States a year
from now. That's where he is when his GSM telephone rings.
"Hello?"
"It's me. I'm standing behind a fat yellow line."
"Which airport?"
"Narita."
"Delighted to hear it. Tell your driver to take you to the Mr. Donut in
Akihabara."
Randy's there an hour later, flipping through a phone book sized manga
epic, when Avi walks in. The unspoken Randy/Avi greeting protocol dictates
that they hug each other at this point, so they do, somewhat to the
astonishment of their fellow donut eaters who usually make do with bowing.
The Mr. Donut is a three level affair jammed into a sliver of real estate
with approximately the same footprint as a spiral staircase and is quite
crowded with people who took compulsory English in their excellent and
highly competitive schools. Besides, Randy broadcast the time and location
of the meeting over a radio an hour ago. So as long as they are there, Randy
and Avi talk about relatively innocuous things. Then they go out for a
stroll. Avi knows his way around this neighborhood. He leads Randy through a
doorway and into nerdvana.
"Many people," Avi explains, "do not know that the word normally
spelled and pronounced 'nirvana' can be more accurately transliterated
'nirdvana' or, arguably, 'nerdvana.' This is nerdvana. The nucleus around
which Akihabara accreted. This is where the pasocon otaku go to get the
stuff they need."
"Pasocon otaku?"
"Personal computer nerds," Avi says. "But as in so many other things,
the Nipponese take it to an extreme that we barely imagine."
The place is laid out precisely like an Asian food market: it is a maze
of narrow aisles winding among tiny stalls, barely larger than phone booths,
where merchants have their wares laid out for inspection. The first thing
they see is a wire stall: at least a hundred reels of different types and
gauges of wire in gaily hued plastic insulation. "How apropos!" Avi says,
admiring the display, "we need to talk about wires." It need not be stated
that this place is a great venue for a conversation: the paths between the
stalls are so narrow that they have to walk in single file. No one can
follow them, or get close to them, here, without being ridiculously blatant.
An array of soldering irons bristles wickedly, giving one stall the look of
a martial arts store. Coffee can sized potentiometers are stacked in
pyramids. "Tell me about wires," Randy says.
"I don't need to tell you how dependent we are on submarine cables,"
Avi says.
" 'We' meaning the Crypt, or society in general?"
"Both. Obviously the Crypt can't even function without communications
linkages to the outside world. But the Internet and everything else are just
as dependent on cables."
A pasocon otaku in a trench coat, holding a plastic bowl as shopping
cart, hunches over a display of gleaming copper toroidal coils that look to
have been hand polished by the owner. Finger sized halogen spotlights
mounted on an overhead rack emphasize their geometric perfection.
"So?"
"So, cables are vulnerable."
They wander past a stall that specializes in banana plugs, with a
sideline in alligator clips, arranged in colorful rosettes around disks of
cardboard.
"Those cables used to be owned by PTAs. Which were basically just
branches of governments. Hence they pretty much did what governments told
them to. But the new cables going in today are owned and controlled by
corporations beholden to no one except their investors. Puts certain
governments in a position they don't like very much."
"Okay," Randy says, "they used to have ultimate control over how
information flowed between countries in that they ran the PTTs that ran the
cables."
"Yes."
"Now they don't."
"That's right. There's been this big transfer of power that has taken
place under their noses, without their having foreseen it." Avi stops in
front of a stall that sells LEDs in all manner of bubble gum colors, packed
into tiny boxes like ripe tropical fruits in crates, and standing up from
cubes of foam like psychedelic mushrooms. He is making big transfer of power
gestures with his hands, but to Randy's increasingly warped mind this looks
like a man moving heavy gold bars from one pile to another. Across the
aisle, they are being stared at by the dead eyes of a hundred miniature
video cameras. Avi continues, "And as we've talked about many times, there
are many reasons why different governments might want to control the flow of
information. China might want to institute political censorship, whereas the
U.S. might want to regulate electronic cash transfers so that they can keep
collecting taxes. In the old days they could ultimately do this insofar as
they owned the cables."
"But now they can't," Randy says.
"Now they can't, and this change happened very fast, or at least it
looked fast to government with its retarded intellectual metabolism, and now
they are way behind the curve, and scared and pissed off, and starting to
lash out."
"They are?"
"They are."
"In what way are they lashing out?"
A toggle switch merchant snaps a rag over rows and columns of stainless
steel merchandise. The tip of the rag breaks the sound barrier and generates
a tiny sonic pop that blasts a dust mote from the top of a switch. Everyone
is politely ignoring them. "Do you have any idea what down time on a state
of the art cable costs nowadays?"
"Of course I do," Randy says. "It can be hundreds of thousands of
dollars a minute."
"That's right. And it takes at least a couple of days to repair a
broken cable. A couple of days. A single break in a cable can cost the
companies that own it tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars in lost
revenue."
"But that hasn't been that much of an issue," Randy says. "The cables
are plowed in so deeply now. They're only exposed in the deep ocean.
"Yes where only an entity with the naval resources of a major
government could sever them."
"Oh, shit!"
"This is the new balance of power, Randy."
"You can't seriously be telling me that governments are threatening to
"
"The Chinese have already done it. They cut an older cable first
generation optical fiber joining Korea to Nippon. The cable wasn't that
important they only did it as a warning shot. And what's the rule of thumb
about governments cutting submarine cables?"
"That it's like nuclear war," Randy says. "Easy to start. Devastating
in its results. So no one does it."
"But if the Chinese have cut a cable, then other governments with a
vested interest in throttling information flow can say, 'Hey, the Chinese
did it, we need to show that we can retaliate in kind.' "
"Is that actually happening?"
"No, no, no!" Avi says. They've stopped in front of the largest display
of needlenose pliers Randy has ever seen. "It's all posturing. It's not
aimed at other governments so much as at the entrepreneurs who own and
operate the new cables."
Light dawns in Randy's mind. "Such as the Dentist."
"The Dentist has put more money into privately financed submarine
cables than just about anyone. He has a minority stake in that cable that
the Chinese cut between Korea and Nippon. So he's trapped like a rat. He has
no choice no choice at all other than to do as he's told."
"And who's giving the orders?"
"I'm sure that the Chinese are very big in this they don't have any
internal checks and balances in their government, so they are more prone to
do something that is grossly irregular like this."
"And they obviously have the most to lose from unfettered information
flow."
"Yeah. But I'm just cynical enough to suspect that a whole lot of other
governments are right behind them."
"If that's true," Randy says, "then everything is completely fucked.
Sooner or later a cable cutting war is going to break out. All the cables
will get chopped through. End of story."
"The world doesn't work that way anymore, Randy. Governments get
together and negotiate. Like they did in Brussels just after Christmas. They
come up with agreements. War does not break out. Usually."
"So there's an agreement in place?"
Avi shrugs. "As best as I can make out. A balance of power has been
struck between the people who own navies i.e., the people who have the
ability to cut cables with impunity and the people who own and operate
cables. Each side is afraid of what the other can do to it. So they have
come to a genteel understanding. The bureaucratic incarnation of it is
IDTRO."
"And the Dentist is in on it."
"Precisely."
"So maybe the Ordo siege really was ultimately directed by the
government."
"I very much doubt that Comstock ordered it," Avi says. "I think it was
the Dentist demonstrating his loyalty."
"How about the Crypt? Is the sultan party to this understanding?"
Avi shrugs. "Pragasu isn't saying much. I told him what I have just
told you. I laid out my theory of what is going on. He looked tolerantly
amused. He did not confirm or deny. But he did give me cause to believe that
the Crypt is still going to be up and running on schedule."
"See, I find that hard to believe," Randy says. "It seems like the
Crypt is their worst nightmare."
"Whose worst nightmare?"
"Any government that needs to collect taxes."
"Randy, governments will always find ways to collect taxes. If worse
comes to worst, the IRS can just base everything on property taxes you can't
hide real estate in cyberspace. But keep in mind that the U.S. government is
only a part of this thing the Chinese are very big in it, too."
"Wing!" Randy blurts. He and Avi cringe and look around them. The
pasocon otaku don't care. A man selling rainbow colored wire ribbons eyes
them with polite curiosity, then looks away. They move out of the bazaar and
onto the sidewalk. It has started to rain. A dozen nearly identical young
women in miniskirts and high heels march in wedge formation down the center
of the street sporting huge umbrellas blazoned with the face of a video game
character.
"Wing's digging for gold in Bundok," Randy says. "He thinks he knows
where Golgotha is. If he finds it, he'll need a really special kind of
bank."
"He's not the only guy in the world who needs a special bank," Avi
says. "Over the years, Switzerland has done a hell of a lot of business with
governments, or people connected with governments. Why didn't Hitler invade
Switzerland? Because the Nazis couldn't have done without it. So the Crypt
definitely fills a niche."
"Okay," Randy says, "so the Crypt will be allowed to remain in
existence."
"It has to. The world needs it," Avi says. "And we'll need it, when we
dig up Golgotha."
Suddenly Avi's got an impish look on his face; he looks to have shed
about ten years of age. This gets a belly laugh out of Randy, the first time
he's really laughed in a couple of months. His mood has gone through some
seismic shift all of a sudden, the whole world looks different to him. "It's
not enough to know where it is. Enoch Root says that these hoards were
buried deep in mines, down in the hard rock. So we're not going to get that
gold out without launching a pretty major engineering project."
"Why do you think I'm in Tokyo?" Avi says. "C'mon, let's get back to
the hotel."
While Avi's checking in, Randy collects his messages from the front
desk, and finds a FedEx envelope waiting for him. If it was tampered with en
route, the tamperers did a good job of covering their traces. It contains a
hand enciphered message from Enoch Root, who evidently has figured out some
way to get himself sprung from the clink with his scruples intact. It is
several lines of seemingly random block letters, in groups of five. Randy
has been carrying around a deck of cards ever since he got sprung from jail:
the prearranged key that will decipher this message. The prospect of several
hours of solitaire seems a lot less inviting in Tokyo than it did in prison
and he knows it will take that long to decipher a message as long as this
one. But he's already programmed his laptop to play Solitaire according to
Enoch's rules, and he's already punched in the key that is embodied in the
deck that Enoch gave him and stored it on a floppy disk that he keeps rubber
banded to the deck in his pocket. So he and Avi go up to Avi's room, pausing
along the way to collect Randy's laptop, and while Avi sorts through his
messages, Randy types in the ciphertext and gets it deciphered. "Enoch's
message says that the land above Golgotha is owned by the Church," Randy
mutters, "but in order to reach it we have to travel across land owned by
Wing, and by some Filipinos."
Avi doesn't appear to hear him. He's fixated on a message slip.
"What's up?" Randy asks.
"A little change of plans for tonight. I hope you have a really good
suit with you."
"I didn't know we had plans for tonight."
"We were going to meet with Goto Furudenendu," Avi says. "I sort of
figured that they were the right guys to approach about digging a big hole
in the ground."
"I'm with you," Randy says. "What's the change in plan?"
"The old man is coming down from his retreat in Hokkaido. He wants to
buy us dinner."
"What old man?"
"The founder of the company, Goto Furudenendu's father," Avi says.
'Protegé of Douglas MacArthur. Multi multi multi millionaire. Golf partner
and confidant of prime ministers. An old guy by the name of Goto Dengo."
Chapter 93 PROJECT X
It is early in April of the year 1945. A middle aged nipponese widow
feels the earth turning over, and scurries out of her paper house, fearing a
temblor. Her house is on the island of Kyushu, near the sea. She gazes out
over the ocean and sees a black ship on the horizon, steaming out of a
rising sun of its own making: for when its guns go off the entire vessel is
shrouded in red fire for a moment. She hopes that the Yamato, the world's
greatest battleship, which steamed away over that horizon a few days ago,
has returned victorious, and is firing its guns in celebration. But this is
an American battleship and it is dropping shells into' the port that the
Yamato just left, making the earth's bowels heave as if it were preparing to
throw up.
Until this moment, the Nipponese woman has been convinced that the
armed forces of her nation were crushing the Americans, the British, the
Dutch, and the Chinese at every turn. This apparition must be some kind of
bizarre suicide raid. But the black ship stays there all day long, heaving
ton after ton of dynamite into sacred soil. No airplanes come out to bomb
it, no ships to shell it, not even a submarine to torpedo it.
In a shocking display of bad form, Patton has lunged across the Rhine
ahead of schedule, to the irritation of Montgomery who has been making
laborious plans and preparations to do it first.
The German submarine U 234 is in the North Atlantic, headed for the
Cape of Good Hope, carrying ten containers holding twelve hundred pounds of
uranium oxide. The uranium is bound for Tokyo where it will be used in some
experiments, still in a preliminary phase, towards the construction of a new
and extremely powerful explosive device.
General Curtis LeMay's Air Force has spent much of the last month
flying dangerously low over Nipponese cities showering them with incendiary
devices. A quarter of Tokyo has been leveled; 83,000 people died there, and
this does not count the similar raids on Nagoya, Osaka, and Kobe.
The night after the Osaka raid, some Marines raised a flag on Iwo Jima
and they put a picture of it in all the papers.
Within the last few days, the Red Army, now the most terrible force on
earth, has taken Vienna and the oil fields of Hungary, and the Soviets have
declared that their Neutrality Pact with Nippon will be allowed to expire
rather than being renewed.
Okinawa has just been invaded. The fighting is the worst ever. The
invasion is supported by a vast fleet against which the Nipponese have
launched everything they have. The Yamato came after them, her eighteen inch
guns at the ready, carrying only enough fuel for a one way voyage. But the
cryptanalysts of the U.S. Navy intercepted and decrypted her orders and the
great ship was sent to the bottom with 2,500 men. The Nipponese have
launched the first of their Floating Chrysanthemum assaults against the
invasion fleet: clouds of kamikaze planes, human bombs, human torpedoes,
speedboats packed with explosives.
To the irritation and bafflement of the German High Command, the
Nipponese government has sent a message to them, requesting that, in the
event that all of Germany's European naval bases are lost, the Kriegsmarine
should be given orders to continue operating with the Nipponese in the Far
East. The message is encrypted in Indigo. It is duly intercepted and read by
the Allies.
In the United Kingdom, Dr. Alan Mathison Turing, considering the war to
be effectively finished, has long since turned his attentions away from the
problem of voice encryption and into the creation of thinking machines. For
about ten months ever since the finished Colossus Mark II was delivered to
Bletchley Park he has had the opportunity to work with a truly programmable
computing machine. Alan invented these machines long before one was ever
built, and has never needed hands on experience in order to think about
them, but his experiences with Colossus Mark II have helped him to solidify
some ideas of how the next machine ought to be designed. He thinks of it as
a postwar machine, but that's only because he's in Europe and hasn't been
concerned with the problem of conquering Nippon as much as Waterhouse has.
"I've been working on BURY and DISINTER," says a voice, coming out of
small holes in a Bakelite headset clamped over Waterhouse's head. The voice
is oddly distorted, nearly obscured by white noise and a maddening buzz.
"Please say it again?" Lawrence says, pressing the phones against his
ear.
"BURY and DISINTER," says the voice. "They are, er, sets of
instructions for the machine to execute, to carry out certain algorithms.
They are programmes.
"Right! Sorry, I just wasn't able to hear you the first time. Yes, I've
been working on them too," Waterhouse says.
"The next machine will have a memory storage system, Lawrence, in the
form of sound waves traveling down a cylinder filled with mercury we stole
the idea from John Wilkins, founder of the Royal Society, who came up with
it three hundred years ago, except he was going to use air instead of
quicksilver. I excuse me, Lawrence, did you say you had been working on
them?"
"I did the same thing with tubes. Valves, as you would call them."
"Well that's all well and good for you Yanks," Alan says, "I suppose if
you are infinitely rich you could make a BURY/DISINTER system out of steam
locomotives, or something, and retain a staff of thousands to run around
squirting oil on the squeaky bits."
"The mercury line is a good idea," Waterhouse admits. "Very
resourceful."
"Have you actually gotten BURY and DISINTER to work with valves?"
"Yes. My DISINTER works better than our shovel expeditions," Lawrence
says. "Did you ever find those silver bars you buried?"
"No," Alan says absently. "They are lost. Lost in the noise of the
world."
"You know, that was a Turing test I just gave you," Lawrence says.
"Beg pardon?"
"This damned machine screws up your voice so bad I can't tell you from
Winston Churchill," Lawrence says. "So the only way I can verify it's you is
by getting you to say things that only Alan Turing could say."
He hears Alan's sharp, high pitched laugh at the other end of the line.
It's him all right.
"This Project X thing really is appalling," Alan says. "Delilah is
infinitely superior. I wish you could see it for yourself. Or hear it."
Alan is in London, in a command bunker somewhere. Lawrence is in Manila
Bay, on the Rock, the island of Corregidor. They are joined by a thread of
copper that goes all the way around the world. There are many such threads
traversing the floors of the world's oceans now, but only a few special ones
go to rooms like this. The rooms are in Washington, London, Melbourne, and
now, Corregidor.
Lawrence looks through a thick glass window into the engineer's booth,
where a phonograph record is playing on the world's most precise and
expensive turntable. This is, likewise, the most valuable record ever turned
out: it is filled with what is intended to be perfectly random white noise.
The noise is electronically combined with the sound of Lawrence's voice
before it is sent down the wire. Once it gets to London, the noise (which is
being read off an identical phonograph record there) is subtracted from his
voice, and the result sent into Alan Turing's headphones. It all depends on
the two phonographs being perfectly synchronized. The only way to
synchronize them is to transmit that maddening buzzing noise, a carrier
wave, along with the voice signal. If all goes well, the opposite phonograph
player can lock onto the buzz and spin its wax in lockstep.
The phonograph record is, in other words, a one time pad. Some where in
New York, in the bowels of Bell Labs, behind a locked and guarded door
stenciled PROJECT X, technicians are turning out more of these things, the
very latest chart topping white noise. They stamp out a few copies, dispatch
them by courier to the Project X sites around the globe, then destroy the
originals.
They would not be having this conversation at all, except that a couple
of years ago Alan went to Greenwich Village and worked at Bell Labs for a
few months, while Lawrence was on Qwghlm. H.M. Government sent him there to
evaluate this Project X thing and let them know whether it was truly secure.
Alan decided that it was then went back home and began working on a much
better one, called Delilah.
What the hell does this have to do with dead Chinese abacus slaves?
To Lawrence, staring through the window at the spinning white noise
disk, the connection could hardly be clearer. He says, "Last I spoke to you,
you were working on generating random noise for Delilah."
"Yes," Alan says absently. That was a long time ago, and that whole
project has been BURIED in his memory storage system; it will take him a
minute or two to DISINTER it.
"What sorts of algorithms did you consider to create that noise?"
There is another five second pause, then Alan launches into a
disquisition about mathematical functions for generating pseudorandom number
sequences. Alan had a good British boarding school education, and his
utterances tend to be well structured, with outline form, topic sentences,
the whole bit:
PSEUDO RANDOM NUMBERS
I. Caveat: they aren't really random, of course, they just look that
way, and that's why the pseudo
II. Overview of the Problem
A. It seems as if it should be easy
B. Actually it turns out to be really hard
C. Consequences of failure: Germans decrypt our secret messages,
millions die, humanity is enslaved, world plunged into an eternal Dark Age
D. How can you tell if a series of numbers is random
1, 2, 3, . . . (A list of different statistical tests for randomness,
the advantages and disadvantages of each)
III. A bunch of stuff that I, Alan Turing, tried
A, B, C, . . . (A list of different mathematical functions that Alan
used to generate random numbers; how almost all of them failed abjectly;
Alan's initial confidence is replaced by surprise, then exasperation, then
despair, and finally by guarded confidence as he at last finds some
techniques that work)
IV. Conclusions
A. It's harder than it looks
B. It's not for the unwary
C. It can be done if you keep your wits about you
D. In retrospect a surprisingly interesting mathematical problem
deserving of further research
When Alan finishes with this perfectly structured whirlwind tour of the
Surprising World of Pseudo Randonmess, Lawrence says, "How about zeta
functions?"
"Didn't even consider those," Alan says.
Lawrence's mouth drops open. He can see his own semitransparent
reflection in the window, superimposed on the spinning phonograph, and he
sees that he has got a sort of mildly outraged look on his face. There must
be something conspicuously nonrandom about the output of the zeta function,
something so obvious to Alan that he dismissed it out of hand. But Lawrence
has never seen any such thing. He knows that Alan is smarter than he is, but
he's not used to being so desperately far behind him.
"Why. . . why not?" he finally stammers.
"Because of Rudy!" Alan thunders. "You and I and Rudy all worked on
that damn machine at Princeton! Rudy knows that you and I have the knowledge
to build such a device. So it is the first thing that he would assume we
would use."
"Ah." Lawrence sighs. "But leaving that aside, the zeta function might
still be a good way of doing it."
"It might," Alan says guardedly, "but I have not investigated it.
You're not thinking of using it, are you?"
Lawrence tells Alan about the abaci. Even through the noise and the
buzz, he can tell that Alan is thunderstruck. There is a pause while the
technicians at each end flip over their phonograph records. When the
connection is reestablished, Alan's still very excited. "Let me tell you
something more," Lawrence says.
"Yes, go ahead."
"You know that the Nipponese use a plethora of different codes, and we
still have only broken some of them."
"Yes."
"There is an unbroken cipher system that Central Bureau calls Arethusa.
It's incredibly rare. Only thirty some Arethusa messages have ever been
intercepted."
"Some company code?" Alan asks. This is a good guess; each major
Nipponese corporation had its own code system before the war, and much
effort has gone into stealing code books for, and otherwise breaking, the
Mitsubishi code, to name one example.
"We can't figure out the sources and destinations of Arethusa
messages," Lawrence continues, "because they use a unique site code system.
We can only guess at their origins by using huffduff. And huffduff tells us
that most of the Arethusa messages have originated from submarines. Possibly
just a single submarine, plying the route between Europe and Southeast Asia.
We have also seen them from Sweden, from London, Buenos Aires, and Manila."
"Buenos Aires? Sweden?"
"Yes. And so, Alan, I took an interest in Arethusa."
"Well, I don't blame you!"
"The message format matches that of Azure/Pufferfish."
"Rudy's system?"
"Yes."
"Nice work on that, by the way."
"Thank you, Alan. As you must have heard by now, it is based on zeta
functions. Which you did not even consider using for Delilah because you
were afraid Rudy would think of it. And this raises the question of whether
Rudy intended us to break Azure/Pufferfish all along."
"Yes, it does. But why would he want us to?"
"I have no idea. The old Azure/Puffeffish messages may contain some
clues. I am having my Digital Computer generate retroactive one time pads so
that I can decrypt those messages and read them."
"Well, then, I shall have Colossus do the same. It is busy just now,"
Alan says, "working on Fish decrypts. But I don't think Hitler has much
longer to go. When he is finished, I can probably get down to Bletchley and
decrypt those messages."
"I'm also working on Arethusa," Lawrence says. "I'm guessing it all has
something to do with gold."
"Why do you say that?" Alan says. But at this point the tone arm of the
phonograph reaches the end of its spiral groove and lifts off the record.
Time's up. Bell Labs, and the might of the Allied governments, did not
install the Project X network so that mathematicians could indulge in
endless chitchat about obscure functions.
Chapter 94 LANDFALL
The sailing ship Gertrude wheezes into the cove shortly after sunrise,
and Bischoff cannot help but laugh. Barnacles have grown so thick around her
hull that the hull itself (he supposes) could be removed entirely, and the
shell of barnacles could be outfitted with a mast and canvas, and sailed to
Tahiti. A hundred yard long skein of seaweed, rooted in those barnacles,
trails behind her, making a long greasy disturbance in her wake. Her mast
has evidently been snapped off at least once. It has been replaced by a rude
jury rigged thing, a tree trunk that has received some attention from a
drawknife but still has bark adhering to it in places, and long dribbles of
golden sap like wax trails on a candle, themselves streaked with sea salt.
Her sails are nearly black with dirt and mildew, and rudely patched, here
and there, with fat black stitches, like the flesh of Frankenstein's
monster.
The men on board are scarcely in better shape. They do not even bother
to drop anchor they just run Gertrude aground on a coral head at the
entrance to the cove, and call it a day. Most of Bischoffs crew has gathered
on the top of V Million, the rocket submarine; they think it's the most
hilarious thing they've ever seen. But when the men on Gertrude climb into a
dinghy and begin rowing towards them, Bischoff's men remember their manners,
and stand at attention, and salute.
Bischoff tries to recognize them as they row closer. It takes a while.
There are five in all. Otto has lost his pot belly and gone much greyer.
Rudy is a completely different man: he has long flowing hair ponytailed down
his back, and a surprisingly thick, Viking like beard, and he appears to
have lost his left eye somewhere along the way, because he's got an actual
black patch over it!
"My god," Bischoff says, "pirates!"
The other three men he has never seen before: a Negro with dread locks;
a brown skinned, Indian looking fellow; and a red headed European.
Rudy is watching a stingray furling and unfurling its meaty wings ten
meters straight down.
"The clarity of the water is exquisite," he remarks.
"When the Catalinas come for us, Rudy, then you will long for the old
northern murk," Bischoff says.
Rudolf von Hacklheber swings his one eye around to bear on Bischoff,
and allows just a trace of amusement to show on his face. "Permission to
come aboard, Captain?" Rudy asks.
"Granted with pleasure," Bischoff says. The dinghy has come alongside
the round hull of the submarine, and Bischoff's crew unrolls a rope ladder
to them. "Welcome to the V Million!"
"I have heard of the V 1 and the V 2, but . .
"We could not guess how many other V weapons Hitler might have
invented, and so we chose a very, very large number," Bischoff says proudly.
"But Günter, you know what the V stands for?"
"Vergeltungswaffen," Bischoff says. "You're not thinking about it hard
enough, Rudy."
Otto's puzzled, and being puzzled makes him angry. " Vergeltung means
revenge, doesn't it?"
"But it can also mean to pay someone back, to compensate them, to
reward them," says Rudy, "even to bless them. I like it very much, Günter."
"Admiral Bischoff to you," Günter returns.
"You are the supreme commander of the V Million – there is no one
above you?"
Bischoff clicks his heels together sharply and holds out his right arm.
"Heil Dönitz!" he shouts.
"What the hell are you talking about?" asks Otto.
"Haven't you been reading the papers? Hitler killed himself yesterday.
In Berlin. The new Führer is my personal friend Karl Dönitz."
"Is he part of the conspiracy too?" Otto mutters.
"I thought my dear mentor and protector Hermann Göring was going to be
Hitler's successor," Rudy says, sounding almost crestfallen.
"He is down in the south somewhere," Bischoff says, "on a diet. Just
before Hitler took cyanide, he ordered the SS to arrest that fat bastard."
"But in all seriousness, Günter when you boarded this U boat in Sweden,
it was called something else, and there were some Nazis on board, yes?" asks
Rudy.
"I had completely forgotten about them." Bischoff cups his hands around
his mouth and shouts down the hatch in the top of the sleek rounded off
conning tower. "Has anyone seen our Nazis?"
The command echoes down the length of the U boat from sailor to sailor:
Nazis? Nazis? Nazis? but somewhere it turns into Nein! Nein! Nein! and
echoes back up the conning tower and out the hatch.
Rudy climbs up V Million's smooth hull on bare feet. "Do you have any
citrus fruit?" He smiles, showing magenta craters in his gums where teeth
might be expected.
"Get the calamansis," Bischoff says to one of his mates. "Rudy, for you
we have the Filipino miniature limes, great piles of them, with more vitamin
C than you could ever want."
"I doubt that," Rudy says.
Otto just looks at Bischoff reproachfully, holding him personally
responsible for having been thrown together with these four other men for
all of 1944 and the first four months of 1945. Finally he speaks: "Is that
son of a bitch Shaftoe here?"
"That son of a bitch Shaftoe is dead," Bischoff says.
Otto averts his glare and nods his head.
"I take it you received my letter from Buenos Aires?" asks Rudy von
Hacklheber.
"Mr. G. Bishop, General Delivery, Manila, the Philippines," Bischoff
recites. "Of course I did, my friend, or else we would not have known where
to meet you. I picked it up when I went into town to renew my acquaintance
with Enoch Root."
"He made it?"
"He made it."
"How did Shaftoe die?"
"Gloriously, of course," Bischoff says. "And there is other news from
Julieta: the conspiracy has a son! Congratulations, Otto, you are a grand
uncle."
This actually elicits a smile, albeit black and gappy, from Otto.
"What's his name?"
"Günter Enoch Bobby Kivistik. Eight pounds, three ounces superb for a
wartime baby."
There is hand shaking all around. Rudy, ever debonair, produces some
Honduran cigars to mark the occasion. He and Otto stand in the sun and smoke
cigars and drink calamansi juice.
"We have been waiting here for three weeks," Bischoff says. "What kept
you?"
Otto spits out something that is pretty bad looking. "I am sorry that
you have had to spend three weeks tanning yourselves on the beach while we
have been sailing this tub of shit across the Pacific!"
"We were dismasted, and lost three men, and my left eye, and two of
Otto's fingers, and a few other items, going around Cape Horn," Rudy says
apologetically. "Our cigars got a little wet. It played havoc with our
schedule."
"No matter," Bischoff says. "The gold isn't going anywhere."
"Do we know where it is?"
"Not exactly. But we have found one who does."
"Clearly, we have much to discuss," Rudy says, "but I have to die
first. Preferably on a soft bed."
"Fine," Bischoff says. "Is there anything that needs to be removed from
Gertrude before we cut her throat, and let her barnacles pull her to the
bottom?"
"Sink the bitch now, please," Otto says. "I will even stay up here and
watch."
"First you must remove five crates marked Property of the
Reichsmarschall ," Rudy says. "They are down in the bilge. We used them as
ballast."
Otto looks startled, and scratches his beard in wonderment. "I forgot
those were down there." The year and a half old memory is slowly resolving
in his mind's eye. "It took a whole day to load them in. I wanted to kill
you. My back still aches from it."
Bischoff says, "Rudy you made off with Göring's pornography
collection?"
"I wouldn't like his kind of pornography," Rudy answers evenly. "These
are cultural treasures. Loot."
"They will have been ruined by bilge water!"
"It's all gold. Sheets of gold foil with holes in it. Impervious."
"Rudy, we are supposed to be exporting gold from the Philippines, not
importing it."
"Don't worry. I shall export it again one day."
"By that time, we'll have money to hire stevedores, so poor Otto won't
have to put his back out again."
"We won't need stevedores," Rudy says. "When I export what is on those
sheets, I'll do it on wires."
They all stand there on the deck of V Million in the tropical cove
watching the sun set and the flying fish leap and hearing birds and insects
cry and buzz from the flowering jungle all around. Bischoff's trying to
imagine wires strung from here to Los Angeles, and sheets of gold foil
sliding down them. It doesn't really work. "Come below, Rudy," he says, "we
need to get some vitamin C into you."
Chapter 95 GOTO SAMA
Avi meets Randy in the hotel lobby. He has burdened himself with a
square, old fashioned briefcase that pulls his slender frame to one side,
giving him the asymptotic curve of a sapling in a steady wind. He and Randy
take a taxi to Some Other Part of Tokyo Randy cannot begin to fathom how the
city is laid out enter the lobby of a skyscraper, and take an elevator up
far enough that Randy's ears pop. When the doors slide open, a maître d' is
standing right there anticipating them with a radiant smile and a bow. He
leads them into a foyer where four men wait: a couple of younger minions;
Goto Furudenendu; and an elderly gentleman. Randy was expecting one of these
gracile, translucent Nipponese seniors, but Goto Dengo is a blocky fellow
with a white buzz cut, somewhat hunched and collapsed with age, which only
goes to make him seem more compact and solid. At first blush he seems more
like a retired village blacksmith, or perhaps a master sergeant in a
daimyo's army, than a business executive, and yet within five or ten seconds
this impression is swallowed up by a good suit, good manners, and Randy's
knowledge of who he really is. He's the only guy in the place who isn't
grinning from ear to ear: apparently when you reach a certain age you are
allowed to get away with staring tunnels through other people's skulls. In
the manner of many old people, he looks vaguely startled that they have
actually shown up.
Still, he levers himself up on a big, gnarled cane and shakes their
hands firmly. His son Furudenendu proffers a hand to help him to his feet
and he shrugs it off with glare of mock outrage this transaction looks
pretty well practiced. There's a brief exchange of small talk that goes
right over Randy's head. Then the two minions peel off, like a fighter
escort no longer needed, and the maître d' leads Randy, Avi, and Goto père
et fils across a totally empty restaurant twenty or thirty tables set with
white linen and crystal to a corner table, where waiters stand at attention
to pull their chairs back. This building is of the sheer walls of solid
glass school of architecture and so the windows go floor to ceiling,
providing, through a bead curtain of raindrops, a view of nighttime Tokyo
that stretches over the horizon. Menus are handed out, printed in French
only. Randy and Avi get the girl menus, with no prices. Goto Dengo gets the
wine list, and pores over it for a good ten minutes before grudgingly
selecting a white from California and a red from Burgundy. Meanwhile,
Furudenendu is leading them in exceedingly pleasant small talk about the
Crypt.
Randy can't stop looking at Tokyo on the one hand and the empty
restaurant on the other. It's like this setting was picked specifically to
remind them that the Nipponese economy has been on the skids for the last
several years a situation that the Asian currency crisis has only worsened.
He half expects to see executives dropping past the window.
Avi ventures to ask about various tunnels and other stupefyingly vast
engineering projects that he happens to have noticed around Tokyo and
whether Goto Engineering had anything to do with them. This at least gets
the patriarch to glance up momentarily from his wine list, but the son
handles the inquiries, allowing as how, yes, their company did play a small
part in those endeavors. Randy figures that it's not the easiest thing in
the world to engage a personal friend of the late General of the Army
Douglas MacArthur in polite chitchat; it's not like you can ask him if he
caught the latest episode of Star Trek: More Time Space Anomalies. All they
can really do is cling to Furudenendu and let him take the lead. Goto Dengo
clears his throat like the engine of a major piece of earth moving equipment
rumbling to life, and recommends the Kobe beef. The sommelier comes around
with the wines and Goto Dengo interrogates him in a mixture of Nipponese and
French for a while, until a film of sweat has broken out on the sommelier's
brow. He samples the wines very carefully. The tension is explosive as he
swirls them around in his mouth, staring off into the distance. The
sommelier seems genuinely startled, not to mention relieved, when he accepts
both of them. The subtext here would seem to be that hosting a really first
class dinner is a not insignificant management challenge, and that Goto
Dengo should not be bothered with social chatter while he is coping with
these responsibilities.
At this point Randy's paranoia finally kicks in: is it possible that
Goto sama bought the whole restaurant out for the evening, just to get a
little privacy? Were the two minions just aides with unusually bulky
briefcases, or were they security, sweeping the place for surveillance
devices? Again, subtext wise, the message seems to be that Randy and Avi are
not to worry their pretty, young little heads about these things. Goto Dengo
is seated underneath a can light in the ceiling. His hair stands
perpendicularly out from his head, a bristling stand of normal vectors,
radiating halogenically. He has a formidable number of scars on his face and
his hands, and Randy suddenly realizes that he must have been in the war.
Which should've been perfectly obvious considering his age.
Goto Dengo inquires about how Randy and Avi got into their current
lines of work, and how they formed their partnership. This is a reasonable
question, but it forces them to explain the entire concept of fantasy role
playing games. If Randy had known this would happen, he would have thrown
himself bodily through a window instead of taking a seat. But Goto Dengo
takes it pretty calmly and instantly cross correlates it to late breaking
developments in the Nipponese game industry, which has been doing this
gradual paradigm shift from arcade to role playing games with actual
narratives; by the time he's finished he makes them feel not like
lightweight nerds but like visionary geniuses who were ten years ahead of
their time. This more or less obligates Avi (who is taking conversational
point) to ask Goto Dengo how he got into his line of work. Both of the Gotos
try to laugh it off, as if how could a couple of young American visionary
Dungeons and Dragons pioneers possibly be interested in something as trivial
as how Goto Dengo singlehandedly rebuilt postwar Nippon, but after Avi
displays a bit of persistence, the patriarch finally shrugs and says
something about how his pop was in the mining racket and so he's always had
a certain knack for digging holes in the ground. His English started out
minimal and is getting better and better as the evening proceeds, as if he
is slowly dusting off substantial banks of memory and processing power,
nursing them on line like tube amplifiers.
Dinner arrives; and so everyone has to eat for a bit, and to thank Goto
sama for his excellent recommendation. Avi gets a bit reckless and asks the
old man if he might regale them with some reminiscences about Douglas
MacArthur. He grins, as if some secret has been ferreted out of him, and
says, "I met the General in the Philippines." Just like that, he's jujitsued
the topic of conversation around to what everyone actually wants to talk
about. Randy's pulse and respiration ratchet up by a good twenty five
percent and all of his senses become more acute, almost as if his ears have
popped again, and he loses his appetite. Everyone else seems to be sitting
up a bit straighter too, shifting in their chairs slightly. "Did you spend
much time in that country?" Avi asks.
"Oh, yes. Much time. A hundred years," says Goto Dengo, with a rather
frosty grin. He pauses, giving everyone a chance to get good and uneasy, and
then continues, "My son tells me that you want to dig a grave there."
"A hole," Randy ventures, after much uncomfortableness.
"Excuse me. My English is rusty," says Goto Dengo, none too
convincingly.
Avi says, "What we have in mind would be a major excavation by our
standards. But probably not by yours."
Goto Dengo chuckles. "That all depends on the circumstances. Permits.
Transportation issues. The Crypt was a big excavation, but it was easy,
because the sultan was supporting it."
"I must emphasize that the work we are considering is still in a very
early planning phase," Avi says. "I regret to say I can't give you good
information about the logistical issues."
Goto Dengo comes this close to rolling his eyes. "I understand," he
says with a dismissive wave of the hand. "We will not talk about these
things this evening."
This produces a really awkward pause, while Randy and Avi ask
themselves what the hell are we going to talk about then? "Very well," Avi
says, sort of weakly lobbing the ball back in Goto Dengo's general
direction.
Furudenendo steps in. "There are many people who dig holes in the
Philippines," he explains with a big knowing wink.
"Ah!" Randy says. "I have met some of the people you are talking
about!" This produces a general outburst of laughter around the table, which
is none the less sincere for being tense.
"You understand, then," says Furudenendo, "that we would have to study
a joint venture very carefully." Even Randy easily translates this to: we
will participate in your loony tunes treasure hunt when hell freezes over.
"Please!" Randy says, "Goto Engineering is a distinguished company. Top
of the line. You have much better things to do than to gamble on joint
ventures. We would never propose such a thing. We would be able to pay for
your services up front."
"Ah!" The Gotos look at each other significantly. "You have a new
investor?" We know you are broke. Avi grins. "We have new resources." This
leaves the Gotos nonplussed. "If I may," Avi says. He heaves his briefcase
up off the floor and onto his lap, flips the latches open, and reaches into
it with both hands. Then he performs a maneuver that, in a bodybuilding gym,
would be called a barbell curl, and lifts a brick of solid gold into the
light.
The faces of Goto Dengo and Goto Furudenendo are transmuted to stone.
Avi holds the bar up for a few moments, then lowers it back into his
briefcase.
Eventually, Furudenendo scoots his chair back a couple of centimeters
and rotates it slightly toward his father, basically excusing himself from
the conversation. Goto Dengo eats dinner and drinks wine calmly, and
silently, for a very, very long fifteen or twenty minutes. Finally, he looks
across the table at Randy and says, "Where do you want to dig?"
"The site is in mountains south of Laguna de Bay "
"Yes, you already told my son that. But that is a large area of boon
docks. Many holes have been dug there. All worthless."
"We have better information."
"Some old Filipino has sold you his memories?"
"Better than that," Randy says. "We have a latitude and longitude."
"To what degree of precision?"
"Tenths of a second."
This occasions another pause. Furudenendo tries to say something in
Nipponese, but his father cuts him off gruffly. Goto Dengo finishes his
dinner and crosses his fork and knife on the plate. A waiter's there five
seconds later to clear the table. Goto Dengo says something to him that
sends him fleeing back into the kitchen. They have essentially a whole floor
of the skyscraper to themselves now. Goto Dengo utters something to his son,
who produces a fountain pen and two business cards. Furudenendo hands the
pen, and one card, to his father, and the other card to Randy. "Let's play a
little game," Goto Dengo says. "You have a pen?"
"Yes," Randy says.
"I am going to write down a latitude and longitude," Goto Dengo says,
"but only the seconds portion. No degrees and no minutes. Only the seconds
part. You understand?"
"Yes."
"The information is useless by itself. You agree?"
"Yes."
"Then there is no risk for you to write down the same."
"It's true."
"Then we will exchange cards. Agreed?"
"I agree."
"Very well." Goto Dengo starts writing. Randy takes a pen from his
pocket and jots down the seconds and tenths of a second: latitude 35.2,
longitude 59.0. When he's done, Goto Dengo's looking at him expectantly.
Randy holds out his card, numbers facing down, and Goto Dengo holds out his.
They exchange them with the small bow that is obligatory around here. Randy
cups Goto sama's card in his palm and turns it into the light. It says
35.2/59.0
No one says anything for ten minutes. It's a measure of how stunned
Randy is that he doesn't realize, for a long time, that Goto Dengo is just
as stunned as he is. Avi and Furudenendu are the only people at the table
whose minds are still functioning, and they spend the whole time looking at
each other uncertainly, neither one really understanding what's going on.
Finally Avi says something that Randy doesn't hear. He nudges Randy
firmly and says it again: "I'm going to the lavatory."
Randy watches him go, counts to ten, and says, "Excuse me." He follows
Avi to the men's washroom: black polished stone, thick white towels, Avi
standing there with his arms crossed. "He knows," Randy says.
"I don't believe it."
Randy shrugs. "What can I say? He knows."
"If he knows, everyone knows. Our security broke down somewhere along
the line."
"Everyone doesn't know," Randy says. "If everyone knew, all hell would
be breaking loose down there, and Enoch would have gotten word to us.
"Then how can he know?"
"Avi," Randy says, "he must be the one who buried it." Avi looks
outraged. "Are you shitting me?"
"You have a better theory?"
"I thought all the people who buried the stuff were killed."
"It's fair to say that he's a survivor. Wouldn't you agree?"
Ten minutes later they return to the table. Goto Dengo has allowed the
restaurant staff back into the room, and dessert menus have been brought
out. Weirdly, the old man has gone back into polite chitchat mode, and Randy
gradually figures out that he's trying to work out how the hell Randy knows
what he knows. Randy mentions, offhandedly, that his grandfather was a
cryptanalyst in Manila in 1945. Goto Dengo sighs, visibly, with relief and
cheers up somewhat. Then it's more completely meaningless chatter until
postprandial coffee has been served, at which point the patriarch leans
forward to make a point. "Before you sip look!"
Randy and Avi look into their cups. A weirdly glittering layer of scum
is floating atop their coffee.
"It is gold," Furudenendu explains. Both of the Gotos laugh. "During
the eighties, when Nippon had so much money, this was the fashion: coffee
with gold dust. Now it is out of fashion. Too ostentatious. But you go ahead
and drink."
Randy and Avi do a bit nervously. The gold dust coats their tongues,
then washes away down their throats.
"Tell me what you think," Goto Dengo demands.
"It's stupid," Randy says.
"Yes." Goto Dengo nods solemnly. "It is stupid. So tell me, then: why
do you want to dig up more of it?"
"We're businessmen," Avi says. "We make money. Gold is worth money."
"Gold is the corpse of value," says Goto Dengo.
"I don't understand."
"If you want to understand, look out the window!" says the patriarch,
and sweeps his cane around in an arc that encompasses half of Tokyo. "Fifty
years ago, it was flames. Now it is lights! Do you understand? The leaders
of Nippon were stupid. They took all of the gold out of Tokyo and buried it
in holes in the ground in the Philippines! Because they thought that The
General would march into Tokyo and steal it. But The General didn't care
about the gold. He understood that the real gold is here " he points to his
head " in the intelligence of the people, and here " he holds out his hands
" in the work that they do. Getting rid of our gold was the best thing that
ever happened to Nippon. It made us rich. Receiving that gold was the worst
thing that happened to the Philippines. It made them poor."
"Then let's get it out of the Philippines," Avi says, "so that they too
can have the opportunity to become rich."
"Ah! Now you are making sense," says Goto Dengo. "You are going to take
the gold out and dump it into the ocean, then?"
"No," Avi says, with a nervous chuckle.
Goto Dengo raises his eyebrows. "Oh. So, you wish to become rich as
part of the bargain?"
At this point Avi does something that Randy's never seen him do, or
even come close to doing, before: he gets pissed off. He doesn't flip the
table over, or raise his voice. But his face turns red, the muscles of his
head bulge as he clenches his teeth together, and he breathes heavily
through his nose for a while. The Gotos both seem to be rather impressed by
this, and so no one says anything for a long time, giving Avi a chance to
regain his cool. It seems as though Avi can't bring words forth, and so
finally he takes his wallet out of his pocket and flips through it until
he's found a black and white photograph, which he pulls from its transparent
sleeve and hands across to Goto Dengo. It's a family portrait: father,
mother, four kids, all with a mid twentieth century, Middle European look
about them. "My great uncle," Avi says, "and his family. Warsaw, 1937. His
teeth are down in that hole. You buried my uncle's teeth!"
Goto Dengo looks up into Avi's eyes, neither angry nor defensive. Just
sad. And this seems to have an effect on Avi, who softens, exhales finally,
breaks eye contact.
"I know you probably had no choice," Avi says. "But that's what you
did. I never knew him, or any of my other relatives who died in the Shoah.
But I would gladly dump every ounce of that gold into the ocean, just to
give them a decent burial. That's what I'll do if you make it a condition.
But what I was really planning on doing was using it to make sure that
nothing of the kind ever happens again."
Goto Dengo ponders this for a while, looking stonefaced out over the
lights of Tokyo. Then he unhooks his cane from the edge of the table, jams
it into the floor, and shoves himself to his feet. He turns towards Avi,
straightens his posture, and then bows. It's the deepest bow Randy's ever
seen. Eventually he straightens up and retakes his seat.
The tension has been broken. Everyone's relaxed, not to say exhausted.
"General Wing is very close to finding Golgotha," Randy says, after a
decent interval has ticked by. "It's him or us."
"It's us, then," says Goto Dengo.
Chapter 96 R.I.P.
The clamor of the Marines' rifles echoes through the cemetery, the
sharp reports pinging from tombstone to tombstone like pachinko balls. Goto
Dengo bends down and thrusts his hand into a pile of loose dirt. It feels
good. He scoops up a handful of the stuff, it trickles out from between his
fingers and trails down the legs of his crisp new United States Army
uniform, getting caught in the trouser cuffs. He steps to the sharp brink of
the grave and pours the earth from his hand onto the General Issue coffin
containing Bobby Shaftoe. He crosses himself, staring at the coffin lid
stained with dirt, and then, with some effort, lifts his head up again,
towards the sunlit world of things that live. Other than a few blades of
grass and some mosquitoes, the first living thing that he sees is a pair of
feet in sandals made from old jeep tires, supporting a white man wrapped in
a shapeless brown garment of rough fabric with a large hood on the top.
Staring out from the shade of that hood is the supernaturally weird looking
(in that he has a red beard and grey hair) head of Enoch Root a character
who keeps bumping into Goto Dengo as he goes around Manila trying to carry
out his duties. Goto Dengo is seized and paralyzed by his wild stare.
They stroll together across the burgeoning cemetery.
"You have something you would like to tell me?" Enoch says.
Goto Dengo turns his head to look into Root's eyes. "I was told that
the confessional was a place of perfect secrets."
"It is," Enoch says.
"Then, how did you know?"
"Know what?"
"I think your Church brothers told you something that you should not
know."
"Put this idea out of your mind. The secrecy of the confessional has
not been violated. I did not talk to the priest who took your first
confession, and if I did, he would tell me nothing."
"Then how do you know?" Goto Dengo asks.
"I have several ways of knowing things. One thing I know is that you
are a digger. A man who engineers big holes in the ground. Your friend and
mine, Father Ferdinand, told me that."
"Yes."
"The Nipponese went to much trouble to bring you here. They would not
have done this unless they wanted you to dig an important hole."
"There are many reasons they might have done this."
"Yes," Enoch Root says, "but only a few that make sense."
They stroll silently for a while. Root's feet kick the hem of his robe
out with each step. "I know other things," he continues. "South of here, a
man brought diamonds to a priest. This man said he had attacked a traveler
on the road, and taken from him a small fortune in diamonds. The victim died
of his injuries. The murderer gave the diamonds to the Church as penance."
"Was the victim Filipino or Chinese?" asks Goto Dengo.
Enoch Root stares at him coolly. "A Chinese man knows of this?"
More strolling. Root will gladly walk from one end of Luzon to the
other if that's how long it takes for the words to come out of Goto Dengo.
"I have information from Europe too," Root says. "I know that the
Germans have been hiding treasure. It is widely known that General Yamashita
is burying more war gold in the northern mountains even as we speak."
"What do you want from me?" Goto Dengo asks. There's no preliminary
moistening of the eyeballs, the tears leap out of him and run down his face.
"I came to the Church because of some words."
"Words?"
"This is Jesus Christ who taketh away the sins of the world," Goto
Dengo says. "Enoch Root, no one knows the sins of the world better than me.
I have swum in those sins, drowned in them, burned in them, dug in them. I
was like a man swimming down a long cave filled with black cold water.
Looking up, I saw a light above me, and swam towards it. I only wanted to
find the surface, to breathe air again. Still immersed in the sins of the
world, at least I could breathe. This is what I am now."
Root nods and waits.
"I had to confess. The things that I saw the things I did were so
terrible. I had to purify myself. That is what I did, in my first
confession." Goto Dengo heaves a deep, shuddering sigh. "It was a very, very
long confession. But it is finished. Jesus has taken away my sins, or so the
priest said."
"Good. I'm glad it helped you."
"Now, you want me to speak of these things again?"
"There are others," says Enoch Root. He stops in his tracks, and turns,
and nods. Silhouetted on the top of a rise, on the other side of several
thousand white tombstones, are two men in civilian clothes. They look
Western, but that is all Goto Dengo can tell from here.
"Who are they?"
"Men who have been to hell and come back, as you did. Men who know
about the gold."
"What do they want?"
"To dig up the gold."
Nausea wraps around Goto Dengo like a wet bedsheet. "They would have to
tunnel down through a thousand fresh corpses. It is a grave."
"The whole world is a grave," says Enoch Root. "Graves can be moved,
corpses reinterred. Decently."
"And then? If they got the gold?"
"The world is bleeding. It needs medicine and bandages. These cost
money."
"But before this war, all of this gold was out here, in the sunlight.
In the world. Yet look what happened." Goto Dengo shudders. "Wealth that is
stored up in gold is dead. It rots and stinks. True wealth is made every day
by men getting up out of bed and going to work. By school children doing
their lessons, improving their minds. Tell those men that if they want
wealth, they should come to Nippon with me after the war. We will start
businesses and build buildings."
"Spoken like a true Nipponese," Enoch says bitterly. "You never
change."
"Please make me understand what you are saying."
"What of the man who cannot get out of bed and work, because he has no
legs? What of the widow who has no husband to work, no children to support
her? What of children who cannot improve their minds because they lack books
and schoolhouses?"
"You can shower gold on them," Goto Dengo says. "Soon enough, it will
all be gone."
"Yes. But some of it will be gone into books and bandages."
Goto Dengo does not have a rejoinder for this. He is not outsmarted so
much as sad and tired. "What do you want? You think I should give the gold
to the Church?"
Enoch Root looks mildly taken aback, as if the idea hadn't really
occurred to him before. "You could do worse, I suppose. The Church has two
thousand years of experience in using its resources to help the poor. It has
not always been perfect. But is has built its share of hospitals and
schools."
Goto Dengo shakes his head. "I have only been in your Church for a few
weeks and already I have many doubts about it. It has been a good thing for
me. But to give it so much gold I am not sure if this is a good idea."
"Don't look at me as if you expect me to defend the Church's
imperfections," says Enoch Root. "They have kicked me out of the
priesthood."
"Then what shall I do?"
"Perhaps give it to the Church with conditions."
"What?"
"You can stipulate that it only be used to educate children, if you
choose."
Goto Dengo says, "Educated men created this cemetery."
"Then choose some other condition."
"My condition is that if that gold ever comes out of the ground, it
should be used so that we do not have any more wars like this one."
"And how should we accomplish such a thing, Goto Dengo?"
Goto Dengo sighs. "You put a big weight on my shoulders!"
"No. I did not put the weight on your shoulders. It has always been
there." Enoch Root stares mercilessly into Goto Dengo's tormented face.
"Jesus takes away the sins of the world, but the world remains: a physical
reality on which we are doomed to live until death takes us away from it.
You have confessed, and you have been forgiven, and so the greater part of
your burden has been taken away by grace. But the gold is still there, in a
hole in the ground. Did you think that the gold all turned into dirt when
you swallowed the bread and the wine? That is not what we mean by
transubstantiation." Enoch Root turns his back and walks away, leaving Goto
Dengo alone in the bright avenues of the city of the dead.
Chapter 97 RETURN
"I SHALL RETURN" wrote Randy in his first e mail message to Amy after
he got to Tokyo. Returning to the Philippines is not a very good idea at
all, and probably not the kind of thing that the old mellow Randy would have
even considered. But here he is on a beach in the Sultanate of Kinakuta,
down below Tom Howard's personal citadel, dipped in sunblock and Dramamined
to the gills, getting ready to return. Reckoning that the goatee would make
him easy to identify, he has shaved it off, and reckoning that hair is
useless where he's headed (the jungle, jail, and Davy Jones's Locker being
the three most likely possibilities), has run a buzzer over his head and
shorn himself down to about an eighth of an inch all around. This in turn
has necessitated finding a hat, to prevent radiation burns of the skull, and
the only hat in Tom Howard's house that fits Randy is an outback number that
some cephalomegalic Aussie contractor left behind there, evidently because
its fragrance had begun to attract nocturnal rodents with a proclivity for
aimless gnawing.
A pamboat is drawn up on the beach, and a couple of families' worth of
badjao kids are tear assing around, exactly like kids at a rest area on the
interstate who know that in ten minutes they have to get back into the
Winnebago. The boat's main hull is carved from a single rainforest tree,
fifty feet long if it's an inch, narrow enough at its widest point that
Randy could sit in the middle and touch both gunwales with out stretched
hands. Most of the hull's shaded under a thatched roof of palm fronds,
almost all grey brown from age and salt spray, though in one place an older
woman is patching it with fresh greens and plastic twine. On each side a
narrow bamboo outrigger is connected to the hull by bamboo poles. There's a
sort of bridge that sticks way out over the bow, painted with bright red and
green and yellow curlicues, like chains of vortices thrown off in the wake
of a boat and reflecting the colors of a tropical sunset.
Speaking of which, the sun's going down right now, and they are making
preparations to bring the final load, of gold up out of the hull of the
pamboat. The land drops so precipitously towards the water that there's no
road access to the beach, which is probably a good thing since they want
this to be as private as possible. But Tom Howard had a lot of heavy stuff
shipped in here when he was constructing his house, and so he already has a
short section of narrow gauge railway in place. This sounds more impressive
than it is: a pair of steel I beams, already rusting, bracketed to half
buried concrete ties, running fifty yards straight up a forty five degree
slope to a small plateau that's accessible via private road. There he's got
a diesel powered winch that he can use to drag stuff up the rails. It is
more than adequate for this evening's job, which is to move a couple of
hundred kilograms of bullion the last of the gold from the sunken submarine
up from the beach and into the vault in his house. Tomorrow, he and the
others can truck it into downtown Kinakuta at their leisure, and turn it
into strings of bits representing very large numbers with noteworthy
cryptological properties.
The badjaos share the same maddening refusal to be exotic that Randy
has found everywhere on his travels: the guy who's running the show insists
that his name is Leon, and the kids on the beach are forever copping
stereotyped martial arts poses and hollering "hi yaaa!" which Randy knows is
a Power Rangers thing, because Avi's kids did exactly the same thing until
their father banned all Power Ranger emulation inside the house. When the
first milk crate full of gold bars is dropped off the high bridge of the
pamboat by Leon, and half buries itself in the floury damp sand below, Avi
stands over it and tries to utter some kind of solemn prayer for the dead in
Hebrew, and gets maybe half a dozen phonemes into it before two of the
badjao kids, having pegged him as a permanent stationary object, decide to
use him as tactical cover, and take up positions on either side of him madly
hi yaaaing each other. Avi's not so full of himself that he can't see the
humor in this, and yet not so sentimental that he doesn't obviously want to
strangle them.
John Wayne is patrolling the surf with a cigarette and a pump shotgun.
Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe rates the probability of frogman attack rather low
because the gold in the pamboat is only worth two and half million dollars,
an amount that hardly rates anything as elaborate, and expensive, as a
seaborne assault. John Wayne needs to be there in case someone gets the
mistaken impression that they've somehow managed to pack ten or twenty times
that much gold into the pamboat. This seems improbable from a hydrodynamics
standpoint. But Doug says that overestimating the intelligence of the enemy
is, if anything, more dangerous than underestimating it. He, Tom Howard, and
Jackie Woo are up the hill guarding the roadhead with assault rifles. Tom's
been positively strutting. All of his fantasies are coming true in this
little tableau.
A large plastic box thuds into the sand, breaks open, and spills out a
mess of shattered coral. Randy strolls over to it and sees leaves of gold
inside the coral carapace, tiny holes punched into them. To him the holes
are more interesting than the gold.
But everyone's reacting differently. Doug Shaftoe's always
conspicuously cool and sort of pensive in the presence of a very large
amount of gold, like he's always known that it was there, but touching it
makes him think about where it came from and what was done to get it there.
The sight of a single brick almost made Goto Dengo vomit up his Kobe beef.
For Eberhard Föhr, who is out in the cove doing a lazy backstroke, it is the
physical incarnation of monetary value, which for him, and the rest of
Epiphyte, has mostly been a mathematical abstraction a practical application
of one particular sub sub sub branch of number theory. So it has the same
kind of purely intellectual attraction to him as a moon rock or a dinosaur
tooth. Tom Howard sees it in the embodiment of some political principles
that are almost as pure, and as divorced from human reality, as number
theory. Mixed in with that is some sense of personal vindication. For Leon
the Sea Gypsy, it's just a cargo to be hauled from point A to point B, for
which he'll be compensated with something more useful. For Avi it's an
inextricable mixture of the sacred and the satanic. For Randy and if anyone
knew about this, he would be dreadfully embarrassed, and would freely admit
to its cloyingness it is the closest thing he's got right now to a physical
link with his beloved, in that she was pulling these bars out of the wreck
of the submarine just a few days ago. And that is really the only sense in
which he gives a damn about it, anymore. In fact, in the few days since he
decided to hire Leon to smuggle him up the Sulu Sea and into southern Luzon,
he has had to remind himself over and over again that the nominal purpose of
the trip is to open up Golgotha.
After the gold has been unloaded, and Leon has taken on some supplies,
Tom Howard produces a bottle of single malt scotch, finally answering
Randy's question of who patronizes all of those duty free stores in
airports. Everyone gathers on the beach for a toast. Randy's a little edgy
when he joins this circle, because he's not sure what he's going to propose
a toast to if the responsibility falls to him. Unearthing Golgotha? He can't
really drink to that. The meeting of minds between Avi and Goto Dengo was a
spark jumping across an air gap sudden, dazzling, and a little scary and it
hinged around their common understanding that all of this gold is blood
money, that Golgotha is a grave they're preparing to desecrate. So that's
not exactly toast material. How about a toast to abstract lofty principles,
then?
Here Randy's got another hangup, something that's been slowly dawning
on him as he stands on the beach beneath Tom Howard's concrete house: the
perfect freedom that Tom's found in Kinakuta is a cut flower in a crystal
vase. It's lovely, but it's dead, and the reason it's dead is that it has
been alienated from its germinal soil. And what is that soil exactly? To a
first approximation you could just say "America," but it's a little more
complicated than that; America's just the hardest to ignore instantiation of
a cultural and philosophical system that can be seen in a few other places.
Not many. Certainly not in Kinakuta. The closest outpost is really not that
far away: the Filipinos, for all of their shortcomings in the human rights
department, have imbibed the whole Western freedom thing deeply, in a way
that has arguably made them economic laggards compared to Asian countries
where no one gives a shit about human rights.
In the end it's a moot point; Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe purposes a
toast to smooth sailing. Two years ago Randy would have found this to be
banal and simple minded. Now he understands it as Doug's implicit nod to the
world's moral ambiguity, and a pretty deft preemptive strike against any
more inflated rhetoric. Randy downs his Scotch in a gulp and then says,
"let's do it," which is also pretty stunningly banal, but this gathering in
a circle on the beach thing really makes him nervous; he signed on to
participate in a business opportunity, not to join a cabal.
Four days on the pamboat ensue. It putts along at a steady ten
kilometers per hour day and night, and it sticks to shallow coastal waters
along the periphery of the Sulu Sea. They are lucky with the weather. They
stop twice on Palawan and once on Mindoro to take on diesel fuel and to
barter for unspecified commodities. Cargo goes down in the hull, people go
above it on the deck, which is just a few loose planks thrown crosswise over
the gunwales. Randy feels more out and out lonely than he has since he was a
teenaged geek, but he's not sad about it. He sleeps a lot, perspires, drinks
water, reads a couple of books, and dicks around with his new GPS receiver.
Its most salient feature is a mushroom shaped external antenna that can pick
up weak signals, which ought to be useful in triple canopy jungle. Randy has
punched Golgotha's latitude and longitude into its memory, so that by
hitting a couple of buttons he can instantly see how far away it is, along
what heading. From Tom Howard's beach it's almost exactly a thousand
kilometers. When the pamboat finally noses up on a tidal mudflat in southern
Luzon, and Randy sloshes ashore in full MacArthurian style, the distance is
only about forty clicks.
But tumbledown volcanoes rise before him, black and mist shrouded, and
he knows from experience that forty kilometers in boondocks will be much
rougher going than the first nine hundred and sixty.
The bell tower of an old Spanish church rises up above the coconut
palms not far away, carved from blocks of volcanic tuff that are beginning
to glow in the lambency of another damn mind blowing tropical sunset. After
he's snagged some extra bottles of water and said his good byes to Leon and
the family, Randy walks towards it. As he goes, he erases the memory of
Golgotha's location from his GPS, just in case it gets confiscated or ripped
off.
The next thought he has says something about his general frame of mind:
that nuts are the genitalia of trees is never more obvious than when you are
looking at a cluster of swelling young coconuts nestled in the hairy dark
groin of a palm tree. It's surprising that the Spanish missionaries didn't
have the whole species eradicated. Anyway, by the time he's reached the
church, he's picked up a retinue of little bare chested Filipino kids who
apparently aren't used to seeing white men materialize out of nowhere.
Randy's not crazy about this, but he'll settle for no one summoning the
police.
A Nipponese sport utility vehicle of the adorably styled, alarmingly
high center of gravity school is parked in front of the church, ringed by
impressed villagers. Randy wonders if they could have done this any more
conspicuously. A fiftyish driver leans against the front bumper smoking a
cigarette and shooting the breeze with some local dignitaries: a priest and,
for god's sake, a cop with a fucking bolt action rifle. Just about everyone
in sight is smoking Marlboros, which have apparently been distributed as a
goodwill gesture. Randy's got to get himself back into a Philippine frame of
mind: the way to sneak into the country is not to mount some cloak and
dagger operation, crawling up onto an isolated beach in a matte black
wetsuit in the middle of the night, but simply to waltz in and make friends
with all of the people who see you. Because it's not like they're stupid;
they are going to see you.
Randy smokes a cigarette. He had never done this in his life until a
few months ago, when he finally got it through his head that it was a social
thing, that some people take it as an insult when you turn down an offered
cigarette, and that a few smokes weren't going to kill him in any case. None
of these people, except for the driver and the priest, speaks a word of
English, and so this is the only way he can communicate with them. Anyway,
given all the other changes he's gone through, why the hell shouldn't he
become a cigarette smoker while he's at it? Maybe next week he'll be
shooting heroin. For something disgusting and lethal, cigarettes are
amazingly enjoyable.
The driver is named Matthew, and he really turns out to be not so much
a driver as a charismatic fixer/negotiator, a smoother of the way, a human
road grader. Randy just stands there passively while Matthew charmingly and
hilariously extricates them from this impromptu village meeting, a job that
would probably be next to impossible if the priest were not so clearly
complicit. The cop looks to the priest for cues as to what he should do, and
the priest tells him something complicated with a series of looks and
gestures, and in that way, somehow, Randy finds his way into the sport
utility vehicle's passenger seat and Matthew gets behind the wheel. Well
after sunset they trundle out of the village along its execrable one lane
road, trailed by kids who run alongside keeping one hand on the car, like
Secret Service agents in a motorcade. They are able to do this for quite a
while because they've gone a few kilometers before the road gets good enough
for Matthew to shift out of first gear.
This is not a part of the world where it makes any sense at all to
drive at night, but clearly Matthew wasn't interested in an overnight stay
at that village. Randy has a pretty good idea of what's going to happen now:
many hours of driving very slowly on circuitous roads, half blocked by piles
of freshly harvested young coconuts, impeded by hunks of lumber thrown
across the right of way as speed bumps to prevent kids and dogs from being
run over. He leans his seat back.
Bright light is streaming into the car and he thinks: roadblock, cops,
spotlights. The light's blocked by a silhouette. There's a rapping noise on
the window. Randy looks over and sees the driver's seat empty, no keys in
the ignition. The car's cool and dormant. He sits up and rubs his face,
partly because it needs to be rubbed and partly because it's probably smart
to keep one's hands in plain sight. More rapping on the windshield,
growingly impatient. The windows are fogged and he can only see shapes. The
light's reddish. He's got a completely inappropriate erection. Randy gropes
for a window control, but the car's got power windows and they don't work
when it's not running. He gropes around on the door until he's figured out
how to unlock it, and almost instantly it flies open and someone's coming
inside to join him.
She ends up on Randy's lap, lying sideways on top of him, her head on
his chest. "Close the door," Amy says, and Randy does. Then she squirms
around until she's face to face with him, her pelvic center of gravity
grinding mercilessly against the huge generalized region between navel and
thigh that has, in recent months, become one big sex organ for him. She
brackets his neck between her forearms and grabs the carotid supports of the
whiplash arrestor. He's busted. The obvious thing now would be a kiss, and
she feints in that direction, but then reconsiders, as it seems like some
serious looking is in order at this time. So they look at each other for
probably a good minute. It's not a moony kind of look that they share, not a
starry eyed thing by any means, more like a what the fuck have we gotten
ourselves into thing. As if it's really important to both of them that they
mutually appreciate how serious everything is. Emotionally, yes, but also
from a legal and, for lack of a better term, military standpoint. But once
Amy is satisfied that her boy does indeed get it, on all of these fronts,
she permits herself a vaguely incredulous looking sneer that blossoms into a
real grin, and then a chuckle that in a less heavily armed woman might be
characterized as a giggle, and then, just to shut herself up, she pulls hard
on the stainless steel goalposts of the whiplash arrestor and nuzzles her
face up to Randy's and, after ten heartbeats' worth of exploratory sniffling
and nuzzling, kisses him. It's a chaste kiss that takes a long time to open
up, which is totally consistent with Amy's cautious, sardonic approach to
everything, as well as with the hypothesis, alluded to once while they were
driving to Whitman, that she is in fact a virgin.
Randy's life is essentially complete at the moment. He has come to
understand during all of this that the light shining in through the windows
is in fact the light of dawn, and he tries to fight back the thought that
it's a good day to die because it's clear to him that although he might go
on from this point to make a lot of money, become famous, or whatever,
nothing's ever going to top this. Amy knows it too, and she makes the kiss
last for a very long time before finally breaking away with a little gasp
for air, and bowing her head so that her brow is supported on Randy's
breastbone, the curve of her head following that of his throat, like the
coastlines of South America and Africa. Randy almost can't take the pressure
of her on his groin. He braces his feet against the floorboards of the sport
utility vehicle and squirms.
She moves suddenly and decisively, grabbing the hem of the left leg of
his baggy shorts and yanking it almost up to his navel, taking his boxer
shorts along with. Randy pops free and takes aim at her, straining upwards,
bobbing slightly with each beat of his heart, glowing healthily (he thinks
modestly) in the dawn light. Amy's in a sort of light wrap around skirt,
which she suddenly flings over him, producing a momentary tent pole effect.
But she's on the move, reaching up beneath to pull her underwear out of the
way, and then before he can even believe it's happening she sits down on
him, hard, producing a nearly electrical shock. Then she stops moving daring
him.
Randy's toe knuckles pop audibly. He lifts himself and Amy into the
air, experiences some kind of synaesthetic hallucination very much like the
famous "jump into hyperspace" scene from Star Wars. Or perhaps the air bag
has accidentally detonated? Then he pumps something like an Imperial pint of
semen it's a seemingly open ended series of ejaculations, each coupled to
the next by nothing more than a leap of faith that another one is coming and
in the end, like all schemes built on faith and hope, it lapses, and then
Randy sits utterly still until his body realizes it has not drawn breath in
quite a while. He fills his lungs all the way, stretching them out, which
feels almost as good as the orgasm, and then he opens his eyes she's staring
down at him in bemusement, but (thank god!) not horror or disgust. He
settles back into the bucket seat, which squeezes his butt in a not
unpleasant gesture of light harassment. Between that, and Amy's thighs, and
other penetrations, he is not going anywhere for a while, and he's
moderately afraid of what Amy's going to say she has a lengthy menu of
possible responses to all of this, most of them at Randy's expense. She
plants a knee, levers herself up, grabs the tail of his Hawaiian shirt and
cleans herself off a bit. Then she shoves the door open, pats him twice on
his whiskery cheek, says "Shave," and exits stage left. Randy can now see
that the air bag has not, in fact, deployed. And yet he has the same feeling
of a major sudden life change that one might get after surviving a car
crash.
He is a mess. Fortunately his bag's in the backseat, with another
shirt. A few minutes later he finally emerges from the fogged up car and
gets a look at his surroundings. He's in a community built on a canted
plateau with a few widely spaced, very high coconut palms scattered about.
Downslope, which appears to be roughly south, there is a pattern of
vegetation that Randy recognizes as a tri leveled cash crop thing:
pineapples down on the ground, cacao and coffee at about head level,
coconuts and bananas above that. The yellowish green leaves of the banana
trees are especially appealing, seemingly big enough to stretch out and
sunbathe on. To the north, and uphill, a jungle is attempting to tear down a
mountain.
This compound that he's in is obviously a recent thing, laid out by
actual surveyors, designed by people with educations, subsidized by someone
who can afford brand new sheets of corrugated tin, ABS drainpipe, and proper
electrical wiring. It has something in common with a normal Philippine town
in that it's built around a church. In this case the church is small Enoch
called it a chapel but that it was designed by Finnish architecture students
would be obvious to Randy even if Root hadn't divulged it. It has a bit of
that Bucky Fuller tensegrity thing going for it lots of exposed, tensioned
cables radiating from the ends of tubular struts, all collaborating to
support a roof that's not a single surface but a system of curved shards. It
looks awfully well designed to Randy, who now judges buildings on the sole
criterion of their ability to resist earthquakes. Root told him it was built
by the brothers of a missionary order, and by local volunteers, with
materials contributed by a Nipponese foundation that is still trying to make
amends for the war.
Music is coming out of the church. Randy checks his watch and discovers
that it's Sunday morning. He avoids participating in the Mass, on the excuse
that it's already underway and he doesn't want to interrupt it, and ambles
toward a nearby pavilion a corrugated roof sheltering a concrete floor slab
with some plastic tables where breakfast is being laid out. He arouses
violent controversy among a loose flock of chickens that is straggling
across his path, none of whom can seem to figure out how to get out of his
way; they're scared of him, but not mentally organized enough to translate
that fear into a coherent plan of action. Several miles away, a helicopter
is flying in from the sea, shedding altitude as it homes in on a pad
somewhere up in the jungle. It is a big and gratuitously loud cargo carrying
chopper with unfamiliar lines, and Randy vaguely suspects that it was built
in Russia for Chinese customers and that it is part of Wing's operations.
He recognizes Jackie Woo lounging at one of the tables, drinking tea
and reading a bright magazine. Amy's in the adjacent kitchen, embroiled in
Tagalog girl talk with a couple of middle aged ladies who are handling the
preparations for the meal. This place seems pretty safe, and so Randy stops
in the open, punches in the digits that only he and Goto Dengo know, and
takes a GPS reading. According to the machine, they are no more than 4500
meters away from the main drift of Golgotha. Randy checks the heading and
determines that it is uphill from here. Although the jungle blurs the
underlying shape of the earth, he thinks that it's going to be up in the
valley of a nearby river.
Forty five hundred meters seems impossibly close, and he's still
standing there trying to convince himself that his memory is sound when the
ragged voices of the worshippers suddenly spill out across the compound as
the chapel's door is pushed open. Enoch Root emerges, wearing (inevitably)
what Randy would describe as a wizard's robe. But as he walks across the
compound he shucks it off to reveal sensible khakis underneath, and hands
the robe to a young Filipino acolyte who scurries back inside with it. The
singing trails off and then Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe emerges from the
church, followed by John Wayne and several people who appear to be locals.
Everyone drifts towards the pavilion. The alertness that comes with being in
a new place, combined with the neurological aftermath of that shockingly big
and long orgasm, has left Randy's senses sharper, and his mind clearer, than
they've ever been, and he's impatient to get going. But he can't dispute the
wisdom of getting a good breakfast, so he shakes hands all around and sits
down with the others. There is a bit of small talk about how his pamboat
voyage went.
"Your friends should have come into the country that way," says Doug
Shaftoe, and then goes on to explain that Avi and both of the Gotos were
supposed to be here yesterday, but they were detained at the airport for
some hours and eventually had to fly back to Tokyo while some mysterious
immigration hassles were ironed out. "Why didn't they go to Taipei or Hong
Kong?" Randy wonders aloud since both those cities are much closer to
Manila. Doug stares at him blankly and observes that both of those are
Chinese cities, and reminds him that their presumed adversary now is General
Wing, who has a lot of pull in places like that.
Several backpacks have already been prepared, laden mostly with bottled
water. After everyone's had a chance to digest breakfast, Douglas MacArthur
Shaftoe, Jackie Woo, John Wayne, Enoch Root, America Shaftoe, and Randall
Lawrence Waterhouse all don packs. They begin to stroll uphill, passing out
of the compound and into a transitional zone of big leaved traveler trees
and giant clusters of bamboo: ten centimeter thick trunks spraying out and
up from central roots, like frozen shell bursts, to heights of at least ten
meters, the poles striped green and brown where the husky leaves are peeling
away. The canopy of the jungle looms higher and higher, accentuated by the
fact that it's uphill from here, and emits a fantastic whistling noise, like
a phaser on overload. As they enter the shade of the canopy the racket of
crickets is added to that whistling noise. It sounds as though there must be
millions of crickets and millions of whatever's making the whistling noise,
but from time to time the sound will suddenly stop and then start up again,
so if there are a lot of them, they are all following the same score.
The place is filled with plants that in America are only seen in pots,
but that grow to the size of oak trees here, so big that Randy's mind can't
recognize them as, for example, the same kind of Diefenbachia that
Grandmother Waterhouse used to have growing on the counter in her downstairs
bathroom. There is an incredible variety of butterflies, for whom the wind
free environment seems to be congenial, and they weave in and out among huge
spiderwebs that call to mind the design of Enoch Root's chapel. But it is
clear that the place is ultimately ruled by ants; in fact it makes the most
sense to think of the jungle as a living tissue of ants with minor
infestations of trees, birds, and humans. Some of them are so small that
they are, to other ants, as those ants are to people; they prosecute their
ant activities in the same physical space but without interfering, like many
signals on different frequencies sharing the same medium. But there are a
fair number of ants carrying other ants, and Randy assumed that they are not
doing it for altruistic reasons.
Where the jungle's dense it is impassable, but there are a fair number
of places where the trees are spaced a few meters apart and the under growth
is only knee high, and light shines through. By moving from one such place
to another they make slow progress in the general direction indicated by
Randy's GPS. Jackie Woo and John Nguyen have disappeared, and appear to be
moving parallel to them but much more quietly. The jungle is a nice place to
visit, but you wouldn't want to live, or even stop moving, there. Just as
the beggars in Intramuros see you as a bipedal automatic teller machine, the
insects here see you as a big slab of animated but not very well defended
food. The ability to move, far from being a deterrent, serves as an
unforgeable guarantee of freshness. The canopy's tentpoles are huge trees
"Octomelis sumatrana," says Enoch Root with narrow buttress roots splayed
out explosively in every direction, as thin and sharp as machetes sunk into
the earth. Some of them are almost completely obscured by colossal
philodendrons winding up their trunks.
They crest a broad, gentle ridgeline; Randy had forgotten that they
were moving uphill. The air suddenly becomes cooler and moisture condenses
on their skins. When the whistlers and the crickets pause, it be comes
possible to hear the murmur of a stream down below them. The next hour is
devoted to slowly working their way down the slope towards it. They cover a
total of a hundred meters; at this rate, Randy thinks, it should take them
two days, hiking around the clock, to reach Golgotha. But he keeps this
observation to himself. As they move downhill he starts to become aware of,
and to be taken aback by, the sheer amount of biomass that happens to be
above them forty or fifty meters above them in many cases. He feels as
though he's at the bottom of the food chain.
They enter a sunnier zone that consequently is snarled by much heavier
undergrowth, and are forced to break out the machetes and hack their way
through to the river. Enoch Root explains that this is a place where a small
lahar, which had been funneled between the steep walls of the river's gorge
farther upstream, spread out and mowed down a few hectares of ancient trees,
clearing the path for smaller, opportunistic vegetation. This is fascinating
for about ten seconds and then it's back to the machete work. Eventually
they reach the edge of the river, all of them sticky and greenish and
itching from the sap and juice and pulp of the vegetation they have
assaulted in order to get here. The river's bed is shallow and rocky here,
with no discernible bank. They sit down and drink water for a while. "What
is the point of all this?" asks Enoch Root suddenly. "I don't mean to sound
discouraged by these physical barriers, because I'm not. But I'm wondering
whether you have worked out the goal of it in your own mind."
"This is fact finding. Nothing more," Randy says.
"But there's no point in just aimlessly finding facts unless you're a
pure scientist, or a historian. You are representing a business concern
here. Correct?"
"Yes."
"And so if I were a shareholder in your company I could demand an
explanation of why you are sitting here on the edge of this river right now
instead of actually doing whatever it is that your company does."
"Assuming you were an intelligent shareholder, yes, that's what you'd
be doing."
"And what would your explanation be, Randy?"
"Well "
"I know where we are going, Randy." And Enoch quotes a string of
digits.
"How did you know that?" Randy asks kind of hotly.
"I've known it for fifty years," Enoch says. "Goto Dengo told me."
All Randy can do for a while is fume. Doug Shaftoe's laughing. Amy just
looks distracted. Enoch broods for a few moments, and finally says:
"Originally the plan was to buy this land with a smaller cache of gold that
was dug up and loaded aboard a certain submarine. We would then wait for the
right moment and then dig up the rest. But the submarine sank, and the gold
sank with it. I sat on the knowledge for many years. But then people started
buying up land around here people who were obviously hoping to find the
Primary. If I'd had the money, I would have bought this land myself. But I
didn't. So I saw to it that the Church bought it."
Doug Shaftoe says, "You haven't answered Enoch's question yet, Randy:
what good are you doing your shareholders here?"
A red dragonfly hovers above a backwater of the stream, its wings
moving so fast that the eye sees not wings in movement but a probability
distribution of where the wings might be, like electron orbitals: a quantum
mechanical effect that maybe explains why the insect can apparently teleport
from one place to another, disappearing from one point and reappearing a
couple of meters away, without seeming to pass through the space in between.
There sure is a lot of bright stuff in the jungle. Randy figures that, in
the natural world, anything that is colored so brightly must be some kind of
serious evolutionary badass.
"We took the gold that you recovered from the submarine and turned it
into electronic cash, right?" Randy says.
"So you claimed. I haven't actually spent any of that electronic cash
yet," says Doug.
"We want to do the same thing for the Church or Wing or whoever ends up
in possession of the gold. We want to deposit it in the Crypt, and make it
usable as electronic currency."
Amy asks, "Do you understand that, in order to move the gold out of
here, it'll be necessary to travel across land controlled by Wing?"
"Who says we have to move it?"
Silence for a minute, or what passes for silence in a jungle.
Doug Shaftoe says, "You're right. If the stories are even half true,
this facility is far more secure than any bank vault."
"The stories are all true and then some," Randy says. "The man who
designed and built Golgotha is Goto Dengo himself."
"Shit!"
"He drew plans of it for us. And the larger issue of local and national
security is not a problem here," Randy adds. "Of course the government has
sometimes been unstable. But any invader who wants to physically seize
possession of the gold will have to fight his way across this jungle with
tens of millions of heavily armed Filipinos barring his path."
"Everyone knows what the Huks did against the Nips," Doug says, nodding
vigorously. "Or the VC against us, for that matter. No one would be stupid
enough to try it."
"Especially if we put you in charge, Doug."
Amy's been woolgathering through most of the conversation, but at this
she turns and grins at her father.
"I accept," Doug says.
Randy's slowly becoming aware that most of the birds and bugs who live
here move so fast that you can't even turn your head fast enough to center
them in your vision. They exist only as slicing movements in your peripheral
vision. The only exception would seem to be a species of gnat that has
evolved into the specific niche of plunging into the left eyeballs of human
beings at something just under the speed of sound. Randy has taken about
four hits in the left eye, none in the right. He takes another one now, and
as he's recovering from it, the earth jumps underneath them. It is a little
like an earthquake in its psychological effect: a feeling of disbelief, and
then betrayal, that the solid ground is having the temerity to move around.
But it's all over by the time the sensation has moved up their spines to
their brains. The river's still running, and the dragonfly is still hunting.
"That felt exactly like high explosive going off," says Doug Shaftoe,
"but I didn't hear anything. Did anyone hear anything?"
No one heard anything.
"What that means," Doug continues, "is that someone is setting off
explosives deep underground."
They start working their way up the riverbed. Randy's GPS indicates
that Golgotha is less than two thousand meters upstream. The river begins to
develop proper banks that get steadily higher and steeper. John Wayne
clambers up onto the left bank and Jackie Woo onto the right, so that the
high ground on either side will be guarded, or at least reconnoitered. They
pass back into the shade of the canopy. The ground here is some kind of
sedimentary rock with granite boulders embedded in it from place to place,
like mixed nuts in half melted chocolate. It must be nothing more than a
scab of congealed ash and sediment on top of an underlying monolith of hard
rock. Those who are down in the streambed move very slowly now. Part of the
time they are down in the river, struggling upstream against a powerful
current, and part of the time they are picking their way from boulder to
boulder, or sidestepping. along crumbling ledges of harder rock that
protrude from the banks here and there. Every few minutes, Doug looks up and
makes visual contact with Jackie Woo and John Wayne who must be contending
with challenges of their own, because sometimes they fall behind the main
group. The trees only seem to get higher as they work their way up into the
mountains, and now their height is accentuated by the fact that they are
rooted in the top of a bank that rises above the stream two, five, ten, then
twenty and thirty meters. The bank actually overhangs them now: the river's
gorge is a tube mostly buried in the earth, open to the sky only through a
narrow slot in the top. But it's close to midday and the sun is shining
nearly straight down through it, illuminating all of the stuff that makes
its way down from the heights. The corpse of a murdered insect drifts down
from the upper canopy like winter's first snowflake. Water seeping from the
rims of the overhanging bank forms a drip curtain, each drop glittering like
a diamond and making it nearly impossible to see the dark cavity behind.
Yellow butterflies weave among those falling drops but never get hit.
They come around a gentle bend in the river and are confronted by a
waterfall some twenty meters high. At the base of the falls there's a still
and relatively shallow pool, filling the bottom of a broad melon shaped
cavity formed by the concave, overhanging banks. The vertical sun beams
straight down on the cloud of white foam at the base of the falls, which
radiates the light back at blinding power, forming a sort of natural light
fixture that illuminates the whole inside of the cavity. The stone walls,
sweating and dripping and running with groundwater, glisten in its light.
The undersides of the ferns and big leaved plants epiphytes sprouting from
invisible footholds in the walls flicker and dapple in the weirdly bluish
foam glow.
Most of the cavity's walls are hidden behind vegetation: fragile,
cascading veils of moss growing from the rock, and vines depending from the
branches of the trees hundreds of feet above them and dangling halfway down
into the gorge, where they have become entangled with protruding tree roots
and formed a natural trellis for a finer network of creepers that is itself
the warp and woof of a matted carpet of moss saturated with flowing ground
water. The gorge is alive with butterflies burning with colors of
radioactive purity, and down closer to the rustling water are damselflies,
mostly black with aqua bodies that flash in the sun their wings revealing
glimpses of salmon and coral red on the underside as they orbit around each
other. But mostly the air is filled with this continual slow progress of
things that didn't survive, making their way down through the column of air
and into the water, which flushes them away: dead leaves and the
exoskeletons of insects, sucked dry and eviscerated in some silent combat
hundreds of feet above their heads.
Randy's keeping an eye on the display of his GPS, which has been having
a hard time locking onto any satellites down in this gorge. But finally some
numbers come up. He has it calculate the distance from here to Golgotha, and
the answer comes up immediately: a long row of zeroes with a few
insignificant digits trailing off the end.
Randy says, "This is it." But most of what he says is obscured by a
sharp explosion from high above them on the bank. A few seconds later, a man
begins to scream.
"No one move," says Doug Shaftoe, "we are in a minefield."
Chapter 98 CRIBS
On a grassy knoll, a man crouches behind a tombstone, peering through a
telescope on a tripod, and tracking the steady pace of a robed and hooded
figure across the grass.
FUNERAL. That's the crib that broke these guys.
The Nipponese man in the American uniform, whom Enoch Root is leaving
behind, must be that Goto Dengo fella. Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse has
seen that name punched on so many ETC cards that he no longer even has to
read the printed letters at the top of the card: he can identify a "Goto
Dengo" from arm's length simply by glancing at the pattern of punched out
rectangles. The same is true of some two dozen other Nipponese mining
engineers and surveyors who were brought to Luzon in '43 and '44, in
response to Azure/Pufferfish messages emanating from Tokyo. But, as far as
Waterhouse can tell, all of the others are dead. Either that, or they
retreated north with Yamashita.
Only one of them is alive, well, and living in what is left of Manila,
and that's Goto Dengo. Waterhouse was going to rat him out to Army
Intelligence, but that doesn't seem like such a good idea now that the
unkillable Nip engineer has become a personal protegé of The General.
Root is heading in the direction of those two mysterious white men who
attended Bobby Shaftoe's funeral. Waterhouse peers at them through the
scope, but mediocre optics, combined with the heat waves rising from the
grass, complicate this. One of them seems oddly familiar. Odd because
Waterhouse doesn't know that many bearded men with long swept back blond
hairdoes and black eyepatches.
An idea springs out of his forehead fully formed, with no warning. This
is how all the best ideas arrive. Ideas that he patiently cultivates from
tiny seeds always fail to germinate or else grow up into monstrosities. Good
ideas are just there all of a sudden, like angels in the Bible. You cannot
ignore them just because they are ridiculous. Waterhouse stifles a giggle
and tries not to get overly excited. The dull, tedious, bureaucratic part of
his mind is feeling testy, and wants a few shreds of supporting evidence.
This is quickly supplied. Waterhouse knows, and has proved to Earl
Comstock, that strange information is in the air, dotting and dashing
furtively from a small number of feeble transmitters scattered around Luzon
and the surrounding waters, encrypted using the Arethusa system. Lawrence
and Alan have known for two years now that Rudy invented it, and from the
decrypts chattering out of digital computers in Bletchley Park and Manila,
they now know other things. They know that Rudy flew the coop late in 1943
and probably went to Sweden. They know that one Günter Bischoff, captain of
the U boat that plucked Shaftoe and Root out of the water, also ended up in
Sweden, and that Dönitz persuaded him to take over the gold running work
that had been performed by U 553 until it ran aground off Qwghlm. The Naval
Intelligence boys are fascinated by Bischoff, and so he had already been the
subject of much research. Waterhouse has seen photos of him from his student
days. The shorter of the two men he is peering at now could easily be the
same fellow, now middle aged. And the taller one, the one with the eyepatch,
could most definitely be Rudy von Hacklheber himself.
It is, then, a conspiracy.
They have secure communications. If Rudy is the architect of Arethusa,
then it will be essentially impossible to break, except for rare lapses such
as this FUNERAL business.
They have a submarine. It cannot be found or sunk, because it is one of
Hitler's new rocket fuel powered babies, and because Günter Bischoff, the
greatest U boat commander in history, is its skipper.
They have, at some level, the backing of the odd brotherhood that Root
belongs too, the ignoti et quasi occulti guys.
And now they are trying to enlist Goto Dengo. The man who, it is safe
to assume, buried the gold.
Three days ago, the intercept boys in Waterhouse's section picked up a
brief flurry of Arethusa messages, exchanged between a hidden transmitter
somewhere in Manila and a mobile one in the South China Sea. Catalinas were
vectored toward the latter, and picked up diminishing radar echoes at first,
but found nothing when they arrived on the scene. A team of journeyman
codebreakers jumped on those messages and started trying to tear them apart
by brute force. Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse, the old hand, went for a
stroll along the Manila Bay seawall. A breeze suddenly rose from the bay. He
stopped to let it cool his face. A coconut fell from the top of a tree and
smashed into the ground ten feet away. Waterhouse turned on his heel and
went back to the office.
Just before the flurry of Arethusa messages began, Waterhouse had been
sitting in his office listening to Armed Forces Radio. They had broadcast an
announcement that, three days from now, at such and such a time, the funeral
for the hero, Bobby Shaftoe, was going to be held at the big new cemetery
down in Makati.
Sitting down in his office with the fresh Arethusa intercepts, he went
to work, using FUNERAL as a crib: if this group of seven letters decrypts to
FUNERAL, then what does the rest of the message look like? Gibberish? Okay,
how about this group of seven letters?
Even with this gift thrown into his lap, it took him two and a half
days of nonstop work to decrypt the message. The first one, transmitted from
Manila, went: OUR FRIEND'S FUNERAL SATURDAY TEN THIRTY AM US MILITARY
CEMETERY MAKATI.
The response from the submarine: WILL BE THERE SUGGEST YOU INFORM GD.
He aims the spyglass at Goto Dengo again. The Nipponese engineer is
standing with his head bowed and his eyes tightly shut. Perhaps his
shoulders are heaving, perhaps it's just the heat waves that make it seem
so.
But then Goto Dengo straightens up and takes a step in the direction of
the conspirators. He stops. Then he takes another step. Then another. His
posture is straightening up miraculously. He seems to feel better with every
stride. He walks faster and faster, until he is almost running.
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse is hardly a mind reader, but he can
easily enough tell what Goto Dengo is thinking: I have a burden on my
shoulders, and it has been crushing me. And now I'm going to hand that
burden over to someone else. Hot damn! Bischoff and Rudy von Hacklheber step
forward to meet him, holding out their right hands enthusiastically.
Bischoff, Rudy, Enoch, and Goto Dengo join into a knot, practically on top
of Bobby Shaftoe's grave.
It is a shame. Waterhouse knew Bobby Shaftoe, and would have liked to
attend his funeral standing up not skulking around like this. But Enoch Root
and Rudy would both recognize him. Waterhouse is their enemy.
Or is he? In a decade full of Hitlers and Stalins, it's hard to worry
about a conspiracy that seemingly includes a priest, and that risks its very
existence in order to attend a member's funeral. Waterhouse rolls over and
lies on his back on some dead guy's grave and ponders it. If Mary were here,
he would lay out the dilemma for her and she would tell him what to do. But
Mary's in Brisbane, picking out bridesmaids' dresses and china patterns.
***
The next time he sees any of these fellows is one month later, in a
clearing in the jungle a couple of hours south of Manila. Waterhouse gets
there before they do, and spends a sweaty night under a mosquito net. In the
morning, about half of Bischoff's submarine crew arrives, grumpy from an all
night march. As Waterhouse expected, they are quite nervous about being
ambushed by the local Huk commander known as the Crocodile, and so they post
a number of sentries in the jungle. That is why Waterhouse took pains to get
here before they did: so that he would not have to infiltrate their picket
line.
The Germans who aren't standing guard go to work with shovels, digging
a hole in the ground next to a big piece of red pumice shaped vaguely like
the continent of Africa. Waterhouse squats no more than twenty feet away,
trying to figure out how he can make his presence known without being gunned
down by a nervous white man.
He almost gets close enough to tap Rudy on the shoulder. Then he slips
on a slimy rock. Rudy hears him, turns, and sees nothing except for a swatch
of undergrowth being torn down by Waterhouse's falling body.
"Is that you, Lawrence?"
Waterhouse stands up cautiously, keeping his hands in plain sight.
"Very good! How did you know?"
"Don't be stupid. There aren't that many people who could have found
us."
They shake hands. Then they think better of it, and embrace. Rudy gives
him a cigarette. The German sailors look on incredulously. There are some
others: a Negro and an Indian, and a grizzled, dark man who looks like he
wants to kill Waterhouse on the spot.
"You must be the famous Otto!" Waterhouse exclaims. But Otto does not
seem eager to make new friends, or even acquaintances, at this juncture in
his life, and turns away sourly. "Where's Bischoff?" Waterhouse asks.
"Minding the submarine. It is risky, lurking in the shallows. How did
you find us, Lawrence?" He answers his own question before Waterhouse can.
"By decrypting the long message, obviously."
"Yes."
"But how did you do that? Did I miss something? Is there a back door?"
"No. It wasn't easy. I broke one of your messages, a while back."
"The FUNERAL one?"
"Yes!" Waterhouse laughs.
"I could have killed Enoch for sending out a message with such an
obvious crib." Rudy shrugs. "It is hard to teach crypto security, even to
intelligent men. Especially to them."
"Maybe he wanted me to decrypt it," Waterhouse muses.
"It is possible," Rudy admits. "Perhaps he wanted me to break
Detachment 2702's one time pad, so that I would come and join him."
"I guess he figures if you're smart enough to break hard codes, you're
automatically going to be on his side," Waterhouse says.
"I'm not sure that I agree . . . it is naive."
"It's a leap of faith," Waterhouse says.
"How did you break Arethusa? I am naturally curious," Rudy says.
"Because Azure/Pufferfish employs a different key every day, I assumed
that Arethusa did the same."
"I call them by different names. But yes, continue."
"The difference is that the daily key for Azure/Pufferfish is simply
the numerical date. Very easy to exploit, once you have figured it out."
"Yes. I intended it that way," Rudy says. He lights up another
cigarette, taking extravagant pleasure in it.
"Whereas the daily key for Arethusa is something I haven't been able to
put my finger on yet. Perhaps a pseudo random function of the date, perhaps
random numbers you are taking from a one time pad. In any case it is not
predictable, which makes Arethusa harder to break."
"But you did break the long message. Would you explain how?"
"Well, your meeting at the cemetery was brief. I guess you had to get
out of there pretty fast."
"It did not seem a good place to linger."
"So, you and Bischoff went away back to the submarine, I figured. Goto
Dengo went back to his post at The General's headquarters. I knew that he
couldn't have told you anything substantive at the cemetery. That would have
to come later, and it would have to be in the form of an Arethusa encrypted
message. You are justifiably proud of Arethusa."
"Thank you," Rudy says briskly.
"But the drawback of Arethusa, as with Azure/Puffeffish, is that it
requires a great deal of computation. This is fine if you happen to have a
computing machine, or a room full of trained abacus operators. I assume you
have a machine on board the submarine?"
"That we do," Rudy says diffidently, "nothing very special. It still
requires a great deal of manual calculation."
"But Enoch Root in Manila, and Goto Dengo, could not have had such a
thing. They would have to encrypt the message by hand doing all of the
calculations on sheets of scratch paper. Enoch already knew the algorithm,
and could tell it to Goto Dengo, but you would have to agree on a key to put
into that algorithm. The only time you could have decided on the key was
while you were all together at the cemetery. And during your conversation
there, I saw you pointing at Shaftoe's headstone. So I figured that you were
using that as a key maybe his name, maybe his dates of birth and death,
maybe his military serial number. It turned out to be the serial number."
"But still you did not know the algorithm."
"Yes, but I had some idea that it was related to the Azure/Pufferfish
algorithm, which in turn is related to the zeta functions that we studied at
Princeton. So I just sat down and said to myself if Rudy were going to build
the ultimate cryptosystem on this basis, and if Azure/Pufferfish is a
simplified version of that system, then what is Arethusa? That gave me a
handful of possibilities."
"And out of that handful you were able to pick the right one."
"No," Waterhouse says, "it was too hard. So I went to the church where
Enoch was working, and looked through his wastebasket. Nothing. I went to
Goto Dengo's office and did the same. Nothing. Both of them were burning
their scratch paper as they went along."
Rudy's face suddenly relaxes. "Oh, good. I was afraid they were doing
something incredibly stupid."
"Not at all. So, you know what I did?"
"What did you do, Lawrence?"
"I went and had an interview with Goto Dengo."
"Yes. He told us that much."
"I told him about the research I had been doing into Azure/Pufferfish,
but I didn't tell him I had broken it. I got him talking, in a very general
way, about what he was doing on Luzon during the last year. He told me the
same story that he has stuck to all along, which is that he was building
some minor fortifications somewhere, and that after escaping from that area
he wandered lost in the jungle for several days before emerging near San
Pablo and joining up with some Air Force troops who were heading north
towards Manila.
" 'It's a good thing you got out of there,' I told him, 'because ever
since then, the Hukbalahap leader who calls himself the Crocodile has been
ransacking the jungle he's convinced that you Nipponese buried a fortune in
gold there.' "
As soon as the word "crocodile" emerges from Waterhouse's mouth, Rudy's
face screws up in disgust and he turns away.
"So when the long message was finally transmitted last week, from the
transmitter that Enoch has hidden on the top of that church's bell tower, I
had two cribs. First of all, I suspected that the key was a number from the
tombstone of Bobby Shaftoe. Secondly, I was confident that the words
'Hukbalahap,' 'crocodile,' and probably 'gold' or 'treasure' would appear
somewhere in the message. I also looked for obvious candidates like
'latitude' and 'longitude.' With all of that to go on, breaking the message
wasn't that hard."
Rudy von Hacklheber heaves a big sigh. "So. You win," he says. "Where
is the cavalry?"
"Cavalry, or calvary?" Waterhouse jokes.
Rudy smiles tolerantly. "I know where Calvary is. Not far from
Golgotha."
"Why do you think the cavalry is coming?"
"I know they are coming," Rudy says. "Your efforts to break the long
message must have required a whole room full of computers. They will talk.
Surely the secret is out." Rudy stubs out his half smoked cigarette, as if
preparing to leave. "So, you have been sent to give us an offer surrender in
a civilized way and we will get good treatment. Something like that."
"Au contraire, Rudy. No one knows except me. I did leave a sealed
envelope in my desk, to be opened if I should die mysteriously on this
little trip to the jungle. That Otto character has a fearsome reputation."
"I don't believe you. It is impossible," Rudy says.
"You of all people. Don't you see? I have a machine, Rudy! The machine
does the work for me. So I don't need a room full of computers human ones,
leastways. And as soon as I read the decrypted message, I burned all of the
cards. So I am the only one who knows."
"Ah!" Rudy says, stepping back and looking into the sky, adjusting his
mind to these new facts. "So, I gather that you have come here to join us?
Otto will be troublesome about it, but you are quite welcome."
Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse actually has to think about it. This
surprises him a little.
"Most of it is going to help victims of the war, in one way or
another," Rudy says, "but if we take a tenth of a percent as commission, and
distribute it among the entire crew of the submarine, we are all among the
richest men in the world."
Waterhouse tries to imagine himself one of the richest men in the
world. It doesn't seem to fit.
"I've been exchanging letters with a college in Washington State," he
says. "My fiancée put me on to them."
"Fiancée? Congratulations."
"She's Qwlghmian Australian. It seems that there's a colony of
Qwghlmians in the Palouse Hills as well, where Washington and Oregon and
Idaho all come together. Sheepherders mostly. But there is this little
college there, and they need a mathematics professor. I could be chairman of
the department within a few years." Waterhouse stands there in the
Philippine jungle smoking his cigarette and imagining this. Nothing sounds
more exotic. "It sounds like a nice life!" he exclaims, as if this were the
first time he had thought of such a thing. "It sounds perfectly all right to
me."
The Palouse Hills seem very far away. He is impatient to begin covering
the distance.
"That it does," says Rudy von Hacklheber.
"You don't sound very convincing, Rudy. I know it wouldn't be so great
for you. But for me it's the cat's pajamas."
"So, are you telling me you don't want in?"
"I'll tell you this. You said most of the money was going to charity.
Well, the college can always use a donation. If your plan works out, how
about endowing a chair for me at this college? That's all I really want."
"I will do that," Rudy says, "and I'll endow one for Alan too, at
Cambridge, and I'll provide both of you with laboratories full of electrical
computers." Rudy's eyes wander back to the hole in the ground, where the
Germans having withdrawn most of their sentries are making steady progress.
"You know that this is nothing more than one of the outlying caches. Seed
capital to finance the Golgotha work."
"Yes. Just as the Nips planned it."
"We'll dig it up soon enough. Sooner, now that we no longer have to
worry about the Crocodile!" Rudy says, and laughs. It is an honest, genuine
laugh, the first time Waterhouse has ever seen him drop his guard. "Then we
will go to ground until the war is over. In the meantime, maybe there will
be enough left over to give you and your Qwghlmian bride a nice wedding
present."
"Our china pattern is Lavender Rose by Royal Albert," Waterhouse says.
Rudy takes an envelope out of his pocket and writes that down. "It was
very good of you to come out and say hello," he mumbles around his
cigarette.
"Those bicycle rides in New Jersey might as well have taken place on a
different planet," Waterhouse says, shaking his head.
"They did," Rudy says. "And when Douglas MacArthur marches into Tokyo,
it's going to be a different planet yet again. See you there, Lawrence."
"See you, Rudy. Godspeed."
They embrace one more time. Waterhouse backs away and watches the
shovels biting into the red mud for a few moments, then turns his back on
all of the money in the world and starts walking.
"Lawrence!" Rudy shouts.
"Yes?"
"Don't forget to destroy that sealed envelope you left in your office."
Waterhouse laughs. "Aw, I was just lying about that. In case someone
wanted to kill me."
"That's a relief."
"You know how people are always saying 'I can keep a secret' and they
are always wrong?"
"Yes."
"Well," Waterhouse says, "I can keep a secret."
Chapter 99 CAYUSE
Another shock wave passes silently through the ground, setting up a
pattern of waves, and reflections of waves, in the water that laps around
their knees.
"Things are going to happen very slowly now for a while. Get used to
it," says Doug Shaftoe. "Everyone needs a probe a long knife or a rod. Even
a stick."
Doug's got a big knife, he being that kind of guy, and Amy has her
kris. Randy pulls the lightweight aluminum frame of his backpack apart to
produce a couple of tubes; this takes a while but, as Doug said, everything
is happening slowly now. Randy tosses one of the tubes to Enoch Root, who
snatches a basically poorly aimed throw out of the air. Now that everyone is
equipped, Doug Shaftoe gives them a tutorial on how to probe one's way
through a minefield. Like every other lesson Randy's ever imbibed, this one
is sort of interesting, but only until Doug divulges the main point, which
is that you can poke a mine from the side and it won't blow up; you just
can't poke it vertically. "The water is bad because it makes it hard to see
what the hell we're doing," he says. Indeed, the water has a milky look,
probably from suspended volcanic ash; you can see clearly for a foot, hazily
for another foot, and below that you can see vague, greenish shapes at best;
everything is covered in a uniform brown jacket of silt. "On the other hand,
it's good because if a mine gets detonated by something other than your
foot, the water's going to absorb some of the blast by flashing into steam.
Now: tactically our problem is that we are exposed to an ambush from above
left: the west bank. Poor old Jackie Woo is down and he can't protect that
flank anymore. You can bet that John Wayne is covering things on the right
as best as he can. Since it is the left bank that's most vulnerable, we will
now head for the bank on that side, and try to reach the protection of the
overhang. We should not all converge on the same point; we spread out so
that if one of us detonates a mine it won't hit anyone else."
Each one of them picks a destination on the west bank and tells
everyone else what it is, so that they won't converge on the same place, and
then each begins probing his or her way towards it. Randy tries to resist
the temptation to look up. He says, after about fifteen minutes: "I know
what's going on with the explosions. Wing's people are tunneling their way
toward Golgotha. They're going to remove the gold through some kind of an
underground conduit. It'll look like they are excavating it from their own
property. But they'll actually be taking it from here."
Amy grins. "They're robbing the bank."
Randy nods, mildly annoyed that she's not taking it more seriously.
"Wing must have been too busy with the Long March and the Great Leap Forward
to buy this real estate when it was available," Enoch says.
A few minutes later, Doug Shaftoe says, "To what extent do you give a
shit, Randy?"
"What do you mean?"
"Would you be willing to die to prevent Wing from getting that gold?"
"Probably not."
"Would you be willing to kill?"
"Well," says Randy, a bit taken aback, "I said I wouldn't be willing to
die. So "
"Don't give me that golden rule shit," Doug says. "If someone broke
into your house in the middle of the night and threatened your family, and
you had a shotgun in your hands, would you use it?"
Randy involuntarily looks towards Amy. Because this is not only an
ethical conundrum. It's also a test to determine whether Randy is fit to be
Doug's daughter's husband, and the father of his grandchildren. "Well, I
should hope so," Randy says. Amy's pretending not to listen.
The water all around them makes a spattering, searing noise. Everyone
cringes. Then they realize that a handful of small pebbles was tossed into
the water from above. They look up at the rim of the overhang, and see a
tiny, reciprocating movement: Jackie Woo, standing on the top of the bank,
waving his hand at them.
"My eyes are going," Doug says. "Does he look intact to you?"
"Yes!" Amy says. She beams her pearlies are very white in the sun and
waves back.
Jackie's grinning. He's carrying a long, muddy rod in one hand: his
mine probe. In the other, he's got a dirty canister about the size of a clay
pigeon. He holds it up and waggles it in the air. "Nip mine!" he shouts
gleefully.
"Well, put it the fuck down, you asshole!" Doug hollers, "after all
these years it's going to be incredibly unstable." Then he gets a look of
incredulous confusion. "Who the hell set off the other mine if it wasn't
you? Someone was screaming up there."
"I haven't found him," Jackie Woo says. "He stopped screaming."
"Do you think he's dead?"
"No."
"Did you hear any other voices?"
"No."
"Jesus Christ," Doug says, "someone's been shadowing us the whole way."
He turns around and looks up at the opposite bank, where John Wayne has now
probed his way to the edge and is taking this all in. Some kind of hand
gesture passes between them (they brought walkie talkies, but Doug scorns
them as a crutch for lightweights and wannabes). John Wayne settles down
onto his belly and gets out a pair of binoculars with objective lenses as
big as saucers and begins scanning Jackie Woo's side.
The group in the riverbed probes onwards in silence for a while. None
of them can figure out what is going on, and so it's good that they have
this mine probing thing to keep their hands and minds busy. Randy's probe
hits something flexible, buried a couple of inches deep in silt and gravel.
He flinches so hard he almost topples back on his ass, and spends a minute
or two trying to get his composure back. The silt gives everything the blank
but suggestive look of sheet covered corpses. Trying to identify the shapes
makes his mind tired. He clears some gravel aside and runs his hand lightly
over this thing. Dead leaves tumble through the water and tickle his
forearms. "Got an old tire down here," he says. "Big. Truck sized. And bald
as an egg."
Every so often a colored bird will descend from the shade of the
overhanging jungle and flash into the sun, never failing to scare the shit
out of them. The sun is brutal. Randy was only a few yards away from the
shade of the bank when all of this started, and now he's pretty sure that
he's going to pass out from sunstroke before he gets there.
Enoch Root starts muttering in Latin at one point. Randy looks over at
him and sees that he's holding up a dripping, muddy human skull.
An irridescent bright blue bird with a yellow scimitar beak mounted in
a black and orange head shoots out of the jungle, seizes control of a nearby
rock, and cocks its head at him. The earth shakes again; Randy flinches and
a bead curtain of sweat falls out of his eyebrows.
"Down under the rocks and mud there's reinforced concrete," Doug says.
"I can see the rebar sticking out."
Another bird or something flashes out of the shadows, headed nearly
straight down toward the water at tremendous speed. Amy makes a funny
grunting sound. Randy's just turning to look her way when a tremendous,
hammering racket opens up from above. He looks up to see a blossom of flame
strobing out of the slotted flash arrestor on the muzzle of John Wayne's
assault rifle. Seems like he's shooting directly across the river. Jackie
Woo gets off a few shots too. Randy, who's squatting, loses his balance from
all of this head turning and has to put out a hand to steady himself, which
fortunately doesn't come down on top of a mine. He looks over at Amy; only
her head and shoulders are showing out of the water, and she's staring at
nothing in particular, with a look in her eyes that Randy doesn't like at
all. He rises to his feet and takes a step towards her.
"Randy, don't do that," says Doug Shaftoe. Doug has already reached the
shade, and is only a couple of paces from the curtain of vegetation that
hangs over the riverbank.
There is a piece of debris riding on the surface of the river not far
from Amy's face, but it is not being moved by the current. It moves when Amy
moves. Randy takes another step towards her, putting his foot down on a big
silt covered boulder whose top he can make out through the milky water. He
squats on that boulder like a bird and focuses again on Amy, who is maybe
fifteen feet away from him. John Wayne fires a series of individual shots
from his rifle. Randy realizes that the piece of debris is made of feathers,
bound to the butt of a narrow stick.
"Amy's been shot with an arrow," Randy says.
"Well that's just fucking great," Doug mutters.
"Amy, where are you hit?" says Enoch Root.
Amy still can't seem to speak. She stands up awkwardly, doing all the
work with her left leg, and as she rises the arrow emerges from the water
and turns out to be lodged squarely in the middle of her right thigh. The
wound is washed clean at first but then blood wells out from around the
arrow's shaft and begins to patrol down her leg in bifurcating streams.
Doug's engaged in some furious exchange of hand signals with the men up
above. "You know," he whispers, "I can tell that this is one of those
classic deals where what was supposed to be a simple reconnaissance suddenly
turns into the actual battle."
Amy grabs the shaft of the arrow with both hands and tries to snap it,
but the wood is green, and won't break cleanly. "I dropped my knife
somewhere," she says. Her voice sounds calm, putting some effort into making
it that way. "I think I can deal with this level of pain for a little," she
says. "But I don't like it at all."
Near Amy, Randy can see another silt covered boulder near the surface,
maybe six feet away. He gathers himself and leaps towards it. But it topples
under the impact of his foot and sends him splashing full length into the
streambed. When he sits up and gets a look at it, the boulder turns out to
be a squat cylindrical object about as big around as a dinner plate and
several inches thick.
"Randy, what you're looking at is a Nip anti tank mine," Doug says. "It
is highly unstable with age, and it contains enough high explosive to
essentially decapitate everyone in our little group here. So if you could
just stop being a complete asshole for a little bit, I'm sure that we would
all appreciate it very much."
Amy shows Randy the palm of one hand. "I'm not looking for you to prove
anything," she says. "If you're trying to say you love me, send me a fucking
valentine."
"I love you," Randy says. "I want you to be okay. I want you to marry
me."
"Well, that's very romantic," Amy says, sarcastically, and then starts
crying.
"Oh, Jesus Christ," Doug Shaftoe says. "You guys can do this later!
Will you ease up? Whoever fired that arrow is long gone. The Huks are
guerrillas. They know how to make themselves scarce."
"It wasn't fired by a Huk," Randy says. "Huks have guns. Even I know
that."
"Who fired it, then?" Amy asks, working hard to get her composure back.
"It looks like a Cayuse arrow," Randy says.
"Cayuse? You think it was fired by a Cayuse?" Doug demands. Randy
admires that Doug, while skeptical, is essentially open to the idea.
"No," Randy says, taking another step towards Amy, and straddling the
antitank mine. "The Cayuse are extinct. Measles. So it was made by a white
man who is an expert in the hunting practices of Northwest Indian tribes.
What else do we know about him? That's he's really good at sneaking around
in the jungle. And that he's so totally fucking crazy that even when he's
been injured by a land mine, he's still crawling around in the undergrowth
taking shots at people." Randy's probing the riverbed as he's talking, and
now he takes another step. Only six feet away from Amy now. "Not just anyone
he took a shot at Amy. Why? Because he's been watching. He saw Amy sitting
next to me when we took that break, resting her head on my shoulder. He
knows that if he wants to hurt me, the best thing he could possibly do is
take a shot at her."
"Why does he want to hurt you?" Enoch asks.
"Because he's evil."
Enoch looks tremendously impressed.
"Well, who the hell is it?" Amy hisses. She's irritated now, which he
takes to be a good sign.
"His name is Andrew Loeb," Randy says. "And Jackie Woo and John Wayne
are never going to find him."
"Jackie and John are very good," Doug demurs.
Another step. He can almost reach out and touch Amy. "That's the
problem," Randy says. "They're way too smart to run around in a minefield
without probing every step. But Andrew Loeb doesn't give a shit. Andrew's
totally out of his fucking mind, Doug. He's going to run around up there at
will. Or crawl, or hop, or whatever. I'd wager that Andy with one foot blown
off, and not caring whether he lives or dies, can move through a minefield
faster than Jackie, when Jackie does care."
Finally, Randy's there. He crouches down before Amy, who leans forward,
places a hand on each of his shoulders, and rests her weight on him, which
feels good. The end of her ponytail paints the back of his neck with warm
river water. The arrow's practically in his face. Randy takes his
multipurpose tool out and turns it into a saw and cuts through the shaft of
the arrow while Amy holds it steady with one fist. Then Amy splays her hand
out, winds up, screams in Randy's ear, and slams the butt of the shaft. It
disappears into her leg. She collapses over Randy's back and sobs. Randy
reaches around behind her leg, cuts his hand on the edge of the arrowhead,
grabs the shaft and yanks it out.
"I don't see evidence of arterial bleeding," says Enoch Root, who has a
good view of her from behind.
Randy rises to his feet, lifting Amy into the air, collapsed over his
shoulder like a sack of rice. He's embarrassed that Amy's body is basically
shielding his from any further arrow attacks now. But she's making it clear
that she's in no mood for walking.
The shade is only four steps away: shade, and shelter from above. "A
land mine just takes a leg or a foot, right?" Randy says. "If I step on one,
it won't kill Amy."
"Not one of your better ideas, Randy!" Doug shouts, almost
contemptuously. "Just calm down and take your time."
"I just want to know my options," Randy says. "I can't poke around for
mines while I'm carrying her."
"Then I'll work my way over to you," says Enoch Root. "Oh, to hell with
it!" Enoch stands up and just walks over to them in half a dozen strides.
"Fucking amateurs!" Doug bellows. Enoch Root ignores him, squats down
at Randy's feet and begins probing.
Doug rises up out of the stream onto a few boulders strewn along the
bank. "I'm going to ascend the wall here," he says, "and go up and reinforce
Jackie. He and I'll find this Andrew Loeb together." It's clear that "find"
here is a euphemism for probably a long list of unpleasant operations. The
bank is made of soft eroded stone with lumps of hard black volcanic rock
jutting out of it frequently, and by clambering from one outcropping to the
next, Doug is able to make his way halfway up the bank in the time it takes
Enoch Root to locate one safe place to plant their feet. Randy wouldn't want
to be the guy who just shot an arrow into Doug Shaftoe's daughter. Doug is
stymied for a moment by the overhang; but by traversing the bank a short
distance he's able to reach a tangle of tree roots that's almost as good as
a ladder to the top.
"She's shivering," Randy announces. "Amy's shivering."
"She's in shock. Keep her head low and her legs high," says Enoch Root.
Randy shifts Amy around, nearly losing his grip on a blood greased leg.
One of the things that Goto Dengo spoke of during their dinner in Tokyo
was the Nipponese practice of tuning streams in gardens by moving rocks from
place to place. The sound of a brook is made by patterns in the flow of
water, and those patterns encode the presence of rocks on the streambed.
Randy found in this an echo of the Palouse winds thing, and said so, and
Goto Dengo either thought it was terribly insightful or else was being
polite. In any case, several minutes later there is a change in the sound of
the water that is flowing around them, and so Randy naturally looks upstream
to see that a man is standing in the water about a dozen feet away from
them. The man has a shaved head that is sunburned as red as a three ball.
He's wearing what used to be a decent enough business suit, which has
practically become one with the jungle now: it is impregnated with red mud,
which has made it so heavy that it pulls itself all out of shape as he
totters to a standing position. He's got a great big pole, a wizard's staff.
He has planted it in the riverbed and is sort of climbing up it hand over
hand. When he gets fully upright, Randy can see that his right leg
terminates just below the knee, although the bare tibia and fibula stick out
for a few inches. The bones are scorched and splintered. Andrew Loeb has
fashioned a tourniquet from sticks and a hundred dollar silk necktie that
Randy's pretty sure he has seen in the windows of airport duty free shops.
This has throttled back the flow of blood from the end of his leg to a rate
comparable to what you would see coming out a Mr. Coffee during its brew
cycle. Once Andy has gotten himself fully upright, he smiles brightly and
begins to move towards Randy and Amy and Enoch, hopping on his intact leg
and using the wizard's staff to keep from falling down. In his free hand he
is carrying a great big knife: Bowie sized, but with all of the extra
spikes, saw blades, blood grooves, and other features that go into a really
top of the line fighting and survival knife.
Neither Enoch nor Amy sees Andrew. Randy has this insight now that Doug
pointed him in the direction of earlier, namely that the ability to kill
someone is basically a mental stance, and not a question of physical means;
a serial killer armed with a couple of feet of clothesline is far more
dangerous than a cheerleader with a bazooka. Randy feels certain, all of a
sudden, that he's got the mental stance now. But he doesn't have the means.
And that is the problem right there in a nutshell. The bad guys tend to
have the means.
Andy's looking him right in the eye and smiling at him, precisely the
same smile you would see on the face of some old acquaintance you had just
accidentally run into on an airport concourse. As he approaches, he's kind
of shifting the big knife around in his hand, getting it into the right grip
for whatever kind of attack he's about to make. It is this detail that
finally breaks Randy out of his trance and causes him to shrug Amy off and
drop her into the water behind him. Andrew Loeb takes another step forward
and plants his wizard's staff, which suddenly flies into the air like a
rocket, leaving a steaming crater behind in the water, which instantly fills
in, of course. Now Andy's standing there like a stork, having miraculously
kept his balance. He bends his one remaining knee and hops towards Randy,
then does it again. Then he is dead and toppling backwards and Randy is
deaf, or maybe it happens in some other order. Enoch Root has become a
column of smoke with a barking, spitting white fire in the center. Andrew
Loeb has become a red, comet shaped disturbance in the stream, marked by a
single arm thrust out of the water, a French cuff that is still uncannily
white, a cuff link shaped like a little honey bee, and a spindly fist
gripping the huge knife.
Randy turns around and looks at Amy. She's levered herself up on one
arm. In her opposite hand she's got a sensible, handy sort of revolver which
she is aiming in the direction of where Andrew Loeb fell.
Something's moving in the corner of Randy's eye. He turns his head
quickly. A coherent, wraith shaped cloud of smoke is drifting away from
Enoch over the surface of the river, just coming into the sun where it is
suddenly brilliant. Enoch is just standing there holding a great big old .45
and moving his lips in the unsettled cadences of some dead language.
Andrew's fingers loosen, the knife falls, and the arm relaxes, but does
not disappear. An insect lands on his thumb and starts to eat it.
Chapter 100 BLACK CHAMBER
"Well," Waterhouse says, "I know a thing or two about keeping secrets."
"I know that perfectly well," says Colonel Earl Comstock. "It is a fine
quality. It is why we want you. After the war."
A formation of bombers flies over the building, rattling its
shellshocked walls with a drone that penetrates into their sinuses. They
take this opportunity to heave their massive Buffalo china coffee cups off
their massive Buffalo china saucers and sip weak, greenish Army coffee.
"Don't let that kind of thing fool you," Comstock hollers over the
noise, glancing up toward the bombers, which bank majestically to the north,
going up to blast hell out of the incredibly tenacious Tiger of Malaya.
"People in the know think that the Nips are on their last legs. It's not too
early to think about what you will be doing after the war."
"I told you, sir. Getting married, and "
"Yeah, teaching math at some little school out west." Comstock sips
coffee and grimaces. The grimace is as tightly coupled to the sip as recoil
is to the pull of a trigger. "Sounds delightful, Waterhouse, it really does.
Oh, there's all kinds of fantasies that sound great to us, sitting here on
the outskirts of what used to be Manila, breathing gasoline fumes and
swatting mosquitoes. I've heard a hundred guys mostly enlisted men
rhapsodize about mowing the lawn. That's all those guys can talk about, is
mowing the lawn. But when they get back home, will they want to mow the
lawn?"
"No."
"Right. They only talk like that because mowing the lawn sounds great
when you're sitting in a foxhole picking lice off your nuts."
One of the useful things about military service is that it gets you
acclimatized to having loud, blustery men say rude things to you. Waterhouse
shrugs it off. "Could be I'll hate it," he concedes.
At this point Comstock sheds a few decibels, scoots closer, and gets
fatherly with him. "It's not just you," he says. "Your wife might not be
crazy about it either."
"Oh, she loves the open countryside. Doesn't care for cities."
"You wouldn't have to live in a city. With the kind of salary we are
talking about here, Waterhouse " Comstock pauses for effect, sips, grimaces,
and lowers his voice another notch " you could buy a nice little Ford or a
Chevy." He stops to let that sink in. "With a V 8 that would give you power
to burn! You could live ten, twenty miles away, and drive in every morning
at a mile a minute!"
"Ten or twenty miles away from where? I'm not clear, yet, on whether I
would be working in New York for Electrical Till, or in Fort Meade for this,
uh, this new thing "
"We're thinking of calling it the National Security Agency," Comstock
says. "Of course, even that name is secret."
"I understand."
"There was a similar thing, between the wars, called the Black Chamber.
Which has a nice ring to it. But a bit old fashioned."
"That was disbanded."
"Yes. Secretary of State Stimson did away with it, he said 'Gentlemen
do not read one another's mail.' " Comstock laughs out loud at this. He
laughs for a long time. "Ahh, the world has changed, hasn't it, Waterhouse?
Without reading Hitler's and Tojo's mail, where would we be now?"
"We would be in a heck of a fix," Waterhouse concedes.
"You have seen Bletchley Park. You have seen Central Bureau in
Brisbane. Those places are nothing less than factories. Mail reading on an
industrial scale." Comstock's eyes glitter at the idea, he is staring
through the walls of the building now like Superman with his X ray vision.
"It is the way of the future, Lawrence. War will never be the same. Hitler
is gone. The Third Reich is history. Nippon is soon to fall. But this only
sets the stage for the struggle with Communism. To build a Bletchley Park
big enough for that job, why, hell! We'd have to take over the whole state
of Utah or something. That is, if we did it the old fashioned way, with
girls sitting in front of Typex machines."
For the first time, now, Waterhouse gets it. "The digital computer," he
says.
"The digital computer," Comstock echoes. He sips and grimaces. "A few
roomfuls of that equipment would replace an acre of girls sitting in front
of Typex machines." Comstock now gets a naughty, conspiratorial grin on his
face, and leans forward. A drop of sweat rolls off the point of his chin and
plonks into Waterhouse's coffee. "It would also replace a lot of the stuff
that Electrical Till manufactures. So, you see, there is a confluence of
interests here." Comstock sets his cup down. Perhaps he is finally convinced
that there is no deep stratum of good coffee concealed underneath the bad;
perhaps coffee is a frivolous thing compared to the importance of what he is
about to divulge. "I have been in constant touch with my higher ups at
Electrical Till, and there is intense interest in this digital computer
business. Intense interest. The machinery has already been set in motion for
a business deal and, Waterhouse, I only tell you this because, as we have
established, you are good at keeping secrets."
"I understand, sir."
"A business deal that would bring Electrical Till, the world's
mightiest manufacturer of business machines, together with the government of
the United States to construct a machine room of titanic proportions at Fort
Meade, Maryland, under the aegis of this new Black Chamber: the National
Security Agency. It is an installation that will be the Bletchley Park of
our upcoming war against the Communist threat a threat both internal and
external."
"And you would like me to get mixed up in this somehow?"
Comstock blinks. He draws back. He is suddenly cool and remote. "To be
absolutely frank, Waterhouse, this thing will go forward with or without
you."
Waterhouse chuckles. "I figured that."
"All I'm doing is giving you a greased path, as it were. Because I
respect your skills, and I have a certain, I don't know, fatherly affection
for you as the result of our work together. I hope you don't mind my saying
so.
"Not at all."
"Say! And speaking of that " Comstock stands up, walking around behind
his terrifyingly neat desk, and plucks a single piece of typing paper off
the blotter. "How are you coming with Arethusa?"
"Still archiving the intercepts as they come in. Still haven't broken
it."
"I have some interesting news about Arethusa."
"You do?"
"Yes. Something you're not aware of." Comstock scans the paper. "After
we took Berlin, we scooped up all of Hitler's crypto people and flew thirty
five of them back to London. Our boys there have been interrogating them in
detail. Filling in a lot of blanks for us. What do you know about this
Rudolf von Hacklheber fellow?"
All traces of moisture have disappeared from Waterhouse's mouth. He
sips and does not grimace. "Knew him a little at Princeton. Dr. Turing and I
thought we saw his handiwork in Azure/Pufferfish."
"You were right," Comstock says, rattling the paper. "But did you know
that he was very likely a Communist?"
"I had no knowledge of his political leanings."
"Well, he is a homo, for one thing, and Hitler hated homos, so that
might have pushed him into the arms of the Reds. Also, he was working under
a couple of Russians at Hauptgruppe B. Supposedly they were Czarists, and
pro Hitler, but you never know. Well, anyway, in the middle of the war,
sometime in late '43, he apparently fled to Sweden. Isn't that funny?"
"Why's it funny?"
"If you have the wherewithal to escape from Germany, why not go to
England, and fight for the good guys? No, he went to the east coast of
Sweden directly across the water," Comstock says portentously, "from
Finland. Which borders on the Soviet Union." He slaps the page down on his
desk. "Seems pretty clear cut to me."
"So . . ."
"And now, we have these goddamn Arethusa messages bouncing around. Some
of them emanating from right here in Manila! Some coming from a mysterious
submarine. Not a Nip submarine, evidently. It seems very much like a secret
espionage ring of some description. Wouldn't you say so?"
Waterhouse shrugs. "Interpretation isn't my department."
"It is mine," Comstock says, "and I say it's espionage. Probably
directed from the Kremlin. Why? Because they are using a cryptosystem that,
according to you, is based on Azure/Pufferfish, which was invented by the
Communist homo Rudolf von Hacklheber. I hypothesize that von Hacklheber only
stayed in Sweden long enough to get some shuteye and maybe cornhole some
nice blond boy and then scooted right over to Finland and from there to the
waiting arms of Lavrenti Beria."
"Well, gosh!" Waterhouse says, "what do you think we should do?"
"I have taken this Arethusa thing off the back burner. We have become
lazy and complacent. More than once, our huffduff people observed Arethusa
messages emanating from this general area." Comstock raises his index finger
to a map of Luzon. Then he catches himself, realizing that this would be
more dignified if he used a pointer. He bends down and grabs a long pointer.
Then he realizes he is too close, and has to back up a couple of steps in
order to get the business end of the pointer on the part of the map that his
index finger was touching a moment earlier. Finally situated, he vigorously
circles a coastal region south of Manila, along the strait that separates
Luzon from Mindoro. "South of all these volcanoes, along the coast here.
This is where that submarine has been skulking around. We haven't gotten a
good fix on the bastards yet, because all of our huffduff stations have been
way up north here." The pointer swoops up for a lightning raid on the
Cordillera Central, where Yamashita has gone to ground. "But not anymore."
Down swoops the pointer, vengefully. "I have ordered several huffduff units
to set up in this area, and at the northern end of Mindoro. Next time that
submarine transmits an Arethusa message, we'll have Catalinas overhead
within fifteen minutes."
"Well," Waterhouse volunteers, "maybe I should get cracking on breaking
that darn code, then."
"If you could accomplish that, Waterhouse, it would be brilliant. It
would mean victory in this, our first cryptological skirmish with the
Communists. It would be a splendid kick off for your relationship with
Electrical Till and the NSA. We could set your new bride up with a nice
house in the horse country, a gas stove, and a Hoover that would make her
forget all about the Palouse Hills."
"Sounds pretty darn inviting," Waterhouse says. "I just can't hold
myself back!" And with that, he's out the door.
***
In a stone room in a half ruined church, Enoch Root looks out of a
busted window and grimaces. "I am not a mathematician," he says. "I only did
the calculations that Dengo asked me to do. You will have to ask him to
encrypt the message."
"Find another place for your transmitter," Waterhouse says, "and be
ready to use it on short notice."
***
Goto Dengo is right where he said he would be, sitting on the bleachers
above third base. The ballfield has been repaired, but no one is playing
now. He and Waterhouse have the place to themselves, except for a couple of
poor Filipino peasants, driven down to Manila by the war up north,
scavenging for dropped popcorn.
"What you ask is very dangerous," he says.
"It will be totally secret," Waterhouse says.
"Think into the future," says Goto Dengo. "One day, these digital
computers you speak of will break the Arethusa code. Is this not so?"
"It is so. Not for many years."
"Say ten years. Say twenty years. The code is broken. Then they will go
back and find all of the old Arethusa messages including the message that
you want to send to your friends and read them. So?"
"Yes. It is true."
"And then they will see this message that says, 'Warning, warning,
Comstock has laid a trap, the huffduff stations are waiting for you, do not
transmit.' Then they will know that there was a spy in Comstock's office.
Certainly they will know it was you."
"You're right. You're right. I didn't think of that," Waterhouse says.
Then he realizes something else. "They'll know about you too."
Goto Dengo blanches. "Please. I am so tired."
"One of the Arethusa messages spoke of a person named GD." Goto Dengo
puts his head in his hands and is perfectly motionless for a long time. He
does not have to say it. He and Waterhouse are imagining the same thing:
twenty years in the future, Nipponese police burst into the office of Goto
Dengo, prosperous businessman, and arrest him for being a Communist spy.
"Only if they decrypt those old messages," Waterhouse says.
"But they will. You said that they will decrypt them."
"Only if they have them," Waterhouse says.
"But they do have them."
"They are in my office."
Goto Dengo is shocked, horrified. "You are not thinking to steal the
messages?"
"That's exactly what I'm thinking."
"But this will be noticed."
"No! I will replace them with others."
***
The voice of Alan Mathison Turing shouts above the buzz of the Project
X synchronization tone. The long playing record, filled with noise, spins on
its turntable. "You want the latest in random numbers?"
"Yeah. Some mathematical function that will give me nearly perfect
randomness. I know you've been working on this."
"Oh yes," Turing says. "I can provide a much higher degree of
randomness than what is on these idiotic phonograph records that you and I
are staring at."
"How do you do it?"
"I have in mind a zeta function that is simple to understand, extremely
tedious to calculate. I hope you have laid in a good stock of valves."
"Don't worry about that, Alan."
"Do you have a pencil?"
"Of course."
"Very well then," Turing says, and begins to call out the symbols of
the function.
***
The Basement is suffocatingly hot because Waterhouse shares it with a
coworker who generates thousands of watts of body heat. The coworker both
eats and shits ETC cards. What it does in between is Waterhouse's business.
He spends about twenty four hours sitting there, stripped to the waist,
his undershirt wrapped around his head like a turban so he won't drop sweat
into the works and cause short circuits, flicking switches on the digital
computer's front panel, swapping patch cords on the back, replacing burned
out tubes and bulbs, probing malfunctioning circuits with an oscilloscope.
In order to make the computer execute Alan's random number function, he even
has to design a new circuit board on the fly, and solder it together. The
entire time, he knows, Goto Dengo and Enoch Root are at work somewhere in
Manila with scratch paper and pencils, encrypting the final Arethusa
message.
He doesn't have to wonder whether they've transmitted it. He will be
told.
Indeed, a lieutenant from the Intercept section comes in at about five
in the evening, looking triumphant.
"You got an Arethusa message?"
"Two of them," the lieutenant says, holding up two separate sheets with
grids of letters on them. "A collision!"
"A collision?"
"A transmitter opened up down south first."
"On land, or ?"
"At sea off the northeast end of Palawan. They transmitted this." He
waves one of the sheets. "Then, almost immediately, a transmitter in Manila
came on the air, and sent this." He waves the other sheet.
"Does Colonel Comstock know about this?"
"Oh, yes sir! He was just leaving for the day when the messages came
through. He's been on the horn to his huffduff people, the Air Force, the
whole bit. He thinks we've got the bastards!"
"Well, before you get carried away celebrating, could you do me a
favor?"
"Yes, sir!"
"What did you do with all of the original intercept sheets for the
archived Arethusa messages?"
"They're filed, sir. Do you want to see them?"
"Yes. All of them. I need to check them against the versions on the ETC
cards. If Arethusa works the way I think it does, then even a single
mistranscribed letter could render all of my calculations useless."
"I'll go and fetch them, sir! I'm not going home anyway.
"You're not?"
"Why, no sir! I want to wait around and see how it all comes out with
that darned submarine."
Waterhouse goes to the oven and takes out a brick of hot, blank ETC
cards. He has learned that he has to keep the cards hot, or else they will
soak up the tropical humidity and jam the machinery; so before he moved the
digital computer into this room, he insisted that a whole bank of ovens be
installed.
He drops the hot cards into the hopper of a card punching machine, sits
down at the keyboard, and clips the first intercept sheet up in front of
him. He begins to punch the letters into it, one by one. It is a short
message; it fits onto three cards. Then he begins punching in the second
message.
The lieutenant comes in carrying a cardboard box. "All of the original
Arethusa intercept sheets."
"Thank you, Lieutenant."
The lieutenant looks over his shoulder. "Can I help you transcribing
those messages?"
"No. The best way for you to help me would be to refill my water
pitcher and then don't bother me for the rest of the night. I have a bee in
my bonnet about this Arethusa business."
"Yes, sir!" says the lieutenant, insufferably cheerful about the fact
that the mystery submarine is, even now, on the run from Catalina bombers.
Waterhouse finishes punching in the second message, though he already
knows what it would say if it were decrypted: "TRAP REPEAT TRAP DO NOT
TRANSMIT STOP HUFFDUFF UNITS NEARBY."
He takes those cards out of the puncher's output tray and places them
neatly in the box along with the cards containing all of the previous
Arethusa messages. He then takes the entire contents of this box a brick of
messages about a foot thick and puts them into his attache case.
He unclips the two fresh intercept slips from the card puncher and puts
them on top of the stack of older slips. The brick of cards in his attache
case, and the pile of slips in his hand, contain exactly the same
information. They are the only copies in all the world. He flips through
them to make sure that they contain all of the critical intercepts such as
the long message giving the location of Golgotha, and the one that mentions
Goto Dengo's initials. He puts the whole stack of slips on top of one of the
ovens.
He dumps a foot thick stack of hot blank cards into the input hopper of
the card punch. He connects the punch's control cable up to the digital
computer, so that the computer can control it.
Then he starts the program he has written, the one that generates
random numbers according to Turing's function. Lights flash, and the card
reader whirrs, as the program is loaded into the computer's RAM. Then it
pauses, waiting for input: the function needs a seed. A stream of bits that
will get it going. Any seed will do. Waterhouse thinks about it for a
moment, and then types in COMSTOCK.
The card punch rumbles into action. The stack of blanks begins to get
shorter. Punched cards skitter into the output tray. When it's finished,
Waterhouse pulls one of them out, holds it up to the light, and looks at the
pattern of tiny rectangular holes punched out of the manila. A constellation
of doorways.
"It'll look like any other encrypted message," he explained to Goto
Dengo, up on the bleachers, "but the, uh, the crypto boys" (he almost said
the NSA) "can run their computers on them forever and never break the code
because there is no code."
He puts this stack of freshly punched cards into the box labeled
ARETHUSA INTERCEPTS, and puts it back in its place on the shelf.
Finally, before leaving the lab, he goes back over to that oven, and
slides the corner of that stack of intercept sheets very close to a pilot
light. It is reluctant to catch, so he gives it some help with a flick of
his Zippo. He stands back and watches the pile burn for a while, until he's
sure that all of the strange information on those sheets has been destroyed.
Then he goes out into the hallway in search of a fire extinguisher.
Upstairs, he can hear Comstock's boys, gathered around the radio, baying
like hounds.
Chapter 101 PASSAGE
When he has picked himself up off the deck, and his ears have stopped
ringing, Bischoff says, "Take her down to seventy five meters."
The dial that tells their depth says twenty. Somewhere, perhaps a
hundred meters above them, crewmen of a circling bomber are setting their
depth charges to explode when they have sunk to a depth of twenty, and so
twenty is a bad place to be for a while.
The dial does not move, though, and Bischoff has to repeat the command.
Everyone on the boat must be deaf.
Either that, or the V Million has sustained damage to her dive planes.
Bischoff presses his skull against a bulkhead, and even though his ears
don't work so well anymore, he can feel the whine of the turbines. At least
they have power. They can move.
But Catalinas can move faster.
Say what you want about those old, clanking diesel U boats, they at
least had guns on them. You could surface, and go out on the decks in the
sun and the air, and fight back. But in the V Million, this swimming rocket,
the only weapon is secrecy. In the Baltic, fine. But this is the Mindoro
Strait, which is an ocean of window glass. V Million might as well be
suspended in midair from piano wires, searchlights crossing on it.
The needle on the dial is moving now, passing down through twenty five
meters. The deck twists under Bischoff's feet as she recoils from another
depth charge. But he can tell from the way it twists that this one has
detonated too high to deal serious damage. From habit he glances at the dial
that tells their speed, and notes it down along with the time: 1746 hours.
The sun must be lower and lower in the sky, its light glancing off the tops
of the waves, forcing the pilots of the Catalinas to peer down through a
screen of bright noise. Another hour and V Million will be completely
invisible. Then, if Bischoff has kept careful records of their speed and
course, dead reckoning will tell them approximately where they are, and
enable them to run down the Palawan Passage in the night, or to cut west
across the South China Sea if that seems like a good idea. But really he is
hoping to find some nice pirate cove on the north coast of Borneo, marry a
nice orangutan, and raise a little family.
The face of the depth dial says Tiefenmesser in that old fashioned
Gothic lettering that the Nazis loved so much. Messer means a gauge or
meter, but it also means knife. Das Messer sitzt mir an der Kehle. The knife
is at my throat; I am face to face with doom. When the knife is at your
throat, you don't want it to move the way the needle on the Tiefenmesser is
moving now. Every tick on the dial's face is another meter of water between
Bischoff and the sun and the air.
"I would like to be a Messerschmidt," Bischoff mutters. A man who
smashes Messers with a hammer, but also a beautiful thing that flies.
"You will see light, and breathe fresh air again, Günter," says Rudolf
von Hacklheber, a civilian mathematician who really has no place on the
bridge of a U boat during a fight to the death. But there's no good place
for him to be, and so here he is.
Now this is a fine thing for Rudy to say, a lovely show of support for
Günter. But saving the life of everyone on the U boat, and getting its cargo
of gold to safety, now depends on Günter's emotional stability, and
especially on his confidence. Sometimes, if you want to live and breathe
tomorrow, you have to dive into the black depths today, and that is a leap
of faith faith in your U boat, and your crew beside which the saints'
religious epiphanies amount to nothing.
So Rudy's promise is soon forgotten or at least it is forgotten by
Bischoff. Bischoff derives strength from having heard it, and from similar
things that members of his crew say to him, and from their grins and thumbs
up and slaps on the shoulder, and their displays of pluck and initiative,
the clever repairs that they make to broken plumbing and overtaxed engines.
Strength gives him faith, and faith makes him into a good U boat skipper.
Some would say the best who ever lived. But Bischoff knows many others,
better than him, whose bodies are trapped in knuckles of imploded metal on
the floor of the North Atlantic.
It comes together like this: the sun has gone down, as it can be relied
on to do every day, even when you are a beleaguered U boat. The V Million
has reamed a tunnel through the Palawan Passage, screaming along, for
several hours, at the completely unreasonable speed of twenty nine knots
four times as fast as U boats are supposed to be capable of going.
The Americans will have drawn a small circle around the point in the
ocean where the mysterious U boat was last sighted. But the speed of the V
Million is four times as great as they think it is. The real circle is four
times as wide as the one they've drawn. The Yanks won't expect them to
surface where they are.
But they have to surface because the V Million wasn't made to run at
twenty nine knots forever; she burns fuel, and hydrogen peroxide, at a
ridiculous rate when both of her six thousand horsepower turbines are
spinning. There is plenty of fuel remaining. But she runs out of hydrogen
peroxide at about midnight. She has a few miserable batteries, and electric
motors, that just barely suffice to get her up to the surface. But then she
has to breathe air for a while, and run her diesels.
So the V Million, and a few crew members, get to enjoy some fresh air.
Bischoff doesn't, because he is dealing with new complexities that have
arisen in the engine room. This probably saves his life, because he doesn't
even know they're being strafed until he hears the cannon rounds drumming
against the outer hull.
Then it is the same old drill, the crash dive, which was so exciting
when he was a young man practicing it in the Baltic, and has become so
tedious for him now. Looking up through a hatch he gets a moment's glimpse
of a single star in the sky before the view is blocked by a mutilated
crewman being fed down from above.
Only five minutes later the depth charge scores a direct hit on the
stern of the V Million and tears a hole through both the outer and the
pressure hull. The deck angles beneath Bischoff's feet, and his ears begin
to pop. On a submarine, both of these are bad omens. He can hear hatches
clanging shut as the crew try to stem the advance of the water towards the
bow; each one seals the fate of whomever happens to be aft of it. But
they're all dead anyway, it is just a question of timing now. Those hatches
are not meant to stem five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten atmospheres of
pressure. They give way, the pressure spikes upwards as the bubble of air in
the front of the V Million suddenly halves its volume, then halves it again,
and again. Each wave of pressure comes as sudden crushing pressure on
Bischoff's thorax, driving all the air out of his lungs.
Because the bow is pointed straight up, like a needle on a meter,
there's no deck to stand on, and every time a bulkhead yields, and the water
level shoots up towards the bow, it leaves them suddenly submerged, with
crushed and evacuated lungs, and they must swim up and find the air bubble
again.
But finally the mangled stern of the boat spikes into the seafloor and
the V Million settles down, the forwardmost cabin rotating around them,
tremendous rock crushing noises all around as a coral reef is destroyed by
the boat's falling hull. And then it's finished. Günter Bischoff and Rudolf
von Hacklheber are together in a safe cozy bubble of compressed air, all of
the air that used to be in the V Million reduced to a pocket the size of a
car. It's dark.
He hears Rudy undoing the latches on his aluminum briefcase.
"Don't strike a match," Bischoff says. "This air is compressed, it will
burn like a flare."
"That would be terrible," Rudy says, and instead turns on a flashlight.
The light comes on and immediately dims and goes brown and shrinks to a tiny
red speck: the glowing remains of the filament in the bulb.
"Your light bulb has imploded," Bischoff explains. "But at least I got
a little glimpse of you, with that silly look on your face."
"You too have looked better," Rudy says. Bischoff can hear him closing
up the briefcase, snapping the latches into place. "Do you think my
briefcase will float here forever?"
"Eventually the pressure hull above us will corrode. The air will
escape from it in a thin line of bubbles that will grow into gyrating
nebulas of foul air as they rush towards the surface. The water level will
rise and press your briefcase up against what is left of the pressure hull's
forward dome, and it will fill with water. But still there will be a little
pocket of air in one corner of your briefcase, perhaps."
"I was thinking of leaving a note in it."
"If you do, better address it to the United States government."
"Department of the Navy, you think?"
"Department of Spying. What do they call it? The OSS."
"Why do you say this?"
"They knew where we were, Rudy. The Catalinas were waiting for us."
"Maybe they found us with radar."
"I allowed for radar. Those planes came even faster. You know what it
means?"
"Tell me."
"It means that those who were hunting us knew how fast the V Million
could go."
"Ah . . . so that is why you think of spies."
"I gave Bobby the plans, Rudy."
"The plans for the V Million?"
"Yes . . so that he could buy forgiveness from the Americans."
"Well, in retrospect maybe you shouldn't have done that. But I do not
blame you for it, Günter. It was a magnificent gesture."
"Now they will come down and find us."
"After we're dead, you mean.
"Yes. The whole plan is ruined. Ah well, it was a nice conspiracy while
it lasted. Perhaps Enoch Root will display some adaptability."
"You really think spies will come down to go through this wreck?"
"Who knows?" Bischoff says. "Why are you worrying about it?"
"I have the coordinates of Golgotha here in my briefcase," Rudy says.
"But I know for certain that they are not written down anywhere else in V
Million."
"You know that because you're the one who decrypted that message."
"Yes. Maybe I should burn the message now."
"It would kill us," Bischoff says, "but at least we would die with some
warmth and some light."
"You are going to be on a sandy beach, sunning yourself, in a few
hours, Günter," Rudy says.
"Stop it!"
"I made a promise which I intend to keep," Rudy says. There is a
movement in the water, the strangled splash of a kicking foot being drawn
under the surface.
"Rudy? Rudy?" Bischoff says. But he is alone in a black dome of
silence.
A minute later a hand grips his ankle.
Rudy climbs up his body like a ladder and thrusts his head above the
surface and howls for air. But this air is the good stuff, sixteen times as
much oxygen in a single lungful. He feels better quickly. Bischoff holds him
while he calms down.
"The hatch is open," Rudy says. "I saw light through it. The sun is up,
Günter!"
"Let's go, then!"
"You go. I'll stay and burn the message." Rudy's opening his briefcase
again, feeling through papers with his hands, taking something out, closing
the briefcase again.
Bischoff cannot move.
"I strike the match in thirty seconds," Rudy says.
Bischoff launches himself towards Rudy's voice and wraps his arms
around him in the dark.
"I'll find the others," Bischoff says. "I'll tell them that some
fucking American spy is onto us. And we'll get that gold first, and we'll
keep it out of their hands."
"Go!" Rudy cries. "I want everything to happen fast now."
Bischoff kisses him once on each cheek and then dives.
Ahead of him is faint blue green light, coming from no particular
direction.
Rudy swam to the hatch, opened it, and swam back, and was almost dead
when he returned. Bischoff has to find that hatch and then swim all the way
to the surface. He knows that it will be impossible.
But then much brighter, warmer light floods the interior of the V
Million. Bischoff looks back and up, and sees the forward end of the
pressure hull turned into a dome of orange fire, the silhouette of a man
centered in it, lines of welds and rivets spreading away from that center
like the meridians of a globe. It's bright as day. He turns around and swims
easily away down the gangway, into the control room, and finds the hatch: a
disk of cyan light.
A life ring is pressed up against what is now the ceiling of this room.
He grabs it and wrestles it down into the middle of the cabin, then shoves
it before him through the hatch, and kicks his way through.
There's coral all around him, and it's beautiful. He'd love to stay and
sightsee, but he's got responsibilities above. He keeps a grip on the life
preserver, and although he doesn't feel himself moving, he sees the coral
dropping away below. There's a big grey thing lying on it, bubbling and
bleeding, and this gets smaller and smaller, like a rocket flying away into
the sky.
He looks up into the water that is streaming over his face. Both of
Bischoff's arms are above his head, gripping the rim of the life ring, and
he sees a disk of sunlight through it, getting brighter and redder as he
ascends.
His knees begin to hurt.
Chapter 102 LIQUIDITY
The rest of it all seems like history to Randall Lawrence Waterhouse.
He knows that technically speaking it is the present, and all of the really
important stuff is future. But what's important to him is finished and
settled. He would like to get on with his life, now that he's got one.
They carry Amy back to the missionary compound and the doctor who is
there does some work on her leg, but they can't get her out to the hospital
in Manila because Wing has blockaded them in there. This ought to seem
threatening, but actually just seems stupid and annoying to them after
they've had a little while to get used to it. The people who are doing it
are Chinese Communist geronto apparatchiks backed up by a few bootlicking
cronies within the local government, and none of them has the slightest
appreciation of things like encrypted spread spectrum packet radio, which
makes it easy for people like Doug and Randy to communicate with the outside
world and explain precisely what is going on. Randy's blood type is
compatible with Amy's and so he lets the doctor suck him nearly dry. The
lack of blood seemingly halves his IQ for a day or two, but even so, when he
sees Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe drawing up the shopping list of men and gear
that they need to dig up Golgotha, he has enough presence of mind to say:
strike all of that stuff. Forget the trucks and jackhammers and dynamite,
the end loaders and excavators and tunnel boring machines, and just give me
a drill, a couple of pumps, and a few thousand gallons of fuel oil. Doug
gets it right away, as indeed how could he not, since he basically gave
Randy the idea by telling him old war legends about his father. They get the
shopping list out to Avi and Goto Dengo with no trouble at all.
Wing keeps them blockaded in the compound for a week; the subterranean
explosions continue to shake the earth; Amy's leg gets infected and the
doctor comes this close to sawing it off to save her life. Enoch Root spends
some time alone with her and suddenly her leg gets a lot better. He explains
that he applied a local folk remedy, but Amy refuses to say anything about
it.
Meanwhile the rest of them kill time by clearing mines from around
Golgotha, and trying to localize those explosions. The verdict seems to be
that Wing still has most of a kilometer of hard rock to tunnel through in
order to get access to Golgotha, and he's only making a few dozen meters per
day.
They know that all hell is breaking loose in the outside world because
media and military helicopters keep flying over the place. One day a Goto
Engineering chopper lands in the compound. It's got earth imaging sonar
gear, and more importantly it's got antibiotics, which have a nearly magical
impact on the jungle bugs in Amy's leg, which have never even met
penicillin, much less this state of the art stuff that makes penicillin look
like chicken noodle soup. Amy's fever breaks in a couple of hours and she's
hobbling within a day. The road gets opened up again and then their problem
becomes trying to keep people out it is jammed with media, opportunistic
gold seekers, and nerds. All of them apparently think they are present at
some kind of radical societal watershed, as if global society has gotten so
screwed up that the only thing to do is shut down and reboot it.
Randy sees people holding up banners with his name on them, and tries
not to think about what this implies. The truckloads of equipment almost
cannot make it through this traffic jam, but they do, and there's another
really frustrating and tedious week of hauling all of the shit through the
jungle. Randy spends most of his time hanging around with the earth imaging
sonar crew; they have this very cool gear that Goto Engineering uses to do
CAT scans of the earth that they are about to dig into. By the time all of
the heavy equipment is in place, Randy's got the entirety of Golgotha imaged
down to a resolution of about a meter; he could fly through it in virtual
reality if he were into that kind of thing. As it is, all he needs is to
decide where to drill his three holes: two from the top down into the main
vault, and then one from the side, coming in almost horizontally from the
riverbank, but at a gentle upward angle, until it enters what he thinks is
the lowest sump in the main chamber. The drain hole.
Someone arrives from the outside world and convinces Randy he's on the
cover of both Time and Newsweek. Randy doesn't consider it to be good news.
He knows that he's got a new life. He had a particular mental image of what
that new life is: mostly, being married to Amy and minding his own business
until he dies of old age. It did not enter his calculations that being on
the cover of newsweeklies, and people standing in the jungle holding banners
with his name on them, would in any way characterize his life. Now he never
wants to leave the jungle.
The pumps are mighty, house sized things; they have to be to fight the
back pressure that they are going to engender. Goto Dengo's young engineers
see to it that they are mated into the two vertical holes on top: one to
supply compressed air, the other pressurized fuel oil. Doug Shaftoe would
like to be involved in this, but he knows it's over his head technically,
and he's got other duties: securing the defensive perimeter against gold
seekers and whatever creepy crawly individuals Wing might have sent out to
harass and sabotage them. But Doug has put the Word out, and a whole lot of
Doug's very interesting and well traveled friends have converged on Golgotha
from all over the world and are now camped out in foxholes in the jungle,
guarding a defensive perimeter strung with monofilament tripwires and other
stuff that Randy doesn't even want to know about. Doug just tells him to
stay away from the perimeter, and he does. But Randy can sense Doug's
interest in the central project here, and so when the big day comes, he lets
Doug be the one to throw the switch.
There is a lot of praying first: Avi's brought in a rabbi from Israel,
and Enoch Root has brought in the Archbishop of Manila, and Goto Dengo has
flown in some Shinto priests, and various Southeast Asian countries have
gotten in on the act too. All of them pray or chant for the memory of their
departed, though the prayers are practically drowned out by the choppers
overhead. A lot of people don't want them disturbing Golgotha at all, and
Randy thinks they are basically right. But he's gone out and earth imaged
Wing's tunnel, this subterranean tentacle of air reaching towards the hoard,
and released three dimensional maps of everything to the media, and made the
case reasonably well, he thinks that it's better to do something
constructive than to let it get ripped off by the likes of Wing. Some people
have come around to his side and some haven't, but none of the latter group
is on the cover of Time and Newsweek.
Doug Shaftoe is the last guy to take the floor. He removes his mesh
back cap, puts it over his heart, and with tears streaming down his face
says something about his father, whom he just barely remembers. He speaks of
the Battle of Manila and of how he saw his father for the first time in the
wreckage of the Church of San Agustin, and how his father carried him up and
down the stairway there before going off to bring hellfire down upon the
Nipponese. He speaks about forgiveness and certain other abstractions, and
the words are all chopped up and blurred by the helicopters overhead, which
only makes it more powerful as far as Randy's concerned, since it's
basically all about a bunch of memories that are all chopped up and blurred
in Doug's memory to begin with. Finally Doug works his way around to some
kind of resolution that is very clear in his heart and mind but poorly
articulated, and hits the switch.
The pumps take a few minutes to pressurize Golgotha with a highly
combustible mixture of air and fuel oil, and then Doug hits another switch
that sets off a small detonation down below. Then the world shudders and
rumbles before settling down into a kind of suppressed throbbing howl. A jet
of white hot flame shoots out of the drain hole down below, digs itself into
the river very close to where Andrew Loeb came to rest, and throws up a
cloud of steam that forces all of the choppers to gain altitude. Randy
crawls down under the cover of that steam cloud, sensing it's the last
privacy he'll ever have, and sits down by the edge of the river to watch.
After half an hour the jet of hot gas is joined by a rivulet of incandescent
fluid that sinks to the bottom of the stream as soon as it emerges, clothed
in a fuzz of wildly boiling water. For a long time there is really nothing
to be seen except steam; but after Golgotha's been burning for an hour or
two, it becomes possible to see that underneath the shallow water, spreading
down the valley floor, indeed right around the isolated boulder where
Randy's perched, is a bright, thick river of gold.
APPENDIX: THE SOLITAIRE ENCRYPTION ALGORITHM
by Bruce Schneier
Author, Applied Cryptography
President, Counterpane Systems
http://www.counterpane.com
In Neal Stephenson's novel Cryptonomicon, The character Enoch Root
describes a cryptosystem code named "Pontifex" to another character named
Randy Waterhouse, and later reveals that the steps of the algorithm are
intended to be carried out using a deck of playing cards. These two
characters go on to exchange several encrypted messages using this system.
The system is called "Solitaire" (in the novel, "Pontifex" is a code name
intended to temporarily conceal the fact that it employs a deck of cards)
and I designed it to allow field agents to communicate securely without
having to rely on electronics or having to carry incriminating tools. An
agent might be in a situation where he just does not have access to a
computer, or may be prosecuted if he has tools for secret communication. But
a deck of cards . . . what harm is that?
Solitaire gets its security from the inherent randomness in a shuffled
deck of cards. By manipulating this deck, a communicant can create a string
of "random" letters that he then combines with his message. Of course
Solitaire can be simulated on a computer, but it is designed to be
implemented by hand.
Solitaire may be low tech, but its security is intended to be high
tech. I designed Solitaire to be secure even against the most well funded
military adversaries with the biggest computers and the smartest
cryptanalysts. Of course there is no guarantee that someone won't find a
clever attack against Solitaire (watch my web page for updates), but the
algorithm is certainly better than any other pencil and paper cipher I've
ever seen.
It's not fast, though. It can take an evening to encrypt or decrypt a
reasonably long message. In David Kahn's book Kahn on Codes, he describes a
real pencil and paper cipher used by a Soviet spy. Both the Soviet algorithm
and Solitaire take about the same amount of time to encrypt a message.
ENCRYPTING WITH SOLITAIRE
Solitaire is an output feedback mode stream cipher. Sometimes this is
called a key generator (KG in U.S. military speak). The basic idea is that
Solitaire generates a stream, often called a "keystream," of numbers between
1 and 26. To encrypt, generate the same number of keystream letters as
plaintext letters. Then add them modulo 26 to plaintext letters, one at a
time, to create the ciphertext. To decrypt, generate the same keystream and
subtract modulo 26 from the ciphertext to recover the plaintext.
For example, to encrypt the first Solitaire message mentioned in
Stephenson's novel, "DO NOT USE PC":
1. Split the plaintext message into five character groups. (There is
nothing magical about five character groups; it's just tradition.) Use X's
to fill in the last group. So if the message is "DO NOT USE PC" then the
plaintext is:
DONOT USEPC
2. Use Solitaire to generate ten keystream letters. (Details are
below.) Assume they are:
KDWUP ONOWT
3. Convert the plaintext message from letters into numbers: A = 1, B =
2, etc:
4 15 14 15 20 21 19 5 16 3
4. Convert the keystream letters similarly:
11 4 23 21 16 15 14 15 23 20
5. Add the plaintext number stream to the keystream numbers, modulo 26.
(All this means is, if the sum is more than 26, subtract 26 from the
result.) For example, 1 + 1 = 2, 26 + 1 = 27, and 27 – 26 = 1, so 26 +
1 = 1.
15 19 11 10 10 10 7 20 13 23
6. Convert the numbers back to letters.
If you are really good at this, you can learn to add letters in your
head, and just add the letters from steps (1) and (2). It just takes
practice. It's easy to remember that A + A = B; remembering that T + Q = K
is harder.
DECRYPTING WITH SOLITAIRE
The basic idea is that the receiver generates the same keystream, and
then subtracts the keystream letters from the ciphertext letters.
1. Take the ciphertext message and put it in five character groups. (It
should already be in this form.)
2. Use Solitaire to generate ten keystream letters. If the receiver
uses the same key as the sender, the keystream letters will be the same:
3. Convert the ciphertext message from letters into numbers:
15 19 11 10 10 10 7 20 13 23
4. Convert the keystream letters similarly:
11 4 23 21 16 15 14 15 23 20
5. Subtract the keystream numbers from the ciphertext numbers, modulo
26. For example, 22 – 1 = 20, 1 – 22 = 5. (It's easy. If the
first number is less than the second number, add 26 to the first number
before subtracting. So 1 – 22 = ? becomes 27 – 22 = 5.)
4 15 14 15 20 21 19 5 16 3
6. Convert the numbers back to letters.
Decryption is the same as encryption, except that you subtract the
keystream from the ciphertext message.
GENERATING THE KEYSTREAM LETTERS
This is the heart of Solitaire. The above descriptions of encryption
and decryption work for any output feedback mode stream cipher. This section
explains how Solitaire works.
Solitaire generates a keystream using a deck of cards. You can think of
a 54 card deck (remember the jokers) as a 54 element permutation. There are
54!, or about 2.31 x 10^71, possible different orderings of a deck. Even
better, there are 52 cards in a deck (without the jokers), and 26 letters in
the alphabet. That kind of coincidence is just too good to pass up.
To be used for Solitaire, a deck needs a full set of 52 cards and two
jokers. The jokers must be different in some way. (This is common. The deck
I'm looking at as I write this has stars on its jokers: one has a little
star and the other has a big star.) Call one joker A and the other B.
Generally, there is a graphical element on the jokers that is the same, but
different size. Make the "B" joker the one that is "bigger." If it's easier,
you can write a big "A" and "B" on the two jokers, but remember that you
will have to explain that to the secret police if you ever get caught.
To initialize the deck, take the deck in your hand, face up. Then
arrange the cards in the initial configuration that is the key. (I'll talk
about the key later, but it's different than the keystream.) Now you're
ready to produce a string of keystream letters.
This is Solitaire:
1. Find the A joker. Move it one card down. (That is, swap it with the
card beneath it.) If the joker is the bottom card of the deck, move it just
below the top card.
2. Find the B joker. Move it two cards down. If the joker is the bottom
card of the deck, move it just below the second card. If the joker is one up
from the bottom card, move it just below the top card. (Basically, assume
the deck is a loop . . . you get the idea.)
It's important to do these two steps in order. It's tempting to get
lazy and just move the jokers as you find them. This is okay, unless they
are very close to each other.
So if the deck looks like this before step 1:
3AB89
at the end of step 2 it should look like:
3A8B9
If you have any doubt, remember to move the A joker before the B joker.
And be careful when the jokers are at the bottom of the deck.
3. Perform a triple cut. That is, swap the cards above the first joker
with the cards below the second joker. If the deck used to look like:
then after the triple cut operation it will look like:
"First" and "second" jokers refer to whatever joker is nearest to, and
furthest from, the top of the deck. Ignore the "A" and "B" designations for
this step.
Remember that the jokers and the cards between them don't move; the
other cards move around them. This is easy to do in your hands. If there are
no cards in one of the three sections (either the jokers are adjacent, or
one is on top or the bottom), just treat that section as empty and move it
anyway.
4. Perform a count cut. Look at the bottom card. Convert it into a
number from 1 through 53. (Use the bridge order of suits: clubs, diamonds,
hearts, and spades. If the card is a (club), it is the value shown. If the
card is a (diamond), it is the value plus 13. If it is a (heart), it is the
value plus 26. If it is a (spade), it is the value plus 39. Either joker is
a 53.) Count down from the top card that number. (I generally count 1
through 13 again and again if I have to; it's easier than counting to high
numbers sequentially.) Cut after the card that you counted down to, leaving
the bottom card on the bottom. If the deck used to look like:
7 ... cards ... 45 ... cards ... 89
and the ninth card was the 4, the cut would result in:
5 ... cards ... 87 ... cards ... 49
The reason the last card is left in place is to make the step
reversible. This is important for mathematical analysis of its security.
5. Find the output card. Look at the top card. Convert it into a number
from 1 through 53, in the same manner as above. Count down that many cards.
(Count the top card as number one.) Write the card after the one you counted
to on a piece of paper. (If you hit a joker, don't write anything down and
start over again with step 1.) This is the first output card. Note that this
step does not modify the state of the deck.
6. Convert the card to a number. As before, use the bridge suits to
order them: From lowest to highest, we have clubs, diamonds, hearts, and
spades. Hence, A(clubs) through K(clubs) is 1 through 13, A(diamonds)
through K(diamonds) is 14 through 26, A(hearts) through K(hearts) is 1
through 13, and A(spades) through K(spades) is 14 through 26.
That's Solitaire. You can use it create as many keystream numbers as
you need.
I know that there are regional differences in decks of cards, depending
on the country. In general, it does not matter what suit ordering you use,
or how you convert cards to numbers. What matters is that the sender and the
receiver agree on the rules. If you're not consistent you won't be able to
communicate.
KEYING THE DECK
Solitaire is only as secure as the key. That is, the easiest way to
break Solitaire is to figure out what key the communicants are using. If you
don't have a good key, none of the rest this matters. Here are some
suggestions for exchanging a key.
1. Shuffle the deck. A random key is the best. One of the communicants
can shuffle up a random leck and then create another, identical deck. One
goes to the sender and the other to the receiver. Most people are not good
shufflers, so shuffle the deck at least ten times, and try to use a deck
that has been played with instead of a fresh deck out of the box. Remember
to keep a spare deck in the keyed order, otherwise if you make a mistake
you'll never be able to decrypt the message. Also remember that the key is
at risk as long as it exists; the secret police could find the deck and copy
down its order.
2. Use a bridge ordering. A description of a set of bridge hands that
you might see in a newspaper or a bridge book is about a 95 bit key. If the
communicants can agree on a way to convert that to a deck ordering and a way
to set the jokers (perhaps after the first two cards that are mentioned in
the discussion of the game), this can work. Be warned: the secret police can
find your bridge column and copy down the order. You can try setting up some
repeatable convention for which bridge column to use; for example, "use the
bridge column in your home town newspaper for the day on which you encrypt
the message," or something like that. Or use a list of keywords to search
the New York Times website, and use the bridge column for the day of the
article that comes up when you search on those words. If the keywords are
found or intercepted, they look like a passphrase. And pick your own
convention; remember that the secret police read Neal Stephenson's books,
too.
3. Use a passphrase to order the deck. This method uses the Solitaire
algorithm to create an initial deck ordering. Both the sender and receiver
share a passphrase. (For example, "SECRET KEY.") Start with the deck in a
fixed order; lowest card to highest card, in bridge suits. Perform the
Solitaire operation, but instead of Step 5, do another count cut based on
the first character of the passphrase (19, in this example). (Remember to
put the top cards just above the bottom card in the deck, as before.) Do
this once for each character. Use another two characters to set the
positions of the jokers. Remember, though, that there are only about 1.4
bits of randomness per character in standard English. You're going to want
at least an 80 character passphrase to make this secure; I recommend at
least 120 characters. (Sorry, but you just can't get good security with a
shorter key.)
SAMPLE OUTPUT
Here's some sample data to practice your Solitaire skills with:
Sample 1: Start with an unkeyed deck: A(clubs) through K(clubs),
A(hearts) through K(hearts), A(diamonds) through K(diamonds), A(spades)
through K(spades), A joker, B joker (you can think of this as 1 52, A, B).
The first ten outputs are:
4 49 10 (53) 24 8 51 44 6 33
The 53 is skipped, of course. I just put it there for demonstration. If
the plain text is:
then the cipher text is:
Sample 2: Using keying method 3 and the key "FOO," the first fifteen
outputs are:
8 19 7 25 20 (53) 9 8 22 32 43 5 26 17 (53) 38 48
If the plain text is all As, the cipher text is:
Sample 3: Using keying method 3 and the key "CRYPTONOMICON," the
message "SOLITAIRE" encrypts to:
Of course, you should use a longer key. These samples are for test
purposes only. There are more samples on the website, and you can use the
book's PERL script to create your own.
SECURITY THROUGH OBSCURITY
Solitaire is designed to be secure even if the enemy knows how the
algorithm works. I have assumed that Cryptonomicon will be a best seller,
and that copies will be available everywhere. I assume that the NSA and
everyone else will study the algorithm and will watch for it. I assume that
the only secret is the key.
That's why keeping the key secret is so important. If you have a deck
of cards in a safe place, you should assume the enemy will at least
entertain the thought that you are using Solitaire. If you have a bridge
column in your safe deposit box, you should expect to raise a few eyebrows.
If any group is known to be using the algorithm, expect the secret police to
maintain a database of bridge columns to use in cracking attempts. Solitaire
is strong even if the enemy knows you are using it, and a simple deck of
playing cards is still much less incriminating than a software encryption
program running on your laptop, but the algorithm is no substitute for
street smarts.
OPERATIONAL NOTES
The first rule of an output feedback mode stream cipher, any of them,
is that you should never use the same key to encrypt two different messages.
Repeat after me: NEVER USE THE SAME KEY TO ENCRYPT TWO DIFFERENT MESSAGES.
If you do, you completely break the security of the system. Here's why: if
you have two ciphertext streams, A + K and B + K, and you subtract one from
the other, you get (A + K) – (B + K) = A + K – B – K = A
– B. That's two plaintext streams combined with each other, and is
very easy to break. Trust me on this one: you might not be able to recover A
and B from A – B, but a professional cryptanalyst can. This is vitally
important: never use the same key to encrypt two different messages.
Keep your messages short. This algorithm is designed to be used with
small messages: a couple of thousand characters. If you have to encrypt a
100,000 word novel, use a computer algorithm. Use shorthand, abbreviations,
and slang in your messages. Don't be chatty.
For maximum security, try to do everything in your head. If the secret
police starts breaking down your door, just calmly shuffle the deck. (Don't
throw it up in the air; you'd be surprised how much of the deck ordering is
maintained during the game of 52 Pickup.) Remember to shuffle the backup
deck, if you have one.
SECURITY ANALYSIS
There's quite a lot of it, but it's far too complicated to reproduce
here. See http://www.counterpane.com, or write to
Counterpane Systems
1711 North Ave #16
Oak Park, IL 60302
LEARNING MORE
I recommend my own book, Applied Cryptography (John Wiley & Sons,
1996), as a good place to start. Then read The Codebreakers, by David Kahn
(Scribner, 1996). After that, there are several books on computer
cryptography, and a few others on manual cryptography. You can subscribe to
my free e mail newsletter at http://www.counterpane.com/cryptogram.html or
by sending a blank e mail message to crypto gram subscribe@
chaparraltree.com. It's a fun field; good luck.
1. 1940 being a good year to begin experimenting with venereal diseases
in that the new injectable penicillin was just becoming available.
2. As the Nipponese were invariably called by Marines, who never used a
three syllable word where a three letter one would do.
3. "Hypo" is a military way of saying the letter H. Bright boy
Waterhouse infers that there must be at least seven others: Alpha, Bravo,
Charlie. etc.
4. Assuming, provisionally, that Alan is wrong and that human brains
are not machines.
5. An evident paradox, but nothing out of the ordinary being out of
America has just made this kind of thing more obvious to Randy.
6. A deprecatory term for a fighting man not good enough to be in the
Corps.
7. Men with experience in Asia use the word "Nip." The Colonel's use of
"Jap" suggests that his career has been spent in the Atlantic and/or
Caribbean.
8. He has no hard data to back this up; it just seems like a cool idea.
9. He has made up his mind that he will use the English words rather
than making a spectacle of himself by trying to pronounce the Qwghlmian
ones.
10. According to the E.Q., derived from lichen.
11. Cantrell alludes to the fact that Plan One brought them a couple of
million dollars in seed money from a venture capital outfit in San Mateo
called the Springboard Group.
12. Shaftoe had had nothing to do for the last couple of weeks except
play Hearts using KNOW YOUR ENEMY cards, so he could now peg model numbers
of obscure Kraut observation planes.
13. The first one, mì, meaning "secret" and the second one, fú, having
a dual connotation meaning, on the one hand, a symbol or mark, and on the
other hand, Taoist magic.
14. Ever since the four wheel Enigma was broken.
15. Baudot code is what teletypes use. Each of the 32 characters in the
teletype alphabet has a unique number assigned to it. This number can be
represented as a five digit binary number, that is, five ones or zeroes, or
(more useful) five holes, or absences of holes, across a strip of paper
tape. Such numbers can also be represented as patterns of electrical
voltages, which can be sent down a wire, or over the radio waves, and
printed out at the other end. Lately, the Germans have been using encrypted
Baudot code messages for communications between high level command posts;
e.g., between Berlin and the various Army group headquarters. At Bletchley
Park, this category of encryption schemes is called Fish, and the Colossus
machine is being built specifically to break it.
16. Half an hour ago, as Epiphyte Corp. was gathering in the lobby, a
big black Mercedes came in, fresh from the airport. 747s come into Kinakuta
four times a day, and from the time that a person presents himself at the
registration desk of his luxury hotel, you can figure out which city he flew
in from. These guys came in from Los Angeles. Three Latino men: a middle
aged fellow of great importance, a somewhat younger assistant, and a
palooka. They were met in the lobby by the solitary fellow who showed up
late yesterday with the cellphone.
17. This is dry humor, and is received as such by everyone in the room;
at this point in the war, a U boat could no more run up the English Channel
than it could travel up the Mississippi, sink a few barges in Dubuque, and
make its escape.
18. Nipponese Army speak for "retreat."
19. It goes without saying that the Finns have to have their own sui
generis brand of automatic weapon.
20. This phrase is a Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe parody.
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