“You’re Sam Wilson?”
The man in front of Sam was tall, his back straight, his head erect. Ex-military, Sam thought. A scar ran sideways across his face, crossing just below the bridge of his nose.
“Yes. Yes, sir,” Sam managed, trying not to stare at the scar.
“Come with me, son.”
Sam stood up from the chair in the waiting area and tried to keep up with the man as he made quick yards down a long, featureless corridor.
A woman was waiting for the man at the end of the corridor, by the open door to an office. She was short and plump and less than five feet tall, but with a huge frizz of orange hair that added another six inches. She glanced briefly at Sam before handing the man a folder.
It was only for a half second but in that time he felt that as though he had just been X-rayed. That her black eyes had burned their way through to his soul.
The tall man opened the folder, reviewing its contents.
“How good is the intel?” he asked the woman.
“As good as it gets,” she said. “We just don’t know when. It could be this afternoon, or it might not be for months.”
The man nodded. “Okay. We’ll raise the threat level. Go to lockdown.”
“I’ll tell the team,” the woman said, glancing again at Sam.
“Thanks. I’ll be along shortly.”
The woman disappeared back along the corridor with the folder as Sam followed the man into the office.
“Sit down, Mr Wilson,” he said, taking a seat behind a large desk.
Sam sat on a chair on the other side. A photo of the man in a Marines uniform sat on a bookshelf to his right, confirming the military background. The man in the photo had no scar though.
“My name is John Jaggard. Welcome to Homeland Security,” the man said.
“CDD?” Sam ventured and Jaggard nodded.
Cyber Defence Division.
“I don’t quite understand why I’m here,” Sam said carefully. “Am I in trouble?”
“You should be,” Jaggard said, punching something on his keyboard that brought up Sam’s file on a screen they could both see. He handed Sam a thick sheaf of papers. “But as it happens, we need people with your skills. We want you to work for us.”
“Work for you?”
“That’s what I said.”
Jaggard smiled. The scar echoed the smile. Sam thought back to the whirlwind of the last few weeks and shook his head, confused.
“But the White House? Neoh@ck Con?”
“There is no Neoh@ck Con,” Jaggard said. “Think of it as a job application.”
“And Recton Hall?”
“The job interview.”
Sam was still having trouble comprehending it all. “What’s this?” he asked, holding up the bundle of papers.
“It’s a job offer,” Jaggard said, although he clearly thought that was obvious. “You can take it or leave it.”
“I’m only sixteen,” Sam said, thinking they must already know that.
“Sam,” Jaggard looked at him appraisingly, “everybody at that meeting in the old warehouse was given the same information. Hack into the White House for the Neoh@ck Convention. You want to know how many of them got through?”
Sam shrugged.
“Just you, Sam.”
Sam looked again at the figure on the bottom line of the contract. It seemed extraordinarily generous for an annual salary. Almost too high in fact.
“What does that work out to be per month?” he wondered out loud, trying to do the math. His brain seemed to be running in slow motion.
“That is per month,” Jaggard said.
Sam gasped.
“You can take it or leave it,” the man said again.
He didn’t expand on that, but Sam had the strong sense that if he left it, that would mean a return to Recton.
“If you take it,” Jaggard continued, “you’re on probation for three months. If you survive the probation …” He’d said “survive” Sam noted, not “pass” or “succeed”. “… then that figure doubles.”
“Doubles?” Sam blurted.
“Think we’re being overgenerous?” Jaggard and his scar smiled again.
Overgenerous? The amount was obscene! Sam thought, but said nothing.
“We pay well,” Jaggard said. “We have to, or at least we choose to. We only select the best of the best, so we pay them accordingly. But it goes a little deeper than that. You’ll have almost unlimited access inside every Government department and financial institution in the country. We want to remove the temptation to help yourself, and to avoid the possibility of bribery by outside agencies. We feel that if you have more money than you know what to do with, it makes you a little more resilient to corruption.”
Sam leaned back in his chair and looked around the office, trying to get his thoughts in order.
Dodge – Skullface – had driven him straight to the same small private airfield just out of Bethesda that he had flown into a few weeks earlier.
The drive hadn’t been without incident. A police cruiser had passed them on the main street through Friendly Village and shone a light into the rear of the cab before pulling in behind them. The red and blues had come on.
Dodge reached for his cell phone the moment the cruiser had shown interest, talking quietly into it even as he signalled and pulled over to stop.
Two Bethesda cops stepped out of the cruiser and approached cautiously, weapons drawn, silhouetted in their own headlights. They only made it halfway to the car when they halted and one put a radio to his ear.
That was it. The two officers retraced their steps to the cruiser and switched off the flashing lights, just sitting there.
Dodge flipped his cell phone back in his pocket as he accelerated away from the curb.
These guys had some powerful mojo, Sam thought.
The flight, in the same black Learjet (or at least an identical one), was longer this time, and he had slept on the plane. He woke at the jolt of landing. His watch said six thirty and he would have expected to see the early dawn lightening of the sky, but it was still as dark as tar. That meant they had flown west, into a new time zone. The flight time (they had taken off around midnight) meant California.
Signs on the freeway on the drive in from the airfield confirmed it. San Jose.
Right in the heart of Silicon Valley.
“Welcome aboard,” Jaggard said as Sam finished signing the last of the paperwork. Jaggard stood. “I’ll take you through to meet the rest of the team.”
“What about my mom?”
Jaggard considered that for a moment and sat back down. “It’s all in your contract, but the gist of it is this. For the next three months, as far as your mother is concerned, you’re still at Recton. Any emails to your Recton account will be intercepted and relayed here. Any efforts to visit you will be rebuffed. Any legal challenges or official channels she might complain to will turn a deaf ear.”
Sam nodded his understanding.
“At the end of the three months, if you survive, then your mother will be fed some cock-and-bull story about you working out a deal with the FBI, and working for them.” He looked Sam in the eye. “At no time is your mother, or anyone else you talk to, allowed to know about your involvement with the CDD. A network is only as safe as the people who protect it. If the bad guys know who you are, they can compromise you, and if they do that, they can compromise our entire operation, and with it the data infrastructure of this entire country. Is that clear enough for you?”
“Yes, sir,” Sam stammered out nervously.
“I’m not trying to frighten you,” Jaggard said.
Sam wondered what he’d be saying if he was trying to frighten him.
Jaggard continued, “But secrecy is our first line of defence. Let’s go.”
Jaggard stood and led him through a series of doors that he unlocked with a keycard, into some kind of control centre. The room was circular with workstations arranged in pairs around the outer circumference. Dark tinted windows gave a dimly shaded view of the outside world. A few blocks away he could see the Adobe logo on top of a group of high-rise towers, and across the motorway was a large sports stadium that he thought was the Hewlett Packard Pavilion.
This was Silicon Valley all right.
In the centre of the room giant plasma screens faced in every direction. Some of the screens were security monitors, showing switching views of both the inside and the outside of the building. They surrounded a small, raised octagonal office. Sam couldn’t see in, but had a strong feeling that someone was in there, looking out.
There were at least seventy people in the control centre when he arrived, and only a few empty desks. The people sat in pairs, three computer screens to each person.
He saw Dodge sitting at one of the workstations. Dodge looked up briefly as Sam walked in behind Jaggard. The rest of the workers ignored them, intent on their screens. There was a sense of urgency in the room.
It could be this afternoon, or it might not be for months, Sam recalled the words that the strange woman had said earlier.
Jaggard put two fingers in his mouth and made a piercing whistle. Work stopped.
“Team, I’d like you to meet our new probationer,” Jaggard said in a voice that filled the whole of the large room. “This is Sam.”
He heard a voice somewhere behind him mutter, “Fresh meat.”
Another voice, from across the room, called out, “Two weeks.”
“Ten days.”
“I give him a month.”
Jaggard rolled his eyes. “Sam is the one who pulled off the Telecomerica hack a few weeks ago.”
There was a sudden, emphatic silence in the room.
Dodge jumped up from his console and bounded over. He shook Sam’s hand. “Welcome aboard,” he said and smiled, creasing the biohazard tattoo on his forehead.
He wore denim shorts, raggedly ripped off at the knees from a pair of jeans; steel chains crisscrossed a tight tartan T-shirt; and a skull on a leather strap hung from around his neck.
Jaggard said, “You’ll be working closely with Dodge. You’ve also met Vienna.”
Vienna was a short-haired girl with a fierce gleam in her eye. She wore a leather miniskirt and a black T-shirt that read “Who are you and why are you reading my T-shirt?” But it was the intertwined dragons tattooed on her arm that gave it away. Rock Chick Bride!
A succession of others came over to meet him.
“This is Socks, Zombie, Bashful, Gummi Bear.” Jaggard introduced each of them in turn.
Sam didn’t hear the door open behind him, but noticed Jaggard’s glance.
“You’re late,” Jaggard said.
“A few problems with the paperwork,” said a voice he well recognised.
Sam half-turned, his mouth gaping open.
“G’day, mate,” Kiwi said.