"Sometimes. It depends on what the designers build into the system."
Sorensen blew out a long breath as she worked through traffic.
"And I found out something else," Davis said. "Once this software is installed in the airplane, you can't get at it. When regulatory agencies like the FAA certify these systems, they make sure the flight control software is shielded, segregated to maintain its integrity. The big concern relates to passenger airplanes — you don't want somebody in row six hacking into the aircraft's systems using an airborne WiFi port."
"Okay, that makes sense. So it's secure."
Davis looked at the map, then outside. "That's what they tell me."
The guard at the gate of the U. S. Consulate in Geneva saw the young man coming. He was probably seventeen or eighteen, but looked ten years older. The Marine sergeant had seen the type before. Switzerland, for all its prosperity and orderliness, had a firm underclass of the homeless and drug addicted. They were kids mostly, swept aside into little-used corners of parks and public buildings. Hidden and unacknowledged.
The sergeant watched the kid come straight at the gate. Straight at him. He was carrying an envelope. Having served tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Marine was suspicious. In either of those places, he'd already have a hand on his sidearm. But then, in either of those places he'd be packing something more intimidating than a holstered 9mm.
The kid stopped right in front of him and held out the envelope. "Here," he said. "Take it, please."
The guard put on his I-eat-nails-for-breakfast face, and asked, "What is it?"
The kid raised the palm of his empty hand to the sky, like he'd just been asked to explain quantum theory. The Marine took a good look at the envelope. It seemed harmless enough. He looked over his shoulder at his partner, a corporal standing behind a concrete blast barrier. His buddy shrugged. The guard took the envelope and the young man scurried off.
There were procedures to be followed now. It was a regular thing to be handed trinkets and missives. Most of the letters were appeals for visas or political asylum, along with a few hostile rants against American foreign policy. Last week they'd gotten a scathing review of Leonardo DiCaprio's newest movie, somebody figuring that the U. S. Consulate in Geneva was the best way to get word to Sony Pictures. Still, when the sergeant read what was carefully typed on the front of the envelope, it did get his attention: information on caliph.
They'd had a few Caliph tips lately. Diplomatic stations all over the world were getting them. Put ten million bucks on a guy's head, the sergeant figured, and you'd get lots of tips. The two guards couldn't leave their post, so the man with the envelope in his hand called inside. Another Marine, the captain in charge of the detachment, came out and took the offering.
Inside the consulate, the captain's first task was to run the envelope through a scanner at the entrance. The machine was normally used for luggage and coats and briefcases — pretty much everything that came through the front door. He didn't like what he saw on the display monitor. Inside the simple white envelope was a vial containing some kind of liquid. This complicated things greatly.
It took another thirty minutes of scanning and careful manipulation to reveal the envelopes complete contents. A letter of demands, a printed record of a laboratory workup, and a test tube full of— something. The vial could not be dealt with here, so it was locked down. The rest was commandeered by the station CIA man, scanned into a computer, and forwarded by a secure line to Langley.
Within the hour, three men and a woman — a contingent no one at the consulate had ever seen — rushed into the building. Guided by the in-house CIA man, the original documents and glass tube were collected and whisked to a waiting car.
The tires began squealing before the back door had even closed.
Chapter THIRTY-TWO
They weren't exactly welcomed. Admitted without prejudice was more like it.
Davis had arranged the visit to CargoAirs production facility on short notice. He and Sorensen were escorted from the visitor's area by a serious guy — crew cut, square suit, shiny shoes. He reminded Davis of a JAG he'd once known, a military lawyer. Or at least the French version. Their guide explained that a full-scale factory tour was available, but Davis figured it was the one that tourists got. He said they weren't interested. He made it clear that he and Sorensen wanted only one thing — to get inside a C-500.
The hangar where they ended up looked a lot like the one attached to Building Sixty-two in Lyon. It had the same bright lights, but everything here was cleaner, more antiseptic. The floor sparkled, and massive banners on the wall exhorted everyone, in both French and English, to be safe. A wide net to cast, Davis thought. He considered all the unfortunate things he'd seen happen in aircraft factories — people falling off scaffoldings, stray screwdrivers getting left behind in newly assembled jet engines. Once he'd seen a work crew forget to put chocks under the wheels of a half-million-pound airplane, watched as it rolled free and crashed into a hangar door. In one bold stroke, CargoAir had made it all expressly against company policy, writ large, be safe.
Davis had seen a lot of hangars in his time. This one reminded him of a showroom at a new car dealership. Everything was neat and tidy, ready for sales pitches and public relations tours. There had to be a production hangar elsewhere on the property, bigger and dirtier, a place where wrenches turned and machinists cussed. But at the moment, Davis was happy to be right here — because in the middle of it all was what he wanted. A C-500.
Their guide stopped. He didn't say anything, and Davis figured he was letting them have a look from a distance, letting them experience the airplane in all its glory. The guy must have thought they'd be impressed.
Davis was.
"Wow," Sorensen exclaimed. "It's bigger than I expected."
"Yeah," Davis agreed, "it's a monster, all right."
He decided the impression of size was likely due to the aircraft's unconventional shape. Davis was familiar with the B-2 bomber, and in terms of general layout, it was the closest thing he'd seen. The C-500 was shaped liked a fat boomerang, or a flat V if viewed from the top. Its four engines were integral, built into the fuselage instead of hanging out like some afterthought appendages. It was wide, at least two hundred feet from wingtip to wingtip, Davis guessed. The center portion was all business, thick and spacious for swallowing cargo, but the body of the craft tapered and blended into sleek wings. It was a nice design, simple and clean — the kind of design that made engineers proud. This particular airplane was tagged in the colors of a Japanese cargo carrier, a white fuselage under red accents and a logo.
"So this thing really flies," Sorensen mused. "It's such a strange shape."
"It does look different. Gets good gas mileage, though."
"The Toyota Prius of airplanes?"
"Something like that."
The JAG led them closer to the airplane and stopped near a ramp that rose on an incline up into the belly of the beast. The ramp had to be twelve feet wide and was hinged at the forward edge, integral to the structure of the C-500. Davis figured it was a feature that would make loading and unloading a cinch, another advantage over any kind of recycled passenger airframe where the cargo containers had to be lifted twenty feet in the air and shoved through doors.
Their guide spoke again, a tricky thing where his lips moved but the rest of his face seemed set in stone. He said, "Wait here, please." And that was it.
The guy marched away, and no sooner had he gone than a woman came bounding down the loading ramp with a clipboard under one arm. She smiled broadly, and her free arm stretched open in welcome — a severe contrast in hospitality to the brick who'd brought them this far.