"Wait, you can't leave." The supervisor started to block the door,then found himself against the wall, pushed there by Andrew's big fist. "Okay. Maybe you can."
"Smart feller." Andrew opened the door and guided Kerry out.
"LINK!" SHAUN BAWLED, shocking everyone in the silence that had fallen as the minutes ticked away to nothing. "LINK! We got a link!"
Dar felt like a bucket of cold water had been dumped on her head.She took a steadying breath and then dove into the console session, seeing the port come active and quickly surge with a stream of traffic.
Many streams of traffic. Dar threw a flow filter in place to sort it,searching for the largest ones first. She clipped and pasted into a note-pad file as she found them, her mind registering the networks involved. She dialed her cell phone and put it into speaker mode. "Mark, you there?"
"Here boss." Mark answered. "We got data?"
"We got." Dar rattled the keys. "Get ready for a set of IP's, see if we've got gateways. I'm setting up the interfaces."
"Dar, we've only got like two minutes."
"You're wasting them." Dar concentrated fully on the screen, blocking out the distractions of the room, and the men watching, the heat, and the pressing of the ticking clock against her shoulder blades. "Okay ready," Mark answered in a chastened tone."That's going to be interfaces zero one, zero two and zero three." "Got it. They're starting the speech up there," Mark answered. "Got gateways."
"Clear the ACL's for it."
"Done."
"Bringing the interfaces up." Dar muttered. "Ready for the next set?"
"Ready."
THE BUZZ OF voices was almost overwhelming. Kerry came in to the gallery pausing in the entrance and looking around to see if she could spot her mother.
On the floor below, the kiosks and stands were filled with traders, the atmosphere frenetic and with an air of almost desperation. She spotted her mother on the far side of the gallery. On the other side, she saw a group of men clustered tightly within the confines of heavy security.
Alastair was there. Outwardly as calm and composed as ever,seeming to ignore the presence of the security agents spaced around where he was standing.
"Kerr--y."
Kerry turned to find her mother approaching. She walked forward to meet her, Andrew right at her heels. "Sorry, Mother," she said, as they met. "I had to get something done."
"Good grief!" Cynthia whispered. "What on earth are you involved in? Someone just told me the FBI has your company under investigation? What's going on?"
Kerry held a hand up. "Give it five minutes, Mom. Then I'll explain everything."
Cynthia looked at her, and then glanced at Andrew. "Oh. Hello,Commander."
"Lo," Andrew responded.
"Well." She turned back to Kerry. "I'm sure there must be an explanation. This is all so--" She fell silent as the speaker went to the gavel across from them, and rapped for attention. "But I agree. Let's see this through, then we can discuss it."
They moved to the rail to listen. Kerry rested her hands on it, so tired it was hard to concentrate on what was going on.
Hard to stand there, and not know what was going on at the other end of the cable. No way was she going to call Dar, and break her concentration, or cause any seconds more delay in what had become the worst of her worst nightmare of a circumstance.
She could feel Andrew behind her, and her mother came to stand at her side, the other senators and dignitaries clustering around them.
"May I now have two minutes of silence," the speaker said and bowed his head.
It went absolutely silent. The only sound was the air conditioning and the soft squeak of a chair moving somewhere in the distance.
An American flag fluttered lightly in the fan breeze, rustling against the stone wall.
Kerry kept her head up and she let her eyes slowly scan the crowd,watching the traders below, heads dutifully bowed, but anxiety for the trade showing in the shifting of shoulders and clenching of fists.
On her level, the dignitaries all were standing in solemn silence, the men with hands clasped before them, and heads bent, the women mostly clasping their hands just over their hearts, some with lips moving in silent prayer.
Behind the pedestal, a group of firemen in their turnout coats waited, too tired to pray.
Kerry turned her head a little and found her gaze caught by a pair of gray ones in the cluster of business suits to one side of the podium. Alastair cocked his head just slightly in question, and she managed a tired grin in response.
What was he thinking?
One more minute. Kerry looked down at her hands, rubbing her thumb across a scrape that stung as she touched it.
One more minute.
"SIXTY SECONDS, BOSS. " Dar barely heard him. She focused completely on the screen, instinct driving her typing more than conscious thought. Flows and errors flashed in front of her, and she forgot where she was, and who was watching.
Focus.
She typed, and exported, and filtered and watched results as she fought to make the data streaming into her monitor go where she wanted it to go, alerts and warnings flashing by so fast they hardly registered.
"Forty seconds."
Routing. Rerouting. Redistributing directions from the machine under her hands to the big routers sitting quietly in the first floor of the Miami office that Dar would have teleported to if she could have.
Protocols stuttered and skewed, probably affecting traffic across the breadth of their network. Dar didn't have time to worry about it.
"Thirty seconds."
Too much data, trying to get to too many places, all of it critical.Dar muttered under her breath as she recycled the router for the nth time, and waited for it to boot. "Cross your fingers."
"Got everything including my eyebrows crossed," Mark said, nervously. "Twenty seconds."
They waited. Dar gazed at the blinking cursor as the boot screen scrolled across her laptop, checking ROMS and ASICS in a process thatseemed glacially slow.
"Ten seconds."
Router prompt. Dar rattled in a command, reviewed the results.
"Five seconds."
Another command and a refresh. Then five keystrokes and a slamming of her enter key so loud it startled everyone watching.
DING, DING, DING. The fireman released the striker, and let his hand fall, as a burst of noise suddenly exploded through the tall space.
Chattering. People's voices. Traders. The rattle of printers.
An LED sign burst into action, spewing out ticker symbols.
Everyone clapped.
Kerry felt her hands start to shake on the ledge, feeling light-headed. Anxiously, she searched the crowd, but the traders had gone to work and blocked out their watchers, busy at kiosks, busy in clusters, busy at terminals, busy at the business of making money.
Completely anticlimactic. Like nothing was wrong at all.
"All right now, Kerry." Her mother turned to her. "What is all this about?"
"Excuse me." Alastair's voice intruded.
Kerry turned and faced him. "Hi." She started to take a breath, then paused as she was enfolded in a heartfelt hug by her ultimate boss. She could feel the catch in his breathing, and felt the sting of tears in her own eyes, and it was all just so crazy and stupid.
She blinked a little."We couldn't let it go," she whispered. "We just couldn't."
"Meant a lot more than you think it did," Alastair uttered back. "Tell you all later."
"McLean?"
Alastair released her, and they turned to find the vice president there, with several of his entourage. "Well, hello, Dick." Alastair's voice was calm, but its usual amiable tone held a distinct edge. "Nice moment there, with the fireman."