Part 50 (1/2)

He told me about the release of the seif-al-din in a Best Buy in Willow Grove, Pennsylvania. Mother Night's people had used big tractor trailers to block front and back doors, and then they released a couple of dozen infected into the store during a doorbuster sale of a new video game.

”Are there any survivors?” I asked.

”No,” Church said wearily. ”But no infected have escaped. The trucks kept everything contained and local SWAT have the area locked down. However, the entire thing was broadcast live via cameras apparently placed inside the store.”

My stomach felt like it was filled with raw sewage. ”The press is going to keep on this, you know. They're going to want to show everything, maybe hoping for a response like to what we did in the subway.”

”No doubt.”

”If you wipe out the infected, they'll see that, and if you don't-and people get wind of what's really going on in there ... Christ, we're screwed either way.”

”And all the confusion, public outrage, and panic serves Mother Night.”

I wanted to bang my head on a wall. Or maybe toss myself out of the d.a.m.n jet. Would have simplified the day.

”You know,” I said, ”thinking back on it, I can see how Bliss got here. Some of the things she asked. The kinds of trouble she got into with Auntie. The opportunities she had. It's not unlike Hugo Vox.”

”Yes,” said Church, ”power corrupts. It's not the first time I've heard that.”

He disconnected.

But he was back in less than five minutes. It wasn't about Bliss's possible friends and it sure as h.e.l.l wasn't good news.

”Captain,” he said in a voice from which all emotion and inflection had been crushed, ”at 10:01 this morning we lost all contact with the Locker.”

Chapter Eighty-one.

Reconnaissance General Bureau Special Office #103 Pyongyang, Democratic People's Republic of Korea Monday, September 1, 10:09 a.m. EST Colonel Sim Sa-jeong mopped sweat from his face as he watched the numbers flow from the account he managed for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and into the numbered account of that witch, Mother Night.

He had won the auction, though barely.

Three-hundred and seventy-eight million euros. Nearly half a billion in U.S. dollars. Nearly one quarter of his yearly operating budget. And all for a weapon that the supreme leader might never have the courage to use. In his private mind, Sim knew that the young leader was more bl.u.s.ter than bite. Would he dare to use a bioweapon of such devastating power as the seif-al-din? Apart from the commonsense question as to whether such a weapon could ever be used with even a prayer of controlling it, the knowledge that North Korea had it could be disastrous. The entire world would fear the country, no doubt, and that was what Kim Jong-un truly wanted. But they would also become a unified force against Sim's beloved country. North Korea would become an island in a sea of enemies. No one would dare invade them, but would anyone trade with them? Would fear of the prion-based pathogen force the world to defer to North Korea and treat it like a global supreme power?

Sim had his doubts.

But now the money was paid.

The only grace was that all of the bidders were blind as to the nationality and personal ident.i.ty of the others. No one yet knew that the Democratic People's Republic of Korea had bought the world's most dangerous weapon. Only Sim, the supreme leader, and Mother Night knew.

For now.

His computer screen changed to indicate that the money transfer was complete.

Sweat ran in lines down Sim's face as he waited for the last part. The coded message with instructions on where and how to take possession of the seif-al-din.

An icon appeared. A symbol of the English letter A surrounded by a circle.

Below it were the words, in Korean, CLICK HERE.

Sim did as instructed.

Nothing happened for a few moments, but he waited with all of the patience he could muster.

Then the display changed again. The letter-A symbol expanded until it filled the entire screen. It paused for a moment, then dissolved into a cartoon version of the face of Mother Night. The cartoon image was laughing.

Laughing.

Then everything went crazy.

The computer system isolated and disabled its own keyboard and mouse. He tried pressing CONTROL, ALT, and DELETE simultaneously, but that did nothing.

Nothing that he was aware of at that moment.

In truth, those keys unlocked the Trojan horse that had been planted in his system by Mother Night during the auction. Once unlocked, hundreds of viruses and tapeworms invaded Sim's computer and, via its wi-fi and landline connections, plunged into the intranet used by his department. From there it raced onward, infecting thousands of computers through the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Copying files, destroying security protocols, interpolating data, shutting down every system and program that could be used to defend against cyberattacks. And in flash-bursts it sent all of that data back out to the Net.

To Britain and Israel.

To j.a.pan.

To South Korea.

To China and Russia.

To America.

To the major press agencies in more than one hundred nations.

And while that was happening, a secondary set of programs reinitiated the banking transfer order, using Sim's pa.s.swords for authorization. Three separate sets of transfers began. Each one taking a remaining third of Sim's annual budget. Two billion in American dollars.

It was all so fast.

By the time Sim realized that he could not stop the process and tore the battery out of his computer, the damage was done.

Everyone knew that North Korea had just paid two billion dollars for a doomsday plague.

Chapter Eighty-two.

The Hangar Floyd Bennett Field Brooklyn, New York Monday, September 1, 10:12 a.m.

”No, Mr. President,” said Mr. Church, ”we can't prove any of this yet. However, this is the most credible way for the pieces to fit.”