Sea Of Terror (2010) Read online

Page 2


  "We can adjust the strength of the X-ray beams," Mitchell explained. "We've had people try to hide stuff in long hair, men and women both." He glanced at Dean, and seemed to read his expression. "Look, I know it's intrusive ... but most people would rather have this than have security guards frisk them ... or put them through a strip search!"

  "Both of which slow down the queue," Lockwood added, "and make for unfortunate delays at the security checkpoints."

  "Do they have a choice?" Dean asked.

  "Oh, yes," Llewellyn told him. "They can walk through the machine, or they can submit to a hand search. Of course they have a choice!"

  Dean wondered if most people knew they even had that option. That had been a problem with trials in the United States, he remembered .. . that, and the fact that most people simply didn't know how graphically revealing this sort of device actually could be. They heard "X-ray" and immediately thought of medical X-rays, black-and-white transparencies showing decidedly non-erotic shadows of bone and translucent tissue.

  "So how much radiation are those people getting, anyway?" Dean asked. He knew the answer but wondered what the security people would say.

  "About as much radiation as you would pick up walking outdoors in full sunshine," Lockwood replied. "Not an issue."

  Dean looked back at the main screen as the computer froze the shockingly bald woman's image momentarily, then rotated it in three dimensions before going back to a real-time image. Her hair, clearly not hiding anything dangerous, faded back into view, and she stepped offscreen.

  "I see you leave no fig leaf unturned," Dean said. "You could make a fortune putting these up on the Internet, you know."

  "The data are immediately discarded, Mr. Dean," Mitchell told him.

  This backscatter unit, Dean noted, was an upgraded model, much improved over the first such devices of a few years ago. The first one had gone into service back in 2007, at the Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix, Arizona. With that unit, airline passengers had stepped onto the painted outlines of footprints in front of a cabinet the size and shape of a refrigerator and stood there for ten seconds. Fast-improving technology had soon made this new model possible, with a computer imaging the body in real time, manipulating viewing angles, and even adjusting its sensitivity to peer down through successive layers of leather, cotton, nylon, and silk. Privacy concerns had delayed the widespread adoption of the technology; there'd been talk about having the computer blur sensitive parts of the body, or even redraw it as a kind of cartoon image that wasn't so completely graphic.

  As Mitchell had pointed out, though, there were problems with that approach. New types of high-velocity explosives in a plastic container the size of a pack of cigarettes were powerful enough to kill several people, or depressurize an airliner's passenger cabin. That had been Reid's intent, obviously, with his PETN-laden shoe.

  And if you could look at each and every passenger boarding an aircraft or, in this case, a cruise ship and be able to see with absolute clarity and perfect certainty whether or not just one person out of some hundreds or thousands was smuggling a bomb or other weapon. . . didn't simple common sense demand that security forces make use of that technology?

  It is, Dean thought, an increasingly strange and difficult world.

  "Uh-oh," Mitchell said, sitting up straighter in his swivel chair. "We've got a live one."

  "Ah!" Llewellyn said. "I see it. Okay, Mr. Dean! There is why we don't have the machine put a blur over 'body parts,' as you put it!"

  Another man had just walked into the tunnel. He was skinny, his ribs showing clearly. He was bearded and, though his facial features were somewhat vague and blank-eyed on the X-ray image, his movements appeared jerky and seemed nervous or uncertain. Hanging above his genitals were what appeared to be three semi-transparent bags, each the size of a man's fist. His hips were oddly pinched by an invisible cloth belt cinched tightly against his skin. As the image rotated, two more bags came into view, one flattened over each buttock. On the security camera, the man was wearing loose-fitting trousers and a shirt with the long tail hanging down outside the pants halfway to his knees. To an unaided eye, there was no way to see the bags secreted underneath.

  " 'Nayim Erbakan,'" Mitchell said, reading the data on the right as Lockwood called it up. "Turkish national, German visa."

  Llewellyn reached up and touched his communicator headset. "Fred? David. Hold this one! Looks like a mule."

  On-screen, the man looked up, stopped, then took a backward step, raising his hands as if to push someone away. Two security guards entered the screen, one from the left and one from the right. Closing on Erbakan, they took him by either arm--with holstered semiautomatic pistols at their hips, with extra ammo clips, plastic belt pouches, badges, ID cards, wallets, radios, handcuffs, flashlights, nightsticks, zippers, buttons, the bills and internal structure of their caps, and other paraphernalia all dangling unsupported from their otherwise nude bodies.

  Dean stood and walked across to the slanted windows looking down onto the terminal concourse and security area. The two guards, fully dressed in blue and white uniforms, were escorting the man away from the white tunnel toward a door marked "Private" and "No Admittance."

  The security process had been efficiently streamlined, Dean saw. A line of civilians, most of them in appropriately garish vacation clothing, stood in line waiting to go through the backscatter scanner. Each person in turn would stop beside a conveyor belt and deposit wallets, handbags, cameras, cell phones, and other devices and carry-on items into baskets for conventional X-ray scans, then walk first through an old-fashioned metal detector and then through the smoothly sculpted white tunnel of the backscatter X-ray machine. Security guards stood at strategic points to control the traffic or to administer, as with Erbakan, more detailed and personal attention. Under the guards' watchful eyes, they retrieved their personal items at the end of the conveyor, on the far side of the backscatter device. Once they were cleared through the checkpoint, they filed through glass doors leading to the dock outside and the immense white cliff of the newest addition to the Royal Sky Line's fleet of luxury cruise ships, the Atlantis Queen.

  Another young woman, looking harried and a bit impatient, stepped out of the tunnel below Dean's window, holding an infant on one arm. She turned, and held out her free hand, fingers impatiently waggling. A moment later a dark-haired girl walked out and took her hand. The girl couldn't have been more than ten.

  Disgusted, Dean turned away and watched Lockwood, Llewellyn, and Mitchell at the console but did not walk back to where he could see the screen.

  "Just how long have you been using this device?" he asked. He was trying not to think about the ten-year-old.. . or about a world gone so sick and paranoid that this kind of thing was thought necessary.

  "Do you mean here in England?" Mitchell asked. "Or Royal Sky Line? We've had them operating at Heathrow International for a couple of years now."

  "That's where I got my training," Llewellyn told him. "We started using this unit here just yesterday. The upgrades are amazing."

  "We've already screened over a thousand of the Queen's passengers," Lockwood added.

  "Really? How many opted for a hand frisk?"

  As he spoke, his right hand peeled a three-inch strip of black, sticky plastic from the back of his tie, the movement blocked from the others by the screen itself.

  "A couple of hundred," Lockwood told him. She shrugged. "Like Tom said, most people prefer this. It's less obtrusive. Less ... personal."

  "So what is the CIA's interest in our little peep show?" Llewellyn wanted to know.

  Dean had introduced himself that morning as a security analyst with the CIA, though he'd used his real name. The National Security Agency remained not only the largest and best-funded intelligence agency in the United States but also the most secretive. Its operatives rarely admitted who they really worked for. NSA employees jokingly referred to the acronym as "No Such Agency" or "Never Say Anything," and, even
yet, few people in the general public had ever heard of the organization, or knew anything about it.

  But everyone had heard of the CIA.

  "We're interested," Dean said carefully, reciting from a memorized script, "in how new transportation security technologies might be interfaced with various international databases, passport records, and police files, so that we can track known criminals and terrorists before they can even enter the United States or Great Britain."

  Unobtrusively he pressed the tape, sticky side down, against the back of the freestanding console. The tape had a meaningless ten-digit number printed on it in white letters; if a security sweep found it later, it would look like just another serial number.

  "Royal Sky Line," Dean added as he finished, "is introducing some .. . novel concepts along those lines."

  "Ah. You mean the passenger tracking chips," Llewellyn said, nodding.

  "Among other things."

  "Makes sense, actually. As you saw, Ship's Security personnel can pull everything necessary in a person's jacket into a database when they check in, or even when they first buy their ticket. When they check on board, they receive a key card with a magnetized strip and an embedded microchip. It serves as the key to their stateroom, but it also holds all pertinent data about that person, and lets them be tracked wherever they go on board the ship. At any given moment, Ship's Security can determine the exact location of everyone aboard. If someone goes ashore at a port of call but doesn't come back aboard for some reason, Security knows about it."

  "Scanners in the passageways and public areas ping the cards' strips every few seconds," Lockwood added. "A computer in Security tallies up where every card is at any given moment, and which cards are missing. Or it can isolate, identify, and pinpoint the location of any one particular card, anywhere on board."

  "Very convenient," Dean said. "What if someone forgets and leaves his card in his stateroom?"

  "Then a steward very politely informs him of the fact," Llewellyn replied, "as soon as he tries to go ashore or to enter a monitored public area. If he loses his card, he is escorted down to Security, where his identity can be verified, and he is issued another card."

  "And how do you safeguard the data?"

  "I beg your pardon?"

  Dean gestured at the back of the big screen. "You've got a lot of sensitive, personal information there. I'm not saying you, necessarily ... but what's to stop one of your security people from misusing it?"

  "I'm sure I don't know what you mean," Llewellyn said.

  "You liked the looks of that one woman v/ho just went through. . . what was her name? Miss Johnson? And here, right at your fingertips, you have her age, her marital status, her address, her phone number, her Social Security number, what she does for a living, where she works, health conditions. For all I know, it tells you whether she prefers Harvey Wallbangers to scotch on the rocks! Are you telling me you don't see how that much personal information could be misused?"

  "All data here are destroyed, Mr. Dean," Mitchell insisted.

  "No, they're not! Those X-ray images are erased--or so you tell me--but the personal data are still there. And why should the public accept your word that even the naked pictures get shit-canned?"

  "Mr. Dean," Lockwood said. "There are professional and legal standards here. We are professionals, no less than doctors or therapists! And our clients, the companies using X-Star's equipment, I assure you are self-policing. A scandal--"

  "In other words, Mr. Dean, we're not going to do anything that would generate lawsuits or right-to-privacy injunctions," Llewellyn said, interrupting.

  "Maybe not," Dean said, shrugging. "But what about outside access? Hackers?"

  Lockwood patted the keyboard in front of her. "This network is completely isolated from the Internet. Hackers can't get in."

  "Oh? What kind of protection software do you use?"

  Lockwood hesitated, and Mitchell answered, "They're not supposed to tell you, but you've been cleared. It's a software package called Netguardz."

  "Ah, right. I've heard of it."

  "Since when is the American CIA so interested in protecting the privacy of individual citizens?" Mitchell asked.

  "There's a difference between what I do for a living," Dean replied slowly, "and what I feel and believe on a personal level."

  "Really?" Lockwood said. "Maybe you're in the wrong line of work."

  "I've often thought so."

  The door to the security room opened and a young man in the blue uniform of the Royal Sky Line walked in.

  He was young, in his mid-twenties, perhaps. "Hey there," he said. "Shift change!"

  "About time," Llewellyn said, standing. He turned to Lockwood. "Can I get you anything, Ellen? Tea? Coffee?"

  "I'm fine, thanks," the woman said. "I'll be breaking for lunch in a little bit."

  "Suit yourself. How about you gents?"

  "Thanks, no."

  Mitchell stood up as well. "Well... you wanted to see the operation here, Mr. Dean," he said. "Are we done? You got all you wanted?"

  "I think so," Dean said. He nodded at Llewellyn and Lockwood. "It was nice meeting you both. Thank you for your help."

  He turned for one last look down through the windows onto the concourse again. There was someone he'd been watching for. . . .

  Yes! There she was. He resisted the urge to wave.

  "See anyone you know?" Mitchell asked.

  "Yes, actually. A ... friend."

  "More CIA?" Mitchell frowned. "Just how many of you are there here today?"

  Dean grinned. "Just me. She's not Company." Which was true enough. "She's just a friend, and I happen to know she's taking your cruise to the Med and was going to check in through your queue today."

  "Really?" Mitchell said, joining him at the window and looking down at the line of tourists. "Who is it?"

  "I'm not going to tell you that!" Dean said. "You're about to strip her naked and peer up every orifice in living black and white! She can just remain anonymous, thank you very much!"

  Lockwood snorted. "If his friend was CIA, you don't think he'd tell us so, do you?"

  The young man sat down at the console in the seat Llewellyn had vacated. "What's all this? CIA? Cloak-and-dagger stuff?" The others ignored him.

  Dean turned away from the window. "What's next on the tour?"

  "Lunch, actually," Mitchell said, standing by the door. "After you?"

  As Dean walked out, he heard the young man's voice behind him. "Coo! Now there's a sweet bird!" "Jesus!" Lockwood said. "Grow up!"

  Royal Sky Line security queue

  Atlantis Queen passenger terminal

  Southampton, England Thursday, 1202 hours GMT

  Carolyn Howorth couldn't resist. She stepped into the yawning mouth of the white tunnel and struck a sexy pose, hips cocked sharply to one side, left hand on her hip, right arm straight overhead. "See anything you like, boys?" she asked.

  Dropping her arm, she swished out of the tunnel, smiling sweetly at the cruise line security guard waiting outside.

  He looked puzzled. "Did you say something, ma'am?" he asked.

  "Not really," she said. "Just checking to see if these things are equipped for sound."

  "No, ma'am. It just takes your picture."

  "Oh, I see. Is that all?"

  She glanced up over her left shoulder. She could see the line of windows up near the ceiling of the cavernous room, the office where Charlie Dean was making nice with the Royal Sky Line security people, and wondered if he'd just gotten an eyeful. She didn't see him, however, and so she walked on down the line to the end of the conveyor, claiming her handbag, her camera, and her laptop computer. She asked the guard for a hand check on her camera. He had her remove her camera from its case and looked down into the lens, but Carolyn noticed that his eyes were watching hers, checking for nervousness or other telltale clues.

  "Open the computer, please, miss," the guard told her, setting the camera aside. "Thank you. Now turn it on fo
r me."

  She pressed the power switch and they waited for the machine to boot up. "Damned Vista," she told him. "It tries to boot everything at once and takes forever."

  Finally, though, the screen came up. Satisfied, the guard motioned to her to close it up and put it away. "Thank you," he said, apparently satisfied. "Have a nice cruise!"

  "Thank you," she told him. She was wondering if he had any idea what was possible in computer technology these days. It wouldn't be hard at all to have a working laptop exactly like this one, which booted to a full screen and yet had free space enough inside for a disassembled gun or high explosives or almost anything else she cared to smuggle onto the ship.

  Presumably, they'd checked for that sort of thing when her laptop had gone through the carry-on scanner . . . but still.

  In fact, her machine wasn't at all what it appeared to be, or not entirely, at least. The computer part did work.

  Technically, Carolyn did not work for the NSA as Charlie Dean did. She was GCHQ, one of the Menwith Girls, as they were known, an employee stationed at Menwith Hill, in Yorkshire, of the highly secret British eavesdropping agency that was closely partnered with America's NSA. Carolyn had worked with Dean before, in an op targeting the Russian mafia.

  Through the double glass doors and onto the dock. A gangway festooned with bunting extended up to the entry port on the Atlantis Queen's port side, where a ship's officer waited for her.

  He checked the electronic pad he was holding. "Good afternoon, Ms. Carroll," he said with a pleasant smile. "May I see your ticket and your passkey, please?"

  "Certainly." She fished into her handbag and produced both. For this operation, Carolyn was traveling as Judith Carroll and all of the electronic information about her in the system, save for her nationality and her gender, was completely false.

  The officer swiped her card through a reader and handed it back to her. "Here you are, Ms. Carroll. We'll keep your ticket for you in the bursar's office. Your passkey serves as your ticket and your ID during your cruise. You have your ID bracelet?"