Walter Williams - Deep State

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“We just may have to seduce the bastard,” he said. “You figure out what to say, how to say it.”

Seduce someone called Slash Berzerker, Dagmar thought. How hard can that be?

LadyDayFan says:

Assuming that this Uruisamoglu is in fact our Slash Berzerker, and assuming that he answers any of our emails, we should put our heads together and work out what questions we’re going to ask him. Should we ask him about Harry right off the bat?

Vikram says:

BTW, have you heard that the Internet is down in New York? I just heard the report here in Bengaluru.

Hippolyte says:

The whole Internet? Doesn’t seem very likely.

Corporal Carrot says:

I just checked the news crawl on CNN. They also report that New York is down.

Hippolyte says:

ReVerb is New York based. Are you still here, ReVerb?

Corporal Carrot says:

ReVerb? (ReVerb, reverb, reverb…)

Big echo in here.

LadyDayFan says:

Yeah. Big hollow echo.

I think we’ve lost the Apple.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

FROM: Rahim

The following proxy sites are still unblocked. Please let any friends in Turkey know this.

86.101.185.112:8080

86.101.185.109:8080

69.92.182.124:2100

128.112.139.28:3124

198.144.36.172:5555

“ ’Round Midnight” brought Dagmar up from sleep. She flailed awake, arms flying, then knocked her handheld off the bedstand and then had to look under the bed for it.

She located the phone by its glowing screen and grabbed it. She brushed dust from the display, looked blearily at the glowing numbers, and saw Uzbekistan’s country code.

Her heart crashed to a sudden surge of adrenaline. She pressed Send.

“This is-” She coughed. “This is Briana.”

“Hello.” A light, young voice. “You left a message for me to call you. This is Nimet Uruisamoglu.”

His voice lilted the unlikely-sounding name, made it almost melodic.

“I’m very pleased to reach you,” Dagmar said. She swung her legs out of bed, planted bare feet on the floor. She rose naked and went to the closet for a robe.

“I work for an American IT company,” Dagmar said. “We were very impressed by a talk you gave in Germany a couple years ago.”

“Which one?” Slash sounded pleased and upbeat.

Dagmar found her robe and got one arm in but couldn’t manage the second arm without taking the phone from her ear.

“Ah-” she said, momentarily distracted. “That would be ‘Toward the Creation of Neural-Based Communications Systems.’ ”

Ismet appeared-he’d been in the kitchen brewing coffee-and he used one hand to hold the phone to Dagmar’s ear while using the other to guide her arm into the empty sleeve. She shrugged on the robe and gave Ismet a grateful look.

“I’m very pleased that you remember that talk,” Slash said.

Dagmar had studied Slash’s speeches through online transcripts and chosen the one that seemed the most heartfelt. The speech had been nearly utopian-Slash had envisioned the Internet carrying not simply verbal or written communication, but information about emotional states, transmitted in a kind of holographic form by brain-scanning hardware.

Once people were able to understand one another’s true feelings, Slash had suggested, it would lead to greater peace among peoples, possibly the abolition of war itself.

Dagmar, for her own part, had little interest in being able to read the emotions of those she met on the Internet. She knew there were monsters in the human psyche. She had enough creatures lurching about in her own brain, and she preferred to keep them private: she didn’t want to broadcast hallucinations of Indonesian rioters or Maffya triggermen to everyone she met, and she very much preferred not to encounter their own needy, ever-hungry Creatures from the Id.

When people found out what others were really like, she thought, there would be more wars than peace treaties.

“We found the ideas visionary,” Dagmar said. “And I’m pleased to tell you that we may be in a situation to bring your ideas into being.”

“But the talk-” Slash stammered a bit. “It was what you call blue-sky. A kind of thought experiment.”

“Thanks to our proprietary hardware,” Dagmar said, “your vision is a lot closer to reality than you might think.”

There was a pause for Slash to digest this.

It was not, she knew, implausible. There were already scanners that could read the areas of the brain that processed speech, so that the scanner would be able to “hear” the words the subject was listening to or be able to print the words the subject was thinking. Processing more complex brain signals such as emotions, she thought, was only a matter of time.

“What company did you say you work for?” he said.

“I can’t actually tell you until nondisclosure agreements are in place,” Dagmar said. “But the hardware exists, and tests are very promising. Our software at the moment is a kloodge-we could really use a software overhaul-but we also need a vision such as the one you articulated in your German talk.”

“I-that’s very interesting.” He sounded cautiously interested.

Ismet appeared again, bringing a cup of coffee. He pressed it into Dagmar’s free hand, and she took a hasty swallow. Coffee scalded its way down her throat.

“I’d very much like to get in the same room with you to discuss this,” she said. “Do you think you can fly back to Germany to meet me?”

Germany, where there were plenty of American special ops teams, and military bases where Slash Berzerker could be debriefed.

“I–I’d like to,” Slash said. “But unfortunately my next few weeks are committed.”

“Oh?” Dagmar tried to sound disappointed. “Where are you?”

“Uzbekistan.”

“Really?” Dagmar made an effort to seem genuinely surprised. “Well,” she said. “We have people in Europe who might be able to meet with you there. Where in Uzbekistan are you?”

“Unfortunately, I’m in a place that’s completely remote. I’m near an oasis called Chechak in the north of the country.”

“How do you spell Chechak?”

From over the lip of her coffee cup Dagmar gave Ismet a wild grin.

This might just work out.

“Tell me about Uzbekistan,” Dagmar said. “The last I heard, they were killing each other.”

She and Ismet were in the backseat of the car, being driven to the ops center by their guards. He looked thoughtful.

“Last year they went through another phase of, ah, post-Karimov adjustment. But they’re quiet now.”

“Who’s running the place?”

“A coalition of political parties dividing all the uranium money while it lasts. Or maybe the uranium interests just bought the political parties. I’m sure it’s hard to tell.”

Dagmar shook her head. “Are they friendly to the U.S.?”

“They’re friendly to the American dollar.”

Dagmar nodded. “Sounds like people we can work with,” she said.

She was nearly skipping in delight when she entered the ops center, but the sight of Lincoln drained the joy from her. He slumped in a chair beneath the picture of Ataturk, a wisp of hair hanging in his face, his face gray and old. A corner of his mouth sagged, as if he’d been hit by a stroke.

Dagmar stopped dead in her tracks and looked at the others. Lloyd and Lola were busy at their desks, expressionless, and the others hadn’t arrived yet. Dagmar gathered herself and walked to Lincoln.

“What’s wrong?”

“The High Zap hit New York yesterday,” Lincoln said. “Just before the stock market closed.”

A shock wave rolled through Dagmar till it rebounded off the inside of her skull.

“How long did it last?”

“Only twenty minutes. But that was enough for Bozbeyli to make his point.”

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