The execution channel, p.1

The Execution Channel, page 1

 

The Execution Channel
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The Execution Channel


  The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you without Digital Rights Management software (DRM) applied so that you can enjoy reading it on your personal devices. This e-book is for your personal use only. You may not print or post this e-book, or make this e-book publicly available in any way. You may not copy, reproduce, or upload this e-book, other than to read it on one of your personal devices.

  Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the author’s copyright, please notify the publisher at: us.macmillanusa.com/piracy.

  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Part One: Opening Shot

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Part Two: The Planck Anomalies

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Part Three: The Scottish Regiment

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Part Four: The Burning Summer

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Part Five: And the Salt Ocean Rolled

  Chapter 25

  Tor Books by Ken MacLeod

  Copyright

  To Andrew J. Wilson

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  THANKS to Carol, Sharon, and Michael, for lots. Thanks to Johan Anglemark, Farah Mendlesohn, Svein Olav Nyberg, and Charles Stross for comments on the draft.

  PART ONE

  Opening Shot

  1

  THE day it happened Travis drove north. The back of the Land Rover held a spare fuel tank and five jerricans, filled years ago and now a standing violation of several laws; an air rifle; an air pistol; a first-aid kit; stacks of bottled water; MREs; camping gear; and a stash of trade goods: a wad of euros, twenty gold coins, and ten kilos of rolling tobacco. Travis kept the radio switched off. He didn’t need the information and he didn’t want the distraction. He watched the road and the sky, and the crawling blip on his phone’s Galileo monitor. From his seat he could see over the hedgerows. Early May morning mist obscured the distance. The mist lay low, around trees and in hollows, under a clear sky. The only contrails visible were high up. No civil aviation was landing or taking off. Now and then a fighter jet flashed above the damp fields, vapor trailing from its wingtips like cartoon streaks. He saw helicopters often, their throb a seldom absent background. Some were big twin-engined, tandem-rotor troop carriers; most were ground-attack choppers. He avoided looking at them. If you looked too long at an attack helicopter, someone might look back.

  It took him a while to realize why so many military aircraft were airborne. They were being kept off the airfields.

  * * *

  Two calls had come in the middle of the night. The red numbers on his alarm clock read 4:13. On the bedside table his mobile buzzed and jittered, then stopped as he reached for it. Text message, he guessed. Down the hall the landline phone was ringing. Landlines triggered an older reflex of urgency. Travis jumped out of bed, stubbed his toe on the door, and stumbled down the hallway in streetlight.

  “Yes?”

  “Dad, I’m all right.” Roisin didn’t sound all right at all.

  “What? What’s wrong?”

  “I’m just ringing to say I’m all right.”

  “That’s good, that’s good.” Travis licked his dry lips with a sticky tongue. “Why should—?”

  “There’s been a bomb—”

  “Oh, Christ! Are you all right?”

  “I just said—”

  “Just hang tight and call the cops, okay? Stay where you are, lie low. Whoever attacked you might still be out there.”

  “Dad,” said Roisin, in a pitying, patient tone that took him back about five years, “it wasn’t a bomb on the camp. It was a bomb on the base.”

  “Shit! What kind of bomb?”

  Roisin took a deep, sniffling breath and let it out shakily. “I think it was a nuke.”

  Travis almost dropped the handset. He heard beeps and the sound of coins being shoved in.

  “Still there?” Roisin asked.

  “Yes, yes, if you run out of money just stay and I’ll call you back. Where are you?”

  “Some wee village gas station. I can’t stay. We’re just going.”

  “Why do you think it was a nuke?”

  “Dad, I’m looking at a fucking mushroom cloud. I saw the flash.”

  “Are you all right?”

  “Yes, I told you. I have to go.”

  “Was the camp—?”

  “We weren’t in the camp. Nobody was, thanks to … thank God. We’re on the road.”

  “Where are you going?”

  “Wherever.”

  Travis paused. Wherever. That word had been agreed between them.

  “I’ll come for you.”

  “Don’t, Dad, please don’t. I have to go. I’m all right. Take care. Bye.”

  She’d put the phone down. Travis dialed 1471 and heard a chip voice. “You were called … today … at oh four fourteen hours. The caller withheld—”

  He slammed the phone down and ran back to the bedroom. He speed-dialed the number for Roisin’s mobile and got another chip voice, telling him the number was unobtainable. Travis guessed that if there really had been a nuke the mobile might have gotten fried by the electromagnetic pulse. As he ended the call he saw the flashing envelope symbol and keyed up the text message:

  sell apls buy orngs

  Travis stared at it for a moment in blank puzzlement, then recognized it. His hand shook a little. He knew better than to call or text back. It wasn’t even worth memorizing the number before he deleted it. After he’d deleted it he ran a soft wipe: it was the best he could do short of trashing the chip. For a while he sat on the side of the bed and stared at the phone’s blank screen. The text message had left him more disturbed than the phone call. The bomb, assuming it wasn’t an opening shot in the big one, would in time become another date that marked a before. Before 9/11. Before the bombing. Before the Iraq war. Before 7/7. Before the Iran war. Before the nukes. Before the flu. Before the Straits. Before Rosyth. Before … and so you could go on, right up to now: 5/5, the first nuke on Britain. Yet another date that changed everything.

  The text message was different. Every new shock, no matter how long dreaded, was unexpected when it came. Travis had been expecting this text message for a long time. It was no surprise.

  He thumbed the phone to television and tuned it to Sky News. The two presenters looked grave.

  “… confirmation of an incident at RAF Leuchars…”

  The caption read BREAKING NEWS: BASE EXPLOSION. The scrolling update read so far no reports of casualties.

  The male presenter glanced down and said, “Ah, we’re just getting the first pictures…”

  A digital low-res image. He couldn’t make it out on the phone screen. Travis grabbed the remote and flicked on the television on the far wall.

  “… viewer on a North Sea oil rig…”

  A crescent moon high above the sea. Faint background voice, male, Newcastle accent: “Look at the moon, love, and—”

  The screen went white, then faded to a glare reflected on the sea, the rig’s shadow long and skeletal.

  “What the fuck!”

  A glimpse of the roustabout as he whirled around, turning his phone camera to—

  “Holy fucking shit!”

  Travis had seen enough onscreen nuclear explosions to recognize a kiloton yield. So, it seemed, had the roustabout.

  “Tac nuke on Leuchars, love,” he said. “Best I get inside. Stay safe … love you too … bye.”

  “As yet there has been no official confirmation,” said the presenter.

  Travis turned the television off. He could hear a faint ringing sound from outside. Wallingford at night was normally so quiet you could hear a snail climbing the window. After a while he worked out that the ringing sound came from his neighbors’ phones. After another while the ringing was drowned out by a deeper tone that came from the sky. The heavy bombers were lifting from Brize Norton.

  Time to move.

  * * *

  This was what had happened.

  Roisin Travis crept among dark conifers, toward a light. She carried a heavy camera with a long-range lens. She had to make an effort not to laugh: she felt like some daft UFO chaser, following a light seen through trees. She knew she looked like an alien herself, in a thin, hooded coverall, with gloves and face-masking scarf of the same insulating black material. Even worn over nothing but jeans and T-shirt, the coverall was far too warm to be comfortable. The notion was that, by containing her body’s heat, it made her less visible in the infrared. She suspected a flaw in this reasoning.

  She stopped just before the edge of the forest. The trees and undergrowth remained dense right up to that line, beyond which they had been clear-cut some years earlier. The base at RAF Leuchars had expanded along with the war; though it had kept its name, it had long since been turned over to the USAF. The rent was unknown but was rumored to go a long way to mollify any objections from the Scottish Executive. The only gesture of independence from that quarter was to tolerate a token peace-protest camp a kilometer away from the base’s eastern perimeter, on the other side of what was left of the forest. From that huddle of shelters and vans a fluctuating dozen or so people made sorties to monitor activity at the base and to wave indignant placards at indifferent motorists. Roisin had spent six months with this ineffectual crew and had accomplished little beyond learning how to live rough through winter. With the Gulf Stream halfway to shutdown this was useful for the foreseeable future, but nothing to her purpose. Others had drifted off; the camp was down to six.

  The other thing she had learned was how to take photographs on film and develop them. She had learned this from Mad Jack Armitage. It was a thing he did. He was quite old and he mistrusted digital cameras. He was not actually mad. In fact he was not even Armitage. His real name, he claimed, was Norman Cunningham. “Mad Jack Armitage” was what he said was his pirate name, and he insisted on answering to no other, including during his appearances in court. He was given to attributing his politics and his persistent petty offenses to attention deficit disorder. It was not that he refused to hold down a job, pay taxes, vote, pay utility bills, or always put his clothes on before going out. He merely forgot. In a similar manner he claimed to be not actually a peace campaigner but a plane-spotter. This was not one of the claims he made in court. Plane-spotting was not in itself illegal but almost all the activities involved in it were.

  Roisin flattened herself on the ground and crawled forward on elbows and knees until she was lying under the overhang of a gorse bush on the very edge of the clear-cut area. A hundred meters ahead of her was the fence, then some grass, and beyond that the tarmac of a runway. Hangars and towers a kilometer away. She checked the viewfinder and the settings and waited. A perimeter patrol paced by, behind the wire. Twenty minutes later, another. A surveillance drone buzzed overhead, then landed like a toy. Each time Roisin lowered her head and held her breath.

  Something was in the air. Roisin heard it above the surf and the sound of the wind. She rolled on her back, opened her mouth wide, and eased the sides of the hood from her face and turned her head this way and that until she identified the sound. A big heavy jet aircraft, coming in low over the North Sea. A bomber—no, a transport plane. A C17 Globemaster. It was surprising how much she had learned from Armitage. She rolled prone again and lost her night-vision as the runway lights flared. Roisin heard the change in the engines’ sound as the aircraft banked, way out over St. Andrews Bay, and then another change as it dug in the flaps for its approach. She could hear it behind her and felt a tension in the back of her neck; she was lying right under its flight path. It passed over her in a rush and flash and she heard the rubber hit the tarmac.

  Before the aircraft had come to a halt she was looking through the viewfinder and zooming the lens. It was almost as if she was hauling the plane back as it moved away. So she saw what happened after the aircraft came to a halt, outside the hangars. The tailgate opened, the ramp lowered, and an object whose main component was a black cylinder that looked about a meter in diameter and four meters long was rolled out on a gurney. A utility vehicle drew up, and the gurney was towed away into the nearest hangar.

  Roisin kept clicking the shutter until the film ran out. She replaced the spool and waited. A couple of jet fighters took off and screamed away over the North Sea. A Chinook landed and a dozen soldiers deplaned. They took up positions in front of the hangar. Somewhat later a few cars drove up and a handful of men, some in uniform, some not, passed through the cordon into the hangar. She photographed all that. Two military policemen with dogs passed in front of her, a hundred meters away behind the perimeter fence. The next such patrol followed a few minutes later. She heard voices.

  Guessing that security had been stepped up, Roisin backed away into the bushes then rose to a low crouch which she maintained until she was deep in among the trees. With relief she threw back her hood and took off her scarf and unzipped the front of the coverall. Her T-shirt was damp and sticky with sweat. She let the faint breeze from the west cool her for a moment. The stars were very clear overhead in the darkness, the Milky Way like a cold breath hanging. A satellite crawled across the firmament from south to north. A meteor rushed down the sky.

  Roisin had no difficulty making her way through the wood. The floor was springy with pine needles. She walked slowly and carefully.

  When her phone vibrated she nearly dropped the camera. She ducked to put the camera on the ground. The phone was in her back pocket and if she didn’t catch it in five seconds it would start ringing. She tried to reach through the open front of the coverall, then swore under her breath and tugged her right arm up out of the sleeve. Her hand darted to her pocket and she slid the phone out just as the vibration stopped. It was only a message after all. But it was tagged as urgent: the little bead that glowed on the side of the casing was red. She flipped the screen open. It showed her brother Alec’s standard e-card shot of himself grinning in his beret in front of a mountain range. Scrawled across it was the text:

  Get away from that base asap Rosh

  expect big security sweep any minute

  I mean NOW!!! xxx

  Roisin stared at it. If it was true, how would Alec know? Of course he would—he worked in comms.

  Away to her left, to the north, she heard the baying of dogs.

  * * *

  The camp was located in a clearing that had once been a picnic-area car park, at the end of a single-track road off from the back of the military housing and the civilian part of town. A concrete litter-bin that they used for the fire. Half-rotted tables with built-in benches that should have been put on the fire long ago but were never quite dry enough. Two vans, one a plain white Transit, the other an ancient VW camper painted with rainbows and peace signs. Two timber-and-plastic shelters and Mad Jack’s bivouac. The old man was sitting cross-legged outside it, smoking, when Roisin ran out of the trees.

  He stubbed the roll-up and stood up, quite limber.

  “What’s up?”

  She told him. He showed no surprise about her brother.

  “You take this seriously?”

  “Very,” she said. “Listen.”

  He cocked his head and cupped his ear. “What?”

  “Drones, dogs, a chopper lifting…”

  “Fuck. All right.”

  He strode to the nearest shelter, the one that held three students from St. Andrews, and rattled the plywood door. Roisin heard raised voices as she stepped inside the shelter she shared with Claire Moyle. She shook her friend in the sleeping bag.

  “Where you been?” Claire asked, drowsy.

  Roisin swung the camera. “Night photography. Doesn’t matter. We got to go before we get chased out.”

  “Why?” asked Claire. “We haven’t done anything wrong.”

  It took too long to explain. By the time Roisin and Claire had come out of the shelter Mad Jack’s bivouac and belongings had vanished into the back of the Transit and the students were slinging things into the camper. The sounds of search hadn’t come closer, they seemed to be in the woods and farther along the perimeter.

  “Move!” Jack said, not too loud.

  “I still think we should just wait,” Claire grumbled, then dashed back into the hut and emerged with an armful. “Okay,” she said. “Okay.” She grinned at Roisin like she was suddenly in full agreement, threw her stuff in the Transit, and walked over to talk to the three students, who sounded like they needed more explanation than they’d gotten.

  Roisin grabbed up some gear, food, two-liter bottles of water. She used one to douse the fire then took the driver’s seat of the Transit. Claire climbed in on the passenger side, Mad Jack jumped in the back and slammed the doors. The sound seemed to echo.

  “Sorry,” he said. “Forgot.” They were worn words from him. Roisin glared over her shoulder.

  The two-van convoy lurched up the potholed track, the Transit in the lead. The reached the junction to a back road.

  “Take the right,” said Claire, looking up from a map. “I’ve worked out a route.”

  “Good work,” said Roisin.

  Claire laughed. “Johnny, Mike, and Irena”—the students—“were going to drive straight through Leuchars!”

  Roisin checked the wing mirror. The camper had followed them.

 

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