She polished off the revision, cranked out the memo, and slipped both into a priority classified delivery pouch.
Swallowing the last of her latte, Laramie decided to find out whether she’d been right. Her self-image needed the boost-or at least, she thought, if she did turn out to be right, then somebody needed to be doing something. Unless nobody cared about the independence of Taiwan.
Maybe nobody did-at least not here.
Laramie’s badge granted her unrestricted access to routine intelligence from most of the Far East and Pacific Rim: satellite photographs, census figures, even some items from the field. Finding corroborating evidence in support of her theory on the pending invasion of Taiwan would be challenging, even if such evidence existed in the first place, but Laramie at least figured she had a pretty good sense of what to search for. The question was where to look.
Any general savvy enough to come to oversee the entire military of a semi-superpower, she thought, would-in planning to annex its neighbor-also prepare for resistance. International resistance. And if you had to fight more than one opponent, you’d want to have more than one player on your team. She could look for the same thing-unscheduled military exercises, a calling-up of army reserves, the whole clandestine effort of preparing for war without telling any of your international brethren-and it made sense to take her first look in nations ideologically aligned with the extremist members of China’s State Council.
She’d start with North Korea.
Over the course of the day, she made sure to log her standard six or seven hours in the SATINT lab, keeping up with her assignments-the routine monitoring of recently generated satellite imagery, provincial immigration figures, CPI and GNP data for the PRC. Around seven, she got into the compare-and-contrast work, and by midnight had scanned her first swath of North Korea, beginning four months prior to the Shandong exercise. She got home early in the morning, having found nothing out of the ordinary.
Laramie followed the same routine for two days running, took one night off, then got back at it. At ten after midnight on her third evening of work, she had just completed a tenth fruitless search of the same patch of Korean land when the phone in her viewing cubicle gurgled. She tapped the speaker button.
“Mm-hm.”
“Laramie.”
Though Laramie preferred to label the current status of her relationship with Eddie Rothgeb as “professional-discussions-only,” she still felt an odd sensation anytime he called her at work. She couldn’t figure it out. Either something was telling her to oust him from her professional life too-Laramie, make a complete break, you idiot-or, alternately, maybe when they discussed professional topics it stirred memories of-
It’s getting late, she thought.
“Hello, Professor.”
“You weren’t home,” Rothgeb said. “I have your list. The e-mail addresses.”
Laramie took a moment to realize he was talking about the list of e-mails for the members of the intelligence committees. When she realized it, though, she decided she didn’t particularly care. The ass-burning ceremony, as well as her subsequent zero-sum evidence hunt, had reduced her ambition somewhat.
“Just so you know,” she said, “things played out about as you predicted. And I’m not finding any-well, corroborating entities, so to speak.”
“Meaning you’re looking,” he said. There was a hesitation. “You know, you need to be-heck, I’m not sure I want to hear about it.”
“You don’t.”
“I’ll fax it to your home.”
Neither of them said anything. Laramie’s eyes darted from region to region on her wide-screen workstation monitor, fingers plugging away at the keyboard. The SATINT photos flicked past like a deck-shuffle on a slot-machine poker game.
The sound of a clearing throat came from the speaker phone. “I’m sure I don’t need to tell you,” he said, “but when you send anything-”
“I know, Professor,” Laramie said.
“You understand what I’m saying?”
Thinking that the tapped phones at CIA made for awkward conversations, but come on, Professor, Laramie said, “I know I can’t do what you’re warning me against doing. I’ll have to be inventive. Origination-wise, you might say.”
“Right,” he said. “I’ll fax you the list.”
The speaker light went dark on her telephone console.
Laramie pulled up another week of SATINT, waited for the thumbnails to load, and got back to the visual deck-shuffle. Selecting from the thumb-nails based on date and region, she enlarged the grids she found interesting or inscrutable, flipping past those she judged to be irrelevant. Laramie the globetrotter, she thought, spanning the world with keyboard and mouse. She zipped down with the Zoom command. Examined an endless succession of trees, houses, lakes, military bases, airports, factories, farms, streets. Mostly she didn’t need to push in any closer than a city block; she could see all she needed in images covering a few dozen square miles of real estate. Flipping, clicking, her eyes drooping, Laramie becoming increasingly pessimistic there would be any-
A small break in the clouds looked vaguely familiar.
She zoomed in twenty times, then fifty, then a hundred, recentering the image as she went. At three hundred times the standard viewing magnification she was able to make out through the cloud break-where pockets of mist still made the images on the ground difficult to isolate-a column of tanks and army trucks.
She cautioned herself that this could have been anything. During any given second of the day, for instance, on every day of the year, she knew there to be a U.S. military convoy transporting something somewhere on one American highway or another. Perhaps the same was true for North Korea.
Except, she thought, this is exactly what I found in Shandong two days before the exercise. In the same exact sort of weather she had found on this particular day in North Korea.
She checked the log for the photograph she was viewing and saw that she was looking at film from April 3, two months earlier than the Shandong exercise. She bookmarked the photograph and moved ahead a day, then two, then three, checking the same area, about five hundred square miles, Laramie aware that any military organization with even a limited intelligence-gathering wing would know when these satellite passes came and accordingly, if they wanted, could hide what they were doing. That’s how she’d caught the PLA simulation in full swing-by snatching some pictures from a private satellite, shot from a lower angle and on a different schedule. And there it had been: a full-scale imitation of a sea-to-land invasion, staged near the city of Qingdao, on the Yellow Sea. The invasion, of course, perfectly mimicking a PLA takeover of Taiwan.
Back on her Korea shots, April 7 now, fifty miles north of where she’d spotted the convoy-and look at that, she thought. The same damn thing as Shandong. Another military exercise. Ghostly outlines of tanks in the field. Bright spotting-probably mortar fire or antitank guns-blooming in the fog beneath the thinner sections of cloud cover.
Laramie zoomed all the way in and still wasn’t able to see much. This was the kind of thing that the North Korea analyst wouldn’t ordinarily spot; with the wider angles the section analysts reviewed in the course of their routine coverage, there would be little to see here, even under intense scrutiny, outside of brighter-than-normal clouds in a remote and otherwise irrelevant part of the country.
But know what to look for, and you find it in three nights of lab work.
Who else, she thought, had signed on here? If, she cautioned herself again, it was anything at all. Which it probably wasn’t. It was likely she’d stumbled across a pair of military exercises with no real-world meaning, occurring in the same time period only coincidentally. But spend two weeks instead of three nights, and who else would she find-