Chapter One
They were in the Smoky Mountains at their favorite bed-and-
breakfast. David was smiling down at her. "What do you
say, gorgeous? Marry me?"
Looking up from their canopy bed, she knew he was the one.
Forever. As she stared into his deep-green eyes, somewhere
in the distance a deafening bell began to ring. It was
pulling him away. She reached for him, but her arms
clutched empty air.
It was the sound of the phone that fully awoke Susan
Fletcher from her dream. She gasped, sat up in bed, and
fumbled for the receiver. "Hello?"
"Susan, it's David. Did I wake you?"
She smiled, rolling over in bed. "I was just dreaming of
you. Come over and play."
He laughed. "It's still dark out."
"Mmm" She moaned sensuously. "Then definitely come over
and play. We can sleep in before we head north."
David let out a frustrated sigh. "That's why I'm calling.
It's about our trip. I've got to postpone."
Susan was suddenly wide awake. "What!"
"I'm sorry. I've got to leave town. I'll be back by
tomorrow. We can head up first thing in the morning. We'll
still have two days."
"But I made reservations," Susan said, hurt. "I got our
old room at Stone Manor."
"I know, but-"
"Tonight was supposed to be special-to celebrate six
months. You do remember we're engaged, don't you?"
"Susan" He sighed. "I really can't go into it now, they've
got a car waiting. I'll call you from the plane and
explain everything."
"Plane?" she repeated. "What's going on? Why would the
university ...?"
"It's not the university. I'll phone and explain later.
I've really got to go; they're calling for me. I'll be in
touch. I promise."
"David!" she cried. "What's-"
But it was too late. David had hung up.
Susan Fletcher lay awake for hours waiting for him to call
back. The phone never rang.
Later that afternoon Susan sat dejected in the tub. She
submerged herself in the soapy water and tried to forget
Stone Manor and the Smoky Mountains. Where could he be?
she wondered. Why hasn't he called?
Gradually the water around her went from hot to lukewarm
and finally to cold. She was about to get out when her
cordless phone buzzed to life. Susan bolted upright,
sloshing water on the floor as she grappled for the
receiver she'd left on the sink.
"David?"
"It's Strathmore," the voice replied.
Susan slumped. "Oh" She was unable to hide her
disappointment. "Good afternoon, Commander."
"Hoping for a younger man?" The voice chuckled.
"No, sir," Susan said, embarrassed. "It's not how it-"
"Sure it is" He laughed. "David Becker's a good man. Don't
ever lose him."
"Thank you, sir."
The commander's voice turned suddenly stern. "Susan, I'm
calling because I need you in here. Pronto."
She tried to focus. "It's Saturday, sir. We don't usually-
"
"I know" he said calmly. "It's an emergency."
Susan sat up. Emergency? She had never heard the word
cross Commander Strathmore's lips. An emergency? In
Crypto? She couldn't imagine. "Y-yes, sir." She
paused. "I'll be there as soon as I can."
"Make it sooner." Strathmore hung up.
Susan Fletcher stood wrapped in a towel and dripped on the
neatly folded clothes she'd set out the night before-
hiking shorts, a sweater for the cool mountain evenings,
and the new lingerie she'd bought for the nights.
Depressed, she went to her closet for a clean blouse and
skirt. An emergency? In Crypto?
As she went downstairs, Susan wondered how the day could
get much worse.
She was about to find out.
Chapter Two
Thirty thousand feet above a dead-calm ocean, David Becker
stared miserably from the Learjet 60's small, oval window.
He'd been told the phone on board was out of order, and
he'd never had a chance to call Susan.
"What am I doing here?" he grumbled to himself. But the
answer was simple-there were men to whom you just didn't
say no.
"Mr. Becker," the loudspeaker crackled. "We'll be arriving
in half an hour."
Becker nodded gloomily to the invisible voice. Wonderful.
He pulled the shade and tried to sleep. But he could only
think of her.
Chapter Three
Susan's Volvo sedan rolled to a stop in the shadow of the
ten-foot-high, barbed Cyclone fence. A young guard placed
his hand on the roof.
"ID, please"
Susan obliged and settled in for the usual half-minute
wait. The officer ran her card through a computerized
scanner. Finally he looked up. "Thank you, Ms. Fletcher."
He gave an imperceptible sign, and the gate swung open.
Half a mile ahead Susan repeated the entire procedure at
an equally imposing electrified fence. Come on, guys ...
I've only been through here a million times.
As she approached the final checkpoint, a stocky sentry
with two attack dogs and a machine gun glanced down at her
license plate and waved her through. She followed Canine
Road for another 250 yards and pulled into Employee Lot C.
Unbelievable, she thought. Twenty-six thousand employees
and a twelve-billion-dollar budget; you'd think they could
make it through the weekend without me. Susan gunned the
car into her reserved spot and killed the engine.
After crossing the landscaped terrace and entering the
main building, she cleared two more internal checkpoints
and finally arrived at the windowless tunnel that led to
the new wing. A voice-scan booth blocked her entry.
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY (NSA) CRYPTO FACILITY AUTHORIZED
PERSONNEL ONLY
The armed guard looked up. "Afternoon, Ms. Fletcher."
Susan smiled tiredly. "Hi, John."
"Didn't expect you today."
"Yeah, me neither." She leaned toward the parabolic
microphone. "Susan Fletcher," she stated clearly. The
computer instantly confirmed the frequency concentrations
in her voice, and the gate clicked open. She stepped
through.
The guard admired Susan as she began her walk down the
cement causeway. He noticed that her strong hazel eyes
seemed distant today, but her cheeks had a flushed
freshness, and her shoulder-length, auburn hair looked
newly blown dry. Trailing her was the faint scent of
Johnson's Baby Powder. His eyes fell the length of her
slender torso-to her white blouse with the bra barely
visible beneath, to her knee-length khaki skirt, and
finally to her legs ... Susan Fletcher's legs.
Hard to imagine they support a 170 IQ, he mused to
himself.
He stared after her a long time. Finally he shook his head
as she disappeared in the distance.
As Susan reached the end of the tunnel, a circular,
vaultlike door blocked her way. The enormous letters read:
CRYPTO.
Sighing, she placed her hand inside the recessed cipher
box and entered her five-digit PIN. Seconds later the
twelve-ton slab of steel began to revolve. She tried to
focus, but her thoughts reeled back to him.
David Becker. The only man she'd ever loved. The youngest
full professor at Georgetown University and a brilliant
foreign-language specialist, he was practically a
celebrity in the world of academia. Born with an eidetic
memory and a love of languages, he'd mastered six Asian
dialects as well as Spanish, French, and Italian. His
university lectures on etymology and linguistics were
standing-room-only, and he invariably stayed late to
answer a barrage of questions. He spoke with authority and
enthusiasm, apparently oblivious to the adoring gazes of
his star-struck coeds.
Becker was dark-a rugged, youthful thirty-five with sharp
green eyes and a wit to match. His strong jaw and taut
features reminded Susan of carved marble. Over six feet
tall, Becker moved across a squash court faster than any
of his colleagues could comprehend. After soundly beating
his opponent, he would cool off by dousing his head in a
drinking fountain and soaking his tuft of thick, black
hair. Then, still dripping, he'd treat his opponent to a
fruit shake and a bagel.
As with all young professors, David's university salary
was modest. From time to time, when he needed to renew his
squash club membership or restring his old Dunlop with
gut, he earned extra money by doing translating work for
government agencies in and around Washington. It was on
one of those jobs that he'd met Susan.
It was a crisp morning during fall break when Becker
returned from a morning jog to his three-room faculty
apartment to find his answering machine blinking. He
downed a quart of orange juice as he listened to the
playback. The message was like many he received-a
government agency requesting his translating services for
a few hours later that morning. The only strange thing was
that Becker had never heard of the organization.
"They're called the National Security Agency," Becker
said, calling a few of his colleagues for background.
The reply was always the same. "You mean the National
Security Council?"
Becker checked the message. "No. They said Agency. The
NSA."
"Never heard of 'em"
Becker checked the GAO Directory, and it showed no listing
either. Puzzled, Becker called one of his old squash
buddies, an ex-political analyst turned research clerk at
the Library of Congress. David was shocked by his friend's
explanation.
Apparently, not only did the NSA exist, but it was
considered one of the most influential government
organizations in the world. It had been gathering global
electronic intelligence data and protecting U.S.
classified information for over half a century. Only 3
percent of Americans were even aware it existed.
"NSA" his buddy joked, "stands for 'No Such Agency.'"
With a mixture of apprehension and curiosity, Becker
accepted the mysterious agency's offer. He drove the
thirty-seven miles to their eighty-six-acre headquarters
hidden discreetly in the wooded hills of Fort Meade,
Maryland. After passing through endless security checks
and being issued a six-hour, holographic guest pass, he
was escorted to a plush research facility where he was
told he would spend the afternoon providing "blind
support" to the Cryptography Division-an elite group of
mathematical brainiacs known as the code-breakers.
For the first hour, the cryptographers seemed unaware
Becker was even there. They hovered around an enormous
table and spoke a language Becker had never heard. They
spoke of stream ciphers, self-decimated generators,
knapsack variants, zero knowledge protocols, unicity
points. Becker observed, lost. They scrawled symbols on
graph paper, pored over computer printouts, and
continuously referred to the jumble of text on the
overhead projector.
Eventually one of them explained what Becker had already
surmised. The scrambled text was a code-a "cipher-text"-
groups of numbers and letters representing encrypted
words. The cryptographers' job was to study the code and
extract from it the original message, or "cleartext." The
NSA had called Becker because they suspected the original
message was written in Mandarin Chinese; he was to
translate the symbols as the cryptographers decrypted
them.
For two hours, Becker interpreted an endless stream of
Mandarin symbols. But each time he gave them a
translation, the cryptographers shook their heads in
despair. Apparently the code was not making sense. Eager
to help, Becker pointed out that all the characters they'd
shown him had a common trait-they were also part of the
Kanji language. Instantly the bustle in the room fell
silent. The man in charge, a lanky chain-smoker named
Morante, turned to Becker in disbelief.
"You mean these symbols have multiple meanings?"
Becker nodded. He explained that Kanji was a Japanese
writing system based on modified Chinese characters. He'd
been giving Mandarin translations because that's what
they'd asked for.
"Jesus Christ." Morante coughed. "Let's try the Kanji."
Like magic, everything fell into place.
The cryptographers were duly impressed, but nonetheless,
they still made Becker work on the characters out of
sequence. "It's for your own safety" Morante said. "This
way, you won't know what you're translating."
Becker laughed. Then he noticed nobody else was laughing.
When the code finally broke, Becker had no idea what dark
secrets he'd helped reveal, but one thing was for certain-
the NSA took code-breaking seriously; the check in
Becker's pocket was more than an entire month's university
salary.
On his way back out through the series of security
checkpoints in the main corridor, Becker's exit was
blocked by a guard hanging up a phone. "Mr. Becker, wait
here, please."
"What's the problem?" Becker had not expected the meeting
to take so long, and he was running late for his standing
Saturday afternoon squash match.
The guard shrugged. "Head of Crypto wants a word. She's on
her way out now."
"She?" Becker laughed. He had yet to see a female inside
the NSA.
"Is that a problem for you?" a woman's voice asked from
behind him.
Becker turned and immediately felt himself flush. He eyed
the ID card on the woman's blouse. The head of the NSA's
Cryptography Division was not only a woman, but an
attractive woman at that.
"No" Becker fumbled. "I just ..."
"Susan Fletcher." The woman smiled, holding out her
slender hand.
Becker took it. "David Becker."
"Congratulations, Mr. Becker. I hear you did a fine job
today. Might I chat with you about it?"
Becker hesitated. "Actually, I'm in a bit of a rush at the
moment." He hoped spurning the world's most powerful
intelligence agency wasn't a foolish act, but his squash
match started in forty-five minutes, and he had a
reputation to uphold: David Becker was never late for
squash ... class maybe, but never squash.
"I'll be brief." Susan Fletcher smiled. "Right this way,
please."
Ten minutes later, Becker was in the NSA's commissary
enjoying a popover and cranberry juice with the NSA's
lovely head cryptographer, Susan Fletcher. It quickly
became evident to David that the thirty-eight-year-old's
high-ranking position at the NSA was no fluke-she was one
of the brightest women he had ever met. As they discussed
codes and code-breaking, Becker found himself struggling
to keep up-a new and exciting experience for him.
An hour later, after Becker had obviously missed his
squash match and Susan had blatantly ignored three pages
on the intercom, both of them had to laugh. There they
were, two highly analytical minds, presumably immune to
irrational infatuations-but somehow, while they sat there
discussing linguistic morphology and pseudo-random number
generators, they felt like a couple of teenagers-
everything was fireworks.
Susan never did get around to the real reason she'd wanted
to speak to David Becker-to offer him a trial post in
their Asiatic Cryptography Division.