Lamb settled his eyes on Hawkins. "Go on."
Hawkins tapped the satellite photo. "The damage is only apparently minimal. That bomb obliterated the Red Streak series of mines. It is-was-the richest deposit of gold and uranium ever found. The loss of that mine will cripple the South African government economically. "
Lamb already knew that. "So what?"
Hawkins opened a folder in front of him. "Your whiz people did a projection on the worldwide economic effect, and the results were extremely startling." Even as he said it, Hawkins wondered if Fran Volkers had had something to do with what he was looking at. Hawkins scanned the page that he himself had only just read. "There is a fifty-six-percent chance that the loss of that mine will trigger a global depression on the order of the crash of 1929-most likely worse, since it will come on top of the recession we've only just started to recover from."
"WHAT!" Lamb leaned forward. "How can that be?"
Hawkins slid a piece of paper across the table to his boss and tried to keep it as simple as possible. "I'm not an expert, but it's laid out pretty clearly there. As you can see, a large number of the world's countries still have a gold-based economy. Most of those nations are in the Third World. Over the past twenty years South Africa has been propping up many of those economies with gold that was not yet mined in exchange for various economic, military, and political concessions. Mandela hasn't changed that policy. Most of that gold is now lost inside what used to be the Red Streak mine.
"Without the gold to back up their currencies many of those countries will slide into economic chaos within a year. The ripple effect will take another year or so to reach us and the other industrialized nations."
Lamb quickly scanned the document, then looked up. "All right. If this projection is correct, what can we do to avoid the depression?"
Hawkins slowly closed the folder. "According to the last page of the report there's not much we can do. We are barely able to maintain our own economy-there's little we could do to help others."
Lamb flipped to the indicated page and read it. When he looked up, his eyes showed his despair. "If the projection on the first page is correct, this is like spitting in a fire. I'll get this thing reworked. I need some better suggestions before I go to the President with it. He'll tear my head off if that's all I give him." He stood, his body hunched over in weariness. "We've got to get that other bomb."
Hawkins gestured around them, taking in the entire complex. "What about all this? Is there anything you didn't tell us in the briefing?"
Lamb shook his head. "You know as much as I do. We assume it's related to the first explosion because of the down link to Vredefort Dome. We have no idea if there is any connection to the second bomb, but it's the only thing we've got."
"But in and of itself," Hawkins asked, "what do you think we have here in the Rock?"
"I have no idea. I hope the other members of your team can figure that out." He paused and then softened his voice. "I need your help with this, Hawk."
Hawkins shrugged. "I'm here. I'll do my best."
"I know you'll do your best. You always have." Lamb looked down at his desk for a second. "I heard what happened in Colombia. I was in the air on Looking Glass already heading here when I gave you the go and I received the after-action report on the secure line. Your men did a good surgical job."
"If you consider putting a nine-millimeter round through the brain of a young woman a good surgical job," Hawkins said, bitterly, "then I suppose it was."
"I heard about that too," Lamb said, his eyes fixed on his subordinate. "I also heard you were acting strangely in the exfiltration aircraft."
Hawkins stood. "I'm fine." He turned on his heels and left the room, the door swinging securely shut behind him with a dull thud.
“What are you doing?" Hawkins asked, gazing over Levy's shoulder at the screen of the computer she was working at.
"I'm looking at the original form of the message," Levy answered.
"Looking at it for what? Haven't they already decoded it?"
"They decoded it one-dimensionally," Levy said. "I'm checking to see if there might be another dimension to it."
Hawkins blinked. "You've lost me."
Levy removed her hands from the keyboard and swiveled her head to look at him. "This is an unknown communication. We don't know who or what sent it. Therefore we should not assume that simply because it has been deciphered one way, there might not be other ways to decipher it. There might be two dimensions to this message or even more."
She closed her eyes briefly in thought. "To give you a simple example, a stop sign has three dimensions: the shape of the sign, the color, and the actual word STOP itself. Anyone of those by itself gives you a message if you know what you're looking for. In that case, it's the same information-but you can also send different information on different dimensions of the same original message. In this case," she said, turning back to the computer and tapping the screen, "the actual physical arrangement of the characters might be informative in and of itself."
Hawkins looked at the arrangement of 0's and 1's. "Doesn't look like anything to me," he noted.
"I agree," Levy said, "but it was something I wanted to check."
Hawkins sat down and scooted his chair close to hers. "I looked at your record-as I'm sure you did mine, in the folder they gave you-and I'm quite impressed with your academic and intellectual achievements. If you were to speculate, what would you say we have here?"
Levy fixed Hawkins with an intense gaze. "You qualified your question quite interestingly, Major. Should I accept the inverse of what you said and assume that you are not impressed with me outside of my intellectual achievements?"
Hawkins returned her steady gaze. "Why should you assume something negative? I phrased it that way because I know nothing about you other than what was in the file and all that was in there was your academic and scientific record. So I assume nothing about you as a person."
Levy broke the eye contact. "I'm sorry. I've never really learned much social tact."
Hawkins softly laughed. "Hell, that's all right. They don't teach that stuff in school. I've been told I don't have too much tact either. My profession isn't noted for it." He paused. "Have you ever worked for the government before on a classified operation?"
She shook her head. "I've done quite a bit of consulting work on various research projects, but never anything like this."
Hawkins leaned back in his seat, feeling very uncomfortable. He was out of his element here. Even Levy's simple explanation of what she was doing had thrown him. He'd never considered a stop sign a three-dimensional message. Always before he'd used great innovation and expertise in his missions, but that was after someone else had given him the rules of engagement and the target. Here he had none. And not only that, but he had somehow automatically assumed the unofficial title of leader of the team. He wasn't sure if he had taken it, or if the others had handed it to him. But the other three all seemed to be immersed in something worthwhile-Batson looking at data on the Rock, Fran with her nose inches away from a computer screen, and Levy exploring the message. Hawkins felt somewhat useless.
His wife, Mary, would have laughed at his being so uneasy, Hawkins thought. She was the only person he had ever allowed to penetrate the hard shell his upbringing in the foster home in New York City and his time in Special Operations had wrapped about his emotions. And the great thing was, Hawkins would have laughed along with her. In their first two years of marriage she had started changing him. But all that had ended four years earlier, and if anything Hawkins was even harder than he had been. He savagely twisted his mind away from thoughts of Mary and focused on the young woman sitting next to him.