The Machine (An Ethan Stone Thriller) (18 page)

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Authors: Tom Aston

Tags: #"The Machine, #novel, #Science thriller, #action thriller", #adventure, #Tom Aston, #Ethan Stone, #thriller, #The Machine

BOOK: The Machine (An Ethan Stone Thriller)
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Oyang gave Stone a meaningful look.

Stone sat back and made a show of enjoying his drink.  He made a show of looking satisfied, but he was unconvinced.  It was too neat by half, and Oyang had given it up too easily.  He knew much more.  The girl had escaped by swimming in the pool.  Oyang pretended to be distracted by her, and clammed up for a while. 

Perhaps Oyang had said obliquely what he wanted to say to Stone, and he’d stopped talking.  Perhaps he was nervous he’d said too much already.  Lunch was served, with the woman sitting with Oyang, touching his arm, smiling at his jokes.  Oyang was back in his element, entrancing, holding forth in English and Japanese, calling for cocktails, and talking his guests through the fine cuisine.

 

-o0o0o-

 

 After lunch, however, Oyang got back to business.  He beckoned to Stone to follow him, and walked out past the pool and away from the servants.  Oyang had something he wanted to say to Stone.

Chapter 31 -
3:14pm 2 April - Shanghai, China

 

Stone and Oyang stood at the end of the long garden, by a thick stand of green bamboo.  It was hot in the sun, and the cicadas sang loudly in the bamboo.  There were tiny green snakes the size of pencils wrapped round the bamboo stems – dozens of them. 

The time had come for Oyang to say his piece.

 ‘My little green sentinels,’ said Oyang.  ‘If anyone tries to climb in over the fence, these snakes are poisonous.  A fine deterrent, I think.  I am a careful man, and you should be too.’

Stone turned to Oyang.  ‘You didn’t bring me here just to look at the bamboo and the snakes.’

Oyang didn’t miss a beat.  ‘I want you to find the Machine, Stone.  Find the Machine and tell the world all about it.  Where is Miss Ying Ning?’

‘Forget Ying Ning,’ said Stone.  He knew Oyang had only asked about Ying Ning because he wanted her kept out of the picture.  ‘No one listens to her and China21.  Communists like Ying Ning have about as much credibility as the Easter Bunny these days.  If you know something, you need to tell me.  What did Semyonov discover in China that brought him here?’

‘I have been through Semyonov’s papers,’ said Oyang.  ‘Of the Machine, all I can give you is this.  I think it refers to the location.’  Oyang passed over a single sheet of paper.  ‘There’s nothing I can do with this information myself.  They’re watching me, and if I get too close, there will be another “accident” with another coal truck.  Don’t let anyone see this, Stone.  And don’t make any Internet searches, at least until you are outside of China.  They are watching you.  You can be sure of it.’

Stone glanced at the slip of paper. 

 

Stone Forest 328 19.2 9.8179

Field Well 15 8.3 9.8827

Silvermine Mountain 169 15.9 9.8457

2 Trees 3 Trees 97 6.7 9.8837

Sitong  44 0.7 9.8249

 

It made no sense.  Perhaps it wasn’t meant to.  But Stone recognised the distinctive writing, and the fountain pen.  It was written by Semyonov all right.

‘Why should I do it, Oyang?’ asked Stone.  ‘If it’s too dangerous for you, with all your connections, your protection, your money.  Why should I decipher it and go looking for the Machine?

Oyang paused, giving Stone another of his meaningful looks.  ‘Let me show you something,’ he said eventually.  He look a small device from his pocket, the kind of device he might use to open the doors of his car.  He pointed the little grey fob at the stand of bamboo and pressed it with his thumb.

‘What are you doing?’ asked Stone.

‘Be patient,’ said Oyang.  ‘You’ll find it interesting.  It will explain a lot.’

Oyang stood for a few seconds looking at the bamboo, while one by one, the tiny green snakes began to uncoil from the bamboo and fall lifeless to the ground.  Stone had already guessed what was happening.  He stepped over and picked up one of the snakes, his thumb and forefinger behind its head for safety - but he needn't have bothered.  It wasn't a real snake at all.

‘What is it?’ said Stone.  ‘Metal and plastic?’ 

‘Yes, but the teeth are stainless steel,’ said Oyang.

Stone lay the snake along his palm and forearm.  It was no more than twenty centimeters long, and barely thicker than a pencil.  Another remarkable manufacture, with a slight iridescence in the green of its scales – light, and very life-like.

‘More amazing technology, Oyang,’ said Stone.  ‘But you said it would explain something.  About the Machine.’

‘No.  I said you should be patient, Stone.’

Stone’s tongue almost froze.  A stupid mistake, a crass error.  Curiosity and over-confidence had undone him.  For a split-second, his brain was shouting at his arm to shake, to cast the snake away.  But Oyang had already hit the remote control.  A tiny click with his thumb.  The snake was alive again, and striking.  Its tiny fangs sank like needle pricks into Stone’s forearm.

Stone’s arm shook, he pulled it loose, threw the snake into the bamboo.  Too late.  His vision was already blurred, his legs wobbling.  He collapsed to his knees.  He couldn’t see, and fell face first to the ground. 

‘Patience,’ said Oyang once more.

Chapter 32 -
7:43pm 2 April -
ShinComm
Factory City, Shanghai, China

 

Stone came to inside the van.  The van he’d arrived in a few hours before.  He was hooded, but not handcuffed.  A while later the door opened, and Stone smelled the warm, humid air of Shanghai again through the black cotton of the hood.  There was a distant noise of a factory – whirring and grinding – but not loud.  Stone felt it was cooler.  No heat from the sun.  It was already dark, or at least dusk, and Stone must have been out for hours in that van.

‘I am sorry for it, Stone,’ said Oyang’s voice.  ‘But I couldn’t let you know where you were coming.’  Stone listened for the footsteps.  Oyang was alone.  Oyang had brought Stone here alone, and was leading him, tugging him by the sleeve toward the noise of whirring and humming.

‘This is the ShinComm Factory, Stone,’ said Oyang, ‘Or at least one of them.  A half million people work for ShinComm, mainly at Dongguan and at Factory City next to this facility,’ he said as Stone heard himself led through a doorway.  ‘But not a soul works in this facility.  Even I was impressed when Semyonov first showed it to me.’  The humming and whirring and the occasional clanking and banging were louder.  Stone could hear the echoes.  They were inside a large shed or a hangar.  Oyang removed the hood from Stone’s head.

It was not as Stone had expected.  Electric motors whirred, machine tool robots hissed and whined.  But entirely in darkness.  The only light was the flash of welding sparks every few seconds. A hundred metres distant across the crowded shop floor, as the industrial robots, metres high, nodded, turned and clamped their beaks onto more metalwork.  Welding and clamping, screwing and soldering.  All happened in complete darkness.  After a few seconds, Oyang flicked some switches, and a battery of arc lights buzzed and flickered into dazzling light.  Robert Oyang had not been exaggerating.  Stone was in a huge factory shed, but there was no human present.

There were no machine guards, no yellow lines, no warning signs or stop buttons.  Stone looked on in wonderment at a large manufacturing shed, run entirely by robots. 

There was an array of different robots.  In that sense it was no different from many modern factories.  There were high-standing robots in the concrete, nodding and twisting with staccato movements.  There were small platforms gliding around carrying materials.  These weren’t unusual.  Then there were grey, cone-shaped things about a metre high, which seemed to glide slowly over the white painted floor, but had no arms or pincers.  What were they?  Above all there was the constant buzzing hiss of  MAV’s.  Micro Air Vehicles, the insect-like robots Stone had seen before.  Except these were smaller, about three centimeters long and a shiny indigo in colour.  They appeared harmless – they were workers, hovering on gossamer wings, cleaning, polishing, cutting and carrying.  More interestingly they were working together, carrying components in groups of exactly ten or twenty.  Stone looked around and calculated there must be a hundred thousand of them in this one factory shed.

Stone’s favourite was what appeared to be a troop of monkeys swinging and jumping around a kind of turbine-less jet engine.  Twenty monkey-robots, each thirty centimeters high, with legs and arms but no head - their sensors and hydraulics being packed into the mid-chest area.  They had tiny hands with three fingers and an opposable thumb, and climbed and swung like silver-alloy simians, their movements rapid, staccato and precise.  Most astonishingly, they moved in complete co-ordination, only millimeters apart but never colliding, and always pulling or placing at exactly the same time, or jumping or walking in perfect rhythm, like a tiny dancing troupe.

Stone realised his heart was racing.  This was staggering technology.  Corporations had spent tens of millions on robots which could barely cross a room without falling over a chair, yet here were a hundred thousand of them, working in intelligent unison. 

Another thing.  A workplace designed by humans bears signs of human thinking, even if the work is left to robots.  It has a linear production track running through it.  In this place, it was all going on at once, like the random access mind of a computer.  Stone was reminded of what people said about Semyonov. 
An alien intelligence. 
Was this the Machine?  The thing that had drawn Semyonov to China?

It wasn’t easy see what it was being manufactured, such was the profusion of machinery and activity.  One item was certainly a small jet engine without turbines - a ram-jet for use in a missile, Stone thought.    Over towards the other side of the shed there was the chassis of some kind of vehicle where the welding sparks flashed every few seconds.  Electric motors in each wheel.  There were also some tubes that looked like gun barrels, three metres long and made from a weird, blue alloy of cobalt. 

Stone’s mind raced.  He was looking at the mind of a computer, with programs and data spread at random across its hard disk, capable of performing hundreds of tasks at once. 

‘This is very impressive, Oyang,’ said Stone.  ‘You didn’t mention you were an engineer.’

‘Indeed I am no engineer, Mr Stone,’ with a small laugh of self-deprecation.  ‘I am an old-style Chinese intellectual, a Confucian,’ said Oyang.    ‘I labour with my mind and not my hands.’

A Confucian who likes Japanese girls in bikinis
.  ‘In that case,’ asked Stone.  ‘Where does it come from?  All this technology?’

Oyang looked almost embarrassed to talk about it, but continued, ‘These developments are  - incredible.  Even more incredible than they look to you.  The true value of Semyonov’s facility here is its flexibility.  The ideas we create on computer design systems can be made reality by the robot workforce.  Otherwise we would need thousands of highly skilled engineers just to design the process…  But here, inspiration goes to idea, to design, to reality.  All in record time.’

‘And the workforce builds you more workers if you need them,’ added Stone.

‘Up to a point, yes,’ nodded Oyang.  ‘It’s a good system.’

A good system?  That was an understatement.  The implications would make an economist’s head spin.

‘ShinComm has five hundred thousand workers between Shanghai and our plant at Dongguan, yet the Development Center makes more money.  That's because it creates high value goods.’

‘Tell me more, Oyang, I’m fascinated,’ said Stone to distract him.  Oyang was so cultured, so image-conscious, almost a parody of himself.  But intelligent nonetheless.  ‘How many people know about this place?’ 

‘A few senior managers in ShinComm.  Semyonov needed a few people to work with him, and he showed it to me only once.  I didn’t see at first how important it was.  The key to the system,’ explained Oyang.  ‘Lies in massively parallel computing software.  Each of the machines and robots is connected in a huge wireless system.’

 Stone thought of Semyonov, with his intelligent search systems built from thousands of machines hooked together.

‘And all of the computing power – every chip in every robot and every flying bug - can be used at once,’ said Stone.  He was beginning to get his head round it.  The theory was one thing – but as a practical achievement, it was preternaturally impressive.  Whole research labs, universities – whole industry sectors had worked on this kind of thing for years and made only baby steps forward.  Yet here was the future - fully realised. 

‘So this is the Machine, Oyang?’ asked Stone.  ‘This is why Semyonov came to China?’

Oyang looked mystified.  ‘No.  This is not the Machine.  Just a manufacturing facility.  But I can tell you all the innovations you see here were Semyonov’s ideas.  All his doing.  He was a remarkable man, Professor Stone.  We shall miss him a great deal.’  Oyang gave the impression that he missed Semyonov personally.  Although anyone would miss a human money-tree, which was what Semyonov had been to him.  ‘Everything here came from Semyonov
xiansheng
.  But now he’s dead.’   

‘So now Semyonov is dead, all this technology just – stops?’ asked Stone.

‘Possibly.  Where can you find a person to understand it all?’ said Oyang, looking to left and right.  ‘You can’t.  So perhaps it is finished.’

‘What about the Machine?  Is that finished too?’

‘The Machine, I believe is different.  Steven Semyonov told me they had discovered something very important, and that was why he wanted to invest in China.  And the Chinese scientists needed Semyonov.’

‘They needed him?  Or his money?’

‘Money?’  Oyang laughed.  ‘The money was simply evidence of his good faith.  Nothing more.  No one needed money.’

‘Twenty-five billion.  That’s a lot of good faith.’

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