Part 28 (1/2)
The truck is stopped, no more than a quarter of a mile away. The driver is getting out. He goes in the back to the open bed of the truck and lifts out a cardboard box. He carries it over and sets it down on the field. Then he walks back to the pickup.
”I don't think he's seen us,” I tell them.
This time he reaches inside the cab. He steps back and closes the door. He has two items, one in each hand. The one in his right hand looks like a laptop. I can't make out what the other one is. It's too small.
”What's he doing?” says Herman.
”I don't know.” I have the field gla.s.ses fixed on his face at the moment. ”I think that's our man.”
”Let me see,” says Joselyn.
I hand her the gla.s.ses.
She raises them to her eyes. ”How do you adjust them?”
”The toggle on top.” I show her.
She focuses in. Then suddenly takes a deep breath. ”Yes. That's him. I would know that face anywhere,” she says. When she pa.s.ses the gla.s.ses back to me, her hand is trembling.
By the time I refocus and acquire his image once more, Thorn is down on one knee in the field. He is working on something, but I can't see it. His back is to me, s.h.i.+elding whatever it is that he has on the ground. He reaches into the cardboard box with one hand and takes out two wires. They look like leads connected to something in the box.
A few seconds later he stands and flings something into the air. He does it almost casually, backhanded, with a flick of his wrist. Whatever it is, it doesn't fall to the ground. Instead it flies off, like a bird, silent and fast into the distance, where I lose it.
”What the h.e.l.l was that?” I ask.
”I don't know,” says Herman. ”I saw it too, then it just disappeared.”
”What's he doing?” I ask.
”He's flying it,” says Joselyn. ”What you just saw is an MAV.”
”What the h.e.l.l's an MAV?” I ask.
”Micro air vehicle,” she says. ”It's military hardware. Latest cutting edge. Like a model airplane, only smaller.”
”I don't hear any motor,” I tell her.
”It's electric. High speed. They use them for surveillance, but use your imagination. With the advances in miniaturization, almost anything's possible.”
”How do you know about this stuff?” I ask.
”Part of the new generation of weapons systems,” she says. ”Designers, kids from Stanford, get hung up on it because it's novel and looks cute and the military tells them it's harmless. But the range of possible applications is insidious. I think we should be going.”
”Why?” says Herman.
”Because we can't see that thing,” says Joselyn, ”but if it's what I think it is, it can probably see us.”
”You mean it's got a camera?” I say.
”A camera, infrared sensors, I don't know, but look at him.” She gestures toward Thorn out in the field.
I train the gla.s.ses back on him. He's standing up, holding the laptop in one hand while he manipulates what looks like a small joystick with the other.
”He's not looking up in the air, is he?” she says.
”No. He's looking down at the computer screen.”
”So?” says Herman.
”So he's flying whatever it is using the eye that's on board that little devil,” she says. ”Which means he can see everything on the ground as he flies over it.”
It's hard to know where it is because we can't follow Thorn's line of sight to track the small model in the air. Then suddenly Thorn turns and looks across the field.
”I got it.” In the sunlight with the gla.s.ses I pick up the glint off one of the wings. The only reason I can see it is because it's almost stationary in the sky, doing a tight circle, hovering over an area on the other side of the field.
”Where?” says Herman.
”There.” I point. ”See the little metal shed over there? Looks like a pump house?”
”Yeah.”
”Look directly above it.”
”Oh, yeah,” he says. ”Looks like a little dot.”
Suddenly the little plane darts away. It moves off just a bit and then drops down quickly and starts to fly in a slow, lazy circle at rooftop height around the corrugated-steel pump house. The building is more of a box, perhaps four feet square and eight feet high, with a slanted shed roof that pitches this way. The metal is all rusted, as if it's been there for a hundred years.
The model turns, heading toward the building. I expect it to fly over the shed roof but it doesn't. Instead, the model noses up just as it gets there and stalls. Suddenly it falls like a rock, hits the roof, and slides off and hits the ground.
”So much for that,” I say.
Thorn grabs the box, gets in the pickup, and races across the field. He parks close to the pump house, then retrieves the little plane. He checks it out.
”Maybe he broke it,” says Herman.
”I don't know. It looks like he's adjusting something under the wings,” I tell them. ”That's got to be the smallest model plane I've ever seen. It's not much bigger than his hand. It looks like four bent wires coming out underneath. They look like the legs on an insect.”
”Let me see,” says Joselyn.
I hand her the gla.s.ses. She focuses and looks. ”Climbing, perching, and jumping,” she says. ”It's what they're working on.”
”What?” I say.
”There're like feet or something attached to the ends of the wires.”
Within seconds he flings it into the air again, opens the computer, and starts all over.