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Authors: Daniel Suarez

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McKinney slowed and craned her neck to look up at the screen along with fellow passengers.

The news anchor narrated the video. “.
 . . felt the scope and sophistication of the plot presents a grave threat to UN member states. In the wake of the discovery both China and the U.S. have expressed support for an international robot arms control agreement to establish an international legal framework on the proliferation and use of lethally autonomous robots.”

McKinney turned to Odin. She knew he could feel her gaze on him. A smile creased her lips.

“It’s not over, you know.” He nodded at the screen. “We set them back a year, maybe two.”

“I’ll take it.” McKinney tugged at his arm and started them walking again. “It’ll buy us civilians some time to sort things out. To let the law catch up with technology.”

He shrugged. “We’ll see about that. . . .”

*   *   *

O
din drove the rental car
through suburban Shelbyville, past horse farms and orderly neighborhoods with lush trees and lawns. McKinney was deep in thought. “I guess this is the part where we try to figure out what’s going on between us.”

He grimaced. “You know how committed I am to my work. And I know how committed you are to yours.”

She nodded, filled with conflicting emotions. Then she noticed that he was pulling into a park not quite in her father’s neighborhood. “Where are we going? I thought we agreed you’re taking me straight to my father’s.”

He pulled in to a parking space and shut off the engine. Then he faced her. “I said I was taking you to your father.” He nodded through the windshield.

McKinney looked ahead to see her father sitting alone on a bench not far away, staring at ducks on a small pond. He stared expressionless, unmoving. “Oh, my God. Dad . . .”

She exited the car and walked across the grass behind him, feeling the tears on her face. But then she thought better of it, stopping to wipe them away as she collected herself.

Her father looked thinner. His bushy hair had become whiter.

After a moment she came up behind him. It took everything she had not to well up with emotion. “Dad . . .”

He turned on the bench, and the moment he saw her, the face she had so missed returned. His expression slowly turned to a tight smile, and he stood, walking toward her, accelerating as he came. “My little girl . . .” Then he wrapped his arms around her in a crushing embrace, and she began to cry along with him.

“I’d thought I lost you.” He started to shudder with sobs, holding her even tighter.

She hugged him back. “No. I’m right here. I’m right here.”

“What happened to you? Are you okay?”

“I’m fine. The State Department helped me get back, but I can’t stay.”

He leaned back to look at her, puzzled. “But why? And why didn’t they contact us? Why didn’t you call from . . . I don’t understand.”

“I’ll explain later.” McKinney pivoted to see Odin watching from near the car. He nodded to her.

“Hey!” McKinney pulled away to look her father in the eye. “There’s someone I want you to meet.”

He held her chin, still smiling at her. “I can’t believe it’s really you. I can’t believe you’re here, safe.”

McKinney shouted and waved at Odin. “Get over here, you coward!”

Odin appeared to sigh impatiently, but he got out and approached them.

McKinney turned to her father. “Dad, this is the man who saved my life.”

Her father turned to face Odin and his extended hand, but her father’s expression changed, and he launched past it to hug Odin tightly. “My God, thank you. Thank you for bringing my girl back to us.”

McKinney could see the emotions coursing through Odin as her father gripped him.

Her father held tight, slapping Odin on the back. “Thank you.”

Odin nodded. “You’re welcome, Mr. McKinney.”

Her father pulled away to look Odin in the face. He extended his hand. “What’s your name, son?”

McKinney shook her head. “Dad, he can’t—”

Odin shook her father’s hand. “David Shaw, sir.”

McKinney gave him a stunned look.

“David. It’s an honor to meet you. I don’t know how I can ever thank you for bringing her back.”

“There’s no need, sir.”

“I have to hear all about it.” Her father motioned for them to start walking along the path, and he leaned toward Odin as he hooked his daughter’s elbow. “What on earth happened back in Africa? I hired investigators, and—”

“In a moment, Dad. I need you to do something for me first.”

“Anything, honey. Anything at all.” He was smiling.

“Can you loan me your phone for a second?”

“Oh, to call your brothers? Of course. My God, they’re going to be so, so happy. . . .” He reached into his jacket pocket and passed her his phone.

McKinney took it, cocked her arm back, and threw it into the very center of the nearby pond, sending the ducks into flight.

Her father looked at her, and then to the pond, in utter confusion. “What on earth did you do that for?”

She looped her arms under her father’s and Odin’s elbows and started them along the path. “Let’s just call it a precaution.” McKinney grinned as her father still looked back, puzzled.

They passed under a tree branch on which two ravens perched. The birds fluffed up their feathers and let out a loud
caw
as they closely watched the humans below.

Further Reading

You can learn more about the technologies and themes explored in
Kill Decision
by visiting www.daniel-suarez.com or through the following books:

 

Adventures Among Ants
by Mark W. Moffett (University of California Press)

Ant Colony Optimization and Swarm Intelligence
by Marco Dorigo, Luca Maria Gambardella, Mauro Birattari, Christian Blum, et al. (Springer-Verlag)

Blank Spots on the Map: The Dark Geography of the Pentagon’s Secret World
by Trevor Paglen (Dutton)

Inside Delta Force
by Eric L. Haney (Delacorte Press)

Killer Elite
by Michael Smith (St. Martin’s Griffin)

The Master Switch
by Tim Wu (Knopf)

Masters of Chaos: The Secret History of the Special Forces
by Linda Robinson (PublicAffairs)

Mind of the Raven
by Bernd Heinrich (Ecco)

On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society
by Lt. Col. Dave Grossman (Little, Brown)

Roughneck Nine-One
by Frank Antenori and Hans Halberstadt (St. Martin’s Griffin)

The Super-Organism
by Bert Hölldobler and E. O. Wilson (W.W. Norton)

Swarm Intelligence
by James Kennedy and Russell C. Eberhart (Morgan Kaufmann)

Tactics of the Crescent Moon
by H. John Poole (Posterity Press)

Top Secret America: The Rise of the New American Security State
by Dana Priest and William M. Arkin (Little, Brown)

The Watchers: The Rise of America’s Surveillance State
by Shane Harris (Penguin Press)

What Technology Wants
by Kevin Kelly (Viking)

Wired for War: The Robotics Revolution and Conflict in the 21st Century
by P. W. Singer (Penguin Press)

The Wrong War: Grit, Strategy, and the Way Out of Afghanistan
by Bing West (Random House)

Acknowledgments

It would have been impossible to complete this book without the gracious assistance of many people. Thanks to John Robb at Global Guerrillas for sharing his extensive knowledge of all things military and otherwise. Thanks also to Chris Paget for providing an up-close view of what was possible in a DIY airborne-hacking platform. Thanks as well to rock-climbing (and atomic clock) expert Eric Burt for helping me learn the ropes. Likewise, my continued gratitude to Christopher Pearson.

Sincere thanks to Frank Antenori, William M. Arkin, Mauro Birattari, Christian Blum, Marco Dorigo, Russell C. Eberhart, Dalton Fury, Lt. Col. Dave Grossman, Hans Halberstadt, Eric L. Haney, Bernd Heinrich, Bert Hölldobler, Kevin Kelly, James Kennedy, Mark W. Moffett, Trevor Paglen, H. John Poole, Dana Priest, Linda Robinson, P. W. Singer, Michael Smith, Bing West, E. O. Wilson, and Tim Wu—scholars all, whose published works greatly enriched this story.

I’d also like to thank Viviana Pendrill, Trenton Broughton, and Christoffer Kuja-Halkola for assistance with Spanish, Mandarin, and Swedish dialogue (respectively).

As always, my thanks to Adam Winston and Don Lamoreaux for last-minute notes. Likewise to my literary agent, Rafe Sagalyn, and the entire team at Sagalyn Literary. Also a huge thanks to my editor, Ben Sevier, at Dutton for seeing the potential in this topic and this story.

And most importantly: heartfelt thanks to my wife, Michelle, for her counsel, friendship, and affection. This journey would be no fun without her.

About the Author

DANIEL SUAREZ is the author of the national bestseller
Daemon
and
Freedom
TM
, and is an independent systems consultant to Fortune 1000 companies. He has designed and developed software for the defense, finance, and entertainment industries. He has also been an invited speaker at the headquarters of Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and The Long Now Foundation. Suarez lives in Los Angeles.

ALSO BY DANIEL SUAREZ

Daemon
Freedom™

Table of Contents

Also by Daniel Suarez

Title Page

Copyright

Contents

Epigraph

Boomerang

Warning Order

Raconteur

Intrusion Detection

Omen

Wake-up Call

The Activity

Lost in Action

Influence Operations

Deconfliction

Eye in the Sky

Underground Drive

Close Hold

Insomnia

Closed Loop

Damage Control

Safari-One-Six

Firestorm

Hot Wash

Oscar Mike

War Mask

Sanctuary

Collateral Damage

Myrmidons

Personae Management

The Puppet Master

Proof-of-Concept

Brood Chamber

Improvise

The Swarm

Reap the Whirlwind

Prodigal Son

Further Reading

Acknowledgments

About the Author

BOOK: Kill Decision
2.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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