He leaned forward. “So, do you remember the big project I’m working on?”

“The classified data link?”

“Yeah.”

“Yes, I remember it,” Parkowski said, rolling her eyes. “It’s the only one you can talk with me about.”

DePresti took a sip of his beer. “So, part of that data link is a cross-domain solution, a guard. It prevents data from going from a higher level of security classification to a lower one on the same network.”

Parkowski thought for a minute. Those server racks in the secure room, they had guards in them. “Go on, but I don’t know where this is going.”

“So, for that piece of hardware to operate at the ops site out at Schriever,” DePresti continued. “I need an ATO — Authority to Operate. It’s a piece of paper saying that I can connect to other networks or data feeds.”

He took a breath. “So, yesterday I finally got all of the paperwork done and called over to the AFOSI office at Los Angeles for them to come take a look at it so they could take it to get signed,” the Space Force officer continued. “They — the local AFOSI agent — don't sign it, someone at the Pentagon does, but they courier it there for signature. It can’t be sent electronically.”

Parkowski’s mind flashed back to a few days ago. “Was the AFOSI agent an older white guy with a mustache?”

“No, younger dude, Hispanic or Mediterranean,” her boyfriend replied, “why?”

She quickly told him about her visit from the AFOSI/PJ agent.

“The two letters after ‘AFOSI’ tell you what detachment they belong to. That one — PJ — is the same detachment this guy who I saw was from,” DePresti said. He took another sip of beer. “That’s their special projects division. They handle all of the SAP and SCI data.”

He cleared his throat. “Anyways, this dude comes over this morning and is going through my paperwork with me. And I ask him all casually ‘Have you ever heard of a program called Bronze Knot?’”

“And then what happened?” Parkowski asked. Her boyfriend's boring work story now had her undivided attention. She was on the edge of her seat.

“His face turned white. Like literally white, Grace, like a light switch. He asked me really nervously where I had heard of it.”

“And what did you tell him?”

“My girlfriend saw it as part of an error message at work on the ILIAD program.”

“And then what?”

DePresti finished his beer and got up to get another one. “He asked if I was read in, which of course I told him no. I’m telling you, Grace, before you mentioned that program I had never heard of it. I’ve never seen a program with ‘Bronze’ in it,” he said, sitting back down. “It’s not a Space Force program.”

She didn’t say anything. But, Parkowski’s mind was flying at a million miles per hour with possibilities.

“So the guy tells me, and I wrote it down before I left because I wanted to get it right. He says verbatim ‘I’ve been doing this for eight years and Bronze Knot is the scariest shit I’ve seen.’”

“The scariest shit he’s seen?”

“Yup.”

“Did you ask what it was?’

“Hell yeah, I asked him what it was,” DePresti said with a smile. “I turned into you at that moment, Grace I needed to know what’s behind the Bronze Knot door.” He smiled. “But, the AFOSI agent told me he couldn’t. He told me it was a waived SAP — my understanding of that means it doesn’t have to be reported formally to Congress — and that I was better off not knowing.”

“What the fuck does that mean?”

“I don’t know, Grace, I’m sorry,” he said. “I pressed him a little more, but I also needed to get this ATO approved so I let him go. He didn’t give me anything else, just another warning not to look into it.”

Parkowski sat there, processing this new information.

A lot of things were coming together.

“Is that all?” she asked.

DePresti shook his head slowly. “Nope, and I have to apologize again.”

“What for?”

“So, before, when you asked me to look around at Space Systems Command for Bronze Knot stuff,” DePresti explained. “I did — but only on the SAP-level network I have access to.”

“So?”

“So there are other networks,” he went on. “The main one being JWICS, which I think stands for Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System — don’t quote me on that. Anyways, it’s the main Top Secret-level network used by the intelligence community.”

“Intelligence community?”

“The CIA, NSA, DIA, all of the intelligence agencies, together they make the intelligence community, or IC,” DePresti continued. “All of their activities fall under U.S. Code Title 50, the military is under Title 10, which makes a mess sometimes but we deal with it.

“Anyways, I never thought of looking on JWICS. It’s not a SAP network, it contains SCI information, which is kind of a SAP, but more importantly, the entire network is searchable. If you’re looking for information on some random Russian military officer or an obscure telephone technology you just type it in like you search on Google and go.”

He finished his second beer and went to get a third. Parkowski thought about saying something, but decided against it. She’d just buy her roommate another six-pack.

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