A Calculated Risk Katherine Neville (adventure books to read txt) đ
- Author: Katherine Neville
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Pearl arrived in a flamingo-colored angora sweater that wrapped like a bathrobe, and Tavish in a T-shirt to matchâsurely picked out by Pearl. It read âReal Men Eat Beluga Caviar.â
We broke out the champagne, settling the bottle in the silver icer beside the coffee table, and flopped down on cushions to feed and relax in preparation for the nightâs computer crunch.
âSitting on top of the world like this, surrounded by flowers and champagne,â Pearl commented, âit makes me feel everything elseâthe bank, my awful career, that creep Karpâtheyâre all unreal.â
âBut thanks to modern technology,â said Tavish, âtheyâre only a phone call away.â
That was the phone call that was going to change my life, I thought.
At nine, we were gathered around the big lacquered table in my study, Tavish tapping away, a determined expression on his face. Pearl and I, weary with exhaustion and a bit too much champagne, were now drinking strong black coffee and checking his work from time to time.
âThis computerâCharles Babbage, is it?âhe has some personality.â Tavish grinned from behind the terminal. âHeâs just told me he expects to be paid overtime for this job.â
Iâd worked out a deal with the Bobbsey Twins, to keep Charles up late tonight so we could âpatch throughâ his mailing list to the bankâs computer and set up our new customer accounts.
The bank got new customers every day, so establishing accounts like these was standard procedure, as long as weâd have a beginning balance to start them off.
And weâd have that moneyâfrom the wire transfer systemâas soon as our âprogram changesâ were moved from the test system into live operation in production. Since we didnât know until five oâclock that eveningâwhen Bobby cracked the codeâexactly what those new programs would do, it was a rush to get them written, and the authorized paperwork filled out to notify the data center these changes would be coming in tonight.
On the other hand, it was a convenient time of year to be asking for last-minute changes to production systems. There was always a huge queue of things to go into production on every system, just before year-end closing, and the wire transfer system was no exception. I just clumped our programs together with all the others before I left the office. I was sure that long before midnight, the codes would be inside the computer, catching wires and scattering that money through all our accounts.
But at ten oâclock, something went horribly wrong.
Pearl and I were out on the terrace in the late-night fog, calming down from the crazed hysteria of the day. Tavish was inside, wrapping things up. Heâd just finished copying the list from New York, and released Charles Babbage to go off to nightly maintenance.
Suddenly, we heard him yell: âBloody hell! Oh, bloody hell!â
We ran inside, and saw Tavish staring at the terminal screen with wild eyes.
âWhatâs happened?â I cried, dashing around the table to look at the screen.
Tavishâs voice seemed to reverberate from the back of my brain as I looked hopelessly at the green letters glowing there:
BANK OF THE WORLD TESTING
HAS ENDED FOR THE DAY.
HAVE A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS
AND A HAPPY HOLIDAY!
âTheyâve brought the bloody test system down!â Tavish was nearly screaming. âMy bloody programs are sitting out there in the queueâand theyâve brought down the bloody systemâtwo hours early!â
âShit,â I said, staring numbly at the screen, wondering what in hell to do. Iâd never felt so helpless in my life.
âAnd we were lolling around,â said Pearl, âeating Chinese food and swilling champagne, as if there were nothing but time. What exactly does this mean? What happens now?â
ââFrom where you are, you can hear their dreams,ââ said Tavish. ââThe dismays and despairs and flight and fall and big seas of their dreams âŠââ
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â asked Pearl, looking at Tavish as if heâd really flipped.
âDylan Thomas,â said Tavish. âIt means our dreams have diedâour system has diedâour project has diedâwe have died.â
He rose, and drifted from the room in a vaporlike trance, without glancing at either of us.
âIs this it?â Pearl asked me. âIsnât there anything we can do?â
âI donât know,â I told her, still staring at the screen. âI really have no idea.â
It was eleven P.M., and Pearl had just told Tavish she would dump her champagne over his head, if he said âIf only we hadnât âŠâ even one more time.
That was when I got the idea. I knew it was a long shotâa wild-assed piss into the wind was more like itâbut I was ready to try anything, rather than staring at walls all night and cursing myself for the next week until I could get on that system again.
âBobby, can you write object code?â I asked him.
âA littleâbut itâs hardly a hobby of mine,â he assured me.
âWhatâs object code?â Pearl wanted to know.
âMachine language,â Tavish told her. âItâs what other programs are compiled intoâbits and bytesâexecutable instructions, orders the machine can understand and carry out.â
âWhat are you cooking up?â Pearl asked me, but I was still looking at Tavish.
âCould you take the object code from those programs you wrote, and put it right into the live production libraryâas if it were already compiled and ready to run?â
âSure, I guess so,â said Tavish with more than a trace of cynicism. âOf course, weâd have to get the operations department to bring down the wire transfer systemâwhich is running right now twenty-four hours a dayâand let me get on the machines to do it. But Iâm sure theyâd be delighted to halt production for us, if we explained we just had to get in there and rob the bank tonight.â
âI didnât mean that,â I said, knowing that what I did mean was even more farfetched. âWhat I meant wasâif I could get you on the production system right nowâcould you make the changes while the wire transfer system is still up and
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