A Calculated Risk Katherine Neville (adventure books to read txt) đ
- Author: Katherine Neville
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Tavish looked at me and started to laugh.
âYouâre joking, of course,â he said.
âTranslation please,â said Pearl. âDoes this mean the gray flannel mindâs come up with something outrĂ©?â
âSheâs bonkers, all right,â agreed Tavish. âThose are âvirtualâ machines down there: they have hundreds of peripheral devices running on-line, all shooting data in and out like gangbustersâand hundreds of partitions open, paging and thrashing at nanosec speedââ
âHold on,â said Pearl. âI meant a translation into people-friendly English.â
âBasically,â he said with exasperation, âitâs like the Harlem Globetrotters from hellâjuggling a million basketballs at once, and all at the speed of light. Going into a machine like that to make changes would be like trying to do brain surgery on a kangaroo while using a stopwatch.â
âA pretty fair description,â I complimented him. âDo you think you can do it, if I can get you on?â
Tavish shook his head, and looked at the floor.
âIâm crazyâbut not that crazy,â he told me quietly. âBesides, thereâs no way to get on the system from a dial-up terminal like this.â
âI wasnât suggesting you phone in the changes,â I said with a smile, âI thought weâd install them in person.â
âYou meanâinside the machine room itself?â gasped Pearl.
Tavish leaped to his feet and tossed his napkin to the floor.
âNo. No. Noâand again no!â he cried. âItâs completely impossible!â He seemed slightly hysterical, and I could certainly see why.
If we made even the slightest error while a complex mass of machines like that was running, the entire system could come crashing downâwith that sickening death rattle that gives computer types nightmares. Once youâve heard it, even a flickering brownout in a supermarket makes you wince. In this case, it would be even worse than crashing a machineâsince if we screwed up here, weâd bring down production for the entire worldwide processing of the Bank of the World.
But finallyâif something like that happened while we were on premisesâweâd be locked deep within the bowels of the data center, inside concentric circles of mantraps and guard posts. Weâd be trapped for good and all, with no way out.
âYouâre right,â I admitted glumly to Tavish. âI canât ask something that dangerous of you. I was mad to even think of doing it myself.â
âYouâve been carried away with this wager of yours,â he agreed, calming down a bit and taking a seat. âOf course, if your friend Dr. Tor were here, things might be different. He could certainly do what youâve askedâheâs written books on the subject.â
Terrificâand I hadnât bothered to return his message at all. But Tor would hardly have been anxious to jet to the coast in my aidâeven if Iâd known what aid I was going to need. After all, we were competing, as he loved to point out.
Just then, the phone rang. And though I knew it would be stretching synchronicity too far, I had the oddest feeling who it might be as I nodded to Tavish to pick it up.
He put his hand over the mouthpiece. âChap by the name of Lobachevski,â he told me. âSays itâs rather urgent.â
I smiled with a grimace, went over and got the phone. It was all over but the shooting now. Tor had somehow sensed from three thousand miles away that heâd won the bet.
âWhy, Nikolai Ivanovich,â I said sweetly, âwhat a joy to hear from you. Havenât seen any treatises of yours on Euclidean math sinceâwhen was itâ1850?â
âEighteen thirty-two, to be precise,â said Tor. âYou never returned my call.â
âIâve been tied up,â I assured him. âIn knotsâto be precise.â
âIf I send you an urgent message, I expect at least the courtesy of an inquiry into my situation. Itâs the very least Iâd do for you.â
âYou didnât ask for an inquiry. You wanted me to hop on a planeâbecause you snapped your fingersâand fly to New York!â I protested hotly. âHave you forgotten Iâve a job to do? Not to mention a bet to win.â
Tavish was looking at me with big eyes as he realized who it must be.
âAs I sayâitâs the least Iâd do for you,â Tor repeated testily. âNow, may I get out of this blasted fog and come upstairs? Assuming, of course, that your guest or guests wouldnât mind.â
I stopped breathing for an instant.
âWhere are you?â I asked in hushed voice.
âAt the newsstand down the block,â he told me. âIâd never before seen this city of yoursâand I still havenât. Are you sure thereâs a town around here? All the way from the airport it was socked in just as nowâwe were fortunate the plane could land at all.â
I closed my eyes, put my hand over the mouthpiece, and whispered, âThank you, God.â Then I shot a wink at Tavish.
âWhat a coincidence,â I told Tor over the phone. âWeâve just had one of those psychic transmissions of yoursâso weâve been expecting you.â
Iâd never been so glad to see anyone in my life.
When I buzzed Tor into the building, and finally saw him ascending the last flight of steps from the elevator to the penthouseâbundled in his elegant cashmere overcoat, his coppery curls illuminated by the hall lampâI wanted to rush out and embrace him. But that might have been ill-advised, considering what I wanted to ask of him the minute he walked in the door. So I took his coat instead.
After brief introductionsâTavish was quite stricken dumb by this first-time meeting with his idolâI settled them all in the living room so Pearl and Tavish could fill him in on our last eight hours of trauma; I went off to the kitchen to start the ball rolling.
âCharming place,â Tor called after me. âVirginal whiteâreminds me of that chapter in Moby Dick. Quite appropriate to your personality, though.â
Regardless of his cynical brand of humorâalways at my expenseâI knew that even if Tor hadnât been my mentor all these years, even if he hadnât suckered me into this bet, even if he didnât need a favor urgent enough to pry him from the bosom of his beloved New York, heâd still never
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