A Calculated Risk Katherine Neville (adventure books to read txt) đ
- Author: Katherine Neville
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Then I called Tavish.
âDid they take the bait?â he asked.
âHook, line, sinker, and part of the pole,â I assured him. âNo one will be the least surprised when you resign on Mondayâexcept maybe Karp, whoâs a bit slow on the uptake.â
âI wish you could join me,â he said sadly, âbut I understand someoneâs got to stay behind and mind the shop. Iâll think of you in New York.â
âGive my love to Charles and the Bobbseys,â I said, for weâd agreed that Tavish could monitor our operation quite well by using Charlesâand the Bobbseys were grateful to hire someone who could help with their operation, even though on a temporary basis, and give them a long-needed break. âIf you happen to hear from Pearl or Tor,â I added, âgive them my bestâbut tell them weâre still going to beat them!â
When we hung up, I felt a terrible cold chill move through me. I was alone nowâsurrounded by villainsâand who knew for how long? I hadnât heard from Tor in weeks, not since theyâd left for Europe.
I glanced at the calendar on the wallâFebruary 1âjust over two months since my night at the opera. In the seventy-two days that had passed, Iâd knocked over two of the largest financial institutions in the world (if you counted Torâs theft, it was three), and everything in my life had been turned upside down. Though I knew it, I couldnât really feel it; I just felt numb inside.
I was thirty-two years old, and by most standards, a success. All the achievements in my life had been won by beating the System. But soon there wasnât going to be a system to beat anymore. I was destroying it, wasnât I?
Tor had known this all along, of course. With one swift kick, heâd knocked away my supports, so the only thing I could cling to was realityâactual reality, not the kind found in systems and structures and other peopleâs rules. He wanted me to take a good, hard look at my life, stop playing the games we all invent to pretend to ourselves that what weâre living out isnât real. And if what I saw stretching behind me was a crumbling, rotten bridge of my own makingâa wasted ruinâI knew what heâd tell me to do.
I sat in my office surrounded by glass, and looked at the fading orchid in the vase before me. A few brown blossoms had fallen, scattered across the desk. I heard Torâs voice whispering, ever so softly, in my ear. His voice said, âLight the match.â
By the Monday of Lawrenceâs returnâwhen I was expected to shut down my project and get off the systemâI still had no solution to the dilemma.
By then, Tavish and I had finished transferring the monitoring of our crime to Charles Babbageâs full-time diligence, though it meant the little computer would have to stay up around the clock for a while in New York. Someone still had to keep an eye on the systems here, just to see who might be snooping around. But if I got transferred back to Kiwi, as Lawrence had threatened, Iâd be occupied full-time cleaning the lavatories with my toothbrush.
As I passed through the fairyland of glass walls to Lawrenceâs office, I was pretty glum. Though Tor had always said the best defense was a good offense, I wasnât sure what I could do that would be offensive enough to stop the wheels that were already set in motion. The least I could do was to give it my best shot.
Lawrence greeted me without rising; he was dug in behind the entrenchment of his desk and unwilling to part with ground. It hardly matteredâthe ammo I had this time would melt under a small blowtorch, and I knew he could do better than that with his breath.
âLetâs have a lookâthis is the wrap-up report?â he said, extending his hand.
He skimmed the first few pages, then read the rest more closely than Iâd hoped for, considering that my hours on earth were numbered. I sat there swinging my legs, looking out at the fog-bound view. I knew I might get one shot if I were lucky. I closed my eyes and tried to visualize the terrain in the dark.
âBanks,â he said, looking up with patience, âthis study seems unnecessarily alarmist to me. You suggest our security can be violatedââ
âHas been violated,â I corrected.
âBut I shouldnât describe our systems as âlax in security.â It might be misunderstood. I realize these systems arenât exactly state-of-the-artââ
âUnless the art is Renaissance fresco painting,â I agreed.
âBut frankly Iâm losing patience with all these studies, and I no longer plan to finance them. Iâll be responsible for making sure that your concerns are addressed. Your request for follow-up work is denied.â
âIâm not requesting that you finance any improvements to security,â I assured him, âor that the Managing Committee should be involved either.â
I stood up and took a deep breathâit was now or never. âThatâs why Iâm turning my findings over to the audit department,â I said. âItâs really their job to ensure the appropriate safeguards are put into our systems, and now that Tavish has left, Iâm the only one who can advise them about where to look for holes in security.â
I surely didnât want the auditors inspecting the system just now, but since it seemed they already knew that weâd violated security (hopefully, not why!) theyâd be expecting to see my reportâthat was the reason Lawrence had used for wrapping things up on my project. On the other hand, if I could work along with them, it would serve the double job of keeping me informed of their activitiesâand out of Kiwiâs hands.
But Lawrenceâs response was something I hadnât bargained for, and it threw me for a loop. I assumed heâd either send me packing back
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