Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
In Death 30 - Fantasy in Death

In Death 30 - Fantasy in Death

Titel: In Death 30 - Fantasy in Death
Autoren: authors_sort
Vom Netzwerk:
we see.”
    “A lot of force to decapitate that clean, and a damn sharp blade.”
    “I’d agree.”
    “The girlfriend’s about five-two, maybe a hundred and ten fully dressed. She wouldn’t have the muscle. A droid could do it.”
    “Possibly, if the programming was altered and enhanced.”
    “I haven’t come across anything that says self-termination, but a logical theory, given the circumstance, might be he wanted out, wanted out in a flashy way. Programs the droid. It does the job, disposes of the weapon, resets the security. It feels like bullshit, but it’s an angle.”
    “People often do the incomprehensible. It’s what makes them so fascinating. Was he in play?”
    “Apparently. Whatever disc he had going is fail-safed, still in the unit.” She gestured to the controls. “EDD’s heading upstairs. Maybe he had the droid in play, too, and something went very wrong.” But she shook her head, slid her hands into her pockets. “And that wouldn’t explain the droid reprogramming itself. It’s cutting-edge—ha-ha—according to Peabody, but that’s beyond any edge. Droids require a human operator to alter programming.”
    “As far as I know, but then I don’t know much about this sort of thing. In general, human-replicate droids strike me as mildly creepy and just a little pitiable.”
    “Yes!” She pulled her hand out of her pocket to point at him. “Exactly.”
    “And since they don’t do the incomprehensible without that human operator programming it, they’re just not that interesting.” Morris shrugged as he got to his feet. “You should ask your expert consultant, civilian. He’d know whatever there would be to know, I’d think.”
    “I’ll see what the department geeks have to say before I tap Roarke.”
    “Whoa.”
    She turned to see the aforesaid geeks step in.
    “Big whoa,” McNab repeated. “Now that’s a large fucking shame. Bart Minnock, boy genius.”
    “I always figured he’d come out ahead.” Callendar winced. “Sorry.”
    “It’s inevitable. That’s Morris’s.” Eve jerked a thumb toward the two pieces of Minnock, then the control panel. “That’s yours. It appears the vic came in to play or maybe to test a new program. Whatever he put in is still in there. It’s passcoded and fail-safed. I need it out without damaging it or the unit. I need the security on this door and the entrance door fine-toothed. The logs say nobody went in or out once he locked in, but since he didn’t do that to himself with his fingernails, the logs are off. Peabody and I will be in the field. Since everyone here has a good head on their shoulders—see? Inevitable. I’ll expect some progress by the time we get back to Central.”
    She left them to it, signaled to Peabody.
    “Uniforms did the knock-on-doors,” Peabody told her as they started out. “Since his place takes up the top three floors of the building, we didn’t get anything. The doorman on duty last night came in when contacted. He confirms time of arrival, and swears no one came in for Minnock or accessed any of the three floors until the girlfriend went up this morning.”
    “A smart e-geek employs, works with, and knows other smart e-geeks. Let’s go find out who didn’t like good old Bart.”
     
    U-Play sprawled and spread over the converted warehouse. Activity, and what struck Eve as a manic energy, buzzed and beeped in the air. From the countless comps and screens, the open labs and offices came the sounds of vehicle crashes, space wars, maniacal laughter, booming threats, and the cheers of the victorious.
    Little worlds, complex fantasies, endless competition, Eve thought. How did anyone keep it straight?
    People, some who looked barely old enough to buy a brew and all clad in wild colors or the sag and bag of lounge wear, bounced over the four open floors. To her ear, they seemed to all talk at once in their incomprehensible e-shorthand as they operated handhelds, communicated on headsets, played with smart screens, and slurped down a variety of bottled go-drinks.
    It was like EDD on Zeus, Eve thought.
    “It’s Nerd World,” Peabody said. “Or Geek Galaxy. I can’t decide which because it’s full of nerds and geeks.”
    “It’s Nerd World in the Geek Galaxy. How can they hear themselves think? Why doesn’t anybody close a door?”
    “As someone who lives with a geek with aspects of nerd, I can tell you they claim the noise, the movement, the basic chaos keeps them up, keeps them
Vom Netzwerk:

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher