the driver, got into the car, and disappeared down the street. A completely unremarkable morning, they all agreed. They could afford to be patient now.
The mountains to the west were sheathed in clouds, and a fine drizzle was falling. The Archer hadn't left yet. There were prayers to be said, people to console. Ortiz was off having his face attended to by one of the French doctors, while his friend was riffling through the CIA officer's papers.
It made him feel guilty, but the Archer told himself that he was merely looking for records that he himself had delivered to the CIA officer. Ortiz was a compulsive note-taker, and, the Archer knew, a map fancier. The map he wanted to see was in its expected place, and clipped to it were several diagrams. These he copied by hand, quickly and accurately, before replacing all as it had been.
"You guys are so square," Bea Taussig laughed.
"It would be a shame to spoil the image," Al replied, a smile masking his distaste for their guest. He never understood why Candi liked this whatever the hell she was. Gregory didn't know why she rang bells in the back of his head. It wasn't the fact that she didn't like him-Al didn't give a damn one way or the other about that. His family and his fiancee loved him, and all his co-workers respected him. That was enough. If he didn't fit into somebody's notion of what an Army officer was supposed to be, screw 'em. But there was something about Bea that-
"Okay, we'll talk business," their guest said with amusement. "I have people from Washington asking me how soon-"
"Somebody ought to tell those bureaucrats that you don't just turn things like this on and off," Candi growled.
"Six weeks, tops." Al grinned. "Maybe less."
"When?" Candi asked.
"Soon. We haven't had a chance to run it on the simulator yet, but it feels right. It was Bob's idea. He was about due, and it streamlined the software package even better than what I was trying. We don't have to use as much AI as I thought."
"Oh?" The use of AI-artificial intelligence-was supposed to be crucial to mirror performance and target discrimination.
"Yeah, we were overengineering the problem, trying to use reason instead of instinct. We don't have to tell the computer how to think everything out. We can reduce the command load twenty percent by putting pre-set options in the program. It turns out to be quicker and easier than making the computer make most judgments off a menu."
"What about the anomalies?" Taussig asked.
"That's the whole point. The AI routines were actually slowing things down more than we thought. We were trying to make the thing so flexible that it had trouble doing anything. The expected laser performance is good enough that it can take the fire-option faster than the AI program can decide whether to aim it-so why not take the shot? If it doesn't fit the profile, we pop it anyway."
"Your laser specs have changed," Bea observed.
"Well, I can't talk about that."
Another grin from the little geek. Taussig managed to smile back. I know something you don't know, is it? Just looking at him made her skin crawl, but what was worse was the way Candi looked at him, like he was Paul Newman or something! Sallow complexion, even zits, and she loved this thing. Bea didn't know whether to laugh or cry
"Even us admin pukes have to be able to plan ahead," Taussig said.
"Sorry, Bea. You know the security rules."
"Makes you wonder how we get anything done." Candi shook her head. "If it gets any worse, Al and I won't be able to talk to each other between " She smiled lecherously at her lover.
Al laughed. "I have a headache."
"Bea, do you believe this guy?" Candi asked.
Taussig leaned back. "I never have."
"When are you going to let Dr. Rabb take you out? You know he's been mooning over you for six months."
"The only mooning I expect out of him is from a car. God, that's a ghastly thought." Her look at Candi masked her feelings exquisitely well. She also realized that the programming information that she'd gotten out was now invalid. Damn the little geek for changing it!
"That's something. Question is, what?" Jones keyed his microphone. "Conn, Sonar, we have a contact bearing zero-nine-eight. Designate this contact Sierra-Four."
"You sure it's a contact?" the young petty officer asked.
"See this?" Jones ran his finger along the screen. The "waterfall display" was cluttered with ambient noise. "Remember that