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“That means absolutely no one outside the company,” Kenneth added sternly. “And each person inside the company will be personally approved by Sean or myself.”

“We’re going to use my house as our base of operations, to plan and implement the shutdown,” Sean said. “I have enough space here for a few dozen people to work. We can’t take the risk of meeting at Avogadro, where we could be observed to be working together. We’re going to get started immediately by brainstorming the key people we’ll need to make this happen.”

“People have to be absolutely sure to turn off their mobiles before they come here,” Gene said, “or leave them at home. We can’t chance ELOPe using location tracking to determine that we’re meeting together here. That also means watching credit card purchases, use of the wireless network, or anything that could track us here.”

David thought about paying for their coffees with his credit card. He had already screwed up.

The group sighed somberly, but nodded assent. It was a sign of how difficult their task was that merely meeting as a group would require extensive precautions.

“If you’ll excuse us, Kenneth and I will get to work on the business aspects,” Rebecca said. “Sean, I expect you and I will coordinate the master schedule.”

Sean nodded agreement, and with that, Rebecca and Kenneth left. Sean, David, and the others got down to work.

“Gentlemen, we have an exceedingly difficult task ahead of us,” Sean began. “We need to power down sixty-eight Avogadro sites around the world, and a dozen offshore data centers. We need to do this without email, phones, or any suspicious patterns of behavior that can be tracked by computers. We need people who know the facility designs to tell us how to power them down, and we need to communicate and synchronize our efforts. Any ideas?”

“We’ll have to avoid commercial airline flights as much as possible,” Gene said. “Those are easy to track because they are in a centralized database. Not to mention that purchasing tickets will leave a trail through credit card transactions and Avogadro’s travel reimbursement system.”

“Well, some employees would be traveling on business to visit other sites,” Mike said. “If we curtailed all travel activity, that would itself be suspicious. We could look for employees who currently have travel planned, and use them as couriers, and have them hand deliver instructions.”

“Good idea,” Gene said.

“Some Avogadro employees are private pilots,” David added. “There’s a woman named Michelle who sits a couple of doors down from me. She’s a private pilot, and she owns her own Cessna. And she’s mentioned there are other pilots at Avogadro. They could fly around the country, and their flights are untracked, right?”

“Well, the flights themselves are tracked, I think,” Sean said. “But I don’t think they track the passengers on the planes. So that definitely does give us an extra tool to use. Good idea. Any others?”

Pete jumped up with a glean in his eyes. “If we can get trusted employees to the remote sites, as long as we stay off Avogadro’s computer network, we should be able to communicate using encrypted emails sent over a competitor’s email service.”

“That’s true,” Mike said. “We can use an isolated computer to generate private and public keys, which we can then copy onto USB drives. With the emails encrypted, ELOPe won’t be able to read them.”

“But why do we need to use a competitor’s email service?” Gene asked.

“If we sent them over Avogadro email,” Sean answered, “ELOPe could still see the patterns of email communication. ELOPe would be able to derive not only that something was going on, but exactly who was involved. If the data packets go over our network at all, they can be detected, so we need to be sure not to use wireless on an Avogadro site at all.”

They brainstormed a list of employees who could help them further develop their plan. The list included people from the facilities team, the travel administration team, the engineers who developed the site plans and the engineers who were responsible for backup and failsafe systems. Sean agreed to spend the next day personally meeting each employee, since he was the one member of their team who was widely known and instantly recognizable.

* * *

The next morning David, Mike, Gene, and Pete reconvened at Sean’s house. Sean was at the Avogadro campus finding the employees they had identified the day before. Gene arrived with a huge cardboard box that he struggled to carry in.

“What the heck do you have in there?” Mike asked.

“Some old fashioned stuff you fancy computer nerds might not be so familiar with. Let’s see what I have.”

Gene proceeded to pull out stacks of paper pads, post it notes, pencils and markers, maps of the United States and the World. David and Mike pitched in to help organize it.

“Do you really think we’re going to need this much?” David asked quizzically.

“We plan to have about thirty people working here, without computers. Yes, we’re going to need it,” Gene answered. “I’ve got more in the car, come help me unload it. Accordion folders. Sketch books. Flip charts.”

David and Mike shared a conspiratorial smile.

“I saw that,” Gene said. “You might think I’m weird, but believe me, people actually did perform office work before they invented computers. And maybe I just happen to know a thing or two about it.”

“Sorry,” they both said sheepishly.

“Don’t take it the wrong way,” Mike said. “It’s just that I’ve never even owned a printer, or had a newspaper subscription. I grew up online. It’s almost like if you pulled out one of those old phones, you know, the one with the round thing on it.”

“A rotary phone? Are you just pulling my chain?” Gene grumbled in a low breath. “Damn fool kids.”

David and Mike shared another secret smile. Might as well have fun if they had to work.

* * *

A little before lunch the first of the employees that Sean had contacted started arriving. By the end of the day most of the people had shown up. Unfortunately, they accomplished very little productive work, because no sooner would David start his explanation of what had happened so far than another person would show up and David would have to start over.

Finally, at eight that evening everyone, including Sean, was there. Standing in Sean’s living room, David gazed at the dozens of people around him. Some engineers sat on Sean’s living room furniture, while others were perched on the folding chairs Gene had wisely purchased. Still more cascaded onto the arms of couches, sat on the floor, or stood in the corners of the room. The temperature of the packed room was high, but the group was absolutely silent, waiting for the story to emerge.

The smell of pizza permeated the house, a recurring odor that they’d smell many more times in the days to come.

David went through the story for the last time, his throat hoarse from the many partial retellings of the story that day. The crowd erupted into astonished gasps and side conversations from time to time, but then fell silent again. Finally, when David had recapped the technical explanation for the last time, Sean got up to speak.

“The world I woke up in a few days ago was very different from the world I lived in all my life previously,” Sean began, and the crowd grew even quieter. “For the first time, man shares this world with another intelligence capable of sophisticated planning and actions. Unfortunately, this intelligence is like a cancer — one that will do anything, manipulate anyone, pursue any foe to ensure its own survival. It has control of our computers and our communications.”