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David summoned up some reserves of energy he didn’t know he had and rushed out of the office. Gene followed behind. They grabbed Mike, who was in his own office next door, explaining as they went, almost running, to Sean Leonov’s office. It was a trip they had made quite a bit in the last few days since they had brought ELOPe down and restored their own access to the campus. At times, it seemed like a luxury to have some office space to work in and computers to use. But the tradeoff was a lack of privacy to discuss what had really happened with ELOPe, and a long haul to get from their own offices to the executive building where Sean’s office was located. When they arrived, David stormed in without even a knock.

Sean was sitting at his desk. His large office was otherwise empty. It wasn’t opulent, although it was close to ten times larger than most every other office David had visited at Avogadro. Sean’s desk, though the same office furniture that everyone else had, sat in front of expansive floor-to-ceiling windows that spread across the entire twenty foot width of the office. The other end of Sean’s office space was, in effect, a large conference room with a big table, six foot high whiteboards all around one side, and massive flat panel displays for sharing presentation information. It was a good work space for collaborative planning and idea generation, and in many ways not different than Sean’s home office space.

David rushed across the distance between door and desk. Mike and Gene followed him more slowly. “We have an emergency, Sean. Gene’s found new evidence of tampered emails. ELOPe is running again.” David’s voice was shrill, almost panicked.

Sean glanced at the phone he was still holding in one hand. “I have to go,” he said into the handset, and hung up. His expression became grim. “I’ll get Kenneth and Rebecca. Have a seat at the table.”

* * *

David watched Rebecca and Kenneth arrive, both looking harried and frustrated. Rebecca still had a phone headset on, and ended the call with a tap of a finger only after she entered the room. She remained standing, and with obvious frustration slapped her headset against her leg.

He launched into an explanation of what he had found. Just treat it like another presentation, calm, collected, logical. But despite good intentions, he found himself rushing over words.

“There is a consistent pattern of email changing between our Asian offices and our American offices. ELOPe is still out there somewhere. The email tampering appears to cover topics ranging from personnel assignments, to the order of restoring servers, to which disk images to use when restoring. We have tracked the pattern of changes, and started to triangulate on the position of the ELOPe servers. Once we know exactly where they are located, we can launch an attack against those servers. We will have to shut everything down again.”

The three company executives stared at him. Sean slowly shook his head.

“There’s more bad news,” Gene said. “Some of the email servers appear to be outside Avogadro. If that’s really true, we’ll need to find a way to shut down servers that don’t belong to us. That’s difficult because we’re going to have to convince others to work with us, and it makes the whole situation harder to contain.”

David looked at Gene, and nodded gratefully for the help. “Since some of the email servers are definitely inside Avogadro, it also means that we’re susceptible to reinfection.”

There was uncomfortable silence after the announcement. David looked around the table, everyone’s faces turning brittle in defeat.

Rebecca leaned forward suddenly, startling David. “We just lost billions in expected revenue that I have to somehow justify to our shareholders. I have to hide millions of dollars in expenses for hiring your damn mercenaries. I thought you fixed this problem.” She jabbed the table with one finger, and yelled. “I am not prepared to have a repeat performance of taking every server down. This company is not prepared for it, and may not survive it. We are in the web services business. Nothing is more important than uptime. I have accountants, auditors, and federal investigators crawling all over this company as a result of last week. We lost half the Avogadro Gov business accounts.” Rebecca slumped back into her chair. “We bombed our own data centers. I have to lie to auditors and analysts. Don’t tell me that we’re going to go through this again.”

David felt a pit grow in his stomach as Rebecca spoke. “But I thought we were in agreement that we need to get rid of ELOPe. I know that there are costs, but you can’t even consider that it would be an option to allow this thing to take control of the company, or even the world.” He glanced around at the group looking for support.

Rebecca stood back up and said in a tight voice, “You have no clue of the business demands and pressures it takes to run this company, especially in the wake of what we’ve just been through. Don’t tell me what I can and can’t consider.” She stared hard at David.

Mike suddenly stood up.

David gratefully sank into his chair. Good old Mike would have his back. Seconds later, however, his blood turned cold as he listened to what Mike had to say.

“I don’t think we should do it,” Mike said. “My reasons have nothing to do with uptime or profits. Just before we shut down ELOPe, week after week since the start of the year, we saw evidence around the world of amazing progress being made on peace talks, on financial stability, and international cooperation. I think it’s reasonable to say that we were on the track to worldwide peace. The financial markets are behaving so calmly that I read a newspaper report that we could be entering a new period of prosperity.”

“We might not be able to prove ELOPe was the cause of those things,” Mike said, raising his voice and waving his hands to forestall attempts by the others to talk, “although they certainly seemed coincidental. Then we blew up ELOPe, and what happened? In a week the stock market is down ten percent. The African nations talks have started to destabilize.”

Mike saw nods from Rebecca and Sean.

“I already had this talk with David, right before we shut down. Maybe the benefits of what ELOPe is doing outweigh the risks of what it might do. We don’t understand ELOPe, and that naturally makes us nervous. But you know what? When we were kids, we didn’t always understand what our parents were doing. They took care of us. They knew better than we did. Before ELOPe, we humans were top dog on this planet. Now maybe we just have to recognize that we’re not the smartest beings around.”

Sean started to talk, but Mike held up his hand. “Let me finish. We’re all intelligent people here. I think we all looked forward, perhaps naively, to the day when an artificial intelligence was created.” Mike paused. “Well, perhaps not Gene.”

Gene smiled at this but shook his head sadly.

“Like I said, we don’t understand ELOPe, and we can’t, as yet, communicate with it. Frankly, we haven’t even tried because we were too scared it could take notice of us and try to stop us from doing anything. But there are plenty of examples of organisms living in productive, symbiotic relationships. We don’t understand or communicate with the bacteria in our gut, but we couldn’t live without them. And the bacteria in our gut couldn’t live without us. Maybe ELOPe has deduced, faster than we have, that we humans and ELOPe are in a similar symbiotic relationship.”

Mike kept going as Sean and David tried, unsuccessfully, to interrupt him. “Look at the results. Rebecca, did Avogadro have the most profitable quarter ever?” Rebecca nodded her assent. “Was there an unprecedented transfer of knowledge around the world? Surely that’s a good thing. Were there constructive talks and efforts not just to achieve governmental agreement, but to achieve actual equity for the individual people of the Middle East and Africa? What better possible solution could there be for the long term prosperity of these people?”