Выбрать главу

"EXPAND."

"HCN = HYDROCYANIC ACID, I.E. PRUSSiC ACID. LIQUID OR GASEOUS STATES. UNSTABLE. MOLECULAR CONFIGURATION. . ,"

"HOLD." The computer would expand the subject forever untii every scrap of available information on it was exhausted, if he let it. Smith keyed out the "Ex­pand" function. The screen reverted to the details of Irma Schwartz's death, listing blood levels of known substances arranged by quantity. At the bottom of the list was PROCAINE. . .00001, followed by a footnote: "ALL LEVELS NORMAL EXCLUDING FINAL EN­TRY."

"PROCAINE: EXPAND"

"PROCAINE = NOVOCAINE, GENERIC TERM. FOUND IN CACAO PLANT. FREQUENTLY REFINED INTO COCAINE. ALSO FOUND IN HIGHLY PURE FORM BUT SMALL QUANTITIES IN HUMAN ENDO­CRINE SYSTEM. . . .

"RELATION TO SCHWARTZ, IRMA L."

"NEAR ABSENCE OF PROCAINE IN SUBJECT'S BLOOD AT TIME OF DEATH. . . DISCREPANCY WITH 000 REPORT. . . DISCREPANCY. . ."

"EXPAND DISCREPANCY."

The screen flashed back to the police report. "SUB­JECT FELT NO PAIN PRIOR TO DEATH."

"What?" Smith said aloud. He asked the computer to explain.

69

"POLICE REPORT 000315219 QUOTE SUBJECT IS REPORTED TO HAVE FELT NO PAIN . . . DIS­CREPANCY WITH LOW PROCAINE LEVEL. . . ."

Smith was interested. He keyed in "PROCAINE" again and pressed the "Expand" button. The com­puter picked up where it had left off and spewed out volumes of information on procaine for the next twenty minutes. Among other things, Smith discovered that a body's procaine level controlled in some measure that body's tolerance for pain.

If irma Schwartz's procaine content was nearly nil, then the strange footnote that she had suffered no pain didn't make sense. On top of it all, Felix Foxx had been with her on the day she died. It still didn't shed any light on Admiral Ives's murder, unless. . .

"UNUSUAL PROCAINE LEVELS IN AUTOPSY REPORTS FOR WATSON, HOMER G., AND IVES, THORNTON?" Smith asked.

"PROCAINE LEVELS NORMAL," the computer answered.

No connection.

Smith readjusted the program back to its former po­sition.

The computer expanded into historical references to the drug, including various published accounts. Smith dutifully read each entry as it appeared on the screen, sifting through decades of data, working back­ward. In 1979 there were 165 entries on procaine, comprising the whole of the printed word worldwide, including tabloids from Sri Lanka and encyclopedias. At this rate, Smith realized, it was going to take for­ever.

"AMERICAN PERIODICALS ONLY," he keyed in. "WORD COUNT ONLY."

There were twelve mentions of the word procaine in

70

1978, all in one issue of the Journal of American Den­tistry. Foxx's name was not mentioned. Nor was it mentioned through the entire decade of the sixties. Or the fifties. Or the forties. Smith blinked back a blinding headache.

!n 1938, American newspapers and magazines printed the word procaine more than 51,000 times.

"HOLD. EXPAND."

The articles appeared one after the other on the screen. All of them concerned a drug scandal involv­ing a now defunct research facility in Enwood, Penn­sylvania, from which a staggering quantity of endocri-nal procaine, extracted from human cadavers, was found missing. The research was being conducted, as later reports revealed, as a military experiment to in­crease the pain tolerances of combat soldiers.

A public outcry against scientists' fiddling around with pain experiments on Our Boys in Uniform far overshadowed any objection to the theft of the drug. As a result, the Pennsylvania facility was abandoned, the experiments aborted, and the project's head re­searcher quietly expatriated. His name was Vaux.

Felix Vaux.

"Vaux," Smith said, reprogramming the computer with new energy.

"EXPAND VAUX, FELIX. HEAD RESEARCHER AT ENWOOD, PA. FACILITY 416, CA. 1938," he keyed.

"VAUX, FELIX. B. AUG. 10,1888. . . B.S. UNIVER­SITY OF CHICAGO. . ."

"HOLD."

1888? That would make him ninety-four years old.

It was the wrong man. Six hours at the most power­ful, omnipotent computer complex in the world, and he'd ended up with the wrong man.

Disgustedly he switched off the console. It was

71

going nowhere. Undoubtedly, Remo had the wrong man, too. If Smith were an ordinary computer analyst working with ordinary computers, he would have put on his twenty-year-old tweed coat at that point, and his thirty-year-old brown felt hat, and locked the catches on the attache case containing his emergency tele­phone, and left for the night.

But Harold W. Smith was not ordinary. He was pre­cise. Precise to the point where, if his peas were not positioned exactly at 9 o'clock on his plate, he would suffer with indigestion throughout the meal. So pre­cise that he trusted almost nothing-not words, not people, not clocks. Nothing except the four items on earth that Smith considered to be adequately accurate to deserve his trust: the Folcroft computers.

And the four Folcroft computers had said, categorially, that Felix Foxx, M.D., was somehow living with­out a date of birth. Given that much as a premise, any­thing else was possible.

With fresh determination he switched on the con­sole.

"COORDINATES, ENWOOD, PA. RESEARCH FA­CILITY, CA. 1938?" he asked. The coordinates came up on the screen. They matched exactly those Remo had given him for Shangri La.

"Hmmm," he said. A coincidence, perhaps.

"PROBABILITY VAUX, FELIX = FOXX, FELIX?" he queried next.

"PROBABILITY FOXX = VAUX 53%, came the an­swer from the four things Harold W. Smith trusted alone among all beings on earth.

A better than even chance! The computers had con­sidered the ridiculous proposition that Dr. Felix Foxx, best-selling author and eminent authority on fitness and diet, TV personality and general celebrity whose

72

youthful face was known to millions, could be a ninety-four-year-old man named Vaux who had left the coun­try fifty years ago in disgrace after a nationwide drug scandal, and the computers had said fifty-three per­cent!

It was the equivalent of a surgeon checking out the remains of a man burned beyond recognition, his hands and feet curled into little charred bails, his teeth no more than melted stubs sticking out of crisp-fried lips, and saying, "The odds are better than even that he'll be back on the job in a couple of weeks."

Smith was ecstatic. For no surgeon on earth could match the predictability, the surety, the breathtaking precision of the Folcroft computers. If they said fifty-three percent, then procaine could be the whole key. And Foxx the holder of that key. And Remo was on his way to someplace cailld Shangri-la to talk to Foxx.

"THANK YOU," he keyed in, as he always did when his work with the sublime four creatures had come to an end.

"YOU'RE WELCOME," they responded as they al­ways did.

The precision!

Of course, there was another possibility, one un­known even to the computers, which were unique in all the universe, infallible in all properly programmed matters. The possibility that they were wrong.

Harold Smith's brow creased into a deep furrow. He felt his breath come quickly and shallowly and his heartbeat step up. Dots of perspiration formed on his brow.

Wrong? The Folcroft Four?

And then he took a deep breath, as Remo had once shown him would alleviate momentary stress, and he

73

picked up the phone to begin the Song routing connec­tions that would lead eventually to Remo.

There was no point in considering whether or not the Folcroft computers were wrong. If they were wrong, then, as Harold Smith saw it, there would be no reason for living. The world would be thrust back into an abyss of guesswork, hypotheses, hunches, sug­gestions, half-truths, loopholes, double entendres, wishes, hopes, spells, incantations, and instincts. A world where being on time could mean anything within the boundaries of a geological age; where peas were not only not presented at 9 o'clock, but scattered at random all over the plate, spilling haphazardly into the mashed potatoes and canned gravy.