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Michaelson crumpled the note and tossed it into the green metal trash can. System backup? he thought. Upgraded chips? What the hell was Lesserec doing? They wasted time on full system backups only before making a substantial modification. With the IVI announced only yesterday, Michaelson had allotted a good two weeks of upgrading before the system was ready for a backup. More wasted time, wasted effort, a poor administrative decision.

Want to take a test drive? Lesserec was goofing off, oblivious to the importance of his own project. That did it. No one was indispensable.

Fuming, Michaelson unlocked his office and powered up his workstation, thinking of the words for a new job posting. He rubbed his palms on his slacks, feeling tingly and itchy again; this time his face felt hot, scratchy. Damned kid is getting to me. He wondered if somebody had messed with the thermostat.

Scooting his chair up to the keyboard, he tapped out a terse memo describing Gary Lesserec’s job position. Tansy could clean up the wording, and he’d cram it through the Internal Transfer office in the morning.

Michaelson sat back to think, though, and the ergonomic chair creaked with his bulk. What he really needed to do was find the perfect person for Lesserec’s job first, then post the notice; if he didn’t have the right replacement in mind, it could turn out to be another disaster.

Besides, thanks to the Lab’s prehistoric hiring procedures, Michaelson couldn’t just fire Lesserec outright. He had to play along with policy just to make everything appear fair. That would mean another delay.

Michaelson viewed the Livermore rules as obstacles to get around, blockades thrown up by incompetents. Bureaucratic rules, made up by beancounters who had nothing better to do: boobs like José Aragon who had been promoted beyond their capability to do any real job.

Michaelson printed a copy of the memo and stuffed it into his upper desk drawer. He would have to make phone calls in the morning, ponder who might be a good replacement. The smartass kid who always wore inane superhero t-shirts had outlasted his usefulness.

Deciding he could do no more tonight, Michaelson shut down, rubbing his hands and face again. Damn, that burned — he wondered if he had picked up some kind of rash. He thought of how good it would feel to go home, mix himself a drink, take a long shower, then go to bed.

But as he headed out of his office, he stared down the long back hall at the empty VR chamber.

Got a new simulation ready to run if you want to take a test drive. Even though Michaelson had complete access, he saw that the door was propped partly open, inviting. The chamber was dark. He glanced around, seeing only the glowing phosphors of Lesserec’s workstation and other terminals blinking as the main system computers crunched away.

A test drive? Michaelson had no idea what Lesserec had been developing, probably another one of his “consulting projects” instead of doing IVI work. “This better be good,” he muttered.

He scanned Lesserec’s desk, frowning at the clutter of scratch paper, code printouts, technical reports, and a toy Snoopy model. Michaelson frowned at a photo of Lesserec and his model-beautiful girlfriend standing on the rocky shore of a deep blue lake.

Michaelson picked up the photograph. Lesserec sported a wide, goofy grin; his red hair and white legs made him look like a bloated fish just pulled from the icy depths. The girlfriend was dark-haired, sleek, and tan, making the couple an unlikely pair. Michaelson snorted and placed the picture down. What did she see in a twit like Lesserec? But he knew very well how appealing some women found quick-witted young men. His own attraction to Amber, Diana Unteling, and all the others rose in his mind.

After all, despite his faults and screwed-up priorities, Lesserec had developed the algorithms that turned the virtual reality chamber into a playground for the gods. Michaelson recalled towering miles above the surface of the Earth, his Olympian legs rising through the clouds below as jet fighters buzzed like gnats around his knees.

But that still didn’t excuse Lesserec’s arrogance and lack of responsibility. He wondered how far the little deeb had gotten with the IVI prep while he had been gone.

Michaelson hunched over Lesserec’s workstation. In the primary window tiny icons dotted the layout as a flowchart of the VR chamber appeared on the screen.

Fidgeting, rubbing his hands and cheeks, Michaelson glanced over the modifications to the virtual reality software, trying to decipher what Lesserec had done.

By now the burning sensation had spread over his palms and the backs of his hands. He looked down, expecting to see angry red skin, but found instead a whitish pale appearance to his hands. He must have gotten into something.

He punched in the final loading procedure for the new VR simulation. The icon of the small jet fighter denoting the Nellis AFB simulation had disappeared, replaced by the stylized drawing of a tiny mountain with smoke around its top. Lesserec had gotten rid of the aircraft simulation! What the hell?

A few taps on the keyboard confirmed that no other routine remained in the parallel processor, only one new memory-hogging simulation. Michaelson stared at the workstation screen, appalled.

Distracted from the fiery itching that continued to spread, Michaelson angrily used the menu-driven directions on the screen to power up the chamber. A minute passed and the screen blinked green, indicating that the simulation was ready.

Michaelson straightened and stomped down the hall toward the open vault door. “This had better be damned good, Gary, or I’ll rip off your head myself.”

A red glow pulsed from inside the VR chamber; light streamed onto the floor from the door. Michaelson entered, holding a hand up to shield his eyes from the ruddy brightness.

He closed the heavy door, and instantly gray curls of holographic smoke swept around him. He couldn’t see through the illusion, but he could smell burning sulfur, one of the packets from the scent-simulators. “What the hell is that?” he muttered.

Shapes drifted in and out of focus through the dull red smoke, as if the software running the chamber had somehow gone awry. He wondered if Lesserec had made a forest fire simulation. What a waste of time!

A loud rumble came from within the walls and floor, the big wall speakers and vibration panels. With a blast of hot air, the smoke cleared. Hal Michaelson found himself transported to another world, one far more realistic than he had ever seen.

Leafy fern fronds towered over him as red sunlight speckled across the earthy ground. A breeze ruffled the plants like scratchy fingernails, bringing a stench of methane and keratome-impregnated gas. The air dripped with humidity, and the light seemed grainy and thick.

A ratcheting sound just to his right made him jump. A dragonfly the size of a model airplane bore down with chainsaw wings and angrily buzzed around him, its green eyes as large as oscilloscope screens. Michaelson swatted the giant insect away as it divebombed in, smacking his hand against a hard exoskeleton. Damn, that hurt!

The rash on his hands seemed to ignite with pain, and his face felt as if it wanted to peel off. He tried rubbing, then digging deep with his fingernails, but the burning grew worse. He felt as if he had fallen into a pit of glass fibers, and he couldn’t make the itching go away.

His heart raced, and he remembered the times in Washington he had overexerted himself. He looked for the door. Enough of Lesserec’s smoke and jungles and giant bugs.

Something crashed through the towering palms behind him with a deep-throated roar. Michaelson heard armored tree trunks splinter, and he felt the ground shake as a thick swatch of smooth gray rumbled past, blocking the low orange sun. Looking up, and up, Michaelson saw long, razor teeth set in a steam-shovel-sized reptilian jaw. A dinosaur?