Please. Please.

He hit the execute button.

The screen went blank. For what seemed like ages it remained blank, except for overload, which was now blinking so fast that, except for a faint shadow, it seemed to remain constant, like a computer executing a closed loop of command. Something inside the CPU popped and sizzled, and Richard groaned.

Then green letters appeared on the screen, floating mystically on the black:

I AM A MAN WHO LIVES ALONE EXCEPT FOR MY WIFE, BELINDA, AND MY SON, JONATHAN

He hit the execute button twice.

Now, he thought. Now I will type: ALL THE BUGS IN THIS WORD PROCESSOR WERE FULLY WORKED OUT BEFORE MR. NORDHOFF BROUGHT IT OVER HERE. Or I'll type: I HAVE IDEAS FOR AT LEAST TWENTY BEST-SELLING NOVELS. Or I'll type: MY FAMILY AND I ARE GOING TO LIVE HAPPILY EVER AFTER. Or I'll type-But he typed nothing. His fingers hovered stupidly over the keys as he felt -- literally felt -- all the circuits in his brain jam up like cars grid-locked into the worst Manhattan traffic jam in the history of internal combustion. The screen suddenly filled up with the word:

LOADOVERLOADOVERLOADOVERLOADOVERLOADOVERLOADOVER-LOAD

There was another pop, and then an explosion from the CPU. Flames belched out of the cabinet and then died away.

Richard leaned back in his chair, shielding his face in case the screen should implode. It didn't. It only went dark. He sat there, looking at the darkness of the screen.

CANNOT TELL FOR SURE ASK AGAIN LATER.

'Dad?'

He swiveled around in his chair, heart pounding so hard he felt that it might actually tear itself out of his chest.

Jon stood there, Jon Hagstrom, and his face was the same but somehow different -- the difference was subtle but noticeable. Perhaps, Richard thought, the difference was the difference in paternity between two brothers. Or perhaps it was simply that that wary, watching expression was gone from the eyes, slightly overmagnified by thick spectacles (wire-rims now, he noticed, not the ugly industrial horn-rims that Roger had always gotten the boy because they were fifteen bucks cheaper).

Maybe it was something even simpler: that look of doom was gone from the boy's eyes.

'Jon?' he said hoarsely, wondering if he had actually wanted something more than this. Had he? It seemed ridiculous, but he supposed he had. He supposed people always did. 'Jon, it's you, isn't it?'

'Who else would it be?' He nodded toward the word processor. 'You didn't hurt yourself when that baby went to data heaven, did you?'

Richard smiled. 'No. I'm fine.'

Jon nodded. 'I'm sorry it didn't work. I don't know what ever possessed me to use all those cruddy parts.' He shook his head. 'Honest to God I don't. It's like I had to. Kid's stuff.'

'Well,' Richard said, joining his son and putting an arm around his shoulders, 'you'll do better next time, maybe.'

'Maybe. Or I might try something else.'

'That might be just as well.'

'Mom said she had cocoa for you, if you wanted it.'

'I do,' Richard said, and the two of them walked together from the study to a house into which no frozen turkey won in a bingo coverall game had ever come. 'A cup of cocoa would go down just fine right now.'

'I'll cannibalize anything worth cannibalizing out of that thing tomorrow and then take it to the dump,' Jon said.

Вы читаете Word Processor of the Gods
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