The senators looked down at me from the screen.
'Why do you say that, Doctor?' asked Senator Jackson.
'General Bauer can't hide his mission from Trinity. The computers at the NSA, NORAD, and possibly even Barksdale Air Force Base were built by Peter Godin or Seymour Gray. Trinity has access to them all. Even if Trinity doesn't detect the mission in progress, do you think it hasn't predicted our most likely methods of attack? That it doesn't know its own Achilles' heel?'
'This is one heel it can't protect,' said General Bauer.
'Of course it can. It can strike preemptively.'
Ewan McCaskell moved his head from side to side, like a man weighing odds. 'The computer's measured response against the German hackers gives me hope that its retaliation would be survivable. And if General Bauer's plan can be accomplished, limited retaliation is worth the risk.'
'How do you feel about full-scale thermonuclear war?' I asked. 'Is attacking the computer worth that level of retaliation?'
'What are you talking about?” asked Senator Jackson. 'General Bauer assured us that nuclear war isn't a possibility.'
'Do you know about something called the 'dead-hand' system, Senator?'
Jackson 's deep-set eyes narrowed. 'We were just dis¬cussing that. The consensus is that it's a myth.'
'What do you know about it, Doctor?' asked General Bauer.
'I know what Andrew Fielding told me. He believed that system existed during the Cold War and might still today. So does Peter Godin. Fielding and Godin discussed the potential for Trinity to disarm such a system prior to a nuclear exchange. And Godin has been involved in Amer¬ican nuclear planning since the 1980s.'
Everyone looked at the hospital bed. Godin still lay unconscious on his pillow.
'Is he sleeping?' asked McCaskell.
'We had to give him morphine,' explained Dr. Case. 'Nerve pain.'
'Can you wake him up?'
'I'll try.'
General Bauer addressed the senators. 'Peter Godin built supercomputers that carried out nuclear-test simu¬lations. That's the extent of his contribution to American strategy. The Soviet dead-hand system never existed. That's the informed consensus of the American defense establishment.'
Horst Bauer was a good salesman. The temptation to agree to his plan was tangible in the room. I could read it on the faces of the senators on the screen. That the plan involved a nuclear weapon only made it more attractive. Every American carries a memory of Hiroshima as the terrible but final solution to the dead¬liest war in history. And the unknown nature of Trinity's power seemed to cry out for some force of equal mystery and power to vanquish it. What the senators did not understand was that nuclear weapons held no mystery for Trinity. In the world of digital warfare, atomic bombs were as primitive as stone clubs. There was only one weapon on earth remotely equal in power to Trinity. The human brain.
I got to my feet, faced the screen, and spoke with as much restraint as I could muster. 'Senators, before you attempt something that could trigger a nuclear holo¬caust, I beg you to allow me to speak to the computer. What do you have to lose?'
General Bauer started to speak, then thought better of it. The senators conferred quietly. Then Barrett Jackson spoke.
'General, why don't we see how the computer feels about speaking to Dr. Tennant? It hasn't talked to any¬one else.'
Skow began to protest, but Senator Jackson cut him off with an upraised hand.
'Tell the computer who Dr. Tennant is,' said Jackson. 'Also where he is. Then ask the machine if it will talk to him.'
'I need to go into the Containment Building to do this,' I said.
Jackson shook his head. 'We can't allow that, Doctor. What if you start hallucinating? You might hit a switch or something. No, if you speak to Trinity, you do it from here.'
On General Bauer's order, a technician typed in what Jackson had said and sent it to Trinity.
Blue letters flashed instantly onto the screen.
I will speak to Tennant.
'I'll be damned,' said Senator Jackson.
'Look,' said Ravi Nara.
More letters had flashed up on the screen.
Send Tennant into Containment.
'What the hell?' said General Bauer. 'Why would it ask that?'
McCaskell looked at me. 'Can you explain this, Doctor? Why would the computer make the same request you did?'
'I have no idea.'
'Type this,' said McCaskell. ''Why do you want Dr. Tennant in Containment?''
The response was instantaneous.
Hath the rain a father? Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven? Wilt thou hunt the prey for the lion? Or fill the appetite of the young lions? Canst thou draw out Leviathan with a hook? None is so fierce that dare stir him up. Who then is able to stand before me?
'That's Scripture, isn't it?' said McCaskell, obviously taken aback.
'The Book of Job,' said Skow, making me picture him as a little boy dressed for Sunday school.
'Why is the computer answering like that?' asked Senator Jackson. 'Was Godin a religious nut?'
'The man is still alive,' I reminded Jackson.
'Godin doesn't believe in God,' said Skow. 'He once told me that religion was the result of an adaptive process evolved to help Homo sapiens overcome its anx¬iety about death.'
Soft cackling echoed through the room. Everyone turned toward the hospital bed. Godin's eyes were open, and the delight in them was plain.
'It's a joke,' he rasped. 'Trinity's telling you to know your damn place.'
McCaskell got up and walked over to the bed. 'Why would the computer want Dr. Tennant in the Contain¬ment building?'
'Computer, computer,' muttered Godin. 'Trinity isn't a computer. A computer is a glorified adding machine. A logic box. Trinity is alive. It's mankind freed from the curse of his body. Trinity is the end of death.'
The old man's voice had the conviction of a prophet.
'Mr. Godin,' said McCaskell, 'what do you know about the existence of the so-called 'dead-hand' Russian missile system?'
The old man's head jerked forward as he struggled against a spasm in his throat. 'The 'dead hand' is yours,' he wheezed. 'Yours and those of all the impo¬tent apparatchiks of our outmoded system.'
McCaskell’s face showed some emotion at last. 'Why have you done this? Are you such an egoist that you can't bear to think of the world without you in it?'
Godin was struggling to breathe. Dr. Case moved to help him, but Godin waved the physician away.
'Look around you,' Godin said. 'Why does all this high-tech machinery exist? I built the most elegant supercomputers in the world, machines capable of enor¬mous contributions to mankind. And what did the gov¬ernment do with them? Cracked codes and built nuclear bombs. For twenty years they used my beautiful machines to perfect their engines of death. But why should I have expected any different? Human history is a charnel house of carnage and absurdity.'
Godin began to cough as though his lungs were coming up. 'We had our chance, gentlemen. Ten thousand years of human civilization has brought us in a circle. The twentieth century was the bloodiest in history. Left to us, the twenty-first would only be worse. Darwin tolled the bell on our stewardship of this planet in 1859. But today you finally heard it.'
'Look at the screen!' cried Ravi Nara.
The blue letters glowed ominously, more menacing by their silence.
Send Dr. Tennant to me or suffer the consequences.
'I guess our decision's been made for us,' said Senator Jackson. 'Send the doctor into the Containment