have sent me detailed reports about your progress for years. So, what does the best theorist in a generation think of my proposal?â
Ritterâs eyebrows raised. He resisted making a deprecating remark, although that would have bought him some time. Everything he had ever known about chaotic phenomena seemed to have fallen out of his mind. He swallowed hard, wishing he, rather than not-Father, were leafing through Fatherâs plans.
âWell, sir, itâs ambitious. A wall built of bricks of small, densely packed, cross-linked redundant machines. It should be easier to maintain and more robust against the ever more violent and unpredictable storms of Turbulence as we push farther into the frontier.â
Not-Father frowned. âAll engineering is a matter of trade-offs, Ritter.â
âI donât know how many engineers, besides you, will be able to create the machinery youâve designed. The feature size is too small and the tolerances too strict. Iâve come up with some alternatives, but â¦â Ritter shrugged. âIf itâs just the two of us alone on the barricade, I think I might be able toââ
âNo, youâre too easily distracted. Your best work is behind the barricade, not on it.â Not-Father stood. âVery good, Ritter. Iâll go over your annotations and weâll discuss them in the morning.â
Not-Father nodded his goodbye then walked away. His boots, creased and dun-colored, their treads worn smooth, left blurred prints on the ground. Heâd broken them down from new in just weeks from manning the retaining wall, not to mention surveying and repairing the barricade as a whole.
Ritter curled as though not-Father had punched him in the gut. He missed the man whoâd decided Ritter could do anything and was always exasperated when it seemed Ritter couldnât.
Engineers gathered again around the fire to finish their shift. Ritter didnât need to see them to know that. The slim volume Deck had given him felt oddly heavy in his hands. He worked through its first exercises as shelves swirling around the barricade echoed through his mind.
Copyright © 2014 by John Chu
Art copyright © 2014 by Julie Dillon
eISBN: 978-1-4668-7648-4
eBooks may be purchased for business or promotional use. For information on bulk purchases, please contact Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department by writing to
[email protected] .