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"This is weird," he said. What do you make of this?"
Arby came over, and looked at it thoughtfully.
"All these missing letters and garbage," Thorne said. "Does it make any sense to you?"
"Yes," Arby said. He snapped his fingers, and went directly to Levine's desk. There, he pulled the plastic cover off the computer, and said, "I thought so."
The computer on Levine's desk was not the modern machine that Thorne would have expected. This computer was several years old, large and bulky, its cover scratched in many places. It had a black stripe on the box that said "Design Associates, Inc." And lower down, right by the power switch, a shiny little metal tag that said "Property International Genetics Technology, Inc., Palo Alto, CA."
"What's this?" Thorne said. "Levine has an InGen computer?"
"Yes," Arby said. "He sent us to buy it last week. They were selling off computer equipment."
"And he sent you?" Thorne said.
"Yeah. Me and Kelly. He didn't want to go himself. He's afraid of being followed."
"But this thing's a CAD-CAM machine, and it must be five years old," Thorne said. CAD-CAM computers were used by architects, graphic artists, and mechanical engineers. "Why would Levine want it?"
"He never told us," Arby said, flipping on the power switch. "But I know now."
"Yes?"
"That memo," Arby said, nodding to the wall. "You know why it looks that way? It's a recovered computer file. Levine's been recovering InGen files from this machine."
As Arby explained it, all the computers that InGen sold that day had had their hard drives reformatted to destroy any sensitive data on the disks. But the CAD-CAM machines were an exception. These machines all had special software installed by the manufacturer. The software was keyed to individual machines, using individual code references. That made these computers awkward to reformat, because the software would have to be reinstalled individually, taking hours.
"So they didn't do it," Thorne said. "Right," Arby said. "They just erased the directory, and sold them."
"And that means the original files are still on the disk."
"Right."
The monitor glowed. The screen said:
TOTAL RECOVERED FILES: 2,387
"Jeez," Arby said. He leaned forward, staring intently, fingers poised over the keys. He pushed the directory button, and row after row of file names scrolled down, Thousands of files in all.
Thorne said "How are you going to - "
"Give me a minute here," Arby said, interrupting him. Then he began to type rapidly.
Okay, Arb," Thorne said. He was amused by the imperious way Arby behaved whenever he was working with a computer. He seemed to forget how young he was, his usual diffidence and timidity vanished. The electronic world was really his element. And he knew he was good at it.
Thorne said, "Any help you can give us will be - "
"Doc," Arby said. "Come on. Go and, uh, I don't know. Help Kelly or something."
And he turned away, and typed.
Raptor
The velociraptor was six feet tall and dark green. Poised to attack, it hissed loudly, its muscular neck thrust forward, jaws wide. Tim, one of the modelers, said, "What do you think, Dr. Malcolm?"
"No menace," Malcolm said, walking by. He was in the back win of the biology department, on his way to his office.
"No menace?" Tim said.
"They never stand like this, flatfooted on two feet. Give him a book" - he grabbed a notebook from a desk, and placed it in the forearms of the animal - "and he might be singing a Christmas carol."
"Gee," Tim said. "I didn't think it was that bad."
"Bad?" Malcolm said. "This is an insult to a great predator. We should feel his speed and menace and power. Widen the jaws. Get the neck down. Tense the muscles, tighten the skin. And get that leg up. Remember, raptors don't attack with their jaws - they use their toe-claws," Malcolm said. "I want to see the claw raised up, ready to slash down and tear the guts out of its prey."
"You really think so?" Tim said doubtfully. "It might scare little kids...."
"You mean it might scare you." Malcolm continued down the hallway. "And another thing: change that hissing sound. It sounds like somebody taking a pee. Give this animal a snarl. Give a great predator his due."
"Gee," Tim said, "I didn't know you had such personal feelings about it."
"It should be accurate," Malcolm said. "You know, there is such a thing as accurate and inaccurate. Irrespective of whatever your feelings are." He walked on, irritable, ignoring the momentary pain in his leg. The modeler annoyed him, although he had to admit Tim was just a representative of the current, fuzzy-minded thinking - what Malcolm called "sappy science."
Malcolm had long been impatient with the arrogance of his scientific colleagues. They maintained that arrogance, he knew, by resolutely ignoring the history of science as a way of thought. Scientists pretended that history didn't matter, because the errors of the past were now corrected by modern discoveries. But of course their forebears had believed exactly the same thing in the past, too. They had been wrong then. And modern scientists were wrong now. No episode of science history proved it better than the way dinosaurs had been portrayed over the decades.