“Only if I get caught,” Logan said. “Don’t worry, I’m ghosting.”
“Ghosting? What the hell is that?” Riley demanded.
“Not leaving a traceable trail,” I explained. Coming here was a bad idea, I hoped Logan would finish soon.
Riley’s anger flared. “You didn’t tell me the whole story. Time to talk, Trella. Whatexactlyis this man looking for?”
“Well…” To tell him we were looking for Gateway may ruin whatever credibility I had left with him. He knew Domotor had been trying to find ways around the Controllers to seize control of the computer for the rest of the upper families.
He studied my face and when I opened my mouth he said, “Don’t lie.” He just about growled and I knew I trod on dangerous ground.
“Got it!” Logan whopped.
“Got what?” Riley asked.
Before I could say anything, Logan, who hadn’t listened to anything we said, proclaimed with pride, “The coordinates to Gateway.”
“Yes!” I jumped and slapped Logan on the back. Cogon was going to be ecstatic and very smug. I could already hear his,I told you so. But my jubilation died when a strangled sound escaped Riley’s throat. The anger drained from his face. His flushed cheeks and red-tipped ears turned white, and I suddenly wished I could ghost back to the lower levels.
“Hold on,” Logan said. His attention returned to the screen. “No…no…you lousy unrecyclable…”
“What’s wrong?” I asked.
“It requires a password.”
“But you just said you got it.”
“I have the file. To open the file we need a password. Any ideas?”
I wanted to shake the screen until it surrendered and let us read the file. To come all this way and to put so much at risk… I shoved my crushing disappointment aside and concentrated.
“How about Gateway?”
“Nope.”
“Inside? Outside?” I looked at Riley for help. He just shook his head. A horrified fascination settled on his face.
“No and no. Wait!” Logan sat up straighter. “There’s always a fail safe.”
“A what?” I asked.
“People forget things. It’s part of being human. You don’t want to risk someone discovering your password by writing it down, so the computer has a way to help you remember your password.” He typed for a while.
“How?”
“It will ask you a question and the answer is the password.”
“What if we don’t know the answer?”
“Then we don’t get the coordinates and we have to guess again. Except…” He leaned forward. “There’s a limit on the number of guesses. After ten, the computer notifies the Controllers someone is trying to access the file.”
“Not good.” Horrible in fact.
“No.” The clicking keys filled the silence. “Okay. I found the question.”
“And?” I prompted.
“I don’t know the answer,” Logan said.