âHey!â he said, grinning. âI was just thinking about you. Did you sort out your little password problem?â
She glared at him. âI think you know the answer to that.â
âWhat!â he said innocently.
âSurely youâre aware that any gain in class standing that you might make by crashing my security protocols will be lost when Headmistress Nilssin finds out that youâve hacked the origin code.â
Nak squinted at her. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
âRight.â
Ajaâs communicator chimed. She pulled out the small silver device. âYes?â
âItâs Dal,â the voice on the other end said. âWeâve run into a really serious problem. Whatever this program is thatâs attacked your identityâ¦Well, thatâs only the tip of the iceberg.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âItâs starting to move deeper into the core software.â
âSo youâve isolated the program?â
âWellâ¦sort of. The program weâve located is just a shell. It sits over the top of more programs. But we can see whatâs underneath it. The shell program is hiding its real function.â
âWell, go Command Level One.â
âCome on, Aja. Weâve done that already.â
âI wrote a new security facility calledââ
âI already tried that. Weâve tried everything obvious.â
âThen why are you calling me?â Aja said.
There was a long pause. âBecause the program that crashed your passwordâ¦â
âYes?â
âWellâ¦you wrote it.â
Aja felt momentarily confused. âWhat! That doesnâtmake any sense. Why would I write a program that crashed my own identity?â
âLook,â Dal said, âI know youâve been messing with a lot of Lifelightâs deeper code for your project. If you made a little mistake or something, hey, we understand. But you need to tell us.â
Aja felt a stab of dread. This was starting to get serious. âI swear!â Aja said. âI didnât do anything. Whatâs the name of this program anyway?â
âItâs got some kind of goofy name. Hold onâ¦.â She heard some keys clicking. âItâs called âKing Hruthâs Maze.ââ
Her eyes widened. âThatâs not my program!â she shouted.
âNo need to get emotional,â Dal said. âJust admit what you did, and weâll figure out how to stop it.â
âI didnât do anything !â
There was a very long pause. âAll right.â Dalâs voice sounded distant and cold. âIf thatâs the way you want to play it. But Iâll be forced to notify the Lifelight directors about what youâve done here.â
âDal, how could you even think thatââ
âLast chance, Aja. Your little program is already attacking the core.â
âNo, Dal, Iââ
âAll right. But donât say we didnât give you a chance.â
Her communicator went dead. She started to call Dal back. But what would that do? Right now logic pointed straight at her. If she was going to prove she didnât have anything to do with this problem, sheâd have to get more evidence.
Nak was still leaning casually against the wall, a placid smile on his face. âEverything okay?â he said.
âNak, you framed me!â
Nak shook his head, as if she were speaking a language he didnât understand. âYou seem kind of nervous,â Nak said. âMaybe a quick jump would calm you down. I have an excellent game in mind that mightââ
âThis is not funny anymore!â Aja said. âYour clever little program is attacking the core!â
â My program? What program? All Iâm talking about is playing a game.â
Something was forming in her mind. An idea. A plan. She could feel the shape of the