I asked them what they hoped to find, their best hope? The American said what he wanted was a chamber of filthy hieroglyphs. The German said he also hoped to find a chamber, but one containing that dream of every Egyptologist: an unrobbed coffin. The students said the same. The Englishman, regaining some of his puff, said that what
“Likely all we’ll grub out of that sanctified hill of beans will be a couple of carved geegaws worth about three and six on the geegaw market. But at least that’ll be an
“So why risk it?” I had to ask. “A device worth a million pounds sterling? What justifies such an investment?”
“Careful.” The German laid his kindly smile on me like the tip of a whip. “This is not the kind of question to ask in the field.”
“True enough,” the American agreed. “That’s the kind of question that’ll be asked a-plenty back at the home office. For what it’s costing to send me over here Stanford could
“Exactly! What’s the home office’s best hope? Why do—” I didn’t finish. The German’s linen jacket had slid from his lap, disclosing the explanation for the table’s mysterious vibes: he was holding not only the American’s beefy paw in one of his long-nailed hands, he was also holding the hand of the Egyptian student seated next to him in the other. All eyes averted diplomatically from the little hand show, to drinks, peanuts, etc. The Englishman chose to turn his attention to me and my question.
“You mean what’s it worth, don’t you, duck? What’s in the pot? Right-o, then; let’s put our pyramid stakes on the table.” He swept a space clear of shells.
“First, let me list some of the Known Negotiable Assets: It’s a multidimensional bureau of standards, omnilingual and universal, constructed to both incorporate and communicate such absolutes as the bloody
“Digging deeper in our stone safe we find deposited such blue-chip securities as the rudiments of plane geometry, solid geometry, the beginnings of trigonometry, and—probably more valuable than all these mundane directions and distances and weights put together—the three mightiest mathematical tricks of them all: first being of course pi, that constant though apparently inconclusive key to the circle. Second, phi, the Golden Rectangle transmission box of our aesthetics enabling us to shift harmoniously and endlessly without stripping gears so long as 2 is to 3 as 3 is to 5 as 5 is to 8 as 8 is to 13. Get it? And, third, the Pythagorean theorem, which is really just an astute amalgam of the first two shortcuts and about as attributable to Pythagoras as soul is to Eric Clapton.”
“Bravo,” the German applauded, but the Englishman’s blood was up and he was not to be distracted.
“In Accounts Probable, the dividends look equally inviting. Based on the admission that so far we have been able to comprehend and appreciate the pyramid’s info in terms of and thus only up to
“It’s as viable as research on the fusion bomb,” the American encouraged.
“But let us speak frankly, mates. The aforementioned is all just collateral, just bloody pignoration compiled to get us bonded by the bureaucrats. The