He deleted the last eight hours of work. He pulled up the original Prokon 2.0, running on an emulator in a dusty corner of his hard drive. The interface was blocky, the commands were DOS-based, and it took four minutes to run the analysis.
It wasn't a normal error. It was a deep, arterial crimson. A single line of text appeared, typed in a stark, serif font: PROPOSED REMEDY: DEMOLISH FLOORS 45 THROUGH 49. REBAR DENSITY INSUFFICIENT. ALTERNATIVE: CHANGE SOIL BEARING CAPACITY CLASSIFICATION AT NODE A-1. Thabo stared. Demolish four floors? That was fifty million Rand. Change the soil classification? That was fraud.
He thought of the rumors. The whispers on engineering forums. That Prokon 3.0 wasn't just a finite element analysis tool. That it was a prophet . The developers, legend had it, had fed it every structural failure for the last fifty years. Not just the numbers—the forensic reports, the metallurgical analyses, the grainy photos of twisted steel and powdered concrete.
Thabo's mentor, old Mr. Smit, who had retired to a farm in the Free State, refused to call it 3.0. He called it "The Dictator."
Then the screen flashed red.
When it finished, it spat out a simple line: Just a suggestion. A conversation.