video. Ms. Fractalli led us down a hallway toward an area called the Chamber of Fractions.
Just then, Benedict grabbed my arm and shouted, âLook!â
With his other hand, he pointed at a sign hanging from the middle of a thick rope that blocked an opening on the left side of the hallway. I could see a flight of stairs past the opening, heading down to the basement. The sign read:
RESTRICTED EXPERIMENTAL AREA
CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC
ABSOLUTELY NO VISITORS ALLOWED
âAwesome!â Benedict said. âThey wouldnât put up a sign if it was really a secret. They want people to go there.â
âThatâs ridiculous.â I grabbed Benedictâs shoulder. âIf they wanted people to go down there, theyâd say so on the sign.â
âThen everyone would go,â he said. âThey want people, but only the ones who are smart enough to figure that out. Like us. Letâs go.â
Before I could say anything, heâd slipped from my grip, ducked under the rope, and raced down the stairs. I found myself alone, listening to the fading squeak of his sneakers on the tile floor and imagining what Ms. Fractalli would do to both of us when Benedict got in trouble down there.
If I didnât chase after him, Iâd get blamed. But the last time Iâd chased him anywhere, I ended up getting punished. That had not been fun.
âI hope this time is different,â I muttered to myself.
I had no idea I was about to get my wish. This time would definitely be differentâmostly because it would be a whole lot worse.
CHAPTER
1 + 1
I checked over my shoulder to make sure Ms. Fractalli wasnât watching. Then I slipped under the rope and hurried down the steps. They led me to a long hallway with doors on both sides. I found Benedict in the third room on the left. He wasnât alone.
A small man wearing a lab coat was hunched over a workbench. His frizzy hair was just Âstarting to turn gray at the sides, but his mustache was still dark black. My jaw dropped as I stared across the workbench. It wasnât the man who surprised me. It was the robot. âAwesome!â I said. I love electronics.
âYeah, awesome,â Benedict said.
The robot had all kinds of flashing lights on it, like an old-fashioned pinball machine. It had a pair of video camera lenses for eyes and small microphones for ears. It had jointed arms that ended in three-pronged claws like those machines at the amusement park where you try to win a toy. The robot didnât have any legs or wheels. I guess it wasnât supposed to walk or roll anywhere. Or maybe it wasnât finished. The man had a whole table full of parts in front of him.
âI agree. Itâs definitely awesome,â he said. âOr it will be, once I work out a couple of glitches.â He smiled at us. I relaxed a bit when I realized he didnât seem to mind that we were there.
âWhat is it?â Benedict asked.
âA new interactive exhibitâCypher, the Number Cruncher. Weâre developing a whole section of new math experiences.â The man held out his hand. âIâm Dr. Thagoras. I just started working here last month.â
âCypher must know a zillion numbers,â I said.
Dr. Thagoras laughed. âActually, he only knows two numbers. Make that two digits. But thatâs all he needs.â
âNo way,â Benedict said. âEven Loganâs dog knows more than that.â
âCypherâs memory is nothing but switches.â Dr. Thagoras reached over to the wall and flicked the lights off and then back on. âOff and onâthatâs all he has. Or 1 and 0. If on means â1â and off means â0,â you have every number you need, as long as you have enough switches.â
âNo, you donât,â Benedict said. âYou donât have the number fifteen. Or ten thousand.â
Dr. Thagoras grabbed a piece of paper and a pen. âLetâs
MR. PINK-WHISTLE INTERFERES