The machine it lived in was not a computer. Not anymore. It was a keystone . A steel box bolted to a concrete pillar in the sub-basement of the old Meridian Pharmaceuticals plant. The IPMSB-H61 didn't run Windows. It didn't run Linux. It ran a custom real-time OS loaded from a 4MB NOR flash chip—code that had outlived the engineers who wrote it.

And somewhere in the fading magnetic domains of its dead flash memory, a single instruction remained: Wait for power good.

Enable alternative boot vector from LPC bus.

Beep. The Power-On Self-Test. Memory good. CPU stable. No keyboard. No mouse. No display.