![]() His search makes him a major suspect in Lilly's disappearance, and soon he no longer needs to know if there is an off chance he can save her.he needs to know how to save himself.Īt first I wasn't all that sure why Henry was trying to solve this mystery, either. No one can understand why he needs to discover her fate. Who is Lilly, and what has happened to her? ![]() Soon his obsessive ways will turn him to another, much deadlier puzzle. From the way the men speak, from the phone numbers he sees on his caller ID, he realizes that Lilly is probably a prostitute. His first night home, he checks his phone messages and discovers that eight of nine calls all inquire after a woman named Lilly. He's filled it with new furniture got a new telephone number. His long hours working on molecules to create the nano computers created a huge rift in their relationship, and so he's taken his clothes and moved into a new apartment. His obsession for chasing the dime, which is slang for creating the tiniest computer possible, has cost him the woman he loves. ![]() Henry Pierce knows how obsession can extract a toll. If it were a novel he would call it Chasing the Dime." He knew it would be a very common, very usual story of how a man's obsession led him to lose the thing that was most important to him. Someday he planned to print out the whole scroll of messages and read it like a novel. ![]() "Pierce closed the message and then the file. (Reviewed by Cindy Lynn Speer SEP 9, 2002) ( Jump down to read a review of Blood Work) ![]()
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