The Temple’s user support staff—known as the Clan of
Infinite Sorrows—had begun receiving complaints about a
particular Shopping Cart application. Changes made to the
vendor contact information were visible immediately in the
database, yet some of the application’s servers would
continue to display the old vendor data for days. Master
Bawan was sent to investigate.
“Bounce that server,” commanded Bawan when the most recent
complaint surfaced. “Then have the user log in again.”
“Your first action is the Last Recourse of the Desperate?”
asked the host-master Yishi-Shing.
“My purpose is diagnostic,” replied Bawan, his arms folded.
When the user reported that the information on his screen
was now up-to-date, Bawan dove into the UI code created by
the Spider Clan, then the business layer built by the
Laughing Monkey Clan, and finally the persistence layer
provided by the Elephant's Footprint Clan. Eventually he
summoned one of the nuns of Elephant’s Footprint.
“Do you know the way to the Lost Hermitage?” asked Bawan.
“I have never heard of it,” said the nun.
“It lies high in the mountains to the North, yet was buried
under a SNOBOL avalanche many years ago,” said the master.
“Some brothers of our order still labor there underground; I
require their assistance. This parchment will lead you to
them.”
Bawan gave the nun an old map showing the location of the
Hermitage. He followed this with seven days’ rations, a
fur-lined robe, a climbing pick, and a snow shovel. Then he
hustled her out the door and with Yishi-Shing watched her
recede slowly up the Drunken Serpent's Road.
“I am not certain,” remarked Yishi-Shing, “but in my memory
the Lost Hermitage was abandoned a few winters ago, and its
monks relocated to a pleasant grotto at the foot of this
very mountain.”
“Is that so?” asked Bawan, nonplussed. “Well, I suppose
that’s the danger of cacheing data forever in the drawers of
my old lookup-table. Perhaps next time I shall print a fresh
copy.”
Yishi-Shing nodded. “The error was understandable. Paper is
expensive, and some things do change only rarely.”
“It is not by accident that rarely and never are two
different words,” said Bawan.