Mario blinked behind his thick glasses. "The cipher? I’m currently teaching the quadratic formula. I think you have the wrong Mario. The postman lives on Via Roma."
Mario Rossi was a man of such aggressive ordinariness that he seemed almost invisible. In his small town outside of Rome, his name was the equivalent of "John Smith"—there were three other Mario Rossis within a ten-block radius. One was a butcher, one was a retired postman, and our Mario was a high school algebra teacher. mario rossi
Before Mario could explain that in 2014 he was mostly preoccupied with a persistent leak in his bathroom ceiling, he was whisked away to a private jet. For the next forty-eight hours, Mario Rossi—the man who got dizzy on step-ladders—found himself in a high-stakes world of international espionage. Mario blinked behind his thick glasses
"Alright class," Mario said, picking up a piece of chalk with a hand that no longer shook. "Today we’re going to talk about the power of variables. Because sometimes, 'X' isn't just a number—it’s the person you never expected to be." I think you have the wrong Mario
Everything changed on a Tuesday when a sleek, black government sedan pulled up to his school. Two men in charcoal suits intercepted him in the hallway.
The agents exchanged a look. "Classic Mario," the second one muttered. "Hiding in plain sight as a math teacher. Sir, the President’s security depends on the prime number sequence you encoded in 2014."
He realized quickly that the "Cipher" they were looking for was actually a complex mathematical theorem he’d published in an obscure journal years ago, which he had forgotten about entirely. It turned out his "boring" obsession with patterns was the only thing capable of breaking a new type of global encryption.