168 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
168 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
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8-25-86 Go Bare
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Light streaks through the blinds. Shadows are seen dancing on the far walls of
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his room. Images flicker as the breeze gently moves the Levelors about, the
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window ajar.
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With a crackly and abrupt tone, an alarm pierces the stillness of the night.
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With the sounds of "True Colors", motions emerge from the stillness that had
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encompassed the bed. With a puff of energy, a set of Garfield sheets and a wool
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blanket jump to life, flying from their resting position on his body to the
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floor. In a few seconds the clump comes to a rest, beside a clump of dirty
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laundry and adjacent to a stagering stack of records, filled with the likes of
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The Wings, The Rolling Stones, and the Who.
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And from beneath the edge of the sheets emerges a foot, followed by a tired
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leg, and eventually another leg. With the roar of thunder, a giant slithers
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forth from his resting position, propping himself up on an elbow. Click and a
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burst of artificial light washes across the room. The once faint images now
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become sharp. The likes of Madonna and Vanity pecker the wall, amidst the
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portraits of George the Ape, Tarzan, and Leatherface.
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With a thud those feet slap onto the floor, stradling a well used weight bar. A
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powerful yawn erupts, and with it he stands, towering over the clothes and
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articles that scatter his residence. With precision movements, he slips into
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clothes, which he had layed out the previous evening, perched atop an old cedar
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chest.
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Dressed in a tattered and torn pair of purple Bermuda shorts, a VistaVision/ILM
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tee shirt, and black Converse All-Star high tops (his parents call them
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obnoxious), he staggers across the room, in search of a door. Mission complete.
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He steps into the hallway. makes a hair-pin right turn, and finds himself in
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the bathroom.
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Click. With an abundance of energy, he fights off tartar for just a few
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minuets. How could tartar existed for so long and people haven't known about
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it? Is it going to kill me?, he ponders. And on pop the rubberbands that make
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his braces hurt so much.
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With all the precision of a member of a color guard, he passes down the hallway
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to the stairs, and slowly descends. At the bottom, he rounds a corner, and is
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met by a large cabinet, which he promptly opens, exposing a mass of machines.
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The low rumble of an IBM fan can be heard, and the rumble of a hard drive is
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sporatic.
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Sitting atop the cabinet, a Hayes busily flickers its lights in a hypnotic
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manner, dialing and redialing. The ansi monitor is quiet. With the flick of a
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switch, it bursts to life, showing the images of an illegal program. "Jackpot",
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he mumbles, in reference to the screen, which tells him that the program is
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calling the local MCI number, trying various codes, and writing down the ones
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that work, a total of 17 for about 5 hours of work.
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Grabbing his favorite swivel chair, he positions himself in front of the
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machine, his battle versus the monsters of the phone lines almost done. It is
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almost 3 in the afternoon, and his rewards have cost him dearly. A lack of
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sleep has plagued his schoolwork, but, for some unknown and unique reason, he
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cares not. A quick scan of the house tells him that he is alone. His parents
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are not to be found. And still the lights of the modem flicker.
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He taps the "S" key, and a quick beep emerges from the depths of the machine.
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Would you like to see the codes? the program asks. With a grin he thanks the
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machine, says no, but tells it to print out the numbers. What a helpful
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computer, he thinks.
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After a peek through some recent printouts, he circles a phone number. He takes
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out the disk in his drive, ponders what it could possibly be, tosses it aside,
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and calls up his terminal program. He takes a second to tell this program about
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his marvelous success with MCI, and, after he is finished, he enters the phone
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number that he had circled. He pauses for a second, sitting there statue like,
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thinking.
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Like a cat pounching on a mouse, he begins to peck at the keyboard, with fire
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in his eyes and fear in his heart. He guides the program through the process of
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selecting a numner, telling it to dial the newset MCI code, and the newest
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number. Patiently he waits. The modem is quiet. All is calm. CONNECT, the
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machine says.
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His face turns red. Welcome to the First Bank of Miami. Can I help you? Uh oh.
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Flashback. Is it the same? Oh no. It is. Can this be real? I guess it has to
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be. Ok. Lets see if there has been any evolution, he thinks to himself.
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Enter bank account number please:, it says. He pauses. And then he types those
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infamous numbers. 88693. There. It is done. But will it work? His heart races
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at an incredible speed. Why isn't it saying INVALID NUMBER, TRY AGAIN? he
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murmers.
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He's in. Minor joy can be seen on his face. Some things never change. Password
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please, it says. And with that, he commits a felony. GEORGE, he tells it. And
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the room is filled with silence as his screen blanks and there is a pause.
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The screen fills with blue letters. Across the top of the color screen it says
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First bank of Miami. The rest of the screen fills with a menu. A)uthorize
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loans, C)alculate interest, D)isplay account total, and so on. There are the
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normal options. He is sitting in the chair of a bank employee. He is a bank
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employee. Or, at least thats what the computer at the other end thinks.
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Again he pauses. It's still not too late to turn off the machine, he thinks to
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himself. Bullshit, he says out loud. His mind is set. There is no turning back.
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He hits the T. Transfers. Ah, sweet memories, he says to himself. A little
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older, a little wiser, and a lot smarter, he says to the empty room.
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With that, a new menu appears on the screen. The options are about ten, from
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such things as account profile to transfer. A quick check at the profile, and
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he discovers that there are still old ladies nursing their nest eggs, like they
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were 2 years earlier, the last time he was through this way.
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But that does not last.
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The screen goes blank. There is a pause. A cursor appears in the top left
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corner. It drops down a few lines. Oh shit, he gasps. What the fuck is going
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on? Questions rip through his mind at an eternal pace. What is this? What's
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going on?
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Who is this? says the cursor.
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He dies. Right then and there he dies. It's all over. He has died and gone to
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hell for his sins.
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Gareth Sullivan, he replies. Will they buy it? Will Gareth find out? Fuck
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Gareth, will they buy it?
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What are you doing here? it asks.
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An idea pops into his mind. No light bulb appears above his head. Instead, a
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flood light does. He has a plan.
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Is this Freddie? This is some board you got here, Freddie, he says with a
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snicker. You had me going there for a second, Fred 'ol pal. I thought this
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actually WAS a bank for a second, he snaps back. Deep in his mind he knows this
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is his only chance.
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You have made a terrible mistake. This IS a bank. And what you are doing is
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called Wire Fraud, and possibly even Grand Theft, dances the little cursor. I
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suggest you hang up right now, and forget what you know, says the machine.
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Freddie, if this is some kind of joke, I'm gonna be upset, he enters as fast as
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he can. But if it is real, well, I'm gonna get the fuck out of here. Bye.
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And he hangs up. Beads of sweet drip down his forehead. he breathes fast. His
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heart pounds. He waits.
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A minuet passes. He sits back in his chair and stares at the phone. He is
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relieved. It does not ring. He is relieved. He sits there and wonders what he
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would do if the phone DID ring, and it WAS them. I would die, say says, as a
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turns back to the computer, looks at the program, and smiles. Ah. The beauty of
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creativity, he says to himself. And all that BS.
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Call the author. Tell him what you thought of it.
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And remember. This is not for real. Close, but not real.
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Or is it?
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Captain "Slider" Goodnight
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Care of:
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Marin 80 TBBS
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(415) 479-7218
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300/1200
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24 hrs a day
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California's Best Bulletin Board. Or so says the Captain
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Have you read The Story of Mojo?
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