228 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
228 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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The Hotel California [312] 234-6237
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*--FORMATTED FOR UPPER & LOWER CASE IN 80 COLUMNS--*
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........................................
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: :
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: My Day With The Secret Service Men :
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: -- --- ---- --- ------ ------- --- :
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:......................................:
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Written and Experienced by: The Incognito
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Note: This File is not protected. To make a copy, insert System Master in
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first disk drive and after boot type (Make sure Caps Lock is down if you
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have a //e) "BRUN FID" (Don't type the quotes). When you see the FID Menu,
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select number one (Copy). Insert appropriate disks and defaults then begin
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the copy. That's it!
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Date: November, 1984 (Friday)
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Time: 3 o'clock PM (Central Standard Time)
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Place: Midwest United States (Minnesota)
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Temp: Around 60 degrees Outside (Partly Cloudy)
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[ Forward ]
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This file explains the dealings and happenings that went on when the
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Secret Service visited my household. Mostly to point out the stupidity
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of this chain of government and the incompetence of the people that were sent
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out for this investigation. Granted, some were intelligent but hardly none
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worth too much mentioning. I will refrain from using their real names in
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order to avoid a law suit of some odd kind on technicalities or some other
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new form of law. But I will refer to them as (most appropriately) Moe, Larry
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and Curly. Also (har har), I do have and reserve the right to use the First
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Amendment that clarifies my freedom of speech (So like, eat shit and get a
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clue!). But seriously, this file is solely for entertainment purposes.
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It is lawful (that means you can) to reproduce this file in any shape or form
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without consent from the author (that's me) as long as there is no substitute
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and/or change of its present text, which will not result in my fault.
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[ The Story ]
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It was an average friday, I came home from school to do some maintenance
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on the board. When I got home my sister came up to me and said "these bad
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lookin' dudes came to our door lookin' fer you!" in a kidding tone. She
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thought they had the wrong house. I was kind of suspicious, ignoring it I
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went upstairs. Then the doorbell rang. My sister answered the door, it was
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the same men asking for me as before. She still insisted to them that they
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had the wrong house. There is no one living here by that name. They said
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"we just saw him walk in the house..." Obviously the jerks were stationed
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outside waiting for something to happen. It turned out that they did have
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the wrong name but the right house (clueless idiots). My sister realized
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that they were talking about me and corrected them in the name. I came to
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the door to see what was going on. There were four men, three Secret Service
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Agents (Moe, Larry and Curly as mentioned before) and one local police cop
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(oink oink oink). Like, "spot the Secret Service men in this picture!", they
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were totally obvious! Sunglasses, trench coats and a brief cases, which I
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doubt anything was in there except their bag lunches. They all showed their
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two cent badges (real proud like, but almost embarrassed). Having no choice
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(well, I didn't want to complicate the situation) I let the losers in and we
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sat at a table. My mother was still at work. They started to fill me in
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on the background and they were investigating names that were thrown at them
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threw their sources (Gee, I wonder who that was? Must have been two big losers
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by the name of The Silencer and Chris R. Gee, what friends eh? Aren't you
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lucky you know them!). They got their biological questions like, age, date of
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birth, color, etc. Then they asked me if I knew anything about the present
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situation they were investigating (You know what I mean.. Plastic things with
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numbers on them. I still want to refrain from directly quoting what the jerks
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were looking for in order to avoid some idiotic charge against me). I said I
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knew nothing about it, only what I heard from other people and boards. My
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sister insisted that I don't say anything until my mother was present. They
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really didn't want that (those sly mothers...). But having no choice they
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waited for my mother to get home. Sitting with the Secret Service men was
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great fun! Listening to their boring conversations with each others. I asked
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them "I thought the 'Secret Service' only job was to protect the president."
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They said they also protect things dealing with the treasury in any shape or
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form (oh really?). Then I told them that I thought it was rather funny that
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they thought there was a "ring". Then Larry (a Secret Service agent) turned
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his head to Moe (an agent) and said "He finds this funny...". Like they were
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taking notes or something, that's all I needed for them to use verbal quotes
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against me. I had to sudden urge to start saying four letters words to their
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faces, but it was all non-verbal. I guess "its the thought that counts"!
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Finally my mother got home and entered the door. God knows I was bored
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with those un-imaginative characters. We were all seated at the table now and
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again all four showed their badges (this must have been about the 5th time they
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took out their useless badges to show that stupid piece of carbonized metal).
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Again with the questions (same stupid ones you see in the movies, like
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Inspector Gadget cartoons and such). Suddenly a real small scruffy looking
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dude comes in the front door (he was definitely on something except the ground.
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A very high tempered idiot who was obviously on a low-sugar diet of some kind)
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He sits down a throws a Search Warrant in front of my face. "Holy Shit!" I
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thought, I picked up the warrant as he talked. He said all that I was saying
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was a lie and they had considerable evidence against me. Here's the part you
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see in all those old movies, "the scare tactics". They use their high and
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mighty "positions" to scare any info out of you. I'm surprised they didn't use
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a light bulb also. I read over the warrant, I know what the law officials
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have to go through to get a warrant. Pages and pages of forms and requirements
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to fill. Its a tuff task, but no sympathy granted. I was amazed that they had
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the right name on the warrant (10 points). Looking over the warrant I knew
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that they had to bullshit the judge to get the warrant. There was things on
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there that I couldn't even pronounce let alone knew what it was. They must have
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thrown in crap randomly just to "make it look good" to the judge. Seriously,
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these stooges were the lowest of sub-life forms (and that's a compliment!).
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He went upstairs with my mother to talk in private. I sat down with Moe,
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Larry, Curly and the local (literally) cop. Moe said "I told you we ain't
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foolin' around. We mean business, so tell us what you know." Ignoring him
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I just read over the warrant. Then the local cop said "I know what you are
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doing... you are looking for ways to get out of this." Then Larry got his
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two cents worth in and said "Its better for you to tell us everything that you
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know instead of keeping it back. It will make things easier for you and us."
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This was only a summary of what I heard, who knows and who cares what else
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they said.
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After a minute or so the scruffy looking dude came downstairs and told us
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to go upstairs now. He asked if the computer was only upstairs, if there were
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some equipment downstairs or anywhere. I told him all of it was only upstairs.
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So we all proceeded up the stairs to my room. They walked in the room and made
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themselves quite comfortable. I turned off the computer and we started to go
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through the equipment. He opened up his brief case and handed Larry a carbon
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piece of paper. I looked inside his brief case. There must have been a stack
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of about twenty Search Warrants. God knows how he managed to get all of those,
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but I guess if you have the right connections and good lies anything in his
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department is possible. The others (Moe, Larry and Curly) told me that he was
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extremely smart and knew what was going on. It yet never seemed to me he had an
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I.Q. greater than sixty. He told Larry to copy down all that he told him to.
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First casualty was the monitor. I unplugged it and he said to Larry "One Apple
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Monitor three. Serial Number (Blah, Blah, Blah and so on)" After that went
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the disk drives. They were two half heights in one case, and I had two of
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those (thus four drives). It was amazing to see him gives names to things he
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didn't know. He called the half heights "two drives inside each other..."
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What in the hell is that?! Is that even physically possible? Next he opened
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the Apple to look inside. My 212 Apple-Cat upgrade was affixed on top of the
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power box (slot saver method). He asked if I could take off the upgrade so he
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could see the serial number that was on top of the power box. I said I could
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not without ruining the upgrade. He said he had to take down the serial number
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and that was were it was located, which he knew from past experiences (I
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seriously don't doubt it). I told the no-mind to take a look under the
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computer. He lifted the computer and there under it was a label with odd
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information and the serial number (Boy, you learn something new everyday!).
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I wonder how much this "extremely smart" agent gets paid per year? If this
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low-life was called "extremely smart", god knows what the "genius" of the
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service are like! And to think, they protect the president! He went through
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all the hardware in the same fashion. Next he went through my drawers. I kept
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my printouts and some odd books there. Now, I know the "normal" way of going
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through drawers... its usually top to bottom, right? Well, not for Mr. Smart.
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I don't know if there was any strategic plan to his method, but he acutally
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went from the bottom drawer to the top drawer. Backwards, ya know kind of like
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our beloved law officals now. Much to my amazement he opened the drawer by
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pulling it not pushing it. It was an impressive sight indeed. He went through
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the drawers pretty throughly, almost not missing a single thing. My bottom
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drawer contained some old magazines. He moved a couple of the magazines to make
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sure there was nothing hidding behind them. After being satisfied that they
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were truely magazines not manuals how to make pipe bombs, call home for free,
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or something I knew he hoped to be incriminating, he moved up to the next
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drawer. That drawer contained some printouts of my many text-files and some
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odd hard copies of odd instruction manuals. Not really looking or reading
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the printouts and odd papers, he took all of them. There was quite of bit in
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that drawer. Of course he had nothing to put the papers in so he asked for
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a couple paper bags to put MY stuff in. What does "How to Solve Zork I" or
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"Bag of Tricks Soft-Doc" have anything to do with the case?! You can imagine
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how long this took. Now he progressed to the next drawer up. In there was a
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couple of those small plastic boxes that can hold ten plus disks at once, which
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were empty, and some new boxes of disks, unopened. He acutally took those
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empty holders. Why he wanted empty holders baffled me. He just said to his
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partner, "Mark these down Larry..." Larry then looked up and said "Um, what
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are the serial numbers for those..." I said "They dont have serial numbers!
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They are only empty holders!" I guess stupidity roams through the whole
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service. The last and top drawer contained some cassette tapes and my
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personal tape walkman. I said I had a reciept for that walkman and I showed
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it to him. He took the reciept, said it looked real and didn't take my walkman
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or my tapes (whew!). Next stop was the closets. He opened the closet and at
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the bottom of the closet was a large cardboard box which I kept my original
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documentations of games and hardware. He took a look into the box. From it
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he took out my Wildcard Manual. He asked were was this "Wildcard" and what
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was it. I can imagine what he must of thought. A name like "WILDCARD" sounds
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like some special piece of hardware that could break access codes into banks
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or whatever. That it goes "wild" when hooked up. Right, I really don't think
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so. I told Einstein that it was used to deprotect certain programs. Obviously
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he didn't believe me and he took the manual, thinking it would tell him how to
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use this awesome hardware (so he thought). He didn't bother to look at the top
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shelves in the closet. Um, that was for the better on my part (heh!). So he
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closed the door and went to the next thing, my dresser drawer. Nothing but my
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clothes was in there, but, of course, he didn't believe me so he took a look
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himself. He looked behind, beside, beneath, before, below, and finally he was
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be-done and be-satisfied and I'm not be-kidding. He then took out his trusty
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pen flashlight, bent down and looked under my bed. It was clean. He now was
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running out of places to look. Then good old Larry had an awesome suggestion.
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He said to Mr. I.Q. less than sixty "You know, when I was a kid I used to hide
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things in between my matress." Wow, he had a childhood. With having nothing
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better to do he told me to lift up the matress. I did and underneath was a
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check written to me in cash for seven dollars, which for some odd reason he
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took. Why a seven dollar check that I had hidden? He told Larry to copy
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down the number of the check and so he did. Lastly he looked on top this small
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table next to the wall. There on top of it was my small pocket calculator.
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Again for no reason, except to irratate me, he took that and the manual that
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came with it. It seemed that he had finished his "expert search". He did a
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360 degree spin (probally to look over the room once more... weird.) and asked
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Larry for the carbon piece of paper. He gave me a copy of it (the black carbon
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copy that was harder then hell to read) and put the paper into his breif case
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and said he was done. I didn't argue about that at all.
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He finally left my room and we all went downstairs. When I got downstairs
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there was all my equipment laying on the floor.
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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Another file downloaded from: NIRVANAnet(tm)
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& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Jeff Hunter 510-935-5845
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Rat Head Ratsnatcher 510-524-3649
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Burn This Flag Zardoz 408-363-9766
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realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 415-567-7043
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Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 415-583-4102
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Specializing in conversations, obscure information, high explosives,
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"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
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