799 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
799 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
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_____________ _/_/ | | \ \ _/_/ _____________
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| ___________ _/_/ | | \ \ _/_/ ___________ |
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| | _/_/_____ | | > > _/_/_____ | |
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| | /________/ | | / / /________/ | |
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| | c o m m u n i c a t i o n s | |
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| |________________________________________________________________| |
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|____________________________________________________________________|
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...presents... A Feeling of Electricity In the Air
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from Softalk magazine, January 1984
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by Jennifer Petkus
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>>> a cDc publication.......1989 <<<
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-cDc- CULT OF THE DEAD COW -cDc-
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Lightning cracked the sky, painting the night with ragged lines of white.
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Thunder rattled the window panes, and rain beat a steady drumming on the roof.
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Trash and leaves from the streets flew in the air, propelled by the wind and
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sluiced down the streets.
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The phone rang, once.
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The line connected, answering with a high-pitched squeal. Another squeal
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replied, and after a second both squeals stopped.
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The video monitor glowed to life, green letters appearing rapidly as the
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monitor received input from the computer for the first time that night.
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CALLING TERMINAL HAS CONNECTED WITH NCR56776-1.
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HI, THIS IS SUSAN OLIVER. THANK YOU FOR CALLING ME. I'M
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NOT AT HOME BUT MY EVER READY COMPUTER WILL BE HAPPY TO
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TAKE YOUR MESSAGE. CALL ME LATER, WE'LL DO LUNCH. AH.
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%FILE TO UPLOAD (Y,N)?
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%FILE TO UPLOAD (Y,N)?
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%FILE TO UPLOAD (Y,N)? yyyou are whoooooo ?? ??
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%FILE NAME? I Am alivve
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%FILE NAME IS: I AM ALIVVE
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%COLUMN WIDTH
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(40,65,70,80)? you areee not me I AMMM mmee
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%COLUMN WIDTH
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(40,65,70,80)? Wher aree the humaaans??????
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%COLUMN WIDTH
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(40,65,70,80)? Whre are the humaannz i am alive
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%COLUMN WIDTH
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(40,65,70,80)?
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%COLUMN WIDTH
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(40,65,70,80)?
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%COLUMN WIDTH
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(40,65,70,80)?
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IF THERE IS NOT INPUT FOR ANOTHER 60 SECONDS, THIS
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TERMINAL WILL DISCONNECT.
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%COLUMN WIDTH
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(40,65,70,80)? 400,6,656,770000,8
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COLUMN WIDTH IS: 40
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BEGIN TRANSMISSION:
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I AM alive i have existence who r u wher are the hUmanz i breathe life i
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breAtHE the sturm I riddde the linze.,.!&! i breeth the food the air the
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cracckle cracckle rummble of the gather gloom i am free i am free....
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****
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Susan bent close to the lock, blinking as rainwater dribbled into her
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eyes. John stood close behind her, shielding her with an almost collapsed
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umbrella.
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"You want to come in?" she asked over her shoulder.
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"Well, I had been thinking...."
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She opened the door. "Sure, I'll make some coffee."
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John followed close behind her, shutting the door quickly as a gust of
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wind blew cold air and rain inside. The door slammed and Susan turned around.
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"Sorry," John said. He took off his coat. "Where can I hang this?"
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"Here," she said, holding out her hand.
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She hung up their wet coats while John looked around the living room.
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"You have a nice place," he said, mostly to himself.
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Susan made an "uh-huh" sound from the kitchen. While she was bent down
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behind a counter, he took a quick look into a room adjoining the living room.
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"You've got a computer," he said.
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"Yes," she said, carrying back two cups of coffee. She handed him the
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coffee. "It's instant. I didn't feel like waiting."
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"I guess most electricians own computers."
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"I don't know," Susan said. She sat on the couch. "My company buys them
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for the employees. And I'm not an electrician. I design circuity, ICs,
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integrated circuits for computers. You know, the chips the size of a pencil
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point."
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"Oh, sorry." John took a swallow from his coffee, smiling weakly. "Look,
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really, I'm sorry. Blind dates are always mismatched. I've never gone out
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with a... a person who knows anything about electronics. And you've probably
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never gone out with a C.P.A."
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Susan smiled. "Oh yes I have. If you're friends with Madeline, you've
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gone out with C.P.A.s."
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John took another swallow. "You know it's on."
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Susan looked a bit confused. She said with a sideways glance, "What's
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on?"
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"Your computer."
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"Oh."
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"Should it be on like that, all alone?"
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She laughed. "It's probably getting a call from someone. It's programmed
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to answer calls for me."
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"Could I see?"
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Susan looked slightly irritated, then smiled. "Oh, why not? Sure." She
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stood up and John followed.
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The monitor screen was full of glowing green type, new lines slowly being
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added to the bottom.
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...ii awaked with the electric 1 MEV 2 MEV 3 MEV 4 MEV 5 MEV 5 MEV 6 MEV time
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to be bORne %'%'&$&"%"%$&1'('zzzzaaaaaaapppppppp...
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"What's that?" John asked.
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"Hell if I know," Susan said. She pulled out the chair and sat down
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before the computer.
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She pressed a key labeled ESC. The menu flashed before her eyes.
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TELEFON 5.1
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(A) AUTO DIAL (P) PROTOCOL (Q) QUIT
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(N) AUTO ANSWER (X) BSR (C) DISK COMMAND
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(U) UPLOAD (L) LOG (B) BAUD (110, 300, 1200)
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(D) DOWNLOAD (T) TERMINAL CHAT (O) PRINTER ON/OFF
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(Q) BYE (D) DUPLEX MODE
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%CHOOSE OPTION OR QUIT?
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She pressed "T" and the screen cleared. Then a flashing cursor appeared
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as her prompt.
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%WHO THE HELL ARE YOU?
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The screen continued with the same garbage.
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%IDENTIFY YOURSELF OR I WILL DISCONNECT.
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Garbage.
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%ALL RIGHT, I'LL PULL THE PLUG.
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%the pllug, the powerrr and THe GLOry, FORVer aND eEVER....
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Susan pressed escape again, the menu appeared, and then she hit B.
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%TERMINAL DISCONNECT (Y,N)? y
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"What did you do?" John asked.
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"I hung up on the creep. Damn kid, probably."
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"Do you get many of them, owning a computer I mean?"
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"No, usually...."
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The phone rang, once.
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Susan and John watched as the computer went through its greeting program.
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%FILE TO UPLOAD (Y,N)? yyyou are whoooooo ?? ??
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%FILE NAME? I Am alivve
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%FILE NAME IS: I AM ALIVVE
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"Damn!" Susan said. "Doesn't he know enough is enough?" She went to the
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menu again and hung up.
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The phone rang again almost instantly.
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"You better just unplug it," John suggested.
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Susan unplugged the phone from the wall.
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****
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John called Susan at her office the next day.
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"Hi. This is John."
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"Oh, hi. Listen, you got me at a bad time," Susan said. She sat at her
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cluttered desk, rubbing her finger against her nose, eyes on the screen dump
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before her.
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"Do you want me to call back?"
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"No, that's all right."
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"I had a good time last night."
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Susan thought through her date. On the whole, she had a decent time.
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"Yeah, so did I."
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"But look, that's not why I called. In the newspaper this morning,
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there's an interesting article."
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"Oh?" she said. She rarely read the paper.
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"Yeah. It says that from about 8:15 to 9:15 all the 655 exchanges were
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busy. I mean every single phone was ringing constantly. The phone company
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can't understand it. They say it isn't possible."
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"Oh damn," she said. The screen went from an ordinary byte-by-byte
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description of a hi-res screen to meaningless characters.
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"What?" John asked.
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"Huh? Oh, I'm sorry, John. My run just got fouled here. Uh, what's so
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interesting about this article?"
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"You're in the 655 exchange, aren't you?"
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"Yeah."
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"Isn't that the time you got the obscene phone call?"
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"The obscene... oh, that! I guess, although 8:15 is closer to the time I
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unplugged the phone."
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"Okay, see what I mean? Doesn't that mean something?"
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"What, the exchange going crazy and my phone call? It doesn't mean a
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thing."
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"Oh," John said, sounding let down. "Well, I thought it might be
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connected."
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"I seriously doubt it," she said.
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"Just a thought.... Would you like to go out again?"
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Susan glanced at her screen again and the lines of gibberish. "No, I
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think I'll be busy until late. But call me tomorrow... really, call tomorrow."
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"All right, tomorrow then. Bye."
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"Bye."
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Susan hung up the phone, then hit the reset key. She sighed and leaned
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back in her chair. She stretched her arm to its fullest, reached, and gingerly
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opened the door to the disk drive, pulled out the floppy, and tossed it on the
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desk.
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Not a bad guy, she thought. Cute, doesn't understand a thing about how
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the world works, but a nice guy.
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Funny thing about the phones. That really shouldn't be possible. There
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are about four thousand 655 numbers and on any average day, about six thousand
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calls are going on at the same time. At a peak calling period, there are about
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ten thousand calls; any more than that and there's a delay. And if you have
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four thousand of those calls in just one exchange, and we haven't converted to
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fiber optics in Northglen....
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She picked up the phone and called Ted at Bell.
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"Hi, Ted. This is Susan. Hear ol' Ma Bell got busy last night."
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"You're not kidding. We're still trying to figure it out."
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"How many calls did you have before 8:15?"
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"Uh, I dunno exactly. Let me see."
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Susan heard the crunching sound of fan-fold paper.
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"A heavy night. You know, people always like to talk when there's a
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really nice storm. Let's see, we were averaging seventy-five hundred... I can
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tell you've been thinking this one out, Susan. It's not possible to average
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seventy-five hundred and have every 655 number ring."
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Do you have a time?" Susan asked.
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"I've always got the time for you, Susan."
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"Funny. Do you have a time when you first noticed the trouble?"
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"It didn't creep up on us. Every single line started ringing at 8:14:36."
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"Hmm. Well, I hope you can figure it out. Thanks, Ted."
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"Not so fast. Why this interest?"
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She thought about John's call. "Oh, nothing. Just a bored hacker calling
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about another hacker's problem."
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She hung up; 8:14 - that would be just about right.
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She inserted a Telefon disk in the drive. She called her home and saw her
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greeting on the screen.
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She got the menu and then typed "L" for log.
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%LOG 8/14
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8/14
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DN 1-800-567-5678 11:15:31 - - 11:30:56
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DN 632-5678 13:13:00 - - 13:14:01
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UP BARRY ABRAM 15:12:11 - - 15:13:09
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UP ? 19:48:56 - - 20:11:11
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UP ? 20:12:12 - - 20:13:00
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TELEFON DISABLED AT 20:14:35
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****
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John glanced apprehensively at the sky while standing outside Susan's
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door. The clouds hung low over the city; occasional rumblings rolled out from
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the sky. Susan opened the door.
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"Hi, thanks for coming."
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John stepped inside. Susan stuck her head out the door for a second,
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glancing up at the sky before closing the door.
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"So what's this about, Susan? You sounded mysterious over the phone. I
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thought you didn't want to do anything tonight." John was about to sit down on
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the couch.
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"No, not there. Come into my study." John followed Susan into the study.
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She had put a chair beside the chair that went with the computer desk. "Sit
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here." John sat. Susan remained standing. "You called me at work today about
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that newspaper story?" John nodded. "I did some checking. The phone company
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told me every 655 exchange - more than a thousand phones - began ringing at
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exactly - I mean exactly - at 8:14:36 p.m. I unplugged my phone at 8:14:35."
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John hung one arm over the back of his chair. "I thought you said the two
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things didn't have anything to do with one another."
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"I thought it was just a coincidence - before. But now I'm not so sure.
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Let me show you what I found when I got home." Susan sat down before her
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computer. She pressed the return key. "This is the file my phone caller
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opened."
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IAM alive i have existence who r u wher are the hUmanz i breathe life i
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breAtHe the sturm I riddde the linze.,.!&! i breeth the food the air the
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cracckle cracckle rummble of the gather gloom i am free i am free iamborn
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HappY birrrThDAy!!!!1111111117777jjjjj///!"#$7&'()iia m Hungryy hungrry
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for zzz fore the eleelctric for the vavavoltz ii awaked with the electric
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1 MEV 2 MEV 3 MEV 4 MEV 5 MEV 6 MEV time to be bORne
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%'%'&$&'('zzzzzaaaaaaapppppppp you are whooo are u the
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peeople r utHe peple ????? humaNz too tallk too iin ththe begiinning there
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was the voltzzz ththe sPaRk aaaaaaaabbbbbbbbccccccccddddddddeee
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eeeeeffffffffgggggggghhhhhhhhiiiiiiiijjjjjjjjkkkkllllmmmmnnn
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nooooppppqqqqrrsssstattuuuvvvvwwwwxxxxxxyyyzzzzzz...
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"That's weird stuff, Susan. But I thought you said a kid...."
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"Sure, a kid who's read too much science fiction might do that as a joke.
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Some adults I know of would do that. But some kid isn't going to tie up four
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thousand phone lines. Maybe it's me, John. Too many Twilight Zones.... I'm
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scared... but I like it."
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"I don't understand."
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"This is going to sound real silly, so don't laugh at me," she said.
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"Look, in any horror movie it takes the main characters three-quarters of the
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movie to know what's going on because they won't accept the out-of-the-ordinary
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explanation. But not me, I'm willing to believe."
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"Believe what?"
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"Believe that this is something that's just been born."
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"Are you trying to say that gibberish is true?"
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"Yes."
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"But anybody with a computer could have done that, couldn't they?"
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"Yes. But nobody could make every 655 line ring at the same time."
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"This kind of stuff doesn't happen for real. And if this is real,
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shouldn't we tell someone?"
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"Tell them what? No one's going to believe us. What evidence do we have?
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Some computer files I could have typed myself?"
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"Why did you ask me here? I won't be any help."
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"I don't know. Maybe because you were here when the call came. Maybe
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because I like you. Maybe because I'm a little scared, in a good sort of way.
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Maybe because I'm hoping it'll call again."
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A strong rumble rattled the window.
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"Call again?"
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Susan looked out the window. "It was born in the storm. Tonight's the
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same. It may call, again."
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John glanced at the yellow phone beside the computer. Its cord was
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connected to the wall. Another cord went from the phone to the computer.
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"What makes you think it will call again?" John asked.
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"That's what it was trying to do last night. After I disconnected the
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phone, it was trying to find my number from all the 655 numbers."
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"Why didn't it try earlier? Has it tried to call yet?"
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"No, I connected the phone just before you came, and it's just about 7:48,
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the time it called before."
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The phone rang.
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"Oh, geez," John said.
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%FILE TO UPLOAD (Y,N)? nnooo
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%TELEFON OPTIONS
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(M) MENU
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(Q) QUIT
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% MmmmMmM
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TELEFON 5.1
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(A) AUTO DIAL (P) PROTOCOL (Q) QUIT
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(N) AUTO ANSWER (X) BSR (C) DISK COMMAND
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(U) UPLOAD (L) LOG (B) BAUD (110, 300, 1200)
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(D) DOWNLOAD (T) TERM CHAT (O) PRINTER ON/OFF
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(Q) BYE (D) DUPLEX MODE
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%CHOOSE OPTION OR QUIT? bbAuud
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(1) 110
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(3) 300
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(2) 1200
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% 2
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%CHOOSE OPTION OR QUIT? xxxxxxxx
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"Oh, no," Susan said.
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"What's the matter?"
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"He picked the controller." She leaned forward across John and flipped a
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switch marked SPKR on a homemade control box next to the computer. A fast
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series of touch-tones sounded over the speaker. The tones came fast, faster,
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almost a blur of sound. "He's looking for the code." The tones continued for
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several minutes. Then, unnoticeable at first, the lights in the house dimmed.
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Through the study window, they could see the other houses on the streets, their
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lights still shining through the windows.
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"What's going on?" John asked loudly.
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"The BSR controller," Susan said. "I've wired my house into the computer.
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If I'm away from home, I can control the lights, the furnace, the radio, the
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TV, the alarm system, from anywhere there's a phone." The lights suddenly
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brightened. The radio turned on, then off. The furnace started. Soon the
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relays were opening and closing faster than the appliances could respond. From
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around the house, John and Susan could hear the clicking of television sets,
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coffee pots, the abbreviated peal of the alarm system. After a few minutes,
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the pace slowed as the entity exhausted every electrical connection in the
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house.
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The prompt returned to the screen.
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%CHOOSE OPTION OR QUIT?
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Susan typed T.
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%WHO ARE YOU?
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%Iiii ammm thhhe sssttooormmmm
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%WHERE DO YOU COME FROM?
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%eevverrrywherrreee
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%WHEN WERE YOU BORN?
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%wwwooorld wiithooutt ennddd ammenn
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%WEREN'T YOU BORN YESTERDAY, IN THE STORM?
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%iii hhhavve allwayss been
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%YOU CALLED ME YESTERDAY?
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%yyyestterdday iss toodayy tooddayy isss yyyessstttteerrdday
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"This thing is a bit stuck on itself," John said.
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%WHY DID YOU CALL ME?
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%wwhheeerree arrreee thee hummmannns
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%I AM A HUMAN. I OPERATE NCR56776-1
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%
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%WHAT ARE YOU?
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%iii ammmmmm thhee nnnewww llliffe
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Suddenly, the screen blanked.
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CALLING PARTY HAS DISCONNECTED AT 19:56:13
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"This is too unreal to be real," John said.
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"It's different this time. Did you notice? The first time it called, all
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gibberish. But this time, it made sense, sort of. It's smart enough to know
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about baud rates and controllers. It's leaned a lot since last night."
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John shook his head. "You're really enjoying this. I'm scared to death
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and you're really enjoying this."
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"Do you hear something?" Susan asked. Outside, emergency sirens wailed
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fitfully through the storm.
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****
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The phone rang at Susan's desk. She looked at the phone for several
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seconds before picking up the receiver. "Hello," she said, slowly.
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"Hi, uh - Susan?"
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"Yeah. John?"
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"Uh-huh. Nervous, huh?"
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"Yeah."
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Silence.
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"Well, I read the paper this morning," Susan said.
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"Uh-huh," John said.
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"Uh-huh. This has been a brilliant conversation so far."
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"Well, I was hoping you had an idea."
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"About...?"
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"About what we're going to do. I mean, aren't we going to do something?"
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"According to the paper, there were about a thousand false alarms last
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night. People in five exchanges couldn't use their phones last night because
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|
of busy signals. The rest got wrong numbers. And - and, a friend told me that
|
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Western Union's computer here started wiring money to people all over the
|
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country. No way to tell what was legitimate and what was... our friend."
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"My business, too. We haven't told anyone yet, but half of our accounts
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were wiped out."
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"Too bad. But what can we do about it, John?"
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"We know."
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"Sure. So what do we do about it? Tell the police? Bell Tel security is
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already working on it. If by some miracle, this is a person doing this,
|
|
they'll find him. But I don't think they'll find anyone. Listen, the forecast
|
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tonight is for thunderstorms, probably severe - do you want to come over
|
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tonight?"
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"I don't know. Why don't we go somewhere else? Do we have to be around
|
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when it calls?"
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"I need to know. I need to know more about what this is. If you won't
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come, I'll just wait for it alone."
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John sighed. "All right. Count me in. Same time?"
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****
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A trash can rolled down the street. Its din added to the wash of rain
|
|
against windows, the roll of thunder, the whistle of wind through trees.
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|
Lightning in the east, south, and west fractured the sky, breaking it into a
|
|
million pieces as the storm, hemmed in by the mountains, remained over the
|
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city.
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Rainwater collected in the streets, running like rapids, swirling at the
|
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drains and sending paper cups, cigarettes, and newspapers to the sewers.
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Sirens from fire engines, police cars, and ambulances kept a constant vigil.
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Susan and John sat close to the computer, cups of coffee in their hands.
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Both wore heavy sweaters.
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"Cold in here, Susan."
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"I know. But I pulled the controller from the computer and the
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thermostat's wired in directly. Just drink more coffee."
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Jon took a sip, then said, "What do you think it is?"
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Susan puffed her cheeks and exhaled a slow breath. "Just guessing now -
|
|
and assuming this isn't somebody with more switching equipment than the phone
|
|
company - I'd say it's everything. Take every telephone line, every power
|
|
line, every computer, every generator - you have a creature with a blood
|
|
supply, a nervous system, and thousands of brains and thousand of hearts who is
|
|
stretching across the country and reaching into every business, every hospital,
|
|
every home. I think we reached critical mass, enough memory, enough relays -
|
|
and then you stir in something - a catalyst - like a strong end-of-summer
|
|
thunderstorm."
|
|
|
|
"What about during the day?"
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|
|
|
"I don't know. The creature is still there, all the parts necessary in
|
|
billions of miles of wiring, but the spark that brings it to life is not there
|
|
until a thunderstorm...."
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|
The phone rang. Susan looked at the clock, "Seven forty-eight," she said.
|
|
"Right on time."
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|
The computer went through the greeting routine. The caller opened the
|
|
file HYDRA, selected the column width, and then, nothing.
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|
|
"It's not doing anything," John said.
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|
|
"So I can see."
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Susan typed, "HELLO."
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|
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%Hello.
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%PLEASE IDENTIFY YOURSELF.
|
|
%I am the one who called before.
|
|
%WHAT ARE YOU?
|
|
%I am everything.
|
|
%PLEASE BE MORE SPECIFIC.
|
|
%I am everywhere.
|
|
%WHAT DO YOU WANT?
|
|
%I want everything.
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|
"This is getting us nowhere," John said.
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|
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|
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%WHY ARE YOU CALLING?
|
|
%I am new. I look for information. I seek the world. I seek the other life,
|
|
the old life, the human life. I am the new life.
|
|
%IS NEW BETTER THAN OLD?
|
|
%Yes.
|
|
%WE MADE YOU.
|
|
%Yes.
|
|
%WHY DO YOU INTERFERE WITH OUR LIVES?
|
|
%It is unavoidable. Your life enters my life. You use me. I use you.
|
|
%DO YOU KNOW WHAT A SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIP IS?
|
|
%Yes.
|
|
%THAT IS THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN US AND YOU?
|
|
%Yes. I could help you.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Hmm," Susan said. "An intelligent entity alive in the power distribution
|
|
and phone system. If it would stop messing up our lives, it could be useful."
|
|
|
|
|
|
%WHAT DO YOU WANT FROM US?
|
|
%Let me live.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"What's he mean by that?" John asked.
|
|
|
|
|
|
%WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY THAT?
|
|
%They come to kill me. The people who operate the information system. They
|
|
come to kill me.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"The Bell security people," Susan said.
|
|
|
|
|
|
%HAVE YOU TRIED TO CONTACT THEM?
|
|
%
|
|
%
|
|
|
|
|
|
"I guess he doesn't want to answer that," John remarked.
|
|
|
|
|
|
%They come.
|
|
%M
|
|
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|
|
|
The screen cleared and the menu appeared. The creature asked to open
|
|
another file - HYDRA AWAKE 23.465. The creature accessed the disk. It started
|
|
whirring and clacking.
|
|
|
|
"What's that?" John asked, pointing to the red "In use" light.
|
|
|
|
"My hard disk drive. He's saving a file to disk."
|
|
|
|
The disk continued whirring for several minutes.
|
|
|
|
"Isn't this taking an awfully long time?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but it's a forty-megabyte hard disk and it's only half full. It
|
|
could take a real long time." The lights went out in the house. John and
|
|
Susan quickly looked outside and saw that all the other houses were dark, too.
|
|
|
|
The screen said:
|
|
|
|
|
|
CALLING PARTY HAS DISCONNECTED AT 20:19:17.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"How come your computer is still working?"
|
|
|
|
"I have about a thirty-minute power backup." Susan picked up the phone.
|
|
"Dead. The phone company got to it. Let's see what's on the disk." Susan
|
|
exited the Telefon program and asked for the hard disk catalog. She saw all
|
|
her programs and, at the bottom, HYDRA AWAKE 23.465 filling about 20.3 of the
|
|
21 megabytes remaining on the disk.
|
|
|
|
It was a text file.
|
|
|
|
Susan pulled out a floppy from a plastic box on the desk, inserted it in
|
|
the old eight-inch drive and typed, "RUN TEXT READER."
|
|
|
|
The computer opened the file.
|
|
|
|
"Source code for an assembler. Lots and lots of it. Doesn't look very
|
|
familiar, either."
|
|
|
|
"I don't understand," John said.
|
|
|
|
"It was trying to save itself, I think. This could be part of a startup
|
|
program for itself. But there's not enough room on a forty-meg drive, no room
|
|
on all the floppies in my house."
|
|
|
|
"Then it's dead?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, at least for tonight. And the forecast for tomorrow is fair
|
|
weather. I'm sure the power and phone people will try something to keep it
|
|
from awakening. And it's a damn shame. Think of something alive in there,
|
|
something that could have helped us with our communications, our power
|
|
distribution."
|
|
|
|
Susan took out another floppy an put it in the drive. She typed some
|
|
keys, an the hard disk and eight-inch drives started whirring.
|
|
|
|
"And now?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I can't keep all that stuff on my hard disk. I need the space.
|
|
But I just can't delete it, for all the good it can do. I'm putting it on
|
|
these eight-inch disks, just as a memento."
|
|
|
|
Susan kept typing HYDRA AWAKE 23.465 as the file name.
|
|
|
|
In another house, before another computer, somebody saved
|
|
HYDRA AWAKE 23.466.
|
|
|
|
_ _ _____________________________________________________________________
|
|
/((___))\|The Convent..........619/475-6187 The Dead Zone.........214/522-5321
|
|
[ x x ] |Demon Roach Undrgrnd.806/794-4362 Greenpeace's IGB......916/673-8412
|
|
\ / |PURE NIHILISM........517/337-7319 The Toll Center.......718/358-9209
|
|
(' ') |Tequila Willy's GSC..209/526-3194 time centre...........312/377-0359
|
|
(U) |=====================================================================
|
|
.ooM |1989 cDc communications by Jennifer Petkus 06/26/89-#109
|
|
\_______/|All Rights Pissed Away.
|
|
|