by Keith Graham
Mackey Dooley sent me to this web page, all deep purples and manga-eyed girls that played some low resolution techno music with a subsonic thump to it. RepFix, it said in a grunge font so whacked out you had to squint in order to read it. The contact information resolved to an old fashioned 32 bit IP address, the kind they used to use back when people still used ugly homemade web pages like this.
I ran back the IP address to a physical location. Mackey was
right - it was local. I knew the area and recognized the street. I tapped the
link and a second later was walking down a sidewalk in a nasty block far from
the subway, looking for number 17B. I had to walk sideways down the entryway to
get by a stack of old style hard drives plugged into a web of yellow cable. I
was surprised to hear them humming. A thousand little red LEDs were blinking in
complex patterns in the shadows under the tarps.
The door was painted red with the name Eric Selvaggio written
with a sharpie. A water stained banner read "RepFix - Open". The door
was sticky and made a noise when I opened it. I could almost smell the mildew.
"Weinstein?" a voice called from the darkness.
I was going to ask him how he knew it was me, but there had
to be 50 ways he could have googled me as I walked up the path to his door.
"Selvaggio?" I countered. The door closed behind
me. The only illumination was from a small flat screen on the far wall. I could
see my own face through cobwebs of hanging cable.
"It will cost you $20,000 cash and take at week at
most." Selvaggio said. I still couldn't see him. "Lucky that Monica
bitch got tired of you or it might have cost more and taken longer."
I could see an image of me on the flat screen behind a bunch
of program windows. One had a Linux command prompt. The image shifted and I saw
a dirty finger press Esc on a keyboard and then the image shifted back to me.
There was a glint of reflected light and I saw a dark shape in the corner.
"What do I get for the 20K?" I asked trying to see
in the murk.
A red spot appeared and glowed brighter. It was a cigarette.
The guy was wearing some kind of large headset over the top half of his face. I
couldn’t make him out in the gloom, and I had to try hard not to watch my
reactions in the flat screen.
"Your bad news gets erased from the search engines. All
pages with unpleasant references to you and your alleged activities are erased.
Monica’s personal pages get trashed and her password scrambled. Anyone who
linked to any of her pages gets the same treatment."
"What if the nets heal?" I had heard this theory
that broken links eventually heal.
"Forget it. A broken link is a broken link. It can't
heal unless the data is reposted."
"But, what if she pulls this crap again?"
"That's up to you. Don't mess with her and she has no
reason to continue with this. Don't screw with her and she'll forget you. Don't
think about her and she'll go away. It's all up to you. Don't give her a reason
to scratch the itch. Let it heal by itself."
"But she's a vindictive bitch."
"And you are an asshole. You will have to change your
behavior or else keep me on a retainer."
There was a glow as Selvaggio sucked on his cigarette. The
image on the flat screen altered and I could see the large image of a dirty
hand setting the cigarette into a filthy ashtray next to the keyboard. The
screen zoomed in as the hand moved to the mouse. The magnified head of an
orange cat blocked the view at that point. A paw tentatively touched the end of
the cigarette and it fell out of the ashtray. The screen abruptly shifted back to
my face as I heard the cat hiss and a thump as Selvaggio tossed it to the
floor.
"Speaking of which, how will you be paying? Cash money
I hope. That was what your agent agreed to."
I opened my hand and showed him my palm. Tattooed in red
script was my public key.
"I see it. There will be a surcharge of 10%. I have to
hide the transaction and it costs a little. I did say cash."
"Cash? I never deal in cash. It's too much trouble.
What would you do with it, anyway?"
"I would put it under my pillow and sleep well."
There was a rustling and I could see the man getting up. He was large and very
overweight. He danced through the piles of obsolete debris without touching any
of it. "Here's an anonymous link that you can use to contact me by
voice." He flashed a tinyurl, and my pod recorded it.
"It's a deal then." He said and stuck out his
hand. It was covered by small crawling things in pixel primary colors. They
looked like small spider mites in magenta, cyan, yellow and black. I recognized
them as IP sprites, small programs that could be programmed to deflect pings
and other intrusive access. I saw a close up of my face on the flat screen. I
could almost feel the bugs crawling up my arm as we made virtual contact.
"Well begun is half the job done." He said. I
tried to brush a bug off my arm.
"You like my little cellular automata?" Selvaggio
asked. "They're my own special recipe: very smart, very cool."
Selvaggio laughed, the cat hissed, and the room went black.
I was back in my office and the familiar Freedom Tree logo
flashed as my pod booted. My glasses cleared to a pale blue and then I could
see the room. I took the pod out from my pocket. The LEDs were flashing in
spasmodic codes. A long list of error messages in yellow courier font scrolled
across the glasses. The data flow paused and then the room booted again. The
dirty curtains disappeared. The view of the brick wall outside my window folded
into a more appealing glass wall with a view of the harbor. The room
virtualized and I was back in my usual place.
Somehow, Selvaggio had crashed my link. It was something
that you weren't supposed to be able to do. Maybe the IP sprites had followed
the datagram back to my pod, or maybe he had ways of sniffing his way back to
my office. It had to have been those damn cellular automata.
In the corner of my vision I could see a small magenta dot.
It might have been a pixel sprite but it disappeared when I tried to focus on
it.
A ringtone clashed with a message gnome as they started at
nearly the same time. I sounded like Fur Elise blown by a hippy harmonica
player. I answered the phone while I read the popup. My account had just paid
$22,000 to an offshore betting site.
That was quick.
"What," I asked, answering the incoming call.
"You're back. Good." Mackey Dooley said. He looked
cheerful. "How did it go?"
"22K is what it cost me. I just got paypaled on
it."
"Cheap at half the price."
"Yeah, so you say."
"I thought you'd have been able to handle this stuff on
your own. I was surprised that you asked me to find you a hired gun."
"Hey, this guy was your idea."
"Then why did I wind up doing all the legwork?"
Mackey asked.
"I wanted an extra layer of protection. I have to have
plausible deniability. You made the contact and my persona went through a dozen
anonymous routers." This was true, yet I thought, Selvaggio had managed to
burn my link and crash my pod. I thought I saw a cyan dot swimming at the edge
of my vision.
"It's too easy," Mackey said. "If he can
repair your rep that easy and that cheap, everyone would be doing it."
"He's got my 22K as of two minutes ago. I'll give him a
day or two and see what happens."
Mackey hung up.
The next day I googled my name along with a few key phrases.
There were no hits. Just one day ago the nets were full of the most terrible
lies and now there was nothing. I tried the bitch's home page and it was gone.
Her email was even gone from my address book. She wasn't listed at any of the
big directories. She wasn't in any of
the reverse listings and her address would not map at any of the GPS sites.
This guy Selvaggio was good. She was unlisted. It took less
than 24 hours to kill off her completely.
But, of course, she still breathed.
A week later, the bitch, my former wife, Monica Weinstein nee Yeager stood at my doorstep. She was a wreck. I tried not to smile.
"You did this." She said. She didn't seem angry,
just tired. If she had shown more signs of suffering, I would have been
happier. Her hair was dirty and she looked like she had slept in the park, but
for all that she only seemed tired.
"Monica, darling. I would never do anything to harm
you."
"May I use your bathroom?" she asked, but I held
firmly on the door and did not let her in.
"After the terrible things you said and did, I don't
see how I could let you in."
"Pervert." She said. "I did nothing more than
tell the truth."
"You were my wife, my better half. You are supposed to
stand by your man."
"My man is a criminal and a pervert and a
disgusting..." she sputtered and could not finish.
"They were lies and yet people believed them." I
said calmly, "I have tastes and I have preferences. Perhaps they are
little out of the ordinary, some might call them strange. Perhaps they are not
in the mainstream, but they are hardly perversions. I am not that much
different than the average man who hides his secret thoughts. I just have the
money and the means to act on my secret thoughts. You were indiscrete and you
caused me pain and now you want to use my bathroom?"
"I need a shower. I'm locked out of my apartment."
Damn, that Selvaggio was good. "My credit cards don't work. I have no
cash. All I want is a shower and then I'll be gone."
"I'm afraid not, darling."
I can't repeat what she said next, but you can imagine. I
still feel good at the memory of her venting her spleen. I felt then, for the
first time, that I had gotten some of my own back. I felt that she was hurting
almost as much as she had hurt me.
As she walked down the hall, she turned and said, "You
can't erase what's up here." She pointed to her darling little head,
"You can erase me from the nets, creep, but you can't erase what I saw and
what I know. You will always be a pervert and a monster to me. As long as I
live, you will have to live a lie, a lie that everyone knows about. Everyone I
meet will know your story. Everyone I talk to will remember you. People on the
street will stop as you pass by and point at you and call you a pervert because
they'll know the truth."
She was gone before I could think of what to say.
There was a small article for sale on Craigslist the next
day. I received 50 calls before coffee the next morning from the vilest sort of
persons. A service request to the site killed the posting by noon, but I had to
take my phones off the hook and filter email with a certain unpleasant phrase.
Similar things happened that afternoon. I began to receive
anonymous email: some warning me about hell, and some asking some deeply
personal questions. When I went out to dinner the doorman refused to make eye
contact.
"Selvaggio, this is Weinstein." I said.
"I told you to leave her alone. 120K this time."
He said before I could tell him what I wanted. His video was off. It sounded
like he was talking through an ancient black Western Electric telephone
handset.
"I want her dead for good, dead for real."
"I don't do reality. 120k to fix her latest antics. I
can promise to keep you squeaky clean for a week, but unless you modify your
behavior towards her and convince her to keep quiet, I can't guarantee that she
won't go commando on you again."
I cut the connection after expressing myself in language
that I seldom use. I opened up a meta search page.
Unfortunately, there seemed
to be precious few links for reputation repair.
I called again, but before I could speak the idiot said,"250K for the fix."
"I need to fix this permanently."
"That would be up to you. You have to change who you
are and you have to change how she sees you. Since I don't see that
happening..."
"I need the data fix, but I need to see her alone in
the real world."
"I don't do..."
"Yeah, I know you don't do reality. All I need is a
minute and an alibi."
There was quiet on the line for a moment.
"Ten million in my account and I can get you both in a
room. You can talk to her. Convince her to lay off. You never call me
again."
Ten million was almost exactly the amount that I had in
legitimate banks. I had twice that in hidden reserves, but that would be hard
to get quickly. Selvaggio must have known that. Well you get what you pay for.
"Sounds like a plan." I said.
I went out that night. I needed some relief. My contacts
hooked me up with a particular flavor, a particular texture. I won't go into
it, but it cost me plenty. I didn't mind. I would be spending much much more in
a few hours and a fellow needs some sweet release from time to time.
When I got back to my place, the door wouldn't unlock. I
found a token in my pocket and made a call from the corner data kiosk. My data
glasses were full of Selvaggio's buglets.
"Mackey," I said, "The bitch has me by the short
hairs. I'm locked out of my house."
"I guess she figures that it's good for the gander.
Wait where you are. I've had a message from Selvaggio to pick you up."
"What is that bastard's game?"
It took the creep over an hour to find me. I didn't have
cash for cigarette and, of course, Mackey doesn't smoke.
"Oh no," he said when I asked him to buy me a
pack, "I don't want any tobacco in this car."
I called him a few names, but it wasn't very satisfying. I
had to hold back or else he just might have let me out of the car to walk. It
wasn't long before we were walking down the sidewalk looking for 17B, but this
time it was for real, not virtual. This time I could feel the warmth radiating
from the array of disk drives and this time I could smell the mildew.
I pushed open the door. Mackey made an after-you gesture so
I went in and he followed. The walls were crawling with bugs in deep saturated
colors and they did not go away when I took off the data glasses.
"Where the hell are you?" I yelled.
"I'm in here darling." It was Monica the Bitch and
her voice was coming from another room. Selvaggio had left a pistol on the
table and I picked it up. I could see light coming from the crack under a door.
"Your hacker said you wanted to talk." She said
from another room. As I walked towards the door a message gnome popped up. I
opened it with a gesture. My account had been debited $11 million dollars. I
shrugged it off. I would deal with Selvaggio at another time. He couldn't hide
the money and there were ways to get it back, or at least most of it. Yeah,
Selvaggio was probably making a vid of this, but there were still ways to get
to him.
I pushed the door open. Monica was there, standing in the
middle of the room. Multi-color bugs crawled all over the walls and floors and
they covered her completely up to her knees.
Mackey went over to her and kissed her hard on the lips. He turned to me and put his arm around her. They smiled sweetly. The creeps were in love.
"Just so you know, this is entirely your own fault. You
pushed us into this," he said.
She didn't even look at me. She just smiled up at him. A
yellow cat walked into the room from behind me. It rubbed against my leg making
me jump. It was so covered with the colored bugs that you could hardly tell it
was the same cat.
I wiped a bug off of my face and saw that my hand was
covered with them. It was the hand that held the gun. I remembered why I was
there and started shooting.
As soon as I pulled the trigger the lights went out. I kept
pulling the trigger and I could see the two of them at every flash like an old
movie. Bang, she was holding him tight. Bang, he turned to face me pushing the
bitch behind him. Bang he was walking towards me. Bang he was closer. I
couldn’t have missed. Bang he was raising his hand, with something dark in it.
I woke up downtown with no shoes and a bottle in my hand. My
head hurt. My pod and my glasses were gone, but the bugs followed me everywhere.
None of my passwords worked in the data kiosks and I am told my soshsec is not
on file. God damn bugs are everywhere. They run all over me and won't let me
sleep. I can't find Mackey and I can't find Selvaggio. The place at 17B doesn't
even exist. I don't know how they did it, but the bitch scammed me and skipped
town. Mackey helped them set me up.
So, please, can you spare a token? Can you give me a fiver
until the soup kitchen opens? Hey don't walk away from me. I'm talking to you.
Can you spare me a butt. I haven't had a smoke in three days. Hey you. Hey!
Bastard. Somebody's got to have a cigarette. Goddamn bugs.
Hey you. Look mister. Hey just a minute. Listen to what I've
got to say. This is how it started. Mackey Dooley sent me to this web page...
No comments:
Post a Comment