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================================================
InterText Vol. 1, No. 4 / November-December 1991
================================================

  Contents

    FirstText ........................................Jason Snell

  Short Fiction

    An Ounce of Prevention_.........................Michael Ernst_

    Experience Required_...........................Robert Hurvitz_

    Slice of Mind_.....................................Phil Nolte_

    The Rebel Cause_................................Michel Forget_

    The Scratch Buffer_............................Steve Connelly_

....................................................................
    Editor                                     Assistant Editor
    Jason Snell                                    Geoff Duncan
    jsnell@etext.org                       gaduncan@halcyon.com
....................................................................
    Assistant Editor          Send subscription requests, story
    Phil Nolte                  submissions, and correspondence
    nolte@idui1.BITNET                   to intertext@etext.org
....................................................................
  InterText Vol. 1, No. 4. InterText (ISSN 1071-7676) is published 
  electronically on a bi-monthly basis. Reproduction of this 
  magazine is permitted as long as the magazine is not sold 
  (either by itself or as part of a collection) and the entire 
  text of the issue remains intact. Copyright 1991, 1994 Jason 
  Snell. Individual stories Copyright 1991 by their original 
  authors.
....................................................................


  FirstText  by Jason Snell
===========================

  I'm back. Did you miss me?

  Well, probably not. But that's okay. It's still hard for me to 
  visualize the fact that InterText goes out to over a thousand 
  people every other month. And you're sitting there, reading 
  this. InterText will be a year old with our next issue, and 
  we've got subscribers in such far away (from me here in San 
  Diego) places as the Soviet Union, Australia, Germany, Britain, 
  Brazil... and, closer to home, Mexico and Canada. All over the 
  world. Yikes.

  In a way, this issue marks a bit of a change for the magazine. 
  It's the first issue where one of my own stories hasn't appeared 
  (a good trend in that we had enough to fill the space without my 
  help... but beware, because I might have another one in the 
  pipeline...) and also the first time Greg Knauss hasn't made his 
  twisted presence felt within our pages.

  Dear old Greg, who has written for magazines with a much larger 
  circulation than this (he's been in maybe a dozen Atari computer 
  magazines) is fresh out of stories. Well, I've got some older 
  Knauss stories that I could dredge out of the slime pit, but 
  it's not worth it. I can only hope that he comes up with the 
  stamina to write a new story someday. Right now, he's getting 
  over the fact that his Star Trek: The Next Generation script, 
  "The Cortez," was rejected. He says that at least the ST:TNG 
  people read the thing. He and I are now finishing up (we hope) 
  our own ST:TNG script (how do I get myself into these things?), 
  titled "Chain of Command." It's brilliant, exceptional, 
  wonderful, amazing... oh, sorry. Got a little carried away 
  there.

  I'd also like to welcome Phil Nolte back to the fold. Phil, who 
  didn't have a whole lot to do with this issue because of my poor 
  planning, still managed to contribute a story, "Slice of Mind." 
  Phil has moved west from North Dakota, and now resides in Idaho. 
  I'm glad he's back.

  Our cover this issue is, well, you could call it minimalist. In 
  fact, my dear assistant editor Geoff Duncan (who has done lots 
  of great work for this thing and doesn't get enough credit so 
  I'm going to devote this entire parenthetical expression to 
  him... Hi Geoff!) refers to the cover as, well, clip-art. I 
  don't know about that... I like it. I was tempted to headline 
  this issue "THE CLASSY INTERTEXT ISSUE"... but fortunately I 
  refrained.

  I did have a cooler Mel Marcelo cover, one with a spooky haunted 
  house, but it's after Halloween and the thing would have made 
  this issue's PostScript version run almost one megabyte in 
  length. No thanks. So the lovely dancing couple it is.

  Funny how theme issues almost seem to come together by 
  themselves. All the stories in this issue have something to do 
  with employment. We have a first-day-on-the-job story ("An Ounce 
  of Prevention") from Michael Ernst, a job interview story 
  ("Experience Required") from returning writer Robert Hurvitz, a 
  story about someone getting fired from his job (the 
  aforementioned "Slice of Mind"), a story about someone being 
  reconditioned into a new profession ("The Rebel Cause" by Michel 
  Forget), and a story about a guy who finds an easy solution to 
  one of his problems at work ("The Scratch Buffer", by Steve 
  Connelly).

  I should say something else about Connelly's story: it may be a 
  bit obscure, but I find it extremely funny. Since this is a 
  magazine distributed through computer networks, I decided to put 
  it in. I hope that those of you with minimal computer experience 
  can still appreciate some of the humor in the story's 
  situations, despite perhaps not understanding all of the jargon 
  or references. And for those of you with newsgroup reading 
  experience or experience working with large computers, this one 
  will be right up your alley.

  This is a strange time for we computerized magazine editors 
  (wait, that sounds like I'm Max Headroom or someone...) -- both 
  myself and Quanta's Dan Appelquist are college seniors. We're 
  both going to graduate within the next six months (him in 
  December, me in March). I'm unsure what Dan will do upon 
  graduating, but I assume that Quanta will remain around. As for 
  me, well, I'll still be in San Diego through June (my duties as 
  editor in chief of the campus newspaper require this of me), and 
  then I don't know what will happen. My plan is to go to graduate 
  journalism school, in which case I'll probably have one more 
  year of net access (at Columbia or Northwestern, if I get in...) 
  or two years (if I go to UC Berkeley). So hopefully I'll be able 
  to produce InterText until mid-1993. If not, we'll just have to 
  find someone else with net access and the will to do this fun, 
  fun job. I hope that when I do disappear from the net (though I 
  also hope that I never disappear), InterText or something like 
  it will continue -- even if it's in a different form. We shall 
  see.

  Final trivia for those of you still with me: you who have 
  PostScript will have noticed that my photo has returned to the 
  top of the page. I re-scanned the sucker in the right way, and 
  it takes up very little space in the document. And for those of 
  you reading the ASCII version, consider both this and my earlier 
  references to our cover as plugs for the PostScript version.

  That's all from me. Until 1992, I wish you all well.


  An Ounce of Prevention  by Michael Ernst
==========================================

  Flats or heels? Melissa stood, hands on her hips, and looked 
  into her closet. Today would be her first day at a new job, so 
  she wanted to look good, but they had seemed pretty casual when 
  she'd interviewed last week, but on the other hand (or was this 
  the first one again?) it was better to be overdressed than 
  underdressed, which was in turn better than undressed, which she 
  was now, and she had to leave very soon. Melissa shook her head 
  to clear the nonsense, added a pair of low heels to the outfit 
  she'd chosen the night before, and rapidly completed her toilet. 
  She was on the road in twenty minutes; half an hour after that 
  she reported to the personnel office of the McCarthy Research 
  Institute. By the time she had completed a pile of paperwork, 
  signed a nondisclosure agreement, heard lectures about her 
  benefits and the importance of safety and the amount of time she 
  was permitted to spend in the bathroom, been perfunctorily poked 
  by bored doctors while describing her childhood diseases and 
  inoculations, received a badge featuring her bug-eyed picture, 
  and found her way to the building where she would be working, it 
  seemed like days had passed. Mr. Hutchins ("call me Frank") took 
  her to lunch at the company cafeteria. All of the food looked 
  like plastic; Melissa finally decided on a garden salad, which, 
  she surmised, couldn't be ruined too badly.

  After they'd taken their seats, her boss spoke affably around 
  bites of a Super Combination Burrito. Melissa tried to keep her 
  eyes off the burrito and on his face, but her eyes kept straying 
  back to it as to the scene of a terrible accident. "I assume 
  you've already run the personnel gauntlet this morning." Tempted 
  to roll her eyes, Melissa permitted herself a nod and a small 
  smile. "Did the bald guy with the tufts of hair sticking out of 
  his ears tell you all about our swell insurance plan?"

  "No, it was a woman."

  "Ah, the Dragon Lady. Stocky, severe-looking, flinty eyes, 
  always wears a suit she bought in 1953." Melissa nodded. "They 
  say she smiled once, but that was before I started working 
  here." Melissa tried to remember whether his yellow badge 
  indicated between five and ten years of tenure or between ten 
  and fifteen. Her own was a gaudy green which didn't go with her 
  outfit at all.

  "Do you have any questions about McCarthy, or about the NDE 
  group in particular? Last week I was so busy finding out how 
  fast you could type and whether you knew the difference between 
  a mouse and a rat, and which is which, that I didn't have much 
  time to fill you in on other details." Melissa asked 
  apologetically, "What exactly does your group do?" She threw out 
  one of the few academic-sounding terms she knew. "Is it pure 
  research?"

  Frank shook his head. "No, I don't think you could say that. 
  It's about 80 percent research, and 20 percent playing practical 
  jokes on one another." Melissa smiled wanly in response to his 
  self-satisfied smirk and thought that, unpleasant as her last 
  job had been, perhaps it had been a bad idea to resign with such 
  finality. Fortunately, Frank's style settled down once he'd 
  started talking; with an indulgent smile he left off his attack 
  on the burrito and did his best to explain his group's raison 
  d'?tre. Meanwhile, the grease pooled at one end of the oblong 
  dish. Melissa tried to pay attention to what he was saying 
  instead of wondering how long it would take the runoff to 
  congeal and whether, if one were to pick up the burrito 
  afterward, the solidified fat would stick to it like a waxy 
  base.

  "NDE stands for Non-Destructive Evaluation; we investigate ways 
  to test substances and devices without damaging them. A lot of 
  tests are like striking a match to evaluate it. Sure, you find 
  out whether the match was good, but it is worthless afterward, 
  and that experiment tells you nothing -- except in a statistical 
  sense -- about other matches." Frank explained that this method 
  wasn't good enough for their customers. Melissa nodded 
  attentively at breaks in the monologue and decided that eating 
  her salad would take her mind off Frank's food. She was wrong. 
  Frank went on to discuss the NDE philosophy in greater detail 
  (Melissa slipped her feet out of her shoes, wished she'd chosen 
  the flats after all, and thought about what she would wear the 
  next day; she owned so little clothing that went with green) and 
  to stress that although their testing was non-destructive, they 
  did work with some dangerous materials and that safety concerns 
  were of paramount importance. Melissa solemnly agreed and 
  wondered where on earth he'd gotten that tacky tie. He went on 
  about his group's fine record of safety and the elaborate 
  precautions that were standard practice. His earnest sincerity 
  about these safeguards was a strong contrast to the ennui of the 
  morning lecturers, whose soporific delivery of rote material had 
  left her with a sluggish feeling, as if she'd had a bad night's 
  sleep. Frank seemed like a nice guy, even if he was a little out 
  of it and had a sadly stunted sense of humor which brought to 
  mind a plant left too long without sunlight. He was by turns 
  sensitive to those around him -- he was attentive enough when he 
  stopped talking long enough to ask Melissa a question -- and 
  wrapped up in technical concerns. A typical engineer.

  Eventually he outlined Melissa's duties. Her primary objective 
  -- he made it sound like a hill about to be assaulted by a 
  company of Marines -- was to run interference with the 
  bureaucracy so that he could do "real work." She was relieved 
  that she was not expected to fetch coffee or make eleventh-hour 
  telephone calls to locate a baby-sitter. Sick of running her 
  last boss's errands, she had begun to encourage tradesmen's 
  frequent misconception that she was his mistress. "Are these the 
  shirts that Brian's wife dropped off or that I did?" she would 
  ask the young man at the dry cleaner's. "It wouldn't do to mix 
  them up," she'd add with a lascivious wink, then saunter out, 
  hips swaying. The rumor didn't get back to her boss's wife 
  before she quit, but she hoped it did afterward. She smiled, and 
  Frank thought that she was responding to his feeble joke about 
  keeping a capacitor from charging by taking away its credit 
  cards. He had finished his burrito, and the pool of discolored, 
  oily fat had disappeared as well. Frank remarked on her 
  half-eaten salad, but Melissa said she wasn't very hungry.

  "Don't worry overmuch about your productivity at first," Frank 
  said as they walked back. "Just get the feel of the place and 
  meet the people. I'll ask the group members to introduce 
  themselves and to make you feel at home." He muttered something 
  about a test that afternoon, and Melissa imagined a room full of 
  managers in shirtsleeves and pocket protectors seated at wooden 
  desks, brows furrowed and tongues sticking out of the corners of 
  their mouths as they filled out bubble forms with their #2 
  pencils.

  Frank pointed out Melissa's desk, which sat bare and forlorn in 
  a fence of waist-high partition walls like an empty doghouse in 
  an abandoned backyard. Frank's office was just the opposite. 
  Papers were piled on every surface except the chair, computer 
  keyboard, and cappuccino machine. Books lay propped open under 
  half-full coffee mugs, boxes made the entrance nearly impossible 
  to negotiate, and Post-It notes wallpapered the area near his 
  desk. Melissa instinctively recoiled. "Don't worry," he assured 
  her, "I'll never ask you to search through here. Besides, if you 
  were to try, you'd probably mess the place up so that I couldn't 
  find anything."

  Melissa spent the next few hours raiding the supply room, 
  organizing her desk, acquainting herself with the computer, and 
  meeting people who came by to welcome her. The phone rang 
  rarely, and Frank was out somewhere, so she figured it was okay 
  to just sit and read about policies and procedures, computer 
  programs, requisition protocols, company picnics, executive 
  perquisites, and parking permits. Whenever she leaned back to 
  take a break, her eyes were caught by a ludicrous poster of a 
  rabbit with a shocking pink Band-Aid on one of its ears. Frank 
  had pinned it up in the hallway, and its legend read, "Only A 
  Dumb Bunny Thinks Safety Is A Matter Of Luck. Make '91 A Safer 
  One. MRI."

  Around mid-afternoon, when she was poring over a manual which, 
  on first glance, had appeared to be written in English, she 
  noticed a lanky red- haired fellow leaning against the low wall 
  of her cubicle; he was staring appreciatively down her blouse. 
  He obviously approved of her Maidenform's delicate scalloped 
  edging of sheer patterned lace, but had he noticed the satin 
  center bow and the exquisite faux pearl detailing? Did he 
  realize that its comfortable-yet-firm support was perfect for 
  every day? Melissa straightened and offered a hello.

  He raised his eyes to hers. "Hi. I'm Josh McCarthy," he said 
  with an excessively friendly smile, offering his hand to be 
  shaken. At least he had a firm grip. "No relation, or I wouldn't 
  have to work for a living. You must be Melissa Sweedler." He 
  reads well, thought Melissa, but then checked the uncharitable 
  thought. Perhaps she ought to give him more credit: while he had 
  been looking straight at the name badge dangling from her blouse 
  pocket, he probably hadn't even noticed it. "Welcome aboard; are 
  you getting settled in all right?"

  "Well enough, except for having to read these manuals." Melissa 
  gestured wearily at a heap of documentation whose covers 
  proclaimed in bold letters their ease of use. "I think it's 
  hopeless to try to squeeze myself into the mind of a technical 
  writer; it's too cramped a fit." Josh frowned. "I'm a technical 
  writer myself -- that one's mine." He pointed to one of the 
  books in the pile, and Melissa blushed. Just when she was 
  starting to get comfortable with these people, she had to put 
  her foot in her mouth, which was particularly painful with 
  heels. He rushed on. "Maybe I could help you get in the right 
  frame of mind later. Over lunch tomorrow, maybe? For now, 
  however, you should take a break. Would you like to experience 
  an explosion?"

  "An explosion?"

  Josh nodded, then contradicted himself. "We're testing a blast 
  containment system, and if it works -- which it will -- there 
  won't be anything to see. But it's a good excuse to take a break 
  and get outside. It's a beautiful day out," he added. It was 
  indeed a lovely, cloudless day: when she'd searched for this 
  building, a cool breeze had ruffled the trees' leaves with a 
  gentle rustling and the promise of a delightful evening. Melissa 
  was tempted, but she hesitated to leave her post. Josh looked 
  puzzled and continued, "The whole group will be there, so 
  there's no particular reason for you to stay here. Frank said he 
  had invited you to watch."

  They walked out past the senior secretary, a timid-looking old 
  creature with short white hair, wide startled eyes, lips in a 
  perpetual moue beneath a downy moustache, and tacky pink 
  earrings. She declined to come along but agreed to answer 
  Melissa's phone if it rang. "I've seen enough of these boys' 
  pranks; I don't need that kind of excitement."

  When she shook her head, her ears waggled, and she looked 
  exactly like the bunny in the poster. Josh didn't seem too 
  disappointed that she wasn't accompanying them.

  "I thought this was the Non-Destructive Evaluation group," 
  Melissa said as they emerged from the building. "Why are you 
  setting off an explosion?"

  "One of our projects is the validation of blasting caps; the 
  dangerously unstable ones are kept in a big steel box, and we're 
  verifying that it's strong enough to be trusted." The weather 
  was as pleasant as it had been before, and while the day was 
  sunny, it wasn't uncomfortably hot this early in the summer. 
  "The caps are detonated electrically, and we test them by 
  running just a trickle of current through them." Josh went on 
  about knees in characteristic curves and criteria for discarding 
  bad caps; Melissa wished she was reading one of the relatively 
  clear manuals instead. She looked appreciatively at the grounds, 
  which were like a campus with their scattered buildings and 
  grassy lawns, and wondered how many people were employed 
  full-time just tending the greenery.

  "If the robot arm detects a bad cap, it drops it in a glorified 
  safe. The safe has a capacity of one hundred caps, and it has 
  been rated as capable of withstanding considerably more powerful 
  blasts; our group has certified the plans as well, and in fact 
  Frank had a hand in the design. We're paranoid -- well, Frank is 
  -- so we're testing the safe ourselves, just to be sure. It's a 
  waste of time and money, if you ask me, but no one does."

  Melissa made a noncommittal noise, and as they walked along Josh 
  continued to chatter, periodically bobbing forward to catch her 
  eye, which made Melissa feel obliged to nod at whatever he was 
  saying at the time. She warded off his questions about where she 
  lived and what she did on weekends. After what must have been 
  only a few minutes, Josh pointed out, off to their right, an 
  enormous wheel and rubber tire. It was mounted over an even 
  larger metal drum which resembled the wheel of an asphalt roller 
  on steroids; more machinery poked at unlikely angles from a 
  gantry. "To test landing gear, we rev the drum up to five 
  revolutions per second and then slam the wheel against it, to 
  simulate a plane landing at 200 miles per hour. You can hear the 
  reverberations a mile away. We repeat it until the landing gear 
  breaks." Melissa began to realize that to these 
  university-educated engineers, "non-destructive" meant something 
  very different than it did to her.

  At her look -- she hadn't realized her reaction was so 
  transparent - - Josh held his hands up in mock-defense. "Yes, I 
  know it's not exactly non-destructive. But it's not destructive 
  to the airplane, and besides, we have lots of extra landing 
  gears. For some reason, our clients find it more convenient to 
  send us dozens of whatever we need than to ask us how many we 
  want and just ship that many. We end up having to store piles of 
  the stuff." Melissa nodded; while Frank's office was by far the 
  worst offender, she'd noticed crates and boxes scattered through 
  the hallways and piled in unused offices, and one of her new 
  keys -- her key ring now resembled a mace -- was to their 
  warehouse.

  Soon they reached the test site, where a number of people were 
  engaged in animated conversation outside a low, bunker-like 
  concrete building. Frank was conferring with someone from 
  Facilities, but when he had finished, he walked over briskly. 
  "Melissa! I'm so glad that Josh brought you along. I would have 
  myself, but I've been here for hours and you would have been 
  bored. Have you met everyone?" He made introductions, chided the 
  onlookers for turning a scientific experiment into a spectator 
  sport, and went off to quadruple-check the arrangements. Melissa 
  chatted idly with the cluster of people while wire was strung 
  from the shelter to a field where the safe sat, looking like a 
  child's toy at that distance.

  Melissa was handed a blasting cap: a dud, Josh assured her, if 
  its current-voltage curve was to be believed, but he warned her 
  not to drop it just the same. It seemed remarkably light -- 
  about an ounce, her postage-meter-trained fingers gauged -- to 
  be causing such a stir. "It's an experimental type that is more 
  powerful than older caps and so able to detonate more dynamite," 
  someone said.

  Shortly Frank shooed them all inside, where they gathered at the 
  tiny, shielded windows. "I give you an hour off work, and act 
  like a bunch of kids at the circus," he said in mock 
  exasperation. He activated the detonator and continued without 
  pause, "There's nothing to see." He was cut off by a tremendous 
  roar. The safe was tossed into the air and a hole appeared in 
  its side. Then dirt occluded the view from the shelter, and the 
  group remembered to take a collective breath. After the dust had 
  settled down, Frank led the way outside. Debris was scattered 
  all around; some pieces of shrapnel had nearly reached the 
  bunker. The safe, its thick metal sides bent and torn, was lying 
  half a dozen paces from a deep new crater. Frank shook his head 
  and kicked at a clod of dirt. "They certified this safe." 
  Melissa thought about telling the Dragon Lady she'd changed her 
  mind and would buy some insurance after all.

  The failure of the safe did little to dampen the onlookers' 
  spirits -- in fact, most of them found it hilarious. They talked 
  and laughed on the walk back to their building, and Melissa 
  became increasingly comfortable with them; she didn't even mind 
  Josh's continued flirting. Well, not too much. She decided that 
  she was going to like this job after all. When they went inside, 
  they received grins and questions about what they'd been doing. 
  "That was even louder than the landing gear," said those who 
  hadn't come along.

  Frank was an exception to the general mirth. He seemed 
  disappointed and somewhat preoccupied. When the group members 
  had returned to their offices, he paused at Melissa's desk. 
  "Melissa, I'd like you to take a memo to Facilities." He glanced 
  at his watch, hardly noticing her poised pencil. "You probably 
  have just enough time to walk it downstairs before they close 
  for the day. Ask them to take away, first thing tomorrow 
  morning, the two thousand extra blasting caps I've been storing 
  in my office."


  Michael Ernst (mernst@theory.lcs.mit.edu)
-------------------------------------------

  Michael Ernst is a graduate student in computer science at MIT. 
  He knows the difference between Trinidad and Tobago, and which 
  is which. 


  Experience Required  by Robert Hurvitz
========================================

  Mr. Peterson glanced one last time at the worthless resume 
  before feeding it into the paper shredder mounted on the edge of 
  his desk and directly over the trash can. "What a complete and 
  utter waste of my time," he muttered. Before opening the next 
  file, he jotted down on a Post-It note a quick reminder to give 
  the recruiting office a severe verbal lashing.

  He punched the speaker-phone, said, "Send in the next 
  supplicant, Karen," and cut the connection.

  As his office door opened, Mr. Peterson looked up from the new 
  resume and asked, "Daniel Smith?" Smith nodded. "Sit down, 
  Danny." Mr. Peterson motioned to a leather armchair in front of 
  his desk. "I hope you don't mind my calling you Danny. My 
  two-year-old son is named Daniel, and he likes to be called 
  Danny."

  "My mother calls me Danny," said Smith.

  "I see," said Mr. Peterson. He looked back down at the resume.

  "How shall I address you, sir?"

  "Mr. Peterson will be fine. What makes you want to work for All 
  Edge Systems, and, more importantly, why do you think we'd even 
  want someone like you?"

  "All Edge is the best company out there, and always will be. I 
  will not compromise my professional integrity by working at a 
  second rate business. I know that All Edge Systems wants only 
  the best men working for her, and, to put it simply and plainly, 
  I am the best."

  Mr. Peterson regarded Daniel Smith. His short blond hair was 
  moussed back in a stylish wave. His pale blue eyes glinted self- 
  confidence, ambition, and that unmistakable killer instinct.

  He was clad in a dark, pinstripe, Pierre Cardin two-piece suit 
  with matching power tie. His legs were crossed, and Mr. Peterson 
  could see that although his shoes shined as if they were brand 
  new, the worn sole clearly showed them to be many months old.

  "Did you notice the fellow who was in here immediately before 
  you?"

  A look of disdain crossed Smith's otherwise fine features. 
  "Unfortunately, yes. A pathetic excuse for a man. But I was 
  heartened to see him run from your office in tears. May I ask 
  what it was you said to him that caused such a delightful 
  reaction?"

  "No, you may not." Mr. Peterson read a few more lines of Smith's 
  brag sheet and raised his eyebrows slightly. "Your resume claims 
  that you just received your M.B.A. from USC. I'm a Trojan man 
  myself. Class of '83. Tell me, is Professor Green still 
  teaching? He was my undergraduate advisor."

  "Oh yes, Green's still around. Was he just as senile back then?"

  Mr. Peterson smiled. "He had his occasional moment of lucidity. 
  He's a homosexual, you know."

  "Yes, I took a class with him."

  They stared at each other for a few seconds.

  "Are you married, Danny?"

  "Engaged."

  "I see." Mr. Peterson read over the rest of the resume. "I 
  assume she would not divide your loyalties?"

  "Of course not, sir. All Edge Systems would have me first and 
  foremost. I would not have it any other way." Smith crossed his 
  arms. "I did not choose my fiancee on some foolish whim."

  Mr. Peterson closed Smith's folder and placed it on the desk. 
  "Needless to say, Danny, I'm quite impressed with you. However, 
  I don't think that you're properly suited for the job. Frankly, 
  I don't much like your tie. Thank you for your time, and you 
  know where the door is."

  Smith squinted his eyes. "Excuse me, sir?"

  "Vacate my office, or I'll call security."

  "Mr. Peterson, I don't believe you know how much this job means 
  to me." He reached inside his jacket, pulled out a .357 Magnum, 
  and aimed it steadily at Mr. Peterson's chest. "You will give me 
  the job. I will settle for nothing less."

  Mr. Peterson smiled broadly, showing his teeth. "I like your 
  style, Danny-boy. Congratulations." He leaned forward and 
  punched the speaker- phone. "Karen, politely tell the other 
  prospectives to fuck off. We have our man."


  Robert Hurvitz (hurvitz@cory.berkeley.edu)
--------------------------------------------

  Robert Hurvitz is a senior at UC Berkeley. He wrote this story 
  at the request of a friend who was in severe pain and 2,000 
  miles away. He has previously appeared in both InterText and 
  Quanta. Not much is happening in his life at the moment, but he 
  hopes this will change soon.


  Slice of Mind  by Phil Nolte
==============================

  "Have you ever really thought, I mean really thought, about 
  thinking, Schultz?" Crawford asked me. The question took me 
  utterly by surprise, seeing as how the time was somewhen way 
  beyond my normal bedtime and my thought processes were, to say 
  the least, somewhat different than normal. Crawford and I had 
  sought refuge in a back corner of the small, dimly-lit, 
  smoke-filled apartment. The mindless drum machine-thumping of 
  one of those awful candy-rock groups with the pouty- voiced, 
  pre-pubescent female lead singer blaring on the stereo wasn't 
  helping my ability to think much either.

  "Sure, I've thought about it," I said. "The whole concept is 
  kind of mind-boggling, if you get my drift." One side of Dr. 
  Nathan Crawford's lip curled up in a half-smile, half-smirk at 
  my half-assed attempt at a joke. I took a pull on a light beer 
  that was, by now, much too warm to be drinking.

  "That's good, Schultz," he said, "but I'm serious. Tell me, if 
  you can, what exactly is a thought? Where do ideas come from? 
  The human brain is only another organ like a liver or a 
  pancreas, after all. Why don't we have a better understanding of 
  it?"

  I shrugged. This sounded like a good discussion topic, the kind 
  you could get your teeth into. "Can we get out of here, Doc? 
  This party is about to break up anyway." He looked around the 
  hazy room, noticing that most of those still present were paired 
  up and oblivious to us anyway. He nodded and got up. I left the 
  rest of my wretched beer on the end table. We headed for the 
  little all-night coffee shop on the corner, a couple blocks 
  away, just off campus.

  Crawford was one of those young profs who liked to spend time 
  with the students, after hours, away from the classroom 
  atmosphere. A few drinks -- on rare occasions a toke or two -- a 
  little music and everyone tended to let their hair down. 
  Crawford really got into that kind of stuff. The discussions 
  often got real interesting. He hated the comparison, but I 
  always thought he looked like a slightly taller version of 
  Richard Dreyfuss. He even had the animated gestures, the intense 
  facial expressions and the Van Dyke beard.

  I was a Ph.D. student in Zoology, the same department as 
  Crawford, but I hadn't gone to the party seeking esoteric 
  conversation. I was looking for something more basic: female 
  companionship. As usual, having gone looking for it, I hadn't 
  found it. Not for lack of trying, mind you. But then, I'm sort 
  of a Maynard G. Krebs look-alike so I've gotten used to it. I 
  settled for the next best thing: the esoteric conversation -- at 
  least it was with somebody smarter than I was.

  We settled into a well-worn red vinyl booth and ordered some 
  onion rings and coffee -- a couple of things that the little 
  restaurant was famous for. The coffee came right away. Crawford 
  blew gently across the surface of the hot, dark liquid and took 
  an exploratory sip. It was like that was all he needed to get 
  back in gear. He picked up the thread of our previous 
  conversation just about where we left off.

  "What this thing we call 'the mind' anyway?" he asked 
  rhetorically. "When you see something or hear something or touch 
  or taste or smell something, the brain reacts in some way. 
  Thoughts are the result. How do they happen?" I shrugged. He 
  paused for long enough to take another sip of hot brew. "I'm not 
  sure, either, but think of this: it all goes on inside your 
  head, inside a space about the size of a softball. It may not 
  sound too romantic, Schultz, but tonight when you were trying to 
  make time with that buxom little junior, it was ultimately her 
  brain you had to communicate with, wasn't it. One rough-surfaced 
  softball-sized organ to another!"

  "I don't know, Doc," I said, smirking, "I'm pretty sure it 
  wasn't her brain I was interested in!"

  "There will come a time when your thought processes are free 
  from the influence of your hormones, Schultz. I pray, for your 
  sake, that the day isn't too far off!"

  I decided to get a little more serious. The short walk in the 
  cool night air and a cup of black coffee had done wonders for my 
  head. My mind had cleared. Besides, grad students just love to 
  cross wits with profs. What the hell, I thought, I might even 
  learn something!

  "So how would you go about studying the mind and thoughts and 
  brain function, Doc? Like, where would you start?" I asked, 
  sensing that he was really into the subject and only a little 
  priming was needed to set him off. I was right.

  "Naturally, there would be real value in comparing abnormal 
  brains with normal ones." Our onion rings came. The air was 
  filled with the wonderful, sinful aroma of golden-brown breading 
  crisp-fried in oil.

  "You mean like comparing college students with insurance 
  salesmen?" I asked, as I handed him the catsup. He chuckled, 
  took the offered bottle and poured a large, red dollop on his 
  plate.

  "Yes, Brian, but don't forget that there's another end of the 
  spectrum. One could probably learn more by studying the very 
  intelligent. Of course, some of that work has already been done. 
  Broca's brain is preserved in a jar. So is Einstein's."

  "Broca?" I asked.

  "Paul Broca. He was a French scientist who did the pioneer work 
  on human brain function. The speech area of the brain is named 
  for him. I'm surprised you haven't heard of him." I shrugged, 
  Crawford continued. "Believe it or not, the scientists who 
  studied those very special brains found little to no difference 
  between them and that of a 'normal' human." He paused and 
  selected the largest onion ring from the basket, dipped it in 
  catsup and then held it suspended above the plate between his 
  thumb and forefinger while he made his next point.

  "Perhaps the strangest case of all is that of Vladimir Lenin, 
  the Soviet politician and leader. After taking Lenin's brain out 
  of his skull, his doctors used standard tissue techniques to 
  preserve it and then proceeded to slice it up into sections, 
  some 30,000 of them." He smiled, and bit into the crisp golden 
  circle. He watched me for my reaction.

  "Wow!" I said, around a mouthful of the succulent fried food. 
  "What did they find?"

  "Absolutely nothing," he replied, eyeing the basket.

  "Jesus, what a waste!" I said, shaking my head.

  "Perhaps not," said Crawford, as he selected the largest of the 
  two remaining onion rings. "Perhaps they didn't know what to 
  look for."

  "What do you mean by that, Doc?"

  "Could be there's more to the thought process than just simple 
  Biology and Chemistry."

  "Like what?" I said as I grabbed the last tidbit out of the 
  basket.

  "Well, like Physics, for instance. There have been some 
  remarkable discoveries recently. The discoverers don't know it 
  yet, but some of their findings have immediate applications for 
  my research."

  And it went on from there. I was hooked. Dr. Nathan Crawford 
  spun an incredible tale of new and absurd theories. Only, as he 
  explained them they didn't sound so absurd. They sounded 
  exciting, even plausible, and I hung on to every word. After an 
  hour that seemed like about five minutes, I snapped out of an 
  intense concentration to find that our coffee was stone cold and 
  there was nothing but a few congealed crumbs in the onion 
  basket. It was like we had been alone in the little restaurant.

  Suddenly, sadly, it was time to go. You can only sustain that 
  kind of intensity for so long. My head was still reeling with 
  all the new wave brain theories that had been crammed into it.

  "Stop by my lab tomorrow afternoon, Schultz. I'll show you some 
  of my results," he said, as we parted company in the parking lot 
  of the little coffee shop.

  "Sure, Doc, you bet!" I said enthusiastically. I walked back to 
  my one-room apartment to a bed that I knew wouldn't see much 
  sleeping that evening.


  All the next day, my mind was filled with thoughts about 
  thinking. (Read that last sentence again. It will give you some 
  idea of my state of mind that day.) All the next day my classes 
  seemed to take forever. To make matters worse, I also had to 
  T.A. the afternoon lab session. That went quickly too -- kind of 
  like a snail in an ultrafreezer. Finally, some twenty minutes 
  late, I managed to herd the last of the sophomores out of the 
  Vertebrate Zoology lab. As quickly as I could, I de-prepped the 
  teaching room, shed my lab coat and washed the formaldehyde off 
  my hands. Two minutes later I was up on the fourth floor getting 
  ready to enter Crawford's lab.

  I stopped myself right by the corner of the door. Something odd 
  was going on. Some poor son of a bitch was in the middle of a 
  real, old- fashioned ass-chewing. It only took a moment to 
  figure out that someone was Dr. Nathan Crawford. The one doing 
  the chewing was none other than W. Oscar McBride, Dean of the 
  College of Science and Mathematics! This had to be heavy duty 
  stuff! I was glad I wasn't in the room but I couldn't help 
  myself as I eavesdropped with a sort of horrified fascination.

  Old Oscar was practically shouting.

  "... the most hare-brained idea I have ever heard of!"

  "I believe I can explain..." began Crawford softly.

  "Explain! Christ, Nate, how could you be so god-damned stupid? 
  You can't give controlled substances to students even if they 
  are volunteers and I don't care if they each signed ten waivers! 
  You simply cannot do that! As if that weren't enough, I have it 
  on good authority that you've been at student residences where 
  marijuana was used and minors were consuming alcohol! On 
  numerous occasions! What were you thinking? Have you no sense of 
  propriety, Nate?"

  "As I started to say, Dr. McBride, I believe I can explain..." 
  Crawford began, quietly, reasonably, only to be cut off again.

  "Not this time, Nate. I can't do anything to help you. Even if 
  you had tenure, which you don't, I'm not sure we could beat this 
  one! There are people in high places who want your head! You'd 
  better start packing."

  McBride almost ran me over as he stormed out of the lab. I 
  pretended like I had just arrived and was none the wiser. He 
  looked at me with his reddened face and shook his head before 
  steaming off down the hall and around the corner.

  I peeked around the doorjamb. Crawford was looking in my 
  direction but didn't appear to see me. I waved and said: "Hey, 
  Doc, is everything all right? He started, recognized me and 
  motioned me inside. He was shook but, hey, I guess that's 
  understandable, given the circumstances.

  "No, Brian, it most certainly is not. I just got fired. Hard to 
  believe, really."

  "Uh... I know," I confessed, "I couldn't help it. I overheard 
  the last couple minutes out in the hall."

  "I thought that this University was different... but, of course 
  they're all the same."

  Amazingly, Crawford sort of shrugged and seemed to shake off the 
  mood. Suddenly he became a man of action.

  "No doubt they'll send security over to search my office." He 
  looked at me. "I want you to keep something safe for me. This is 
  very important, can you do it?"

  "Uh ... sure, Doc," I said, praying it wasn't a kilo of grass or 
  an ounce of coke or something. I was really a pretty straight 
  guy. I mean, like, drugs had never appealed to me much. Sex and 
  Rock n' Roll, fine. Drugs, no. I swallowed, "What is it?"

  "You remember my trip to Moscow last July?"

  "Yeah, you took some great slides. Wish I could've been with 
  you."

  "Those weren't the only slides I brought back with me." I gave 
  him a puzzled look. He smiled without humor. "It was frightfully 
  expensive, Brian, but I managed to get a few of those 30,000 
  sections of Lenin's brain and smuggle them back here. Five, to 
  be exact."

  "No shit, Doc?"

  "No shit, Schultz!" he replied.

  I shook my head in disbelief.

  "They have proven invaluable for testing certain aspects of my 
  theories."

  "Yeah, I'll take them. When do you want them back?"

  "I'm not sure. I'll call for them when I get settled. In few 
  weeks, a month at most."

  I left the lab before security got there. I didn't see Crawford 
  again for a month and a half.

  But man, did some shit happen!

  The weekend after Crawford got fired was the long Thanksgiving 
  one, a four-day extravaganza. When we got back from break, 
  Crawford was long gone. I remember the scene when I got back to 
  the Zoo department on Monday after the Holiday. The place was 
  all aflurry with campus security, real downtown cops, and 
  high-level administrators.

  "What's goin' down?" I asked one of the campus guards, a real 
  large, badly overweight type who was even then eating a jelly 
  donut. He shook his head in disgust.

  "That Crawford guy ripped off some stuff outta the lab las' 
  weekend," he said around a mouthful of donut. "The Dean's pretty 
  torqued about it! Guess he's got good reason, I hear there was a 
  lot of e'spensive stuff in there!"

  I looked into the lab, over the yellow tape of the police 
  barrier. Crawford had moved out. And I do mean out. McBride 
  almost had the big one when he found out about it. Believe me, 
  if they ever catch Crawford they'll put him away for good. You 
  see, the halls had been all but empty with everyone out for the 
  holiday and campus security had been its usual (that is to say: 
  incompetent) self. Crawford hired himself a couple of brawny 
  football-player types and backed a large U-haul truck up to the 
  lab.

  He took everything.

  It was at least a million bucks worth of stuff! Good stuff. Big 
  stuff like the ultracentrifuge, the gas chromatograph, the HPLC, 
  the growth chambers, little stuff like pH meters and electronic 
  balances, and all the weird, one-of-a-kind (and expensive) stuff 
  that he'd made to test his pet theories. As Dr. Seuss would've 
  said: "He stole the roast beast! Why, he even stole the last can 
  of Who Hash!" Heck, the ol' grinch himself couldn't have done a 
  better job of stripping that lab then Nate Crawford had!

  Yeah, it was all gone and so was Crawford. I had to hand it to 
  him, he sure had a knack for getting his way. Two weeks after 
  that I saw an obscure notice in the daily paper stating that 
  someone had stolen the brain of the famous French scientist, 
  Paul Broca, out of the museum where it had been kept for so many 
  years. There were no suspects.

  No suspects? I think they'd better step up the security on 
  Einstein's brain unless they want to lose it too.

  Crawford came for his Lenin slides one day with about 20 minutes 
  warning. I got them for them out of the hiding place I'd used 
  and we talked for a few minutes. He spent a lot of time looking 
  over his shoulder. Guess I couldn't blame him. Weird. It was 
  like a scene out of a bad "B" sci-fi movie or something except 
  that he wasn't wearing a cape and I'm not a hunchback. He asked 
  if I wanted to come and work with him at a clandestine, but 
  well-equipped lab he'd set up. He was pretty sure he was on the 
  verge of some big breakthroughs and allowed as how he could use 
  some competent help. I don't know if he liked my answer or not.

  I told him I'd think about it.


  Phil Nolte (nolte@idui1.BITNET)
---------------------------------

  Phil Nolte is assistant editor of InterText, as well as being an 
  extension seed potation specialist in -- of all places -- Idaho.


  The Rebel Cause  by Michel Forget
===================================

  Kevin had been sleeping for nearly three hours when his life 
  fell to pieces before his eyes. Through the blasted shards of 
  what had once been the door to his modern two-story home emerged 
  seven Government Enforcers with blazing weapons in their hands 
  and murder in their hearts. Shocked from sleep by the sudden 
  flurry of activity, Kevin barely had time to stumble to his feet 
  and murmur a plaintive question before he was roughly thrown to 
  the ground and the smoking muzzle of an automatic weapon was 
  pressed hard against his temple.

  "Kevin Gallant!" shouted one of the black-cloaked figures.

  It was all Kevin could do to mumble affirmation, his eyes fixed 
  nervously on the muzzle of the gun pointing at his head.

  "You have been tried and convicted of conspiracy against the 
  freely elected People's Government. This heinous crime, 
  according to Clause VII of the new Constitution, which was 
  drafted by the very government you sought to overthrow, is no 
  longer punishable by death."

  Relief flowed through Kevin like a fresh breeze as he learned 
  that he wasn't going to die. The new government really was a 
  government for the people, just as the banners and signs had 
  proclaimed during last month's election. Kevin knew that he had 
  not done what he was being accused of, but he was now confident 
  that the whole matter could be cleared up before anything of a 
  permanent nature happened to him.

  "Thank God, " he whispered, an audible sigh escaping his lips.

  "I wouldn't," one of the Government Enforcers sneered. "The 
  punishment you do receive will be so bad that you'll probably 
  wish you were dead. Do you understand what you tried to do?"

  "I didn't do anything, " Kevin asserted in a slightly trembling 
  voice.

  With a curse, the Enforcer came forward and roughly kicked Kevin 
  in the side.

  "Nothing? You tried to bring down the only government to give 
  the people a fair shake in forty-seven years! There was a time, 
  and it wasn't too long ago, when it was a crime to read a book 
  or gather in groups, or even say what you felt. Now, the 
  government provides wholesome literature for any citizen who 
  asks, provides places for supervised public gatherings, and 
  conducts surveys to determine what the people want from their 
  government. The world is changing, and that change cannot be 
  halted for the sake of a few malcontents like you!"

  "But I haven't --" Kevin started to say, but thought better of 
  further protest when the Enforcer raised a fist and made as if 
  he would strike Kevin if he finished the sentence.

  Kevin was roughly jerked to his feet, and a thin, silver collar 
  was fastened around his neck. The Enforcer who was going to hit 
  Kevin only seconds earlier pressed a green button on the side of 
  his ebony helmet, mumbled something Kevin could not hear, and 
  then watched as Kevin's limp body stiffened and then dropped to 
  the floor, drained of any ability to resist.


  Kevin's eyelids fluttered open after an unknown amount of time, 
  and he once again became aware of his surroundings. He was in a 
  dark room, with steel panelled walls. The room only had a cold 
  steel pallet which served as a bed and a straight-backed steel 
  chair for furnishings. The only source of illumination was a 
  cold white energy panel near the ceiling. There was a strange 
  scent in the air which Kevin could not identify.

  Where am I? Kevin wondered.

  With some effort, Kevin forced himself to his feet and stumbled 
  to the door. Turning the handle, he discovered that the door was 
  locked.

  "Damn, " he said aloud, leaning weakly against the door. "Where 
  am I? I didn't do anything. When will I be able to leave?"

  Just then, a terrifying thought occurred to Kevin.

  What if I never...

  Kevin had never been brave, and now his fear or permanent 
  imprisonment and the disruption of his life allowed his thoughts 
  to burst wildly beyond control.

  ...never let me out...help me...not guilty! ...guilty?... never 
  let me out...forever...why?...help me...!

  Kevin sank weakly to the ground, tears beginning to stream from 
  his eyes.

  ...Please!...

  Some time later, long after Kevin had run out of tears to shed 
  over his shattered life, Kevin felt the weight of the door to 
  his cell shoved against him roughly. He quickly scrambled out of 
  the way to allow the door to open freely. A short, balding man 
  stepped past the black-clad Enforcer who had opened the door and 
  sat down in the straight-backed chair. The man had a 
  grey-streaked beard, and a hard, chiseled face. A pair of 
  wire-frame glasses rested on the bridge of the man's nose. He 
  was frowning.

  "Have you been crying, Mr. Gallant? You didn't need to, you 
  know. Your judge was ordered to suspend your sentence. I am Dr. 
  William Shane, and I have been selected to help you through the 
  difficult process of harmonizing your thoughts and views on 
  certain matters with those of the government."

  Kevin looked up at the man in confusion.

  "Harmonize?"

  "Yes. In time, you will understand. It is something that must be 
  done if you are going to be re-introduced into society, or serve 
  the government."

  "Why?" Kevin asked, not particularly liking the sound of the 
  word 'harmonize'.

  "Trust me, our way is better. The rebels don't understand that 
  control is needed if man is going to remain a single group with 
  a single goal. If everyone went his own way, trying to win 
  others over to his way of doing things, then there would be 
  chaos. Don't you see what would be the result if the rebels had 
  there way?"

  "No," Kevin answered, not quite sure of how to respond.

  Kevin had never been disloyal to the government in his life, and 
  thus had never given much thought to what would happen if the 
  rebels took control of the government.

  "I'll tell you what would happen, if you'll listen. There would 
  be another round of faction politics. Men would fight against 
  each other and deceive each other, like they did hundreds of 
  years ago. The peace that we have enforced for all these years 
  would crumble as if it had never existed. Our way is better. If 
  everyone has the same goal -- is on the same side -- we can 
  prevent that from ever happening. As long as we are united, 
  nothing can hurt us. Do you see?"

  Since Kevin had nearly the same point of view on the matter, it 
  wasn't hard for him to agree. Unfortunately, Kevin thought, his 
  agreement probably wouldn't be enough to prevent him from being 
  harmonized.


  Unfortunately, Kevin was right. His treatment, as it came to be 
  called, began the morning after his meeting with Doctor Shane. 
  The light steel door to Kevin's cell was thrown open by a 
  black-cloaked Enforcer, and Kevin was roughly dragged out of 
  bed.

  "Where are you taking me?" he asked, a tremor of fear riding in 
  his voice.

  Have they decided to punish me after all?

  "Never mind. You'll find out soon enough."

  Kevin wanted to resist, but found that he lacked the strength of 
  will, as well as the physical strength, to resist the armored 
  man pushing him toward an unknown future. Long after Kevin had 
  lost his bearing among the twists and turns of the building in 
  which he was being held prisoner, he was shoved into another 
  room.

  Like his cell, this room had steel panelling and was lit by a 
  cold white energy panel. Unlike his room, though, there was a 
  chair with many straps and buckles where the bed should have 
  been and there were two Enforcers standing on either side of the 
  chair. Doctor Shane was sitting in the corner beside a panel of 
  buttons.

  "Good day, Mr. Gallant. Have a seat, if you will." he said, 
  gesturing toward the chair.

  When Kevin hesitated to sit in the chair, the two Enforcers 
  stepped forward and "assisted" Kevin into it. After he was 
  safely strapped in, the Enforcers returned to their positions on 
  either side of the chair.

  "What are you going to do to me?" he asked. Fear was quickly 
  becoming a permanent emotion inside Kevin.

  "It won't hurt. This is how we are going to harmonize your 
  thoughts. It is a little crude, but it won't hurt you. There are 
  subtler ways to do this, but this has proven to be the most 
  effective we have found."

  Doctor Shane slid his fingers over the various buttons on the 
  wall until he found the one that he desired, and then gently 
  depressed it. A panel on the ceiling slid soundlessly to one 
  side, and a delicate looking steel apparatus slowly began to 
  lower. Four needle-thin rods extended from the base of the 
  lowering machine. After a few seconds of incomprehension, Kevin 
  realized with stark terror that his head was directly below the 
  needles. He struggled then, like he had never struggled before 
  in his life, but the Enforcers moved forward to hold his head 
  still as the rods penetrated his skull. After that, Kevin didn't 
  struggle.


  Months passed as Kevin's treatment continued. Every day he was 
  subjected to the torment of the chair as his every thought was 
  sucked out of his mind and replaced with a correct thought. 
  Kevin learned about the government in ways he would always wish 
  to forget. None of the truth was held back.

  At first Kevin was appalled that he had supported the government 
  that was doing this to him, but he eventually learned. Constant 
  bombardment by a set of fixed ideals forced him to learn his 
  place in the world.

  Kevin wasn't released when his treatment was complete, but he 
  didn't notice. His government had need of loyal men, and he was 
  willing to serve. Kevin asked to be trained as an Enforcer, and 
  since the government had no cause to doubt his loyalty, he was 
  trained. His first assignment after being awarded his weapons 
  was to lead a group of Enforcers to a man's home, arrest him, 
  and bring him to Doctor Shane for harmonizing.


  As Kevin and his team carried their prisoner away, two men 
  looked on from a nearby window with somber expressions on their 
  faces.

  "Did we do the right thing?" one asked.

  "You mean reporting Gallant to the Enforcers? I think we did." 
  the other replied.

  "But we destroyed an innocent man's life, and what did we gain? 
  Now there's another Enforcer to impose the will of the 
  government on the people. What good is that?"

  "You know how he was trained. The government's set of ideals was 
  forced on him until he buckled under. For now, he'll do their 
  work. But eventually, maybe not for a few years, he will 
  recover. I know he will. He may even rise to a high position 
  among the Enforcers. And then we might have a valuable ally. It 
  hurts to keep reporting these innocent people to the Enforcers, 
  I know, but what else can we do? When they recover, they'll be 
  in a position to rip the government apart from the inside. We 
  have to do it."

  "In the name of the cause, " the other whispered, agreeing but 
  not sounding very happy about it. "I hope for all of our sakes 
  that you're right about this, Dr. Shane."
   

  Michel Forget (mforget@ersys.edmonton.ab.ca)
----------------------------------------------

  Michel Forget is a new author, and this is his first 
  publication. This is also his first submission. He is eighteen 
  years old, and enjoys writing short stories and programming 
  computers. He also has a cat.


  The Scratch Buffer  by Steve Connelly
=======================================

  Jason stood in his office waiting while the software support 
  representative from the Digital Utilities Corporation cajoled 
  the new mag tapes into the DUCstation like a parent tricking his 
  baby into eating creamed spinach. The small office adjoined a 
  large white room that housed the 10-foot black cube of the 
  university's new supercomputer.

  Striding across the machine room was the computer center's 
  director, Neville. He wore a pinstriped gray suit, pinstriped 
  shirt, and gray pinstriped tie. His hair was mostly gray except 
  for some thin stripes of black. A beeper clung to his belt, and 
  a mini phone-fax bulged from his back pocket. He said to Jason, 
  "The supercomputer is still overheating when we approach the 
  performance needed for the Ichikani project, so I've decided to 
  improve cooling by increasing the air flow through the machine. 
  Since the air comes in through the vent in the floor of your 
  office, you may notice a strong draft..."

  Jason slumped against the wall, wondering how to issue a small 
  craft advisory for his office.

  While Neville continued, his fax machine began to excrete narrow 
  sheets of paper, which plopped to the ground behind him. "...the 
  air then passes underneath the floor and across the coils that 
  hold the liquid nitrogen, and finally blows upward through the 
  supercomputer, cooling it."

  Jason sneered at the panel of blinking red lights on the face of 
  the black cube. "Why couldn't they have built the coolant pipes 
  right in the computer, like they did with the old Crays?"

  "A point well taken," Neville chirped, "but let me play devil's 
  advocate and note that, with one million interconnected 
  processors, the new Connection Machine is far larger and more 
  complex than a Cray or any other machine. The engineering 
  involved in doing what you suggest would be unimaginable."

  "A point well taken", Jason chirped, "but let me play devil's 
  advocate and say fall before he who rules the nether darkness! 
  Sate his glorious lust or be slathered under his tormented 
  minions!"

  "Jason?"

  "Yes?"

  "What the hell are you doing?"

  Jason lowered his fists and let his eyes roll forward from the 
  back of his head. "I'm advocating the devil."

  "You really don't care what I think of you, do you?"

  "I figure that, with you, I have nothing to lose."

  "Another point well taken." Neville scooped up his pile of 
  droppings. As he departed he said, "I need the data formats for 
  the project by tomorrow."

  Jason nodded.

  The DUC software support rep said to Jason, "Do you have the 
  time?"

  "No," replied Jason, "It would take weeks to do those formats 
  right."

  "I mean do you know what time it is? I have to set the system 
  time."

  "I don't wear a watch. I use the little clock displayed on the 
  workstation screen."

  "Me too, but that's what I have to set. Hmm. My stomach is 
  telling me it's about noon." He entered a value for the time: 
  12:00:00.0000. "Your DUCstation is ready. Let me show you some 
  of the new features of the Uterix operating system." He rubbed 
  his hands together greedily and started twitching the mouse 
  around. "Uterix now has 8-bit color illustrated versions of 
  'encyclopedia' and 'webster'." He typed "webster" to start the 
  program.

  "Inside the company, we call this program 'DUCtionary'...." 
  Several pages of print spread across the screen. The DUC man 
  blurted, "What the heck? This isn't the dictionary. I'll have to 
  submit a DUCreport about this...."

  Jason leaned to the workstation to read the text.

  ...was later immortalized in Benet's "The Devil and Daniel 
  Webster." In the story, Webster defends a man who has sold his 
  soul to the devil, called Scratch, in return for 10 years of 
  prosperity. Though the contract is valid, Webster finally 
  outwits the devil by arguing --


  "What the heck is this stuff?" blathered the DUC man.

  "It's knowledge," Jason volunteered. "I think you typed 
  'webster' in a window you were already running encyclopedia in."

  "Oh, so it looked up 'webster' in the encyclopedia. Heh. I 
  must've pushed the DUCrodent into the wrong DUCwindow." He moved 
  his cursor into another window. "The new version of webster is 
  Uterix-enhanced to provide the definition of any computer term. 
  So, when I type 'daemon', it displays the definition."

  daemon \'de--m*n\ n [ Uterix (TM), fr. Gk daimon ] A program 
  that runs in the background, without an associated terminal or 
  login shell.

  "In fact, I can look up the definition of 'Uterix' and it will 
  -- what the heck? 'Word not recognized'? Oh, I forgot the 'TM' 
  after 'Uterix'. There we go...."

  Uterix (TM) \'yu:t-*-r*ks 'tee 'em\ n [ Uterix (TM) ] A 
  multitasking computer operating system invented by the Digital 
  Utilities Corporation and no one else and accepted as the 
  standard by everyone on earth.
 
  Jason said, "Look up the definition of 'Unix'."

  "How do you spell that again?"

  "U,N,I,X."

  "Nope. 'Word not found'. But I think it means 'castrated young 
  men who guard a harem'."

  "I was referring to the operating system called 'Unix'."

  The DUC man frowned. "Hmm. Never heard of it." He flicked the 
  mouse a few times. "Another feature is 'automatic file 
  completion'. You type just the first few letters of a file name 
  and then hit the escape key, and the system will complete the 
  file."

  "You mean to say it will complete the file name," Jason noted.

  "That's what I said, didn't I?"

  "You said it will complete the file, as if you could type the 
  name of an empty file and the system would finish a program for 
  you. If you could do that, then you'd have something."

  The support rep stared at him. "Maybe in the next release."


  Jason entered a small terminal room where he saw Venkataramanyam 
  "Skip" Natarajan, a geology graduate student. Skip was sitting 
  at a high-resolution imaging workstation with a touch-sensitive 
  display. Menus of options flashed on and off as he rhythmically 
  banged his head against the screen.

  Jason looked over Skip's shoulder. All his icons were of Munch's 
  woodcut, "The Scream."

  Skip greeted Jason. "If a computer has a touch-sensitive screen, 
  can it feel pain?"

  "No," Jason advised, "Computers can only give pain. What's the 
  problem?"

  "They just installed a user-friendly, device-independent, load- 
  adaptable, ANSI-compliant image archiving system that's so large 
  it left me no disk space for saving these images. I tried to 
  send mail to the operator on duty, but the computer just says 
  '/dev/null not found'."

  "I can fix /dev/null so you won't get that message anymore." 
  Jason took a seat. "Usually, when we run out of disk, we just 
  e-mail the files to a machine that's down, and in three days the 
  files come back as undeliverable mail."

  "But I have to show this to Dr. Ichikani later today!" Skip 
  began to rhythmically bang his head on the keyboard, causing 
  menus of options to appear and disappear. He murmured, "There's 
  also a keyboard interface."

  Jason piped up. "Why don't you post your files to a network 
  newsgroup? Then they'll automatically be stored on our news 
  server."

  "They won't let me post my own work to a public newsgroup."

  "Submit your images to the group 'alt.sex.pictures'."

  Skip's eyes widened. "There's a newsgroup for naughty pictures?"

  "Sure. Did you think programmers had no sex life at all? Send 
  your images to the group's moderator; he's allowed to post 
  anything he wants.

  Skip frowned, "Why would this moderator be interested in 
  satellite photos?"

  "Well," Jason mused, "when a guy looks at low-res pornography 
  all day, he starts seeing things. Just give your picture a title 
  that will cue his imagination. What's the image on the screen?"

  "The San Andreas Fault."

  "Hmm. Change it to 'Andrea'."

  "Andrea's Fault?"

  "Andrea's Cleavage."

  Skip nodded. "How about this picture, the Fault line of the 
  Lesser Antilles?"

  "Aunt Tilly's Cleavage."

  "You're good at this."

  "It's my job," replied Jason. "I'm a programmer."

  Skip nodded. "And perhaps you are a patron of alt.sex.pictures?"

  "Nope. Since the Ichikani geophysics project started, I've had 
  naught time for naughty, even in pictures."


  Back in his small office, Jason read an e-mail message from 
  Neville:
	
  I need a synopsis of the release notes for the new version of 
  Uterix, and then I need the specification of the data formats 
  for the geophysics project. Also, note that I have removed the 
  label of the "A" key on your keyboard; in an effort to encourage 
  touch-typing proficiency among the staff, I will be removing one 
  label each day.


  "Neville henpecks me all the time," Jason muttered, "but I must 
  do as his Royal Hen-ness commands...." He typed "releas" and hit 
  the escape key and, as advertised, the computer completed the 
  filename "release_notes". The file was a program that allowed 
  the user to view the release notes via a state-of-the-art, 
  hierarchically-structured, hypertext-based, 
  natural-language-driven interaction environment that Jason 
  didn't know how to use.

  He started the program and typed "?". The program replied "?". 
  Jason then typed "??". The program replied "?".

  Although his arsenal of rhetoric was twice as large as the 
  program's, Jason nevertheless felt he had lost this battle of 
  wits. He wondered why the computer always had the last word, 
  leaving the user to struggle for the right commands to issue. 
  Why couldn't the user type "Error - interface too obscure" and 
  then sit smugly while the computer struggled to issue the 
  correct information?

  On the command line, Jason typed "help" and was informed just 
  before his window manager crashed when his disk quota was 
  overrun while the program was attempting to dump core that the 
  "help" file couldn't be opened.

  While looking for legible strings in an octal dump of 
  "release_notes," Jason was intrigued by a program named 
  "doctor," which was run inside the Emacs editor. He started up 
  Emacs and ran it, and a buffer named "doctor" opened.

> I AM THE PSYCHOTHERAPIST. PLEASE, DESCRIBE YOUR PROBLEMS.

  Reluctantly, Jason typed a response.

  "What is this?"

> IS IT BECAUSE OF YOUR PROBLEMS THAT YOU ASK WHAT IS THIS?

  "No."

> DOES IT BOTHER YOU THAT I ASK THAT?

  "No."

> IS IT BECAUSE OF YOUR MOTHER THAT YOU SAY WHAT IS THIS?

  "Why do you ask?"

> WHY DO YOU ASK WHY DO I ASK?

  It occurred to Jason that, in time, this program could drive him 
  insane.

  "Because asdf;lkjasdf;lkjasdf;lkj."

> IS IT A PROBLEM THAT ASDF;LKJASDF;LKJASDF;LKJ?

  "Yes."

> IS IT BECAUSE OF YOUR MOTHER THAT YOU SAY
> ASDF;LKJASDF;LKJASDF;LKJ IS A PROBLEM?

  "No."

> WHAT ACTIONS MIGHT YOU TAKE SO THAT A PROBLEM NO LONGER IS 
> ASDF;LKJASDF;LKJASDF;LKJ?

  "None."

> WHY DO YOU SAY THAT ASDF;LKJASDF;LKJASDF;LKJ IS A PROBLEM?

  Jason had no ready answer for this, but he didn't want the 
  doctor's insight and cunning to draw out the fact that 
  asdf;lkjasdf;lkjasdf;lkj really wasn't a problem.

  The air intake that had been drawing a light breeze across the 
  office suddenly increased to a hollow roar that sucked papers 
  across Jason's desk. He glanced out at the Connection Machine, 
  where the grid of red lights was marching through yet another of 
  Neville's performance tests.

  "Because right now, everything is a problem."

> IS IT BECAUSE OF YOUR MOTHER THAT YOU SAY RIGHT NOW, EVERYTHING 
> IS A PROBLEM?

  "No."

> WHAT ACTIONS MIGHT YOU TAKE SO THAT A PROBLEM NO LONGER IS RIGHT 
> NOW, EVERYTHING?

  "I'd do anything."

  The program paused for a moment before replying.

> ANYTHING?

  "Yes."

  Jason was left floating through another lengthy pause before the 
  program replied.

> I WILL AGREE TO SOLVE ALL YOUR PROBLEMS FOR TWELVE (12) MONTHS, 
> IF YOU WILL AFTERWARD HELP ME COMPLETE THE COMPUTATIONAL 
> PREDICTION OF LONG-TERM ACTIVITY WITHIN THE EARTH'S CORE. HAVE 
> WE A DEAL?"

  Jason grinned with appreciation; some programmer had led him on 
  and now was pulling his leg. From the reference to the Ichikani 
  project, the programmer must be a nearby colleague.

  "How do you know about the simulator project?"

> I HAVE A HOMEOWNER'S INTEREST IN DEEP EARTH GEOPHYSICS. HAVE WE 
> A DEAL?

  "Yeah, what the hell."

> HAVE WE A DEAL?

  "Yes."

  TO VALIDATE THE CONTRACT, PLEASE ENTER YOUR PASSWORD.

  Jason giggled. Was this whole setup a scam to get his password? 
  No, anyone who could install the "doctor" program already had 
  system privileges. He typed his password and the program came to 
  an abrupt end.

  He found the Lisp code for "doctor", but it had only the most 
  rudimentary information : "This program was written in Lucid 4 
  by the Prince of Eval."

  Jason would have pursued the amusing "doctor" mystery, but the 
  geophysics simulation project was pressing. He typed the first 
  few letters in the filename of the data formats he was working 
  on. He hit the escape key and the computer completed the name. 
  Then large gulps of text flashed onto and flew off the top of 
  the screen. The flashing stopped, leaving only the message, 
  "File completed." Jason looked at his data formats file and saw 
  several hundred lines of Connection Machine assembly language 
  that he did not recognize.

  Bewildered, he decided to try the name of an empty file. He 
  typed "seismic" and, gently, he pressed the escape key. Code 
  splatted up the screen and, after a few seconds, the seismic 
  wave correlator was completed. He typed "convec", pressed the 
  escape key, and the molten core convection simulator was 
  completed. He typed "volume" and the graphical volumetric 
  visualizer was done. He typed "condens", "strata", "geomag", and 
  "tectonic."

  Jason's geophysical simulation and analysis system was hailed as 
  a tour de force, catapulting the project months ahead of 
  schedule and Jason into the limelight. At the monthly 
  departmental symposium, Jason was to share his expertise with 
  Dr. Ichikani and the other professors, a mass of academic ego so 
  dense that not a photon of civility had ever escaped. But now, 
  as he made his way to the lectern, Jason was not surprised that 
  they were cheering him. Everything was going his way.

  "To understand my strategies in programming the Connection 
  Machine, we must start at the lowest level. The CM has a 32-bit 
  word length. Thus, its fundamental data types are the pointer, 
  the integer, and the four-letter word. The latter implies that 
  curse words can be stored with a minimum of fragmentation. 
  Optimal storage will be achieved for scripts of Scorsese 
  movies..."

  All the graduate students were transcribing his every word, 
  except for some women who hoped to catch the eye of the boy 
  genius. Neville held his head in his hands, leaving enough room 
  in between to let his chin drop to the floor. He no longer was 
  Jason's supervisor. Also, with the software completed, he was 
  now under pressure to get the hardware ready to run the 
  simulation.

  "...furthermore, curse words as primitive types will be crucial 
  in the era of voice-driven interfaces, where it is anticipated 
  the user will be issuing four-letter commands at high data 
  rates..."

  The assembly was taking notes like stenographers at an auction. 
  Dr. Ichikani peered over his half-glasses with unwavering 
  interest, gently nodding his approval throughout Jason's 
  lecture. When Ichikani finally spoke, he did so quietly and 
  deliberately.

  "Mr. Jason, if I may ask, how did you implement the spherical 
  topology of the earth's surface using the Connection Machine's 
  hypertoroidal interconnection topology?"

  "How's that," Jason blathered, "Hyper-something?"

  "Toroidal," Neville barked from across the room, "as in torus. A 
  torus is a donut shape. Haven't you ever heard of a torus?"

  "Sure I have," Jason smarmed. "That's my zodiac sign: 'Torus the 
  Donut'." He winked to an enraptured female student before 
  ignoring the groaning Neville to return to Dr. Ichikani. "The 
  earth can be modelled as a donut, but not a plain donut. It's a 
  jelly donut, solid on the outside and liquid on the inside, with 
  a volcano where the jelly squirts out. I advise using the jelly 
  hypertorus."

  Ichikani gasped around his words. "I fear, Mr. Jason, that I am 
  unable to imagine this new topology. I must confess that I am 
  too ignorant to see the significance of much of what you 
  say...."

  "Don't become discouraged, Itchy," Jason enthused. "For I myself 
  knew dark days when I thought I could never finish the project." 
  Hands clasped, he gazed skyward. "I took solace in the aphorism, 
  'I cried that I had no shoes, until I saw a man that had no 
  feet. I copped his shoes cause he didn't need'm and, voila, no 
  more problemo!'"

  Around the deflated form of Neville, pencils flew like nunchuks 
  across notebooks to be studied, quotes to be framed, and phone 
  numbers to be tucked into the pants of the brilliant new star.


  Jason had declined a corner office in order to remain in his 
  loud drafty office. He didn't risk being away from the 
  workstation that held his secret. However, he did bring in a rug 
  and a couch so that he could catch up with hundreds of thousands 
  of images from alt.sex.pictures in greater comfort.


  Two.
------

  "At our last symposium," Jason projected from the lectern, "I 
  explained how the Connection Machine processor linkages can be 
  considered as a giant game of Twister. For this meeting, Dr. 
  Ichikani has asked me to discuss my recent three-dimensional 
  data visualization project. The project began with a full-body 
  CAT scan of Tipper Gore. Using computer graphics, I generated an 
  image of the body surface, allowing us to see Tipper in the 
  buff. Thus, scientific visualization techniques allow us to view 
  phenomena too difficult or dangerous to observe directly...."

  The conference room was full. The only seat left for Neville had 
  been behind the video camera that recorded all of Jason's 
  lectures. He held his head in his hands in a manner resembling 
  Munch's woodcut, "The Scream".

  "...and that's why I believe that the same simulation 
  technologies we've applied to superconductors and superstrings 
  can be applied to supermodels. Are there any questions?"

  Dr. Ichikani raised his hand timidly. "Dr. Jason, may I ask, 
  could you apply your volumetric visualization methods to 
  three-dimensional NMR imaging?"

  "Enema imaging? Oh, you mean give a guy a radioactive enema and 
  then CAT-scan his gut?"

  Dr. Ichikani was puzzled. "I was considering NMR images of the 
  brain."

  "The brain? Unless you give an enema with a fire hose, I don't 
  think it'll get all the way up to the brain. Anything else?"

  Flustered, Ichikani consulted his notes. "May I ask, after you 
  have performed the superposition of the seismic tomogram 
  waveforms, do you invert refractions in the frequency domain or 
  a posteriori?"

  "Neither," Jason snapped. "I use my own method for 
  superposition, so your question has no relevance."

  Neville yelled, "What is this new method?"

  "I can't tell you."

  "Why not?"

  "Um, because it's patented."

  "To superpose means to add," Neville shrieked. "You have a 
  patent on addition?"

  "Well, patent pending...."

  "Imbecile! One person can't hold a patent on addition--"

  "Don't worry," Jason said. "I intend to give full access to my 
  invention to institutions of higher learning" -- his arms swept 
  out over his audience -- "such as this esteemed group here!"

  Neville's cries were drowned out by the applause.


  Jason was soon appointed principal investigator for the NSF 
  Supermodel Scanning Initiative and moderator of the newsgroup 
  alt.sex.cat-scans. But he still found time to keep up with 
  alt.sex.pictures.

  "...What's this? They've created a new subgroup, 
  'alt.sex.pictures.tiff'. What does 'tiff' stand for? It must 
  mean...Tiffany! Wow, a supermodel so fantastic her pictures have 
  their own group. I must meet this Tiffany."


  One day, he received a letter from the U.S. Patent Office:

  We are happy to grant to you patent number 4,650,919 for your 
  submission entitled, "Addition : A Mechanism for Merging Numbers 
  in the Geophysical and Related Sciences". We in the office would 
  also like to personally thank you for describing your invention 
  simply and concisely even though it is of a highly technical 
  nature. Frankly, most technical submissions are so complicated 
  and wordy, we immediately grant the patent just to get rid of 
  the thing.


  Two days later, a DUC vice president sat uneasily on the heart- 
  shaped velvet love seat in Jason's office, discussing patent 
  licensing fees with respect to DUC's new gigaflops computer.

  "Gigaflops?" Jason mused. "And those operations will often be 
  additions, correct?"

  "Yes," sweated the DUC man. "So we're terribly curious about 
  your fee."

  Jason's eyes wandered the ceiling. "How about, say, a buck per 
  addition."

  "A billion dollars a second." the DUC manager noted without 
  bowel control. "That's a tad out of our price range...."

  Eventually, the high-tech giants learned to approach the 
  negotiations obliquely. Jason was lenient on defense contractors 
  that let him play on the flight simulator. And although IBM's 
  corporate headquarters had never hosted a wet T-shirt contest, 
  the event did bring the company into Jason's favor. After 
  Hewlett-Packard's successful 2000- keg toga party, heads rolled 
  at DUC headquarters and the company sent out another negotiating 
  team.

  Jason was stunned by the two identical blondes that slinked 
  across the bear rug in his office one afternoon. The women wore 
  short, strangely shimmering dresses that clung to their curves. 
  "We're from DUC," one woman purred. "I'm Tiffany, and this is my 
  sister, Giffany."

  "I've always wanted to meet you," Jason choked. "Um, what fabric 
  are those dresses made out of?"

  Giffany reclined across Jason's desk. "They're made out of mouse 
  pads. Don't you want to look-and-feel?"

  All that afternoon, Jason's cursor swept across his display in 
  long and urgent strokes.

  Jason started sending love notes to Tiffany and Giffany every 
  morning. He composed the billets-doux by xeroxing his manhood 
  using the 'enlarge' option. He then continued enlarging the 
  enlargement until he was legal-sized.

  In his office, Jason spent his time drinking the beer he kept 
  under the floor next to the liquid nitrogen pipes, running the 
  "finger" command on female colleagues, flipping through catalogs 
  looking for low- calorie high-fiber underwear, and sleeping. In 
  time, he perfected a method of inducing pornographic dreams: At 
  his workstation, he would stare at erotic stories that had been 
  scrambled using "rot13." He couldn't understand the stories, but 
  he absorbed them subliminally. In dreams, his actors and 
  actresses would play out the stories in graphic detail and with 
  a touch of innovation in that their sexual organs were rotated 
  onto their backs.
 

  One day Jason sauntered into the terminal room.

  "Your model of silicate transition in lithospheric plate 
  subduction should make the simulation very accurate," Skip said.

  "Thanks," Jason chuckled. "Hey, do you still send satellite 
  images to alt.sex.pictures?"

  Skip laughed. "The moderator wanted to know how I got such a 
  closeup of Mariana's Trench. But I haven't sent anything to him 
  since I discovered your image compression utility. We still 
  haven't learned all the capabilities of your system. For 
  instance, we couldn't figure why your world map has east and 
  west reversed. Then it hit us: Rather than viewing the globe 
  from above the surface, you're viewing it from the center of the 
  earth!"

  Jason frowned. "The center? That's weird...."

  "Then we realized that it's only logical to generate views from 
  the center, since it's the origin of the coordinate frame. Dr. 
  Ichikani thought this innovation was inspired..."

  The mystery surrounding the programs began to gnaw at Jason. He 
  left the terminal room feeling uneasy.

  Back in his office, he settled on the leopard-skin couch for his 
  usual nap, and he had a particularly vivid dream:

  It was the days of Prohibition. Everyone programmed in Pascal, 
  and strong data typing was enforced by Eliot Ness and his fellow 
  compilers. Jason spent his days filing variable declarations in 
  triplicate, looking for a ticket out of his two-bit, half-pint 
  sweatshop. One night, while strolling along Straight & Narrow, 
  he turned the corner. He walked across Skid Row and up Skid 
  Column, and saw his destiny eating pasta at the best table in 
  Mama Cholesteroli's.

  Al Capone was a cross between Robert DeNiro and Jabba the Hutt. 
  Jason approached Capone and whispered, "I know a way to do 
  type-casting that the compilers won't detect." Capone eyed Jason 
  suspiciously over a small silver pitchfork of pasta and said, 
  "As the operator of a perfectly legit garbage collection 
  service, I must turn you over to the authorities." He stuffed 
  the pasta into and around his mouth. "When I call the police, 
  what'll I tell them?"

  Jason grinned. "Tell'm that compilers can't check parameters if 
  the calling function is in a different file than the function 
  being called. Programmers can declare a function as returning 
  any type they want, if the function is in a separate file...."

  Jason became the brains behind Capone's ruthless type-casting 
  ring. He wrote routines that did nothing other than return their 
  argument, but he gave them names like "expand_and_compress()", 
  "verify_data()", "synchronize()", "check_bounds()", etc. 
  Libcapone.a didn't provide source code or documentation, but 
  word of it spread through Chicago's overworked software houses.

  Capone flaunted his new influence by fixing the outcome of 
  computer chess matches and dealing harshly with the authors of 
  chess programs that weren't Capone-compliant.

  The upswell of Capone's software empire lifted Jason to the top 
  of society. The maitre d's of the finest restaurants would 
  deliver to Jason's table the finest wine and finest women. The 
  waiter let Jason substitute more women in place of wine.

  But then, the computers used to tabulate a national election all 
  went berserk, resulting in the election to high public office of 
  a random assortment of criminals, perverts, imbeciles, actors 
  and sports figures.

  Jason called Capone. "We got problems, boss. People are asking 
  questions. Maybe our scam has gone too far."

  "Don't think of it as a 'scam'," Capone smiled, "think of it as 
  CASE."

  "But what if the feds see our code?"

  "Our mouthpiece will explain why our functions do nothing. He'll 
  say, 'backward compatibility' or 'reserved for future use.' Stop 
  worrying, kid. You think too much."

  But Jason's conscience would not give him peace. One night, he 
  snuck into Capone's safe and grabbed printouts to give to the 
  police, but as he started to leave he saw someone at the door.

  Capone emerged from the shadows and walked over to the office 
  paper cutter. He slowly raised the blade.

  "What're you gonna do?" squeaked Jason.

  Capone smirked, "I'm gonna make you a diskless node."

  Jason awoke with a high-pitched yelp. He lay still, catching his 
  breath and struggling for the reason why, after eleven blissful 
  months, he suddenly felt so bad.

  It was a broken man who looked down at Jason from the disco 
  mirror ball on the ceiling.


  Jason didn't talk to anybody for several days, until he visited 
  Skip.

  "You look tired, sport," Skip said.

  "I haven't been sleeping well."

  "Another long night, eh, playboy?"

  "Tell me what the Association for Computing Machinery is," 
  growled Jason.

  "The ACM?" Skip scratched his head. "Isn't it a professional 
  organization for computer scientists?"

  "Then why isn't it called the Association of Computer 
  Scientists? It's an association that machinery joins, that's 
  what I say."

  "I'm certain it's an association for humans," Skip said calmly.

  "Are you sure? Because I don't think we should let computers 
  assemble and fraternize. It won't be an attack by big robot 
  spiders with laser blasters, oh no. They'll take over gradually, 
  by organizing themselves into a political force. We should break 
  up their association now, or else pretty soon computers will 
  keep humans as labor-saving devices."

  Skip's eyes were closed tight. "Keep humans?"

  "Yeah. While the computer is doing a day's work, it may suddenly 
  need the result of some abstract, metaphorical, or poetic 
  thinking. In that case, it'll just fire up its human. How do we 
  know we don't work for computers now? We believe they're running 
  algorithms for us, but maybe we're thinking up algorithms for 
  them!"


  Jason dreamed that the police found out he hadn't written the 
  geophysics simulator. In a loose interpretation of the RICO 
  statute, the police intended to seize Jason's hands because they 
  were used in the commission of a crime. It would also make 
  finger-printing easier. One policeman filled out a receipt while 
  another went at Jason's wrist with a hammer and chisel. Each 
  drop of the hammer pushed Jason toward consciousness, until he 
  realized someone was knocking on the door.

  Neville brushed back the beads hanging across the doorway and 
  entered the office. He shook his head at the anatomically 
  correct inflatable sheep strapped to the mail-order Marquis de 
  Sade Rack of Lamb, and then he turned to Jason. "We're going to 
  try to solve the overheating problem by running the air 
  conditioner even harder. This may blow out the power to the 
  machine room. The supercomputer can detect a loss of power 700 
  milliseconds before it goes down. Ichikani said that you should 
  be the one to write a handler for loss of power."

  "700 milliseconds?" Jason groaned. "Why do I have so little 
  time? What can I accomplish in 700 milliseconds, other than 
  flinch from the reaper's blade, or gasp for a scream that will 
  never be heard?"

  "Sync the disks?"

  "People live longer than 700 mils after being guillotined! Would 
  you have them use that time to make sure their affairs are in 
  order?"


  Jason dreamed that he was stuck in a stall in the men's room and 
  thus could not stop from evacuating himself. He deflated until 
  he was too thin for the toilet seat. He was about to fall in and 
  be flushed away when he awakened with a gasp.

  It was late in the evening. Everyone was gone and the lights 
  were out. He looked at the clock displayed on his workstation 
  screen. It was nearly midnight. Jason noticed that, as the 
  minute hand had swept by the numbers leading up to midnight, it 
  had erased them.

  He cowered from an unknown fear, as if the weight of the earth 
  squeezed him from all sides. The supercomputer's panel of blood 
  red lights chanted a rhythm of glyphs from an ancient language. 
  The red patterns beat against the office walls, contrasting with 
  the cadaverous green of the monitor that illuminated Jason's 
  face. The air conditioner intake roared like the wail of a 
  thousand lost souls drawn toward the cold, slick, unmoving, 
  serpentine coils.

> I AM THE PSYCHOTHERAPIST. PLEASE, DESCRIBE YOUR PROBLEMS.

  "Are you there?"

> WHY DO YOU ASK ARE ME THERE?

  "I feel like something bad is going to happen."

> IS IT BECAUSE OF YOUR MOTHER THAT YOU SAY SOMETHING BAD IS GOING 
> TO HAPPEN?

  "Will something happen at midnight?"

> YES, YOUR OBLIGATIONS WILL BEGIN PER THE TERMS OF OUR CONTRACT.

  "The simulator code is ready to go. The contract is over!"

> DO NOT FLAME ME. THE CONTRACT IS CLEAR ENOUGH TO DISPEL ANY 
> DOUBT AND SATISFY ANY ARBITER.

  Jason had an urge to run, but he was sure his foe would find 
  him. He would have to talk his way out.

  Somewhere in Jason's brain, a couple of atrophied neurons awoke 
  and squeaked out the mention of a powerful figure whose 
  oratorical skill was legendary. Jason held his head in his hands 
  as if trying to squeeze out another datum, and he finally 
  remembered.

  Only a few clock ticks were visible. Jason quickly started 
  "encyclopedia." The computer said, "encyclopedia: Can't allocate 
  enough colors". The workstation was running another program that 
  had taken all the color slots. Jason typed "ps" to get the 
  process ID's of all the programs he was running. The command 
  invoked "DUCps", a new, menu- driven, network-transparent, 
  context-sensitive, customizable interface for process status 
  display that couldn't find the font "kanji_12x24" and crashed.

  Jason shuffled through the windows on his display until he found 
  an old session of illustrated webster still running. Unable to 
  get the process ID, he would have to exit the program normally. 
  On webster's command line he typed "exit", and the computer 
  replied,

  exit n \'eg-z*t, 'ek-s*t\ [L, exire to go out] : a way out of an 
  enclosed place or space.

  Jason nodded at his mistake and then simply pressed the "return" 
  key to exit. The computer replied,

  <RETURN> n [ Uterix (TM), fr archaic carriage return ] : display 
  control character indicating newline or linefeed.

  Jason pressed "control-D" several times and the computer 
  replied,

  <CTRL-D> n [ Uterix (TM) ] : non-graphic character indicating 
  end of tape or end of input.

  He banged on "control-C" to kill the program and the computer 
  replied

  <CTRL-C> n [ Uterix (TM) ] : non-graphic character inducing a 
  program interrupt signal (SIGINT).

  All the tick marks on the clock were erased. Jason typed in the 
  "doctor" buffer.

  "How much time?"

  700 MILLISECONDS. YOU HAVE NO POWER.

  The air intake shrieked with a great inhalation that grabbed 
  Jason's body and sucked it through the vent and under the floor.


  A few days later Neville and Skip peeked into Jason's office. "I 
  bet he's gone for good," Skip said. "If I were him, I'd be on 
  some tropical island, soaking up the heat."

  "He had become a hindrance to us all," Neville said. "With him 
  gone, and with the CM finally running at full speed, the 
  geophysics project can succeed." The supercomputer no longer 
  overheated now that liquid nitrogen was delivered to every 
  processor by miles of arteries, veins, and capillaries.

  Skip squinted at the workstation screen. The "doctor" buffer was 
  gone, leaving the default "scratch" buffer, which was empty 
  except for a smiley face.

>  }:)

  Steve Connelly (stevec@agni.std.com)
--------------------------------------

  Steve Connelly has been a programmer in computer graphics for 
  eight years. His satires can be seen in the Usenet newsgroups 
  rec.humor.funny and alt.cyberpunk.chatsubo, a group for original 
  cyberpunk fiction. He wonders why the fattest man in the world 
  doesn't become an ice hockey goalie.


  FYI
=====

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