💾 Archived View for spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › humor › miami.hum captured on 2023-06-14 at 17:13:45.
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8-25-86 Go Bare Light streaks through the blinds. Shadows are seen dancing on the far walls of his room. Images flicker as the breeze gently moves the Levelors about, the window ajar. With a crackly and abrupt tone, an alarm pierces the stillness of the night. With the sounds of "True Colors", motions emerge from the stillness that had encompassed the bed. With a puff of energy, a set of Garfield sheets and a wool blanket jump to life, flying from their resting position on his body to the floor. In a few seconds the clump comes to a rest, beside a clump of dirty laundry and adjacent to a stagering stack of records, filled with the likes of The Wings, The Rolling Stones, and the Who. And from beneath the edge of the sheets emerges a foot, followed by a tired leg, and eventually another leg. With the roar of thunder, a giant slithers forth from his resting position, propping himself up on an elbow. Click and a burst of artificial light washes across the room. The once faint images now become sharp. The likes of Madonna and Vanity pecker the wall, amidst the portraits of George the Ape, Tarzan, and Leatherface. With a thud those feet slap onto the floor, stradling a well used weight bar. A powerful yawn erupts, and with it he stands, towering over the clothes and articles that scatter his residence. With precision movements, he slips into clothes, which he had layed out the previous evening, perched atop an old cedar chest. Dressed in a tattered and torn pair of purple Bermuda shorts, a VistaVision/ILM tee shirt, and black Converse All-Star high tops (his parents call them obnoxious), he staggers across the room, in search of a door. Mission complete. He steps into the hallway. makes a hair-pin right turn, and finds himself in the bathroom. Click. With an abundance of energy, he fights off tartar for just a few minuets. How could tartar existed for so long and people haven't known about it? Is it going to kill me?, he ponders. And on pop the rubberbands that make his braces hurt so much. With all the precision of a member of a color guard, he passes down the hallway to the stairs, and slowly descends. At the bottom, he rounds a corner, and is met by a large cabinet, which he promptly opens, exposing a mass of machines. The low rumble of an IBM fan can be heard, and the rumble of a hard drive is sporatic. Sitting atop the cabinet, a Hayes busily flickers its lights in a hypnotic manner, dialing and redialing. The ansi monitor is quiet. With the flick of a switch, it bursts to life, showing the images of an illegal program. "Jackpot", he mumbles, in reference to the screen, which tells him that the program is calling the local MCI number, trying various codes, and writing down the ones that work, a total of 17 for about 5 hours of work. Grabbing his favorite swivel chair, he positions himself in front of the machine, his battle versus the monsters of the phone lines almost done. It is almost 3 in the afternoon, and his rewards have cost him dearly. A lack of sleep has plagued his schoolwork, but, for some unknown and unique reason, he cares not. A quick scan of the house tells him that he is alone. His parents are not to be found. And still the lights of the modem flicker. He taps the "S" key, and a quick beep emerges from the depths of the machine. Would you like to see the codes? the program asks. With a grin he thanks the machine, says no, but tells it to print out the numbers. What a helpful computer, he thinks. After a peek through some recent printouts, he circles a phone number. He takes out the disk in his drive, ponders what it could possibly be, tosses it aside, and calls up his terminal program. He takes a second to tell this program about his marvelous success with MCI, and, after he is finished, he enters the phone number that he had circled. He pauses for a second, sitting there statue like, thinking. Like a cat pounching on a mouse, he begins to peck at the keyboard, with fire in his eyes and fear in his heart. He guides the program through the process of selecting a numner, telling it to dial the newset MCI code, and the newest number. Patiently he waits. The modem is quiet. All is calm. CONNECT, the machine says. His face turns red. Welcome to the First Bank of Miami. Can I help you? Uh oh. Flashback. Is it the same? Oh no. It is. Can this be real? I guess it has to be. Ok. Lets see if there has been any evolution, he thinks to himself. Enter bank account number please:, it says. He pauses. And then he types those infamous numbers. 88693. There. It is done. But will it work? His heart races at an incredible speed. Why isn't it saying INVALID NUMBER, TRY AGAIN? he murmers. He's in. Minor joy can be seen on his face. Some things never change. Password please, it says. And with that, he commits a felony. GEORGE, he tells it. And the room is filled with silence as his screen blanks and there is a pause. The screen fills with blue letters. Across the top of the color screen it says First bank of Miami. The rest of the screen fills with a menu. A)uthorize loans, C)alculate interest, D)isplay account total, and so on. There are the normal options. He is sitting in the chair of a bank employee. He is a bank employee. Or, at least thats what the computer at the other end thinks. Again he pauses. It's still not too late to turn off the machine, he thinks to himself. Bullshit, he says out loud. His mind is set. There is no turning back. He hits the T. Transfers. Ah, sweet memories, he says to himself. A little older, a little wiser, and a lot smarter, he says to the empty room. With that, a new menu appears on the screen. The options are about ten, from such things as account profile to transfer. A quick check at the profile, and he discovers that there are still old ladies nursing their nest eggs, like they were 2 years earlier, the last time he was through this way. But that does not last. The screen goes blank. There is a pause. A cursor appears in the top left corner. It drops down a few lines. Oh shit, he gasps. What the fuck is going on? Questions rip through his mind at an eternal pace. What is this? What's going on? Who is this? says the cursor. He dies. Right then and there he dies. It's all over. He has died and gone to hell for his sins. Gareth Sullivan, he replies. Will they buy it? Will Gareth find out? Fuck Gareth, will they buy it? What are you doing here? it asks. An idea pops into his mind. No light bulb appears above his head. Instead, a flood light does. He has a plan. Is this Freddie? This is some board you got here, Freddie, he says with a snicker. You had me going there for a second, Fred 'ol pal. I thought this actually WAS a bank for a second, he snaps back. Deep in his mind he knows this is his only chance. You have made a terrible mistake. This IS a bank. And what you are doing is called Wire Fraud, and possibly even Grand Theft, dances the little cursor. I suggest you hang up right now, and forget what you know, says the machine. Freddie, if this is some kind of joke, I'm gonna be upset, he enters as fast as he can. But if it is real, well, I'm gonna get the fuck out of here. Bye. And he hangs up. Beads of sweet drip down his forehead. he breathes fast. His heart pounds. He waits. A minuet passes. He sits back in his chair and stares at the phone. He is relieved. It does not ring. He is relieved. He sits there and wonders what he would do if the phone DID ring, and it WAS them. I would die, say says, as a turns back to the computer, looks at the program, and smiles. Ah. The beauty of creativity, he says to himself. And all that BS. Call the author. Tell him what you thought of it. And remember. This is not for real. Close, but not real. Or is it? Captain "Slider" Goodnight Care of: Marin 80 TBBS (415) 479-7218 300/1200 24 hrs a day California's Best Bulletin Board. Or so says the Captain Have you read The Story of Mojo?