Hackers by David Bischoff 1878 Within its very first year of operation, 1878 (Alexander Graham Bell's telephone) company learned a sharp lesson about combining teenage boys and telephone switchboards. Putting teenage boys in charge of the phone system brought swift and consistent disaster. Bell's chief engineer described them as "wild Indians." The boys were openly rude to customers. They talked back to subscribers, saucing off, uttering facetious remarks, and generally giving lip. The rascals took Saint Patrick's Day off without permission. And worst of all, they played clever tricks with the switchboard plugs: disconnecting calls, crossing lines so that customers found themselves talking to strangers, and so forth. This combination of power, technical mastery, and effective anonymity seemed to act like catnip on teenage boys. Bruce Sterling, The Hacker Crackdown 1983 "SHALL WE PLAY A GAME?" Walter Parkes and Larry Lasker, Wargames hacker (originally, someone who makes furniture with an axe) n. 1. A person who enjoys exploring the details of programmable systems and how to stretch their capabilities, as opposed to most users, who prefer to learn only the minimum necessary. 2. One who programs enthusiastically (even obsessively) or who enjoys programming rather than just theorizing about programming. 3. A person capable of appreciating hack value. 4. A person who is good at programming quickly. ... 8. (deprecated) A malicious meddler who tries to discover information by poking around. Hence password hacker, network hacker. The correct term is cracker. The term "hacker" also tends to connote membership in the global community defined by the net (see network, the and Internet address). It also implies that the person described is seen to subscribe to some version of the hacker ethic (see hacker ethic, the). It is better to be described as a hacker by others than to describe oneself that way. Hackers consider themselves something of an elite (a meritocracy on ability), though one to which new members are gladly welcome. There is thus a certain ego satisfaction to be had in identifying yourself as a hacker (but if you claim to be one and are not, you'll quickly be labeled bogus). See also wanna-be. -The New Hacker's Dictionary Eric S. Raymond, compiler < sign became <. Dade studied the code for a few moments. "Damn," he said. "You're right!" Who was this guy? "Dade, I know how you might feel about narcing on your friends, but we are hackers, both of us. For us there's no such thing as family or friends. We are each our own country, with temporary allies and enemies. I'd like to make a treaty with you." "Who are you?" Dade said. "I'm the one who understands you," said The Plague. "Now then, can we be allies?" He extended a hand. Dade looked at that hand. Tried to make it look as though he were honestly considering shaking it. "Naw," he said finally. "I don't play well with others." The Plague smiled. "Watch which 'others' you play with. A record like yours could get you kicked out of school. No colleges would take you. Maybe land you in jail. No future there. You'd be exiled from everyone and everything you love." He pulled a disk out of the computer and turned off the machine, ridding it of Dade's virus. "I'll be in touch. You try and stay out of trouble, okay?" "Bite me," said Dade. The grin remained. "Thank you." The Plague left. Dade let loose a breath and put his hands to his face. He let some of his emotions go, and shuddered. Damn! He was back in the big leagues again, and it didn't feel one bit better than it had last time! He sat for a while, regaining his regular breathing, his composure. He couldn't believe they'd just crashed in like that, without even a search warrant. He looked around. Everything had been pulled from his boxes. His storage disks were all out and manhandled. A quiet rage began to build in him. Whatever happened to the Bill of Rights? He felt like he'd been handed over to fascism, pure and simple. He heard the bang and bash of the front door opening again. What now? Were they back? His mom poked her nose through the door, looked around at the boxes the agents had opened. "Dade!" she said, happily. "You unpacked!" 9 Party The night after the Secret Service raid, Dade Murphy found himself heading up a Soho staircase along with Fantom Phreak, Lord Nikon, and Cereal Killer. The staircase smelled freshly painted and the sounds of partying people and acid jazz filtered down, echoing in the stairwell. He hadn't particularly felt like partying tonight. What with all that had been going on, he had been thinking he'd just like to chill for a while, stay out of the heat, think things over. But then, there'd been this particular dialogue with the chums: "Hey, hear about Joey's bust?" Phreak had said. "Probably had to do with that bank in Idaho," suggested Cereal, who seemed relieved they weren't ragging on him now. Fantom Phreak had just suggested that Cereal's parents had missed Woodstock and had been raising their son to make up for it. "You think he really could hack a Gibson?" Phreak had wondered aloud. Dade said, "Did you talk to him about it?" "Nope. But I did get an earful from Momma de Joey," Phreak had answered. "She said he's grounded for his next three lifetimes, man. And he can't 'consort with his computer friends' either. Hey, man-you think she means us?" A wry chuckle, then a serious shake of the head. "The Secret Service is really out to screw him." Dade had not commented on that at all. He felt it best at the moment to keep his mouth shut concerning that visit from that Pestilence guy. He needed to scope the territory properly first. As they approached the party-the existence of which they'd discovered by hacker means-Dade recognized the music. Funky acid jazz by US 3. There were so many grooves going on, they were going to have to watch their footing in this party. Phreak knocked on the apartment door. Lord Nikon flashed the invitation he'd wangled from his computer contacts. The pinhead who opened the door acted like it could have been a coupon for cornflakes for all he cared. He just let them in, and they cut through the hip-hopping, party-up party-down throng. "Wooooooo. One heavy-duty, deluxe-size apartment," Phreak commented. "Geez, I bet they gotta import cockroaches from Texas for this one." "Yeah," said Lord Nikon, his head already bobbing, his toe already tapping to the killer beat. "They made these kind of apartments back before WW II when there was some space in Manhattan. Nice, huh?" There were people dancing and people shmoozing and people just sitting on expensive couches or chairs, zoned and grooving. There were people in front of computer screens, there were people in the kitchen attacking the drink supply, there were people chomping on chips and onion dip at the refreshment spread. The place smelled of perfumed people and floor wax, with a gentle touch of potpourri in the air, occasionally without the pourri. However, despite the fact that this was definitely a party and they had not been wrongly guided, they could see no sign of Kate. "Nice place, huh?" said Phreak. Dade could only whistle with appreciation. Phreak led them over to a bookshelf. "Her mom makes big bucks writing these self-help books for women. Stuff like this." He pulled one out of a pile. "Women Who Love Men Who Are Emotional Amoebas." "That would explain a lot," said Dade sarcastically. It was his way of pretending to himself that he didn't care if he saw Kate Libby or not. In fact, last night, he'd had troubling dreams. One of the featured attractions had starred the hostess of this party and included some bare flesh and a lot of kissing-until Secret Service had ripped him away and stuck him on a plane slated for Siberia, U.S.A. Okay, okay, so she wasn't unsexy, he thought. Okay, okay, so maybe the less brainy parts of him, uhm, reacted to her. The traitors! His friends, after picking up some drinks and food, seemed to be similarly affected by the female gender. Nikon pointed out a particularly blond sort with a particularly black leather outfit. "Yo, Mr. C. Check it out. Houston, we have liftoff. Nasty niblet, three o'clock." Their heads all turned to inspect the young woman attired partly in a microskirt, but mostly in bare legs. "Ouch. Look at her!" said Phreak. "Look at her?" said Cereal, looking as though a great deal of snap-crackle-pop was going on behind his mirrored shades. "I've already erected a monument to her." "Hmm. Getting other kind of internal readings on that one," said Phreak, scrunching his face as he consulted his brain on the matter. "Uh . . . Lisa Blair . . . 26 East Seventh Street. Apartment 16, phone 555-4817." "How'd you know that?" Phreak smiled. "Photographic memory. It's a curse." Their gazes wandered, lighting upon another dancing woman, overweight and jammed into quite tight pants. "Spandex," said Cereal. "It's a privilege, not a right." "Hey, guys," said Phreak. "I see the phone. I gotta phone call expected about right now in Buenos Aires." There was a spare space on the couch beside the phone. Dade grabbed a Jolt Cola and sat, hoping to hear the Master in Phone Phreak Action. At the other side of the room he noticed a guy in rave attire dancing rather spastically who looked a little like one of the thuggy S.S. guys from yesterday. Naw.... Phreak was getting into it with his long-distance girlfriend. "No, baby, I'm not here at this party with no one. I'm thinking only of you. Why you think I'm calling you now?" The guy who'd been with Kate at the Cyberdelia the other day-that brain-dead Apollo who'd been identified as Curtis-sauntered by Dade, not noticing him. He stopped by Phreak, though, gave a disapproving scowl. "Hey, man, practicing phone sex again?" Phreak just glared with immense hostility at him. Dade chugged at his Jolt. Soon it was gone and he went to get another. "Happiness in Slavery" by Nine Inch Nails came on and the dance floor went nuts. Dade wasn't much of a dancer. And while he liked the general angry anarchy of the music, he just wasn't in the mood for tintinitus tonight. He suggested to the others an exploration of other rooms, and they happily agreed. "Hey, man, let's see if Hostess has a computer! Let's see what kind of megabytes she's packing, man!" It didn't take long to find Kate's room. It was the one with the first-rate sound system and the Trent Reznor poster alongside a fancy bed and tasteful Georgia O'Keeffe and Frida Kahlo prints on the walls. No stuffed animals, no pink, Dade noted. It looked like the room of one girl who got sophisticated a little too early for her mental health. "Yo," said Nikon. "I found it." "Leave it to Nikon, man," said Cereal. "I never would have. Sometimes these small ones, they just blend in with the atmosphere." Phreak was already at the notebook computer. It sat neatly at the desk, already hooked up to all the peripherals. Phreak turned it on, hit a command, and examined the interior specs. "Check it out, guys. This is insanely great. It's got a 28.8-kilobaud modem." Dade's attention was diverted from the room to the notebook. It was a really cool little machine, no question. It even smelled expensive. "Display?" he asked. "Active matrix, a million psychedelic colors. Man, she's sweet." "I want it," said Nikon. "I want it to have my children," said Phreak. They admired the sharp graphics and colors of the new Windows display. "Bet it looks crispy in the dark," said Cereal. "Hit the light, then!" said Phreak. The top light went out and the guys hovered over the computer, silently oohing and aahing at the varied shades and hues glowing from this miracle of technology. The bedroom door opened, and Dade turned to see two entangled figures enter the room and tumble onto the bed: Kate and Curtis. Kissing sounds arose from them as they rolled around. The antics were even more interesting than computers. However, for some reason, Dade was irked by this particular display. "Now there's some interesting linkage maneuvers," he whispered. "Yep," said Nikon. "You think Burn's got wetware to match her software?" Dade was alarmed. "Burn?" As in Acid Burn? But he said it too loudly. The osculating duo ceased osculating. "What the-" said Curtis. He groped around, hit the lights. Kate was readjusting her clothes. "What are you doing in here?" she demanded, totally outraged. Her eyes touched Dade's. She looked away. Was that a blush? he wondered. "I'm sorry," said Phreak. "We're sorry. We were just checkin' out your fly laptop." Nikon's head bobbed. "That's hype. You're in the butter zone." Only slightly in disarray now, Kate had come over to them. However, she no longer seemed angry, but pleased at the compliment. "Isn't it? I want to triple the RAM-" Curtis was aghast. "You're going into that computer crap now?" He made an abrupt and dismissive gesture. "Forget it. I'll see you later." "Sensitive lad." Kate looked abashed at having slipped into a technical mode. She pointed at Dade. "What's he doing here?" "Relax, Burn. He's my guest." Oh no! "Burn? You're Acid Burn? You booted me out of NBC?" said Dade. "What?" Kate was confused. Dade stuck out his hand. "I'm Crash Override." Kate's eyes went wide. "You're the moron who keeps invading my turf?" Cereal seemed totally overwhelmed. He pointed at Dade. "Crash . .." To Kate. ". .. and Burn!" Kate's eyebrows furrowed. Her hands went to her hips and she looked grimly thoughtful. "Wait. Does it occur to you guys that Joey's arrested just as this guy shows up?" She turned to Dade. "Nothing personal, but how do we know you aren't some amateur who got busted and turned informer?" Phreak shook his head. "He ain't no narc. Don't be paranoid." She stalked out. "It's nice being paranoid. It makes you feel wanted." "Crash and Burn," said Dade, considering. "That has a lovely ring to it." "Speakin' of Joey, I wonder how he's doing," said Nikon. "Oh, he's fine. He's a hardy soul," said Phreak. "They probably got him at an AA meeting or something 'cause they think he's a computer addict. Can you imagine that?" Nikon laughed, sipped his beer, and burped. The Plague's Office The Plague sat at his computer, typing away furiously. It was a hacker's dream, this computer. Top of the line, all that money could buy, with a horizontal Radius display, a DataHand keyboard, and a Cyberman joystick. He was getting exactly where he wanted to go, too, because he was good, the best. These amateurs . . . nobody could access like The Plague! There was a knock on the door. "Yeah?" "It's Margo." "Sure. Come in." She was dressed in a tight black dress, accentuating a slim and sexy StairMaster-in-the-office form. She had on a nice floral scent. The Plague studiously ignored her. "I thought we were going out for a drink. Several drinks, actually." "I realize this situation is stressful, Margo, but there's really no time to waste here." The Plague spat the words tersely. "Things haven't gone as planned." "The Murphy kid turned you down?" "Look here," he said, preferring not to dwell on the matter. "I've disguised myself as an IRS probe and penetrated the FBI NCIC___" "Whatever are you talking about?" He stopped. Below him was a compact refrigerator. He pulled out a cold Jolt. Offered Margo Wallace one. "No thanks. I'll take a diet." He gave her a diet Coke. He popped his Jolt and sipped. Gestured at the screen. "The FBI's computer holds' files on twenty million Americans. I hacked into it." He started typing again. "From here I can get access to every piece of data ever stored on Dade Murphy's parents. Everyone has a secret, Margo. Even you and I, hmm?" She sat down on the couch and took a nap. By the time she awoke, Plague's desk had magically become strewn with soda cans, candy wrappers, and computer printouts, all evidence of his hours of hacking activity. ¦ "Hey. Sleeping Beauty," said The Plague. "Look what I found!" She got up, went to his side. The printer was working. The Plague tapped some information onto the screen. "His parents separated five years ago, reconciled two years later, filed for divorce last year. Custody battle, boy chose to go with his mother." "So?" said Margo, rubbing her eyes. The Plague pulled paper from the printer. It showed a driver's license photo marked MURPHY LAUREN ROSE, along with other information. "So," said The Plague. "We get the mother, we get the kid." Margo Wallace smiled. She put her arms around his shoulders and gently nibbled The Plague's neck. "You know, it's nice to have a man around who's good for more than one thing." The Plague grinned cockily. Acid Burning The party was still going on in the main part of the apartment, but Trent Reznor was taking a snooze and Liz Phair was subbing, at a lower volume. Dade heard the Whip Smart tunes only vaguely. He was in Kate's room again, fooling around. Not with Kate, alas, but second best was not far behind in gratification value: Kate's laptop computer. He was just fooling around now in a local BBS, marveling at the subtlety of the shadings this machine got on its screen. It was late. He'd dived outside the room during some of the hairier parts of the party. He'd even joined in a moment of peace with Kate. She actually laughed. Of course, that was when the beer can had exploded in his face. It was particularly galling, since Dade didn't like beer, but the nice laugh it had coaxed out of the usually glacial Kate had made it worthwhile. On his way back here, he'd been looking for the bathroom and found Kate Libby's mother's office by mistake. Ruth Libby had been pounding away at some new antimale book, puffing away at cigarettes. She'd asked him some embarrassing questions about whether he'd been bottle-fed or gone the natural route before she let him go. Dade was having an on-line chat with a late-night BBS party-guy when Kate wandered back into her bedroom-this time, fortunately, minus a certain studly growth named Curtis. "What are you doing?" she demanded. "It's cool. I'm just on the Big Board. Under my own name, too." She moved next to him. Close enough that he could smell her perfume, still strong amidst the party odors. "I think it's too much machine for you." "Oh yeah?" He grinned, typed his way out of the board, and then started running through the operating systems with the ease of a pro. "Not bad," she said. "It's got a wicked refresh rate," he commented. "P6 chip. Triple the speed of a Pentium." "It's not just the chip." He pounded out a command, got a display, tapped some info. "It's got a PCI bus." He smiled. "But then, of course, you knew that already, didn't you." "Indeed," she said, arching an eyebrow. "RISC architecture is gonna change everything." "Risk is good," said Dade. Their eyes met, held. There was sweet electricity in the gaze. Frizzle and hum. A couple kissing on the balcony smacked against the window, breaking the spell. Dade turned back to the laptop, patting it appreciatively. "You sure this sweet machine's not going to waste?" Kate leaned against the desk, a vision of nonchalance. "Crash Override. What was it you said, 'Mess with the best. . . die like the rest'?" "Uh-huh. Not exactly hyperoriginal, but I still mean it." She laughed. "What? You're challenging me?" "You bet. Name your stakes." Kate's eyes came alight. "If I win, you become my slave?" "That actually sounds like fun!" "You wish. You'll do crap work. Scan, crack copyrights, whatever I want." "Deal. And if I win . . .," said Dade. "Hey, you can have my firstborn!" "How about your first date . . . with me!" "You're not going to win." "And on this date . . . you have to smile." Kate seemed to think about this for a moment. Then a wicked smile split her face. "Well, I don't do 'dates' . . . but I won't lose, either." She nodded. "You're on!" They shook hands, and her palm and fingers were cool and soft and sexy. "I look forward to interfacing with you," he said. "Ready for some advanced failure therapy?" she returned. But she was still smiling. 10 The Competition This was the deal: The contest was to hassle the Secret Service and achieve something to avenge the way that Joey had been treated. Dade Murphy and Kate Libby had agreed to let Fantom Phreak outline the tasks they would use to prove who of the two was the superior hacker. "Me, Nikon, and Cereal are the judges and referees," Phreak had proclaimed. "Our decisions are made final by a vote of at least two to one. No appeals. The duel lasts until a winner is declared. You may use only the dial-ups, access codes, and passwords in your collections. You can't ask for any help from us." The next day the two opponents hit the streets, notebook computers in hand, the Three Hacketeers along for observation purposes. "How quaint," Kate Libby said upon seeing Dade's plain vanilla machine. "It's all I need," Dade assured her. Under Phreak's supervision, they set up temporary operations at two pay phones on a low-trafficked street. Dade went first, while they all watched. Dade called the Village Voice, hacked into certain computer operations. "He's in the personal ads!" Kate said. "Looking for a date when you don't get one from me?" "Nope," said Dade. "A date for somebody else." The ad listed some very embarrassing dating specifications, and it gave Secret Service Agent Richard Gill's personal office number. This resulted in a countless stream of phone calls one night that got logged onto Gill's phone mail and caused a great deal of annoyance to him. Even worse was when he got phone calls during the day. As The Plague looked on with amusement, Gill finally got a line out to Bob and Ray, who had been stationed to watch Joey's activities. What was the kid up to? He was watching Star Trek, returned the agents. Classic Trek. "City on the Edge of Forever," starring Joan Collins. Good episode. Gill hadn't authorized a bug, so he wanted to know how they knew. The Plague answered that one: it wasn't a bug. It was a phone company computer which went on people's lines between two and four a.m. checking for maintenance problems. The Plague had subverted this computer for Gill's purposes to work around the clock, because the side effect was that it turned a phone receiver into a speakerphone. Thus, Bob and Ray knew what Joey had been watching on TV-and knew that he had not been responsible for all the obscene phone calls. This prank impressed the Hacker Committee very much indeed. Kate's had been good too-she'd managed to get sixty-seven pizzerias from the tri-state region to make deliveries to Gill's home at the same time--but they liked Dade's better. However, they conferred first on the subject. "Dade's been strokin' twenty-four/seven," Phreak said. "Your boy want to interface?" "Say," Phreak said, "wouldn't you rather a nice clean-cut freak like Crash be with Acid Burn than Curtis?" "Right, Mr. Simplex. Good point," Nikon agreed. "Listen up," Phreak said. "We gotta keep declaring their duel a tie. Sooner or later, chemistry will take over." Cereal offered another possibility: "Or we'll be accessories to a murder." So they'd gone back to the dueling duo, announcing a tie and an advance to Round Two. "I think I'm going to win this one," Dade announced. "Dade thinks," observed Kate. "There's an oxymoron." They went out to hit the pay phones again, the Hacketeers in tow to observe. The expedition proved quite fruitful. Secret Service Agent Gill's credit card was declined and then cut up by an irate waiter at a fancy restaurant in front of important guests. Secret Service Agent Gill exited the restaurant to discover his car being hauled away by a tow truck, the driver of which nastily advised him to pay his bills. The next day, Gill's beat-up rust-bucket rental car was pulled over by a cop, who handcuffed him after discovering that Richard Gill's license had been suspended because of a DUI and 113 traffic violations. Later that day, the Secret Service received flowers and messages of condolences. Richard Gill, upon trying to get the computer problems solved (he'd figured out that someone was messing things up-and not Joey H.; he'd checked on that), called accounting to get a paycheck he particularly needed due to the circumstances in which he'd been placed, only to discover that the government accounting computers had him listed as "deceased." That had been Dade's doing, as he announced proudly before the judging committee and Kate. "Very impressive," Nikon said. "Almost. . . Godlike," Cereal added. "Yeah. Whatever," Kate said. "So. What's the score?" The trio conferred. "Still a tie," Phreak declared. Both Dade and Kate disagreed. "With Mr. Gill's untimely demise and all, guess you two will have to improvise the next round." Dade turned to Kate. "If I win, will you wear a dress on our date?" Kate nodded. "But if I win, you wear a dress as my slave!" "Deal," said Dade. Their next hacker objectives were a little more difficult. High Places At the top of the observation deck of the Empire State Building, where Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan had finally found one another in Sleepless in Seattle and the giant ape had taken the plunge for Fay Wray in King Kong, Kate Libby attached her super-notebook to a public phone, while Dade Murphy, Fantom Phreak, Lord Nikon, and Cereal Killer looked on. "It's ringing," said Kate, cupping her attached phone unit. "Gimme a name to use." "Nah, nah," said Dade. "No help from the audience." Someone answered on the other end. "Hello?" Kate glanced at the writing on the side of Dade's sunglasses. She found a name to use. "Yeah. How are you tonight? This is Miss Oakley, with the computer operations office." At the other end of the line was a presidential aide sitting in a room just a few doors down from the Oval Office of the White House. "Yes," said the aide, fiddling with his suspenders. "You have access to the PROFS system, don't you?" "Yes, I do," said the aide. "Yeah, I know," said Kate, "'cause I'm troubleshooting the system. Something's wrong with the log-in prompt. I'm not sure if it's your end or our end. Could you help me with this?" "Sure, what can I do for you?" The aide was distracted. He was working on some stuff for a speech the president had to give the next day. "I know you're not supposed to divulge your account number or password over the phone-after all, we told you not to. But could you just type the word 'echo' into your computer?" "Sure," said the aide. The word 'ECHO' appeared on the screen of Kate's computer. "I can't see," said Cereal. "What's she doing?" "Shhhhh!" said Phreak. "She fooled him. He thinks he's logged onto the White House computer, but she sent him a dummy screen." "Now then," said Kate. "Enter your account." As the aide typed, numbers appeared on Kate's screen. 2-2-2-6-2. "And now your password, please," instructed Kate. "Uh-huh," said the aide. STUD appeared on the screen. Kate laughed to herself, then typed a message to the aide's computer. On the aide's monitor: INCORRECT LOG-IN. "Odd," said the aide. "I thought I typed it correctly." "Don't worry," said Kate. "I see the problem is on my end. Thanks for the help. . . ." She hung up. "Stud!" She cackled with glee. "I hacked the White House. Beat that!" The last remark was for Dade. And Dade was duly impressed, though naturally he chose not to reveal this. "We can read the president's mail!" Cereal exulted. Nikon bobbed his head. "Now that's what I call freedom of information!" Temptations Life went on, and so did the various efforts of certain people struggling for control, one-upmanship, domination, and the various odd things of value to human beings. Early the next day, at school, Kate Libby beckoned Dade Murphy to her locker, where she showed him a frilly pink dress and a wild red leather bra-and-panty ensemble. "I didn't know your size, so I guessed. You are man enough to stick to the deal, right?" Dade assured her that he was. He was very impressed by the girl's perversity. He was equally impressed later that day, though, by the parcel he received back home at his apartment. After signing for it, he opened the cardboard package. It was a translucent laptop, its interior mechanisms revealed. Dade had never seen one before. He turned it on. The face of The Plague appeared. "You want to know who I am?" his voice announced. "Well, let me explain the new world order. Governments and corporations need people like you and me. We are the samurai, the keyboard cowboys. And all the people out there who have no idea what's going on, they're the cattle, herded and helpless. You help me and I'll help you earn your spurs. Think about it. Meanwhile, enjoy your new, improved laptop." The program ceased and immediately erased itself. Meanwhile, at the Libby household, this mother-daughter interchange was going on: "Who was the cute new kid at the party?" Ruth Libby wanted to know. She was sitting at the table, smoking a cigarette, drinking coffee, and reading the Village Voice Literary Supplement. She had a yuppified Bohemian pallor to her face. "Some jerk," said Kate, pondering a copy of Wired as she finished her dinner. "That serious, eh?" said Ruth. She squinted through her cigarette smoke and wagged her finger. "Be careful-we always seem to fall for the ones we hate, to fulfill what I call a woman's 'suffering cycle.' Men are as unavoidable as menstrual cramps, and equally unpleasant, yet an integral part of our female experience." "Thanks. More cryptic parental advice," replied Kate. That night, though, she had a dream that was not cryptic at all. It involved rolling around and kissing a guy who was wearing a red dress, and who turned out to be Dade Murphy. Oh dear. She awoke immediately and sat up in bed with shock. Then, when she realized that she'd enjoyed the dream . . . well, maybe, she thought this Murphy person had more uses than being merely someone to best in a hacking contest. Hmm . . . Back at Ellingson Mineral, The Plague's dreams were less pleasant. The data printouts on Lauren Murphy were strewn on his desk. IRS data. Banking data. Medical data. Insurance data. And whatever other data he'd been able to come up with. Margo Wallace sat on the couch, regarding him. "Lauren Murphy, this is your life." He drummed the papers with his fingertips, then looked up at Margo. "Nothing here. I found zip. She's boring. She had a misdemeanor arrest for marijuana possession, way back in 1979. That's about all." "Dammit," said Margo. She got up and paced. She was used to getting what she wanted, used to getting immediate feedback. Action, action, action was her trade in PR. Immediate returns. Now, coming up blank for so long was making her frustrated. The Plague watched her. Enjoying her anxiety. She was such a cool number that he enjoyed it when she lost balance-that is, as long as he could put her back on-line. There had been times when she'd simply crashed into a screaming, out-of-control freak-out. She was a Hades-on-wheels at the best of times, and keeping her reined in was part of the challenge and pleasure of his mutually beneficial relationship with her. A small part. The Plague stood up, stretched, cracked his knuckles, then got himself another Jolt. He vaguely thought about going back to coffee-but then coffee didn't have the carbonation to inject the caffeine into the system properly. "This is a true story," he said. "This guy was mistakenly arrested because he had the same name as a felon in the FBI computer. And when he was booked there was a typing error. His name was entered 'Rook' instead of 'Brook.' He was in jail for months while the computer searched for the name 'Brook' to put it on the court calendar. His family called the police, but they couldn't locate him." He indicated the computer. "Because the computer said no such person was in jail." "What's the moral of this story?" snapped Margo, still pacing. The Plague rubbed his hands together, relishing the facts that he was about to present. "It's a dirty little secret that wrongful arrests occur constantly. That's why I wiped myself out of every system years ago." He sat back down in his seat, inserted his hands into the DataHands. "The only free man is the one that doesn't exist. Now then, this"-he penetrated screen after screen with a wild ferocity-"is where we find out if Dade Murphy is a momma's boy." "So you want to tell me what you're doing?" said Margo. The Plague smiled mischievously. "Ms. Lauren Murphy works at a bank as a loan officer. I think, in light of my expertise, we might play around with her reputation, hmm?" Margo brightened. "I think I like the way you think." As The Plague and Margo plotted and hacked, elsewhere in the city-Joey's apartment, to be exact-Mrs. Hardcastle looked in upon her son. She found the boy lying despondent upon his bed, staring up at the ceiling like a limp lasagna noodle without sauce. It was simply too much for the good-hearted woman to take. "You look pitiful, Joey," she said. "Okay, okay, you're not grounded anymore." Shaking her head sorrowfully, wishing that the boy merely wanted to play guitar in some rock band instead of illegal computer games, she left the room. Joey jumped to his feet. He felt one hundred percent better. He had known this would happen eventually, and he had bided his time accordingly. Now for vindication! He placed several telephone books on a chair, then hopped on. He pushed back a ceiling tile, pulled a pile of Playboys aside, and retrieved a leather bag. In the bag was a card collection. He delved into this and pulled out his "firmie," the infamous 3.5-inch disk marked copy-ellingson mineral. Then, liberated, he bolted for the great outdoors. He paged Phreak, got a return call at the phone booth. Wanna meet me at Battery Park? he asked. Designated bench? Would he! Phreak said. You bet, buddy! Welcome back to the living. The two hackers met. They high-fived. They walked. Joey talked. From a distance, Bob and Ray, who had followed Joey to Battery Park, tagged along, lurking. "Joey," said Phreak. "A Garbage File just holds miscellaneous data, junk, bits of stuff that's been erased." Joey shook his adamantly. "Not this one," he insisted. "I got it from Ellingson. They keep askin' about it. Take a look!" Joey pulled the disk from a pocket and Phreak took it. But even as he did, he heard a faint click, looked around. There was a Secret Service jerk, taking a picture of the transaction! "Oh, crap, Joey. You got a tail." "Rats! I gotta go!" Joey split, leaving Phreak holding the deadly disk in his hand. He looked down at it, said, "Oh, crap," and split in the other direction. The Secret Service hopped into action. Bob followed Joey. Ray followed Phreak. Something was happening! 11 When Ramon Sanchez, aka Fantom Phreak, woke up the next morning to the pounding of his mother on his door and her shouting of "Ramon, Ramon! Get up! Time for school," he was grateful to her. He'd just been having a monster of a dream, and he was glad to be rid of it. He'd managed to ditch Ray the Secret Service Agent with a combination of his trademark technical efficiency and his cleverness. He'd ducked into a pizzeria phone booth. When the SS guy trained a laser listening device on the pizzeria, Phreak left a small recorder going, spouting his love songs to some distant amour, and then slipped out the back. The Secret Service guy spent the next half hour listening to Phreak's tape, thinking Phreak was still in the pizzeria. Then he'd hid the Garbage File that Joey had given him in a Stanton boys' room, gone home, and shredded lots of incriminating computer notebooks. Nonetheless, when the lights were finally out and he'd hit the sack, he'd dreamed that helicopters were buzzing around his apartment and that Secret Service Agent Gill was on his computer screen, nose protruding, saying, "I'm watching you!" Enough to ruin any good night's sleep, certainly. He sighed with relief. However, his relief was short-lived, for when his mother pulled the shades of his window open, there were a couple of Secret Service agents there, peering in, guns drawn. They opened the window and stuck their guns in. "Don't move!" they cried. Bob and Ray. The Dropsy Twins. They came in and pointed their big guns in the general direction of Phreak's brains, emphasizing the seriousness of their phrasings. "Deja vu," said Phreak. "Ray Sanchez," announced Secret Service Agent Bob. "You're under arrest under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986." His mother, truly pissed off, started screaming Spanish at Phreak and smacking him even though she had no clue as to what he did, she had known he'd get into trouble with his computer hijinks some day. "What're you waiting for?" he cried. "Arrest me already!" They were only too happy to oblige. They put handcuffs on him and hauled him down to jail, bars and heavy-duty criminals and all. The criminals looked at him as though he were breakfast. Phreak asked for the phone call every citizen is entitled to under these circumstances. He was reluctantly obliged. "You get one call. Uno," a, big-bellied guard told him. "Understand? Comprende? Write down the number." He scribbled the number on the clipboard. The guard dialed it, shut and locked the plate, preventing any other calls, then waddled out. Phreak pressed the phone's hook to hang up, then flicked it ten times. Dial tone. He pursed his lips and whistled a short, clear tone. Back in the old days, you could get a whistle from Cap'n Crunch boxes that could do this. Fortunately, Phreak had developed the same lovely and useful talent. When someone came on, he said, "Operator, I'm having trouble dialing a number. 555-4202. Thank you." Kate Libby answered. She knew what had happened to him. "Hey, it's me," said Phreak. "Yeah, I'm freakin'. I get arraigned Friday. The lawyers cost a lot. My parents are buggin'. They're chargin' me with serious shit. And this is stuff I didn't even do, like, get this, inserting some virus called da Vinci. And they keep askin' about you guys." Kate Libby kept calm. "You think they're gonna bust us?" "Yeah," said Phreak. "You better figure out what's on that disk, 'cause we are being framed. I put it in that place where I left that other thing that time. Remember?" Kate remembered. The next day, she got the disk from the locker at Stanton High School. Shortly thereafter, Dade Murphy received a phone call from a man with a familiar voice. "The girl," said Plague. "The girl has the disk I need. Get it for me." "Told you. I don't play well with others," said Dade. "Your laptop is on the telephone line?" "Sure." "Turn it on. Set it for incoming data." Dade shrugged and obeyed, booting up the machine, then setting up a terminal quickly. It whirred with incoming information, and then the screen filled with a picture of a woman who had some facial resemblances to his mother. Suddenly, digitally, the image changed- morphed-into an exact resemblance of Lauren Murphy. "Lauren Murphy is now a wanted felon in the state of Washington. Forgery, embezzlement, two drug convictions. Plus, she jumped parole. When she's arrested, she will not pass 'go,' she will go straight to jail. Then, I change this file back to the original and your mom disappears." "No way!" said Dade. "Computers never lie, kid. Your mother will be arrested at work. She'll be handcuffed. Later, she'll be strip-searched. And that's only the beginning!" Dade stood up and screamed into the phone. "Leave her alone, Plague, or I'm going to kill you!" "Kid, don't threaten me," said The Plague. "There are worse things than death, and I can do all of them. Now listen to a true story. It's about a poor guy named Tom Brook. .. ." Dade listened in hopeless, forlorn disbelief to the story of a wrongfully jailed man. Damn! These were no idle words, either; The Plague had the chops to accomplish all this, no question about it! He was up against the wall, big time! Helplessly, he listened to this techno-Beelzebub, thinking furiously. Snap Crackle Hack Cereal Killer was standing in Central Park, a rucksack of tapes by his feet, hawking his wares, when Kate rolled up on a trail bike. "Re-edited videotapes of my own devising!" he called to passing strollers, skateboarders, and Rollerbladers. "Godfather versus Scarface. Pacino versus Pacino. Which is the baddest Al?" "Hey, C. K.," said Kate, skidding to an elaborate halt. "Nice moves, sunshine," said Cereal, peeling back some of his long hair to get a better look at his visitor. "Phreak's been busted." "That's the buzz. Life's getting hot all around." She pulled out a disk from her windbreaker. "This is what they're after. But why? We're going to have to decipher this little baby, that much is pretty clear." "Guess you already thought about. . .?" "Dade? No way . . .," she said. "Man, that guy knows some code. . . . His brain is seriously tuned up, that's all I can say!" "We don't know him. How can we trust him?" Cereal shrugged. "Well, I guess you can trust him about as much as any hacker. . . . But me, I got a sixth sense for this thing, I think." There was a sudden and different kind of depth in his eye. "I been scoping out the dude. I think he resonates." "Well, C. K. That's nice. But can we trust him?" "The question you're asking yourself, Burn, is ... can you trust yourself?" She looked away. "We gotta stick together. The Man's on our butts and our lifestyles are threatened!" "Okay, okay, he does seem to know his way around this kind of stuff. You know where he lives?" "You bet, sweetheart!" When Kate and Cereal Killer arrived at Dade Murphy's apartment, Lauren Murphy opened the door. "I'm Kate. This is Cereal," Kate said by way of introduction. "You must be Dade's mom. Is he here? Can we see him if he is?" Lauren Murphy and Kate eyed each other in an appraising fashion. Kate grudgingly thought that this was a pretty cool mom. She didn't look like the kind who analyzed everything to death. Lauren Murphy was a little more basic than that. "Now I see what all the fuss is about," she said, appreciative of the fact that Kate had just the right amounts of youth, beauty, and smarts to interest a guy like her son. "He's here, all right. Come this way, please!" Lauren Murphy led them through the small apartment to Dade's room. She knocked. "You have company," she announced. Dade, lying on his bed, managed to get ahold of himself. He mumbled agreement to an audience and Lauren pushed the door open and left them alone. Kate took a deep breath and pushed out the words. "We need your help." It was incredibly painful for her. Asking for help from a guy like this! That he was so cute and so smart made him that much more unbearable. Dade seemed honestly surprised. The sarcasm in his voice was just habit. "Do my ears deceive me? You need help?" Cereal held up two fingers in a sixties peace sign. "Truce, guys. We got a higher purpose: a wake-up call for the Nintendo generation. We demand free access to data. Well, it brings responsibility." He swept back his long hair dramatically. "I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man I put away childish things." Kate just rolled her eyes. "Are you feeling all right?" she said jokingly. Cereal nodded gravely. This immersion into reality was causing him stress. Kate put her hands up in a gesture of reasoning. "Look, guy, Phreak and Joey are being framed. We need your help in figuring out what's on this disk." She took the thing out from her pocket, let him see it. Dade shook his head warily. "I can't. Everybody who touches that thing gets busted. I can't afford to get arrested. I'm sorry." Kate could not hide her disappointment. She let his words sink in for a moment, then extended the disk toward Dade. "Okay. Just one favor then-no risk. Would you make a copy of the disk? Just hide it, in case we get busted, so we'll have one to give our lawyers that we know hasn't been tampered with." Lauren Murphy leaned into the room. "You kids help yourself to anything in the fridge," she said cheerfully. In his mind, Dade could hear the scenario that The Plague had painted for her future: "Your mother will be arrested at work . . . handcuffed . . . strip-searched .. ." Dade turned to Kate. "Okay. Copying it's no problem." "Thanks, Dade." Her smile was heaven. After they'd left, Dade smashed the clear laptop Plague had given him. "I hate my life!" he told the uncaring walls. Then he called The Plague. The security chief was only too happy to hear from him. Dade told him what he had and demanded that the extortion discontinue, and also demanded that no harm or trouble be visited upon Kate Libby. "I mean, she came to me to figure it out. She isn't the one who planted the virus. Leave her alone." "Don't worry about it, kid. If she's innocent, she'll be fine," said the Plague. The Plague came around to the neighborhood in a silver limo and picked the disk up outside, according to plan. His eyes shone as he took the disk. "Your mommy's fine now. Okay?" Then he'd disappeared, swallowed up again by the big empty stone canyons of the city. No, Dade thought. Things were not okay at all. Nor were they exactly okay when, later, his mom came into his room with a batch of new letters from colleges. Unopened, of course. "Dade," she said. "Would you please consider these!" Dade turned away from her. "I don't care! To heck with college!" Lauren was completely flabbergasted. "Great, just ruin the rest of your life." Dade rolled over and stared at her. "Uh, like I ruined your marriage?" She seemed taken aback by this. "You know what happened with your father. .. ." Dade got up off the bed, shot her a dead look, and started walking. "You blame me for it, don't you. Don't you!" He kept going toward the door. Lauren Murphy started to deny it, but somehow could not. "Dade . . .," she called after him. He slammed the door on the way out. Garbage Alert Kate Libby's mother let him in with no hassle, and he went right to the bedroom, where he knew they'd be. The hackers were hovering over Kate's computer, seemingly in some kind of spell. On the screen was the code that could only be the Garbage program. They were attempting to figure out what it was, why the Secret Service wanted it so much. "Kate, listen . . .," said Dade. Kate barely acknowledged his arrival. "Hold on," she said, lifting a restraining hand. "I have to . . .," said Dade. Nikon was shaking his head, tapping the screen. "Look at this, it's so mean and clean . . .," he said. ". . . like a hacker wrote it," Cereal finished for him. Dade blinked. He considered. Intricate wheels turned within tinier cogs in his brain. "You mean, like, a Dark Side hacker?" Kate didn't seem to hear him. She was too wrapped up. She knew something about computer programs, enough to tell the difference between a sloppy program and an elegant one. This program, though, was like some offspring of Chthulu and Dracula, wearing Regency cybergear. "C'mere. Look. This thing is tense!" Nikon scrolled down to the bottom and tapped a ragged thread, ripped off in midcoding. "This is ill. It's incomplete. It'll take forever and a day to figure out." "Let me take a look," said Dade. They let him in, and he started scrolling back up to the top of the program. "Better start at the beginning." They studied the thing for hours. Dade was surprised at how much code the others had picked up just from fooling around with computers; however they did not have the complete book knowledge he'd gotten from reading, reading, reading during his years of exile. Still, there was stuff going on in this program that he'd never seen or imagined. Eventually they got hungry and ordered a pizza. The pizza boy arrived with the pineapple-Canadian-bacon-with-double-cheese at exactly the same time as boyfriend Curtis showed up. Mrs. Libby let them both in. "What's this?" Curtis demanded, at the same time as he turned his nose up at the offer of a steaming, greasy hunk of pizza. "Just an orgy," said Dade. Curtis focused his attention on Kate. "Where were you last night?" Kate slapped a hand against her head, as though to knock some faulty part of it back into functioning. "Oh God, I'm sorry. Can we talk later?" "No thanks!" snapped Curtis. "So you can blow me off again?" He gazed with total contempt at the collection of computer paper, empty and unempty Jolt cans, and funky teenage brainy disarray surrounding the group huddled around the computer. "Enjoy your nerd buddies. I see they're rubbing off." He sneered in Dade's general direction, then stormed out. "Get a leash on life!" Cereal called cheerfully after him, a wedge of pizza hanging limply in his hands. They devoured the large pizza, washed down by more Jolt, and set back to work at deciphering the program in the Garbage File. They did so deep into the night. Finally, Dade examined one significant bit that was part of a long printout they'd spread on the bed. He slapped the paper, astonished. "It isn't a virus! It's a worm." Nikon leaned back in his chair, interested but sleepy. "So what's this one eating?" "It's nibblin'," said Dade. See all this?" He tapped a pile of accumulated paper. "This is every financial transaction Ellingson conducts. From million-dollar deals to the ten bucks some guy paid for gas." "I've heard that what a worm does is eat a few cents from each transaction," said Kate. "No one's caught it because the money isn't really gone, it's just data being shifted around," said Dade. Kate nodded. "So when the worm's ready, it zips out the money, then erases its tracks." "You bet," said Dade. "Joey got cut off before he got to that part. Check it out. By this point"-he went back to the computer screen, scrolled, tapped-"the worm is running twice the speed as when it started." Kate said, "At this rate, it ends its run in ..." "Two days," said Nikon. Dade went back to the printout. "Judging from this segment alone its already eaten about. . ." Cereal held up a string of paper. "Twenty-one point-eight million dollars." "Pretty good, Cereal," said Kate. "Whoever wrote this needs someone to take the fall, and that's Phreak and Joey and us. We gotta get the rest of this file and find out where the money's going before the worm disappears, so we can find out who created it." "The jerk!" said Dade abruptly. "What?" said Kate. "Who? You know, Dade?" "I know. Yes. I know who wrote it. This Ellingson security creep. I-uh ... I gave him the copy of the disk you gave me." "You what?" said Kate. "I didn't know what was on it." They were all aghast at the news. "Universally stupid, man." Kate pursued the topic doggedly. "Why did he come after you?" Dade looked at them. There was no way he was going to get out of this one. The only way they were going to understand the reason he'd done this was to let it all spill. "I've got a record." He had to force the truth out. "I'm, I mean ... I was . . . Zero Cool." Whatever cool that remained in the group drained away immediately. They stared at Dade Murphy, totally shocked. "Far out," said Cereal, the first one to speak. "Zero Cool crashed fifteen hundred and seven systems in one day. Biggest crash in history," muttered Nikon. "Front page, New York Times, August tenth, 1988, photo on page seven. You had braces then!" Kate put her hands on her face. "Oh, this is great. There goes MIT." Dade looked at her, mustering every bit of sincerity he could. "I'll make it up." "How?" asked Kate. Dade thought a moment, then shrugged. "I'll hack that Ellingson Gibson." With a laugh, Nikon said, "You'll get traced like that!" He snapped his fingers. "The cops will find you holding a smokin' gun!" Dade was still looking at Kate, still being sincere. "I don't care." "Even if you had passwords, it'll take you ten minutes to get in," Lord Nikon pointed out. "Then you still have to find the file. The cops can find you in five." Cereal Killer pulled a french fry from his pocket. "Oh wow. We are fried!" Kate folded her arms and smiled at Dade. "Never send a boy to do a woman's job. With me we can do it in seven." Dade was surprised. But not too surprised. Somewhere in this person he'd glimpsed this kind of individual. Maybe that was why she bothered him so much. Cereal grinned. "Ah, you're both doomed. I help, we can do it in six." Nikon shook his head wearily. "I have to save all your asses." He broke into a grin. "I help, we can do it in five." Dade looked at them all, and he got a thrill. Here were all these independent cusses, united. . . . United, in solidarity, against an evil force that had penetrated the individualistic but oddly principled universe of Hackerdom. "Okay," he said, cracking his fingers. "Let's go shopping!" 12 There were, of course, things that had to be accomplished before the gates of the Gibson could be breached again. They all knew that Joey had been incredibly lucky-no, make that unlucky-to have hacked the Gibson in the fashion he had, plopping them all into this kind of awkward situation. There would be added precautions by the computer security people to make sure that a hacker never got in again. However, that did not mean that hacking the Ellingson Gibson was entirely impossible. Only improbable. And if hackers had done nothing else over the years since amateur computer operators had first jammed onto the telephone lines and the Information Highway, they had developed odd loop-de-loops and limbos around, above, and below that Line of Improbability. First off, Lord Nikon and Cereal Killer went on a small skateboarding expedition. It didn't take them long to find the telltale colorings and insignia of New York Telephone on a van parked above a manhole. While the workmen labored below the city street, the duo successfully snagged a phone headset, a lineman's belt, and a yellow hard hat. Cereal forgot the manual. Had to go back. Almost got caught, but their expertise on skateboards soon streaked them away from harm. Using the swiped items, Cereal disguised himself as a phone repairman who was looking for something wrong in Secret Service Agent Gill's office. Crawling under desks, working away, he was able to get into some very worthwhile mischief, right under Agent Gill's nose. Cereal planted an electronic bug in the middle of Secret Service headquarters. Lord Nikon found a couple of flower bouquets on special at a nearby florist. Under a deliveryman cover, he got inside the offices of Ellingson Mineral and immediately discovered the areas with the densest computer populations. His bouquets never quite got delivered; however, he was able to do a great deal of "shoulder surfing" for passwords as people logged onto their computers, even spotting the movement of fingers, correlating them with an imaginary keyboard and memorizing the passwords collected. Meanwhile, Dade and Kate prepared for their own task, which had to take place under cover of night to be most effective: Dumpster diving. "We're gonna climb that?" said Dade, eyeing the ten-foot Cyclone fence running the length of the rear alley of the skyscraper. "You can if you feel like it," said Kate. "I've got some other ideas." She pulled out a pair of wire cutters from her backpack. Once inside, they found the Dumpster. Unfortunately, it correlated to the Ellingson Building perfectly: it was huge! "It's the size of a truck," said Dade, peering up at the moonlit monolith. "Lotsa trash, guy," said Kate. Dade took an exaggerated breath. "Ah! Strangely romantic, isn't it? Moonlight and stench." They scaled the side, opened one of the lids, and jumped inside. Dade first, Kate's bag, then Kate . . . a little awkwardly. She fell onto him, pushing him into the refuse. They lay together, body to body, face to face, and Dade did not mind the sensations he felt being close to her. "If I didn't live by a personal code of honor, I might take advantage of this situation . . . uhm . . . erotically, if you know what I mean!" he said. "Save it, my friend." She reached down for the bag and pulled out a flashlight. Turned it on. Amongst all the mess, they discovered two large bags full of computer printouts that looked likely to contain necessary information. Hauling these, they scrambled out of the Dumpster. "Good work," said Dade, examining the papery loot. "This is just the kind of-" A metal side door of the Ellingson Building opened. Light spilled into the alleyway, illuminating the ransackers. A guard stepped out. "Hold it right there, you two!" the guard cried. Kate pulled something from her bag. She lifted her arms. Bright light shot from her hands: a brilliant ball of it. "Holy . . .," cried the guard. No hero, he slammed his door shut. The fireball-more fireworks than weapon-smashed harmlessly yards away from the door. The effect, however, had been achieved. "Outta here!" cried Kate. Dade scrambled behind her. Out on the street, he caught up. "What was that?" She pulled a flare gun from her pocket. "Personalized Subway Defense System." "Well, Mace wouldn't have worked back there, that's for sure." He hoisted his bag of papers. "Onward to rendezvous?" "Yes, and quickly." They jogged on into the night. The Plague Spreads Margo Wallace had tried to sleep, God knew she had. She was getting these sunken eyes and these awful lines on her face and the stress was going to start showing through the makeup soon. That would not be good for her job, and it certainly would not be good if anyone got suspicious about her. (But why'? Margo, she asked herself. How? Nobody knew she was involved with The Thing From Under the Computer. She had no record. This was her first attempt at crime. That it was for a multimillion-dollar score was what had made her cross the line. It had been she who'd been reading that book The Hacker Crackdown by Bruce Sterling, after she'd taken a fancy to the skateboarding computer ferret. It was she who had asked if it would be possible to quietly and anonymously drain a few million off the amazing number-flow of Ellingson Mineral. She'd been half-surprised when The Plague had said that not only was it possible, but it would be amazingly easy, provided she pulled off a few corporate memos and maneuvers that would make the books balance in the end. So, she was getting older and she still didn't have the kind of life she wanted. Millions of dollars, she'd thought, would buy exactly what she wanted. She'd wait a few years, retire, and then live the rest of her life in just the fashion she deserved. With Byte Brain? Most likely not. But then, there were lots of other men who were more powerful and wealthier, and if she could just be in the right places, she knew she could snag one. No, Margo couldn't sleep, so she put on jeans and sneaks and went to the office to see what was up. The Plague was up, of course. Working on his computer. "What's going on?" she said. "Close the door, will you?" He looked a little weary and worried, but unbeaten. She closed the door. "They had the Garbage File, all right." Margo stiffened. She sat down in a chair, gritting her teeth. "How much do they know?" "Very hard to say. Certainly not everything. These are smart kids, though." He sighed. "And curious. They'll know enough. Maybe enough to implicate us." Margo shook her head. "You said the beauty of this plan was that the 'worm' was untraceable." "Oh yeah. Your normal civilian computer people wouldn't know what it was. Not even if they had computer science degrees. But these are hackers." He'banged his desk with his fist, snapped his fingers. "What we have do is to nail them first. With something big . . . and nasty." He thought for a moment. A greasy smile crossed his features. "Tell you what. We launch the virus, then implicate the little chumps with having written it. The worm delivers our payday . . . and no one believes the guilty!" Margo stood and paced. "Launch the da Vinci?" Damn! This was supposed to be just pulling some numbers from a computer, putting those numbers into a Swiss bank account, then earning interest and pulling out raw cash over the years. "This is getting too messy!" Plague frowned. He stood up, grabbed her arm, held it firmly. There was iron in his voice. "Look. There is no right and wrong. There's only fun and boring. A thirty-year prison sentence sounds pretty dull to me. Who do you prefer serves it-us or them?" She could say nothing. She had no choice. "I'm not stopping you," she said. The Plague sat back down. Hit a few buttons. An operating screen for the da Vinci virus appeared on the screen. A graphic menu choice stated: CANCEL and LAUNCH. The Plague hit the LAUNCH command. He reached back and patted himself on the back. "I think we've got 'em," said The Plague. "Now all I have to do is make some arrangements with law enforcement." Margo Wallace sighed and nodded. Well, nothing would come of it, anyway, she told herself. And they were only hackers. Scum of the new technology. Lowest of the low. They deserved to be put away. Further into the Night The Plague placed a phone call the next day to Richard Gill, Secret Service agent. "The virus goes off tomorrow, and those hackers attempted to get into our network again. Last night, one of the guards caught them snooping around our building. At this point I insist you take more strenuous action or Ellingson Mineral will hold the Secret Service responsible." The call was enough. It got Gill cracking. He requested arrest warrants for Kate Murphy, alias Acid Burn; Emmanuel Goldstein, alias Cereal Killer; Dade Murphy, alias Crash Override, also known as Zero Cool; and Paul Cook, alias Lord Nikon. He designated that they be picked up at nine a.m. the next day. Fortunately, Cereal had a tap on Gill's phone. He and Nikon heard every dire word. A meeting was called. For safety's sake, it was held in the A train, speeding up and down the length of Manhattan. In the last car the group, newly aware of the time limit they had, sat and pored over the printouts and the trash that looked info-worthy. Dade was taking a break, rubbing his eyes from the strain and stress he'd been experiencing. He'd been talking to Kate all day, about the way he felt about his parents, the world, his life . . . and cyberspace. He felt the need to sum things up, to make sense of it all. "Yeah, cyberspace," he said now to all of them. "It's like astral projection. Sit in your room and go to Japan. It's where our money is, where our phone conversations take place, our messages are stored, our identities are. No fuzzy edges, no emotional spill, just pure logic. It's a world that hasn't been screwed up yet. And I want to plant my flag in it. I just can't stop." Kate tapped him on the shoulder in a comforting way. "Look-A: You didn't break up your parents' marriage, they did. B: No one who's been where we have can stop. And C: We're all going to jail soon, so enjoy it while you can, 'cause the way things are going, our kids won't be able to do it. We're the last of the free hackers." He digested that for a moment, then looked into her eyes. They were really deep eyes, deeper and sweeter than he'd realized anything could be. She looked into his for a moment, and there was a surprising spark of contact. Embarrassed, vulnerable, they both looked away. Kate ruffled through her notes, then looked up at the others. "So. How are we doing?" she asked. "We have fifty passwords," replied Dade. He pointed at Lord Nikon. "Plus whatever Polaroid-head over there got at Ellingson." "I got a lot," said Nikon. "Don't know how many, but my head hurts." Cereal was studying the pieces of a shredded printout. He had rearranged this odd puzzle. "Guys, what's a 'da Vinci Virus'?" he asked. "Huh?" was the general reply. "Look at this," said Cereal. "It's a memo about how they're gonna deal with those oil spills that happened on the fourteenth." "What oil spills?" asked Kate. "Yo, burnout," said Nikon, gently slapping Cereal's arm. "Today's the thirteenth." "This hasn't even happened yet!" said Cereal. Kate said, "The fourteenth? Isn't that the same day the worm ends its run?" They all leaned over to read the memo. Then a memory stirred in Kate's mind. "The da Vinci virus! Yeah! Didn't Phreak say that's what he's being charged with?" She read from the memo, ". . . 'infecting ballast programs of Ellingson tankers.' They blame hackers." Cereal's head bobbed with great seriousness. "Whoa. A worm and a virus. The plot thickens." "We're going to need all the help we can get," said Kate. "We've only got a few hours before we're arrested. You two," she said to Nikon and Cereal, "stay low. I'll beep you." She gathered up her Rollerblades, then turned to Dade. "You coming?" The train was coming to a stop. The doors opened, revealing the concrete-bunker station-dim lights, grim signs. It was a world he hadn't created. But maybe he could have a say in the world that was coming. "You bet!" he said, grabbing his Rollerblades and jumping out after her. 13 Robot's Revolt and Beyond The robotic arm rose from the array of mechanical contraptions with a whirring noise. Dade Murphy and Kate Libby halted at the doorway of the room they'd just entered. In the dim light, they could just make out what was attached to that robotic arm. A gun, pointed directly at them. "Oh, I definitely don't like this," said Dade. It was very late in the evening. Kate had dragged him all over New York City Creation, looking for those two weirdos on that pirate satellite station, Razor and Blade. Dade figured them to be flakes and was confused as to how they could help, but Kate had insisted they were "elite" and would be of incalculable value. She dragged him into an East Village nightclub called the Robot's Revolt. The music had been industrial, the clothes had been weird squared, and Dade had never seen so many tattoos, scars, and bizarre primeval dances since that National Geographic special on deep-jungle New Guinea tribal rites. However, technology had clearly had its impact on it all, and they'd also located both Razor and Blade, spiky hair and all, dancing like loony pogo sticks. The club has been noisy, smelly, and packed, though, and they'd lost them. With the help of their 'blades, they followed the twins in the limo they'd hopped in, back to their building. Then, of course, they'd gotten into their loft. "What do you want?" said a challenging voice. There were the banks of monitors that were featured on the TV show. Now they held multiple images of Razor and Blade. "Uh," said Dade. "We come in peace." - "Look, dudes. We need your help. ... I mean, if you're up to it." Kate's voice was taunting, daring. "She's buff, ballsy," said a voice from everywhere. Another: "Let's keep her." However, the pistol tracked on Dade. The trigger tightened. "But definitely waste the dude!" "Yeah!" A stream of water spewed from the water pistol, splattering Dade's face. "These guys are zero-harm," Kate said to him. "Think I'd bring you here if they were? I'm on good terms with them. C'mon!" She led them back to a bedroom, the one in the twins' show. Hyperhip though it might have been, it smelled of stale snacks and old pizza. Lounging on the bed were Razor and Blade. They told their visitors to sit down and asked them what was going on. Kate gave the preliminaries, took a deep breath, and then unleashed the rest: "A virus called da Vinci will cause oil spills tomorrow." "It's somehow connected with the worm that's stealing the money," said Dade. "We need your help to overload the Gibson," said Kate, "so we can kill the da Vinci virus and download the worm program." One of the twins played with a spike of hair. "She's rabid, but cute," he pronounced. "See," explained the other, "we're very busy. A TV network that wishes to remain nameless has expressed an interest in our show." Dade, smelling a sellout, turned and started walking. "Let's go, Kate." One of the twins shot up from his lounging position. "Wait! Nobody said no." He jumped off the bed, started pacing. A forefinger smote the air. "But you need more than just two media icons like us. You need a whole army!" The other twin hopped from bed and threw an arm around his brother. "That's it, Razor! An electronic army! If I were us, I'd get on the Internet, send out a distress signal." Again, the finger in the air. "Hackers of the world, unite!" "How're you going to take care of the cops?" Blade asked. "Same way as with a lot of stuff in our business, gentlemen." Dade went to a phone that looked like an old-fashioned cash register, dialed his home number. In his bedroom, his laptop, attached to the outside phone line, answered the call and responded immediately: 0900: RUN PROGRAM, said the screen. "It's taken care of," announced Dade. "I've just bought us a little more time." "Good job! We'll need it," said Blade. "I'm really jacked on this. Aren't you, Razor?" "You bet. An army!" "An army needs weapons, though." "A high-tech army needs high-tech weapons." They high-fived and wiggled their butts together, then hurried to a closet. Dade and Kate watched, bemused, as they hauled stuff out. Razor handed Kate a stack of notebook computers, while Blade gave Dade a black Velcro headband. To this band a tiny eyepiece was attached. Dade's bemused expression stayed put. "It's a Pirate Eye," explained Blade. "It improves your reaction time. Plus, it looks cool." "So," said Razor. "When do we party?" "Soon," said Dade, examining the device. "Very soon." Dawn of the Hackers At eight-thirty in the morning, Cereal Killer and Lord Nikon were in Central Park playing chess on one of the boards provided there for just that purpose. The beepers on their wide, heavy-buckled belts went off. The message-GRAND CENTRAL: HACK THE PLANET. Donning their backpacks, they jumped on their skateboards and cruised off toward destiny. Secret Service agents in a black Lincoln followed closely behind. It would not be long before they would swoop in and take these guys to jail. After leading the agents a casual chase through sideways and byways, Cereal and Nikon met Dade and Kate at the appointed street. By now, they had plenty of Secret Service cars on their tail. Dade examined his watch. Straight-up nine A.M. was only seconds away. Perfect. Up ahead was one of the busiest intersections of Manhattan at the quietest times-and now it was the height of rush hour. At nine a.m. exactly, Dade's computer sent a message to traffic control. The green lights at the intersection flicked on. All the green lights. To New York drivers, green means serious business. Streams of cars rushed out to greet the new wide-open space from all avenues, causing a mangled traffic jam of tremendous proportions. Through this merrily skated and Rollerbladed the Generals of the New Hacker Army, easily eluding the Secret Service cars that were now thoroughly jammed into place. Bob the Secret Service Agent got out of his car and tried to use a pedestrian's skateboard to follow, but wound up with only a sore rear end for his trouble. Ray, however, raced after them, colliding with one of New York City's Finest. Secret Service Agent Gill saw what was happening, but could do nothing about it. He got out of the back of the car he was riding in and saw the cyberbladers skate away toward a new day. Terribly frustrated, he pounded on the hood of a red Lexus that was parked by a quality hotel. The Lexus's alarm squawked in Gill's ear, adding its whoop-and-wail to the clamor of horns and shouts that accompanied this incredible traffic snarl. The skaters and bladers whirled onto Park Avenue like the Four Roller People of the Apocalypse. Next stop: Grand Central Station. Quickly they rolled under the ancient scrolled columns, frightening pigeons and panhandlers. Then it was down into the marble concourse, into the old and noble station. Their noise blended with the echoes in the vast space. Dade had chosen the station for a simple reason: down past the ticketing windows, beyond a couple of newsstands, was one of the largest banks of pay phones in New York City. A good place indeed for a hacker army to make a stand! There they nearly ran over the waiting Joey, holding a laptop and a box of disks and wearing a look of total thrill upon his face. "You got the other laptops?" said Dade. "Right over there. And we've got the phones all to ourselves!" said Joey. "P.U., man," said Cereal. "What's that smell?" "That's why we've got the place to ourselves." Joey held his nose and dragged an old derelict coat back to its derelict, along with its ten-dollar rental fee. "Guy's sharp, all right," said Kate, making a face. "Wish he'd rented us some nose plugs, though." "We'll send him for some Lysol from a bathroom," said Cereal. He grabbed himself a laptop, placed it on the lip of a pay phone. "Hey, we're a crew, a posse. We need a name. How 'bout the F.O.D.?-the Flowerpickers of Death!" "Free Our Data," said Nikon, selecting his own weapon. "Fathers on Drugs," continued Cereal, checking out his gear and booting up. "Friends of Dogs. It could depend on the day of the week." "Sure," said Dade, "and initiation means putting you up for a night." He pulled out his own laptop. "Let's jack in." While Ellingson supertankers cruised off the rugged coast of Japan, the balmy beaches of Southern California, and yes, even the already oily waters of New York Harbor, the Wanna-be Infamous F.O.D. lined up at the bank of pay phones, hooking up. They stacked 3.5-inch disks beside themselves like infantrymen reading extra ammo clips. A couple of businessmen tried to angle for empty booths, but Kate waved them away. "Use 'em if you want," she said, "but I'll warn you-somebody just died here!" The businessmen wandered off to find other phones. "All right," said Kate. "Listen up. Use your best viruses to buy us some time. We need to get into Plague's file so we can copy the worm, then find da Vinci and cancel it." "Stand by," said Nikon. "Remember: we only get five minutes." A scream made him jump. They all turned to see that Cereal had been the screamer. "A little tension breaker," he explained. Kate looked at him with total exasperation. "Cereal, go and take care of those other phones." Cereal readily agreed. "But of course!" With nary an afterthought, he abandoned his post by his laptop and hurried off to his next assignment. Joey was on his way back, nervously looking around. "Joey, take Cereal's place," Kate said. "Me?" said Joey, astonished but delighted. "Just do it." As Cereal skated away, holding a box, he sang out, "I'll be your angel!" Then he was gone. "Ready?" called Kate. "Yep," said Dade. "Let's boot up." "Right on, brothers. Let's put up." Dade pulled on the Pirate Eye the Razor/Blade boys had given him. He jacked it in. Yeah, he could perceive the screen much better with this thing. Dade Murphy, as he attached his computer into the public phone system and booted up the whirlings of his laptop computer, fancied he was some character in William Gibson's Neuromancer, diving into a won-drously luminous schematic of New York City, cruising through the canyons, flying through the circuitry. He could almost feel his jacked-in brain nodes reaching for that supercomputer in the Ellingson, getting ready to dive into it, headfirst! He started typing in passwords. It was but the work of a moment. Soon, all hell broke loose in the computer operations room of Ellingson Mineral. The alarm sounded, tugging Eugene Belford from bed. On the way to the computer room, Margo ran into him. "Good news?" she asked. The Plague rolled his eyes and said nothing. Margo followed, trying to look merely like a very concerned employee. Inside the computer room, Hal and the other sysops were typing at high speed. The Plague jumped into his stirrups and flicked on his monitor. What he got there was pure snow. "What is it?" Margo demanded. "What's wrong?" "Nothing," said The Plague. "It's a minor glitch." Hal called over to his boss, his voice barely under control. "There's a new virus in the database." Another alarm went off. Words filled the large main monitor: COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE COOKIE "It's replicating," said Hal. "Taking over memory. What do I do?" The Plague was already doing manic typing at his machine. "Type 'COOKIE,' you idiot. I'll head him off at the pass." A hacker had gotten in again, through a line. Which line, though? There was a virus already in the computer, but the computer was a gigantic, convoluted place and the virus could only cover so much territory in so little time. By coding in an appropriate counterprogram, The Plague could easily nullify the progress of this oncoming program. Unfortunately for him, he did not realize that there were several channels open into the computer and that while they'd been distracted by the Cookie virus, they'd been invaded on other lines. At Grand Central Station, the hacking invaders moved through the multitude of screens, searching for the evidence they needed in the supercomputer. They all typed furiously, staring intently into their screens, silent save for the clicking of keys against the echoing din of the railway station. Fortunately for him, The Plague was smart enough to monitor the Ellingson network and note that other lines were opening up, viral programs spreading. He'd already written some stuff to deal with just this kind of encroachment, and now he called it up from memory storage, then coolly observed the main monitor as he popped up a 3-D graphic of the whole system. "We have a zero bug attacking all log-in and overlay files," called one of the sysops. A happy face appeared, eating zeros like Pac-Man eats dots-certainly an alien creature in the Ellingson system. "Run antivirus!" called The Plague, the picture of calm in the midst of a storm. The 3-D graphic he'd called up illustrated the huge maze of all the Ellingson computers, with the Gibson Supercomputer at the very center of operations. Below it was a title: System Command Shell. The majority of the graphic was green, which meant it was virus-free. However, five of the sectors were red, which meant they were infected with a virus program, doing unauthorized things. The Plague smiled. All these sectors were within easy reach of his own prepared programs. Along with those of the other sysops, this stuff should be easily contained, he felt certain. "Die, snotweeds," he snarled, stabbing at a key. While the Secret Service agents, newly freed from the traffic jam, hurried on their way in search of the F.O.D., baffled secretaries in the Ellingson Building watched as Ping-Pong-ball graphics bounced around on their work screens. In the computer room, the antiviral programs were not working quite as well as The Plague had hoped. "A rabbit is in the administrative system," called another sysop. "It's maxing out all the local disks." "Send a flu shot!" cried The Plague. "Rabbit? Flu shot?" said Margo Wallace. "Someone talk to me! I'm a VP here, and I want to know what's going on!" The Plague ignored her, but Hal answered her question. "A rabbit replicates till it overloads a file, then spreads like cancer." "Cancer?" said Margo. "I didn't know that cancer was a virus!" Abruptly, they got a visitor. The picture of Leonardo da Vinci by way of Terry Gilliam appeared on several screens. Images of oil tankers began to pop up beside the face, then started to tilt over to one side. "Row, row, row your boat, gently down the stream." The puppet-lined jaw of da Vinci moved up and down as the voice sang. After studying the viral spread, The Plague hit another key, letting loose an additional already prepared program. "Gotcha!" he cried triumphantly. At the phone bank, Kate watched as she was pushed from the Ellingson computer system and her connection was broken. "The Gibson," she called to Dade. "It's finding us too fast." Dade had gotten into the main directory and found a slew of files. Unfortunately, there were plenty of similarities among them. "There are too many Garbage Files," he said. "I need more time." Kate leaned over and checked the halls. No sign of expected arrivals. "Where are the twins?" she said. "They've flaked out on us." Back at the Computer Center, things were looking up. The unleashed antiviral programs were mopping up the spread of the virus. In the graphic representation, the red of the virus had been pushed back to three sectors. The Plague was wailing with glee as he typed out another small flu shot for backup. "Morons! Give it up!" "Can't you figure out where this is coming from?" said Margo. "Can't you trace these hackers' calls?" The Plague's eyes glittered. "It's already been done. Agent Gill and company are on their way to nab the pack!" As Kate Libby worked away at her laptop, the empty phone beside her rang. She picked it up. "Razor here," piped a voice. "Are we fashionably late?" "Maybe too late!" Kate snapped. "No, no. We've been on the ball. You did good. Lots of passwords, lots of connections. We're in," Blade said. "What, you two?" "And a few others, just for laughs!" Kate's heart was gladdened. It would have been even more gladdened had she seen the extent and array and quality of these hackers: some of the world's best. In Venice, California, in the rosy glow of dawn, a couple of surfer bodybuilders were on the boardwalk with laptops at a pay phone, crying "Rock and roll" as they logged onto the Ellingson computer. In Hamburg, Germany, where it was late afternoon, a trio of punk rockers were sprawled on a bed, a computer in front of their pimply faces. "Wannsinnig, man!" cried one. In Madrid, Spain, in an office at siesta time, a couple of tapa-tossing, black-clad Spaniards had just crammed their way in. "Ahora, mano!" cried one. Across the world, hundreds of men and women of all nationalities cyberelbowed their way into the entirety of the Ellingson computer system. Their one commonality: they were of the new world communications order, with the common languages of C++ and Fortran and a dozen others. They were hackers. The results of their expert anarchy were immediate. As Old Man Ellingson himself, CEO Extreme, rode down his building, the elevator stopped, then jerked up and down shockingly at the selected floor. The smug smile left Ellingson's face. What was this, an earthquake in Manhattan? He didn't have the right insurance! All over the building the fax machines and the computers blurted bizzare messages: FRANK ZAPPA LIVES! FUGS OF THE WORLD UNITE! OFF OUR CYBERBACKS! VIVA REVOLUTION! Down the hallways blared the song of all the phones ringing. Workers picked the receivers up, with no result. RINGRINGRING, continued the maddening jangle. All over the place, lights suddenly went out, replaced by the odd red glow of emergency lights. An ashen Elder Ellingson emerged from the elevator. He wobbled over to the nearest trash can and lost his breakfast there. Inside the Computer Center, things were battening down for a true battle. A red light, previously unlit, spun as a Klaxon sounded. The Plague was astonished. What was happening? He'd thought he was dealing here with a few stupidly brilliant kids! What, had they multiplied? "We have massive infection," cried a sysop. "Multiple GPI and PSI viruses!" "They're coming in from remote nodes!" cried another. The Plague and Margo looked up at the 3-D graphic. There were splatters of red everywhere now. The sight was so consternating they did not notice their boss, Ellingson Senior, stumble in, gasping like a beached bass. Hal the Sysop blended his cry into the throng. "They're going for the kernel!" "Colonel who?" said Margo, doubtless noticing the military bunker atmosphere. "The system command processor," returned Hal. "The brain." "Cancer, brain. . . ." said Margo, trying to connect. "Brain cancer?" Ellingson shook The Plague's shoulder. "Belford! What's going on?" Plague did not miss a single typestroke in providing the answer. "In short, a multiple-hacker problem." Hal shook his head. "Why are hackers trying to shut us down when it would kill their virus? I don't understand!" Margo nudged The Plague. "Yeah. Why?" Maybe he could come up with a satisfactory lie. She certainly couldn't! The 3-D graphic of the Ellingson computer system darkened with creeping red. 14 Grand Central Hackers The Hacker Festival continued on the lower lobby of Grand Central Station. Kate Libby had triple duty. She not only had to work her own keyboard and monitor all proceedings, she also had to talk to the Razor/Blade boys, who were directing the Worldwide Hacker Army. "Razor," she said quickly into the phone, "keep your guys on the outer systems. We've lost the worm. We can't zap the Gibson before we find it." "Roger that," agreed Razor eagerly, his voice squeaking with pleasure. "Everything's connected absolutely properly." Cereal slid back into her view, casually grinning. "Good work, guy," said Kate, giving the thumbs-up sign. Cereal held up a knife and black electrician's tape, smiling over her approval. In the room that was the center of the Mother of All Computer Battles, the multicolored lights were flashing like a carnival at ultraspeed. Frenetic activity upon keyboards did not seem to slow those lights down one bit. "We have Steroid and Fu Manchu virus!" said a sysop. "The Gibson's operations are slowing down!" cried Hal. Indeed, the face of Leonardo da Vinci looked as though it had gone into slow motion in contrast to the lights around it. "Roooow, Roooowwwwwwwww-www . . ." The Plague stood, his DataHands forgotten. He was working with incredible speed using just his own naked hands. Margo Wallace yelled above the din, "Can't we just unplug our computers?" The Plague looked as though he'd been hit by a bolt of lightning. "Ohmigod!" he cried. "The woman has a clue." Nonetheless, he did not lift his typing fingers. "Do it!" he cried to his assistants and Margo. "Turn off computers, have the central operators disconnect phones. It'll slow 'em down." Margo raced out to obey the command. In place by his telephone and computer, Dade Murphy worked through the various directories. Screen after screen after screen zipped by under his scrutiny. Suddenly, he stopped. Right in front of his nose was a file, stating: EYES ONLY: EUGENE BELFORD, COMPUTER SECURITY OFFICER. He hit a key. There it was: GARBAGE. And only one to choose from! "What the-" he gasped. "I found it." Quickly, he typed a command and started siphoning the thing into a disk he'd already slotted into a drive. "Razor, Dade's copying the worm," said Kate into her phone. The phone to Dade's right rang. He picked it up with one hand, still controlling the siphoning of the Garbage File. The voice on the phone was disgustingly familiar. "Yeah?" "Game's over," said The Plague. "Last chance to get out of this without a prison sentence. You're not good enough to beat me." "Maybe I'm not," said Dade. He turned to Kate and took a moment to give her the A-OK sign as he chinned the phone. "But we are." He hung up. Cereal, who'd been scouting about, raced up to them. "Cops are in the building." The disk in Dade's machine had already filled up. Kate zapped it out, popped in another, which proceeded to copy the rest of the Garbage program. "Almost there!" she said. Suddenly, there was a brilliant flash of bright light on Dade's display. The screen went blank and the machine stopped copying. "He got me," said Dade. "I'm there!" cried Joey. "I'm where I was before. I recognize the area." "Yo, Joey," said Nikon. "Gettin' stupid busy." "Joey," said Kate. "Let Dade." "No," said Dade. "Don't interrupt him!" He stood close to Joey and said softly, "Joey, drop your virus. Get the worm for me, you're the closest. It's /root/.workspace/.garbage." Joey blinked sweat from his eyes. He was more scared then he'd ever been. He couldn't blow it. Not this time. Dade slid in a disk unobtrusively so as to not disturb Joey's concentration. Secret Service Agent Gill, who with his fellow agents and a few police had just entered Grand Central Station, pulled out his gun as he approached the bank of phones. He raced around the side to the front of a phone, two hands on his gun, in perfect stance. "Freeze!" he cried, pointing. Unfortunately, however, there was only a frightened old lady and a businessman using the phones here. They raised their hands, terrified. Most of the phones here had been paired up, coupled together at handsets with black electrician's tape. "Blast!" Gill cried. "Is there another set of phones here?" "Yeah," said Bob. "Upstairs." "No, downstairs," said Ray. They began arguing. At the Ellingson Computer Room, Margo was just coming back in, exhausted by her work, when The Plague's screen flashed. "There you are!" The Plague cried with glee. He had found Joey, who was copying the Garbage/worm file. "I'm gonna kick your butt outta there, you bet!" He hit a key. "Die!" "They're in the kernal!" cried Hal. The Plague swiveled to look at the 3-D graphic of his computer. It was almost completely covered with red now-and then it changed. The graphic was completely wiped, and in its place was the message: BUILD ME A MATE! The Plague unleashed another antiviral program, but it was too late. I'M HUNGRY, said the main monitor. INSERT HAMBURGER INTO DRIVE. "What does it mean?" the baffled Ellingson wanted to know. "There's a viral blockade around the kernel," explained Hal. "We're locked out." ARF! ARF! said the main monitor. WE GOTCHA! On Joey's screen in Grand Central Station flashed the welcome words: COPY IS COMPLETED. Joey fell back, exhausted. Kate grabbed the final disk. Dade typed a message to The Plague with one hand, grabbed the hot line to Razor with his other, placed it against his mouth. "Kill the kernel!" he cried. "Kill! Banzai! Banzai!" cried Razor. The message was transmitted quickly all over the world. The Hacker Army sent a final onslaught of viruses and auto instructions through the lines into the Gibson Supercomputer. Dade's message zapped onto The Plague's screen: MESS WITH THE BEST, DIE LIKE THE REST. The Plague gritted his teeth, smiling like a corpse. "Little jerk," he whispered harshly. Hacker slogans and handles started pelting the monitor, filling it up, dominating it with cyber-graffiti. The da Vinci virus was eaten up totally. No tankers would tilt today, no oil would spill. As for da Vinci himself-the picture's eyes were wobbling, the jaw wagging, as he slowly oozed to the bottom of his screen. "Helllllp meeeeeeeeeee," he cried, becoming phosphor-dot sludge. The lights in the Ellingson Computer Room shuddered, then went off, steeping the room in darkness. In the lower lobby of Grand Central Station, Kate Libby was hugging Dade Murphy. "We did it!" she whooped. Alas, the hug was all too brief for Dade's taste. "Let's get out of here," she said. There was certainly wisdom in the woman's words, Dade knew- after all, The Plague had promised that Gill and company were coming their way. They started packing up quickly, untangling their gear. Secret Service Agent Richard Gill, however, had determined that since the hackers were not in the first-level lobby, nor on the second level (they'd checked), they must be in the lower lobby. And that was indeed where they found them. "Freeze," cried Gill, gun up. Kate and the others lifted their hands into the air; Dade did not. Plenty of guns, plenty of agents, plenty of frustration. Dade had the disks containing the full Garbage File in his hands. He backed up, banged into the trash can. Pushed open the lid and dropped the disks into the trash. "Okay," said Gill. "Spread 'em!" To his fellow officers, he said, "Get out the cuffs." Dade had been through this before. Nonetheless, he again felt the fear, the helplessness, the outrage, again felt himself freezing up, reacting to the power displayed by these men in suits of authority. He determined to fight it off-there were things he had to do. He had to retain his courage, his power, despite all the reactions this experience was unearthing in him. He had to get the message out-but how? As the busted F.O.D. were being dragged outside toward the police cruisers, bubble-tops flashing, Dade saw his chance. A crowd had gathered to watch the sight of kids being hauled away. In that crowd was Cereal Killer, munching a granola bar, looking totally bemused by the whole business. If he could get the message to Cereal, Dade thought.. . He started struggling melodramatically, then yelled at the crowd at the top of his lungs. "They're trashing our civil rights!" he cried. "They're trashing the flow of data! They're trashing, uh . . . trashing . . . trash . . ." A car door opened and Dade was stuffed into the back of the cruiser. He managed one more cry before they closed the door on him. "Hack the planet!" he cried. "Hack the planet!" Some of the crowd cheered, despite the fact that they probably had no idea what Dade was saying. But this was, after all, New York City. Secret Service Agent Richard Gill, his Joe Friday aplomb now fully recovered, whipped open his cellular phone and dialed The Plague's number. "We caught them red-handed," he told the computer security officer as the police cars toted the hackers away. "I don't think you'll have any more trouble with them." This was good news, naturally, to those at Ellingson Mineral, as they tried to get things back on-line at the business. However, it was particularly good news to Margo Wallace and Eugene "The Plague" Belford. It meant that the threat to them was over. They'd won. The worm could nibble away at Ellingson Mineral Corporation's money now, and they'd soon be very rich indeed, and remain very free. Upon hearing the news, The Plague kissed Margo's hand, leering. She actually enjoyed it. At Grand Central Station, however, Cereal Killer wandered the halls, not enjoying himself, confused. Dade Murphy had been looking straight at him, wiggling his eyebrows significantly, when he'd started spouting that nonsense about trashing. Thinking, thinking, thinking, Cereal was wandering by the phone bank when he decided to toss his granola bar wrapper. He pushed the trash can lid open, let go. ... Trashing . . . trash . . . Trash! That was it! Inside the trash can, he found two computer disks. "Cool!" said Cereal. Interrogation It was all coming back to him now, all the Secret Service stuff. The mean grimness of it, the no-nonsense offices, the implied threats in every movement the dark-suited people made. Dade, however, was surprised that the fear was disappearing. Instead, what he felt was defiance. He knew what he'd done was right. He knew that they'd killed that virus, saving lots of environment and maybe even ruining the plans of that Dark Side hacker thug The Plague. Somehow, knowing this, feeling moral about the whole thing, not only made him feel less than frightened-it made him feel noble, gave him a sense of himself. For Kate, defiance appeared easy. She seemed the type, indeed, who would happily get arrested at an anti-fur rally. Still, with this feeling of self-discovery giving him iron in the spirit, he began to feel protective of her. "Okay, kiddos. Who's going to spill everything I need to hear first?" said Gill, hovering over them, glowering. "Me," said Dade. He pointed at Kate. "She knows nothing about computers. She's just my girlfriend." Kate got a perplexed look on her face. "Huh?" "Okay, then, Mr. Computer Expert. Tell me what F.O.D. means," demanded Gill. "Freak out Dude!" snarled Dade. Gill stuck his face into Dade's. He'd had onions for breakfast. "I'd suggest you modify your attitude, chum." Snarling, the man left. Dade shot a look at the intercom sitting on the desk. Was the place bugged? Kate seemed to think so, because she whispered when she spoke to him. "Are you crazy?" she asked. "What are you doing?" "I'm trying to help you." There was a long pause as Kate considered how much Dade was sacrificing to save her. With his previous record, she knew the law was going to come down hard on him. Finally , she spoke up. "Dade?" "What?" "Thanks for your help." Gill reentered, dark suit coat flapping. In his hand was the clear laptop The Plague had given him- busted up now, of course, thanks to Dade's disgust. He placed it on the desk right near Dade. "The original program for the da Vinci virus is encrypted in your laptop's hard drive. Care to explain that?" "That guy ... Belford . . . The Plague. He gave it to me." "Not according to your mother's credit card receipt." He thrust a piece of paper in Dade's face. "Isn't that your handwriting?" Oh geez. . . . The Plague must have gotten his signature when he'd signed that thing the UPS man had given him to accept the package! UPS. Yeah, right. He turned to Kate as if to say, "Would you just tattoo 'sucker' on my forehead?" The intercom buzzed. "Sir," it announced. "We have a Mrs. Murphy to see you." Gill grabbed the laptop, shot the two kids a "Don't move a muscle," look, and then was gone. "I'd like to hear this," said Dade. He went over and switched the intercom on. He recognized the voice of his mother as she introduced herself. The reply was gravel-voiced: "You son is in big trouble. He has violated his probation and he has engaged in criminal activity." "My son happens to be a genius," said Lauren Murphy. "He understands something happening today that you won't comprehend if you live to be a hundred, and he would never use what he knows to harm a living soul." Dade heard another voice enter the conversation, and recognized the agent called Bob. "The news crew you requested is here, sir." " "Good," said Lauren Murphy. "I have a few things to tell them." "Your son is facing thirty felony counts in an ongoing investigation," said Gill. "You face possible arrest if you do that." Lauren's voice snapped back, "Mister, I don't care if I face certain death!" "We better have Mrs. Murphy wait here, Bob," said Gill. Kate's eyes were wide. "Wow! She's great!" Dade nodded, surprised. "Yeah." Yes indeed. She certainly was. There was more inside both of them, he realized, than he'd ever imagined. "Hey, guy, look," said Kate, peering out the window. "We're at the happening place all right." They both looked out the window. Below was an ABC-TV news van, its microwave antenna unfurling from its roof and focusing upward. "And to think my dark little secret desire is that one day I would be newsworthy," said Kate. "Welcome to the club," said Dade. We Regret to Interrupt . . . Across the screens of TVs throughout New York, the midday newscast had a special interview with a Secret Service agent named Richard Gill. "These hackers apparently attacked the Ellingson computer network," said the reporter. "Is this the last we've seen of this type of high-tech espionage?" "I'm afraid not," said Richard Gill, looking grimly professional. "Hackers are a grave threat to our national security. This incident proves beyond a doubt we need increased funding to-" The video monitor beside the technicians, echoing the broadcast that was originating live on the premises, frizzled with static. Straightened into a figure of a long-haired youth holding a pair of 3.5-inch disks in his hands. Richard Gill recognized him. It was Emmanuel Whatshisname-aka Cereal Killer. "Hola, boys and girls!" "Get that clown off!" cried Gill. "I can't," said the technician. "He's coming from someplace else." "I come," said Cereal, "to tell you about a heinous scheme hatched from within Ellingson Mineral. For what, you ask? World domination? Nay, something far more tacky!" Gill stared with horror at the broadcast. Without a doubt, this was turning into the worst day of his life! 15 There's No Business Like. . . . High up above the Earth, between a universe crammed with stars and a planet white with whipped clouds and blue-brown with ocean and land masses, a communications satellite fired a thruster, repositioning its antenna to a new position. Through one of its channels beamed the image and the voice of the hacker known as Cereal Killer, courtesy of the wealthy technopirates Razor and Blade. The image waved the disks it held, and the voice told of a nasty plot: "... a virus called da Vinci that would cause Ellingson's tankers to capsize would be blamed on innocent hackers." All across New York City and its environs, this odd live drama was broadcast. In bars, in malls, in electronics stores, the slightly dazed but happy expression of Cereal Killer peered out like a refugee from the sixties, newly stumbled out of a time machine. Then the face became a virus-a computer virus, written in a language that may as well have been hieroglyphics to most. "The virus was just a smoke screen, however. But for what? Could it have been to cover the tracks of this worm program?" In Times Square, passersby looked up and gawked as the complex code for the Garbage program flashed over the giant screen. Then Cereal's huge visage reappeared. "A worm," continued Cereal," that was to steal twenty-five million dollars. The passwords to this hungry little sucker belong to Margo Wallace, head of public relations for Ellingson, and Eugene Belford, the corporation's computer security officer. Ah . . . what's this?" Different sorts of numbers and letters flashed. "The encrypted account in the Bahamas where the money was to be stashed!" In her bed, Margo Wallace sat, watching with horror as her future riches went down the drain. She and The Plague had taken a "lunch break" to celebrate their victory. They'd been watching TV to see what was becoming of their foes. She stared, stunned, as she watched those foes turn the tables. For a very long time she could only gape at the TV screen, unable to turn or even to speak. Finally she managed to say something. "Oh my God. Plague?" She turned. The bed was empty now but for her. "Eugene." Eugene, however, was gone. On the TV screen, a camera pulled back to reveal Cereal Killer cavorting in the makeshift studio of Razor and Blade's bedroom. A little later in the day, after the story spread by the specter on the afternoon TV screens was checked out and found to be true, Dade Murphy and Kate Libby were released. Lauren was waiting outside for them. Dade wasn't sure what to do. He felt, in a real way, that he'd betrayed her. One of the conditions of his having gotten that computer was that he wouldn't cause any more trouble. True, this was all for a good cause. But it was still trouble, and big trouble at that. "Mom, uh . . . I'm sorry," he choked out. "What I mean is . . ." She just smiled and hugged him. Her acceptance felt really good, in a way he hadn't realized that he'd yearned to feel. Emotion clogged his throat, and there were tears in his eyes. Kate looked on, smiling. Alas, some hours later, a certain ex-public relations vice president named Margo Wallace was not smiling. She was standing in a federal detention center, wearing handcuffs as information about her was typed into a computer. "Get me a cup of coffee," she said, feeling tired and drained as she stared at the computer, feeling total loathing for this machine and every machine like it in the universe. The officer typing her in looked up at her over his half-frames. "Lady, what do you think I am . . . your executive assistant?" He snarled and went back to work. Elsewhere, a great deal higher up, in the first-class compartment of a British Airways flight, a man in sunglasses and a spangled cowboy hat and shirt, and looking like a skinnier version of Garth Brooks, received his first glass of champagne from an attractive stewardess. "We should be landing in Tokyo in about fourteen hours, Mr. O'Reilly. Can I get you anything else?" He took off his glasses to get a better look at his new friend. They weren't the kind of glasses that Eugene "The Plague" Belford was exactly used to. "No, thank you, darlin'." He smiled and sipped at the cool, tart champagne. "Uh ... on second thought, ma'am . . . Could I have another pillow?" He got one and took a little nap, his plane soaring out of the country, and as the Plague slept, he dreamt of a land without borders, where he was still a player. A land where soon, he knew, he would get revenge on certain hackers. Things were still, after all, a lot of fun on the Dark Side of the Force! Cyberdelia and Beyond Look out, Algonquin Round Table, thought Dade Murphy as he sat on the glossy vinyl couch at the Cyberdelia, surrounded by his buddies, sodas and coffee and junk food sitting in front of them. Here's the F.O.D. Friends of Dade! "So what'd they slap you with, Kate?" a newly self-confident Joey asked. "Two hundred hours of community service," said Kate. She was sitting right by Dade, and he liked it. "Me too," said Joey. "But I'm happy." He pulled out a snazzy-looking laptop. "Meet Mindy!" Cereal put his wedge of pizza down. "Joey, you get a handle yet?" Joey grinned significantly at Dade. "Yeah. I got one handed down to me. Zero Cool." Cereal nodded. "That'll work." Sitting by Fantom Phreak was a beautiful young woman with long lashes and a killer smile who spoke with him in Spanish. Kate leaned over and asked him, "Is this your girl from Venezuela?" Phreak nodded. "Who paid for her flight?" Kate asked. "Frequent-flier miles." Phreak shrugged eloquently. "I can't help it. Airline computers are so choice." Nikon knocked back a hit of espresso. "You guys apply for college on time?" "Mertz got me a late application," said Dade. "Nah, man," said Cereal. "I never made it to the S.A.T." "Oh, I forgot." Kate pulled a letter from the inside of her jacket, handed it to Cereal. "What's this?" "Your S.A.T. You scored 1540." Dade untucked another letter from a book. "Also, in appreciation of your excellence in trash diving, you've been accepted to Harvard." Nikon had a bigger envelope. "Or if not. . . here's a degree. You graduated with honors." "Thanks," said Cereal, clearly underwhelmed with emotion. "I don't know what to say, except, uh, what did I major in?" "What else," said Dade. "Communications." Date Night Kate Libby was in her apartment getting ready for the date she'd promised to Dade, when her mother called to her in her bedroom. "Kate, Curtis is on the phone for you." "Tell him I have nothing to say," said Kate. Ruth Libby returned the phone to the side of her head. "I'm sorry, Curtis, she says she has nothing to say." "Tell him he's a narcissistic jerk who only looks deep into my eyes to see his own reflection." Ruth Libby spoke into the telephone receiver. "Kate thinks your insecurity about your appearance has given you an intimacy problem." "Touche, Mom. Touche!" They high-fived. The Date They walked together near Central Park. Dusk had just fallen and the streetlights hung in the tree branches like fairy jewelry. New York City had a summery magic now, and the park still smelled of flowers and grass, with just a suggestion of the coming cool of fall. Dade was enjoying himself immensely, walking with this absolutely drop-dead-brilliant girl who just happened to be beautiful in the bargain. "You look good in a dress," he said. "You would have looked even better." He took in the smells and sights of the city street. He listened to the traffic, then checked his watch. Yes. Pretty soon his computer, linked up to its line per usual, would set the program into action. "Say," he said. "You want to go for a swim?" "A swim? Where?" "A pool on a roof." Dade sprang for a cab, and they were there in a shot. It was just as Blade had described it: an oasis of shimmering green on a rooftop-pool, complete with lawn chairs, umbrellas-and a lovely inflatable raft for two. "Shall we?" said Dade, gesturing to the raft. "We shall," returned Kate. Together, fully clothed, they launched themselves out into the water. It was wonderful, floating and rotating against green iridescence, gazing up at the dim starlight, looking over the lights of the cityscape. "I can't believe they decided you won," said Kate finally, after a delicious silence. "I didn't," said Dade. "The guys felt it was the only way I'd get a date. Anyway, you're pretty good. In fact, you're . . . elite." She looked at him with amusement, the lights glistened in her eyes. "Yeah? You know, if you would have said so at the start, you would have saved yourself a lot of trouble." He checked his watch. Ten . . . nine . . . eight. . . seven . . . six .... "Say, Kate. Take a look over there." He pointed. She looked. It was a huge office building, with many, many windows, most of them dark now. . . . three . . . two . . . one .. . Now, though, the building's few lights were being rearranged, like something on a silent pinball machine. They finally settled into a pattern ... ... A pattern spelling out in lit windows: CRASH + BURN. The result of a little amusing computer-controlled hacking last night. She looked at him, smiling approvingly. "You know," said Dade, putting his arms around her. "I've been having these weird . . ." "Dreams," said Kate. They embraced, they kissed, and they rolled off the raft into the water. Dade barely noticed. It was the best kiss he'd ever had, or ever even dreamed of. It was better . . . better ... Even better than hacking. The term [hacking] can signify the free-wheeling intellectual exploration of the highest and deepest potential of computer systems. Hacking can describe the determination of access to computers and information as free and open as possible. Hacking can involve the heartfelt conviction that beauty can be found in computers, that the fine aesthetic in a perfect program can liberate the mind and spirit. . . . . . . given that electronics and telecommunications are still largely unexplored territories, there is simply no telling what hackers might uncover. For some people, this freedom is the very breath of oxygen, the inventive spontaneity that makes life worth living and that flings open doors to marvelous possibility and individual empowerment. But for many people-and increasingly so-the hacker is an ominous figure, a smart-aleck sociopath ready to burst out of his basement wilderness and savage other people's lives for his own anarchical convenience. Any form of power without responsibility, without direct and formal checks and balances, is frightening to people-and reasonably so. -Bruce Sterling, The Hacker Crackdown If you don't want it known, don't use the phone. -Nelson Rockefeller