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0wnz0red

   by Cory Doctorow

   Ten years in the Valley, and all Murray Swain had to show for it was a
   spare tire, a bald patch, and a life that was friendless and empty and
   maggoty-rotten. His only ever California friend, Liam, had dwindled from a
   tubbaguts programmer-shaped potato to a living skeleton on his death-bed
   the year before, herpes blooms run riot over his skin and bones in the
   absence of any immunoresponse. The memorial service featured a framed
   photo of Liam at his graduation; his body was donated for medical science.

   Liam's death really screwed things up for Murray. He'd gone into one of
   those clinical depression spirals that eventually afflicted all the aging
   bright young coders he'd known during his life in tech. He'd get misty in
   the morning over his second cup of coffee and by the midafternoon
   blood-sugar crash, he'd be weeping silently in his cubicle, clattering
   nonsensically at the keys to disguise the disgusting snuffling noises he
   made. His wastebasket overflowed with spent tissues and a rumor circulated
   among the evening cleaning-staff that he was a compulsive masturbator. The
   impossibility of the rumor was immediately apparent to all the other
   coders on his floor who, pr0n-hounds that they were, had explored the
   limits and extent of the censoring proxy that sat at the headwaters of the
   office network. Nevertheless, it was gleefully repeated in the collegial
   fratmosphere of his workplace and wags kept dumping their collections of
   conference-snarfed hotel-sized bottles of hand-lotion on his desk.

   The number of bugs per line in Murray's code was 500 percent that of the
   overall company average. The QA people sometimes just sent his code back
   to him (From: qamanager@globalsemi.com To: mswain@globalsemi.com Subject:
   Your code... Body: ...sucks) rather than trying to get it to build and run.
   Three weeks after Liam died, Murray's team leader pulled his commit
   privileges on the CVS repository, which meant that he had to grovel with
   one of the other coders when he wanted to add his work to the project.

   Two months after Liam died, Murray was put on probation.

   Three months after Liam died, Murray was given two weeks' leave and an
   e-mail from HR with contact info for an in-plan shrink who could counsel
   him. The shrink recommended Cognitive Therapy, which he explained in
   detail, though all Murray remembered ten minutes after the session was
   that he'd have to do it every week for years, and the name reminded him of
   Cognitive Dissonance, which was the name of Liam's favorite stupid Orange
   County garage band.

   Murray returned to Global Semiconductor's Mountain View headquarters after
   three more sessions with the shrink. He badged in at the front door, at
   the elevator, and on his floor, sat at his desk and badged in again on his
   PC.

   From: tvanya@globalsemi.com To: mswain@globalsemi.com Subject: Welcome
   back! Come see me... Body: ...when you get in.

   Tomas Vanya was Murray's team lead, and rated a glass office with a door.
   The blinds were closed, which meant: dead Murray walking. Murray closed
   the door behind him and sighed a huge heave of nauseated relief. He'd
   washed out of Silicon Valley and he could go home to Vancouver and live in
   his parents' basement and go salmon fishing on weekends with his
   high-school drinking buds. He didn't exactly love Global Semi, but shit,
   they were number three in a hot, competitive sector where Moore's Law
   drove the cost of microprocessors relentlessly downwards as their speed
   rocketed relentlessly skyward. They had four billion in the bank, a
   healthy share price, and his options were above water, unlike the poor
   fucks at Motorola, number four and falling. He'd washed out of the
   nearly-best, what the fuck, beat spending his prime years in Hongcouver
   writing government-standard code for the Ministry of Unbelievable
   Dullness.

   Even the number-two chair in Tomas Vanya's office kicked major ergonomic
   azz. Murray settled into it and popped some of the controls experimentally
   until the ess of his spine was cushioned and pinioned into
   chiropractically correct form. Tomas unbagged a Fourbucks Morning Harvest
   muffin and a venti coconut Frappucino and slid them across his
   multi-tiered Swedish Disposable Moderne desque.

   "A little welcome-back present, Murray," Tomas said. Murray listened for
   the sound of a minimum-wage security guard clearing out his desk during
   this exit-interview-cum-breakfast-banquet. He wondered if Global Semi
   would forward-vest his options and mentally calculated the strike price
   minus the current price times the number of shares times the conversion
   rate to Canadian Pesos and thought he could maybe put down 25 percent on a
   two bedroom in New Westminster.

   "Dee-licious and noo-tritious," Murray said and slurped at the frappe.

   "So," Tomas said. "So."

   Here it comes, Murray thought, and sucked up a brain-freezing mouthful of
   frou-frou West Coast caffeine delivery system. G0nz0red. Fi0red.
   Sh17canned. Thinking in leet-hacker crap made it all seem more distant.

   "It's really great to see you again," Tomas said. "You're a really
   important part of the team here, you know?"

   Murray restrained himself from rolling his eyes. He was fired, so why draw
   it out? There'd been enough lay-offs at Global Semi, enough boom and bust
   and bust and bust that it was a routine, they all knew how it went.

   But though Murray was an on Air Canada jet headed for Vangroover, Tomas
   wasn't even on the damned script. "You're sharp and seasoned. You can
   communicate effectively. Most techies can't write worth a damn, but you're
   good. It's rare."

   Ah, the soothing sensation of smoke between one's buttocks. It was true
   that Murray liked to write, but there wasn't any money in it, no glory
   either. If you were going to be a writer in the tech world, you'd have to
   be -

   "You've had a couple weeks off to reassess things, and we've been
   reassessing, too. Coding, hell, most people don't do it for very long.
   Especially assembler, Jesus, if you're still writing assembler after five
   years, there's something, you know, wrong. You end up in management or you
   move horizontally. Or you lose it." Tomas realized that he'd said the
   wrong thing and blushed.

   Aw, shit.

   "Horizontal movement. That's the great thing about a company this size.
   There's always somewhere you can go when you burn out on one task."

   No, no, no.

   "The Honorable Computing initiative is ready for documentation, Murray. We
   need a tech writer who can really nail it."

   A tech writer. Why not just break his goddamned fingers and poke his eyes
   out? Never write another line of code, never make the machine buck and hum
   and make his will real in the abstract beauty of silicon? Tech writers
   were coders' janitors, documenting the plainly self-evident logic of APIs
   and code-structures, niggling over punctuation and grammar and frigging
   stylebooks, like any of it mattered - human beings could parse English,
   even if it wasn't well-formed, even if you had a comma-splice or a
   dangling participle.

   "It's a twelve month secondment, a change of pace for you and a chance for
   us to evaluate your other strengths. You go to four weeks' vacation and we
   accelerate your vesting and start you with a new grant at the same strike
   price, over 24 months."

   Murray did the math in his head, numbers dancing. Four weeks' vacation -
   that was three years ahead of schedule, not that anyone that senior ever
   used his vacation days, but you could bank them for retirement or, ahem,
   exit strategy. The forward vesting meant that he could walk out and fly
   back to Canada in three weeks if he hated it and put 30 percent down on a
   two-bedroom in New West.

   And the door was closed and the blinds were drawn and the implication was
   clear. Take this job or shove it.

   He took the job.

   A month later he was balls-deep in the documentation project and feeling,
   you know, not horrible. The Honorable Computing initiative was your basic
   Bond-villain world-domination horseshit, of course, but it was technically
   sweet and it kept him from misting over and bawling. And they had cute
   girls on the documentation floor, liberal arts/electrical engineering
   double-majors with abs you could bounce a quarter off of who were doing
   time before being promoted up to join the first cohort of senior female
   coders to put their mark on the Valley.

   He worked late most nights, only marking the passing of five PM by his
   instinctive upwards glance as all those fine, firm rear ends walked past
   his desk on their way out of the office. Then he went into night mode,
   working by the glow of his display and the emergency lights until the
   custodians came in and chased him out with their vacuum cleaners.

   One night, he was struggling to understand the use-cases for Honorable
   Computing when the overhead lights flicked on, shrinking his pupils to
   painful pinpricks. The cleaners clattered in and began to pointedly empty
   the wastebins. He took the hint, grabbed his shoulderbag and staggered for
   the exit, badging out as he went.

   His car was one of the last ones in the lot, a hybrid Toyota with a lot of
   dashboard geek-toys like a GPS and a back-seat DVD player, though no one
   ever rode in Murray's back seat. He'd bought it three months before Liam
   died, cashing in some shares and trading in the giant gas-guzzling SUV
   he'd never once taken off-road.

   As he aimed his remote at it and initiated the cryptographic handshake -
   i.e., unlocked the doors - he spotted the guy leaning against the car.
   Murray's thumb jabbed at the locking button on the remote, but it was too
   late: the guy had the door open and he was sliding into the passenger
   seat.

   In the process of hitting the remote's panic button, Murray managed to pop
   the trunk and start the engine, but eventually his thumb mashed the right
   button and the car's lights strobed and the horn blared. He backed slowly
   towards the office doors, just as the guy found the dome-light control and
   lit up the car's interior and Murray got a good look at him.

   It was Liam.

   Murray stabbed at the remote some more and killed the panic button. Jesus,
   who was going to respond at this hour in some abandoned industrial park in
   the middle of the Valley anyway? The limp-dick security guard? He squinted
   at the face in the car.

   Liam. Still Liam. Not the skeletal Liam he'd last seen rotted and
   intubated on a bed at San Jose General. Not the porcine Liam he'd laughed
   with over a million late-night El Torito burritos. A fit, healthy, young
   Liam, the Liam he'd met the day they both started at Global Semi at
   adjacent desks, Liam fresh out of Cal Tech and fit from his weekly
   lot-hockey game and his weekend dirtbike rides in the hills. Liam-prime,
   or maybe Liam's younger brother or something.

   Liam rolled down the window and struck a match on the passenger-side door,
   then took a Marlboro Red from a pack in his shirt pocket and lit it.
   Murray walked cautiously to the car, his thumb working on his cellphone,
   punching in the numbers 9-1-1 and hovering over "SEND." He got close
   enough to see the scratch the match-head had left on the side-panel and
   muttered "fuck" with feeling.

   "Hey dirtbag, you kiss your mother with that mouth?" Liam said. It was
   Liam.

   "You kiss your mother after I'm through with her mouth?" Murray said, the
   rote of old times. He gulped for air.

   Liam popped the door and got out. He was ripped, bullish chest and
   cartoonish wasp-waist, rock-hard abs through a silvery club-shirt and
   bulging thighs. A body like that, it's a full-time job, or so Murray had
   concluded after many failed get-fit initiatives involving gyms and
   retreats and expensive home equipment and humiliating early-morning jogs
   through the sidewalk-free streets of Shallow Alto.

   "Who the fuck are you?" Murray said, looking into the familiar eyes, the
   familiar smile-lines and the deep wrinkle between Liam's eyes from his
   concentration face. Though the night was cool, Murray felt runnels of
   sweat tracing his spine, trickling down between his buttocks.

   "You know the answer, so why ask? The question isn't who, it's how. Let's
   drive around a little and I'll tell you all about it."

   Liam clapped a strong hand on his forearm and gave it a companionable
   squeeze. It felt good and real and human.

   "You can't smoke in my car," Murray said.

   "Don't worry," Liam said. "I won't exhale."

   Murray shook his head and went around to the driver's side. By the time he
   started the engine, Liam had his seatbelt on and was poking randomly at
   the on-board controls. "This is pretty rad. You told me about it, I
   remember, but it sounded stupid at the time. Really rad." He brought up
   the MP3 player and scrolled through Murray's library, adding tracks to a
   mix, cranking up the opening crash of an old, old, old punk Beastie Boys
   song. "The speakers are for shit, though!" he hollered over the music.

   Murray cranked the volume down as he bounced over the speed bumps, badged
   out of the lot, and headed for the hills, stabbing at the GPS to bring up
   some roadmaps that included the private roads way up in the highlands.

   "So, do I get two other ghosts tonight, Marley, or are you the only one?"

   Liam found the sunroof control and flicked his smoke out into the road.
   "Ghost, huh? I'm meat, dude, same as you. Not back from the dead, just
   back from the mostly dead." He did the last like Billy Crystal as Miracle
   Max in "The Princess Bride," one of their faves. "I'll tell you all about
   it, but I want to catch up on your shit first. What are you working on?"

   "They've got me writing docs," Murray said, grateful of the car's darkness
   covering his blush.

   "Awwww," Liam said. "You're shitting me."

   "I kinda lost it," Murray said. "Couldn't code. About six months ago.
   After."

   "Ah," Liam said.

   "So I'm writing docs. It's a sideways promotion and the work's not bad.
   I'm writing up Honorable Computing."

   "What?"

   "Sorry, it was after your time. It's a big deal. All the semiconductor
   companies are in on it: Intel, AMD, even Motorola and Hitachi. And
   Microsoft - they're hardcore for it."

   "So what is it?"

   Murray turned onto a gravel road, following the tracery on the glowing GPS
   screen as much as the narrow road, spiraling up and up over the sparse
   lights of Silicon Valley. He and Liam had had a million bullshit sessions
   about tech, what was vaporware and what was killer, and now they were
   having one again, just like old times. Only Liam was dead. Well, if it was
   time for Murray to lose his shit, what better way than in the hills, great
   tunes on the stereo, all alone in the night?

   Murray was warming up to the subject. He'd wanted someone he could really
   chew this over with since he got reassigned, he'd wanted Liam there to key
   off his observations. "OK, so, the Turing Machine, right? Turing's
   Universal Machine. The building-block of modern computation. In Turing's
   day, you had all these specialized machines: a machine for solving
   quadratics, a machine for calculating derivatives, and so on. Turing came
   up with the idea of a machine that could configure itself to be any
   specialized machine, using symbolic logic: software. Included in the
   machines that you can simulate in a Turing Machine is another Turing
   Machine, like Java or VMWare. With me?"

   "With you."

   "So this gives rise to a kind of existential crisis. When your software is
   executing, how does it know what its execution environment is? Maybe it's
   running on a Global Semi Itanium clone at 1.6 gigahertz, or maybe it's
   running on a model of that chip, simulated on a Motorola G5 RISC
   processor."

   "Got it."

   "Now, forget about that for a sec and think about Hollywood. The coked-up
   Hollyweird fatcats hate Turing Machines. I mean, they want to release
   their stuff over the Internet, but they want to deliver it to you in a
   lockbox. You get to listen to it, you get to watch it, but only if they
   say so, and only if you've paid. You can buy it over and over again, but
   you can never own it. It's scrambled - encrypted - and they only send you
   the keys when you satisfy a license server that you've paid up. The keys
   are delivered to a secure app that you can't fuxor with, and the app locks
   you out of the video card and the sound card and the drive while it's
   decrypting the stream and showing it to you, and then it locks everything
   up again once you're done and hands control back over to you."

   Liam snorted. "It is to laugh."

   "Yeah, I know. It's bullshit. It's Turing Machines, right? When the
   software executes on your computer, it has to rely on your computer's
   feedback to confirm that the video card and the sound card are locked up,
   that you're not just feeding the cleartext stream back to the drive and
   then to 10,000,000 pals online. But the ‘computer' it's executing on could
   be simulated inside another computer, one that you've modified to your
   heart's content. The ‘video card' is a simulation; the ‘sound card' is a
   simulation. The computer is a brain in a bottle, it's in the Matrix, it
   can't trust its senses because you're in control, it's a Turing Machine
   nested inside another Turing Machine."

   "Like Descartes."

   "What?"

   "You gotta read your classics, bro. I've been catching up over the past
   six months or so, doing a lot of reading. Mostly free e-books from the
   Gutenberg Project. Descartes' "Meditations" are some heavy shiznit.
   Descartes starts by saying that he wants to figure out some stuff about
   the world, but he can't, right, because in order to say stuff about the
   world, he needs to trust his senses, but his senses are wrong all the
   time. When he dreams, his senses deliver full-on THX all-digital IMAX, but
   none of it's really there. How does he know when he's dreaming or when
   he's awake? How does he know when he's experiencing something or imagining
   it? How does he know he's not a brain in a jar?"

   "So, how does he know?" Murray asked, taking them over a reservoir on a
   switchback road, moonlight glittering over the still water, occulted by
   fringed silhouettes of tall California pines.

   "Well, that's where he pulls some religion out of his ass. Here's how it
   goes: God is good, because part of the definition of God is goodness. God
   made the world. God made me. God made my senses. God made my senses so
   that I could experience the goodness of his world. Why would God give me
   bum senses? QED, I can trust my senses."

   "It is like Descartes," Murray said, accelerating up a new hill.

   "Yeah?" Liam said. "Who's God, then?"

   "Crypto," Murray said. "Really good, standards-defined crypto. Public
   ciphersystems whose details are published and understood. AES, RSA, good
   crypto. There's a signing key for each chip fab - ours is in some secret
   biometrics-and-machineguns bunker under some desert. That key is used to
   sign another key that's embedded in a tamper-resistant chip -"

   Liam snorted again.

   "No, really. Not tamper-proof, obviously, but tamper-resistant - you'd
   need a tunneling microscope or a vat of Freon to extract the keys from the
   chip. And every chip has its own keys, so you'd need to do this for every
   chip, which doesn't, you know, scale. So there's this chip full of
   secrets, they call the Fritz chip, for Fritz Hollings, the Senator from
   Disney, the guy who's trying to ban computers so that Hollywood won't go
   broke. The Fritz chip wakes up when you switch on the machine, and it uses
   its secret key to sign the operating system - well, the boot-loader and
   the operating system and the drivers and stuff - so now you've got a bunch
   of cryptographic signatures that reflect the software and hardware
   configuration of your box. When you want to download Police Academy n,
   your computer sends all these keys to Hollywood central, attesting to the
   operating environment of your computer. Hollywood decides on the fly if it
   wants to trust that config, and if it does, it encrypts the movie, using
   the keys you've sent. That means that you can only unscramble the movie
   when you're running that Fritz chip, on that CPU, with that version of the
   OS and that video driver and so on."

   "Got it: so if the OS and the CPU and so on are all ‘Honorable'" - Liam
   described quote-marks with his index fingers - "then you can be sure that
   the execution environment is what the software expects it to be, that it's
   not a brain in a vat. Hollywood movies are safe from Napsterization."

   They bottomed out on the shore of the reservoir and Murray pulled over.
   "You've got it."

   "So basically, whatever Hollywood says, goes. You can't fake an interface,
   you can't make any uses that they don't authorize. You know that these
   guys sued to make the VCR illegal, right? You can't wrap up an old app in
   a compatibility layer and make it work with a new app. You say Microsoft
   loves this? No fucking wonder, dude - they can write software that won't
   run on a computer running Oracle software. It's your basic Bond-villain -"

   "- world-domination horseshit. Yeah, I know."

   Liam got out of the car and lit up another butt, kicked loose stones into
   the reservoir. Murray joined him, looking out over the still water.

   "Ring Minus One," Liam said, and skipped a rock over the oily-black
   surface of the water, getting four long bounces out of it.

   "Yeah." Murray said. Ring Zero, the first registers in the processor, was
   where your computer checked to figure out how to start itself up.
   Compromise Ring Zero and you can make the computer do anything - load an
   alternate operating system, turn the whole box into a brain-in-a-jar,
   executing in an unknown environment. Ring Minus One, well, that was like
   God-code, space on another, virtual processor that was unalterable, owned
   by some remote party, by LoCal and its entertainment giants. Software was
   released without any copy-prevention tech because everyone knew that
   copy-prevention tech didn't work. Nevertheless, Hollywood was always
   chewing the scenery and hollering, they just didn't believe that the
   hairfaces and ponytails didn't have some seekrit tech that would keep
   their movies safe from copying until the heat death of the universe or the
   expiry of copyright, whichever came last.

   "You run this stuff," Liam said, carefully, thinking it through, like he'd
   done before he got sick, murdered by his need to feed speedballs to his
   golden, tracked-out arm. "You run it and while you're watching a movie,
   Hollywood 0wnz your box." Murray heard the zero and the zee in 0wnz.
   Hacker-speak for having total control. No one wants to be 0wnz0red by some
   teenaged script-kiddie who's found some fresh exploit and turned it loose
   on your computer.

   "In a nutsac. Gimme a butt."

   Liam shook one out of the pack and passed it to Murray, along with a box
   of Mexican strike-anywhere matches. "You're back on these things?" Liam
   said, a note of surprise in his voice.

   "Not really. Special occasion, you being back from the dead and all. I've
   always heard that these things'd kill me, but apparently being killed
   isn't so bad - you look great."

   "Artful segue, dude. You must be burning up with curiosity."

   "Not really," Murray said. "Figgered I'm hallucinating. I haven't
   hallucinated up until now, but back when I was really down, you know,
   clinical, I had all kinds of voices muttering in my head, telling me that
   I'd fucked up, it was all fucked up, crash the car into the median and do
   the world a favor, whatever. You get a little better from that stuff by
   changing jobs, but maybe not all the way better. Maybe I'm going to fill
   my pockets with rocks and jump in the lake. It's the next logical step,
   right?"

   Liam studied his face. Murray tried to stay deadpan, but he felt the old
   sadness that came with the admission, the admission of guilt and weakness,
   felt the tears pricking his eyes. "Hear me out first, OK?" Liam said.

   "By all means. It'd be rude not to hear you out after you came all the way
   here from the kingdom of the dead."

   "Mostly dead. Mostly. Ever think about how all the really good shit in
   your body - metabolism, immunoresponse, cognition - it's all in Ring Minus
   One? Not user-accessible? I mean, why is it that something like wiggling
   your toes is under your volitional control, but your memory isn't?"

   "Well, that's complicated stuff - heartbeat, breathing, immunoresponse,
   memory. You don't want to forget to breathe, right?"

   Liam hissed a laugh. "Horse-sheeit," he drawled. "How complicated is
   moving your arm? How many muscle-movements in a smile? How many
   muscle-movements in a heartbeat? How complicated is writing code versus
   immunoresponse? Why when you're holding your breath can't you hold it
   until you don't want to hold it anymore? Why do you have to be a fucking
   Jedi Master to stop your heart at will?"

   "But the interactions -"

   "More horseshit. Yeah, the interactions between brain chemistry and body
   and cognition and metabolism are all complicated. I was a speed-freak, I
   know all about it. But it's not any more complicated than any of the other
   complex interactions you master every day - wind and attack and spin when
   someone tosses you a ball; speed and acceleration and vectors when you
   change lanes; don't even get me started on what goes on when you season a
   soup. No, your body just isn't that complicated - it's just hubris that
   makes us so certain that our meat-sacks are transcendently complex.

   "We're simple, but all the good stuff is 0wned by your autonomic systems.
   They're like conditional operators left behind by a sloppy coder: while x
   is true, do y. We've only had the vaguest idea what x is, but we've got a
   handle on y, you betcha. Burning fat, for example." He prodded Murray's
   gut-overhang with a long finger. Self-consciously, Murray tugged his
   JavaOne gimme jacket tighter.

   "For forty years now, doctors have been telling us that the way to keep
   fit is to exercise more and eat less. That's great fucking advice, as can
   be demonstrated by the number of trim, fit residents of Northern
   California that can be found waddling around any shopping mall off
   Interstate 101. Look at exercise, Jesus, what could be stupider? Exercise
   doesn't burn fat, exercise just satisfies the condition in which your body
   is prepared to burn fat off. It's like a computer that won't boot unless
   you restart it twice, switch off the monitor, open the CD drive and stand
   on one foot. If you're a luser, you do all this shit every time you want
   to boot your box, but if you're a leet hax0r like you and me, you just
   figure out what's wrong with the computer and fix it. You don't sacrifice
   a chicken twice a day, you 0wn the box, so you make it dance to your tune.

   "But your meat, it's not under your control. You know you have to exercise
   for 20 minutes before you start burning any fat at all? In other words,
   the first twenty minutes are just a goddamned waste of time. It's
   sacrificing a chicken to your metabolism. Eat less, exercise more is a
   giant chicken-sacrifice, so I say screw it. I say, you should be
   super-user in your own body. You should be leet as you want to be. Every
   cell in your body should be end-user modifiable."

   Liam held his hands out before them, then stretched and stretched and
   stretched the fingers, so that each one bent over double. "Triple jointed,
   metabolically secure, cognitively large and in charge. I 0wn, dude."

   Liam fished the last cig out of the pack, crumpled it and tucked it into a
   pocket. "Last one," he said. "Wanna share?"

   "Sure," Murray said, dazedly. "Yeah," he said, taking the smoke and
   bringing it to his lips. The tip, he realized too late, was dripping with
   saliva. He made a face and handed it back to Liam. "Aaagh! You juiced the
   filter!"

   "Sorry," Liam said, "talking gets my spit going. Where was I? Oh, yeah, I
   0wn. Want to know how it happened?"

   "Does it also explain how you ended up not dead?"

   "Mostly dead. Indeed it does."

   Murray walked back to the car and lay back on the hood, staring at the
   thin star-cover and the softly swaying pine-tops. He heard Liam begin to
   pace, heard the cadence of Liam's thinking stride, the walk he fell into
   when he was on a roll.

   "Are you sitting comfortably?" Liam said. "Then I shall begin."

   The palliatives on the ward were abysmal whiners, but they were still
   better than the goddamned church volunteers who came by to patch-adams at
   them. Liam was glad of the days when the dementia was strong, morphine
   days when the sun rose and set in a slow blink and then it was bedtime
   again.

   Lucky for him, then, that lucid days were fewer and farther between.
   Unlucky for him that his lucid days, when they came, were filled with the
   G-Men.

   The G-Men had come to him in the late days of his tenure on the palliative
   ward. They'd wheeled him into a private consultation room and given him a
   cigarette that stung the sores on his lips, tongue and throat. He coughed
   gratefully.

   "You must be the Fed," Liam said. "No one else could green-light indoor
   smoking in California." Liam had worked for the Fed before. Work in the
   Valley and you end up working for the Fed, because when the cyclic
   five-year bust arrives, the only venture capital that's liquid in the U.S.
   is military research green - khaki money. He'd been seconded twice to
   biometrics-and-machineguns bunkers where he'd worked on need-to-know
   integration projects for Global Semi's customers in the
   Military-Industrial Simplex.

   The military and the alphabet soup of Fed cops gave birth to the Valley.
   After WWII, all those shipbuilder engineers and all those radar engineers
   and all those radio engineers and the tame academics at Cal Tech and Cal
   and Stanford sorta congealed, did a bunch of startups and built a bunch of
   crap their buds in the Forces would buy.

   Khaki money stunted the Valley. Generals didn't need to lobby in Congress
   for bigger appropriations. They just took home black budgets that were
   silently erased from the books, aerosolized cash that they misted over the
   eggheads along Highway 101. Two generations later, the Valley was filled
   with techno-determinists, swaggering nerd squillionaires who were
   steadfastly convinced that the money would flow forever and ever amen.

   Then came Hollywood, the puny $35 billion David that slew the $600 billion
   Goliath of tech. They bought Congresscritters, had their business-models
   declared fundamental to the American way of life, extended copyright ad
   [inifinitum|nauseam] and generally kicked the shit out of tech in DC.
   They'd been playing this game since 1908, when they sued to keep the
   player piano off the market, and they punched well above their weight in
   the legislative ring. As the copyright police began to crush tech
   companies throughout the Valley, khaki money took on the sweet appeal of
   nostalgia, strings-free cash for babykiller projects that no one was going
   to get sued over.

   The Feds that took Liam aside that day could have been pulled from a
   fiftieth anniversary revival of "Nerds and Generals." Clean-cut,
   stone-faced, prominent wedding-bands. The Feds had never cared for Liam's
   jokes, though it was his trackmarks and not his punchlines that eventually
   accounted for his security clearance being yanked. These two did not crack
   a smile as Liam wheezed out his pathetic joke.

   Instead, they introduced themselves gravely. Col. Gonzalez - an MD, with
   caduceus insignia next to his silver birds - and Special Agent Fredericks.
   Grateful for his attention, they had an offer to make him.

   "It's experimental, and the risks are high. We won't kid you about that."

   "I appreciate that," Liam wheezed. "I like to live dangerously. Give me
   another smoke, willya?"

   Col. Gonzalez lit another Marlboro Red with his brass Zippo and passed him
   a sheaf of papers. "You can review these here, once we're done. I'm afraid
   I'll have to take them with me when we go, though."

   Liam paged through the docs, passing over the bio stuff and nodding his
   head over the circuit diagrams and schematics. "I give up," he said. "What
   does it all do?"

   "It's an interface between your autonomic processes and a
   microcontroller."

   Liam thought about that for a moment. "I'm in," he said.

   Special Agent Fredericks' thin lips compressed a hair and his eyes gave
   the hintiest hint of a roll. But Col. Gonzalez nodded to himself. "All
   right. Here's the protocol: tomorrow, we give you a bug. It's a controlled
   mutagen that prepares your brainstem so that it emits and receives weak
   electromagnetic fields that can be manipulated with an external
   microcontroller. In subjects with effective immunoresponse, the bug takes
   less than one percent of the time -"

   "But if you're dying of AIDS, that's not a problem," Liam said and smiled
   until some of the sores at the corners of his mouth cracked and released a
   thin gruel of pus. "Lucky fucking me."

   "You grasp the essentials," the Colonel said. "There's no surgery
   involved. The interface regulates immunoresponse in the region of the
   insult to prevent rejection. The controller has a serial connector that
   connects to a PC that instructs it in respect of the governance of most
   bodily functions."

   Liam smiled slantwise and butted out. "God, I'd hate to see the project
   you developed this shit for. Zombie soldiers, right? You can tell me, I've
   got clearance."

   Special Agent Fredericks shook his head. "Not for three years, you
   haven't. And you never had clearance to get the answer to that question.
   But once you sign here and here and here, you'll almost have clearance to
   get some of the answers." He passed a clipboard to Liam.

   Liam signed, and signed, and signed. "Autonomic processes, right?"

   Col. Gonzalez nodded. "Correct."

   "Including, say, immunoresponse?"

   "Yes, we've had very promising results in respect of the immune system. It
   was one of the first apps we wrote. Modifies the genome to produce
   virus-hardened cells and kick-starts production of new cells."

   "Yeah, until some virus out-evolves it," Liam said. He knew how to debug
   vaporware.

   "We issue a patch," the Colonel said.

   "I write good patches," Liam said.

   "We know," Special Agent Fredericks said, and gently prized the clipboard
   from his fingers.

   *          *          *

   The techs came first, to wire Liam up. The new bug in his system broadened
   his already-exhaustive survey of the ways in which the human body can
   hurt. He squeezed his eyes tight against the morphine rush and lazily
   considered the possibility of rerouting pain to a sort of dull tickle.

   The techs were familiar Valley-dwellers, portly and bedecked with
   multitools and cellular gear and wireless PDAs. They handled him like
   spoiled meat, with gloves and wrinkled noses, and talked shop over his
   head to one another.

   Colonel Gonzalez supervised, occasionally stepping away to liaise with the
   hospital's ineffectual medical staff.

   A week of this - a week of feeling like his spine was working its way out
   of his asshole, a week of rough latex hands and hacker jargon - and he was
   wheeled into a semi-private room, surrounded by louche oatmeal-colored
   commodity PCs - no keyboards or mice, lest he get the urge to tinker.

   The other bed was occupied by Joey, another Silicon Valley needle-freak, a
   heroin addict who'd been a design engineer for Apple, figuring out how to
   cram commodity hardware into stylish gumdrop boxen. Joey and Liam croaked
   conversation between themselves when they were both lucid and alone. Liam
   always knew when Joey was awake by the wet hacking coughs he wrenched out
   of his pneumonia-riddled lungs. Alone together, ignored by the mad
   scientists who were hacking their bodies, they struck up a weak and
   hallucinogenic camaraderie.

   "I'm not going to sleep," Joey said, in one timeless twilight.

   "So don't sleep, shit," Liam said.

   "No, I mean, ever. Sleep, it's like a third of your life, 20, 30 years.
   What's it good for? It resets a bunch of switches, gives your brain a
   chance to sort through its buffers, a little oxygenation for your tissues.
   That stuff can all take place while you're doing whatever you feel like
   doing, hiking in the hills or getting laid. Make ‘em into cron jobs and
   nice them down to the point where they just grab any idle cycles and do
   their work incrementally."

   "You're crazy. I like to sleep," Liam said.

   "Not me. I've slept enough in this joint, been on the nod enough, I never
   want to sleep another minute. We're getting another chance, I'm not
   wasting a minute of it." Despite the braveness of his words, he sounded
   like he was half-asleep already.

   "Well, that'll make them happy. All part of a good super-soldier, you
   know."

   "Now who's crazy?"

   "You don't believe it? They're just getting our junkie asses back online
   so they can learn enough from us to field some mean, lean, heavily
   modified fighting-machines."

   "And then they snuff us. You told me that this morning. Yesterday? I still
   don't believe it. Even if you're right about why they're doing this,
   they're still going to want us around so they can monitor the long-term
   effects."

   "I hope you're right."

   "You know I am."

   Liam stared into the ceiling until he heard Joey's wet snores, then he
   closed his eyes and waited for the fever dreams.

   Joey went critical the next day. One minute, he was snoring away in bed
   while Liam watched a daytime soap with headphones. The next minute, there
   were twenty people in the room: nurses, doctors, techs, even Col.
   Gonzalez. Joey was doing the floppy dance in the next bed, the OD dance
   that Liam had seen once or twice, danced once or twice on an Emergency
   Room floor, his heart pounding the crystal meth mambo.

   Someone backhanded Liam's TV and it slid away on its articulated arm and
   yanked the headphones off his head, ripping open the scabs on the slowly
   healing sores on his ears. Liam stifled a yelp and listened to the
   splashing sounds of all those people standing ankle-deep in something pink
   and bad-smelling, and Liam realized it was watery blood and he pitched
   forward and his empty stomach spasmed, trying to send up some bile or
   mucous, clicking on empty.

   Colonel Gonzales snapped out some orders and two techs abandoned their
   fretting over one of the computers, yanked free a tangle of roll-up,
   rubberized keyboards and trackballs and USB cables, piled them on the side
   of Liam's gurney, snapped up the guard rails and wheeled him out of the
   room.

   They crashed through a series of doors before hitting a badgepoint. One
   tech thought he'd left his badge back in the room on its lanyard (he
   hadn't - he'd dropped it on the gurney and Liam had slipped it under the
   sheets), the other one wasn't sure if his was in one of his many pockets.
   As they frisked themselves, Liam stole his skeletal hand out from under
   the covers, a hand all tracked out with collapsed IV veins and yellowing
   fingernails, a claw of a hand.

   The claw shook as Liam guided it to a keyboard, stole it under the covers,
   rolled it under the loose meat of his thigh.

   *          *          *

   "Need to know?" Liam said, spitting the words at Col. Gonzalez. "If I
   don't need to know what happened to Joey, who the fuck does?"

   "You're not a medical professional, Liam. You're also not cleared. What
   happened to Joey was an isolated incident, nothing to worry about."

   "Horseshit! You can tell me what happened to Joey or not, but I'll find
   out, you goddamned betcha."

   The Colonel sighed and wiped his palms on his thighs. He looked like shit,
   his brush-cut glistening with sweat and scalp-oil, his eyes bagged and his
   youthful face made old with exhaustion lines. It had been two hours since
   Joey had gone critical - two hours of lying still with the keyboard
   nestled under his thigh, on the gurney in the a locked room, until they
   came for him again. "I have a lot of work to do yet, Liam. I came to see
   you as a courtesy, but I'm afraid that the courtesy is at a close." He
   stood.

   "Hey!" Liam croaked after him. "Gimme a fucking cigarette, will you?"

   Once the Colonel was gone, Liam had the run of the room. They'd mopped it
   out and disinfected it and sent Joey's corpse to an Area 51 black ops
   morgue for gruesome autopsy, and there was only half as much hardware
   remaining, all of it plugged back into the hard pucker of skin on the back
   of Liam's neck.

   Cautiously, Liam turned himself so that the toes of one foot touched the
   ground. Knuckling his toes, he pushed off towards the computers, the
   gurney's wheels squeaking. Painfully, arthritically, he inched to the
   boxes, then plugged in and unrolled the keyboard.

   He hit the spacebar and got rid of the screen-saver, brought up a login
   prompt. He'd been stealthily shoulder-surfing the techs for weeks now, and
   had half a dozen logins in his brain. He tapped out the login/pass
   combination and he was in.

   The machine was networked to a CVS repository in some bunker, so the first
   thing he did was login to the server and download all the day's commits,
   then he dug out the READMEs. While everything was downloading, he logged
   into the tech's e-mail account and found Col. Gonzalez's account of Joey's
   demise.

   It was encrypted with the group's shared key as well as the tech's key,
   but he'd shoulder-surfed both, and after three tries, he had cleartext on
   the screen.

   Hydrostatic shock. The membranes of all of Joey's cells had ruptured
   simultaneously, so that he'd essentially burst like a bag of semi-liquid
   Jell-O. Preliminary indications were that the antiviral cellular
   modifications had gone awry due to some idiosyncrasy of Joey's "platform"
   - his physiology, in other words - and that the "fortified" cell-membranes
   had given way disastrously and simultaneously.

   A ghoulish giggle escaped Liam's lips. Venture capitalists liked to talk
   about "liquidity events" - times in the life of a portfolio company when
   the investors get to cash out: acquisition and IPO, basically. Liam had
   always joked that the VCs needed adult diapers to cope with their
   liquidity events, but now he had a better one. Joey had experienced the
   ultimate liquidity event.

   The giggle threatened to rise into a squeal as he contemplated a liquidity
   event of his own, so he swallowed it and got into the READMEs and the
   source code.

   He wasn't a biotech, wasn't a medical professional, but neither were the
   coders who'd been working on the mods that were executing on his
   "platform" at that very moment. In their comments and data-structures and
   READMEs, they'd gone to great pains to convert medical jargon to
   geekspeak, so that Liam was actually able to follow most of it.

   One thing he immediately gleaned is that his interface was modifying his
   cells to be virus-hardened as slowly as possible. They wanted a controlled
   experiment, data on every stage of the recovery - if a recovery was indeed
   in the cards.

   Liam didn't want to wait. He didn't even have to change the code - he just
   edited a variable in the config file and respawned the process. Where
   before he'd been running at a pace that would reverse the course of HIV in
   his body in a space of three weeks, now he was set to be done in three
   hours. What the fuck - how many chances was he going to get to screw
   around after they figured out that he'd been tinkering?

   *          *          *

   Manufacturing the curative made him famished. His body was burning a lot
   of calories, and after a couple hours he felt like he could eat the ass
   out of a dead bear. Whatever was happening was happening, though! He felt
   the sores on his body dry up and start to slough off. He was hungry enough
   that he actually caught himself peeling off the scabby cornflakes and
   eating them. It grossed him out, but he was hungry.

   His only visitor that night was a nurse, who made enough noise with her
   trolley on the way down the hall that he had time to balance the keyboard
   on top of the monitor and knuckle the bed back into position. The nurse
   was pleased to hear that he had an appetite and obligingly brought him a
   couple of supper-trays - the kitchen had sent up one for poor Joey, she
   explained.

   Once Liam was satisfied that she was gone, he returned to his task with a
   renewed sense of urgency. No techs and no docs and no Colonel for six
   hours now - there must be a shitload of paperwork and fingerpointing over
   Joey, but who knew how long it would last?

   He stuffed his face, nailing about three thousand calories over the next
   two hours, poking through the code. Here was a routine for stimulating the
   growth of large muscle-groups. Here was one for regenerating fine nerves.
   The enhanced reflexes sounded like a low-cal option, too, so he executed
   it. It was all betaware, but as between a liquidity event, a slow death on
   the palliative ward and a chance at a quick cure, what the fuck, he'd take
   his chances.

   He was chuckling now, going through the code, learning the programmers'
   style and personality from their comments and variable names. He was so
   damned hungry, and the muscles in his back and limbs and ass and gut all
   felt like they were home to nests of termites.

   He needed more food. He gingerly peeled off the surgical tape holding on
   controller and its cable. Experimentally, he stood. His inner ear twirled
   rollercoaster for a minute or two, but then it settled down and he was
   actually erect - upright - well, both, he could cut glass with that boner,
   it was the first one he'd had in a year - and walking!

   He stole out into the hallway, experiencing a frisson of delight and then
   the burning ritual humiliation of any person who finds himself in a public
   place wearing a hospital gown. His bony ass was hanging out of the back,
   the cool air of the dim ward raising goose-pimples on it.

   He stepped into the next room. It was dusky-dark, the twilight of a
   hospital nighttime, and the two occupants were snoring in contratime. Each
   had his (her? it was too dark to tell) own nightstand, piled high with
   helium balloons, Care Bears, flowers and baskets of nuts, dried fruits and
   chocolates. Saliva flooded Liam's mouth. He tiptoed across to each
   nightstand and held up the hem of his gown, then grinched the food into
   the pocket it made.

   Stealthily, he stole his way down the length of the ward, emptying
   fruit-baskets, boxes of candy and chocolate, leftover dinner trays. By the
   time he returned to his room, he could hardly stand. He dumped the food
   out on the bed and began to shovel it into his face, going back through
   the code, looking for obvious bugs, memory leaks, buffer overruns. He
   found several and recompiled the apps, accelerating the pace of growth in
   his muscles. He could actually feel himself bulking up, feel the tone
   creeping back into his flesh.

   He'd read the notes in the READMEs on waste heat and the potential to
   denature enzymes, so he stripped naked and soaked towels in a quiet
   trickle of ice-water in the small sink. He kept taking breaks from his
   work to wring out the steaming towels he wrapped around his body and wet
   them down again.

   The next time he rose, his legs were springy. He parted the slats of the
   blinds and saw the sun rising over the distant ocean and knew it was time
   to hit the road, jack.

   He tore loose the controller and its cable and shut down the computer. He
   undid the thumbscrews on the back of the case and slid it away, then
   tugged at the sled for the hard-disk until it sprang free. He ducked back
   out into the hall and quickly worked his way through the rooms until he
   found one with a change of men's clothes neatly folded on the chair -
   ill-fitting tan chinos and a blue Oxford shirt, the NoCal yuppie uniform.
   He found a pair of too-small penny-loafers too and jammed his feet into
   the toes. He dressed in his room and went through the wallet that was
   stuck in the pants pocket. A couple hundred bucks' worth of cash, some
   worthless plastic, a picture of a heavyset wife and three chubby kids. He
   dumped all the crap out, kept the cash, snatched up the drive-sled and
   booted, badging out with the tech's badge.

   "How long have you been on the road, then?" Murray asked. His mouth tasted
   like an ashtray and he had a mild case of the shakes.

   "Four months. I've been breaking into cars mostly. Stealing laptops and
   selling them for cash. I've got a box at the rooming-house with the
   hard-drive installed, and I've been using an e-gold account to buy little
   things online to help me out."

   "Help you out with what?"

   "Hacking - duh. First thing I did was reverse-engineer the interface bug.
   I wanted a safe virus I could grow arbitrary payloads for in my body. I
   embedded the antiviral hardening agent in the vector. It's a sexually
   transmissible wellness, dude. I've been barebacking my way through the
   skankiest crack-hoes in the Tenderloin, playing Patient Zero, infecting
   everyone with the Cure."

   Murray sat up and his head swam. "You did what?"

   "I cured AIDS. It's going around, it's catching, you might already be a
   winner."

   "Jesus, Liam, what the fuck do you know about medicine? For all you know,
   your cure is worse than the disease - for all you know, we're all going to
   have a - ‘liquidity event‘ any day now!"

   "No chance of that happening, bro. I isolated the cause of that early on.
   This medical stuff is just not that complicated - once you get over the
   new jargon, it's nothing you can't learn as you go with a little judicious
   googling. Trust me. You're soaking in it."

   It took Murray a moment to parse that. "You infected me?"

   "The works - I've viralized all the best stuff. Metabolic controllers,
   until further notice, you're on a five-cheeseburger-a-day diet; increased
   dendrite density; muscle-builders. At-will pain-dampeners. You'll need
   those - I gave you the interface, too."

   A spasm shot up Murray's back, then down again.

   "It was on the cigarette butt. You're cancer-immune, by the by. I'm extra
   contagious tonight." Liam turned down his collar to show Murray the taped
   lump there, the dangling cable that disappeared down his shirt, connecting
   to the palmtop strapped to his belt.

   Murray arched his back and mewled through locked jaws.

   Liam caught his head before it slammed into the Toyota's hood. "Breathe,"
   he hissed. "Relax. You're only feeling the pain because you're choosing
   not to ignore it. Try to ignore it, you'll see. It kicks azz."

   *          *          *

   "I needed an accomplice. A partner in crime. I'm underground, see? No
   credit-card, no ID. I can't rent a car or hop a plane. I needed to recruit
   someone I could trust. Naturally, I thought of you."

   "I'm flattered," Murray sarcased around a mouthful of double-bacon
   cheeseburger with extra mayo.

   "You should be, asshole," Liam said. They were at Murray's one-bedroom
   techno-monastic condo: shit sofa, hyper-ergonomic chairs, dusty home
   theatre, computers everywhere. Liam drove them there, singing into the
   wind that whipped down from the sunroof, following the GPS's sterile
   eurobabe voice as it guided them back to the anonymous shitbox building
   where Murray had located his carcass for eight years.

   "Liam, you're a pal, really, my best friend ever, I couldn't be happier
   that you're alive, but if I could get up I would fucking kill you. You
   raped me, asshole. Used my body without my permission."

   "You see it that way now, but give it a couple weeks, it'll, ah, grow on
   you. Trust me. It's rad. So, call in sick for the next week - you're going
   to need some time to get used to the mods."

   "And if I don't?"

   "Do whatever you want, buddy, but I don't think you're going to be in any
   shape to go to work this week - maybe not next week either. Tell them it's
   a personal crisis. Take some vacation days. Tell ‘em you're going to a
   fat-farm. You must have a shitload of holidays saved up."

   "I do," Murray said. "I don't know why I should use them, though."

   "Oh, this is the best vacation of all, the Journey Thru Innerspace. You're
   going to love it."

   *          *          *

   Murray hadn't counted on the coding.

   Liam tunneled into his box at the rooming house and dumped its drive to
   one of the old laptops lying around Murray's apartment. He set the laptop
   next to Murray while he drove to Fry's Electronics to get the cabling and
   components he needed to make the emitter/receiver for the interface.
   They'd always had a running joke that you can build anything from parts at
   Fry's, but when Liam invoked it, Murray barely cracked a smile. He was
   stepping through the code in a debugger, reading the comments Liam had
   left behind as he'd deciphered its form and function.

   He was back in it. There was a runtime that simulated the platform and as
   he tweaked the code, he ran it on the simulator and checked out how his
   body would react if he executed it for real. Once he got a couple of
   liquidity events, he saw that Liam was right, they just weren't that hard
   to avoid.

   The API was great, there were function calls for just about everything. He
   delved into the cognitive stuff right off, since it was the area that was
   rawest, that Liam had devoted the least effort to. At-will serotonin
   production. Mnemonic perfection. Endorphin production, adrenalin. Zen
   master on a disk. Who needs meditation and biofeedback when you can do it
   all in code?

   Out of habit, he was documenting as he went along, writing proper
   tutorials for the API, putting together a table of the different kinds of
   interaction he got with different mods. Good, clear docs, ready for
   printing, able to be slotted in as online help in the developer toolkit.
   Inspired by Joey, he began work on a routine that would replace all the
   maintenance chores that the platform did in sleep-mode, along with a
   subroutine that suppressed melatonin and all the other circadian chemicals
   that induced sleep.

   Liam returned from Fry's with bags full of cabling and soldering guns and
   breadboards. He draped a black pillowcase over a patch of living-room
   floor and laid everything out on it, wires and strippers and crimpers and
   components and a soldering gun, and went to work methodically, stripping
   and crimping and twisting. He'd taken out his own connector for reference
   and he was comparing them both, using a white LED torch on a headband to
   show him the pinouts on the custom end.

   "So I'm thinking that I'll clone the controller and stick it on my head
   first to make sure it works. You wear my wire and I'll burn the new one in
   for a couple days and then we can swap. OK?"

   "Sure," Murray said, "whatever." His fingers rattled on the keys.

   "Got you one of these," Liam said and held up a bulky Korean palmtop.
   "Runs Linux. You can cross-compile the SDK and all the libraries for it;
   the compiler's on the drive. Good if you want to run an interactive app -"
   an application that changed its instructions based on output from the
   platform - "and it's stinking cool, too. I fucking love gear."

   "Gear's good," Murray agreed. "Cheap as hell and faster every time I turn
   around."

   "Well, until Honorable Computing comes along," Liam said. "That'll put a
   nail in the old coffin."

   "You're overreacting."

   "Naw. Just being realistic. Open up a shell, OK? See at the top, how it
   says ‘tty'? The kernel thinks it's communicating with a printer. Your
   shell window is a simulation of a printer, so the kernel knows how to talk
   to it - it's got plenty of compatibility layers between it and you. If the
   guy who wrote the code doesn't want you to interface with it, you can't.
   No emulation, that's not ‘honorable.' Your box is 0wned."

   Murray looked up from his keyboard. "So what do you want me to do about
   it, dead man?"

   "Mostly dead," Liam said. "Just think about it, OK? How much money you got
   in your savings account?"

   "Nice segue. Not enough."

   "Not enough for what?"

   "Not enough for sharing any of it with you."

   "Come on, dude, I'm going back underground. I need fifty grand to get out
   of the country - Canada, then buy a fake passport and head to London. Once
   I'm in the EU, I'm in good shape. I learned German last week, this week
   I'm doing French. The dendrite density shit is the shit."

   "Man und zooperman," Murray said. "If you're zo zooper, go and earn a buck
   or two, OK?"

   "Come on, you know I'm good for it. Once this stuff is ready to go -"

   "What stuff?"

   "The codebase! Haven't you figured it out yet? It's a startup! We go into
   business in some former-Soviet Stan in Asia or some African kleptocracy.
   We infect the locals with the Cure, then the interface, and then we sell
   ‘em the software. It's viral marketing, gettit?"

   "Leaving aside CIA assassins, if only for the moment, there's one gigantic
   flaw in your plan, dead-man."

   "I'm all aflutter with anticipation."

   "There's no fucking revenue opportunity. The platform spreads for free -
   it's already out there, you've seeded it with your magic undead
   super-cock. The hardware is commodity hardware, no margin and no money.
   The controller can be built out of spare parts from Fry's - next gen,
   we'll make it WiFi, so that we're using commodity wireless chipsets and
   you can control the device from a distance -"

   "- yeah, and that's why we're selling the software!" Liam hopped from foot
   to foot in a personal folk-dance celebrating his sublime cleverness.

   "In Buttfuckistan or Kleptomalia. Where being a warez d00d is an honorable
   trade. We release our libraries and binaries and APIs and fifteen minutes
   later, they're burning CDs in every souk and selling them for ten cents a
   throw."

   "Nope, that's not gonna happen."

   "Why not?"

   "We're gonna deploy on Honorable hardware."

   "I am not hearing this." Murray closed the lid of his laptop and tore into
   a slice of double-cheese meat-lover's deep-dish pizza. "You are not
   telling me this."

   "You are. I am. It's only temporary. The interface isn't Honorable, so
   anyone who reverse-engineers it can make his own apps. We're just getting
   ours while the getting is good. All the good stuff - say, pain-control and
   universal antiviral hardening - we'll make for free, viralize it. Once our
   stuff is in the market, the whole world's going to change, anyway.
   There'll be apps for happiness, cures for every disease, hibernation,
   limb-regeneration, whatever. Anything any human body has ever done, ever,
   you'll be able to do at-will. You think there's going to be anything
   recognizable as an economy once we're ubiquitous?"

   Every morning, upon rising, Murray looked down at his toes and thought,
   "Hello toes." It had been ten years since he'd had regular acquaintance
   with anything south of his gut. But his gut was gone, tight as a drumhead.
   He was free from scars and age-marks and unsightly moles and his beard
   wouldn't grow in again until he asked it to. When he thought about it, he
   could feel the dull ache of the new teeth coming in underneath the ones
   that had grown discolored and chipped, the back molar with all the ugly
   amalgam fillings, but if he chose to ignore it, the pain simply went away.

   He flexed the muscles, great and small, all around his body. His fat index
   was low enough to see the definition of each of those superbly toned slabs
   of flexible contained energy - he looked like an anatomy lesson, and it
   was all he could do not to stare at himself in the mirror all day.

   But he couldn't do that - not today, anyway. He was needed back at the
   office. He was already in the shitter at work over his "unexpected trip to
   a heath-farm," and if he left it any longer, he'd be out on his toned ass.
   He hadn't even been able to go out for new clothes - Liam had every liquid
   cent he could lay hands on, as well as his credit-cards.

   He found a pair of ancient, threadbare jeans and a couple of medium
   t-shirts that clung to the pecs that had grown up underneath his formerly
   sagging man-boobs and left for the office.

   He drew stares on the way to his desk. The documentation department hummed
   with hormonal female energy, and half a dozen of his co-workers found
   cause to cruise past his desk before he took his morning break. As he
   greedily scarfed up a box of warm Krispy Kremes, his cellphone rang.

   "Yeah?" he said. The caller-ID was the number of the international GSM
   phone he'd bought for Liam.

   "They're after us," Liam said. "I was at the Surrey border-crossing and
   the Canadian immigration guy had my pic!"

   Murray's heart pounded. He concentrated for a moment, then his heart
   calmed, a jolt of serotonin lifting his spirits. "Did you get away?"

   "Of course I got away. Jesus, you think that the CIA gives you a phone
   call? I took off cross-country, went over the fence for the duty-free and
   headed for the brush. They shot me in the fucking leg - I had to dig the
   bullet out with my multitool. I'm sending in ass-loads of T-cells and
   knitting it as fast as I can."

   Panic crept up Murray's esophagus, and he tamped it down. It broke out in
   his knees, he tamped it down. His balance swam, he stabilized it. He
   focused his eyes with an effort. "They shot you?"

   "I think they were trying to wing me. Look, I burned all the source in
   4,096-bit GPG ciphertext onto a couple of CDs, then zeroed out my drive.
   You've got to do the same, it's only a matter of time until they run my
   back-trail to you. The code is our only bargaining chip."

   "I'm at work - the backups are at home, I just can't."

   "Leave, asshole, like now! Go - get in your car and drive. Go home and
   start scrubbing the drives. I left a bottle of industrial paint-stripper
   behind and a bulk eraser. Unscrew every drive-casing, smash the platters
   and dump them in a tub with all the stripper, then put the tub onto the
   bulk-eraser - that should do it. Keep one copy, ciphertext only, and make
   the key a good one. Are you going?"

   "I'm badging out of the lot, shit, shit, shit. What the fuck did you do to
   me?"

   "Don't, OK? Just don't. I've got my own problems. I've got to go now. I'll
   call you later once I get somewhere."

   *          *          *

   He thought hard on the way back to his condo, as he whipped down the
   off-peak emptiness of Highway 101. Being a coder was all about doing
   things in the correct order: first a; then b; then, if c equals d, e;
   otherwise, f.

   First, get home. Then set the stateful operation of his body for maximal
   efficiency: reset his metabolism, increase the pace of dendrite
   densification. Manufacture viralized anti-viral in all his serum. Lots of
   serotonin and at-will endorphin. Hard times ahead.

   Next, encipher and back up the data to a removable. Did he have any CD
   blanks at home? With eidetic clarity, he saw the half-spent spool of
   generic blanks on the second shelf of the media totem.

   Then trash the disks, pack a bag and hit the road. Where to?

   He pulled into his driveway, hammered the elevator button a dozen times,
   then bolted for the stairs. Five flights later, he slammed his key into
   the lock and went into motion, executing the plan. The password gave him
   pause - generating a 4,096 bit key that he could remember was going to be
   damned hard, but then he closed his eyes and recalled, with perfect
   clarity, the first five pages of documentation he'd written for the API.
   His fingers rattled on the keys at speed, zero typos.

   He was just dumping the last of the platters into the acid bath when they
   broke his door down. Half a dozen big guys in martian riot-gear, outsized
   science-fiction black-ops guns. One flipped up his visor and pointed to a
   badge clipped to a D-ring on his tactical vest.

   "Police," he barked. "Hands where I can see them."

   The serotonin flooded the murky grey recesses of Murray's brain and he was
   able to smile nonchalantly as he straightened from his work, hands held
   loosely away from his sides. The cop pulled a zap-strap from a holster at
   his belt and bound his wrists tight. He snapped on a pair of latex gloves
   and untaped the interface on the back of Murray's neck, then slapped a
   bandage over it.

   "Am I under arrest?"

   "You're not cleared to know that," the cop said.

   "Special Agent Fredericks, right?" Murray said. "Liam told me about you."

   "Dig yourself in deeper, that's right. No one wants to hear from you. Not
   yet, anyway." He took a bag off his belt, then, in a quick motion, slid it
   over Murray's head, cinching it tight at the throat, but not so tight he
   couldn't breathe. The fabric passed air, but not light, and Murray was
   plunged into total darkness. "There's a gag that goes with the hood. If
   you play nice, we won't have to use it."

   "I'm nice, I'm nice," Murray said.

   "Bag it all and get it back to the house. You and you, take him down the
   back way."

   Murray felt the bodies moving near him, then thick zap-straps cinching his
   arms, knees, thighs and ankles. He tottered and tipped backwards, twisting
   his head to avoid smacking it, but before he hit the ground, he'd be
   roughly scooped up into a fireman's carry, resting on bulky body-armor.

   As they carried him out, he heard his cellphone ring. Someone plucked it
   off his belt and answered it. Special Agent Fredericks said, "Hello,
   Liam."

   *          *          *

   Machineguns-and-biometrics bunkers have their own special signature scent,
   scrubbed air and coffee farts and ozone. They cut his clothes off and
   disinfected him, then took him through two air-showers to remove
   particulate that the jets of icy pungent Lysol hadn't taken care of. He
   was dumped on a soft pallet, still in the dark.

   "You know why you're here," Special Agent Fredericks said from somewhere
   behind him.

   "Why don't you refresh me?" He was calm and cool, heart normal. The
   cramped muscles bound by the plastic straps eased loose, relaxing under
   him.

   "We found two CDs of encrypted data on your premises. We can crack them,
   given time, but it will reflect well on you if you assist us in our
   inquiries."

   "Given about a billion years. No one can brute-force a 4,096-bit GPG
   cipher. It's what you use in your own communications. I've worked on
   military projects, you know that. If you could factor out the products of
   large primes, you wouldn't depend on them for your own security. I'm not
   getting out of here ever, no matter how much I cooperate."

   "You've got an awfully low opinion of your country, sir." Murray thought
   he detected a note of real anger in the Fed's voice and tried not to take
   satisfaction in it.

   "Why? Because I don't believe you've got magic technology hidden away up
   your asses?"

   "No, sir, because you think you won't get just treatment at our hands."

   "Am I under arrest?"

   "You're not cleared for that information."

   "We're at an impasse, Special Agent Fredericks. You don't trust me and I
   don't have any reason to trust you."

   "You have every reason to trust me," the voice said, very close in now.

   "Why?"

   The hood over his tag was tugged to one side and he heard a sawing sound
   as a knife hacked through the fabric at the base of his skull. Gloved
   fingers worked a plug into the socket there. "Because," the voice hissed
   in his ear, "because I am not stimulating the pain center of your brain.
   Because I am not cutting off the blood-supply to your extremities. Because
   I am not draining your brain of all the serotonin there or leaving you in
   a vegetative state. Because I can do all of these things and I'm not."

   Murray tamped his adrenals, counteracted their effect, relaxed back into
   his bonds. "You think you could outrace me? I could stop my heart right
   now, long before you could do any of those things." Thinking: I am a total
   bad-azz, I am. But I don't want to die.

   "Tell him," Liam said.

   "Liam?" Murray tried to twist his head toward the voice, but strong hands
   held it in place.

   "Tell him," Liam said again. "We'll get a deal. They don't want us dead,
   they just want us under control. Tell him, OK?"

   Murray's adrenals were firing at max now, he was sweating uncontrollably.
   His limbs twitched hard against his bonds, the plastic straps cutting into
   them, the pain surfacing despite his efforts. It hit him. His wonderful
   body was 0wnz0red by the Feds.

   "Tell me, and you have my word that no harm will come to you. You'll get
   all the resources you want. You can code as much as you want."

   Murray began to recite his key, all five pages of it, through the muffling
   hood.

   Liam was fully clothed, no visual restraints. As Murray chafed feeling
   back into his hands and feet, Liam crossed the locked office with its grey
   industrial carpeting and tossed him a set of khakis and a pair of boxers.
   Murray dressed silently, then turned his accusing glare on Liam.

   "How far did you get?"

   "I didn't even make it out of the state. They caught me in Sebastopol,
   took me off the Greyhound in cuffs with six guns on me all the time."

   "The disks?"

   "They needed to be sure that you got rid of all the backups, that there
   wasn't anything stashed online or in a safe-deposit box, that they had the
   only copy. It was their idea."

   "Did you really get shot?"

   "I really got shot."

   "I hope it really fucking hurt."

   "It really fucking hurt."

   "Well, good."

   The door opened and Special Agent Fredericks appeared with a big brown bag
   of Frappuccinos and muffins. He passed them around.

   "My people tell me that you write excellent documentation, Mr. Swain."

   "What can I say? It's a gift."

   "And they tell me that you two have written some remarkable code."

   "Another gift."

   "We always need good coders here."

   "What's the job pay? How are the bennies? How much vacation?"

   "As much as you want, excellent, as long as you want, provided we approve
   the destinations first. Once you're cleared."

   "It's not enough," Murray said, upending twenty ounces of West Coast
   frou-frou caffeine delivery system on the carpeting.

   "Come on, Murray," Liam said. "Don't be that way."

   Special Agent Fredericks fished in the bag and produced another novelty
   coffee beverage and handed it to Murray. "Make this one last, it's all
   that's left."

   "With all due respect," Murray said, feeling a swell of righteousness in
   his chest, in his thighs, in his groin, "go fuck yourself. You don't 0wn
   me."

   "They do, Murray. They 0wn both our asses." Liam said, staring into the
   puddle of coffee slurry on the carpet.

   Murray crossed the room as fast as he could and smacked Liam, open palm,
   across the cheek.

   "That will do," Special Agent Fredericks said, with surprising mildness.

   "He needed smacking," Murray said, without rancor, and sat back down.

   "Liam, why don't you wait for us in the hallway?"

   *          *          *

   "You came around," Liam said. "Everyone does. These guys 0wn."

   "I didn't ask to share a room with you, Liam. I'm not glad I am. I'd
   rather not be reminded of that fact, so shut your fucking mouth before I
   shut it for you."

   "What do you want, an apology? I'm sorry. I'm sorry I infected you, I'm
   sorry I helped them catch you. I'm sorry I fuxored your life. What can I
   say?"

   "You can shut up anytime now."

   "Well, this is going to be a swell living-arrangement."

   The room was labeled "Officers' Quarters," and it had two good, firm
   queen-sized mattresses, premium cable, two identical stainless-steel
   dressers, and two good ergonomic chairs. There were junction boxes beside
   each desk with locked covers that Murray supposed housed Ethernet ports.
   All the comforts of home.

   Murray lay on his bed and pulled the blankets over his head. Though he
   didn't need to sleep, he chose to.

   *          *          *

   For two weeks, Murray sat at his assigned desk, in his assigned cube, and
   zoned out on the screen-saver. He refused to touch the keyboard, refused
   to touch the mouse. Liam had the adjacent desk for a week, then they moved
   him to another office, so that Murray had solitude in which to contemplate
   the whirling star-field. He'd have a cup of coffee at 10:30 and started to
   feel a little sniffly in the back of his nose. He ate in the commissary at
   his own table. If anyone sat down at his table, he stood up and left. They
   didn't sit at his table. At 2PM, they'd send in a box of warm Krispy
   Kremes, and by 3PM, his blood-sugar would be crashing and he'd be sobbing
   over his keyboard. He refused to adjust his serotonin levels.

   On the third Monday, he turned up at his desk at 9AM as usual and found a
   clipboard on his chair with a ball-point tied to it.

   Discharge papers. Non-disclosure agreements. Cross-your-heart swears on
   pain of death. A modest pension. Post-It "sign here" tabs had been stuck
   on here, here and here.

   *          *          *

   The junkie couldn't have been more than fifteen years old. She was
   death-camp skinny, tracked out, sitting cross-legged on a cardboard box on
   the sidewalk, sunning herself in the thin Mission noonlight. "Wanna buy a
   laptop? Two hundred bucks."

   Murray stopped. "Where'd you get it?"

   "I stole it," she said. "Out of a convertible. It looks real nice.
   One-fifty."

   "Two hundred," Murray said. "But you've got to do me a favor."

   "Three hundred, and you wear a condom."

   "Not that kind of favor. You know the Radio Shack on Mission at 24th? Give
   them this parts list and come back here. Here's a $100 down-payment."

   He kept his eyes peeled for the minders he'd occasionally spotted
   shadowing him when he went out for groceries, but they were nowhere to be
   seen. Maybe he'd lost them in the traffic on the 101. By the time the girl
   got back with the parts he'd need to make his interface, he was sweating
   bullets, but once he had the laptop open and began to rekey the entire
   codebase, the eidetic rush of perfect memory dispelled all his
   nervousness, leaving him cool and calm as the sun set over the Mission.

   *          *          *

   From the sky, Africa was green and lush, but once the plane touched down
   in Mogadishu, all Murray saw was sere brown plains and blowing dust. He
   sprang up from his seat, laundering the sleep toxins in his brain and the
   fatigue toxins in his legs and ass as he did.

   He was the first off the jetway and the first at the Customs desk.

   "Do you have any commercial or work-related goods, sir?"

   "No sir," Murray said, willing himself calm.

   "But you have a laptop computer," the Customs man said, eyeballing his
   case.

   "Oh, yeah. That. Can't ever get away from work, you know how it is."

   "I certainly hope you find time to relax, sir." The Customs man stamped
   the passport he'd bought in New York.

   "When you love your work, it can be relaxing."

   "Enjoy your stay in Somalia, sir."

   The End
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