There are no explicit descriptions of sex in this story. The computer devices and technology described are purely a product of my imagination. Although, to paraphrase what someone once said . . . . . "Yesterday's science fiction is today's reality". So who can really say that they don't already exist . . . somewhere.
'The Agency' is fictional but perhaps it isn't. Who really knows what goes on hidden away from the eyes of the American public.
Hopefully, the gremlins that attacked my last submission have found something else better to do this time.
Chapter One - The Beginning
Just what in the Hell am I doing getting shot in a bank lobby in Berlin, Germany? I'm just a computer geek sent to Germany because no one else has the ability or expertise to carry out this particular mission. Maybe I should go back to the very beginning so you will have some understanding of my present predicament.
A long, long time ago God created a man and a woman . . . . . Wait a minute I don't need to go back quite that far.
When I was born my mom and dad named me after a great-great-grandfather, Frederick Karl Wilhelm. Now that's quite a mouthful so I preferred that folks call me by my nickname, Rick. Dad operated his own business in our small town. He ran a home center type store. It was the only one around for miles so he did quite a good business.
One afternoon, when I was about twelve years old, I was playing in the front of our driveway when I saw our neighbor hauling some computer equipment out to the curb.
"Hey Mr. Williams what are you doing?" I called out to him.
"Oh. Hi Ricky. I'm putting this old computer out for the recyclers to haul off. It stopped working so I bought myself a new one."
I've always been a curious about how things work so I asked him if I could have it. He said sure but I had to ask my mom first. I went inside and asked her. She came out and told Mr. Williams it was okay with her.
I hauled all three pieces (monitor, keyboard and the actual computer or CPU as it is called) into the garage where dad had a small workshop. I didn't have any of the techie type equipment like meters and such but I did have a magnifying glass. Taking that sucker apart I was amazed by all the little tiny pieces of electronic stuff that made it work.
After forty-five minutes or so I noticed a faint smudge of something on one of the circuit boards. I went inside the house and got a cotton swab and some denatured alcohol. Cleaning the the mark off I saw what appeared to be a faint crack in the solder. Getting my dad's soldering iron and a strip of wire solder I filled in the crack. Examining the other circuit boards I found two more hairline cracks and repaired those as well.
Two hours later I replaced the case on the CPU and hooked up the monitor and keyboard. I plugged it into the electrical outlet and pressed the start-up button.
With some buzzing and clicking it came to life. I turned the monitor on and it worked, too. I was so surprised that I immediately shut it all down and tried it again. The same thing happened. It worked.
Going back next door I rang the bell and when Mr. Williams answered I told him I fixed it and for him to come look. We walked back to the garage and he hit the start-up button and the computer sprang to life.
"Do you want it back now that it is working?" I asked him.
"No, Ricky, you can keep it. You fixed it, you can have it. Let's go back to my house and I'll find the manuals for you."
Wonderful. Now that I had a computer I needed to learn how to use it. I read everything I could lay my hands on about computers and programming. Over the next few years I discovered I had a real flair for writing code.
As I said before, my father had a very successful business. Each evening after supper he would go into his little home office and work on reconciling his daily sales with his inventory. He would spend hours in there with his daily receipts tapping away on his adding machine and then writing it all down in his ledger.
One day I had an idea. Maybe I could write a program that would enable him to reconcile his receipts with his inventory. Without going into a lot of detail I did exactly that. When certain parameters were reached for each item in his store the program would automatically produce an order form to replace it in his inventory.
When I showed him how it worked the two of us spent a whole week each night doing his paper work. He did his old-fashioned way and I entered the numbers in my computer program. What took him two to three hours I was able to accomplish in less than thirty minutes. He was impressed to say the least.
Then I had another idea. If I could link up the electronic cash registers at the check-out counter with the computer server in his store all the sales and inventory reconciliation would be automatically completed on a real time basis. If it worked it would mean no more paperwork for him to do at home. After a few trial and errors I got it to work.
Like all proud fathers he told all of his friends at the Chamber of Commerce what a smart son he had. One of his friends approached him asking if I could develop a similar program for him. Building on the one I did for dad I was able to complete one for him in short order.
I gave him a computer disk with the program on it along with a written set of instructions on how to install and implement it. The next day he showed up my house after supper and gave me a check for five hundred dollars. He told my dad it was worth every penny for all the time and headaches it saved him.
The next thing I knew I had businessmen from all over town and neighboring communities wanting me to do the same for them. By the time I was seventeen I had a bank account balance of over twenty thousand dollars. The only money I ever spent was to up grade my own computer equipment.
I then started fooling around with building my own computer. Securing an old Apple MacBook I tore it apart and essentially rebuilt it entirely making it not only faster but more powerful. The only problem I had was with battery life. The increased capabilities drained them pretty quickly.
Then I came up with an idea about how to eliminate the battery altogether. Building on the eco-drive concept, Citizen watches use, I was able to construct a device that ran on light. It made no difference, sunlight or artificial light my device functioned flawlessly. Dad made sure that I got a lawyer and he patented it for me and then went about marketing it to the leading computer manufacturers.