If you haven't read the earlier chapters you really ought to go back and read them now. Oh, you can go ahead and plow on without them, but none of this will make any sense to you and you'll think it's all my fault.
There is no explicit sex in this story. If you need a detailed description so you can learn how to do it, either find a different story or find a girl who's been around a bit.
Hans
*****
We were allowed to go back to our apartment a few days later, and we relished the feeling of being back in our own place, especially with everything freshly checked for cameras, microphones, laptop readers, keystroke recorders, anything at all that could tell somebody that we were there and what we were doing or saying or thinking. We weren't told if they'd found anything, and I wondered sometimes about what spies would think if they had us thoroughly bugged. Think about sex. Sometimes there's an hour of foreplay and five minutes of actual sex, and sometimes it's just the other way around. Then there are the little bits of heated conversation. "You get on top." "Oh, come on, I need you! Now!" "Keep that up, I'm almost there!" And the screams. It makes me wonder if spies ever come in their pants when they eavesdrop on young people in love.
So I had the pleasure of our own bedroom, to balance the awful feeling of not having our own car to drive. We didn't get it back until a month after our "accident" and we made a joke out of the fact that it took twice as long to fix it as it did to build it. When I complained to Jerry about how long it was taking, he told me, "Woody is just being extra careful. The last thing he'd want to do is screw up Red's creation. I went to see what was taking so long, and he had a little thing, I don't know what it was, that he was putting in for the third time. He put it in, adjusted something, then took it out and did it over again just to make sure it was perfect."
Once we had our own wheels again, we felt like taking a trip home to see our folks. The weather was warming up. School would soon let out for the summer, and although the work on the project would go on without a break, Jim and Glenn were very understanding when we wanted a couple of weeks back home. The arrangement we worked out was for me to take off for two weeks, come back for a week of overlap with Jim, and then he'd take off for two weeks.
The obvious way for us to go was to take the Mass Pike to the Berkshire Section of the New York Thruway, and then run the Thruway straight across New York State to Lake Erie. It's a great route, direct and fast, but Jerry didn't want us to go that way again. Whenever I'd complain about some security precaution, he'd fire back with, "Remember Utica!" and that would silence my protests. So I prepared myself mentally for some zigzag route to avoid traveling in a straight line.
A week before we were to leave, Jerry stopped at the lab and gave me a route, all marked out on a map and described in written directions, spelling out every turn and the distance between them to the nearest tenth of a mile. One thing was obvious - it wasn't direct. In round numbers, to travel 600 miles we'd be driving 750. The whole thing was in a big manila envelope with my name on the front and the license number of my car. I was ready to ridicule the stupidity of packaging my secret route in such an obvious fashion when Jerry frowned at me, stopping me cold. Something was up! So I thanked him and he shook my hand and wished us a good trip, right there at my desk, in front of everybody. After he left, I took the map out and looked it over carefully, then put everything away in the big envelope and set it over on a corner of my conference table. The label with my name was facing up, but the top of the envelope, where I had sliced it open neatly, was facing toward my desk, so that somebody sitting across the table from me could read the label easily. If Jerry wanted to be obvious, I could be obvious too.
As the day went on I reviewed work packages with several programmers, giving attention as usual to the way their individual packages stitched together. I praised their work, made suggestions, and directed changes in a few of the packages. It was a day pretty much like all days. Just before lunch I had several people at the table at once, while we discussed ways to eliminate redundant computations by making several of the modules more interdependent, to save processor time. We had printouts spread all over the table, some on chairs, and even one sequence on the floor. When we finally agreed I sketched a flow diagram showing the changes, and I asked Bernie and Doris to gather up the sheets of the diagram and copy them so I could have a copy, as well as each of the people whose work would be affected.
It was a great show, worthy of an Oscar.
Back when the big changes were being made in our workspace, with the new entrance and exit and all that, I had spent time in the wee hours of a couple of mornings with Jerry and two FBI surveillance specialists, explaining what we needed to cover with cameras. Most of the space was watched with area coverage, a camera with a wide angle lens about every sixteen feet. But some critical locations had more detailed coverage. I asked for a clear view of the face and hands of every person at my conference table, and I got exactly what I asked for. In the process, the cameras captured every square inch of my desk and table. Nothing could be set down, picked up, moved, written on, or looked at without leaving a permanent record, and I was assured that there were enough millions of pixels so we could zoom in to read every word on any document.
I left work early that afternoon. Well, a little after five - that was early for me. On the way home I stopped at a Seven-Eleven store and bought a six pack of Coke to give me a plausible excuse for being there. On my way back to the car I stopped at the pay phone to make a call. "Jerry, can you call up the pictures from work cameras onto my laptop?"
"Sure. I can put 'em anywhere in the world. Got something you want to look at?"
"Yeah, well, maybe. If you'll drop over at our apartment there might be something we'd enjoy watching together."
"Tell you what I'll do. I can be there at seven with a pizza for the three of us. Pepperoni all right for you?"
"Absolutely. If it's pepperoni and black olives, that's even better."
Jerry didn't get there till quarter after seven, which had Trudy starting to get anxious. To me, the big attraction was what we'd get to see, or not see, on the video. But for Trudy, who often skipped lunch, the pizza trumped the video. What followed was real teamwork. I took the pizza box, locked the door, and set the pizza box on the bed. Jerry sat down at my desk and got to work on my laptop. Trudy ignored both of us, opened the box, and gobbled down the first slice about as fast as I can type this sentence.
"Okay Jack, what is it you want to see?"
"Can you show us an area view of my workstation, or at least of my conference table?"
"What a question. Does a bear shit in the woods? Oops, sorry Trudy." That prompted some sort of a reply from her that probably started out as sarcasm but came out as a grunt, garbled by competing with a mouthful of pizza. Jerry typed in commands and brought up the overall view of the lab, a panorama made by joining the area cameras the same way that computers can join a dozen views from a mountaintop to make one picture covering 180 degrees of viewing angle. On that picture he moved the cursor to the middle of my conference table and selected that camera. While that was coming up, he asked, "What time do you want to start?"
"You left at what time, maybe ten thirty?"
"Yeah, about that. Let's see what happened then."
There I was, with the map spread out on the table. Then I folded it carefully and slid it into the envelope, with the front of the map toward the front of the envelope and the top fold toward the top edge of the envelope. Just as I remembered, I slid the envelope over to the corner of the table, face up, slit opening toward my desk. Then we fast forwarded to the first meeting, during which the manila envelope was untouched and apparently unnoticed. Next meeting, same thing. Jeremy showed up, same thing. Cal was next, and again the manila envelope stayed put. Then I got to the joint meeting with Bernie and Doris and it got interesting.
Trudy had inhaled two slices of pizza by then, and was recovering from her daylong fast. She put two slices on small plates and passed them to Jerry and me, then looked over my shoulder to see what was so interesting. On the monitor, I was talking to Bernie and Doris, gesturing with my hands as I did so. They replied and we had an animated discussion, as they brought out page after page of printout and I started to diagram the logic in the middle of the table. Nobody had even looked at the envelope. Then the papers started to cover and overflow the tabletop. We had the display speed set at 4X, which makes normal movements look jerky, and watched the ocean of paper expand and flood every horizontal surface within reach. The gestures, the jerky movements, and the tsunami of paper were comical to watch, and had all three of us chuckling and then laughing out loud. There was more discussion, with hands waving and fingers pointing at significant places on the paper, and finally I was finishing the diagram, which itself had expanded from one page to five. Then we all sat back, smiling, and nodding as we expressed final agreement. We watched me get up and leave the scene while Bernie and Doris gathered up their printouts and Bernie took my diagram to make copies. The two of them wrapped up their conversation and turned in opposite directions to leave.
The table was bare!
I reacted first, naturally. "Okay, now we're getting somewhere. Here's what we need: a good closeup view all all four of their hands, their facial expressions, and what they were saying to each other. Can you do that for us, Jerry?"
"The video I can do right away. Different cameras, different display rates, but it's all right here. But to get the audio and sync it with the real time video will take a few minutes because it's in a different server. So let's do the video first and see what we can learn from that, while the server is searching for the audio."
Trudy stepped over to our tiny refrigerator and got out three cans of Coke while Jerry was typing. I watched with interest as he manipulated the video coverage. "Jerry, I didn't know you were this good at juggling computer data. Is this something new, or were you a closet techie all along?"
"It's fairly new. It became obvious that I needed to be handy with the IT stuff, just to ride herd on this program. We had some IT specialists up here from the New York office for another job, and on the side they gave me a crash course in the fundamentals. Then as we got into the high powered surveillance they taught me how to work that. It's all stuff I need to know anyway, so this project is giving me on the job training.
All this time Jerry was picking out the cameras he wanted for our tracking of the envelope, and he brought four on the view simultaneously, in a four window array. As he finished, the monitor displayed the notice that the audio track was available to us, so it was showtime. He backed up the video to where I had just left the scene and then started the show.