Randi's theme is sudden wealth. That's to Silicon Valley what the gold rush was to the Forty-Niners. So, my hero is a nerd -- aka my kind of guy, it's also the reason why I left the narrative in geek-speak. I know that nerd terminology bugs a few of you. But I'm after authenticity in this story, and it's the way my people talk. Don't try to translate it. It might cause you to develop weird social behaviors.
Fact is... you can be whoever you want to be in cyberspace. Its anonymity lets you say and do things that you would never do in the physical world. Even so, freedom from accountability can also cause you to lose your way... which is why this story fits so neatly into the Loving Wives category.
The plot's a classic LW trope - well, sort of... not really.... And please note that the hacking exploits aren't even remotely fictitious. I've either done or been professionally involved in every exploit that I describe, and I think it's important for you to know about that kind of stuff because it's a jungle out there. The usual thanks to Randi, you're a superstar my friend... please enjoy - DT
NOBODY EVER DIES
Majorca is almost heaven - bright golden sun, floral scented breezes, and a cloudless sky. There was a sweating bottle of San Miguel in front of me and I was luxuriating in the shade of a potted palm as I thought back over the past three miserable years.
It was a toss-up as-to which had hurt the most, losing my marriage, or the tragic plane crash that followed. Whatever... both events were tied together by a single person, Colonel David Osborne, or as I fondly called him, "Shithead."
Shithead had flourished up the chain of command by kissing the right rings. So, as far as he was concerned, all you needed were the two "Bs" - Belligerence and Bravado. He had plenty of that, along with two other Bs - Bluff, and Bullshit. That ultimately caused his demise. My life and happiness were just collateral damage.
When my story begins, I was a Captain with the 780th Military Intelligence Brigade. That might sound gloriously martial if you didn't know that the main qualification for my two gold bars was a Master's Degree in software engineering from Carnegie-Mellon.
The 780th is an offensive unit, no different in concept than the armored corps at Fort Knox. But the folks who stand on the ramparts in this digital age aren't your classic chiseled jaw Marine. They're the guys those Marines used to stuff in lockers. And yet ironically... they're now the people, who protect us from unthinkable things.
Every country faces traditional military threats. They are all more-or-less serious. But armed conflict, invasions, and more recently nuclear war have been around for decades. Cyberwar is a horse of a different color. Cyberattacks can originate from anywhere, they happen in an instant, and the results are no less catastrophic than if somebody dropped a nuke on you.
You doubt me??! Well believe it. Because if, for example, a cyberattack knocked out our electrical grid, and that's not entirely beyond the realm of possibility, we would ALL have the opportunity to experience life in the Eighteenth Century -- permanently!!
Even worse, there's no expensive military hardware required. It just takes the right know-how and sorry to say... you can find that in every shithole country on the planet. Hence, the only effective way to convince a would-be perpetrator that a mass extinction event would be a very bad idea is to remind them that they'd better dig two graves. That was my job.
My specialty is worms. No, not THAT kind. Earthworms are good for your lawn. I was a master of self-replicating malware, called internet worms, and my little pets could drop a post-industrial society to its knees in minutes. That was why I was seen as something of an eminence-grise around Fort Meade.
I may look normal. I'm taller than most with a long face, deep-set grey eyes, and an unruly shock of dark hair. But underneath the hood I'm devoutly geek, and people like me don't spend much time in the real world.
My interests center mainly in the cyberverse, most of which involves gaming. That was where I'd met and even teamed with Tiffin Ellerian in Warcraft MMOs. She was a member of the same Alliance faction, and she was a powerful Human Mage to my Lightforged Paladin.
I'd always wondered what Tiffin looked like. Of course, there was no way I would run into her in physical space - and I probably wouldn't like it if I did. Because in the real-world my ideal woman could be anybody from a bisexual BBW whose legs had never experienced a razor; to some fat nerd living in his parents basement and getting a thrill out of representing as female.
Back then, I worked in the FANEX's. Those aren't the shining citadel on the hill called Fort Meade. The FANEXs are over in Linthicum next to BWI and it's relatively brass free. So, there's a totally different vibe over there. It hosts odds and ends like the Crypto School and spooky operations like mine.
But like every other outfit... they throw a Christmas party for the peasantry. And since the FANEXs have all the charm of an airport baggage facility that party is normally held at the Marriott on Baltimore's Inner Harbor.
Like I said, I'm a nerd with all the social grace of a high-end, living room sofa. But the Bird Colonel I reported to made it clear that my attendance wasn't optional. So, there I was, in my dress blues lurking around the outer fringes of the merry makers trying to look engaged and wishing that I was in the Shadowlands, or anyplace but there.
That was when I noticed a gorgeous woman sitting all by herself at a big round table at the back of the room. She was radiating irritation and boredom, which no doubt explained the lack of suitors because she was a real knock-out.
My nerd-dar klaxon began to hoot and I thought to myself, "She might be hot but she's one of us." You can always spot a nerd. It's something in the way we sit apart looking down on everybody around us. So, being socially retarded myself, I thought I'd toddle over and say hi.
She was radiating, "Don't talk to me!!" Naturally, I said, "You look as bored as I feel." She studied me with a half-smile, like she was evaluating an especially interesting species of rodent and said, "You're wasting your time."
I pulled out a chair and said, "Can I sit?"
She gestured and said, "It's a free country. Just don't expect me to talk."
I sat down and said to nobody in particular, "Okay, then I'll do the talking. You're here because your boss made you come. You wish you were anywhere else but here, because all these happy people are driving you nuts. So, instead of drinking and socializing, you want to be doing what you usually do on a Friday night, which is cruising the internet."
I stopped and said sardonically, "How am I doing so far?" She cracked an unwilling smile.
I added, "I know how you feel because it's the only reason I'm here, instead of in the Shadowlands, which is venue of choice for any time that I'm not at work."
She perked up considerably and said, "Really, seriously??!! You're a gamer."
I extended my hand and said, "Lothar Kingslaughter, Lightforged Draenei Paladin."
She gasped and put a reflexive hand to her delectable chest. Then she said excitedly, "Tiffin Ellerian, Human Mage."
I said astounded, "My God!!! You're her?" She nodded eagerly. It was like we were former high school sweethearts unexpectedly bumping into each other at the twentieth reunion.
And that's the story of how a potentially excruciating experience became one of the best nights of my life. We talked for hours about the truly important things, like the strategies we'd used to defeat the minions of the Burning Legion and our experiences on Azeroth.
That may sound all weird and geeky to you. Because none of what we were talking about really happened - except in our imaginations. But those experiences were as real to Tiffin and me as the mating dance that was going on among the muggles. It was just that this time we weren't staring into a monitor and wearing headsets like we usually did when we talked.
Finally, I said, "Erik." She looked puzzled. I added, "That's my real-world name." You have to make those distinctions with gamers. She gave me a pretty little smile, complete with two adorable dimples, and said, "Rebecca, my name is Rebecca." That marked the beginning of a fourteen-month period of perfect bliss, as we got to know each other, fell in love, and married.
My wife Rebecca, or Becks as I affectionately called her, was nature's way of saying "suck this!" to any person who believes that a beautiful and sexy woman can't be a genius. The gift of mathematics is bestowed early, and Becks was one of those child savants.
I have no idea what my wife's IQ was. But she graduated from Cal Tech with a PhD in math at the tender age of twenty-one and she worked in the Central Security Service, which is where the Fort's real eggheads are stabled.