It started with an antiquated copy of Paint Shop Pro 2.0. It probably would have worked if I'd been able to afford Photoshop, too. At any rate, I began to dabble with pics I found on the web or usenet -- enhancing this tree, removing that boulder, cloning a water feature from another landscape. Then, on to shots of people. I became pretty good, considering the limitations of the software.
I was hooked. Digital photo manipulation replaced all my other hobbies and most of my friends and girlfriends. After about a year, I managed to upgrade to 3.0. Shortly thereafter, it happened for the first time. I'd been periodically emailing an old high school lady friend -- really, only a friend. We idly traded news and remembrances once a month or so. She'd sent me a few pics of herself and her family, including a bikini shot from their vacation of Florida the winter past. Chuckling to myself, I loaded it into my editor and began to play. Nothing obscene, mind you, but I shaved maybe 20 pounds from her belly, hips, and thighs, smoothed out her complexion, and lightened her hair.
Pleased with my improvements, I sort of drifted away mentally, admiring Chloe's refound beauty. It suddenly seemed so
real.
I shook my head, laughed away my mini-hallucination, and closed the file. Six or eight weeks later, Chloe shipped me her next update, crowing about having lost so much weight that she had her hair done and felt like a teenager again. Attached was a new bikini shot.
My head swam. Apart from her pose and a different background, it might have been my doctored pic. I don't know exactly how long I sat with my version of her side by side with the new true Chloe, emptily staring and the uncanny similarity. Shaking myself out of my near trance, I got up and fixed myself some dinner.
A few days later, I cropped her revitalized head and chest and enlarged her for a better look. She
did
almost look like a teenager. She'd become even prettier as a woman than she'd been growing up. I imagined her dressed to the nines for a night out. Compositing her glowing face, with appropriate new makeup, onto a stock runway model's body, I was again amazed for long moments by the seeming reality of my work. Breaking free of my fantasy, I shot a sincere, congratulatory reply back to my old friend
Three months later, another email with attachments arrived. She apologized for not keeping in touch, but she'd been so busy with her home life and new career that time was short. Shortly after her last message, she'd been invited to participate in a charity fund raiser as a model. She said she'd never had so much fun out of bed. She'd been talked up by an agent in the audience, and was now doing shoots as often as she could get away from family responsibilities.
My pleased-for-her smile kind of solidified on my face as I opened her jpegs. There she was, in full, glossy glam. The images were quality scans of professional portfolio shots. I freaked. I shouted a best unrepeated curse and knocked the chair over getting away from the computer. It was just too fucking weird. It was as if . . . My mind veered away and I decided that maybe I shouldn't play with people's pics for a while.
But I worried over the events almost obsessively. What if it wasn't coincidence? The correlations seemed too exact not to have been causal. And the very idea that I might have somehow brought about changes in Chloe's life scared me shitless. It might be an adolescent's wet dream literally come true, but if you aren't appalled by the notion of tinkering with something as complex as reality, then you must be either brain dead or a politician -- or is that the same thing? Inadvertently fucking up someone's life with a daydream isn't my idea of a good time. I mean, what if I'd been horny, and slapped Chloe's into some sleazy streetwalker's scene? I firmly, with all my soul, believe in karma. Ultimately, no matter what, you reap what you sow. "Do no harm" are words to live by.
I couldn't leave PSP alone for long, though. Even as my mind ran over the insanity of it all, I began dabbling again, with safe subjects, and without ever experiencing that strange reverie as I stared at my techie art. So, since that seemed okay, I decided to be scientific about the problem: take a known, work it over and see if I
could
change something innocuous. Like the flowers in the neighbor's side yard. Iris, they were, and just coming into bloom. I made them larger and much more vivid on-screen. I visualized, trying to recapture whatever (if anything) I'd done before. Outside the bedroom window, nothing happened.
So I tried a picture of a co-worker I nabbed from the company website. Jim occupied the cube across from mine. I didn't know him very well, but he was in my line of sight five days a week. I flopped a smiling shot from an awards banquet and grafted his watch from his left to right wrist. The next morning, sure enough, he was explaining to a crony about how his grandson had helped him get dressed for work, insisting on strapping his rolex knock-off on the wrong wrist and upside down.
I took the rest of the day off sick, and I wasn't malingering. After I deleted Jim's photo from my hard drive, I spent the rest of the day in bed, dozing my way from one half-nightmare to another. Deleting it must have been enough, I thought feverishly, for the next day Jim's watch was righted.
As I sat shakily in my cubicle that fateful Friday, I considered -- briefly -- getting psychiatric help, but opted out of that scenario. While it works miracles for some, thorazine is not my friend. I was just pulling myself together when the office manager hag dropped by to harass me about three inconsequential typos in a report I filed the week past.
I plead weakness. The bitch had for some reason singled me out as a fresh hire, and had been favoring me with sniping remarks, unfounded vague accusations, and less than glowing reviews for three years. The instant her back was turned, I opened my personal laptop and downloaded her face from the company website in three-quarter profile. An adult site featuring mature housewives offered me a quick sample of a severely corseted woman of Maude's slightly chubby body type servicing a well-hung black man. By the time I finished, Maude's heavily made up eyes were glazed with lust, and her bright lipstick was smeared across her face. Her stocking clad toes were curled inside her clear platform pumps as she orgasmed.
Maude showed up for work the next day looking more like a worn out hooker than a frumpy middle-aged office manager. While everyone else snickered behind her back, I quailed in my cube, racked by guilt. Yeah, she was a heartless, dried-up old bitch, but she didn't deserve what I'd done to her -- or imagined I'd done. Still, it was with mixed emotions that I deleted her altered photograph. In its stead, I did her up as a more kindly matron, removing some of the harshness from her natural features, trying to put some sincerity and compassion into her face.
The results were oddly mixed. The following day, while she'd toned down her makeup a half dozen notches and substituted more modest heels for the unholy stilettos she'd worn the day before, she was still obviously more of a sexual creature than before I tampered with her image. Also, she was much nicer, acting like a human being instead of a sniping asshole. Curiouser and Curiouser, I thought.
Several weeks, a lot of thought, and some cautious experimentation later, I came to several hesitant conclusions.
First, I could not manipulate objects. Rocks, thimbles, dollar bills, and cars just sat there. Only people were susceptible. Cats, dogs, and parakeets seemed immune to whatever the hell I may have been doing. People I knew responded in various degrees, and most -- though not all - strangers were unphased.
I didn't think my power was godlike. Maude might have always had a strongly sexual side that she'd never displayed in the workplace -- or, perhaps, it had been deeply repressed. I may have just freed her libido, and, once out of the cage, mere deletion of the pic hadn't re-imprisoned it. Also, her humanity could have merely surfaced with my nudge.
My investigations definitely indicated that I couldn't manufacture a silk purse from a sow's ear. I didn't seem to be able to radically
alter
reality so much as
influence
it. If a seed of something existed in a person, I could help it germinate, but was unable to plant the seed directly. I wondered if poor Maude had really tarted herself up and jumped some black dude. But, on second thought, I didn't really want to know the answer.