Norm
The days that followed came and went in a blur of activity. Tilly's disappearance and my search for her had stalled our plans, but had not derailed them. This window of time was critical if we were to build a future on the farm.
I spent half of that first day worrying over how best to approach Nock about managing our growing network. Something had put him in a mood that was even more surly than usual, and given our recent interactions, I was concerned that he would just throw anything I had to say to him back in my face.
I finally took Nissi aside and explained Tilly's idea. She thought for a moment, chewing at her lip in a way that was sexy as hell, if a bit incongruous for an elf. I could tell from the smile that stole over her face that she had something good.
"Reverse psychology," she said. I frowned, so she went on, detailing exactly what I should say. I had to admit, it was clever, if a bit obvious. Even if it failed, there was a good chance that I could regroup and come at it from a different direction. Running the plan through my head one last time, I made my way to the den.
Stan was in the chair behind the terminal screen, typing, stopping to read, typing again. The lines of text were mostly incomprehensible strings of text and symbols, which meant he was hacking code or debugging. Tilly was seated on the high-backed reading chair, a trade paperback in her lap that must have been at least a thousand pages and probably weighed several pounds. She turned the pages at a rate of about once per second. If not for the look of intense concentration on her face, an observer might think that she was idly flipping through it.
"Hi, Norm," Tilly she said, no looking up from her book or pausing in her reading. "Did you need me?"
"I just need to talk to Stan, if you have a moment."
"Sure," Stan said. He typed out a few more characters and swiveled in the chair to face me. "What do you need?"
"How are things going with the network?"
He shook his head. "Under other circumstances, I would think we were doing great. If I had managed this level of sophistication in our authentication and transport layer protocols back at IBM, I would probably have been at the top of my division. Tilly's been digging into the literature and coming up with new ideas every day for how to test and secure it. In fact, at the rate she's picking things up, she's going to start outclassing me completely soon."
"That's great," I said, nodding as if I had any idea what the hell he was talking about. "Just don't overdo it on the design."
Stan snorted. "Hardly. Every time we think we've got everything covered, that every user, machine, datastore and communications channel is locked down tight, Sam finds some new way through. Then we go back, look over all the logs, tear the code apart, and find some little bug or exploit that escaped our notice. The only encouraging sign in all of this is that it's taking him a day or two to find new holes now, not like when he got into the Santiago hub in seconds."
"So you're making progress, then?"
"Oh, certainly. We've got a lot to be proud of. Honestly, I've never seen anything like it. Sure, we built this thing in a very short time, but a lot of the code modules I've plugged in is stuff I used before at IBM. It's been out there for years, withstanding tests by hackers and security experts. Just this morning, Sam found an exploit in a core routine that, as far as anyone knows, has never been tried before."
That was interesting, and more than a little worrying. "Do you think Sam is a genemod?" I asked. "Maybe a G?"
"I don't think so," Tilly answered, at the same time that Stan said, "Possibly."
The pair glanced at each other, as if this were an argument that they had been at before. I decided to de-escalate before things got ugly. "So he's some kind of super-talented hacker," I said. "Does it seem a little suspicious to anyone that he's helping us instead of doing whatever hackers do? Could he be working for the government?"
Stan frowned. "Don't think that I haven't considered it. If he's trying to get our location, he's doing a pretty terrible job of things. He's penetrated the network in Santiago without tripping any alerts more than a half dozen times. Any one of those times, he could have accessed the data behind our spoofing algorithm, used that to trace our true IP address and gotten at least a general idea of where we are located. In the unlikely event that the security at our local CSP stopped him, he would already know we're in Corvallis, at the very least."
"This isn't making me feel better," I said.
"It is what it is," Stan said. "If he's with the enemy, he has laid us wide open and hasn't chosen to take any action against us. Why would he wait?"
"How much does he know about our plans for the network?" I asked. "Does he know we're planning on hooking up other safe houses here in the states to it?"
Stan looked uncomfortable for a moment, but shook his head. "I don't think so. Not unless someone from Santiago talked to him about it personally or left documentation of some kind out on their network where he could find it.."
"Good," I said, letting out a breath in relief. "Let's keep it that way, at least until he stops breaching the network. How close are you to making that a reality?"
Stan shrugged. "It's hard to say. Tilly's doing more of the coding work at this point than I am. I've been spending hours every day on university message boards and chatrooms dropping hints and hoping to get noticed by staff who might be sympathetic to our work. I got a bite from a professor in Tehran who is interested, and there's a network admin in Seoul, but her English is not much better than my Korean."
This was the opening I was hoping for. I pretended to mull it over for a moment. "What do you think about having someone else take over the network expansion, so that you could focus on all the technical details?"
Stan's response was immediate and earnest. "Oh, yeah, that would be great. Were you thinking of anyone in particular?"
I caught Tilly looking up from her book, watching me as I spoke. "Well, I don't know. Who do you think is best suited for the task?"
Stan laughed. "If you want the job, Norm, you got it. You're better with people than I am."
I smiled and shook my head. "I don't know if that's true, but I'm the only one here who can venture outside this farm with any degree of safety, and there's still plenty of work for me to do around the farm.. It should be someone we know has the time to devote to it."
Stan nodded at that. I had already thought he might try to pick me, perhaps thinking I had been after the job from the start. "Alright, if you want someone with free time, I think I would pick Nock. He a businessman. We need someone who can sell the vision of what we're doing to complete strangers."
I spread my hands. "Nock? I don't know. He's never had all that much interest in what goes on with the network, and I'm not so confident in his abilities. Other than him, I guess it's a toss up between Nissi, Stansy, and Wendy."
"Well, we should ask him first," Stan said, giving me a peculiar look. He knew that Nock and I had a history, but what I had said was a bit over the line.
I tried to play the innocent. "I guess we can ask him," I said reluctantly
"Yeah, I'll do it," Nock said from the doorway behind me.
I had to fight back a smile as I turned. "Hello, Nock."
Nock's eyes narrowed when he looked at me, as if I were something that he might need to scrape off his shoe. "Yeah, you seem to forget I can hear you from across the house. Stan, if you need someone to take this over, I'm your guy. I'm fluent in nine languages and am passable in three more. You put me in touch with that woman in Korea. I'll vet her and get her on board today if she passes."
"You speak a dozen languages?" I asked, not having to fake my surprise.
He said a few words in what sounded like Mandarin, following it up with what I thought was German, then three more languages. At the end, I caught the words "pinche idiota", a phrase I had picked up from the Spanish-speaking students at UCLA, and one of the coarser insults I knew. He looked right at me when he said it.
I played dumb, of course. "Wow, that is useful." I looked at Stan. "How long do you think it will take to get Nock up to speed?"
Nock stepped around me and touched Stan on the shoulder. "You give me to the tools you are using to communicate, give me some history of your interactions, and I'll get started right away."
"All done," Tilly said, flipping the back cover closed on her book. "I'm gonna grab some lunch." She gave me a knowing grin as she went by.