# Octothorpe Productions Title: "The Traitor" By: The Cruiser Date:8/8/87 Corey decided that he'd better move onward to a city before the hot noon hours came around. He got up from where he was resting and surveyed his surroundings. Huge cedars abounded in this region. The forest path weaved a snakelike trail to the south from which he came. It had ended here in a semi-open clearing at the base of a plump, round hill. He decided to climb it and take a look around, as he'd had no earthly idea where he was, besides the fact that it was somewhere in the Northwestern region of the United States, and that it was sometime in the middle of the month of September. He had left Springdale some time ago (was it four days? five possibly? ever since he'd bartered his data-watch for government rations, he lost track of time), and drove north til he hit Harrrington. It was there when he'd decided to go on foot through the Blue Mountains, because he had no flight insurance and everyone knew that this area was pirate-infested. Should they be attacked, he'd lose everything. So he had obtained rations and left for Pendelton Trade Center. God, it didn't seem this far, though. Was he traveling in circles? The Blue Mountains were one of the few unoccupied forest areas in the country, and he'd have to get stuck in it. Great. He knew that time was of major importance, especially in this transaction. Should he wait too long, he could lose it all. It was tough being a businessman. But if he made it, he'd get enough commission to retire. And if he lost...well, there was always a few major corporations that would hire him to commit some sort of trade crime or other. Since the collapse of the old stock market at the turn of the century, a new business trading system was developed, one that hailed the paper more than the actual money, even in sales. Then the major corporations spent more time making transactions then selling products. After this, it was up to the government to supply food, clothing and other neccessities to the people. Some companies turned to crime to make money, hiring theives and burglars to change stock prices and get inside information. The country was no longer run by the government, but by IBM, AT&T, and DOW, the three largest and most powerful corporations. They (and all other businesses) revolved around the trade system, and left the government for providing merchandise, public relations with other countries (who, in turn, were run similar to the U.S.) , and law enforcement. There was hardly any violent crime commited anymore, as money could only be traded through the trading system. The only outbreaks of violence that did occur were treated by the National Guard, who usually killed criminals at sight. This is what forced the illiterates and criminals into either learning the ways of the modern society or dieing. For a time there were two classes, the filthy rich and the paupers. Over a decade the poor were gone -- some perished while others adapted to the new system. As for the rich, they had competition from this new entry of people, and thus the classes slowly equaled out into one general middle class, with a few rich (the Computer Programmers)and the few poor (the labor workers). The new computer-minded and mentally violent society soon turned on a new wave of white-collar crime. But this was all irrelevent to Corey right now. Reaching the top of the hill, he now had a good view of his surroundings. Behind him, he saw the miles of trees, and even the river he stopped at some thirty miles back where he had a trout dinner (not to mention lunch and breakfast). On the other side of the hill was a road which stretched around a bend to the west and straight through more forest to the east. Hmm. If I take the west trail, which turns north anyway, I might find out where in the hell I am. Maybe even get to Pendelton.. He descended down the hill, but stopped bluntly at the bottom upon noticing a small bush with frilled leaves and small, black berries. "Ohmygod! Blackberries! I haven't tasted them since my second marriage!", he shouted aloud to himself. It must've been a good ten years since he'd even SEEN a blackberry. It was his second marriage. He was eighteen, and the bride was thirteen. After having fun for a night, and a week later getting her pregnant, he divorced her. But that first night with her he'd never forget. They checked into a posh hotel on the outskirts of Boston. But that was a long, long time ago. Sheesh, he had still lived in good ol' Boston! Then after getting his degree of Trade Manager, and being self-employed meant moving from city to city, usually New York and Los Angeles. Occasionally he would find himself in the middle of nowhere, like now. Quickly the thoughts of his former bride left him as he finished off the berries. It was probably eleven o'clock now, or so he guessed. He knew that if he didn't make it to a city by noon, he'd collapse from the heat. So he walked on down the road. Ah, at least these roadside trees give me SOME shade. It's getting a little hotter. He heard a noise, something like an old diesel engine. It was a truck coming his way. After a few seconds, he could see it speed down the road behind him. He flagged it down, and it came to a screeching halt. A fat, bearded man in his upper thirties peered his head out the window. "You want a ride, feller? Hell, don't you try nothin' stupid, I got a six inch pipe with my twelve brothers in it, and they're all loaded jus' in cas' you's try somethin'," he said, waving his gun. Corey tried to make his rather dull face look a little more innocent. "Don't worry, sir, I'm not armed. Search me." He was lucky the guy was nice enough to stop for him. Most people would run you over, but he knew truckers were the type that'd give you a ride provided you looked convincing. The trucker gave a sigh and opened the passenger door. "Hop in." Corey got in and sat down next to him. "Name's Muller. What do they call you?" the trucker said. Corey replied a bit quickly, "Corey. I'm from Eastcountry, but I travel a lot." Just then he wished he wouldn't have said that. If the trucker knew he was a businessman, there's no telling what would happen. But his face was unshaven and he was wearing an old cloth shirt, flannels and standard dungarees, along with hiking boots -- he had traded in his old attire before taking his expedition. Thank God. "I'm.. uh, I'm a lumber worker. One of the few. Heh, they still need people to build their buildings out East, you know. That's one thing I can really do!" He tried to laugh, but it came out as a nervous cough. Muller looked him over again. "There's somethin' strange about you. Don't you try nothin' now. If you'se a lumberman, why'd I catch you walkin' down the road there, in the middle of nowheres?" He quickly thought of an alibi. "I was flying to Pendelton to pick up our quotes to see if we were still in business when pirates took the ship over. They robbed almost everyone, then I managed to grab a chute and jump ship. But they took my ID card before I had a chance to escape, so now I'm also going to have to clear my ID so the Federals don't come after ME because of the crimes those guys are probably pulling with MY credentials! They looked like radio pirates, and being caught for that means the death penalty. No red tape." "You'se in luck, boy," Muller said. "Pendelton's jus' thirty miles from here, so I'll get you there in 'nuther fifteen minutes." Corey felt his head clear and his body lose its tenseness. "What time is it, anyway?" Muller then looked at his watch, which was an old digital thing. "Twelve fourteen." At about twelve-thirty they saw the large glass and steel buildings that were the heart of Pendelton. Muller stopped at the turnoff and let him off. "You better get that stuff cleared right away," he advised Corey as he stepped off the truck. "I will," he replied. He walked up to the nearest business hotel and got a room. After a quick shower and a welcome change of clothes (some nice business attire would do), he'd feel fine. Then he could get back down to business and maybe take the trade system by it's heels and give it a swing or two. Yeah. It was his bizarre, semi-egotistical attitude towards life in general that let him get places, and he knew it. Only now it's time to flaunt it, he thought with a chuckle. -:- Tucked away inside a plush office of a rather large New York city building, Roarke was getting slightly impatient. He tapped his fingers on the leather arms of his office chair. He looked at his data watch. Ten minutes late. Damn. The pager on his desk made a loud as he tapped the [talk] button. "Angie! Angie! I want that report NOW!" Damn that secretary. Damn that report. The deal was to be made in one day and he hadn't even seen the informational report yet. After he read it, he would approve of the deal and let it get carried out. It's not as if he had no idea what it was about -- he planned the whole thing. Now it was up to him to read its report his Network Department made on it. This was secret stuff, the only one that knew about it was him and a few members of the Department. Not even the trader that was working on the case this very instant had all the information. There was a reason for the secrecy, though. If this deal goes through as planned, it would make ADC Corp. one of the most powerful corporations around. But if one word of this got out, the plan would be ruined and ADC would be back to manufacturing in the world of low-cost home telecommunications equiptment. Angie walked into the room. "Here you are, Sir," she said. Roarke took the report in his hands and looked at the cover. In plain white letters it read, "BIANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT FOR DISTRICT FOUR/MERCHANDISING, ADC CORP." Heh. Looked innocent enough. Angie (or anyone else, for that matter) would never have guessed it to have been ADC's most top-secret documental. "Thanks, Ang. Say, by the way. The wife's not going to be home for the weekend. Do you want to get married?" Angie strategically let her legs spread apart, letting her black mini expose her thighs. "Sure, honey," she purred. -:- Once inside the massive Trade Center, Corey pulled out his ID and sat down at the nearest open terminal. HELLO. IT IS THURSDAY, SEPT 24. ENTER YOUR FULL NAME/ID AT PROMPT. PLEASE LOG IN: He then entered "Corey/G20030412 3027640 54B1411076392" After several seconds, the computer let him into the Network. [MAIN:\]COMMAND OR ?:datanet WELCOME TO DATANET. CURRENT TRADE RESULTS CAN BE VIEWED USING THE V CMD. [M:\DATANET]COMMAND OR ?:v;adccor;3 [VIEW STATUS: ADC CORPORATION] SCREEN 3 ADC HAS A NET FISCAL VALUE OF 4.003 THEY ARE PROJECTING A .0043% NET DECREASE WITHIN 24 HOURS MARKET OPENS :32 1/4 MARKET CLOSES :33 3/7 BID AVERAGE :402 NET CRP WORTH :000,102,502,672 INCREMENT :%00.0000 DECREMENT :%00.0002 SALE (100's) :34454.42 [M:\DATANET]COMMAND OR ?:s [SELL FISCAL VALUE:ADC CORPORATION] [YOU HAVE CHARGE OF 34454.42 AMT OF STOCK] AMOUNT TO SELL: Corey sat at his terminal, thinking. If he'd sell it all, that would mean the only material possesions in his name was the small amount of petty cash in his wallet. But of course, by selling it, as instructed to by his boss, he'd create a total trade turnaround that would shake the Network. It started when he got the assignment two weeks ago. He was given all of ADC's stock in his ID. Then he proceeded to buy all of ADC's stock owned by other companies, (using his own money, of course. ADC didn't want to make a noticeable thing out of this. That's why they hired him, and put it all in his name instead of the company's. This made him broke, though. He had to sell his house, car, and all his other possesions to get the money to buy the remaining stock.) and soon he had most of it. Enough that if he sold it for paper value, he would clog up the Network with stock, and have a large amount of money to sit on. This couldn't be done by just any company, though. Most would go bankrupt if they tried what Corey was to do. But IBM was trying itself to buy up ADC and put them out of business, and if Corey would flood the open market with all of the ADC stock, IBM would never get it. And ADC would collect enough sales profits to make them rich. He would buy a house, live it up for a while. Have fun. Possibly even start his own trade firm. ADC would become a major power in the United States, just by this simple little thing! This seemed too good to be true! Without hesitating, he entered "34454.42". [SALE COMPLETE. STOCK NOW ENTERED INTO THE NETWORK.] [YOUR DIVIDEND AMOUNT WILL BE GIVEN TO YOU ON FRIDAY, SEPT 25 AFTER 09:30.] [M:\DATANET]COMMAND OR ?:e Almost as an afterthought, he went into another section of the Network's computer system. [MAIN:\]COMMAND OR ?:util [M:\UTILITIES]COMMAND OR ?:idlock LOCK NAME/ID #: corey/g20030412 3027640 54b1411076392 LOCK WITH :adc corporation.intel300867.root.core3/4 [LOCKED.] [M:\UTILITIES]COMMAND OR ?:e [MAIN:\]COMMAND OR ?:e LOGOUT:TERMINAL DISCONNECT -:- Sun. Big Yellow Blob. Blue Sky. Blue blends with purple. Makes indigo streaks. Puffy, white clouds rise above. Clouds flatten into marshmellow smears by sun. Orange and red are now one. Bright and red. Now a little dimmer. Indigo streaks lengthen. Orange fireball floats down. Messy red lines all over sky. Huge glass buildings reflect with shades of color. Slowly. Smaller. Big, blue blanket comes slowly tumbling down. Indigo sheets cover sky. Dark. Fluff from clouds littered around. Sun is gone. Roarke tilted his chair around from his huge bay window. Another sunset come and gone. His data watch read 07:03 PM. He picked up the report and looked at it again. Perfect. We will win. From his desk he pulled out a scratch pad with a number scralled onto it. Where was the phone? Ah, there it is. Like a steer, it was branded with some silly telecom company's logo on it. As if it really mattered. Those phones are all the same. After dialing, he could hear it ring three times before someone answered. "Hello, DEC Switchboard. Can I help you?" "Uh, yes," Roarke replied, "Line 39. This is ADC, I have clearance." "Yes, sir. One moment." After a few clicks and rings, he was transferred to the line he requested. An official-sounding voice said, "Yes?" "Hello, Tony. This is Roarke. The transaction is complete. Did your men get it in time?" "Yes, Roarke, we've got it all. And now the trade will begin tommorow?" "Yes, tommorow at 9:30 I will have the purchase made. Then we can trade it. We'll do it just as planned." "Good, good. No other problems?" "None whatsoever. It's perfect." "Alright then, Roarke. I'll be waiting for your call tommorow morning." "Bye, Tony." Roarke hung up his phone. -:- Ugh. What a headache. How about some pain relievers? Can't wait to get out of this dump and go back to Boston. Maybe settle down, who knows. But for now, this'll have to do. Hey, it's only 7:30. Why don't I get married? I don't have to be back until 9:00 tommorow, when Roarke will call! Sheesh, that oughta give me twelve hours! Before the turn of the century, sexually transmittable diseases and teen prostitution turned the country into debate. Pornography and perversion abounded at morally sickening rates, and because of this some do-good political figure by the name of Edwin Meese III outlawed premarital sex. After this the other countries caught on and did the same. This was partly good because it was getting out of control by some amoral people, and the disease rate had gotten dangerously high. Meese had a lot of support from groups such as the Roman Catholic Church, but soon after that whore houses reopened as public "marriage centers", where one could pick a girl he liked, marry her, bed down, and divorce her before leaving, all for a minimal fee, and all 100% legal! The government didn't do anything about this, even after teens started wedding at an alarmingly young age. This was probably due to the fact that the government received a hefty sum of the marriage fees and taxes. -:- 09:29 AM. Sitting at his terminal, Roarke logged onto the Network. He quickly and expertly got the current trade rates, and then went straight to the stock reports, where he collected a dividend of over 25 million. He used it all to buy IBM stock from all the trade connections he'd gained over the years. -:- A smallish teenager rode past one of the Network Main Branch Data Centers in downtown Los Angeles. It was early Friday morning, and so most of the stores were closed, and the streets bare, except for the Network's Trade Center, which he could see busses stopping in front of it every three minutes or so, letting off groups of businessmen, who hurried into the tall, glass building, probably to login and work another business day of trading. He wondered what would happen if one of those buildings blew up, or if one of the huge data bins caught fire, losing half of all their precious information, including the stuff that showed who owned who and how much of it they had. He wondered if it really mattered anymore. The place made him sick. He slid back on his skateboard and glided off. -:- 09:52 AM. "Room service! Room service!" "...hugmph. Huh?" Corey awoke with a start. "Oh, SHIT! It's almost TEN! How could I have overslept? DAMN! DAMN! And why didn't Roarke call?" He got dressed in record time, grabbed his wallet and ran out the door, almost knocking over a suprised maid. "...Room service?" He didn't have time to explain to her, so he ran out the building to the Trade Center, and quickly logged in. HELLO. IT IS FRIDAY, SEPT 25. ENTER YOUR FULL NAME/ID AT PROMPT. PLEASE LOG IN:corey/g20030412 3027640 54b1411076392 [MAIN:\]COMMAND OR ?:d WELCOME TO DATANET. CURRENT TRADE RESULTS CAN BE VIEWED USING THE V CMD. [M:\DATANET]COMMAND OR ?:v;adccor;3 [VIEW STATUS: ADC CORPORATION] SCREEN 3 ADC HAS A NET FISCAL VALUE OF 0.000 THEY ARE NOW A SUBSIDARY OF DEC COMPUTER CORPORATION MARKET OPENS :68 2/3 MARKET CLOSES :70 1/8 BID AVERAGE :810 NET CRP WORTH :N/A AT THIS TIME INCREASE :%04.9882 DECREASE :%00.0000 SALE(100'S) :NONE CURRENTLY OFFERED FOR SALE. [M:\DATANET]COMMAND OR ?: Corey looked at his computer in shock. Instead of finding the stock to be distributed into the public net and finding a 25 million dollar dividend, he found ADC to be no longer a company, but a subsidary of DEC. This meant that DEC had bought all of ADC's stock as soon as it hit market yesterday. But how? This was a first-class, top secret operation. Nobody should have known. Wait. Unless this was one big scheme after all. Oh, hell. He picked up the phone next to his terminal and made a collect call to ADC's central headquarters in New York. "Yes. Is this Roarke?" "Yes.. oh, hello, Corey. By now I take it that you've logged onto the Net and found what happened." "You mean you...knew about..it? Wh-what the hell, Roarke?! We were gonna have it made! Why'd you blow it?" He barely got the words out. "Well, you see, Corey, we aren't the kind of company in the kind of position to have bought a stock protect bond to forbid one company from buying us up, and as you know, IBM has been watching us very closely the past few weeks, and if I hadn't taken action, we would have been eliminated by them. The plan we had would not have worked, because IBM would have bought all of the stock, and if anyone had bought a few loose bonds, IBM would have pressured them into selling. You must not forget that IBM has the best security in the Network. They probably knew about the scam when it started. So we made a deal with DEC to buy us up, and with the dividend that I recieved, I bought up loose IBM stock. Enough to own a good portion of the company. After I chat with you, I am going to hand all of it over to DEC, who in turn will give me back full ownership of ADC. It's all in paper; we've had it planned since last Saturday. You see, in doing this, we will have both helped bring down a common enemy of ours. ADC will not have to worry about IBM, and DEC will get a clear shot at bringing them down. I'm sorry I had to do this, to you, Corey, but it's the nature of the business." Corey felt more than shocked at this moment. The rage was building up inside of him, but he didn't show it. "Ah..ah, I see, Roarke. Well, I uh, I guess that means no bonus dividend for me, but, uh, can you send me some stock slips for a plane ticket to New York and a week's hotel pay? I sold everything I own to get the stock, as you know, and now I've just got enough for dinner tonight." "Well, Corey, I'm sorry but you are no longer working for us, so I cannot give you any company slips. And I cannot give you any of my own because I only give them to personal relations and close friends. Since I fired you, that makes you niether. So I'm afriad you are on your own. Have a nice life." Corey heard a high-pitched wink and the familiar dial tone flooded his ear. -:- HELLO. IT IS FRIDAY, SEPT 25. ENTER YOUR FULL NAME/ID AT PROMPT. PLEASE LOG IN:corey/g20030412 3027640 54b1411076392 [MAIN:\]COMMAND OR ?:ls [LOCK STATUS :COREY/G20030412 3027640 54B1411076392] PAPER :000.000.000.032..000 BOND :000000 EPCT :%.04 STOCKS :000000.00 PRT OWN :ADC CORP.COMP.ROOT/SYS CORE OTR :NIL [M:\LOCK STATUS]COMMAND OR ?: Good. The fools didn't even find out yet. He had to work fast, because if they catch him in the act, he had no way out. What he had done was lock his ID into the core of ADC when he had top access to their system. This was a little trick he'd learned some time ago. Roarke should have known better not to have messed with him. Hired traders can sometimes be dangerous when mad. Especially ones like Corey. He worked his way to the Datanet. [M:\DATANET]COMMAND OR ?:v;adccor;3 [VIEW STATUS: ADC CORPORATION] SCREEN 3 ADC HAS A NET FISCAL VALUE OF 4.031 MARKET OPENS :32 2/7 MARKET CLOSES :33 8/9 BID AVG :317 NET CRP WORTH :000,102,574,492 INCREMENT :%00.0000 DECREMENT :%00.0005 SALE (100'S) :34456.10 [M:\DATANET]COMMAND OR ?:s.pref [PREFFERED SALE OF FISCAL VALUE: ADC CORPORATION] [LOCK IN ACTION:ACCESS GRANTED.] ENTER NAME/ID OR DATANET CODE OF PREFFERED PARTY:ibmcor [PREFFERED SALE TO:INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES] [PAGING TRADE ROUTE:BOCA RATON, FLORIDA.] [PLEASE HOLD.] [SALE GRANTED.] [YOU HAVE CHARGE OF 34456.10 AMOUNT OF STOCK] AMOUNT TO SELL: He entered, "34456.10." [SALE COMPLETE.] ENTER NAME/ID DIVIDEND TRANSFERRED TO[DEFAULT IF YOURS]:default [DIVIDEND WILL BE TRANSFERRED TO YOUR ACCOUNT ON SATURDAY, SEPT 26 AT 09:30 AM.] [M:\DATANET]COMMAND OR ?:e [MAIN:\]COMMAND OR ?:e LOGOUT:TERMINAL DISCONNET Tommorow Corey would login once more, collect his dividend, and go off to Boston and retire. IBM was pleased, knowing that ADC just sold their whole company to them. And as for Roarke -- well, Corey hoped that he likes life on the streets. That was Roarke's most fatal mistake, a mistake he'd never forget. Never, never hire a pirate like Corey, and then doublecross him. A large smile formed over Corey's rather dull-looking face. FINIS