A Short Story for Shadowrun
by: Linda Naughton O'Meara
I stood on the street corner in downtown Atlanta, across from the
spacious Piedmont Park. My eyes scanned the edge of the park, watching
from a distance the spot where the meet was supposed to take place. No
one was there yet, which was making me nervous. I fingered the shotgun
under my longcoat, its weight a comforting presence against my right leg.
Turning my attention from the meeting place for an instant, I glanced down
at my chronometer. 2215. He was late.
The man who'd called me had refused to give his name, saying only that
he had some information that I would be interested in. I probably should
have had my head examined for coming to such a shady meet, but I must
admit I was curious how the person mana ged to find out my telecom number
and my name, and I also wanted to know what this info was. One of the
hold-overs from my reporting days, I guess. I may not work for any network
any more, but I'm still a snoop at heart.
After a few moments, I heard a voice from behind me whisper, "Holly?"
I spun around, finger instinctively flipping the safety off my shotgun,
and saw a familiar face. Relaxing a little, I said in annoyance, "Mitch!
What are you doing here? Are you the one who called me?" As I looked him
over, I made a mental note to pay closer attention to my surroundings. I
must be slipping if Mitch Marvin was able to sneak up on me!
Mitch was a small man, wearing his usual corporate suit and tie.
He was a reporter for the same trid station I used to work for, and was
one of the few people from my old life I still kept in touch with. His
short brown hair was tousled, and his suit wrinkled as if he'd slept in
it. Mitch nodded, and I asked, "Why didn't you just tell me it was you?
What's with all this anonymous drek?"
"I couldn't take a chance someone was listening in on your calls.
Listen, Holly, I stumbled onto some drek-hot data. But the heat's coming
down on me. I want to get rid of the chip and lay low for a while. You
interested?" Mitch said, his voice showing the nervous strain he was
feeling.
"What kind of data?" I wanted to know. Mitch didn't get a chance
to answer. As he opened his mouth to speak, two black Mitsubishi
Nightskys came barreling down the street, in our direction. My danger
instincts went into overdrive. While Mitch stood there, staring oblivious
at the oncoming limos, I dashed over to the nearest door. It was locked,
and secure enough that I wasn't going to be able to kick it in. The cars
were approaching, fast, and I decided there wasn't any more time to mess
around with the doors.
Grabbing Mitch by the wrist, I pulled him after me as I ran across
the street into Piedmont Park. The Nightskys screeched to a halt at the
corner where we'd been standing, and the doors flew open. Three Asians in
suits jumped out of each of the limos, all of them wielding SMGs. Cursing
my luck, I stopped looking over my shoulder and concentrated on just plain
running. Still dragging Mitch behind me, I tried to make my course a
zigzag, putting the sparse amount of trees in the park between us and the
guys with guns.
We got a small head start on the gunners before they started
giving chase, firing as they went. They weren't shooting long bursts and
spraying the area, I noticed, they were taking careful single shots, most
of which skittered off the ground behind us. I guessed that the goons
wanted us alive. Otherwise, they just would've hosed down the area with
lead.
I risked a glance over my shoulder, and saw that three of the
attackers had gotten back into one of the Nightskys and were circling
around the park, trying to cut us off, I guessed. The other three were
still giving chase. Mitch stumbled over a tree stump and went down. It
was dark out this late at night, and Mitch was having trouble seeing, but
I wasn't bothered much due to my cyber low light vision. Mitch screamed
in pain an instant after falling as one of the Asians shot him in the left
leg. "Come on, run!" I shouted, pulling Mitch to his feet again and
half-dragging, half-carrying him along with me. He was slowing me down, I
knew, but I couldn't just abandon my friend and run for it alone.
We weren't going to be able to outrun them, I realized as I looked
back and saw that the gunmen were easily keeping pace with us. Time to
get tricky. I knew the geography of Atlanta like the back of my hand,
Piedmont Park included. I could only hope that they didn't know it as
well as I did. I started taking the back trails, around the botanical
garden and past the small, acid-rain filled pond. A short-cut through the
trees got me to a connecting path, and I continued taking the unmarked
trails in a random pattern across the park, heading for a good hiding
place that I remembered. After a short time, when I looked behind me I
couldn't see any signs of our pursuers.
Mitch was whimpering in pain when we reached the old bridge that
connected two sides of a gully in the park. I helped him down the
hillside under the bridge, and we took shelter in a small drain pipe near
one of the bridge supports. I held my shotgun, a Spas-22 model with
burst-fire capability (great for personal protection, I always thought),
ready to fire on anything that came down the drainpipe. Tossing Mitch a
clean handkerchief, I said, "Tie that around the wound. It'll help stop
the bleeding." I knew we'd have to get Mitch to a doctor, but first we
had to get out of this place. He was pale and sweating buckets, no doubt
a combination of shock and fear.
"Now, why don't you tell me about this data. Who are those guys,
and what do they want with it?" I demanded, not happy about being dragged
into the middle of a gunfight because of this whole deal.
"I don't know what it is," Mitch said through clenched teeth. "I
was in the Matrix, and I think I took a wrong turn at an LTG. Next thing
I know, I'm in one of Cord Mutual's datastores. I figured that there
wasn't any sense in wasting an opportunity, so I started downloading
everything in sight. But all I got was one file before I was dumped."
"What file?" I asked. Mitch held up an optical chip and handed it
to me. "It's on there," he said, "I haven't had a chance to look at it.
Ever since I got it, people have been shooting at me. Whatever this file
is, it's wiz stuff."
My attention was drawn to the opening of the drainpipe as I heard
someone coughing loudly, obviously trying to get our attention. Raising
the shotgun again, I could make out two figures standing slightly to the
right side of the drain opening. They were both armed, their weapons
pointed in my direction. But they hadn't fired yet, which I thought was a
good sign.
"Put down the gun and come with us," one of them said coolly.
"Yeah, right," I replied mockingly, "Why don't you put your guns
down?" It went on like that for some time, a total stalemate. I wasn't
overly worried. There were only two of them, and my shotgun could easily
take them both out, probably before they could get off a shot of their
own. My cyberware is nice that way. But I wanted to try to milk them for
information, and maybe try to talk my way out of the situation. I didn't
like killing when it wasn't necessary. I'm no saint, but I don't go out
of my way to geek people like some street sams do.
Before the conversation could really get anywhere, however, there
were two quick gunshots, and the two Asians suddenly found themselves with
gaping holes in their skulls. The two of them collapsed limply, and I
turned my attention to the area behind them, where the shots had come
from. In the moonlight (amplified by my cybereyes to make it appear as
bright as day), I saw an ork in ragged street-leathers, holding a SMG. He
was a big fellow, well-muscled with long, tied back black hair. He gave
me a toothy grin. "It looked like you could've used a little help there,
Miss," he said smugly, lowering the weapon.
Great, I thought, just what I need: some ganger who styles himself
a fragging knight in shining armor. At least he can shoot straight, I
muttered. But what I ended up saying was a simple "Thank you", as I
hauled Mitch to his feet and started heading out of the drain. The ork
was searching the two bodies, taking anything that looked useful. As he
rifled their jackets, I spotted the telltale dragon tattoos on their arms
and chests. Yakuza. I cursed silently. What had Mitch gotten me into
this time? Fragging with the Japanese mafia was something I tried to
avoid. It was healthier that way.
"Iceman, at your service," the ork told me, extending his hand. I
shook it, and told him, "This is Mitch, and I'm Holly." Most
shadowrunners and gangers tend to go by a streetname, I knew, rather than
their real name, but I didn't like it that way. Introducing myself as
Holly had a tendency to throw people off guard. They seemed to
underestimate me, seeing me as some weak woman who didn't know how to run
the shadows. But that suited me just fine. It helps a lot sometimes when
your opponents underestimate you.
"We'd better get out of here," I said to the two men, "Those shots
probably gave away our location."
As if on cue, the second Nightsky came into view, its tires
tearing deep grooves into the park's grass as it left the main path and
sped down the hill into the gully under the bridge. "This way!" Iceman
shouted, motioning up the hill, "Follow me!" He started off in that
direction, looking back to make sure Mitch and I were following. I made a
quick decision to take a chance, and I headed after the ork.
Iceman, Mitch and I ran towards one of the back paths. The
Nightsky had unloaded its three goons, who were running up the hillside
after us. We reached the top of the embankment and about fifty meters
away I saw a Harley Scorpion propped up against a tree. Iceman was
heading towards the motorcycle, and I guessed that it was his. We had
covered half the distance by the time the three Yakuza gunmen crested the
rise. The took a few shots at us. Iceman stopped and spun around,
raising his SMG to fire. He shouted with bravado, "I'll hold them, you
get on the bike."
Frag that, I thought. I stopped running and flipped the safety
off my shotgun. "You get on the bike," I told Iceman as I set the
selector switch to burst fire. The three Yakuza were out in the open when
I pulled the trigger on my shotgun. There was a tremendous roar as the
weapon fired three times in rapid succession. I struggled to keep the gun
level, the recoil compensation helping significantly. All of the Yaks
were caught in the hail of lead buckshot, and they went down, dead or
dying.
Iceman's jaw dropped. He didn't say anything, but he did get on
the bike and started the engine. Mitch climbed up into the seat behind
him, and as Iceman pulled the motorcycle around, I jumped on the back,
squeezing onto the edge of the seat. The bike was designed for two
riders, not three, but fortunately Mitch and I were both pretty slim. The
bike lurched underneath us as Iceman gunned the engine and we went tearing
off down the dirt road.
The ork ganger pulled the bike out of the park and onto Monroe,
heading south. He gunned the engine, and we sped off down the road.
"Where are we going?" I asked, struggling to be heard over the whipping
wind and the engine.
"Somewhere safe. Trust me," Iceman replied. I decided to do
that, for the time being. We drove out of the heart of the city, and
entered the outer reaches of the sprawl known as Southtown.
* * * *
The doss was small considering the sheer number of people who
appeared to live there. One bed occupied the far wall, but there were a
half dozen cots scattered around the room. A doorway led into a kitchen
unit, and a second door apparently led to the bathroom.
There was only one person in the place when we arrived. He was
very plain-looking human, with short brown hair and a five o'clock shadow
that didn't do much to conceal his youthful face. He looked up as we
entered the room. "Who are they?" he asked, glancing at Mitch and I and
then fixing his stare on Iceman.
"The lady was in trouble, and I decided to help them out. They've
got some people chasing them," Iceman explained. The other man raised an
eyebrow. "Holly, Mitch, this is L.A." I gave him a brief smile in
greeting, and then turned to Iceman and asked if he had a medkit around
anywhere. L.A. got up off his cot and brought a small satchel from the
corner of the room. He knelt down next to Mitch and began tending the
man's leg. As he did so, Iceman and I filled him in on the earlier events
of the evening. I told the two gangers about the chip Mitch had. L.A.
didn't say much, he just nodded every once in a while to show he was
listening.
As L.A. worked, Iceman turned to me and asked, "So what is this
data, anyway? What do the Yaks want with it?"
I shrugged. "I don't know, but I intend to find out. Maybe then
I can get these guys off our tails." As I said that, I slotted the chip
Mitch had given me into the jack at the base of my skull. A simple
thought linked my internal display unit to the chip, and a blank screen
was overlaid on my left eye. I tried to view the file on the chip, but
all that came up was a jumble of characters. It was an encoded file. I
said as much to the others. "I'll need a telecom hookup to connect my
deck so I can decrypt the file," I told them.
"You're a decker?" Iceman said in surprise. I nodded, and slid
back the right side of my longcoat to reveal the small cyberdeck case
slung over my shoulder.
"L.A., mind if I use your telecom?" I asked, spotting the unit
which took up one corner of the room. L.A. grumbled a bit, probably
thinking of the possibility that someone would trace the call to his doss,
but eventually he said to go ahed. I pulled up a metal folding chair and
sat down in front of the telecom. "I'm going to try to crack the code on
this file. You guys had probably take turns keeping watch. Just in case
somebody comes looking for us." Iceman and L.A. nodded, and L.A. offered
to take the first shift.
I unslung my cyberdeck case from my right shoulder and carefully
removed the deck from its protective shell. There was a chipjack in the
side of the deck, and I slotted the chip Mitch had given me. The telecom
was an old model, and it took me a moment to find the jack, but once I
did, I plugged in the fiber optic cord which connected to my cyberdeck.
Another cord came from the left side of the deck, and this one I plugged
into the datajack at the base of my skull. "Here we go," I muttered, and
punched the "ON" button of my deck. The world went dark for a fraction of
a second, and I felt the familiar wave of disorientation as my senses were
overridden by the virtual reality signals coming from my deck. Then I was
in the Matrix, standing next to the icon which represented the telecom
unit.
Working at the speed of thought, I adjusted my deck's memory
allocation to make room for the decryption program I'd written. Then, I
brought up the icon that was the Matrix representation of the file
contained in Mitch's chip. It spun in space an arm's length away from me,
bright swirls of alphanumeric characters wrapped around the file's icon.
That was the file encryption, I knew, and it was those swirls that I had
to decode.
It didn't take me long to do so. The encryption was a rather
simple code, not something I expected from a big corp like Cord Mutual.
As I tweaked the last bit of code, the bright swirls faded to black and I
was left with a plain file icon. Now to see what all the fuss is about, I
thought. I ran a simple text-reader program, and displayed the contents
of the file. As the words scrolled by at an incredible rate (which I was
able to comprehend thanks to the cybernetic connection between my brain
and the deck), I thought that there must have been some mistake. I
scanned the title of the file. "Great Expectations", by Charles Dickens.
What was this drek? This is the file the Yakuza are willing to kill over?
I had trouble accepting that. There must be something more about the
file.
A quick trip to the Atlanta Public Library database got me a copy
of the real version of "Great Expectations". I ran a program to compare
the file Mitch found with the library's file, looking for any differences.
The program didn't find any. The text was identical in both documents. I
then tried to dissect the file itself, taking the code apart bit by bit.
But once again, it was a perfect match with the library's file. It was as
if somebody had downloaded a copy of the novel from the library data banks
and placed it in Cord Mutual's datastore.
Before I could think much on the subject, my deck alerted me to an
incoming phone call on my wrist phone. I transferred the call to L.A.'s
telecom and quickly loaded my best anti-trace program into memory set it
to guard the phone line. Then I jacked out and answered the call. The
blank screen on the phone was replaced by a familiar face. He was a
middle-aged man, with graying brown hair and a few early wrinkles on his
high, Amerind forehead. "Wind!" I exclaimed, "I didn't expect to hear
from you."
"I've been hearing some things on the street, Holly, and it's not
good. Everyone's looking for you and Mitch Marvin. Are you all right?"
Hands-Like-Wind asked, the tone of his voice telling me that he really was
very worried. Hands-Like-Wind always did have a sort of sixth sense when
it came to my well-being. He'd been a close friend of my father's for a
number of years, and was like a favorite uncle to me.
"I'm okay so far," I told him. Then I asked nervously, "Who's
everyone?"
"Yakuza, Seoupla, Mafia...the real fun people. You're in serious
drek, my girl. The word is that your friend Mitch intercepted a transfer
of some financial files on their way to one of Cord Mutual's subsidiaries.
I talked to my chummer at Cord, and he told me that the files contained
the updated system passcodes for the next twenty-four hours. Somebody
with that data could get at a whole lot of Cord's financial assets if they
act before Cord changes the codes. Everyone on the street that I talked
to heard the same story, and they say that's why you and Mitch are so
popular nowadays."
"Passcodes? Are you sure that's what's supposed to be in this
file?" I asked with a look of bewilderment on my face.
Hands-Like-Wind shrugged. "All I know is what my friend told me.
Why? What's wrong?"
I shook my head, trying to figure it out. I said to him, "I
looked at that file, Wind. There's nothing on there but a copy of a
novel." He asked me if I was sure. "I'm positive. I checked that file
inside and out. There's nothing there." I paused, and asked, "Your
friend said the files were being transferred?" Hands-Like-Wind nodded.
Things started to fall into place in my mind. Mitch told me he'd found
the file in a datastore, not in the middle of a transfer. So either Mitch
was lying, (which I didn't believe) or Wind's friend at Cord was wrong
(which didn't make sense, since Wind said everyone on the street got the
same story). It was then that the thought struck me. What if the people
on the street had been meant to get the same story? Even though it wasn't
true?
Mitch had told me that he didn't know how he ended up in that
datastore at Cord. What if it had been a setup all along, with Cord using
Mitch (and subsequently, me) as a distraction, leaking the info that we
had the file? It made sense, but I couldn't figure out why Cord would
need a distraction like that. Unless they were worried that someone was
going to intercept the real passcodes, and wanted a decoy. Too many "what
if's", I thought. I needed some real answers, and fast.
I looked at the face on the telecom screen. "Thanks, for the
info, Wind. Listen, I need a favor. I need to access Cord's main system.
Can your friend there get me inside?" Hands-Like-Wind looked concerned,
but he saw the determined look on my face and told me he'd try to work
something out. I thanked him, and broke the phone connection. I jacked
back into the cyberdeck, and began running some searches on Cord Financial
and its subsidiaries.
As I was decking, I heard something on the fringes of my
perception. It sounded like a gunshot. I immediately jacked out, and my
senses were jerked back to the real world. That was one of the big
disadvantages of decking...the virtual reality signals overrode your own
perceptions to a great degree, making you nearly oblivious to the real
world. Fortunately, it was only "nearly oblivious". I reached for my
shotgun and scanned the room quickly, my reactions jacked up by the
synaptic accelerator implanted in my skull. Mitch was cowering behind one
of the cots, and I saw that the door was open. Iceman was taking cover in
the doorway, firing at someone down the hall with his SMG. L.A. was
crouched in the middle of the hallway nearby, also firing. As I moved
towards the door, L.A. took a slug to the shoulder, spinning him around
and knocking him down. He fired from the ground, cradling his injured arm
against his chest.
I reached the doorway in a split-second, and strode out into the
hall, raising my Spas-22 shotgun to my shoulder. I saw the three Asians
in suits at the other end of the hallway (a fourth had been downed already
by Iceman and L.A.'s fire) and the rangefinder link calculated the
distance to them. My smartgun link adjusted the choke of the shotgun
accordingly, for the best possible spread of shots, and I pulled the
trigger, loosing a hail of flechettes down the corridor. At this close
range, flechettes hit flesh, and it was very messy indeed.
Iceman lowered his SMG, and looked at me, shaking his head. He
glanced back down the hall at the bodies. "You really didn't need my help
at all, did you?" he asked, more a statement than a question, and I
assumed he was referring to the original incident in Piedmont Park.
I shrugged. "Not really, but that doesn't mean it's not
appreciated." I smiled at him and gave him a good-natured slap on the
back, and then moved to help the injured L.A. Iceman, meanwhile, searched
what was left of the attackers, and discovered a small business card on
one of them. It didn't have any writing on it, just a stylized beetle
symbol. Seoulpa ring, I realized. Hands-Like-Wind had been right. First
the Yaks, now the Korean mafia. Just fragging great.
Since the apartment obviously wasn't safe any more, we decided to
relocate. As we were gathering our things, I got another call from
Hands-Like-Wind. Fast service, I noted. He had spoken with his friend at
Cord and called in some old favors. We were supposed to meet the friend,
Garcia, in an hour outside the Cord Mutual skyraker downtown. And from
there, Garcia would get us into the building, where I'd be able to access
Cord's system. Hopefully, there I'd find the info we needed to get out of
this mess alive.
* * * *
L.A., Iceman and I waited in an alley across the street from
Turner Savings and Loans, concealed in the shadows. Hands-Like-Wind had
arranged for Mitch to stay at a safe-house across town while we took care
of things here.
We had met up with Garcia as planned, and everything went
smoothly. I had decked Cord's system from one of the terminals on the
22nd floor, sleazing my way into the CPU and then convincing the system
that I was really an authorized user. From there, I had the run of the
entire system. Besides managing to get my virtual hands on some good
paydata (which would help out significantly with the rent for quite a few
months, once I sold the files to a fixer I knew), I had also found some
tidbits of info more applicable to my current problem.
I found a memo from the VP of Cord's financial division, detailing
the whole fragging plan. It seems Cord was a bit paranoid about wayward
deckers in their Matrix system getting a hold of the updated passcodes, so
they wanted to transfer the codes via a real courier, rather than
electronically. And to keep anybody from finding out about the courier,
they decided to use a decoy.
Enter Mitch Marvin, nosy reporter for Channel 48, who just
happened to be decking in the wrong place at the wrong time. They
arranged for him to "find" the decoy file, and then made sure everyone who
was anyone knew that he had it. Let them fight it out among themselves,
and then drive themselves crazy trying to figure out how "Great
Expectations" was going to be the key to Cord's files. Meanwhile, the
courier would carry the real file to Cord's subsidiaries without anyone
being the wiser.
The plan would've worked perfectly, if Mitch and I hadn't managed
to elude the Yaks, Seoulpa and Mafia (the Mafia had paid a visit to L.A.
and Iceman's doss a few minutes after we had left...we saw them arriving
as we were driving safely away) hit teams long enough for me to figure out
what was really going on. And once we knew what Cord was planning, L.A.,
Iceman and I had decided to make sure they didn't get away with it. So
the two gangers and I had made our way across town to the Turner building,
and here we waited. The memo had contained a detailed explanation of the
route the courier would be taking. I glanced at my watch. It was nearing
midnight, which was when Cord's courier was due to make his stop at Turner
Savings and Loans.
I adjusted my grip on my shotgun, and noticed Iceman looking
impatiently at his watch as well. L.A. on the other hand was calm as
always, his twin silenced Ares Predator II pistols held loosely in his
hands. Iceman had his trusty Uzi SMG, also silenced. We were kept
waiting another few minutes before the courier arrived. A van pulled up
in front of the building, and three men stepped out. Two were obviously
bodyguards, and the third matched the picture I'd weaseled out of Cord's
main computer system. It was the courier. I nodded to the two men, and
we all sprang into action.
It was over in an instant. L.A. took a head shot at each of the
guards, nailing them both, and Iceman fired a burst of non-lethal gel
rounds from his SMG. The bullets splatted against the back of the
courier's head, knocking him out cold. Not a sound had been made aside
from the three corp men hitting the pavement. We dashed across the
street, a shimmering in the air around us telling me that Wind's spirit
was still there, concealing us. To the rest of the world, we were pretty
much invisible. Iceman picked up the courier and slung him over one
shoulder, and then we dashed back into the alley, got on our bikes and
sped off to rendezvous with Hands-Like-Wind.
The courier turned out to be a very weak-willed individual. It
didn't take much for Wind's mind control spell to do its work, and the
courier happily downloaded the file he carried in his headware memory. I
took the optical chip he handed me and plugged it into my cyberdeck. Time
to do some decoding. The encryption on this file turned out to be pretty
sophisticated...no surprise there. Much tougher than the decoy file had
been. But decrypting codes was my specialty, and I'd cooked up a really
wiz program to aid me in the task. It took some time, but eventually the
file was like an open book to me. Not a classic like "Great
Expectations", natch, but more valuable in other regards.
I stared at the financial codes for some of Cord's more
influential clients (not all of them, mind you, Cord was smart enough not
to put all its eggs into one basket), laid out on the screen in front of
me, and it took some effort to keep from drooling. There was enough money
in those accounts to set me up for life. The only trouble was, I probably
wouldn't live to spend it. True, with Iceman and L.A.'s help, I had
managed to elude the hit teams for a few hours, but I wasn't naive enough
to think I could keep that up for 24 hours. Especially not after the real
hard-hitters, the corporations, got wind of this and sent their boys out
to play. And once Cord found out what had happened to their courier, I'd
have them to deal with as well.
Then, suddenly, an idea hit me. Nobody was really after Mitch and
me personally. They just wanted the codes. So to get them off my back,
all I had to do was give them what they wanted. I smiled to myself and
began calling up the LTG numbers of every public database I could think
of.
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CORD MUTUAL CODES
>>>>>(In case any of you actually care (and
apparently some of you do, since you've been hounding me all night trying
to get these fraggin' codes), I've uploaded the passcodes for some of Cord
Mutual's clients. Better get them while they're hot, chummers , they're
not going to be good for much longer.) <<<<<
---Holly (01:14:22/04-22-56)
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