MirrorVerse
Part Ten: Greg
[A/N: Online board simulator designed by Conceptualist ]
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♦Topic: Drug House Hit
In: Boards ► Fucking Heroes ► Upsiders
BottomFeeder (Original Poster)
Posted on April 15, 2011:
So, I hear the Upsiders hit a drug house. Burned the powder, got away with the dollars. Or was it burned the dollars, got away with the drugs?
(Showing Page 3 of 47)
SellSword (Verified Cape) (Veteran Member) (Syndicate Member)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
We will catch those little shits, and when we do, they are never gonna bother anyone in this town at all. Ever.
HeroSnogger (Cape Groupie)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
Yeah well, I notice that you didn't do much to stop them. Were you off playing house with Artillery again?
SellSword (Verified Cape) (Veteran Member) (Syndicate Member)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
HeroSnogger, shut that mouth or I'll shut it for you.
Artillery (Verified Cape) (Veteran Member) (Syndicate Member)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
And if he doesn't, I will.
DogBiscuit
Replied on April 15, 2011:
I hear the Minions got taken down pretty good.
CaptainZombie (Verified Cape) (Minion)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
And you can fuck off too. There was a new cape on scene. Some bug controller.
HeroSnogger (Cape Groupie)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
In fact, I heard that the Minions got taken down even though Pandemic was in the building, and Teaser was outside. What the fuck happened there? Did Teaser get lost on the way?
DirtyBastard
Replied on April 15, 2011:
Wouldn't be surprised. She's not the sharpest spoon in the drawer.
GrabBag (The Guy In The Know)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
Okay, so all joking aside, what happened in there with Pandemic? Isn't she supposed to be all fucking scary?
Teaser (Verified Cape) (Cape Daughter) (Brockton Bay Brigands)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
Pandemic got a broken wrist and a concussion. And when I catch up with the bitch who did that, I'm gonna fuckin' spread her over three miles of highway.
HeroSnogger (Cape Groupie)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
Yeah, big talk. We all know your sister's the brains of the outfit.
DogBiscuit
Replied on April 15, 2011:
So, death threats aside, is there anyone going to do anything about the Upsiders? They're really making a nuisance of themselves.
SellSword (Verified Cape) (Veteran Member) (Syndicate Member)
Replied on April 15, 2011:
Don't worry. I've got a lead on them. And when I catch them, especially that little bitch Insight, I've got something special for them.
End of Page. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ... 45 , 46, 47
<><>
Greg Veder paused; a blinking red icon had popped up in the corner of his screen. He knew what that meant; the SO mods were two jumps away from locating his IP address. Unhurriedly, he entered the keystrokes to drop out of the boards and back to the ordinary net.
The icon stayed, blinking faster. One jump away.
Fuck.
Castigating himself for being so complacent – he should have realised that the SO mods would have kept on him after he left the boards – he stomped down on the floor switch of the power board that fed his modem and computer. Power cut, they died immediately.
He didn't relax; if they had really located him, teleporters might be popping into his bedroom at any moment now. He reached under the desk, and his hand curled around the comforting grip of the nine-millimetre Glock that he had acquired during a previous excursion into the Deep Web.
Not that he held much hope of his survival if they had indeed located him; if they did get to him, he intended to take as many as possible with him, and save the last bullet for himself. Anything was better than to be grabbed for spying on the Syndicate's private message boards. Or worse, the PRT. Rumour was that whole
families died if you crossed them.
He waited, tense. The house creaked slightly as it settled. Under him, the chair squeaked gently as he shifted a little to look out the window. The curtains ruffled slightly under the impulse of a breeze that found its way in through the barely-open window. With the computer off, the loudest sound in the room was his breathing, followed by the ticking of the clock on the wall.
Was that a noise? Is someone climbing up the side of the house?
His hand closed convulsively over the butt of the pistol, and he pulled it clear of its makeshift holder. More scratching sounded, outside, then there came the sound of heavy wings beating as some night bird took off. His heart rate slowed to merely rapid-fire levels, and he took a deep breath, then another one, before holding his breath and trying to listen.
Nothing. Just the clock ticking. He looked at it. Ten minutes.
Ten minutes? It felt like ten hours.
Carefully, he slid the Glock back into its holder and leaned back in his chair. Despite the cool air in the room, his forehead was beaded with sweat. Slowly, he began to relax.
They didn't track me down. But it was close.
Pressure on the foot switch fed power to the computer; as it went through its startup sequence, he breathed slowly and deeply.
I'm playing a dangerous game. I need to stay calm.
And then his bedroom door opened suddenly, startling him. Just barely, he managed to avoid grabbing for the pistol, and instead looked inquiringly at his mother's face, as she leaned in through the door.
"Uh, hi, Mom," he greeted her, trying to sound as awkward as he could. "What's up?"
"We were just coming up to bed," she told him. "I thought I'd check in on you. What're you doing?"
"Oh, uh, nothing," he told her, hitting keys to activate a series of macros.
"Gregory Veder," she chided him. "You know I can tell when you're not telling the truth."
That hasn't been true for years now, Mom. Entering the room, she took a good look at his computer terminal. "Homework? Now I
know you're up to something."
"Mo-
om," he groaned. "Can't a guy actually do homework without being given the third degree?"
"Well, if you were actually doing homework, I would be okay with it," she retorted. "But I know you, Greg." Reaching down to the keyboard, she pressed a couple of keys, and blinked at the window that revealed itself. "Okay, what's this?"
"It's only a game, Mom," he told her with seeming embarrassment. "It's an online interactive game called Dungeon Delvers. You explore tunnels and dig through to other tunnels to find treasure. There's underground cities as well."
She looked at the open screen. There was a burly humanoid, busy digging away at what looked like a vein of gold ore, and loading it into a barrow.
"Oh, well, don't stay up too long playing," she warned him.
"Not a school night, Mom," he protested.
"Doesn't matter," she replied. "Your Dad wants you to mow the lawn tomorrow."
Greg decided that now was the time for a typical teen response. "Mo-
om … " he groaned, rolling his eyes. "Can't I have
one weekend to do what I want?"
"Take it up with him. Just don't be up too late," she warned him, and kissed him on the top of the head. "Sweet dreams."
"Uh huh." He watched as she walked across the room to the door. "Night, Mom."
He watched the door close behind her, then turned to his computer. The game was a blind, of course; he had played it a few times, to get an idea of how it ran. To further the illusion, he had gotten on to the message boards, and chatted about ways and means to beat some of the levels. As a matter of fact, he had very little trouble with it, but he pretended to be less adept than he really was, in order to fit in.
However, someone with the username GstringGirl had contacted him with hints and tips, and he had messaged her back, thanking her for the courtesy. This may have been a mistake; she was messaging him on a regular occasion now, wanting to chat, and even suggesting that they meet. However, the tone of the messages indicated that she was interested in getting to know him, perhaps even to form some level of relationship. Not only was he not interested in such at the moment, but all indications were that she would the clingy type, unwilling to accept excuses for not being let into every facet of his life.
Unfortunately, nor did he want to end up in a messy scene that would draw attention to him, so he continued to be politely oblivious online. Perhaps, he hoped, she would lose interest and drift away.
Closing both decoy windows, he frowned in deep thought as he brought up the list of proxies he could use, the ones that weren't already burned. There were fewer than there had been an hour ago. More would crop up, of course, but it was a slow process.
Better not access the SO boards for a while then. I wonder how the mods rumbled me? Maybe I should've posted something.
His thoughts strayed back to GstringGirl again.
How do I deflect her? For a moment, he considered lying to her. If she thinks I'm gay, maybe she'll leave me alone.
Or maybe she'll try harder. No thanks. As it was, she was getting stalkerish.
Through the wall, he heard the bedsprings squeak as his parents went to bed.
They'll be asleep soon.
Frowning in concentration, he accessed another proxy and went on to the PHO boards. It was ill-organised at the best of times; he had to plough through reams of spam and scam posts before getting to anything resembling actual content.
From an anonymous guest account, he sent a message to Insight.
Big fan of yours. Can we meet sometime?
Hopefully, she would see through it to his true purpose and PM him back. Then he could warn her. She might even take it seriously; it was the best that he could do without actually finding out her real identity and approaching her in the real world. Not that he'd ever
do that; such a thing would be stupid, and highly risky for the both of them.
I just wish I could help Taylor, too.
<><>
Greg was a straight-A student at Winslow, a shoo-in for a college scholarship; he regularly pulled in class prizes for his work. But despite his best intentions, people tended to crowd around him to bask in the reflected glory, not because they actually liked him. His actual friends were few and far between; Taylor was one of the few girls who treated him the same as she treated everyone else. That is, with arrogant disdain. What put other people off actually attracted him; he felt that if a girl who disliked people could be persuaded to like him, he would have made a real friend.
Not that he intended to do anything more than be her friend; rumour had it that any boy sniffing around her ended up getting a very pointed reminded to leave her alone. Danny Hebert was a powerful figure in the city, and it was just the thing that he might do.
Whatever I do, whatever I say, I'm going to have to be careful.
He felt a certain kinship to her; he was isolated by his scholastic success, while she was set apart by her disdain for anyone who wasn't her. Yes, she occasionally bullied and victimised her fellow students – particularly Emma Barnes and Madison Clements – but to him that was a symptom of a greater problem. That was learned behaviour, he believed; learned from a powerful, ruthless father.
And what can be learned, can be unlearned. Once she saw that he actually had concern for her well-being, was willing to help her, perhaps he could connect with her.
I like her. I want her to see that she's likeable. Once she sees that, perhaps she will stop striking out at the world.
Of course, he had no illusions that it would be an overnight process. Her problems ran deep, but once she had accepted his friendship, he would do what he could to help her sort them out.
One step at a time.
Manually, he turned off his modem, then double-checked his computer for any sort of running software that might store information and retransmit it later. Finding nothing, he pulled up an encrypted file and typed in the key. Almost instantly, it opened up to where he had last finished working on it.
It was fairly large, over a hundred thousand words so far; he figured that it might be twice or three times that size before he was finished. It had evolved as he had written it; originally, it had been a mundane essay on the state of law and order in Brockton Bay, but some ideas in it had struck him as being interesting, and he had saved them before handing in the essay. Going back to the ideas, he had developed them, then written more on the subject, backing up the essay with his own observations. Currently it was titled
Right and Wrong, but he suspected that it might change again before he was finished with it.
'… instinctive reaction of the average person is to do good, to do right by the fellow man. It is only by association with others that one learns bad traits; to steal, to attack, to kill. Our laws, based around the instinct for good, tend to be lax, as most people understand the basis behind them on a visceral level. This fails us when we encounter an organisation of entrenched evil; we try to deal with it as per normal, and we fail. Unfortunately, those who reach positions of power seem to be quite adept at ignoring their inner good instinct … '
He frowned, typing a few corrections here and there, tightening some phrasing. Absent rules, people tended to play fair. It was when rules and laws came into being that they started to work to get around them. And so, for every law, there were a thousand loopholes. This was the basis of the work; he had hopes that it would end up on the best-seller list someday.
A few paragraphs came to him, and he typed them up, then saved the work, re-encrypting it as he did so. Some of the information in there came from the SO boards, and he devoutly hoped that the authors of the words he had stolen would have long since forgotten their posts by the time his
magnum opus made print.
Leaning back in his chair, he let his mind drift. After a few moments, he found himself pondering the concept of a world where people were inherently greedy, where laws were required to keep the unscrupulous from fleecing the less aware. Would it be a paradise, he wondered, or would it be even harsher, as things like speed limits and drinking age became an actual definitive aspect, as opposed to a general guideline?
Would crime be more prevalent or less? With stricter laws, would criminals pay heed to them, or ignore them at the risk of harsher jail terms, doled out by an uncaring justice system? With the police and superheroes more organised than the criminals, would such a world be a paradise of justice, or would the legal system there be just as disorganised as the criminals here?
He tried to imagine a mirrored Taylor in such a world; a sweet, gentle and kindly girl, she would be much easier to make friends with.
But would I be the sort of person that she would make friends with?
It was something to wonder about.
I'm socially adept, charismatic, intelligent … does this mean that a mirror-me would be the opposite? He shuddered.
I think I'd rather be me. But I'd still like to meet a mirror version of Taylor. She would probably be easier to get along with than the one we have at the moment.
Ensuring that his document was stored away again, he restarted the modem and logged on to the PHO site. There was no answer yet to his offer, but he had hopes. Insight was not known to be stupid, after all.
I just hope she gets back to me before Sellsword gets hold of her. The Syndicate villain had a well-deserved reputation for long-held grudges, and violence in general.
Shutting down his computer, he turned out the light and got into bed. It took him a while to get comfortable
; rolling over, he sought refuge in sleep. His last coherent thought was,
I wonder what a true mirror world would be like?
<><>
In the middle of the night, he sat up, bolt upright, eyes wide. In his mind's eye, he could see a machine. Fumbling on his night-light, he scrabbled for a pencil and pad, and sketched furiously. Page after page was covered in drawings and notes, the pencil flying over the paper. He had no idea what it was that he was drawing, but he knew that it was somehow important.
Finally, he faltered. His eyelids grew heavy; he scribbled a last few notes, and dropped the pad on the bedside table. The light clicked off, leaving bright after-images swimming in his vision.
I wonder what that thing is, anyway?
He was asleep before he could think of an answer.
<><>
"Wake up, honey. "
Slowly, his eyes edged their way open as someone shook him. That 'someone' turned out to be his mother.
"'m awake."
"Good," she told him briskly. "Your father will be back shortly, and then we'll be going out. He'd like you to mow the lawn today, if it's not too much trouble."
"No, no trouble," he agreed. He really didn't mind mowing the lawn; it was mindless exercise that left his brain to its own devices. "I'll get it done after breakfast."
"Great!" she told him. The crunch of tyres on gravel, followed by the beep of a horn, heralded the return of his father. "We'll see you later."
"Where are you going?" he asked curiously.
"Movies," she returned briefly. "That new Earth Aleph one."
There were three 'new Earth Aleph' movies playing at the moment; he didn't bother asking which one. "Well, have fun."
She grinned. "Oh, we will." Leaning down, she kissed him on the cheek. "It's good that you're responsible enough to be left on your own."
With that, she was gone, trotting down the stairs as he levered himself out of bed. It was a short trip to the bathroom, where he got into the shower.
Gradually, the hot spray woke him up, unlocking his mental processes. He dried and dressed; as he was sitting on the bed, pulling his shoes on, his gaze fell upon the notepad, and the interlude during the night returned to him.
What was that device which I was drawing?
Picking up the notepad, Greg began paging through it. The drawings looked strange, but he found that he could understand them. Wandering downstairs, he made himself some cereal and ate it, while still perusing the notebook.
After he rinsed the dish and spoon, he wandered out to the garage. His father considered himself a do-it-yourselfer, and the shelves were crammed with every type of junk available. Greg began to go through them, picking out bits and pieces. They didn't match the parts that he had visualised, not exactly, but somehow he knew that they would do.
After he had gotten all the parts together, he began to assemble them. Some didn't fit exactly, but he found that he could file them down, or in one case, chip a piece off the side, to make them slot into place. It took him a while, following the spidery notes that he had scribbled down, sometimes trailing off the edge of the page, but toward the end, he was pretty sure that he had gotten it right.
There were a couple of pieces that he wasn't quite sure how they fitted into the contraption, but with a bit of work, he got them connected up.
Adding a heavy battery and attaching it to the terminals was the work of a moment. And then he threw the switch.
Nothing seemed to be happening.
He eyed the thing; it wasn't humming, beeping or buzzing. He was pretty sure that it was a Tinker tech device of some sort. Which made him a Tinker. But he had no idea what the thing was supposed to do.
With a sigh, he threw it on to the work bench and pulled the lawnmower out.
If I mow the yard, maybe I'll have a better idea of what to do about it. Grunting with the effort, he wheeled the mower outside; soon a roar of engine noise indicated that he'd gotten it started.
On the work bench, lights blinked on the device; the drop on to the bench had connected two vital components. It began to function.
Several miles and a whole universe away, Taylor Hebert stared in confusion as her bedroom mirror became a window to another world …
End of Part Ten
Part Eleven