SFworld 版 (精华区)
作 家: xian (去日留痕) on board 'SFworld'
题 目: dogwalker (3)
来 源: 哈尔滨紫丁香站
日 期: Thu Sep 25 11:28:12 1997
出 处: byh.bbs@bbs.net.tsinghua.edu.cn
发信人: dogwalker (沉苇), 信区: SFworld
标 题: dogwalker (3)
发信站: BBS 水木清华站 (Thu Jul 17 02:10:08 1997)
How I finally got to meet Jesse H. was dervish,
the best I ever thought of. Which made me wonder
wh I never thought of it before, except that I never
before had Dogwalker like a parrot saying "stupid
idea" every time I thought of something. By the
time I finally got a plan that he didn't say "stupid
idea," I was almost drowned in the deepest light-
holes of my lucidity. I mean I was going at a hundred
watts by the time I satisfied him.
First we found out who did babysitting for them
when Jesse H. and Mrs Jesse went out on the town
(which for Nice People in G-boro means walking
around the mall wishing there was something to do
and then taking a piss in the public john). They had
two regular teenage girls who usually came over and
ignored their children for a fee, but when these
darlettes were otherwise engaged, which meant they
had a contract to get squeezed and poked by some
half-zipped boy in exchange for a humbuger and a
vid, they called upon Mother Hubbard s Homecare
Hotline. So I most carefully assinuated myself into
Mother Hubbard's estimable organization by passing
myself off as a lamentably prepubic fourteen-year-
old, specializing in the northwest section of town
and on into the county. All this took a week, but
Walker was in no hurry. Take the time to do it right,
he said, if we hurry somebody's going to notice the
blur of motion and look our way and just by looking
at us they'll undo-us. A horizontal mind that boy
had.
Came a most delicious night when the Hunts went
out to play, and both their diddle-girls were busy
being squeezed most delectably (and didn't we havc
a lovely time persuading two toddle-boys to do the
squeezing that very night). This news came to Mr,
and Mrs. Jesse at the very last minute, and they had
no choice but to call Mother Hubbard's, and isn't it
lovely that just a half hour before, sweet little Stevie
Queen, being moi, called in and said that he was
available for baby-stomping after all. Ein and ein
made zwei, and there I was being dropped off by a
Mother Hubbard driver at the door of the Jesse
Hunt house, whereupon I not only got to look upon
the beatific face of Mr. Fed himself, I also got to
have my dear head patted by Mrs. Fed, and then
had the privilege of preparing little snacks for fussy
Fed Jr. and foul-mouthed Fedene, the five-year-old
and the three-year-old, while Microfed, the one-
year-old (not yet human and, if I am any judge of
character, not likely to live long enough to become
such) sprayed uric acid in my face while I was diaper-
ing him. A good time was had by all.
Because of my heroic efforts, the small creatures
were in their truckle beds quite early, and being a
most fastidious baby-tucker, I browsed the house
looking for burglars and stumbling, quite by chance,
upon the most useful information about the beak-
rat whose secret self-chosen name I was trying to
learn. For one thing, he had set a watchful hair upon
each of his bureau drawers, so that if I had been
inclined to steal, he would know that unlawful access
of his drawers had been attempted. I learned that
he and his wife had separate containers of everything
in the bathroom, even when they used the same
brand of toothpaste, and it was he, not she, who
took care of all their prophylactic activities (and not
a moment too soon, thought I, for I had come to
know their children). He was not the sort to use
lubrificants or little pleasure-giving ribs, either. Only
the regulation government-issue hard-as-concrete
rubber rafts for him, which suggested to my most
pernicious mind that he had almost as much fun
between the sheets as me.
I learned all kinds of joyful information, all of it
trivial, all of it vital. I never know which of the
threads I grasp are going to make connections deep
within the lumens of my brightest caves. But I never
before had the chance to wander unmolested
through a person's own house when searching for
his P-word. I saw the notes his children brought
home from school, the magazines his family
received, and more and more I began to see that
Jesse H. Hunt barely touched his family at any point.
He stood like a waterbug on the surface of life,
without ever getting his feet wet. He could die, and
if nobody tripped over the corpse it would be weeks
before they noticed. And yet this was not because
he did not care. It was because he was so very very
careful. He examined everything, but through the
wrong end of the microscope, so that it all became
very small and far away. I was a sad little boy by
the end of that night, and I whispered to Microfed
that he should practice pissing in male faces, because
that's the only way he would ever sink a hook into
his daddy's face.
"What if he wants to take you home?" Dogwalker
asked.me, and I said, "No way he would, nobody
does that," but Dogwalker made sure I had a place
to go all the same, and sure enough, it was Doggy
who got voltage and me who went limp. I ended
up riding in a beak-rat buggy, a genuine made-in-
America rattletrap station wagon, and he took me to
the for-sale house where Mama Pimple was waiting
crossly for me and made Mr. Hunt go away because
he kept me out too late. Then when the door was
closed Mama Pimple giggled her gig and chuckled
her chuck, and Walker himself wandered out of the
back room and said, "That's one less favor you owe
me, Mama Pimple," and she said, "No, my dear
boyoh, that's one more favor you owe me," and
then they kissed a deep passionate kiss if you can
believe it. Did you imagine anybody ever kissed
Mama Pimple that way? Dogwalker is a boyful of
shocks.
"Did you get all you needed?" he asks me.
"I have P-words dancing upward," says I, "and
I'll have a name for you tomorrow in my sleep."
"Hold onto it and don't tell me," says Dogwalker.
"I don't want to hear a name until after we have his
finger."
That magical day was only hours away, because
the girl-whose name I never knew and whose face
I never saw-was to cast her spell over Mr. Fed the
very next day. As Dogwalker said, this was no job
for lingeree. The girl did not dress pretty and pre-
tended to be lacking in the social graces, but she
was a good little clerical who was going through a
most distressing period in her private life, because
she had undergone a premature hysterectomy, poor
lass, or so she told Mr. Fed, and here she was losing
her womanhood and she had never really felt like a
woman at all. But he was so kind to her, for weeks
he had been so kind, and Dogwalker told me after-
ward how he locked the door of his office for just a
few minutes, and held her and kissed her to make
her feel womanly, and once his fingers had all made
their little impressions on the thin electrified plastic
microcoating all over her lovely naked back and
breasts, she began to cry and most gratefully in-
formed him that she did not want him to be unfaith-
ful to his wife for her sake, that he had already given
her such a much of a lovely gift by being so kind
and understanding, and she felt better thinking that
a man like him could bear to touch her knowing she
was defemmed inside, and now she thought she had
the confidence to go on. A very convincing act,
and one calculated to get his hot naked handprints
without giving him a crisis of conscience that might
change his face and give him a whole new set of
possible Ps.
The microsheet got all his fingers from several
angles, and so Walker was able to dummy out a
finger mask for our inside man within a single night.
Right index. I looked at it most skeptically, I fear,
because I had my doubts already dancing in the little
lightpoints of my inmost mind. "Just one finger?"
"All we get is one shot," said Dogwalker. "One
single try."
"But if he makes a mistake, if my first password
isn't right, then he could use the middle finger on
the second try."
"Tell me, my vertical pricket, whether you think
Jesse H. Hunt is the sort of burr-oak rat who makes
mistakes?"
To which I had to answer that he was not, and
yet I had my misgivings and my misgivings all had
to do with needing a second finger, and yet I am
vertical, not horizontal, which means that I can see
the present as deep as you please but the future's
not mine to see, que sera, sera.
From what Doggy told me, I tried to imagine Mr.
Fed's reaction to this nubile flesh that he hsd
pressed. If he had poked as well as peeked, I thmk
it would have changed his P-word, but when she told
him that she would not want to compromise his
uncompromising virtue, it reinforced him as a most
regular or even regulation fellow and his name
remained pronouncedly the same, and his P-word
also did not change. "InvictusXYZrwr," quoth I to
Dogwalker, for that was his veritable password, I
knew it with more certainty than I had ever had
before.
"Where in hell did you come up with that?" says
he.
"If I knew how I did it, Walker, I'd never miss at
all," says I. "I don't even know if it's in the goo or
in the zoo. All the facts go down, and it all gets
mixed around, and up come all these dancing P-
words, little pieces of P."
"Yeah but you don't just make it up, what does
it mean?"
"Invictus is an old poem in a frame stuck in his
bureau drawer, which his mama gave him when he
was still a little fed-to-be. XYZ is his idea of random-
izing, and rwr is the first U.S. President that he
admired. I don't know why he chose these words
now. Six weeks ago he was using a different P-word
with a lot of numbers in it, and six weeks from now
he'll change again, but right now-"
"Sixty percent sure?" asked Doggy.
"I give no percents this time," says I. "I've never
roamed through the bathroom of my subject before.
But this or give me an assectomy, I've never been
more sure."
Now that he had the P-word, the inside guy began
to wear his magic finger every day, looking for a
chance to be alone in Mr. Fed's office. He had
already created the preliminary files, like any routine
green card requests, and buried them within his
work area. All he needed was to go in, sign on as
Mr. Fed, and then if the system accepted his name
and P-word and finger, he could call up the files,
approve them, and be gone within a minute. But he
bad to have that minute.
And on that wonderful magical day he had it. Mr.
Fed had a meeting and his secretary sprung a leak
a day early, and in went Inside Man with a perfectly
legitimate note to leave for Hunt. He sat before the
terminal, typed name and P-word and laid down his
phony finger, and the machine spread wide its lovely
legs and bid him enter. He had the files processed
in forty seconds, laying down his finger for each
green, then signed off and went on out. No sign,
no sound that anything was wrong. As sweet as
summertime, as smooth as ice, and all we had to do
was sit and wait for green cards to come in the mail.
`Who you going to sell them to?" says I.
"I offer them to no one till I have clean greens in
my hand," says he. Because Dogwalker is careful.
What happened was not because he was not careful.
Every day we walked to the ten places where the
envelopes were supposed to come. We knew they
wouldn't be there for a week-the wheels of govern-
ment grind exceeding slow, for good or ill. Every
day we checked with Inside Man, whose name and
face I have already given you, much good it will do,
since both are no doubt different by now. He told
us every time that all was the same, nothing was
changed, and he was telling the truth, for the fed
was most lugubrious and palatial and gave no leaks
that anything was wrong. Even Mr. Hunt himself did
not know that aught was amiss in his little kingdom;:
Yet even with no sign that I could name, I was
jumpy every morning and sleepless every night.
"You walk like you got to use the toilet," says
Walker to me, and it is verily so. Something is
wrong, I say to myself, something is most deeply
wrong, but I cannot find the name for it even though
I know, and so I say nothing, or lie to myself and
try to invent a reason for my fear. "It's my big
chance," says I. "To be twenty percent of rich."
"Rich," says he, "not just a fifth."
"Then you'll be double rich."
And he just grins at me, being the strong and
silent type.
"But then why don't you sell nine," says I, "and
keep the other green? Then you'll have the money
to pay for it, and the green to go where you want
in all the world."
But he just laughs at me and says, "Silly boy, my
dear sweet pinheaded lightbrained little friend. If
someone sees a pimp like me passing a green, he'll
tell a fed, because he'll know there's been a mistake.
Greens don't go to boys like me."
"But you won't be dressed like a pimp," says I,
"and you won't stay in pimp hotels."
"I'm a low-class pimp," he says again, "and so
however I dress that day, that's just the way pimps
dress. And whatever hotel I go to, that's a low-class
pimp hotel until I leave."
"Pimping isn't some disease," says I. "It isn't in
your gonads and it isn't in your genes. If your daddy
was a Kroc and your mama an Iacocca, you wouldn't
be a pimp."
"The hell I wouldn't," says he. "I'd just be a high-
class pimp, like my mama and my daddy. Who do
you think gets green cards? You can't sell no virgins
on the street."
I thought that he was wrong and I still do. If
anybody could go from low to high in a week, it s
Dogwalker. He could be anything and do anything,
and that's the truth. Or almost anything. If he could
do anything then his story would have a different
ending. But it not his fault. Unless you blame pigs
because they can't fly. I was the vertical one, wasn t
I? I should have named my suspicions and we
wouldn't have passed those greens.
I held them in my hands, there in his little room,
all ten of them when he spilled them out on the bed.
To celebrate he jumped up so high he smacked his
head on the ceiling again and again, which made
them ceiling tiles dance and flip over and spill dust
all over the room. "I flashed just one, a single one
says he, "and a cool million was what he said, and
then I said what if ten? And he laughs and says fill
in the check yourself."
"We should test them," says I.
"We can't test them," he says. "The only way to
test it is to use it, and if you use it then your print
and face are in its memory forever and so we could
never sell it."
"Then sell one, and make sure it's clean."
"A package deal," he says. "If I sell one, and
they think I got more by I'm holding out to raise
the price, then I may not live to collect for the other
nine, because I might have an accident and lose
these little babies. I sell all ten tonight at once, and
then I'm out of the green card business for life."
But more than ever that night I am afraid, he's
out selling those greens to those sweet gentlebodies
who are commonly referred to as Organic Crime,
and there I am on his bed, shivering and dreaming
because I know that something will go most deeply
wrong but I still don't know what and I still don't
know why. I keep telling myself, you're only afraid
because nothing could ever go so right for you, you
can't believe that anything could ever make you rich
and safe. I say this stuff so much that I believe that
I believe it, but I don't really, not down deep, so I
shiver again and finally I cry, because after all my
body still believes I'm nine, and nine-year-olds have
tear ducts very easy of access, no password required.
Well he comes in late that night, and I'm asleep he
thinks, and so he walks quiet instead of dancing, but
I can hear the dancing in his little sounds, I know
he has the money all safely in the bank, and so when
he leans over to make sure if I'm asleep, I say,
"Could I borrow a hundred thou?"
So he slaps me and he laughs and dances and
sings, and I try to go along, you bet I do, I know I
should be happy, but then at the end he says, "You
just can't take it, can you? You just can't handle it,"
and then I cry all over again, and he just puts his
arm around me like a movie dad and gives me play-
punches on the head and says, "I'm gonna marry
me a wife, I am, maybe even Mama Pimple herself,
and we'll adopt you and have a little spielberg family
in Summerfield, with a riding mower on a real grass
lawn."
"I'm older than you or Mama Pimple," says I, but
he just laughs. Laughs and hugs me until he thinks
that I'm all right. Don't go home, he says to me that
night, but home I got to go, because I know I'll cry
again, from fear or something, anyway, and I don't
want him to think his cure wasn't permanent. "No
thanks," says I, but he just laughs at me. "Stay here
and cry all you want to, Goo Boy, but don't go
home tonight. I don't want to be alone tonight, and
sure as hell you don't either." And so I slept
between his sheets, like a brother, him punching and
tickling and pinching and telling dirty jokes about
his whores, the most good and natural night I spent
in all my life, with a true friend, which I know you
don't believe, snickering and nickering and ickering
your filthy little thoughts, there was no holes plugged
that night because nobody was out to take pleasure
from nobody else, just Dogwalker being happy and
wanting me not to be so sad.
And after he was asleep, I wanted so bad to know
who it was he sold them to, so I could call them up
and say, "Don't use those greens, cause they aren't
clean. I don't know how, I don't know why, but the
feds are onto this, I know they are, and if you use
those cards they'll nail your fingers to your face."
But if I called would they believe me? They were
careful too. Why else did it take a week? They had
one of their nothing goons use a card to make sure
it had no squeaks or leaks, and it came up clean.
Only then did they give the cards to seven big boys,
with two held in reserve. Even Organic Crime, the
All-seeing Eye, passed those cards same as we did.
I think maybe Dogwalker was a little bit vertical
too. I think he knew same as me that something was
wrong with this. That's why he kept checking back
with the inside man, cause he didn't trust how good
it was. That's why he didn't spend any of his share.
We'd sit there eating the same old schlock, out of
his cut from some leg job or my piece from a data
wipe, and every now and then he'd say, "Rich man's
food sure tastes good." Or maybe even though he
wasn't vertical he still thought maybe I was right
when I thought something was wrong. Whatever ha
thought, though, it just kept getting worse and worsc
for me, until the morning when we went to see the
inside man and the inside man was gone.
Gone clean. Gone like he never existed. His
apartment for rent, cleaned out floor to ceiling. A
phone call to the fed, and he was on vacation, which
meant they had him, he wasn't just moved to another
house with his newfound wealth. We stood there in
his empty place, his shabby empty hovel that was
ten times better than anywhere we ever lived, and
Doggy says to me, real quiet, he says, "What was
it? What did I do wrong? I thought I was like Hunt,
I thought I never made a single mistake in this job,
in this one job."
--
情 深 不 寿 剑 钢 易 折
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