Terminal Compromise by Winn Schwartau (my reading book .txt) 📖
- Author: Winn Schwartau
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then? He realized the answer was easier found now that he was a
man of experience: Do Something About It.
Far from a rebel looking for a cause, the cause jumped all over
Tyrone with a vengeance and the tenacity of a barnacle.
All at once Scott knew that Tyrone was serious and that he would
be a better friend if he congratulated instead of castigated.
“You know, I kind of understand a little. Same thing with my ex-
wife.”
“Hey, that’s not fair, man,” Tyrone vigorously objected. “Maggie
was a dingbat . . .”
“I know that and she knew that,” Scott agreed, “but that was what
made her Maggie.” Tyrone nodded, remembering her antics. “And
in some ways we still love each other. After ten years of fun,
great fun, she wanted to get off of the planet more than I did,
so she went to California.” The softness in Scott’s voice said
he still cared about Maggie, that she was a cherished part of his
life, that was and would remain in the past.
Scott shook off the melancholy and continued. “It’s the same for
you. You’re married to the FBI, and while you still love it, you
need to let it go to move on with your life.”
“Y’know, I don’t know why everyone says you’re so stupid,” Tyrone
said with respect. “UFO’s aside, you can actually make sense.”
“Maybe, maybe not. Doesn’t really matter. But I’m doing exactly
what I want to do. And the day it stops being fun, I’m outta
here.”
“Isn’t that the arrogance of wealth speaking?” Tyrone asked.
“And you’re any different? The 22 room Tudor shack you live in
is not exactly my vision of poverty. As I see it, it’s one of
the benefits,” Scott said unembarrassed by his financial securi-
ty. “Before I made my money, I swore that when I got rich, I
would give something back. You know, to the planet or society or
something. Do something useful and not for the money.” Scott
spoke with honest enthusiasm. “But I don’t believe there’s a
rule that says I have to be miserable. I love what I do, and
well, I don’t know. The concept of career is different for me.
I like the idea of doing a little bit of everything for the
experience. You know, I drove a cab for one night. Glad I did,
but never again.”
“So?” asked Tyrone.
“So, do what you want to do and enjoy it. Period. As a friend of
a friend says, live long and prosper.”
Scott let Tyrone sit in contemplative silence as the waiter
brought them two more. They were doing a good job of sticking to
the plan of getting ‘shiffaced’.
“You know,” Tyrone opined, “INTERNET is only the tip of the
iceberg. NASA is having ECCO and CERT look into over $12 Million
in unaccounted-for telephone calls. The Justice Department sold
old computers containing the names and other details of the
Witness Protection Program to a junk dealer in Kentucky and
they’re suing him to get them back. The Secret Service is rede-
signing its protection techniques for the President since someone
got into their computers and copied the plans. The computers at
Mitre have been used by hackers for years to get at classified
information. The public hears less than 1% of the computer
problems in the government. And still, no one will do anything.
There’s even talk that the missing Plutonium that the Israelis
theoretically stole in 1981 was actually a computer error.”
“What do you want to do about it?” Scott was asking as a friend,
not a reporter.
“First,” said a newly determined Tyrone, “I’m gonna nail me some
of these mothers, and I’ll do it with your help. Then, after
that?” Tyrone’s old smile was suddenly back. “I think I’m gonna
kick myself some government ass.” Tyrone roared with laughter
and Scott joined the contagious behavior. “In the meantime, I
want to take a look at some blackmail. I think you may be
right.”
“About what? I don’t listen to what I tell you.”
“Remember you said that the blackmail scheme wasn’t really
blackmail.” Tyrone shifted his weight in the chair and he
reached for the words through is fogged mind. “You said it might
be a way to make us too busy to see our own shadow. That it was
a cover up for another dissociated crime.”
“Yeah? It might be,” Scott said.
Tyrone’s body heaved while he snickered. “We finally have a lead.
Demands have been made.”
“What kind? Who? What do they want?” Scott’s journalist mind
clicked into gear. “What about the computer virus crap?”
“I’m kind of looking into both, but this morning my interest was
renewed. A corporate type I met says not only he, but another 25
or more of his corporate brethren are getting the same treatment.
If he’s right, someone is demanding over $30 Million in ransoms.”
“Jesus Christ! Is that confirmed?” Scott probed.
“Yes. That’s why I said you were right.”
The implications were tremendous, even to Scott’s clouded mind.
While the legal system might not be convinced that computer
radiation was responsible for an obviously well coordinated
criminal venture, he, as an engineer, realized how vulnerable
anyone – everyone was. The questions raced through his mind all
at once.
Over a few dozen oysters and not as many drinks, Scott and Ty
proceeded to share their findings. Scott had documents up the
ying-yang, documents he couldn’t use in a journalistic sense, but
might be valuable to the recent developments in Ty’s case. He
had moved the files to his home; they were simply taking too much
space around his desk at the office. They were an added attrac-
tion to the disaster he called his study. Scott agreed to show
Ty some of them. After the meeting with Franklin Dobbs, and
knowing there might be others in similar situations, Ty wanted an
informal look at Scott’s cache.
“I’ve been holding back, Ty,” Scott said during a lull in their
conversation.
“How do you mean?”
“I got a call from a guy I had spoken to a few months ago; I
assume he sent me those files, and he said that key executives
throughout the country were being blackmailed. Some were borrow-
ing money from the mob to pay them off.”
“Do you have names? Who?” Tyrone’s took an immediate interest.
“Let me see if I have’m here,” he said as he reached for his
small notebook in the sports jacket draped over the back of his
chair. “Yeah, he only gave me three, not much to go on. A
Faulkner, some banker from L.A., a Wall Street tycoon named
Henson and another guy Dobbs, Franklin Dobbs.”
“Dobbs! How the hell do you know about Dobbs?” Tyrone yelled so
loud several remaining bar patrons looked over to see what the
ruckus was.
Scott was taken aback by the outburst. “What’re you hollering
about?”
“Shit, goddamned shit, I don’t need this.” Tyrone finished one
and ordered another drink. He was keeping his promise; well on
the way to getting severely intoxicated. “Dobbs. Dobbs is the
poor fucker that came into my office.”
“You saw Dobbs? He admitted it?” Scott’s heart raced at the
prospect of a connection. Finally.
“Scott,” Tyrone asked quietly, “I have no right to ask you this,
but I will anyway. If you find anything, on Dobbs, can you hold
back? Just for a while?” A slight pleading on Tyrone’s part.
“Why?” Was this part of the unofficial trade with Ty for earlier
information?
The waiter returned with the credit card. Tyrone signed the
slip, giving the waiter entirely too much of a tip. “I’ll tell
you on the train. Let’s go.”
“Where?”
“To your house. You have a computer, don’t you?”
“Yeah . . .”
“Well, let’s see if we can find out who the other 25 are.”
They took a cab from the Scarsdale station to Scott’s house. No
point in ending up in the clink for a DUI, even with a Federal
Agent in tow. Scott’s study was in such disarray that he liter-
ally scraped off books and papers from the couch onto the floor
to find Ty a place to sit and he piled up bigger piles of files
to make room for their beers on one of his desks.
Scott and Tyrone hadn’t by any means sobered up on the train, but
their thinking was still eminently clear. During the hour ride,
they reviewed what they knew.
Several prominent businessmen were being actively blackmailed.
In addition, the blackmailer, or a confederate, was feeding
information to the media. At a minimum the Times, and probably
the Expos. Perhaps other media as well were in receipt of simi-
lar information, but legitimate news organizations couldn’t have
much to do with it in its current form.
Presumably then, like Scott, other reporters were calling names
in the files. Tyrone reasoned that such an exercise might be a
well planned maneuver on the part of the perpetrators.
“Think
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