increase in terrorist acts both large and small every day, everywhere.
The tone of conversation in the rooms was different, too. It lacked the almost pleading exasperation of previous listings that wanted to teach and had become more militant. Much more us versus them. And that attitude, too, seemed to be becoming more mainstream with every passing day.
John simply lurked in the topic and chat rooms, gathering information, but he'd noticed one user, styled Watcher, who occasionally shook things up. Lately the
threats the Luddites made against Watcher for questioning their methods and ideas had become chilling.
He decided to seek out this character. Someone with that sobriquet might know some very interesting things, and might be someone he could add to his growing list of informants on the Web.
He was in luck; Watcher was on-line, discussing a recent bombing with the Luddites. If you could call such a hostile exchange a discussion.
He glanced around his whitewashed bedroom with its black
John checked out the address at the top of Watcher's messages and found it a dead end.
Narrowing it down to the university was good, but he'd need some power to get the information he wanted. He constructed a password that got him into the operational side of the MIT site—a little lockpick-and-insertion program that
Dieter had brought with him from the Sector was very useful here—and registered himself as a systems administrator. That essentially made him a system god, giving him access to all the on-site users' real tags.
He continued to trace Watcher, which was turning out to be a job and a half.
Aha! A freshman student at MIT, Watcher was Wendy Dorset. John hacked into her school records, finding a picture.
*I'd like to talk with you,* he sent.
There was a long pause. Finally she accepted the request, creating a secure shell in which they could speak. John's screen split into he said/she said columns, as did hers. Now they could communicate in real time.
*Who are you?* Watcher asked.
John's tag was AM, which stood for Action Man, not necessarily something he would ever reveal.
*I could be a friend,* John typed. *Why don't you blow oil these bozos. I think we have similar interests.*
*Similar interests?* she asked.
*Beyond making fools of fools,* he typed with a smile. *But first we should get
to know each other.*
*And how are we going to do that? And why should I trust you?*
*Trust?* he wrote. * You trust these guys? Hey, at least I'm not threatening to kill you if we ever meet*
*Good point. Okay, I'll ditch the creeps. They're getting more excited than is good for them anyway.* Watcher was gone for a moment then came back. *So, what do you want?*
*What drew you to that particular site?* John asked.
*It's rude to answer a question with a question,* Watcher pointed out.
*True, but I'm asking.*
And he wasn't going to answer any questions until he had a satisfactory answer.
*Whatever. I was just looking around when I found it. I wasn't looking for anything in particular, just killing time. Y'know? But something about the Sarah Connor story reached me. Maybe it was that lone-wolf thing. I'm a sucker for underdogs.*
*It turned out to be a really strange site,* Watcher went on. *And as for these idiots, I just can't help myself. I've gotta poke 'em.*
*People who take themselves very seriously can also be very dangerous,* John warned. *So how's the weather on the East Coast?* he asked, deciding to throw her a curve.
There was a long wait for Watcher's next post.
*Probably not as warm as it is waaaay down south,* Watcher finally replied.
John caught his breath. Sure
*this demonstrates why it's a bad idea to tease the crazies. One of them might be computer literate.*
*It may be cocky,* Watcher replied, *but I like to think of myself as being a little more than merely 'literate.'*
*Actually I think you are, too. The dangerous part is in assuming that because you're smart no one else is. It's always unwise to underestimate people. Leads to nasty surprises.*
Once again there was a long pause. *Are you warning me against yourself?
Whatever. What I really want to know is, what do you want?*
His brief review of Dorset's school records had made her sound like a straight arrow. What he'd observed of her interactions with the Luddites told him she had nerve and could think on her feet. The way she'd hidden her tracks told him she was damn smart. The way she'd found him told him she might be dangerous if
she wasn't handled right.
*I'm head of a kind of watchers' group, no pun intended,* he explained.
*Okay, here's my problem,* she answered. *Think of where I met you. Now, how do I know you're not a Luddite extremist yourself?*
*Tough one,* he agreed. *Ideally I would meet you face-to-face.*
he suggested.
*All right,* she replied, and typed a number. *Four o'clock tomorrow afternoon.
Eastern Standard Time.*
*Why not now?* he asked.
*It's not my number,* she wrote.
Then she was gone.
Sarah didn't dislike Dr. Ray; she just didn't respect him. She did think that he
might be useful, however, if she handled herself right. In a way, being back in one of the beige-dingy