New York City
Monday, November 28th, 7:58 AM EST
26 Days, 16 Hours, 2 Minutes until Cyberjihad
I
have the information to nail that son of a bitch to
the wall, Christopher Moran thought, pulling a
floppy disk from his breast pocket and rotating it
between his fingertips. He stared through the taxi's
dirty window with eyes that ached. The view of the
financial district appeared and disappeared between
the buildings as the cab made its way downtown. Glancing
up at the rearview mirror, he saw the cabby's eyes
watching him.
"Rough weekend, my friend?"
Christopher glared out of his window. "You have no
idea."
Christopher had grown suspicious of the consultant hired
to help with BIG's (Bond Index Group) computer installation.
Big also, were the troubled business unit's computer problems.
The root cause of project delays and complications pointed
toward the consultant. Still, this left one unanswered question.
Why had the consultant modified BIG's network hubs? This
was way beyond the scope of the project and even so, it
was not their responsibility. Christopher tried to confront
him, but was met by marked arrogance. This sparked a fire
within Christopher, which drove him to thoroughly examine
everything twice until they were dead charred embers. He
had poured over the computer configuration and log files
until headaches from eyestrain pounded his temples. The
past weekend's efforts were just as fatiguing, but in the
end, productive. He slipped the floppy disk back into his
pocket and smiled. He had the consultant nailed.
The taxi turned the corner as vapor peeled off the pavement
and formed a dreary mist three feet into the air. The East
River's polluted water, seeping into New York Harbor, capped
one end of the street. At the other end sat a brown, sandstone
House of God with a neo-gothic spire that was dwarfed by
the skyscrapers surrounding it. A black wrought iron fence
with spear shaped pickets enclosed the church grounds. Weather-beaten
gravestones, many of them hundreds of years old, lay banded
in tight rows across the landscape.
The cab double-parked next to a livery limousine halfway
up the street and Christopher handed the driver a ten. "Keep
the change."
Wading through the mist, he crossed the street toward the
billion-dollar Money Center Banking and Security Holdings
building that dominated the skyline. The upper floors of
the forty-seven story building had glass enclosed turret
offices that gave the occupants a panoramic view of the
city. Christopher wove through the throng of Wall Street
suits as he approached the entrance, two revolving doors
flanked by five-story granite columns. The acronym MCBASH
crowned the doors in gold letters.
Screeching tires spun on the damp pavement behind him. He
turned, but it was too late. The wheels of the yellow cab
caught and the sedan careened off the street and up onto
the sidewalk, smashing into a coffee vendor's silver cart.
Christopher felt adrenaline course down his spine as the
muscles in his body clenched. He stretched his arm out like
a running back fending off a tackle. It would be his final
move. The car bulldozed the wagon into Christopher and pinned
him against a pillar. The impact hurled the merchant from
his cart and he fell unconscious at the curb. The cabby
jumped out of his mangled wreck and rushed over to Christopher.
"Allahu Akbar!" he cried.
Blood dripped from Christopher's mouth and ears like oil
from an engine's blown head gasket. The cabby slipped his
hand inside Christopher's jacket and removed the floppy
disk as a crowd began to form.
"I've got to get help," he yelled to nobody
in particular as he pushed his way through the crowd and
disappeared.
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