Debatable Space (20 page)

Read Debatable Space Online

Authors: Philip Palmer

BOOK: Debatable Space
11.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

My team came to see me, and recoiled, but I beckoned them back and made them listen to my rasping demands.

A few days after that, I was able to use a voice-activated computer to send my emails. My paperwork was projected on a screen.
I started working again, running African Aid, while also researching my enemies on Google. And I began plotting my revenge.

After two weeks I discharged myself and went back to the office. I was able to wear a coverall over my polythene-sealed body.
I wore a brightly coloured Venetian carnival mask to hide the horror that was my face. My team were stunned, and unable to
speak when I arrived. So I threw them a bag of doughnuts and bitched about how many episodes I’d watched of a dumb sitcom
called
It’s a Dog’s life on Mars
, about a robot dog travelling through ancient Martian civilisations.

Then I started to make my plan come to life. I had written twenty pages of detailed notes and flowcharts to map out my strategy.
It required precision, and sublime boldness.

In the dead of night, nourished by pizza and french fries and Coke from a vending machine next to my desk, with only a computer
and a fiendishly cunning brain as my weapons, I declared war on the entire military-pharmaceutical complex of the USA.

First, I accessed the President of the United States’ private and personal email account. And I sent an email to him explaining
in lucid, persuasive terms that I had invented a virus which would make people 5 per cent less intelligent. I threatened to
unleash the virus on American soil unless I received a billion dollars in cash. I sent him comprehensive research findings
to prove I could do what I said. And I offered him a sample of the virus as evidence.

The email wasn’t signed by me of course, nor could it be traced to any computer I had ever owned or operated. Instead, the
email was directly trackable back to the university of Michigan, and was signed by the Nobel Prize-winning academic John A.
Foley.

The FBI of course checked it out and quickly discovered that the email was a hoax. Foley was exonerated of any responsibility
for these threatening and inane ravings, which were based of course on totally spurious science. Apologies were made. And
the identity of the mystery emailer went down in the FBI files as an unsolved mystery.

But the FBI’s security check was thorough and comprehensive, and it meant that Foley was now on their database, and was hence
routinely subjected to security and psychological profiling.

I then made use of a state-of-the-art firewall cracking “n” hacking software system created by one of our Jo’Burg startup
computer companies. With the aid of this powerful tool, I was able to hack into the FBI case files, and access their most
heavily classified files. And as a result, I was able to read the newly compiled FBI dossier on Foley – which revealed that
he had close associations with a group of businessmen and businesswomen called the Ludds, who specialised in low-tech investment
portfolios and had a history of bank frauds. Foley had been receiving six-figure payments from the Ludds for many years. His
academic objectivity was totally compromised; he had sold his soul many years before to Big Business.

Foley was also chief scientific adviser and boffin to Future Dreams, the manufacturers of the Plague. (This I already knew
of course – it was the reason I had targeted him.) Foley’s reputation as a scientist and idealist was a sham; he was in this
for the money.

Armed with the information from my FBI database computer hacking, I compiled a list of every board member of Future Dreams
and the Ludds. And I emailed every one of them to say that they had been infected by a fast-developing cancer which would
sap their personality in slow stages. The first symptom would be depression, sleepless nights, and an unbearable itching sensation.

Then I cashed in some major endowments and hired an international hitman to murder John A. Foley and make it look like suicide.

Okay, okay, let’s pause a moment! I know that last bit looks bad. Extremely bad, really – almost enough to turn me from hero
to villain in your eyes. And, I must concede, it’s an approach that did give me a few qualms. But I reassured myself with
the thought that I was engaged in an all-out war with a ruthless opponent. Millions had died in Africa because of this lab-created
Plague; I considered that what these bastards had done was an act of genocide. So I would argue that in such a case, murder
doesn’t constitute a crime – it’s merely the appropriate tool for the job.

You see? Are you persuaded? Hero not villain! Trust me on this.

The process of hiring a “hitman” was surprisingly easy. I didn’t use any of the gangsters who were so easy to find in the
bars near my office. I needed a premier service, which I got by Googling a series of nested encrypted sites. This took me
to some truly evil cyberplaces: sites for paedophiles, bestiality chat lines, S & M photo galleries. I discovered that if
I paid enough money, I could hire someone to be eaten by me. Or, if I preferred, to eat
me
. Neither option appealed . . .

Instead, I opted for what I hoped was a simple murder-for-cash transaction. I met a man in a bar who took money from me and
vanished, and I waited a week. Then the same man came back to get the details of the job. I provided dossiers and key information.

Then I sat back and waited. Eventually, I got a video bulletin on my phone from my news service saying that Foley had been
shot to death by a burglar, together with his wife and two children. The burglar had escaped, and there were no clues about
his or her identity. It was a flawless “hit”.

I had killed a man.

It felt good.

I had also been responsible for the death of his innocent wife and children. This, after a moment’s reflection, left me feeling
stunned, and appalled. What had I become? Was I a monster? A psychopath? Or was I no worse than a politician, who declares
a war then has to live with the collateral damage?

The sleepless nights continued. But the guilt refused to curdle and eat me up; I decided I could live with it. Sometimes,
you have to do wrong, in order to do right.

But then one evening, as I sat in my office, my phone beeped, and I picked up a text asking me to meet a man in a bar. A code
word was used; and I realised that this was the assassination service. Money was mentioned… a million dollars, twice
as much as the original fee.

I was terrified now. This was clearly blackmail. It was obvious I was in out of my depth. But I had no one to turn to, no
one who could help me. So I dressed myself in an all-over body-armour suit – thin enough that it didn’t show any bulges when
I wore my suit over it. I took a knife and a gun, sprayed myself with perfume to hide the “I’m about to shit myself” smell
of fear that clung in my nostrils, then I went to see my hitman-turned-extortionist.

We met in the Shona Bar. He drank orange juice. He kept the glass far from me, so I couldn’t poison it. It was a public place,
so I couldn’t threaten him with the gun. And I guessed, from his stance and aura of “don’t fuck with me-ness”, that in any
hand-to-hand combat situation, I would die instantly.

The hitman’s name was George. He apologised for pestering me. He apologised also for the deaths of the wife and kids. They
weren’t meant to be there; it was “just one of those things”. And George then explained that the extra money was a one-off
payment to cover unexpected expenses. It wasn’t in fact, as I might have thought, blackmail, it wasn’t a try-on. After today
I would never see him again.

It fucking well
was
blackmail of course, but there was nothing I could do about it. So I gave him the money and never saw him again.

However, the money was a stash left over from my crime-fighting days. Provided George touched it within twenty-four hours
of our meeting, it would release a slow-acting serum into his system that would induce paranoia. I hoped that he would hoard
it, and not spend it freely. But I was confident he would count it. They
always
count the money. Sometimes, I dream of George sinking into a paranoiac slump, racked with fear and unable to cope.

That’ll teach him for trying to fuck with
me
.

The murder of Foley was just another chess move; I had no intention of killing my enemies one by one. My methods were far
more guileful. I sent more emails out to the Ludds and the Future Dreams board members citing more details of the personality-sapping
cancer, and further suggesting that Foley hadn’t been killed by a burglar at all – he’d gone mad, killed his family, then
himself, and the authorities were covering it up.

And then I began leaking stories to the financial press about the precarious state of Future Dreams finances, pointing out
that a cheap antidote to the IS Plague would soon be available, patented by African scientists, blah de blah, blah de blah,
the upshot being, this would cut profits, since Future Dreams relied heavily on its trade of selling palliatives for plagues
it had bioengineered.

This leak was repeated verbatim in one of the financial papers. It took some hours before it was spotted that the journalist
had inadvertently slandered Future Dreams by accusing them of
bioengineering plagues for profit
.

Fearful of a possible damaging legal case, the paper took pre-emptive protective measures. In other words, it authorised an
in-depth investigation of Future Dreams, and in particular into the claim that it was bioengineering plagues. Rather to their
own astonishment, they quickly found a massive and compelling amount of evidence in support of their original unchecked story.
And the scandal broke.

And once a scandal breaks, in today’s media universe, it really breaks. Journalists were camped out on the lawns of the accused
men and women. Pundits held forth on breakfast TV. Topical sitcoms included jokes mocking Future Dreams. It was a media blitz.

After a few days of this Jeffray Colt, the deputy marketing manager of Future Dreams, committed suicide. His wife explained
that he sank into a terrible depression after the death of John A. Foley, and had suffered appalling bouts of itching that
had caused him to rub his skin raw. There was in fact no physical cause for this; the itching was brought about purely by
the power of my suggestion.

The next day, Dan Mathers, the head of research and development at Future Dreams, blew himself up in his own laboratory. A
day after that, three researchers in the Future Dreams lab drove a car off the Grand Canyon. Journalists besieged the house
of Future Dreams CEO Mark Malone, clamouring to hear his response to this spate of deaths. He denied everything, but that
night he was admitted to hospital after an overdose, and suffered irreversible brain damage. Three board directors shot each
other in a drunken suicide pact. Then Molton Hatcher, leader of the Ludds, confessed to a twenty-year-old bank fraud and hanged
himself in his prison cell. Three of his associates hanged themselves in the back room of their local church, though one survived,
and died later in hospital after eating his own tongue.

After a week, twenty-four guilty men and women were dead, all by their own hand.

And so, primed by my evil mind-fuck emails about the personality-corroding cancer, and fuelled by the press frenzy and the
constant TV and newspaper exposés, the suicides became epidemic, as I knew they would. It’s a principle of people-manipulation
psychology that high-status individuals under intense stress are highly susceptible to dreams, delusions and paranoias. These
men had engineered a plague to decimate Africa; my revenge was to use a metaphorical psychological “plague” to fuck them up
in the head.

It worked. And it was the best kind of justice; only the guilty were driven by their guilt to kill themselves. The innocent
were spared. What could be fairer?

Future Dreams survived; before long the cover-ups began, the fix was in. But we stopped getting new incidents of the IS Plague
in Africa. And African leaders, stung by the untrue report in the Western press that their own scientists had patented an
antidote to the plague, commissioned their university’s brightest scientist to patent an antidote to
something
. This resulted, five years later, in a virus that combated the symptoms of and essentially eradicated, MS, ME and diabetes.
The resulting profits made Africa
rich
, and eventually led to a state of affairs where the African Community of Nations was a net lender of money to Western countries,
rather than continuing to be a net borrower.

The political consequences of these deftly planted psych bombs never cease to astound me. I have performed, in my time, marvels
that have changed the history of the world. But no one knows of course. That’s my curse; to never get the credit.

On this occasion, however, I did not care.

It was four years before a team of scientists managed to graft on my new skin. I went for improved breast implants at the
same time, and insisted on tiny laughter lines around my eyes, to alleviate the otherwise overwhelming effect of pure, perfect,
glowing young skin.

On the day my graft took, I booked myself into the Bridal Suite of a 5-star hotel, got drunk on champagne, then lay naked
on the bed and stared and stared at myself in the ceiling mirror. I didn’t masturbate, I didn’t sleep. I just spent the night
admiring myself. A day before, I had been a flayed monster with bulging eyes who was unable to touch anyone, and whose appearance
sent children screaming away.

Now I was beautiful. But psychologically maimed. To this day, there are times when I cannot bear to touch anyone. Even now,
I become hysterical if I see someone peel the skin off a chicken; and blisters and skin abrasions cause me to have panic attacks.

But I internalise all these phobias and fears. I try not to dwell. I self-therapise.

Secretly, though, I consider myself to be a monster, a horror – a flayed beast. Nothing will ever persuade me otherwise. But
I have an inner cesspool, where all my bad thoughts and fears go. There dwells the monster. There my hate broods and simmers.

Other books

Hawk Quest by Robert Lyndon
Intimate Strangers by Denise Mathews
Ring of Truth by Ciji Ware
Before She Dies by Mary Burton
Crooked by Camilla Nelson
Mothers and Daughters by Howard, Minna
Rotten Luck! by Peter Bently