Here's an abbreviated version of a story I've been banging on forever. Hope you like it.
EDIT: Formatting's a little hairy here and I see the forum doesn't allow me to curse. Ah well.
1
Wendy’s Jetta shot down the street until it was just a small, gray dot on the horizon. I watched her go from the front window of the apartment we shared – or used to share. This time she packed her bags before she stormed out. This time all she left me was a pair of skid marks in the driveway.
There was nothing spectacular about our last fight. She was still the same callous, domineering woman I’d always known and I was still just a computer nerd and a slacker. But this time there was an angry undertone to everything we said. Maybe we finally decided there was no changing one another.
I suppose I could have done more productive things at this point. Instead I grabbed a beer from the fridge, a regular old Budweiser and not one of those horrible imports Wendy always bought. They were showing Jaws on TBS for the thousandth time, but since Wendy didn’t like “science fiction” films I never got to watch it.
For the first time in four years I was alone Friday night. I untucked my shirt and propped my feet up on the coffee table. I drank the beer directly from the bottle and didn’t use a coaster. I tried very hard not to dwell on her but I just couldn’t do it. The beer was all gone by the time the shark was dining on Robert Shaw.
I was still alone the next morning, except for an impressive hangover no pill could penetrate. When I got downstairs I knew better than to count the bottle caps I had left on the counter, arranged in a slightly skewed “W.”
It was an appallingly bright Saturday morning that played hell on my bloodshot eyes. I got in my car and drove around town for a little bit, switching stations whenever they played a song that reminded me of Wendy. Eventually I switched to AM.
There was no real mystery in where I was going. Around noon I pulled into the parking lot of my local computer superstore. Wearing dirty shirts and foregoing coasters was one thing but what I really wanted to do was get myself a brand new computer.
Before I met Wendy I spent most of my free time at my PC. I’d like to say that I was writing a novel or even balancing my checkbook. The truth is I was almost always playing a game. From the time I was twelve I’ve been hooked on computer games. Space games, strategy games, puzzle games, shoot ‘em ups, didn’t matter. I played them every moment I could.
And then I met Wendy. She hated computer games. Complete and utter wastes of time, she said. It was a minor miracle that she let me keep my old PC around the house. I told her I had to do things on it for work now and then, which was almost true.
But now I could play games all day and night if I wanted. I was already contemplating the other rash things I would do now that she was no longer the bane of my existence. As I walked into the computer department I swore not to shave or change shirts for the rest of the weekend.
The morning light was one thing but I was unprepared for the visual assault that met me inside. Flashing lights, thundering speakers, and walls built from televisions and computer monitors all fought for my attention.
In five years time the world of home computing had evolved into something I was no longer familiar with. I was at the mercy of the high schooler salesman who was there to separate me from my savings account. The kid was a winner; jet-black hair and a rash of tattoos no prospective employer would ever miss.
My new PC was not the best they had by certainly something that was beyond running circles around the aging paperweight of a computer I still had in the basement. I added larger speakers, a huge monitor, and quite a few accessories that I’m sure my high schooler was thrilled to load into the shopping cart. Fortunately the trend had been lower prices and bundle packaging so I escaped without needing a second mortgage.
Now all I needed was something to play.
My last look at a computer game was also five years ago. That was five years in an industry where six months was eternity. The last game I bought was barely more than squares and bleeping noises compared to what was on the market now.
The high schooler had followed me to the gaming section but it was clear he was ready to send me to the checkout lines so he could return to the sales floor and pad his commission-driven lifestyle. The first game I picked up was “epic” according to him while the second was “way cool.”
“What about this one?” I asked, pointing to a section on the far side of the strategy game aisle. The box was simple, plain even, but the words were mesmerizing in bright red letters. “Build a nation to withstand the test of rising empires!”
“We just go that one in,” High School said quietly. “It’s supposed to be...different.”
Knowing that further elaboration was beyond him I nodded and dropped the game in the cart. Time to blow up the credit card.
I checked the answering machine first thing when I got back home. Mom might have called, I lied to myself.
The PC setup went smoothly. Sometime during between now and the last time I put a computer together some kind soul decided to color code all the external wiring. I attached the monitor, speakers, mouse and keyboard with no problems. I finished up by attaching a web camera – a “free” bonus that came with the PC.
Despite all the supposed dummy-proof instructions I was still just a little surprised when everything seemed to work right the first time. The machine booted up with a hum of raw power. The noise of the CD-ROM sounded like a 747 taking off.
I had transferred my cable Internet equipment from the old PC and was able to check my email right away. I told myself I wasn’t looking for anything in particular but who was I kidding? Seeing that my inbox was empty only depressed me even more. I was getting ready to shut everything down when I remembered the game.
I didn’t noticed in the store but the box was much smaller than the games I used to remember. The insides were absolutely stuffed with instructions, maps, key cards, advertisements, and of course the game itself on CD. I tossed it in the drive and thumbed through the thick manual while it installed.
My first though that was perhaps I had made a mistake. The instructions were very, very detailed. I read something, thought I understood it, read something else that seemed to contradict the first section, then went back and realized I had never understood anything to begin with. Great, I thought. It’s like I’m back in my high school chemistry class.
Eventually, as I had done with every power tool and consumer electronic device I had ever owned, the instructions were tossed aside.
The game started up. Flashing animations exploded across the huge monitor and a triumphant musical score roared from the new speakers. It was like Gettysburg in my living room. I sat transfixed at the graphics, the detail of which was just a half step away from an actual movie. I watched nations struggle for survival, farming, building, negotiating, and making war. By the time the introduction had played out I was ready to conquer the world.
I was given a series of choices to start and I made them mostly at random. I began the game as leader of a people I called the Losers. Self-esteem was never my strong suit. I started with a single piece on a small area of grassland. Everything beyond a few spaces was dark. It seemed I would have to explore my lands one turn at a time.
I was deciding where to move first when a window popped onscreen. “This might be a good place to start a city. Hit for City.” I hit the button and my first city was created. I changed the default name to Timville for want of something better and directed the town to start building an army. You can’t conquer the world without an army.
Through trial and much error I picked up on the basic mechanics of play. A city could build many different things, including fighting units and units that could move around the map and start up new cities. The idea was to explore the surroundings, build a large nation, balance taxes and research, and make sure the other players didn’t do all of this better than you. Since I was playing alone the other “players” would be controlled by the computer itself. I chose a large map at the start of the game and had yet to encounter any other nations for the first hour.
Before long I had three cities along a grassy area peppered with symbols I didn’t yet understand. Some of them were land formations like hills or trees but what bearing they had on the game I wasn’t sure. Other symbols were less obvious.
I was guiding a fighting unit along an unexplored area east of Timville when something moved out of the darkness. It was another nation, one of the computer-controlled ones, its coloring a uniform aquamarine. I had chosen a dark blue for the Losers, a broad fit for my mood.
The newcomer didn’t appear to be a threat and as I looked closer I saw it was one of the city builders. On my next turn I decided to stand in place to see what would happen. To my surprise something else stepped out of the darkness.
The newest member of our trio was definitely a fighting unit. It held a miniature sword in its hand and was dressed in pure white. Any thought that the white stood for good guy disappeared when the newcomer’s next move took it directly toward the defenseless city builder, which was clearly retreating.
That’s not very fair , I thought. On my next turn I moved at an angle and got between the fighter and the builder. Let’s see what you’re made of.
The fighter could have gone past me, or around me, but instead charged to the attack. My own unit defended itself automatically. I watched the tiny, animated battle scene like I was rooting at a prizefight, only this was somehow more personal. I heard myself yell “kill him!” a little too loudly, but not as loud as the shout I gave when the attacker fell dead to the ground.
I was flush with victory and still deciding my next move when the aquamarine unit took a step toward me. Without really knowing what would happen, I moved the mouse pointer over it and clicked.
The game screen dissolved into the regal features of a distinguished-looking man in his early 30s. Curly dark hair fell from beneath an angled crown seemingly made of gold. He nodded and then spoke.
“Thank you for your help, my friend. I am Xerxes, leader of the humble Persians.”
His voice was foreign but the accent wasn’t traceable. He sounded a bit like Sean Connery run through a Slavic. He sounded firm and even but not aggressive. The voice of a leader.
I looked for a place to type a response but didn’t see anything right away. His face was bordered by an elaborate design and I thought perhaps there was some button to push hidden there.
“Are you looking for something?” Xerxes asked.
“Yeah, yeah,” I said, grabbing the manual. “Just a sec…”
“Do you need something from the manual, Tim?”
And then everything just stopped. My fingers hovered above the pages and my mouth stood open. There was no mistake – I heard exactly what he said.
I looked up from the manual very slowly. Fear was not at the forefront of my mind but certainly hanging out in the back ready to go. I looked first at Xerxes and then above him, at the video cam sitting on the monitor.
Son of a *****.
EDIT: Formatting's a little hairy here and I see the forum doesn't allow me to curse. Ah well.
1
Wendy’s Jetta shot down the street until it was just a small, gray dot on the horizon. I watched her go from the front window of the apartment we shared – or used to share. This time she packed her bags before she stormed out. This time all she left me was a pair of skid marks in the driveway.
There was nothing spectacular about our last fight. She was still the same callous, domineering woman I’d always known and I was still just a computer nerd and a slacker. But this time there was an angry undertone to everything we said. Maybe we finally decided there was no changing one another.
I suppose I could have done more productive things at this point. Instead I grabbed a beer from the fridge, a regular old Budweiser and not one of those horrible imports Wendy always bought. They were showing Jaws on TBS for the thousandth time, but since Wendy didn’t like “science fiction” films I never got to watch it.
For the first time in four years I was alone Friday night. I untucked my shirt and propped my feet up on the coffee table. I drank the beer directly from the bottle and didn’t use a coaster. I tried very hard not to dwell on her but I just couldn’t do it. The beer was all gone by the time the shark was dining on Robert Shaw.
I was still alone the next morning, except for an impressive hangover no pill could penetrate. When I got downstairs I knew better than to count the bottle caps I had left on the counter, arranged in a slightly skewed “W.”
It was an appallingly bright Saturday morning that played hell on my bloodshot eyes. I got in my car and drove around town for a little bit, switching stations whenever they played a song that reminded me of Wendy. Eventually I switched to AM.
There was no real mystery in where I was going. Around noon I pulled into the parking lot of my local computer superstore. Wearing dirty shirts and foregoing coasters was one thing but what I really wanted to do was get myself a brand new computer.
Before I met Wendy I spent most of my free time at my PC. I’d like to say that I was writing a novel or even balancing my checkbook. The truth is I was almost always playing a game. From the time I was twelve I’ve been hooked on computer games. Space games, strategy games, puzzle games, shoot ‘em ups, didn’t matter. I played them every moment I could.
And then I met Wendy. She hated computer games. Complete and utter wastes of time, she said. It was a minor miracle that she let me keep my old PC around the house. I told her I had to do things on it for work now and then, which was almost true.
But now I could play games all day and night if I wanted. I was already contemplating the other rash things I would do now that she was no longer the bane of my existence. As I walked into the computer department I swore not to shave or change shirts for the rest of the weekend.
The morning light was one thing but I was unprepared for the visual assault that met me inside. Flashing lights, thundering speakers, and walls built from televisions and computer monitors all fought for my attention.
In five years time the world of home computing had evolved into something I was no longer familiar with. I was at the mercy of the high schooler salesman who was there to separate me from my savings account. The kid was a winner; jet-black hair and a rash of tattoos no prospective employer would ever miss.
My new PC was not the best they had by certainly something that was beyond running circles around the aging paperweight of a computer I still had in the basement. I added larger speakers, a huge monitor, and quite a few accessories that I’m sure my high schooler was thrilled to load into the shopping cart. Fortunately the trend had been lower prices and bundle packaging so I escaped without needing a second mortgage.
Now all I needed was something to play.
My last look at a computer game was also five years ago. That was five years in an industry where six months was eternity. The last game I bought was barely more than squares and bleeping noises compared to what was on the market now.
The high schooler had followed me to the gaming section but it was clear he was ready to send me to the checkout lines so he could return to the sales floor and pad his commission-driven lifestyle. The first game I picked up was “epic” according to him while the second was “way cool.”
“What about this one?” I asked, pointing to a section on the far side of the strategy game aisle. The box was simple, plain even, but the words were mesmerizing in bright red letters. “Build a nation to withstand the test of rising empires!”
“We just go that one in,” High School said quietly. “It’s supposed to be...different.”
Knowing that further elaboration was beyond him I nodded and dropped the game in the cart. Time to blow up the credit card.
I checked the answering machine first thing when I got back home. Mom might have called, I lied to myself.
The PC setup went smoothly. Sometime during between now and the last time I put a computer together some kind soul decided to color code all the external wiring. I attached the monitor, speakers, mouse and keyboard with no problems. I finished up by attaching a web camera – a “free” bonus that came with the PC.
Despite all the supposed dummy-proof instructions I was still just a little surprised when everything seemed to work right the first time. The machine booted up with a hum of raw power. The noise of the CD-ROM sounded like a 747 taking off.
I had transferred my cable Internet equipment from the old PC and was able to check my email right away. I told myself I wasn’t looking for anything in particular but who was I kidding? Seeing that my inbox was empty only depressed me even more. I was getting ready to shut everything down when I remembered the game.
I didn’t noticed in the store but the box was much smaller than the games I used to remember. The insides were absolutely stuffed with instructions, maps, key cards, advertisements, and of course the game itself on CD. I tossed it in the drive and thumbed through the thick manual while it installed.
My first though that was perhaps I had made a mistake. The instructions were very, very detailed. I read something, thought I understood it, read something else that seemed to contradict the first section, then went back and realized I had never understood anything to begin with. Great, I thought. It’s like I’m back in my high school chemistry class.
Eventually, as I had done with every power tool and consumer electronic device I had ever owned, the instructions were tossed aside.
The game started up. Flashing animations exploded across the huge monitor and a triumphant musical score roared from the new speakers. It was like Gettysburg in my living room. I sat transfixed at the graphics, the detail of which was just a half step away from an actual movie. I watched nations struggle for survival, farming, building, negotiating, and making war. By the time the introduction had played out I was ready to conquer the world.
I was given a series of choices to start and I made them mostly at random. I began the game as leader of a people I called the Losers. Self-esteem was never my strong suit. I started with a single piece on a small area of grassland. Everything beyond a few spaces was dark. It seemed I would have to explore my lands one turn at a time.
I was deciding where to move first when a window popped onscreen. “This might be a good place to start a city. Hit
Through trial and much error I picked up on the basic mechanics of play. A city could build many different things, including fighting units and units that could move around the map and start up new cities. The idea was to explore the surroundings, build a large nation, balance taxes and research, and make sure the other players didn’t do all of this better than you. Since I was playing alone the other “players” would be controlled by the computer itself. I chose a large map at the start of the game and had yet to encounter any other nations for the first hour.
Before long I had three cities along a grassy area peppered with symbols I didn’t yet understand. Some of them were land formations like hills or trees but what bearing they had on the game I wasn’t sure. Other symbols were less obvious.
I was guiding a fighting unit along an unexplored area east of Timville when something moved out of the darkness. It was another nation, one of the computer-controlled ones, its coloring a uniform aquamarine. I had chosen a dark blue for the Losers, a broad fit for my mood.
The newcomer didn’t appear to be a threat and as I looked closer I saw it was one of the city builders. On my next turn I decided to stand in place to see what would happen. To my surprise something else stepped out of the darkness.
The newest member of our trio was definitely a fighting unit. It held a miniature sword in its hand and was dressed in pure white. Any thought that the white stood for good guy disappeared when the newcomer’s next move took it directly toward the defenseless city builder, which was clearly retreating.
That’s not very fair , I thought. On my next turn I moved at an angle and got between the fighter and the builder. Let’s see what you’re made of.
The fighter could have gone past me, or around me, but instead charged to the attack. My own unit defended itself automatically. I watched the tiny, animated battle scene like I was rooting at a prizefight, only this was somehow more personal. I heard myself yell “kill him!” a little too loudly, but not as loud as the shout I gave when the attacker fell dead to the ground.
I was flush with victory and still deciding my next move when the aquamarine unit took a step toward me. Without really knowing what would happen, I moved the mouse pointer over it and clicked.
The game screen dissolved into the regal features of a distinguished-looking man in his early 30s. Curly dark hair fell from beneath an angled crown seemingly made of gold. He nodded and then spoke.
“Thank you for your help, my friend. I am Xerxes, leader of the humble Persians.”
His voice was foreign but the accent wasn’t traceable. He sounded a bit like Sean Connery run through a Slavic. He sounded firm and even but not aggressive. The voice of a leader.
I looked for a place to type a response but didn’t see anything right away. His face was bordered by an elaborate design and I thought perhaps there was some button to push hidden there.
“Are you looking for something?” Xerxes asked.
“Yeah, yeah,” I said, grabbing the manual. “Just a sec…”
“Do you need something from the manual, Tim?”
And then everything just stopped. My fingers hovered above the pages and my mouth stood open. There was no mistake – I heard exactly what he said.
I looked up from the manual very slowly. Fear was not at the forefront of my mind but certainly hanging out in the back ready to go. I looked first at Xerxes and then above him, at the video cam sitting on the monitor.
Son of a *****.
Comment