We live in a world that has doors.
— Absolutely Not Aaron Sorkin
It was five in the afternoon when Claire found me slumped over the dining room table, eating breakfast.
"You're finally up," she said.
"Sort of. I had a long night. And then some."
"Good lord, Shayna. Is that what I think it is?"
"Maybe?"
"Oh, no."
"Look, we've been texting fake grocery lists, but we forgot to make a real one. We're out of milk."
"So you're having Fruit Loops with...?"
"Vanilla vodka."
"Girl, that's nasty."
"Trust me. I need this. What's up, Claire?"
"I have news."
"If it's bad, can it wait?"
"It's good. Maybe great. I might have a line on a whale."
"Wait. What?"
"I was supposed to be on a date with a mark last night, but he didn't show."
"You got stood up?"
"Let it go."
"Really?"
"I'm trying to tell you... While I was waiting at the bar, the guy next to me used a crypto credit card to pay for his drinks. I guess that's a new thing."
"Hey! Good catch!"
"Yeah! I was, like, 'Hello handsome!'"
"You worked your magic!"
"I did. We flirted for a bit, but he had to leave, so he gave me his business card. He owns an art gallery in Hyde Park, and I'm pretty sure it's a scam. I'm gonna pretend to casually drop by so he can ask me out. Wanna come?"
"No way. I never meet the mark."
"Not to the art gallery. I mean, you should come with me, to hang out in the city. I know you love Chicago, and Hyde Park is a nice neighborhood. We'll make a day of it."
She knew me too well, which means she also knew I was in no condition to go anywhere. But we wanted to strike while the iron was hot, so we headed out the next day. She even offered to drive, since I was still recovering from a nasty Vroot Loops hangover.
When we got into the city, I grabbed a snack at a coffee shop and wandered Hyde Park while she flirted with the mark. Then we went to 57th Street Beach so she could lie on a blanket and run her fingers and toes in the sand. Give me the concrete jungle any day, but that girl craved Earth.
I have to admit, it felt nice to take a break and sit in the late summer sun. Claire seemed to think so too.
"This has been a good day," she said.
"So, things went well with the mark?"
"His name is Mark."
"The mark is a Mark?"
"It is and he is."
"I guess that had to happen, eventually."
"Shay, his art gallery has scam written all over it, and there's a Bitcoin payment thingamabob by the desk. He's a mega-mark."
"Awesome! We should celebrate! Let's go for drinks. Someplace nice."
"Sure, but if you're drinking, I'm not. One of us needs to be sober for the drive home."
"More for me then. I saw a place with outdoor seating. I got an idea I want to run by you."
"Oh?"
"It's just a thought."
I took her to a cafe called Quadra. It had a patio with too many tables in too little space smooshed between the building and the sidewalk, but for what I needed, it was perfect.
I started to order a whiskey, but Claire told me to live a little, so I got a Chicago Fizz, and then another, as a cool breeze hinted that autumn would soon be here.
Claire saw me smirk. She asked, "What's up?"
"On your left. When you see it, say it."
"Say what?"
I said, "You'll know when you see it," and I watched her eyes as she searched for the source of my amusement.
My smirk grew into an ear to ear grin as a Lexus parked across the street, in front of one of those stupid trendy hotels where people overpay for tiny rooms. The hotel didn't have a parking lot, but it had curbside valet in front of the main entrance.
A guy got out of the car and handed his keys to the valet attendant.
Claire's jaw dropped, but her eyebrows went straight up.
"Oh my God, Shay."
"Aha! You saw it!"
"Girl, that's evil."
"Come on, Claire. Our whole thing is... y'know..."
"Evil."
"We ain't doin' Mother Teresa shit."
"You can't even say the word, can you?"
"What word?"
"Evil."
"Is that what you want me to say?"
"I want the truth, Shay. Can you admit this stuff is evil? I'm all for it when we're targeting bad guys, but it's still evil."
"You want the TRUTH?"
"Yeah."
"You. Can't. Handle. The Truth! Claire, we live in a world that has doors, and those doors have locks. Who's gonna give us the keys? Who's gonna do it? Them? Them, Lieutenant Weinberg?"
"What the fuck?"
"It's from that movie. A Few Good Men."
"Oh, lord."
"We have a greater responsibility than they can possibly fathom! We make them weep for their lost Bitcoin, but as you know, they'd just spend it on hookers and blow."
"Hey now."
"Or they'd lose it, Claire! They'd lose the Bitcoin, because, as we also know, the way they store seed words is shit. It's shit! They write 'em on paper, so hackers can't get 'em. But they store the paper where somebody can find it! They set themselves up to get robbed because they don't understand it's their responsibility to keep that piece of paper safe! And they won't understand until somebody teaches them. So we must teach them!!!"
"We must?"
"We must!"
"Because...?"
"We have a duty to teach people the dangers of offline theft and Social Engineering."
"Social what whut?"
"Social engineering. That's the term for our shtick. You get into their lives so I can get into their homes. We exist to teach them a lesson, and this lesson, while grotesque and incomprehensible to some, saves lives!"
"It saves lives, Shay?"
"It saves something, Claire! It saves others from having to learn the hard way, because they find out what happened to the others!"
"To the other others."
"Yes! And thus..."
"There's more?"
"And thus, I lost my train of thought."
"Yeah you did."
"But I've got it back!!!"
"Giiirl."
"And THUS, Claire, by stealing their Bitcoin, we're teaching! And we do this not only for ourselves, though especially for ourselves, but also for the other things, because these drinks are stronger than I thought, and again, my train of thought is lost."
"Trains are on rails, Shay. They can't get lost."
"But I don't care! And I don't give a damn what they think they are entitled to! Not the trains. The men. And that's also from the speech in A Few Good Men, but these are not good men! So, fuck 'em, I say! Fuck 'em all! Let THEM be the ones to experience a code red! Maxi-Pads for each and every fucking one of 'em!!!"
"It's time to bring this train into the station, Shay."
"I DID THE JOB THAT..."
"Shay?"
"Yeah?"
"I think you scared everybody at the next table."
"YOU'RE GODDAMN RIGHT I DID!!!"
"Oof."
"Sorry."
"Finished?"
"Yep."
"Feel better?"
"I really do."
"Whoooooooooo..."
"But it is brilliant, Claire. Isn't it? My idea?"
"God, it is."
"And, yeah. It's the other thing, too."
"Evil?"
"That."
Editor's Note:
Our sincerest apologies to Aaron Sorkin, author of A Few Good Men. Unfortunately, this conversation happened.