TOC
Ch. 1: Paperboy
I was out there on on the front steps of the new house, sitting there, doing nothing, kicking with my toes at the grass growing through the cracks in the sidewalk. I felt like I was melting. No, not melting, sublimating. Late August afternoon heat and air so dry that a young woman like me can't even glow. Just evaporates before it can even begin to make your skin glisten.
When my mother and I moved here from South Dakota last week, my father's things were conspicuously absent from the moving van. He said he needed to stay behind to clean things up and sell the house. But he didn't send a single box of his stuff with us.
Mom says it's because he's a geek and an ascetic. He literally owns nothing that he doesn't use every day. I'm not so sure. They've been having a lot of arguments, and it seems like, at least half my friends back home, their parents are divorced now.
He did let me bring the servers I usually work on. But it just feels so strange logging in to his research servers remotely.
Oh. I'm a geek, too. I set up the new computer room here all by myself in the extra bedroom. False floor and walls, insulation, airconditioning, wiring. The county inspector was surprised when he asked who had done the work, but I showed him my apprentice papers and Dad's plans.
Mom insists that I should formally finish real, brick and mortar high school, so I haven't had time to be certified as a journeyman yet. But Dad's a master electrician and he did the blueprints, and the computer room really isn't that complicated.
The inspector made us shut down the computer room until a real electrician came out to "finish the job". Mom said she told us so. Nanner-nanner.
At Dad's suggestion, I swept the whole house and the mains for bugs after he left, but there were none that my bug sweeper or eyes could find.
And that's why I was outside kicking the grass on the front sidewalk instead of inside working in the cool, regulated air of our new computer room. Master electricians have schedules, and no one has an opening for three weeks. No air conditioned computer lab in the house until after school starts.
School is another thing I am not looking forward to, and Mom just laughs it off. She so does not want me to be a geek.
Mom says the new school will be good for me. The sun, too.
I'm glad connecting to the internet doesn't require a full computer room. But there's only so much you can do with a notebook PC cooled by a fan. (Maybe the notebook doesn't need the extra fan just for e-mail, but the human does, in this heat.) So I let Mom do her mail and went outside to sit down and see what the real world looked like in the hot August afternoon in our new neighborhood.
I heard the sound of newspapers plopping onto porches and looked up the street. Yeah, there's so little traffic that you can actually hear a newspaper plop at the end of the street, and our street is a long one -- a soccer field or two either direction from the house.
There was a boy, walking with a load of newspapers in his shoulder bags, front and back, headed our way. I was surprised. No. I was floored. What kind of boy would you expect to be doing such a thing? In this heat? A geek?
Like me?
I could see the red hair from the end of the street. As he got closer, I could tell he was not your average geek. Wavy hair, freckles, clear complexion, nicely defined face.
And he was sweating. You'd have to be superhuman not to sweat. He had to be superhuman, just walking with that load of newspapers in that heat.
He waved, and suddenly I remembered I was wearing one of my grungier tank tops and loose running shorts still dusty from the work in the computer room, and barefoot. Dust in my hair, too.
Barefoot's a plus, as long as I'm not standing on the hot sidewalk. But I am not such a geek that I don't care what I look like when I meet the new superpaperboy.
"Hi!"
"Hello." I was trying to be cool, anyway.
"Did you just move in?"
Ohmigosh, he was going to try to sell us a subscription. "Uh, well, ..." And his eyes ... were, uhm, still are, ... so ... blue.
"Must be. I've been wanting to catch you at home, to see if you need hardcopy."
We'd been out most days during the afternoon. There was a lot of paperwork to take care of, and I went with Mom to help her get it right. Two heads are better than one.
"We get ours on the 'net."
"Great. We have a 'net edition, too. Virtual coupons and stuff. Neighborhood SNS. Lemme give you the URL."
Why not? It gave me a little more time to evaluate him. Maybe on the skinny side, but delivering newspapers didn't seem to have made him a wimp.
He fished in his pocket and handed me an one-page flyer. "My name's Rusty. I run the neighborhood servers."
I retrieved my jaw. And my tongue. Not my brain. "My name's Cheryl. I'm a geek."
I couldn't have said that. Just drop all my defenses.
He didn't miss a beat. "Cool. My mail address is on there too, ping me. Gotta get the rest of these out." And he raised his hand as if to bump fists, but shifted to a half wave when my hand didn't move, and turned and continued down the street. Looked back once and gave me a grin.
I stood up under auto-pilot and went inside to show Mom the flyer.
"Oh. The ISP mentioned this. It's one of the bundled services." Mom looked up at me and smiled dryly. "Is he good looking?"
All my defenses.
Ch. 2: UDP Packets
Backup at https://joel-rees-economics.blogspot.com/2017/10/bk-phr-01-paperboy.html.
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Keep it on topic, and be patient with the moderator. I have other things to do, too, you know.