This achieved a number of things. Most importantly, it got you the file. But there was no way – from looking at your computer – that the authorities could tell whether it had got there by accident or design. You were clearly either a criminal or a victim of crime, but it was impossible for them to tell which. Secondly, there was no way that – from you – they could trace more than a handful of other users. They could bring down a cell, but never disable the entire network. Thirdly, it meant that you had to clear a few gigs of shit off your hard drive every evening, or else install some software that did it for you. A small price to pay for total freedom of information? People thought so. Even the politicians whose private documents were being circulated on a daily basis recognised that it was pretty cool, and attempted to ally themselves with it. Nothing ever changes.
That’s why I ended up there, anyway, wandering through the hundred or so hosted Chat rooms as [JK22], looking at the throb of conversation scrolling up before me: SHOUTs and (whispers); multi-coloured text; emoticons; roses and kisses being passed around like spare cigarettes or bought like free drinks. It was an alien world to me, and every time I saw a new name entering the room, or slid sideways through into another one myself, I felt a thrill of excitement in my gut that I hadn’t felt for a long time.
People as text.
I’d sip coffee after coffee, or sometimes a beer, and have random conversations with complete strangers.
I was never on for that long. By that point in time, Amy was spending a great deal of the evenings on the internet herself, looking at sites she didn’t want me to see, and so I was always grateful for any time with her that I could get. But sometimes – when the clouds came over – I was also glad for somewhere else to go: somewhere I could be whoever I wanted, talk to whomever I please and feel that there were no consequences.
None at all.
And one late evening, with a simple invitation to private, Claire Warner had found me. I knew, because she told me while we were talking, that she was sitting in her bedroom, naked, with the bedclothes wrapped around her a little. (It was cold that night.) Throughout it all – until towards the end, anyway – she was sitting cross-legged on the edge of her bed with the keyboard resting across her bare thighs, and there was a bottle of wine on the bedside table. She had a glass in her hand, and there was hard dance music playing in the background – only she’d turned it down so low that it had the volume and ease of a soft, comfortable ballad.
She always typed to music, she said. It made her fingers feel as though they were dancing.
‘You had cybersex with her?’ Wilkinson asked me.
I tapped my fingers on the table a couple of times, wondering where exactly this was going. All the time, I was remembering things that I’d done my best to bury and forget. Unhelpful things.
[CLAIRE21]: why do you want to know that?
[JK22]:?
[CLAIRE21]: well why are you asking?
[JK22]: (getting all embarrassed…)
[CLAIRE21]: aw – blushing boy!
‘Yes,’ I said. ‘After a while.’
‘That night?’
I stared at the top of his head.
‘Yes,’ I said. ‘Later on.’
[JK22]: I don’t want to offend you.
[JK22]:…
[CLAIRE21]: you think you could offend me?
[JK22]: maybe
[CLAIRE21]: lol
[CLAIRE21]: doubt it
[CLAIRE21]: feel free to try!
[JK22]: lol
[JK22]: (still blushing tho)
[CLAIRE21]: y r u so worried about offending me?
Wilkinson was still typing, but now he was frowning slightly.
‘So you had cybersex with her that evening.’
‘Yes.’
‘Just the once?’
I almost laughed.
‘Of course.’
He looked up at me, not really smiling.
‘Jason, I don’t know anything about this kind of thing.’
And, although he said it in a neutral voice – deliberately neutral – I could tell that it was a loaded sentence. This kind of thing. This kind of disgusting thing, was what he meant. I checked out his hand. No wedding ring. I figured that Wilkinson was a real man: he picked up his ladies in bars or clubs. Never anywhere so sad as on-line, even though it was exactly the same.
‘You generally only tend to do it once,’ I explained.
He started typing again, his voice more normal.
‘Did you meet her again?’
‘Yes.’
‘On-line?’
‘Yes.’
The excitement, fluttering in my stomach as the train pulled into the station at Schio. The people milling around. My fingertips were pressed on the glass, with a phantom hand touching them from the outside and a slight reflection of my peering face almost cheek-to-cheek with me. Looking for that white dress in the crowd.
‘Yes,’ I said again. ‘It was always on-line.’
He tapped a key.
‘How many times did you meet her?’
I thought about it.
‘I couldn’t say for sure. Maybe eight or nine times, over a period of about… I don’t know. Two months?’ I shook my head. ‘But I’m not sure.’
‘You didn’t keep track?’
‘No.’
A few more keystrokes.
‘And did you continue to have cybersex with her throughout that time?’
A loaded question – again – fired like a blank.
I said, ‘A couple of times, maybe.’
‘So, yes?’
‘I suppose so. Yes. But not always.’
‘Sometimes you just talked?’
‘Yes,’ I said. ‘That’s right. Just like in any other relationship. Sometimes we just talked.’
[CLAIRE21]: y r u so worried about offending me?
[JK22] because you’re nice
[JK22] you know?
[CLAIRE21]: I think you’re nice, too.
[CLAIRE21]: you’re not like the other bastards on here
[CLAIRE21]: r u gonna blush now?
[CLAIRE21]: whaddyou think?
[CLAIRE21]: lol
[JK22] no. I’m glad you think I’m nice
[CLAIRE21] (shocked) what would your gf say?
Wilkinson tapped in a few more lines of text, recording the strange fact that – from time to time – two people had actually managed to talk without having sex. I shifted in my seat a little. He looked up, then, catching my movement.
‘You okay? You comfortable?’
‘I’m fine, yeah.’
‘You want a coffee?’
Of course I wanted a coffee. But not as much as I wanted to be out of here.
‘No,’ I said. ‘No, thanks.’
‘Okay. You know – this is just routine.’ Suddenly, he leaned back in his chair and seemed more relaxed.
‘Your name was on her computer: a bunch of old transcripts and stuff. She’d erased a load of it, but some were still left. Not just you, by the way.’ He leaned forwards again. ‘A whole load of guys. She was on the internet a lot, huh?’