[MD] (OT) The Sunday of the Mouse
Ian Glendinning
ian.glendinning at gmail.com
Mon Jul 12 00:45:05 PDT 2010
Hi Andy,
"bit it farewell" ? The janitor wasn't rodent-biter Ozzy was he ?
Excellent
Ian
On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 8:10 AM, Andy Skelton <skeltoac at gmail.com> wrote:
> [I have done a lot of things. This story is true AFAIR. I tell it at
> parties to burn my image in people's minds. It is pretty far off topic
> but there was a request for a personal introduction. If you want
> specifics about me, they are mostly very findable. I have Google
> thinking I'm the most important Andy Skelton on the internet.]
>
> Soon after Y2K I left a tech support job in a call center due to a
> health issue. Couldn't breathe, couldn't talk on the phone. I got a
> temp job wrangling a pallet jack and quickly became the department's
> database expert. Before the end of the year I switched again because
> the corporate bullshit wasn't worth the pay. I moved from
> multi-billion companies where I was nobody to a computer forensics lab
> in the mother-in-law wing of my employer's house. He also shared the
> space with an administrative assistant. When she wasn't around, it was
> man central.
>
> It had to be. Computer forensics was not something we could have done
> in a socially sterile environment. Political correctness was assailed
> every instant by the contents of the hard drives we examined and the
> hidden sides of people we revealed. We searched, compiled, and
> reported to our clients about digital documentation of deceit and
> abuse. It took a thick skin.
>
> We got jobs from local PD, sheriffs, staties, feds, even RCMP. But the
> best ones were the private investigator jobs.
>
> I remember fondly the job we did for a woman who co-owned a successful
> direct-marketing business with her husband. The woman came to us
> because she knew that her husband was having an affair with the office
> floozy. She wanted to know how deep the affair had gone. She wanted to
> wave the evidence in his face and make him stop screwing around. She
> wanted him to choose her, or hit the road and leave her with the
> entire fortune.
>
> We had heard this all before. This was bread and butter to us. Since
> the wife co-owned the business, she felt it was well within her rights
> to inspect the company computers. Our job was to acquire the data
> without the perps knowing. If the investigation were known, the jig
> would be up and the wife might not have any standing. No problem, we'd
> just go to the office on the weekend and skedaddle after a few hours
> of dd'ing disks in BeOS.
>
> The boss saw no fizz in this foray. He'd had his fill of field work
> for the week and his family got upset when he worked weekends. So it
> was to be my first solo acquisition.
>
> I arrived at business address, a suite between a gas station and a
> hairdresser in a 70's strip mall, with my gear and my lunch. The
> janitor was an old friend of the wife and sympathetic to her plight.
> He was a short, rotund man of indeterminate ancestry. A fat, old,
> lovable mutt of a man. He cheerfully opened the door for me, showed me
> to my workspace and then locked up and kept the lights dim so nobody
> driving by would think people were inside.
>
> The janitor was really into the stealth aspect of this job. This was
> his supporting role in a Mission Impossible film. He had parked a
> block away. I parked right in front of the door. Whatever.
>
> Once I had my gear set up, he showed me around the suite. It was just
> a bunch of private offices and a kitchen. Only two of the offices were
> of any interest: those of the husband and the floozy.
>
> We later learned all of their dirty little pet names from scouring
> their emails. The list was long and we were too respectful to write it
> down. I just remember laughing for hours over Pussy Pants. Anyway, I
> digress.
>
> The two offices were in a strange condition. The janitor had purchased
> several rolls of blue masking tape and spent the early morning hours
> affixing each and every item of office materiel in its place. Objects
> were removed only after their footprints were outlined in blue tape.
> There were five blue C's on the floor where the wheels of the office
> chair had come to rest before the floozy had left on Friday. The
> janitor was unbelievably thorough.
>
> He was also very creative. I was prepared to ignore the shattered
> sheet of clear plastic on the floozy's floor behind her chair and
> concentrate on the computers. While I waited for a large hard drive to
> be copied into a file on an even larger one, the janitor told me what
> had happened. I couldn't stop him in his glee.
>
> Just like I did when I was a janitor, he had a big keyring. There was
> no place he was forbidden to tidy up. However, the lock on the
> floozy's door had been changed very recently without his knowledge.
> Rather than try to draw conclusions, he got busy bypassing the lock.
> He accessed the hair salon next door, climbed into the suspended
> ceiling with his fat little body (bless him) crawled over the wall and
> lowered himself into the office. That was hard work, especially when
> you have to bring a ladder with you so you can get down, and he did a
> good job not making a huge mess of the ceiling tiles. But the 4'x2'
> lens from one of the fluorescent lights had fallen out of the ceiling
> and shattered on the floor.
>
> He had considered his options. He looked for a replacement and found
> none. This being a Sunday, the store that sold them was closed. He
> decided to leave the mess exactly as it lay and concoct a plausible
> story. After marking the rough outline of the wreckage with blue tape
> to help us avoid stepping in it, he removed the doorknob and walked
> out of the building with gleeful giggles in his wake.
>
> An hour later he was back with a fresh set of keys made by his
> locksmith friend and a brown paper sack and a look of sublime
> satisfaction. He left the sack in the kitchen and got to work
> reinstalling the doorknob. I had just finished copying the last hard
> drive and was just about to ask him to lock the door after I left. He
> stopped me with his hands full of grass and other debris from the lawn
> and he told me the story of the fluorescent light.
>
> He was weaving the debris into the rough shape of a nest. He said he
> wasn't sure what a rodent's nest looked like but it would be good
> enough to convince everyone in the office. He climbed the ladder and
> stashed the nest on top of a ceiling tile.
>
> In his story, there had been a mouse living in the ceiling of the
> office. There was extra value to this scheme because, as we all know,
> all floozies are frightened and sickened by the mere idea of rodents.
> By the time she recovered from the shock of the knowledge that there
> had been a mouse just a few feet above her head for unknown months,
> the shards of plastic would have been forgotten.
>
> While on the ladder, the janitor removed one of the punch-outs from
> the light fixture's chassis. This was where the mouse had curiously
> climbed through just before crashing to its death on the floor eight
> feet below. He stuck traces of fresh mouse fur to the rough edges of
> the hole to create evidence that, in my estimation, nobody would
> bother looking for. He did it for his own enjoyment.
>
> When everything was back in its place and the blue tape all crushed
> into several trash bags and we were ready to go, he went to the
> kitchen to fetch the paper sack out of the freezer. It was from a pet
> store that was open on Sundays. He dumped the now frozen mouse onto
> the pile of shards, bit it fare well, and locked the floozy's office
> with a flourish. His masterpiece was complete.
>
> I never heard about the aftermath in that office so I guess it went
> according to plan. We engrossed ourselves with the evidence I
> gathered. It was a nasty mess. The husband had squirreled away enough
> cash to buy a cabin on the lake where he would meet the floozy while
> he was ostensibly out of town on business. We hoped his wife left him
> standing naked in the rain but since she never came back for the full
> evidence we guess she settled it without a court battle.
>
> As I said, it's a true story. I enjoy telling it.
>
> Andy
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