Forgetting my manners, I stare across the desk at the young lady studying her
playing cards. At least I think she's studying them. All she does is glance back at me with an impish smile on her face, and that knowing
look that hasn't changed since the game started.
It's her poker face, and she certainly knows how to play. I,
on the other hand, an eighteen-year-old student whose only source of income is
from collecting trolleys for a local supermarket, has no idea, except for the
fact that getting four of something is very good indeed and that five is
cheating and might get you shot in the head by an angry cowboy.
But this is no western saloon, this is the second-largest
bedroom in a four-bedroom detached house somewhere in the English home counties, and I've got an
actual model up here playing poker with me. Heaven knows how I got her in here,
past the parental vanguard at the front door, the knowing leer of my younger
brother, but she's up here with me and there's no denying the truth, the
triumph. My triumph.
She's tactful, I'll grant her that. She hasn't commented on
the flowery wallpaper covered with posters for eighties bands and RAF fighter
jets. She's said nothing about the fact that our card table is little more than
my sister's old desk, covered in scratches, one of the drawers not working since somebody jammed too much rubbish in there, sticking it fast. She
sits there, demure in her leather jacket, looking at her cards, that impish
smile not moving an inch.
I draw a card and raise the stakes. I'm not sure what I'm
doing here, but I think I might be winning. Not a flicker from the other side
of the table as the money begins to get serious.
Shuffling nervously in my chair – I've got the uncomfortable
wooden one that's always brought downstairs when we have too many guests for
dinner, and dad has to fix the extension on the table that turns it into a huge
circle with a rotating lazy susan in the centre for that added Chinese banquet
bit of class – I decide what to do next. My hand's good but not great, and I'm
sure that smile is hiding something. If she wanted to, I'm sure she'd flick a
strand of blonde hair from her face, and give me that come-on to throw everything all-in
and see what she's got.
And by which I mean cards, and not the other. Or do I?
A decision is made. The die is cast. All in, whatever that
means. All my money on the table. Hardly an impressive amount, but it's every
last penny. I want to see those cards, win or lose.
I've got a pair of threes, a pair of sevens. Not bad. I
raise an eyebrow in mocking triumph. Beat that, lady.
With a flourish she turns her cards over. Three Jacks.
"Arse," I say, the first words to pass between us
since this doomed hand started.
She looks down. She is naked, that classy leather jacket
gone, an air of surprise on her face. Nevertheless, she strikes the pose known
to millions of easily-pleased tabloid newspaper readers.
"You bastard," Sam says at last, "You hacked
the game didn't you?"
Of course I hacked the game. You're not going to buy
Samantha Fox Strip Poker for your BBC Micro and NOT hack the game, are you?
Versions for other popular home computers are also available.
I get paid fifteen pounds for a day's shoving trollies for
those ungrateful bastards at the supermarket and this game's eaten up ten of
them, and I've only got five quid to last the rest of the week. Of course I'm
going to hack Samantha Fox Strip Poker and hack it hard.
Young people! This is what is known as a "cassette". A cassette. |
The grainy eight-bit image of Britain's number one topless
model smiles back at me from the black-and-white monitor. It's less a monitor,
more an ancient portable television set which one day, at the very depths of financial
woe, I shall sell for two pounds. But at the moment, it has a topless,
depressingly low resolution image of La Fox staring back at me.
It is a minor triumph of the teenage programmer's art. I
hate to lose, so I fix the game so that I always win.
And I reset the game, and I win again.
And later, I learn that the penultimate picture in the
sequence is the best one, so I fix the game once more.
it's the kobyashi maru. ;D
ReplyDelete-- k baker/vidas/davey/irvin
You know what they say, SD.
ReplyDelete"You don't need a partner if you've got a good hand."
A BBC Micro? So-phis-tication!
ReplyDeleteI had a Dragon 32. Now that's a computer...
Best program I had for it? I built a tone generator to convert an incoming radio signal into a square wave and then compare it to dots and dashes, match it to a database and then convert the morse code into text. I was still using it years later when we'd progressed to 80486 in the IBM PCs.
Worked the other way round too. Type in text and it converted it to morse and transmitted it through the radio.
Then the bastards abolished the Ham Radio license requirement to be able to use morse. Arse!
(OK. I'm a sad bastard. And I still hold a Ham license!)