Tenacity, Patrick thought. Better than “stubborn as a mule,” which was how his mother used to characterize him.
“But that same tenacity cancause problems too. When a situation looks like trouble for you or the firm, you have to know when to back away and cut your losses.”
“I hear you, Alton. Loud and clear. But I’m sort of stuck with the sims for now.”
“Not for long, fortunately.”
“What do you mean?”
“Oh, I guess you haven’t had time to sift through your messages yet. Judge Boughton has been assigned to decide on the declaratory judgment.”
“Henry Boughton?”
“The one and only.”
Patrick felt as if he’d been punched. Shit. What else could go wrong today?
“I think I’d better go talk to my clients.”
9
Tome answered Patrick’s knock at the barrack door. His large dark eyes widened at the sight of him. His grin was pure joy.
“Mist Sulliman! You all right? You not hurt?”
Doeseverybody know? “I’m fine, Tome. I just—”
“Look!” Tome cried, turning to the nearly empty room where half a dozen off-duty sims were either clearing the breakfast plates from the long mess tables or lounging in front of the TV. “He comes. He safe!”
The other sims jumped up and began screeching. They rushed forward and crowded around, some reaching out to touch him, as if to reassure themselves that he was real. Patrick was touched in another way—they must have been genuinely worried about him.
“We see TV,” Tome said. “See burn. Say men who hate sim hate you.”
“Well, we don’t know that for sure.”
Tome cocked his head and his dark eyes stared at Patrick from beneath his prominent brow. “Why men hate sim?”
“Justsome men, Tome—a very small number. Dumb men. Let’s not worry about them. We’ve got a bigger worry.”
“More fire?”
“No. A judge, a very tough judge, has been assigned to our case.”
“No problem for Mist Sulliman. Him best lawyer world.”
Patrick had to grin at that. “You keep thinking those good thoughts, Tome. But this is very bad news for our case.”
“No problem for Mist Sulliman.”
“Yes, problem. Big problem.”
How to explain this to a nonhuman? Patrick wasn’t all that familiar with Judge Boughton’s positions, opinions, and decisions outside the labor relations arena. He did know he was a crotchety old fart who thought too much court time was being wasted on trivialities at the expense of more serious legal matters; woe to the attorney who showed up in Boughton’s court with a case the judge considered frivolous—which covered a lot of territory in Boughton’s field of vision. He was the terror of unions, notorious for his loathing of the picket line.
And not only is this a union case, Patrick thought, but one he’ll consider inherently frivolous.
The Beacon Ridge lawyers were seeking a judgment to terminate the suit and Boughton would do just that—with relish and extreme prejudice. Probably have bailiffs waiting at the courthouse door to give him the old heave-ho as soon as he set foot inside.
Patrick had been counting on extended hearings as an avenue to the public’s ear and pocketbook, an opportunity to generate ongoing press coverage and daily sound bites on the evening news, all of which would—he hoped—lead to contributions to the defense fund.
At present, the sim war chest was pretty bare. He’d set up a website and a toll-free number—1-800-SIMUNION—with an answering service to accept contributions, but the phone hadn’t exactly been ringing off the hook. A little money had come in during the initial flurry of publicity when he’d filed his suit, but nothing compared to what he’d hoped for. Now it looked as if the case would be over before it began.
Which would delight Pamela and please Alton Kraft. Ben Armstrong would be happy too. He’d called as Patrick was leaving the office, ostensibly to express his concern over the incident at the house, but soon got around to the real reason: Could this sim union matter be distracting Patrick, preventing him from devoting sufficient attention to the negotiations with the Jarman clerks’ union, set to open next week? Patrick had assured Ben it was not.
Looked like everyone would be happy when Boughton pulled the plug. Patrick glanced at the surrounding sims. Well, not everyone.
“Let’s just say that Judge Boughton will not be our friend.”
Tome cocked his head. “Him hate sim, like men who burn?”
“No. He’s not like them. I’m sure of that. He’s just—”
Tome turned and pointed to the television playing in a corner. “Like TV man?”
“Who?”
Tome moved away, motioning Patrick to follow. He led him on a winding course through the seats clustered before the TV set.
“This man,” Tome said, pointing to the sweaty, multi-chinned face that filled the screen.
“…and I say to you, good people, that those cute creatures they call ‘sims’ are our tour guides along the road to hell. The Bible tells us, ‘Thou shalt not suffer an abomination!’ And that’s exactly what we do when we allow the evildoers at SinGen to go on populating the world with these godless creatures. That’s Satan’splan, you know. Yes, it is. I’ve had a vision and I’ve seen the world overrun by these soulless caricatures of humankind. And where will that leave man, the pinnacle of Creation, fashioned by the Lord himself to have dominion over the creatures of the earth? Gone! Supplanted by these unholy hybrids. And then Satan will have won. The earth will be his, populated byhiscreations instead of the Lord’s!”
He then launched in a plea for pledges to finance the fight against the evil spewing forth from “SinGen.”
“Sim nev hurt man,” Tome said, pointing at the screen. “Why man not like sim?”
“Oh, I’ll bet he likes you just fine,” Patrick said.
In fact, he thought, I’ll bet the Revloves sims. He should. Sims are his meal ticket.
“Then why say sim bad?”
“Just a way to make money.”
And I’ll bet he’s making lots of it. Cleaning up.
Then Reverend Eckert said that he was scheduled to be onAckenbury at Large tonight. He urged all his regular viewers to tune in and watch him “spread the truth about SinGen to the unenlightened.”
And that gave Patrick a wonderful idea.
10
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
Ellis Sinclair sat in his office in the basic research complex and searched for calm while he waited for Harry to bring in the sim. He toyed idly with the ExecSec plant on his desktop, brushing his pen against the leaves and watching its tendrils whip around the shaft and hold it in place. Then he’d tug on the pen and the tendrils would release it. Back and forth, give and take, noting with pleasure how the plant rotated use of its tendrils to avoid fatigue.
He sighed and let the plant keep the pen as he leaned back in his chair. The ExecSec had been a modest success back in the days before SinclairGen became SimGen. He wished they’d stuck to harmless little gimmicky products like this instead of going for the killer app. They wouldn’t be fractionally as wealthy, but how much money can you spend?
And there’d be no sims wandering the earth.
He rubbed his cold palms together. The artificial sunlight streaming through the frosted panes at his back did nothing to warm him. More and more lately he craved a real window. Just one. But that was out of the question. Basic research’s windowless design was his own doing, for he knew as well as anyone that a window to the outside was also a portal in. So he had allowed not a pinhole through the walls of this lead-lined box of steel-reinforced concrete.
To keep the place from looking too much like the Berlin Wall, mirror-glass panes had been set into the exterior to simulate windows and, perhaps, to tempt industrial and media spies to bounce the beams of their snoop lasers off the glass in vain attempts to hear what was being said on the other side.