“This is your new home, Meerm,” Needle Lady say.
“Why Meerm new room?”
“Because you’re a special sim.” Needle Lady smile Needle Man. “Very special.”
Meerm say, “All for self? Not share other sim?”
“All yours,” Needle Man say. “The rest of the sims will stay downstairs in the dorm room, just like always. But you’ll be here.”
Meerm walk and look. Nice bed, own bathroom, all for Meerm. Not need share. But Meerm little room still have metal bar window like sim big room downstair.
Meerm sit bed, hold out arm.
“What are you doing, Meerm?” Needle Lady say.
“Stick?”
Needle Lady smile. “No, Meerm, we won’t be taking any blood from you. Except for a tiny little bit now and then, you get to keep your globulins.”
No stick? This ver strange. Always Needle Lady and Needle Man stick-stick-stick. Take Meerm blood ev few day. Take-take-take. Now no stick?
“Meerm blood bad?”
Needle Man laugh, say, “Not at all! In fact, we’re very happy with what we found in it.Very happy.”
Own room. No stick. Meerm happy sim.
3
WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NY
OCTOBER 22
“Mr. Kraft wants to see you in his office,” Maggie said as Patrick passed her desk. The strained look on his secretary’s face told him the managing senior partner wasn’t requesting a social visit.
Patrick’s stomach roiled. Great. He was living out of a suitcase, Pamela wouldn’t return his calls, his clients were either bailing out—like Ben Armstrong who’d taken Jarman’s business to another firm with no explanation—or giving him ultimatums: Say good-bye to the sims or say good-bye to us. And now Alton Kraft was waiting for him. Just what he needed.
Well, at least things couldn’t get much worse. Or could they?
Patrick laid his briefcase on his desk and glanced around. His office was small, as was his window with its limited view of downtown White Plains. But that left extra wall space for his law books. He liked his office. Cozy. He wondered how long he’d be rating a window if his clients kept heading for the hills.
He walked down the hall to Alton’s office, took a deep breath, then stepped inside. A bigger office than Patrick’s. Much bigger. Thicker carpet, bigger desk. Lots of window glass, and still plenty of space for books.
“Hi, Alton.”
“Patrick,” Kraft replied.
No “good morning” or even a “hello.” Just his name, spoken in a flat tone from the man seated behind the mahogany desk. And no handshake. Kraft was something of a compulsive hand shaker, but apparently not today. His blue eyes were ice, glinting within a cave of wrinkles.
Patrick’s gut tightened. This did not look good.
He dropped into a chair, trying to look relaxed. “Maggie said you wanted to see me.”
“A serious matter has come up,” Kraft said, bridging his hands. “One that needs to be addressed immediately. We all know about the recent exodus of your clients—”
“Just a temporary thing, Alton. I—”
Kraft held up his hand. When the senior managing partner held up his hand, you stopped talking and listened.
“We’ve been aware of the losses you’ve been suffering and we’ve sympathized. We were confident you’d recover. But now things have taken an ugly turn. It was bad enough when it was just your client base that was eroding, but now the dissatisfaction is spreading to the partners’ clients.”
“Oh, hell,” Patrick said. He could barely hear his own voice.
“‘Oh, hell’ doesn’t even begin to say it, Patrick. Two of the firm’s oldest and biggest clients called yesterday to say they’re having second thoughts about staying with us. They said they’d always thought of Payes & Hecht as a firm that represented people, a firm above suchstunts —their word, not mine, Patrick—as representing animals. Who do we prefer as clients, they want to know: people or animals? Because it’s time to choose.”
“The sons of bitches,” Patrick muttered.
“They may well be, but they’re sons of bitches who pay a major part of the freight around here.”
And account for a lot of the senior partners’ billable hours, Patrick thought.
The partners had sat back and watched with clucks of the tongue and sympathetic shakes of the head as his client base headed south. No need for immediate concern: The firm adjusted salaries and bonuses according to each member’s billing, so Patrick’s bottom line would take the hit, not theirs. But when they saw their own paychecks threatened…ah, now that was a different story.
Not that Patrick blamed them. He’d do exactly the same.
“I don’t think I have to tell you what needs to be done,” Kraft said.
Patrick knew. Shit, yes, he knew.
“And if I don’t?”
“I’m already taking heat because of this, Patrick. Don’t make it more difficult than it already is.”
Patrick understood. Alton Kraft had been his biggest supporter for partnership. If Patrick looked bad, he looked bad. The partners had probably told him to give Sullivan a choice: Stick with the sims or stay with the firm. Mutually exclusive options.
The decision should have been a no-brainer except for the inconvenient fact that he’d become attached to the Beacon Ridge sims. He enjoyed visiting them, liked the feelings that rolled off them—probably the nearest thing to worship he’d ever experience.
But all that was going to end. Because on his next visit he’d have to tell them he was dropping their case. He’d make up something good, and they’d believe him, and they wouldn’t hold it against him, because Mist Sulliman the best, Mist Sulliman never lie to sim, Mist Sulliman never let sim down.
Yeah, right.
Mist Sulliman feel like slime mold.
He fought the urge to grab Kraft by his worsted lapels and shout, Fuck you, fuck the firm, and fuck all its candy-assed clients!
Instead, he sighed and nodded. “All right.”
He’d lost his house, his girlfriend, and a shitload of clients. He couldn’t afford to lose his job too.
“Good man,” Kraft said. He rose and thrust out his hand. “I’ll tell the others.”
Nowthe handshake. Patrick made it as perfunctory as possible and beat it the hell out of there. Or maybe crawled was more like it. Or slithered. He felt like he’d just ratted out a friend to the police. If the carpet had been shag he would have needed a machete to reach the door.
As he passed Maggie again she cocked her head toward the waiting room farther down the hall.
“New client. No appointment. Wants to know if you can squeeze her in.”
“Anew client? No kidding? What’s my morning look like?”
“Empty.”
Figured. “Then by all means, ‘squeeze her in.’”
A few minutes later Maggie showed a statuesque brunette into his office and introduced her as Romy Cadman. Short dark hair, dark eyes, full lips, and long legs. Dressed on the casual side in a sweater and flared slacks under a long leather coat, all black.
Patrick’s spirits lifted. Nothing like a new client, and a beautiful one to boot.
Maggie placed the woman’s card on his desk:Romy Cadman—Consultant.
“I won’t take up much of your time, Mr. Sullivan,” she said as he rose to shake her hand.
Patrick fixed on her eyebrows, so smooth, so dark, tapering to perfect points. Penciled? No, just naturally perfect. But he couldn’t find much warmth in the deep brown eyes below—at least not for him. All business. A woman with a mission. Aconsultant with a mission.
“Take as much as you need,” he said, thinking, I’ve gotaaaaall day. He gestured to a seat. “Please.”
“That won’t be necessary.” Because she remained standing, so did Patrick. “I understand, Mr. Sullivan, that you’ve come under a lot of pressure from SimGen lately.”