At This Point
S.M. Skaar
At this point in 1980 Dennis had
been working in the corporate copy center for fourteen months and he was at the
top of his form. “Xerography is my
life,” he told the stream of secretaries and administrative assistants who tripped
daintily down the steel and concrete stairs of building G.
Like Linda Dunn, to name one of
his favorite sweeties, a golden amazon who liked to sunbathe naked on the deck
of her sailboat underneath Palo Alto’s Dumbarton Bridge.
Or like Lucy Snyder, a bit older, a sexy senior secretary with a smug,
cynical attitude and a knockout ass. Or
any one of the ten or twelve other cute chicks Dennis had come to know well at
Paradigm Control, Incorporated.
The company Dennis had signed on
with lived largely off the efforts of a legion of women, and sooner or later
they all came Dennis’s way. Paradigm
Control (PCI) had been founded a dozen years before, and it was home to a
diverse fraternity of ex-Stanford consultants, each with his own “Gal
Friday.” It was Lucy Snyder herself,
holding forth in a seemingly endless series of tarty, mini-skirted and
tight-sweatered outfits, who really ran the Vermont division, who held all the keys and
safe combinations. As the consultancy
grew it demanded an increasing pool of word processors, secretaries, document specialists
to produce its mounds of proposals and reports.
Dennis’s latest dalliance,
Leanne, a homegirl from Sunnyvale,
had recently begun hanging out downstairs in the copy center to avoid the
attentions of Lucy, the office manager.
She was just twenty-two, wearing baby-blue jeans and a doilied cotton
top over a black sports stretch bra.
Leanne had come to Paradigm Control from Manpower, the same agency that
had placed Dennis. Before coming up the
hill to Palo Alto,
to become the junior member of the Aeronautical and Marine Systems division,
she had worked the flats for Emergency Medical, driving ambulance. Leanne was spiral punching a tall stack of
documents with divider tabs.
“You don’t have to do that, you
know,” Dennis said, watching Leanne’s trim
rear clench as she slid each set of pages against the switch. “Consuelo said she’d take care of it.”
“She’ll just screw it up. I’m tired of getting blamed for other
people’s mistakes.” Which wasn’t a bad
answer. At this point Dennis had developed
a liking for girls who knew how to look out for themselves. Leanne was dumb, but she was arrogant. She was ‘Sally,’ from the ‘Dick, Jane, and
Sally’ books, a brash and unskilled young woman thrust into the working world
too soon.
“If you let her do it, you and I
can slip out behind the oleander and blow this joint I have,” Dennis told her. Leanne looked back coyly over her shoulder
and wriggled in assent. Her brassy blond
hair was feathered and blown dry like a rock and roll tramp.
From the outside, Paradigm
Control was a first-generation concrete slab-constructed row of buildings, E,
F, and G. The buildings still stand, at
Junipero Serra and Page Mill, in the old Stanford Industrial Park. Dennis popped his badge against the reader
and eased Leanne by him, the warm summer light splashing her young skin. “You know this place?” It was the edge of the corporate world beyond
the oleander hedge, lank yellow hill grasses, a dry path, a couple of live oaks
casting marginal shade. “Have a
seat.” There was a broken gray trunk and
Leanne swung her long strong legs astride it.
“Look at you!” Dennis said, staring admiringly
into the wedge of her blue-jeaned thighs and tossing the number and his lighter
into her sculpted lap. Leanne was
really into fitness. He had lusted
mightily over the thought of her working breathlessly out at her health club,
the Golden Venus, face down on a bench, her hamcakes bulging as she kicked
seventy-five pounds off the floor.
Leanne couldn’t resist flattery or the drugs that Dennis had made every
effort to supply her with. She preened
for him now, pushing back her hair backhanded and lighting up, sucking the fat
joint until it glowed.
He sat down next to her, one hand
touching her leg familiarly as he plucked back the number from her extended
fingers.
“Good stuff,” he said ambiguously. “How’s it going upstairs, anyway?” Almost from the beginning of her career in
the corporate world Leanne had found herself on the outs with the strict
hierarchy of the A&M division.
“Lucy Snyder is evil. Evil.
Those slutty outfits she wears all the time. She thinks she’s so superior. I’m sick of filing contracts. I could puke.” Leanne was elemental, innocently Manichean,
unwilling to evaluate the possible similarities and differences between her own
baby-doll style and Lucy’s whore of the world act. Which meant there would be some Monday she’d
be transferred to a light on Lucy’s 12-button phone. There were stayers and
there were goers in the corporate world, and that was one reason Dennis had
moved so fast on Leanne.
“I can’t believe you did it with
her.”
Dennis choked the heavy smoke
out, his fist hiding his expression. “I
can’t believe I told you about it,” he said ruefully. “I told you that story in strictest
confidence. Besides, I was drunk. It happened way last year.” Lucy Snyder was Leanne’s supervisor,
forty-two, the very same nervous, chain-smoking overdressed executive secretary
who in a surreal episode a few months before had taken Dennis to her apartment
after encountering him at the Whomp-Whomp Room and fucked the snot out of him
with all the skill and compassion of a cranked-up porn star.
“Listen,
Leanne. She’s just jealous and
desperate. It’s kind of sad. She’s always been the office party gal and
now the role’s getting a little old for her—or she’s getting too old for the
role, or both. Why do you think all her
assistants up until now have been those wispy gay guys. You’re young, beautiful, sex-y. You’re like real competition for her.”
“I know it,” Leanne said.
“Those engineers up there are on me like dogs.”
Leanne accepted
the compliment, raising her arms and dancing from side to side in a victory
cheer. She stretched to the left
elaborately, unconsciously making a hard little bicep, the smoking reefer stuck
between her curled knuckles.
“There’s a guy down here that’s
after your bod, too.” Dennis kissed
Leanne, advancing his palm along her thigh.
“Or did I fail to get that message across the other night?”
“You wish. That bitch Lucy scrambled up all those
binders she made me do the other day and blamed it on me. I don’t have to take this shit.” Leanne returned Dennis’ kiss casually,
clearly sublimely unwilling to consider the possibility that she did have to
take that shit. A true child of the
silicon valley aerospace suburbia, making out to her was as natural to her as
drugs, and was held in the same little locket as all her other rebellious sins.
“Think you could go back to the
ambulance?” Dennis murmured, drinking in
the juices of her smoke-filled mouth.
He fondled the sleek swell of her titties beneath her stretch bra. “Or how about this? I’ll quit too. We’ll move to Stockton and open that motel you talked
about.” He was half serious. Or take her back to Montana and resume his former life as a
carpenter. Nah. ‘Xerography is my life.’ At this point Dennis had become pretty much a
company man.
“There’s this, guy, Rod. No, I can’t work there again. He’s the reason I started temping. Didn’t you hear? He came up after me last week. Remember the ambulance?” Sure.
Leanne’s former boyfriend had to be the over-muscled shithead who had
parked his emergency vehicle conspicuously in front of the corporate lobby
recently, giving everyone a moment of false hope that Pearson or Toomey might
have had the mortal episode that statistically two men per year per company
might reasonably be expected to achieve.
“What’s up with you and Rod? Are you still with him or not?”
“I think it would be just too
much to ask for you to have to deal with Rod, Dennis. I’d like you to move out.”
“You’re dumping me already?” Even at this point Dennis was fairly quick on
the uptake. “We’ve only known each other
for three weeks. I thought we were
having fun together!”
“Sure. It was fine.
You’re really ‘good in bed’. It’s
just that I don’t think it looks right, you know. I’m upstairs, you work down here, you
know. I’m really not ready for that
yet. You’re just like Rod, trying to
trap me into your plans. Like I don’t
have my own plans already. That stuff
about Stockton
and the hotel, that was just made up for you.
I got places to go, things to do.
This girl’s got a lot of living to do before she settles down. Besides, when I heard about you and that old
witch. It feels creepy.”
It was
just that she was so perfect for him except for this, her naïve selfishness,
her beautiful and bouncy body. It made
you mad. At this point Dennis had been
dumped or rejected dozens of times, which far from making it easier was enough
of a kick in the nuts to make you question even the motives of the few women
who could hack you at all. At this point
it was only early afternoon and it was going to get worse.
They heard the sound of a car
parking behind the bushes, heard the door slam and the sound of footsteps. “I’ve got to get back to the job,” Dennis told Leanne gruffly, unwilling for her
to see him cry. Waste of a good joint. “Listen.
I’ll see you later.” He stood up
and blundered his way back through the oleander, being careful of his eyes. And ran right into the headlight of James
Toomey’s Coupe de Ville where he had swung onto the corner of the parking lot.
Toomey was a small man in a large
car, the Caddy white with gold pinstripes.
What did that tell you all by itself?
They came ducking through the bushes as he was straightening his canvas
car cover. He was dark-haired but well
shaven, five-six, the latest in a series of bullshitters Paradigm Control had
brought in recently. Toomey’s office was
lined with strange “artistic” touches, framed cartoon caricatures he had drawn
of tennis buddies, photos of him with other guys with rackets, a fringed, green
glass shaded lamp. How did Dennis
know? At this point one of his hobbies
was roaming the office at night. Anyway,
Toomey considered himself artistic.
So did Dennis. But not in that way. “Afternoon, Jim,” he said, “beautiful day,
isn’t it?” Hoping that the smell of weed
hadn’t stunk to him too bad. Toomey was
his bosses boss’s new HR director. The
corporate functionary regarded them both wordlessly, the point of a toothpick
from his late lunch protruding through pursed lips.
“Cigarette break,” Dennis explained. “We better get back in there, Lee.” Oh, man, did she look loaded. Well, she could watch after her own self from
now on, if that was how she wanted it.
At the stairs he stopped for a final disappointed gander at her
well-toned figure. He had been getting
in shape to be with her, working off a little flab. The two of them could have tried some new
positions.
“Shit, Dennis. Don’t take it so hard. It’s just sort of like a generation gap
thing, or whatever.”
“See, that’s just it. Why make such a big deal out of a few years
age? You think I can’t keep up with you
or something? I’m the king of party.” Over Leanne’s tanned shoulder Dennis could
see Toomey watching them.
“It’s because Rod’s an older guy
too. And then I go and break up with him
and the first thing that happens is I end up with another old guy. I think I must be fucked up, some way. Psychologically.”
At this point Dennis thought so
too. Why did they all have to go off on
these headtrips this way. But he knew
that there wasn’t any point arguing.
“Well, listen, I’ve got work to finish up. See you later, Lee.”
So I
guess you could say that at this point Dennis was ready for a rebound, a new
love interest, like a fuzzy duckling whose mother has been run over by a
truck. Normally he liked working high,
now he was just fucking pissed off and depressed. He flipped through the jobs on the incoming
shelf listlessly.
Then Wendy Guerin appeared
suddenly in the door of the copy center, dark-haired, pale-skinned, clutching
two slim computer printouts. Dennis
crossed his arms, waited for the inevitable.
“I’m sorry, Denny, they just
sprung this on me. Can we, you know, do
the closed door thing?” She was tall,
beautiful, with the serene arrogance of a chanter or meditator. So out of Dennis’s league, and dangerously
scary, too. Dennis had never been into
any of that hooty-gooty stuff.
“Sure, Wendy. Wanna fill out the request? What do you think, Consuelo? Are you caught up?” In a few seconds they had closed the dutch
doors into the repro room, where the two Xerox 9200 and 9400 copiers hulked
end-to-end like wary dogs. Dennis banged
the handle on the side panel of the 9400 and clicked the two elbow hinges that
released the middle transport cover. He
pulled the pin-feed gizmo from the shelf and held back the spring lock to fit
it against the exposed sprockets, snapped the shields off both sides of the
tractor feed.
“Let’s go,” he said, reaching for
the printouts and the yellow request form.
Wendy pulled away from him.
“I need, let me see, nine copies
of this one, and one-two-three-four-eleven of these,” Wendy ventured, “Unless…
“I always make a single master
first and then run the other copies off of that,” Dennis said, taking the printouts. He flipped the header page up and checked the
print. It was light and he twiddled the
density control up to the max, then threaded the greenbar paper up to the registration
point. He clicked seventy-four percent
and listened as the optics in the big copier dropped to their new
position. Enter 1. Go. He turned to Wendy. She really was something, head to feet the
embodiment of the Santa Cruz
alternative life force, in a filmy rainbow dress and Birkenstock sandals, a
strange talisman of Indian beads and feathers banding her long neck. It didn’t bother Dennis that Wendy was also a
genuine space case, but for some reason this hippie-chick outfit offended
him. Pretty much at this point Dennis
had been forced by Toomey and others like him to become the kind of guy who
always kept his nose hairs short and his shirt tucked in.
“Been dreaming lately?”
“It’s so funny that you ask. I had the most crazy dream just a week ago. Wow.
Yeah.”
It seemed apparent at this point
that Dennis was not going to be made privy to the no doubt heavily archetypal
contents of Wendy’s fantasy world.
“How’s Bill?” Bill Copeland was the divorced father of two
that Wendy had started dating. He was an
engineer in the Defense Division, one of the theoretical ones. Dennis always enjoyed looking at his stuff.
Right after the ready supply of
pussy, the constant flow of interesting reading matter was the most important
fringe benefit in working for Paradigm Control.
The company would consult to you on anything, for a buck, and on a daily
basis in the copy center a guy could run off an extra copy of some just flat
out weird documents like “Emerad 70--an Anti-Aircraft System for the Republic
of Kuwait“, “Preliminary Analysis of Tidal Effects in the Bay of Fundy”, “An
Energy Control Center for the Republic of Yugoslavia”, or a DARPA paper
provocatively titled “Weather on Jupiter.”
The list went on. In his
litero-phagic way, Dennis had come to associate each of these documents with
the spirits of the various women who delivered them unto him. Some had passed through his hands many times.
“He’s working on this thing to
show the pictures from that thing they sent to Mars,” Wendy said obscurely. “They’re going to have them on as soon as
they come in.”
“Have what where?”
Wendy shuddered as she forced her
brain into action. “They have all these
computers and things that they’re taking to that place, you know, the
Exploratorium in San Francisco. And they have a line down to NASA Ames, where
some people Bill knows work. Would you
like to go? I think I could get you a
ticket.”
Dennis was touched. “Thanks, Wendy. That sounds interesting. Do you think you could get two? I might take my girlfriend.” Maybe if he showed Leanne they could do some
things together. He turned and pressed
the linefeed button twice. The printout
fell crisply into its wire basket and he threaded the second one in.
“Are you guys like, in
love?” Wendy’s dark lashes flicked down,
and Dennis chose that moment to punch a 2 into the selector. Go.
The first report had been the monthly summary, he knew from experience. The second was the “Compensation Study.” The lower sorter rattled as the diverter,
triggered by a light sensor beamed through the bins, detected the presence of
the first job.
“I don’t know Bill is so…”
He slapped the sheets out of the
assembly and took off the feeder, then went around to the sorter. He peeled the header and two blank pages off
and dropped them into the half-high garbage can behind the copier.
“Nine copies, you said?”
“Let me see. I think so.”
Wendy began to count again, and Dennis took the opportunity to pull the
second copy of the Compensation Study from the lower sorter and drop it in the
trash, with a moue of disgust. Even a
Repro God can make a mistake now and then.
He knocked off 9 copies of the
first report and went around to the sorter.
“Stapled or clipped?”
“Clipped,” Wendy said.
“I can do it.” She loved to work
the little binder clips. Dennis pulled
the original out of the document handler and flipped it into the trash,
inserting the second report. 10. Go.
When the lower sorter had finished rattling he extracted the second
original and snapped a clip on it, handing it to her.
“Here you go.”
“Thanks. Where’s that other copy?”
“What do you mean?” Dennis asked.
“The first one. The original.”
“I gave it to you,” he offered,
but Wendy was looking at him with a bothered expression. Her pretty throat was tight within the beaded
choker.
“You should dump Bill and his
brats and go trekking in Nepal
with me. Yeah, here it is. I punched in the total number, so I dropped
this dummy in the garbage. Do you want
it for some reason?”
“Yes, please. Wasn’t there some other stuff, too?”
“No-o-o. I don’t know what you mean. OK, then.
See you next time,” Dennis bluffed as blandly as he could. Dingbat.
He eased Wendy out the door, flipping the Classified Processing sign
around and nodding shortly to his Filipino assistant, Consuelo, who shuffled
wearily into the room. As soon as Wendy
was out the door he spun and followed Consuelo in.
“Are you OK?” he asked.
“Maybe you can finish up Miss Leanne’s binding job for me. I can work in here for a while.” Counting thinking time, he knew he might only
have a few seconds before Wendy came back, and he didn’t bother to wait for
Consuelo to leave before retrieving the purloined pages from the trashcan and
flicking them beneath the sorter bin.
“What do we have going here?”
It looked like Dennis had gotten
away with it again, and as the nervousness went away he felt the tiredness of
the weed trying to take him over.
Six. Go.
He said to himself and to the big copier which after all these months
was nearly an extension of his own body.
The machine cycled into life, shooting six collated copies of a
forty-page treatise on Bayesian Finite Element Analysis into the sorter. Half a ream of paper in less than two
minutes. That was how the Xerox 9400 had
gotten its name: nine-thousand, four-hundred copies-per-hour. Dennis withdrew the last set and looked it
over with a bleary eye. Horst Salzwedel,
Werner Von Braun’s Austrian love child, was offering up yet another gloomy
assessment of the failure profile of the space station. Worth a read, for sure. Dennis popped a binder clip over the document
and put it into the trash. A second
later James Toomey walked in, Wendy Guerin hanging nervously behind him
Toomey had never been to the
repro center before. He’d only been on
the job for a month or so, the new director of Human Relations. “Howdy, Boss,” Dennis acknowledged, lifting his
eyebrows. He leaned his forearms down
casually on the pebbled plastic surface of the doc feeder.
“Wendy tells me there’s a
problem,” the functionary said, looming
under Dennis menacingly. “Oh?” Dennis asked.
The stupid little twit.
Wendy shuddered again, but
stepped forward to point at the trash-can.
“There was something else. At
least I think there was. He threw it in
there.”
He rolled his eyes between Wendy
and the trash, making sure that Toomey got the point that the woman was a
complete dingbat. “Yeah. Sorry about that. I forgot to count the original in the total
copies. Bad mistake. I apologize, Boss. But I gave it to her. You have it now, right, Wendy? Ten copies instead of the nine you needed.”
“There’s another one in the
trash. I saw it!” Wendy said shrilly to Toomey. Dennis shook his head sadly.
“Be my guest,” he said,
gesturing. James Toomey looked down into
the trashcan from his five-foot-five height, clearly unwilling to explore its
depths. Pussy. Finally Dennis reached in himself. “OK, maybe I get it now. Maybe you saw me throw away this copy of
Horst Salzwedel’s paper we ran this morning.
Same kind of thing, you forget about the original, and then you have an
extra copy. Happens all the time. I hate it when I do it.” He held the document from the garbage can,
his palm concealing the binder clip,
”Wendy?”
“That must have been it,” Wendy said uncertainly, mistrustful of
Dennis’s legerdemain. “I’m sorry,
Dennis. I understand now.”
“Sorry for the confusion,
boss.” Dennis tipped his head grimly
toward her. One other thing that Dennis
had been trying not to think of was Toomey’s inclination to fire first and ask
questions afterward. You could go from a
cushy job as a corporate flunky to temping again in no time.
“No sweat, Dennis,” Toomey replied. He still clenched the toothpick between his
teeth. “I’m glad it was nothing. We’ll get out of your hair now.” Which probably was a reference to Dennis’s
now collar length hair and his ambition to regrow the waist-length mane he had
had in his teen-age glory years as a carpenter in Montana.
The two of them left, but in a
minute Wendy was back. “I have those two
tickets for you. I’m sorry. Let’s be friends.”
“I’m serious, Wendy. Tibet,
Nepal. You’re never going to get off the wheel with
somebody else’s kids hanging around your neck.
Screw it. We’ll become the
original Dharma bums together.” Which
wasn’t a bad idea. Dennis had always
wanted to follow in the footsteps of Jesus and Sherlock Holmes.
Dennis’s style was always just to
feel around for things, like finding a meaningful conversation, even with a
hooty-gooty dingbat like Wendy and one of his dependant clauses must have
brushed one of her tantric nexuses.
Wendy glowed for him. At this
point, Dennis had never actually seen an aura before.
“Hold that thought,” Dennis said to Wendy, peering deep into her
vacant blue eyes, so hungry for enlightenment.
As if he had any to offer her.
“Thanks for the tickets,” he
said. Wendy went out, looking away, as
alarmed as a grazing doe, as Lucy Snyder, Bob Pearson’s carnivorous executive
secretary, stamped noisily into the Copy
Center.
“Hey Consuela! Hi, Dennis.
You gotta give this lady a raise!”
she told Dennis. Lucy paused
before beginning her typical tirade.
“That son-of-bitching bastard Bob!
He gets to go home and on his way out the goddamn door he dumps this
shit on me. I’m so mad I’m ready to slit
his throat.” Lucy slammed down a thick
stack of orange-coded documents. She was
wearing, rather astonishingly, a pair of metallic blue high heeled boots, white
tights, and a low-cut blue-striped jersey with a red hammer-and-sickle
insignia. She winked seductively at
Dennis from beneath a round hat circled with embroidered Russian characters.
“What’s with the outfit? Thinking of going over to the other
side?” At this point Lucy had to be
already in her forties, with more than ten years on Dennis, at a time when
Dennis was just beginning to freak out over his own age. But he drank in her confident sexuality
anyway. Lucy pushed the pillbox hat back
rakishly above curled brass blond hair, raised her elbow in some kind of
cold-war pin-up pose.
“Darlin’ let me tell you, I’ve
always been on the other side.” She
scowled. “It’s for Bob’s party
tonight.” Framed by the square neckline
of the navy uniform, Lucy’s stretchy num-nums swayed pendulously. Her deep cleavage showed the effects of
over-exposure, sprinkled by blotchy freckles.
“It’s real. Bob scored it off a
guy at the Russian embassy when their submarine landed here last year. Don’t you like it?”
Right from the beginning Dennis
had been in glory at PCI. It had to be
something left over from the ‘Playboy Philosophy,’ although he could have sworn
that all traces of that magazine had been scrubbed from his eighties
brain. Maybe those stupid cartoons. Anyway the lingering letch for a leggy,
well-turned stenographer had to be part of why he had responded in such a crazy
way to Lucy Snyder those many months ago at the bar—the Night of the Long Dong.
But a guy couldn’t compete with
someone who made a hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year brokering Top
Secret material from the DoD to his captive consultants. Which was another part of the Playboy credo,
he was sure. The big dogs got the
babes. Dennis had to admit, Pearson had
it made. A Stanford grad, Bob Pearson
now lived and partied hearty with a bevy of always-aestivating bitches in his
mansion in Los Altos Hills. Dennis had
never needed anything from the guy. He
lived at least two dimensions away from Dennis’s life—deep in the secret
society of military intelligence, high in the upper levels of corporate
control, only occasionally getting off the secure phone, sending Lucy
downstairs for classified copies.
“I guess
when Bob wants to score, he scores,” he said snipishly, a little embarrassed at
his reaction. He had always liked Lucy,
respected the cynical perspective that her dozen years at Paradigm Control had
given her on the affairs of the corporation.
She shouldn’t have to play dress-up for that bozo.
“Ooh—nasty
today, aren’t we,” Lucy gave him an
inquiring look. “Listen, I just need to
get some copies and then I’ll get out of your hair. Got some forms for me to fill out?”
Dennis had already picked up a
collectors item paper on Towed Sonar Arrays from Lucy with an authentic orange
and white striped Top Secret label.
Today she had plunked down nearly a dozen Trident submarine docs with
the same designation.
“I’m serious, Lucy.” He swallowed.
“You’re my hero, you practically run the damn company, from everything I
can see. You shouldn’t disrespect
yourself.”
“Get yourself another hero,
honey. Besides, what the fuck do you
know about it? Your little downstairs
hustle isn’t all that much different than what we have to do for a living
upstairs. Only maybe some of us have a
little more fun doing it.”
“Don’t get me wrong. You’re still a good-looking woman…”
“Oh, cram it, Dennis,” Lucy said, getting him wrong. That wasn’t what he meant, either. He just meant, for her age…
“I suppose you think being a good
secretary is enough? I’ve got news. Anywhere else and I take home at least $5K
less than Bob gives me here. I have
bills. And that’s if I even get another
job. There’s a lot of girls out there
who can’t type but are willing to drop their panties at lunch.”
Dennis thought darkly about
Leanne. “What about that union
thing? Did you ever get any response on
that?” Lucy and some of the other senior
secretaries had threatened to give notice unless they were allowed to organize.
“I just told you—that was
the response,” Lucy regarded Dennis
bitterly. “It was ‘shape up or ship
out’. So I guess you’d say that’s why
I’m wearing the costume. One more
chance—don’t you like it?”
“Love it,” Dennis said.
“Maybe you should think about going into business for yourself.”
“Doing what? I’m not even a good whore, and thanks a lot
for pointing that out. I never even got
my GED—I flunked the test cold. Is
someone else going to pay me for copying classified documents? That’s all I know how to do. Speaking of which, do you mind?” He shrugged and opened the door of the copy
room, re-hanging the “Classified” sign behind them.
Dennis knew the procedure
backwards and forwards. He logged each
doc separately and stapled Lucy’s repro slips into the binder. Three copies each. He stopped.
“Where’s this one?” he
asked. There was a signature sheet with
no document—“Evasion Strategies in North Atlantic Waters.”
“Shit,” Lucy said.
“I must of left it up in the safe.”
“Well, I guess you better get
your fanny back up to Bob’s office and get it, then,” Dennis said.
“This is like the first example they teach us in DIS school.” The DIS was this collection of GS-8 clowns
from San Francisco the government entrusted with
security in the Silicon Valley. “Plus, he’s the authorized officer. He needs to sign.”
“I can’t!” Lucy went off. “I told you.
Bob’s gone fucking home. He’s
getting ready to play with his band tonight at the party. He’s supposed to be flying to Virginia with these
documents tomorrow. Isn’t there anything
else we can do?” She touched Dennis’s
shoulder, her voice lowering, singing the last syllable. “As a personal favor?”
“Sure, for you, Lucy.”
“Why don’t you come up with me,”
she suggested, a quick change from her
previous snotty attitude. “I’ll show you
how they live upstairs. We could have a
drink and do some repro before I head to the party.”
“That sounds kinky. Sure.”
Upstairs, in Bob Pearson’s boardroom, Lucy opened the credenza and doled
him out a big martini, complete with ice and speared olives, taking vodka herself. They were far from the first after-hours
highballs she had poured, Dennis realized.
Lucy had partied hard for years, and it showed in the way her bitter
complexion became piquant and alert with the application of alcohol. Now Dennis knew.
“So this is where the inner-most
secrets of the company are divulged.”
“I couldn’t count how many times
I’ve pulled a train on this conference table,”
Lucy bragged. It was hard to know
if she was serious. “You wanna do it? Come on, let’s go.” Lucy’s aura burned around her, a fiery sickly
orange.
Dennis stood silent, completely
enthralled.
“You’re scared of me, aren’t
you,” she mused. Dennis blushed. So maybe it was an oedipal thing--he had
always feared his mother’s sudden ability to get high, to burn bright in just
this way.
“I think we better open the safe
and find “Strategies in the North Atlantic,” Dennis said, dry-mouthed. If it had been Leanne he would have hopped
her in a second. Like the time he and
Vickie had done it in the Mills
College Art
Museum.
“I think we better pop your
nut,” Lucy said predatorily. “Then, I’ll open the safe.”
You couldn’t get more plainer
than that. He didn’t know why, but just
like months before he had this raging hard-on for the old broad again. Show her what having secrets really
meant. He came close to her, pulled her
starched uniform down crisply to her waist, her sagging boobs undone beneath
it. Staring straight into her eyes.
“I want you to do something for
me.”
Lucy went down on him, hiking an
avocado chair to entrap him, a tang of vodka on her tongue, and undid his
pants, his sweaty boner poking half out of his JCPennys. Dennis leaned his ass back on the shiny
conference table, aware of the possibility of shit-smear, and accepted her.
In a second she had pulled the
sailor suit over her head and rubbed up on him, kneading his dick with her
pillowy knockers while she gave his highness her first sucking kisses. Dennis groaned. At this point he had never been titty-fucked
before. It was the end of his virginity
in a lot of ways.
“Let’s play a game,” he
said, “I’m going to fuck you until you
open that safe.”
Chapter 2 Truth is better than Fiction
At this point Dennis had never
been in a hot-tub with a bunch of other people before. Pearson’s house was high on the rolling hills
that lined the valley. Dennis guided his
Olds Cutlass up a curved, forested Los
Altos way until he located the driveway and parked on
the street. The place was really big, a
mansion really, with trees all around it, which was rare at that point.
The sounds of the party Lucy had
summoned him to filtered down from above as Dennis ascended a stairstepped sidewalk that snaked
upward around the trunks of a redwood grove.
He knocked tentatively at a door that was ten feet high and five-foot
wide.
The man who pulled open the door
was Jim Toomey, the HR director, but Dennis almost didn’t recognize him. He was short and slim, with a chest full of
lank black hair speckled with moisture.
He was nearly naked, wearing nothing but a small towel wrapped around
his upper thighs. He seemed puzzled by
Dennis too. Finally his expression
cleared.
“Just surprised to see you
here. Hi, Dennis. Something happen at the office?”
“Lucy around? It was Lucy Snyder gave me the invite.”
“Everyone’s in the tub,” Toomey said, still reluctant, gesturing
Dennis inside. “Out on the deck. Clothing optional.” Dennis wandered inside, to where a band was tuning
up. “Toad Sonar,” the sign on the bass
drum read. An obscure reference to the
sensor arrays that the Navy’s submarine chasers trolled behind them. Very cute, Dennis had to admit, considering
that Pearson did look a lot a toad.
The Vice President was a
broad-shouldered forty-five year old with acne eaten cheeks and jagged
teeth. He wore a long sleeved white
shirt open over his chest and some really uncomfortable looking leather
pants. He was holding forth for a
scattering of guests, some of the scientists that Dennis knew by sight. For some reason a lot of the scientists liked
to do their copying themselves, while the engineers all sent down their
secretaries. Horst Salzwedel was one of
the closest to Pearson, his faced stretched, as always with the witless grin of
an idiot savant. Dennis liked
Horst. He pulled a beer from a nearby
cooler and tried to mingle.
“Hey, Horst, Vie Gehts?”
“We all are preparing for the
telemetry from the Mars Voyager tomorrow,” Salzwedel answered. “Professor Pearson has arranged for the
images from the space probe to be re-transmitted on the internet.”
“Right. Yeah.
I’ll be there. I’m going. The internet.
That’s like ‘darpanet,’ isn’t it?”
Bob Pearson looked over at Dennis
with brief interest. “That’s right,
that’s right. Our contract monitor over
at the ARC is a good friend of mine. As
soon as the images come in to the JPL labs in Pasadena they’ll be encoded real-time and
broadcast on the DARPAnet. Up here at Ames we hook up a
leased-line and download live video.
It’s going to be a landmark event!”
“Ja..ah, if it works,” Horst Salzwedel grinned. Pearson looked at him questioningly for a
moment and then laughed.
“Thanks a lot for the vote of
confidence, Horst. I know. That’s why we keep you around. Say, I don’t think I know you,” he said to Dennis, extending his hand, “Do you work at PCI? Wait a minute. The guy from the mailroom. Come on in, dude. Grab yourself a drink or something.” At this point Dennis had never been called
‘dude’ before, either.
“Thanks, Bob,” he said, wondering suddenly whether Pearson
had read “Evasive Tactics in the North Atlantic” or how he might feel if he
knew that just a couple hours before the ‘dude’ had done his secretary on top
of a stack of classified documents. “Got
one already. I’m set.”
“Horst’s my private cynic,” Pearson went on. “Right, Horst? Tell us about the space station.”
“Ja-ah, Herr Professor
Pearson. You understand it is a matter
of attitude control, nie? I have been
executing some angle-of-moment simulations on the VAX. Would you believe that in 331 of 383 cases,
stresses were encountered that exceeded the structural integrity constraints of
the components?”
“Interesting,” Dennis mused. “Gives a lot different meaning to ‘man in
space.’ That’s based on using old 20th
century materials, I assume. How about
the composites? How about those crystal
monofilaments we’re going to grow in space?”
Pearson guffawed again. “That’s right. That’s a good one. Twentieth century. How about that, Horst?”
The tub was enormous, built into
a wide redwood deck cantilevered over a great view of the bay. There were already about ten and a half
bodies in the hot tub, to subtract by the number of visible limbs.
“Welcome!” shouted a slim, gray-haired man who perched
on his elbows on the redwood decking, water draining down from his exposed cock
and balls. “Strip down and join us. Have you got a drink, yet?” It was Jim Toomey, the new director of
Personnel. Dennis waggled his beer.
“Fine, thanks. I’m okay.
Hi, Lucy.”
“Oh come on, just do it,
Dennis,” Lucy said softly, red lips
smirking, her droopy mums floating visibly just beneath the frothy blue-green
water. He grinned back. How could anyone mistake the look they
shared? He only recognized a couple of
the other people, uh-oh, Lucy’s best friend, Joan Cummins, Margie Popowicz, and
the ubiquitous Horst Salzwedel. Everyone
was watching him, waiting for him to strip down.
Dennis set his beer to the side
and pulled up his striped shirt. He was
in good shape at this point, doing a lot of running, but he still had this
stomach from all the booze. He uncinched
his buttons and peeled out of his Levi 501s.
Joan Cummins inspected his nakedness malevolently. No doubt Lucy had already been talking. Salzwedel’s face, as always, was stretched in
a grin, his eyes crinkled, both wise and idiotic.
“We’re approaching critical
mass!” Toomey joked, and everyone
laughed. Was this hostmaster thing a
fringe benefit for him or part of his job description? Dennis slid into the water beside Margie
Popowicz. Margie’s tanned tits rode
pertly above the steam, dribbled with perspiration. Beneath the surface, her thigh shifted
languidly against him.
Everyone was talking about
smoking again. Palo Alto had just made smoking in the
workplace illegal, an enlightened move, no doubt, but one that was personally
painful for a lot of people. “It’s
flat out unconstitutional,” one of the senior consultants opined angrily. “Social engineering.”
“I hear you, buddy,” Dennis said, without much sympathy. “I’d fight it, myself. Unfortunately, I just quit.”
“Well, I didn’t,” Lucy said.
“The bastards. Where do they get
off telling me what to do with my body?
Anybody got a cig?” She had
pinned her hair up in some kind of European, Grace Kelly doo, high above the
steam.
Not that either of them had that
much respect for legal authority.
Dennis smiled across the tub at Lucy, remembering her standing only a
few hours before, in the boardroom behind Pearson’s office, de-pansed with a
Winston ultralong stuck between her knuckles.
He didn’t know about the law, but pretty much it was a given that you
weren’t supposed to screw in the workplace either. It made Dennis want to do it again, and with
the thought he felt his submerged pecker begin to twitch hard.
“When is Bob going to play?” Joan Cummins asked Lucy.
“How the fuck would I know? Go ask him.
If he’s wearing his leather pants it means he’s ready to rock and
roll. That’s if he can get his fat ass
into them any more.”
“Ha-ha,” Horst Salzwedel laughed, “Have another drink,
Lucy.”
“What are you waiting for? Another brilliant idea?” Lucy said scathingly. “Have one yourself.”
“Ha-ha-ha,” the German engineer
laughed, his expression hurt, “You know I don’t drink, Lucy. Otherwise I would.”
“Jesus! Has everybody turned into a god-damned
Austrian monk around here? No drinking,
no smoking. What do you people do for
fun?”
“What bothers me about it,” Dennis said,
“is all these high priced people standing outside the front door,
puffing their lives away. It looks like
shit, and it’s like this big waste of everybody’s time.”
“See, that’s exactly it!” Jim Toomey said, hunching forward.
“I’ve got an idea,” Lucy
slurred. “I’m going to reach under and
touch someone else somewhere, then that person does the same thing to another
one, and the next person does it. It’ll
be like water twister. Horst, what do
you think?”
“Ja-ja. Ja-ja.”
Lucy reached unerringly to capture Dennis’s left foot, squeezing his
softened instep passionately. Dennis
gave his eyes to Lucy, his smile to everyone else. It was nice to be wanted. He hadn’t thought about Leanne all evening.
“It’s me,” he announced, and
leaned forward, his head and hands beneath the bubbles, selecting…Joan
Cummins. Her calf was long and narrow,
and he let his finger trail down her shinbone, observing her flinch. But she took no time in making her own
contact. In a few seconds, they were all
giggling. Dennis felt his thighs drawn
apart by a hand from the left. Margie’s?
It was actually kind of a special
event. As each person’s hands, feet and
thighs were engaged, ways were found to engage other body parts, at least
including Dennis’s semi-erect prick. For
a moment there was a real comraderie—the group had, if not an aura of its own,
something else, both carnal and brotherly.
“See, that’s exactly it!” Jim Toomey exclaimed. “Wow!”
At this point, Dennis had at least heard of Esalen. They were putting rattlesnakes in their
mailboxes down there.
Dennis rolled over and gave
Margie Popovicz a good kiss, and around the tub the others also touched mouths,
a couple of the women giving twice. But
really, at that point it was all Lucy.
He looked across the mass of interlocked shoulders that had emerged from
the scrum to her. And that was even
before the point at which all the other shit went down.
“Want to do a line?” Jim Toomey asked him confidentially a little
later. Dennis looked at him
incredulously. Was everybody as corrupt
as he was? “Sure thing,” he said. The man was as dainty nude as he was in his
three-piece suit on the second floor. He
unfolded a glossy picture and coaxed a small mountain of powder onto a nearby
mirror, mincing it vigorously with a razorblade.
“Take this hundred,” Toomey ordered. “Never been used.” But Dennis immediately smelled the medicinal
scent of cocaine on the rolled-up bill.
He leaned forward, hoping he wasn’t fucking up by never having done it
before, and followed Jim’s edging blade down the length of the mirror. Pow!
A few seconds later he was
retching out his lunch. “Excuse me,” he
begged from his knees where he had taken a starboard spin to the floor. “It’s OK,”
Toomey’s voice said, “Happens to
the best of us.” Dennis nodded
weakly. At this point, he’d only had the
four beers.
He grabbed
a towel from the hot tub and
cleaned up the mess, now getting into the crystalline shape of it. A little bit like mescaline, but more
organic. Dennis sniffed as the cool goop
of the snort began to trickle its way into his throat.
There was the massive sound of an
electric guitar riff. “Just in
time,” Toomey said.
Continuous exposure had led
Dennis to really detest the Rolling Stones, and he groaned as Pearson’s band
cranked up into “Satisfaction.” “And I
try, and I try, and I try, and I try…”
the vice-president’s throaty voice strived for the tune. Actually, though, the guy could sing
okay. His pizzaface cheeks shook as his
head nailed the downbeat, and he kicked hard into “Git no.”
“Right Arm!” Dennis cheered as
the song ended, with only a little bit of sarcasm. The guy was good. In the corner of a huge white-carpeted
livingroom, in the space made by pushed away furniture, Pearson did an
aw-shucks. “Know any Creedence?” Dennis called. At this point Creedence Clearwater Revival
was no more than eight or nine years out of date.
“Born on a Bayou.” He should have figured. The guy did a fair John Fogerty,
dispronouncing well. Dennis hadn’t been
born on a bayou, Montana,
instead, but that should have been sticks enough for you. Well, whatever direction you went, it was
hard to get the accent right.
“Bravo!” Feeling good, Pearson singled him out with a
forefinger. “Thanks, dude.”
Dennis smiled a phony smile in
return and left him on his own, fading into the audience to grab another beer,
leering at the back side of the group, still a few bare-assed, Margie P’s boxy
derriere among them. The magic powder had really done it to
him. Fortunately he had put his clothes
back on--almost without thinking his tool was swollen up hard, fat and flat
between his hairy stomach and the button-fly of his pants. A long carpeted hallway led away from
Pearson’s kitchen and Dennis went snooping, pretending he was looking for the
john. Like it would have to be a bank
shot off the ceiling.
He came back in
a moment, locating a towel-wrapped Lucy and simultaneously goosing her with a
cold-necked bottle and his stiffened dick.
Beneath his hands her small shoulders were tight as they watched Pearson
and his band grind through another sixties standard. At least Pearson seemed immune to the malign
influences of the next decade—the hated Doobie Brothers, Bad Company, Daryl
Hall and John Oates. At this point
Dennis had begun to really dig the Rolling Stones again.
“I hate this
shit,” Lucy mouthed. Dennis nodded. “I know.”
He jerked his thumb meaningfully over his shoulder. He had found Pearson’s office, a private
bathroom and another large room beyond,
with Jesus, a heated waterbed. All
perfectly deserted as everyone listened to the boss perform. Tugging the hem of her white towel, Dennis
drew Lucy away into the private area.
So at this point I guess you could say what happened next was all his
fault.
The towel fell away from her as
she released her hands, and she stood, a little bit squinty, a little
flatfooted, and swam up and passionately tongue-fucked his mouth. It was the kind of hardball foreplay that
Dennis had always found irresistible.
Even the filthy tang of tobacco on the older woman’s demanding mouth was
exciting.
“I want to do it here, on his
fucking desk. Now.” She told him with that same piquant slurred
intensity, moving him back. Dennis
glanced a listen over his shoulder at the door.
It was “Gimme Shelter”, at least a four minute jam. Pearson’s desk was made of some rare polished
red wood. At this point in 1980, it was
weird, even though computers hadn’t even been invented yet, how the
leatherbound blotter pad and onyx and brass pen set that framed the desktop
looked archaic. On the edge of the desk
sat a stack of papers and magazines.
“Would you mind filing these for
me, honey?” Lucy mimicked, pushing the
jumbled pile carelessly over the precipice.
“Why, no, Bob. Why should I mind
making a stark bloody fool of myself?”
She advanced on Dennis, undoing his pants and pulling them half down,
taking steerage of him in the same predatory way. She shoved him back on the desk with
surprising strength, clambering to the top of the lacquered surface, her bent
knees pointed into his shortribs, her shaggy little cunt just right there. Dennis groaned and plugged her.
Not that, at this point, either
of them was winning any style points.
Stimulated by the danger in spite of himself, Dennis’s upright boner
stabbed wildly into Lucy’s churning groove.
It’s just a shot away, kiss away.
Yeah. Was that Mick Jagger’s
entendre or Bob Pearson’s solipsism? At
the last bonk of the electric guitar, Dennis found himself jerking guiltily out
of her, as though to somehow keep their union provisional, but Lucy surged
above him like a man, her damp blond
hair whipping his face, confidently re-cunting him, demanding his continued
allegiance.
“Ooh, Shelter,” she cooed above
him.
It had been the same way earlier,
at the office, Dennis somehow enraged with lust and distrust that made him a
man with no country, doomed to fly the naked staff for all time. With Leanne it was the exact opposite, the
Coer’d’Alene, heart of somethingorother.
Though at this point, it was all likely to have been the effect of the
drugs, whether the cocaine or the beer or the number he had smoked on the way
up. At this point, although Dennis regularly
got zonked, the crows had not yet come home to roost on his brain or his soul.
Far too heavy. Dennis looked deep into Lucy’s eyes at this
point and knew she was insane, knew decisively that he should not have done
this.
“Fuck, Lucy!” Pearson’s big
shouldered figure suddenly appeared in the posing mirror, looking irritated and
somehow a little hurt too. “Dude?” His back pinned against the sticky surface of
the desk, Dennis tried to kick upright, but Lucy held him down.
“Hey, Ma, I’m already doing
sixty!” Lucy panted, the punchline to
the first dirty joke Dennis had ever heard.
Was this even realistic, he wondered.
Because it was definitely actually happening. Dennis heard himself unexpectedly giggle.
“Jesus FUCK!” Pearson’s temper flared. “Get the hell out of my office, you sarcastic
bitch! Get off my desk!” Instead of complying, Lucy bore down and
began to texturize Dennis with long, fluid strokes, her closeup face a vengeful
sneer.
Which might have seemed a
completely shriveling experience, except Dennis’s big rod just wouldn’t lie
down. He finally came hard, after a long
time, and with painful electricity, another all-star screw. And with the Vice-President in attendance.
“Get the FUCK out of here!” Pearson repeated, grabbing Lucy by the hips
and consummating a bizarre ménage-a-trois by shaking the last globs of cum deep
out of Dennis’s tubes.
“Ooooh. Ooooh,”
Lucy breathed as the executive touch brought her to a climax too. Dennis was inches from her face and he knew
the truth was being told. In the
crisscrossed spotlights of the office ceiling her skin was flushed bright with
blood. Against his will, Dennis felt
himself curl forward to take her cheek to cheek with him, the woman still
puffing with exertion and exhilaration against his neck. Pearson fizzled spastically above them.
So, you would have to say there
was considerable passion between them.
Dennis easily unjointed from Lucy now and leaned back against the edge
of the desk, still cocky and acting like it, facing Bob Pearson with his own
version of an ironic smile.
“Enjoyed your music, man. Going to do more?”
Chapter 3 No Insurance
The two of them walked out of the
room noble as you please, leaving Pearson wondering whether he should take the
piss he went in for. “Are we in deep
shit, or what?” Lucy giggled, tugging
Dennis though the doors to the deck, as naked as a bean in the crisp Los Altos night air. Dennis gauged the danger seriously. “I believe that to be a true
statement,” he said. “Hopefully, he’ll get over it.”
Inside the glass-lined interior,
Bob Pearson had returned to the party, limping uncertainly. The Vice President’s underslung jaw quivered
as he swiveled from side to side, searching for them. The dude from the mailroom. It wouldn’t take long to straighten that out.
“Hopefully not,” Lucy slurred angrily. “Think I appreciated his ‘work-out sessions’
with that little temp slut from A&M?”
Dennis was sure that Lucy’s jealousy was justified but it didn’t do a
lot for his situation, not to mention the perspective it put on Leanne’s new
career path. Very ambitious of her,
Dennis had to admit. He was dead
meat. Behind the glass, Bob Pearson
picked up his electric guitar, struck an angry barred G, and slammed the
instrument down. Around him his audience
sought its own world.
“Ready for another toot?” Jim Toomey asked brightly, pushing his way
outside and catching sight of Dennis.
This time the powder was a lot easier to take. He straightened up and tipped the rolled bill
at Lucy. “I’d rather not,” she snarled dismissively. A few weeks later she would be singing a
different tune, but at this point they hadn’t gotten into that.
“Sorry we didn’t have a chance to
chat, earlier,” Toomey said, shaking
Dennis’s hand and eyeing his still turgid prick. “Don’t worry.
Happens to the best of us.”
Against his will, Dennis found himself looking back—the HR Director’s
penis hung from a dark pelt of curly hair, not too fat and a little too long,
nicely nipped.
“Pretty young to be a VP aren’t
you?” he asked Toomey, curious. It was the second time that evening he had
ignored Lucy, and it had the predictable effect.
“Are you two fags finished,” she sneered.
Toomey smiled, impishly, at this point acting like a real person, but
already betrayed by the total lack of an aura.
He seemed amused, not letting go of Dennis’s eyes. So that was the way it was.
“I had a really great mentor,” he
said.
“Yeah, well, thanks for the
blow.” Dennis said, a moment latter
realizing the double meaning and blushing red.
“Don’t mention it.”
Always in those days, Dennis’s
muse lay in weed, only later the cocaine.
But even at this point it was amazing the way it magnified and shrank
your personality. I guess you could say
that at this point Dennis was still just learning.
Dennis put his pants back on,
carefully tucking himself back in. In a
flash the second snort of coke had left him limp but unretracted. Or maybe it was Toomey. “Let’s go back to the music.” Dennis said, a reckless flush. A little bit less confidently, he took Lucy’s
hand and led her through the sliding door into Bob Pearson’s expansive
livingroom. Toomey followed them, close
behind.
“I mean it, Bob. I really like your stuff. You should play some more.” One thing Dennis had always been able to do
was be nice to people and mean it—when he was in the mood, and at this point he
seemed to be in the mood. Everything had
achieved a slow clarity, a danger sign he recognized from alcohol but ignored
anyway.
Pearson looked at him, red, angry,
bugged out eyes, and shook his arms at the guitar he had thrown to the
floor. “It’s all fucked up.”
“No, man, I bet it’s OK,” he
joked. “They’re like women, you know,
they can take the abuse.” Pearson made a
grimace with his lower jaw and bent over to pick up his axe, feathering the
steel strings carefully with his thumb.
The open chord rang flat, and every female in the room and a few of the
males reached automatically for the key.
“Yeah,” he said, momentarily
mollified. Another beast tamed. Dennis retreated, nodding to the hired bass
player who stood awkwardly in the corner.
“Hit it.”
Pearson waved the hired hand
off. “You’ve got a lot of nerve,” he began in Dylan’s broken, Liberty Bell
voice, “to say you are my
friend. When I was down, you just stood
there grinning.” It was not taking
the best turn.
“Oh for the love of Mike, Lucy,”
he hissed from the side of his mouth. “I
thought you told me you and your boss weren’t an item any more.”
“Do you take me for such a
fool, to think that I would make contact?”
Pearson’s hammy treatment of the lyric seemed aimed right at him. Dennis turned three-quarters and squeezed
Lucy’s forearms hard, stifling her nervous guffaw.
“Hey, there, partner,” Jim Toomey chided him, at this point not yet
understanding, apparently still oblivious to the message behind the music, and
Dennis ratcheted his grip a notch tighter on her chicken stick armbones, enough
pressure to be certain it hurt.
“With the one who tries to hide what he
don't know to begin with.”
Positively 4th Street”
was like the raging deposed emperor of angry songs, Dennis thought wildly. Pearson must be royally pissed at Lucy. “Well, we are still married,” Lucy finally
admitted. Jesus. At this point Toomey had begun looking at
Dennis strangely. “Gosh, I’m a little
surprised to hear that, Lucy. I wish you
could have found a more convenient time to tell me,” he replied, rattled by the revelation but
still not comprehending it well from within the cocaine.
“I knew Bob’d catch us as soon as
we tried to screw,” Lucy bragged with
alcoholic dangerousness. “I couldn’t of
planned it better if I tried. You were
just too good to resist, Dennis. The
prick’s been dead for me for years, but he won’t fucking give me a
divorce. I guess he thinks I want to
take him for all his money. Which at
this point, I do, motherfucker.” She
swam up in Dennis’s arms, attempting to repeat her earlier rape of his consent. Her hands were slight, frail, so thinly
tissued and breakable, held down waist high in his tight grip. He pulled them up and threw them back at her,
leaving the woman grimacing at the painful release of pressure.
“You lying witch!” he flared
angrily, finally catching on. Let her
and Pearson sort her own extramarital affairs out and leave him alone. And yet even at this point, he was somehow
all there and aware with it, that little bit of a shine of complicity. Because, for some reason, at this point,
Dennis always seemed to be busting up someone’s marriage or relationship, and
sure you had to have some pity for the silly fool, but didn’t it always really
go this way? No one could pretend to be
a virgin at this point.
“Wait. You guys?”
Toomey asked, his smile turning tight.
“Oh, shut up!” Dennis snapped,
exasperated all the same by the sudden diminution of his options. He shrugged back toward Pearson, “Sorry, man,”
halfway meaning it, and then walked away from them to join
the other partiers, who watched him nervously.
(This is the place where he talks
to Pearson one-to-one in the crowd.)
Actually this scene should
frontload the whole party. There’s a
drawing room scene where Pearson previews the high-tech internet link for the
mars probe. Keep it peppy, though. Pearson waves him in and then turns back to
his expounding. Sees Lucy through the
glass, chats with Horst, hears Pearson’s spiel, desires her, finally pulls away
from Horst, who follows him to the hot tub.
Or else he chats with someone other than Horst, possibly even Pearson
himself. Or maybe it’s Toomey who meets
him at the door. I like that. He needs a towel.
Pearson pulled Dennis back,
trying to kill him, at this point his fighting even worse than his taste in
music. He grabbed Dennis by the
shoulder, trying to spin him, looking confused when it didn’t work. “Dude!”
he squawked again plaintively, “I mean, come on, you know.”
“Yeah, I know. Like I said, ‘sorry.’ I’m innocent, though. I didn’t understand the situation. I’ll just go say goodbye to someone and then
I’m leaving.” Dennis turned away again. A fair number of the party guests had drawn
away from their boss’ public embarrassment and that was what he wanted to do
too. They gathered in the large dining
area that cantilevered over the long ramp that led to Bob Pearson’s splendid
home. Dennis walked in. A couple of otherwise sensible adults were
playing “Pong” on a two thousand dollar color TV. Not that, even at this point, it was that
easy to buy a black and white, but “color” still carried the stigma of great
value. Why weren’t they watching Starsky
and Hutch, or something.
“Vie Gehts, Horst.” Dennis greeted the Austrian scientist as
heartily as he could, considering his mood.
Remember, at this point, it wasn’t like TV wasn’t known to be
vacuous. It was acceptance of the
nothingness that mattered. Remember, at
this point, Palo Alto still didn’t have cable,
twenty years after it had become a staple throughout America. For Dennis, growing up in Montana, cable had
been a near continuous exposure to the schizy faces of normality that Salt Lake
City media provided, Channels 5, 4, and 2.
“Ben is beating the pants off
him,” Salzwedel grinned, pointing to
where Ben Freidlander wiggled his ‘paddle’ aggressively, an inch-long cursor of
gleaming white phosphor, an oddly rectangular ball or puck. Friedlander’s technique was to slam the
paddle to the bottom of the screen repeatedly, bouncing quickly away like a
small knobby bird attempting to fly.
Dennis noted the leather upholstered JoySticks that had been wired to
the tiny system unit. Nice.
“We all are preparing for the
telemetry from the Mars Voyager tomorrow,” Salzwedel answered. “Professor Pearson has arranged for the
images from the space probe to be re-transmitted on the internet.”
“I heard about that. Wendy got me tickets.”
“Can you imagine it? Mars.”
Horst Salzwedel’s laugh was eerily infectious.
“No, man, I can’t,” Dennis laughed back. “Can you?”
But he could, somehow. A whole
new world. “Will they have it
pong-ified, so that you can knock the space probe and the planet back and
forth?”
“No reason why they could
not.” The Austrian’s face wrinkled with
the effort of assimilating the ridiculous suggestion, but he was up to the
task. “There is no reason why multiple
different source video transfers could not be mosaic’d into a single view,
vectored and rotated appropriately. Ja.”
“Mosaic’d. That’s a good word. Like tesseract.” Dennis proclaimed. Though usually he would have been able to
tell you the dammed difference. The
fucking drugs and the jolt to his reality was really telling on him at this
point.
The floor length windows behind
the German engineer were silvered by the twilight bay beyond, and in them
Dennis couldn’t escape the reflected images of Toomey, Lucy, and Bob Pearson,
who again slammed his electric guitar to the floor and stormed down on Lucy,
who countered by giving him the finger.
“Screw you, Bob. I know your
game. I know every fucking thing about
you. You can’t push me around any
more,” she proclaimed loudly.
“What’s a guy supposed to
do?” Dennis appealed to Horst Salzwedel,
who grinned and blinked uncertainly.
“That woman’s going to get herself fired for sure.”
“She’s not the one who’s getting
fired.” Toomey said, coming up behind Dennis and playing the toad card.
Toomey tensed stupidly as Dennis
turned, challenged by his size and unpredictability, and Dennis really wanted
to just stick a fist in his gut and be done with it. “You’re kidding,” he said, incredulous. The others shrank away from them, Joan
Cummins gloating at him, Margie P. somehow wistful in avoidance of his angry
embarrassed aura. “This is Lucy’s gig,
not mine. I can’t believe that
chickenshit prick would have the nerve to fire me just for balling his ex-old
lady. I’m out of here.”
“See, that’s exactly it,” Toomey agreed. “You are out of here. I’m firing your ass for having the bad
judgment to make my boss unhappy in my presence. Go home and sleep it off, big fella.” Which at that point had to be a little bit
worse than being called ‘dude’.
“I’ll just get my coat.” Dennis corrected his earlier mistake and
pounded his fist into Toomey’s queer liver after all. The little man cringed over satisfactorily
and Dennis pushed by and went back outside.
The sweatshirt was where he had hung it near the bar, and on the bar was
Toomey’s mirror with its razorblade and folded packet. What was there to lose? At this point, having just assaulted Paradigm
Control’s new Director of Personnel, it seemed like the answer was not
much. Fuck it. He scooped up the dope and looked back just
one more time to where Lucy peered after him through the sliding glass, Pearson
behind her, as hapless as ever, Toomey still not yet recovered. Dennis kept going, down the side stairs of
the deck, kicking out each of the ornamental lights that cornered his path down
through the ivy and into the metaphoric dusk.
Chapter 4 Heavy Lifting
It was still a little before
eight in the evening and even this early Dennis could see a certain sorry
resemblance between himself and the fifteen year old Vista Cruiser he had
parked the wrong direction on Terra
Linda Way.
The broken passenger door groaned on its hinge as he got in, the big
station wagon as battered as a beaten horse, dented on every panel, the hood
painted primer white. He had done the
car up to make Leanne laugh, when he’d been trying to show her how hip he could
be, since she had driven ambulance, lettering the front in backwards-writing
the words ECNARUSNI ON. Whether it had
been viewed as confession or commitment, the proclamation had led to a
different sort of memorable evening.
Dennis slipped into the
back. The back seat was folded down, a
high flat platform with a thin pad. He
sat upright and cross-legged in meditation beneath the station wagon’s stately
excursion window, a six-inch raised section of roof. Ec Na Rus Ni Ooon. It was sort of like a mantra. Visualize revenge.
It had to bother a guy that
Leanne and Lucy were so much the same, like he could be Superman, star-crossed
with women from Krypton whose names began with L. Both had the same brass blonde hair, Lucy’s
styled and sexy, Leanne’s straight to her shoulders, bangs curling-ironed up
away from her eyes. And they were the
same body type too, except that Lucy was big and meaty, nearly five ten, while
Leanne was wiry, short and petite.
Just to stay in character, and
without uncrossing his legs, even though he had to admit that he was pretty
jittery from the shock of getting canned, Dennis leaned forward and flipped
down the Vista Cruiser’s backseat ashtray, lighting one of the pre-rolled jays
he kept there. As if by paranoid
coincidence the streetlights blinked on, through the cracks and divots in his
windshield each a tiny holographic fragmentary image of the Man of Steel reaching
to the sky. Dennis let the touch of the
pot waft his mind into pleasant thoughts of unscrewing the lug nuts off
Toomey’s tires. Toomey’s nuts in a
box. Even in those ruthless days of the
early eighties it was a bit rare for most people to think about murder as a
viable alternative, but Dennis’s temper always took him there first.
At this point one thing Dennis
had learned was that even when things were over you could always work them for
another screw or two, although for Lucy he was pretty sure he’d rather pass the
ass, thanks and see you later. Pearson,
probably an electric guitar in the hot tub when no one else was around, he
wouldn’t jangle too long before the circuits blew.
The big station wagon had
belonged to Dennis’s old man, one of the many dubious gifts his mother’s second
husband had bestowed, and one of the few Dennis actually appreciated. The Vista Cruiser was as broad and long as a
bus, and it cornered like an aircraft carrier.
No doubt Alistair’s altruism had come from his sensitivity to gas
mileage, but even martyred by the Energy Crisis, and despite the fact that the
son of a bitch broke down nearly every week, Dennis still drove the car. He nosed the station wagon down through
winding and Los Altos
streets to the 280 freeway, gunning the mass of the big guzzler centrifugally
up the circular on-ramp.
It was a long ten miles, a gallon
of gas and a quart of 10-40, to where San Jose’s
northern protuberences stuck up under Cupertino’s
country dress, the apartment district where he had lived since getting the temp
job at PCI. But the goddammed piece of
shit couldn’t even drag its stupid ass that far. In the darkness of the curve near Foothill College the Vista Cruiser lurched
suddenly down four inches and a lane to the left as Dennis’ front tire
shredded. He dragged the vehicle to a
bumpy stop on the center divide and turned off its laboring motor.
Even though it was summer it was
getting chilly in the bottom of the canyon at night. Dennis had to hoof it from near the Magdelena
exit to a phone booth by a Foster’s Freeze drive-in on the outskirts of
downtown Los Altos. This was at the point where phone booths were
still a fairly familiar fixture of everyone’s existence. He sorted his change for dimes in the light
of the upright glass and metal chamber, still trying to think of someone
else. But it was going to have to be
Leanne. Leanne answered after the
second ring, her voice worried and impolite.
“I told you over and over, quit calling me, Rod. If I hear that siren outside one more time,
I’m filing a complaint.”
“Hey, Leigh.”
“Dennis? Oh God.
Now you. Listen, I don’t want you
calling me either. Let’s just leave it
where we left it this afternoon. Friends
and all, but don’t call me. And don’t
call me Leigh any more, all right?
What’s the matter? You sound
weird.”
“I don’t know whether I’m weird
or not. I don’t know who I am. I’m not Rod.
Is that guy still bothering you?”
“No. I don’t want to talk about it. Yeah.”
Dennis could picture her in the bedroom of her apartment, wearing only a
S.F. Giants baseball shirt, talking to him on her blood red nightstand phone.
“It sounds like you could really
use a friend. Leigh, you gotta help
me. I need a friend too. I broke down on 280. You’re the only person I know who can change
a tire.”
“Shit, Dennis. I’m not even dressed. Call triple A.” He could feel Leanne start to hang up and
embarrassed himself by squeaking.
“Wait.” He upped the ante. “I scored a little coke for you.”
“Shit,” Leanne said gracelessly. “Whatever.
The Foster’s Freeze? I’ll be
there in ten minutes.”
Leanne’s Ford Bronco came up San Antonio a little
later and paused without opening.
Dennis unlatched the door with cold-stiff fingers and climbed inside,
sinking back in a sheepskin seat cover.
After standing in the night air the rush of warmth from Leanne’s roaring
dashboard heater felt good.
“It’s about a quarter mile up 280
on the other side. I was just heading
home.”
“Working late, Dennis?” Leanne asked him archly. “That’s a little out of character.”
“No, I was at a party.”
“Yeah,” she agreed, looking over
at him meaningfully as she drove, “I saw
you and the dragon lady messing around upstairs after quitting time. Did she take you to Pearson’s big bash from
there?”
“What were you doing up
there?” Dennis sucked in air.
“The party? Nah, I didn’t go. Bob’s so nervous… Oh, you mean the office. I went in there to pick up my gym bag. As of today, I’m Bob Pearson’s Personal
Trainer. Don’t worry, I didn’t see
nothing.” The only thing not alarming
about those seven sentences was that at least Leanne hadn’t lost her bag.
“I guess maybe you just have a
thing for sailor suits—is that it?”
Leanne pressed.
He let out the breath. “I guess.
Something like that.
Something. Thank you for helping
me with my flat tire.”
“Guess I’m not really in any
position to complain, am I?” she
apologized, a little insincerely, Dennis thought. At this point he still had not produced the
promised cocaine and if she didn’t shut up pretty soon he wouldn’t be likely
to.
“You just surprised me, that’s
all. What was it you didn’t see?”
“I didn’t see the end of what
appeared to be an award-winning blowjob,”
Leanne said. “Frankly, I could
do better, though…”
“I’m not really in the
mood.” At this point, he was more into
roadside assistance than oral sex.
“Oh, like I’ll believe
that.” Right, like you will. Dennis felt a throb of nausea as he suddenly
realized how disinterested he really was with the whole thing.
“There’s my car.”
She spun the steering and levered
the gearshift into reverse, backing down into the drainage between the two
halves of the freeway and coming up the other side, emergency flashers
plinking. Dennis patted at his
pockets. Where had he put those keys?
“You got a jack? Oh, never mind. I can see you aren’t going to be any use to
me.” Leanne slid out of the Bronco,
leaving Dennis to climb slowly from the uphill side.
She was already on her knees
ahead of him, looking like the emergency medical technician she was at heart, a
tomboy angel, shining a super-phallic flashlight at his front tire. They packed about six or eight batteries in
the long anodized aluminum case. The
tire was wasted, torn and tortured steel cords, the smell of melted rubber.
“That’s what I said,” he
said. “I might have one. I never looked.” He took her around to the tailgate, where he
was pretty sure he had a spare.
Sure. There was a thing that you
turned, and underneath a rubber-matted panel was a tire, a scissors jack, and a
four-ended lugwrench.
“Flat,” Leanne pronounced, shining the flashlight
again and rocking the tire in its recess.
In her own light she wore worn jeans and a sleeveless white shirt that
showed off her arms, the slim muscles of a boy.
She jerked the thing up triumphantly with both hands and swiveled to
press it at Dennis. “Shit, look at
this. The belts are worn half through
the steel.”
“It’s a spare,” Dennis said defensively. The tire was filthy and it had left its tread
across her heaved-up chest. “I guess we
should put it on.”
“Are you a moron? We have to take it to a gas station and get
it filled first.”
“What, get gas?” Dennis was embarrassed. “Maybe we should take a moment in the Vista
Cruiser before we proceed,” he said, changing the subject. “I owe you a thing.” He helped Leanne into his floating
Xanadu--the folded down back seat lined with sleeping silks and furs, beneath
the stately excursion dome.
“Take it a little slow at
first,” he warned her, handing her the
rolled Ben Franklin. She accepted it
with short, pearly blue painted nails.
“Shit, I’ve snorted tons of shit.
Bob’s?”
Dennis thought about it. He had been thinking the cocaine had been
Toomey’s but from the amount it made sense.
“Yeah, I guess.”
“Bob’s so generous,” Leanne said matter-of-factly. She inhaled a long stream of powder and
propped the back of her thumb against her nose to hold it in. “I thought you didn’t like this shit.”
“I’m getting to like it a
little.” Even in those days true shit
was known to come out of the mouths of babes.
Dennis nudged his line straight with the packet, went up halfway with
one nostril and halfway down from the top with the other. Zow.
“So. You must have moved pretty quick after we
came back into the building. I think you
and Lucy Snyder just about beat me upstairs.”
“That’s me, Johnny
Fuckerfaster…” Dennis said wryly,
shaking his head at the memory. He
turned the subject back as fast as he could.
“What’s up with you and Rod? Are
you still with him or not?” Leanne’s
former boyfriend was an over-muscled jerk who wore an ambulance company
coverall like a special forces uniform.
He had shadowed her to PCI, parking his emergency vehicle conspicuously
in front of the corporate lobby and giving everyone a moment of false hope that
Pearson or Toomey might have had the mortal episode that statistically two men
per year per company might reasonably be expected to achieve.
“Fuck Rod,” Leanne pronounced. She slumped sullenly back in the mess of
unzipped sleeping bags that lined the body of the Vista Cruiser. Dennis could see that reminding her of her
former partner had set her into a dangerous and impulsive state, his imagined
extra screw almost within reach. But all
the kick in the balls apathy he had felt before returned. “I’m just worn out.” Why would she care if some fat thirty year
old could still eat a car?
“I’ve been thinking about our
motel some more,” he informed Leanne,
trying hard to communicate despite the fatigue of the drugs. “How’s this fit? Stucco, single story, with blue trim, one of
those courtyard operations. We get use
of the satellite TV and the pool free because we own the place. We could set up our own gym too.”
For Leanne, he thought, it really
was that motel in the East slope Sierra town, no matter how worldly she
pretended to be. With Wendy Guerin it
was the Dharma Bum routine. With Lucy,
on the other hand, it was a cipher, a secret to be extracted, by force, if
Dennis wanted. What were his own
desires? Too secret to reveal.
“I can benchpress my own weight
now,” Leanne bragged suddenly in
response to the suggestion. “A hundred
twenty-five. How much are you, Den?”
”Heavy, man.” Dennis was unimpressed. There would always be some refrigerator you
needed to get your boyfriend to lift.
Even though he had learned that Leanne studied karate, even with her
profoundly muscular bottom and crescent dimples in her shoulders that could
pull off a bottlecap, he had never felt that same sense of being
overwhelmed. How much could Lucy weigh,
he thought uneasily, thinking back to the power of her wide hips as she pinned
him to Pearson’s desk.
“Maybe you could be happy in a
little town life like that,” Leanne
said. “Not me.”
“That’s right, I forgot for a
second. Regular life isn’t good enough
for you all of a sudden. You’re a career
girl. Going places in the corporation.”
“You’re so mean. Why can’t you just be happy for me? Working for Bob is my big chance.”
“Keeping the boss in fighting
trim? That doesn’t sound like a very
fulfilling career.” Maybe if Pearson
hadn’t just fired him Dennis would have felt different about it.
“I don’t know what you have
against him. Bob’s really a nice guy.”
“Sure he is.” Leanne’s pretty pug-nosed face was suddenly
swept by the moving headlights of a vehicle heading southward on the
Interstate. Dennis had already told
himself that there was no need for her to know, at least not at this
point. “Well, I got a couple VIP
tickets to your boss’s Mars thing in the city Thursday. Want to go?”
Maybe it did just come down to
the city/country thing. It had taken a
couple of years, and even though at this point Dennis had gotten used to
sleeping in the same bed with the million or so people that shared his life on
a daily basis, he somehow didn’t end up sleeping with any of them for more than
a couple of hours.
“Well, no. That’s what I told Bob too. Why would I?
That stuff is boring. My old man
worked on the space program at Lockheed his whole life. I know all about it.”
“I thought just because I was
asking, maybe. I didn’t mean to get
personal. Does your dad still work
there?”
Leanne looked sad, snuffling a
little, her sinuses numb from powder.
“Dad…passed away last November, Thanksgiving. The house burned down and he…died.” At this point the term “passed away” was just
making a comeback. It sounded weird to
hear Leanne feel for and discard the phrase.
At points like these you suddenly
realize on a couple of levels again how little you know about a person no
matter how much you actually do know.
During all his time in the Silicon Valley Dennis had fallen into this
thing again and again, a state change in his understanding of a woman in which
normalcy always took a seismic jolt.
“Jesus, Leanne, I didn’t know.”
“No, it’s okay.”
Was it Dennis’s honest face or
what? “You loved your Dad, I bet.” At this point Dennis figured it was going to
be a sympathy screw. He touched Leanne’s
arm, warm in the dark of the car.
“Shit, yeah, I guess so. Except for the abuse. You know how it is.” Actually, Dennis did. He pulled his hand back, the old tentative
thing, then . Whether you had suppressed
those tender memories or come up with more, the territory was a lot the same.
The warbling whoop of an
emergency siren interrupted the past, whatever the fuck it was. Ruby light blared and blinked away through
the steamy windows. Dennis scrambled to
collect the cocaine and barely succeeded before the circle of a flashlight
pierced the tailgate window of the station wagon, outlining them both. “Shit,”
Leanne muttered, “It’s Rod.”
Dennis had never gone to Vietnam. His lottery number had tested negative and
the draft board had called his conscientious objector bluff by offering to let
him slide from active status to 4F in a brief three week exposure. Dennis had been sure that it had been a ruse
to break his spirit. A press gang would
bag him in that window of vulnerability, bop him on the head, throw him in a
C-140 headed to Da Nang. At this point Dennis had a pretty good
feeling that the powers that be didn’t always have his best interests in mind.
It was the first time he had ever
met Rod, although Leanne never stopped talking about him. About his time in Vietnam, about his bad temper,
about how he kept shadowing her, following her around. That and a whole mess of other things were
what had given Dennis a big hard on with regard to Rod.
Dennis went out first, enduring
the flashlight beam that Rod pinned him with.
He was even larger than Dennis, probably 230 or 40, well over six feet
tall, anonymous and angry in the glare of the light. Leanne came out behind, waiting impatiently
while hostilities between the two males were exchanged and a demilitarized zone
established. “Did you follow me fucking
here?” she asked Rod furiously.
“What, were you fucking
here?” he snarled back, flicking the flashlight Dennis’s way
again. “Ahh, come off it. You know I like to cruise the freeways. I recognize your truck.” He shined the beam across the primer painted
front of the Vista Cruiser, lips moving as he read the words, ‘ECNARUSNI ON’. “Heh,”
he said finally, “Very funny.
Who’s this joker?”
“I…” Dennis began.
“Roadside assistance,” Leanne said quickly. “A 10-42.
I was just on my way home from work.
He’s got a shredded tire.”
“Working late? That’s a little out of character.” Rod brushed by him and squatted to inspect
the remains of the radial, his big knees cracking. Dennis noticed a similar smell between this
man and Leanne, partly medicinal, part musk.
“How would you know how late I
work?” Leanne flared again. “I told you not to follow me around,
Rod. You don’t have any right to judge
how I act.”
“He…” Dennis started to point out. The guy had just told her he had been
cruising the freeway.
“Who’s judging?” Rod glared at Dennis to shut up. “I just know how you act. You think after riding the range together for
two years and seven months I don’t know everything about you?
“You…” Dennis finally said. Both Leanne and her former boyfriend turned
and looked at him expectantly. “You must
be Rod.”
“Who the fuck is this?” The big medical technician towered over
Dennis threateningly. Dennis smiled at
Rod, thinking hard what it would take to kick off his kneecap, wondering if
violence would work against the Vietnam vet as well as it had against Pearson’s
queer HR director an hour before and not caring that much even though the cat
was twice as big. At this point one of
the things Dennis had to count on, whether it was an asset or a liability, was
the way he over and over found himself jumping without a safety net and somehow
surviving. ECNARUSNI ON. But maybe not this time.
“Name’s Dennis, Rod,” Dennis said, sticking out his hand. “I work with Leanne at PCI. Lucky she came by after my tire blew. I’d be screwed.”
“Yeah? I bet you would. What were you two up to in there?” It was a good question. You rarely fixed a flat tire on a vehicle
from inside it. Dennis smiled at him
again, squeezing the big veteran’s hand sincerely. At this point lying was still more like a
native talent than a regular habit.
“Out of the wind. Waiting for professional help,
obviously. What do you say? Can you give us a ride to the nearest service
station? My spare’s gone flat.”
“Shit. Call triple A.”
“Forget it. We don’t need this. I’ll drive you myself.” Leanne broke in.
“Shit,” Rod repeated.
“Whatever.” He picked up Dennis’
spare easily, opening the back gate of the ambulance and sliding it
inside. “You and me have to talk,
Leanne. Your mother called.”
“The hell we do. You get up there,” she told Dennis, pointing to the front
seat. She climbed into the side of the
ambulance, sliding racked equipment away.
“It’s okay, Dennis. Rod is cool.
He gets high. He gets high a
lot.” Rod scowled. “Jesus, Leanne.”
“No, I mean it. You guys should like each other. You’re both a lot alike. Controlling fucks.”
“Oh, I doubt it,” Dennis said, leaving it there. A lot of times it didn’t pay to get into it
with them.
“Shit.” Rod said,
similarly disconnected. “Might as
well.” He popped a small plastic case
and pulled out a doobie.
At the Chevron station a minute
later Rod started laughing.
“Hee…Hee…Hee. Look at this
tire.”
“The fucker’s completely bald!”
Leanne chimed in derisively. “He won’t
get fifteen miles.”
“Well, crap.” Dennis said.
“How am I going to get to San Fran tomorrow night?”
“You asking my advice? Buy some fucking tires,” Rod said, still laughing, “Silly sucker.”
Somewhere along the line they
agreed that everything was okay--Dennis could go on idealizing Rod’s girlfriend
as long as it was recognized that Rod had been there first. Inch by inch Dennis saw that Leanne could
probably be right. He and Rod were
enough alike that they could get along.
“You remind me of a friend of mine,”
the veteran said magnanimously a while later after the lines had been drawn
again, other lines inhaled. He accepted
Dennis’s protestations about Vietnam
with indifference. “So much good dope
there, man. Bags of pure heroin. Bags of it!
You think this shit of yours is something.” After they put on the spare, the ambulance
followed the Vista Cruiser slowly back to Leanne’s apartment. “Would you mind coming in with me?” she asked.
“You see what I mean.”
Dennis got out and walked back to
the idling emergency vehicle.
“Rod,” he said. “I’ve got her, now. Give it up, she’s with me.”
“That’s okay, man, I’m sure you
do. I’ll just sit here.” At this point the big red and white unit
loomed unlit in the middle of Curtner
street, blocking all traffic in either
direction. After a while Dennis
shrugged, thinking instead what he could do to use the situation to his
advantage.
“Listen,” he said.
“Do you like that space stuff? I
already invited Leigh. We’re going to
her bosses’ big rocket to Mars event in San
Francisco tomorrow night. Want to come along? Really, what I need is a ride. I’m afraid the Vista Cruiser won’t make it
this time.” Although at this point he
had to admit, he must also have been thinking about the disruption factor, starship
troopers arriving at the Exploratorium in a real ambulance, sirens flashing. Pearson was going to shit his pants.
“Cool,” Rod said.
Believe it or not there was a certain point in that half century when it
was not cool to say cool, and Rod had nailed it. “Mars, huh?
That’s like that place where the guy in the funny helmet comes from,
isn’t it? In the Bugs Bunny cartoons?”
“Right.” Dennis said.
“Okay. That’s cool then. Tomorrow, around five-thirty. Do you think there will be any traffic?”
“He’s just sitting there,” he reported to Leanne a few minutes
later. “So, we all set for Pearson’s
thing tomorrow?” It took a little
talking. Her new boss would be happy if
she showed up. Maybe her dad would have
liked her to go.
“Oh, screw you,” Leanne said mournfully, but the promise and
application of a few more lines of white powder finally did the trick for him.
Chapter 5 The Mission
to Mars
“I thought you said “San Mateo,” Rod let go of it finally. “Frisco, huh?
See I never been there before. I
never been off of the peninsula, except for Vietnam. And that was different. They didn’t make me drive myself there.” Which at that point you had to agree was a
valid exception.
“Want me to drive?” Dennis offered. He was used to driving a big wagon.
“Company wouldn’t like it. No insurance.
It’s just that, Jesus, you could have told me.” The traffic down Lombard
was solid, the street a mess of confusing neon.
Rod flicked the siren of the ambulance to scatter a running group of
pedestrians.
“Wait, there it is. Turn here!”
Dennis and Leanne both shouted.
Rod was already well past the turnoff, but he flicked the lights and
siren on again and swerved the ambulance into it anyway, easily missing the
fenders of a couple of cars blindly following the connector to the Golden Gate
bridge.
Ahead was a circular grove of eucalyptus,
a large round building like a bullfighting stadium before them. “Parking!”
Leanne and Dennis screamed simultaneously, and Rod cruised left, and
left again, entering a circular parking lot choked with idling cars each aimed
in a different direction, a jumble of bacilli on a petri dish illuminated by
the ambulance’s flashing lights.
“Palace of Fine
Arts/Exploratorium, this way,” Dennis
recited, reading the sign. “Look for the
theatre.” Rod thumbed off the lights
and pulled the emergency vehicle nose up to nudge the bumper of a maroon
BMW. A man in a dark suit and a woman
in an elegant dress turned and looked uncertainly back at them as though
wondering if they were being summoned.
“Sorry!” Rod smiled, waving. He, Dennis, and Leanne followed a larger
group that was funneling toward the curved Palace building.
“Dennis? Oh, my!
I didn’t expect to see you here.
I thought…” It was Wendy Guerin,
looking even more disconnected than usual.
She wore a short suede leather skirt and jacket with beaded
fringes. At this point it was before
leather had gotten that association with skin stolen from murdered
animals. Instead, people thought it was
like a way to get back to your roots as a native American, even if you weren’t
one, sort of like stealing your skin from a murdered animal. Jesus, Dennis was getting cynical in his old
age.
“Hi Wendy. You look good. Well, it isn’t like you die when you leave
Paradigm Control, you know. Just maybe
your Systems aren’t controlled as much as they used to be. These are my friends, Leanne and Rod. Leanne works at PCI too. You’ve probably seen her there. Say, is there a way we could score another
ticket?”
Wendy looked as though she might
have a mental hernia, although at this point in psychology they still hadn’t
come up with all this right-brain/left-brain crap. “I gave them away! I didn’t think you were going to come. Could you just, you know, buy tickets?”
“Sure, no problem,” Dennis said.
“How much is the tab, anyway?”
“Thirty-five. It’s like a charity thing. The tickets get you into the reception
later.”
“Thanks for nothing, dear.” At this point it was beginning to be sort of
a bummer of a night, with no hint of the confusion that lay ahead.
A door opened in the curved
surface of the Palace, and two odd figures emerged, their bodies not yet
adjusted to the outside light. Behind
them was a backstage area, musty and muffled by tall curtains. The stagehands looked warily at the large
figure of Rod, wearing his uniform coverall as usual, but then shrugged and lit
their cigarettes, one a Benson and Hedges, the other a Marlboro man.
“Oh! It’s Erik,”
Wendy remarked, her aura suddenly attaining the clear pink of love as
inspiration came and she recognized the men.
“Actually, if you don’t care about the reception, I’m sure we can get
you in backstage. Erik, can I ask you a
great favor? I’m sure you could use a
little extra help, am I right? Here’s
three of my friends that have offered to assist you.” At this point Dennis had to love her a
little back. Everybody who met Wendy in
this modality did. The shorter and
broader of the two stagehands reached carefully down and stepped the coal off
the end of his cigarette.
“Sure, Wendy, glad to. Will we see you later? Are you coming to the party?”
“Ohh, I’ll try. You know what? I will.
So I’ll see you guys there?” The
eyes of the two stagehands fixed on Wendy’s fringed goddess form, willing her
not to depart as she broke away, another rift in the cosmos repaired. “Thanks for coming, Dennis.”
“I’m Hamilton.
This is Terry Flickinger. What
can you guys do?”
“Well. I’m a Xerox Key Operator. Rod drives ambulance. Leanne can bench a hundred and a
quarter.” Dennis said, stepping through
the door into the backstage area.
“Swell,” Hamilton
said, following. He was coming into
focus now as a short-legged man in his late thirties, with long blond hair,
dulled with age, and a frizzly beard. He
turned his back on them and sat down in an army issue canvas chair, and began
to turn knobs on a stack of electronic equipment. The other man, silent, short-haired but with
a beatnik’s goatee, skinny as wire, stood diffidently to the side.
“Are those the lights?” Dennis asked.
It looked like dimmer switches, thick black tee-handled controls that
slid down long slots. He wondered out
loud how they were planning to get the images from space.
“You kidding me?” Hamilton
asked, dismissively. “Over here. This interface is where our leased-line from
Moffett field comes in. They have an
IMP on the ARPAnet that they’re going to use to get the images from the Jet
Propulsion Lab in Pasadena. But you wouldn’t know what that means, would
you?”
“I get the drift,” Dennis said.
“Only, how do you get pictures through the wires? Is it like cable?”
Hamilton shot a pitying look at him and
elbowed his buddy Flickinger. “Flick,
would you take these three someplace where they can’t do any harm. Tape down some coax or something.”
“No, seriously. ARPAnet, that’s like the stuff Cordell
Green’s group does, isn’t it? Do you
have some kind of modem or something here to decode the pictures?” Hamilton
took a second look at him and nodded, a nerd’s fish-eyed acceptance, then
turned nervously back to his machines.
“That’s right. Like I said to that other guy, really what
we’ll be showing is a series of stills.
You gotta realize, that’s pretty much the way the telemetry at JPL is
receiving the data too.”
“I love this techy stuff,” Dennis confided to Rod and Leanne, who didn’t
seem to be digging it quite as much.
“OK, fine, you guys. We’ll find
some seats.”
“See you, nice to meet you,” Leanne said vacantly. They were inside.
“I love this techy stuff,” Dennis repeated. “I should have studied it in college.” Instead, it had been art, leaving him now
somehow a spectator into the world of engineering he had found himself in at
PCI. He should have studied anything at
college with the attention he had done here.
It had been an eye-opening education into practical science, the social
calculus of what could be portrayed as knowledge.
The theater was already full,
full of an unrestrained babble of conversation.
Dennis heard a lady’s snorting laugh a few rows away. Dennis led them to the back, right below the
projection booth and on the aisle where there were a few empty seats. Ahead of them a short little twerp in a NASA
flight jacket was holding forth in an English accent to a bunch of his
friends. “It’s going to be the most
important mission since Mariner orbited nine years ago. Up until then we didn’t have any pictures at
all.”
Another man sitting to the side
of them spoke up unexpectedly. “I’m
sorry, this is not really true. The Mars
5 mission of 1972 send back some excellent images.” He was
medium-tall, with short brown hair, and a nice blue suit jacket, a few
years older than Dennis. “Excuse
me. May I present myself. My name is Valerie Voloshin. A scientific attaché from the Russian
Embassy.”
“That was after
Mariner,” the troop leader informed his
group.
“How far away is this Mars?” Rod asked.
Rod’s ignorance of everything scientific seemed profound. “That’s like a star or something, isn’t it?”
“Well, no,” Dennis said, a little embarrassed, looking
away. On the stage below a guy in
gathered silk chi pants stood, looking back at the projection booth in
irritation. A slide with the words
“Viking 1” splashed across the screen.
“Largah, largah!” the man shouted
through his hands. The communication was
impaired by a heavy English accent. The
picture swiveled violently away for a moment and then returned, smaller and to
the right. The man had to be like a
director or stage manager. He stamped
his foot in frustration and then bounded up the stairs toward them. “No!
Noo!”
“You like them like that,
Leanne?” Dennis asked, “Sensitive and British?”
“Oh, Fuck You!” she responded satisfyingly. The man was thin also, dark, had what seemed
to Dennis to be a purposely unshaven face.
His shirt was silk also, a slate purple long-sleeved blouse, open to a
curl of dark chest hair. He came to a
stop on the level where they sat.
“Get these people out of my
seats!” he demanded, although it was hard to tell of whom. Dennis looked him top to bottom without
moving. After a moment the director
seemed to think again, continuing up the rest of the way and banging on the
door of the booth. “Give me that live
feed now. This is a rehearsal,
everybody!”
The NASA groupies had swiveled to
look at the three of them, their leader scowling at Dennis disapprovingly,
faced with a crisis in his semi-official capacity. Dennis smiled friendlily and gave him the
finger.
There was a sudden decrease of
light from the projection booth and a small blurry spot appeared in the center
of the screen. A few seconds later the
theater lights began to shut down in banks, right, center, left. A spotlight wavered on an empty podium. The hundred or so people in the auditorium
hushed and became an audience. But then,
for a long time nothing else happened.
People began to talk again, but uncertainly now, as though unwilling to
broach complex subjects.
“It’s the same still
picture,” the troup leader ahead of them
said dismissively. This is an old shot
from Mariner. Viking is going to get
much, much closer.” He looked over his
shoulder at the Russian for a moment. “Bob tells me we’re in for a treat—full motion
video as it comes in from the probe, which of course is now three minutes away,
at the speed of light.”
As if in confirmation, there was
a disturbance above and the director burst back out of the projection booth. “He’s a bloody actor. Tell him to act. I’m not going to take a fall over some
technical glitch. And get these people
out of my seats.” He spun and descended
jerkily downward.
“Uh-oh,” Rod said.
“That doesn’t sound positive.”
Between them, Leanne sighed deeply.
Dennis touched her arm, getting up and angling out to the aisle. “Hang on.
I’ll find out what’s going on.”
He followed the director down the stairs and backstage, coming up behind
him arguing in loud cockney with Hamilton.
“I was told ‘full motion
video.’ I was told bloody beaver shots
of the bloody planetoid! What do you
mean you haven’t even tested the communications?”
Hamilton was shrugging imperviously. “Nothing to test, bud. I know the phone line works. You just saw the other picture I sent
through. That means the cable is all
good and my converter works. Now all we
have to hope for is that they can make that internet connection between Moffett
and JPL.”
“Hope for? Hope for?
We have an auditorium full of bloody patrons. It has to work! What if it doesn’t? Have you thought of that?”
Hamilton shrugged again, as though saying,
‘Not my problem.’
“It means that Scotty, you
know, Scotty from Star Trek will be trying to explain why people
shouldn’t want their money back. You
don’t want to hang Scotty out to dry, do you?” The english director managed to make his
voice both sarcastic and wheedling.
“Is there a problem here?” It was Bob Pearson, wearing a tuxedo for some
reason and looking nearly as odd and big shouldered in it as he had in tight
leather pants and cotton smock a few nights before. He pushed past Dennis to confront the two
staffers, shooting Dennis a somewhat alarmed look. “You must be Neville, my producer. Welcome.
Erik, what’s going on?”
“Ahh, this pud’s just worried
because I can’t totally guarantee the guys at Moffett and JPL will have their
act together. Hell, for that matter, I
can’t guarantee that that Martian guy in the helmet from the Bugs Bunny cartoons
won’t shoot his disintegrator ray at the Viking, boss.”
Pearson smiled sharkishly,
exposing his jagged teeth. “Got
you. When are they supposed to come on
line?”
“Any time now. I’ve been waiting. We’re showing an old picture from the Mariner
probe. But the new pictures will be a
lot better.”
“It isn’t bloody working. That’s what I’ve been telling you. We should have started ten minutes ago!” The director was tapping his wristwatch
vigorously.
“You’re kidding. That probe is 35 million miles away. It’s been traveling for more than six
months. You gotta cut us a little
slack.”
Pearson looked troubled. “Could you get on the horn and check for
me?” he ordered Hamilton.
“We’re almost out of time. Scotty
is on his way.” It didn’t sound right to
Dennis either. They would know exactly
where that thing was.
In a moment it was confirmed as Hamilton hung up the
phone, his face red. He examined a
series of meters in a box in front of him, tapping one, jiggling a thick
connector where it was attached.
“Something wrong,” he muttered.
It made perfect sense to Dennis
that Bob Pearson would be a Star Trek fan.
It fit right in with his taste in music, a frozen slice of genre that
ended around 1967. Dennis had to admit,
he was impressed. Of course it wasn’t as
good as getting Shatner to work the event, or DeForest Kelley, but still, he
had to admit he was affected on a gut level when Chief Engineer Scott and his
escort came through the backstage door of the Palace of Fine Arts, wearing the
pressed felt red dress uniform of Star Fleet.
His escort wore the mini-dressed women’s outfit, meshed tights revealing
her long sexy legs. It was Lucy. Her eyes met Dennis’s and she blushed and
looked guiltily down. She dragged hard
on a thin black cigarette.
“Hi, Scotty,” Pearson greeted the actor with shy, nearly
erotic intensity. “You look great,
babe,” he threw at Lucy. Lucy’s face burned with shame at the
dismissive bite of his tone. “Listen, Scotty,
we have a small problem.”
“It’s OK. No reason to panic,” Pearson began speaking too quickly, and
Dennis suddenly realized he was witnessing the birth of a fraud. “We’ve got pictures of Mars in the can
already. It’s just that we might need
you to spin some of your old space yarns, Scotty, you know, until we can
re-establish communications with StarFleet Command.”
“Now listen, no one needs to
know. Here’s what you do,” Pearson was saying to Hamilton and the
director. “Erik, when you hear Scotty
say, ‘Aye, here she’s coming into focus now, Captain,’ that’s your cue to turn
on this old picture. Only I want you to
just sit here and bounce your pencil eraser off the lens every ten or fifteen
seconds. Okay?”
“You got it, boss,” Hamilton
said. “Should we have a transmission
failure after a couple three minutes?”
“Unless we can get that real
signal up, I don’t see that we have any choice,” Pearson said, giving the director a
meaningful glance. “Right, Neville? It’s going to be your job to figure out a way
to keep things going. No one needs to
leave here unhappy. We’ve got computers,
projectors, pictures from Mars, no problem.”
The director looked for a moment as though he was going to object, but
finally withdrew under the stern glance of his employer. “Scotty?
Are you ready? We’re almost ready
to start. I’ve ordered Lucy to get out
there with you. A little
distraction. She’ll do anything you need
her to do.”
“Aye-aye, Captain, sir.” The actor said. He looked a lot more nervous in real life
than Dennis could ever remember the Chief Engineer being when the antimatter
hit the fan. Lucy looked as if she was
going to spit.
Across the room, in a fold of
curtain across the hidden stage, Dennis saw the Russian attaché standing
silently, also watching. Spying, maybe
you would have to say. He must have
followed Dennis down. Well, it wasn’t
like they were giving away the specs to the transporter or anything. The Soviets shouldn’t need any instruction in
how to fool people. Dennis withdrew to
the auditorium, rejoining Leanne and Rod.
A few moments later the Russian also returned to his seat, shooting
Dennis a look of amusement.
“What did you find out?” Leanne asked.
“Can we go yet?”
“Pretty soon, I think,” Dennis whispered. On the stage below, Pearson, Scotty, and the
young leader of the group seated in front of them were gathering together. After a moment the kid popped his finger on
the microphone to draw everyone’s attention.
“Welcome. Ladies and Gentlemen, your Viking team
welcomes you,” he said
self-importantly. “On behalf of the
Santa Clara Valley L5 Society and the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, we’d like to welcome you here to this…event. Here with us tonight are two very good
friends of mine. May I introduce, Dr.
Robert Pearson, Vice President and Chief Exectutive Officer of Paradigm
Control, Incorporated, down in Palo
Alto. Bob, I
know you can’t tell us about your real work, but maybe you can say a few words
to our audience about how PCI came to sponsor this event tonight.”
Pearson had looked a lot more at
ease as a rock and roller performing for his friends a few nights before than
he did now in front of a real audience.
His mouth folded to a small smile, bad teeth protruding in a jagged
line. He hunched over the podium and
spoke tightly into the microphone.
“That’s right, Stan,” he said
jokingly. “No one knows exactly what we
do over there in Palo Alto,
and we try to keep it that way. But
seriously…” Pearson paused, although no
one had actually laughed. “Seriously,
PCI has been a partner with NASA throughout most of the company’s history. Whether it’s telecommunications, or global
positioning for weather satellites, or, you know, defense, NASA knows it can
count on our engineers to help it get the job done. Stan, I want to make sure everyone knows what
an honor it is for me personally to meet our special guest tonight. Mr. James Noonan. Scotty!
Dennis watched in embarrassment
as Scotty bounded from behind the curtains, looking fat, ancient and awkward,
dragging Lucy by the hand. Lucy
stumbled out, knock-kneed in patent Starfleet space boots, vamping feminine
frailty. Dennis thought that at some
point it had to serve her right. You are
what you dress up as.
The audience around him clapped
and cheered wildly, even Leanne and Rod.
Rod looked sideways at both of them, his mouth widening in a grin of
recognition, as if getting it for the first time. “It’s Scotty!”. Dennis felt himself outraged as Lucy tipped
her high-heeled toe in a leggy pose. Was
she so vain and self-centered that she could think all this applause was really
for her?
“A-a-y-e, Captain!” Scotty leaned close to the microphone. “I dinna know how long we can hold on. She’s getting ready to blow!” He wrapped his arm around Lucy, making it
clear he was making a filthy joke, his hand stuck under the short dress of the uniform,
massaging her ass. The audience, mostly
male, mostly geeky, cracked up. Lucy
leaned forward to place her lipsticked mouth close to the microphone. “Ohh, Scotty!”
“No time for that now,
Lieutenant. There’s an important
transmission from Star Fleet arriving.”
Scotty leered theatrically into Lucy’s deep cleavage. “Space—the Final Frontier. These are the images of the space probe Viking. Aye, Captain.
It’s all coming into focus now.”
Behind them, on cue, the projection screen popped with light and the
tiny orange image of Mars they had seen before appeared again. To the side of the stage Dennis could see the
figure of the director gesture to someone in the booth behind them and the
opening notes of 2001: A Space Odyssey
boomed through the speakers, a bastard combination of Science Fiction themes.
“This sucks,” Leanne observed. Dennis nodded agreement, but Rod was clearly
captivated.
“Wait, though,” he shushed them both, hunching forward in the
small theater seat. “I want to see what
happens next.” The image on the screen
jumped suddenly, then wobbled back into place.
“Captain, there seems to be some
interference. A space vortex. Remember, Ladies and Gentlemen, these
pictures are coming in live from light years away, so there may be some
fuzziness. We’ll keep on showing the
pictures to you as long as we can.
Lieutenant, can you take us in any closer?”
“Aye-aye, sir,” Lucy said, a hostility made sullen by fear or
shame evident in each of the three syllables.
“Oh God,” Leanne said.
“I can’t believe it. This woman
is such a whore. Did you know she was
going to be here?” Lucy was facing
straight at them, lifting her long boobies saucily to the top of the low cut
uniform, presenting them for the Chief Engineer’s inspection and the audience’s
salacious delight. Leanne elbowed Dennis
angrily in the ribs as he continued to watch the woman on the stage manipulate
her knockers.
Dennis had to agree with Leanne,
but he was all mixed up. A second later
Lucy’s eyes met his, stabbing him quickly and indifferently with her ironic
lack of giving a shit. Why did he always
go for these bleak, messed up bitches?
If he had had her, he could have…just had her. And he almost
had. I guess you could say that at this
point, watching Lucy neck up to the revolting old man something like jealousy
was going on.
Is this really any different than the show she put on for me the other
night? Dennis’s frustration exploded
inside. Her flirtation with the audience
was offered in the same base and brassy coin she always displayed.
“Thank you, Lieutenant. I can see those celestial bodies emerging
now.” On the stage the lighting
narrowed and intensified, a spot with a cyan gel hollowing Lucy’s facial bones,
making her look sultry and severe beneath charcoal Vulcan eyebrows. It would always be this kind of drama with
Lucy, no line between what was real and what was pretense.
“Something’s happening,
Captain! A Klingon destroyer has locked
on to our probe,” Scotty suddenly
screamed. The screen jumped again, the
image of the planet tracing a jagged trail across the darkness of space, joined
an instant later by a tiny cutout of an evil enemy starship. The director’s flashlight, Dennis realized. “Captain!
Shields are down!”
“OK. We can go now,” he told Leanne and Rod. Rod looked angry, unsure of what was going
on. Was this a real show?
“Ladies and Gentlemen, this just
in from StarFleet Command,” Scotty
dead-panned gravely, touching his communicator and reading aloud from a half
sheet of paper. “We regret to inform the
Federation citizens that the Viking 1 probe has encountered transmission
difficulties.”
“Whether from the effects of
space time disruption or under Klingon phaser fire, we may not ken for some
time. Fleet Command is assessing the
situation.” Scotty looked up somberly
from his notes. “Ladies and Gentlemen,
I’m sorry I won’t be able to attend the reception afterwards, but as you might
imagine, there’s an urgent summons for me to return to base. We will be as forthcoming as possible with
status updates for the Viking as information becomes available. For tonight, thank you very much for
coming. Thank you for your generous
contributions. And could we all join
together in again thanking our corporate sponsor, Dr. Robert Pearson, C.E.O of
Paradigm Control, Incorporated.”
Looking happy to escape, Scotty
angled his portly frame away from Lucy and offstage. There was a brief spurt of applause, then
unhappy noise. “Is he kidding? He must be kidding, right?” Rod asked. “Isn’t there something we can do?” Left alone on the stage, Lucy curtsied
deeply and also withdrew. The audience
simmered with discontent, beginning to fragment into unruly groups.
“Stan? Stan?
Is that it?” the members of the
Santa Clara Valley L5 Society wheedled
their leader, whose head hung in shame.
Bob Pearson’s big shoulders squared fatalistically. He rose and walked quickly out of the
theatre.
Both Dennis and the Russian’s
heads turned in search of the likely scapegoat, the director. After a minute he reappeared, shrugging
angrily.
“We want our money back!” Dennis intoned. Around them a couple of other people turned
and picked up the chant. The director
winced.
“I don’t do the bloody tickets,
folks. The blokes you want will be at the
reception. Take it up with them if you
like. They may make some kind of
adjustment.”
“The pictures of the stars were
all faked,” Rod exclaimed loudly,
threateningly, rising to his feet.
Leanne looked embarrassed, maybe because she knew the difference between
a planet and a star, maybe because she didn’t.
She clearly didn’t want to participate in this. “That’s right. A complete fake,” she said.
“To be precise, an amateurish
fake,” another voice contributed. It was the Russian.
“We want our money back!” Dennis repeated, doing his best to rouse the
sheepish crowd filing out of the theater.
“You know what? Fuck you.
Like I say, talk to Dr. Pearson.”
The director spun away, elbowing people aside as he descended the steep
aisle.
Their mission had kept the star
troopers away from home base too long.
Leanne seemed worn out, her skin tones flaccid and blotchy.
“Let’s go back to the car for a
minute,” Dennis suggested. Everybody brightened. But in the parking lot when he opened the
glovebox and looked for the five grams he had put there for EZ access they were
gone. “Did you see that shit I left in
here?” he questioned Rod sharply. He
checked the crumpled Carl’s Junior bag on the floor of the passenger side. The rest of the blow was still there,
fortunately. See, that was what you
learned in this city, never trust anyone.
At this point although Dennis wasn’t paranoid yet he was learning about
paranoia fast.
Plus this whole Mars probe thing
had put him in a vindictive mood, one that even the jumbo lines that they
snorted couldn’t erase. He hated to
think about how much money he had just lost.
“Hey buddy. Want to buy some blow?” he asked the same suited gentleman as before,
now helping his wife into a car parked nearby.
“Gram for eighty.” Which had its
predictable negative effect, but it also pays to advertise. Almost before the couple had locked their
doors Dennis had another sale going, and another after that.
“Good evening.” Dennis looked up from shuffling a bunch of
cash to meet the look of the Russian attaché he had seen inside. Remember, O Dearly Beloved, that at this
point it was even before ATMs were invented, you weren’t so used to seeing big
wads of money unless you sold drugs.
The Russian attaché stood openly,
illuminated by an overhead parking lot light.
He wore a sports coat the same color as his wood colored hair, a tan
pullover sweater that imprisoned a red tie.
He wore an amused expression as easily as he did the academic uniform.
“Dosvedanya, Tovarich.” Dennis said warily.
“You speak? No, I understand. Nothing but Clockwork Orange.
Would it be possible for me also to make a purchase this evening?”
Leanne leaned forward, entranced
by the cultured accent. “Are you really
from Russia?”
“The Ukraine, actually. A city named Odessa,
on the Black Sea,” the Russian said.
“You shitting me?” Dennis asked,
“I thought I heard you say inside you were with the embassy in some
way. What’s a clean cut soviet type like
you doing trying to score?”
“Heh heh. What do you think they make diplomatic
immunity for?” the Russian said
ironically, leering at Leanne. “No, but
seriously, every embassy has a guy like me on the staff. Our job is to get out and mingle, go places,
buy things. May I try a little
sample?” Dennis nodded grudging assent.
“Could you sell as much as four
grams?” the Russian bore in after a
short pause. Dennis nodded again,
grinning fiercely, wondering whether there was some four gm legal threshold he
should be aware of. “No problem. Thirty-two.”
“What?”
“No price breaks. Three hundred twenty for the four.” Beneath the dark dashboard Dennis separated
out the packets. “Pay the man in the booth,”
he said, pointing to Rod in the back seat.
They had about a half an hour
before the reception across town, falling into conversation. After a while Dennis gestured and the Russian
joined Rod in the back seat, sliding to the center to address them.
“What do you think actually
happened in there?” Valerie asked. “Is it possible that something really
happened to the Viking spacecraft?”
“Nah,” Dennis volunteered. “You heard them backstage—the communications
was messed up. It was all an act.”
“Oh, really? Actually, I didn’t hear very much. Sometimes I’m not able to get as close as I’d
like. What happened?” The Russian leaned on the back of the front
seat close to Leanne. At least this was
in the days when cars still had a full length bench between the front and back
instead of bucket seats.
It wasn’t that Dennis was nervous
about Russians. At this point they had a
couple three of them at Paradigm Control.
Nice guys, heavily into tobacco.
At this point it was over a year before Tsing-Ping and Chen, the two EEs
from the People’s Republic of China
arrived. But he didn’t care much for the
way that Valerie Voloshin was making himself
so familiar.
“I was right there. The computer guy Erik said that their
internet signal was broken. Pearson
ordered him and that wussy director, Neville, to fake it with the canned
shots.”
“I felt sorry for Scotty,” Leanne said, “He looked so embarrassed.”
“He deserved it. The capitalist lackey. My dissertation at university was on the
racist imperialist propaganda of American Science Fiction. You know the aliens in the stories are
always either Africans or Chinese or Arabs.
Or socialist robots. Can you deny
it?”
Dennis snorted. “That’s right. Scotty himself. In the Star Trek series he’s that stereotype
of the Scottish steam engineer in the industrial revolution.”
The Ukranian’s eyebrows
arched. “But who was that Vulcan floozy
with him? Will she be at the
reception? I don’t think I’ve seen her
before.”
“Shit, not you too,” Leanne shook her head. “Woman is the nigger of the galaxy, that’s
all. What is it about you men? Not that that bitch doesn’t deserve it.”
“Something about a woman in a
uniform just does it to me, I’m afraid,” Valerie admitted. “It must be my KGB upbringing. It’s just so out there, out in the open.”
Dennis explained about Lucy and
her costumes. Obviously in her case telling
the truth or conning the public was of no concern.
“Haha. Now I understand. The naval uniform. A couple of months ago I had an unorthodox
request for a Soviet Navy uniform.
Unorthodox, that’s what we call them.
Don’t know if I ever knew what he traded for it or whether it was a
gift.”
“Do you live here in
Frisco?” Leanne asked. At this point it was almost as politically
incorrect to use the F-word in public to describe The City as it is now. The Russian smiled at the faux pas, white
teeth in his blond face. “In San
Francisk. Yes. In Pacific
Heights, not far from
here.”
“I’ve never been to Frisco
before,” Leanne said. It had been, Dennis and Rod had discovered,
like coming to the land that time forgot, a generation of families who woke up
too early for malls and too late for rural California, suburbia without a
heart.
“I wish I could give Wendy Guerin
a piece of my mind for making us come up here to be a part of this fraud,” Dennis said.
It was beginning to nag at him that asking for money back when you
hadn’t actually paid anything was a little silly. Maybe they should just drop it. He wasn’t sure they’d even be able to get in
the door without tickets.
“I hardly think the publics will
be invited to this party, especially after what happened.” Valerie Voloshin was amused. “I mean, did not happen. To each according to his needs. Allow me to offer you some tickets,
compliments of the U.S.S.R.” He reached
into his pocket. Dennis was surprised to
see four cardboard rectangles with the Viking logo imprinted on them.
Chapter 6 The Reception
A few members of the space group
from the theater, the L5 society, guarded the reception room at the Palace of Fine Arts, next to the
Exploratorium. Dennis and Rod and Leanne
let their new friend go in first, then presented their tickets. Inside, Bob Pearson was conversing earnestly
with the reporter they had seen earlier.
Beyond him, on the other side of the blond paneled room, Dennis was
immediately aware of Lucy Snyder, still outfitted in her Star Trek outfit,
toasting his entrance over the rim of a glass, apparently oblivious to another
adoring group of zitfaced L5’rs that bumped around her like sperm. Fuck her and the landing craft she came in
on. Pearson moved toward them.
“Well, if it isn’t my new
personal assistant! Hey, Leigh,” the
Vice President greeted Leanne first,
“Glad you could make it. Are you
into space exploration too? I didn’t
know.”
“Sure.” Leanne simpered, moving close to her
employer. Why didn’t she do that for Dennis? It seemed like it was all he could do these
days to get a laugh out of her. “I’m
into all kinds of shit. You’d be
surprised.”
Pearson daggered gray eyes in
Dennis’s direction. “I hope you’re not
into this shit,” he said
malevolently. “This dude’s nothing but
bad news. Dude. What are you doing here? I thought we fired you.”
“That’s right, you did.” Dennis said, meeting the Vice President’s
glare without flinching. “Only I didn’t
die. How goes the war against communism,
Bob? Better than your little event
tonight, I hope.”
“I don’t know what the hell
you’re talking about.”
“We just hate being lied
to,” Rod chimed in. “You guys had a lot of nerve to show us that
one stupid slide over and over when you were supposed to be showing a movie. It wasn’t even the right star. You should be ashamed of yourselves.”
“Oh, horseshit. We knew something might go wrong, there were
a couple of things that were beyond our control. Everybody else knew that. We were trying our best to keep folks entertained. With Scotty.
Plus Lucy’s little T&A tease.”
Pearson gestured over his muscular shoulder to where Lucy stood, still
sexy in the short star dress. “Look,
dude, I told you before I didn’t care who Lucy screws,” Pearson said, “just as long as they aren’t Klingons. You’re not a Klingon, are you, dude? Let it go.”
Pearson turned back to the man he
had been talking to. A lapel badge
identified him as “Francis Coughlin, San Jose Mercury News.” “Even though there were a few technical
hitches at the last minute,” Pearson
resumed his spiel, “I think we can say the evening was a success. We showed we could bring the excitement of
space exploration, live, as it happens, right to the people, so to speak.”
“I understand you’ve put together
a real technical tour-de-force,” the reporter agreed. “Dr. Pearson, in the future, do you think
that events like this one will become commonplace?”
“Indeed I do, Francis. What we have been using here tonight is
something called the Internet, and it provides us with a vision of
communications that potentially could allow anyone to obtain instant and
complete access to information everywhere.
Tonight one of our network nodes is in orbit around Mars. Think of the implications!” Dennis leaned in to listen.
“Information Theory is one of PCI’s
specialties, isn’t it, Bob?” he
said. Pearson flinched slightly, nodding
reluctantly.
“That’s right. I was going to ask. What business would a company with a name
like Paradigm Control Incorporated be in, actually?” the Mercury News reporter asked.
“I’m really not at liberty to
say, Francis. Agencies of the federal
government. Mostly classified
contracts.”
“It’s fascinating stuff, I’ve got
to tell you, Frank,” Dennis contributed
cheerfully, looking again at Lucy Snyder across the room, a secret touch of
lust coloring his mood as he remembered the tight clench of the woman’s lips,
an open classified container. “Spook
stuff. Cruise Missiles, Trident
subs. Nuclear Theatre. Bob’s into it all.”
“Really?” the reporter said. “That’s interesting, because…”
“Shut the hell up, will
you?” Pearson growled. “We do do some work with DARPA, as this guy
knows,” he admitted to the reporter. “That’s the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency. And, of course, with
NASA, as well.”
“You can certainly count on my
discretion, sir,” Francis Coughlin
said.
Dennis smiled. Obviously at this point you can’t really
count on mine, he thought. It was going
to get worse for Dr. Pearson for quite a while before it got better, as a
second later Wendy Guerin showed up. The
personnel assistant looked strung out, stressed, but her aura was strong as she
marched up and confronted Bob Pearson, her chin tilted tremulously. “What on earth were you trying to put over on
us tonight, Bob? That was just so
embarrassing. I have to apologize to so
many people.” Wendy seemed to notice
Dennis for the first time. “Like
Dennis.”
“I can’t think of any reason I
would ever want to apologize to this creep,” Pearson said.
“It’s okay, Wendy. No hard feelings. Not your fault.” Dennis loved the slim tension in the woman as
she stood up to the executive. Her
shoulder blades were sharp and angelic beneath a filmy evening dress, her
skinny body so different from Lucy’s soft sullen form.
“I know you said we might have to
wing it if something went wrong, but that was a lie, wasn’t it, Bob? You never planned to do anything except
insult our intelligence, did you?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking
about, Lady,” Pearson said with a
wounded tone. “What reason would I have
to do that? Do you think I like looking
foolish?”
“No. Well, I haven’t figured that part out
yet. But I know you had something
planned. Why else would you make me hire
that horrid actor?” Wendy’s fine
features wrinkled with disgust as she remembered Scotty. Pearson looked hurt. “I like Star Trek.
Scotty and I are good friends.” He said
defensively.
“Let me get this straight,” the
man from the Mercury News began. “Scotty
was covering something up?” At this
point the memories of Watergate, Woodward and Bernstein, the Washington Post
were still fresh. Every cub reporter in
every High School in the country was ready to dig dirt with a career-making
scoop.
“Absolutely not,” Pearson stonewalled. “Mr. Noonan was simply informed of what to do
in case technical difficulties occurred.
Unfortunately, they did. But,
again, Francis, I’d like to stress the importance of the kind of communications
link we’ve put in place here using the Internet. That’s your big news story. Wendy, you and I need to talk. Could I have a minute, please?”
“Shall we get another beer?” Dennis thought that Frank Coughlin was young,
maybe even underage. You couldn’t expect
a reporter barely old enough to shave to be any good at getting information or
even understanding it when it was dropped in his lap. Remember, at this point, the San Jose Mercury
News was just a crappy local paper, the kind that people read at all in order
to remain ignorant of the news, not to get it.
Good business section, though.
Coughlin seemed somehow short and tentative, with dark, curly hair above
a collared blue shirt, an inconclusive moustache.
“Got you,” Coughlin said. He pulled a small spiral notebook from the
pocket of his dress shirt and began to write with a stubby ballpoint. “I’m sorry.
Your name is?”
“Doug Green,” Dennis said.
Something the guy could write down fast.
He turned and headed back to the bar, trying not to look at Lucy.
The bar was a set of brown
folding tables covered with white paper,
a couple of beer kegs at each end.
Rather than being déclassé, the appearance of the rare draft form of
Anchor Steam beer showed that someone, probably Pearson, had connections. The bartenders, volunteers from the
Exploratorium staff who had been paid extra for the evening, snapped to
attention, pouring for the teen-aged reporter without question. Dennis tipped plastic glasses with him in
congratulations. The beer was bitter,
deep, much rougher than the Budweiser and Schlitz Dennis had learned to drink
in Montana.
“San Jose Mercury News, eh? Is this your regular beat?” The kid swallowed most of his beer in a few
seconds.
“Pacific Stock Exchange,” he
said. “The early morning shift. No, I’m really getting to be up past my
bedtime tonight. I just came here
because I used to be interested in astronomy.”
“Is the stock exchange an actual
place?” Dennis asked. “I think I’m seeing that picture of the
trading floor in Wall Street. Is it like
that?”
“Pretty much. A lot of the trading happens other places too.”
“See, that’s what I’m getting
at,” Dennis said. “This Internet that Pearson’s talking
about. Think how weird it would be if
you didn’t have to be there at all to buy and sell stock. You could be anywhere.”
“You mean, like with a
Telex? We already have that.”
“I think you’re going to have to
leave,” Pearson said, coming over to
join them at the bar. Wendy just
explained the situation. Your services
at PCI have been terminated. You
shouldn’t have been here tonight at all.
Put that beer down. This
reception is for the press and the VIPs only.”
“I am a VIP, though,”
Dennis asserted, taking a deeper drag of the beer. It tasted better the madder Pearson got. “I’m with the press too, now, as my friend
Frank here will attest. Lost that
stick-on badge somewhere. Very
Important, actually. But I got the
ticket someplace.” He presented the
ticket that Valerie Voloshin had given him.
He stared straight into Pearson’s eyes, daring him to make a move. “Come on, Frank. Let’s mingle,” he said.
Dennis went looking for Wendy
again, with the Mercury News reporter in tow.
She had retreated to the party’s service sector, standing with the two
communications geeks, Hamilton and Flickenger, that they had met backstage. The techies had drawn two plastic pitchers
of draft beer for themselves and stood, refilling each other’s glasses. “You knew this was going to be messed
up?” he asked.
“I…I had a feeling,” the new ager said nervously. “I was talking to Eric earlier. It didn’t sound like he was able to make it
work.”
“There was a finite chance that
NASA wouldn’t be able to cooperate,”
Eric Hamilton said stiffly. “It
has to do with the connection to the Internet in Sunnyvale.
It’s going through a secure facility.”
“The ARC?” The ARC was the advanced research center at
Moffett field that Paradigm Control maintained for the Air Force. Hamilton
nodded shortly, his smile disappearing as Pearson again strode across the
crowded room toward them.
“I finally figured it out, boss,” he said sheepishly. “They had some kind of wicked authentication
we had to do to channel the data through.
It’s easy for us on this end, but hard for NASA. I blew it, sorry.”
“Right. You’re fired too.” Pearson’s finger drew on the skinny form of
Terry Flickenger. “Flick, come see Wendy
on Monday morning, if you think you still want a job.” He spun and stalked off.
Dennis looked around for Valerie
Voloshin, thinking how much the Russian naval attaché would be interested to
hear the conversation, but the man was on the far side of the room, talking
intently with Lucy. Pearson looked as
though he might be heading that direction, but then bulled toward the beer
counter where Leanne stood, gesturing in frustration and barking gruffly at
her. Dennis realized Leanne must be
freaked. He hadn’t really gotten around
to mentioning that her new boss had fired him a few days before.
“Is everyone upset about
something or something?” Frank Coughlin
asked Dennis uncertainly. He thought
about it. At this point the only person
who had any real reason to be angry was Pearson, down an ounce of cocaine, a
couple of employees, and with an unruly audience asking for their money
back. And that was really Pearson’s
problem, not his own.
“Shit, no. Everything’s cool,” he reassured the reporter. “The boss just gets this way sometimes. Let’s go see what brother Rod has dug
up.” Rod was listening attentively to
Stan Kent, the leader of the L5 Society.
A small group of his followers and Horst Salzwedel were also standing
by.
“The platform doesn’t matter,
don’t you see. O’Neil suggested using
the flywheel to generate artificial gravity, that’s all. There’s no reason why the colony couldn’t be
established in permanent free-fall. No
reason at all. There might be certain
health benefits, long-term.”
“Ja, but…” The German engineer looked agitated.
“No buts about it. Energy on the High Frontier is free,
completely free. The L5 colony should be
self-sufficient within two years by beaming power back to earth through its solar
concentrators.”
“Ja, but you can’t make people
live in cans that way,” Salzwedel
said. “They’ll die.”
The visionary sneered. “You underestimate the strength of the human
will, my friend.”
“Nein. I do not.”
Horst Salzwedel’s weathered face grinned. “I estimate the strength of systems. This is what I do. Think of it so—a spacecraft, any spacecraft
contains a large number of inter-related systems, which we model as a line of
lamps in series. When any of the lamps
is burn out, whole system is broken, until the lamp is replaced. And for a large structure, such as for a
space station, the number of lamps is great, and the probability of lamps
burning out is high. Your colonists will
die because they will simply be unable to keep up with the repairs to their home.”
“I’ve made up my mind. Leanne and me are going. They’ll need help,” Rod burst out, with indomitable spirit, the
tears of the converted brimming from his eyes.
However many astronauts it takes to change a light bulb, that light bulb
will be changed. At this point it
was probably a full eighteen years before the Heaven’s Gaters finally achieved
Satori, but occasional abductions had already been recorded.
Dennis stepped into the line
between Rod and his former girlfriend.
Leanne was doing her best to calm Pearson and looking very chic doing
it, in blue ankle-zipped slacks that displayed her proud calves, but with her
skills at handling a hysterical chief executive being honed that moment against
the “it’s not working…it’s not working” stone.
(This is where the fact that
Dennis has stolen the coke becomes known to Pearson.)
Pearson’s broken shark teeth
gnashed together in a furious flushed face.
“I’ll have your balls for breakfast,”
he hissed.
“Bob. Bob,”
Dennis chastened the executive.
“Such a horrible thing to say. To
me the question isn’t about balls, it’s about cajones, as in who’s got some of
what who wants, you know what I mean?”
Pearson’s body language, which at this point Dennis was still pretty
good at reading, said he did. Even after
you extracted all the hooty-gooty analysis was taken away, Bob’s posture
revealed a man with a need.
“Alright, then. Bob, I want you to take that back, the
castration thing, you know. Cause I want
you to know, I can’t do any kind of business with a man who wants my balls, you
know what I mean?”
“Because if we screw up now, you
know, Bob, it’ll be sorry about the stuff I snorted and give the rest to
charity, or scatter it to sea.
Otherwise, if you apologize, maybe we can talk.”
“Yeah,” Pearson scowled at last, shrugging
insincerely. “I didn’t mean it. No offense.”
“Oh, well, shit, then, none
taken. But then there’s that other
thing. I don’t suppose it would be too
much to arrange to get my old job back.”
Pearson spit a mouthful of bitter beer back into his glass.
“You screw my secretary in my own
house and then steal my dope and you think I should un-fire you for some
reason?” The executive whispered
incredulously, obviously wary of the closeness of the gathered reception. “You really are a piece of work, aren’t
you?” He glared around angrily, as
though wishing the room would empty and he could strangle Dennis on the spot.
“Well,” Dennis said, surprised,
“Yeah.” When you put it that way, it did
seem kind of far-fetched. At this point,
he had more or less been going on the assumption that he was Pearson’s
victim. It was little embarrassing to
realize that Pearson might see things differently, but at this point he was
relishing his rediscovered talent for complication and there was no stopping
the kid now.
“Bob, here’s something I bet you
haven’t thought through, all that classified repro that’s stuck in my safe at
PCI.” The safe that Dennis had down in
the Copy Center, one of the old Bessmers,
actually contained nothing but dust, but how would Pearson know that. Besides, he had teased away Lucy’s combo in
those few moments of foreplay the PCI boardroom those days before. “I’ll tell you my numbers, you tell me
yours,” he had suggested to Lucy and she
had agreed.
You could see Pearson realize
belatedly that firing a guy who was an authorized administrator of a classified
container would inevitably cause him a lot of grief. “You can bet your red flag, the DIS will be
down for a visit next week, if not sooner,”
Dennis said. “Don’t worry,
though. I haven’t called the hotline
yet.” DIS was the Defense Investigative
Service in San Francisco that looked after top
secret affairs in the Silicon Valley.
“Shut up, dammit!” Pearson bit at his glass of regurgitated beer
again furiously. “I’ll take care of the
DIS. But, listen. I might be willing to pay out a reward for
the return of certain items that were stolen from my home, you know, no
questions asked.”
(Additonal material to be added)
Chapter 7 Rear-ended
At this point, after being fired,
Dennis was living on the Palo Alto
streets, crashing in the Vista Cruiser nights.
He could have gone back to the apartment in San Jose, but there was still the probability
that the old vehicle wouldn’t make it, he’d get pulled over, or his roommate
Mark would want the rent. On the second
morning he found himself parked outside Lucy Snyder’s apartment waiting for her
to leave for work. A night of jangly
electronic Junior College FM had given form to his fury over the fucked up way Lucy had treated him. He always slept with the radio on. It was early morning on Picasso Way, Sunnyvale, California, curvy suburban returns that
accessed their own hundred or so dwellings.
He was “fumigating”, or at least that was what he would tell anyone that
asked. He would wait for her to go to
work, and if she didn’t go, well then she would still be there.
Lucy came out of the front door
of a single story house, dressed in a pantsuit of red and black Scottish plaid,
tight through the hips, a ruffled white blouse buttoned to the top of the
neck. The costume seemed designed as an
antithesis to Valerie Voloshin’s Marxist critique of the female role in
capitalism a few nights before. But the
executive secretary drove a burnt-cream colored diesel Mercedes she never
should have been able to afford on her own, probably another of Bob Pearson’s
passing enthusiasms.
He followed the Mercedes up Alma to Palo Alto,
wondering if Lucy would notice his massive and joke-lettered vehicle in her
rear mirror, but she never did. The
Vista Cruiser cut the mustard for once, farting unburnt hydrocarbons but
keeping up. He watched Lucy loop into
the underpass that led to Page
Mill Road.
As she slowed at the bottom, peering left at the traffic from the Oregon
Expwy Dennis let his brake slip and watched Lucy’s brassy blonde hair jerk as
his ugly american rear-ended her fat assed foreign vehicle. The impact pushed her out dangerously into
the narrow, blind bend of the road, Dennis really half-hoping she’d get
pegged. He rolled down his window,
gesturing with his arm for her to pull on through the subway. It was cool, there wasn’t much traffic that
early, no real danger.
“You could have killed me! You ruined my car! Were you following me?” All the usual things. “Sorry,” Dennis said, “Sorry.” After his moment of rage passed the
consequences did seem a little more severe than he might have hoped. “Listen, is there someplace we can go?”
“Palo Alto Motors, you fucking
creep. I’m going to sue your silly ass
off.”
“Sue an unemployed copy
jock? Can’t you read backwards?” Dennis pointed without pity at his hand
lettered hood, ECNARUSNI ON.
“Don’t make me laugh. No, I’ve
been thinking about what you said last night.
I split that coke into packages.
I’ve got about ten, twelve grams left.
I’m selling each one for sixty-five.
You tell Toomey I’ll give him first dibs. He can write it out as a severance check.”
“Now, wait a minute,
sweetie. James told me there was a lot
more than that.”
“No, I’m driving here. Sweetie, apparently you’re forgetting those
forged signatures in the docs log. I’m
so pissed off I have half a mind to turn your boss in to the DIS. What if I tell them about Bob’s compulsive
drug use, his bad taste in music?
Where’s that leave you, babe?
Are you sure you’ve thought this through?”
It was a strange moment, standing
in the ivy beside their dented vehicles in the early Palo Alto morning. Lucy’s gray eyes gauged Dennis balefully and
her red lipsticked mouth set. “You’re
cute when you’re mad,” she offered inadequately. “Antonio’s Doughnut House, across the parking
lot from the Santa Clara County Courthouse.
I’ll meet you there.”
“I’ve been coming to this little
dump since before Paradigm Control was even Paradigm Control. Before Bob Pearson ever even heard of the
CIA. That must be like thirteen,
fourteen years now. We were all crowded
together in an office on the ground floor in that building there. All of us.
It was called Wolf Properties then,”
Lucy mused. “Wow. Those were the days. A couple of horny real estate guys and a
couple of Stanford engineering geeks.”
The store’s full-length windows were decorated with cartoon characters
in baker’s hats who juggled heaps of brightly decorated doughnuts. “Eat the Whole thing!!!” commanded the Nut
House’s slogan, also painted on glass.
Dennis’s brain twisted. Was
writing from the back side the same as its image in a rear view mirror? Maybe the outlines were the same, but one was
a projection, the other a reflection, the right side and the wrong side
reversed.
“It must have been hard,” he said
helpfully, but without sympathy. Lucy
looked at him over a styrofoam cup of spiked OJ pinched between lacquered
fingertips the color of crusted blood.
The white cup was dappled with brighter red lipstick prints.
“Nah. Yeah.
It was hard-core, anyway,” she
mused. “It took screwing a lot of Navy
procurement guys to get us where we got to.
I used to think of it just as “Sales.”
You know, what the fuck. See,
that’s what I hate so much about Bob. He
thinks it’s fine to light my ass on fire so he can get his contracts, and then
he pretends I’m too dirty to touch. I
can’t even get his dick to stick up any more.”
Lucy’s eyes sizzled with scorn, and Dennis had pity on Pearson’s poor
pecker.
“You’re hung up on me, aren’t
you?” she announced. And although at this point he was still a
little bit afraid of her, Dennis had to agree.
“no,” he denied. He took a bite of his maplebar, choking. And yet again he found himself looking behind
the make-up to Lucy’s uncertain features, a small, snippy nose, freckles, eyes
watery blue. He jolted hot coffee
unexpectedly through the slot of his cup, scalding his upper lip.
“You’re paying to fix my fucking
car, you know that, don’t you?” Lucy
pressed.
“Crap. That’s what your insurance is for.” At this point in the State of California if you
rear-ended someone, it was automatically declared your fault, but Dennis
couldn’t agree with that. The little
embolism of self that had exploded as he punched the accelerator into the three
pronged logo on Lucy Snyder’s Mercedes had not completely dispersed. She had deserved it.
Lucy was quiet for a moment,
biting a thick chunk of her candy-sprinkled doughnut and taking a suck of juice
from the white cup to make it go down.
“Where were you thirteen years ago, Dennis?” she asked finally. Montana,
still, he figured. Probably not even out
of Junior High at that point. While Lucy
had been already ready here in the fast track world of the Silicon
Valley, wearing her nice clothes, hanging out with these cool
people. “That’s what I figured,” she said, watching his face. “You think it’s been like one big long old
party for me. Well, maybe. I ain’t done partying yet, darling. I’m for shit sure done with Doctor Robert
Pearson.”
“Really. How are you going to swing that? You’re still working for him aren’t you?”
“Not for any longer than I have
to. I’m serious. I’ve been talking to a woman lawyer who
handles cases like mine. I lived with
the bastard for over eight fucking years.
Eight fucking years. I’m entitled
to something for that.”
“So then you weren’t really
married?”
“That’s what I’m saying. He promised me.”
“I guess that’s what you really
need. Someone to make an honest woman
out of you. Maybe you should marry me
instead.” Dennis couldn’t understand why
hardly none of the women ever took these proposals seriously. Maybe nothing was forever, but it was a
start. Or maybe it was the price he was
asking. He always meant it, though,
every single time. Lucy, meanwhile,
seemed to have trouble swallowing her medicated orange juice. “We can get a flight out of San Francisco
International to Las Vegas
for $80 each,” Dennis offered. Always
show them the car running, the ticket in hand, although at this point the
proposal did have a little bit of the Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas element to it.
“Not an honest bone in this body,
any more. Including yours. Okay.
I do. But I think it’s goinna be
at least a hundred to get there.” He
didn’t understand. Lucy should have zero
reason for blowing off her palimony case by hopping on a budget flight with a
fired repro clerk. He had thought this
would have been before the point at which people started doing things like
that. “California is a community property state,”
he joked nervously. “I pick up half your
wardrobe. Can I wear those pants some
time? All you get is the other ten grams
of coke I swiped from your boyfriend and a fifty-percent interest in my Station
Wagon.”
“I do,” Lucy repeated, as if closing a trap, and
aside from not realizing at this point what all shit that was going to imply in
the future, Dennis became instantly aware that marriage might not be the most
financially rewarding decision he had ever tried to make. “Well, then, babe, don’t plan on quitting
your day job just yet,” he said
vengefully. Twenty years later, when
people finally did quit their day jobs, well, that was another story.
“See, I’m hung up on you,
too,” Lucy said. And say what you want about co-dependency,
which at this point wasn’t even a word, there had to be a lot of love between
them, unless, as Dennis realized at some point, she was just trying to find a
co-conspirator to help her get revenge on her so-called husband.
Chapter 8 Slut Mode
“I grew up in Mountain View, right across the
line…there,” Lucy said, her finger a
compass needle pointing south. She
rotated away from Dennis, staring out the scratched windshield as he turned
into the registration circle of Rickey’s Hyatt House. “Those houses behind the San Antonio Mall,
see? Sears! The Sears building. You can’t believe how important that store
was in my life. And that’s East MV
Fucking High, the so-called school I graduated from.”
“You know what? You’re probably the first person I’ve told
the truth to,” Lucy said. About what?
Oh, about her past. “That’s why I
need you to come with me to the reuninion.
Please, Darling?” Dennis had
proposed Las Vegas,
but for some reason Lucy insisted on a dragging him on her trip down memory
lane. It was a couple of weeks after he
had rammed her the first time. The hotel
they had checked into was a fairly swank place on El Camino, but certainly a
poor second choice of location for an adulterous escapade. “It’s my high school reunion. My goddammed thirtieth,” Lucy said, looking old.
“Why bother going back? It seems like you don’t have very good
memories.” Dennis had always believed in
moving on, himself. At this point you
would say that was why he was in California in
fact, because for shits sake sure there had been no fucking future in Montana. “Didn’t you say your folks lived in Salt Lake City or
something?”
“Weren’t you listening to
me? That was just a story I tell
people. They’re both still here.” Lucy continued to point, her arm extended through
the window of the Vista Cruiser. The
bright western light swept across the woman’s weary, artificial smile. It was strange to think of Lucy as having
ever been a high school kid, when he had always thought of her as some kind of
sophisticate, in the know, you know.
Not that they weren’t earning
style points now. Lucy had on a nice
camel skirt, split at the knee, with an open white blouse and a spotted rayon
scarf. Dennis had been given a little
fashion advice in advance—he wore a sweater over a collared shirt, a woven
leather belt, light slacks.
“That’s right. I was raised up right, here in Mountain View,” Lucy said sarcastically. “A model of rectitude and expectations. I guess you could say that at some point I
rebelled from all that.” Even so, it was
amazing to Dennis. All around him the
hotel lobby seemed populated with broad blondes just like Lucy, each aimed in
her own bland, cynical direction, all apparently walking away from him in
high-heeled disdain. “Why go back, Darlin’?
Because they owe me.”
To Dennis, it really wasn’t clear
whether she had said owe or own, and if it was owe, what was the debt she
needed to collect. “Who does? Your parents?”
“Oh, fuck, no.” Lucy took a long drink of vodka from the
bottle of Smirnoff in the room’s honor bar, a little bit dribbling off her chin
and running provocatively into her open blouse.
“My so-called classmates. The Mod
Squad. I’ll introduce you. Darlin’ we’re going to have such a good
time!”
“I don’t know why I’m even
here,” Dennis groused sullenly. “I hate the valley. I hate fancy hotels. Plus I can’t afford it, having just lost my
fucking job.”
“Oh, now baby, don’t worry. We’ll get you your job back. Bobby will do anything I say. Anyway, just think of this as like a little
vacation, our honeymoon.” Lucy pulled
herself against him, turned her cheek to Dennis’s dry lips. Honeymoon?
He had to admit that at this point he did feel a little bit
over-committed.
It was always summertime in Mountain View. The courtyard at Rickey’s Hyatt house hotel
had some palm trees and the weather was hot and dry as usual. Lucy and him had taken a room on the third
level above the swimming pool, checking in early, mid afternoon before the
reunion. Rickey’s was only called a
hotel because it charged $60 a night, offered valet parking, a “conference
center.” But it had cable and an ice
machine, including a dirty movie channel, which at that point was pretty high
tech. Dennis barefooted back to the room
in his skivs with a couple of the square beige plastic ice buckets. Lucy seemed fixated on the small store of
liquor that had accompanied the refrigerator in their room—after the two
Heinekens Dennis lost interest, thinking instead of the bulky package with the
cocaine he had placed in Lucy’s suitcase for safekeeping, reasoning that since
she already had his clothes and underwear it was all the same thing. At least that was what he would say.
It was good to unwind. Lucy stood meditatively on the deck
overlooking the pool, smoking her long brown cigarettes while Dennis poured her
another drink, in the process taking proper possession of his dope again. See, at this point this was like a dream,
though when you thought about it, so was most of the rest of life.
Lucy was on the phone, checking
the reservations. “What time is the
reception? 6:30? Okay, thank you very much, Darlin’, we’ll see
you all there.” She hung up and popped
open the suitcases Dennis had put on the bed.
“Is there an iron in this room?”
she asked.
"What are you going to wear,
Dennis?" She took off her blouse and tossed it to the floor, unhooking a
faded blue bra.
"Pair of raggedy gym shorts
and a sweatshirt," he answered,
"You are so nuts on this dressing up thing. The reunion doesn’t start for four hours, I
heard you say so yourself." With
her shoes and shirt off she seemed flat-footed and topheavy, shockingly
graceless. Her chesty, cheesy intimate
air really knocked Dennis out. It was
weird the way Lucy could care so much about outward appearances and yet be so
unconcerned about his presence. “Why
worry about me? No one will be
looking. You’re the big actress here.”
“I want you to look good, that’s
all.” Lucy came toward Dennis, pressing
him back against the edge of the big bed.
“You can bet my old girlfriends Mary and Mary will be paying
attention. Come on, baby. I’ll help you.” He voice was filthy, wheedling, whorish.
At this point Dennis was
beginning to feel pretty edgy anyway and now it seemed he was doomed to another
exhibition of the woman’s throating skills or her jackhammer lapdance
technique. Dennis had found Lucy’s
talents impressive, but embarrassing somehow.
What was she after?
“Why don’t you go iron a shirt or
something. Jesus, calm down, would
you? I have my own ideas about having fun
too. Maybe one of these times I could be
on top even, do you think?” At this
point the thrill of being thought an edible sexual prey was wearing off. Lucy shrugged the rebuff away, but looked
doubtful.
“Sure, baby, I guess so.”
“I’m going to get high. You’re welcome to join me.” Dennis produced the flat metal tin and took
off the rubber band.
“Don’t get too wasted. I’m going to need you later.” After a final pause she withdrew, her nippled
boobs swinging away, now unoffered fruit.
“Sooner or later, you’re going to
have to take a little toot with me,”
Dennis said after her.
“Sure, baby. Maybe later.”
Lucy retired to the bathroom, leaving the door ajar. “Don’t take too much. Remember, Bobby might buy that stuff
back.” Dennis pried open the lid of the
tin.
The first time he had looked at
it, he had thought maybe a couple of ounces, maybe a half pound, because he was
so used to buying weed in that quantity.
But the power powder was dense.
There was a great slug of it, only slightly diminished by the lines he
and Leanne and Rod had taken. It was no
wonder losing it had Pearson and Toomey a little excited.
Recalling what Rod had told him
about his experiences in Vietnam,
Dennis had swiped an aluminum coffee spoon from Antonio’s Nut house. “And then heat it up with a lighter until it
just starts to steam. The sign of
steam.” Rod had repeated, making the
gesture of the flicked bic and the steady spoon. Free-basing, he had called it. Dennis crumbled off a big snowflake into the
spoon and heated the cocaine until it slumped into a vaporous liquid, sucking
the narcotic fumes through his lips.
That was all she wrote. The last
thing he was aware of was a massive iron spike driven into his chest. Sudden death experience, and he clocked out
and back in suddenly and suddenly he was two feet taller looking down, and
there was hot slime dribbling all over the front of him.
“Huuuhhh,” he moaned, picking up
the spilled spoon and discovering it could burn twice. At this point it must have been the sound of
the dropped utensils that brought Lucy back in.
“Are you okay, Dennis?” she asked
with concern. Holy crap, was he
okay?
“Sure, I’m, uh, okay…” he said,
feeling weirdly guilty for being so high all of a sudden. He tried to get up and clean himself off but
sat back down as the tracers burst his vision into a million moving
shards. This was great!
“Really?” Lucy came back into the room in another stage
of undress, her skirt now gone, crinkled white underpants trapped between brown
pantyhose and her fleshy hips. “Because
I’ve decided to let you be on top now.”
“That’s mighty open-minded of
you, Lucy,” he countered as manfully as
he could. “Well, I have that toot right
here waiting. Think it might slow you up
a little. You need to relax and enjoy
things, lady.” At this point, he could
see her weighing the truth of it, finally nodding. The depths to which drugs or nymphomania
could take you. You had to think though,
that if it wasn’t love for sure they were on pretty much the same wavelength
most of the time. Dennis shoveled
another spoonful of the coke, stirring the flaky powder for her
inspection.
“Sure, fine,” she said. “Let’s do it.”
At this point it really shouldn’t
have been any kind of surprise, or maybe that was the point, at any point, it
was a new surprise for everyone that tried it.
Dennis executed the ritual, the steam rising from the blackened surface
of the spoon. “Breathe this in, Darlin’” he mimicked.
Well, at this point maybe it was
the drinks Lucy had had or something.
Lucy leaned toward his upraised hands, inhaling, and then her head
snapped away and flopped loosely to the side.
It was funny to watch it happen to someone else. But she didn’t come right back the way that
Dennis had. Instead her eyes rolled and
she slumped unconscious to the bed.
“Lucy, Lucy! You all right?” he laughed.
She didn’t answer. Her high
cheeks were pasty and slack, her painted lips the only color left in her
face. Dennis realized he had never seen
her asleep before. He reached to check
her breathing. Still there.
At this point it was years before
the term “date rape” was invented, though pretty much everybody had some
experience with fucking drunk chicks.
Dennis moved fast, turning Lucy over and laying her down, rolling her
pantyhose and underwear down over wide hips.
Lucy’s big ass was warm to the touch, soft and jiggly, shot with lines
of butter. Dennis freed the nylon
garments from the woman’s ankles so that he could get inside, jamming a pillow
beneath her stomach to position her comatose cunny.
This might not have been what
Lucy meant when she said she would let him be on top, but it was definitely
still worth doing. Dennis poked into her
furry fundaments, making a hole. Lucy’s
circle widened. Not that he was into
necrophilia, but it was nice to have the run of the house for once.
Standing in front of the third
floor elevator door Lucy and Dennis looked each other over one last time before
bursting out laughing one last time, but actually, Lucy was getting twitchy as
she contemplated her entrance.
“Here,” she said, wiping lipstick
from his cheek with a piece of sleeve.
“Here you go, darling. Come on,
let’s get serious now, darling, please.
Please.” At this point, the
elevator doors separated, revealing another couple, a small Pakistani woman,
dark as a bruise, dressed in a tan jumper, her brown legs and her brown face
sparkled with glitter. The male’s head was hairless and wearing a worried look.
“Lucy? Oh my God!”
The woman whistled in mock surprise.
“Is it really you? I heard your
folks both died in that horrible fire.
Are you all right?”
“Die?” Lucy answered ambiguously. “Where did you come up with that? And miss the reunion? You’ve got to be kidding, Sofie! Bob, this is Sofie, my Best Friend.”
Dennis was supposed to
impersonate Pearson, he gathered. Lucy
seemed amused by her friend’s confusion, already swirling the evening away into
new dimensions of dishonesty. At this
point, when he thought about it, although he didn’t happen to think about it at
the time, it seemed to Dennis that this wasn’t right. Of the women he knew, it was Leanne, not Lucy
whose parents had burned up, wasn’t it?
Hadn’t Lucy said her folks still lived here?
In the lobby they got name tags,
which simplified things a little, but left open questions. The little woman was Sofia Moore, her husband
Spence, or something like that, it was hard to read the scrawl of magic
marker. The four of them bustled in, the
two men making an instinctive rush for the no-host bar. “Let us buy you one,” Dennis suggested to the man beside him, in
part to get Lucy’s order in first. She
trailed behind him, glowering malevolently, making him nervous.
“Thanks.” Spence was in his forties, a little flabbier
than he should have been, but he seemed like an okay guy who wore an actual
pin-striped blue suit well, the pants secured by patterned suspenders, a bold
stroke of individuality. He had candy
colored hair and an edged beard. He
pulled down a Johnny Walker, white wine for his wife. Behind
them, vodka tonic in hand, Dennis heard Lucy Snyder continue her schemes.
“Bobby says that after we sell
the summer house that maybe we should just take that time off we’ve always been
talking about. Bob works so hard.”
“Just beer, for me,” Dennis told the girl at the bar
cautiously. Her hotel name plaque read
“jeannie.” He looked down at himself, at
the sticky badge Lucy had pasted over his heart. “BOB”, the inverted sign read, identical in
its palindromic form to its reflection.
Could looking down on yourself really be the same as seeing your image
in a mirror? Dennis rallied, sticking
out his hand. Spence’s palm was soft and
moist, cold from the glass. “What’s your line of business?” he asked Spence as casually as he could. Hopefully Supreme Court Justice or something
like that.
“I sell telephone switches for
Rolm Corporation.
TeleCommunications. That’s where
Sofie works too.” Spence’s composure
cracked and he sobbed suddenly: “Bob,
you should know that I just want to forget about it. You know, what happened with Lucy. I’m sure she feels the same way.”
Apparently, unbeknownst to him,
the stakes had been raised to those of thermofuckingnuclear war. Not that at this point you couldn’t have
predicted that some sort of dirty bomb might have gone off a couple of times
during the course of human history or the senior year of high school. But really, who cared about that old shit?
“I’m sure she does. Well, that was a long time ago.”
“Th>|<at’s funny,” the man
hiccupped. “It seems like it. Anyway, I just wanted you to know that I
never meant to mess things up for you and Lucy.
It’s a relief to see you here together tonight. And to hear that her folks are >|< okay
after all. Gosh, >|<, I thought
Sofie said you teach at Stanford, Bob. I
thought you would have had to be older, more >|< our age. You know, I’m really, really sorry.”
“Well, you know, some of us got a
little quicker start on life. Don’t
sweat it, Spence. These things happen.”
Spence hiccupped again. “Sofie doesn’t know.”
At this point, though, fuck, you
had to wonder why this numbnut thought you owed him anything anyway. Spence’s bearded face hung before him,
bobbing pathetically. Is there some sick
resemblance she sees between this guy and me?
Or between me and “Bobby”? She’s
so wrong.
“Your secret’s safe with
me,” Dennis growled. “Needless to say, if you’re worried about
your wife finding out, you really ought to talk to someone that gives a shit. Lucy, for instance.”
The entire Class Reunion thing
had Lucy in her element, happily posing, posturing, and bantering, because it
mattered, with the kids that counted.
She had put on a little black dress, sort of a classic choice in evening
wear for a returning blonde. It was a
mini kind of thing, just a tad longer than her pubes and only a tiny bit taller
than her tits.
“This old thing? Thanks.
I don’t like to talk about it, though,”
Lucy was lying to a group of her former classmates, “I had to buy it for the funeral, you
know. Didn’t you hear about my parents’
accident?” Dennis watched her work in
exasperated admiration, picking up a good buzz from the bar and her outrageous
story. Despite his initial reservations
he was kind of getting into the spirit of self-invention, enjoying and
enlarging on being Bob Pearson. At this
point it was years before “identity theft” became such a big deal. In those days you could pretty much say
whatever you wanted, and if someone knew otherwise, well, fuck it, what could
they do. Really, it wasn’t turning out
to be too bad of a party.
“Cruise missles, spy satellites,
that kind of thing,” he told a trio of thirty-eight year old corporate
functionaries and city workers, brushing off the teary-eyed Spence. They were Barry, Jim, and Mark, nice guys with
better senses of humor. “Any of you guys
care to smoke a doob?”
It was fun to see their
expressions as he passed around a couple of jays outside. This guy was part of the military industrial
complex? Their military
industrial complex? “Speaking of drugs,
one of the things the NSA is doing is color scans, spectrometric scans from
space,” he said expansively, “It turns out we can hone in on the
individual poppy fields in Afghanistan
by their spectral signature. Our guys
can tell you the day a crop is ready for harvesting, probably better than the
farmers can.”
Barry, the cat who worked for the
City of Mountain View
spoke up. “I see. And then we interdict the process when they
begin to move the heroin to market. Are
the pictures good enough to see the trucks?
Given that, the rest is trivial.”
What did he say he was? A
lawyer? Jesus. From his words you would have thought a
programmer.
“Very astute, my young
friend. They are indeed. Ever see the movie “Blow-up”? All the images are digitized, but they’re slices
of some of the finest optics ever engineered.
Take away atmospheric haze and glare and we can easily resolve objects
as small as one meter. Not quite your
license plate, but getting there.
Suffice it to say, if the boogers are big enough, we’re gonna catch you
picking your nose.”
Dennis was thrilled and alarmed
at how easily he had absorbed Bob Pearson’s technical evangelist style. Everything was true, unless the sky happened
to be sort of hazy or you had wiped the snot off on the back of your knee. It was all crap and jargon.
It played so well with this Silicon Valley crowd, though. At this point, just to generalize, the region
had become a fountainhead, a telepathic hive buzzing with the collective
libertarian thoughts of a generation and a half of slide-rule wielding can-do
aerospace engineers whose mechanistic views could be summed up by the mantra
“It’s trivial. All you gotta do is…”,
but whose consequence had been lost in middle-aged fatigue.
Each of the trivial measures they
proposed ended up depending on some episodic malthusian extinction of the
unfit, which contributed to a certain sangfroid that Dennis himself bought into
and knew he could call on. At this
point these old guys were still keeping up.
“Here’s the view from space,
though,” he continued. “Satellite
imaging hasn’t been turned on yet in Northern California or Columbia.
That was some good Humboldt bud of which you just partook. Now check this out, dudes. Pure snow from the Andes.” No actual responsibility was accepted, the
consequence of any mortal action in the face of the natural rules of existence
also seen as “trivial”.
“Dudes.” Pearson never failed to use the term wrong
but Dennis had nailed it and he knew it, just as much as he had nailed the
political climate. There was actually a
fairly large proportion of morons in the valley. He grinned at Kevin, the middle manager,
offering him the rolled up hundred.
“How about it, Kevin?” Kevin smiled goofily, sucked up a strong
line, and sat back, waiting for it to happen.
A second later, it did, stabbing his heart muscle sharp as a spike. Kevin said a word and collapsed as his center
disappeared.
“Kevin?” Someone said a while later. “That must be good dope. Kevin?”
“Kevin?”
Kevin was dead for sure, that
last word his Om. And, as though breathing his essence, Lucy
stepped into the courtyard.
“I knew what I’d find out here!”
she hooted brassily, not knowing. At
this point this was sort of Lucy’s lookout, Dennis thought.
“Somebody better call Nine-One-One. Let’s give this man some air.” Miraculously, the crowd of guys whirled away,
though most of them probably were headed for the phone, and one or more of them
remained, wavering uncertainly.
“Kevin. Kevin.
Snap out of it, buddy.” Dennis
pinched the man’s flabby cheek as he lay.
Was it good or bad that the color didn’t change?
“Little too much for him,” he
told Lucy. She seemed horrified, sucking
in a scream, her painted fingernails pressed back into her palms, her thumbs
pointing out from her hips. Her short
spangled dress made her seem suddenly vulnerable. “Why don’t you go to the ladies room, wash
your face,” he suggested.
He had to get out of there,
too. Fuck Kevin and his dying ways. “Do you know Artificial Respiration or
anything?” He asked the guy who hadn’t
left, Barry. “Do it, then!” Cops would be there any time. Without moving fast he recovered his stash,
making sure no roaches or paraphernalia were left around.
The reunion had gone quiet almost
right away. Dennis headed up to the
bar. “Shit. Give me a vodka over with lemon, would
you? That poor guy’s really wiped out!”
“What happened?” The girl, “jeannie,” was about twenty-five,
Leanne’s age, and almost the same name in a weird way, wide-eyed at the idea of
any serious event, she having been hired to sling free liquor for some
completely unimportant reunion, and now this.
“Jesus. This guy was out in the courtyard smoking up
when someone offered him some of that cocaine and the poor guy just ate it.”
“I read that that could happen to
you with that stuff. It’s not as cool as
they say.” She was short, wearing black
stretch polyester pants and a ruffled white blouse. Dennis smiled.
In due course Lucy emerged from
the bathroom. “Another voddy for my
wife, please, jeannie.” Dennis held up a
ten. “Thank you very much.”
“Sure, mister, thanks. Ohh.”
Suddenly, an ambulance had arrived, its lights pulsing red and white
though the opening to the hotel lobby. A
moment later a coveralled paramedic pounded in through the double glass doors,
hesitating impatiently as the sliding glass door trundled automatically to the
side.
It was Rod. Leanne’s dumbass ex-boyfriend was always
showing up unexpectedly these days. It
was beginning to irritate Dennis, even though he liked the guy, really. The vet had turned out to really have a
liking for the power-powder Dennis had liberated from Bob Pearson, and the
money, which Rod seemed to have plenty of, from his job with the ambulance, was
keeping Dennis going now that he was unemployed. But shit.
Rod nodded as he recognized
Dennis, staring openly at Lucy, who ignored him, then strode quickly toward the
courtyard, where a group of guests clustered around the still body.
Lucy took the outstretched drink
and poured it down, obviously at this point already smashed. “What was his name? Kelvin?”
“Kevin, I think,” Dennis said.
What the fuck?
Lucy turned to face the commotion
in the hotel courtyard, tugging the neckline of her black dress askew. “Kevin??” she quavered experimentally. “Kevin?”,
gaining speed as she returned to the outdoor area.
“Oh, oh. Better go monitor this,” Dennis told the girl, smiling. “I shall return.”
Outside Lucy was already in
tears. “Kevin, Kevin, Kevin,” she
moaned. Somehow she had gotten herself inside
the circle of spectators watching as Rod, on his knees, hulked over the
ex-graduate’s slumped body. Dennis
realized his hands were tight, his brain finally reacting the way it should. Maybe there was something Rod could do, he
hoped.
Expertly, Rod checked the
victim’s breath, pulse, pried open his mouth.
Then he turned to the large box he had brought from the ambulance,
muttering out loud. “Gotta see if we can
shock this guy.” With one
Frankensteinian motion he snapped the locks and brought out two plastic handled
things trailing curled wires.
Whamm. Whamm.
The sound was soul-less, electricity against mere meat, not even much
lift to the legs, as Rod said at some point, maybe not then. “Obvious overdose,” he had said. Dennis shrank back from the corpse.
Rod looked up. “Guy’s toast,” he said, with an authority Dennis
admired. “Sorry.” At this point it was still shocking to think
that a paramedic might deliver this final verdict, but somehow even the cops
seemed to be okay with that.
“Give me a call tonight,” Rod said out of the corner of his mouth as he
wrapped up his wires, “Got some business for you.” Which Dennis really didn’t appreciate.
The cops. There were two of them, a Car 54 act. Dennis curled his lip behind his cocktail glass. His modus operandi always was to brazen it
out, only it didn’t always work, he recently having ignored an order to appear
after blowing a joint in Peavey
Park. He tried to look past the uniforms in case
either turned out to be the little prick who had jogged by him and produced a
badge from the pocket of his sweatpants.
More nametags. One of the pigs,
the one that looked a lot like Dennis’s brother Allen, was “Morgan,” the other “Green”. Doug Green?
Dennis thought, thinking of the false name he had given the Mercury News
reporter the day before.
The fact was, none of his
encounters with police had ever gone right, so at this point he was visited
with a kind of dream-dread in which he could only wait for the inevitable
blow-up. Like when his car had been
pulled over by Suzie-Q’s father, the Montana Highway Patrol officer. Like getting shoved around by the Hollywood
detectives in Los Angeles
(dope again). Even going way back to
grade school, when they had had to call the fuzz on him a couple of times.
But maybe Lucy was showing him a
different way. Her straw-blond coiffure
was artfully distressed, her bare shoulders quivering in the blue uniformed
policemen’s protective zone as she looked back at Dennis in sly delight. Apparently if you were a female the same
rules didn’t always apply. Dennis stared
back at Lucy with hardened envy.
He could imagine her triumphant
chatter already--Well, I mean, sure I was a little freaked out to see the
dead guy. It doesn’t speak well for the
occasion, as my mother always said. Rest
her soul, even if the bitch ain’t dead yet.
But it wasn’t like I’m happy that the guy has eaten shit, although from
the look of him, it was going to happen sooner or later anyway. You know, everybody dies. You just can’t waste time worrying about it.
“It’s OK, Ma’am,” the cop was soothing Lucy softly. Although how could it be, if you really gave
a crap about poor dead Kevin. Dennis looked
back down. Kevin seemed to be bloating
already, changing color from pink to green.
You know, Dennis knew he shouldn’t be feeling anything, but you had to
feel for the guy, didn’t you. How long
was it before you displayed rigor mortis?
He just wondered what they might
do. Whether they were going to talk to
everybody or if he should blow. He
didn’t see the cops stringing up ribbon or setting up tables or anything. He should probably just stick with it, go
with the crowd, until he ended up in a gas chamber, or something. When you put it like that, he needed a
drink.
He wasn’t even officially here,
having signed in as “Bob Pearson”, not
“Dennis Smith”, but you had to wonder which was worse, leaving, and getting
Bobby listed as an absentee, or telling them some bullshit and getting things
the fuck over with.
“Give me another beer, would you,
jeannie? Do you have any of that ‘steam’
beer? Okay, fine, just a bud, please.”
He had thought he had figured out
that the key to her pleasure lay in these lies and dissatisfictions she had
been telling about her past, her parents, whatever it was that had happened to
make her unhappy self. But now he
finally saw Lucy in a larger light, the top bill actress on her own stage, a
world from which he was excluded.
“Do you smoke up?” he asked the
young bartendress, looking around. “I
bet there’s some place back by the dumpster we could go.” At least they would be a little further away
from the Palo Alto
police.
She was really sweet and he
figured he could have fucked her, but he knew it was only because she reminded
him of Leanne, young, naïve, pretty good-looking. Tease a kiss or two from her, anyway? No.
“Have you lived in the valley
long?”
“Not really. I moved up from Southern
California two years ago.
You know where Orange
County is?”
Dennis had been to Disneyland, sure.
His old college buddy had lived in Anaheim. “Sure,” he repeated. “Nice place.
California
sun.”
That was all that happened. They walked back into the hotel with a
pleasant high. Oh yeah. The dead guy.
About six or eight of the classmates were milling around the bar when
they got back, another guy in a white shirt and no tie serving up free drinks.
“Did you know him?” Sure.
I had him in Zimmerman’s World History class. Remember?”
“Kevin used to be such a funny guy.”
“Is he dead? I didn’t hear.” “Listen, honey, if you’re alive they turn on
the siren. They don’t put you in those
black bags if you’re still kicking.”
“Where have you been?” the
bartender snarled angrily to jeannie out of the side of his mouth. The girl immediately freaked out, of course.
“I’m sorry, Jerry. I had to go to the bathroom.”
“The fuck you do. You reek.
I told ManPower—“No Stoners.” Hit
the road, Jeannie. Felicia can sign your
timecard.”
“jeannie” gifted Dennis with a
last, wounded, uncapitalized look and was gone, another casualty. “Hey.
Could I get another vodka tonic for my wife?”
“Just vodka over,” Lucy put in.
She leaned against the bar for support, sneering stupidly, the
withdrawal of her role removing her purpose as well. “Bitch deserved to walk.”
You know, it’s times like this
that make you wish that smacking them was still in style, because, not because
of equality and that shit, because Dennis really bought into that, but just for
being evil. Sometimes you could literally
see Lucy’s head revolve on her pretty neck.
At least it would after a good slapping.
She smirked again, daring him.
“I was asking her how to get
through the back to check on our car, darling.
Which she did. Excuse me,
sir. It was I who was smoking weed
earlier, not your worker. She just gave
me directions.”
“I’ll bet she gave you
directions,” Lucy said. “You always were the obedient type.”
“As if you’d know.” Remembering his vicious knowledge of her
unconscious carnals a few hours before with a flush of justification. What the fuck did that mean. Talking about how you got me to bang your
crusty old ass at your husband’s party and get myself fired? Get over it.
The two cops had come into the
bar area, mingling with the members of the shattered reunion. The same one that had been consoling her
before headed for Lucy again, which made Dennis mad too. “By the way, nice performance in there.” What if I did get a little something from the
girl out back?
“Can we ask you a few questions,
Ma’am?” the cop named Morgan bore in, a small notebook open in his hand. Believe it or not, there have been times in
our country when people didn’t bother to use these kind of stupid terms like
“sir” and “ma’am”. The cop’s words
sounded stilted and phony. He obviously
had something down his pants for this mother-old blonde. Woman in tears and that kind of crap.
“Forget it,” Dennis accused. “Lucy didn’t even know the poor guy. She had to ask me what his name was. She’s nothing but a used up old drama queen.”
“Who are you, sir? Did you know the deceased?” It was happening again. “It appears that drugs may have been
involved. Would you know anything about
that, sir?”
“Uhh-uhh.”
“Because, sir, the deceased
smelled a little bit of marijuana. As
though he might have been smoking it recently.
And in my professional opinion you may be under a similar
influence. You wouldn’t have any more of
that wacky-tabaccy on you, would you?
You didn’t see what happened, did you?”
At this point, what Dennis had
already learned from Lucy was that there was never any clear-cut situation that
could not be complicated out of control for any number of reasons, none of
which had to have anything to do with logic or reality.
“Kelvin, you know, Kelvin had all
these drugs. I don’t know where he got
them. We hadn’t seen the guy for what,
three or four years, right, Lucy?”
“I’ve seen him since then,
officer.” Lucy contradicted. Dennis swelled back to life as he sensed her
amusement at his lie. “Poor Kevin!” Lucy was taking them into full slut mode now,
sprawling back against the bar, air and the cop’s eyes wafting up the bottom of
her short black dress. Despite what she
might be saying.
“You told me you were
shopping!” Dennis accused. “So that’s where you’ve been on Wednesday
nights! I knew it!”
“Oh, yeah, I was shopping.” Lucy affirmed. “Lot of
bargains out there, used goods, mostly.
Hi, Sophie.” Dennis looked around
his shoulder. Lucy’s diminutive
classmate was more darkly furious than ever, her brown eyes glittering from her
scowling face. Behind her, gulping his
fist, was her husband, Spence or whatever the fuck his name was.
“Wednesday’s bowling night, you
know,” Lucy admitted to the police
officer, giving the hapless salesman an exaggerated wink. “Oops.
Oops. Giving away my secrets. You can’t bust me for being a nympho, can
you, Sophie?”
“I don’t know about that,
ma’am. You have a right to remain
silent. You seem to be embarrassing
folks. Did the deceased ever mention
illegal drugs to you?”
“Only when he had any. Kevin was such a generous guy. It’s so sad.”
In a better world, you know, back
in the seventies or whatever, Dennis understood that this sort of scene was
supposed to end with a pornflick ménage-a-cinq or six, with the cop still
wearing his hat and gun. But it hardly
seemed like anyone was into it, Sophie’s small body stiff with anger, Spence’s large one limp and unconnected, his
fat face shiny and red. “Are there any
more questions, officer? I’d better take
my wife home.”
Think about having Lucy finally
tell what really happened with her parents.
Lucy: my ass hurts.
The next week is difficult. Lucy claims to be negotiating with Toomey to
buy back the dope but it isn’t happening.
Meanwhile the stash is getting a bit smaller. Dennis is actually living in the Vista
Cruiser at this point, parked on the streets of Palo Alto, and now Rod has begun shadowing
him. “Got a spoon?” Dennis is crazily jealous, believes that Lucy
would skedaddle back to Pearson in a minute if she could. Meanwhile he also hears through Rod that
Leanne and the Vice President have become a regular thing. “I thought you said you had her,” he complains to Dennis. “I thought I did,” he answers, looking down
at his fat belly and realizing how out of shape he is.
Dennis goes for a run up the
Stanford hill, thinking of mortality.
He’s living with Leanne at this point.
“At this point, he was living with Leanne, but screwing Lucy in the
regular way every night after work, when Leanne was at her job. Lucy liked to go to the pick-up bars. There were a few of them in the valley, not
nearly as many as you would think, but we know which was her favorite. The Whomp-whomp Room, the Brass Rail. Jesus.
It was fun, by now Lucy was taking a toot pretty often and Dennis had
her wrapped. Lucy had an amazing
inventiveness that was sharpened to even a bitchier extent by the drug. Dennis was drinking Calistoga water at this
point and he was at the top of his form, exercising every day.
One night after some Dennis took
Lucy to a fancy French Restaurant he had heard about. They had started going out formally,
cementing their emerging relationship as consenting adults, something cold, a
bit like ballroom dancers. Dennis held
the door of Chez Ariane for Lucy, haute cuisine in an electric blue mini-skirted
suit, her legs encased in the seamed fishnet black silk of a streetwalker, and
smiled as he saw the maitre’d melt down.
“It’s Mr. Smith,” Dennis said, as always, daring anyone to make
a remark. “We’re expecting another
gentleman. Has he arrived?” It had been Dennis’ dear dad who had taught
him to talk with this exaggeration of politeness. The bloody backstabber.
“Monsieur Coughlin? Oui, oui.”
The man gestured to the bar, where the young reporter stood with a
drink. His face warmed as Lucy approached.
“Mr. Jones, a.k.a. Mr.
Smith,” Frank Coughlin greeted them,
reminding Dennis of the fake name he had given at the party in San Francisco those weeks
before..
“My real name is Smith,” Dennis said.
“You remember Lucy.”
Ariane was the name of the French
commercial space program at that time, Coughlin reminded them in a whisper,
gesturing at the figure of the chef through the open counter of a flame
brightened kitchen. “Remember last
spring? The very first launch blew up in
the upper atmosphere. Fifteen million
dollars. Do yourself a favor and don’t
mention that fact to the owner.”
“What? He lost his fortune and now he’s cooking in a
French bistro in Palo Alto?”
Coughlin laughed. “Not quite.
But the project had a hefty government subsidy, and as the booster fell
out of the sky, so did our friend fall from favor with the post-Pompidou
government.”
Dennis thought about it. There was still something wrong with the
timing. “Oh, never mind,” he said.
“Is that why you called me? To
share Silicon Valley gossip?”
“Yes, actually. I was impressed by that list of spook stuff
you rattled off to me in your boss’s presence the other night. You guys are plugged in.”
“That’s right,” Lucy said.
She had ordered a big vodka drink with a slice of lemon and she looked
over it at him appraisingly. “I’ve been
working aerospace alley for twenty years, had a top secret for half that time.”
“Lockheed?”
“Sure. General Electric. Westinghouse.
I came up the hill to PCI in 1971.”
“Wow. So you’ve seen it all.” Francis Coughlin stared candidly into Lucy’s
open shirt.
“I’ve seen enough.”
“Escargot?” Dennis didn’t want to interrupt a tender
moment, but he was getting hungry.
“Ah, Oui,” Francis Coughlin said, passably. “And let me introduce you to the specialty of
the house, the famous ‘Firewheel.’” He shrugged. “The Ariane booster failed in May 1980 with a
number of satellites. The most important
of which bore this name. I’m sure the
owner does not appreciate that irony.
Still, the dish is very popular.”
The thing turned out to be a
skirt steak with a bunch of vegetables laying on it. There was some kind of good sauce, though,
with a kind of burned, smoky flavor.
“What’s your angle, Frank?”
Dennis asked finally, belching, as the fucking waiter hovered over him
with the bottle of wine again. Lucy
smacked him on the knee, whether at being foul or being a ham, or being
indiscreet, he wasn’t sure.
“I mean, you asking me here. Us here.
Certain hints you’ve been giving off.”
“I know that you see me as a
mild-mannered reporter,” Coughlin
quoted, “…but in reality. I am a reporter, financial reporter, you remember. So I knew when a couple of French companies
bought in to proxy companies here in Mountain
View. More or
less innocent companies, but what they were was dealers, middlemen in the micro
market. I don’t mean computers, I mean
6800s, you know, process control technology, RAM chips, whatever. They do a lot of business in France of
course. “
“So?”
“What this brokerage allows them
to do is to provide real-time intelligence of availability information to their
owners. It turns out that the money
behind these ventures is a government-sponsored micro consortium. They’re home-growing big R&D programs and
building big fab facilities outside of Paris.”
“I know about 6800s,” Dennis said, “We use them at PCI. Process control like you said. pumping stations, electric power generation
farms. Don’t try to bullshit me.”
“Think I don’t know that?” Francis Coughlin smiled tensely. “I have reason to believe that certain
people, including possibly the proprietor of this restaurant might pay well for
information concerning the state-of-the-art in industrial process control.”
Lucy looked confused. “What are you guys talking about?”
“It’s the other division,” Dennis mused.
“Matadero Creek. That’s where
they do all those projects. Yeah…I’ve
got stuff on that.”
Chapter ?
Dennis nursed the Vista Cruiser
into San Fran the back way, on 280 where the wide lanes allowed a slow
car. Outside Colma the thing chugged and
nearly died. Dennis floored it and then
let the petal flutter, searching the mirrors wildly for overtaking
vehicles. But the engine caught and cycled
through, shuddering as it hauled the heavy frame of the station wagon up a long
grade, curving past the StoneRidge Mall.
Dennis had scissored out a map of
San Fran from the Palo Alto Library, worked out his route with these various
decision points. Mostly relating to the
unreliable state of his automobile but also to reinforce the idea that he could
change his mind and to give him a chance to recharge his own battery. Like the stop at the tourist overlook on
Crystal Springs Reservoir along 280, where he sneaked a snort of the coke he’d
folded in a magazine page, or if there were a lot of police outside the embassy
or whatever. It was hard to know what
to predict at this point.
His long hair might have seemed
out of place in his former corporate world, but here in Frisco Dennis was
hoping that he’d seem normal enough. No
one would think he was suspicious. At
this point, at thirty-one, Dennis was the same five-ten, but a little lighter
than he would later become, although he had been getting fatter fast. His hair was barn-brown, his eyes even
darker brown, intense looking when you looked at them in the mirror. He thought he looked a little like Picasso,
except for the glasses, and sometimes wore striped shirts.
At this point Dennis had checked
all the telephone books they had in the Library for the name of the Russian, Voloshin
or Vuloshen, but he must have spelled it wrong.
At least the man wasn’t listed in San Francisco,
or Oakland, or Marin County. In the end he figured he’d just have to be
brazen and take the embassy head-on, like Mission
Impossible-style. There was a photo in a
book of the old embassy building, along with the address of the new one. Dennis scissored that out too. Maybe if the library’s coin-driven Xerox
machines ever worked. At this point
Dennis had complained a couple of times, even offering to fix the fuckers
himself, but the dilettantes and volunteers at the main desk couldn’t cope with
that.
“Reconnaissance, Equipment,
Alertness, Concept, Training.”
R.E.A.C.T. Dennis didn’t remember
where he had picked up the stupid acronym.
Probably some old Soldier of Fortune magazine. There wasn’t time for much of that now. In the city he parked and hung out for a
couple of minutes before crossing the street to the embassy, which didn’t look
anything like the picture. He tried to
imagine where the American spotters would be located and thought he saw one, a
guy working up on a nearby roof. That
didn’t make sense, did it? There were
uniformed guards inside the gate.
The thing that Dennis noticed
first was the clothes everyone was wearing.
Apparently the dictatorship of the proletariat imposed dress codes as
much as a free capitalist society did.
Everyone had on a blue suit or a uniform, the few ladies who were in
evidence dressed in matching attire. As
the door closed, Dennis felt like he had stepped inside a training school for
airline stewards or something. At this
point the Russians seemed to be committed to some kind of stereotype of the
bourgeois. It was as though when you
went to Paris you would put on a beret or wear
short leather pants with straps, what did you call them, in Germany. At this point Dennis had never been out of
the country, but the syndrome was obvious.
Or maybe it was just obvious when you were on the receiving end.
“May I be of assistance?” The speaker was a thin man, about Dennis’
age, with a scrubby moustache and a pinched expression.
“First day covers,” Dennis explained loudly, looking around. “I’m a philatelist, a stamp collector. Someone told me that I could come here to
arrange to have the new series of stamps mailed to me when they are
released. I’ll pay, of course.” He leaned a little closer, confidentially,
“Valerie Voloshin, please.”
“Va-lare-ee,” the functionary corrected immediately,
looking bothered by something other than the mispronounciation, maybe the offer
of cash. “I’m not certain that the
undersecretary is in, today. Can I help
you in any other way?”
“Just give him this, please. I’ll wait.”
Dennis had selected one of the best of the technical papers, a complex
analysis of underwater sonar-boom deployment.
The doc was a copy, but Dennis, in those days when xerography had been
his life, had taken the trouble to duplicate the front and back covers with
their Naval Operations Center
logo on the official blue cardstock.
Paradigm Control did strategic defensive work with the Navy’s sub-chaser
operations as well as its offensive Trident missile stuff. It didn’t feel as wrong to hand over this
kind of thing. Although at this point
Dennis had pretty much put all the morality crap behind him.
He looked the embassy foyer
over. A few yards away a slim
dark-haired woman sat in a cabineted desk unit, a small goosenecked lamp
illuminating the loose sheaf of lined papers which she studied intently. Dennis stepped toward her silently, at this
point not sure whether he was going to speak, peering at the upside down
words. After a moment more she shook the
papers into shape and looked up at him, pulling the sheets toward her blouse.
“Oh, excuse me, just
spying,” he joked, and she actually got
it, smiling rather pleasantly as she placed her work face down in a
drawer. She reminded Dennis of Wendy
Guerin, for some reason, although at this point he couldn’t really put his
finger on it. Maybe the short hair, or
her aura, or something like that.
“Your friend told me to
wait,” he offered. “I saw you over here. Do you speak English?” She was actually really cute, with smooth
pale skin and dark eyes. Just like
Wendy, except that Wendy was much shorter and didn’t wear glasses.
“Nyet. I’m sure Igor will be right back.” Cold bitch.
Anyway, she was wrong. Thirty
seconds later Valerie Voloshin himself appeared, recognizing Dennis with surprise
and striding to meet him with evident agitation.
“How are you, my friend? Please, come to my office. I didn’t expect to see you so soon after the
other evening.” Dennis smiled down at
the secretary. She seemed appropriately
impressed, her pale skin warming with a faint blush. Voloshin escorted him through a tall paneled
door and down a hallway to a private room.
“Igor has just passed on to me
this very unusual document,” Voloshin
said, his blond eyebrows arched with tension.
“I had no idea that you had access to such material as this.”
At this point a lot had changed
and a lot had happened, Dennis had to agree.
He sank into the padded wooden chair that Voloshin indicated, feeling
the pregnancy of the moment. It was
really more of an interrogation cell than an office. A barrier of some kind extended from the
sills of both windows to mid-height, permitting only a three inch band of foggy
light. “Bullet-proofing,” Voloshin remarked, regaining a little of the
sang-froid that Dennis had seen before.
“In my own cubicle as well. We
can speak more freely here.”
“I’ve got more,” Dennis said, getting back to it. Don’t be “cool,” be cool. “I’m thinking, ten thousand.” Which at this point was just a bluff, a blind
stab.
“Ten thousand,” Voloshin repeated. “I can assume you don’t mean rubles.” He hesitated slightly, “I’m sure something of the sort can be
arranged. Ten thousand.”
“What’s the matter? A strain on the budget? Because if we’re going to do business I don’t
want this to be an issue between us. You
know, kind of a mutual benefit thing, that’s what I have in mind, like me, and
the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics.”
“You’re a funny man, Mr.
Smith,” Voloshin smiled grimly, “But I understand that you are no longer
employed at Paradigm Control, Incorporated.”
Where had he heard that? One of those Russian engineers? Lucy, Dennis thought immediately. But of course it was Horst, though at this
exact point Dennis had no idea of this.
“How did you know that?” he asked.
It had to be Horst.
“Oh,” Valerie Voloshin answered
dangerously, “I’ve been keeping my eyes on you since we met at the reception. At the least I wanted to be able to contact
you for some more of that excellent cocaine.
Columbian, I believe. No doubt
transported via Nicaragua
by the fascist military groups there.”
It was funny, maybe his
matter-of-fact Russian aura or something, that this point was maybe the first
time Dennis had really considered the concept of where the drugs had come
from. Could Pearson actually be involved
with the CIA cowboys that flew in the cocaine in their black planes for the
Reagan-sponsored Contras? As soon as the
drugs were mentioned, Dennis was immediately on guard. Voloshin seemed young, still fit, and yet
there was kind of hardening of age, a small mole in the center of his cheek, as
what, an inerasable stain of sin or toxic pollutants on the skin of his
generation.
“You’re a smart guy. Claiming to be plugged in somehow. How would you not know this?” Dennis got the confused idea that the Russian
was scolding him in some way. “How do I
know that you aren’t F.B.I? Could it be
even K.G.B.?” Voloshin’s evident
paranoia was alarming in its own way.
“I didn’t come here to be
insulted,” Dennis said, trying to feel
his way. “And I didn’t bring any dope
with me. What do you think I am, crazy?” Although, at this point…
“Nyet, nyet. Sorry.
I was up very late last evening with a diplomatic crisis. I’m sorry, my temper is a little short
today.” It was true. Voloshin looked much worse in the daylight
than he had mingling with Bob Pearson’s techno-glitterati.
“I see where you’re coming from,” Dennis said.
“But let’s just talk stamps. It
turns out I have a few rare first-day covers for sale. Maybe I know the widow that owns the album,
maybe not. The question is, do you want
these first-day covers or what?”
Voloshin smiled. “Ah.
Indeed. You might not suspect
this, Mr. Smith, but from a very early age stamp collecting has been a special
hobby of mine. And yet, you’ll
understand, I will need to check a catalog, perhaps consult with my wife,
before committing to such a large payment.”
Dennis tried not to look
disappointed or let his excitement show.
He didn’t know what he had expected, at this point. At this point it seemed sort of stupid to
expect the Russian to pull out a briefcase full of cash or something. But it didn’t hurt to turn the screw a
little.
“Lookit. I’m not going to get mousetrapped here. I’m leaving with the document I gave you, and
I want those staples put back exactly like they were. What day is it, Wednesday? I think on Saturday morning you should meet
me at the statue of Father Serra up above 280 with a sack of cash. I might have some other stamps to show you.”
He figured the less time he spent
at the embassy the better.