Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Thawing A.C. Nielsen--Sharing Ch. 10

Today I'm sharing chapter ten of "Thawing A.C. Nielsen"! I hope you'll read it. I'm trying to share a chapter a day, although at some point I will have to take them all down as the book starts to go to press.

I am wondering if any of you would consider reviewing the book. It will be released on Amazon/Kindle on October 18th. I need reviews posted to amazon on the release day, if possible. You get a FREE pdf, word.doc or .mobi (Kindle ebook file) copy and plenty of time between now and mid-October to read it. Let me know, friends!

Chapter ten was a hoot to write. We're still in flashback mode and it's the continuation of Chapter nine where Mike is fired by GM for embezzlement but let off the hook, and then him driving from Michigan through Indiana back to Chicago (in a later chapter we find out what happens when he arrives back in Chicago- it's a shocker). 

So it was a hoot because I have Mike visiting one of those goofy fireworks warehouses they have in NW Indiana. The owner is a weird old geezer, and then Mike takes his fireworks purchases and sets them off in an Indiana field at dusk. As a new writer it was a challenge to create the rhythm and colors of the fireworks and paint that across the expansive Indiana sky and relate it all to Mike's situation. I must have tweaked that passage 100 times!


CHAPTER TEN

Speeding west across Michigan at ninety miles per hour, Mike realized a strange feeling was overtaking him. What was this new thing? Perhaps absolute, newfound fricking freedom? He had thought the next ten or fifteen years of his life had already been mapped out, but now look. Funny how his mind had put certain things in boxes, like the embezzling. He had compartmentalized it, shut it away, didn’t think about it. That money, that gross error in judgment—it was as if someone else, some other Mike Burgess had done it. And maybe it was some other Mike Burgess. That version got caught by the IRS, forced out of his job—the Mike driving the shiny Olds 88 heading back toward Chicago was a free man—with a brand new canvas for the future and a helluva lot of dollars’ worth of fresh paint to play with.

By early evening he was about to say good-bye to Michigan and roll back through Indiana—good ol’ Indiana. Maybe it wasn’t such a bad place. A flood of feelings—happiness, melancholy, confusion, nostalgia—swept over Mike. What would he do now? What was out there for him?

A few minutes before the Chesterton exit he noticed a big billboard: “Johnston Brothers Dy-no-MITE Fireworks Superstore, Buy One, Get Five Free!” Well there’s a deal if I ever saw one, he thought. His lucky day just kept on getting better and better. Mike turned off 94 and rolled up to the front of the big sheet-metal building. It was almost six p.m., the posted closing time. Mike hopped out of the car and walked in. There was only one person there, the owner it looked like, lazily tallying up a poor day’s worth of sales. He was an older fellow, sporting a completely illogical comb-over and some snazzy red suspenders, which almost distracted your eyes from the greasy food stains on his shirt. He might afford a nice toupee and some new clothes if he didn’t give so many fireworks away. It had always amused Mike how these Indiana fireworks joints always tried to one-up each other with their hokey old bait-and-switch advertising tactics.

“You still open?”

“Sure, fella. Slow day, maybe you can make it better. Name’s Tucker J. Johnston. I’m the owner.”

“Pleased to meet you. I’ll just wander. You got a bag I can put stuff in?”

“There’s carts over there. Fill it on up. I’ll stay open for as long as you like. Got some great new aerial cakes in aisle three.”

“Thanks.” Mike grabbed a cart and started down aisle one in no hurry. Heck, no place to go but home and no work for tomorrow. He picked a few things out from aisle one and two, then got to three. There they were, the item the owner had suggested, with a special banner proclaiming their awesomeness:

NEW! Junk Dawg Thumpers $19.95
10 shot 500 gram aerial cake
Double breaks of glittering mines
Strobe willows/timed mines w/3-shot finale

Well, look at that! Mike had no idea what any of that meant but it sounded pretty spectacular. I better get at least two of those. And these and these over here. Heck, fill up the cart, make the old man at the register happy.

“Well, look at you, sir! You got yourself a full cart, don’t ya? You just made my day, big fella. Just watch your fingers with all those. Take a lookey here,” Johnston said, holding up his right hand, which was missing two fingers. “So you got a celebration comin’ up?”

“Oh yeah, I just got fired. Time to celebrate.”

“Oh, I’m sorry, that’s a shame. Wait, you’re celebratin’ you got laid off?”

“More like celebrating the money they gave me to get out. Seven hundred fifty grand.”

“Cash or check?”

“It’s a check. You wanna see it?”

“No, sir, I meant cash or check for the fireworks? We don’t take no plastic here, that’s not real money.”

“Oh sorry, I thought you were asking about my big payday.”

“Well actually, it would be interesting to see a check like that. How much did you say it was for?”

“Seven hundred fifty thousand real US dollars. Here, take a look.” Mike pulled out his wallet and showed the certified bank draft to the old codger.

“GM, huh? You build cars of the future for them or somethin’? Flying cars, mebbe?”

“Nope, just kept all the GM cars nice and cool in the summer and toasty in the winter. I’m Mike Burgess, but I got stuck with a nickname back a few years, Cold Smokey,” Mike said with a smile, reaching out to shake the old man’s hand. “Kind of a mix of what I do, the cold part—you know, air-conditioning, and then a mix of my name, Mike Burgess, with that White Sox pinch hitter from a few years ago, Smokey Burgess. Remember him? Put it all together and it’s Mike ‘Cold Smokey’ Burgess. A guy on the line at the GM plant in Flint made it up. I thought it was dumb at first, but now I kinda like it.”

“I ain’t never had a nickname myself. Always wished I could have one,” the owner sighed.

“Well, you know since you showed me your hand,” Mike said, “there was a baseball player called Mordecai ‘Three Finger’ Brown. Born here in Indiana, I think maybe Nyesville, or maybe it was Terre Haute. He pitched for the Cubs. When he was a kid his hand was injured in a farming accident, but he still learned how to pitch. I’m a baseball nut, in case you hadn’t figured that out yet. So there’s a nickname for you, I suppose.”

“Well, I can’t take another Indiana fella’s nickname. That don’t seem right, Mr. Cold Smokey. Gotta be a fresh one picked out for me, don’t ya think?”

“Sure. Well wait, let me think. Hey, I got an idea, ready to hear it?” The old man shook his head up and down. “What sound does your best firework make? Make that sound right now.”

“It goes ka—booooom!”

“There you go! Nice to meet you, Kaboom Johnston!”

“Hey, I like that. Thanks, Mr. Smokey. You got a new friend. Come back anytime.” He gave Mike a big fat smile, exposing gaps here and there where teeth had jumped ship.

“So, I buy one and get five free, right? This won’t be too expensive, then, huh?”

“Oh, well them are over there, in that old blue garbage can in the corner. Now you pick one of them deluxe sparkler packs there, and you sure do get five more, no charge. We been running that special for twenty-five years, I bet,” Kaboom bragged.

“Ah, that’s great. Yeah, well then add that to my order. Thanks!” Mike grinned, happy to experience the scam in all its hokey glory. The old man rang Mike up, absentmindedly whistling the first eight bars of “On the Banks of the Wabash” over and over. “Well, sir, nice to do business with you today,” said Mike, shaking Kaboom’s hand.

“The pleasure was all mine, sir. G’night. Drive safe now, big fella.”


Mike loaded the fireworks into his trunk and got back onto 94. A beautiful peach-colored sunset was lingering in the sky, taking its sweet time painting some scattered clouds. Mike drove about ten miles and then saw some open space along the road, a field with no crops. He stopped the car and got out, took the boxes of fireworks out of the trunk and walked them over into the field. He went back to the car and got a couple boxes of matches he had grabbed when he stopped for a late lunch at La Cantina restaurant in Paw Paw. 

Next he rigged up a few of the smaller fireworks and lit them—pow, pow, pow they went, lighting up the sky with green, red, and silver streaks. He shot off a few more, building to the larger purchases he had made. A few passing cars slowed down to watch the display, a couple of them honking in appreciation. Mike now bundled a few together and set them off. At one point, one of the fireworks had fallen loose just as it exploded and whizzed past Mike, just missing his left ear. The burnt black powder hung in the air, stinging his nose. As night crept closer the sunset’s colors intensified to a dark orange, and the fireworks showcase grew even more exhilarating. One rocket swept high in the air, exploded into an anemone shape, made little whistling sounds, and then the cinders fell toward the ground, glittery gold all the way down. Good stuff, Mike thought.

  Now time for the finale. Mike set up the big investment of the day, the two Junk Dawg Thumpers. He aimed them up high and toward the field, away from his car and the road, not knowing how wild these bad boys might be. He paused for a moment, then said out loud, “Good-bye Frigidaire, good-bye GM. It was fun while it lasted. But now I’m moving on. Wish me luck!” He lit the bundled fuses and stepped back. The fuses hissed and then whoosh, the Thumpers blasted into the sky, higher and higher. Multiple explosions and a wild array of colors and patterns took over the sky. Then more glittering lights and pinwheels spun out into the darkening sky, and finally the payoff, the advertised three-shot volley (times two)—kaboom, kaboom, kaboom, kaboom, kaboom, kaboooommmm. Mike felt the heavy concussion of the volleys slamming into his chest and then heard the waves of sound bounce off the barns of surrounding farms—a series of smaller kabooms echoed on for at least ten more seconds. 

Thoroughly satisfied, Mike stood and watched the waning sunset for a few minutes. It’s so beautiful, this show the sun puts on for us every night and then the sunrise in the morning—every morning. Why don’t we watch these more, make the time to see them? He tried his hardest to etch this moment into his mind forever. Not just the beauty of this big evening sky across the flatness of an Indiana field, but also the feeling of new freedom, the exhilarating opportunity to reinvent himself however he chose.





Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Thawing A.C. Nielsen--Sharing Ch. 9

Today I'm sharing chapter nine of "Thawing A.C. Nielsen". I hope you'll read it. I'm trying to share a chapter a day, although at some point I will have to take them all down as the book starts to go to press.

I am wondering if any of you would consider reviewing the book. It will be released on Amazon/Kindle on October 18th. I need reviews from regular folks posted to amazon on the release day, if possible. You get a FREE pdf, word.doc or .mobi (Kindle ebook file) copy  and plenty of time between now and mid-October to read it. Let me know, friends!

In Chapter Nine we start flashing back a few decades to learn about Mike's not-so-perfect past, but these are a series of events which shape his future for sure, and without which his company ExitStrategy would never have come into being. I had some fun with this chapter and the next in regard to details about Indiana, Michigan, and so on. I also drop a few things in here that become important later on-- it's actually kind of fun dropping little clues in to early chapters which will help later chapters seem logical!

I also had fun naming the gumshoe PI Jussi Bendek, after the great opera singer Jussi Bjorling!


CHAPTER NINE

Mike Burgess, Fall 1980

Do a line, then I’m outta here. A raise and a promotion, piece of cake. Stop sharing me with Frigidaire, GM all the way now, baby. Today’s the day—I can feel it.

Mike Burgess trotted out of his Glencoe, Illinois, apartment and jumped in his car, a 1979 Oldsmobile 88 with the optional 260 Olds engine. He wouldn’t be caught dead with the Buick six-cylinder engine they were dropping into most of the 88s now. Mike had every possible option added to the car and it drove like a dream. He especially liked the headroom, since he could slide his six-foot-four-inch frame behind the wheel with ease. Mike had not only created the coolant system and heating/air-conditioning design for this car and every other GM car since 1972, but he also had a part in redesigning the assembly line it was built on.

Okay, looking good. Not much traffic. Get through this stretch past downtown and then drive like a bat out of hell through goddamn Gary, Indiana, stinkin’ armpit of the Midwest. Just zoom on past that stench from the steel mills. Then hit the Michigan state line—smooth sailing from then on.
A few hours later Mike pulled into the GM corporate headquarters parking lot with time to spare. He parked his car and strode on through the famous entrance doors, smiling and shaking hands left and right as he made his way toward the elevators. He was a big man with an equally large personality—people were naturally drawn to him. As he stepped into the elevator and pushed the button for the boardroom floor, he saw McDonald, one of the chairmen. McDonald tried to scramble in but the doors closed too fast. He tried to call out to Mike but it was too late. Wow, he looked kind of sour. Just from missing the elevator? Oh well, he’ll catch up. Good guy, doesn’t take any shit from Moore. McDonald has an electrical engineering background. Gotta like him, we engineering guys stick together!

Mike got off the elevator and shook hands with more pals in the hallway. This is gonna be a red-letter day, he thought. How much more money are they offering, I wonder? Hell, all the patents and the new work in plant design—I think I’m making senior VP, easy. And they won’t be sharing me with Frigidaire anymore.

“They’re ready for you, Mr. Burgess,” the receptionist controlling access to the boardroom said. Mike straightened his tie, then winked and smiled at her, “Here I go!” he announced. She looked blankly back at him. The Mike “Cold Smokey” Burgess charisma hadn’t yet won her over.

Mike pulled the door open and walked in with his usual confidence. He looked around and saw all the usual exec faces, but also two others he didn’t know. Bean counters probably, he thought. He moved around the room shaking a few hands, and then McDonald entered from the private entrance and sat down at the head of the table. There were ten or so men in attendance, plus a secretary taking notes.

“Greetings, Mike. Glad you got here safe and sound,” McDonald said.

“Glad to be here. I survived driving through Gary and the mills. No matter how many times I drive through there I can’t get used to that smell.”

“Well, Mike, don’t forget, a lot of that Gary steel winds up in our cars. Or in a lot of the stuff you’ve designed for Frigidaire over the years.”

“Sure, I was just making a joke. Guess it wasn’t that funny.”

“So, Mike,” McDonald announced, “I’m going to be running this meeting since we’ve known each other a long time. I’ve always respected your work. You’re a multitalented hardworking man and I appreciate all you’ve done for Frigidaire and GM in your time here. Carl here will start things off.”

“Thanks for being here, Mike. I echo Mr. McDonald’s sentiments,” said Carl Castle, a bald-headed fellow who always looked like he’d been sucking on lemons. “Mike, we’re all here because we’ve become aware that you like money.”

“Well, of course. That’s what GM is about, Carl. Didn’t you get the memo?” Mike zinged back. He looked around and to his surprise no one seemed to get his little joke—his sly putdown of Castle, the goddamn jerk.

“Yes, Mike. I understand. Clever. As I said, we’ve noticed you like money. And actually girls, too.”
Carl Castle? Really? The guy hates my guts. Everyone knows it. What’s he talking for, anyway? “Well sure, Carl, I think it’s safe to say we all like money here. And girls, too, right? We’re men, aren’t we?” Stone-cold silence. Even the fellows in the room who’d been his best work pals looked away, avoiding eye contact.

“Mike, there’s a difference between girls and women, wouldn’t you say?”

“Well sure. So, really, what’s this about, Carl? I thought this was a business meeting. Say, if it’s about production on that new thermocouple for the Impala I’ve got the specs in my car. I can go get them.” Jesus, something’s not right here. Damn fucking Castle, what the hell does he know? Dammit, dammit, dammit!

“Carl, get back to the main point, please,” McDonald insisted, looking pissed off.

“No, sir, I’m sorry. We need to go over this point first, do we not?” Castle said, looking over at a fellow who Mike had never seen before in his life. The man who stuck out by virtue of his ill-fitting $39.95 Montgomery Ward’s suit gave a tiny nod back to Castle.

“No, Mr. Castle,” McDonald said, “I said for you to move to the real point of this meeting. Ultimately I’m in charge here. Stick to the main point or you won’t speak any further.”

“All right, understood,” Castle said, trying to hide his disdain not only for Mike but for McDonald, too. 
“Mike,” Castle snarled, “bottom line is that I don’t have to be nice to you. I can just hang you out to twist in the wind. You know why? Because right now I’m going to introduce you to someone who has become very interested in you. This is Special Agent Springer from the Internal Revenue Service here to my right. He’s got a few things to say.” This wasn’t the poorly dressed man Castle was trying to introduce before—this was a different fellow, trying, with little success, to herd a giant pile of folders on the desk, papers spilling out every which way.

Oh shit, they got me. Damn it, fucking goddammit, and fuck Castle. I should cold-cock him right now. Motherfucker! Mike could feel his face turning red, his blood pressure going through the roof. His urge to walk over to Castle and kill the bald-headed shit-fucking bastard with his bare hands was overwhelming.

“Good afternoon, Mr. Burgess, I’m agent Dirk Springer of the Internal Revenue Service out of Cincinnati. For a while now Frigidaire and GM accountants have been reviewing your expense accounts and have also been trying to resolve how you had access to and control of certain company bank accounts. They asked us to investigate and we’ve been doing so for about nine months now. Your personal bank has been cooperating with us for at least the last six months. I would like it on record that the IRS feels that GM and Frigidaire have done a poor job of controlling situations like this. We’ll be working with you to clean up some processes, correct, Mr. Wyatt?”

“Yes, GM will oblige and we’re ready to work with you,” said Larry Wyatt, GM head legal counsel. “That’s completely understood. Mr. Springer—please continue.”

“Mr. Burgess, I am here to inform you that the IRS is prepared to file charges against you next week for felony tax fraud in regard to massive unreported income, alleged to be embezzled GM funds, for tax year 1978. We are talking about criminal tax fraud, a felony. The files here on this table represent just a fraction of the information that will prove our case. The case against you is substantial. I suggest you listen closely to Mr. McDonald and GM legal counsel Mr. Wyatt when they lay out a path for you which may resolve this matter quickly. Just to be clear, the IRS is not charging you with embezzlement. That’s not part of the IRS—we are simply a taxing body. Embezzlement would be a state of Michigan matter. However, if the state did press charges we would fully cooperate. Thank you, Mr. Burgess for your attention.” And with that, Springer simply sat down. There was no drama—no vendetta. He wasn’t there to crucify Mike like Castle was. Mike hated the IRS, but at least he could give credit to Springer for treating him with decency and respect while speaking to him in front of his colleagues.

“So, there we have it,” Castle said. “And now I am going to turn to Mr. Bendek like I first wanted to. There is more to this situation. Mr. Bendek?”

The fellow with the cheap suit stood up. “My name is Jussi Bendek, I’m a private investigator. When the IRS started investigating this situation, they confirmed that they were only investigating his financial activities. But Mr. Castle desired more information about Mr. Burgess’s daily activity. He hired me, and in my investigation I found that he purchases cocaine for his private use. I also discovered that he seems to like young women, often taking them out to either what you might call dive bars but just as often to nice restaurants. Over the last year we identified these young women and determined their ages. Mr. Burgess, you met a Hazel Morganthaler in Flint, Michigan, on December 31, 1978. Do you recall that?”

“I refuse to answer your questions,” Mike said, recovering a little bit of his cool. “You’re obviously a tool of Castle’s. This is a fucking hatchet job. I have nothing to say.” McDonald’s sour expression finally turned into a smile. He nodded his approval to Mike, as did several other men.
“You drove Miss Morganthaler from Michigan,” Bendek continued, unfazed, “through Indiana to Illinois while she was, at that point, seventeen years old, in order to engage her in an act of prostitution, a violation of the Mann Act of 1910.”

“Oh, really?” Mike bellowed, pounding the table with his fist. “Castle, you asshole, you hired this two-bit sleaze ball

“I’m prepared to turn this over to the FBI right now, Mike,” Castle interrupted, waving Bendek off.
“Carl, shut the hell up,” Wyatt snapped, glowering at Castle, then turning to Mike. “Look, Mike, you do seem to have a weakness for young women, the Morganthaler girl aside. It’s fairly apparent. For now, though, let’s calm down and put things in perspective. If the board were to allow Mr. Castle to go the FBI they can probably fabricate a case to make against you somehow, even though I personally think you never slept with anyone underage.”

“Damn straight, Larry,” Mike said. “I’m not a pervert.”

“I understand, Mike,” Wyatt agreed, “but right now the FBI isn’t a friend of GM. I simply don’t want to deal with them. The IRS, however, is our friend. They work with us, not against us. The Mann Act is the FBI’s baby, but they know nothing about any of this yet. We’d like to keep it that way and I don’t believe Mr. Castle’s character assassination of you will prevail. Carl, I’m head legal counsel here. I’m telling you right now to stay out of my territory, and I highly advise you to stop drumming up support with various board members about what your PI was up to. You brought the IRS in on this before we had even finished our internal investigation. That doesn’t sit well with me or anyone else in this room.” Wyatt turned back to Mike, softening his tone. “Anyway, Mike, the real situation is this—you embezzled the money. You know it, I know it. It’s a fact. You have a coke problem as well. And right now we don’t want the media to have any juicy stories to print about us. Fighting off the Japanese for market share is our big job right now, understand? We don’t want shareholders to worry about this kind of stuff, too. Therefore, we have no choice but to keep this quiet and let you go.”
“Mike,” McDonald jumped in, “does this have anything to do with situations where you were expecting bonuses from us? You know, when we licensed out patents you worked on? I’m pretty sure you were angry about that.”

“You bet I was angry,” Mike answered. “You made ten million selling off my new coolant recycle design and didn’t give me a penny. All I asked for was some part of that pie. I thought I was working for GM—not those other companies.”

“Mike, it wasn’t your design. You know how this works. Anything you did while an employee was the property of GM to do with as the company pleased.”
“And the board couldn’t give me anything? I’ve made this company millions of dollars. Many fucking millions. So yeah, that’s why I did it. I was damn angry. I did it to mess with GM—to prove I was smarter than GM. And it wasn’t hard, by the way. You’ve got a lot of leaks in your system. Come to think of it, fellas, if GM’s fiscal security was a radiator, you’d be on the side of the road with steam blasting out the hood.”

“Duly noted, Mike,” McDonald said with a slight grin.

Mike let out a deep sigh as he pushed himself away from the big table, trying to figure out what to do or say for the moment. It wasn’t their fault. He had been in the coke haze weeks, months on end, plotting revenge like a maniac. How could he have had such a serious lapse in judgment, in character? And now it was over. A relief, actually. Thank God for friends. Sure, Castle was a total asshole, but there were other men in the room who, he knew, loved him as a friend and as a colleague. He had let them all down. And even just McDonald being there, sort of on his side, meant the world to Mike now.

“So, Mike,” Wyatt continued, “GM knows that we have a number of people in the company with cocaine problems, it’s a problem all over the country, I hear. You’ll have to sort that issue out for yourself. Frankly, it’s neither here nor there to us right now. GM leadership believes along with me about you and the women. None were underage, just good-looking twentysomethings, correct? Don’t listen to Castle. Don’t let him rattle you. When Cunningham and Farrell leave the board in about six months, he’ll be fired. He pretty much hung himself when he spilled all this to the IRS without coming to me.” Wyatt shot a withering look at Castle, who shriveled under the glare. “The amount you embezzled would seem very large to John Q. Public, but to GM it’s a tiny piss in the ocean. So here’s where we stand with Agent Springer—GM will not ask you to turn the money back in—it will still be viewed as income. We’ve worked out a deal wherein GM will pay your taxes, late fees, penalties, the whole nine yards. We’re settling with the IRS and after today they don’t know you from Adam. All you have to do is resign and walk away. Plus one more thing. We want you to write down how you got the money—how you did it. We want that so we can tighten things up, understand? We’ve got papers here for you to sign. Everyone else is going to walk out now except for Agent Springer, McDonald, and myself. You look over the papers and I’ll answer any questions you have, but you need to sign these today, understand?”

“Yes, Larry, thank you. I apologize to you all. It should never have happened. Thank you, and I hope you can forgive me,” Mike said sadly, looking from face to face. The other men shuffled out of the room, most of them giving him a firm handshake or a bear hug as they went. Wyatt brought the resignation papers over to Mike.

“Okay, Mike, go ahead and read all this. Please note that you can’t take any of our intellectual property to your next employer. That’s very important.” McDonald, Wyatt, and Springer sat patiently while Mike read everything. It was all straightforward. There was zero mention of the cocaine or of the Mann Act crap.

“Okay,” Mike said. “Now what?”

“Here’s a pen. You’ve got to sign here and there, and initial over here on this page a couple times, see? Press hard for the carbons, okay?”

“Okay,” Mike said, “what else?”

“Now you need to sign this amended tax return the IRS has prepared for you,” said Wyatt. “Look it over and sign that and you’re off the hook with the IRS. No charges, no prison, nothing. The state of Michigan and the FBI will not be brought in. And for your own sake, Mike, clean up your drug problem. You don’t want to risk going to jail for that, do you? Anyway, look at this way out as GM’s thank-you for your many years of inspired service, and we’re sorry this happened just as much as you are.” Wyatt gave Mike some time to read over the IRS amended return. “Okay, now take this piece of paper and write down how you got into those accounts. You can just sketch it out for us. Listen, Mike, there’s nobody on this planet who can replace you at GM. It’ll probably take three guys to do what you did for us. Best of luck as you move forward with your life.” Mike finished up the quick narrative on how he easily funneled GM money into accounts he controlled and then handed it to Wyatt.

“Mind if I keep this pen, Wyatt?”

“Sure, of course.”

“You can have this, too, Mike.” McDonald slid an envelope over to Mike.

“What’s this?” Mike asked.

“It’s our thank-you,” McDonald explained. “The board decided, who amongst us is without fault? The chairman says we made a mistake by not rewarding you enough. We should have done more all along to make you happy. You made a mistake, a big one, and maybe there should have been a public punishment—that’s what pricks like Castle would like to see happen. But having to resign from GM is a gigantic punishment just in itself. We hope you’ll reinvent yourself. I mean hell, that’s what you do, man. You invent!”

“Thank you all,” Mike said humbly as he rubbed his tired eyes. “Mr. Springer, I’m sorry—and I didn’t think I would ever say I’m sorry to the IRS for anything, but here I am doing it now. Thank you all,” he muttered again as he stuffed the envelope in his suit. “Wait, Larry, do I have someplace to sleep tonight if I drive back to Glencoe?”

“Yes. The company lease for your apartment is good for another seven weeks. Drive carefully going back, okay? Can you handle that?”

“Yeah, I can. Hope to see you sometime.” Mike shook hands with all three men, walked out of the room, and got on the elevator. Half an hour earlier, in this very same elevator car, he had been dreaming about nabbing a senior VP job and a fat raise. That sure as hell didn’t pan out. The elevator brought him down to the lobby. He sat down on a bench, took a deep breath, then slowly tore open the envelope McDonald had given him. Inside was his final Frigidaire/GM check—all his company retirement account money and other accrued benefits added together, then rounded up, way up to the figure of exactly $750,000—GM’s way of somewhat turning a blind eye and thanking him for his years of genius and dedication.




Monday, August 29, 2016

Thawing A.C. Nielsen--Sharing Ch. 8

This just in-- a five star review from "Readers Favorite"! Will be posting it here soon (and to Amazon on my page there when I finally have it up and running).

Today I'm sharing chapter eight of "Thawing A.C. Nielsen! I hope you'll read it. I'm trying to share a chapter a day, although at some point I will have to take them all down as the book starts to go to press.

I am wondering if any of you would consider reviewing the book. It will be released on Amazon/Kindle on October 18th. I need reviews posted to amazon on the release day, if possible. You get a FREE pdf, word.doc or .mobi (Kindle ebook file) copy  and plenty of time between now and mid-October to read it. Let me know, friends!


In Chapter eight Kate competes the tour of ExitStrategy and learns more about the history of cryonics. This chapter took a lot of research and some effort in world-building, re: the cryonics facility.

I had  little fun referencing the origin of the iconic movie Blade Runner, starring Harrison Ford, which was a screen adaptation of Philip Dick's novel "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?":


“Interesting,” Kate replied. “Do you think they dream? I mean all these people. What would they dream about?”

“You’re quite the romantic, aren’t you? Well, I don’t think they dream of electric sheep, we’ll leave that to the androids—maybe more like how to get ahold of a plush electric blanket and set it on extra-high, I bet,” Mike said, chuckling.

 CHAPTER EIGHT


“Miss Pearson is here, Mr. Burgess.”

“Very good, Keith. Thanks for staying late. You can take off now.”

“Thank you, Mr. Burgess.”

“Thanks for letting me use the company car, Mike. That was very nice of you,” Kate said.

“Not a problem. Well, how about I show you the last remaining things you need to see? Shall we?”

“Of course.”

“All right. So over here, Kate, opposite your lab, is the operating room. This is where all the patients make their transition—their ‘exit strategy.’ Step on in.”

“It looks just like a hospital operating room, I would venture. What are some of the procedures?”
“Well, first let me tell you that all the patients have signed a Body Donor Agreement. Technically they are donating their body to ExitStrategy. But instead of the usual, you know, a body going to an educational institution as a cadaver for students to study, or to a research project, we’re going to put them in stasis as quickly as possible. The donor status ensures that we are covered legally. We have other forms as well—agreements made between our patients and us, and these are not meant to be divulged to the outside world. We also, at times, videotape patients just before their procedure. They are on camera stating their wishes for cryo. It’s a pretty good idea, especially since there have been a few times where we sensed that certain patients’ family members might want to battle us.”

“So you’ve had battles?”

“Nope. Knock on wood—it’s never happened. We’ve been surprised by that. Ironically, the only battle we’ve had was with an actual cryo patient. She was insistent on getting what she wanted. Enzo decided she was right, so she got it. Franklin and I gave in. In the long run, she and Enzo were right. It actually changed how we do things around here.”

“What happened? What did she want?”

“It’s a long story, I’ll tell you later. Let’s just stick to the mini-tour script for now, okay?”

“Sure, that’s fine, Mike. Wait—so do these people have funerals? It would seem antithetical to their beliefs. They’re denying death, right?”

“They usually will have a memorial service. Some who don’t want to divulge that they’ve gone into cryo may stage a funeral, but there’s no body in the casket. In those cases, only a few people at the service may know about the choice for cryo. However it plays out, we haven’t really had any problems. Don’t forget, most of our clients are wealthy, powerful, and famous. They’ve been calling their own shots for years. Not too many people around them are going to buck them when they choose to be a part of ExitStrategy.

“I understand. So walk me through the procedure.”

“I’ll give you the highlights,” Mike said. “The body is cooled quite a bit to minimize any chance of early decomposition. As quickly as we can, we open the femoral arteries. We drain most, but not quite all of the blood out of one, while we inject our glycol-based cryofluid on the other side. For the most part, Chrissy and a partner do this. They are very good at it.”

“Wait. You have licensed medical people for this? You can’t just use anybody, right?”

“Chrissy is a licensed RN. She studied to become one specifically so that she could participate. Enzo Saltieri was the supervising MD, of course. We had other doctors and nurses on call when needed.”

“You said ‘had,’ not have. What’s that mean?”

“Good catch, Kate. We haven’t cryo’d anyone in three years.”

“Why not? Wait, what about Enzo? Didn’t he want to go into cryo?”

“We’ll get to that soon, Kate. Anyway, no one alive right now under contract with us has died recently, for one thing. We’ve been okay with that. You mentioned you wanted to think about the ethics of all this, right? Well, actually that hit us a while back. Enzo and I began to realize that we needed time to review the ethical implications of going the next step—of reviving people. I mean, who’s responsible if we bring back someone now, or years from now, and they’re alive but a vegetable? Who is responsible for their quality of life? What if their family doesn’t exist in the future? What will the society of the future say? Enzo and I rushed into some of this too quickly. We were too excited to start the company and get it running. But as we got older we realized that there were issues, big and small, that colored this whole thing. Understand?”

“Of course. I totally understand that, Mike. And I’m actually glad you’re saying this. We are in an ethical gray area, right? Life, death, some kind limbo in between? It does raise millions of questions.”

“Correct, Kate. So, moving on, after we have the cryo preservative in their body, the fluid that protects against icing, as well as the helium gas perfusion of the entire body to protect against ice formation in between cells, we start really dropping the temperature. As I told you before, we don’t just do the knee-jerk thing the other facilities have always done—simply freezing all the way down to liquid nitrogen level. We don’t even hit the glassy state I told you about, so we’re nowhere near liquid nitrogen temperature. At the temperature we use, there can still even be a tiny amount of biological process going on at the molecular level, believe it or not. I mean laymen don’t get that, but I’m sure you would appreciate this as a biologist. Granted, there is no measurable heartbeat, no EEG. We also cycle the temperature up and down and periodically force more helium into the environment. You’ll see the readout and hear that at each pod, and it’s all computer controlled.”

“Why the temperature shifts?”

“Enzo believed the body needs variety, that some kind of external stimulus, or at least change in the environment is good for the body. I don’t understand his research and formulas on this—maybe you will!”

“Yes, I get most of the ideas I’m hearing. Brilliant, actually. And your expertise in heat transfer is what makes all this possible and affordable over many years, right?”

“Correct, Kate. We think that our process will result in the least amount of cellular damage and the best chance for revival. Of course, that’s your new job, understand? Examining all of that. My fresh set of brilliant, young eyes.”

“Wait, let’s go back a sec.” Kate drummed her fingers on the steel table in the room, trying to keep her focus on what questions to ask. “When you begin this process, these people have just died, right? They have a death certificate from a doctor, correct?”

“Yes. But we don’t actually agree with what that certificate says. A death certificate is just a piece of paper that society thinks should exist. In our case, the patient has just shown the early signs of physical death, just initial function failures—that is all. We believe that they are still alive. That is our position here. Did you know the most recent studies show that brain cells last far beyond the current definition of death? People can laugh all they want at us, but those are folks who don’t know recent research. When we place someone in cryo, we are preserving their more important functions for them. You stopped breathing or your heart stopped—so what? We will preserve you, we will save you—literally save you. We really do believe in this, Kate. Remember what I said about the brain cells? Let me ask you, Kate—what makes you, you? What is it about Katherine Pearson that makes her the person she is—that people say, ‘Oh look, there’s Kate Pearson’?”

“Well, other than my appearance, I would say personality, I guess. They would know my smile, how I talk, what I think about the world.”

“And where is that? Where is it stored?”

“In my brain, obviously. Memory, the collected basis for my views and my personality, right?”

“Correct. That recent research I mentioned posits strongly that brain cells, especially core memory cells, are still functional far beyond the point where a doctor would readily agree to sign a death certificate. These cells do not die quickly—they are still functional for hours, even days past so-called death. I’ll show you the research from legitimate cutting-edge sources, not quacks.”

“Wow, seriously? So you honestly believe that the patients here have much more than just their physical bodies in stasis, that you have preserved their memories as well, and that you can restore full brain function upon revival?”

“Absolutely. I have to, otherwise we are just freezing and thawing flesh—not real human individuals. And as you mull all of this over, it goes to show you, again, that we really don’t know what divides life from death. We are still stumbling blindly, just guessing at things.”

“This is pretty amazing stuff. So now what?”

“Let’s walk down the B wing. Ready?”



“Okay, here we go, Kate,” Mike began. “This was the first patient wing built. The cryo system control starts at the center of the hub—you know, the big tower of power, as Chrissy calls it, and runs right underneath the floor we’re walking on. As you see, we have people in cryopods running down each side of the wall. These first forty or so are the steel pods, not the new design. The equipment below us feeds up to each of these pods. There’s an outer pod, and then an inner one. We’ve got readouts on the whole system and each individual pod. Norm oversees all this with the help of a young woman named Deirdre. She also helps me run my calculations. Brilliant kid, just a little older than you. Actually, you two might hit it off—not everyone here is an old-timer.”

“This is amazing. So who are all these people? It looks like there are about eighty stations along each wall—so about 160 patients in this wing alone?”

“You’re a bit off—there are sixty on each side, thus 120 patients in this wing. Evens over here and odds on the opposite side. So here, let me tell you about some of them. B34 here—she’s a ballerina; B36, an author; B38, a well-known scientist. Across there is B39, a politician whose name you would know. It’s an impressive assemblage of people.”

“So, they just lay here and wait? And what killed most of them? You mentioned cancer earlier today.”
“Yes, a lot of these people have cancer, especially pancreatic or metastatic cases. ALS, MS, MD, late-stage Alzheimer’s—there are many illnesses represented here.”

“So, they wait, right? But really, how long?”

“Maybe not too long for some of them. As you know, almost every day around the world there are new treatment ideas and promising medical research. And frankly, it depends on you, too, Kate. After you look the research over, you tell me when we could take a try at it. Try it out on some animals we have frozen here. If it works with the animals and you’ve finalized a procedure, then we could hunt for a patient here whose illness is curable in today’s medical world. I’d sure like to see it happen soon—most people my age have been retired for a while and are out playing golf in sunny Arizona, right? Well, here we are the end of this wing. That’s Benjamin, in B120. He was a public school teacher. He met Franklin at some museum in LA. We have no idea how he saved up a million dollars to spend with us. But here he is, nonetheless.”

“Interesting,” Kate replied. “Do you think they dream? I mean all these people. What would they dream about?”

“You’re quite the romantic, aren’t you? Well, I don’t think they dream of electric sheep, we’ll leave that to the androids—maybe more like how to get ahold of a plush electric blanket and set it on extra-high, I bet,” Mike said, chuckling. “I’m curious. When we first revealed what ExitStrategy does, you panicked. You were nauseous. How did that change so quickly?”

Kate had thought Mike might get around to asking this question. She stared at the floor for a moment, then spoke slowly, yet clearly. “My dad died from cancer. He was in so much pain. It was terrible. Yes, I freaked out for a while the other day. But then I started thinking of my dad—how I lost him and he’s never coming back. Here he would have had a chance.” Kate fought hard to not tear up in front of Mike.

“I’m sorry for your loss. I’m sure it must have been hard for you. But here were are now, in the present, right? And the big, big question is this—are you ready? Do you want to be the new head of research at ExitStrategy?”

“Yes, I’ve decided to be bold. I’m young. If I can’t go out on a limb now, take a risk—maybe make a difference in the world—when will I? Sure, this is all quite unusual, but I see your commitment to hard science. The lab alone screams that. You seem to be a brilliant man. So heck yeah, I’m in!”
“That’s fabulous, Kate. I’m so pleased—you have no idea. Franklin will be, too. Welcome aboard! Oh, hope you don’t mind—I got ahold of your friend Edouard. We talked over Skype. Lovely young man, very gracious and ridiculously smart. Get this, he said he would be available to you for six months if you want to pursue this.”

“Seriously? You talked to Edouard?”

“Yes, he says he is leaving his current position soon, and he has a new government health appointment lined up with some other Caribbean country. It starts late spring of next year, I think he said. Until that job kicks in he’s available to the highest bidder, he joked.”

“Wow! That’s great to hear.”

“Yes, just the man you hoped for, right? So when I told him what we do here he wasn’t shocked like you were back at the hotel. After all, he’s from Haiti, right? He took it completely in stride. When I explained it all he said Saltieri and I should be in the Vodoun Doctor Hall of Fame!”

“That’s pretty funny. So what’s next?”

“I have your contract here. Take your time and read it over. And you can keep that company car, too. We’ll add a rider to that effect.”

Kate took the document. Everything seemed straightforward. She smiled at Mike. What a wonderful, brilliant man, she thought. “Okay, I’m ready. Do you have that lucky pen your nephew mentioned?”

“Oh yes, somewhere here.” Mike patted his pockets. “Here it is. Kate, I’ve kept this pen for years. Just looking at it now and then keeps me from becoming complacent. Same thing you seem to want to avoid, eh? It’s the pen that General Motors handed me years ago to sign my forced resignation.”


Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Thawing A.C. Nielsen--Sharing Ch. 7

 This just in-- a five star review from "Readers Favorite"! Will be posting it here soon (and to Amazon on my page there when I finally have it up and running).

Today I'm sharing chapter seven of "Thawing A.C. Nielsen! I hope you'll read it. I'm trying to share a chapter a day, although at some point I will have to take them all down as the book starts to go to press.

I am wondering if any of you would consider reviewing the book. It will be released on Amazon/Kindle on October 18th. I need reviews posted to amazon on the release day, if possible. You get a FREE pdf, word.doc or .mobi (Kindle ebook file) copy  and plenty of time between now and mid-October to read it. Let me know, friends!

 In chapter seven Kate gets to visit the ExitStrategy building and learn more about the history of cryonics. What you'll read is based on true stories about real cryo labs, even the Bumble Bee Tuna anecdote!

I had fun working these two lines in:
 
“Sure, Mike is wooing you big-time. Resistance is futile—you will be assimilated,” Norm quipped.

And later: "Yes, we will talk honestly now. Franklin and I believe in the importance of being earnest, Kate."

CHAPTER SEVEN

Before parting ways at the hotel on Friday, Gloria insisted on scheduling a lunch date with Kate for a month later. “Time for us girls to get to know each other better,” she’d said as she kissed Kate on the cheek. Then it was time for Mike and Franklin to show Kate around Energy Source/ExitStrategy. They left the hotel and drove north on Lake Shore Drive since I-94 was a mess. It was a beautiful day—people out on the lakefront jogging trail, Lincoln Park harbor and the zoo off to the left. They zoomed on, eventually zipping onto Green Bay Road. Mike was driving, so Kate engaged Franklin in some small talk in the backseat.

“So, Franklin, you were an actor? What was that like?”

“Oh, it was great fun. I never hurt for work. And I lived in sunny LA—I still don’t know why Mike insists on living here year-round, brr.”

“Might I have seen you in any films?”

“Yes, and no. When I was really young I did stand-in work. I’d be Ryan O’Neill’s or Warren Beatty’s or someone else’s backside. Did some stunts, too. Just about got killed by a crazy horse one day—threw me and started kicking me. I was in the hospital for a week. I graduated from that racket and did television work back in the 1980s through most of the 1990s. In fact, if you watch reruns I’ll turn up somewhere, of course looking a lot fitter than I am now.”

“So when you had speaking roles what kind of parts did you play?”

“I was typically one of the bad guys. You know, the guy who’s trying to punch out Jim Garner on Rockford P.I.—stuff like that. I had some recurrings for a while, too—Law & Order, a couple other more forgettable shows. I was crap at comedy, so I was pretty much typecast as a bad guy in dramas. The directors liked my threatening scowl. Wanna see?”

“Sure.” Franklin glared at her, his eyebrows arched, his mouth parted to show off some pretty wicked incisors.

“Whoa—that’s good.”

“Yeah, I had steady work. No problemo.”

“Kate, Franklin knows everyone in Hollywood,” Mike piped in. “Not just actors—directors, cameramen, grips, set design, makeup people. Everyone big and small.”

“Ha, maybe because I had a weakness. Well actually, I still have it,” Franklin said.

“And what’s that?” Kate asked.

“I pick up tabs. My dad and Mike taught me that. Always happy to treat others when there was a great get-together. You watch if we ever go out with a group sometime. Everyone will sit there and keep their mouths shut, looking around pretending to not notice that the check has come. They’ll all be waiting for Mike or me to pick it up.”

“We don’t mind—it makes us very popular fellows!” Mike added.

The small talk continued for a while more. They drove past the corporate offices for many Fortune 500 companies. Sandwiched between were small, yet amazing tech start-ups.

“What are all these green and white circular buildings I see?” Kate asked. “Right in back of these companies?”

“Ah, good eyes, Kate,” Franklin exclaimed. “Those are ice system air-conditioning units. I’m glad you noticed them! They’re designed, constructed, and licensed by my uncle.”

“So, Mike? Ice systems?”

“Yes, Kate. It’s heat transfer—what I do. This type is simple enough that a third-grader could understand it. You know there are variable rates for electricity from the power company, right? This system makes ice at night when electric rates are low. Then in the morning, say about six a.m., we shut off the ice production and let the ice melt. Air blown over the ice is cooled and circulated throughout the building. Just repeat every day and voilà—you’ve got a forty-five percent saving in air-conditioning costs. It’s a ridiculously simple formula and it’s an easy Energy Source revenue stream to help out what we’re doing at ExitStrategy. I sure as heck didn’t invent the idea, but I tweaked it for efficiency. And here—we’ve arrived!”

There it was, the home of Energy Source/ExitStrategy and to dozens of patentable discoveries in heat-transfer research, cryonic stasis, and more. Kate was impressed—the building looked like something out of the future.

“Oh my, it’s so huge and so modern,” Kate gasped. “A massive solar array? That must produce crazy amounts of wattage. I wasn’t expecting this. Huh, you have a tennis court off the parking lot—seriously?”

“Yes, built just for you,” Franklin quipped.

“Don’t listen to him,” Mike said. “Gloria Dunham had it built for someone. But you can use it whenever you like.”

“So, this is a big circular wall, and then that’s the building rising out over the top of the wall?”
“Actually, no,” Mike said, prying his girth out of the car. “What looks like a wall is the outside edge of an enormous circular hallway that goes all the way around. If you could see the building from the air you would liken the design to a wagon wheel. That tall part rising up in the middle—see it there? That’s the hub. Then there are five spokes, or wings, which connect to the outer ring you’re looking at now. You’ll get a better idea of it once you’re inside.”

“This must have cost a fortune to build.”

“It did, but in baby steps. We started with the central hub and two wings. The other wings and what we jokingly call the ‘collider ring’ were added later.”

“Collider ring? Oh, yeah, I get it,” Kate said.

“So let’s go in the main entrance, which is the A wing,” Mike said before calling security and then entering. “So, Kate, this wing holds all the offices, including mine and yours. Also, a few office staff, a few people who do the ice construction; licensing, also the sales of the solar energy electricity to our neighboring buildings. There’s my office, and right here is yours. Let’s pop in and take a look.”
“Mike, you make it sound like I’m totally ready to sign a contract,” Kate protested.

“I don’t think that will happen until you see the lab,” Franklin interjected.

“Oh my, this is swanky.” Kate walked here and there, checking out all the highlights: multiple computers and monitors, a video system apparently running a live feed from the lab, whiteboards of various sizes, filing systems, a large steel and glass desk in the center of the room, voice-commanded direct and indirect lighting, a mini-kitchen, a private bath with shower. “It’s beautiful, such a modern design. I think you could live here. This office is as big as my whole apartment.”

“Check out the coat rack, Kate,” Mike said.

“Ooh, look at that, upscale lab coats with my name embroidered by hand, it looks like. All different colors. You’re sparing no expense.”

“That’s true,” Franklin said. “Now walk back out and go to the end of the hallway and you’ll be at the center—the energy center—of the whole building.”

As they left the hall, the space opened up into the circular hub area—the ceiling extended to about forty-five feet. At the center of the hub was a giant monolithic tower.

“Oh, my God. It’s huge. What is that?”

 “Well, guess,” Mike said.

“I’m guessing it’s your main power generator. But it’s almost silent. Is this where the solar energy comes in, over here? And you’ve got some kind of heat-transfer system, maybe this part over here, I’m guessing, to run your cryosystem?”

“That’s pretty close.”

“He’s got about twenty-five patents just sitting there, Kate,” Franklin said. “Not that we’re planning on disclosing the workings of all this yet.”

“Wow, oh wow. This is amazing,” Kate gasped as she walked the entire circumference of the towering steel and copper monolith. There were monitors, displays, dials, and weird-looking gizmos here, there, and everywhere.

“Oh, here come Chrissy and Norm,” Franklin said. “‘Clipboard Norm’ people call him. He’s married to that thing—the clipboard, I mean, not the woman with him. Norm, Chrissy, come on over. I’d like to introduce our new head of research, Katherine Pearson. You know, the one we’ve been telling you about.”

“Oh, it’s so good to meet you, Kate,” Chrissy exclaimed, shaking Kate’s hand. Chrissy appeared to be about fifty, a very fit woman with wavy brown hair, green eyes, and an abundance of freckles. “When do you start?”

“Well, I haven’t even agreed yet. Although I already seem to have a number of lab coats with my name on them.”

“Sure, Mike is wooing you big-time. Resistance is futile—you will be assimilated,” Norm quipped.
“These two have been with me for years,” Mike said. “Chrissy from day one and Norm a little after. I stole him from GM. Norm is the brain behind the brawn of that beast you see in front of you.”
“No, you invented it, Mike. You are the brain. I just keep it running, and happy,” Norm said.

“Mike, what if you had a power outage? What’s the backup?” Kate asked.

“Kate,” Norm interjected, “we are so redundant on energy supply it’s ridiculous. Don’t worry about that!”

“All right, Kate, you ready to see your lab?” Mike asked. “It’s near the start of B wing, over this way. Walk with us, Chrissy, Norm.”

They entered the B wing and immediately ducked into a large room that opened up to total about two thousand square feet.

“Oh my God, look at this,” Kate gushed, trotting from spot to spot. “Electron microscopes—the latest models? Eppendorf centrifuges, a speed vac concentrator, an ELISA washer—this looks like custom glassware over here, right? And computers and monitors everywhere, a sample preparation station, oh wait, three stations? Oh my! Wait, is that what I think it is? A brand new proton ion DNA sequencer? They just bought this model at Northwestern, but they wouldn’t let me touch it—for full professors only. Oh my God, this is insane!”

“Like a kid in a candy shop, right, Mike?” Chrissy said, grinning over at him.

“You bet,” he replied. “Can you blame her? A very expensive, well-stocked candy shop, I might add!”

Kate discovered more and more gadgets and toys to drool over. Maybe it was finally time to put up or shut up, she thought.

“So shall we talk now, Kate?” Mike asked. “Let’s just you and me step into my office and see what you think.”

“All right,” she answered, still overwhelmed by the totally tricked-out lab.

###

“So first let me ask you a couple questions,” Kate said. “Why me? Aren’t I awfully young? All I have is a master’s degree. And why am I replacing a doctor? Shouldn’t you simply just get another MD?”

“Kate,” Mike confided, “we talked to your advising professor at Northwestern. He said you have more potential for creativity than any grad student he’s seen in years. Went on and on about you. We’re looking for serious potential, new ideas. We’re trying to find someone who can do cutting-edge hard science and add a hell of a lot of imagination, too. And someone who isn’t afraid of a failure or two along the way. He says you’re the one, and we believe him. And you’re humble, too. We could just have Norm keep the cryosystem running forever, but we want to go way further. We want to revive these people, not just keep them frozen. What’s the point of that?”

“And what makes you think you can do it? I know we talked about this a little bit, but then Miss Dunham’s lawyer shut things down. Do you want to talk freely to me now? I might be about to commit to this, now that I’ve seen some of the operation. But I need to know where you are, where you are trying to go, and I really need to think about the ethics of this, too. Understand?”

“Yes, we will talk honestly now. Franklin and I believe in the importance of being earnest, Kate. Just to clarify, Randolph Morgan does not work for us. He’s just Gloria’s lawyer. And Gloria has a habit of poking her nose into people’s business. We usually let her do what she thinks she wants because then we just circumvent her anyway. Sometimes this is just a big game for Franklin and me—the ‘Outfox Gloria Game,’ I suppose you could call it. That game goes all the way back to 1985 or so. Franklin has been into mind-games since he was a kid. Believe me, he played devilish tricks on me the whole time he was growing up.”

“So Gloria is a bit of an oddball, I take it. Is she senile, or just weird? Both?”

“Hmm.” Mike doodled on some stationery, trying to decide how to answer the question. “You saw the tennis court. She had it built for an individual who has been here in cryo for years. What does that tell you, Kate?”

“What? A tennis court for someone in cryostasis? That’s crazy.”

“Agreed. Watch yourself around her, okay?”

“Sure. Should be interesting when we have lunch together next month, huh?”

“You’ll be fine. Ninety percent of the time she’ll blather on about her show-biz career and how awful her two ex-husbands were to her. You can just sit and nod. But I have to say that when she learned you played tennis it made her even more interested in meeting you. You also went to the same high school as her tennis-playing friend here in stasis. She tells me it’s fate that you’re here.”

“New Trier? This person went to New Trier High? Hmm, interesting.”

“Yup.”

“All right,” Kate said. “So what truly sets you apart from the corpsecicle places, like you called them? What do I need to know?”

“Saltieri and I agreed, let’s stay away from deep cryo. It’s unnecessary. We go to just before the glassy state and hover there. We don’t chill people to the point that their skulls crack—hey, I noticed that made you gag when I mentioned it. Sorry, but that’s what those hacks do. But don’t worry, they say, the doctors of the future will fix everything! We say stop being barbarians. We can do far better if we apply real science to this field.”

“Keep talking,” Kate said, nodding.

“Enzo and I set out to scientifically reinvent the whole cryonics field—blow past the pseudoscience our competitors were doing. We had a lot of ideas, and some of them were shots in the dark—just hunches. But we think we nailed a lot of stuff. ‘Stuff,’ Kate—that’s a scientific term, you know,” Mike said, his eyes twinkling.

“Hunches or dreams can yield results. You and I know that they’ve been there throughout the history of science, right?”

“Agreed, and I’ve been blessed to have had those moments myself now and then in my career. So we decided to perfuse the body with helium, driving out moisture. In addition, I invented the polymer pods, which are more stable and are less prone to icing and so on. A few other tweaks and changes in procedure I can tell you later. And then the final piece of the puzzle—what Enzo was working on.”

“Yes? Yes? What was it?” Kate asked eagerly, moving forward on her chair.

“I don’t know. I honestly don’t know,” Mike said, grimacing in frustration. “That’s why you’re here, Kate. He was up to something. But between the lung cancer and the Alzheimer’s he was struggling. It seemed like he had ideas percolating. But when he would tell me about them and I didn’t understand immediately what he was getting at, he would get very frustrated, and then the Alzheimer’s would kick in. He would lose his train of thought and storm away—mad at me, mad at the world. You’ll have all the files to look through. Vet whatever of his you can decipher, or discover solutions yourself. That’s the opportunity here, understand? You’re the one who can decide if we can truly revive these patients—all these wonderful people here, waiting. Let’s walk down to Enzo’s office.”

They walked down the hall to Saltieri’s old office. Mike swiped a keycard, opened the door, and motioned Kate in. “What does this look like to you, Kate?”

“Ha. It looks like Albert Einstein’s office—that famous photo of his office taken on the day he died. It was a mess. Well, to us it looks like a mess, but I’m sure to him it was just how he worked, right?”

“Right. And what you see here is the desk of another genius—Dr. Enzo Saltieri. Enzo taught medicine at the University of Bologna in Italy for years. A small man with a ginormous brain. Johns Hopkins lured him to the States. He was guest lecturing at University of Chicago when we met, and we discovered that we both had a bent for this crazy idea of cryo. Anyway, Kate, all the work is here—and yes, I know it’s a mess. His notes are a jumble, sorry. Some of it is on computer drives, but a lot of it is page after page of scribbles on legal pads. What Franklin and I want you to do is this—take some time, say ninety days, and evaluate absolutely everything Enzo was studying. Beyond that, your real bottom-line assignment is to formulate a procedure to revive the patients here. Make a magic potion, click your ruby slippers three times, or whatever else it might take to turn them back into normal, healthy, walking and talking people again. That’s it in a nutshell. Not so hard, eh, Kate?” Mike grinned.

“Mike, you do realize that every internal organ has to work in order to pull this off, right? And right away we have to fix what killed these people in the first place. What was wrong with most of them when they died?”

“Cancer mostly. And just remember, no cryo company ever promised revival and the cure for any patient’s disease or illness. Cryonics just presents the opportunity for a human body to exist into the future where cures might be discovered, right?”

“Hmm, so much to think about.” Kate stood and paced Saltieri’s office and pulled at her hair—a habit of hers when she was trying to blast through a tough problem. “So what do people pay to be here?”
“What do you think people pay at other facilities?”

“I have no idea, sorry,” she said, stopping to finger through the pile of scribbled-upon papers heaped on Saltieri’s desk.

“For a full-body cryo, the tab is anywhere from eighty thousand dollars on up to two hundred thousand. Pretty steep, huh?”

“Hey, you want immortality you better have the buckos for it, I would guess,” she said, suddenly realizing this whole day was the strangest one of her life. She wondered what Aria would think of all this and how many goofy, comedically inappropriate questions she would ask Mike if given the opportunity.

“Right. So that’s what others charge. Our fee is one million dollars,” Mike declared.

“One million? Wow. Oh my gosh, all I’ve been saying since we got here is ‘wow,’ huh?”

“Yes, I noticed, but who wouldn’t say ‘wow’? You see, Kate, the people we’ve brought in, mostly from Franklin’s networking—the famous actors and directors, painters and sculptors, novelists and sports stars, the old money folks and the nouveau rich lottery winners—none of them are going to try to do this Walmart style. The wealthy can be a pain in the ass and do plenty of stupid stuff, but overall most of them are damned smart with their money. They rarely bargain shop for anything, whether it’s shoes, cars, homes, boats, or a cryo facility. We’re number one because they’ve learned by word of mouth that we are the only ones who care enough about science and have a chance to make this work.”

“And who regulates this? State health agencies? The FDA? No, wait, that makes no sense,” Kate said, confused about how this could be monitored in any logical manner.

“No one. Can you imagine some state-employed drudge comprehending any of this?”

“They’d be very confuzzled,” Kate said, borrowing one of Aria’s favorite made-up words.

“Confuzzled indeed,” Mike said, grinning. “There’s a little patient paperwork involved. Some minor legal issues that I’ll explain to you later. They’re really not a concern. How about some food? I’m starving. Let’s hop over to our lunchroom, okay?” They jaywalked through the hub and entered the cafeteria. They saw Franklin was already there, getting himself an iced tea.

“Hi, Kate,” Franklin greeted, smiling. “Glad to see you again. Walk over this way. So here we’ve got our own chef from eleven a.m. until two. You can order anything you want as long as James has the ingredients on hand. It’s a company perk. Nice, huh? James, this is Katherine Pearson, she’s going to be our new head of research. Are you ready to show off your talents for her?”

“Sure, Franklin. So, Miss Pearson, what have you got a taste for? I do have some killer avocados today, maybe we can work them into something for you,” James said. He was a tall, hunky young man, maybe twenty-five or so. I would definitely enjoy having this man cook for me every day, thought Kate. Bet Aria doesn’t have a chef cooking for her at the symphony in Milwaukee. The best she can usually do is pop into Usinger’s for brats and a beer. Tasty food, but mostly guys with well-developed beer bellies there.

“Well, James, first, just call me Kate. And I would absolutely die for a fajita with those avocados being one of the stars of the day.”

“Not a problem. Chicken? Beef? How do you want it?”

Hmm, there’s a line Aria would jump on. She always knows how to flirt with hunky guys. Wait, I’m here for a job, need to get my mind back on business. “Why don’t you surprise me, okay?”

“Sure thing,” James said, flashing a million-dollar smile.

“Okay, Kate, go get something to drink over there and meet us at a table,” Mike said.

Kate grabbed a bottle of Italian soda. In a few minutes their food was ready and they continued their talk.

“So, Kate,” Mike said, between bites of beef stroganoff, “our operation doesn’t look like a scene from a Svengoolie movie, huh?”

“That’s for sure. But I guess that other lab with Ted Williams’s head, as you told me, would certainly qualify.”

“Kate, do you like tuna?” Franklin asked.

“Sure, why not?”

“Well, don’t gag, but they decided to place each head upside-down on a can of Bumble Bee Tuna to keep it, I mean the head, from sticking to the cryo unit surface. Not kidding!”

“Well, that’ll make her lose her appetite, Franklin. Stop torturing the poor girl.”

“Never you mind, Mike,” Franklin answered. “And then, Kate, guess what happened once when they tried to transfer one of those heads. They picked it up and the can was frozen tight to the head. Now there’s a Svengoolie picture for you, huh? So, they started banging at the can with a hammer, but it wouldn’t pop off until they slammed it like fifty times. I kid you not. It’s all in a book written by a former employee of theirs. Can you imagine?”

Kate suddenly broke out into a fit of laughter. Just the absurdity of it all had finally bowled her over. Mike and Franklin grinned at each other and finally laughed, too.

“Okay, Kate, ha-ha—that was good. We laugh a lot around here, by the way,” Mike said. “Hey, we don’t know how much of that book is true. But there it is. Anyway, back to reality, in your résumé you mentioned a doctor from the Caribbean somewhere, a fellow you worked with now and then on cryobiology projects. What was his name again?”

“Oh, yes, Edouard—Edouard Radelet. Brilliant man. Bet you he’s head of the World Health Organization before he hits forty. An amazing mind.”

“If you’re on board we want to hire him to work with you,” Mike offered. “Would you like that?”

“Would I? Of course. That lab and me with Edouard? That would be amazing, although I don’t know if he’s available.” Kate finished off the last of her delicious lunch. This was a great perk, she decided.

“We’ll figure that out. All right, listen, I have some things to attend to for a few hours,” Mike said. 
 “Could we drop you by your place—it’s close, right? And then meet us back here maybe about seven and we’ll tour the operating room and walk you down a wing or two to see the actual patients. Okay?”

“Sure. Aria—that’s my roommate—can drop me back over.”

“Wait, Mike, why don’t we let her use one of the company cars?” Franklin said. “Enzo’s is sitting there doing nothing except collecting tree sap and bird droppings. He won’t be driving it anytime soon, right? Keith, the head of security will start that car up and hand you the keys, Kate. Meet back here at seven. We’ll have a fancy gold pen for you to sign your contract, won’t we, Mike?”

“Fancy pen? Oh yes. My lucky pen you’re talking about. Right, Franklin?”

“Yessir, Uncle Mike. The lucky pen!”