Disclosure (14 page)

Read Disclosure Online

Authors: Michael Crichton

He slammed the door.

He sat in the kitchen in darkness. It was quiet al around him, except for the hum of the refrigerator. Through the kitchen window, he could see the moonlight on the bay, through the stand of fir trees.

He wondered if Susan would come down, but she didn't. He got up and walked around, pacing. After a while, it occurred to him that he hadn't eaten. He opened the refrigerator door, squinting in the light. It was stacked with baby food, juice containers, baby vitamins, bottles of formula. He poked among the stuff, looking for some cheese, or maybe a beer. He couldn't find anything except a can of Susan's Diet Coke.

Christ, he thought, not like the old days. When his refrigerator was ful of frozen food and chips and salsa and lots of beer. His bachelor days.

He took out the Diet Coke. Now Eliza was starting to drink it, too. He'd told Susan a dozen times he didn't want the kids to get diet drinks. They ought to be getting healthy food. Real food. But Susan was busy, and Consuela indifferent. The kids ate al kinds of crap. It wasn't right. It wasn't the way he had been brought up.

Nothing to eat. Nothing in his own damned refrigerator. Hopeful, he lifted the lid of a Tupperware container and found a partial y eaten peanut butter and jel y sandwich, with Eliza's smal toothmarks in one side. He picked the sandwich up and turned it over, wondering how old it was. He didn't see any mold.

What the hel , he thought, and he ate the rest of Eliza's sandwich, standing there in his T-shirt, in the light of the refrigerator door. He was startled by his own reflection in the glass of the oven. “Another privileged member of the patriarchy, lording it over the manor.”

Christ, he thought, where did women come up with this crap?

He finished the sandwich and rubbed the crumbs off his hands. The wal clock said 9:15. Susan went to sleep early. Apparently she wasn't coming down to make up. She usual y didn't. It was his job to make up.

He was the peacemaker. He opened a carton of milk and drank from it, then put it back on the wire shelf. He closed the door. Darkness again.

He walked over to the sink, washed his hands, and dried them on a dish towel.

Having eaten a little, he wasn't so angry anymore. Fatigue crept over him. He looked out the window and through the trees and saw the lights of a ferry, heading west toward Bremerton. One of the things he liked about this house was that it was relatively isolated. It had some land around it. It was good for the kids.

Kids should grow up with a place to run and play.

He yawned. She definitely wasn't coming down. It'd have to wait until morning.

He knew how it would go: he'd get up first, fix her a cup of coffee, and take it to her in bed. Then he'd say he was sorry, and she would reply that she was sorry, too. They'd hug, and he would go get dressed for work. And that would be it.

He went back up the dark stairs to the second floor, and opened the door to the bedroom. He could hear the quiet rhythms of Susan's breathing.

He slipped into bed, and rol ed over on his side. And then he went to sleep.

TUESDAY

It rained in the morning, hard sheets of drumming downpour that slashed across the windows of the ferry. Sanders stood in line to get his coffee, thinking about the day to come. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Dave Benedict coming toward him, and quickly turned away, but it was too late. Benedict waved, “Hey, guy.” Sanders didn't want to talk about DigiCom this morning.

At the last moment, he was saved by a cal : the phone in his pocket went off: He turned away to answer it.

“Fucking A, Tommy boy.” It was Eddie Larson in Austin.

“What is it, Eddie?”

“You know that bean counter Cupertino sent down? Wel , get this: there's eight of

'em here now. Independent accounting firm of Jenkins, McKay, out of Dal as.

They're going over al the books, like a swarm of roaches. And I mean everything: receivables, payables, A and L's, year to date, everything. And now they're going back through every year to 'eighty-nine.”

“Yeah? Disrupting everything?”

“Better believe it. The gals don't even have a place to sit down and answer the phone. Plus, everything from 'ninety-one back is in storage, downtown. We've got it on fiche here, but they say they want original documents. They want the damned paper. And they get al squinty and paranoid when they order us around.

Treating us like we're thieves or something trying to pul a fast one. It's insulting.”

“Wel ,” Sanders said, “hang in there. You've got to do what they ask.”

“The only thing that real y bothers me,” Eddie said, “is they got another seven more coming in this afternoon. Because they're also doing a complete inventory of the plant. Everything from the furniture in the offices to the air handlers and the heat stampers out on the line. We got a guy there now, making his way down the line, stopping at each work station. Says, `What's this thing cal ed? How do you spel it? Who makes it? What's the model number? How old is it? Where's the serial number?' You ask me, we might as wel shut the line down for the rest of the day.”

Sanders frowned. “They're doing an inventory?”

“Wel , that's what they cal it. But it's beyond any damn inventory I ever heard of.

These guys have worked over at Texas Instruments or someplace, and I'l give

'em one thing: they know what they're talking about. This morning, one of the Jenkins guys came up and asked me what kind of glass we got in the ceiling skylights. I said, `What kind of glass?' I thought he was shitting me. He says,

`Yeah, is it Corning two forty-seven, or two-forty-seven slash nine.' Or some damned thing like that. They're different kinds of UV glass, because UV can affect chips on the production line. I never even heard that UV can affect chips. Òh yeah,' this guy says. `Real problem if your ASDs get over two-twenty.' That's annual sunny days. Have you heard of that?”

Sanders wasn't real y listening. He was thinking about what it meant that somebody either Garvin, or the Conley-White people would ask for an inventory of the plant. Ordinarily, you cal ed for an inventory only if you were planning to sel a facility. Then you had to do it, to figure your writedowns at the time of transfer of assets, and-

“Tom, you there?”

“I'm here.”

“So I say to this guy, I never heard that. About the UV and the chips. And we been putting chips in the phones for years, never any trouble. And then the guy says, Òh, not for instal ing chips. UV affects it if you're manufacturing chips.' And I say, we don't do that here. And he says, Ì know.' So, I'm wondering: what the hel does he care what kind of glass we have? Tommy boy? You with me?

What's the story?” Larson said. “We're going to have fifteen guys crawling al over us by the end of the day. Now don't tel me this is routine.”

“It doesn't sound like it's routine, no.”

“It sounds like they're going to sel the plant to somebody who makes chips, is what it sounds like. And that ain't us.”

“I agree. That's what it sounds like.”

“Fucking A,” Eddie said. “I thought you told me this wasn't going to happen. Tom: people here are getting upset. And I'm one of 'em.”

“I understand.”

“I mean, I got people asking me. They just bought a house, their wife's pregnant, they got a baby coming, and they want to know. What do I tel 'em?”

“Eddie, I don't have any information.”

`Jesus, Tom, you're the division head.”

“I know. Let me check with Cork, see what the accountants did there. They were out there last week.”

“I already talked to Colin an hour ago. Operations sent two people out there. For one day. Very polite. Not like this at al .”

“No inventory?”

“No inventory.”

“Okay,” Sanders said. He sighed. “Let me get into it.”

“Tommy boy,” Eddie said. “I got to tel you right out. I'm concerned you don't already know.”

“Me, too,” Sanders said. “Me, too.”

He hung up the phone. Sanders pushed K-A-P for Stephanie Kaplan. She would know what was going on in Austin, and he thought she would tel him. But her assistant said Kaplan was out of the office for the rest of the morning. He cal ed Mary Anne, but she was gore, too. Then he dialed the Four Seasons Hotel, and asked for Max Dorfman. The operator said Mr. Dorfman's lines were busy. He made a mental note to see Max later in the day. Because if Eddie was right, then Sanders was out of the loop. And that wasn't good.

In the meantime, he could bring up the plant closing with Meredith at the conclusion of the morning meeting with Conley-White. That was the best he could do, for the moment. The prospect of talking to her made him uneasy. But he'd get through it somehow. He didn't real y have a choice.

When he got to the fourth-floor conference room, nobody was there. At the far end, a wal board showed a cutaway of the Twinkle drive and a schematic for the Malaysia assembly line. There were notes scribbled on some of the pads, open briefcases beside some of the chairs. The meeting was already under way. Sanders had a sense of panic. He started to sweat. At the far end of the room, an assistant came in, and began moving around the table, setting out glasses and water. “Where is everybody?” he asked. “Oh, they left about fifteen minutes ago,”

she said. “Fifteen minutes ago? When did they start?” “The meeting started at eight.” “Eight?” Sanders said. “I thought it was supposed to be eight-thirty.” “No, the meeting started at eight.” Damn. “Where are they now?” “Meredith took everybody down to VIE, to demo the Corridor.”

Entering VIE, the first thing Sanders heard was laughter. When he walked into the equipment room, he saw that Don Cherry's team had two of the Conley-White executives up on the system. John Conley, the young lawyer, and Jim Daly, the investment banker, were both wearing headsets while they walked on the rol ing walker pads. The two men were grinning wildly. Everyone else in the room was laughing too, including the normal y sour-faced CFO of Conley-White, Ed Nichols, who was standing beside a monitor which showed an image of the virtual corridor that the users were seeing. Nichols had red marks on his forehead from wearing the headset.

Nichols looked over as Sanders came up. “This is fantastic.”

Sanders said, “Yes, it's pretty spectacular.”

“Simply fantastic. It's going to wipe out al the criticism in New York, once they see this. We've been asking Don if he can run this on our own corporate database.”

“No problem,” Cherry said. `Just get us the programming hooks for your DB, and we'l plug you right in. Take us about an hour.”

Nichols pointed to the headset. “And we can get one of these contraptions in New York?”

“Easy,” Cherry said. “We can ship it out later today. It'l be there Thursday. I'l send one of our people to set it up for you.”

“This is going to be a great sel ing point,” Nichols said. `Just great.” He took out his half-frame glasses. They were a complicated kind of glasses that folded up very smal . Nichols unfolded them careful y and put them on his nose.

On the walker pad, John Conley was laughing. “Angel,” he said. “How do I open this drawer?” Then he cocked his head, listening.

“He's talking to the help angel,” Cherry said. “He hears the angel through his earphones.”

“What's the angel tel ing him?” Nichols said.

“That's between him and his angel,” Cherry laughed.

On the walker pad, Conley nodded as he listened, then reached forward into the air with his hand. He closed his fingers, as if gripping something, and pul ed back, pantomiming someone opening a file drawer.

On the monitor, Sanders saw a virtual file drawer slide out from the wal of the corridor. Inside the drawer he saw neatly arranged files.

“Wow,” Conley said. “This is amazing. Angel: can I see a file? . . . Oh. Okay.”

Conley reached out and touched one of the file labels with his fingertip.

Immediately the file popped out of the drawer and opened up, apparently hanging in midair.

“We have to break the physical metaphor sometimes,” Cherry said. “Because users have only one hand. And you can't open a regular file with one hand.”

Standing on the black walker pad, Conley moved his hand through the air in short arcs, mimicking someone turning pages with his hand. On the monitor, Sanders saw Conley was actual y looking at a series of spreadsheets. “Hey,”

Conley said, “you people ought to be more careful. I have al your financial records here.”

“Let me see that,” Daly said, turning around on the walker pad to look.

“You guys look al you want,” Cherry laughed. “Enjoy it while you can. In the final system, we'l have safeguards built in to control access. But for now, we bypass the entire system. Do you notice that some of the numbers are red? That means they have more detail stored away. Touch one.”

Conley touched a red number. The number zoomed out, creating a new plane of information that hung in the air above the previous spreadsheet.

“Wow!”

“Kind of a hypertext thing,” Cherry said, with a shrug. “Sort of neat, if I say so myself.”

Conley and Daly were giggling, poking rapidly at numbers on the spreadsheet, zooming out dozens of detail sheets that now hung in the air al around them.

“Hey, how do you get rid of al this stuff?”

“Can you find the original spreadsheet?”

“It's hidden behind al this other stuff”

“Bend over, and look. See if you can get it.”

Conley bent at the waist, and appeared to look under something. He reached out and pinched air. “I got it.”

“Okay, now you see a green arrow in the right corner. Touch it.”

Conley touched it. Al the papers zoomed back into the original spreadsheet.

“Fabulous!”

“I want to do it,” Daly said.

“No, you can't. I'm going to do it.”

“No, me!”

“Me■

.

They were laughing like delighted kids.

Blackburn came up. “I know this is enjoyable for everyone,” he said to Nichols,

“but we're fal ing behind our schedule and perhaps we ought to go back to the conference room.”

“Al right,” Nichols said, with obvious reluctance. He turned to Cherry. “You sure you can get us one of these things?”

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