Part 30 (1/2)
”I understand, darling. Please listen. The people I'm with are very, very careful. They want confirmation from you that you're willing to go along with our project. You must say something to convince them, but you must a.s.sume someone's listening to you at your end.”
Moments pa.s.sed. Surikov pressed his hand back over his brow and his thinning hair. His eyes widened briefly, like a man struggling with the incomprehensible. Twice he opened his mouth as if to speak, then said nothing.
”Well,” he said finally, ”I don't know quite how to say this. I just want to be reunited with my wife.
Everything else is rather secondary. It's been, very difficult... difficult to concentrate on my work. I'm so used to her being here. I know she loves me very much, and she wants what's best for me. What more can I say? I trust her implicitly. She wants what I want. I want what she wants. Do you see?”
Farrah Moffit turned her head and met Rico's eyes. She looked scared, expectant, and hopeful all at the same time. Rico looked at the man on the screen, then back at Moffit, watched her a moment, then nodded. ”Say bye. We'll be in touch.”
Moffit said that, and then a few other things that only helped persuade Rico that the relations.h.i.+p between her and Surikov was real, or real enough that it didn't matter.
The slag wanted what Moffit wanted.
Likely, that was what he'd be getting.
34.
Twenty minutes in the lavatory did slightly more for her psyche than for her looks. More than half that time Farrah spent seated on the toilet, face in her hands, eyes closed, struggling to regain her composure, and to reinforce it. The ploy by the runners' leader had caught her off-guard. She had walked into that little room at the top of the hall expecting to face Osborne, only to be confronted by Ansell. It had forced her to s.h.i.+ft mind-sets very abruptly, in little more than a moment. With a man like Osborne, she could afford to be every bit the corporate woman, cool to the point of ruthless. In fact, she had to be like that. With Ansell, she couldn't afford to be anything less than the stereotypical woman, as defined by Ansell's own views.
Approaching the man in the wrong manner would have invited disaster. Failing to impress upon him the dangers of the situation would have invited so much greater a disaster. It had forced her to think very quickly, to make leaps of intuition she felt only half-able to make. It left her in a state-heart pounding, body shaking-practically on the verge of fainting. She needed time alone to recover, and to prepare for what was coming.
She felt as if things were beginning to rush past her too swiftly, slipping out of control. She told herself that wasn't so. Her plan was coming together. She would make it work.
She had to.
Before the grime-streaked mirror over the lavatory sink, she did what little she could to improve her appearance. There wasn't much. She had no supplies. She was lucky the runners had seen fit to provide her with a change of underwear. She washed her face, then combed her hair and tied it behind her head.
Fortunately, the subdued tones permanently bonded to her face, lips, brows, and lashes simulated the most basic effects of makeup. The resulting look was neat enough, though anyone who knew her would see the difference at once. She looked somewhat less polished than her usual self. Unfinished. A woman would certainly spot that. But would a man like Osborne notice?
”I'll make you a promise,” said a quiet voice.
Farrah turned to face the man standing in the doorway. The latest one to act as her guard. His graying, razorcut hair and three-day growth of beard made him appear the oldest of the runners. He was also the one who had seemed most acutely distressed after the runners' meeting with Prometheus. The woman who had died at that meeting had apparently been his woman.
”If you cross us,” he said, lowly, ”you'll never see home again.”
Farrah believed it. For all this man's apparent skill at first aid, he carried himself like someone used to confrontations, physical violence. Farrah did not doubt that he could kill her if so moved, without difficulty,without remorse. It was a frightening realization. Her days lately had been fraught with such realizations.
”You scan?” the man insisted.
”I won't cross you,” Farrah replied, somewhere finding the capacity to speak in a voice that did not waiver. ”I want to get out of this alive. I want to get back to my husband.”
To Farrah, those seemed like persuasive proofs, but she saw at once that she had slipped and slipped badly. The man's expression turned venomous, his mouth twisting into a vicious sneer. ”That's it,” he snarled, motioning with his gun. ”Move it.”
She did, stepping again into the hall, expecting something, she wasn't sure what-a blow at the back of the head, a shove at the very least. Nothing like that happened and she immediately saw why. The runners'
leader waited, watching from the top of the hall. The leader's expression was hard, but she saw none of the fury that had lit his features on previous occasions. Farrah suspected that she might have at least a slim chance of survival as long as she did nothing to provoke that fury.
At a motion of his head, she moved past the leader and into the little room outfitted like an office. A shabby office. The Asian woman was jacked into her deck. Here was another variable that kept Farrah's nerves on edge and twitching. The Asian despised all corporates, everything to do with corporations and corporate living. She seemed to want all corporates dead. Farrah hadn't the slightest doubt that this one might kill her too, given the right opportunity, given the right ”excuse.”
The leader closed the door, then turned to Farrah, saying, ”We play this like you're making all the arrangements. You'll be against a black background. The man won't see nothing but you.”
Farrah nodded. ”I understand.”
”Remember what I told you.”
”I will.” The man had given her precise instructions on the details of the agreement she was to complete. Farrah closed her eyes and told herself again that she would somehow make this work. She had no choice. Everything depended on it.
”You set?”
”Yes. I'm ready.”
The telecom calling screen appeared on the wall display. That was swiftly replaced by the willow and lotus logo of Maas Intertech. Then came the face of a very young and very attractive Asian woman. ”Mr.
Osborne's office. May I help you?”
Farrah smiled. ”May I speak to him, please.”
The woman also smiled, apparently in recognition. ”Oh, yes. One moment, please.”
”Thank you.”
”You're quite welcome.”
The corporate logo returned, then Osborne appeared. He was not a good-looking man. His face resembled putty that had been sculpted into rough, square lines, then baked to a stony texture. He wore his hair samurai-style, shaven above the brow, drawn back behind his head. Prominent eyebrows threw his eyes into shadow. Of his clothes, only a plain, collarless white linen s.h.i.+rt, b.u.t.toned at the neck, showed on the screen. A small, dark, circular pin that kept winking with the light clung to the s.h.i.+rt's right breast.
”Nice of you to call,” Osborne said. ”I understand that you've been lifted.”
Osborne did not seem pleased at all, but Farrah had no difficulty guessing why. If he had heard some rumor of her abduction, he would be presuming, at the very least, that their previous negotiations were now void. That would mean the loss of certain opportunities. She would have to correct that presumption, bring him up to date. ”The situation has changed.”
”Yes. I'm aware of that, I'm also aware that a certain person died at the Willow Brook Mall. I'm not sure if I should be thanking you or cursing you for that. Do we have anything else to discuss?”
”Quite a lot, in fact.”
”I'm listening.”
”My basic offer to you is unchanged. However, I now have the capability to recruit the person myself and deliver him to you at a suitable time and place.”
”And just how has this happened?”
”It happened. The result is this. I'm willing to concede certain of the extras we discussed, the ones you found most problematic, in exchange for certain consideration.”
Osborne said nothing for several moments. Doubtless, he was pondering what she might want hi place of any extras she had previously demanded. All such ”bonuses” were not created equal. Simple monetary value was not always a deciding factor. ”I'm still listening.”
”The main points relate to my recruitment team. They want a cash award for their efforts.”