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Tropical Storm - DK1 Page 11


  Dar gazed at the dresser, shadowy in the pre-dawn gloom. “I know,” she replied softly. “Thanks for the warning, Dukky.” There was a click as he hung up. She rolled over and regarded the ceiling soberly. Complications already.

  She’d used her momentary leverage to get the position approved, not really thinking about the consequences, or how it would look.

  She hadn’t really even considered it. No, that was a lie. She’d been thinking exactly of Kerry when she’d asked for it, and it had seemed like such an ingenious solution at the time. The woman had talent and potential, she was sharp—she’d be a good addition to the team.

  But what about Kerry? She’s been hurt by the entire situation with her 64 Melissa Good company. Do I want to expose her to the many times more vicious environment inside the upper levels of the corporation? Is that fair to the kid? Was she even really interested? She seemed like she was last night, but…that could have been overtiredness, and a reaction to the day.

  The morning surely would bring a more sensible attitude, and Dar quietly hoped the young woman would at least reconsider, and remain with the Associated account. She didn’t like to see talent leave the company. Right?

  Dar pulled the covers up over her head and sighed. Oh Dar, lie to everyone but yourself, remember? You like the little imp.

  There was something about Kerry she found very appealing. Maybe some of the friendly innocence she could remember in herself, a very long time ago.

  No. She’d never been that innocent. Dar closed her eyes, picturing Kerry’s face.

  Now look. Is that what you want for her, too? Leave her where she is, or let her go and find something else—a small place where she doesn’t have to be exposed to the way you have to do business. Last thing she needs is to move into a nest of vipers.

  Inhabited by the queen asp.

  Dar swallowed the slight lump in her throat, as the blue walls faded to a somber gray in tune with her mood. It was a quiet depression that she’d been experiencing more and more often lately, making her question what the point was in doing what she did, in going the places she went. A feeling of hopelessness that made her want to just curl up in a ball here in the dark and never leave.

  Her solution so far was to throw herself into yet more work, which usually distracted her enough to make the feeling go away.

  With a sigh, she pulled the covers back and slid out of bed, trudging across to the bathroom and flipping on the light. She used the facilities, then splashed a few handfuls of water over her face, stopping to regard her reflection wearily. Bloodshot blue eyes looked back at her, accented by dark shadows which added years to her age.

  Hell with it. Might as well get some work done.

  She turned and flipped off the light, moving out into the living room to where her briefcase rested on the coffee table. She unzipped it and pulled her laptop out, plugging in the custom cord built specifically for that purpose, and booting it up. Then she went into the kitchen and looked at the coffee machine, bypassing it and going to the refrigerator instead.

  She poured a glass of milk from the dispenser, then added three squirts of chocolate syrup and mixed it. She sipped at the beverage as she seated herself on the long, leather couch and punched the buttons that would start a connection to the office.

  A flick of the control turned on the large screen TV while she was waiting, and she surfed through the cable channels, bypassing CNN and MSNBC and settling on the Cartoon Network, which was showing Space Ghost Coast to Coast.

  “Better commentary than Dan Rather,” she muttered, as she glanced down, watching her e-mail download. She leaned back against the cushions, then decided to lie down full length and balance the laptop on her stomach.

  She let her eyes scan down the listings, and her eyes brightened a little when Tropical Storm 65

  she saw Kerry’s name listed.

  “Probably wants to say no thanks,” Dar murmured after a moment’s reflection. “After she slept on it.” For a moment, her mouse hovered over the entry, then finally she clicked on the mail, feeling an odd dryness in her mouth as she waited for the contents to appear in her preview pane.

  Sent by: Kerry Stuart

  Subject: Assistant’s Job

  Time: 1:01 AM

  Hi.

  I know you’re thinking “what is this crazy woman

  doing, sending mail at one AM after a day like today?”

  Well, I didn’t start out to do that. I took a shower, and got changed, and fluffed up my pillows, and answered the two frantic messages on my machine because people saw my car towed back here, and then I was laying there figuring this sleep thing wasn’t going to be a problem.

  But I kind of got to thinking, that there was

  something I hadn’t done, and it kept bugging me and bugging me until I just gave up and figured out what it was.

  It was deciding what I wanted to do, as in, with my life at this point, and I know you’re probably sitting there reading this thinking I’ve flipped my lid, but…I haven’t.

  I decided if you were serious about that assistant job of yours, then I was going to apply for it. I know there are probably ten thousand other people more

  qualified, but I have this crazy idea that maybe I can find better ways for people to do things, so that it’s not so brutal, and it doesn’t hurt people inside just to do business.

  That’s pretty naïve sounding. I sound like some

  Midwestern rube just out of certification school, don’t I? Yikes.

  So anyway, what I did was logon, and I found that

  posting of yours, and I submitted a formal request for consideration. I also attached my résumé, like it said.

  Though figuring out where to click in that CAS

  application is a real pain in the neck, you know? I feel better now, and I think I’ll be able to sleep.

  I know I don’t have much of a chance at it. It’s so weird to think that I was cursing your name before dinner time, and hoping I get to work for you at midnight.

  If you can squeeze me back into my old job, though, that would be fantastic. Monday is going to be really crazy, and there’s one thing I forgot to thank you for—

  and that was the severance packages. It changes firing someone from a hateful sentence, to what I can present as a good chance for change, so that these people can find something else, without having the pressure of bills 66 Melissa Good hanging over their heads. You don’t know now much that means, especially since four of the people have school age children who were covered under the insurance.

  Thank you, Dar. I really mean that.

  Have a great weekend.

  Kerry

  Dar felt a grin coming on, and she let it, as she read the mail twice over.

  Then she very deliberately logged into her CAS session and reviewed her work list. An eyebrow went up when she saw the thirty or so responses, and she scanned the names. All qualified, pretty much. Most junior, but a few senior account managers, with lots of experience in what she did. Several candidates, in fact, were already assistants to other VPs. Good, solid employees, with stable backgrounds and excellent references.

  She clicked on Kerry’s submission and reviewed it. Absolutely no experience in any facet of what she did. Absolutely no experience in multiple markets, no experience overseas, no experience in corporate takeovers. She had absolutely nothing in her favor, in fact, except for guts, and brains, and a beautiful smile.

  A reckless, piratical gleam entered Dar’s blue eyes. It was so easy. Two clicks and an F3 submit key. “Oh look.” Dar did it before she could stop and think better of anything. “I just hired an assistant.” She took a deep breath.

  “Isn’t technology wonderful?”

  She almost felt lightheaded. Making decisions was second nature to her, but she knew this one was different. Mariana was going to kill her. Company regulations stipulated that she had to interview and evaluate each candidate, and produce written documentation to back up her choice. Hell with it. She
clicked over to mail.

  Sent by: Dar Roberts

  Subject: New Assistant

  Mari—

  Just hired Kerry Stuart from the Associated

  Synergenics account as my assistant. Please process her paperwork. I figured it would be easier on you since she’s technically an outside candidate—you can hire and transition her all at once.

  Bring her in as a 10, standard package, the works.

  I’ll send her over to fill out forms some time next week.

  I know everyone will bitch. Just tell them manager’s discretion, and they can see me personally if they have a problem.

  Dar

  A loophole. Dar loved loopholes. Bringing in Kerry as an outside posting would circumvent most of the hysteria, and she could just ignore the rest.

  Mariana was used to that anyway, manager’s discretion was a watchword in the company. A lot of the rules were left deliberately vague, and you had to take responsibility for what you decided.

  Tropical Storm 67

  Dar always had. Even when the decisions had turned out wrong, she still refused to hide behind anyone, and took the brunt of the blame on her own shoulders. It was the one thing that kept everyone at bay, even those people who hated her…and there were a lot of those. She’d made a lot of enemies and few friends in her years at the company, but it was the one thing that everyone respected her for. When Dar Roberts made a decision, she stood behind it, one hundred percent.

  With a grin, she rubbed her hands together, then took a long drink of her chocolate milk before she started typing.

  Sent by: Dar Roberts

  Subject: re: Assistant’s Job

  Kerry,

  Got your note.

  Attached to this e-mail you’ll find corporate

  policies and procedures, including the dress code. You might want to take a look at that. Jeans are not allowed during normal business hours.

  I estimate it should take about a week to get the

  paperwork completed, and that will give you a chance to settle your current assignment. Call me if you have any questions.

  Dar

  With a sense of inevitability, she hit Send. She still had some doubts, still had some questions as to whether she was doing the right thing for Kerry, but it was done. Time would tell if this was a good decision, or one of the ones she lived to regret.

  With a sigh, she wriggled into a more comfortable position and allowed her attention to be distracted by Space Ghost strangling something with tentacles on the screen. “I love a good violent cartoon,” she commented to the empty condo.

  The words echoed off the walls, and she turned the sound up a little, a faint grin twitching at her lips as her thoughts drifted, the fingers of her right hand flexing slowly against the couch’s soft leather.

  “SO, WHAT HAPPENED?” the tall, dark-skinned man asked, his eyes on the broken window.

  “Um, a rock,” Kerry muttered. “Must have…fallen off the highway overpass, or something.”

  Brown eyes gave her a disbelieving stare. “C’mon, honey, you got to give me something better than that.” Jerry wagged a finger at her. “You have a new boyfriend, maybe? You get in a, how you call, a fight?”

  Kerry laughed softly. “Uh, no. No, no new boyfriend. I…” She glanced around. “Jerry, I was in the wrong place at the wrong time. Some guys just decided to take a crack at the car. I got away.” She made a face. “I don’t want to make a big deal about it. I didn’t see them, so…”

  “Ah hah.” Jerry waggled his fingers at her. “I got you. No problem.” He 68 Melissa Good studied the car. “Sixty dollars.”

  “Great.” Kerry smiled and handed over the keys. “You’re a lifesaver.”

  “Cherry, I hope.” The man laughed. “My favorite flavor.” He patted her on the shoulder. “Hey, did you get cut?” He lifted her hand and studied it.

  “Looks like you hit something.”

  “Um…” Kerry ran her fingers through her hair. “An accident.”

  Jerry looked at her, serious now. He tipped her chin up so she had to look him in the eye. “Girlfriend, are you in trouble?”

  “No.” She shook her head positively. “I almost was, last night…but someone showed up, and chased the guys off, and I was fine, really. They even gave me a ride back here.”

  “Mmm-hmm…was he nice? Was he a gentleman?” Jerry inquired.

  Kerry bit off a grin. “He was a she.” Her eyes twinkled a little. “And she…was wonderful.”

  “Ahhh…okay.” The mechanic chuckled. “I’ll finish this probably tonight, maybe tomorrow, okay?”

  She nodded. “Great.”

  Colleen came up behind her and put a hand on her shoulder. “Hey, girl.”

  Kerry turned and smiled. “Hey, listen, thanks for calling to check on me last night. Sorry I gave you a scare yesterday.” She motioned towards the door to her apartment. “Come on inside, it’s wet out here.”

  The redhead followed her, closing the door behind them, and moving quickly across to where Kerry was stacking printouts she no longer needed on her desk. “So, now tell me everything.” Her voice was eager. “I could have killed you last night. Five words and you’re gone.”

  Kerry finished her task, then grinned and pulled her friend over to the couch. “Sit, it’s a long story.” She waited for Colleen to sit down, then she tucked her legs up under her and leaned an arm on the back of the couch.

  “Well, where do I start?” She told Colleen the whole story, watching Colleen’s jaw drop in amazement.

  “Whoa. Whoa, whoa... Hold on just a Jesus, Mary and Joseph minute.”

  She held up her hand. “Let me get this tale straight: you found out you all were gonna be fired; so you drove out to the Key; then you run out of gas on the way back; get stuck near the tracks in downtown; get carjacked; then you get rescued, like a full-blown-caped-crusader-flying-to-the-rescue kind of thing, by Dar Roberts. Am I clear on this so far?” Her voice was incredulous.

  “The same Dar Roberts that just fired you? That one?”

  “Um…essentially, yes.” Kerry grinned. “Only she made like it was nothing—like she just sort of happened by, and the guys ran off or something.

  But I know she had to have done something to them, because her hands were all banged up, and I heard at least one of the guys scream.”

  “Wow.” Colleen squealed. “Is she, like, into karate or something?”

  “Mmm.” Kerry thought about that. “I don’t know, but I think she’s into something. She’s got all these muscles all up and down her arms…like here.”

  She patted her shoulders. “And when she walks, she kinda…well, you can tell she doesn’t just sit around her office all day.”

  “Ooo…” Colleen giggled. “So, what was she doing, wandering the streets looking for damsels in distress to save?”

  Tropical Storm 69

  “Tch.” Kerry slapped her leg. “No, actually. I, um…I called her. No, don’t look at me like that, okay? I had this number she told me to use if I had any problems with her goon squad. I figured it was some flunky of hers, so I called it. I thought I could get him to call Triple A for me or something.”

  “But it wasn’t, huh?” Colleen looked fascinated. “This is more and more intriguing.”

  “No. No, it was her,” Kerry admitted. “So I hung up, but she called back.

  And she asked me where I was. I felt like such an idiot telling her I ran out of gas, but…” She sighed. “Anyway, these guys came at me, and I told her to call the police. Then they hit the car, and it got really scary. Then the next thing I knew, they were gone, and she was there.” The blonde woman chuckled a little. “Boy, for someone I was hating a half hour before, I sure was glad to see her.”“So…you’re fired, though?” Colleen said, concerned. “What are you going to do?”

  “Well, I’m not, actually. See, we went back to her office after the whole thing, and she went over the numbers again, and she finally had a brainstorm or something…and sh
e worked it out so we were okay.” Kerry took a breath.

  “It was pretty amazing. She told some big boss of hers she’d been working on whatever this thing was for forty-eight hours without sleep.”

  “Jesus!” The redhead snorted. “So, you’re not fired.”

  “No,” her friend agreed.

  “And your guys are okay?”

  Kerry lifted a hand and let it drop to her knee. “As okay as I could work out,” she admitted. “Some of them are going to be let go.”

  “Figures.” Colleen now looked skeptical. “That leopard isn’t changing its spots any time soon, I think.”

  “No. No, it’s…” Kerry shook her head. “She made it okay, Col. She’s letting me give them six months’ severance.”

  The redhead’s jaw dropped wide open, and she goggled at Kerry. “Six?”

  “And six months’ benefits,” Kerry concluded. “I couldn’t believe it.

  That’s the part that was so hard, Col. I knew even if I worked it out, I’d still have to face those people.”

  “Six?” Colleen repeated, seemingly in a daze. “Kerry, nobody does that.”

  “She did.” The blonde woman leaned back. “What a weight off my shoulders. I could have ki…” She fell silent. “Anyway, it’ll be a little tough, but we’re in.”

  “Unbelievable,” her friend said. “But can you trust her? You sound like you’re thinking she’s not so bad after all.”

  “No.” Kerry shook her head and smiled. “She’s really not. I mean, she’s all business, right? And I think she’d fire someone like most other people would just blow their nose or whatever. But towards the end of the night, she was kind of just okay. And, I got the feeling we could actually…sort of get along, if we really wanted to.”

  Colleen whistled. “My boss wouldn’t believe it. You should hear how he talks about her. You’d think she was the daughter of the devil himself.”

  Kerry looked up as her PC chimed. “Whoops.” She got up and checked the screen. “Mail, on Saturday?” But a thrill of anticipation ran up her back as 70 Melissa Good she opened the program, scanning the inbox and letting out a soft breath as she saw the first name on the list. “Well, speaking of Dar Roberts.” She clicked on the message, and read it, then read it again. “What in…”