one-victim massacre, if there is such a thing,â sympathized Rebecca.
âIt was,â admitted Parnell. âGod knows what Kathy imagined Iâd done when I dictated the reply Newton insisted upon.â Kathy Richardson was the greying, middle-aged divorcee whom heâd finally engaged as his secretary, the only position Dwight Newton hadnât insisted be considered by the appointments committee.
âHardly a day to celebrate,â said Rebecca. They were eating in her uncleâs restaurant, accustomed now to the food and wine choice being made for them and to Ciro sometimes talking them through special dishes heâd created, always âjust for you twoâ.
âI wanted a change from eating crow,â said Parnell. âAnd it was a good day until the Newton episode. I think theyâre all going to come together very well.â
âShouldnât you give it more than a first-day impression, like you should have given the website idea more thought?â cautioned the woman.
âI am only talking first-day impression,â said Parnell. âAnd Iâve already admitted to the other mistake. I still donât believe it represented more than a one or two per cent danger. Five tops.â
âDarling! To a company like Dubette the one or two per cent possibility of a competitor getting into its research is a major drama. Five per cent registers ten on the Richter scale. Youâre not involved in pure science any more. Youâve got to remember that.â
âI will, in future. Believe me!â Parnell didnât like losing, certainly not to someone like Newton, whom he judged to be a bully. But it had been an ill-considered mistake and he was determined not to make another.
âI asked outright,â suddenly blurted Rebecca.
âWhat?â frowned Parnell, totally confused.
âMy section head, Burt Showcross. I asked him outright what all the secrecy was about between France and us.â
âWhat did he say?â His mind blocked by the humiliating confrontation with Newton, Parnell had forgotten his earlier conversation with Rebecca about back-channelled secrecy from Dubetteâs French division.
âThat he didnât know either but that it sometimes happened and that I wasnât to concern myself with it â any of it â again.â
Parnell was about to say that she should let it go at that but was halted by a sudden thought. Instead he said: âIf Paris has come up with something theyâre excited about â something to which theyâre attaching such a degree of priority and secrecy â it could be something which has an application to pharma-cogenomics?â
Rebecca shrugged. âWho knows? But guess what?â
Parnell wished Rebecca didnât so often conduct conversations like a quiz game. âWhat?â
âThere was a mistyped report from Paris, a good enough excuse to telephone them direct. While I was chatting to the girl I normally deal with, I was told the chief executive had been recalled to New York ⦠along with the research-division head who misdirected that one message that no one, not even Showcross, was supposed to see.â
âI think you should do what Showcross told you. Forget about it.â
âMaybe itâs been a bad day for both of us.â
âForget about it,â repeated Parnell. He wasnât sure he would, though.
Seven
E dward C. Grant said: âI needed to speak to you like this, just the two of us. Discreetly.â
âOf course,â agreed Dwight Newton, who had caught the first shuttle from Washington that morning, wanting to be at the Dubette corporate building before the president. Heâd failed. Heâd been careful to wear his seminar suit, which matched the dark grey of Grantâs. And to enter, as instructed in the summons, by the special penthouse-only elevator.
âWeâre talking risk assessment,â
Em Petrova
Jacqueline Druga
Tina Folsom
Avril Sabine
Andrea Laurence
Anita Cox
John Dean
Linda Finlay
Nicole R. Taylor
Michael Gruber