"C M Kornbluth - The Goodly Creatures UC" - читать интересную книгу автора (Kornbluth C M)"This is Greenhough, Farwell," snarled the voice of the senior partner. "You get over here right away. Bring Clancy, whatever his name isЧthe lawyer." Click.
Where was "here"? Farwell phoned the Greybar. "Don't connect me with his roomЧI just want to know if he's in." The floor clerk said he was and Farwell tried to phone the home of the Chicago branch's lawyer, but got no answer. Too much time lost. He soaked his head in cold water, threw his clothes on and drove hell-for-leather to the Greybar. Greenhough was in one of the big two-bedroom suites on the sixteenth floor. A frozen-faced blond girl in an evening gown let Farwell in without a word. The senior partner was sprawled on the sofa in dress trousers and stiff shirt. He had a bruise under his left eye. "I came as quickly as I could, Mr. Greenhough," said Farwell. "I couldn't get in touch withЧ" The senior partner coughed thunderously, twitched his face at Farwell in a baffling manner, and then stalked into a bedroom. The blond girl's frozen mask suddenly split into a vindictive grin. "You're going to get it!" she jeered at Farwell. "I'm supposed to think his name's Wilkins. Well, go on after him, pappy." -t Farwell went into the bedroom. Greenhough was sitting on the bed dabbing at the bruise and muttering. "I told you I wanted our lawyer!" he shouted at the branch manager. "I was attacked by a drunkard in that damned Mars Room of yours and by God booked by the police like a common criminal! I'm going to get satisfaction if I have to turn the city up-sidedown! Get on that phone and get me Clancy or whatever his name is!" "But I can't!" said Farwell desperately. "He won't answer his phone and in the second place he isn't that kind of lawyer. I can't ask Clarahan to fight a disorderly-conduct chargeЧ he's a big man here. He only does contract law and that kind of thing. You posted bond, didn't you, Mr. Greenhough?" "Twenty dollars," said the senior partner bitterly, "and they only wanted ten from that drunken ape." "Then why not just forget about it? Forfeit the bond and probably you'll never hear of it again, especially since you're an out-of-towner. I'll do what I can to smooth it over if they don't let it slide." "Get out of here," said Greenhough, dabbing at the bruise again. The blond was reading a TV magazine in the parlor; she ignored Farwell as he let himself out. The branch manager drove to an all-night barber shop near one of the terminals and napped through "the works." A slow breakfast killed another hour and by then it wasn't too ridiculously early to appear at the office. He dawdled over copy until 9 and phoned the Greybar. They told him Mr. Greenhough had checked out leaving no forwarding address. The morning papers came and he found nothing about a scuffle at the Mars Room or the booking of Greenhough. Maybe the senior partner had given a false nameЧWilkins?Чor maybe the stories had been killed because Greenhough and Brady did some institutional advertising. Maybe there was some mysterious interlock between Greenhough and Brady and the papers high up on some misty alp that Farwell had never glimpsed. Don't worry about it, he told himself savagely. You gave him good advice, the thing's going to blow over, Clarahan wouldn't have taken it anyway. He hoped Pete Messier in New York wouldn't hear about it and try to use it as a lever to pry him out of the spot he held, the spot Pete Messier coveted. Maybe there was some way he could get somebody in the New York office to keep an eye on Messier and let him know how he^was doing, just to get something he could counter-punch with when Messier pulled something like that garbled message stunt. The intercom buzzed and Grace said, "Angelo wants to see you. He says it's personal." "Send him in." The kid was beaming. He looked pretty goodЧnot raw and jumpy; just happy. "I want to say thanks and good-bye, Mr. Farwell," he told the branch manager. "Look!" The plastic-laminated card said "WORK PERMIT" and "Brother Angelo Libonari" and "International Union of Spacemen, Spacedockworkers and Rocket Maintenance Men, Unaffiliated (ISU-IND)" and "Member in Good Standing" and other things. "So that was the game," said Farwell slowly. "We take you and we train you at a loss hoping that some day you'll turn out decent copy for us and as soon as you have a thousand bucks saved up you quit like a shot and buy a work card to be a wiper on a rocket. Well, I hope you show a little more loyalty to your space line than you showed us." Angelo's face drooped in miserable surprise. "I never thoughtЧ" he stuttered. "I didn't mean to run out, Mr. Farwell. I'll give two weeks notice if you wantЧa month? How about a month?" "It doesn't matter," said Farwell. "I should have known. I thought I pounded some sense into your head, but I was wrong. You're forgiven, Angelo. I hope you have a good time. What are your plans?" He wasn't really interested, but why go out of his way to kick the kid in the teeth? Obviously he'd meant it when he registered surpriseЧhe didn't have the boss's viewpoint and his other jobs had been one-week stands in hashhouses. |
|
|