exotic dancer with chloracne.

It must be my face, he lifts up his hands and stares at me nervously, then swallows his cud of potato crisps. 'You must be Mr. Howard'

I begin to get an inkling. 'No, I'm the grim fucking reaper.' My eyes take in more telling details: his sallow skin, the acne and straggly goatee beard. Ye gods and little demons, it's like looking in a time-traveling mirror. I grin nastily. 'I asked you once and I won't ask you again: Who are you'

He gulps. 'I'm Pete. Uh, Pete Young. I was told to come here by Andy, uh, Mr. Newstrom. He says I'm your new intern.'

'My new what...?' I trail off. Andy, you're a bastard! But I repeat myself. 'Intern. Yeah, right. How long have you been here? In the Laundry, I mean.'

He looks nervous. 'Since last Monday morning,'

'Well, this is the first anyone's told me about an intern,'

I explain carefully, trying to keep my voice level because blaming the messenger won't help; anyway, if Pete's telling the truth he's so wet behind the ears I could use him to water the plants. 'So now I'm going to have to go and confirm that.

You just wait here.' I glance at my desktop. Hang on, what would I have done five or so years ago ...? 'No, on second thoughts, come with me.'

The Ops wing is a maze of twisty little passageways, all alike.

Cramped offices open off them, painted institutional green and illuminated by underpowered bulbs lightly dusted with cobwebs. It isn't like this on Mahogany Row or over the road in Administration, but those of us who actually contribute to the bottom line get to mend and make do. (There's a malicious, persistent rumor that this is because the Board wants to encourage a spirit of plucky us-against-the-world selfreliance in Ops, and the easiest way to do that is to make every requisition for a box of paper clips into a Herculean struggle. I subscribe to the other, less popular theory: they just don't care.) I know my way through these dingy tunnels; I've worked here for years. Andy has been a couple of rungs above me in the org chart for all that time. These days he's got a corner office with a blond Scandinavian pine desk. (It's a corner office on the second floor with a view over the alley where the local Chinese take-away keeps their dumpsters, and the desk came from IKEA, but his office still represents the cargo-cult trappings of upward mobility; we beggars in Ops can't be choosy.) I see the red light's out, so I bang on his door.

'Come in.' He sounds even more world-weary than usual, and so he should be, judging from the pile of spreadsheet printouts scattered across the desk in front of him. 'Bob'

He glances up and sees the intern. 'Oh, I see you've met Pete.'

'Pete tells me he's my intern,' I say, as pleasantly as I can manage under the circumstances. I pull out the ratty visitor's chair with the hole in the seat stuffing and slump into it.

'And he's been in the Laundry since the beginning of this week.' I glance over my shoulder; Pete is standing in the doorway looking uncomfortable, so I decide to move White Pawn to Black Castle Four or whatever it's called: 'Come on in, Pete; grab a chair.' (The other chair is a crawling horror covered in mouse-bitten lever arch files labeled STRICTLY SECRET.) It's important to get the message across that I'm not leaving without an answer, and camping my henchsquirt on Andy's virtual in-tray is a good way to do that.

(Now if only I can figure out what I'm supposed to be asking ...) 'What's going on'

'Nobody told you?' Andy looks puzzled.

'Okay, let me rephrase. Whose idea was it, and what am I meant to do with him'

'I think it was Emma MacDougal's. In Human Resources.' Oops, he said Human Resources. I can feel my stomach sinking already. 'We picked him up in a routine sweep through Erewhon space last month.' (Erewhon is a new Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game that started up, oh, about two months ago, with only a few thousand players so far. Written by a bunch of spaced-out games programmers from Gothenburg.) 'Boris iced him and explained the situation, then put him through induction.

Emma feels that it'd be better if we trialed the mentoring program currently on roll-out throughout Admin to see if it's an improvement over our traditional way of inducting new staff into Ops, and his number came up.' Andy raises a fist and coughs into it, then waggles his eyebrows at me significantly. 'As opposed to hiding out behind the wet shrubbery for a few months before graduating to polishing Angleton's gear-wheels?' I shrug. 'Well, I can't say it's a bad Idea — ' Nobody ever accuses HR of having a bad idea; they're subtle and quick to anger, and their revenge is terrible to behold. ' — but a little bit of warning would have been nice. Some mentoring for the mentor, eh?'

The feeble quip is only a trial balloon, but Andy latches onto it immediately and with evident gratitude. 'Yes, I completely agree! I'll get onto it at once.'

I cross my arms and grin at him lopsidedly. 'I'm waiting.'

'You're — ' His gaze slides sideways, coming to rest on Pete. 'Hmm.' I can almost see the wheels turning. Andy isn't aggressive, but he's a sharp operator. 'Okay, let's start from the beginning. Bob, this fellow is Peter-Fred Young.

Peter-Fred, meet Mr. Howard, better known as Bob. I'm — '

' — Andy Newstrom, senior operational support manager, Department G,' I butt in smoothly. 'Due to the modern miracle of matrix management, Andy is my line manager but I work for someone else, Mr. Angleton, who is also Andy's boss. You probably won't meet him; if you do, it probably means you're in big trouble. That right, Andy'

'Yes, Bob,' he says indulgently, picking right up from my cue. 'And this is Ops Division.' He looks at Peter- Fred Young. 'Your job, for the next three months, is to shadow Bob. Bob, you're between field assignments anyway, and Project Aurora looks likely to keep you occupied for the whole time — Peter-Fred should be quite useful to you, given his background.'

'Project Aurora?' Pete looks puzzled. Yeah, and me, too.

'What is his background, exactly?' I ask. Here it comes ...

'Peter-Fred used to design dungeon modules for a living.'

Andy's cheek twitches. 'The earlier games weren't a big problem, but I think vou can guess where this one's going.'

'Hey, it's not my fault!' Pete hunches defensively. 'I just thought it was a really neat scenario!'

I have a horrible feeling I know what Andy's going to say next. 'The third-party content tools for some of the leading MMORPGs are getting pretty hairy these days. They're supposed to have some recognizers built in to stop the most dangerous design patterns getting out, but nobody was expecting Peter-Fred to try to implement a Delta Green scenario as a Neverwinter Nights persistent realm. If it had gone online on a public game server — assuming it didn't eat him during beta testing — we could have been facing a mass outbreak.'

I turn and stare at Pete in disbelief. 'That was him?'Jesus, I could have been killed!

He stares back truculently. 'Yeah. Your wizard eats rice cakes!'

And an attitude to boot. 'Andy, he's going to need a desk.'

'I'm working on getting you a bigger office.' He grins.

'This was Emma's idea, she can foot the bill.'

Somehow I knew she had to be tied in with this, but maybe I can turn it to my advantage. 'If Human Resources is involved, surely they're paying?' Which means, deep pockets to pick. 'We're going to need two Herman Miller Aeron chairs, an Eames bookcase and occasional table, a desk from some eye-wateringly expensive Italian design studio, a genuine eighty-year-old Bonsai Californian redwood, an OC3 cable into Telehouse, and gaming laptops. Alienware: we need lots and lots of Alienware....'

Andy gives me five seconds to slaver over the fantasy before he pricks my balloon. 'You'll take Dell and like it.'

'Even if the bad guys frag us?' I try.

'They won't.' He looks smug. 'Because you're the best.'

One of the advantages of being a cash-starved department is that nobody ever dares to throw anything away in case it turns out to be useful later. Another advantage is that there's ,never any money to get things done, like (for example) refit old offices to comply with current health and safety regulations.

It's cheaper just to move everybody out into a Portakabin in the car park and leave the office refurb for another financial year. At least, that's what they do in this day and age; thirty, forty years ago I don't know where

Вы читаете The Jennifer Morgue
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