'And is that enough?'

'Sometimes.' He paused. 'No. But I don't have anything else. Anyone.' He certainly wasn't making much progress with Raven. Or Mona Pietri, for that matter.

'Are you happy?'

He sighed. 'Sometimes. Not really. I don't like the way things are.'

'Would you eat grubs to keep yourself alive?'

'Grubs? What the hell is a grub?'

'A larval insect.'

He laughed. 'If I would, does that mean I'm happy? Or simply crazy enough to go on your outdoor outing?'

Dr. Chen smiled. 'Congratulations, Daniel. You've passed the first test of Outback Adventure.'

'That's it? I'm insane enough to go?'

'You've been accepted as a candidate for the experience of a lifetime. To pursue this possibility further you must make an appointment to meet your Outback Adventure counselor.'

'Good grief. You don't make taking my money easy, do you?'

'At our corporate offices we'll explain the program and schedule you for excitement if you decide to participate.'

'Schedule for excitement?' He rolled his eyes.

'We choose our words carefully, believe me.'

He looked at her skeptically. 'And how much will this once-in-a-lifetime experience cost me?'

'One year's salary.' She didn't even blink.

'What!'

'The fee is to test the seriousness of your commitment.'

'It sure as hell does! I can't afford that!'

'Yes you can.' Her look remained serene.

'I'm sorry. I'm not going to pay that.'

'Yes you will.' Her confidence was infuriating. 'It's a small price to come alive.'

CHAPTER SEVEN

The address in Daniel's city was in the tower of an anonymous skyscraper cluster forty minutes away by tube. Discreet lettering in the lobby announced the firm's presence on the thirty-third floor. The elevator opened to reveal a number of nondescript small offices: a title company, a financial newsletter, a laser-lift skin clinic. The tour agency door was solid wood, plain, and locked. OUTBACK ADVENTURE, a tiny sign read in letters slipped into the kind of bracket that could accommodate a rapid turnover of tenants. He glanced at the ceiling. A vidsnake was watching him.

Daniel hesitated, then knocked.

Silence.

He looked at his watch: on time. He tried the knob but it didn't budge. He knocked again. Nothing.

Dammit, it wasn't lunch, but there was no sound from the other side. He eyed the keypad lock and punched some numbers at random without effect, quickly becoming bored. 'Hello?' Finally he retreated across the hallway and slid down the wall, sitting expectantly on the floor. He'd wait for the bastards.

With that there was a buzz, a click, and the door swung quietly open. He stood awkwardly and walked over, poking his head through. The inside revealed a small waiting area with ugly plastic molded chairs, a desk, and a pretty receptionist. She smiled. 'Close the door behind you.'

He stepped through and the door clicked shut.

'Your appointment?'

'To see Mr. Coyle,' he said grumpily. 'My name is Daniel Dyson.'

'Please have a seat, Mr. Dyson.' She gestured at the plastic chairs. 'I'll inform Mr. Coyle.'

'You didn't answer my knock.'

'Yes we did. Eventually.' She regarded him with quiet amusement.

'You don't want clients to come in?'

'Eight percent of our applicants are turned away by that door and that's for their own good. They wouldn't do well with Outback Adventure, would they?'

He sat while she announced his arrival. The chairs were as uncomfortable as they looked. The brochures on the table featured the same wilderness couple he'd seen on his video wall. There were pictures of empty desert, red-rocked gorges, and bounding kangaroos. The text was spare. 'Like primitive life itself, this is a journey with no schedule, no itinerary, and no set destination- except self-realization.'

A Zen thing, maybe.

There was a buzz and she looked up at him again, smiling. 'Your counselor will see you now.' He went through another solid wooden door.

The man who met Daniel reminded him a bit of the brochure Ninja, but without the knives. Elliott Coyle was dark-haired, tanned, and dressed in a charcoal sport coat over a black silk crew shirt and dark pants. He wore black Dura-Flex slippers. A silver pin on his lapel was the only bright point to catch the eye. It showed a kangaroo. That would be something, Daniel thought, to see a wild kangaroo.

'There are thousands of them- hundreds of thousands- where you're going.' Coyle had followed Daniel's eye.

'How do you know I'm going?'

'I've read your profile, Daniel. You belong there.'

'You have a profile?'

'The screening questionnaire, a background check. We don't send just anyone on Outback Adventure. It's too expensive for both of us. So we try to guess- an educated guess, but a guess nonetheless- who truly belongs there. The information we have on you is very promising.'

'I'll bet it includes my annual salary, if that's my fee.'

Coyle smiled. 'Touche.'

'Secret passwords, locked doors. Your company doesn't make sense.'

He nodded. 'You want to know more, of course, which is why I'm here.' He stuck out his hand. 'Elliott Coyle.' The handshake was firm and brisk. 'I'm your assigned counselor, the man whose job it is to convince you the experience is worthwhile, to help decide if we should give each other a try, and then guide you through preparation if we come to agreement. I feel it's safe to say that what I'm offeringwhat we're offering- will change your life.'

'Who is 'we,' exactly?'

'Outback Adventure is a travel consultant that contracts with the umbrella governing arm of United Corporations. We have exclusive excursion rights to offer wilderness experiences in Australia.'

'And Australia is quarantined. Off-limits. Dangerous, last I heard.'

'It was. To keep management of the continent controllable, we haven't advertised its change in status. Instead we screen candidates to find the few who can realistically take advantage of what we have to offer. You're in a select group, Daniel.'

'So how did you find me?'

'You found us, remember? That's the first requirement. Friends tend to tell like-minded friends. We keep a low profile to discourage the casually curious. We register as an export company. If we didn't take such steps, the screening would become unwieldy. The idea would intrigue more people than you might think.'

'So how do I fit?'

'You're also the right age, the right fitness, the right… temperament. We think. The only one who can really answer that is you.'

Daniel wanted to digest this for a moment. 'If I go, do I get Cave Girl?' he deflected. He solemnly held up a brochure.

Вы читаете Getting back
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату