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Text File | 1993-09-18 | 56.7 KB | 1,068 lines |
- "Good news"
-
- As the door swung shut behind me, I patted at my pants pocket
- to make sure I had my keys. I realized they weren't there just as
- the door clicked shut.
- "You idiot," I grumbled to myself. I wasn't too concerned;
- I'd done this several times before, and the apartment manager
- always just gave me the master key so I could let myself back in.
- I went down to the mail boxes and extracted the thick wad of
- bills, magazines, and product literature which clogged my box.
- Another normal day's mail. I got caught up in flipping through the
- stack, and forgot all about forgetting my keys. I went back up the
- stairs to my door before remembering.
- I dropped my mail on the floor and went back downstairs.
- There was a note on the manager's door saying he'd be back in
- about half an hour. Didn't say half an hour from when, though.
- Well, I wasn't going to give up. I'd left the patio door
- open. True, I lived on the third floor, but it looked like an
- easier climb than some of the rocks I'd been on.
- I went outside, and around back to where the patio decks were
- stacked up. Surveying the wall of the building as though it was a
- cliff, I selected a route and began my ascent.
- I would have made it, too, if it hadn't been for a weak bit
- of trim on the second floor. It began to make alarming cracking
- sounds, and I grabbed for the adjacent patio railing just as it
- gave way. I swung for a moment before letting go, falling to the
- ground below.
- I rolled as I hit, and came to rest in a sitting position,
- looking up at the building. My downstairs neighbor was leaning
- against the railing from which I'd just fallen. He was looking at
- me with a mixture of curiosity, concern and amusement on his
- face.
- I admit, I'd been looking for an excuse to introduce myself.
- He was a second-generation recom, one of the sons and daughters of
- the brave military pilots who'd saved civilization during the Last
- War. I suppose we all idolized them for their strength, speed, and
- intelligence. I remember reading about the War all through school.
- The books said that recoms had been created to fly the turn-of-
- the-century jets when they got too hot for human pilots. The fact
- that recoms had originally been slaves, pressed into service
- against their will, just reinforced the civics-class lessons on
- how corrupt the old regime had been.
- It also made it all the more remarkable that those same
- recoms had fought so fiercely in defense of this country. They'd
- earned their freedom, and their children grew up proud and
- independent.
- Somehow I'd hoped for a more dignified way to meet him.
- "Ah, hi," I essayed, waving at the broken trim strip. "Just
- checking for termites."
- "Find any?"
- "I forgot to check."
- He laughed, giving me a look at his sharp white teeth. "Looks
- okay to me," he replied, after making a show of studying the
- broken section.
- "Great," I said. "Sorry about that. I locked myself out, and
- I didn't want to wait for the manager to get back."
- "Come on up, then, I'll let you in," he chirruped. Without
- waiting for a response, he leaped up onto his railing, then spun
- around and jumped up and backwards, away from the building. He
- jackknifed on the way up, reaching forward to grab the railing on
- my patio, and vaulted over to land out of sight.
- I was impressed, no less so because he was a recom. Reading
- about them in a book was one thing, but seeing is believing.
- I got to my feet quickly, and ran up the stairs. My door was
- already open. I picked up my mail, and went inside. He was looking
- at the bookshelves in the living room.
- I stuck out my hand and introduced myself. "Thanks. My name
- is Mac... Mac Gentry."
- "Call me Tell," he replied. His grip was warm and firm, and I
- held on just a little longer than necessary, but I didn't think he
- noticed.
- I went over to drop the mail on the small desk in the corner
- by the kitchen door. "Can I get you a drink?" I asked.
- "Got any beer?"
- "Sure do," I said, moving into the kitchen. I came back out
- with two bottles. He was looking over my library again. I handed
- him his beer, and sat on the back of the couch.
- "Porto Alegre?" he asked, reading the label.
- "Yeah, it's Brazilian. I got it a couple weeks ago when I was
- down there."
- "Business trip? You're an engineer, right?"
- "Uh-huh. Rio Supercomputers. I work for Rio N.A. in Long
- Beach."
- "I could tell from your books here. What do you work on?"
- "Product acceptance, compatibility, that sort of thing.
- Mostly on the F/X series."
- He looked kind of thoughtful, then ran a long fingernail
- along the line of books dealing with optical computers and
- communications. "Have you worked with that Devtech fiber optic
- network?"
- My pained expression was all the answer he needed. As he
- laughed, I shook my head sorrowfully. "Please don't remind me.
- That's all I've worked on for two years, trying to fix Devnet.
- Devtech has no idea what they're doing, and it seems like I spend
- half my time telling my management that we're wasting our time
- helping them. Every time I give a presentation to the networking
- group in Japan or the corporate people in Brazil, they tell me
- to just keep trying." I sighed. "At least it pays well."
- "I hope you like to travel."
- "Sure, but with all the money they've spent on semi-ballistic
- tickets on the LA-Rio and LA-Tokyo runs, they could have bought me
- one of the darn rockets by now."
- He'd been nodding. "You're right about Devtech. The guys
- working on that really don't have a clue. We've been hearing about
- all the problems."
- I raised an eyebrow. "What's this 'we' stuff?"
- "I'm a systems engineer at Devtech," he said, with a smile.
- I grimaced again. "Uh, sorry, no offense."
- "Hey, no fur off my nose. I work with NCT 'frames. Devnet
- handles those okay. It's just those F/X monsters which are too
- fast for it. I worked with Rio Series F machines in school,
- they're good units."
- "Too good for Devnet, that's for sure. I just wish I could
- get Devtech to face facts. Rio isn't going to develop any new
- hardware. All we have now is XNA, which isn't very efficient, but
- it works okay. Devnet would be a big improvement, if Devtech would
- develop a new interface, but they don't want to admit they can't
- handle the speed with the stuff they use everywhere else."
- "That's the problem, all right." He turned back to the
- shelves again, studying titles. It gave me a chance to look at
- him. I couldn't figure the genetic mix, but then, you never really
- could. They were all different. Some looked more like felines, or
- canines, or whatever, but most of them were pretty generic. His
- fur was a glossy dark brown, lighter in front, maybe a little
- shorter than usual.
- He was about my height, but his legs were longer than mine.
- His tail dropped almost all the way to the floor, and swept back
- and forth hypnotically. He wasn't wearing much, just a pair of
- jogging shorts like some I had, except his had a cutout in the
- back for his tail, closed at the top with a magnetic clasp. He
- filled them well; I could see muscles flexing through the sheer
- fabric.
- All in all, he was very attractive. I was afraid that my
- feelings would start to show if I just sat there looking, so I
- picked a new subject.
- "Tell's an unusual name. What's it from?"
- He looked at me, flashing another quick smile. "It's short
- for Teller, from Edward Teller, the physicist. My parents say I
- was conceived in Teller GEO. That's one of the command and control
- stations for the UN's space-based interceptor platforms."
- "What were your parents doing? Besides the obvious," I added,
- blushing.
- "They were UNSF military pilots. Still are."
- That made them the best of the best; of the three thousand
- recoms in the old US Navy and Air Force, only about two hundred
- were asked to stay on with the United Nations peacekeeping forces.
- "Neat. What do they fly?"
- "Nothing. They're teleoperators on Enforcer RPV's. Mom's the
- pilot, Dad's the weapons officer. It's not as romantic as flying
- in the platform, but there aren't any windows in the new ones
- anyway."
- "And you can't get shot down. Right."
- He drank the last of his beer, and handed the bottle back to
- me. "Thanks for the beer, Mac. I have to get back to my place,
- I'm expecting a call."
- "Uh, okay. Thanks again for the help."
- "No problem. And if I see any termites, I'll let you know."
- "Great," I laughed.
- I held the door for him, and waved as he went down the
- stairs. Closing the door, I went over and sat down on the couch. I
- took a drink from my beer. It was still full. I thought about him
- for a while. I hadn't responded that strongly to another male in a
- long time, not that there were many women in my life either. I
- really wasn't sure whether to feel honored that he'd been friendly
- with me, or just plain surprised. I felt a little strange about
- it, too. Everyone liked recoms, but never sexually; that was the
- subject of bad jokes by bad stand-up comics, not real life.
- I thought about him, off and on, for the rest of the day.
-
- About 9 pm, I heard a knock on the door. It was Tell. He was
- carrying a Devtech documentation binder.
- "Hi. I had a couple ideas about that problem with Devnet and
- the F/X machines. Do you have a minute?"
- "Sure, come in," I said, maybe a little too enthusiastically.
- He walked over to the dinner table, looking for a place to set the
- book down.
- "Oh, sorry, are you still eating dinner?"
- "No, I just finished." Actually, I'd finished an hour
- earlier, but I just hadn't cleaned up yet. "Let's go into the
- office. There's more room in there anyway."
- I led him into the spare bedroom, where I had my computer
- stuff. The center of the room was dominated by a massive
- adjustable drafting table which must have been older than both of
- us combined. It was built like a precision machine tool, and
- worked as well as when it was new. I didn't use it for drafting,
- of course. I had it set low and flat; it made a great table.
- He set the book down on one end, and sat in the spare
- executive chair, curling his tail over his lap. I took the other
- chair, and he started.
- "Okay. The major problem with the F/X is that the Devnet
- board doesn't acknowledge transfers fast enough, right? The
- interface chips are too slow. But they're too highly integrated
- with the network architecture to replace, and Devtech won't
- redesign them."
- "So far so bad."
- "Or, Rio could slow down the I/O channel, but it's so closely
- coupled with the CPU that overall performance would suffer. I bet
- you've tried that."
- I nodded. "That's the price we pay for wafer scale
- integration, I guess."
- "But all of this assumes that the network has to operate
- synchronously. What if we decouple the network interface from the
- I/O channel?"
- "Elementary, my dear Watson. Add a first-in first-out buffer
- to the network interface, some more code in the kernel to support
- the sliding window, and it'll work great. First thing I thought
- about. But RIO doesn't care enough to assign the design engineers,
- and Devtech thinks they can get it to work by tweaking the
- timing."
- "So they won't do it. So what?" He leaned towards me. "We
- could." He continued before I could respond. "Look, the problem
- here is that we need a software fix on the Rio side, and more
- hardware on the Devtech side. I'm a programmer, you're an
- engineer."
- "I'm not a design engineer! We're not in any position to
- redesign all that custom silicon on the Devnet boards."
- "It's not that much work if we start from Devtech's design
- files. You know what needs to be added, don't you?"
- "Well, yes, but..."
- "And I'm not an F/X expert, but I know what code it'll take."
- True, there were no real technical obstacles. It was mostly
- an image thing, two companies that couldn't agree they had a
- problem. I'd just never thought about fixing it myself.
- I did see a few complications, though. "We'd have to do the
- intermediate logic in gallium arsenide, you know, and there's none
- of that on the existing wafer. We'd need the speed. That's tricky
- stuff to work with."
- "That's what service bureaus are for. Let them sweat the
- details, we can give them the basic design. Integrating the new
- code into the network kernel will be the real tricky part."
- "Hey, I'm not going to pay some service bureau to do my
- design work for me," I exclaimed in mock indignation. "I'll do it,
- and save the fee."
- "So it's a deal, then?" He looked at me expectantly.
- My grin faded as I began to take it seriously. "Umm... hold
- on. We still have some problems here. Money. License fees for
- kernel sources and Devnet specs. Devtech might not even want us
- doing this."
- He shook his head. "I'm sure we can raise the money. The rest
- is just politics. Devtech will go along as long as they don't have
- to admit they ever had a problem."
- "I suppose so. We'd better have a solid plan before we hand
- in our notices, though."
- "Oh, I agree." Slyly, he asked, "Say, you wouldn't happen to
- have those F/X kernel sources around here, would you?" He looked
- significantly over my shoulder at the workstation screen hanging
- on the wall behind the desk.
- I drummed my fingers on the binder he'd brought along. "I
- don't know... but maybe you'd know where I could find a copy of
- the specs on the F/X series Devnet boards, huh?"
- We laughed together, and got to work. It really did look
- easy, and I think it was the feeling that we could get the whole
- problem solved right then and there which kept us going for over
- six hours. Fortunately, it was Saturday, and we didn't have to go
- to work the next morning.
- I actually didn't think about him too much as we worked.
- There were moments when he'd lean over my shoulder to point out
- something in the documentation, or when I'd sit next to him to
- explain something on the screen, when I was acutely aware of his
- presence, his subtly different scent. Mostly, though, I just
- concentrated on the job.
- Some time after 3 am, I heard him push back his chair. I was
- running out of ideas and energy, and it seemed like a good time to
- stop.
- "That's enough for tonight," I said to him.
- "Yeah. So what do you think? Looks good to me."
- "Looks good to me, too." I rubbed my right shoulder; my arm
- was stiff from making notes. He reached over from where he was
- sitting, and pushed my hand away. He took over, smoothing the
- tension away.
- "Not used to writing so much, huh? I guess I monopolized the
- keyboard."
- I rolled my head around. "Oh, that's nice. No, that's okay,
- I've been meaning to get a second workstation in here anyway."
- He came and stood behind me, massaging my neck expertly. It
- felt great. As his hands moved down my back, I leaned forward,
- resting my forehead on folded arms.
- I suppose I must have fallen asleep, because the next thing I
- remember is being shaken gently.
- "Come on, sleepy, time to go to bed." I lifted my head,
- blinking, then got up. He led me into the bedroom, and sat me down
- on the edge of the bed without turning the light on.
- "Thanks," I mumbled sleepily. "Come by tomorrow, we'll work
- up a presentation."
- He yawned conspicuously. "Well, I'm pretty tired. Mind if I
- sleep here?"
- I thought about it for a moment, then started to get up. "You
- mean, on the couch? Um, okay... let me get you some sheets."
- He pushed me back down, and sat beside me. "No, I mean right
- here."
- He was sitting close enough that I could smell him... and
- suddenly I understood. If I could smell him, then he could smell
- me a hundred times as well. He turned me on, and he knew it. Did
- he really feel the same way about me?
- I looked at him, and in his eyes, I saw what I was looking
- for. Happily, I fell backwards, pulling him down on top of me.
- "Okay," I said, huskily. I hugged him tightly, and he squeezed
- back.
- He seemed to be shivering, but his fur was warm and dry. I
- stroked his back gently.
- "Hey, what's the matter?"
- "Nothing, really. I'm just so happy..."
- "Me too, Tell." I continued to stroke him, and he calmed
- down. I moved my hand to his side, where our bodies met, and he
- rolled slightly to let my hand move between us. I began to rub at
- the fabric of his jogging shorts. I admit, I was curious. I'd
- never seen a nude recom of either sex. I had no idea what was
- under there.
- "Mmm..." he sighed. "I thought you were tired?"
- "I'm never that tired," I said, as I released the tab over
- his tail, and slipped his shorts down off his hips. His penis was
- sheathed, covered in soft fur, like his scrotum. Once freed, his
- erection grew quickly. He wasn't very large, which struck me as
- unfair; presumably the designers could have given recoms just
- about any size penis, but I guess they had other things to
- consider. Large genitals would just get in the way of a G-suit.
- I grasped him, fingers sliding on his moist shaft, and he
- began to moan, moving his hips back and forth. His eyes were
- closed, his mouth was open, and his tail was thrashing from side
- to side. He was breathing rapidly, and it looked like he was
- already ready to come.
- "Tell, are you...?"
- "Yes," he said, urgently.
- I rolled him over on his back, and leaned over, taking him
- into my mouth. He gasped, and suddenly my mouth was filled with
- his semen. He pressed gently on the back of my head, and I moved
- my hand to his balls, squeezing lightly. His cock slid deeper into
- my mouth, and he cried out. His body shook for a few seconds, and
- then he subsided.
- His penis slid back into its sheath quickly. I stroked his
- sheath, smoothing the ruffled fur, kissed it gently, and then
- straightened up, lying alongside him, resting a hand on his chest,
- my other arm under his neck. We snuggled close, looking deep into
- each other's eyes.
- "Thank you," he said softly. "I've never done this before.
- With anyone," he added, even more quietly.
- I was taken aback. He'd been so, well, forward... but what
- could I say? "Tell, I wouldn't have asked for this. At least, not
- so soon." I grinned. "But I'm glad I didn't have to. I think
- things are going to work out fine."
- "I'm sure they are," he replied. "But there's something we
- need to get straight."
- "Uh, what?" I asked, afraid of some misunderstanding.
- In response, he dropped his hand to my crotch, and squeezed.
- "This," he said, mouth open in a silent laugh.
- I gave a startled "yip!"-- just in the spirit of things, you
- know-- and grabbed him right back. We wrestled around on the bed
- for a few minutes, my clothes just sort of falling off my body.
- Soon our movements became more rhythmic, more deliberate. He was
- inexperienced, sure, but he wanted to please me, and he seemed to
- know what to do.
- He made me hard with his hands, and wet with his tongue. Then
- he rolled away from me, onto his stomach, and moved his tail to
- the side. He looked back over his shoulder. "Mount me," he said,
- almost moaning.
- "Yes..." I answered, so full of love for him I could hardly
- speak. I moved over him, wet his anus with my saliva, and pressed
- the tip of my penis against him. "Relax," I crooned, stroking the
- fur on his back, squeezing him around the base of his tail.
- He opened himself to me, and I slid inside slowly. His ass
- was tight and hot, and we both made little whimpering sounds as we
- began to move together.
- "You okay?" I asked.
- "Oh, yes, Mac," he breathed. "Don't hold back."
- He was so strong. I could see the muscles moving under his
- fur, and feel them under my hands. He was clutching the bedspread
- as tightly as I clutched his hips. Although we strained against
- each other, there was something light and effortless to our
- coupling, a sense of perfect freedom and mutual joy.
- As I watched him, I thought about how lucky we were to have
- each other, and that familiar and pleasant pressure began to rise
- within my crotch. He matched the increasing tempo of my thrusts,
- lifting his head, making the most marvelous purring sound. I
- wondered if it was deliberate.
- As my climax approached, I leaned forward, nuzzling the back
- of his neck, resting against him. My arms went around his chest,
- and I hugged him as I came.
- "Ohhh," I cried, and I held the full length of my penis
- inside him. He pushed back against me until I was done, then
- together we toppled over onto our sides, my arms still wrapped
- around him.
- "I love you, Tell," I said.
- "I love you too, Mac... oh!" My hand, moving slowly down his
- belly, had encountered the tip of his penis, again erect.
- "Gently, Tell... don't rush it, make it last," I whispered
- into his ear. I brushed the tips of my fingers down his shaft, hot
- and slick, and he quivered with every touch.
- "Mac... it's all right... we-- ah!-- it's the way we are..."
- He grasped my hand and pressed it against his cock. I took
- hold of him, and quickly, he came, curling up around his spurting
- organ, his semen splashing against my other hand, where I held his
- chest.
- We lay there together for a while, relaxing, and soon I felt
- him fall asleep. I extracted myself gingerly, and made my way to
- the bathroom. Returning with a washcloth, I cleaned him as best I
- could without waking him. I went out to turn off the lights in the
- office and hallway, and then got back into bed.
- He stirred as I stretched out beside him, throwing an arm and
- a leg and about a yard of tail across me. I rolled slightly
- towards him, and pulled him against me, feeling the dampness on
- his chest. With a contented sigh, I sank quickly into a deep
- sleep.
-
- I woke as he was getting out of bed. "Hmm?"
- He leaned over me and gave me a quick kiss. "Go back to
- sleep, lover, it's still early."
- "Okay," I said, feeling warm and happy, and I did.
- The sun was brighter on the windowshade the next time I woke
- up. Tell was getting back into bed. He sat up, leaning back
- against the headboard, and I slid over and hugged him.
- "Good morning, Tell."
- "Good morning, Mac."
- "What'cha wanna do?" I asked, tickling his balls with a
- fingertip.
- "Oh, Mac..." he sighed. "You know."
-
- It was somewhat later when we returned to the subject of our
- project. We spent the rest of the day-- well, most of it-- going
- over each other's work from the previous night, and developing a
- presentation for our respective managements.
- Even in the light of the new day, it looked good. We knew how
- to market the idea; it was just a matter of offering to assume
- responsibility for the development in exchange for access to the
- proprietary information we needed... access Tell and I had
- already, of course. Rio and Devtech had nothing to lose, and
- everything to gain.
- The other aspect was financing. We figured we'd need about
- 35 kilocredits to complete the detailed design and produce the
- first run of prototypes. It turned out that Tell had almost 20K in
- the bank. I had about five. Between us, we had enough bank credit
- to borrow another ten.
- We had lunch down in Tell's apartment. I learned that recoms
- had rather unusual metabolisms and required different food than
- the kind of stuff I usually kept around my place. There were a few
- restaurants in the city which catered to the recom trade, but most
- recoms prepared their own food. I wasn't very enthusiastic about
- trying his diet, although he tried to persuade me. "It tastes
- better than it looks." I ended up nibbling on some of the things I
- could recognize, and left the rest of it for him.
- Tell had a pretty impressive collection of nature artwork...
- paintings of wolves, big cats, and other animals. He also had a
- pair of huge wall-sized posters covered with 6-point type,
- millions of seemingly random letters and numbers defining the
- structure of his parents' genetic code, from the DARPA lab where
- they'd been designed. I'd always wondered if recoms were sensitive
- about their heritage, but he was obviously proud of it.
- I started laughing while he was explaining something about
- the size of the actual database, to which these posters were
- really just indexes. He asked me what was so funny.
- "It tastes better than it looks," I said. He hit me.
- His computer equipment was more video-oriented than mine, so
- we stayed downstairs that afternoon, preparing two presentations.
- One was aimed at his management, the other one at mine. He had a
- flair for that sort of thing, which was good, since I didn't. By
- about 8, we decided there was nothing left to do, so we stored the
- results on a couple of cards, and had dinner.
- After dinner, we took fresh bottles of beer into his living
- room, and snuggled down into his couch. Tell put some music on,
- the volume down low, and we talked for a while. In a way, it
- wasn't as much like finding out about each other as like catching
- up on things with an old friend. We really didn't have much in
- common besides computers, but that didn't seem to matter.
- What really surprised me was how young he was, only 18 years
- old. He'd graduated from college three years before, which was
- routine for recoms. I was only 26 myself, four years out of
- school, but for a moment I felt much older. Well, I wasn't going
- to get paternal. Just from talking, I could tell he'd lived as
- much as I had. Maybe it was true, what people said about recoms
- just living faster. It wasn't something you could really compare,
- of course.
- Eventually, I started yawning, and he started yawning, and
- when we noticed each other yawning at the same time, we both
- laughed.
- "Gee, you don't want to go to bed already, do you?" I asked
- innocently.
- "My place or yours?" he replied, eyes twinkling.
- "Let's mess up your sheets tonight."
- "You say the most romantic things."
- Tell had sheets, all right. He kept them in the closet, in
- case of cold weather. His bed was nothing more than a padded,
- upholstered platform, with several pillows. It didn't look very
- comfortable, but sharing it with Tell made it just perfect.
- We weren't as tired as the night before, and the sexual
- tension had mostly dissipated, so everything was much more casual.
- We learned a lot about each other, and had a wonderful time in the
- process.
- At one point, Tell got kind of silly, and started trying to
- find all the places where I was ticklish. In self-defense, I
- turned over onto my belly, and pulled my arms down along my sides.
- He rolled on top of me, trying to dig his fingers around to my
- stomach, laughing and carrying on.
- I felt something odd, and it took me a moment to figure out
- what it was, an out-of-place wet sensation on my thigh. Then the
- character of Tell's movements began to change, becoming more
- rhythmic. He was hard, pressing himself between my legs, making a
- growling sound... and then I felt his teeth on the back of my
- neck.
- "Ooh, Tell, is this how recoms do it?" I asked, half-joking.
- He didn't answer; he just growled louder, but I could tell
- somehow that he wasn't being entirely serious. With an exaggerated
- roughness, he grabbed my hips and lifted me into the air.
- I moaned loudly for effect, and then again, softly, as I felt
- his penis sliding up towards my ass. Then he paused.
- "Come on," I urged.
- "Uh, be right with you," he said, and leaned back to see what
- he was doing. Maybe it distracted him not to have a tail to aim
- for; I don't know.
- He got himself positioned, and leaned forward again, his
- chest warm and soft against my back. Smoothly, he pushed his glans
- into me. He gasped, gripped me tightly, and thrust firmly,
- entering me completely.
- Without pausing, he began thrusting himself against me, very
- quickly, very hard. After maybe a dozen strokes, he cried out, bit
- my neck again, and came.
- I reached back between my legs to squeeze his balls, and he
- made a high-pitched little sound and collapsed against me. I don't
- know if he passed out, or what, but it was a few minutes before he
- moved again. I just lay there quietly, enjoying the feel of him
- inside of me and on top of me, until his penis withdrew and
- resheathed itself.
- Finally he stirred, moving to rest beside me. I turned to
- look at him.
- "That was nice."
- "Mmm-hmm," he agreed. "Thanks."
- "Anytime, lover. Better yet, all the time."
- He smiled, and we held each other until we fell asleep.
-
- It's a good thing Tell set his alarm clock, because I'd
- totally forgotten about going to work in the morning. As it was, I
- had to hurry to be on time. We kissed quickly, and I ran upstairs
- to get dressed.
- I did remember the card with the presentation, though, and
- after the regular Monday morning staff meeting, I took the group
- manager aside and told him our idea. He was very receptive, I
- suppose because the Devnet problem was as much his problem as
- mine. He got me an appointment with the Director of Product
- Planning for early that afternoon.
- I had some appointments and phone calls to return to people
- in our US networking department and at Devtech, but I put those on
- hold, and took an informal poll among my coworkers as to the
- prospects for the kind of solution we were planning to offer.
- All of them had worked on the problem at one time or another,
- and after two years, most of them were willing to listen to
- anything. The technical comments were in line with my own
- observations, which was reassuring, and nobody brought up any new
- problems.
- The afternoon meeting went very well. The director liked the
- video, and told me to send it down to his boss, the Senior
- Director of R&D, in Rio. Brazil had already gone home, but Japan
- was just about to arrive on Tuesday morning, so I stayed late to
- talk with Dr. Nagura, the Director of Networking Systems out
- there. I'd been out to see him just a few weeks before. We had a
- good professional relationship, but that was about all. He was a
- very quiet man, and he commanded a great deal of respect, probably
- more than company policy required. While he never got excited
- about anything, he did pay close attention to the presentation,
- and asked all the right questions.
- He brought up one subject which I hadn't given enough thought
- to.
- "And, what if your design is a success?"
- "Sir?"
- "What will you do then?"
- "Well... I just assumed that Rio would buy it, and I'd come
- back to work. Or maybe it would be better if Devtech built it into
- their equipment."
- "No. You build it. Don't sell the design. Sell a product."
- I started to object, but the look on his face made me stop
- and think. Yes, it would make more sense. If we could buy
- Devtech's hardware, at the wafer level or as finished boards, we
- could build it into a plug-and-play system for the F/X.
- He continued. "And when you speak with Cruz, tell him you
- want to use the company's engineering facilities in Brazil. Ask
- him to set a fair price, but do not give him any control over your
- new company."
- That was another good idea. "Yes, sir. I will do that." I
- paused. "I think you are helping me more than you need to."
- "No, Mr. Gentry. We needed someone to do this. And there may
- be more opportunities for you in the future."
- "Thank you. I will think about this." We cleared, and I sat
- there thinking about it for a while. Whenever I talked with him, I
- ended up talking like him. It was pretty strange.
- All in all, it was a very busy day and a very promising
- start. When I got home, I went straight up to Tell's apartment.
- Rather than knocking, I tried the door; it was open, and I went
- right in. He was standing in the kitchen, cooking something. I
- tossed my mail on his coffee table, sat down on the couch, and
- kicked my feet up.
- "Hi, dear. I'm home," I called.
- He ran over and sat down on my lap, put his arms around my
- neck, and gave me a big kiss. "Hi," he said. "You could make a
- habit of that. If you want," he added, shyly.
- "I want," I sighed. We held each other for a while. My
- curiosity eventually overcame my reluctance to disturb the moment.
- "Tell? How'd it go today?"
- He slid off my lap onto the couch beside me. "Pretty good. My
- boss doesn't want me to quit, but he did go with me to see the
- Vice President of Engineering. The VP wasn't exactly thrilled to
- lose me, either, but he seems to like the idea of having the
- problem solved for him. Like I figured, he'll give us access to
- the wafer design library for nothing. How'd it go with you?"
- "Okay here. I ought to have a response from Brazil tomorrow.
- Got some interesting advice from Japan." I explained what Nagura
- had suggested, and Tell nodded, thoughtfully.
- "So what's left at your end? As far as I can tell, Devtech is
- ready to sign the papers anytime. How many more layers do you have
- to go through?"
- "Well, if Cruz goes along with everything, I'll probably have
- to go down to Brazil to present the idea to the partners."
- "When?"
- "Maybe this week, I don't know. Rio is a pretty well-run
- company."
- "I need to spend a few days clearing my desk, but apart from
- that, I'm ready."
- I surpressed a laugh. "Tell, you're always ready."
- "I'm ready to eat! How about you?"
- I thought about making another joke, but I was kind of
- hungry. Something smelled good. "Yeah, I guess so. What's for
- dinner?"
- "Ask me after we're done eating it."
- I was dubious, but agreed. It tasted okay, but I'd rather not
- think about what it turned out to be. As much as I loved the guy,
- I resolved to select my own menus in the future.
- We were too keyed up over the project to sit around watching
- TV, so we picked a new movie, and went out. It was an interesting
- experience. Tell attracted a lot of attention. I know it was rare
- to see recoms, even though there were hundreds of them in the
- city, but did people always gawk like that? Maybe it was the
- strange feeling that they were staring at me, too.
- We went into the ice-cream place next to the theater after
- the movie. Tell made a spectacle of himself, turning the simple
- task of eating an ice-cream cone into some kind of erotic
- exhibition. It was done for my benefit, of course, but he didn't
- seem to mind that several other patrons were enjoying the show.
- I was blushing scarlet by the time I got him out of there.
- "You're terrible!" I protested.
- "You loved it," he said, smiling.
- "Well, yeah, but..." I responded, weakly.
- He took my arm and led me back towards the metro station.
- "Let's go home."
- "Oh, boy," I said. "Last one on the train is a rotten egg!" I
- took off running.
- He breezed past me effortlessly, and then obviously slowed
- down so he could cheer me on. I'm not slow, but I'd guess he was
- going thirty percent faster than I was when he passed me. He
- stayed exactly two paces ahead of me all the way to the station.
- We waved our passes at the gate, and went in. I didn't catch
- my breath until we were back home.
- "My place tonight," I said. "My turn."
- "Okay," he agreed. "I'll be up in a few minutes. Got to get
- something to eat."
- Well, I can't resist more than one joke in a day. "It'll be
- waiting."
- He just shook his head and went on into his apartment. I went
- upstairs, and realized I hadn't been in there in a day and a half,
- except for a few minutes that morning. I went into the bedroom and
- whipped the sheets off the bed. They were rather fragrant. I stuck
- them in the laundry basket in the bathroom, and got out another
- set.
- I was still putting them on when Tell snuck up behind me and
- tackled me onto the bed. I think we may have set a speed record
- for ruining a set of sheets.
- Not that that bothered us any. In fact, we were still going
- at it shortly before 1 am, when the phone rang. I grabbed the
- handset, and motioned to Tell to be quiet.
- "Hello?"
- "Mac Gentry? This is Francis Cruz, in Brazil."
- "Hello, Francis. Good to hear from you."
- "I know it's very late, but I wanted to ask you if you could
- fly down here today. The managing partners will be leaving for a
- conference in Europe on Thursday, so tomorrow is the only day we
- can meet with them before next week."
- "Of course, no problem."
- "I also wanted to ask you if your partner, Mr. Teller, could
- come with you."
- Tell was nodding, but I waved him off. "I don't know, but
- I'll ask."
- "It would be a good thing if he could. I understand he is a
- recombinant?"
- "Yes, that's right."
- "That will work to your advantage, I believe."
- Ahh... right. Recoms were uncommon in the US, but almost
- never seen elsewhere. Tell himself could be a selling point. "I'm
- fairly sure he'll be able to make it."
- "Excellent. If you'll check, I believe your travel
- arrangements are in your phone now."
- I looked at the screen, which was otherwise blank, and indeed
- there was a new file. I touched the icon, and brought up the
- itinerary. There were confirmed tickets for both of us on the
- next semi-ballistic flight to Rio.
- "Right. We'll see you Wednesday morning, then."
- "Good night."
- I signed off, and looked at Tell. "Want to visit Brazil?"
- "Sure," he said.
- "Well, we better get some sleep, then, 'cause we have to
- leave for the airport in about seven hours."
- "Okay." He flipped over and started snoring.
- I moved over behind him, and snuggled up against his back.
- Sticking a hand down past his tail and between his legs, I started
- rubbing the downy fur under his balls.
- "Not so fast," I said, softly.
-
- My alarm clock went off at the normal time, and we got up so
- we could leave messages at our offices. Tell had to go get packed;
- I just threw a couple of shirts in my travel bag. I did this a
- lot, so it was all ready to go. We made it to the airport in
- plenty of time.
- The small crowd waiting for the SB was predominantly
- Brazilian, and they were obviously interested in Tell. I began to
- have new respect for the husbands and wives of famous people. I'm
- sure Tell enjoyed the attention, but it made me slightly
- uncomfortable. I also began to wonder how he'd made it to 18
- without losing his virginity. Surely it wasn't for lack of
- opportunity; some of the looks he got from the women (and from
- some of the men) were about as explicit as you can get without a
- written contract.
- He told me later that he just didn't know. Go figure.
- As usual, Rio had reserved first-class tickets for me on the
- Brazilian national airline. When they started boarding, we went on
- into the plane, and took our seats. Since first-class seats had
- windows-- expensive on a trans-atmospheric vehicle-- my preference
- was for the third-row left window seat; this was the first row
- with paired seating, and usually I wanted the adjacent seat so I
- could set down my Dynabook without having to drop the tray table.
- Now, of course, I had something much nicer to put there.
- The stewardess came forward and took our drink orders. They
- had Porto Alegre beer, of course, and we each got a glass of that.
- We sat together, talking, while the coach-class passengers boarded
- through the mid-cabin hatch. Presently, they finished boarding,
- and I realized we were still alone in the first-class cabin. As we
- started taxiing out, the screen on the forward bulkhead began
- showing the standard wildly optimistic emergency procedures
- briefing, and the stewardess came forward to get our glasses.
- "Will you be needing anything else before we land?" she
- asked.
- "No, thank you," I answered.
- She checked to see that our seatbelts were buckled, then went
- aft, and closed the door.
- I turned towards Tell, and raised the armrest between us. We
- each put an arm around the other, and leaned together. I licked at
- his ear as I unbuckled our belts.
- "You know, she won't be back in here until we get there."
- "No, she won't, will she?" he said, wriggling in
- anticipation.
- I released the clasp on his pants, and started unbuttoning
- his shirt. "Do you suppose we can amuse ourselves?"
- He was already breathing hard. "Yes."
- As we reached the end of the runway, the PA asked us to
- prepare for acceleration. By the time we started rolling, Tell was
- fully erect, pink and glistening. I bent down and took him in my
- mouth, cupping his testicles in one hand, the other against the
- small of his back. He came just as we lifted off, his cries of
- pleasure drowned out by the howling of the powerful scramjets.
- I straightened up with some effort, against the gradually
- increasing acceleration which pushed me down and backwards. The
- forward screen displayed a G-meter in a corner of the view from
- the forward camera. It read 1.5G, and it was definitely going up.
- I knew from experience that it would peak at about 2.5G about ten
- minutes into the flight.
- Tell leaned against me, eyes half-closed, smiling. I put an
- arm around him and held him for a while, stroking his belly with
- my other hand as his tail flicked back and forth across my legs.
- Eventually, the acceleration made it uncomfortable to be
- turned sideways like that, so I released Tell and sat back in my
- seat. I figured he'd do the same... but instead, I felt his hands
- at my waist, releasing my own penis, which was already swollen and
- throbbing.
- I watched with some disbelief as he levered himself up out of
- his seat, and turned to kneel before me. The G-meter was at 1.9
- and still climbing. Against that force, Tell slowly leaned forward
- to lick me, his rough tongue making me twitch.
- I couldn't even bend my head down to watch him without
- straining, so I just relaxed, and let my head go back against the
- seat. Tell's mouth enveloped me, and he began to move his head up
- and down slowly, pressing with his hands against the seat behind
- me. It felt just incredible. I gripped his shoulders, and started
- making thrusting motions with my hips, but as the meter approached
- 2.5G, I couldn't move much.
- My pleasure peaked with the pressure of acceleration, and as
- the engines spooled down to about half a G, I cried out and shot
- my load into his throat. The rapid loss of weight brought me
- forward in my seat. I curled over Tell's head, crossing my arms
- over his shoulders.
- After a long moment, I shuddered and leaned back. Breathing
- hard, trying to catch my breath, I welcomed Tell into my arms as
- he sat back down.
- "Oh, wow," I said, panting. "That was more than I expected."
- "Did you enjoy it?" he asked.
- "Of course! Wasn't it obvious?" I grinned.
- He smiled back, smacking his lips loudly. "Yeah, but I wanted
- to hear you say it."
- "I loved it, Tell. I love you."
- "Same here, Mac."
- Some of the longer flights-- New York to Perth, or the
- occasional flight from L.A. to Madagascar-- remained at low gee
- long enough for the stewardesses to hand out quick drink orders,
- but this one basically just went up and right back down again. The
- stewardesses were around to handle minor emergencies, but I knew
- we wouldn't be bothered unless we called for help.
- It took us a few minutes to get our pants on, and we had a
- couple more minutes to enjoy the views through the forward camera,
- as displayed on the screen, and the windows in the cabin. We were
- up high enough to see stars and the curvature of the Earth, and we
- could see bits of Central and South America.
- The acceleration warning sounded again, and we had to
- sit down and prepare for the descent. The forces this time were
- more down and forward, so we both fastened our belts and just
- enjoyed the ride.
- We ended up making some wide sweeping turns as we approached
- the runway at Rio, probably to avoid some weather. It gave us a
- better look at the northwest part of Brazil, which was nice.
- The landing was perfect, and as we taxiied in to the gate,
- our stewardess opened the door and stuck her head inside.
- "How was the flight?"
- "Very nice, thanks," Tell replied, smiling politely.
- Although it was mid-morning when we left L.A., it was already
- evening in Rio de Janeiro. Rio SC maintained a bloc of apartments
- near their headquarters and engineering facility in Soleri II, and
- some of the apartments were set up like hotel rooms for visitors.
- We got our keys from the security guard downstairs, and we went on
- up. The company had arranged for two apartments, but I don't think
- it ever occurred to us to use them both.
- I got the same unit almost every time I was in Brazil, so it
- was practically like a home away from home. I showed Tell where
- everything was. There was a note on the phone from Francis Cruz;
- he offered to take us out to dinner at ten. It wasn't quite eight
- yet, so we decided to go walk around for a while.
- Soleri II is the smallest arcology in Brazil, but even so,
- it's plenty big enough to get lost in. 70 levels, each about 500
- meters in diameter: over 10 million square meters of floor space.
- Fifty thousand spacious apartments and hundreds of businesses, all
- within a few minutes walking or elevator-riding distance of each
- other.
- Tell had never been inside an arcology; there weren't many of
- them in the United States, and he hadn't been abroad much. It was
- fun to play tour guide.
- The neatest part of the building was the mall, a half-
- kilometer of three levels of shops, restaurants, and open park-
- like spaces. We started north from the south end, and began
- picking up hangers-on almost immediately. By the time we reached
- the central plaza, there must have been twenty people following
- us. Well, following Tell, anyway.
- "I love a parade," I said, sarcastically.
- "Aww, it's okay," he said. "They're just curious."
- As we walked, I noticed he was holding his tail higher than
- usual, and swinging his ass back and forth with each step.
- "Giving them a show, huh?"
- "What do you mean?" he asked, innocently.
- "If you shake any harder, you're going to bring this building
- down."
- "Oh. Sorry."
- He looked contrite, but he kept walking the same way. I
- couldn't help laughing.
- "You're terrible!" I turned a little and bumped his shoulder
- with mine. He bumped me back, and our hands found each other. We
- walked for a moment like that, hand in hand, until someone behind
- us started clapping. Soon everyone was laughing and cheering.
- We were passing a bank of elevators. I decided it was time to
- bail out. One of them was open already, so I pulled Tell into it,
- and punched the highest button on the panel. The doors closed to
- cut off the crowd noise, and we fell against each other, giggling
- like fools.
- The doors opened on the 24th floor, and fortunately nobody
- was around.
- "Where to?" Tell asked.
- "How about we go on up to the roof?"
- "Okay."
- The 24th floor was a major interchange for the elevator
- system; there was a bank of express express elevators running from
- the 24th floor up to the top 20 floors. We took one of these all
- the way up. It was a nice evening; we'd gone from a warm summer in
- L.A. to a mild winter in Rio, and it was a little cool, but
- comfortable enough for both of us.
- We spent the next hour walking the circumference of the roof,
- admiring the sparkling city around and below us. Soleri III, over
- three kilometers away, seemed to loom over us, another 200 levels
- higher and much wider.
- Soon it was time to go back to our apartment and get ready
- for dinner. Cruz had invited us to the best the arcology had to
- offer, an expensive establishment on the roofline near the company
- offices. We'd both brought suitable formalwear,
- We arrived right on time. Cruz was already waiting.
- "Hello, Mac. Good to see you again."
- "Francis," I nodded, shaking his hand. "This is Tell, my new
- partner."
- Cruz and Tell said hello, and shook hands. Cruz motioned
- towards the dining room.
- "Shall we go in?"
- Cruz led us in to a table for four, where his wife was
- waiting. This suited me fine; I was thinking he might have brought
- the managing partners along, and I wasn't really prepared to do
- any kind of presentation then and there.
- It turned out to be a nice social dinner. The food was always
- excellent there, and even Tell was completely satisfied with what
- they had to offer him. We did talk about the project for a few
- minutes here and there, but mostly it was just idle chit-chat.
- Over dessert, Senora Cruz, an utterly charming woman, asked how
- long we'd known each other. Tell added it up quicker.
- "Three days," he said, while I was still checking my math.
- Our hosts looked surprised, and I'm sure we did too. "Seems
- like longer," I offered.
- "And you developed this idea that quickly?" Cruz asked.
- "It was mostly Tell's idea."
- "It's Mac's project, really," Tell said.
- I laughed. "Well, we worked on it a lot over the weekend."
- "Ah," said Francis, looking back and forth at the two of us.
- He looked at his wife for a long moment, and I got the feeling
- they were having a silent conversation.
- Then, to Tell, he said, "My wife and I were going to ask you
- back to our home tonight." He turned to me, "but I think I should
- ask you both... except that I suspect you have other plans."
- Somewhat to my surprise, it was good old exhibitionistic Tell
- who declined.
- "I'm flattered, Senor Cruz, but perhaps another time."
- Cruz smiled pleasantly. "As you wish."
- We finished dessert, and Cruz ordered brandies all around.
- The drinks were just the ticket; I began to feel tired, and knew
- it would be a good idea to go to sleep as soon as possible.
- "When should we get together tomorrow, Francis?"
- "Ten? Yes, ten, that would be fine. In the board room."
- "Very good," I replied, standing. "Thank you for everything."
- "Our pleasure."
- Tell and I went back to the apartment, got undressed, and
- went to bed.
- "You are such a tease," I teased.
- "Oh, Mac."
- "It's okay, I love you for it. C'mere," I said, pulling him
- on top of me. We made love gently, and I fell asleep in his arms.
-
- I managed to sleep for about six hours, and I figured that
- would be enough. Tell was up and around when I got out of bed,
- fixing himself some kind of breakfast out of what was in the
- apartment's kitchen.
- "Is there enough stuff here for you?"
- "Sure."
- "You might go check in the apartment they arranged for you. I
- bet they have the right kind of stuff over there."
- "Hmm... good idea."
- He went and put on some shorts, and left. He was back in a
- few minutes, carrying an armful of stuff.
- "You were right. Thoughtful people."
- "It's a good company."
- "Mac? We are kind of rushing into this. Are you really sure
- you want to leave Rio?"
- "Well... yes, I think I am. It's something worth doing. I can
- always go back, if it doesn't work out."
- "Good. I want to do it, too."
- I didn't want to make a joke out of that. "I'm glad. I
- couldn't do it without you, love."
- He came over and hugged me, wordlessly. I listened to him
- breathing. What a wonderful thing it is, to have someone that
- close.
- Holding him was inevitably arousing, and he noticed, and we
- went back into the bedroom for a while, then showered together--
- an adventure in itself, let me tell you-- and got ready to go over
- to the Rio offices.
-
- One of the nice things about living and working in the same
- building, even if it's a large building, is that there's almost no
- commute time. We left the apartment at five to ten and we were
- still a minute early.
- Francis Cruz introduced us to the managing partners and a few
- other people who didn't really need to be there. They were
- probably just there to see Tell, but who could blame them?
- There was fresh coffee on a side table, and everyone stood
- around talking for a while before moving to the huge mahogany
- table. Tell and I had one side of the table to ourselves, near the
- wall with the video screens.
- We made some introductory remarks, then ran the computer
- presentation. Afterwards, I filled in some of the details about
- financing, and suggested that it would be best if Rio allowed Tell
- and I to do the hardware work there in the Rio design studios.
- The only hard question came from Francis Cruz.
- "When can you deliver a finished product?"
- "Thirteen weeks." I said it firmly. Tell and I had talked it
- over, and we were sure we could do it in eight weeks. I put in a
- fudge factor on general principles. Either they'd buy it, or they
- wouldn't-- but with two years of almost no progress, I was sure
- three months would be acceptable. Evidently it was, since nobody
- voiced any objections.
- After the question and answer period, the managing partners
- and the others excused themselves, and left. That's another thing
- I liked about Rio's management style; they were leaving the
- decision up to Francis Cruz, since it was his department.
- He decided quickly. "I think it looks like something we can
- support," Cruz said. "When do you want to get started?"
- I answered for both of us. "Two weeks should be enough. Tell
- is going to arrange to get the technical specs from Devtech. We
- also need to clear things up at our current jobs, and take care of
- the paperwork for the new business."
- "I'll have the legal department in the Los Angeles office
- take care of that for you, if you'd prefer."
- "Oh, absolutely. I don't know much about it."
- "Fortunately, it should be simple enough. The United States
- is part of the American Common Market, so there won't be any
- import/export problems."
- "Good. Should we say two weeks from next Monday?"
- "Fine."
- We all stood and shook hands, and it was done. Although the
- business side of the visit was over, there was still some
- technical work to do. I spent the rest of the day with people
- from the design engineering department, scheduling access to their
- design support systems and production equipment. Tell went off
- with the company's programming gurus to get the kernel interface
- design rules and talk about the code he'd be adding.
- These were just design overviews, and by the end of the day,
- there wasn't much more for us to do. Tell came over to engineering
- just as I was finishing up, and we left.
- Since we didn't need to stay another day, I'd picked up
- tickets for the late SB flight that evening, but I didn't want to
- leave Brazil without celebrating a little.
- On an earlier visit, one of the network engineers had taken
- me to a small but excellent specialty restaurant in a suburban
- area near the city. I'd asked him if it was still open. He said it
- was, and gave me the phone number and directions for the metro.
- It was the sort of place where I knew Tell and I could both
- enjoy the food. We got there early, since we had to get back to
- the arcology and pack before our flight.
- A waitress took our drink orders-- Porto Alegre, of course--
- and I told Tell I'd already ordered dinner.
- "What're we getting?"
- "They have great steaks here, so that's what."
- "Oh, okay," he said, without much enthusiasm. "Anything
- else?"
- "Just the normal stuff. You can grab something back at the
- apartment if you need to."
- The food arrived promptly, and I watched as Tell took his
- first bite. He started chewing, then stopped, and started again.
- His eyes widened, and he had to swallow before he could speak.
- "Hey! This is steak!"
- "Right. It's a steak house. I ordered steak."
- "It's _real_ steak!"
- "Now do you think you'll still be hungry later?" I asked,
- grinning.
- "No! I didn't know they had this here," he said, as he
- started eating again. I wasn't sure if he'd keep using his knife
- and fork; it looked like he could save time if he just used his
- hands and teeth.
- "Well, they never did outlaw meat sales here, you know, just
- cattle ranching. The ranchers just started growing beef without
- leather around it, that's all."
- "Mmm-hmm," he mumbled.
- I wasn't wild about real steak myself; it was terribly
- expensive, and I thought the synthesized stuff was basically just
- as good. Tell certainly liked it, though.
- He finished the first steak in almost no time, and called the
- waitress over to order another. They had it waiting already, since
- I'd told them who my guest would be.
- That one lasted a little longer, but still he wanted another.
- The waitress said they'd have to cook it, and could he wait ten
- minutes? He said he could, but I wasn't sure.
- I ended up feeding him bits of mine while he waited, since I
- just couldn't resist the way he looked at it. I used my fingers,
- and I was glad we had a semi-private booth; he sucked the meat and
- juices off my fingers in a way which was purely sexual.
- By my count, he had about three pounds of steak in him when
- we left.
- "Better than bugs and worms and stuff, huh?" I asked, as we
- rode back to the hotel on the metro.
- "You bet!" he exclaimed, licking his lips. "It's still not my
- favorite form of protein, though."
- "You letch," I chided, patting his leg. "You'll have to wait
- for that, we've got to get to the airport."
- "I hope we're alone in first class again."
- "Me too."
- And we were.
-
-