十月,2066年
迈尔斯·拉尼尔已经有一阵子没见过理查德·维利尔斯喝得这么醉了,上次还是去年。
拉尼尔接到电话是在午夜刚过。维利尔斯的私人助理——她的名字拉尼尔依然记不住——在午夜时分打电话给他说维利尔斯又需要他来接他。他坚持说这次的情况要糟糕得多。拉尼尔希望事情没那么糟。十月似乎总能触动维利尔斯的神经,他想。也许这和他心爱的洋基队每年都被红袜队打得落花流水有关。
偌大的夜总会寂静无声,空无一人,几个小时前就被维利尔斯的信用棒清场了。维利尔斯坐在最边上的红木吧台前,位置和去年几乎是同一个。全息屏幕上,红袜队正在与洋基队进行美联冠军赛。体育解说员已经称这场比赛为“波士顿大屠杀”。比赛进行到第六局,红袜队21比3领先。洋基队的投手泰隆·马格努森在第一局就崩溃了,主教练出于气愤让他继续投球。新星科技新芬威公园球场座无虚席,观众们为每一场比赛欢呼雀跃,仿佛这场比赛仍然胜负难分。红袜队的球迷喜欢看到洋基队出丑。他们为每一次跑垒欢呼,即使第六局的比分几乎完全没有意义,领先优势已经达到两位数。
又一个红袜队的本垒打落在了看台上。维利尔斯厌恶地耷拉着脑袋。拉尼尔走到他身后,轻轻拍了拍他的肩膀。维利尔斯猛地转过身来,朝拉尼尔挥了一拳,拉尼尔轻松躲过,反击了一拳。拉尼尔狠狠地击中了维利尔斯,把他从吧台凳上打飞了出去,撞到了近20英尺外的一堆破桌椅上。
“你这是在干什么?”拉尼尔挑眉问道,浑然不知自己已经站出了拳击的战斗姿势。多年训练留下的肌肉记忆。
有那么一瞬间,拉尼尔担心他把维利尔斯打昏了。他的头向后仰着,眼睛斜视着天花板。然而,一声深沉的叹息告诉他,维利尔斯只是没有动。拉尼尔放松了姿态。“需要我帮你起来吗?”
“如果可以的话,我想我就在这里躺一会儿。”维利尔斯有气无力地回答道。芬威球场的观众再次欢呼,因为又有一名跑者得分了。
“随你便,”拉尼尔说,他在维利尔斯和他的吧凳刚刚占据的吧台空位旁坐了下来。“你要弄完这个吗?”
“打架?不,不会,”维利尔斯躺在地上说。
“不,我是说这杯酒,”拉尼尔说。维利尔斯抬起头几英寸。拉尼尔朝他晃了晃那杯几乎全满的波本威士忌。
“请便,”维利尔斯说。当他放松颈部肌肉时,他的头又落到了地板上,发出一声轻响。
拉尼尔一饮而尽,然后示意酒保再来一杯。酒保迅速地走了过来,重新斟满酒杯,然后迅速离开,尽量避免被卷入这场争吵。如果维利尔斯向酒保挥拳,酒保知道他必须挨这一拳。他可不想这样。
“这和超统-艾瑞卡的交易有关吗?”拉尼尔问道。
“一群自以为是的混蛋,”维利尔斯咒骂道,依然躺在地上。“试图告诉我该怎么做。我知道该怎么做,我是理查德他妈的维利尔斯。”
“那你打算怎么办?”拉尼尔问。
“哦,可能什么都不做。他们是混蛋,但他们是好混蛋。他们在欧洲会给大L
(译注:指洛菲尔)带来很大的压力。我只是讨厌和他们打交道。至少他们没有试图杀我。”
“就你所知。”拉尼尔说。
“这不是他们的风格,”维利尔斯说。“我们在派对上相处得很好,但一到谈生意的时候,事情就变得很棘手。这是个大麻烦。”
又一个安打,又一个跑垒。24比3,红袜队领先。谈话稍作停顿。
过了一会儿,维利尔斯清了清嗓子。"我想明白了,"他说,只是口齿有些不清。
“什么?”拉尼尔问,心里想这会是真知灼见还是只有醉汉才能明白的东西。
“那个混蛋丹克瓦尔特,”维利尔斯仍然躺在地上。“他搞了我。”
拉尼尔觉得这话没道理。丹克瓦尔特在新星科技IPO和公司法院颁发欧米茄命令几天后就被解决了。“在我看来是你搞了他,”拉尼尔说。“他的资产被没收,他的组织变成了废墟。而且他自己也被轨道武器炸死了。”
“问题不在于他发生了什么,而在于我发生了什么,”维利尔斯说。
“你发生了什么?”拉尼尔看向维利尔斯,反问道。“你的敌人被消灭了,你的公司是世界第三大公司,你没有债务,现金储备充足。问题是什么?”
“我输了,”维利尔斯说。
拉尼尔皱了皱眉头,走到维利尔斯旁边,用一只手把他从地上拉起来。他又拉来一张吧凳,让维利尔斯坐回吧台前的原位。“我不能和躺在地上的人谈话,”他解释道。
维利尔斯马上又点了一杯酒。酒杯被瞬间倒满,然后酒保再次迅速地消失了。
“在富积与中臣和山名的那些年是我生命中最糟糕的几年,”维利尔斯说。“每天早晨醒来,我都不知道自己会不会被其中一个人暗杀。开董事会时,我们之间的保镖多得可以排成一排。年度会议上有成千上万的愚蠢股东提问,要求我对每件事都给出答案,甚至包括我一天内放屁的次数。我无法出售自己公司股票,因为没有人有足够的钱购买它,即使有,出售它的行为也会导致股东抛售。然后我还要应对我们收购公司的新高管。超统-艾瑞卡的人是最糟糕的——因为他们有一半的时间是对的。混蛋。我不需要他们总是给我泼冷水。”
拉尼尔点了点头。
“丹克瓦尔特迫使我们进行IPO,”维利尔斯说。“当新星科技还是私人公司时,经营它简直就是天堂。现在我又回到了原点。我身处地狱。”
拉尼尔一言不发。他无法反驳这个评价。他有些惊讶地发现自己也有同样的感觉。这真让人沮丧。
“顺便说一句,打了你很抱歉,”拉尼尔点头,朝维利尔斯脸上迅速肿起的瘀伤点了点头。
“会好的,”维利尔斯说。“谢谢你做我的挚友。”
“随时恭候,”拉尼尔回应道,眼睛看着全息屏幕上的比赛,又喝了一口波本。
维利尔斯注意到吧台后面的镜子里有东西。他站起来,凑到对面,仔细端详着自己的脸。“你戴的是什么戒指?”他问,看着印在他左眉上的戒指反面印记。
“1906年的世界大赛戒指。”
“哦,”维利尔斯说。“我没想到你是个棒球爱好者。”
“你觉得做洋基队球迷很难,那你应该试试这个,”拉尼尔指了指他戴着戒指的手指说。
维利尔斯举起右手,伸出他戴着戒指的手指。“2013年。洋基队最后一次赢得世界大赛。”
“尽管哭诉吧。”拉尼尔翻了个白眼,脸上露出一丝苦笑。
全息屏幕上,红袜队又一记大满贯飞过绿色怪物墙。第六局看起来不会很快结束。
劇透 - :
OCTOBER, 2066
Miles Lanier hadn’t seen Richard Villiers this drunk in awhile, not since the previous year.
Lanier had gotten the call just after midnight. Villier’s personal assistant, whose name Lanier still couldn’t remember, called him around midnight asking him to come out to get Villiers again. He insisted that this time it was far worse. Lanier hoped that wasn’t the case. There was something about October that just seemed to get underneath Villiers’ skin, he thought. Probably had something to do with the annual trashing of his beloved Yankees by the Red Sox.
The vast nightclub was as silent and empty, having been cleared out hours ago by Villiers’ credstick. Villiers sat at the mahogany bar on the far side, in nearly the same spot as he had last year. On the trid, the Red Sox were playing the Yankees in the ALCS. The sportscasters were already calling this game the Boston Massacre. It was 21-3 Sox, the sixth inning. The Yankees pitcher, Tyrone Magnusson, had melted down in the first inning and the manager had left him out on the mound out of spite. Novatech New Fenway park was jam packed, the crowd cheering every play as if it were still a close game. Sox fans loved seeing the Yankees embarrassed. They cheered for every run even though the score was nearly completely pointless with a double-digit lead in the 6th.
Another Red Sox home run landed in the stands. Villiers slumped over with disgust. Lanier came up behind him and gently put his arm on Villiers shoulder. Villiers swung around sharply and took a swing at Lanier, who dodged it as if he weren’t even trying and returned fire. Lanier hit Villiers so hard that he flew out of his barstool, crashing into a heap of broken chairs and table almost 20 feet away.
“What the hell was that for?” asked Lanier, raising an eyebrow, unaware of the fact that he was standing in a boxer’s fighting stance. Years of burned-in training were responsible for that.
For a moment Lanier feared that he’d knocked Villiers unconscious. His head was tilted back, his eyes angled toward the ceiling. A deep sigh however told him that Villiers just wasn’t moving. Lanier relaxed his stance. “You need a hand up?”
“I think I’ll just lie here for awhile if that’s ok,” responded Villiers weakly. Another cheer went up from the crowd at Fenway as another runner scored.
“Fine by me,” said Lanier, who sat down next to the vacant spot at the bar recently occupied by Villiers and his bar stool. “Are you going to finish this?”
“The fight? No, probably not,” said Villiers from his heap the floor.
“No, I mean this drink,” said Lanier. Villiers raised his head a few inches. Lanier wiggled a mostly-full glass of bourbon at him.
“Be my guest,” said Villiers. There was a light thump as he relaxed his neck muscles and his head hit the floor again.
Lanier drained the glass, then signaled to the bartender for another. The bartender came over quickly, refilled the glass, and stole away, trying to avoid getting brought into the argument somehow. If Villiers took a swing at the bartender, the bartender knew he would have to take the hit. He wanted no part of that.
“So is this because of the Transys-Erika deal?” inquired Lanier.
“Bunch of opinionated assholes,” swore Villiers without moving from the floor. “Trying to tell me how to run things. I know how to run things, I’m Richard fucking Villiers for chrissakes.”
“What are you going to do about it?” asked Lanier.
“Oh, probably nothing. They’re assholes but they’re good assholes. They’re going to give the Big L a good run for his money over there in Europe. I just hate having to deal with them. At least they’re not trying to kill me.”
“As far as you know,” said Lanier.
“Not their style,” said Villiers. “We get along great when we’re out partying, it’s when it comes down to business that things get rough. It’s a giant pain in the ass.”
Another base hit, another run. 24-3 Sox. The conversation paused briefly.
After a few moments, Villiers cleared his throat. “I figured it out,” he said, his speech only slightly slurred.
“What’s that?” asked Lanier, wondering if this was going to be true insight or something that only made sense if you were drunk.
“That bastard Dankwalther,” said Villiers, still on the floor. “He got me.”
That didn’t make sense to Lanier. Dankwalther had been taken care of days after the Novatech IPO and Corporate Court Omega Order. “Seems to me like you got him,” said Lanier. “His assets have been seized, his organization is in ruins. And he was nuked from orbit.”
“It’s not what happened to him, it’s what happened to me,” said Villiers.
“What happened to you?” asked Lanier rhetorically as he looked over at Villiers. “Your enemy is destroyed, your corporation is the third largest in the world, you have no debt and ample cash reserves. What’s the problem?”
“I’ve lost,” said Villiers.
Lanier scowled, walked over to Villiers and picked him up off the ground with one arm. He pulled up another bar stool and sat Villiers down at the bar in his original spot. “I can’t have conversations with people lying on the floor,” he explained.
Villiers immediately ordered another drink. It was filled in a flash, then the bartender vanished quickly again.
“Those years at Fuchi with Nakatomi and Yamana were the worst years of my life,” said Villiers. “Waking up each morning not knowing if I would be assassinated by one or the other. The board meetings with enough bodyguards between us to field a platoon. Annual meetings with thousands of imbecile shareholder questions, demanding answers for everything down to the number of times I farted in a given day. Not being able to sell stock in my own company because no one had enough money to purchase it, and even if they did the mere act of selling it would cause a shareholder sell-off. Then there’s dealing with all these new executives in the companies we purchased. The TransysErika guys are the worst of the lot—because half the time they’re right. Jerks. Like I need that thrown in my face all the time.”
Lanier nodded.
“Dankwalther forced us into the IPO,” said Villiers. “Running Novatech when it was private was heaven. Now I’m back to square one again. I’m in hell.”
Lanier said nothing. He couldn’t argue with that assessment. He was somewhat surprised to discover that part of him felt the same way. That was depressing.
“Sorry about the eye, by the way,” said Lanier, nodding toward the rapidly swelling bruise on Villiers’ face.
“It’ll heal,” said Villiers. “Thanks for being a good friend.”
“Anytime,” replied Lanier, taking another sip of bourbon, eyes on the trid.
Villiers noticed something in the mirror on the bar behind the counter. He stood up, leaned across, and looked closer at his face. “What kind of ring is that you’re wearing?” he asked, looking at its reverse imprint just about his left eyebrow.
“World Series ring. 1906.”
“Oh,” said Villiers. “I didn’t realize you were a baseball fan.”
“You think being a Yankees fan is tough, you should try this on,” said Lanier, pointing to his ring finger.
Villiers held up his right hand, ring finger extended. “2013. The last time the Yankees won.”
“Cry me a river,” said Lanier, rolling his eyes with a slight grin on his face.
On the trid, another Red Sox grand slam sailed over the Green Monster. It didn’t look like the sixth inning was going to end anytime soon.