Disclosure_ A Novel - Michael Crichton [156]
And she turned away.
Sanders stood at the arrivals gate at SeaTac and watched the passengers come off the Phoenix plane. Eliza came running up to him, shouting “Daddy!” as she leapt into his arms. She had a suntan.
“Did you have a nice time in Phoenix?”
“It was great, Dad! We rode horses and ate tacos, and guess what?”
“What?”
“I saw a snake.”
“A real snake?”
“Uh-huh. A green one. It was this big,” she said, stretching her hands.
“That’s pretty big, Eliza.”
“But you know what? Green snakes don’t hurt you.”
Susan came up, carrying Matthew. She had a suntan, too. He kissed her, and Eliza said, “I told Daddy about the snake.”
“How are you?” Susan said, looking at his face.
“I’m fine. Tired.”
“Is it finished?”
“Yes. It’s finished.”
They walked on. Susan slipped her arm around his waist. “I’ve been thinking. Maybe I’m traveling too much. We ought to spend more time together.”
“That’d be nice,” he said.
They walked toward the baggage claim. Carrying his daughter, feeling her small hands on his shoulder, he glanced over and saw Meredith Johnson standing at the check-in counter of one of the departure gates. She was wearing a trench coat. Her hair was pulled back. She didn’t turn and see him.
Susan said, “Somebody you know?”
“No,” he said. “It’s nobody.”
POSTSCRIPT
Constance Walsh was fired by the Seattle Post Intelligencer and sued the paper for wrongful termination and sexual discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The paper settled out of court.
Philip Blackburn was named chief counsel at Silicon Holographics of Mountain View, California, a company twice as large as DigiCom. He was later elected Chairman of the Ethics Panel of the San Francisco Bar Association.
Edward Nichols took early retirement from Conley-White Communications and moved with his wife to Nassau, Bahamas, where he worked part-time as a consultant to offshore firms.
Elizabeth “Betsy” Ross was hired by Conrad Computers in Sunnyvale, California, and soon after joined Alcoholics Anonymous.
John Conley was named Vice President for Planning at Conley-White Communications. He died in an automobile accident in Patchogue, New York, six months later.
Mark Lewyn was charged with sexual harassment under Title VII by an employee of the Design Group. Although Lewyn was cleared of the charge, his wife filed for divorce not long after the investigation was concluded.
Arthur Kahn joined Bull Data Systems in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Richard Jackson of Aldus was charged with sexual harassment under Title VII by an employee of American DataHouse, a wholesale distributor for Aldus. After an investigation, Aldus fired Jackson.
Gary Bosak developed a data encryption algorithm, which he licensed to IBM, Microsoft, and Hitachi. He became a multi-millionaire.
Louise Fernandez was appointed to the federal bench. She delivered a lecture to the Seattle Bar Association in which she argued that sexual harassment suits had become increasingly used as a weapon to resolve corporate disputes. She suggested that in the future there might be a need to revise laws or to limit the involvement of attorneys in such matters. Her speech was received coolly.
Meredith Johnson was named Vice President for Operations and Planning at IBM’s Paris office. She subsequently married the United States Ambassador to France, Edward Harmon, following his divorce. She has since retired from business.
AFTERWORD
The episode related here is based on a true story. Its appearance in a novel is not intended to deny the fact that the great majority of harassment claims are brought by women against men. On the contrary: the advantage of a role-reversal story is that it may enable us to examine aspects concealed by traditional responses and conventional rhetoric. However readers respond to this story, it is important to recognize that the behavior of the two antagonists