19
MARCH 26, 2010
FRIDAY, 9:30 a.m.
FRIDAY, 9:30 a.m.
Hello, Miss Bourse,” Ben said
brightly.
“Good morning, sir!” Clair said, pulling her eyes
away from a novel she was surreptitiously reading behind her
monitor. No one had come in during the previous half-hour, and she
essentially had nothing to do.
“Is Carl in yet?” Ben asked as he walked by the
receptionist, hardly slowing his rapid gait.
“Yes, he is!” Clair called after the CEO.
Poking his head into Carl’s open office, Ben said,
“Can I see you?” Without waiting for an answer, Ben continued down
to his own office. He hung up his coat in his closet before sitting
behind his desk. The late-March morning sunlight blazed into the
room through the open door into Jacqueline’s office that faced
east. The back of his black leather desk chair was hot from its
power. Ben called out hello to Jacqueline, whose desk was out of
view, and she returned his greeting.
By the time Ben moved the latest batch of journals
to the side and cleaned the center of his desk, Carl entered and
took his usual seat front and center. With sun streaming though the
open door into Jacqueline’s office, he had to squint.
“Are you making any progress with a possible iPS
RAPID deal?” Ben asked, forgoing any small talk. Ben had been
thinking of little else to avoid obsessing about Satoshi presumably
enjoying himself in Washington, D.C., where Ben was now convinced
he’d most likely gone.
“As much as can be expected in so little time. I
sent them a number of e-mail inquiries last evening, a fraction of
which they have already responded to. I think I’ll hear back on
most of them today. The remainder on Monday, for certain.”
“Has anything so far changed your initial
impressions?”
“No, not really,” Carl responded. “I think they
will respond favorably to an offer to purchase. What price range, I
have no idea. My sense is that these guys are true researchers and
not necessarily businessmen, and would like to cash out early in
the game. Maybe they fear something else might come down the pike
and best their patent.”
“Could happen,” Ben agreed. “But my intuition tells
me the same thing. I think it’s time to pounce, especially with our
market value sure to go up, thanks to our licensing deal with
Satoshi. Are you working on that as well?”
“I don’t have time,” Carl joked. “Of course I am.
I’ll be speaking with a number of analysts today to see where they
think we are, valuewise.”
“All right,” Ben said, indicating that the short
meeting was over. “Keep me informed. I want to move on this to take
advantage of our angel investors drooling to get more
equity.”
Carl got up and stretched. “It’s an enviable
position to be in, I must say. As a CFO, I’ve never had the
pleasure of this kind of situation with access to seemingly
limitless capital.”
Carl got almost to the door to the hall when Ben
called after him. “I have a ten-K training race tomorrow, so I’ll
be leaving early. I’ll check in with you before I do.”
Carl gave Ben a thumbs-up sign before turning back
around to leave.
“Carl,” Ben called out again. “I forgot to ask—have
you seen Satoshi yet this morning?” Actually, Ben had not
forgotten. Feeling superstitious yet again, he’d hoped that Carl
would have brought it up. By having to ask, Ben was certain he was
going to get a negative reply, and he did.
“Not yet. Did you ask Clair, in case he slipped by
me?”
“I didn’t,” Ben admitted.
“He didn’t come in yet,” Jacqueline yelled out of
sight from her office. “I asked Clair when I came in, and the
answer was no, and he hasn’t come in while I’ve been here.”
“There you go,” Carl said. “He’s not here yet.”
Carl touched his forehead in a kind of salute, and disappeared down
the hall.
Ben shook his head with disappointment and a touch
of paranoia. Why was Satoshi doing this to him? Ben then glanced at
the will and the other trust documents making him Satoshi’s son’s
guardian as well as the trustee if something were to happen to the
parents. Under normal circumstances, they would have provided him a
modicum of reassurance. But they didn’t. The problem was that they
had not yet been signed by Yunie-chan, Satoshi’s wife.
With sudden determination, Ben reached into his
jacket pocket and pulled out his cell phone. With the same sense of
superstition that had kept him from asking Carl about Satoshi, he’d
yet to try Satoshi’s number that day. Ignoring the feeling, he
dialed Satoshi’s number. The moment he heard the beginning of the
generic outgoing message, he voided the call. Instead, he dialed
Michael Calabrese’s office number. As usual, he didn’t get the
placement agent, and instead had to leave a message on the man’s
voicemail. As irritating as it was under the immediate
circumstance, at least he was confident he’d get a call back, in
contrast to the messages he had been leaving Satoshi.
Impulsively, Ben picked up the trustee document and
turned to the signature page. There was Satoshi’s signature, along
with his inkan seal. The signature was nothing more than a
wild scribble. Ben had learned that it was the reddish-orange
inkan that was the important part, along with the two
witnesses, who were both iPS USA employees. There was also Pauline
Wilson’s signature as the notary. The only thing missing was
Yunie-chan’s scribble and her inkan seal.
All of a sudden Ben felt a bit less anxious, even
though the documents had not been signed by the wife. He thought
there was a reasonably good chance Saboru Fukuda, with Vinnie
Dominick’s encouragement, could have the needed signature faked, as
well as an inkan seal. He smiled at his paranoia. Next he looked at
the wife’s will. That could be faked as well, if needed, making Ben
both trustee and guardian. With a comforting exhale, Ben realized
if the worst-case scenario was to occur and something untoward was
to happen to Satoshi with or without his wife, iPS USA would not
find itself out in the cold vis-à-vis the license agreement.
Shigeru would own them, and Ben would be the trustee.
Snatching up the legal papers, Ben passed from his
office into Jacqueline’s. “I’d like you to put these papers in the
safe,” he said. “Put them with Satoshi’s lab books.”
“Will do!” Jacqueline responded while covering the
telephone mouthpiece with her left hand.
“What’s my schedule for today?” Ben asked. He’d
been so preoccupied with working himself up over Satoshi and the
new opportunity represented by iPS RAPID, he’d completely forgotten
his planned schedule for the day. Of course, forgetting his agenda
was hardly unusual for Ben.
“It’s blank,” Jacqueline said. “Do you remember
telling me not to schedule today because of your race in the
morning? You said you wanted to leave early. I took you at your
word.”
“I remember now,” Ben said happily, like a teenager
hearing that school had been canceled.
With a spring back in his step, Ben returned to his
desk. He was looking forward to the race in the morning as the
official beginning of his training for the Hawaiian Ironman event
on the fifth of June. Picking up the top magazine from the newly
constituted biomedical journal stack, Ben eased back and lifted his
legs. He was just getting comfortable when the phone rang. It was
Clair out at the reception desk with the message that Michael
Calabrese was on the line.
With considerably less anxiousness than he’d felt
when he’d put in the call, Ben answered.
“I know you called, but I have some possibly good
news,” Michael said eagerly. “Remember I mentioned that there was
another potential angel investor for iPS USA.”
“Of course,” Ben said.
“Well, he’s heard of the contract signing we had
with Satoshi through Vinnie Dominick and he wants in. He already
called me this morning and said he wants in to the same degree as
Dominick and Fukuda. Since I didn’t want to piss those guys off, I
called and asked if they minded, since it will dilute them, but
they don’t mind. The reality is you guys are sitting on a lot more
capital today than you were yesterday.”
“It’s coming at a good time, as we are actually
considering making an offer for iPS RAPID in San Diego instead of
just negotiating a licensing agreement. We think there’s a good
chance they might jump at an offer.”
“Well, whatever you decide, the money will be
there,” Michael said. “Now, I know you called me, so what’s
up?”
“I was calling you about Satoshi,” Ben said. “I
haven’t seen him since he signed the contract.”
“Is that unusual?”
“I suppose not. One time he disappeared on a trip
to Niagara Falls without telling me, and Carl said that he
mentioned to him he was thinking of taking his family to
Washington, D.C.”
“Did you try to call him?”
“Of course. Many times.”
“Did you try to call him when he went to Niagara
Falls?”
“I did, and he didn’t answer then, either.”
“Then I wouldn’t worry. He wants to get away once
in a while and celebrate his liberation. He told me when he first
arrived at the signing the day before yesterday that what he liked
best about living in America is the freedom to do what he wanted
rather than always doing what was expected of him.”
“But I had specifically asked him the day of the
signing to either come to the office or call me the following day,
yesterday, because he had reminded me to find laboratory space for
him, which I have now done. He was also to pick up some documents
for his wife to sign, but he never showed up or called. He hasn’t
even shown up today, at least not so far.”
“Well, it doesn’t sound worrisome to me, if that’s
what you are asking.”
“I suppose not,” Ben agreed. “But it makes me
uncomfortable. What I was going to ask you was to get in touch with
Vinnie Dominick and ask where Vinnie and his guys had placed
Satoshi and his family. You said it’s probably one of their
collection of safe houses.”
“That was my understanding.”
“Would you mind asking for me? I’d like the address
and the phone number, if there is one. I’ll feel better if I know
how to get in touch with him if need be, and he’s not answering his
cell. I certainly would not tell anyone.”
“They don’t like to reveal any of their safe houses
for obvious reasons, the main being because it’s then no longer a
safe house. I know Satoshi was told under no uncertain terms not to
reveal where he was temporarily living. I know Fukuda-san is
arranging more permanent housing. Anyway, I’ll ask and explain your
reasons. I mean, they are already entrusting you with a heck of a
lot of their hard-earned money. I can’t see why they wouldn’t trust
you with the address of one of their safe houses.”
“It will let me sleep better,” Ben confessed.