My name is Cynthia
Alexander. I think of myself as an
independent, assertive, and sometimes a cold-calculating woman. I usually know what I want and do what ever
it takes to get it. But how I got myself
into this mess is a bit of a mystery to me.
Do I start with my
childhood? No, this isn’t analysis. The lousy time I had at the high school
prom? No, just because that established my
distrust for men in general and for Albert Hanson in particular doesn’t really
have much to do with the mess I’m in now.
The regular beatings I got from my husband? No, that’s a whole book in itself and the
result is the same: I don't really trust men.
Let me start, one day seven
months ago. I got up early, put on my
most expensive, tailored suit and took the bus downtown. My briefcase was empty except for a Tiger’s
Milk bar and three copies of my current resume.
It wasn’t that I had an interview
or had even targeted a company, I just was ready to
take on a new project. I’d been
freelancing as a Software Project Manager for about 10 years. Taking only the offers that met my current
list of challenges. The last project
took 80-hour weeks for 6 months and then several months of clean up. That had ended about two weeks ago. I was surprised to find that I was looking
for another challenge so soon, but I’m not very happy when I don’t have a job.
I always trusted my instincts
when looking for a new project. I’d
learned my trade at a major telecommunications company where the concept of
efficiency was wasted on good-old boys in corner offices who remembered the
business as manual switches and plug-boards.
This environment gave me the freedom to read all the books, take the
classes, and experiment with projects that would be killed two months after
implementation.
Anyway, once downtown, I
sauntered through the financial district looking at the buildings and all the
suited-brief-cases hustling to their offices.
I’d been working on construction sites too long to want to go back to
the games boys in tailored suits play.
After the financial district came
abandoned buildings and new construction.
I stood watching the cranes and hard hats, but didn’t seem even remotely
compelled to go to the project office and offer to set up a decent computer
tracking system for them,
As usual, because I had left the
house with perfect hair, the Seattle
mist turned to light rain. Swell, must
be the perfect day to get a job, I mumbled to myself.
After the hard-hat district was
an area I’d never thought of as a job market.
The storefronts were full of hand painted clothing, wood art, Disney
prints, and so many galleries it was hard to believe there could be any more
art in the back room.
My saunter slowed to a curious,
window-shoppers pace. The stores were
just opening. I stood in front of one
shop watching a petite brunette rearranging hand polished silver jewelry.
“Nice pieces, huh?” A man’s smooth tenor voice behind me startled
me out of my stupor. “I come in to work
early several mornings a week, just so I can see what’s new.”
I simply nodded, without looking
at him, I think I might have pretended to smile. He grunted and said, “You don’t look like you
are a serious window shopper. I’ve never
seen you in the square before.” I looked
down at my feet and kept my mouth shut.
“What do you do?” His persistence
was charming. Irritating, but charming.
When I looked up, I saw a man in
his early 40’s dressed in faded jeans and a black leather biker’s jacket. His attire didn’t match his $500 brief case
and the Rolex peaking out from under the sleeves of his jacket, but that’s the
thing about truly wealthy people, they dress however they please.
“I’m an efficiency expert.” I lied, but he’s a total stranger so I
couldn’t see the harm. “I am hired to
cut out the excess, get the job done better, faster, cheaper. You got anything you need chopped off?” I let my eyes slowly lower to just below his
belt. He didn’t even flinch.
“Know anything about
computers?” The corners of his mouth
turned up.
“Some.” There was a short silence, while we both
reloaded.
“Ever work with KIDS – computer
geeks that have the social skills of a kindergarten play ground? I’ve got a pigpen I can’t count on, because
they speak a language that is foreign to me.”
He looked at me, licked his lips, and added, “Interested?”
So we headed up the stairs; above
the jewelry store, to his office. Gregg
Sullivan owned a software development company called Software Anonymous. He seemed genuinely pleased that I’d never
heard of them. I’d only worked in the Seattle
area for a couple years, so I wasn’t surprised.
His philosophy was that the really interesting software was written to
make something else work and when it did its job well, it never got
noticed. There were awards and plaques
on the walls that told me someone noticed the product Gregg produced; and they
liked it.
As we walked through the maze of
desks, I became intrigued by the atmosphere; jeans and T-shirt