Chapter 13
July 20, 2010 through 2012
The drone demonstration with the CIA evaluation team was successful, and we were the only team to achieve the specified requirements. This contract was worth $38 million to our company, and our development team was honored with company-wide recognition and a very healthy bonus, which I donated to the Cathleen Foundation.
These little drones are now in use many places in the world and are proving critical in several hotspots to find the bad guys. They work in close to find the targets and watch as the Predator drones take over and do their job.
Emily was very busy. She spent additional time in Nashville with Bob and Judy until the Stanford classes began. Her class schedule seemed to take over her life, but she loved it. Although in computer science, she was allowed to take an elective course each semester. Emily used that opportunity to learn about welfare case management, health and human services, adult and child psychology and business management. All would be useful for the Foundation work.
Emily found three projects to fund in late 2010. She was at the airport one day and saw a wounded soldier arriving from war in a wheelchair. He was missing both legs. His wife, a three-year-old son, and her parents greeted him as only a loving and proud family can do. Several bystanders shook his hand and thanked him for his sacrifice.
Emily stood nearby and heard a conversation that convinced her to get involved. She approached the grandmother and handed her a card with the Foundation's phone number. Emily whispered to her that she would like to help this young couple if they would let her.
Four days later, the young mother called and they talked about the needs they had with modifications to their house. Emily never revealed her full name, only the Foundation name. Not once did the young mother ask for anything for herself or her son.
Emily engaged a contractor who specialized in handicap access and accommodation, and the work was done at no charge to the young couple. The Foundation paid $61,980 and also gave $25,000 to the young family to help with any other needs they had.
The wounded warrior called her after the modifications were done. His words touched her so much that she cried that night when recounting what he said. That family went into her diary for follow-up and will be there for many years. The need down the road will be the education funding for the son.
The second project was a student Emily befriended one day at the University Center. The young woman was sitting alone, obviously distressed, and staring at the floor. Emily sat near her and asked whether she could help. After a few awkward moments, the woman opened up. Emily has that influence on people.
The young woman's father had passed away from a heart attack several weeks earlier, and she was being forced to leave Stanford after the current semester. There was no money for her to continue. Emily wrote down her name and said that she would be praying for her.
The next day, Emily went to the finance office and paid for the remainder of this young woman's undergraduate studies. The young woman never knew Emily's full name, and they never saw each other again. The check from the Foundation to Stanford University was for $94,820.
The third project involved a police officer's family. Emily saw on the news that an officer had been killed during a traffic stop. He had served three tours in the US Army in Iraq and Afghanistan and had survived only to return and be killed on the streets of San Francisco. The TV reporter indicated that he had two young children. The widow's brother was interviewed, and a few things he said encouraged Emily to take action.
She called the TV station and talked to the reporter who had covered the story. After Emily explained what her Foundation did, the reporter gave her the widow's phone number. The next day Emily called and gave her condolences and asked if the widow could meet with her. Again, only the Foundation's name was used.
The widow had a number of health issues, and the officer's insurance survivor benefit would not be sufficient to cover the costs. The Foundation stepped in and worked with the police union rep to determine the health care costs that would not be covered. The Foundation made arrangements with the widow's primary care provider to pay these expenses.
This is an ongoing need, and the Foundation has paid $6,200 so far. This family has also been added to the diary because of Emily's concern for the young children's future. Although there was a large life insurance benefit paid, it would not be enough to provide a quality education for the children.
As time allowed, Emily visited with David and Jill in Los Angeles and we had them up several times over weekends. Both impressed her, and their love has grown. Jill couldn't have children so there were no half-brothers or half-sisters.
The relationship I had with Emily matured. We obviously enjoyed passionate lovemaking. Her body was always inviting me to visit it seemed. We rarely showered together... but when we did, it was exciting.
The big change was that we spent time talking and sipping on beer or wine for hours each evening. TV was not a priority unless her Giants were playing. We would never solve all the world's problems, but we discussed a fair number of them.
Emily "elected" her dad and me to the board of directors of the Cathleen Foundation and we met over beers at least once a month to focus on new potential projects and receive updates on the diary entries.
The time demanded by the Foundation research and record keeping quickly overwhelmed Emily; so she hired Sue Morris, Brad's widow, to be the Director of Research. Sue excelled in this role and became a dear friend to all of us. Her baby boy, Bradley Michael, was born in December 2010. Sue is dating again and her new beau is an engineer like me.
David was not allowed to use FBI databases for a personal reason; but some of the information he dug up on potential projects made me wonder how he got it. He occasionally offered up a potential project discovered during his investigations and two of those were funded.
I had two major engineering team developments during 2010. One was a small robot to check under cars at border entries. It ran around under the vehicle like one of those little Roomba vacuum cleaners. Before that, the Border Patrol had only hand-held mirrors that were not very effective. Ours had excellent optics and could smell many different types of drugs. Its "nose" was almost as good as a trained dog.
The second development was a robot that operated in the sewer systems of major cities to check for blockages and buildups. People had been doing this until we demonstrated a robot that could deal with all the solids and water without failing. The rats don't seem to mind it too much and haven't yet tried to eat it.
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