Max looked up and down the street nervously. There was nothing to see but a long row of large, nigh-identical houses, each one hidden behind a towering hedge and a foreboding gate. The suburbs. Max hated it here. It was too damn quiet. Why did all these stupid rich people need to live so far away from each other? Why were they so scared of anyone walking less than a hundred yards from their front door? What were they hiding?
Well, Max knew the answer to that. They were all a bunch of crooks.
Which made it all the more uncomfortable that she was standing there, in front of one of those too-big houses, waiting for someone to open the gate.
"Fuck this," she grunted. "If this bitch is gonna keep me waiting, I'm leaving."
The man standing next to her sighed and reached up to wipe away his brow sweat. "Max, as your lawyer, I very, very strongly advise you not to do that."
"Or what?" Max snarled. She didn't like being told what to do, and she knew when someone was condescending to her.
"Or," the lawyer replied, "Ms. Wexler will file a formal police report, you'll go to trial, and probably land yourself a month or two in prison. We've been over this, remember?"
Max rolled her eyes. She hadn't been expecting much from a public defender, but she'd still been hoping for better than this - than giving into the stupid, power-tripping whims of some asshole CEO.
She didn't regret keying and spray-painting Rosalind Wexler's car. It had been a great statement - anarchist symbols and slogans on a CEO's ostentatious gas-guzzler. She only regretted getting caught. Frankly, it was bullshit that people were making such a big deal about it. Rosalind Wexler was a multi-millionaire. A car was nothing to her. She probably owned a whole warehouse of them. But even so, Max had found herself hauled in by the pigs and threatened with vandalism and property destruction charges. Until, that is, Wexler's lawyer had contacted Max's with an unusual proposition.
"Just remember," her lawyer added. "Two weeks. Two weeks, and you're out. No jail. No record. It's a sweetheart deal, Max."
It didn't sound that way to her.
At that moment, the gate clicked, and a tinny voice sounded from the nearby speaker panel.
"Enter," it said.
Max's lawyer pushed the gate open and beckoned Max inside.
The short walk up the driveway gave Max ample time to gawk at Wexler's house. It wasn't as big as some of the others on the block, but even from the outside, it was clear that it was dripping in every imaginable luxury and amenity. The punk girl idly wondered how much a place like this cost. Five million? Ten? It was obscene.
Rosalind Wexler met them at the door. She was dressed immaculately, in an expensive suit worthy of a CEO, and her hair was up in a tight bun. She sounded pleasant as she invited Max and her lawyer inside her house, but Max knew better than to trust in that. Every CEO had a PR face, it didn't make them any less of a scumbag.
"Thank you for having us, Ms. Wexler," Max's lawyer said. He was annoyingly eager to please. "I'll be on my way just as soon as the paperwork gets signed."
He reached into his briefcase and retrieved a few documents, and handed them over. He offered the CEO a cheap, ballpoint pen, and then looked embarrassed when she plucked a gilded fountain pen out of her own pocket.
"Perhaps we should go over the, ah, details of the arrangement just one more time," he suggested nervously. "Just so everyone is clear."
"Of course," Wexler agreed, scanning and signing the papers. "It's very simple. I waive my right to press charges against Max - provided that, every day for the next two weeks, she comes to my house to perform some chores for me. Nine to five, for fourteen days. I will even pay her for her labor."
Max bristled.
"It's very generous, Ms. Wexler," Max's lawyer said. Max snorted. He'd probably kiss her shoes if she asked.
"I simply believe in the power of rehabilitation," Wexler replied, with a winning smile. "My hope is that, through a little hard work, Max can come to learn that a life of domesticity and hard work is something to aspire to. Rather than, well..." She glanced sideways at the punk. "Besides, I could use the help around the house while I'm at work."
Now, Max's very blood boiled, especially when her lawyer started nodding like a witless donkey. She wanted to spit on something, just to show her contempt. Preferably Wexler's face.
"Max? Is that agreeable?"
Max glared daggers at her lawyer, before swiping the pen he offered and scrawling her name on the contract.
"Excellent!" her lawyer cried, a little too excitedly. His relief was palpable, and it was clear he was keen to leave before Max made another mess he'd have to clean up. "I'll be on my way. Good day, Ms. Wexler."
He saw himself out of Wexler's house as quickly as he could.
"Max," Wexler began, smiling. "Why don't you come with me?"
She beckoned Max into her spacious dining room. Max considered refusing, just out of spite, but she figured she was going to have to make a few sacrifices to get through the next couple of weeks. She stalked after her host and slouched into one of the dining room chairs. The table was a preposterously imposing slab of dark wood, with a strange metal box sitting on top of it.
"I'll talk to you about your duties in a moment," Wexler told her sternly. "But first... Max, don't you have anything nicer to wear? Any dresses, perhaps?"
Max stared at the woman incredulously. "Fuck you."