Author's Note - Please read from Chapter 1 to make sense of this. This is not a quick stroke story. There will be sexy-times, but they will only happen as the story's pace dictates, and that won't start quick.
All characters participating in sexual activities are 18 or older.
*****
Chapter 39
After a brief confusion getting everyone into vehicles, the convoy headed off to check out the new building. Neither Tauriz nor Ray detected any unwonted interest in their travels from ground vehicles, fixed cameras, drones, or satellites. Ray was a little concerned this implied they were missing something that was allowing the government to keep track of them, and Tauriz was unable to determine what, if anything, was there.
Arriving at the building, Paul in the lead vehicle typed in a code at a little kiosk outside the main gates while the rest of the convoy waited. The right-hand gate opened smoothly, clearly kept well maintained. There was plenty of parking for all the vehicles in the 'guest' lot in front of the building, with a more extensive 'staff' plot off around the corner of the building beyond a loading dock sticking out from the side of the building.
Unlocking the double glass front doors, Paul led them in. A spry older gentleman met them, rising from an office chair behind what appeared to be a receptionist's desk. "Mr. Boch," he greeted Paul, "These are the people you called about?"
"Yes, Stephens, it is. Ray, may I introduce Harry Stephens, the building manager we hired to keep this place shipshape. He's done a good job for us on this tasking, and I'd recommend you keep him on if you purchase the building."
"Mr. Stephens, a pleasure to meet you. Please, call me Ray," Ray said as he shook hands. Harry had a heck of a firm grip for an older gent.
"Well then, Ray, please call me Harry."
"Gladly. So - what're the best and worst things about this building, in your opinion, Harry?"
"Best is that you'd have quite a bit of room, between the two unfinished basements and all the efficiencies upstairs. The two worst are that it's unfurnished, the lowest two basements are just big concrete rooms at this point, not even lights beyond the bare minimum down there. Perhaps the biggest issue is that everything relies on just two elevators which aren't redundant, so one failure and you've got people climbing up and down emergency ladders."
"No other mechanical, plumbing, or electrical issues?"
"Those we found we've fixed thus far, Ray. There might be something a little wonky with the pumps down on the lowest basement level because we've never really put them to a serious test - no one has extensively used this place since they were put in."
"It's been a contingency plan, a backup location we could activate fairly quickly if we needed to, Ray," Paul explained. "As such, getting it up and ready was not the real priority, but keeping it ready was."
"Makes sense. Continuity of Operations or something else, Paul?"
"Other options, Ray. Frankly, we had indications that something of interest might happen in this area for quite some time, and Mr. Boch himself took an interest. I'd frankly be unsurprised if he showed up at some point here to meet you."
"THE Mr. Boch? He's still active in the company?"
"Oh, yes, very. I don't think he knows quite how to stop working, which is something of a concern for those of us who support him."
"I see. I think I'd quite like to meet him - he sounds like a fascinating character."
"He is that, Ray," was Paul's deadpan response.
"You mentioned indications that there'd be something interesting going on in this area. What kind of indications?"
"I don't know, frankly. It was a closed board meeting, and the notes are still close-hold last I checked."
"I see. Definitely want to meet Mr. Boch. Harry, were there any plans put together to create a redundant elevator system?"
"Yes, but the price put the kibosh on that."
"After we've explored a bit, I think I'd like to see those plans and the pricing."
"I've got them in the office, let me go rustle them up while you poke about. Got all the circuit breakers turned on and the HVAC running, so there may be some dust, but all the lights will work."
"Great, thanks for that, Harry."
"Just part of the job, Ray, no problem."
"So, if I remember correctly, the elevator's at the back of the building. Let's go exploring, folks - we'll meet back up here in, say, thirty minutes? That enough time, you think?"
"That should work for us, Ray," Holger said. "We'll have a team check the basements - we'd thought we'd commandeer one for a barracks if you end up buying this place."
"You should probably think a bit bigger than just a barracks. Maybe consider including a small but well-stocked doctor's office, a galley or mess, and an open day room. I don't think we want to shoehorn your people in cheek by jowl - this is likely to be a longer contract."
"Understood, and we'd planned on some creature comforts from our folks' perspective. I'd suggest reconsidering the doctor's office down by the barracks, though - troops can get feisty sometimes, it'd probably be better somewhere else."
"Thanks for that, good catch. Think about where you'd suggest putting it while you look around."
Ray, Tauriz, Jessica, and Jennifer took the first elevator ride up to the top floor. They stepped out onto an industrial carpet pathway leading down the middle of a large room with a rubberized floor. Two of the walls were mirrored. Jennifer mentioned, "We'd planned to turn this space into a gym, but haven't invested in the gear. Harry has a few older quotes to fill the space with appropriate gear. It wasn't all that much, just not an immediate requirement."
"You folks seem to have gone to some great lengths with this space already," Ray said.
"We've been building it out over time, under Mr. Boch's direction. It's been a minor drain on the bottom line, but given how good he's been for the overall bottom line, no one has felt up to challenge him on what some viewed as a minor eccentricity. He's too good at our line of business."
"Where does Mr. Boch reside? If I am going anywhere near where he is, I'd like to take the time to meet the man."