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Quaranteam – Book 1: Part 17


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Quaranteam – Book 1: Part 17
Andy has his interview for primetime.

Based on a post by CorruptingPower, in 25 parts. Listen to the Podcast

at Explicit Novels.



 

It turned out that a dozen women all getting ready for

television appearances was, in fact, a major operation. The master bathroom was
large enough that four of the girls could use the mirror at the same time, but
beyond that, they had to party up with "prep buddies," each making
sure they were getting themselves ready as well as their prep buddy.

Andy was, of course, ready long before anyone else was, even

with Emily, Sarah, Ash and Niko sharing him in the shower. He left the four of
them in there, although they emerged not long after, each running a hair dryer
while they applied their make up and got into their outfits.

He was glad to escape the bathroom as early as he did. The

girls were in go mode now, and the last thing he wanted to do was get in
anyone's way, so he took the time to prep the house. The house had a large
empty room that seemed like it was meant to be used as a ballroom. They'd used
it as their poker room on and off, but it was also just a nice place where lots
of people could stand around and talk. It also had French windows opening into
the garden, so the lighting of the room was excellent. Andy figured it would be
the best place for the group interviews to take place.

Katie and Nicolette helped him get enough chairs for

everyone into the room, while Jenny was prepping a large lunch for all of them,
a massive batch of jambalaya, so they would have a bit of leftovers in case the
60 Minutes crew arrived hungry. They were scheduled to arrive at one in the
afternoon, and had asked them not to make plans into the evening, so clearly
the interviews would take as long as they took.

Nicolette had been doing cleaning a bit at a time for the

last two weeks, so the only thing that really needed to get a major touch up
was Andy's writing room, which the 60 Minutes people had asked to use for their
one on one interviews, something he'd agreed to, although he was going to lock
his laptop away before they arrived. He didn't imagine they'd want to steal his
writing, but he was notoriously paranoid when it came to that sort of thing.

The cats seemed extremely confused by all the hustle and

bustle, but also seemed content to just rub up against the leg of whoever was
closest, and follow people around when it seemed like they were going from one
place to another.

Andy also took time to check in with both Tala and Jade,

making sure they doing okay and still on board with talking to 60 Minutes,
something he was glad he did.

Tala, as expected, was starting to feel the mental itch from

having been primed the day before but not yet imprinted, though she was
handling it far better than Sheridan had, even if she wasn't as far along with
it. She said she'd never felt quite so sexually frustrated before, but that it
was a great feeling to have, and that she enjoyed her body acting with wills
and wants of its own.

Jade had news for him as well. "I want you to imprint

me as soon as you're done imprinting Tala, Andy," the bubbly blonde said
to him. "And I want you to record it. Not for 60 Minutes, though, but for
my father. He has tried to control me my entire life, and I'm just friggin'
sick of it, so I want him to see that his dang control is broken, and that I'm
giving that control to another man, a better man. So you can use my phone to
make the video of it, and I don't care what it shows and what it doesn't, as
long as he sees my face when I'm taking that orgasm, when I'm starting that
imprinting process, so he knows that he can't push me around any more."
She'd been talking with a sort of intensity that he'd never seen from her
before, and he let her finish. When she stopped talking, it was almost as
thought it dawned on her how forcefully she'd been lecturing him on what to do.
"That's, that's okay, right?"

"You're sure about this, Jade?" he said, taking

her hand in his own. "I'm sure he's done some rough things over the years,
but he's still your father, and you want to be careful not to do anything
you'll come to regret."

"The only thing I regret is being that asshole's

daughter," she said, wrath in her voice. "I know it's a lot to ask,
especially since I'll be sucking you off, which means that it'll be hard not to
get your cock at least a little in the shot, but it's important to me, okay?
I'm, I'm reclaiming a part of myself that bastard's taken from me. So
you asked me earlier what I wanted, and that's what I want. And I want him to
see it while I'm imprinting, so there's no way he can talk to me about
it."

He nodded. "Alright then. You can change your mind at

any time between now and then, but if you don't, then that's what we'll do,
just for your father, just at your request. Although, you probably also want to
record a message for him to go along with it before hand, so he's not just
randomly getting that video without any context."

She bristled in mirth, nodding quickly. "Good point.

I'll record that on my phone after lunch."

"Or during the time they're doing one on one interviews

with anyone else. I know they're planning on doing smaller interviews, one with
Emily and Sarah and one with just me, but I don't know who else they're going
to want to talk to."

"If they want to talk to me, they can, and if the 49ers

organization has a problem with it, well, the heck with them, I don't have to
continue being a cheerleader for them anymore."

"Give it some thought. You've still got time."

By lunchtime, everyone was ready except for the staff, who'd

gone to get themselves ready once lunch had been served. Nobody was sure if the
60 Minutes crew would want to talk to them, but Andy felt it best to make sure
that anyone who was willing to have a conversation with Katie Couric was in a
state where they could. Nicolette had said she didn't care one way or another,
and while Katie wasn't thrilled about the idea of being interviewed, she agreed
that if Katie Couric wanted to talk to the two of them, she and Jenny would
make themselves available for it.

Over the course of lunch, it was clear the girls were doing

everything they could to keep Andy's mind off the interview, as the family got
to know both Tala and Jade better, while Whitney was still in Nicolette's
chambers, in the middle of the imprinting process, and Fiona and Moira were in
the early stages of it in the master bedroom.

Tala had decided that her first project, once she got her

workshop set up in the poolhouse, was going to be to make Andy a puzzle desk of
his very own, and once that idea had been voiced, all the girls had thoughts
and ideas on things to incorporate, with Sarah filling in suggestions based on
his books, and Aisling filling in suggestions based on his life. Niko thought
it should also incorporate all the girls' names, so that he might have a better
time remembering everyone, which made everybody laugh, simply because the
family had indeed grown so large.

They were just finishing cleaning up after lunch when the

doorbell rang, and Andy's heart felt like it stopped just a little. Ash poked
him with a smile. "It's just the media, babes," she teased.
"You'll do fine. Go say hi."

He headed up from the dining room and down to the front

door, where Nicolette was standing in the doorway, greeting the visitors.
Standing in the doorway was Katie Couric, one of the best known journalists in
America, with a couple of crew members behind her. "Hey, Ms. Couric,"
he said to her as he approached. "Welcome to my home." He held out
his hand and she seemed thankful for the normalcy of shaking hands.

"Please, Mr. Rook, call me Katie," she said,

"and thank you for inviting us for the interview. I know the President's
office had something to do with it, but you could have said no if you didn't
want to. Having a couple of famous faces like Miss Stevens and Miss Washington
selling the new normal will help the general population of the nation make more
sense out of this tragic new normal."

"Well, I'll call you Katie if you'll call me

Andy," he said. "How's your tour of New Eden been so far? Niko
mentioned you did a short interview with her at the base, although you mostly
just talked with Dr. Varma and my boy Phil."

"You're friends with Mr. Marcos?" she said.

"Is that how you got in here?"

"Well, there's a story behind that. I can tell you now,

but I suspect you'd rather get it down on camera. It's not all that long a
story, nor is it really that interesting. I suspect Phil's story was a lot more
engaging than mine will be."

"Did you get your writing room all set up for our

interview?"

"I did," he said, "and we also set up our

ballroom with chairs, so you can talk to all of us together first. I know Em
and Sarah are willing to talk to you either in their little studio, or you can
use my writing study instead. It's up to you."

"I'll have my team take a look at both locations while

we're getting set up in the ballroom. Is everyone in the house willing to take
part in the interviews?"

"Two of my partners have chosen not to take part,

simply because they aren't sure how their employers would react to it, but
everyone else in the house is willing to chat," he said, as he felt a hand
sliding onto his shoulder. He turned around to see Lauren standing behind him.

"Actually, Andy, Sheridan and I have decided we're

going to do it anyway, and if the Niners or the people at Cirque have a problem
with it, fuck'em, we'll sue their asses into the ground," the tall blonde
Aussie told him. "If this is gonna be the new normal, pretendin' like it's
not is just as bad as sayin' it ain't, so we'll be there."

"You're sure, Lauren?" he asked her, smoothing his

hand over her hip, knowing it usually soothed her nervous when she was wound
up.

She placed her hand over his and gave it a soft squeeze,

smiling at him. "Yeh, 'sides I dunno how much of management's gone at this
point already. You gambled with us, so let us have a turn at the plow fer a
change."

He leaned up and kissed her softly. "Well, I've known

you long enough, hon, to know if your mind's made up, there's no point in
trying to talk you out of it." Andy glanced back at Katie Couric,
shrugging. "Guess you get your pick of the litter then."

Behind her, the crew had started ferrying in lights, tripods

and camera equipment. While Andy had thought he'd only seen two additional
people at first, it turned out Katie Couric traveled with a crew of nine, and
there had been a second and third S U V behind the van that he hadn't seen. It
felt a little like his house was being invaded, but he did his best to not get
in anyone's way, as Nicolette started to lead a producer away, to show her
where both Andy's writing room and the actresses' little studio were located.

"C'mon, I'll take you down to the ballroom, and we can

get settled there," he said, starting to lead Katie and her two companions
down the hallway. One of them, Geraldine Amato, was the unit's head producer,
and the other, Poppy Delgato, was the lead camera woman. "Was your crew
mostly women before the plague hit?"

"Mostly," she said, "although I've got a

couple of men in here as well, and thankfully, they've been given the treatment
via their wives. My husband has been getting it through myself as well, for
about a month now."

"I'm a little surprised they let your whole crew into

New Eden," he said, as they headed down the stairs to the lower level.
"They've been fairly paranoid about letting people in, I've been told, so
I imagine you had to quarantine for a little bit after you got here."

"We did," she said, stopping to look at one of the

promotional posters on the wall, this one in particular for "The Trouble
With Werebears." She glanced over at him with that winning smile she loved
flashing on the news regularly. "In fact, Geraldine here's now sharing my
husband with me, because she didn't have anyone before hand, and needed someone
she could count on to be around while doing her job." She reached up and
tapped at the words 'New York Times Bestselling Author' on the poster. "It
says here you're a bestselling author, but I have to admit that before
preparing for this interview, I'd never heard of you."

He shrugged with a little smile. "There's leagues of

difference between a Bestselling Fiction author and a Bestselling Genre
Fiction author, I'm afraid. When you're talking non genre, you're talking
hundreds of thousands of copies, but for genre, well, drop a zero off there, so
if you're not into urban fantasy, I won't take it as a slight. Jim Butcher,
who's probably the most popular of us working in the field, only sold a couple
hundred thousand copies for his most recent Dresden Files book, and that series
has a huge following, far bigger than my little corner. Hell, I think the
reason a publisher finally took a gamble on me was that I was playing in a
similar wheelhouse and they were hoping to piggyback off his success."

"E. F. Winston is a genre writer, but her books have

sold in the hundreds of millions," Katie countered. "So clearly there
are breakout stars."

"Ah, but those are young adult books, and the teen

fiction genre has a handful of crossover success that never seemed to roll over
into other things in our genres," he sighed. "The Dagger Academy
books were definitely science fiction, but you didn't see a spike in sales for
people like John Scalzi or William Gibson when those books took off, did you?
The same for those Harry Potter books. Sold by the truckload, and yet, did many
of those kids go and read works from Roger Zelazny, Fred Saberhagen, Emma Bull,
Terry Pratchett, Steven Brust, Simon R. Green or any of the other massively
prolific fantasy masterminds we've had working for decades? No, we're not all that
different than any other form of entertainment,  everyone's just hoping
that they get one big bite from the apple at some point during their
career."

"But I heard they're making a movie based on your

books?"

"Well, when two high profile actresses are willing to

sign onto a project, that goes a long way into pushing it out of Movie
Hell," he laughed. "The option had been signed years before that, but
once Sarah and Emily expressed interest in playing supporting roles, well, that
got the whole thing into turnaround quite quickly. It's like the screenwriter
William Goldman always said, 'Nobody in Hollywood knows anything.'" Andy
shrugged a little bit as they entered the ballroom. "Besides, I figured
you'd want to get all this out during the on camera interview."

"Oh, we'll go over it again then, but it doesn't hurt

to do a little pre camera screening, just so I know what kinds of things you're
likely to say, so I can facilitate the conversation in moving in the right
directions," she said. "You've been interviewed several times before.
Hasn't anyone ever done that?"

"Nope," he said, moving to sit in one of the

chairs in the front row. "But then again, I've never been interviewed for
television before." They'd originally set up the 17 chairs as one chair
facing two rows of eight, but Geraldine started moving the two rows of eight
into four staggered rows of four.

"We'll bring in some risers, so we can get everyone

into one big shot," Geraldine told Katie.

Poppy nodded. "We'll need to set up four cameras in

here," she said, as she started to help Geraldine block out the room.
"One for the group shot, one for Katie, one for Andy and one to rove to
whoever's answering questions in the group setting. We can use fixed cameras
for the first three, and I'll manage the fourth. We'll have them all rolling
all the time and you can just pick and choose what you want in the editing
room."

"How do you want to order them, Katie?" Geraldine

asked her.

"Well, Andy here in the front corner, then Niko, the

woman we interviewed yesterday next to him. That'll be our link between the
segments. Then Sarah and Emily next to her, because star power up front. Beyond
that, we can figure it out."

"I'd like to insist Aisling, my first partner, be up

front with me," he said, just as Ash was walking into the room, along with
Emily.

"The balance might be a little weird," Poppy

frowned.

"No no," Geraldine, "we can make that work.

We'll just do five in front and three in the top row, so we frame Andy in the
center, with Niko and Aisling on one side, Emily and Sarah on the other."

"Good," Katie said, "that reinforces the

whole 'large family' front and forward as our first visual cue, so that the
viewer has to confront it right away. Does that work for you?" she said,
asking Andy his opinion for the first time.

"That'll work," he replied. "You can even put

the three staff at the back, since they're willing to be here for this, but
aren't likely to volunteer much in the way of answers."

"Jenny and Katie, er, Kate might not, Master,"

Nicolette said, entering the room with the rest of Katie Couric's crew in tow,
"but I'm certainly planning on speaking my mind given a chance, because I
don't want people to be given the wrong idea."

"What's the wrong idea?" Katie asked, tilting her

head just a little bit.

"That we're here involuntarily, or that this isn't what

we wanted, or, hell, even that Master Rook here wouldn't let us change if we
wanted," the French maid teased. "You know if I had a nickel for
every time he's sort of reminded me I don't have to call him Master, and I've
had to remind him that I like calling him Master, well, I could enjoy a
nice two week stay in the Bahamas, once it's opened up again. In fact, little
secret, every time he reminds me of it lately, I've just gone out of my way to
say it even more, so I can watch him blush."

"I think you like watching him blush," Ash said,

moving to close in around Andy.

"Katie Couric," Andy said, "this is my first

partner, Ash Blake, and I'm sure you've probably already met Emily
Stevens."

Katie made it a point to shake Ash's hand first. "A

pleasure, Miss Blake." She then turned to Emily, taking the tiny blonde's
hand and shaking it as well. "I've actually interviewed you before, Miss
Stevens, although I wouldn't be surprised if you didn't remember. You seemed
quite busy on that press junket, and I know they were just wheeling journalists
in and out for you."

"I keep a diary of anyone who's interviewing me, Ms.

Couric," Em said, a wry grin on her face, "so I assure you, I
remember the interview quite well. Any surprises we should be wary of?"

"Oh, I've always got a few things planned to lighten up

an interview," the journalist said, somewhat evasively. "It's not
like I'm interviewing Vladimir Putin or anything. You're not going to have me
murdered for a question you don't like."

"Well," the Brit said, "I still wouldn't

anger Sarah too much. She's, excitable, and prone to fits of
exaggeration."

"I'm fairly certain she's never poisoned anyone to win

a role, Em," Andy said to her.

Emily clicked her tongue in amusement. "Let's not be

too hasty with that judgment, Andy. Anyway, shall I round everyone up and we
can get started?"

"Yes, I think my team will be ready to start in about

twenty minutes, so if you can get everyone together, that would be
excellent."

By the time all the girls were in the ballroom, risers had

been placed under the seats, the lights and sound were set up, a boom
microphone used to cover the majority of the girls, although clip on mics were
used for Katie and Andy. They also had a handheld microphone that the girls
could pass around if anyone wanted to give a detailed answer.

They were structured as had been discussed, with Niko and

Aisling to Andy's left in the front row, and Emily and Sarah to his right.
Behind them, Lauren, Taylor, Sheridan and Piper sat. The third row had Asha,
Hannah, Tala and Jade. In the back row sat the staff, Kate (his Katie), Jenny
and Nicolette. All of the fiancees were up front, and everyone else was sat in
order of arrival, with the exception of the staff, who were at the back, at
their own request. It felt right that Ash was on one side of him and Emily was
on the other, as if the two of them wanted to be close in case he needed
support.

It wasn't until Andy saw it framed up in the monitor as they

were showing Katie that it dawned on him just how big his household was
growing, and even still, he knew there were already three more in the house not
in this shot.

He was always aware of how big his family was, but seeing

everyone together in one single framing shot, it really drove the size of it
home, and it felt huge.

"Okay, Andy, let's start with how you telling us a

little bit about yourself and how you got here."

For the next few minutes, Andy gave the shortest possible

version of his bio, how he'd moved to California a decade and a half ago, his
writing for the Silicon Valley companies, as well as his novels, which
transitioned nicely into him talking about how he got his vaunted level 5
status, regaling 60 Minutes with the story of how the guy who'd come to test
them, Dave, had been a big fan and given he and his then roommate Eric level 5
status as a return gift for Andy having given him an advanced copy of his next
novel.

"I hope I'm not getting Dave in any trouble by telling

that story," he finished.

"No no, each member of the initial Bay Area team was

given five level 5 statuses to give away as they saw fit," Katie Couric
told him. "Most of them just gave them to friends or family, but Dr. David
Straussman hadn't used any of his until he met you, and there were no rules on
who he could or couldn't give them to, so that's fine."

"Straussman," Andy repeated. "Huh. You know,

I didn't even know his last name until right now. I hope he's doing okay."

"He's doing quite well," Niko said. "I see

him every so often wandering around the base."

"So Andy," Katie said, bringing them back on task,

"how did you fill out the form you were given with the testing
process?"

"Well," Andy said, "Dave stressed to us when

he gave us the link that we should be honest, and to answer the questions
knowing we wouldn't be judged for our responses. I don't actually remember a
lot of it, because it was a very long questionnaire, like, ridiculously
thorough. But I suppose what you're getting at is what key things do I
remember answering."

"Yes, that's what I'm asking."

"There were definitely questions about my sexual

preferences, like, a lot of those, but there were also basic demographic
questions about what range of people I felt comfortable dating, was I into
women, men or both, and how did I feel about polyamory."

"Did that surprise you?" she asked him.

"Sure, but not as much as I expect it probably shocked

people back in the Midwest. It's not what I would call common place around
here, but you see it mentioned often enough in people's online dating profiles
that most people have at least some awareness of it here in the Bay."

"And how did you answer the polyamory question?"

"I actually put 'no preference,' but you have to

remember, to some extent when this started, we thought this was all some temporary
thing, and we certainly didn't know that the casualties to men in America were
going to be as high as they were," Andy said, sighing a little bit, Ash
taking his hand, squeezing it reassuringly.

"Do you remember what ages you put that you would be

comfortable with?"

"The low end was set to 18, and I didn't adjust it, and

I set the high end to 35. I suspected no one younger than their mid twenties
would be interested in me, so the low end didn't really matter."

"You can start to see how his mind works," Hannah

teased, "and how he just misses things sometimes." That let the girls
have a soft laugh, releasing a little bit of the tension.

"Were there any things that you said were absolute deal

breakers?" Katie asked.

"Just two," Andy admitted. "Must not be allergic

to cats, and must not smoke, although we ended up with someone who vapes."

"And who is that?"

"That'd be me," Sheridan said, "but I'm

working on quitting, so, it's a stopgap on the way to that. And it's been much
easier stepping down from that than it was stepping to that from smoking."

"Who showed up first?"

"Aisling showed up I think it was actually the very

next day," Andy said. "I was a little surprised how quickly
everything moved. Usually anything the government's managing is a total
clusterfuck, but I think since we were basically right by the site where the
treatment was developed, they were rushing it out in order to keep as many
people safe as they could."

"Aisling, let me ask you Aisling, was Andy the sort of

man you dreamed about ending up with when you entered into the process?"

"At first, my head was a little clouded, because the

process when it started wasn't as refined as it is now, so when I met Andy, my
mind was a little fogged up with lust, but he ticked all the boxes of what I
wanted out of a man. He didn't look exactly like I expected him to, but yeah,
within a couple of days, I knew I loved him pretty hard. Still do."

"Would he have been the kind of person you would've

gravitated to in a bar?" Katie asked her.

"I would've thought he was cute, but I was horrible at

dating, and only had a couple'a boyfriends before him, so I'm a bad judge of
character for that sort of question."

"How many of you would've approached Andy in a

bar?" Katie asked the group of them.

Andy chuckled, rolling his eyes. "Be honest."

Sarah put her hand up immediately, and Tala raised her hand

as well, as the rest of the group giggled a little bit.

"As progressive as we all like to think we are,

Katie," Niko said, "women still generally don't approach men in bars,
so maybe that's more on us than saying anything about our tastes."

"Sarah, I saw you put your hand up," Katie asked.

"You're an Oscar nominated actress who's know worldwide. What about Andy
would've made you approach him?"

Over the next couple of minutes, Sarah and Emily related the

story of how they'd attended one of Andy's Q&As at ComicCon in costume, so
that nobody would recognize them, and talked about how she'd had a crush on him
because of his writing for a long time, which Katie laughed about, and Andy was
certain would make for good television.

"So how many of you would say you're in love with Andy

now?" she asked the group after Sarah finished her story.

About half of women raised their hands, although several of

the others looked like they were considering raising their hands. The front row
all raised their hands, as expected, but Lauren and Piper also raised their
hands, which surprised Andy a little.

"So those of you who wouldn't say you're in love with

him, how would you describe your relationship with him?"

"Deep respect and affection, but not at the love stage,

not yet anyway," Sheridan said.

Most of the other girls seemed to nod and agree with that.

"Why do you say 'not yet,' Sheridan?"

"You have to keep in mind, Katie, a lot of us have only

known Andy a few weeks right now," she said, leaning forward just a little
bit. "We had to make probably the biggest choice of our lives, and we had
to do it basically on a hunch. Our choices were to defer treatment and go on
being afraid we were going to die, or take the treatment and get paired up with
a man for the indefinite future. That's a hell of a gamble to ask of
anyone."

"Who's unhappy with the decision they made, raise your

hand," Katie said, only to get no hands raised in response.
"Everyone's happy being paired with Andy, maybe for the rest of your
lives?"

"Look, Ms. Couric," Hannah said. "You're

going to find every one of us girls has a different story, a unique story, and
each one of us came to where we are now on an entirely different path, m'kay?
But we'll all tell you the same thing,  Andy's treated us with an immense
amount of respect and affection, and he's made sure that nobody's doing
anything they aren't comfortable with. Shit, he's even done stuff he's
been a little uncomfortable with because it's made us feel more
comfortable, and how many women can say that about their partner? So while a
bunch of us aren't in love with him, yet, we all admire and respect how much
he's gone out of his way to make sure we feel like we're part of a goddamn
family, a good goddamn family."

"Do you want to continue to grow the family,

Andy?"

"If you ask him," Em said, jumping in before he

could respond, "he wanted to stop growing it a while ago." All the
girls laughed at that. "But at this point, I think we're all doing what we
can to stick together, and a lot of us girls wanted to protect our friends, to
keep them safe, so we took turns presenting them all to Andy, trying to
convince him to bring them into our home and into our family."

"Everyone had someone they wanted to pitch?" Katie

said, smiling at Andy. "That must have been overwhelming."

"Not everyone wanted to pitch someone, but almost

everyone," he said with a laugh. "And it was a lot of names and faces
that were presented all at once. I said upfront, though, that I wasn't going to
bring everyone on, and that there was only so much of me to go around. In the
end, I think we mostly made it work to everyone's satisfaction."

"So how many more people are coming?"

"Well, we have three people who are in the imprinting

process right now, and two more people arriving tomorrow, and if I have any say
in the matter, that will absolutely, positively, definitively be the
limit of women I can handle in my life," he chuckled.

"And how much say do you actually have in that matter,

Andy?"

"Very little!" Emily joked, and all the

girls laughed, as did Katie.

"It would take a super compelling case for us to add,

like, anyone else to the family past that," Sarah said, "but I think
it's totally for the best that we never say never. Sometimes exceptions have to
be made."

"Like I told you yesterday, Katie," Niko said,

"I think if Andy had total control of the matter, he would've probably put
a hard limit in after myself, Ash and Lauren were in his life. He told me
multiple times early on that he barely felt like he deserved one amazing woman,
and at that point, he already had three, so it's been a growth process."

"But this is the new normal now," Katie said.

"Or at least it's going to be. Families with one man and several women,
because so many men in the US have died. Raise your hand if you know a man
who's lost their life to the plague here in the US."

All the women raised their hands, and of course Andy had his

raised as well.

"How does that feel?"

"I think we're all suffering from some degree of post

traumatic stress disorder," Piper said. "The losses, they're too big
for any of us to process, so we're sort of clinging to one another, holding on
to the only family that we know for certain that we can protect."

"Piper, you were actually supposed to have competed in

the Olympics by now. How does that feel, knowing that when it starts up again
next year, the US basically doesn't have almost any of their male athletes to
compete?"

"At this point, it's impossible for it to even make

sense in my head any more, Katie," she sighed. "Most of the people I
trained with have died over the last several months. A lot of my trainers died.
I've lost colleagues, friends and family members. I don't even know where to
start mourning, because there's so damn many people to mourn. I consider
myself lucky that my sister's husband took everything seriously, and completely
refused to leave the house this year since the word of the plague got
out."

"It's something we've talked about in here a

bunch," Andy said. "And we sort of keep coming back to that famous
Stalin quote. 'A single death is a tragedy, a million deaths are a statistic.'
It's so many dead men that the mind can't even make sense of it. It's like
9/11, but if each of the Twin Towers was holding exclusively almost every man
each of us knew and loved. My own brother died a few weeks back, and he was one
of the kindest and most careful souls I know, but he ran out to help someone
get their storm shutters up before a particular bad thunderstorm rolled
through, and a few weeks later, he was just gone, almost overnight. It happened
so fast, I didn't even hear about it until after he was already gone."

"It's actually unproven that's a real Stalin

quote," Tala said. "I read an article that said it was attributed to
a French humorist."

"Sure, but even if Stalin didn't say it," Andy

said, "it's still pretty relevant here. It doesn't really matter who said
it, it's the sentiment that's important. We're talking about a matter of scale,
and the human mind's capacity to comprehend that scale. At the end of the day,
that's a hell of a lot for anyone to handle. So we're all just doing our
best."

"Normally," Emily said, "when a friend or

loved one dies, there is typically a funeral or a wake, a gathering of all that
person's surviving circle coming together, to celebrate their passing and
remember them, but we have been denied that, and it has made all their passings
that much harder to process, somehow transformed them all into seeming less
real, because our normal emotional milestones haven't happened along the way.
We are adrift in our emotional morass."

"That's true," Katie said. "We, as Americans,

haven't had to confront all the deaths simply because we aren't allowed to go
out and do so, and that somehow makes it feel less concrete."

"It hits you every day," Jade said, "little

by little. Lauren described it to me a few weeks ago as a slow motion car crash
that we're all stuck in, and nobody can get out of."

"So, Jade, I understand you're one of the newest arrivals

here," Katie said. "Have you gone through the imprinting process
yet?"

"Not yet," she said. "Tala and I arrived

yesterday, but we wanted to wait a little bit, to spend some time with Andy and
his family, to makes sure that we would be happy getting melted into their pot.
I'm happy to say we're both going to do it, but it's the kind of commitment you
gotta be certain of, you know?"

"Have you seen what the imprinting process is

like?"

"Um, yes?" she said, trying not to blush a little.

"When we arrived yesterday, we had a third person with us, another woman
who was joining the staff and faculty of the house, but not the family itself,
a young woman named Whitney."

"So, Andy, explain to me the difference between family

and staff, and how you decide that."

He immediately put his hands up, almost like he was at

gunpoint. "First and foremost, I do not decide that," he
laughed, and all the girls laughed with him. "When the military came and
relocated us from our little condo and brought us here to New Eden, the house
also came with three members of staff attached with it, all of whom I was told
had been selected to mesh with me, and whose boxes I would tick as well."

"That was the three of you in the back, Nicolette,

Jenny and Kate, yes?" Katie asked.

"We had all been told a bit about Andy before he

arrived," Nicolette said, "and his answers to the questionnaire
implied that he would eventually be willing to play into our tastes."

"Eventually?" Katie asked.

"Well, sure," Nicolette giggled. "I know the

first few times I called him Master, it rattled his cage a little bit, but he
eventually realized I liked saying it, and nobody was making me do it.
One of the things that we girls all figured out early on was that just because
Andy was okay with something didn't mean he had any real experience with
it, so we would need to hand hold him a bit through it. So while Andy said he
was okay with bondage and discipline stuff in his questionnaire, he didn't have
any real practical experience in it. So we've found ways to teach him about
that kind of thing without it ever feeling like we were lecturing to him. He
sort of set that expectation up front when he told us communication was
everything, and he couldn't have been more right."

"And Kate? I hear that you and Jenny had a different

experience," Katie asked.

"Damn, uh? Andy?" Kate (his Katie) asked.

"How real you want us to get here?"

"We're not hiding anything," he chuckled, "so

fire away."

"So, uh, Katie," Kate coughed. "I'm actually

a lesbian. Not a bisexual who mostly identifies as a lesbian, I mean straight
up, hardcore, one hundred percent, unrepentant fully committed lesbian.
And Jenny here is my wife, but she's bisexual."

"Hi!" Jenny cheerily said with a wave.

"When we signed up for this, we, ah, we were planning

on hiding that from Andy, and I was simply going to fake it, and go along with
the ruse, so that we could stay together, and we could still get the treatment,
which, as you already know, takes both a female and a male component to
work," she sighed. "So I, er, we lied, and claimed we were
both bisexual. Since we were married, wherever we went, we were going to go
together, and we figured we could just keep up that lie as long as we needed
and make it work."

"And what happened?" Katie asked.

"Day two, I folded, before we'd even been

imprinted," Jenny said with a shrug. "When we met him, Andy wasn't at
all what any of us were expecting him to be, but I mean that in a really good
way. It didn't feel right lying to him. We'd had a few days together before he
showed up, the three of us, us two and Nicolette. We'd talked about it, and
Nicolette volunteered to go first, so that if it didn't go well, my Katie and I
could request to be moved elsewhere, since we were a little more particular
than she was about how we got paired up."

"What do you mean, you folded?"

"I started talking to Andy, and, and it all just came

tumbling out, how we were a little unsure, how my Katie wasn't really into men,
and, I just felt like I had to tell him everything before we were committed to
anything."

"How did you react to that, Andy?"

"I could tell they were afraid that I was going to be

angry," Andy said, his tone as breezy and relaxed as he could keep it,
"but I wasn't. Why would I be? I simply wanted to talk with them about how
they wanted to handle it, because at that point, I knew a bit more about the
physiological affects of the treatment than they did, so I wanted to prepare
them for it, if they wanted to move forward."

"Do you still consider yourself a lesbian, Kate?"

Katie asked her.

"Absolutely. I don't feel any sexual attraction to Andy

what so ever," she said. "Now, with that said, I can also admit that
I have received biochemically induced orgasms from him regularly as part of the
treatment process, and I don't think that affects my sexual identity in any
way. But Andy and I haven't ever had direct sex. He's offered, but he's also
never pressured. I might take him up on it some day, to see if the chemical and
neurological changes the treatment have made to me might compensate for my lack
of sexual attraction to him, but then again, I may not. That's my decision,
well, our decision, to make," she said, taking Jenny's hand in
hers. "And nobody's going to tell me who and what I am. I get to decide
that, and fuck anyone who says otherwise."

"So if you haven't had direct sex with him, how are you

getting what you need from him to keep your treatment managed? Go ahead and be
as direct as you want, and we can bleep parts of it out if we need to, but I
think they're just going to air it as we send it."

"Well, to be frank about it, I don't ever actually fuck

Andy, but that doesn't mean I don't swallow his semen. I do that around once a
week, either directly from him, or second hand from my wife. I consider sucking
his cock just to be another task around the house that needs doing now and
again. No offense, Andy."

He laughed, waving a hand in his air. "None taken, but

you already know that."

"And that's enough?" Katie asked. "Just

swallowing semen, either directly or second hand?"

Kate nodded. "It's fine. I haven't had any adverse side

effects, and it's easy enough right before he's about to pop for him to point
it elsewhere, or for Jenny and I to split it after he does pop. I'm never going
to have an encounter with Andy without Jenny present, and she's always my
focus, not him, because she's my wife, and he's just, my boss."

"And everyone in the house is okay with that?"

"This is the world we live in now," Lauren said.

"Lotsa fellas used to get all hung up onna things that they did and didn't
like, but who's got time for that anymore? Life's too short to hold onta old
grudges, so if we can, we're all gonna take it on the chin and just keep movin'
on together."

"Now Lauren, I understand you're also a lesbian."

"Nah Katie," the tall blonde Aussie corrected.

"I'm definitely bisexual, but I just lean a lot more towards the ladies
than I do the fellas. I very much enjoy my sexual encounters with Andy, but I'm
not one of his primary partners, despite showing up so early. I'm in love with
him, like he is with me, but he's not my Big Love, if you folla. I've got me
own primary partner here, in Taylor. We'd split before New Eden, and when she
came back, I was right pissed off, but we've worked it out, and now she and I
are back to being a couple again."

"Does that put you on the outs with Andy?"

"Nah," she laughed, "it just means the master

bed doesn't need triple reinforcement. I love Andy and all he's done for me,
for alla us, but I ain't interested in being one of his wives. I wanna marry
Taylor at some point, but that doesn't mean I don' wanna stay part of this
family. That works for us, so, y'know, fair play."

"How many people do sleep in bed with you on any given

night, Andy?"

"There's always at least five of us in the bed,"

he answered. "Myself, Ash, Niko, Emily and Sarah. But sometimes more
people want to cram in, and we never say no."

"What's the most the bed's ever held for a night?"

"Oh, uh, everyone who isn't staff, I think, but last

week, so before some people had arrived," he said, trying to remember,
"so, what, 11?"

"Yes, that was the maximum. On the day when we found

out Andy's brother died," Emily said, "we all crawled into bed with
him and just wrapped our arms around him, as we all shared a good cry, then
fell asleep holding one another, but that's extremely uncommon."

"Five or six would definitely be the average," Ash

said.

"So the four of you would say you're closer to Andy

than the rest of the women in the house?"

"Well, we're all his fiancees, so we'd better be,

Katie!" Sarah laughed. "He asked Ash first, and then Niko asked him
before he could even get the words out to her, so once he freakin' told us, me
and Em, we both demanded he propose to us as well immediately, because we come
as a package deal."

"What do you mean by that, Sarah?"

"Okay, well, here's the thing. Emily and I have been a

couple for almost two years now, but we're both, well, we're both totally into
dudes and chicks. So while we super love each other, we also knew we were going
to need a regular cock in the equation. When we found out that the
writer of my favorite freaking book series of all time was in play, we decided
we had to freaking have him." Andy was a little amazed Sarah could do so
much to self censor, but realized she'd probably been doing it for interviews
forever.

"So you put in a request for the two of you to be

paired up with Andy, and the government made that happen?"

There was a long pause, as everyone was trying to decide

what to say and how to say it, but eventually Emily broke the silence.

"Something like that, yes," she lied.

"We'll put a pin in that and come back to it

later," Katie said, and Andy's guard was immediately up. He'd been
wondering what sort of problems this interview was going to throw up, and now
he felt like he knew what one of them was. "Have you had to send anyone
back, Andy? Had any partners show up that you didn't think would be
compatible?"

"Just one," he admitted. "My ex girlfriend

was sent to me, because she hadn't disclosed that we'd been together about a
decade ago. She was eager to rekindle the relationship, but I was not. It ended
on terms that made me unwilling to revisit it again, so we helped her make
other arrangements. We hadn't been compatible back then, and I didn't feel
comfortable gambling that she'd grown enough that I would've been compatible
with her now."

"You didn't send her back to the government?"

"New Eden isn't that large of a community, so sometimes

we just see if we can make things work among ourselves first, and we found a
solution that everyone seemed happy with, including my ex. In fact, the people
that my partners here pitched to me that I didn't think would be good matches
for our family, we worked to pair them up with other people here in New Eden
instead, so they were still local and safe. It's a small town, so we have to
look out for one another. Problems here are rare and generally
manageable."

"Not always, though, we've heard," Katie said.

"I take it you've heard about the fatality that New Eden had last
week?"

Everyone nodded. "It was horrible, hearing about

someone dying from something so easily preventable," Hannah said.
"Like, they totes warned us about that ish before we left the base, so why
the hell would someone chance it?"

"They did warn you?"

"Very thoroughly," Emily insisted, horror

in her voice. "They told us multiple times, again and again and again,
that if we took in semen from any man other than the one we were paired up
with, it would be toxic, if not fatal. They even showed us a recording of a
woman who'd already been imprinted getting semen from a man she wasn't paired
up with on her skin, and the large, violent rash that immediately broke out. I
am told they show that footage to everyone, to drive the point home. Seeing
that sort of instantaneous reaction should've been enough to discourage anyone
from testing those boundaries."

"They're talking on base about showing some of the

autopsy photos from the fatality to the people who are getting the treatment
now," Niko said, "to make sure everyone understands how serious it is
not to dally outside your family."

"Have any of you ever been tempted?"

"I think we all value our lives too much for

that," Sarah joked.

"And love Andy far too much for that," Ash said.

"Definitely," Emily agreed. "Why would anyone

task such a pointless risk?"

"Did any of you know the woman who died, or the man she

partook from that killed her?" Katie asked them.

"I met her briefly," Andy said, "but I

wouldn't say I knew her. And none of us ever even met the man accused of doing
it to her."

"Major Peters told us yesterday he's currently

imprisoned at the base, pending local law enforcement being able to take
custody of him. They're going to charge him with murder, they were telling
us."

"They should," Sarah said. "They told

everyone when they brought them here to New Eden what would happen if people
engaged in any form of sexual activity with anyone they're not paired with, and
they fucking did it anyway!"

"The problem," Andy sighed, "is that the man,

whoever he is, already has multiple women paired up with him, which means that
whatever they do to him is going to affect those women as well, even if it's
just that they have to come to a prison for their weekly intake. Those women
are already tied to him. I'm sure they're looking into some way to remove the
binding and reimprint a woman onto a new person, but there's only so many
problems they can solve at once."

"Does it bother any of you that your health is tied to

Andy's?" Katie asked the group.

"Bother is the wrong word," Sheridan said,

annoyance in her tone of voice. "Concern is the right word. We're
very protective of Andy, because he knows our lives are all fully dependent on
his for the time being, and that if he dies, we all probably die with him. So,
sure, we're concerned, but I think all of us feel comfortable in knowing that
Andy's got our best interests at heart, and is keeping that all in mind."

"One of the two people arriving tomorrow is going to be

his bodyguard," Jenny said. "A friend of mine from college, who's
going to guard his life with her own."

"Who's the other?"

"A director friend of mine," Emily said,

"whom I thought would be an excellent addition to the house. She was one
of the AD's on some of the latter Dagger Academy movies."

Katie Couric clapped her hands together. "Okay, why

don't we take a break, then do some of the one on ones, and then we can circle
back and do another group interview to close out the day. Our team can leave
you one of our cameras here tonight, so you can get that video of someone being
imprinted, and we'll come by and pick it up tomorrow before we leave town. We
appreciate you trusting us with that, as I know it can't have been an easy
decision to make, but I think that footage will go a long way to convincing
people this treatment is in their best interest. As for today, we'll go ahead
and finish getting set up in Andy's office, and when you're ready Andy, we can
sit down and do our one on one and drill down on some things I've got further
questions on."

"Sure," he said, as all the girls were standing up

and stretching. "Let me go grab a quick drink, and I'll meet you in my
office in about ten minutes, okay?"

"Sounds good."

Katie and her crew were escorted by Nicolette down to Andy's

office, while the girls stood up and started chatting among themselves, while
Emily and Ash closed it around Andy.

"That went about as well as can be expected,"

Emily said to them.

"I feel like we've got some kind of curveball

coming," Ash said, taking Andy's hand in her left and Emily's hand in her
right. "After you're done, Andy, we'll talk a bit again. I'm sure you'll
get surprises before any of us do."

He took his time, grabbed a bottle of Vanilla Coke, drank it

then headed down to his office, which today felt a little like going into a
lion's den. With all the girls in the ballroom, the large group session had
allowed the attention to bounce around a great deal, and he felt like he could
catch his breath, but here, it was just going to be the two of them, and he
didn't have anyone to run interference for him from time to time.

Andy headed into his office and saw that even his cats

weren't in there, likely having been moved by the production crew, as Andy
moved to sit down in his writing chair, Katie Couric sitting across from him.

"Are you ready?" she said to him.

"Yep," he answered. "Let's do it."

After the mics were checked, the cameras were tested and the

lights were adjusting, Andy's one on one began with a softball question.
"So how'd you fall into writing urban fantasy, Andy?"

"The best advice I ever got was 'if the stories you

want to read don't exist in the world, it's your job to put them there,' so
I've stuck with that," he said. "I knew what kind of stories I wanted
to read, and nobody was really writing those, a sort of fantasy western/samurai
hybrid. I mean, you had Butcher's Dresden books, but those were more of fantasy
noir hybrids, and I wanted to get into the sort of stories that people like
Akira Kurosawa and Sergio Leone used to tell, where you could kill off
characters, where actions had consequences and where you never really knew when
the next gunfight was coming, because it felt like they could happen at any
time. Joe Abercrombie does it in high fantasy, but I wanted something that was
happening in our time, in our world."

"Do you think your books' protagonist, the Druid

Gunslinger, is a hero?"

"I think it's very dangerous to reduce people or

characters to simple heroes and villains, Katie," he said, starting to
feel a little comfortable, more in his element. "Reductive story telling
focuses on obvious rights and wrongs. One of the reason I love things like 'The
Seven Samurai' or 'The Good, The Bad and the Ugly' is that often times, bad
people are doing good things, and sometimes without any real reason given at
all. Life is such a complicated journey, and when I see storytellers trying to
boil it down to simple things like 'heroes' and 'villains,' I think it becomes
too easy to demonize the people who have viewpoints opposed from our own. So
I've tried to make characters in the Druid Gunslinger books less of simple
heroes or villains and more of a fully fleshed out people. Sometimes the
protagonist has done very noble things. Other times, he's taken less noble
paths. In a couple of the books, he's done some very bad things for what
he thought were the right reasons. I leave it to my readers to decide if things
like killing a wounded and temporarily incapacitated adversary are bad things
or not. He's always trying to do what he thinks is right, but sometimes that
means crossing into some very sketchy moral territory."

Then she clocked him in the face with her right hook, one

sentence that cut though the November air like a cannonball.

"So tell me a bit about the poker game where you won

the lives of Emily Stevens, Sarah Washington and three others."

Chapter 32

"Excuse me?" Andy said, trying to buy himself some

time.

"I said, why don't you tell me a bit about the poker

game where you won the lives of Emily Stevens, Sarah Washington and three other
women," Katie Couric said to him.

Andy knew he was in a dire pickle. If he asked them to turn

the camera off, turn the microphone off, refused to answer the question, it
would make him look far guiltier than he actually was. However, there was
something about the way she phrased the question, and suddenly, he had an
epiphany.

"Why don't you tell me what you know, or, more

importantly, what you think you know, and maybe I can shed a little more light
on the matter," he said to her.

She was on a fishing expedition. It was the kind of question

meant to catch him off guard, to make him think she knew a lot more than she
actually did, and to prove it, he was going to need to force her hand a bit.
She was bluffing, thinking her pair of aces was good enough to stare down
someone holding a possible flush.

She hadn't mentioned who'd held the game. She hadn't

mentioned who else had been playing there. She hadn't mentioned with other
girls he'd won, other than the two big headliners. She'd thrown out a couple of
pieces of information and implied she had the whole story, but if she had the
whole story, she would've led with more. She was hoping to get him to spill
more information.

"Isn't it true that you gambled with women's lives in

order to win Emily Stevens and Sarah Washington?" Katie Couric said,
trying to press again.

"I didn't know Emily or Sarah were going to be

there."

"So you gambled just hoping to win more women to your

household?"

"No, I gambled because I was trying to save a couple of

women on behalf of one of my existing partners," he said with a sigh.
"Look, I know you think this is some gotcha moment, and that you're going
to expose me for being some kind of villain, but I'm going to tell you the
entire story, and then you're going to have to decide what to do with that
information, because depending on what you do with it, you could end up doing a
lot of damage."

"So why don't you start at the beginning?"

Over the next thirty minutes or so, Andy regaled her with

the entire tail, how Covington had come to him to invite him to the poker game,
how Niko had revealed that she knew both Dr. Varma and her daughter Asha were
going to be in the pool for it, and that they were currently being shipped over
to Covington, a man who Andy made no attempt to paint in a good light. Andy
told her how the two women he'd had to use as collateral into the tournament, one
of whom he barely knew and the other was his ex girlfriend, whom he wasn't
going to accept as a partner anyway.

To be continued in part 18, by CorruptingPower for Literotica.

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