Act 25: The Wall Has Ears
Doug got into a carriage and left Yale.
He didn't go back to the printing and dyeing factory. Although he had to arrange a visit, he couldn't expect the workers to wait for a 24-hour long 24-hour standby. He was still in the factory late at night.
Doug returned to the New Haven Hotel, and the waiter standing at the door saw Doug in the carriage, rushed to Doug several times and helped Doug out of the car.
"Sir, your bath water is ready!" said the waiter.
Doug nodded.
"Sir! There is someone in the lobby who wants to see you!"
"Who?" Doug asked with his head turned.
"Jimmy McGill do you know him?"
"He is my lawyer," Doug said.
As he spoke and walked, Doug soon met McGill in the hall.
McGill's depressed look has diminished a lot. It seems that busy work can indeed effectively relieve negative mental emotions.
"Mr. Doug, I..." McGill immediately stood up and wanted to speak when he saw Doug.
Doug shook his head slightly, and said softly to the side, "Come with me."
McGill quickly reacted. Although it was already very late, the hotel lobby was still crowded.
Who knows who will have interests in what you say later? Will someone sell it as a good price?
He was just too anxious just now.
After finishing the work that Doug had assigned, he first went to the Clayden Printing and Dyeing Factory, but after the workers there asked McGill about his identity, they told him that the boss had left.
As for where they went, they didn't know.
When he returned to the police station, he asked his cousin Hull. Hull didn't know where Doug would go, but just told him that Doug stayed in the New Haven hotel and that he should be able to wait for him.
McGill sat in the New Haven hotel for hours.
At the beginning, a waiter came over to ask him what he wanted to drink.
McGill said he was waiting for someone.
After an hour or two hours, there were more and more people in the lobby and there were not enough seats. The waiter came to ask him what he wanted to drink, and said tactfully that if he didn't order anything, he would ask him to go out of the hotel and wait.
He originally wanted to order something, but the expensive price order still made him feel a little trembling.
He picked up his handbag and wanted to leave, but another tall waiter asked him who he was waiting for.
This waiter is Madison.
Recently, Madison, favored by Master Doug, became rich all of a sudden.
He insisted on drawing pictures every day, but did not forget his job and became a waiter.
It’s not that he is reluctant to leave the waiter’s salary, but that he is reluctant to leave the New Haven Information Gathering Center, the New Haven Hotel.
After careful thinking, he had found his position. Although Mr. Doug asked himself to draw pictures, he could not draw them for the rest of his life.
In addition to doing something that anyone can do, you also need to have something you can do to prove your value.
Otherwise, the person favored by Mr. Doug today may be his own Madison, but it may be someone else Filson tomorrow.
Madison has a strong desire to survive and is also very capable of seizing opportunities.
When he learned that the person McGill was waiting for was Mr. Doug, he didn't over-confirm that it was true or false, so he bought him a drink and asked him to sit here and continue waiting.
Although he couldn't bear to buy the drinks in the hotel, he just sipped a little while the delivery process.
But compared to the price of the drink that hurts, it is the most important thing to make clear arrangements about Mr. Doug.
Doug took off the "Do Not Disturb" sign, inserted (harmoniously) into the key, and slowly twisted the handrail.
He felt a little relieved after feeling the resistance of his hair that was almost uncheckable and unbroken.
He and McGill entered the room one after another.
After McGill closed the door, he wanted to speak again. Doug put his index finger on his lips and told him not to speak.
Doug pulled out a stack of white paper from the drawer in his desk, took out two pens, one for McGill and the other for himself.
Pulling out the cap of the pen in his hand, Doug wrote on the paper, "Don't say it, write it out of paper."
McGill looked vigilantly, but there were only walls with ornaments hanging around him, and he could not find anything.
Doug was cautiously a little nervous, but the hotel has always been a news distribution center. Among these news, some people include those who want to let people know that they will spread it on purpose, and some people who don’t want to spread it.
How do news that you don’t want to spread spread?
It's worth thinking about, isn't it?
Therefore, being cautious and cautious became Doug's choice.
Although McGill also felt it was a bit complicated, he also felt relieved.
He regards himself as Doug's partner, who doesn't want his partner to be more reliable?
He wrote on the paper, "Judge, jury, police have all arranged it. When do you want to hold the court?"
"Wait a little longer," Doug wrote on paper.
The death of the little shoe shiner must wait until the mass version of "Monopoly" begins to be mass-produced.
Although those people were having fun playing "Monopoly" just now, it seems a bit too simple to have to pay real money for the tokens in the game.
Doug had thought it was too simple before. He thought that industry only needed to solve the general framework, and details were not a problem.
But judging from the current situation, details are the biggest problem.
"Okay." McGill wrote.
After writing this sentence, he thought about it and continued to write on the paper, "Does your Monopoly apply for patents and copyright protection?"
"No." Doug wrote on paper.
It’s not that he doesn’t know about patents and copyrights, but he doesn’t believe in the US law enforcement efforts.
In the United States, there is no equality for everyone, only equality for money.
If you have money, the legal libra will tilt towards you.
If you are rich, the weight of the Libra will be unbalanced.
If you are very rich, Libra is yours.
Writing patent and copyright application documents not only requires going to various departments, but also having corresponding formats.
Moreover, patents and copyrights are applied separately on each country, and the rules and requirements of each country are different.
Although there are potential risks in the long run, Doug, who does not understand these, does not have the corresponding time to study, and has not yet come into contact with corresponding talents, is willing to sacrifice long-term interests for short-term interests.
It’s not that he has short-sighted vision, but that he can grasp the present and have a future.
"Leave it to me!" McGill wrote, "Actually, my full-time job is a patent attorney!"
"Okay! I'll sort out the information and I'll give it to you tomorrow. Can you apply for patents and copyrights other than the United States? Money is not a problem."
"No problem. The UK, France, Germany, Spain, Portugal, and the Netherlands can apply!"
"Leave it to you!" Doug stood up and patted McGill on the shoulder, sending him out of the room.
Doug sat in front of the burning copper basin, with a warm light on his cheeks.
Chapter completed!