He recalls how the team members that partook in the alcoholic beverages reported additional euphoria, seemingly proportional to their level of infection. He wondered if that was because the infection was reinforcing the behavior, or if the infection was impeded and the body felt better for it. He set the water down and grabbed a beer. Watching his aura, he drank the beer quickly. Then he grabbed the water, sat down at the breakfast table, and waited for the infection to react.
Ohanzee pounds a beer, wondering if he really wanted to or if some mysterious force in his head compelled him too. He considers the bottle. It's a craft beer, one of those fancy microbrews that are popular with people who have more money than they need. The bottle describes its contents as a "white ale", 6% ABV. A true corper's beer.
Ohanzee assenses himself. If he hadn't seen the nanites before then he certainly wouldn't be able to track them now; only his familiarity allows him to follow their movements throughout his system. At first, there is no response, but as soon as the alcohol enters his bloodstream the nanites spring into action. They swarm the ethanol and break it down rapidly. None of it makes it to his liver, nor his kidneys or lungs. With his dwarven constitution, Ohanzee is used to not feeling much of an effect from alcohol - especially beer - but this is indistinguishable from his water. There's no buzz - none - but yet there's a vague feeling of reward, as if he had done something healthy. His body seems pleased.
Doc hits the Matrix, rapidly pulling up public records files while Ace and Ohanzee walk next door. Luckily the Pueblo Matrix is so bleeding-edge that the information practically falls out of it. He finds the answer in a blink: NATELY EXPEDITIONS.
That sounds like a corporation, so Doc quickly cross-references it. Indeed, it is A-rated corporation, a small multinational with offices in several North American countries. A list of officers brings up one MR. EDWARD J. NATELY II as the Chairman of the Board. A quick glance through the corporate history suggests that he was once the CEO but stepped down in 2064 to spend more time with his possessions. The nature of their business is opaque but the company seems to be very old, dating to the 18th century.
Granted that he's been retired for a while, but it seems curious to Doc that someone with (presumably) such a high net worth would be living outside of a corporate compound, or lacking in better physical security. Or is SecForce really that good that you don't need those extra steps in Aspen?
Stewart and Brian quickly evaluate the couple while Stewart starts the conversation. The woman is mostly obscured, given that she's only glancing from around a corner. What Ohanzee can see (her head) doesn't look augmented at all. Her aura looks healthy. She's curious about who is at the door, and maybe a bit annoyed by the draft. The man looks trim and fit. His stance is confident; maybe he does judo, or tai chi. Ohanzee sees cyberware in his head, which is common for corpers. It looks like older product, probably from 10+ years ago. Neither of them are Awakened, nor is there any obvious magical security. The old man is definitely suspicious but seems to be erring on the side of courtesy for now.
"Joe sent you over, did he?" the man asks. Ace and Ohanzee immediately pick up that he didn't say "Joseph". Strike one, but not a fatal error; maybe Joe's employees (?) use his full name.
"Not to be offensive, Mr. Griffin," he continues, looking down at Ohanzee, "but you don't seem like Joe's kind of people. He and I don't see eye-to-eye on the matter, but he's been very clear on his views in the past." He arches an eyebrow. Strike two. He definitely does not seem to be on the verge of inviting you in.