King Sarcowicz, known to his friends and acquaintances as King
Sauerkraut, means well. He even brings in his elderly neighbor's garbage
cans when he happens to remember. But King is careless of people. As a
partner in Keystone Robotics in Pittsburgh, King has a way of
antagonizing staff and customers. He's great with machines, but give him
a human being and he doesn't know where to begin. His life seems to be
made up of work and consuming large quantities of beer and eggs.
King is brilliant, however. Nobody would deny that. He's just dreadful
with paperwork and deadlines and organization and personal relations.
He's not the man to be in charge of a project, especially not a major
defense subcontract from MechoTech. He can help design the project, but
he should not be top man.
Nobody wants to report to King, not his partner, Dennis Cox, not his two
Silicon Valley colleagues Gregory Dillard and Mimi Hargrove. When
MechoTech calls them all to New York and puts them together in a
six-bedroom apartment, the mood is anything but collegial. Live together
under one roof they must, enjoy it they won't.