Does Yves know about Claire joining VILE? If yes, what's his view?
I don’t
think so. He knows that I have found steady work with people who appreciate my talents, but we have not talked about the details. I am not
hiding it, exactly, but I have not yet seen a need to bring it up. Right now, we only see each other four or five days a month, and we have better things to do in that time than talk about something that could potentially be a liability if he knew too much. He would probably follow me, if I asked him to. He would do well here.
I'd asked
@Patty a similar question, but here we go: Under which circumstances would Claire have joined ACME, and what would that have been like?
I tend to approach any relationship from a purely logical standpoint. VILE offered me exactly what I wanted: a chance to use my skills and interests in a way that generates profit and allows me the flexibility to pursue my own enjoyments. If ACME had offered me the same thing, my allegiances might swing differently. It’s nothing personal, my dear director, only business.
Would Claire ever defect from VILE, why and why not?
If there is one thing I have learned over the years, it is that I have to look out for myself, because no one else is going to do it for me. It was my sense of self-preservation that brought me to VILE: I knew there would be steady, potentially lucrative work, and that I would be among a brotherhood of peers and equals who look out for each other and are not without a sense of honor of their own. There could be many different reasons to defect - it is impossible to know the circumstances under which they might occur until you are in them - but whatever they are, they would have to be compelling enough to where that sense of self-preservation saw leaving as the best option.
What is Claire like when she received bad news? Does she sulk, get angry, pretend nothing is wrong, withdraw, etc?
I get mad. Then, I get even.
What do you consider the most overrated virtue?
Frugality. Time is short, and your life is happening right now. It seems foolish to not enjoy the fruits of your labor in the moment, when you can best appreciate them, rather than deny yourself in favor of an uncertain future. Money cannot buy happiness, but it
can be spent on the things, people, and experiences that bring you joy.