Chapter One
Elena had always felt
somewhat uncomfortable around people. She was an introvert, and had always been
shy and quiet, and shrank away from the loud, screaming children she found
herself around. She was a modest and polite child, and extremely bright, so her
parents never worried she'd find her way in life.
As she hit her teenage
years and turned to books rather than boys, they started to worry a little, but
knew their lovely young daughter would eventually feel the spark of interest in
going beyond the fantasies she found in books.
She dated little in high
school. She was quite modest, and quite polite, and expected the same of others.
Her expectations were rarely fulfilled, especially with boys. They tended to be
loud, obnoxious, rude, crude, and outrageously improper in what they said and
did with her.
Even the few interested in
a true intellectual discussion were all-too-eager to get their hands on her
body at the first opportunity, especially her breasts, which were unfortunately
quite prominent. Nor were they gentle, practically salivating with excitement
as they squeezed her breasts as though the mere sight and touch had turned them
into slavering beasts!
She expected better at
college. She was a straight-A student, of course, and her marks were more than
sufficient to win her entry to any number of elite universities. Harvard had
beckoned, with its lovely old buildings and a campus rich with history. It had,
unfortunately, turned out to be a disappointment.
Her roommates were
air-heads. Only a short acquaintance told her that Amy, the blonde, got in
because her parents were alumni. Millie, the Black girl, got in because Harvard
had lowered the marks required for minorities. And Chantal claimed to be
'emotionally disabled' due to various neurosis, as well as being 'non-binary'
and insisted on being addressed as 'they' instead of 'her' or 'she'.
As always, Elena kept her
head down, had as little to do with them as possible, and carried on with her
nose in her books. She had taken Accounting, and in particular, Forensic
Accounting as her specialty. She loved numbers, and loved order. She had always
loved puzzles, too. Forensic Accounting gave her an opportunity to puzzle out
answers through numbers and formulas.
Because she had graduated
high school early, Elena arrived at Harvard when barely seventeen. And through
studious effort was able to complete her masters of Forensic Accounting at
twenty-one, finishing first in her class.
Her college experience had
not been one of parties and dating. Far from it. Her life had remained quiet
and peaceful - and quite orderly. Which was just the way she liked it. Before
graduation, she had a number of interviews from large corporations and
accounting firms, and several offers.
She finally settled on the
London Bank of Commerce. Which, despite its name, was headquartered in New York
City. Elena loved order, and tradition and certainty. The London Bank of
Commerce was located in the heart of the Manhattan financial district. But not
in a giant skyscraper. Instead it was nicely ensconced in a century old
six-story Tudor style building.
The London Bank of Commerce
was old money, so old it was practically petrified. It was a corporate bank
which handled the business and financial affairs of some of the city's
wealthiest people. Its insides matched its outsides, reeking of dignity, age,
and extreme wealth.
The walls were paneled
mahogany, the floors Italian marble, the chandeliers from France, the richly
upholstered buttoned leather furniture hand made in England a century ago, and
still looking almost new.
There would be no young men
pestering her for sex here! She could dress as she usually did, in a modest,
brown, black or gray dress which helped disguise her distressingly shapely
figure (distressing because it drew attention to her). Her hair was rich and
soft and lush, and it drew attention when it was long. So she had cut it in a
soft, loose bob, the tips curling in slightly just below her jaw. Her eyes were
a deep, breathtaking brown, but nicely covered by thick-framed glasses.
Elena did not desire
attention. Most especially for her looks. That sort of thing only led to
embarrassment.
She started work on the
fifth floor. Though unlike in most buildings, the top floors did not contain
the finest of offices. The two top floors
had formerly been an attic (in the case of the top floor) and servants
quarters, for hers. The windows were smaller here, the ceilings lower, and the
HVAC system in the basement struggled to keep up with the cold of winter and
heat of summer.
What she did have, however,
was an office. There were no cubicles here. This was an actual office with
stone walls, a window, and a real door. It was exceedingly small, of course.
She could fit her desk, a filing cabinet, and a visitor's chair in, and that
was about it.
But that was more than
enough.
She had two large,
flat-screen monitors on her desk and a fine computer, and she spent her initial
time doing data entry - at which she was extremely fast - and then adding up
numbers and setting up formulas for various matching reviews.
She spent the first several
months getting settled in, and finding a small apartment across the river in
Brooklyn (no one could actually live in Manhattan on her salary). She was
assigned a number of files to update and monitor which had been under the care
of a Mister Glaston, who had just recently retired at eighty-seven.
It took her some time to
puzzle her way through the numbers, as Glaston had not used modern computer
software and formulas. And his methodology struck her as slipshod at best.
Perhaps because he was old he had not kept as up to date on his files as he
should have, she thought.
There were problems with
every one of the files, requiring her to put in a great deal of effort to
untangle. This meant she had to do overtime (unpaid) but that was fine with
Elena. She found it relaxing to go over numbers, though irritating when they
failed to add up.
And so it was approaching
Nine in the evening when she got up from her desk to go down the hall for more
tea. Or rather, for more hot water with which to make her tea. The old building
was quiet at this hour of the night. The lighting was not provided by fluorescent
tubes as in modern office buildings, but antique sconces along the paneled
walls. It was restrained and a soft yellow, but not terribly bright.
She made her way up the
narrow corridor, her feet making little noise on the thick rug going down the
middle of the wooden floor. It was not a large building and she didn't have far
to go. Just around the corner was the tiny kitchen, which was little more than
a cupboard, really. It had a sink, though, a small refrigerator, a coffee maker
and a tea kettle.
There was, at best, room
for two in the little kitchen, provided they didn't mind being rather close to
each other.
Elena minded, of course,
which was why she did her best to get in and out fairly quickly. Of course, at
this time of the evening she had little to fear. She put more water into the
kettle, then plugged it in and went back to her office.
Or at least, that was her
intention.
Even after three months
Elena did not know the people on her floor very well. There were eight other
offices, all as small as hers, as far as she knew. She always kept her door
closed and listened to soft, classical music on her earphones, so saw and heard little of them.
Above her was the attic,
which, so far as she knew, was used only for storage. Except now, as she came
out of the small kitchen near the stairs she heard a sound coming from the open
door to its left. She had noted it as she'd gone into the kitchen but paid it
little mind.
Now... now she heard a
strange, repetitive sound coming from the open door. Or rather, coming down the
wooden stairway from above. She glanced at her watch, then stepped to the open
door and peered up. It was a narrow, curving set of stairs, even more poorly
lit than the corridor. But she could see more light coming from the attic
above.
She fidgeted with herself,
wondering if she dared climb them to see what was causing that noise. It was a
soft thumping sound, and it did not have
a distinct pattern. She tried to imagine what might be causing it and failed.
She almost called up, but did not like to draw attention to herself.
On the other hand, Elena
liked puzzles. She was a curious girl and loved to solve mysteries. Which was
why she was a forensic accountant. And so she softly climbed the stairs,
thinking to peek over the top and sate her curiosity about what could possibly
be making such a strange sound!
As she reached the top, she
slowed so that she could peek over slowly. She immediately noted large chests
of drawers to her left, like old fashioned wooden filing cabinets. As she rose
higher she saw more of them, but the noise came from her right, so she turned
to look there.
There were more chests, all
of them taller than her, arranged in rows. It would be necessary to actually go
into the attic and move further forward to find out what was causing the
baffling noise. She hesitated, arguing with herself. She should go back down,
she thought. But she compromised. She would just spend a few seconds.
She climbed up slowly,
making as little sound as possible, and moved past the first few rows of cabinets.
Peeking around the last she saw an open area where the sound was coming from.
This was an area where furniture was stored against the walls. But space had
been cleared in the middle, and a long, thick boxing bag had been hung from a
chain attached to the rafters.
A man was standing in front
of it, shirtless, wearing boxing gloves, and delivering a series of rapid and
violent blows to the bag, which shook and shuddered.
This, of course, was the
very last thing (almost) she had expected to find. There was no gym in this
building! It wasn't nearly big enough! But this man had created a space for
exercise. There were mats under his feet, and several loose dumbbells sitting
on an old upholstered sofa.
There was no way he could
hear her given the noise he was making, so he continued punching the bag as she
gaped at him. She flushed immediately, of course. The man was half-naked! But
she found her eyes caught by the large, impressively thick curve of his
shoulders, the muscled smoothness of his back, and even, as he turned a little
to the side, the thickness of his chest.
Elena rarely found herself
attracted to men in the physical sense, which was partly what shocked her about
the sudden rise in a very animal appreciation of the man before her. She
recognized his face in profile now, for the short beard. She had occasionally
seen him on her lunchtime trips to the larger kitchen on the second floor,
which had a microwave and toaster oven.
She had no idea who he was,
though. Only that he had an English accent.
And a very powerful chest,
she thought, feeling a sudden sense of breathless appreciation as she watched
him throw harsh, even violent punches into the bag. She flinched at those
punches, but there was a dark, animal appreciation of them, as well, on some level
she did not quite understand.
She started to draw back.
She had already been staring at the man for an indecent length of time, after
all. And then his head turned, as if caught by a sound. A moment later he
turned around fully and Elena halted, gulping in air - caught!
"Uhm... uh... er... I...
please do excuse me," she said, her voice squeaking slightly as her face
reddened. "The sound made me wonder if... if perhaps something wasn't...
amiss," she gulped.
"No, just working out some
frustration," he said. "Sorry to have disturbed you, Miss..."
"Uhm, Smithson," she said.
"Elena Smithson."
He pulled one of the boxing
gloves off, and to her dismay he walked closer. Elena flushed further and
dropped her eyes away from staring at all that naked flesh!
"James Wild," he said,
extending his hand.
Elena most definitely did
not want to take that hand! But refusing would seem extraordinarily rude, so
she hesitantly reached her hand out and put it in his very much larger, very
much hotter and very much male hand!
"You're the new girl," he
said.
"Uhm, well, three months or
so new," she said anxiously.
There was so much bare
flesh there! And right in her face! And it was so... attractive to the eyes!
His skin was soft and lightly tanned, hairless, stretched across quite
prominent muscles! The lighting up here wasn't much better than in the hall,
and the muscles of his chest and stomach were picked out in soft shadows.
She jerked her eyes away,
then forced herself to look at his face.
"I'm working late and...
the door was open, you see," she said apprehensively. "I didn't mean to
intrude, Mister Wild."
"Pretty girls are rarely an
intrusion," he said with a soft smile.
And then he drew her hand
upward and bent to brush his lips across the knuckles.
"Enchanté," he said.
"Ah, er... uhm... th-thank
you," she squeaked.
"Forensic accounting, yes?"
"Uhm, yes."
"Finding things
interesting, are you?"
Elena didn't know where to
put her eyes! She had to tilt her head back to look up at him, and she
resolutely ordered her eyes to stay there!
"Yes... yes, quite!"
"I imagine you've found
Glaston's files in some disarray."
"Well... to be honest, yes.
That's why I'm working late."
"Whereas I'm working late
because of the incompetence and stupidity of some people who ought to know
better and don't have the excuse of old age to excuse them."
"Oh, I'm sorry."
"Don't be. Not your fault.
From what I hear you're frighteningly competent."
She blushed further. "Oh,
well, I don't know as I'm exactly frightening," she gulped, pleased.
"You quite impressed
Lawrence. Old stick that he is he's rarely happy about hiring women, you know.
You had to be good to overcome his natural prejudice."
"I... do my best," she
said.
"And that is all anyone can
ask."
He pulled off his other
boxing glove and turned away from her, which let her eyes streak downward
across that impressive chest and stomach again before she yanked her eyes away.
He went over and picked up a shirt, then pulled it on.
"Must be getting back to
work," he said.
"Me too," she said
hurriedly. "Uhm, pleased to meet you, Mr. Wild."
He smiled and nodded as she
turned away and hurried back to the stairs.
She blew out a puff of air
as she reached them and hurried down. Her water was already boiling, so she
hurriedly made her tea and then scurried back to her office as she heard his
footsteps on the stairs.
Back in her office, she
closed the door in relief. Back in the security and comfort of not being seen
nor having to navigate through difficult conversations. Numbers were sooo much
more relaxing!
Of course, they didn't look
like James Wild! The man could have
posed for da Vinci! He'd put Michelangelo to shame! His voice had been a soft,
deep rumble which had seemed to vibrate off the inner walls of her ribs, as well!
His face was a bit harsh,
though, or perhaps, dramatic, she thought. He wasn't ugly, but square-jawed,
with piercing eyes that made him seem to scowl threateningly. Just looking at
that face made her nervous wondering what she'd done that had irritated him!
Yet from his voice and attitude he clearly hadn't been upset with her.
She wondered what he WAS like when upset!
Best not to find out, she
thought, as she sipped her tea and tried to get back to the numbers.
These numbers, unlike most
numbers, were not as soothing as she would wish. They were like singers in a
choir out of key with each other. They simply weren't agreeing, weren't adding
up. It was irritating because she had not yet been able to figure out why.
Sometimes it was just a
small error in a formula. Sometimes it was just one mistaken entry that was
throwing off everything else. In order to check she had to go through past
records to find out which entry was wrong - if it was wrong at all! She'd
already spent some time examining the formulas to ensure they worked.
But this spreadsheet was
drawing on numbers from other spreadsheets. And thus she had to validate their
origin, too. That meant more than just looking at spreadsheets. She had to go
and look at actual files. But she couldn't do that until she had a clue as to
which ones might be throwing the numbers off.
It was... annoying!
Also annoying was that
images of James Wild kept popping into her head to interrupt her. She'd had
little experience with men, and even less with partially, let alone entirely
naked men. None of the ones she did have experience with had been remotely like
James Wild.
Her preference for men of
intelligence and dignity and maturity and an interest in the arts and reading
meant they tended to be rather slim, and often short. And none had the kind of
barrel chest of James Wild, nor those startlingly visible muscles across their
chests and belly.
She wondered how old he
was. Certainly he was considerably older than she! Easily in his thirties, she
thought. But that wasn't necessarily bad. It meant he was more mature. Perhaps
she ought to have been considering the possibility of meeting older men all
along. They were bound to be less juvenile and silly and crude.
Was James Wild married, she
wondered.