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Authors: Carole Remy

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BOOK: Twelve Nights
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“This is beautiful,” she commented to throw Danny off track.
She didn’t want him to guess that she knew this view well. He glanced at her
and smiled, almost as if he knew. But he couldn’t, she reminded herself. “What
is this body of water called?”

“English Bay.” The words were polite, but the accompanying
look was almost disappointed.

They were walking along the seawall now and Aggie forgot her
anxiety, forgot the scheming, forgot the coming ordeal, in the sheer pleasure
of walking between ocean and green grass, passing and being passed by walkers
and bikers, each intent on their journey. The place had a sense of combined
peace and purpose that eased Aggie toward well-being. If only I could walk here
every day, she thought, I think I would be a happy woman.

Reality returned as Danny steered her away from the seawall
and up to a tall white apartment building.

“Is this where the interview is?” Aggie asked stupidly, all
peace flown.

Danny nodded.

“So you did manage to get me an interview?” Aggie persisted.

“No.”

The word didn’t sound like an admission or an apology, just
a simple statement of fact. Aggie stopped and pulled her elbow from her guide’s
grip.

“Then why are we here, Danny?” she demanded.

“I’ll get you in.”

The young man sounded so calm and assured, Aggie almost
believed him. After all, he was the man’s brother. Danny walked through the
lobby and she followed. He stopped at a small elevator in a side hall. The door
opened at his touch and he escorted her inside. Aggie’s anxiety flooded back.
She felt ugly and stupid. She would never pull off the deception. The lawyer would
see through her in a minute. Even if he didn’t, she was too ugly and stupid to
convince him to let Angela be the twelve-day woman.

Through her panic, Aggie noticed that the elevator had only
two buttons. One said ‘office’ and the other had no sign. Danny pressed
‘office’. They ascended swiftly, surely more than two floors. Aggie guessed
that the elevator carried them to the top of the building. They stepped out
onto a plush burnt orange carpet. A receptionist sat behind a large
semi-circular desk. Two hallways, left and right, led back from the desk into
the bowels of the office. No doors were visible from Aggie’s viewpoint. The
lobby might have been designed to intimidate.

Aggie glanced at her watch. It was almost eleven.

“Put Ms. Trout in a room.” Danny told the receptionist

“Yes, Mr. Buko.” Aggie watched as she pressed a button
behind the counter.

“When the others are done, send her in to Richard.” It was
the longest sentence Aggie had heard Danny say.

“He won’t be happy,” the receptionist looked nervous.

“Tell him I said to interview her.”

“Of course, Mr. Buko.”

“Danny,” Aggie interrupted. “I don’t think this is such a
good idea. If the lawyer really doesn’t want to see me…”

“Everything will be fine.” Danny’s voice held no
reassurance, only conviction. He continued to the receptionist. “At 12:45, have
her brought back out here to me.”

Then he vanished.

The first thing Aggie did after a young woman escorted her
to an office was to pull the tape recorder from her pocket. She saw to her
dismay that she had pressed ‘rewind’ instead of ‘record’. She memorized the
location of the correct button and replaced the recorder in her pocket. She
tried the button. Then she pulled the recorder back out. Bingo. As she went to
put the device back in her pocket, Aggie thought of a complication. It was too
hot. She couldn’t wear her coat to the interview. She shrugged out of the
jacket and laid it across a small table. Then she pushed the ‘record’ button
and put it in her purse. Angela had brought a loosely woven tapestry bag for
this very purpose. The tape was for ninety minutes. Surely it wouldn’t run out
before the interview.

Aggie checked her watch fifteen times over the ensuing hour.
The time went no faster for her prodding. The room she sat in was pleasantly
cluttered. Obviously someone’s unused office, it exuded family and warmth.
Aggie sat glued to her chair for the first few minutes, two watch-checks,
afraid someone would catch her if she snooped. Then she dragged the chair a
foot closer to the desk and leaned in. The only visible paper was upside down
to her. She struggled to decipher the text. It was a grocery list.

She examined the photographs behind the desk. A man, a man
and a woman, and a man, woman and baby. A woman’s desk then. A man wouldn’t
keep a solo picture of himself. The woman was in her late twenties, about
Aggie’s age. With a husband and baby. Aggie felt a pang of envy. The bookshelf
contained volumes of computer manuals. The woman must be a programmer. Aggie
checked her watch for the tenth time.

Finally, at 12:33, the same young woman came back to the
door.

“Mr. Urbano will see you now.”

Urbano. Aggie tucked the name away into her small stack of
evidence. TransGlobe. Danny Buko. Urbano. English Bay. She followed the
secretary down the hall. They arrived shortly at an imposing door. Aggie
guessed from the glimpses she caught through open doors and windows that this
office must have a great view of the water. Probably the head honcho’s. The
young woman rapped once and then swung open the door.

“I’m afraid there’s been a mistake.” The man behind the desk
spoke as Aggie entered the room. Aggie ignored his comment.

“Good afternoon, Mr. Urbano.” She walked forward with her
hand outstretched. “It’s a pleasure to meet you.”

The man’s eyes took in her appearance. The perusal was more
invigorating than invading.

“It’s a pleasure to meet you too, Miss Trout.”

Aggie walked to a chair in front of the desk and sat down.

“I’m afraid you have wasted your time,” the man began with
an apologetic smile.

“Mr. Urbano,” Aggie countered, “Danny told me to come to
Vancouver. He brought me here to your office.”

“Actually this isn’t my office.”

“Wouldn’t it be easier to just interview me? I’m here.”

“My client wants an honest woman, Miss Trout.”

“My name is Aggie,” she offered with what she hoped was an
ingratiating smile. “And I
am
an
honest woman.”

Most of the time, she added mentally.

“Why did you write from a New York post office box if you
live and work in Cincinnati? “

“I was visiting my cousin. I explained that in my letter.”

“Why would you take a box if you were only visiting?”

“It was my s…cousin’s box.” Aggie hoped the small slip would
pass unnoticed.

“How old are you?”

“I’m twenty-eight,” Aggie admitted as she and Angela had
agreed. She hurried on. “I know you said thirty, but twenty-eight is close.
I’ll be twenty-nine soon.”

“But you’re not thirty.”

“Look, Mr. Urbano, why don’t you ask me some real questions?
I love reading and chess. I am the head librarian of a small branch library. Do
you want me to recite the Dewey decimal system?”

For the first time, Richard cracked a smile. It lightened
his expression from annoyed to merely suspicious.

“Why did Danny tell you to come to Vancouver?”

“To meet his brother.”

“I mean, why you? Why not one of the three thousand other
rejects?”

“Three thousand?” Aggie echoed. “Whew.”

“I repeat, Miss Trout. Why you?”

“You’d have to ask Danny that, Mr. Urbano. Look, are you
going to interview me?”

“I thought I was. You have an insinuating way, Miss Trout. I
had no intention to listen to a word, and here we are, talking.”

Aggie smiled.

“But I’m afraid I can’t recommend you for the position.”

“Is that the missionary position?”

This time Richard laughed.

“All sorts of positions,” he admitted.

Maybe he was rethinking the rejection. The longer she kept
him talking, the more likely he would relent. Just like a hostage situation.
Keep them talking and avoid the ax. Aggie hurried on.

“I’m eager.” She and Angela had decided on the word as
suggestive but not vulgar.

“What are you willing to do?”

Aggie sensed a challenge in the lawyer’s words. Still the
descriptions stuck in her throat. She thought of Angela’s advice and remembered
her sister’s plight.

“Anything.” The word was hampered by the gulp in her throat.

“Give me a list.” The man would not give in. Still, he
hadn’t thrown her out of the office yet.

“Bondage?” she tried.

“Have you ever tried it?”

“No,” she admitted. “But I would.”

“For one hundred twenty thousand dollars?”

“No,” Aggie realized the truth as she spoke it. “For the
curiosity. I’d try it once just to try it.”

“It could be twelve times,” the lawyer warned. Aggie
swallowed and nodded. “What else would you do?”

“Discipline?”

“Have you tried
that
?”

“No,” Aggie admitted again. “I’m not too sure that I want
to.”

“I’m glad you’re being honest at last.” The man didn’t
smile.

“What else?”

Aggie felt her face flush. She hated to admit to this urge
and she squirmed on her chair.

“Sodomy.” The word came out as a whisper.

“Is that a curious interest or an I’ll-do-it-if-I-have-too
interest?”

Again Aggie paused. She looked down at her lap.

“Curious.”

The man leaned toward her. “What was that?”

“I said ‘curious’,” Aggie repeated more loudly.

“Any other sexual ‘curiosity’?” The man’s tone was faintly
mocking. Aggie debated snapping back at him, but swallowed her spleen for
Angela’s sake.

“Not that I can think of.”

“What about oral sex?”

“Sure,” Aggie answered. “I thought that was a given. I like
all the normal stuff.”

The lawyer smiled.

“I think you do,” he commented. “One last question. What do
you want the money for?”

Aggie panicked. She and Angela hadn’t thought of the one
most obvious question. She couldn’t tell him the truth, to get her sister who
was going to masquerade as her out of prostitution. What else would have
compelled her to respond to an ad like that? She couldn’t think of a single
reason.

“Thank you, Miss Trout.” The lawyer stood up from behind the
desk.

“Don’t you want to hear …” Aggie began. Still she drew a
blank.

“You’re a lovely young woman, Miss Trout,” the lawyer began
his kiss-off. “You even seem to have the right attitudes about sex, at least as
far as we talked. But the fact is that you’re a fraud.”

Aggie sat mute as a statue. She couldn’t deny the charge.

“I’m not sure what your game is,” the lawyer continued. “But
I’m afraid you aren’t acceptable for the position. Any position.”

Aggie remembered her earlier joke about the missionary
position. No humor now could penetrate her sense of failure. She had let her
sister down. A simple interview, and she had frozen on the first unrehearsed
question. Suddenly the answer was clear to her, and she blurted it out.

“It wasn’t the money, Mr. Urbano,” she explained. “It was
the fact that he offered the money. The man behind the offer intrigues me.”

“A good answer, Miss Trout.” The man smiled and extended his
hand. “Too bad you remembered it a few minutes too late.”

It’s the truth, Aggie wanted to shout. But the interview was
over. She followed the lawyer to the door and turned to shake his hand as she
stepped out.

“It was a pleasure meeting you, Mr. Urbano.” Her dignity was
as firm as her grip. “I’m sorry things didn’t work out better.”

Aggie glanced again at her watch as she walked
straight-backed down the hall. It was 12:45. The interview had taken twelve
minutes.

When she arrived back at the lobby, Danny was standing
silently by the reception desk.

“Aggie,” he greeted her. Just the one flat word. “Come with
me.”

“It didn’t work, Danny.”

“Come with me,” he repeated.

“Mr. Urbano told me ‘no’,” Aggie tried to explain as they
walked to the elevator. “I’ll just go back to my …”

She had almost said ‘sister’, Aggie realized.

“Hotel,” she completed the sentence.

“I’ll buy you lunch.”

“That’s all right.” Aggie wanted to get as far from Danny
and TransGlobe and Mr. Buko and Mr. Urbano as she could. There was no chance
she would get to meet the elusive placer-of-the-ad anyway. He was the only one
that had interested her from the beginning and he remained as firmly hidden as
ever behind his league of minions. Aggie laughed inwardly at her flowery choice
of internal words. Time to get back to the library.

“I’d rather go to the hotel,” she tried to insist.

“Come with me.”

Danny again ignored her protest. Did he ever listen? Was he
a robot?

“Why do you want me to come to lunch?” Direct questions had
worked before. Maybe she would get an answer to this one.

“I want you to meet my brother.”

That was an answer. Aggie wanted very much to meet this
brother. She followed Danny meekly into the elevator.

 

Chapter
11

Jimmy drummed his fingers impatiently on the table. He
glanced at his watch. Danny was almost five minutes late. A mild anxiety
overshadowed the anger he would have felt had the latecomer been anyone else.
Danny was punctual to the second. And he wasn’t particularly good at navigating
the streets. Two more minutes and Jimmy would begin to retrace the route from
the restaurant back to the office.

With ten seconds to spare, Jimmy spotted Danny just outside
the entrance to the restaurant. He had a woman with him. A tall auburn-haired
beauty. As they stepped through the doors, Jimmy got a better look at his
brother’s companion. It was the woman he had envisioned that morning. A face
like a Botticelli and a body like a Giacometti. The young woman took off her
coat and handed it to a server. No, he revised. Giacometti’s figures were too
thin. Hers was perfect. Jimmy felt an unfamiliar envy of his brother. As they
approached the table, Jimmy stood.

BOOK: Twelve Nights
9.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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