CHAPTER ONE:
Lukas sat on the edge of the apartment building, one leg thrown carelessly over the edge and an arm wrapped around his other knee. His dark skin gleamed in the light from the full moon and the neon lights of the stores on the street below. He loved this time of night…the hum of the city seemed less menacing and the world was asleep. He sat there for hours, until the sun came up and he had to seek refuge from that glaring orb.
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Michelle rushed through the store, her arms full of glossy paper bags, bumping into people and drawing angry looks. Her shopping had taken her longer than she thought, and now she was going to be late for her afternoon appointment. Andre was going to be pissed, she thought.
She ran along the aisles of the store, out the doors and down the street towards the subway station. As she bustled along, her mind ran along familiar paths – paths filled with uncomfortable, disconcerting thoughts and memories. She sat on the subway for two hours as she jogged between transfer points, missed stops and construction zones. She finally got to her apartment in the Falcon Heights complex. Michelle had lived in Minneapolis for about two months, working in the afternoons as a corporate consultant for a Washington, D.C. company. Gerald Newman and Associates, a consulting company a hundred and twenty years old, was paying extravagantly for the luxurious suite in the Oakwood apartments, but they would only continue to do so if she made it to her appointments on time! Damn it all!
She burst in the door, shielding her eyes from the bright light that shone through the windows. She tripped over the rug and barked her shin on the shoe rack. She swore through gritted teeth as she dumped her packages on the dining room table and launched herself to the bathroom.
Michelle eased herself under the massaging water stream issuing from the shower head, the hot water easing sore, tired muscles and fogging up the mirror and making the ceramic tiles of the bathroom floor slick with moisture. She lathered up and washed her hair – she had to be sparkling for this meeting. She tumbled out of the shower and dried herself off with a fluffy white towel. Normally she luxuriated in her showers, it was one of her favorite activities, but this was not the right time. She did, nevertheless, take a moment to bury her nose in the fragrant towel, sighing as she rubbed it over her dripping body.
Now was the moment of truth – her hair. Being of mixed blood, she had the black, curly hair of her father and the wave and body of her mother. It was an absolute pain to keep tidy, and in her haste she had forgotten that. She took a straightener to her hair and attacked it with a vengeance. A blow drier, a scrunchie and some mousse turned her rats' nest of hair into a sleek, black helmet with a long pony tail reaching almost to her waist.
Michelle's wardrobe was slightly easier to choose from – she merely had to impress the client with her looks and her smarts. She didn't know much about who the client was sending as a delegate, but assumed it would be a man. Men were easy to impress: they thought with their dicks, and not much else. Of course, she knew exceptions, like her daddy, but she had always run across the chauvinist type in business matters. So, with this in mind, she went casual-sexy. A black lacy push-up bra started the list, and a pair of boyshorts slipped up her legs. Knee high nylons went on her feet. She took out a crimson lace top shirt out of the closet and put it on. It was long in the arms and the trunk, so the cuffs would hang out her jacket sleeves and the hem would hug her hips. Her third-best suit came out; it was a white blazer coupled with white front-seam pants. She slipped them on and stepped into a pair of heeled sandals. Michelle did not need the height as she stood at a respectable 5'10", but the heels added a provocative sway to her hips and made her slightly more imposing. Men often backed down when a woman could look directly into their eyes, or even down at them.
Michelle took a step back and looked in the floor length mirror and appraised herself. She was a slender woman, weighing in at a grand total of a hundred and fifteen pounds of bone and muscle. Her light caramel coloured skin was flawless except for a couple of small moles and freckles on her neck and shoulders and long, slender hands and small, dainty feet stuck out in the proper places. She had high cheek bones framing two almond shaped eyes, a well-proportioned nose and high, narrow eyebrows.
She applied red lipstick and lip gloss to her lips and adjusted the neckline of her shirt and buttoned up her blazer. She fixed a couple of hoops to her ear lobes, chose a gold-plated necklace from her safe. She shrugged into a dark knee length coat and grabbed her purse and portfolio from the kitchen table as she sauntered out the door. She got on board the elevator and called a cab on her cell phone; it was waiting for her as she walked out the door of her apartment building.
It was a thirty minute drive from her apartment to the offices of Jaimeson, Tyler and Goodriche. Michelle reviewed her portfolio as the cabbie navigated the hell that was the Minneapolis street system. Jaimeson, Tyler and Goodriche had been around since the early 1940s, having been founded in the economic boom that had heralded the start of the Second World War in America. They dealt with European and African imports. They had a silent partner that held over thirty percent of their assets. The eldest sons of the company's founders each held fifteen percent of the stock, and the final quarter of the company's assets was held by small-time investors throughout America, Europe and Africa.
They had over three thousand employees taking care of various parts of the business in branches across the western hemisphere. Their gains were at over five hundred million a year, but they were loosing money, and fast. The executives of Jamieson, Tyler and Goodriche had called her in an attempt to find out what was going wrong.
The cab finally pulled up outside a tall sky rise. Its steel and concrete edifices were broken by long mirrored windows and marble carvings. The JT&G offices were on the sixty second floor, overlooking the downtown sprawl of greater Minneapolis. Michelle got out of the car as the doorman opened the door. He was an old man with a white goatee and moustache and had white hair with grey temples tied back in a neat pony tail.
"Good afternoon," he said. His voice held a hint of an upper class English accent. "I assume you are here to speak with Mr. Jaimeson, Miss…" He looked at her expectantly, his warm brown eyes looking at her steadily.
"Michelle
Leodegrance
. I'm here from Gerald Newman and Associates."
"I will tell them you will be right up." He took her hand as she stepped onto the curb and motioned for her to precede him up the stairs into the foyer. Michelle heard him mumbling behind her, but didn't turn around. Either he was senile, she thought, or he had a microphone. It was probably the latter, for he seemed to be a stable sort of man.
Michelle walked through the main floor of the office building and moved to the triple bank of elevators in the center. A hand on her arm stopped her, prompting her to turn around. The doorman stood there with an unreadable expression on his face.
"The Firm has a private elevator, madam. Please follow me." He passed by her towards the back of the building. There was a partition there, with mirrored glass doors; she could see their reflections in the glass, but nothing beyond them. The old man walked up to them, tapped lightly, and pushed open the panels.
She stepped through the plate glass doors into a vast foyer carpeted with Persian rugs laid over Grecian rose granite. African-style carvings in some black wood sat in little nooks inset into the walls, and they were lit from below with little halogen lights. The sculptures' shadows lay steadily on the walls behind them. They were kind of spooky.
A brass elevator sat in the middle of the back wall of the room, directly across from the doors Michelle came through.
"This way," said the old man as he passed by her. For some reason he always seemed to disappear from sight the moment she blinked, only to suddenly appear out of the corner of her eye. Michelle followed him into the elevator. It had glass walls, and as it rose up the vertical wall of the sky scraper, she could see the carvings in the walls on either side of the elevator shaft, carvings of knights, warriors and wild beasts. Part way up, the elevator paused, and Michelle saw, carved deeply into the wall of the shaft, the image of a wild beast, with a snake's head, a leopard's body and a lion's haunches surrounded by uncountable hounds. It started again with a lurch, and then the ride was smooth the rest of the way up.
The elevator stopped and Michelle and the old man stepped through the door into a very professional looking office. The ceiling was high and pillars covered in books and collectables filled the room, blocking lines of sight. She could make out a desk and a small group of people down at the other end of the room.
"Miss Leodegrance, master Lukas and his associates are down there," he pointed. "Jered Jaimeson is the one in the black and khaki, Mr. John Tyler and Mr. Percival Goodriche are the bearded and the bald men, respectively. You'll know master Lukas, I'm sure." The man had a little, knowing smile on his wrinkled face. "Your Mr. Andre Bors will be here soon, I understand that he was held up in traffic on the way here."
Michelle's relief was apparent as she slouched a little in her wool jacket. The doorman's smile grew larger. "If you need anything, you may call me Mer. I suggest that you wait to ask me questions until you are done with your meeting." He bowed slightly and stepped back into the elevator, the brass doors closing in front of him.