Chapter Three:
When Tuesday came around, I had a lab final in the morning that I had to be up early for. After a quick breakfast of overnight oats, I made my usual coffee and filled my thermos. I sipped at the hot beverage as I walked across the bridge to campus to help calm the chattering of my teeth. Today would be the last cadaver experience of my undergraduate career, and I was eager to throw my formaldehyde-stained lab coat in the trash after the exam.
My coffee was gone before I got to the lab door, and I entered with the other students, pausing in the entry to remove my gear and don my lab coat. The exam went as I thought it would, with various organs and cadavers marked with secondary and tertiary questions. Thankfully, it was all over after ninety grueling minutes. With my lab coat effectively in the 'contaminated' container, I headed home for a quick lunch before my work-study shift at the library. I scarfed down a sandwich and was quickly out the door. The walk back was painless since the wind had died down as the day warmed, and I quickly made my way back to the school.
My four-hour shift went by quickly. The two weeks of finals at the end of term was the time period when the library saw the most traffic. Students from other schools often used our library as well since we closed much later at night, so I was kept much busier than usual. When evening came around, I clocked out and quickly made my way home to change. As I walked across the bridge, I opened up the confirmation email, just to make sure I had the correct appointment time. While reading the contents, anxiety flooded through me.
"Six? I thought I told her six thirty! I hate military time!" I checked my phone and noticed I had thirty minutes.
Half an hour. That's all I had to run back home, change, and jump into my car. I wouldn't have time to do any make-up or my hair. I might not even have time to change clothes. Clutching the straps of my backpack, I ran as fast as my legs would take me across the icy bridge and toward our house. When I made it to my car, I had just ten minutes to get downtown.
Full of sweat and with hair clinging to my forehead, I started the vehicle and headed to the address at the bottom of Patricia's email. Luckily, I found the building right away after making a few turns downtown. I put some coins in a parking meter, not caring to see if I paid for enough time, and carefully half jogged up the slick sidewalk and through the entrance.
It wasn't a skyscraper by any means. But there were a modest number of floors and the building seemed as large as our five-story library. As I entered, I noticed a reception counter and I approached it while the person seated behind it clacked noisily on a keyboard.
"Hi. I'm here for an interview?"
She didn't look up at me and continued typing while looking at her screen. "Who are you here to see?"
"Mr. Crawford?"
"Please wait one moment." Her fingers eventually ceased long enough to allow her to quickly grab the receiver of the phone next to her. She pressed a few buttons on the interface and held it up to her ear with her shoulder while she resumed typing. "Is Mr. Crawford ready for his next interviewee? Okay, great. I'll send her up." She hung up the phone and looked at me. "You're going to want to take the elevator to the third floor. There will be a sitting area that breaks off into a hallway to your left. Take that one all the way down to the conference room. Patricia will be waiting for you."
I nodded. "Okay. Thanks."
I suddenly felt so nervous. The elevator was easy to find, and I followed the instructions until I came to a conference room at the end of the hall. An older woman was seated at a desk just to the left of a set of double doors and she smiled at me as I rushed over to her.
"Here to see Mr. Crawford?"
"Yes. Am I late? I must have sent the wrong time when I emailed, and I had work before the interview today. I just caught the mistake on my way home. I'm so sorry."
"Let me check. You're Avery?"
"Yes."
She swiped through the screen of a tablet propped up in front of her and frowned. "Oh, I am so sorry."
My heart began to sink, and I wanted to scream up at the ceiling. This job would have been so much for me and I managed to blow it by something as small as not double checking the email before I sent it. I forced down the anger bubbling up inside of me and waited, scraping my nails against the inside of my palm.
"I must have put in the wrong time for you. You said eighteen thirty in your email. I am so sorry you felt like you had to rush here."
I blew out a breath of relief. So, I wasn't growing forgetful and clumsy just yet. I swallowed down my anxiety. "Will he still see me?"
"Of course. I'll let him know you're here." She pressed a button on the phone next to her and held the receiver to her ear. "Mr. Crawford? Avery Mitts is here to see you." She nodded and put the phone down. "Go in, dear." She motioned toward the door.
"Thank you." I walked over to the entrance and took a peek inside.
The outer walls were merely windows, and I could see a dark long table surrounded by office chairs. The biggest chair at the end of the table was occupied by a man in a dark suit. Although I couldn't see his face as he was bent over papers on the table, I got a glimpse of his gorgeous wavy hair. It looked soft and slightly messy, but in a way like it had been purposefully styled that way. I raised my hand and gave a few soft taps on the door, and his head popped up momentarily. He waved me in as he turned back to his papers.
"Please, take a seat. I'm just finishing up some notes and then we can begin." His voice was much deeper than I had anticipated. The sound reminded me of the way I felt after eating imported chocolate I was able to have one time. Jess had brought some back from her family vacation to Switzerland. It was sweet, slightly bitter, and velvety smooth. Savoring it had been exciting and pleasurable. Listening to him talk was like eating that chocolate. Delicious. I looked to the chair he indicated and made my way over to it.
"Alright. Thank you." I chose a chair one away from the next on his left and sat down.
The windows of the conference room faced the artistic section of downtown. Murals were painted across brick and stucco of the many businesses scattered throughout as well as some tasteful graffiti on some of the fences. It all worked together, the vandalism and the paintings. It was almost as if whoever painted the murals had also decided to contrast it with graffiti, and the balance created was like complementing opposites. Opposite ends of the spectrum, yet unable to signify beauty or existence without the other.
"So." He shuffled through his stack and pulled a new pile of papers before placing them on top. "You must be Avery?"
He turned his attention on me and all I could do was study his beautiful face. He had the warmest brown eyes and a subtle five o'clock shadow on his chiseled jaw. He had an aesthetically pleasing nose and sensually shaped lips. His skin looked slightly tanned, but not the unnatural type of coloring from a tanning bed or spray products.
I looked away to clear my head enough to find the words to answer his question. "Yes, that's me." My voice came out squeakier than I would have liked, and I tried to cover it up with a smile. I prayed that he wasn't the 'Mr. Crawford' for whom I'd be working. There was no way I would be able to live in the same house as this man without him starring in my every erotic late-night fantasy.
"Alright then, Avery." My name rolled off of his tongue like a promised night of primal coupling. I tried to push the thoughts out of my head so I could focus on getting the job. His eyes wander over my sweatshirt and messy bun with a look of disapproval.
"There was a mix-up in the interview times. I'm so sorry for how I'm dressed. I had something else planned, a lot more professional, actually." I tugged at my sweatshirt and tried to push stray strands back into the pile on top of my head.
"I'm sure." Obvious dinterest was laced in his tone, and he looked back down to look over the words in front of him. He returned his attention to me, elbows on the table, hands steepled in front of him. "I'm going to cut right to the chase. Among many other things, I'm the CEO of an investing company I started ten years ago as a hobby. As of recently, it has begun to take off and now requires a lot more of my time and attention. I also run a company that specializes in renting out luxury condos in the surrounding and metro areas. Last, but not least, I have a few other small businesses scattered throughout." He gave a nonchalant wave of his hand as if to dismiss them.
His eyes hold mine with such an intensity that I have to look away again. I looked down at my hands. "Sounds like a lot."
He nodded, picked up a pen, and began to tap it against, what I was assuming, was my application. "It is. It keeps me busier than I anticipated. Lately, there's also been pressure to attach myself to a woman."
I frown at such a bigoted idea. "That still happens in this day and age? Who would pressure you to do that?"