Brooklyn
Normally when a client contacted me to engage my services, I was responsible for everything, but not this time. My client, Heston Mallard, knew exactly what he was doing and what he wanted. He was taking a working vacation during the month of March to give his new sailboat a shakedown cruise in the Caribbean. I only had to provide his companion.
Heston was different than most of my clients. Like all my clients, he was wealthy, worth just a tick under a billion dollars on paper, but unlike most, he was a little younger, twenty-nine, and a confirmed bachelor. Many of my clients were in their mid to late forties, or older, and were looking for someone special. That was where I came in. I specialized in finding that special someone, arranging a dream getaway, and allowing nature to take its course.
Not this time. Heston claimed he wasn't interested in a relationship. He was only looking for someone to spend a month on his boat with him, someone whose company he could enjoy, and when the month ended, the pair would go their separate ways. I first thought of turning him down as a client. Despite what my critics said about me, I didn't run an escort service, and I didn't provide women as playthings for the wealthy. I hadn't discovered what Heston said he wanted until I was interviewing him. He was very clear he didn't have time for long term relationships, that he was married to his work, and he liked it that way. The only reason I accepted him as a client was because during our interview, I realized he was deluding himself. I didn't have time or the inclination to dig into his emotional baggage, but it was clear he was trying to make himself happy by throwing himself into his work. If he truly wanted nothing more than someone to warm his bed at night for a month, he could have found plenty of takers for that role on his own. By coming to me, he was making a silent plea for help.
I always interviewed the client first to find out his or her likes and dislikes. I had a Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Chicago and had started out as a traditional therapist, helping people deal with life's slings and arrows. Early in my career, I realized what I enjoyed most was fixing troubled relationships. Later I'd become more of a life coach by helping men and women create healthy, rewarding relationships. That led to what I did now. I used my counseling experience to discover what my clients were looking for in a companion and matched them with people seeking what my client offered. The interview process normally took several hours and allowed me to develop a profile that I used when selecting a companion.
Once I had a baseline for my client, I began my search for a companion. I found my companions, both male and female, the same way anyone finds anything these days. I used the internet. I'd hired a company to design a 'dating' app that people could download for free. They filled out some basic personal information, and I used that information to make my selections. The app was only the first step. From there I selected individuals I thought might be a good fit, and after a brief phone interview, if I was still interested, I'd arrange a face to face for a more in-depth interview. I typically narrowed my interview list to between two and four potential companions during the phone interview.
Like with my client, the interviews with potential companions took several hours and allowed me to develop a profile for them. There was no science to what I did, but it should be clear to anyone that an outdoorsy adventuresome type probably wouldn't be a good fit for someone that enjoyed ballet, opera, and quiet evenings at home reading a book. It often took me anywhere from six weeks to three months to find a companion, matching people based on their personality types and my clients' desires and wishes.
Some clients were easier to match than others. Heston was proving to be more of a challenge than most, and I was running out of time. It was already the first week in February and his new boat was scheduled for delivery in the next week. He was pulling up anchor March second, companion or no.
During my interview, I realized the deal breaker for him was he was keenly interested in a woman who had her own career, who would understand the demands of his job, and finally, someone who understood he was a man driven by competition and winning. He measured himself by his financial success and his ability to make hundreds of millions of dollars in a single stock trade. If his companion wasn't equally competitive, I knew he would grind her down and lose respect for her.
What I needed and hadn't yet found was a strong, confident, woman who was at the top of her game in a highly competitive field, and she couldn't be an artist or someone who's successes couldn't be quantified. I needed a lawyer, doctor, businesswoman, or someone similar. I'd thought I'd found a perfect match, a divorce lawyer who specialized in high profile cases, but she'd turned out to be a real ball buster who took only female clients and was driven by the thrill of ruining her clients' husbands. Like Heston, I didn't have the time or desire to get into all her problems, but during the interview I realized that would have been an explosive pairing. Cooped up on a boat, they would have either hate fucked each other to death, or one would have thrown the other overboard in the middle of the ocean.
I looked through the latest applicants. Like most days, many of the applicants were people I couldn't use. My clients weren't likely to interested in a thrice divorced, three hundred-pound, mother of five barely getting by on government assistance, or an unemployed, unshaven, parolee whose idea of a good time was shot gunning beers and watching football on television while his girlfriend or wife waited on him.
After wading through and deleting more than a hundred applications, one person caught my attention. My app intentionally asked for very little information. The details of applicants' lives didn't interest me at this point, and it was natural for people to inflate themselves, so any information they might give was be suspect anyway. All I asked for was some basic information I used to weed out those who would never make the cut.
I looked Chloe up on the internet, searching for more information to give me a better idea of the woman. She was attractive, and working backwards from her credentials and graduation dates, I pegged her age somewhere around thirty. It was hard to believe someone so accomplished would have to resort to using a dating app, even mine, but at first glance she appeared to be perfect for my needs. I booted my version of the application she'd used that brought her to my attention and initiated a contact request. Chloe's phone would alert her that I wished to talk to her and asked for permission to contact her, along with a time and phone number that would be convenient for her. I hoped she would respond soon and agree to contact quickly. I was running out of time.
Chloe had signed up just last night. It wasn't often that the very person I was looking for happened to fall into my lap just when I needed her, but I wasn't going to look this gift horse in the mouth. Chloe and I were in the same time zone, so ten a.m. in Chicago was ten a.m. in Nashville. Even on a Saturday, she should be up by now.
The sounds of bare feet padding across my hardwood floor caught my attention. I looked up from my desk and smiled as my latest conquest appeared. Jacob Lanier was tall and muscled like an athlete. He was twenty-two years my junior, but that hadn't prevented him from fucking me into bliss last night. The fact he'd slept to almost ten o'clock probably meant I'd given as good as I'd gotten.
"Morning, lover," he purred. "Coming back to bed?"
He was still bed tossed and wearing nothing but his tight boxer briefs. I couldn't decide if the most attractive thing about him was his rock-hard abs or his equally hard cock. I wouldn't mind another tumble, but I was working under a tight deadline.
"Sorry, Babe, duty calls. There's orange juice in the 'fridge."
He stepped up behind me, taking my breasts into his big hands as he nuzzled my neck. "The only thing I want for breakfast is you," he rumbled, his voice low and sexy.
I let him continue for a moment. "Stop. I have work to do."
"All work and no play..." he continued in his bedroom voice.
I rose from my desk. He tried to pull me into a kiss, but I blocked him with a hand on his muscular chest. "Be a good boy, let me work now, and maybe tonight you can make me squirm again."
He backed off. "Who works on a Saturday?"
"I do."
He didn't like me giving him the brush-off. "Fine," he growled. "I need to go anyway."
"I had a good time last night," I said softly, trying to soften the blow to his ego. He'd fucked the shit out of me last night, and if he did that to most women, he probably wasn't used to getting turned down for seconds.
He smiled, but I could tell I'd never hear from him again. I was a little disappointed, but it wasn't unexpected. I'd let him pick me up because he looked like a good candidate to scratch an itch, and he hadn't disappointed.
"Okay, lover. I'll call you."
I smiled. He couldn't even remember my name. "Want to shower before you go?"
My computer dinged, and I looked at it. Chloe had accepted my request for contact. I needed Jacob to go.
"Join me?"
"Can't," I replied, nodding at my computer. "Work."