Danielle Murray strode briskly through the front door of the downtown hotel, a bellhop trailing behind with her suitcase and a hang-up bag. She walked up to the front desk to confirm her reservation, complete the check-in process and obtain her key card.
Once she had completed her business, she thanked the manager who was working the desk with a brief smile, then walked purposefully through the ornate lobby.
As she walked through the lobby, she happened to look over at a man reading a newspaper in one of the lobby chairs, and there was just the briefest of eye contact, a hint of a smile, then she was gone toward the elevators at the back of the lobby.
At age 41, Danielle was a success by anyone's measure. Confident, self-assured and well educated, she had used a considerable inheritance to form a holding company that had acquired a half-dozen companies in the area of home maintenance, of which she was the president and CEO.
Among her group, there was a nationally known drain-cleaning company, a widely recognized carpet cleaning service and other such companies that weren't quite as well known. She had used her estimable work experience and her business acumen to position her group among the leaders in the industry.
She had arrived in the city that morning, and had a meeting scheduled with the directors of one of those companies, which was about to launch a major advertising campaign. She needed to stow her belongings in the room, freshen up quickly and make her way back downstairs to catch a taxi to the company's headquarters.
Stan Conway really wasn't terribly interested in anything he saw in USA Today, but he liked to scan through it just so he could say he was well informed.
He was much more interested in the woman who strode into the hotel like she owned it, followed by a bellhop pulling a cart with her things. He watched as she efficiently completed her business at the front desk, and gave her a quick mental appraisal.
The woman was slightly taller than average, probably 5-foot-7, maybe 5-8, and he guessed her age at around 40, although she was a young-looking 40. There was nothing about her body that stood out; her hips, breasts and legs were all in perfect proportion, and she was dressed for business in a smart suit with a knee-length skirt that was snug but not tight.
She wasn't classically beautiful, but she was quite nice-looking, with sandy blonde hair cut in a style that was very short in back, but swept up from her forehead and off to her left. Stan found himself nodding in appreciation, all the more so when she strode past, glanced his way and smiled briefly.
Stan stared at her receding backside – and it was very nicely put-together backside – until she turned the corner to the elevators, out of sight from where he was sitting. It was only then that he sensed a presence next to his chair.
"Know her?" John Motta said with a knowing smile.
"No, but I wish I did," Stan answered as he folded his newspaper and stood up to greet the man he was meeting for lunch. "Nice piece of work."
"That she is," John said as the two men shook hands. "How is everything, Stan? Are we about ready to kick this deal up a couple of notches?"
"Let's have lunch, and we'll talk," Stan said.
Stan Conway owned a modest-sized construction company and John Motta was a potential client, one whose business could put Stan's company into a brand-new market, both in terms of location and the type of construction.
At 38, he was just about to realize the dream he'd had when he'd started with the company, back when it had been owned by his ex-father-in-law.
Stan was an average-sized man, about 5-foot-10 and fairly lean. He still had a full head of brown hair that was just starting to show some silver, dazzling blue eyes and a thick moustache that failed to mask a ready and winning smile.
Stan and John had sat down at their table in the hotel's restaurant, and had just placed their orders, when Stan happened to see the blonde woman he'd noticed earlier stride back through the lobby, briefcase in hand, and head out the door.
He was shocked to feel little butterflies in his stomach, something that hadn't happened at the sight of a woman in a long, long time.
It wasn't that Stan didn't think about women, or that he didn't enjoy looking at them. On the contrary. He dated a few women back in his home city, and sometimes, when the need became too great, he would avail himself of the services of an escort service, usually on business trips like this one.
But he hadn't gotten the butterflies like that since college, when he'd first laid eyes on the girl he'd eventually married, the woman who had broken his heart six years earlier.
Even as he watched through the window as the woman climbed into a taxi, all of the bittersweet memories came rushing back, unbidden and unwanted.
God, he'd loved her! They had been the perfect couple at their college; she was the homecoming queen and he was a starter on the varsity baseball team.
Angie had been a raven-haired beauty that every man on campus had tried to nail. But Stan had gotten there first, and after they graduated from the college, they had gotten married.
His father-in-law owned a construction company, and he gladly gave his new son-in-law a position in the company.
Stan had proven to have a natural affinity for the work, and he quickly won over the foremen and other workingmen he came in contact with. He may have been the boss' son-in-law, but he'd come from a working-class background, the son of a maintenance foreman for a chemical plant, and Stan knew all about hard work.
By the time he was 30, he'd moved up to become vice president of the company, with all of the responsibilities that entailed. It should have been the turning point in his life, and it was, but not the way he had hoped.
He wasn't sure when he began to suspect that Angie was cheating on him. There were just little things. She wasn't as affectionate; there were mysterious disappearances, when she was supposed to be some place and wasn't; and she adamantly refused to start a family, which he wanted.
She had taken to going off on vacations, either by herself or with friends, and living something approximating a jet-set life, which they really couldn't afford.
Whatever it was, it all started to add up a year or so after he was promoted to vice president. He caught his wife in a few little lies here and there; she was going out, "with the girls," a little too often, then coming home late and fairly disheveled.
Stan decided to lay a trap and see what happened. He hired a special crew, men he knew from jobs around town, to build a large deck behind his house. He installed several hidden cameras, in a number of locations, including the den and their bedroom, then sat back and waited.
He didn't have to wait long. The men he'd hired were all uniformly athletic-looking – muscular and handsome – and they had been instructed to flirt with his wife and see what she'd do. Angie wasn't working, so she was around the house a lot.
Within two weeks of the start of the project, his cameras had caught Angie taking one of the young men upstairs to their bedroom for a tryst, then another one, and finally, she took them all on in a furious gangbang.
Stan was crushed, but his revenge was grim. He filed for divorce, then paid his father-in-law a visit. Angie, of course, had filled her father's ear with her version of events, and Stan was about to become persona non grata at the construction company. He couldn't have that.
He walked straight into his father-in-law's office with glossy photos and the tapes of Angie in action with his crew of workers. Plus, by then he'd hired a private investigator that had turned up evidence of his wife's antics on trips to places like Cancun and the Bahamas.
Stan's terms were simple. He wanted the company. Period. If his father-in-law would turn over the company to him, and legally surrender all rights to its ownership, he'd give Angie a no-fault divorce and none of his evidence of her cheating would see the light of a courtroom.
Initially, the man had balked. His father had founded the company, and he was loath to see it pass out of the family's hands. Stan simply turned the screws. Unless he got the company, not only would he drag Angie's name through the mud, but also all of the workers and the foremen would leave the company and follow him to a new competing company.
Stan had earned their loyalty through hard work and dedication, and for the fact that he'd brought a significant amount of new business to the company. They'd leave his father-in-law high and dry, with a shop and equipment and no one to run it.
It had been a huge gamble on his part. Had his father-in-law called his bluff, Stan would have been forced to go deeply in debt to finance his new company, and he would have had to painstakingly build a new clientele.
The threat had worked, however, and his father-in-law caved in. It had taken several months for all of the legal wrangling to be completed, and Stan did eventually give his ex-father-in-law a nominal amount of money as a token to purchase the company. But he assumed ownership of the company, and he had worked his ass off to make it profitable.
Stan had thoroughly modernized the company's equipment, increased salaries and wages across the board, and had steered the company into some new areas and different types of buildings than the company had been involved with before.
He'd become a success, but it was hollow, because he had no one to share it with.
Even as that thought passed through his mind, all in but a second's reminiscing, the same thought was passing through Danielle Murray's mind as the taxi drove her toward her destination.
She had everything a successful person could want: position, power, wealth, possessions, but she had no one to share it with. She had never married, never had children and her family was all gone. Her parents were both dead, and her only sibling, an older brother, had been killed in a traffic accident many years ago.
Danielle had a few close friends, a few old girlfriends that were her confidantes, and a few longtime boyfriends she could turn to for sex if her need for physical release and intimacy became too much.
But her girlfriends all had families of their own, and while she often enjoyed sex with her boyfriends, there was a detachment, a lack of passion to those relationships that left her feeling empty.
Moreover, she felt her biological clock ticking away, and she sometimes found herself wanting a child, if only for the companionship.
Out of the clear, a face flashed through her memory, the face of a man she'd seen earlier that morning.
Where had it been? Yes, the hotel lobby, sitting on a chair reading a newspaper. What was it about the man that had diverted her attention? The mere fact that she'd noticed him was significant; usually when she was traveling on business, her focus was narrow, straight ahead.
But she'd looked over at him, made eye contact and even smiled, albeit very briefly. Why? Danielle had something close to a photographic memory, and she brought her acute mental facilities to bear, and suddenly it hit her.