Hello, my pervy readers. I'm back with the 4-part continuation of Police Training. There will be spankies, laughter, criminal activities, and some heart-wrenching scenes.
As usual, this is a finished story, and I'll be submitting one chapter every Sunday. Enjoy.
Special thanks to MJ Wacko for being the bestest editor ever.
Three years have come and gone since the fateful first meeting of our star-crossed lovers. Nicolai's businesses, both the legal and the not-so-much legal, have thrived. His children are grown and have started to take on more and more responsibilities. They're making a few rookie mistakes here and there, but overall they are doing fine.
Lizzy graduated third in her class and is a two-year veteran in the NYPD. She still works a regular beat, but is looking for an opportunity to prove herself and start climbing the ladder. To say she was shocked when she found out her Nic was the one and only Nikolai Kerchenko might be an understatement. She knew who he was of course, her family hated him, but she never had a face to go with the name while she was growing up. When his name and picture were first displayed on the monitor during the roll-call and beginning of shift update, she choked on her bagel. Her cousin actually had to give her the Heimlich maneuver to force the chunk out. No one in the meeting missed the timing of her choking either, and she was taunted for weeks about being in love with Nikolai Kerchenko. Little did they know how close to the truth they were.
*******
Sunday afternoon dinner is a tradition in the Byrne house. At 3PM, massive amounts of food are placed on the large table in the dining room. Everyone and anyone is invited, just don't be late. Tucked in with all the other middle class households in the neighborhood, the clan (as they still call themselves) gets together to catch up on the past week, and discuss the upcoming one. Shop talk is prevalent, with a healthy dose of constructive criticism tossed in, and laughter. Always laughter. The Byrne's might not have a lot, but they have each other.
For the past month my brothers have been trying to convince me to do this stupid charity thing. And today is no exception. At 3:10 PM after all the plates are filled with food and there is no escape, they start again. Luckily, of my five brothers, three are working today. So I only have to put up with two, Donal and Finn.
"You're going anyway, Liz. Why not just contribute. It's for Big Brothers / Big Sisters." Donal even pulls out the pamphlet for the event. It has the standard silent auctions, the 50/50 raffles, the roaming baskets raffles, and there on the bottom - Dinner, Dessert and Dancing auction: Your chance to win a delicious 5-course meal on stage with a lovely or handsome contributor who will provide a homemade dessert followed by dancing after the meal. Bidding starts at $175. Meal starts at 6:00. Dancing till 11:00.
After swallowing the dumpling I had stuffed into my mouth. "No. No. No. We're not starting this again. I will be contributing. I'm going to buy stuff, I am not going to be bought. Period."
"Don't think of it like that! It's more like a date. Someone will buy you the nice gourmet meal instead of the rubber chicken the rest of us will be eating. You just have to provide dessert."
"Why don't I make the dessert for you, and you can go up on stage and have everyone bid on you. Then you can have the gourmet dinner."
"I'm a guy. No way!"
"Ah HA! I knew it. It's OK for a girl to be bought and sold for an evening, but not a guy. It says 'handsome' right on the pamphlet. You want it so bad, you do it." This goes on for a while until mom sees I'm getting frustrated, and puts an end to it with one word βEnough. The table goes quiet for a few seconds before new topics are picked apart.
After dinner, I'm sitting on the back porch finishing off my strawberry shortcake in peace and quiet when my grampa comes out. He had the same idea; I hold his dessert plate as he gets settled on the large 2-person swing next to me. We eat in silence for a while.
"You should do the auction thing. I think it'd be good for you." His voice is calm and even. I can remember him using it during ceremonies when he was Police Commissioner. It's his 'listen and learn' voice.
"Aww Grampa, not you too. Come on. Drop it."
"I will, but I get my two cents in first." He looks at me to see if I'll argue or not. When I don't he continues. "I think it would be good for you to meet different people. This is completely safe; you'll be up on a stage with hundreds of people around watching out for you. You'll get a good meal and meet someone you might not get a chance to meet at any other time. You'll dance for a while, have some fun, and it'll help a charity we believe in. You haven't had a boyfriend that lasted longer than a month or two since you got back from the army. I'm worried about you."
I hug him. "I'm fine. You don't have to worry about me. I just haven't found the right guy yet."
"And this is a great opportunity to meet one." He's still pressing the point.
"Grampa, I just don't want to. OK."
"That's what I don't understand. Why? Why don't you want to?"
"Grampa..." I try whining, but he just waits for me to answer. "What if no one bids on me?" My voice cracks just a little at the end. I can see myself standing up there, holding a stupid pie, and complete silence surrounds me. I'd be humiliated.
He laughs. "Where did that come from? I never pegged you for lack of confidence. Of course people will want you. Lots of people will fight over you."
"You know I'm a tomboy. This is a girl thing. I'm scared to be up there all alone and get humiliated. If it was a boxing match, or a hockey game, I'd kick ass. But this... I'm out of my league here, grampa."
He hugs me tight. "Oh, baby. You're gonna kick ass on this too. You'll have men fighting over you. I guarantee it. And if they don't, I'll have the boys beat the crap out of everyone at the event." I laugh as we sit back on the swing and just hold each other. "Besides, I already have Samuel at the market getting fresh rhubarb for you. I'm not sure how he's doing that at the end of October, but he is." I punch him in the shoulder and he just laughs. I love my grampa.
*******
His driver is in line to let him out at the Marriott Marquis for the Big Brothers / Big Sisters annual charity event. He's never been to this before, but his associate Williamson said both Scott and El-Habir are supporters and usually show up at this event. Scott's company has a timing device he wants for his baseball pitching machines, and El-Habir has been calling him twice a week for the last two months. No idea what he wants and he's being super secretive about it. He probably got caught doing something illegal, and wants to 'trade-up" to lighten his sentence. So I definitely want to catch him off guard.
The car pulls up to the front of the line, and the valet opens the door. A short walk through the photographers, and into the hotel. Inside he gets a pamphlet and a listing of what's going on in what rooms. Williamson will be in the bar, so that's the first stop. God, I hope I'm never that predictable. I see Williamson, and just down the bar is El-Habir. This is just too easy.
El-Habir visibly blanches when he turns and sees me standing behind him. Yeah, he's working for the cops. We have a short, terse conversation, that wouldn't prove anything if replayed in a court of law. El-Habir sulks out of the building when I'm done with him.
Williamson is drunk when I get to him, and it's not even 5 o'clock yet. I keep the distain off my face as he slurs and giggles in front of me. I rifle through the pamphlet for a distraction. He tells me his daughter is participating in some dinner thing tonight, and when I mention the 'dinner thing' auction has already started, he grabs me and rushes me into the other room where his wife is holding a table for us. His wife scolds him, but tells him he hasn't missed her turn.
As the girl up on stage smiles while holding a cheesecake, I browse the pamphlet I was given earlier. The last page is the list of participants for the dessert auction, one name catches my eye; Elizabeth Byrne. It can't be her, can it?
The girl on stage is sold for $375, and the next girl is called. If the pamphlet goes in order, Lizzy should be up in four more auctions. I make small talk with Mrs. Williamson, getting the details on this auction. If it is her, this could be an interesting night after all.
The four auctions go by swiftly, the bids ranging between $300 and $950. Mrs. Williamson is ecstatic when her daughter gets sold for $625. My breath catches as she comes out. A little summer white and blue checkered dress, very southern, but not very practical for October in New York. Her red hair is shorter than I remember, the ends just teasing her shoulders. She's put on a few pounds, maybe ten or fifteen, but they're in all the right places. She no longer looks like a girl; she has all the promise a woman's body can offer.
Her face is unchanged, still as beautiful as I remember. I can see the stoic posture of a soldier, she has a smile on her lips, but it doesn't reach her eyes. Her eyes are cold and hard. At first I think it's anger marring her features, but when the first bid is made for $175, and then a second for $185, her eyes close for a second and she visibly relaxes. She was afraid no one would bid on her. My fierce little wild thing has a weak spot. I sit quietly as the bids get higher. They slow down in the upper $300's, with the last bid coming in at an even $400. The auctioneer waits and then calls out the traditional last chance β Going once. All is quiet. Going Twice. All is quiet.