Author's note:
Thank you for considering this story. Because it is a novel, here is some information that may affect the decision whether to invest time in it:
It is completely written/posted and has been divided into 12 parts, each part 4-7 Literotica pages in length. A list of the chapters in each part is available at the end of Part 12.
It is essentially a mystery/suspense novel that includes graphic erotic scenes. The sex scenes comprise no more than 20% of the text. For those more in the mood for a quick onset and high volume of sexual content, this is unlikely to be a rewarding read.
The erotic content is male/female and includes some scenes that would fall under "erotic couplings" and other scenes involving a slow burn romance --- not a flowers and candlelight romance, but an explicit, dark romance.
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Chapter 1. A DINNER AT DELMONICO'S
Manhattan, October 8, 1900
"Here's to your final year of medical school," Dr. Mullenix said, smiling and raising his crystal wine goblet. "Three done and one to go."
Seated across the table, the young man acknowledged the toast with a brief inclination of his head.
"To Dr. Anders RΓΈkke!" Dr. Mullenix winked away his dining companion's sudden protest and took a deep draught of wine.
Anders conceded with a rueful headshake. "Thank you, sir. But too many people already call me 'Dr. RΓΈkke', no matter how often I explain I'm only a student."
"Outside the hospital --- outside the medical profession, truth be told --- few people understand the distinction between a physician and a medical student." Dr. Mullenix patted his mustache with a fine linen napkin.
"I wonder if I shall feel the difference once I've truly earned the title."
"Come next year, when you're woken in the middle of the night to make a life-or-death decision regarding a patient, you'll feel the difference --- I promise you."
A wan grin lifted Anders' lips.
"I'll also wager the acquisition of a stipend --- even that of an intern --- after years of paying tuition will be a difference you'll appreciate as well." Mullenix raised a sage eyebrow.
Anders nodded slowly. "It will certainly be a novelty."
Two black-suited waiters appeared, and Anders leaned back in his chair as they silently whisked away the empty soup plates. Within minutes the pair returned, one setting a large silver tray upon a folding stand alongside the table. Dishes were transferred with murmured introductions. "Canvas back duck ... spring lamb ... fresh mushrooms on toast ...
terrine de foie gras
... escarole ... asparagus tips." A waiter's white-gloved hand rotated the gilt-edged dinner plates before them to the mysterious final position that perfected the gastronomical journey.
The other waiter deftly opened a new wine bottle and presented the crimson-stained cork, then a sample glass to Dr. Mullenix. Having no knowledge of wine, Anders was happy to defer to his mentor's expertise when they dined together. Fresh goblets were produced, and red wine was poured. The crystal flower vase on the table was adjusted aside to accommodate a silver filagree cradle for the bottle, then the waiters departed.
Anders cleared his throat. "Thank you again for inviting me to dine, sir. You honor me."
"Say no more. It's a pleasure as always to have some sensible company. I could scarcely countenance joining my wife at her sister's dinner party ... and to dine alone at home or at the club with the same old bores was a thought too ghastly to contemplate."
With a discreet nod, Dr. Mullenix confirmed the younger man's selection of fork and knife from among the array of silver next to the plate. "So Anders, what is your impression of this new Delmonico's? Does it surpass the downtown restaurant?"
The young man undertook a deliberate survey of the elegant room. In the past year, he had had the honor of dining with Dr. Mullenix on six previous occasions when the man's wife and family had been otherwise engaged --- either visiting one or another of her "intolerable" relations, summering in Newport, or away in Paris for the spring. All the previous dinners had been at Delmonico's other site by Madison Square Park.
Between the restaurant's two locations, Anders detected no notable difference --- both equally catered to the opulent tastes of their millionaire clientele. As at the older location, the present dining room shimmered in luxurious appointments: intricately patterned Persian rugs, fluted and gilt-encrusted mahogany columns and wall panels, paintings in sculpted gold frames, and cut-glass chandeliers. Richly dressed patrons sat at the surrounding linen-draped tables --- men in tailcoats or tuxedos and women in elaborate gowns. A string quartet played a restrained sonata in the far corner.
He shrugged by way of response.
Mullenix nodded. "Apart from the electrical lighting, I likewise appreciate no remarkable innovations. And one could dispute whether electricity is indeed an improvement. To a young fellow, I dare say the humble candle or gaslight is more conducive to a romantic dinner with a young lady, eh?" He winked.
Again, Anders eyed the chandeliers. With the state of his wallet, the only dining establishments to which he could afford to take a young lady would likely offer only sputtering gaslights. He glanced across the table at Mullenix. At thirty-four, the man was still young himself --- but with a wife and two small children, he was undoubtedly qualified to tease a younger man about courting.
Inwardly sighing, Anders cut into the lamb chop. Courting! There was a discouraging subject. The rigors of the medical school curriculum paradoxically both stimulated his amorous urges and left him with scant time to pursue romance. Of course, there were means by which to procure immediate physical relief --- in his daily life, he had marked the "soiled doves" traipsing about the sidewalks of New York. Furthermore, if one believed the proclamations made in the newspapers by Mr. Anthony Comstock --- the bible-thumping commissioner of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice --- prostitution was even more rampant than casual observation suggested.
As distractingly tempting as some of the ladies' offerings were, he had no inclination to satiate his yearnings by that route. What he longed for was a female companion who provoked his heart and mind as much as his privates. When he would have time for that fantasy, he could not foresee. Once graduated from medical school, he hoped to land an internship and residency with specialization in surgery. By all accounts, these years would be even more arduous than medical school.
Perhaps when his formal education was finished, he might have time to cast his eyes about for love --- but by that point, he reminded himself, he should be more concerned with finding a suitable wife than with indulging in frivolous flights of the heart.
Thus it was that Anders relied upon the unflagging loyalty of his left hand to alleviate the pressure of frustrated urges. For the past three years of medical school, he had spent the majority of his after-school hours in his boardinghouse room with a textbook on his desk and his hand in his drawers, idly tugging on his cock as he memorized facts of anatomy, chemistry, histology, physiology, bacteriology, as well as the signs and symptoms of innumerable diseases. When he had mastered the allotted material for the night, he rewarded himself by bringing out the bottle of cottonseed oil and his collection of French postcards ... frigging himself to a shuddering release and the sweet oblivion of sleep.
"Next time we dine," Dr. Mullenix was saying, "We'll go to Sherry's across the street. In this infamous restaurant rivalry, I doubt Mr. White's triumph can be overshadowed."
"Mr. White, sir?" Anders gave him a questioning look.
"Stanford White, the architect who designed Sherry's. He's been the undisputed architectural genius in the city --- no, the state --- for several years." Dr. Mullenix shook his head with a chuckle. "Anders, I applaud your devotion to your studies, but you truly need to take your nose out of your books every once in a while to appreciate the world around you. Have you never heard of Stanford White?"
Anders accepted the joshing with a comical roll of his eyes.