A small, frivolous tale of pleasant surprises and eccentric or, perhaps, sophisticated tastes.
A small note - if you don't view feet as exceedingly erotic, you might be reading the wrong story.
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Step we gaily, on we go, Heel for heel and toe for toe, Arm in arm and row in row...
Celtic traditional song
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Flying was always an ordeal, I thought to myself. Yes, First Class was far more comfortable and one got priority across the board, but the hours still seemed to drag out into eternity.
Not even the sight of the quite lovely flight attendant coming down the aisle did much to alter my sour mood.
I took an admiring glance as she stopped to speak to the passenger across the aisle. Her uniform was well-tailored and fit her bottom quite nicely. My eyes lingered over her trim calves and ankles, slipped back to her butt as she squatted down to help the old fellow adjust his seat.
It was a nice bum, one of the better ones I'd seen lately.
She rose and turned to me. Her name was Brigit and she'd be my attendant today and the menu would be available in two minutes and would I like dry sherry or sweet?
I had a momentary daydream of she and I holding hands as we waited together for a taxi outside Charles de Gaulle airport, then she had moved on to the next passenger. She was indeed a lovely creature, but there was nothing new or different or promising about her or her smile; it was the same professional greeting she'd bestowed on thousands upon thousands of other customers.
She was followed by Rachel, who passed me a hot moist hand-towel with a pair of serving tongs. She too was easy on the eyes; her smile every bit as professionally detached.
My eyes followed the pair's slim ankles as they returned to their station before I tried to settle into what was proving to be an entirely overrated novel. The Hidalgo sherry on the other hand proved to be as good as expected and I took my time savoring it but, by the time we'd leveled off, I was already yearning for our landing in Paris.
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I was trying to escape the pressure, the competition, the morbid bitchery and internal politics, the endless navel-gazing meetings of a truly stressful financial quarter.
My real problem was that I was thoroughly jaded -- and I knew it. I'd done everything, been everywhere. I'd fought the corporate battles and won them. I'd built careers and buried them. I'd been noted, quoted, pointed out and pointed to.
I'd had it already, all of it. A man with my wealth — and the connections such prosperity brings — can have and do just about anything he wishes.
My chef had been lured away from a five-star Pisan restaurant, yet my meals increasingly tasted like sawdust. I had the wine cellar, the sports cars and the ski lodge., but I was drinking too much to drive and couldn't be bothered skiing anymore. I had advanced bidding status for tickets to any concert or sports match you could name and attended almost none.
I'd had the exciting vacations - skydiving, running rapids, exploring Machu Pichu. I hadn't done Everest, but only because the workup training would have taken too long. I'd even had an illicit private midnight picnic on top of the Great Pyramid. Despite it all, I was bored.
Fleeing ennui, I'd taken refuge in the arms of women. There'd been a phalanx of them -- tender, innocent lasses, skilled, doe-eyed 'escorts' and everything in between, but even that had begun to seem stale. Any real excitement had escaped me and, more and more, I was finding only simply physical release.
Then my shrink had suggested a special clinic. In Sicily, of all places.
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I closed my eyes, lowered my seat and tried to rest. It didn't come easily; I think I fell asleep just as we started our descent. That was another problem. Sleep, real sleep, was evasive.
My people are efficient and there was only a minimal wait for the connecting flight from Paris to Catania. I was first off the airplane when we landed and soon after, towing my bag, emerged from Italian customs. I was met by a middle-aged man in a crisp uniform. He apparently had been briefed on my appearance, for he approached me immediately.
"Benvenuti,
Signore Garvey. My name is Bruno. Welcome to Sicily. Is this all your luggage?"
"Yes, thank you."
Pack lightly,
I'd been told.
I let him take it. To be honest, I still wasn't entirely sure what I was getting into. Dr. Webber, my shrink, had been encouraging without giving much information. The clinic website, while not going into any great detail, had made the place look comfortable and had stressed the benefits of tranquility. That much had been enough. If excitement had abandoned me, then why not woo tranquility?
Bruno led me outside to a shiny grey limousine sitting in a No Parking zone, where a muscular young man in a
Polizia di Stato
uniform was busily not noticing. He looked me over, nodded at Bruno and strolled away.
There was a soft
chuff
as Bruno closed the door behind me, then he circled the limo, got behind the wheel, started the engine and turned on the air conditioning. That done, he turned and looked back at me over his seat.
"We will be about two hours, Signore Garvey." He explained the controls for the entertainment system and the privacy screen, pointed out a small refrigerator. Seeing me nod, he turned in his seat, signaled and pulled out, the engine a kitten's purr.
A late flight, ten hours to Paris, two and a half hours to Catania and ground time on top of that; I was beyond tired. I raised the privacy screen, settled myself and dozed fitfully until the limo pulled to a gentle stop.
I was shaking off my fatigue as Bruno opened the door. He'd already retrieved my bag and waved me towards the door of the pink stucco villa I'd seen on the website. Dusk was falling and I was struck by the silence. It was such a far cry from the endless clamour back in the city.
An attractive woman in her mid-40s rose to greet me as we entered. Curly brown hair framed a patrician face before falling over the lapels of a linen suit. I could sense solid intelligence in her brown eyes, a confident, pragmatic competence I had to pay top dollar to hire back home.
"Welcome, Mr. Garvey," she said. For some reason, I found the standard greeting particularly calming. "I am Dr. Annika Steiner, the clinic director."
Her accent and name suggested that she was German or Austrian. I noticed a wedding ring set -- on her right hand. I wondered what that meant.
"Thank you. Um...
Doctor
Steiner?"
Her smile was no less professional than Brigit's, but it seemed somehow more sincere, more welcoming. Very European, she gave me a slight bow and presented a business card. My eyebrows went up a little when I saw the letters after her name; the woman had more degrees than a pocket compass.
"Yes, 'Doctor'," she smiled. "I am, among other things, a psychologist. But, for now, I am your hostess and you must be very tired."
I nodded, merely acknowledged the truth.