Author's note: Oh, hey. Long time no see.
If anyone is still following this story after reading my one short post two-and-change years ago... thanks! I have been developing a full-length erotic romance storyline for Grace and Adrian, for which I've written about 25,000 words' worth of scenes so far, including the 10,000 or so of this section. The story will be upwards of 70,000, I think, when it's finished.
At this point I'd consider 2019's chapter one to be more of an exploratory semi-non-canonical prologue that serves to introduce the main characters, some themes, and the writing style. I'm leaving it up, since at the end of the day it's porn and it ain't that serious. But please be advised that this is the real start of the story. Things should progress more or less in a linear fashion from here. And, with any luck, it'll be less than two years between chapters going forward.
Hope you enjoy the vampiric seduction and that the burn isn't too slow.
-MSL
*
I hadn't expected there to be a list. As I shivered in the slush-slicked street, the bouncer flipped through far too many pages of names to find mine. How many people had been invited? I'd thought this was going to be a small crowd, a soft opening for friends, family and artists only. My heart throbbed and the chill March air bit into me like it intended to draw blood.
For a moment, I indulged in a wild fantasy--that there'd been a mistake and that I was not actually supposed to be here tonight--that my submission had been rejected after all. It wouldn't count as chickening out if I wasn't even allowed in.
"Grace Bergeron," said the bouncer, setting a finger on my name and sealing my fate. He glanced back up at me. Was I supposed to show him my ID? He hadn't asked for it yet. Maybe he was thinking that I didn't
look
like a Grace Bergeron. Or maybe he wondered if he was imagining mom's Chinese influence on my features. I had known it to go either way.
Whatever he was thinking, he kept it to himself. "Go on in. Just take the stairs."
The foyer was just a small landing. There was one set of steps going up, and one going down.
The carpeted steps leading downwards were sodden and streaked with road salt. The thrum of music and conversation drifted up the stairwell, not especially raucous, but as blistering as a furnace backdraft against my frazzled nerves. I pressed a hand to my chest. It was clear enough which way I was supposed to go.
I thanked the bouncer and he wished me a good night as I descended into my own personal Boschian hellscape.
*
The room was full of people I didn't know. They were mostly crowded around the bar, socializing in little tableaus, illuminated by the infernal glow of hanging filament bulbs. There were no naked figures writhing, no demons ravening, no black-eyed creatures glowering. I sucked in a lungful of warm air and tried to be optimistic. With a better mindset, the ambiance could be nice. The golden tone of the light complemented the natural brick walls and the bar's copper accents. The dimness was just an industrial take on the candle-lit chiaroscuro of a Rembrandt.
As I knocked the last vestiges of melting slush from my high heels, I ran through my mission for the night. Stay at least an hour. Have a real conversation with someone. Get the photo.
The end of the hour felt about a million heartbeats away, and that number just went up as I sized up the crowd. My pulse raced when I imagined myself interjecting in a conversation. But the photo seemed doable.
I just had to find my painting.
The submissions were hung around the perimeter of the place, which meant I could steer well and clear of the bar, although it also meant that no one else was really looking at the art. Each piece was set in a bronze frame. I tried to be nonchalant as I skimmed past landscape after landscape, but a pit was deepening in my chest. The show was themed around the Rideau Falls, and my submission had not been a literal interpretation. Apparently I'd been alone in that. As if I didn't stick out enough already... This dress was all wrong...
And there it was, presiding over a mercifully unoccupied booth, tucked into the corner of the room. The framing wasn't doing my work any favours--didn't match my colours, dwarfed my figures, and took away somewhat from the effect of the trompe-l'oeil curtain in the foreground--but it was here, and it was mine, and it was on display. And I was here, too. A sudden flare of pride sucked the oxygen away from the anxiety.
I pulled out my phone and squared up the shot. Someone caught me by the elbow and I almost jumped out of my skin.
"So sorry," said the woman who'd caught me, "but we're asking for no photos to be taken of the art." She was a glamorous thirty-something. Her sleek, auburn hair was pulled into a bun. Cherry-red lips pressed into a gracious expression, and she held a glass of red wine.
"Oh, God, right. I'm sorry. I just promised my friend I'd get a picture..." I shrugged, guilty. "It's actually mine. I mean, I'm the artist."
"Oh! We haven't met, but I'm Michelle. And you're..." She waved a manicured hand as if she was trying to conjure up my name. "Lynn's barista!"
Michelle. The owner, and a friend of my boss. My heart clenched and I hoped it didn't reflect in my smile. "I'm Grace," I said. "So nice to meet you. I wanted to thank you for accepting my piece, and for the invitation tonight. The place looks really great."
"Of course, hon." She took my outstretched hand and pulled me into a dainty embrace, kissing my cheeks in turn, which I was not at all prepared for. "Anything for Lynn. And after all, it's fitting, don't you think? Starting a new business, showing unknown artists... it's a night for taking risks."
Michelle lifted her glass to me. I raised my hand before I realized I had nothing to cheers back with, so I gave her a thumbs-up instead and tried not to wince at my own awkwardness.
"
Love
the piece, by the way," she continued, turning towards my painting. "Even if it's not quite on theme."
A flush was spreading across my cheeks and I fluffed my curls out to conceal it. My Vermeer reference, the falling curtain, the Rideau Falls... it had all seemed clever a week ago, but now, faced with explaining it to someone else, I was tongue-tied.
"Like I said, risks! And I did owe Lynn the favour anyway." Michelle patted my shoulder, maybe meaning it to be reassuring. My arms were limp and heavy. "Anyway, hon, I've got to make the rounds. But have fun, have a drink... oh, and remember, no photos of the art..." With that, she sashayed back into the crowd, insinuating herself into another conversation.
My dress was too tight. I was as out of place as my painting. The music faded beneath the hammering of my pulse, and I was sure every set of eyes in the place was on me as I slunk away to the bathroom to text Ellie.
send help SOS
Her reply was nearly instant.
What happened? Deep breaths dude. I can be there in like 20 mins
Right. Breathing. I closed my eyes and pressed a hand to my chest, focusing on the swell of the air in my lungs. The bathroom smelled of soap and citrus.
No, don't come. I'm being dramatic. It's just not my scene.
And then I added, in case she decided to ignore me and come anyway,
You wouldn't be able to get in, there's a guest list.
And you're on itโผ! So who says it's not your scene???
Uhh, the owner? I was talking to her and it made me feel like my painting is all wrong. She just had to accept it because she owed Lynn. Now I wanna go home tbh
Well, she sucks, then. Your painting is