Note: All characters involved in sexual situations are 18 years or older.
"Yes, Mrs. Worthington, I understand. Yes, I couldn't agree more. Of course, Mrs. Worthington, I'll be sure to do that."
Will this blue-haired old windbag ever shut up?
Susan Morgan asked herself in frustration as she listened to the wife of the board chairman of the Birch Grove Mansion and Museum rattle on. But as the development director of Birch Grove, Susan knew she had no choice but to listen and agree with the old woman's pontificating.
The younger woman wasn't inclined to suffer fools gladly, and she was particularly incensed when someone assumed they were smarter than her simply because of their family wealth.
I've had more than my fill of rich bitches who thought their money made them authorities on other people's business,
Susan snarled to herself.
A glance at her watch only added to her frustration: she was late leaving for an important meeting. But just as Susan was about to interrupt, the old woman abruptly halted her monologue. "Goodness, look at the time. If I don't hang up now, I'll be late for my hair appointment."
"I understand, Mrs. Worthington. Sorry to have kept you so long," Susan replied without a hint of sarcasm.
After her caller had finally rung off, Susan quickly dashed off an IM to her husband: "Dinner with a prospect. Don't wait up." When it was sent, she hastily tidied her desk, checked her make-up in a hand mirror, and then strode out the door of her small office. The space was originally a butler's pantry in the Birch Grove mansion,
but at least it has my name on the door,
she thought.
As she started down the hallway, Evita, her Latina secretary, called after her, "Are you leaving, Senora Morgan?"
Without slowing her stride, Susan looked back over her shoulder irritably. "I'm off to call on a prospective donor. I won't be back today."
As Evita watched, she could see the rhythmic swivel of her boss's expensive suit skirt and hear her high heels tapping on the mansion's marble floors. As soon as the woman was out the exit, Evita darted down the hallway toward the office of the Executive Director, stopping at his secretary's desk. "Is he gone?" she asked Christina.
"Si," Christina replied, "he left about ten minutes ago. He said he had an important meeting to attend."
Evita smirked, "Just like clockwork: this week, last week, the week before that... They both have meetings to go to at the same time? They think we don't know what's really going on?" She looked toward the exit and spat out, "Puta!"
The two young women snickered and went back to their work.
* * * * * * * * * * *
Professor Daniel Morgan looked out over the array of faces in his Intro to Econ class. Although he knew only a few would have any lasting interest in economics, he hoped he could at least spark a little intellectual curiosity in the subject. To pique that interest would call for an unconventional approach.
He clicked the icon on his tablet computer, and behind him a projected image of a graph filled the wall. "Today," he intoned, "we're going to talk about the concepts of Supply, Demand and Price." Some comedian in the lecture hall gave a low groan, provoking general laughter.
Daniel was unfazed. "I know, I know, boring. But those abstract concepts have real world impact. Let me give you an example." He reached down and picked up a piece of artwork, holding it so they could all see. "Anybody recognize this?" he asked.
"Marilyn Monroe, by Andy Warhol," a female voice spoke up.
"Sorry, Miss, I'm afraid you're in the wrong class -- Art Appreciation is in the other building," Daniel quipped.
When the laughter died down, Daniel smiled. "Seriously, our art lover is exactly right. So why am I showing you an Andy Warhol in an Econ class? The answer is that this very work, or at least one that looks almost exactly like it, sold in 2022 for slightly over $195 million dollars. That makes it the current record holder for a sale by an American artist."
There were a couple of whistles from the students. "I assume," Daniel went on, "that no one in this classroom was the buyer." That brought a few chuckles.
"No billionaires here? Well, I was hoping. Anyway, the fact is that at that price there was only one buyer for Andy's Marilyn. Yet any one of us could go over to the University bookstore right now and buy a reproduction of Marilyn for maybe $20. And why are there so many buyers at the bookstore and so few at the auction? It's the price. At $195 million, there was only a single buyer, but at $20 bucks, demand skyrockets.
"Before you start to disagree, I know there are many factors affecting market demand for any commodity, product or service. We'll get into those in upcoming classes. But the fact remains that price is one of -- if not the most important -- factor in determining demand."
When the session ended, Daniel was pleased that a number of students came up to ask questions or argue a different point of view.
At least I got them thinking about the subject,
he mused with satisfaction.
When he returned to his office, he stowed the Monroe print away behind a file cabinet and then fished his cellphone out of his pocket. He'd felt it vibrate during his lecture, but made it a rule never to interrupt class to check. Now he saw that Susan was going to be out again this evening.
It bothered him that this seemed to be happening so often, but at least it gave him an opportunity to stop by and check on his dad. When Ezra had been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease several years ago, the older man insisted he could manage perfectly well in his own home. But Daniel had seen his father's symptoms worsening, and his concern prompted him to visit more frequently.
When he reached his dad on the phone, the older man launched into a rambling discourse on symptoms real and imagined, doctors who didn't know what they were doing and the problems of the world in general. When Daniel finally managed to ask if it would be convenient for him to drop by, his father insisted he come and stay for dinner. Daniel tried to protest, but his father interrupted. "Here," he said, "talk to Paloma," and handed the phone away.
Paloma was Ezra Morgan's live-in nurse and caretaker. When his dad's condition had visibly worsened, Daniel had insisted his father have full-time care if he wanted to remain at home. The old man had sullenly agreed, and promptly proceeded to run off every caregiver the agency sent with his complaints, insults and hostile behavior. Just when Daniel had decided he would have no choice but to put his father in a nursing home, Paloma arrived.
The young woman had two significant advantages over her predecessors. First, she was unexpectedly pretty, something that Ezra definitely appreciated. Second, Paloma was completely unfazed by Ezra's bluster. When he snapped at her, she snapped right back. When he balked at following a doctor's orders, she pestered him until he gave in and complied. And when he was grouchy and curt, she ignored him until he quit trying to fluster her.
One day when Daniel had come by to see how things were going with the new care-giver, his father had surprised him by declaring that he approved of Paloma. "She doesn't take any shit off me," he'd declared, and Daniel dared to hope they'd finally found a solution.
Those hopes took a serious blow about ten months later, when Paloma called Daniel to notify him she was going to quit. "It's my son, Marco," she told him. "My mother has been taking care of him, but now my abuela is sick and Mama has to go live with her. Plus Marco is ready to start school, and there's just no way I can take care of him and Senor Morgan at the same time."
If Daniel was upset at the news, Ezra simply refused to accept it. To Daniel's amazement, the old man came up with a solution. "Come and live here in my house," he'd told her. "This place is plenty big enough. Besides, you'll save on rent and your commute. I'll even kick in the groceries."
"But what about Marco? You don't want a six-year-old running through your house."
"I've had a six-year-old boy here before, you know. Besides, Marco will give me someone to talk to when I got tired of you nagging at me."
She had gone to Daniel's office to talk to him about the proposal. Once he'd gotten over his surprise, he began to see the advantages. In addition to the continuity of care from someone his dad liked, Daniel thought that living in a family environment might be good for his father.
"It's up to you, Paloma," Daniel had told her. "I think it could be a good arrangement for Dad, and I know I'd feel better if he's being cared for by someone he likes. But you have to decide if it would be good for you and Marco."
"I believe it could work, Senor Daniel, but it would work better if you could try to come by more often, you know, for your dad's sake. And Marco would love it too."
Then, to his astonishment, she'd blushed bright red before turning and scurrying out the door. Her reaction confused him, but he was delighted when he heard she'd accepted his father's offer.
Now, after eighteen months of the new arrangement, Daniel was not at all surprised to hear his dad deferring to Paloma's wishes, nor was he unhappy when she too urged him to stay for dinner. Given that the alternative was eating take-out alone at his campus home, Daniel didn't put up much resistance. In addition to her skills as a nurse, Paloma had turned out to be an excellent cook.
It'll be nice having a home-cooked meal for a change,
he thought, his mood brightening.
* * * * * * * * * * *
Susan hated the long drive through the countryside, but she knew it was necessary. Neither she nor Grant could afford to be recognized when they were "developing prospects" together.
It wasn't just the length of the drive that bothered her, it was passing all the small, run-down houses along the way.
I used to live in a dump exactly like that one,