Copyright ©, 2003: All characters, events, and text in this story are purely fictional, and are created by and the sole property of the author. All rights reserved.
Writer’s Note: Happy holidays, dear readers. This piece is long, but Jeanine is quite a gal, and her story needed this much. It felt good to fantasize about sunny Aegean islands in the wintertime. Everyone should taste the magic of Greece sometime; he or she will be changed. Consider the usual warning: do not read this if you are not an adult.
* * * * *
It is now January 7. Christmas and New Year’s festivities are over, but my two business partners and I have one last celebration here in our office – our consulting business had just received its first major contract from an import/export firm in Athens, Greece. The three of us were Bryn Mawr college classmates fifteen years ago and close friends today. We all followed the familiar pattern of marrying college sweethearts, supporting hubbies’ careers, having babies, etc., etc. For over a year, we met weekly to collaborate on drafting business plans, just to keep alive the fantasy that one day we would start up our own consulting company.
Finally, last October, we were able to make that dream come true. We’re confident of our abilities and our business plan, but we know that our existence and financing is all because last June I had the very good fortune of meeting Aristotle Thermopodi. You my not have heard of him, but he is the CEO of one of the largest investment banking firms in southern Europe. Because of Ari, and my passion for everything Grecian, we call our firm ‘Tria Graci,’ and our business cards and stationery are highlighted with a reproduction of Sir Edward Burne-Jones’s painting of the Three Graces, in the classical Greek style. Business cards with three nude women on them gets a lot of attention. Even our e-mail addresses follow this theme. Katherine, our international patent lawyer is aglaia@___; Elena, our financing consultant is euprhosene@___ and I, the marketing strategist, am thalia@___. By the way, my name is Jeanine Jamieson, and I live with my husband Alec and two boys in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.
The elation of hearing that we were selected by our client, plus sharing two bottles of champagne between three women, had made us pretty giddy and loose-tongued. In the back of my mind, though, I was feeling more than a little disappointed that Ari had not even sent a Christmas card, let alone a present, as he had promised in his last e-mail in early December. My blue thoughts were interrupted as I heard my name.
“Come on, Jeanine,” wheedled Elena. “You simply have to tell us the real story of how you met Ari and why he has been so generous to you. Come on. It’s only fair, since we let you select the company name and logo. People are forever asking me why that name. They think we’re lesbians, for God’s sake.”
“Just do what I do when asked,” I replied. “Tell them, ‘One time, Jeanine did Aristotle Thermopodi a favor by helping his mistress avoid being arrested as a prostitute.’ That remark usually stuns them into silence, and they stop asking further questions. Actually, that statement happens to be true.”
Katherine put down her plastic glass. “No! It can’t be! Knowing you and your sometimes outlandish sense of humor, I always thought you said that just to pull people’s legs.”
Elena refilled our glasses. “That could make a rich man grateful, but still not be as generous as your Ari has been. Come on, Thalia, it’s time you let us other two Graces in on the whole story. What things did you do to earn that much gratitude?”
The alcohol was having its effect on my inhibitions, and I felt that I could trust these two to keep secrets. We had made a pact that ‘what happens on the road, stays on the road.’
“Well, I can tell you that the first night that Alec and I were at Ari’s villa, I fucked Ari’s brains out, while Alec screwed Ari’s mistress. Also, I posed as a CIA agent, and conned a Frenchman out of a business deal.”
“Wow! That was some week! You didn’t hold back, did you?” Elena remarked.
“Well, Alec and I believe that Thalia, not Jeanine, enjoyed a lot. I know that sounds like rationalization, but you would have to have been there to understand. There are only four people who know the complete story of the most exciting five days of my life – Aristotle; his mistress, Olympe; my husband, Alec; and myself. If I tell you the whole story, this must, absolutely, must, be on the road.”
Katherine and Elena pledged their confidences.
“OK, I trust you,” I replied, and began to tell the whole story.
* * * * *
As they say, it all began last June, when my husband and I celebrated our fifteenth wedding anniversary. We left our two kids with their grandparents and took a trip to Greece and some Aegean islands. Alec and I had met in our senior year after I returned from a year abroad at the university in Athens. I longed to return, but the years kept sweeping by. However, the engineering company which Alec helped start up had prospered, and at long last, I was making my dream of a return to Greece come true.
I hoped that seeing the beauty spots of Greece, and being by ourselves in the Mediterranean sunshine, would rejuvenate our lives together. In retrospect, I realize that the rejuvenation that both of us wanted most was our sex lives. And that certainly happened on the tiny island of Xirokis, off the southeast coast of Greece.
After a week-long tour of the mainland, we decided to strike out on our own, and explore some of the islands in the Aegean. We flew a small jet from Athens to our first site, the island of Spanika. That was where Alec and I met Olympe, or, to be more correct, she met me.
We were approaching a bistro, which had those classic outdoor round tables and curved metal chairs under Cinzano umbrellas, when we noticed a very attractive woman arguing with a local policeman. She reminded me of Melina Mercouri, with salon-blonde hair, and large breasts and hips over slender legs. Just as we were passing her and the policeman, the woman looked at us, and ran over to me.
“Thalia!” she cried out in accent-filled English. “At last you’re here.”
She embraced me, and gave me the customary European kisses on both cheeks, at the same time whispering in my ear.
“My name is Olympe Thanodokos. Help me, I beg of you.”