One of the issues with LW stories is trying to find a new plot. Normally, stories follow similar plots, but the writer puts their own twist to them. I hope I have found a most unusual twist in this one.
Thanks to my editor kenjisato for his hard work in making stories flow
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Sam, or Samantha to her mother, sat alone in the bar of the Hilton Hotel. She was bored and lonely, not out of choice, but out of necessity. Sam worked as a sales tech for a large heating and plumbing wholesaler. She was good at designing systems, but was not comfortable meeting customers. That meant a good nine-to-five job which always had her home in time for dinner and meant very little travel and no overnight stays, until this week.
This week was a trade show, and Sam had been drafted to go at the last minute because her sales executive, who always attended, fell on the golf course on Saturday and broke his leg. Sam had no choice and flew out early Monday and would be here until Thursday. Her husband, Mark, was very understanding and her two boys, Owen and Peter, only understood that they had to be good for daddy. They were eight and five, and would do anything for their father.
There were five of them at the trade show. The sales executive, Tony, was out every night with clients along with the product executive, Lewis. Both of them were in their late fifties and Sam liked them both, but they were not good company, even if they had of been with her. What she was expecting was to have some fun with the two sales representatives, Judy and Beth. They were both in their early thirties like Sam, and were both also married. Judy had one child and Beth had two.
Sam thought they would have dinner and drinks at night, maybe a film. She was shocked to find both of them went out cruising. On the first night, they both picked up men and slept with them.
This morning, Tuesday, Beth told her about the trade show 'timeout'. Judy and Beth had been doing them for a couple of years by then and, as they were three states away, they took a 'time out' from their marriage to have some fun. It was just recreational sex and what their husbands didn't know, didn't hurt them.
Sam was shocked and disgusted-- a marriage didn't have a time-out clause! Right at that moment, Judy was plastered against a new man from their company's head office and Beth was attached to a guy who was a buyer for a retail chain. Sam decided it was time to leave.
She was getting ready to go to her room when a shadow appeared over her. She looked up to see a tall man, with dark skin, perfectly sculpted black hair, and piercing eyes. Mark was Irish by descent, had very pale skin, and an untidy mop of blond hair. The contrast between this man and her husband was an instant attraction.
The stranger reached out a hand and introduced himself, "Hi, I'm Damon, do you mind if I sit with you?"
Sam couldn't help herself, "Yes, that would be nice. I'm bored, sitting here on my own."
Damon smiled, replying, "I was standing over there at the bar, and thought you could do with a friend to talk to. Would you like a drink?"
Sam knew she already had two glasses of wine and that was her limit, but she eagerly accepted a third.
Conversation and a fourth glass of wine followed. Soon, she was on the dance floor and was closely pressed to him, in a way she vaguely knew was not appropriate. But she was having a good time, and her friends were there with her, doing the same.
After a couple of slow dances, Sam wasn't feeling any pain and Damon brought her back to the table, where a fifth glass of wine awaited. It was around this time, Beth came to the table, holding the hand of a man who was different from the one she was dancing with earlier.
Beth said, "Make sure you are up good and early for tomorrow, and remember, no harm no foul."
As Beth and her man walked to the lift, Damon lightly kissed Sam on the lips, and said, "I think the bar is closing, shall we move this upstairs?"
As he said this, he took Sam's hand and they both stood and walked to the elevator.
Sam was feeling free, but as the door opened, she saw a reflection of herself in the mirror, holding hands with a man, who was not her husband, and she knew what would happen if she didn't act quickly.
She stepped into the elevator with Damon and he reached across to press the floor number. He didn't ask her for her number, pressing the button for the seventh floor only. After he pressed it, she reached over and pressed the 'five' button, that being the floor she was on.
Damon gave her a funny look.
But, she turned to face him, removing her hand from his, and said, "Damon, I have had a lovely night and you rescued me from total boredom, but I am a married woman and I have to end it here."
Damon was clearly annoyed. He had turned down a sure thing in Beth because this one was a total babe, but here, right then, he was being left. He was about to give her a piece of his mind, when the door opened on floor number five and Sam practically ran from the elevator, not stopping until she was through her door and the safety lock in place.
Sam sat on the bed-- she was devastated by her own behaviour. She knew she had come close to crossing a line she had vowed to never go near. She loved her husband, her children, and her life; if she had crossed that line, it would have been over. She knew she could not keep that a secret from Mark and she knew confessing infidelity would result in an immediate divorce. Hell, if the shoe was on the other foot, she would do the same to him.
The next morning, Sam came to breakfast. Judy and Beth were sitting at the table, both with large smiles on their faces. "Well? I'm assuming you need a big breakfast to replenish your strength for today and more this evening," Judy almost gushed.
Sam shook her head, just as Damon passed the table without a second glance.
Beth watched him go past, then asked Sam, "Did you turn that down? He's gorgeous, totally different to your husband, and I know from experience, he's excellent in bed. Why would you turn that down when no one would know?"
The waiter was standing by the table and Sam waited until he filled her coffee cup, then replied, "Sorry, girls, but it was not for me. I could never do it. I can't give myself a time out like you have. I would be betraying Mark and everything I have, and I would have to confess. That would be the end of my marriage. No, I did the right thing for me."
The day went slowly. Sam would not be home until the next day at eight in the evening, and her heart and soul were burning with revulsion as to what she nearly did. She just wanted Mark to come and hold her and let her cry.
That night, Sam didn't even come out of her room after she returned from the trade show. She ate room service and FaceTimed home, spending well over an hour just looking at the screen as the boys played. It was like looking in a window at a scene she had been excluded from. It was a metaphor for the divorce that would have come her way, if she had trashed her wedding vows the previous night. She knew she would never go on another trade-show trip; she would resign before she went.
The next morning was slightly different. Both Judy and Beth had clearly been with someone overnight as they both looked tired, but they were talking about getting home and their children, not the previous night's activities. Sam's absence was only mentioned once, when Judy asked what she had done.
Sam replied, simply, "Read," and did not go into the long FaceTime call. That was her reminder of what it would be like to be on the outside looking in, if she destroyed her marriage.
The final day of the show was actually the best. Sam signed up two new retail outlets and then, at lunchtime, they started packing up the stand. They left for the airport a little after three for the six o'clock flight home, arriving one time zone over at seven PM after a two-hour flight.