First, friends, a confession. This is presented as a SemperAmare story, but was almost entirely written by me, the author known as Vandemonium1. After jointly developing the outline, my partner in crime, CreativityTakesCourage, became busy starting a new business and finishing her professional trilogy. She did edit it, though, and half the concept is hers.
You know, amusingly, some people have accused me and CTC of being the same person. Rather begs the question, doesn't it? If I could write as well as her, why the f$%k would I keep writing badly as me?
This story has been independently rated 3.5 pickaxe handles on the BTB-ometer.
Now strap in and enjoy the ride.
*********
TODAY
THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE of the Dramatic Arts, NIDA, has a tradition. Whenever final year students are putting on a performance, old alumni are invited to be members of the audience. Then, at a post-production social event, budding actors, set designers, costume designers, prop makers etc., can rub shoulders with celebrities, both major and minor, to hopefully get honest feedback on their efforts and make connections beneficial to their future careers.
Thus, it was the actress and alumni—her name is not important and will be withheld for her protection—was mingling after the performance. She remembered back the near dozen years to her final year here and smiled. The intervening years had been exceptionally kind to her. Exposure in the local industry had quickly led to offers from Hollywood. She was now regarded well enough that she could pick and choose her roles. Her agent had just told her she'd been approached for a role as an escort. She was considering accepting that one for the pure devilment of it.
Just about everyone wanted to meet her, but she believed in the purpose of her invitation here and sought out members of the cast and crew to speak with and offer her feedback. A pretty, early twenties, girl introduced herself as Sarah, the set designer, and the actress complimented her on the innovative use of space and clever interchanges between sets. She was just about to move on when the girl leaned in a little.
"My father wants to know if you'll have dinner with him tonight?"
"Young lady, many people want to have dinner with me. Here's my agent's card, ask him to..."
"He told me to tell you his name is Mr. X."
The actress froze.
So, after all these years, what she'd secretly feared had come to pass.
Fuck! Hang on a minute. The guy has a grown-up daughter. How bad can it be?
Surely, he won't demand sex if his child is involved.
On one level, she'd always been grateful to him. After all, it was he that suggested she become an actress in the first place. Until then, she'd never considered it. She'd been an economics student when she met him. After his suggestion, she'd applied to NIDA and hardly ever looked back.
On another level, though, she'd always considered the guy a threat. Why? He'd been a client. Only once, but once was enough.
The actress thought of the contingency plans she'd developed over the years. One whiff of her past by the gutter press and she would be in full defence mode. She was big enough to survive it, probably, but it was a battle she didn't want to have to fight.
Where was the harm in having dinner with the guy? Besides, ever since the first and only time they'd met, she'd burned with curiosity to know what it had all been about. Yes, where was the harm? She asked the girl where and when to meet the mysterious Mr. X. It was a restaurant not far from the hotel she was bunked in. The time allowed her to mingle for another hour, then go to the hotel, shower, and change. She rang first her lawyer, then her husband from the limo. Her husband demanded she ring as soon as the fourteen-year old mystery had been solved.
After a two-block walk to the restaurant, she was shown into a private dining room. Just before she entered, she put on a confident face to mask the nervousness she actually felt. If the guy was going to attempt blackmailing her into sex, she was going to call his bluff. Her lawyer already had the guy's daughter's name.
The door to the private room opened and a wave of relief swept over the actress.
There was the girl who'd been at NIDA, sitting next to another girl who appeared a year or so younger. Her eyes travelled to a late forties man she recognised from a single meeting fourteen years previously. Mr. X. The last member around the table was a lady she estimated was around the same age as the man. Mr. X stood and shook her hand, introducing himself as David Brown, before introducing his wife and daughters.
After ordering and consuming their mains, with the ladies asking the obligatory celebrity questions, Dave called for quiet. He announced that now that his youngest daughter, Wendy, was eighteen, he had a tale to tell. It was his side of the story only, and he was very glad the actress had agreed to join them to corroborate some of the details.
The actress looked over at the two younger girls and noticed the expectant looks on their faces. Then, she noticed that she herself was sitting on the edge of her seat. Smiling, she forced herself to relax. Dave looked nervous. Only Maria, his wife, looked relaxed. She held her husband's hand for strength. After a squeeze, he looked at her, then forward again, before continuing his speech.
Dave explained the motivation for telling his strange tale. Partly, it was to fulfil a promise, he nodded toward the actress at that point, and put her mind at ease for the strange events of the decade and a half before and the knowledge that there was someone out there who could damage her image. She nodded her thanks at Dave.
Secondly, it was to tell his daughters, for the first time, why they hadn't seen their birth mother for over fourteen years. He explained that he'd fully intended telling Sarah when she turned eighteen, but she'd never asked. That was a compliment to Maria, he said. She was obviously all the mother his daughters needed. After that explanation, he prewarned them that after telling them the story, he was going to beg their forgiveness for his unilateral actions of so long ago.
With his audience champing at the bit, Dave started at the beginning.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the country, a woman was lying sleepless in a cheap motel bed, listening to the snoring pig beside her, reviewing the mistakes she's made that led to her current situation.
*********
MARTHA, PRESENT DAY
I DON'T THINK I was born entitled. More, I think, I developed a sense of entitlement from the easy course of my life. Born into a comfortable middle-class family, growing up I wanted for nothing. With next to no effort, I finished university with an arts degree and diploma of education. Daddy used his old-boy-network to land me my first post in a good school rather than me having to work my way up from the usual out-in-the-sticks shitholes.
I worked for five years, never settling on one hobby, one pastime, or one man. In short, I enjoyed sampling all life had to offer. I dipped my toe in any pond that appealed to me. Then, as I was nearing twenty-eight, daddy begged me to settle down and make something of my life. By this point, he was the chief aide to a federal Senator, and knew in his heart he himself would never make the top job. Perhaps, he wanted to achieve through me what he couldn't achieve for himself, or, maybe, he saw in me something I hadn't yet seen in myself. Regardless, over the course of an hour, he hooked me with stories of the power his boss wielded. Between us we came up with a plan to put me in the running to be our country's first female Prime Minister within the next twenty years.
The list included; successful career, family, joining a political party, a more visible connection to a mainstream church, and charitable works, to name but a few. With my new-found ambition, again things seemed easy.
Through a church committee, I met my future husband, but not in the way you think. I was attending a meeting in a side room of the church when I went into the apse to ask a workman redoing some of the antique woodwork to keep the noise down. He was on his knees with his back to me when I yelled to get his attention. He unfolded his tall frame, turned, and smiled. A waft of his musky scent hit my nostrils and appealed straight to my womanhood.
We were married less than a year later.