Jasmine's Last Stand, Part 1: Newton's Cradle
Jasmine rolls over on the mattress, trying to decide what to do. Stay, go. She's not sure. If she goes, she'll definitely have to put clothes on.
Sunlight pours in through the giant windows of...Devon's room. Almost certainly Devon's room. Sorry,
Mr. Stockwell
. Sorry, sorry,
Mr. Stockwell the Younger
, as the other ladies at reception like to call him. You have to be precise with them, because they actually like Mr. Stockwell the Elder.
But yesterday, Devon had told her to just call him Devon.
#
"Peggy, don't look now," Glinda muttered under her breath.
"Stockwell the Younger?"
"Mm-hm. Bob warned me he's on his way up."
Glinda had some coy flirting thing going on with Bob, one of the security guards on the building's main floor. He gave her intel on who was being sent up the elevator to their office suite, and she gave him...chocolates, Jasmine was pretty sure. Sometimes champagne. Whatever old people liked to flirt with.
She tried not to think about what else their arrangement might entail.
"He's probably here for the Christmas party," Jasmine suggested. It always made her feel weird when they talked shit about Devon Stockwell. She didn't know him, had only seen him pass by their desk at the front of the office suite a few times, and Peggy and Glinda could never really explain what they didn't like about him. They just told her that when Jasmine had had as much life experience as they did, she would know how to spot a bad seed when she saw one. They were both about forty years older than Jasmine, so she supposed it might be true.
"More like he's hoping to catch his daddy in a good mood before we close for the holiday so he can get some more cash," Peggy said, and Glinda laughed before answering the phone that was ringing. Peggy turned to Jasmine with one of those trust-me-because-I-know-more-than-you looks. "Last time he was here I heard him talking about redoing the tile on his deck. Well, one of his decks." Peggy rolled her eyes. She and Glinda thought it was absolutely abhorrent that Stockwell the Younger had a penthouse of his very own, because as far as they knew, he'd never had a real job. He was being groomed to take over the family business when his father retired, but until then, the other receptionists claimed he was just "coasting," living the Manhattan aristocratic life and sowing all the wild oats he could, occasionally doing some work for his dad when the mood suited him.
Jasmine wondered sometimes what was so bad about that. If she had access to the kind of money Stockwell the Younger did, she'd probably do the same. But she never dared to say that to Peggy or Glinda. She wanted them to respect her, which she was pretty sure they did, even if they repeatedly claimed they thought of her as "their other granddaughter," which she secretly hated. But she had to spend forty hours a week sharing a desk with these ladies, so she indulged them when they wanted to gossip, when they told her she was too skinny, or when they "accidentally" peeked at her checking her Tinder matches and made disapproving tongue clicks.
The elevator dinged and opened, and Stockwell the Younger walked out. Jasmine tried to pretend that she didn't notice him, though he had the kind of presence that was impossible not to notice. He was tall, six feet at least, always dressed impeccably, whether in a suit or just a fashionable T-shirt and well-fitting jeans. Dark brown hair styled perfectly, piled on top but shaved close and faded at his temples. Angular cheekbones. Eyes to match his hair, like warm mahogany.
Jasmine had yet to find anyone on Tinder who could make her forget about Stockwell the Younger, especially when she lay in her bed at night, hand moving to her pussy. But it was hard to picture him falling for someone like her. She'd been told she was pretty by well-meaning people like Peggy and Glinda, with her wavy strawberry blonde hair and her slender frame. But he probably had dozens of prettier girls lined up, and aside from a general attractiveness she was shy and short and frumpy, with barely a penny to her name that didn't go straight back into rent or meager savings. Barely any idea what she wanted to do with her life. He exuded confidence, direction, and of course, money.
"Afternoon, ladies." He smiled at the trio at the large welcome desk. "My dad in?"
"He's in a meeting," Peggy said, friendly but blunt. "I can let his EA know--"
"No need. I'll just hang in his waiting area 'til he's free. Will I see you all at the party tonight?" Jasmine noticed that he was looking directly at her.
But Peggy didn't. "Of course."
"And you, Jasmine?" Jasmine nearly jumped in her seat when he said her name. She didn't even know that he knew it. "You have somewhere cooler to be?" He winked, and she hoped to God she was wearing enough foundation to cover up the heat rising in her cheeks.
"I'll be here, Mr. Stockwell," she said.
"Good, good," he said. "Call me Devon, by the way. I'll see you later." He drummed his fingers quickly on the desk, smiled, and walked off.
"Ugh," Peggy said under her breath when he was out of earshot. "I hope you're not falling for his routine."
Jasmine blinked a couple of times, forced a smile that she knew could fool Peggy. "Of course not."
#
She's been awake for a good five minutes, and somehow, she's just noticed. There are cuff bracelets on her wrists and ankles.
Jasmine examines them. They're black, thick leather, with metal loops and buckles.
She wishes she could remember Devon putting them on her last night, what he did with them. Why can't she remember? Why isn't she more disturbed by the fact that she can't remember?
Instead of disturbed, she's just fascinated. Curious. She runs her fingers along the cuffs on her wrists. She smells them. They smell like real leather. She has no doubt that they are. She has no doubt that they're expensive. She reasons to herself that she probably drank more last night than she thought, and simply can't remember her time with Devon getting a bit kinky.
She examines the buckle of the one on her left wrist. They're not locked shut or anything, at least. She places her thumb on the buckle, readying to get the cuff off.
Except, she can't.
In her head, she can picture a buckle. She can picture pulling out the strap, lifting the prong. It's one of the easiest movements she can think of. She's done it a million times before.
But for some reason, right now, she can't go any farther. She can't do anything to unfasten the cuff from her wrist. It's like every time she tries, her fingers freeze up and forget what to do.
She takes a deep breath and tries to remove the cuff from her right wrist, but she can't. Her fingers freeze again. She tries for the cuffs at her ankles. Same result.
Okay. Okay.
Now she's getting disturbed.
#
The party officially started at 6. A few people went home to change in the interim, but Jasmine didn't need to. She'd bought a green knit dress on Amazon just for the occasion, accessorizing it with a wide black elastic belt around her waist.
She hadn't even thought that Devon might attend the party, even though he was technically on the payroll. She would have assumed he had cooler places to be, just like he'd suggested to her. But as soon as the caterers finished setting up, there he was, slumming it with the other employees. Jasmine had never seen him talk to anyone but her and the other front desk ladies before, and was surprised to see that some people actually seemed to like talking to him. But she shouldn't have been surprised. He was quite charming; it was just that Peggy and Glinda seemed immune to his charms, and wanted Jasmine to be too.
She wanted to find an excuse to talk to him, but he always seemed to be on the opposite end of the room from her, making the rounds. Instead, she got caught up in a conversation with Phil from Accounting, who launched into a fascinating lecture on the differences between 401Ks and Roth IRAs or something like that. Jasmine struggled to keep her face alert in between sips of white wine.
Just as she was coming up with a good reason to excuse herself, she felt a hand on her shoulder, and heard a man's voice in her ear. "Phil, buddy, I heard you got a new boat," Devon said.
Phil beamed with pride. "Sure did, Mr. Stockwell."