The City Of Angels, Spring 2008
Chapter 00. A Brief Review and Preview
Managing partner David Barnes, who did not fully understand the computer assault his firm suffered, was agitated enough to see Sam ushered into his office as soon as he returned from his meeting with Eric Grey, which did not go as planned. They did not shake hands, by design his desk is too broad for that. It was something he did intentionally to throw people off. Paulo Zero had given Sam the job of selling her services to Barnes, so she used her own little tricks and working her computer magic...
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This is a short story that leads into Book 2 of "Not Quite A White Knight." That will be submitted shortly as "Anal" since that is where things start.
This story focuses on Sam (Samantha), a female character who was introduced in Book 1. Events occur in the same time frame as Chapter 48 through 51.
Book 1 was published between July 7, 2018 to November 9, 2018. Think of this as the "made for TV movie," used as a bridge between seasons of a TV series that is changing channels with a year-long gap between seasons. If you have not read Book 1 (parts 1 through 7 contain chapters 1 through 51) of "Not Quite a White Knight" you may be missing too much background to get much benefit from this.
This story is classified as "NonConsent/Reluctance" because part of the story is one person (Sam) bending another (Barnes) to her will. It builds to a scene where a rich, powerful lawyer is lightly drugged (to lower his inhibitions) and induced (leveraging what he values) to give oral pleasure to a woman's ass, which is something he would never do by his own choice. All other sex is consensual.
There are three chapters. In Chapter 1 Sam must sell it. Sam is assigned to mind-fuck Barnes in his office; she succeeds. In Chapter 2 Sam works it. Sam gets to work in an office and calls upon a service girl; working with benefits. In Chapter 3 Sam get to play. Sam takes a hotel room where David Barnes come to pleasantly consummate their deal - her way. There is sex in chapter 2 and 3. This book is complete in these 3 chapters. Sam may have other stories in the future. The first chapters of "Not Quite A White Knight Book 2" pick up from chapter 3 of this story.
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Book 1 ended with our hero's (AKA the Prince or Eric Grey or Paulo Zero or Jefe of the 49 street gang) victory in the law firm's board room over the thieving weasel Larry, who was supported by his uncles, senior partners Chet and Ben. Their theft of a doctored document created a security leak that put the entire firm at risk. After due process, where Sam was a critical witness, all three were banished from the firm, a heavy fine was levied and the computer support contract was terminated for cause. In her moment of emotional distress Larry's wife terminated their marriage with extreme prejudice using a skillet. Repeatedly.
Following his victory the Prince hosted a celebratory dinner party at his mansion, the Casa Grey, with two adult couples and some younger guests. After a wonderful dinner the adult guests enjoyed a evening of adult theater on the sex machines, some nighttime pleasures, and a very delightful morning.
This story covers Sam's activities working while her hero enjoyed his victory. Sam's job is to get herself "into bed with the law firm" both figuratively and literally. She does so with her own unique twist.
"Not Quite a White Knight Book 2" will pick up our hero meating Sam in appreciation of her loyal services, and then sharing a wonderful breakfast.
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Chapter 01. Sam's Meeting At The Law Office
Wednesday May 21, 2008
Samantha Zeek, who also went by Sam or Sam K, was 30 when she walked into the office building for the most important day of her life. She arrived early in the morning, she needed preparation for her mind and appearance from the professional staff the firm employed, and some witness preparation from Joe Pope.
While her face was cute at 20 when she graduated with an advanced degree from Cal Poly, for a few years after she had a sponsor/employer with particular and demanding requirements 24/7. Then that sponsor made some bad choices in the people he chose to antagonize, and paid with his life. Sam was raped and almost killed in the attack. Without her sponsor Sam, a trained computer genius, was on the streets before she was 24.
Fortunately, she had learned much in both the classroom and the bedroom, and was resilient in using what she learned afterwards. She also had many friends. Still, burning the candle so very brightly at both ends over the span of her twenties while making her own questionable chemical choices left its mark on her. An intervention by Paulo Zero, in her mid-20s, saved her.
Now at 30 her figure was not bad, although she presented as sort of stocky and well below average by LA's kale-fueled standards, even if she was far from fat.
When the need came, Paulo Zero selected her to aid him, then backed her with money and some very intense advice. She was still a genius who could learn at a faster rate than most. With hair styling, makeup, new clothes, and the guidance of Joe Pope, she presented herself well enough to move to the next level.
After her testimony Sam was ushered to the waiting room for the executive offices while the partners conferred with her master. She was dressed in an uncomfortable new business suit but would let a computer and her documents do the talking.
The value of the law firm came from the complex, detailed and spot-on opinions they wrote and sold to clients, often selling the same opinion to both sides of a given conflict. To that end they use two computer systems, 1) a normal network that connects to the internet, and is vulnerable to all the attacks that implies, so it is used for nothing important, and 2) a separate, physically isolated internal network, confined to the building, where all work was done and supposedly stored securely. In an attempt to steal work product from Eric Grey, Larry and his two partners had violated the internal network's security, building a bridge connecting the two networks - and hence the outside world - using a wireless wi-fi device that was not secured because they were not smart enough about security or network devices.
Now Sam had a chance one-on-one to illustrate the great cost of that security breech to the managing partner of the law firm. She knew that when leading desperate fools into cyberspace, especially lawyers, truth was not really a requirement. Lawyers believe what they see on their computer screens, which have replaced law books in so many ways. Sam prepared some screens to make it easy for Barnes to follow, and thereby heighten his great despair.
(Here we pick up Barnes after he left his meeting where Eric Grey turned down the CTO job.)
They spent zero time on niceties, Sam pointed to the "outside" computer Barnes used for emails and little else. At her request Barnes invoked his Dark Web browser. Barnes had no legitimate use for such software on his computer, he had no idea how to use it, but when the bored low-level tech asked if he wanted "the custom secure browser - for a small fee" he automatically said yes, thinking it made him look like one of the cool kids who knew what he was doing. (An unwritten LA law: we never really leave high school, we carry it with us to the grave.)
It was a mistake which would cost him much emotional anguish.
After the browser was open Sam took the keyboard and typed in a address from memory.
As she typed, Sam mentioned that the management of the now-fired computer support firm assigned workers to shifts based not on their computer skills, but based on how well they "played the office game" with their own managers. Thus the techs who Barnes saw at the law offices most often were in fact the best entertainers, but also the worst computer people. Many were hoping to make it big in stand-up comedy so they could get out of the office and into the floodlights where they were sure they would shine bright.
Once the browser was up Sam looked puzzled, so she hit a few keys filling the screen with computer code, and then pointed to a line of code. She said that line meant that his private browsing history was exported "every 78 seconds," to another computer via the Dark Web.