First offering. Thanks to HeyAll for edit assist. Mistakes are fault of author.
*****
Murry Fassler Vess was a lion of a man. Ruthless, and with few moral scruples, he was feared by friend and foe alike. But he was wealthy and powerful, fabulously so, and possessed a rare and priceless charmâa bright flower whose bloom towered red-wood high over the weeds of his character: he was a loving husband and doting dad. A beautiful wife and son. He loved them, adored them, and was a different man around them. Everyone knew his philosophy: Business was business and business was war; but family was family and family was why he fought dirty to be the undisputed victor of said war. Double-cross him in business? Fine; okay. But snub a charity dinner hosted by his wife after accepting an invite? Fire-sell your assets then hideout with the Amish.
But he was eighty with a heart that didn't want to beat anymore. The lead cardiologist joked, privately, the organ was recovering from Stockholm syndrome. Finally it gave out, slitting its red and blue wrists in a final act of defiance. Mr. Vess cursed it with his last breath. "Ungrateful little bastard."
His Last Will and Testament was simpleâeverything went to his son: assets, debts, obligation, everything . . . and his enemies, especially those. The old lion was dead and the hyenas were circling the pride, grinning, laughing and unafraid. Their covetous snouts salivating at the sight of lush territory, whose bounty could fill their bellies trice over.
The ensuing carnage would result in a corporate safari replete with spectators, white-collar enthusiasts, who, instead of four-wheel jeeps, binoculars, and cheap African guides, were partial to Maybachs, I-devices, and secretaries with stocking thighs. Like meerkats in executive suits, they were watchful, curious to see what the young cub would do. Would he rally and keep the scavengers at bay, or be devoured? Would he follow in his sire's paw prints, or beat his own path? Would he be the cruel, ruthless beast his father was or, God forbid, worse. Be it royal protector or bloodthirsty dictator, the hyenas were approaching, snickering, laughing, wanting to snap and shake his neck. Survive or perish: the fiscal circle of commerce. This is his story.
Simon and his mother sat quietly as their limo circled down the hill that held their protector's remains. Murry F. Vess, loving father and husbandâprotector, no more. They were alone, away from the somber, botox expressions and the engraved daggers those aftermarket faces disguised. They'd bared it stoically, mother and son, stone-faced, proud, never leaving the other's side, even now.
It had rained, during the funeral, essentially poured. Everyone knew it would. Even though the forecast called for Sunny skiesâand it had been; it was sunny all morning, right until two o'clock when the funeral started. Those who didn't know, commented on the freakish weatherâblack suits and dresses further darkened under the deluge. Those who did know, graciously shared their umbrellas: the very same that were looked upon curiously when the sun was high and bright. "Thanks," one said to another. "Woke up this morning and knew it would rain, huh?" A stately man with a jaw lined with silver bristles beneath a black felt hat replied, "
This
morning? Yes. This morning and countless ones before it."
Droplets still fell, huge gray beads that shattered against the roof like tossed rice at a wedding. Simon nodded as he stared out at the burly limbed trees lumbering by. With Father gone, the businesses, accounts, stocks, and employees were his veiled brides awaiting consummation. Barely eighteen years old and betrothed to more responsibility a man even trice his age would ever have.
Responsibility, obligation . . . power. It was in his blood to carry all three. Father told him so, repeatedly, and Father's word was law . . .
He
was Father now.
Simon stared at the ghostly blue eyes watching him from the window pane. "I'm ready," he whispered.
"Did you say something, dear?"
Simon turned to his mother, having momentarily forgotten that she was beside him.
Right
beside him: the warmth of her body and stocking leg enveloped his left side like a warm unwavering breeze. Dressed in an elegant black dress, she was the quintessential trophy wife-turned widowâthe Italian version, at mere age of thirty-three. He stared placidly into her dark, almond-shaped eyes, commanding himself to look no farther down. Busty. A term he learned at eight; and knew immediately what it meant, that it would be applicable to her even at half her size.
She'd worn a funeral hat at the grave, wide-sweeping and low, revealing only her lips through the mesh veil. Lips that were as lush as grapes being pressed into red wine. And they were pouty and dutiful, too, as if a plea or an apology were waiting there: the lips of a loving wife desperate to please.
Simon turned to his window. "No."
That he could forget that she was within reach his reach was a testament of the occasion's enormity. She was irresistible even while mourning.
When standing, her dress stopped several inches above her kneesâbut seated, crossed-legged, stocking left over stocking right, the hem was above her mid-thigh. Without turning from the window, Simon placed his left hand on her stocking leg, his open palm on her raised thigh. She made no acknowledgement which he could see or hear. But when he squeezed her thigh, working his thumb back and forth where the smooth fabric ended and the black sheer stockings began. Her leg jerked, ever so slightly, rolling a delicious ripple down the center of his palm. He rubbed her thigh, savoring the textured, smooth sound that played from her leg. His suit was dark but certain protrusions show even against black. He wondered if she noticed his growing erection or was purposely looking the other way. And he wondered if she knew what he expected from her now that Father was gone. Would she resist him, submit, or attempt to flee?
None of that mattered, really. He was Father now. The will, the attorneys, Fatherâthey were clear and conclusive on that point. And if Simon wanted a trophy instead of a mother, then, his word was law. She could leave, sure, and receive enough to live in luxury. Though, a crumb to the whole.
The hilly road leveled out, arresting their gentle sway inside the cabin. On the highway, and the driver accelerated to merge with traffic, persuading the exhaust to offer up a satisfying rumble. The adjacent lanes were occupied by soccer moms, weekend warriors, and teenagers on dates. Simon watched them with the same quiet awe he had the trees that covered the hill. They all were following their nature, which made them beautiful, since beauty, by its nature, obeyed nature, alwaysâas anyone who's ever played chicken with a tree will know. If a tree violates its nature, it rots and dies. Those commuters have their natures, and Simon has his.
"I will yield to no one," he whispered.
His mother shifted slightly but made no comment; instead, clasping her manicured hands in her lapâinches from Simon's restless thumb. He glanced at her hands: slender and feminine, the progenies of countless fantasies and quicken breaths. They were colorless, her nails, for the funeral. Father forbade her to look 'loose', but Simon liked color . . . among other things.