Bonds of Attraction (Full Length Erotic Romance Novel) (19 page)

 

“Well, I didn’t exactly find her,” I said
politely. I always explained my process to new clients, but when they were
matched with someone who was everything they were looking for, their shock
usually led to them asking me how I did it. “I screened a lot of clients. I
have files built up and I take notes on your personalities and certain aspects
of your views towards relationships. While I do ask you about your interests
and views on things like religion and politics, those are far less important
than you’d think. Simply because two people are Catholic and love horseback
riding doesn’t mean they were meant to be.”

 

Charles laughed. His face was warm with the
air of new love. “So what is your algorithm then?”

 

I stopped to think about this. If I could
figure out exactly what my algorithm towards relationships was, could I then
apply that very same equation towards myself?

 

“I don’t use one, unfortunately. Dating
websites use those, and while dating websites are often successful, I mean,
even I have to admit a lot of people find partners through those sites, I find
that any kind of rigorous equation or algorithm has a high failure rate. I
simply go by your wants, needs, and a general impression of your personality.”

 

Charles sat back his chair, a furrow crossing
his brow as he contemplated this. “It definitely works for you. I’ve done a lot
of research on you, Miss Facet. People absolutely rave about you on every
website I could find on you, and I did my homework. I even wrote to a few of
your ex-clients and they wrote long emails about how great you were and how
well you came to know them personally. Simply put, I was impressed. So even
though my mathematics background cries out against your method of feeling it
out, I have to applaud you.”

 

I had felt my way towards Leon Christensen
thrusting in and out of me as the fire burned in the background. The same
intuition that had proved to be so helpful in building my business from the
ground up served to leave me alone, next to a dead fireplace with no trace of
the client that I had apparently seduced. How would my ex-clients feel about
that?

 

“Thank you, it has served me well,” I said,
thinking that it served me well at least in my professional life. “Although, I
have to agree with you that it’s anything but mathematical.”

 

We shared a smile.

 

“I’m just glad that your intuition led me to
meet Rebecca. At the very least, it’s been a very long time since I’ve been so
interested in someone,” Charles said. The happiness in his face faded slightly.
I remembered our first interview again and his sadness crossed the room and hit
me hard, harder than I thought it could have.

 

Charles had married young. He had described
her as the most beautiful girls he had ever seen. They had grown up next to
each other on a small street in a small town in New England. Her name had been
Lori and her hair had been a golden blond that he said always reminded him of
summer even when snow covered everything in sight. They had gone through grade
school together and then married before college.

 

She died giving birth. Even now, when Charles
told the story, his face grew heavy and tears welled up in his eyes. His voice
grew hoarse and every word was labored in its delivery. Charles recalled his
pain with amazing clarity, as though it had happened yesterday.

 

They had waited to have children. In their
thirties, they decided that it was time to either have a child or give up on
the idea altogether. When Lori became pregnant, they had rejoiced.

 

“I never really got over losing Lori,” Charles
had said at our first meeting. “I love my son, Brandon, more than I can even
describe and I wouldn’t trade him for the world, but there are times when I
miss her so much that it pains me to look at him. He looks just like her. Most
of the time though, it’s really nice that he looks like Lori. He even has some
of her mannerisms, believe it or not.”

 

Leon’s eyes burning with tears as he stared
into the fire. A story of a childhood loss that still weighed on him. His
confession, honest and without motive. The look of complete loss on his face.

 

I fought back tears again. I steadied my
voice as best I could before I spoke again.
“Well, Charles,
I’m ecstatic at the results so far. As of now, can I consider your file on
hold?” I asked, my voice solid and without any slight hint of emotional strain.

 

“What does my file being on hold mean?”

 

“Essentially, it means that you’re not
interested in being matched up with anyone else. We retain your information,
and consider you off our matching possibilities, but I still may link up
possible matches with your file in case you come back. After six months of you
being on hold, we consider your case officially closed.”

 

“You can consider me on hold, I suppose. I’m
hoping that you and I never have to work together again,” Charles said,
laughing. “Well, unless you’re looking to invest in my hedge fund.”

 

We shared another laugh. Charles shook my
hand and a wide smile spread from ear to ear across his face. We said our
goodbyes and Charles left my office, practically dancing to the door. When he
passed April, he also said a cordial goodbye and April giggled. She turned
backed to me and her face was positively bright with happiness. She gave me a
big thumbs-up of approval and I gave her one back. It was our customary gesture
for a job well done.

 

I made more coffee. After the meeting with
Charlie, I was exhausted. I knew that I had to stay and finish up some work,
but all I wanted to do was curl up in my bed and sleep away the entire day and
forget everything that had happened. Deep down, I knew that if I went home all
I would see is the fireplace and the empty floor where Leon and I had embraced
each other.

 

His hands had been so gentle. His fingers had
brushed against my skin softly as they plucked away the buttons on my blouse.
My nipples grew hard in remembrance of the previous night. His eyes stared into
mine, bloodshot and wanting.

 

No, I told myself. I was not going to sit
here all day and think about last night.

 

I walked out to April. “April, please hold
all of my calls. Unless it’s a state of emergency or fire rains from the sky,
don’t disturb me until four o’clock,” I said. April was nodding as she wrote
down four pm. “Oh, and while you’re at it, order us some lunch. It’s on me, of
course. Just give me a heads up when the food gets here.”

 

“Where should I order from and what would you
like?” she asked.

 

I stopped to consider it. I wanted Leon here.
That’s all I wanted. I wanted him to lay down with me and wrap me in his
muscular arms and hold me close. He’d slide inside of me slowly and I’d feel
every inch of him push into me. His tongue would work against mine with steady
pressure until his cock was fully inside of me. Then his hands would wrap
around my ass and move me back and forth on him, my wetness sliding up and down
on him.

 

April stared at me. I shook my head slightly
and turned back to her.

 

“Something Asian, I don’t care. Get me
vegetables or tofu. Spicy. Make sure to get a big salad on the side,” I said. I
really wanted a big steak and potatoes, but I would try to at least attempt to
keep it healthy.

 

April wrote down everything and nodded. She
was scanning websites, finding something that caught her attention. I left her
and returned to my own office. Rather than turn on the overhead light, I opted
to turn on the numerous lamps I had strewn about the office. I closed the door
behind me and pulled the shades shut. With the window closed as well, I was
completely alone and private. The lamps gave the office a calm feel to it,
which I liked. I sat down at my desk and closed my eyes, resting my head on my
outstretched arms.

 

Sleep wavered in and out. The pressure of my
arm pushed against my forehead, but the feeling was far away. The beginning of
a dream started to paste itself over the darkness and I was still conscious
enough to realize that I was falling into a dream.

 

Leon stared at me. His hand was between my
legs, sliding in between my lips as it moved up and down. His other hand held
me against him. I could feel his cock, hard and rigid, against my ass cheek. He
was moving me up and down on his hand, his fingers penetrating me in an
explosion of pleasure. The fire blazed in front of us. My skin felt alive and
hot. I thrust my hips against his and his abs flexed in response.

 

I awoke with a start, the dream washing away
in an instant. My vision cleared and my office came into view. With the blinds
closed and only the lamps on, it was no wonder I fell asleep. Cursing myself
for being so stupid that I could fall asleep on the job, I got up and turned on
the overhead light.

 

The harsh light cast down on me. My head swam
with the thralls of a brief sleep and my eyes hurt at the flood of new light. I
told myself to suck it up and that I would soon grow accustomed to it. After a
few minutes, the nap hangover cleared and the light seemed much less harsh.

 

I looked through my schedule and pulled out
the files of clients that I had upcoming meetings with. The nearest meeting was
with a woman who ran her own bridal flower store. I laughed to myself when I
remembered her; we were both in the business of love yet we were both loveless
ourselves. I had thought to make the joke to her, but decided against it and
kept my silence.

 

The file contained everything I needed to
know about her to get some preliminary matches. Unless I was absolutely sure
that I had a perfect match, I typically let the client go through a summary
packet of their potential match, picture not included. From there, the client
would choose two or three people that they felt looked the most appealing
through their profile. From those three, I would then show the client the
pictures of the potential matches, but unattached to any particular file.

 

This method was helpful in establishing the
client’s interests in types of people and how they looked. Sometimes the first
match worked out, sometimes it provided me with a better basis to move forward.

 

I opened the bridal flower shop owner’s file.
My eyes blurred as I tried to read. I would find myself halfway down a page
without any idea of what I had just read. To get through the first page of the
folder took me close to twenty minutes.

 

Under her history, I read that she went to a
boarding school. I tried to imagine Leon as a sixteen year old boy. He was
undoubtedly handsome, albeit smaller and less muscular. The beginning of his
sixteenth year must have been an optimistic one for him. At a prestigious
school, surrounded by friends, hounded by young girls who threw themselves at
him, he must have felt like a king. Then Kevin died.

 

Kevin Bowers, the poor boy. I thought of all
of my feelings at the age. Every time something bad happened, it was as if the
world had ended. Every emotion rang like a church-bell in my heart, overbearing
and demanding of all attention. What broken-hearted sixteen year old doesn’t
consider ending it all?

 

Yet Kevin Bowers had gone and done just that.
His life ended at the end of a belt attached to a ceiling fan. What if I had
found my best friend hanging from the ceiling. I couldn’t begin to imagine the
shock of it, how it would haunt your dreams for weeks, months, and years. The
guilt might be enough to drive you crazy.

 

Leon Christensen, no longer the sixteen year
old kid he was once but now a grown man, had been deeply affected by the trauma
he had experienced on the day his best friend had taken his own life. I
wondered if his sexuality had something to do with that day. Was he drawn to
being a dominant out of some need to control? If he could assert control in
some fashion, did that mean he wouldn’t be subjected to any more pain like the
pain of that day?

 

These were questions I had no answers to. I
barely knew Leon Christensen, but from what I did know, I wanted to know him
more. There was no denying that truth of that. Even now, feeling slighted and
hurt, I wanted to get inside Leon Christensen’s head. He was certainly in mine.

 

I returned to the folder. With a fierce
determination that probably gave me another wrinkle in my forehead, I pressed
on. By the end of the flower store owner’s file, my eyes refused to cooperate
with my will. I made some brief notes in her file and tossed it on my desk to
start a fresh pile. I looked over to the unfinished stack of client folders and
sighed. It seemed like a tower of folders before me.

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