The Girl Beneath the Skin - Cover

The Girl Beneath the Skin

by blacknight99

Copyright© 2008 by blacknight99

Mind Control Sex Story: What happens when Honesty meets Innocence? Sometimes, good deeds ARE rewarded.

Caution: This Mind Control Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including mt/ft   Consensual   Romantic   Mind Control   Hypnosis   Drunk/Drugged   Heterosexual   First   Oral Sex   .

Sometimes, you can tell the sound of a man. It was that way with Grinsworth. Coming down the quiet emptiness of the late Friday afternoon hallway, I knew his gait, the rhythm of his stumpy little stride. I knew this would happen sooner or later. Word gets around. It always does. I didn’t want it to happen, but I was ready for it.

I heard my secretary through the open door. “Good afternoon, Mr. Grinsworth. He’s in. Please let me tell him that you’re here.” I smiled. She’d never met the man, but it made sense that she’d learn who he was. Damn, she’s a good secretary!

“Sit down!” he barked. And then there was the long, inevitable pause. “Good Lord!” he muttered under his breath, just loud enough to make himself heard ... by me, and of course, by her. “Oh, Good Lord, what was the man thinking?”

And he waddled into my office, looking as officious as he possibly could. Unfortunately, the look fell flat. He reminded me of a strutting banty rooster; small, puffed up, stiff, overly erect, chest out, as if to say “I’m in charge here! I’m in charge!” I smiled, but somehow withheld the laugh.

“Why, Mr. Grinsworth. To what do I owe this pleasure?”

“Grant, I’d heard about it, but I didn’t believe it!” he began, screaming, spraying spittle. He was really trying to work himself into a frenzy. “You bring our most important clients into this office! How in God’s name could you go out, behind my back and hire ... hire ... THAT!?!” He pointed savagely at the open door.

“If by ‘that,’ you mean ‘her,’” I responded calmly, “it was agreed when I came onboard here that I’d hire my own staff. I haven’t needed any further sales personnel, only a good secretary. And SHE is it.”

“We GAVE you a secretary!” he screeched, his face reddening. “We gave you Miss Rhombus! We sent you two others after you tried to fire her! I didn’t question you then, but I should have! You can’t fire a girl like Miss Rhombus!”

“You mean I can’t fire the air-headed bimbo niece of the personnel director,” I said calmly. “You’re right, I didn’t have that authority, despite the fact that she filed the Granger Contract under ‘C,’ for ‘Contract.’ In point of fact, it seems that she have filed ALL of the contracts under ‘C.’ No, I didn’t have the right to fire her. And she does need the work. She wouldn’t be able to afford those D-cup fake breasts of hers without a job.”

“She’s a good girl!” he bellowed. “A pretty girl! If she did nothing but sit out there and look sexy, she’d be one hell of a lot better than THAT!” He pointed again toward the wide-open door. “I want her OUT of here, Grant! And I mean NOW!”

“Okay,” I said quietly. “Consider her gone.”

He looked suspiciously at me. “You mean that?”

“Absolutely. She’ll be working for Feingold, Stillman and Hersh Monday morning.”

He barked a laugh. “Give me fuckin’ break! FS&H wouldn’t touch someone like her with a ten-foot pole!”

“Oh, yes they would,” I said levelly. I got up and walked over to the office trash can, picked up an empty box I’d thrown away earlier, and sat back down at my desk. “She’s part of the package.”

“What package?”

“Me,” I answered. “They’ve been after me for months. They’ve offered me a fifteen hundred dollar a month raise over what I make here, plus an extra one percent commission. I quit, Grinsworth. I should have quit a long time ago.”

“You can’t quit!” he roared. “We have a contract, you son of a bitch!”

I slid open my top drawer, picked up a couple of stapled pages, and flipped them across the desk. “There’s your contract, asshole,” I said with as much venom as I could muster. I began taking things out of my desk and packing them in the empty box. “And I didn’t break the contract ... YOU did. It says right there that I can hire my own staff. If you break that contract, I can quit without notice ... and that’s just what I’m doing.”

Grinsworth watched nervously as I opened a drawer and dumped the entire contents into the box. “Now wait a minute, Grant.”

“Fuck you,” I said. “I couldn’t be happier. Another fifteen hundred a month ... plus an extra percent. All I needed was an excuse, and you just handed it to me on a silver platter.”

“Grant, stop!” he pleaded. I opened another drawer and began stuffing files into the box. “Grant, stop! Hang on a minute!” He was getting frantic. “Grant!”

“Go take a flyin’ leap,” I sneered. “I’m outta here!”

“For God’s sake, Grant, I didn’t mean it! You can keep the girl!”

I ignored him and opened another drawer.

“We’ll match it!” he wailed.

I stopped and looked up at him, keeping my face impassive. “Say that again,” I told him calmly.

“Damn it, Grant, this is blackmail,” he muttered.

“I have grossed more for this company in the past four months than the rest of your entire sales staff combined has pulled in for the past year,” I said. “Now, if you’re serious, pick up that contract, change the figures ... and nothing else ... and I’ll sign it Monday. Otherwise, I’m out of here.”

He slumped, completely defeated. “Blackmail,” he muttered.

“Take it or leave it,” I said flatly. “And one other thing. One other strictly non-negotiable thing. Take it or leave it.”

“What is it?” he groaned.

“You go out there and apologize to that girl. She’s the best damn secretary I’ve ever had. Ever. In five days, she’s single-handedly unfucked all the damage your over-sexed bimbo secretarial staff has managed to do in four months. And I mean REALLY apologize. Like you mean it. Make HER believe it.”

Grinsworth sighed but didn’t comment further. He picked up the personnel contract and waddled out the door.

I heard him begin, shakily, unsteadily. “Um ... Miss ... um...”

“Jenny Winslow, Mr. Grinsworth. Please ... call me Jenny.” Her voice was small, polite. She hesitated once, as if her voice had caught. I imagined that she’d been crying, having overheard everything we’d said.

“Jenny...” He paused for several seconds. I could imagine him looking down at his feet. Anywhere but directly at her. “Jenny, I’d like to apologize to you. What I said was crude and impolite and ... um ... I’m truly sorry please forgive me.” He finished all in a rush.

“Thank you, Mr. Grinsworth,” I heard her say, her voice much stronger. “I accept your apology. I look forward to seeing you again.”

And I heard Grinsworth shuffling away, more rapidly than he’d come, but with an unmistakable tread. Sometimes, you can just tell the sound of a man.

It was another long minute before Jenny appeared at my door. “Why did you do that?” she asked softly. I looked up at her. I looked right at her, right at her face, and I kept my expression tender and non-committal and business-like.

Jenny is ugly. And I’m not talking plain here, or mediocre. Novelists have relied on similes and metaphors in the past... “horse-faced” (or some other barnyard animal), or any number of crude, cruel literary devices. But Jenny’s face is ... well ... it’s a wreck. Twisted, pock-marked, scarred, colored bright orange-red in some places, bluish-purple in others. Her right eye is obviously artificial ... a glass eye, which stares fixedly straight ahead. But because the other, normal eye is still bright, alive, intelligent (and a deep sea-green in color), the bad one often makes her appear cross-eyed. Her face is ... well, to put it succinctly, hideous.

I am a professional salesman. And I’m a good salesman. I pride myself on being able to confront prejudice and purposefully take no notice of it. Whether the person I’m talking to is hampered by age, height, overt sexuality, race, religion, whatever. The more outrageous, the more I’m able to simply ignore it. The vast, vast majority of people can’t do that. And you cannot believe what an asset it is. A new client who’s a flaming homosexual transvestite? I treat him exactly the same way I would one of the Rockefellers. I simply look PAST it. As if it isn’t even there. And because of that ability, I sell things. Oh, you would not believe how good I am at selling things.

When I interviewed Jenny for the job, I treated her the same way. I looked beyond her face ... like she didn’t even have one. I never even mentioned it. Not then, and not at any time since. And right away, I realized she was special. No ... more than that. She was amazing! When I told Grinsworth that she’s the best secretary I’ve ever had, that was putting it very mildly. The girl is phenomenal!

I got up and moved over to the couch, where I sat, burying my face in my hands.

“Why did you do that?” she repeated from the doorway. “You threatened to quit on my behalf.”

“What are you talking about?” I countered, not looking up. “I got myself a nice raise!”

“No,” she said flatly. “You didn’t care about a raise. You don’t really need one ... not really. You did it because of ME. I’m certain you did. I’ve only worked for you for five days. You barely even know me.” She was talking as much to herself as she was to me, trying to figure the situation out, but now she repeated herself yet again. “Why did you do it?”

I sighed. “You’re mine,” I told her weakly.

That made her pause. “What?”

“You’re mine,” I repeated. “We’re a team. I watch out for you, and you watch out for me. In this office, we belong to each other. I’m responsible.” I sighed again. “Oh, man, I hate confrontations like that!” I looked down at my hands and tried to control the shaking.

She took a few rushed steps across the office toward me, but stopped abruptly, blushing, looking down at her feet. Her greatest physical attribute is her hair, which is several inches longer than shoulder-length, a rich reddish-brown in color, straight and very thick. She has learned to keep her head lowered, so that her hair falls across the right side of her face, hiding it from the world as much as possible. She had briefly reached both of her hands out toward me as she took those few steps, but now she fumbled them together, as if trying to keep them busy.

“You shouldn’t feel that way about me,” she said quietly. “I don’t want to be a liability to you. And I am, of course. My face...”

It was the first time either of us had uttered the word “face” since we’d met. I regarded her quietly as she fidgeted, and decided to ignore the word completely.

“I need you tonight,” I told her.

Her gaze came up, and she regarded me in shock. “What?”

I immediately realized the innuendo, but decided to pretend I hadn’t. “The Hobart Contract,” I said matter-of-factly. “I need to go over it with you. The notes you put in the margin. I need you to explain them to me.”

The topics had changed too quickly for her to keep up. She was confused, nervous, and still blushing. “You don’t have to follow my recommendations,” she said to her feet. “I was only trying to help. Please just ignore them if...”

“They’re excellent notes,” I told her. “I just don’t understand all of them. I’d like you to stay late and work on the whole contract with me. Will you?”

“Yes!” she said too quickly, then looked down again, brushing her hair forward with her right hand, idly covering that side of her face. “I mean ... yes, yes of course I can stay. I’d be happy to help.”

“Great!” I exclaimed, clapping and rubbing my hands together as I rose from the couch. “Let’s go out and get a bite to eat, then come back here and work on it. What are you in the mood for?”

She looked back up, real fear in her one good eye, and she backed away from me. “No!” she said urgently, but then paused and tried to compose herself. “I mean ... no, Mr. Grant. I can’t. I mean, I NEVER go out ... I couldn’t.”

I tried to put on a mild expression. “Nonsense, Jenny. Let’s go out for some dinner. There’s no reason to be...”

“No, Mr. Grant,” she said firmly. “I won’t go out with you. I’m sorry. You don’t know ... you couldn’t know. You have no idea what it’s like.” She ignored her hair and looked up at me imploringly. “Mr. Grant, people stare. It’s not their fault ... it’s mine, for going out where they can see me in the first place. They can’t control themselves. They stare, and they shrink back away from me, and they try to hide their revulsion, but they can’t keep it out of their eyes. Children cry. Oh, God ... children cry...” Tears were welling and starting down the left side of her face now, and for the first time, I wondered at the amount of damage done to her right eye. It was obviously incapable of producing tears.

I stepped forward to her and held her by the shoulders. It was the first time that we’d actually touched, other than a handshake after I’d hired her. “Jenny, I’m sorry. Of course we don’t have to go out for dinner.” I thought for a moment. “I’ll go get us some carry-out. How about Chinese? Do you like Chinese?”

She sniffed and smiled wanly. “I love Chinese,” she whispered.

I went to the restaurant four doors down and ordered the food, then walked over to a large drugstore while it was being prepared. I picked up a bottle of Chardonnay from the cooler, then a couple of real wine glasses back in housewares, and finally, as an afterthought, a tall candle and fake crystal candle holder, and carried everything back to the register.

She wasn’t at her desk when I got back. “In here, Mr. Grant!” she called from the office.

“After hours, I want you to call me Tim,” I told her as I walked through the door. “I bought too much food.”

She straightened from the task of placing a chair in front of the coffee table by the couch, smiling nervously at me. “People always buy too much Chinese food ... Tim,” she replied.

I regarded her quietly for a moment, until she blushed and turned her head away. I kept casting glances as I unloaded the food and as I went to the desk and brought back a corkscrew and lighter for the candle. “Um ... did you change clothes while I was gone?” I asked.

She smiled, but didn’t look up as she placed napkins, paper plates and chopsticks in their places on the coffee table. “I was wearing a vest. I just took it off. It’s warm in here.”

But, of course, it was more than that. I realized that she HAD been wearing a vest, but she’d also had her white blouse buttoned to the throat, with a dangling gold necklace and cheap crystal charm hanging on the outside of the high neckline. Now, the top three buttons of the blouse were undone and the collar flared wide, showing an ample amount of cleavage. More than ample, as the case might be. The round, multi-faceted crystal dangled and bounced between the tops of her milky breasts. For the very first time, I found myself thinking that Miss Winslow had a remarkably nice figure.

She sat in the chair and waited as I settled into the cushions of the large couch, facing her. She’s a small girl, barely over five feet in height, but in the chair, she sat above my level on the couch. She leaned forward and served both of us, giving me considerably larger portions than she took herself. I wasn’t paying too much attention. The crystal was bouncing, caressing the insides of those creamy breasts. She watched as I poured the wine, smiling, tasting, telling me how good everything was. I felt confused. I had obviously never considered Jenny in romantic terms. Business is business. Private life is private. I could ignore appearance when I put on my business hat. But privately, appearance DOES matter. Of course it does. It’s that way it is with everyone. Right? I looked away from her, my head suddenly swimming.

For the first time, I noticed the Hobart Account folder sitting on the table, next to our feast. Ah yes ... this was a business dinner. I cleared my throat, and picked up and opened the folder. “These notes you put in the margins,” I began.

“It’s just syntax, mostly,” she responded, suddenly all business herself. “I don’t know if you want me to correct that sort of thing on my own or ask your permission first.”

“No, no,” I chided. “All that’s just fine. You don’t have to ask. Make those changes on your own.” I picked up a sheet of yellow legal paper. “It’s this extra page of figures ... Where the hell did you get this data?”

She suddenly seemed unsure of herself. “Aren’t those the figures that Hobart wants?” she asked.

“Of course they are,” I said, trying to sound authoritative, “but this is not what our process can provide.” I looked quizzically at the yellow page. According to her figures, we COULD provide it. But that didn’t make any sense.

“Well, yes, I realized that,” she said, still unsure. I tried not to look at her boobs as she leaned forward and pointed. “So ... I ... um ... changed the process. I found all the technical manuals on the shelves behind your desk.” She pointed at the yellow sheet. “You see, our technicians input this portion first. But if we reverse our procedure here ... and here ... modify this portion right here ... then input this data before this step here...”

And suddenly, it all made sense. I dropped my chopsticks, stared at them for a moment, then I leaped up and rushed to my desk for my calculator. I was back in a flash, tapping like crazy. It only took me two minutes. She was right. I looked up at her, dumbfounded. Holy shit ... she was right!

“You don’t have to consider that if you don’t ... I mean, I just thought ... I mean, I was only trying to help. Please just throw it away.” She sat back, looking down at her folded hands on her knees, which were pressed together, her slim legs tucked under the side of the chair.

“Jenny,” I began, but stopped, considering the ramifications. I cleared my throat. “Um ... Jenny, this is...” I just stared at her, but she didn’t ... she couldn’t ... look back. I sighed heavily. “Jenny, we have to get this patented right away. Immediately! First thing Monday morning!”

Now she looked up, total confusion in her eyes. “What?”

“This is a new process!” I exclaimed. “Not a change ... a whole new process! Don’t you understand? This is going to save the company millions! Tens of millions! Maybe hundreds!”

She didn’t comprehend. “It just seemed logical,” she said in a voice barely above a whisper. “I’m glad I was able to help.”

I gawked at her. She still didn’t get it. “Jenny,” I said levelly, “You’re going to be rich.” Her eyes narrowed and she cocked her head a little to the left. I cleared my throat and continued. “Don’t you understand? You’re going to be able to sell this for big bucks!”

And suddenly, her eyes went wide. “Me?” she asked.

“Well, of course ‘you!’ It’s your process. Our company is going to pay you LOTS of money for this! And if they won’t, I’ll take you to our competition. I could probably get you a million, easy. Plus royalties. You, my dear, are going to be rich! Very, VERY rich.”

But she was shaking her head. Suddenly, she looked frightened, unsure, meek. “No ... I ... Mr. Grant, I don’t want ... I just CAN’T...”

I smiled at her reassuringly. “Of course you can, Jenny. I’ll take you down to the patent office first thing Monday...”

“NO!” she said firmly. “I won’t do it! YOU take credit for it! I did it for YOU! You can have it! I don’t want to be involved!”

I smiled broadly. “I’ll do no such thing! I’m not going to take credit for someone else’s work. And if it’s the last thing I do, I’m going to make sure you get all of the credit and fanfare and money...”

She stood up so abruptly that her chair fell over backwards, and she took two quick steps away from me. “What are you DOING to me?” she howled. “Why are you DOING this? Don’t you UNDERSTAND?” I was on my feet, uncomprehending, completely befuddled. I took a step toward her, but she turned and ran for the door, stopping only when she got there, spinning around to face me yet again. “Can’t you see what you’ve done to me?” she sobbed, making a gesture of hopelessness with her arms and heaving shoulders. “Can’t you SEE?” And she fled through the office door, her high heels clicking rapidly as she ran down the hallway. Eventually, I heard the ladies’ room door slam.

I stood in utter disbelief. I thought and thought and simply couldn’t make heads or tails of the whole thing. I couldn’t comprehend why she wasn’t completely ecstatic. I had done nothing but help the poor girl from the moment she got here, and now she was blaming me for ... for ... WHAT? I sat back down on the couch again and held my head, as if maybe I could physically keep the frantic thoughts from escaping. My brain felt as if it was full of jigsaw pieces, most of which were missing. I don’t know how many minutes I sat like that before I became aware that she was in the room again. I stood up abruptly.

“Jenny, I...”

“Mr. Grant ... Tim,” she said quickly, interrupting. “If you don’t mind ... I’d like to accept your gracious offer of dinner tonight, but with one condition. Let’s NOT talk about the Hobart Contract. Okay? We’ll have a date, just the two of us, right here in this office. But please, please, let’s not talk about the Hobart Contract.”

“Jenny,” I pleaded, “if I said something that...”

“Please, Tim. Please? Not another word. Okay?”

I slumped back onto the couch. “Sure,” I replied, trying to hide confusion, exasperation, and a myriad of other emotions. “By all means. I’m afraid the food may not be hot any more.”

“I’m sure it’ll be delicious,” she said quietly, righting her chair and sitting back down. “May I have a little more wine, please?”

“Um ... of course.”

As I poured her another glass, she reached down beside her and picked up her small, black purse. She fished around in it for a moment, took out a small glass bottle with and eye-dropper cap, and set it beside her plate.

“What’s that?” I asked her, nodding toward it.

“I’m not going to tell you,” she answered, smiling, “Not yet. When I’m ready to let you know, I’ll tell you then.”

I glanced up at her, and she met my gaze almost happily. She smiled broadly. I suddenly realized that behind her crooked mouth, she has almost perfect teeth; straight and pearly white.

I groped for something to say. “You changed your hair.”

“I pulled it back while I was in the restroom. Do you like it?” she asked lightly.

“Truthfully? I like it better down.”

Her smile froze and her hand faltered a moment before setting her chopsticks down. Without comment, she reached behind her head and pulled the rubber band off, freeing her cascading hair. As if by habit, she smoothed the right side across her ruined face. But before she could resume eating, I leaned across the table and stroked it back behind her ear.

“You have beautiful hair,” I said honestly. “But it shouldn’t be used as a curtain. You have absolutely no good reason to hide behind it.” And I began eating again.

She regarded me curiously for a long moment. “You’re doing it again,” she said gently.

I sighed. “Doing WHAT!?” I implored.

But she ignored me. She took a deep breath.

And then she began.

“It happened just over six months ago,” she said in a quiet, resolute voice.

“Jenny,” I said seriously. “You don’t have to...”

But she disregarded me completely and continued.

“It’s so strange about pretty girls. When a girl has a pretty face, all the boys can think about is her body. From the moment I started dating, guys were always coming on to me, trying to cop a feel, trying to get me into bed. I was engaged, you know. He wanted me ... wanted me constantly. But I told him no, not until we were married. And he was content to wait. For him, I was WORTH waiting for. But then, after the accident, he didn’t even wait until the bandages were off. He sent me a letter. He broke up with me by sending me a stupid letter! He told me I could keep the ring. And would you believe it? I forgot all about it. I’d forgotten I even HAD it. I found it a month ago in the lining of my suitcase, and I pawned it to pay off my overdue rent.”

Her words were disjointed. Her narrative skipping backwards and forwards and I tried to keep up and make sense of it.

“I borrowed a car from my roommate’s boyfriend. An old Jeep. I could barely steer the thing. It didn’t have power steering, and I almost drove it off the road twice before I got to the Mathematics seminar being put on by the military up in Victorville. But then, on the way home, the stupid thing just quit. It just ... quit. I was on an old two-lane road, out in the middle of the desert, and there were no other cars in sight, and the lousy jeep quit running. I got out and somehow got the hood open, but I didn’t know the first thing about car engines. There was smoke coming out of the battery. White smoke. Lots of it. But I didn’t know anything at all about batteries, either. There were these two plastic cover-looking things on top of it, and the smoke was pouring out of one of those. And I just thought that if I took those covers off, then maybe it would cool down. You know?”

“Aw, God, Jenny,” I groaned.

“It exploded. It just ... exploded ... right in my face. And there was no one around. Not for the longest time. And there was no water. Maybe if I’d brought a bottle of water with me ... but I hadn’t. And no one came ... no one came. And it burned. It burned and burned and burned, and no one came.”

“Aw, God, Jenny.”

“Do you know what ‘maximum coverage’ means in an insurance policy?” She didn’t give me time to answer or comment. “I just had a student policy. I didn’t even read the thing before I signed it.” She sighed. “Do you know how fast you can go through $100,000 when you’re in a hospital burn unit? I was there one month ... well, actually five weeks. Seven skin graft operations, but those were all, and I quote, Vital and Necessary, unquote. The insurance didn’t cover anything cosmetic. The cornea transplant didn’t take, so they removed my eye. They said that I’d be a good candidate for a ‘whole eye transplant,’ but that wasn’t, and I quote, Vital and Necessary, unquote.

“And then, the insurance money was gone. All gone. And that was just the last thing in a whole LIST of things ... and they just kept getting worse and worse. One right after the other. First came the ‘Dear John letter’ from David, and then a letter from the dean telling me that my research grant had been cancelled, and that the whole project staff had been laid off. The next thing was a letter from the administration department saying that 50% of the teaching assistants in the Physics Department were getting laid off ‘in seniority order,’ and of course, I was one of them. Then a letter from the state saying that ‘due to budget cuts my scholarship was no longer active.’ And if I was no longer a student, then I’d have to start paying on all my student loans. And then, the icing on the cake, the hospital discharged me when the insurance would no longer pay. The chief surgeon in my ward gave me twelve prescriptions: for pain, for infection, for all sorts of things. I still have them in my purse. What good are prescriptions without a way to pay for them?

“And finally came the realization of what it’s like to be an ugly girl. More than ugly. The looks people gave me! The way they’d cringe! Some would actually cross the street to keep from having to pass close to me. EVERYONE did it, to one degree or another. Before it had happened, had I ever done that to anyone? Honestly, if I ever had, I couldn’t remember doing so. But then, these people probably wouldn’t remember ME, either. They don’t WANT to remember people like me. That’s just the way it is. Undoubtedly, it’s always been that way. No one even realizes it’s happening ... unless they’re someone like me ... like I am now. And WE can’t forget. WE can never get away from it. It’s always around us. Ever-present.

“I have no family. And no one would give me a job. Usually, I wouldn’t even get past the secretary in a personnel department. And do you know what the most common reason they gave for NOT hiring me? I was overqualified. Overqualified!

“I hocked the ring to pay the back rent on my hotel room, and then I found a room in Watts for $90 a week. When I started missing payments on that place I really panicked! On Monday, I went to a job interview at the YWCA. I thought it was for an entrance-level management position, so I dressed up in the nicest clothes I still had, but when I got there, I found out that it was just for a part-time position for janitor. I took it. A hundred a week.

“I sat down on a bench outside the place and tried to figure out what I was going to do. I owed $180 in back rent, and I wouldn’t be paid for another two weeks. I’d have to go to a shelter. I was SO hungry. I hadn’t eaten in three days, except for half a candy bar I’d found in the hall trashcan in my apartment building. I’d hit bottom, Tim. There was nowhere to go. Nothing to do. It was a problem with no possible solution.

“And there, sitting on the bench beside me, was a day-old newspaper. And there, in the want ads, was your notice about hiring a secretary. And there, right across the street, was your building ... this building. And then ... and then ... and then, there was you.

“You gave me the job, right on the spot. And I simply couldn’t believe it when you insisted on giving me a ‘one-month’s signing bonus.’ Remember how you dragged me down to personnel and forced them to cut that check? They practically refused, but you wouldn’t leave their office until they’d written it out for me. I’d walked into this building without a penny to my name, and now I was walking out with a real job and $2,000 in my pocket. But none of that really mattered to me. Not really. What mattered to me was you, Tim. You’d treated me like a real person. An honest-to-goodness real person. I’d forgotten what it was like to have someone be polite to me. I’d forgotten what courtesy was like. But most of all ... most of all, I’d forgotten what it was like to be respected.

 
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