Banking for Beginners
Copyright© 2009 by Freddie Clegg
Chapter 15: Henry's Career
Action/Adventure Sex Story: Chapter 15: Henry's Career - Henry Clegg is on the run. Kushtia seems like a safe haven but how will Henry cope with the peculiarities of Kushtian society where women take a subservient role?
Caution: This Action/Adventure Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa Fa/Fa NonConsensual Rape Slavery Lesbian Heterosexual Humor BDSM DomSub FemaleDom Rough Humiliation Oral Sex Masturbation Slow
The lobby of Henry's hotel was scattered with the usual collection of people waiting to check out (always a long process in Kushtia), people hoping to check in (usually even longer) and people waiting for a meeting with somebody staying in the hotel. Those that had got tired of the wait sat at low tables ranged along one side of the lobby and tried to attract the attention of one of the waitresses who could, on occasion, be persuaded to fetch coffee.
As he was about to emerge from the lift, Henry thanked his luck that a row of potted palms broke the view of the lifts from the lobby. He was about to leave the lift when he saw, across the lobby, someone he knew. Unveiled, the woman was obviously a westerner. The thin lips, high cheek bones and scraped back mousey brown hair were instantly recognisable. It was Esther Baskin, senior investigator with the United Kingdom Financial Services Authority. Henry immediately suspected that Baskin's appearance meant trouble. She would hardly be in Kushtia for a holiday. She must be after him, just as Ellie had suggested.
Henry stayed where he was in the lift, letting the lift doors slide shut in front of him, closing finally as he saw Esther getting to her feet.
Across the lobby of the hotel sitting in a booth that hid her partly from view and taking advantage of the veil that hid her face, Ellie had watched the tableau unfold. Henry's ashen face told her at once that the woman at the desk was one that he was hoping to avoid. Another complication, Ellie thought.
The lift arrived at the basement. Henry could imagine the conversation that Ms Baskin would be having at the reception desk... "Mr Clegg, I'm not sure." ... the producing of a $20 bill... "Ah, now you come to mention it." ... the surreptitious slipping away of the $20 bill to avoid the notice of the hotel manager... "Oh yes, no he will be at the bank." "The bank you say."... "Yes, of course. You will find him there. His office is on..." henry thought for a moment. With luck he could duck out of the building up the car park ramp and pick up a taxi on the main road. He wasn't for the life of him sure where he was going but it was the best he could thing of. As he got to the top of the car park ramp he saw Esther Baskin climb into a cab. He flagged down another and sent it off in the opposite direction. He needed time to think. He told the driver to drop him in the Square of the Revolution. At least there he could submerge himself in the throng of Kushtian office workers, trudging from the bus station to the various office buildings dotted around the centre of town.
A small stall with a few stools alongside it offered the opportunity of breakfast. Henry took a coffee and a small sticky cake, paid the stall holder and perched himself on a stool. The square was packed; a solid river of people walked purposefully by him.
A voice hailed him from the far side of the river of commuters. "Hey, Mr Clegg! That's lucky. Can we have a word? I hear the FSA has come looking for you. You'll want to tell your side of the story."
It was Dana Harris, the reporter. Henry most certainly did not want to tell his side of the story or any side of the story. What he wanted was for the story to go away. Dana was trying to push her way through the crowd of commuters. Henry took his opportunity to slide around the back of the coffee stall. He slipped away down a nearby alley way. As he ducked into a carpet seller's shop, he heard Dana calling after him. Fortunately she didn't think to come inside.
As Dana stood in the street outside, trying to decide where Henry had gone, she saw a woman in a chanoosh gesturing at her. She pointed down an alleyway to one side of the building. Dana, acknowledging the woman's directions with thanks, slipped past her and into the dark alley. The woman in the chanoosh followed her.
It took Henry some time to disentangle himself from the carpet seller. The owner of the shop was unused to tourists actually arriving in his shop unbidden. He had taken a lot of convincing than usual that no, Clegg did not want a rug, a carpet, a wall hanging or indeed any other form of woven textile product. Eventually Henry managed to push his way back out onto the street. Fortunately Dana seemed no longer to be around.
In the office of Kerren Kerrish, Esther Baskin was having little success in her discussions. Her rather abrupt, forthright manner had irritated the Kushtian banker almost at once. Anch watched their discussions. She wanted to tell Kerrish about her suspicions but wanted more evidence first. Natalya, hiding in Anch's household had seen Henry's involved with the slavers but even so Anch still found it hard to believe that he was one of them. She had hoped that the English regulator's enquiries might help her to prove or disprove her suspicions about her boss but the way that Baskin was conducting herself didn't seem likely to gain any cooperation from Mr Kerrish.
"I don't see why you are finding it so difficult to help me, Mr Kerrish," she said acidly. "I would have thought that it was in the interests of the bank to avoid any involvement with corrupt and dishonest practices."
"I bow to the experience of the British FSA in that field Ms Baskin," Kerrish responded with as much grace as he could muster. "Your recent triumphs in the regulation of the British banking industry are the envy of the world of finance. Fortunately we have found that our own practices are less likely to lead to fiscal instability."
"I had not realised that the Kushtian banking system had solved the world's financial problems." Baskin found it difficult not to rise to Kerrish's remarks. "You must tell me the secret."
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