Page 45 of Odalisque
Constanceâs knees shook as she climbed the five stairs to the temporary platform that had been erected for the Centerâs opening ceremonies. She looked out at the large, informally gathered group of charitable givers, child advocates, and various politicians and well-wishers. There were also a few young faces in the crowd, youth in need who were already starting to wander in off the street.
Constance felt a new surge of purpose. Familiar, supportive faces encouraged her. Satya, Mason, Jeremy and Nell. She looked behind her to see Kai arranging his notes at the podium.
Then her husband looked up at the crowd. His eyes seemed to catch for a moment at the back of the audience, his lips going tense in surprise, or perhaps recognition. Constance searched to see what--or who--he was looking at so intently, but then he seemed to recollect himself. He straightened the corners of his notes and smiled at her expectantly. There was nothing to do but begin.
Constance took a deep breath, focused on the faces before her, and launched into the act of giving her first speech. Her fingers felt stiff at the outset, her arms held tensely to her waist. But at the nods and smiles that met her words, she relaxed and began to sign with more confidence. Confidence turned to emotion and emotion to zeal.
âIn this city most of all,â she signed, âhomeless youth need a place to find shelter. A place to feel safe. Young people come here seeking a dream career, only to find a harsh reality. Exploitation, abuse, a spiral of helplessness and addiction.â She paused for effect. âBut every life is worth saving. Inside every person is a spark that can be rekindled even when itâs nearly extinguished. Thatâs what we hope to do here.â
She stopped as the people before her started clapping. She knew they only understood her words because Kai was reading them out behind her. She turned back to him and he gave her a furtive thumbs-up. She smiled and turned around to deliver the last of her speech.
âIn closing, I want to thank you for being here today,â she signed. âFor sharing in my dream becoming a reality. Once I was a youth in crisis too. I had nowhere to go, but I found a place where I was welcomed and nurtured and it helped me arrive at this place I am today. With everything you give, with everything you share, with every dream you nurture, you help someone like me make a difference in the world. And when enough people make a difference, wonderful things can happen.â
Her final âthank youâ was met with another round of applause. She turned from the clapping guests in front of her to look at the magnificent complex behind her, and then her eyes fell on Kai. âThank you,â she signed softly, her fingers to her lips. âI can never thank you enough.â
Kai gave a tiny shake of his head and signed, âYou already have.â
*** *** ***
Their story had begun at a charity event, Kai remembered. A charity event for underprivileged children, no less. How unhappy heâd been then, slumped at his table in the back, listening to maudlin music. Smashing chocolate cake in mute fury.
This was so different. Constanceâs face was alight with happiness, and he--he was practically bursting with it. He was content to stand on the sidelines and let her enjoy her moment, the fruition of her long time dream. Heâd hired a professional ASL translator to stay with her so conversation could come easily and so she, not Kai hovering over her, could take the credit for what sheâd done.
After a half hour or so she made her way back to his side, glowing with excitement and pride. He gave her a crushing hug. She was wearing a smart little ivory business suit that begged to be ripped off. Later. Let her savor all this first.
He drew back to drop a kiss on her forehead. âMy delicious little--â he began. But Constanceâs gaze was fixed on something over his shoulder. Kai turned to see a group of three teens. Fourteen, fifteen years old. Maybe younger. They were Indian, two boys and a girl. He had seen them earlier in the back of the crowd. For a moment, as heâd seen them buffeted in the squeeze of people around them, heâd thought of those three glossy heads bobbing under the waves.
âHello,â he blurted out. He reached out his hand. âKai Chandler. This is my wife, Constance.â
Only one of the kids, the oldest, reached out to shake it. The other two looked pretty bad. Drug addicted? Malnourished? He could see Constance looking over at him from his peripheral vision, but he couldnât take his eyes off the kids. They werenât the age his kids would have been, and they didnât look like Veronica at all, but...
âWe need help,â the oldest one, the brother, said quietly. âCan you help us?â
Help, help! The words in a shrill childish voice echoed in his subconscious. It was all he could do not to grab the three kids to stop them from scattering out of his reach. But they werenât running from him this time. They were here and they needed help. Constance stood beside him, looking at him encouragingly.
âYes, we can help you,â said Kai, finding his voice again. âOf course. Please...â He pointed toward the entrance to the center. The kids let themselves be guided, the second brother drawing his sister along when she looked like she might pull away.
Kai followed them inside, taking Constanceâs hand and squeezing it almost unconsciously. This is your life. What do you want it to be?
The door closed behind them in a whisper whirr of a slide that sounded almost like a dream come to life. Almost like a second chance.
A Final Note
In case any readers are wondering, the Code dâOdalisque actually exists and is now in its fifth edition, although Maison Odalisque and Agt. Sebastien Gaudet are products of my own imagination. I must express my deepest gratitude to Mr. Charles Molyneux, a tireless steward of the Code dâOdalisque, whose website http://codeodalisque.blogspot.com played a great part in inspiring this book.
While this bookâs version of the code borrowed heavily from the real thing, other aspects were completely made up. If youâd like to read the actual Code dâOdalisque, Mr. Molyneux and his group of volunteers have graciously offered to forward free PDF copies to any who are interested. They can be contacted at [email protected] Their mission is to spread the word about this lifestyle to provide an alternative to those attracted to a more sensual style of slavery.
As for the signing and lip-reading which takes place in this book, it is very difficult to do justice to a deaf personâs true experience in communication. No disrespect was meant in trying to give Constance and Kaiâs sign language and lip-reading conversations a âspoken languageâ feel. This was merely done for the convenience of the reader.
Finally, if you enjoyed this book, I hope you will also read the first book set in this world, Comfort Object, which tells the story of Jeremy and Nell, and the second, Caressaâs Knees, about Kyle and concert cellist Caressa.
Many thanks to all my readers for your continued support. Please subscribe to my website to keep up to date on coming stories, re-issues, contests and blog appearances.
http://annabeljoseph.wordpress.com.
Other erotic romance by Annabel Joseph
Mercy
Cait and the Devil
Firebird
Deep in the Woods
Fortune
Lily Mine
Owning Wednesday
Comfort Object
Caressaâs Knees
Erotica by Annabel Joseph
Club Mephisto
Coming soon:
Cirque du Minuit
The Edge of the Earth
An excerpt from Cirque du Minuit, available in spring of 2012
Kelsey was lost again. She couldnât believe it.
Four months at Cirque du Mondeâs Paris headquarters, and the mazelike corridors of its training facility still flabbergasted her sense of direction. The hallways met at strange angles and the numbers followed no system she could discern. Some walls were glass, while others were painted concrete. A small meeting roo
m might be nestled next to a cavernous rehearsal space, a dressing room next to a directorâs office. She was looking for a trainerâs office at the moment.
She was pretty sure she was in the âJâ corridor, but she needed to be in the âIâ corridor. She opened the next door she encountered, hoping to cut across, and found herself in a dimly lit, crowded storage room. The ceiling soared above her, dotted by skylights. She had just enough light to navigate through the densely stacked boxes, but she still managed to trip over a low-lying obstacle. Her gymnastâs reflexes were the only thing that saved her from a total pratfall. She rolled and came to a stop with her back against the side of a crate, rubbing her aching shin. Graceful, Kelsey. Thank God no one saw that.
Then she heard voices, a manâs deeper voice and a womanâs soft one. The man sounded angry. She stood and peered around the crate in front of her in the semi-darkness. The couple was perhaps twenty yards away. Minya, a gorgeous Chinese trapeze artist, and him.
Theo Zamora, her soaring fantasy. Her gypsy king.
Kelsey had noticed Theo Zamora the first day of her auditions. Heâd strolled through the studio around ten in the morning--she even remembered the time. Just the way he walked, the casual flick of his wrist as he passed them, arrested her. Sheâd been unable to look away until heâd left through the other door. Sheâd seen him a couple other times that week, and each time his presence had affected her in the same visceral way. When she was hired a week later, her first thought was Now I work in the same company as him.
Kelsey was always watching for him, stealing peeks into practice gyms and company meetings in hopes of a glimpse of his tall strong body, his dark eyes. She stared at him each night backstage as they performed in the show Tsilaosa. Not once--not one time--had they exchanged words.
Exchanged words? Ha. Theo Zamora didnât even know she existed. He was unapproachable to her, a sleek and powerful idol to be admired from afar. Even now, her heart was racing to be in such close proximity to him. She pressed her hand to her mouth and stood perfectly still as she watched the couple in profile. He was scolding his trapeze partner. Kelsey couldnât hear his words, but she picked up the inflection of French, his native language. He towered over Minya, his face a menacing mask.