Selina also learned early in the game how to succeed in the executive boys' club. The two main requirements consisted of a sharp sense of humor and a thick skin. She'd never once had to worry about harassment, but she doubted she would have been as close to the team if she hated bars, beer, and occasional crudeness.
Her conversation with Daniel flashed in her mind. Yes, she loved opera, and fine dining and art museums. Money brought that type of culture and opportunity. Selina never apologized for it, and enjoyed the finer points of life, but growing up in a foster home with a bunch of step-siblings, with no one to depend on but herself, taught her the proper ways to curse, tell bawdy jokes, defend herself, and drink like a fish without collapsing.
Ways to survive on the streets.
But Daniel had never seen that part of her. Never would.
Edward slid into the booth clutching a Guinness and a slip of paper. Selina laughed out loud at his look. "Was it the blonde rooting for the Mets?" she asked, gesturing to the phone number written in black ink.
He winked. "Hell, yeah. She wanted me from the first look."
"Hmm, you know she went initially for the dude with the fat wallet over there?" Selina pointed to the guy dressed in the designer suit, sporting a three hundred dollar haircut, and hefty Rolex. He sat across the bar talking to another hottie. "So, I'd say you're sloppy seconds."
Ed waved his hand in the air in dismissal. "Who the hell cares? I got her number."
"Nothing like high standards, Ed."
"I need to get laid."
"I'd say so. You going on thirty days now?"
Ed glared. "Twenty. You going on six months, Rogers?"
She grinned, swigged more beer, and stuck out her tongue. "I go for quality, not quantity. You should give it a try."
"No, thanks. I like quantity just fine." He ordered another Guinness. "So, are we set on our meeting with Forrester?"
Selina nodded. "Yep, Thursday at six. Waldorf Astoria, baby--only the best. A little dazzle, a bit of kiss ass, and maybe we can get him to commit."
"I'm tired of kissing ass. Why doesn't somebody kiss my ass?"
She drained the rest of her beer and stood up. "Maybe you'll get lucky with that move from Blondie." They both laughed. "I'm exhausted - doing a Batman."
"Tom will call you a wuss. He wanted to play you in darts."
"Tell him I went to the restroom and I'll take the heat later. I need a good night's sleep. See you at six tomorrow?"
He shot her a disgusted glare. "Can't believe I agreed to that on a Saturday. Yeah, fine. Need me to get you a cab?"
"Nah, it's still early and I'm only a few blocks. I'll walk."
"I'll walk with you," he said.
She shook her head and grabbed her purse. "No reason, plenty of people out tonight. I'll be fine."
"All righty then. See you in the morning."
"Later."
Selina slipped out through the crowds and breathed in the first rush of frosty air. She stuck her hands in the pockets of her mocha trench coat and headed towards home. The image of soft comfy PJ's and a Lifetime movie beckoned. With the ease of an expert, she shifted her body around other pedestrians, leapt around a speeding cab, and tuned out the chaotic sounds of one of the largest cities in America. She took a right and headed uptown to her Central Park West apartment. Close to the famous Dakota Hotel where John Lennon died, the area contained gorgeous art deco architecture, proximity to Central Park, and the perfect mix of business and play. Her mind shut down as she walked the familiar path. Passing endless brownstones impeccably maintained, she tucked her head down and thought over any loophole she may have missed in the Forrester contract. She caught the scent of coffee from an open cafe, veered around a handsome man walking his dog, and crossed the street, not caring that it flashed red with warning. Her heel hit a crack in the pavement as she kept walking, looking forward to seeing the familiar golden ears of corn, as she liked to term the carvings on her apartment building. Shadows deepened, but the residential neighborhood tended to cater to career yuppies with a hip edge. She'd walked this sidewalk dozens of times and at all hours. Bred a city girl at heart she still understood the dangers and laced her fingers around her apartment keys - edge kept out in case of any surprise, as she closed the distance to home. Her low-heeled boots slapped against the pavement and echoed in the night.
It was in the echo of her heels she heard voices coming up fast behind her.
On instinct, she gripped the keys in defense position; positive she was overreacting, as this had happened before, walking the dark streets alone. One would be a fool not to be prepared. She ran her thumb over the dense key tips, ready to swing if necessary. She picked up the pace; sure she'd increased the gap between her and those on the sidewalk behind her.
Seconds later, she was grabbed from behind. She hadn't the time to react as the palm of her assailant stifled her scream, and her keys fell to the ground. She tried to bite, kicked back hard, but they dragged her down the stairs of a brownstone into the small, black space where barred windows told of a vacant, closed apartment. Her back hit the brick wall so hard her teeth knocked together.
The breath whooshed out of her lungs and the world tilted. Adrenalin cut through her body in a rush of cold, sharp fear, and she moved fast, seeing a gap in the space between them and diving as fast as possible for freedom.
She never made it.
The first punch connected with her cheek. A sickening crack rose to her eardrums as she fell hard on her ass. The pain rolled in waves and she choked on the nausea, fighting for consciousness. When she tried to rise, the kick to her stomach made sure she stayed down. She retched, but then there were hands pushing her onto the rough, cold pavement. Her mind screamed, but her voice sounded weak as she cried the mantra over and over, the only word she could think of, the only word holding her to sanity.
"No, no, no, no, no..."
"Shut up, bitch."
The slap stung, then burned. They ripped off the trendy coat, tore the delicate cardigan sweater she'd once been so proud of. It had been her favorite. Her power cardigan. They cursed, their voices low and mean, blending in a never-ending nightmare. She pushed, she kicked, but they hit her, held her, and suddenly her breasts were naked and bare to their filthy gazes. The air rushed over her skin and she almost retched, feeling the torn fabric hanging in tatters around her, while hard hands groped and touched and mauled and marked.
She slipped when they tore her jeans. She knew she wouldn't be saved, knew she had to go somewhere else. There was too much horror, the shadows hiding their faces, her vision blurred with the pain and the blood dripping into her eyes as they tore her hair. She took a step into the distance, away from the woman on the ground who was rich, confident, and working on a killer deal. Back, back, back … away from this moment. This terrible and horrible moment. She closed her eyes, focusing on everything … anything, but this moment … and then … then …
They were gone.
Her mind flew from where it had wandered and she suddenly found herself gasping for air, her sanity stolen from the monsters that ran into the night. Sobs escaped her lips as she pushed herself up from the ground; knowing she had to run, get help. The rusty taste of blood lingered on her tongue, and she got on her hands and knees and began crawling. Up the stairs and to the light. Help, help, she needed help...
She pushed up to her feet. Fell. Grasped at the torn fabric beside her, needing to cover her naked breasts, and tried again. Selina wobbled, maintained her balance, and began to stumble forward to safety.
Then she looked up.
The two men who had been on her seconds before lay on the ground in a broken tangle. One flat on his back, the other draped over him in obvious pain, apparent by the low groans coming from the ground. A man stood over them dressed completely in black, his eyes glowing in the darkness.
Selina froze in sheer terror. Her mind groped desperately for reality but fear pulsed through every blood vessel, pumping furiously as her entire body shook in reaction to the scene before her. The rage shimmering around the man reached out in a tangible ripple, whirling around the sprawled attackers like a tornado. As this tornado grew denser and picked up in speed, the sound of a crashing wave roared in her ears. The darkness turned to a dim red, glowing and illuminating the two men on the pavement, and then the glow turned hot.
Flames burst from the circle.
Selina moaned and stumbled back. A dim corner of her mind screamed for her to run, but her body wouldn't obey. She stood and watched the mysterious stranger hold out his hands and murmur a chant, his voice deep and hypnotic, and the flames turned into two, swirling around each victim as if ready to mark them.