âAny magician worth his salt can escape from a locked cage or a pair of handcuffs.â
âMurphy, the theater owner (The Perfect Poison)
Clement Johns was a new account exec at Davies and Birch Advertising. He was from the South, born in Memphis, and he had a slow, dusky way of talking that sent shivers up my spine every time he came up behind me and said my name. Something he seemed to enjoy, because he did it at every opportunity. Iâd be standing in the lunchroom, staring at the microwave, waiting for my Cup-a-Soup and heâd come up behind me. âGlory,â heâd breathe on my neck, the word tickling the soft hairs at my nape. âA lovely name for a beautiful woman,â heâd say from behind me as I bent over the copier tray to retrieve my copies. I said, âThanks, thatâs sweet of you,â the first couple of times, but that seemed to encourage him. So I started rolling my eyes at him whenever he tried to catch my eye, and when he came up behind me, Iâd get my cup of soup or my copies or my supplies and make my way around the pillar that heâd become.
He was a find. Not because he looked like Jude Law, with his straight-teethed smile, the boyish look of his slightly mussed fair hair and the glow that emanated from his gaze, but because there was a definite charm to his Southern purr and his confidence was backed by substance. After earning an MBA from Stanford, heâd gone out to L.A. and bounced around from agency to agency before he went home and started his own ad firm, which focused primarily on evaluating and purchasing internet ad space. He came to Davies and Birch with a solid client list and a technical manual heâd developed that identified primary venues and established a criteria for judging their potential effectiveness. The firm had hired him in at substantial cost, given him a staff of two and a small corner suite of offices. It was a sound move. The clients were impressed with the expanded markets and the projected figures looked as though the firmâs faith in Johns would be realized sooner than expected.
He and his crew were to take center stage at the morning staff meeting. Bruce Davies was, as usual, at the head of the long oval table and Lucas Birch at the foot. Johns was to present a list of up-and-coming sites with suggestions for how and by who they might be best used. It was his first presentation to the staff at large. Claire, Daviesâs assistant cum secretary, had reserved three prime center seats for Johns and his staff. The two nerdy looking guys who worked with him were fresh out of CUNY. They took two of the seats and dutifully held the one between them for their leader. But Johns, instead of assuming his position of prominence, slid in next to me as I sat on the mini sofa that rested against the wall behind Davies.
âGlooory, Glooory,â he whispered savoring the extra set of Oâs as he lowered himself beside me. I thought of that scene in The Long Hot Summer. He had stretched out the Oâs and crooned my name just like the randy group of teenaged boys had when theyâd hidden in the bushes and called out âEuula, Euula.â A giddy Eula in the guise of a pert Lee Remick had giggled from her perch on the veranda. Her husband, Tony Franciosa, whoâd been sitting there with her and other members of the family, hadnât been tickled in the least by their antics. Heâd gotten red in the face as he ran to the edge of the porch, shouting and threatening all manner of violence at the boys. âGloory,â Clement said again close to my ear. It tickled and I laughed. Clement grinned, maybe he meant to make the connection.
Davies turned and glanced briefly at the two of us before turning to begin the meeting.
âBeen looking for you,â Clement murmured as he leaned close to my ear, his warm breath whisking across my cheek.
I looked at him, eyebrows raised as if to say âI canât imagine why.â
He grinned again and slipped a flier for an off-off-Broadway production of Tennessee Williamsâs The Glass Menagerie onto my lap.
âTonight?â he said, for my ears only. âThey so rarely do the old masters up here.â
I raised my eyebrows.
âYou and me,â he said, touching my chest and then his with the tip of his finger.
It made me smile, but I didnât say anything one way or the other. Instead, I put a finger over my lips, urging him to be quiet before we drew any more attention. Bruce Davies glanced back at us again, before returning his attention to a status report from the accounting department. The report, which ended with a recommendation that a new set of limits and restrictions should be placed on company credit cards, finished to a chorus of groans as Davies nodded and said heâd consider the suggestions.