She Shouldn't Want to Know... 7/14

Oct 11, 2015 10:55

Links to all parts:

1/14 - ... who is Lady A-?
2/14 - Interlude: Irv is Frustrated
3/14 - ... how much submission excites her.
4/14 - ... if Andrea has a girlfriend.
5/14 - Interlude: Irv Finds Ammunition
6/14 - ... the identity of her playmates.
7/14 - Interlude: More Frustration for Irv.
8/14 - ... how much her friends value her.
9/14 - ... how much of a turn on Lady S- is.
10/14 - Interlude: Irv Gets a Warning
11/14 - ... how many kneel to Lady A-.
12/14 - Interlude: Irv in Lust
13/14 - ... how life could get any better.
14/14 - ... what was coming in the future.



Author: TrialPenmanship

Title: She shouldn't want to know...

Chapter: 7/14 - Interlude: More Frustration for Irv

Rating: M/NC-17

Pairing: Emily/Serena (Miranda/Andrea established)

Prompt: None

Length/Word Count: 8k+

Summary: Emily shouldn't want to know the things she finds out even if she does likes it afterwards

Disclaimer: Devil Wears Prada, the book and the movie are owned by their respective producers. I am making no money from this foray into femslash fanfiction.

A/N: Once again, I labeled the sections as chapters though they are very short.

A/N: Also once again, this hasn’t been beta’d, so all mistakes are mine alone.

A/N: There is a lot of backstory here that isn't included. I might be able to be persuaded to put that into writing.

A/N: This deals with bondage and discipline. I am not in the lifestyle so it is probably all bull*, but know that the characters don't view themselves as being in the lifestyle. It applies to certain aspects of their personal lives so that they have an area where they may relax.



Irv slammed his phone down with frustration. The woman that he'd spoken with wouldn't tell him what he wanted to know. His wife had read a mystery set at a college. It was dark enough that horror fans were buying it. It was convoluted enough that mystery fans were buying it. It was a police procedural with a detective going under cover to identify the killer, and written sympathetically enough for the police that it was praised for that. The sex was steamy and explicit enough that Midwestern housewives were reading it.

D. C. Ashe was elusive. No interviews, no photographs, nothing to indicate who he was, and his wife wanted to meet him.

Then there was the article from the Financial Times about the composition of the Boards of Directors of dozens of companies in New York, London, and Frankfurt. Elias-Clarke was not explicitly named but it fit the profile that Cassandra Ash was writing about. They had one woman on their board and she was paid less than her counterparts. The majority of their income came from targeting women's interests and their leadership didn't reflect that.

He'd already fielded two phone calls from institutional investors who'd read the article and expressed concern that the points the article addressed had been off their radar until now. He knew that his secretary Donna had fielded multiple calls from reporters looking for reaction to the article and that she was replying with, "Yes, we are aware of the article and have no comment at this time."

He wondered if D. C. Ashe and Cassandra Ash were the same person, but shrugged it off. The best selling mystery author was certainly a man.

His phone rang and after pleasantries he had to admit, "No, dear, I haven't managed to contact them yet."

next...

pairing: andy/miranda, genre: romance, rating: nc-17, genre: friendship, length: 5000, pairing: emily/serena

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