Chapter 4: The Debut (Part 2)

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“How about Cognac?” A voice said beside me with a thick accent.

I turned around and saw a petite asian lady about my age standing next to me. She was fiercely beautiful, with long black hair that went straight down, not a single curl or tangle. She dressed impeccably too, in an elegant black dress, with a plunging neckline and a wide open back. It was figure-hugging; the dress certainly would have given me second thoughts. Not only did she wear it well, but she wore it with an air that demanded no apologies. She completed the outfit with a brash and showy diamond necklace and Manolo Blahniks with impossibly high heels. This lady redefined the term ‘dressed to the nines’. This was no wilting flower, no cherry blossom before the first day of spring. She very confidently positioned herself next to me and winked.

“It is less calories, sweet in itself and unlike whiskey, it is made of grapes,” she said in her thick accent. I recognized it as Japanese.

I smiled. “Cognac it is,” I told the waiter. “For myself and,” I turned to the lady.

“Rina,” she said in her thick accent. “Rina Tanaka.” She bowed to me.

“What brings you here, Rina?” I asked. There was something oddly mysterious about her. I wasn’t entirely at ease with this person. Her dark eyes bored into mine like gimlets. There was something very intense, poised and powerful about her. She had her aura, yes, but it was something more than that. Intensity, I could handle. I certainly had more than my fair share of intense personalities when I was chair of Hunter Robotics. I couldn’t help but feel there was more to this young lady than met the eye.

“I am a guest, a potential investor in the man who owns this home,” she said with a smile.

“Pardon my asking but you look rather young to be an emissary for such a purpose.”

She laughed heartily and turned fully toward me. “I am Goro Tanaka’s daughter. My family owns Tanaka Pharmaceutical.”

I froze. No wonder she looked vaguely familiar. The name should have jogged my memory. I was getting sloppy.

From Tokyo to Osaka to Munich and the Netherlands, Tanaka had interests in urology, immunology and oncology to name a few. My father had trained me well. I could call upon these facts at a moment’s notice. Tanaka was the largest competitor to Ashcroft Pharmaceutical; firms whose R&D interests were in conflict with each other.

Ashcroft.

Daniel.

My heart pounded as I realized there was an opportunity to see Daniel then and there. Wherever Tanaka went, Ashcroft went too.

Ashcroft wasn’t always the follower. Tanaka had always been a close second, but a series of carefully planned acquisitions in the last three years had put them in the leadership position. Goro Tanaka was as sly as he was ruthless. But there was none more ruthless than his first-born: a woman who defied Japanese custom. She was a woman, and a warrior. A person who flew in the face of everything the Japanese knew about a man and a woman’s place in society. A person who lived by the code of the Samurai: Honor tempered by Ruthlessness. Indeed, there were some who feared Rina Tanaka more than they did her father.

“In my country, it is customary for one to introduce themselves after the other party has done so,” Rina was saying.

I snapped myself back into it. “I, I’m sorry,” I said. She had caught me off-guard.

“Please, allow me to do the honors,” Death showed up rather conveniently next to me.

“This is Haley Wellington. I am managing her family trust fund. I am forbidden to speak of it if nothing more than to say that her family’s interests, are rather sizable.”

Rina Tanaka smiled. “Richard Grim. It is a pleasure as always.” Rina moved closer to me and shook my hand. “Do you have any insights for me on the current market?”

“Tech is on the rise,” said Death, “though I am sure you are aware of it. Investing in technology, particularly technology that furthers the human race would be worth looking into,” he said with a smile.

Rina smiled. “Of course. Anything in particular?”

“How about,” Death breathed in deep. “Hunter Robotics? The firm has always been consistent, barely any missteps in the last five years, though leadership has been thrown into turmoil following the death of it’s Chair.”

I looked at Death sharply as if to say, “What the hell are you doing?”

Death winked at me and continued. “The stock is sharply down in trading, but it won’t last long. They will install a new Chair soon and remove the Market’s doubts.”

“What makes you think Tanaka would have interests in a Robotics firm?” Rina asked insistently.

“Because Robotics furthers the cause of the Human Race,” Death concluded. “Fail to understand the role that technology plays in man’s future and you cede your leadership position. Gaining a controlling interest at this time, could prove to be pivotal for the right organization.”

“You have balls, Richard Grim.” Rina Tanaka smiled as she said it.

“It was nice meeting you, Haley Wellington,” Rina Tanaka decided this conversation was over. “I hope you enjoy your Cognac.”

I smiled, amused at the name Death had chosen, but infuriated he had brought my father’s, no, my company into the conversation.

Rina smiled at me. There was something in her eyes I couldn’t quite place, but it made me very uneasy.

“I have taken up too much of your time,” Rina said again in her thick Japanese accent. “Yoru o tanoshimu,” she said to both of us bowing.

“Dōyō ni,” I said, smiling back at her.

“You speak Japanese,” Rina said, smiled again, without once taking her eyes off me. “You are a most interesting character, Haley Wellington. We shall cross paths again in the near future.” Rina walked slowly away from us to mingle with another group of people.

“That was creepy.” I whispered to Death.

Death winked at me and there was the oddest twinkle in his dark eyes.

“What?” I asked.

He shook his head and smiled. “Oh, nothing.”

“What was that about a suggested takeover of my beloved company, Richard?” I asked.

“It isn’t your company anymore, Haley. I’m doing you a favor. You’ll find out soon enough,” said Death.

Death gracefully placed a hand behind me and whispered in my ear. “Allow me to direct your attention to ten o'clock,” he said

I looked and almost fainted.

I spotted a man standing just twenty feet away from me, speaking to an older gentleman. I would recognize those good looks anywhere. Deep blue eyes, chiseled jawline. Dark, short, wavy hair.


It was Daniel Ashcroft.

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