
About Nice: Knowing it by Hart
by CB Conwy
34 pages / 7600 words
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Brit's life is exactly how he wants it: neat, ordered, and disciplined,
the way it needs to be if anybody is going to take a thirty-two year old CEO
seriously. If that means being so discreet that you're basically in the
closet, then so be it.
Then, at a charity dinner, he meets the good Mr. Hart. A very drunken Mr.
Hart. Who gives Brit the kiss of his life. That's all that happens, of
course; Brit has got a reputation to protect. Only, he can't get Mr. Hart
out of his head, and he realizes that it might be time to make some changes.

Sample
"It's all about sex."
The words carried very well through the lull in the conversation, and
Brit couldn't help turning in his chair after the speaker's voice. It
wasn't exactly what you expected at the annual contributor's Christmas
dinner at the Symphony, after all.
The voice belonged to a man in his thirties, well dressed but with the
subtly shoddy air of someone having had just one too many. The man's
inebriation didn't do anything to diminish his good looks. Very good
looks, in fact, the light brown hair was almost the same color as his
eyes and he had the sweetest smile on his face.
And Brit was being entirely too obvious in his gawping. Discretion was
more important to him than almost anything else.
He wasn't the only one being somewhat too open, though.
"Now, take the Rite of Spring. That's about a fertility ritual, and at
the premiere, you couldn't even hear the music over the booing. If
something's too sexy for Paris, then it's damn sexy." The last couple of
words were a bit slurred, and the speaker was looming slightly to one
side where his dinner partner, an elderly lady with an aristocratic air,
had a hard time concealing the slightly uneasy look on her face.
"I must admit to being rather more interested in Haydn than Stravinsky,
Mr. Hart." Her tone was polite. She must have incredibly good manners.
"Yes! Haydn." It didn't deter the inebriated speaker in the slightest to
have his subject changed. "Do you know the Farewell Symphony, Mrs.
Campbell?"
"Oh, yes." Poor Mrs. Campbell sounded relieved. "It's a charming piece
of music; so very moving when the musicians leave one by one. The
Symphony played it a couple of years back when the financial
circumstances threatened a cut to the orchestra. But I believe that was
before your time, Mr. Hart. How long have you been writing the program
notes now?"
The valiant attempt at changing the subject was completely lost on Mr.
Hart. "That symphony is about sex, too." |