Al had been astonishing and amazing Katja for something over an hour when his clothes arrived with a discreet knock at her door.
He was delighted that the Invisible Flight had gone off without a hitch, and had moved on to some other sleights and manipulations he'd been playing around with. Stuff he wasn't really ready for yet, but when he screwed up she laughed, and the effect of that on her bosoms was downright mystical. However noble he had decided to be for the evening, he'd made no suggestion they get dressed. He was Christian, not stupid.
But the clothes seemed like a nice way of saying her time was no longer his, and after checking everything was where it should be he pulled on his tatty boxers, yellowing T-shirt, mud-soaked khaki fatigue trousers, freshly dried wool socks, black Docs, and his pa's jacket.
Katja put on a purple thong and matching brassiere and took his arm. She never said anything about what had or hadn't happened. He hoped she got paid the same either way. And he doubted he was unique or that she was particulary impressed. There was no shortage of deluded fools that figured one night of restraint would somehow win them the undying off-site love of some nubile young thing way out of his league. And that was probably what she thought he was. He could live with that.
At the top of the stairs, she just said, "Thank you for a wonderful time," drenched with an unspoken plea for him to return soon, laden with the implication that he was somehow one of a kind. She said it so well he knew she'd rehearsed it, polished it, made it a part of her. A half dozen times a shift. And he could live with that, too. Had to respect anyone that good at what they did.
He disengaged his arm, said, "Reckon I can find my way from here, toots," and head down to the bar.