
Wembley Wonder
"Sports agent Nneka represents the biggest names in British football from her Wembley office. When journalist Marcus scores an exclusive interview, she shows him that her most valuable negotiations happen in private."
Everyone wanted access to Nneka's clients. She was the most powerful agent in British football—Nigerian-British, thick curves in power suits, making billionaires beg for meetings.
Marcus's magazine had tried for years. She finally agreed—one interview, her terms, her rules.
"You have thirty minutes," she said in her Wembley office, stadium views behind her. "Make them count."
"Can I be direct?"
"I expect nothing less."
"How does a woman control a room full of men who think they own the world?"
Her smile was the answer. "By knowing my value. Absolutely knowing it."
The thirty minutes became three hours. She was brilliant, ruthless, and underneath it, achingly human.
"You're good at your job," she observed. "But you want something else. I can always tell."
"What do I want?"
"The real story. The one I never give." She stood, walked to her office door, and locked it. "Let me show you why I'm worth billions."
The desk cost more than his flat. She pushed him onto it and climbed on top, her power suit jacket falling open.
"In this room, I control everything. Deals, people, outcomes." She kissed him hard. "Right now, I want to control you."
He surrendered. It was the only sane response.
Her thick body dominated him—professionally, expertly, completely. She took pleasure like she took contracts—with absolute certainty.
"There... yes... you're mine now..."
She came like a victory, triumphant and devastating. He followed, utterly outclassed.
"That's why I win," she breathed. "Because I commit completely. To everything."
"The interview," she said afterward, fixing her suit. "Run it. Every word."
"And this?"
"This is something else. Between us." She kissed him softly. "I have meetings every Monday until late. Coincidentally, I'm always free after."
His Wembley wonder had closed the deal. And Marcus had signed something with much better terms than just an interview.