1. Swiss Exchange


    Date: 11/19/2023, Categories: Gay Male, Author: byKeithD

    ... afternoon activity for all but the three senior guests here to consult with each other, would be skiing. He would take the inexperienced skiers out and would direct the expert one to the appropriate slopes. The only ones to defy him were the Russians, who just stared at him and gave him a snort.
    
    At the initial lunch, it became established by seeing who was seated in the main dining room, that the guest rooms would only be half occupied. The New Zealand buyer, Peter Summerfield, and his boyfriend, Jeff Reyolds, ate at one table and would occupy one of two suites on the first floor of the guest room wing. The Russian supplier, Gennadi Ivanov, and his two associates, Pavel Sokolov and Sergei Popov, were seated at another table. Ivanov occupied the other suite on the first floor. Each of his two associates were assigned a room in the six-room third floor. The Greek transporter, Christos Diakos, and his boyfriend, Kabr Zeidan, sat at a separate table and had been assigned one of the suites on the second floor.
    
    At lunch the latecomers found there were three Olympic skiers, a German, a Frenchman, and an Italian, the three being acquainted with each other, already having been in residence for a week. They and the boyfriend of the German and claimed brother of the Frenchmen sat together at lunch. The Italian was there alone. The German skier, Maximilian Bauer, and his German boyfriend, Jonas Koch, occupied one of the two double rooms on the first floor and the Italian skier, ...
    ... Matteo Caputo, had the other. The Frenchmen, Lyam Beaumont and Alois Durand, having different surnames although claiming to be brothers, each occupied one of the two double rooms on the second floor.
    
    This left one second-floor suite and four double rooms on the third floor unoccupied, although they were soon to understand that the ski instructor, Farzin Ahmadi, was holding the second-floor suite as a party room. The ground floor of the guestroom wing, the wing to the south of the hotel structure, housed a business center and a gym, both very well equipped.
    
    The central lobby, facing the Matterhorn to the east and the downslope of the Riffleberg Mountain, was only a story and a half high. The wing to the north was the service wing, behind the reception desk, with the dining room on the first floor, kitchen and storage rooms on the ground floor, and hotel staff living quarters on the second and third floors. Behind the lobby and pushed into the mountain slope on the hotel's west side were the hotel bar and offices for the manager, ski instructor, and head chef, with a corridor between them leading back to a door facing the surface of the mountain. The second floor of this wing housed the lounge, the third floor included meeting rooms and a library, and there was a fourth floor, where the senior hotel staffers had small apartments. The hotel was pretty much snowed in much of the year and the hotel staffers either lived in the hotel or near enough to it to ski in. All of the ...
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