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EXCERPT
Chapter 1
Would it be possible to
have sex on that thing?
May Davenport licked her
lips as she stared at the waist high laser
fax-copier-printer, rumored to have been an accomplice in an
office tryst. Who knew Hewlett Packard could be an
aphrodisiac, she thought.
Damn, she needed to get a
life and get laid if thoughts of sex in the office consumed
her time. For a brief moment, May wondered if it were
possible to have sex on that thing.
May cocked her head as she
stared at the machine, as though willing it to share its
secrets. Who was on top? Did anything break in the process?
If they left the lid open, did it get any good pictures?
The rumor running rampant
at Crystal Industries would have the entire twenty-five
floors believing that such an act would not only be
plausible, but indeed had happened between a junior partner
on the second floor and a female executive on the
seventeenth who was not known to fraternize with anyone
below her floor.
Stupid people. Why in the
world would they risk their careers for the sake of hot sex?
May could kind of see the lure. The executive had power and
the junior guy had hunger, at least that was how another
executive assistant from that floor had described the two to
May during a good gossip session in the bathroom.
Damn, she needed to get a
life.
What she really wanted to
know was what possessed two people to throw caution to the
wind and be so reckless as to risk getting caught going
against Company Policy No-No Number Two. According to the
Crystal Industries’ Employee Handbook, the Number One rule
involved giving up stock trading tips. Priorities. How
fitting that the company would care more about its bottom
line than the interactions of their employees.
She snickered to herself,
sitting at her desk, which faced the main door and had her
back to her boss’s office. The bastard wanted to be sure he
could look over her shoulder at a moment’s notice to make
sure she didn’t pass time surfing the Internet or worse—find
a better job.
So close to heaven, being
this high off the ground, she would have thought she would
have been happier.
What would make her
extremely happy would be to move up in the company, for them
to finally recognize her skills and talents in the financial
department instead of being relegated as simply an executive
assistant. Hell, she might as well say it. A secretary.
The thought made her grind
her teeth. She knew her pinhead of a boss held her back.
Other assistants were allowed to sit in on meetings. She had
heard that some even ran them. Damn bastard.
What fueled her to stay at
Crystal Industries, more than the pay and the health
benefits that paid for her grandmother’s medication, was the
fact that one day May would make it to the top and would
have the distinct pleasure of telling her windbag of a boss
to kiss her ass.
As she thought about the
man planting his lips onto her cheek, her face felt flush.
Sure he was a jerk but he was a pretty good-looking jerk.
Well, if tall, clear blue eyes and straight, white teeth
turned a woman on. For May, it did.
There were days she
imagined her boss on his hands and knees, crawling to her,
begging to be disciplined or more. She wanted Winston
Biggers to please her. She closed her eyes and imagined
feeling his tongue against her pussy, stroking her lower
lips and diving inside of her until she came hard. But she
wouldn’t stop there. She would use him as her own play toy.
Making him fuck her until she was exhausted or grew tired of
him. She would use him in the same way he’d been using her.
Get this. Get that. Fuck
you!
Absently, she tugged at a
loose piece of string at the end of her sleeve. With one
pull, she managed to unravel the stitching going up the arm,
making a nice, long opening at the inside seam.
“Shit.” She tossed the
useless thread and attempted to close the hole. “My favorite
sweater too.”
The good thing about the
gaping opening was that it created a Saturday night project
since May didn’t have a date and had no prospects of getting
one in the near future. Calling numbers at the local bingo
hall and taking her grandmother to and from the doctor’s
office offered little in the way of finding suitable dates,
or any dates for that matter.
The next obstacle would be
to get out of here on time. Before she could look at her
watch, a bellow broke her thoughts.
“Maybelline, come in here,”
jerk du jour said as though he’d known her immediate plans.
Why did he have to use her
full first name? He knew she hated it. The name constantly
reminded her of her southern roots and her mother’s
ignorance about popular cosmetics.
“I thought it sounded
sweet,” her mother had said.
She used to correct her
boss constantly the first year she worked for him.
“It’s May, just like the
month. Just call me May.”
Four years and a Bachelor
of Arts degree later, he still called her the name that made
her skin crawl.
Pushing herself back from
her pressboard-and-steel desk, she grabbed a notepad and
pen. The man never asked her in his office for something
simple. He spouted orders like a drill sergeant and always
without looking her in her eyes. Not once.
Lack of eye contact suited
her fine. She’d always been a sucker for blue eyes even if
they were in the head of the most insensitive man she’d ever
met.
Plants died around him.
She’d tried keeping a fern in his office once. Within a
week, it turned brown and suffered a horrible death. She
thought about bringing in a goldfish but she imagined he
would swallow the thing whole like a snake.
She took a deep breath,
calming her queasy stomach and giving herself the strength
to walk through her boss’s door, hopefully for the last time
today. She glanced at her watch. Five minutes to five. He
had better make it quick.
Behind a desk big enough to
crush a Mini Cooper and surrounded by so many windows, he
could have leased a portion of his office to a gardener as a
greenhouse, Winston Biggers reigned in his office and, by
most people’s accounts, ruled all of the twenty-third floor.
Different shaped awards
decorated a four-tiered glass shelf that sat next to his
private bathroom. His diploma from University of Virginia
hung on the opposite wall above an elliptical trainer. Guess
even the King of Mean needed to keep in shape.
Thanks to the fresh flowers
brought in each week, his office wreaked of jasmine and
lavender today. Even the sweet aroma didn’t raise Biggers’
spirit.
At a good six-foot-four and
dressed in tailored clothes, his presence overwhelmed an
entire room. He looked expensive, from his daily barber-cut
brown hair with a light streaking of gray strands down to
his shined shoes that must have been worth more than a small
house there in Virginia Beach.
May breathed easier seeing
his head down, his gaze trained on the piece of paper on his
desk. She cocked her head and stared at the top of his.
He wasn’t balding like the
rest of the high-level executives in the building. Didn’t
mean he would be immune to the follicle failure. It happened
to all execs. Bald heads, ulcers, bad marriages. And they
kept putting these guys in high-rise buildings. Guys like
Biggers were walking poster children for stress-related
suicides.
The sight made her imagine
him again between her legs, her knees wrapped around his
head as she held a good chunk of his hair fisted in her
hand. She chewed her bottom lip and wondered if he ever had
fantasies. Didn’t all bosses fantasize about their
secretaries? In her sexy erotica novels that she loved
reading so much, they all did.
Not that she cared. The
only thing she cared about involved walking out of the
office by the time the big hand hit the twelve and the
little hand camped out at the five. If he didn’t look up,
she could get away fast and still get off on time.
Princess Watkins promised
her a drink and she knew her friend wouldn’t wait for her
for very long. But then again, with a name like Princess
what did May expect?
“Flowers,” Winston said,
breaking May from her rambling thoughts.
“Sir?”
Working with the totem pole
with style for years, she had grown use to his shorthand way
of speaking. Right now he had her stumped. She had to stop
thinking about sex so much at the office.
Maybe the idea of having a
margarita in about twenty or so minutes made her stumble.
She could almost taste the burning tequila on her tongue.
Thinking about the bitter salt that would cover the glass
rim made her suck in her cheeks. Sugar, definitely sugar on
the rim.
“I need an arrangement
ordered and sent to a young lady.” His deep voice rolled
over the desk and nearly bowled May over. He swiveled in his
chair and retrieved a piece of paper from behind him.
“Yes, sir,” she said. She
wrote on her pad, ‘guilt flowers’ and underlined it.
Men were so easy to read.
It was no longer a sport for her to figure them out. Now it
became second nature to decipher their inner workings.
Biggers was an easy read.
Controlling in all aspects of his life. No personal
attachments like pets or children (he would have considered
both to be in the same category). Girlfriends that lasted
six to eight months. Long enough to develop a comfortable
rhythm but short enough to avoid the annoying marriage
question.
He probably had a cordial
almost too proper relationship with his parents. More than
likely an only child, and if he did have a sibling,
especially a brother, they competed on every aspect of their
lives from jobs to relationships.
To think of him now, May
felt a tiny twinge of sadness. As soon as he spoke, the
feeling that felt like a caterpillar crawling across her
naked belly disappeared.
Probably just hunger pangs
anyway since she worked through her lunch thanks to some new
reports Biggers wanted prepared.
“I need the arrangement
sent to her tonight.” He scribbled something on a notepad.
“Something big but tasteful. Nice and sweet but heartfelt.”
“Perhaps a stuffed animal
with it?” she asked.
If she couldn’t have a man
there to wring his neck when he skipped out on dinner then a
stuffed animal would do nicely.
He slipped on a pair of
glasses with short, rectangular, wire frames that reminded
May so much of her granny’s glasses. His blue-eyed gaze cut
over the top as though he looked down on her and her
opinion.
Years of smiling with his
deep, long dimples caused him to have two distinct creases
in his cheeks that made him look even more distinguished and
handsome. Didn’t help that he also had a cleft in his chin.
Men. They get older and
look even better. Women constantly had to overhaul their
looks.
Now his stare turned her
off. She hoped the woman he would be standing up tonight
never got this chilling look. It caused a rippling shiver
from her toes to the top of her head. She gripped her pen
and pad tighter to calm herself.
“I want something classy,
not gaudy.”
May bit the inside of her
lower lip, trying hard not to spit on him the way his gaze
made her feel like he’d done that to her.
What did he know about
class? Designer clothes and working close to the top floor
didn’t give him any sort of prestige.
“Yes, sir.” She wrote
‘asshole’ on under her initial comment and underlined it
twice.
“On the card I need to have
written, ‘Can’t make it to dinner tonight. Sorry. Some other
time. Win.’ Got that?”
As though she could not get
that pathetic excuse for an apology.
But she obliged him and
repeated his message. “Unable to make it to dinner.”
He cut her off. “Can’t. Not
‘unable to make it.’ I can’t.”
“There’s a difference,
sir?” Not that she meant to be insolent, but his pettiness
wore on her nerves, especially now.
He leaned back in his
black, leather swivel chair and removed his glasses.
“‘Unable’ makes it seem like I could go but don’t want to.
‘Can’t’ says that I cannot physically make it to dinner. And
I can’t go. I just can’t.”
His voice held something
that said he had a bigger but not necessarily better excuse
for not showing. If she didn’t know any better, she would
have thought he sounded exhausted.
So this was what Winston
Biggers was like as a boyfriend. He created the rules. He
set the pace. His wants. His schedule.
Bastard.
Did he ever once think
about his woman’s needs?
What was May thinking? This
was the same man who’d given her a day to get over the flu.
But a man who worked this
many hours and rode her hard had to have had a story for why
he became the man he was today. Not that May necessarily
cared. But he did intrigue her. How could a handsome man
manage to never marry and seem so unfulfilled?
She wanted to kick herself
for asking but a good employee, the one who desperately
needed and deserved a raise, would do so. “Did you have some
extra work that needed to be done that’s preventing you from
meeting this woman for dinner? I could help you if that’s
the case.”
He stared at her, his face
and expression looking softer than she’d ever seen it. At
that moment, the crow’s feet around his eyes didn’t look as
sinister. His lips parted but he uttered nothing.
Was he actually touched by
her gesture? She blinked and directed her gaze back to her
pad and pen. Her hand trembled and she shook it as though
that would somehow reset her feelings.
“No,” he answered, finally.
“Something else came up.”
She nodded, relieved he
didn’t suggest more work. “Can’t make it to dinner tonight.
Sorry. Some other time. Win.”
He nodded. “Here’s her name
and address.” He handed her a paper.
May stared at the name. A
gasp rose up her throat but she swallowed it down before it
had a chance to become audible.
She kept her expression
neutral. “She won’t be happy.”
“It’s not like she hasn’t
canceled a million times on me when she got a break in one
of her cases.” He folded his glasses and slipped them into a
small, brown leather case.
Yeah, but Courtney
Vanderloo wasn’t just any detective. To say she’d been
highly decorated throughout her career would be like saying
Americans were moderately pleased Saddam Hussein had been
captured.
To think the woman wouldn’t
want to have dinner with someone special tonight would have
been an even bigger error in judgment.
May’s gaze cut to the open
newspaper on Biggers’ desk. ‘Vanderloo Nabs Child Porn
Distributor’ splashed across the top. A picture of a petite
blonde leading a burly man with a jacket over his head into
the Virginia Beach jail coupled the article.
So, blondes were Biggers’
type. Again, not that May cared. She knew beyond a shadow of
a doubt that Biggers wouldn’t give her a second glance. Not
because she was Black or that her full hips and thighs
classified her as voluptuous and not petite, but because of
her position.
He looked down on her
because she was only an executive assistant. Given
the chance, she wanted to do more. She could be more if only
she didn’t have this blue-eyed roadblock in her way.
She craned her head to read
a part of the article about Courtney when her boss snatched
the paper off his desk and folded it. He shoved it into his
briefcase.
“You know the flower shop
to use and they have my charge account number.”
“Yes, sir.”
She wrote ‘feeling
inadequate’ in her list and underlined it three times. Her
minor in psychology had to be good for something.
With a quick turn on her
heel, she rushed back to her desk. As long as the phone line
remained clear to the flower shop, she could still make it
to downtown Norfolk from downtown Virginia Beach in about
twenty minutes.
His voice halted her again.
“Maybelline.”
She cursed under her breath
while her back faced him. She pivoted. “Yes, Mr. Biggers?”
He lifted his briefcase
while slinging his suit jacket over his arm. With a
confident gait, he strolled to her. As she watched him, she
wondered if he’d been taught how to act like he owned the
room from one of the many prep schools he must have
attended.
Like positive sides to two
magnets repelling each other, May felt the need to move back
from him, easing to her desk the closer he got. With his
long legs, he made it to her, trapping her in the doorway.
The man always had a way of
crowding a person’s personal space. May had thought he did
it only to her. Then, others came forth like victims to the
same crime. He’d violated all of their spaces and probably
didn’t realize what he’d done.
Or maybe he did. Maybe it
was his way of lording over people. Maybe he did it as an
intimidation factor. This time, though, she would look the
beast in its eyes. She wouldn’t be bullied today.
As he stood so close, May
took in a deep breath. He smelled of a clean-smelling
cologne. Not too overpowering and not a heavy, musky scent.
If she didn’t know any better, she would have sworn he’d
just put it on before she entered his office. The light
aroma belied his power. But it worked.
She let out her breath to
steady her queasy stomach. Why did this guy make her so
nervous? She epitomized a strong, young Black woman.
Educated, smart, independent. No way a corporate White guy
who probably ate mayonnaise sandwiches without the crust
could make her feel intimidated.
Yet, there she was, her
knees knocking, her heart pounding, sweat forming on the
back of her neck. She grabbed the doorframe behind her to
keep from slipping down to the floor.
“Plans tonight?” he asked.
Without her stopping it,
she blinked at his question. Seemed odd he would ask since
he’d never asked her about her life outside of the office.
He usually wanted to know how to keep her in the office
working more.
She nodded, cleared her
throat then answered. “Yes. Meeting someone.”
He raised his eyebrows. He
opened his mouth like he wanted to ask her more questions.
She never noticed the subtle glow of his sun-kissed skin.
Yes, Courtney would be very
pissed she missed her date tonight. If the man didn’t speak,
he could be doable.
“Oh.” His tone sounded both
curious and almost disappointed. A strange combination.
“Thank you for staying over to do this for me. I appreciate
it.”
Just how much did he
appreciate it? She tightened her grip on the wall and
summoned as much courage as she could.
“Appreciation can be shown
in a lot of ways,” she began.
Biggers’ eyes widened as he
moved himself out of the doorway and into the main office,
holding his briefcase in front of himself. “Really?” His
tone turned even more curious as though he imagined some
possibility.
Not on his life. The man
cared about nothing but himself. Any woman who hooked up
with him was asking for heartache. She’d been through enough
to not want it to happen to her again.
Besides, he was her boss.
That would have been a violation of Crystal Industries’ Rule
Number Twelve. Among other things, May had time to memorize
the company handbook.
She nodded, turned her gaze
down for a moment then back to him. “My bonus. A raise, sir.
I know it may not be the right time to ask for them, but—”
“You’re right,” he said,
interrupting her. “It isn’t. The company is going through a
rough time financially so there may not be any bonuses this
year. Your annual review comes up in another four months. We
can discuss it then.”
Four months? Four fucking
months to wait to see if she’ll be granted a raise
especially since there won’t be any bonuses?
Sorry, Granny. Can’t get
that medication you need because I have to wait four months
for a raise from my stingy-ass boss!
And the story about the
company going through its own depression was bullshit. She
knew the financial status of Crystal Industries better than
most executives. They had money to spare.
Instead of screaming at the
top of her lungs at this jerk or quitting right on the spot,
she smiled and slipped down into her wobbly chair. The cheap
bastard wouldn’t even spring for a decent chair.
“And I know the company
encourages individual style to a limit, but in the future I
would like to see you wear appropriate clothing to work.” He
nodded toward her. “Nothing with holes in them.”
Her gaze dropped to the
newly formed hole in her sweater sleeve. “Sir, you don’t
understand. I—”
Without a word, he walked
out of the office. She waited to hear the ding of the
elevator down the hall and the subsequent sound of the door
sliding behind him before she let out a groan.
That capped off her helluva
day.
Snatching the phone from
its cradle, she hit the speed dial number to Flower Power,
the company’s floral arranger.
“Flower Power. What
occasion can we decorate for you?” the perky salesman asked.
“Hi, Chip. It’s May.”
May stared at her notes.
Her anger displayed with each assessment. She ran her finger
over the last two words, ‘feeling inadequate’. She felt the
deep grooves and impressions on the page.
“All The Way May!” he
chirped. “How are you?”
“Overworked and underpaid.”
She let out a long sigh. Feeling inadequate, she thought.
“I hear that. So what can I
do for you tonight?”
“Are you still gay?”
“Out and proud.”
“Then I’ll settle for a
floral arrangement for Bighead.” She had other nicknames for
the man but Bighead seemed like an okay one to use for now.
“What is it? Funeral?
Promotion? Birthday?”
“Ditching a date.” She
heard Chip flipping through some papers.
“Ohh, worse kind.” He tsked.
“Shoot.”
May described the type of
arrangement she would have like to have gotten if a date had
dumped her. Something big, full of roses, babies breath,
daisies and calla lilies. After getting a brief rundown of
their different types of vases, May settled on one that
sounded the most appealing.
“Anything else?” he asked.
“Yes.” She stared at the
trite statement on her notepad. The guy was an asshole but
Courtney deserved better. “The card. Write ‘I wish I could
have been there tonight to celebrate. I am proud of you.
Please accept my apologies.’” She struggled with the
signature but her romantic side won. “Sign it ‘Love, Win.’”
How could he not love a
woman who fought against pornography?
“Oh, girl. Sounds serious.”
Chip smacked his lips, audible even through the phone.
If Biggers found out what
she did, it would be serious. Or maybe he would thank her.
The uptight man needed to get laid. Then again, so did she.
First things first. Make her boss happy and she would be
happy.
She gave Chip the name and
address of the woman who would receive these flowers.
“Anything else?”
May ripped off her
notepaper and tossed the wad into the trashcan under her
desk. “Yes. You have any stuffed animals?”
* * * *
“To bosses! May they all
rot in hell!” Princess clinked her bowl-shaped margarita
glass against May’s and took a healthy gulp of her frozen
drink.
May opted to sip her
raspberry margarita through a straw. She couldn’t pound her
drinks back like Princess could. Then again, there were a
lot of things Princess did that May couldn’t do, and that
went from the guys she dated to the clothes she wore to her
questionable employment.
May glanced at her friend’s
cleavage-revealing top then looked down at her high-neck,
long-sleeved black knit shirt. She remembered how short
Princess’s skirt was when she met her in the parking lot.
May’s skirt had to have been three times as long as hers.
She didn’t even want to think about footwear.
May had to face it. Where
Princess looked ready for a party, May seemed like she was
ready to teach the next school lesson. Looking dowdy worked
for her when she went through college. But that life ended.
She needed to do some living.
“So what did that asshole
do this time?” Princess asked as she glanced at her while
surveying the bar.
“It’s less about him and
more about me.” May trailed her finger along the rim of the
glass, removing the grainy sugar then licking it off of her
finger.
Princess wanted the heavy
rock salt on her rim. One time she even asked if she could
have the worm inside of the tequila bottle. Maybe if May had
salt instead of sugar on her glass then she would be as bold
and brash as her friend.
“He told me I had to wait
four months for a raise.” May shook her head. “I need the
extra dough, Princess. I’m barely making ends meet as it is
and Granny’s meds aren’t getting any cheaper.”
And May had told her
financial woes to a woman who looked to have had her hair
done by the best professional in Virginia Beach, wore
clothes that looked designer-made even if they weren’t and
had rings on every finger.
“You need a better job,”
Princess said.
“Don’t you think I’ve
tried? I thought having a degree meant something. All it
means now is that I spent way too much time in school and
less learning about real life.” She dipped a fried tortilla
chip into some red, chunky salsa. Put her in her bedroom and
give her a good, steamy romance novel and May would have
been in heaven.
“You college graduates,”
her friend said and shook her head. “All the book sense in
the world but no common sense to save your lives.”
“That’s why I like hanging
out with you, Princess. You always know the right thing to
say.” May took a big drink. The icy cold liquid chilled her
teeth to the gums and made her wince. The ice headache that
pierced her brain didn’t help matters either.
“I think I can help you,”
Princess said then winked to a man walking by them.
“I don’t want a handout. I
want to earn the money on my own.”
Her friend furrowed her
eyebrows. “I wasn’t about to give you any money. I was
offering you an opportunity.”
Now it was May’s turn to
look confused. “What kind of opportunity?”
She’d known Princess since
junior high school and knew her friend had a thing for
dancing on the wrong side of the law. Not necessarily
illegal but not quite right either.
Princess reached into her
Louis Vuitton bag, real, not a knockoff, and pulled out a
card. With a bit of trepidation, May took the card, waited a
beat before she read it. Lord only knew what her friend had
in mind.
“The Oh Club. Never heard
of it.”
The red card with gold
letters proved difficult to read in the dimly lit bar. Held
at an angle and into the only light source May found in the
place, she could see the name. Nothing else appeared on the
card except for a phone number. No addresses. No proprietor
name. Nothing.
“What is this?” May asked.
“Your ticket to easy money.
All you have to do is say yes.”
May stared at the card.
Princess was wild but she knew she wouldn’t put her in harms
way. And she did need the money, fast. Easy.
Staring at her friend, she
said, “It wouldn’t hurt to look.”
With a big grin, Princess
said, “It never hurts to look.”
* * * *
Winston pushed his way
through the door once he reached the parking garage level.
Walking down twenty-three flights of stairs didn’t get his
heart rate going. The fact that the trip came from the
twenty-third floor instead of the twenty-fifth made him
grind his teeth.
Two floors. Two fucking
floors to the top. Wasn’t it enough that he’d given up
everything to Crystal Industries? No family. No real
relationship. Working eighty-hour workweeks. But it still
hadn’t been sufficient. And at every turn, someone with
their hand out, wanting money or something from him.
“Evening, Mr. Biggers.” A
valet driver held his hand out to him, waiting for Winston’s
claim ticket.
The gesture seemed almost
creepy as though the man knew what Winston had been thinking
moments before.
“Mr. Biggers?” the valet
driver asked.
Winston smiled and fished
through his pants pocket for the stub. “Long day. Little out
of it.”
“I understand, sir.” The
young man ran down a row of cars.
As Winston stared at the
valet, he was brought back twenty years ago to his own
youth. Twenty-one and carefree. He worked as a waiter at his
parents’ country club during the summer. Then when school
started he went to the university his parents wanted him to
attend. Except for what he wore, his every decision had been
made for him.
He took in a deep breath,
inhaling the car exhaust and cigarette smoke smell that hung
in the garage. Feeling constricted all of the sudden, he
loosened his tie and unbuttoned the top two buttons of his
shirt. He heard the rumbling of his vehicle, a black Hummer
that Courtney hated.
“It’s destroying the
environment,” she’d said.
When he said he wouldn’t be
giving it up, waiting and wanting her to argue with him, she
conceded.
“You men and your toys.”
Why couldn’t he find a
woman strong enough to question him? As soon as the
headlights hit him, he thought of the one woman who had.
Maybelline. May, she wanted
him to call her. No, he liked her birth name. It stood
out…like her.
Once she wore a black dress
that wasn’t meant to be clingy but it did. It hung onto
every curve and swell on her body, accentuating her round
breasts, her firm ass and her long legs. Just thinking about
her now caused his cock to twitch and engorge until he had
to, again, cover himself with his briefcase. If he hadn’t
done it earlier when he was talking to her, she would have
had him up for sexual harassment charges.
But being near her drove
him crazy. Her long, dark brown hair always looked soft. On
a few occasions, he happened to stand behind her at her desk
right before she noticed he was there and smelled her hair.
Her scent matched the aroma of the flowers she had delivered
to his office. Something wild but fragrant that he couldn’t
quite place.
Her almond shaped eyes
drove him to distraction. And her full lips. God help him
but he had imagined them wrapped around his hard-on until he
came into her mouth.
He let out a groan as soon
as the valet stopped the truck in front of him.
“Win Big,” the young man
said as he held open the door.
Many people liked saying
the name printed on Winston’s license plates. The name was
his father’s idea, a fact the man still bragged about to
this day.
Winston handed the man a
twenty. He was feeling generous and nostalgic all at the
same time. He imagined that if he were that man, he would
have spent the money on beer and pizza.
As he headed down the
street to his house, Winston wondered how Maybelline was
spending her time right now. He knew it wasn’t thinking
about him. If she were thinking of him, it wouldn’t be
flattering.
However, he couldn’t be
kind to her. His kindness would turn into something more.
Something physical. Since Genterson and Pollick couldn’t
keep their fucking hands off of each other in the office,
the company emphasized the company policy against office
romances.
As long as he had her there
in his office, working for him, that would have to sustain
him for now. In order to keep up his need, he would have to
keep suppressed her newly acquired degree.
If human resources knew she
had an English degree, they would have snagged her for their
training department. They had asked about her before. He
couldn’t let her go. Not yet. He just needed more time. More
time with her.
From the corner down the
street from his house, he activated his garage door opener
so that by the time he reached his driveway, he pulled into
the garage without waiting.
Once inside, he did,
however, wait until the door closed completely and until the
motion sensor light in the garage went off before he undid
the rest of the buttons on his shirt.
His hand moved down to his
pants and he unfastened them. Pulling the zipper down, he
noticed the sound of each tooth releasing. Relief waved over
him with each click. He closed his eyes and imagined what
Maybelline would have done if she heard him undoing his
pants.
She would lick her lips
like the way she’d done in his office earlier, maybe even
brush her hands over her breasts. Those magnificent nipples
of hers that he’d seen poke out nice and hard during the
summer when he kept the office temperature at an arctic
level, would stand out proud, waiting for his touch, wanting
to be licked and sucked.
He pulled out his hard
cock. With a firm grip, he stroked his hand up and down the
shaft while thinking of Maybelline.
“More. Give me more,” she
would say.
He squeezed harder, being
sure to pulse his hand at the tip. Heat filled the truck
until sweat covered him, making his t-shirt and pants stick
to his body. In the silent vehicle inside of his garage, he
heard his moans, his cries for a woman who looked at him
with hate and disgust in her eyes. If she only knew.
All he would want would be
to kiss her, to have her lips against his. Just the thought
made him erupt.
His warm sperm shot from
him, landing on his shirt, steering wheel and windshield.
The new-car smell that permeated the truck now smelled like
sex and new-car smell.
Damn, he needed her. Not
any woman. Maybelline Davenport.
When the fanfare died down
around Courtney, he would break up with her. It wouldn’t be
fair to her to continue dating. With his mind constantly on
Maybelline, he wouldn’t have given her the attention she
deserved.
Besides, the relationship
wasn’t that serious. It wasn’t like he’d told her he loved
her.
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