THE GROUNDBREAKING TURNSÂ out to be a lot of people in their Sunday best standing on bare dirt inside a fenced-in lot that takes up nearly an entire block.
And cameras. Lots of cameras.
I put Smuckers on his long retractable leash and let him run around and receive petting from his minions. I smile and laugh and discreetly lower my sunglasses.
But I canât help wonder what Henry had planned. What if I had said yes? Would we be at a hotel right now instead of here? Butterflies whirl in my belly every time I look over at him.
Brett comes over and presents Smuckers with a plastic squeaky shovel in Locke blue and everybodyâs taking pictures of him running around with it in his mouth.
Then the people involved with the facility get a silver shovel with a blue handle and they all take turns digging bits of dirt out of the ground.
When itâs Henryâs turn, he takes off his suit jacket, rolls up his shirtsleeves, and digs up a massive shovelful of earth, heaving it aside. Everybodyâs clapping, and heâs standing in the sunshine with his wicked, billion-dollar Henry Locke smile. He jams the shovel into the dirt and grabs his suit coat, slings it over his shoulder.
When the applause dies down, he shoots a sly glance my way. He pretends to wind his watch.
Heâs mouthing a word. Infinity.
My face flares hot. But I just shake my head. Like Iâm immune.
Brett has his own shtick. He holds Smuckers in his arms as if theyâre wielding the shovel together. Afterward, people close in and pet Smuckers. I realize that Henry never pets Smuckers just for the pleasure of it.
âYou guys got him a little Locke shovel,â I say once weâre back in the limo. âNice optics.â
âI meant what I said,â he says. âIâm waiting.â
âFor me to come and kiss you,â I say.
âAnd then all bets are off, Vicky.â
My mouth goes dry. âI heard you the first time.â I try to think how to change the mood. I want to kiss him. Right now. In this place. âDo you not like dogs?â
He frowns. âI like dogs.â
âI donât think you do. The only time you ever pet Smuckers isâ¦for a purpose. You want to make him paddle his legs or calm down or something. You never just pet him out of fun.â
âHeâs just a dog, Vicky.â He doesnât deny it, and I feel a little sorry for him right then.
âYou hardly ever even say his name.â
âSmuckers is just a dog.â He glances over at me. âIs that better?â
âA dog your mother left her company to.â
âYou think Iâm jealous of a dog? Please, Vicky. If I wanted to wear my hair in a marshmallow Afro and live in a womanâs purse, I think I could find a way to arrange it. This is New York, after all. There is probably a dominatrix out there whoâd make it happen.â
I cross my arms. âYou know what I find weird? People arenât freaking out about Smuckersâs control of the company very much. They all seem to think itâs a PR stunt.â
âA lot of people see it as a PR stunt. Connected to his dog shelter gift.â
âAnd youâre letting them think that.â
âWe are.â
âWhy not tell people the truth?â I ask. âUnlessâ¦I donât knowâ¦â
He says, âUnless we have more evil plans to get rid of you?â
I say nothing. Because, yeah, does he have yet another trick up his sleeve? I wish I could just tell himâdonât worry, youâll get it back.
But how can I expect Carly to keep her word if I donât keep mine?
âYou know how many people we employ?â Luckily he answers the question for himself. âDirectly, we employ three hundred forty thousand people across ten offices worldwide. When you count vendors and subcontractors, itâs double that. Those are real people with real lives and families and homes, people who depend on the health of this firm to make house payments and put food on the table. Do I want to announce that a Maltese is in charge of all that?â
I wait. I know a rhetorical question when I hear one.
âNo. Iâm not going to rock the company with that kind of announcement. Iâm showing them that things remain consistent after Bernadetteâs death. I want them feeling strong, steady, capable leadership.â
âOkay.â I make myself not look at his hands. I try not to think too hard about him caring about people. Or turning out so different from Denny.
We have a late lunch at a sidewalk café in Soho. It feels like a date. He asks me a lot of questions about my life and my jewelry biz. He seems really interested in the makers studio, and I swell with pride talking about it, because itâs such an awesome space and an amazing group of people.
Then I remember heâs not my boyfriend. Heâs not even my friend. Heâs an entitled wealthy man who thinks Iâm going to come to him and beg him to take me.
I keep my distance.
I tamp out every spark that lights between us. Sometimes I feel like Smoky the Bear, stomping sparks left and right. Too many to stomp out.
Day after day.
Biding my time.
The worst are those moments when he lets down his guard, when he stops being beloved playboy Henry Locke. When it feels real.
Itâs a mindfuck when it feels real.
Here is the last guy you should ever trust or want. Heâs fooling you. Fake seducing you. And you want him anyway!
The mindfuck of hanging out with Henry twists and contorts into confusing new shapes every hour over the following days.
The man is on this kick of showing me every aspect of the company. âYou need to understand things to vote out of a place of knowledge,â he says.
This involves Smuckers and me getting picked up in a limo and taken to a different part of New York or New Jersey and meeting people and learning new things that a giant company does.
Building turns out to be a small part of the Locke activities. Every one of those companies that got listed off in the will reading has its own little empire of activity.
Henry does work in the car and discusses corporate things on the phone with the people we meet. Heâs good at what he does. He really cares. Is this his new method of seduction?
On one outing we tour a nearly finished building that has a zero carbon footprintâitâs heated and cooled through underground circulating water. Super green. Henryâs excited.
Itâs infectious.
On another outing, we tour a mammoth prefab facility in New Jersey where they make parts of buildings so they donât have to build everything on site. Heâs just as excited about that. Also infectious.
âHow do you know everyoneâs names?â I ask on one of our many limo rides.
âI make a point of it.â
âBut how? You know so many names.â
âIf somethingâs important, you find a way to do it,â he says.
Bird, I mumble.
He gets that amused smile that always annoys me. âWhat was that?â
I want to grab his lapels and yank him to me and say fuck you, lip to lips, and then kiss him.
But I know where that leads.
Instead, I lock my hands together in my lap and turn away.
The worst thing is the family feeling throughout Locke Worldwide. Like they really are one big happy family with Henry Locke as the strong, fierce leader, a man whoâd go to the ends of the earth for his people.
It makes him twice as hot, how he fights for his people. How protective he is.
At times, tooling around the five boroughs with Henry, touring sites, meeting employees, learning new things at Locke HQ, I get this feeling like Iâm part of that team, part of the family that Henry fights for and protects.
Itâs intoxicating.
And so predictable. So pathetic.
It doesnât take a team of psychoanalysts to understand why that would be wildly attractive to me, considering itâs been me alone for so long, looking after Carly on my own. Even back home, nobody was protecting us. Nobody was fighting for us.
Sometimes when weâre talking about the company I use the word we. As if Iâm part of the Locke family. So cool that weâre opening an office in Raleigh. How are we doing on our stadium proposal? Wow, our development team is kicking the shit out of those assholes at Dartford & Sons!
I constantly have to remind myself Iâm not in the family.
We ride around in elevators and limos and other enclosed spaces and itâs exciting. Sometimes our gazes lock and the earth seems to still.
My vibrator gets a workout at night.
Iâm a week through the twenty-one-day cooling off period and I just want to touch him. Even just his arm. Heâs irresistible as catnip. Irresistible as a super-charged magnet. Or maybe irresistible as a black hole, the kind that sucks in spaceships and girls who just want to be loved and trusted.
None of his affection is real, thatâs the thing I need to remember. Heâs had PIs on me, after all. He thinks Iâm a scammer.
Iâm something far worse. Iâm Vonda OâNeil.
Again I remember that picture of me, smiling out at the world so hopefully, repeated a million times across Twitter and Facebook with captions like Iâm a lying whore.
Sometimes, right before I go out the door in the morning to meet the car, I give myself a little pep talk. I remind myself that I donât need team Locke.
I control a giant company and have access to all the money I could ever want. I ride around in limos with literally the sexiest man in New York, but somehow Iâm still that hungry girl looking in from the outside, nose pressed to the bakery window, wanting just anything.
A crumb.
Henry is like the hottest and most charming vacuum cleaner salesman who ever came to your door. And you invite him in and you let him show you the vacuum, how well it cleans and how all of the attachments work. And you see that he loves this vacuum, and his love for the vacuum makes him insanely desirable. And you guys laugh and have fun cleaning the carpet. And itâs nice.
And you keep telling yourself itâs not about youâhe just wants to sell you that vacuum cleaner. That is his only motive! Except itâs getting harder and harder to remember that.
Maybe sometimes, when heâs expertly changing that nozzle with his amazingly capable handsâ¦or when heâs smiling at something you said, and youâre looking into his gorgeous blue eyes and getting that floaty feeling in your chest, those times you start to believe, that even though he came to sell you that thing, maybe he has started to like you.
Then you hate yourself for being gullible, because hello! Heâs New Yorkâs most eligible bastard and youâre not even in the top million bachelorettes.
In fact, youâre barely an eligible bachelorette for any bachelor, unless the bachelor in question is a poetry-scribbling parking lot attendant with self-esteem issues or a junior pastry chef with eight roommates and a video game obsession, or a cook/musician/student, not that that sums up my last three years of dating.
ONE OF THEÂ hardest things about hanging out with Henry is how he has this knack for reaching into me and hauling the pure Vonda out of me. Sometimes provoking it out of me. Sometimes enchanting it out of me with his questions and his jokes and his endless interest in my opinions.
âI know what youâre doing,â I finally tell him at lunch after another afternoon of finding out about the awesomeness of Locke Worldwide, another afternoon of witnessing him play the part of the fierce protector, admired by all. Weâve left Smuckers behind today.
âBeyond the supposedly fake seduction?â He cracks a popadam in half and hands me the big piece, because it turns out weâre both heavy into popadams.
I take it, remembering what he said about his hands. So good between your legs. Youâll come to me. Iâll get you off. Iâll print every inch of your skin.
Needless to say, my vibrator has been getting quite the workout in recent days.
He studies my face, expression unreadable. He does that sometimes. Like he wants to know me. To figure me out. Again and again I tell myself it isnât real, but it feels so good.
And I want to kiss him. I want to press GO on us. I want to stab that button so hard he flies to me. I want him to print every inch of my skin. Iâm not sure what that means in his mind, but I want it.
âYou know what Iâm doing?â he asks. âWhat would that be?â
âYou want me to love Locke like you do,â I continue in a breezy tone. âYou canât trick it out of my evil clutches, you canât seduce me, so youâre doing the next best thing. Trying to humanize it.â
âDonât count out the part where I seduce you. Thatâs still going to happen.â
âUh,â I say, belly tightening. âYou probably think all women would just die for your magic peen.â
âNot all of them.â Casually he cracks another piece of popadam. âJust the ones Iâve slept with.â
Gulp.
âAnd for the record, my seduction of you isnât goal oriented. Iâd seduce you if all you had was a dog bow tie Etsy store. Though, really, I should turn you in for animal cruelty. Because those bow ties you put Smuckers in? No.â
âHe likes his little bow ties.â
âTrust me,â Henry says. âHe doesnât like the little bow ties.â
âI think youâre just jealous.â
His eyes sparkle. âThatâs what you think?â
âMaybe Iâll make one for you.â
âMy neck has a lot of girth.â He lowers his voice. âYouâd need a lot of sequins.â
I snort, but I donât look at him. I donât want to see that on-camera smile of his turned on me.
I say, âYouâre trying to make me see how important Locke is to all your family. Keeping me from killing it. You think Iâll kill Locke, but you donât have to worry. Things are going to be okay.â
âI donât think youâre going to kill it,â he says in the voice he sometimes uses when he feels like his communication is important.
I want to believe him. His opinion has become important to me, stupid as that sounds.
I grab the last popadam. âRight now, Iâm thinking about killing this. You mind?â
I look up to find him gazing at me in his infuriatingly hot way. What is he seeing? What is he thinking?
I snap off a bit. âCrackly,â I say. My forced brightness is designed to cover the hopeless feeling.
It gets worse when he shows me his absolute favorite under-construction project, the Moreno Sky, a boutique hotel in Brooklyn that will be built in the crater of a half-crumbled-down building. It incorporates many urban ruin elements into the mod design.
He shows me support beams of reclaimed wood, the slabs of reclaimed concrete walls with graffiti from the 1970s. âThis wouldâve ended up in a landfill.â
I run my finger over the words Keep on Truckinâ in blue. âDid people say that?â
âApparently.â
I can see why he likes it. The place incorporates a lot of the forward-thinking design principles from that building in Melbourne heâs so wild about. You can see it in the way the structure is mostly greenery and engaging public/private spaces at the bottom and the way the building takes on mass as it rises.
He shows me more of the construction site, how theyâre folding old into new. âThis is cool as hell,â I say.
He hands me a hard hat. âWeâre not even in the building yet.â
âKaleb must hate it,â I say.
âI practically had to give up my firstborn to make this happen,â he says. âRunning this place, I donât get to design and build that much anymore, or really getting my hands dirty on any level.â He says this last in a wistful tone. Like he misses it. âYou have to see from the top. Come on.â
We climb a circular concrete stairway to the main floor, what will be the future lobby. Right now itâs a noisy, unfinished space full of men and women doing different jobsâthe trades, he calls them.
One side is a two-story wall covered in plastic. When the place is finished, itâll be a curtainwall, which is apparently a wall of windows.
He shows me more old timber and twisted rebar that was heading into a landfill but that Henry feels could be incorporated into lobby furnitureâhe needs to get the bandwidth to figure it out somehow.
Thatâs how he puts it. I love his lingo sometimes.
We head to the âfreight elevatorâ which doesnât look like any elevator I ever rode or ever would want to ride.
Henry punches a button thatâs attached to a metal coil thing. Thereâs a screech and a rumble and our cage arrives. âCome on.â
We step in and it hoists us up through a seemingly endless concrete column that would be utterly dark if not for a sputtering makeshift utility light clamped to the side.
Fear spikes through me during the long flickers when I think the light might go outâI wasnât prepared for how much like the well this would beânot the cage part, but how dark it is and the way weâre closed in by dark gray walls and you can see light way up high.
I move a little closer to Henry. I was so scared in that well for so long. Scared of dying. Scared to call for help. Scared it was Denny and his friends out there, looking for me, scared that theyâd get to me first, but wanting so bad to get out. Scared of the sounds. But mostly I was scared of the dark. I would sit in a little ball. I would tell myself if I got really small, even the darkness couldnât find me.
The elevator is taking forever, and I inch closer still, enjoying Henryâs nearness, his strength. I tell myself heâs just the vacuum cleaner salesman, not here to make me feel safe.
His fake currency still spends.
âVicky,â he says.
I brace myself. Does he notice Iâm being a freak? âWhat?â
âAre you going to smell me again?â
I smile. âItâs just a little rickety.â
âI forget youâre not used to this. Totally safe.â He puts his arm around me. âOkay?â
I donât know whether the okay is about his arm around me or the safety statement. âOkay,â I say.
âI wouldnât put you in here if I didnât know it was safe. I wouldnât do that.â
I nod. Itâs not the elevator now, itâs him, doing strange things to my body. Him being protective. Like Iâm one of his people.
âBut if you want to smell me, you can.â
I donât want to smell him. I donât want the warm weight of his arm to feel so good. I want him to stop making me feel alive and happy. I want to not perk up in some soul-deep way when our gazes find each other from across a crowded room. I want him to not seem to admire the Vonda in me.
I want that not to feel amazing.
I lean in closer, stealing what doesnât belong to me. My head isnât exactly on his shoulderâitâs difficult to do that when youâre wearing a hard hat. But itâs close.
He brushes a lock of hair over my shoulder. His knuckles graze my jawline. His touch is featherlight. Barely there.
But the energy of it hums over my skin, spreading outward in a burn, like fingers of heat warming cold, remote parts of me.
I fight the urge to turn my face to his hand.
âYou look hot in the hat,â he says.
âYouâre just saying that.â
But when I do turn my head, his eyes are dark. Serious.
His voice lowers to a rumble. âIâm not just saying that, Vicky.â
Oh, I want to kiss him. And, if anything, an elevator shaft that looks like a well should be reminding me why I have an allergy to rich, powerful men. Itâs not.
His eyes drop to my lips. My heart pounds.
The elevator grinds to a stop.
Iâm shaking when we step out into wide open space, twelve stories over Brooklyn. And itâs not about fear.
Open blue sky soars above us and massive pillars of concrete surround us, stretching upward. Chains with links bigger than my head are coiled in piles, and there are stacks of wood and massive metal things like strange Legos.
I stroll to the far side, near a squared-off column. Thereâs a brightly spray-painted scribble on the concrete surface. Not from the 1970s, but new. Everything up here is new. Raw.
I toe the orange scribble like itâs more fascinating than the royal babies of England, but really I need to be apart from him, because Iâm reeling from the goodness of his arm on my shoulder. The forbiddenness of ever falling for him. Of thinking heâs falling for me.
He comes up next to me.
I act like the operation of tracing the squiggle with my toe is of urgent importance. âSomebody went Jackson Pollack with the spray paint up here.â
âThatâs actually a message. Itâs there to show the electricians the alarm conduit placement.â
âHow can you even read it?â I ask.
He kneels next to me, and his dark suit jacket stretches over his thick, solid arms as he points to different parts. âThis is orientation. Right here is just a measurement. The fact that itâs orange means any kind of telecom, but thisâll be an alarm, of course.â
Of course, I think. Such a construction nerd.
I stand, biting back the urge to run my hands over his shoulders, to get in on the tautness of fine fabric over solid man muscles.
He twists and looks up at me, chin stubble glinting in the light. My heart is in my throat.
I force my gaze back to the scribbles. âThe colors tell you?â
âJust like you see down on the street.â
âYouâre all secretly communicating with each other?â
He stands. âYellowâs natural gas. Redâs electric. Blue is water.â
His nearness affects me like a drug. My eyes fall to his lips, and I shiver.
âYou cold?â
Iâm not, but heâs taking off his jacket and putting it over my shoulders now, cocooning my arms, and I like it very much. I like how warm and soft it is. I like how he adjusts it so precisely, like he cares greatly for my comfort.
I tell myself the idea he cares about me is an illusion. Wishful, magical, ridiculous thinking.
Ancient people thought the stars formed pictures of archers and bears and gigantic spoons, but can we be honest for a moment? Theyâre just stars. They donât form pictures, no matter how many stupid diagrams you make. Like the stupidest dot-to-dot puzzles ever.
Thatâs what Iâm doing with Henryâs affection. Making pictures that arenât there. Elaborate diagrams of him wanting me. But it feels so real.
He holds the lapels of the jacket snugly shut, his breath gusting warm on my forehead. âIâm so glad you could see this.â
His tender gaze sizzles over my skin. Like heâs really looking at me. And then he smiles.
His eyes sparkle. Uneven dimples appear. Itâs his Henry smile. The real Henry smile.
I reach my hands out from my coat cocoon and grab his soft, warm shirtfront, pulling him to me.
I kiss him.
Boom. He deepens the kiss. My kiss was soft, but his is rough and wild. With his other hand, he cradles my cheek, fingertips trembling with energy where they touch my skin.
âVicky,â he rumbles. He walks me backward into a massive concrete pillar.
My hard hat falls down over my eyes.
âNo, no, no,â he rasps, yanking it clear off my head and tossing it over his shoulder.
Because he wants to see me.
Somewhere behind us thereâs a splock, and a softer splock as the hard hat comes to rest. I can barely hear it over the hurricane of my pulse whooshing in my ears.
And I want him so bad, Iâm shaking.
He fists my ponytail. My breath hitches as he slides the backs of his fingers up my throat, up to the tender underside of my chin. His touch sears me.
âHenry,â I say, trembling down to my toes.
âI love watching my name on your lips.â His voice is ragged.
Silently, I mouth his name: Henry. And then again, Henâ
He doesnât let me finish; my lips are still open when he kisses me, a desperate, open-mouthed kiss with the fury of a thousand senselessly whirling stars.
He shoves his hand into my hair, cradling the back of my head, pressing me back against the cool concrete post.
I can feel the shape of him against my belly, huge and hard. I want to wrap myself around him, to dissolve around him. To obliterate myself on him.
His breath is ragged as he bends to get our lips level. I reach behind him, fitting hungry hands around his warm, solid back, digging in with my fingers a little.
He makes a growly sound as he rains kisses over my cheek, my neck, before taking my lips once again.
The cool breeze caresses my exposed legs, but underneath my clothes, sweat trickles down my spine.
The entire building seems to sway in time with my thundering pulse, in time with Henry, pressing himself to me.
Somewhere down on the street, trucks and cars rumble by and honking horns are answered by other honking horns.
Heâs still wearing his own hard hat. Itâs sexy.
His breath turns erratic as he runs his hands over the sides of my hips, up and down. âYou and your skirts,â he says, like my skirts are a point of awesomeness.
Without warning, he grips my assâclenches it hardâfingers like steely vise grips. He jerks me against his rock-hard erection and I gasp to feel the size of him through our clothes. âYou feel that?â he snarls, notching himself to me, pulsing against me. âThatâs how you have me every day. Damn! You already feel good.â
âOh my god, yes,â I breathe. He presses me harder. His weight feels amazing. I gasp as he kisses my cheek, my neck. Every time he moves, the pressure between my legs changes and my ache builds.
Iâm pulling up his shirt, freeing it from his pants and belt. Finally I get to his warm abs. I press my hands there. Iâm a thief now, taking whatâs not mine. Consuming his belly, rough smattering of hair over muscle.
I donât care if itâs not real anymore. Itâs real enough.
âIâve imagined this for so long,â he says, pulling away, panting.
I shiver as he skims his fingertips over my sweater-clad breasts âThese fuzzy sweaters.â
âTake it off me,â I say. âLet me watch you unbutton it. Like before. How you started to before.â
âHave you been thinking about it?â he asks. âYou been beating off to it?â
âYes,â I breathe.
His fingers tremble as he unbuttons the pearl buttons of the sweater. I love that heâs trembling.
âPull up your skirt, then,â he says.
I hunch over and pull it up, turning it inside out, gathering it up.
He pushes a hard-cut thigh between my legs. âRide it. Move. Iâm gonna need you good and wet.â
âI donât know how much more wet I canâ¦â
âRide it,â he growls. He gyrates his hips, getting up the rhythm. I match his movement, moving while he undoes me. Itâs a little embarrassing, but it feels so good.
âHarder,â he whispers in my ear. âIf you want me to undo these dainty buttons, you gotta do your part.â He nudges my legs wider. âRide.â
I do it. Satisfied, he returns his attention to the buttons.
âI look at these buttons sometimesâ¦damn,â he pants. Like heâs lost his ability to make sense. He kisses my forehead. âYou watching me down there?â His fingers are soft spiders at my midriff, undoing the third-to-last button. The second-to-last button. âUnwrapping you. You watching?â
âIâm watching,â I say.
âIs this what Iâm doing when you beat off? Donât bother trying to tell me you donât.â He knows it is. He flicks the last button. My sweater falls open.
His thigh between my legs is blunt waves of pleasure. He fists the center of my cami, uses it to pull me into a faster rhythm. âI love how you move on me.â He skims his palms up the front of me, sliding over the white fabric, calluses catching and snagging. âLike this?â he says. âIs this what I do to you next?â
âNext,â I pant, âyou do whatever you want to me.â
His chuckle is a rumble in my ear. He curls his fingers around the tops of the bra cups and jerks down. I gasp at the violence of the movement. My breasts pop free with a jiggle.
âJesus, youâre hot,â he says. He throws off his hard hat and kisses me roughly, then pulls away, panting.
âWatch my hands, kitten, watch what I do to you.â He presses his hands over my breasts, rough and warm. âSo hot. My cum would look so good right here. All over these pretty tits. You look so prim and proper, it makes me want to corrupt you. It makes me want to unravel you. There are so many layers to you, and Iâm going to fuck them all.â
The layers comment sends momentary alarm through me, but then he plucks my nipple, and the zing of it flares bright white inside me.
âSo entitled.â My breath speeds. The city spreads out below us like another world, another time, dizzying and slightly unreal.
âWhy arenât you riding?â
âI need something else there now,â I say. âBut isnât this a little bit exposed up here?â
âNobody sees you but me,â he says.
I think it might be true on a level he doesnât mean. I donât know how to feel about that. He slides the pads of his fingers over my lips. Lust runs thick between us.
âOpen.â
I gaze up at him, knuckles grazing his steely abs.
âWetness is not going to be a problem,â I say.
âBaby.â The word feathers my cheek. âYouâre not the only one beating off to things these hands might do.â He slides a thumb over my bottom lip, pulling it down. âOpen.â
I open and he slips two fingers between my lips, into my mouth. âSuck. Get them nice and wet. These are the fingers that are going to fuck your pussy.â
Heat rushes through me as I palm his bulge, as I suck his fingers, as I run my tongue over them. He slides them in and out, watching me.
âThis is how youâre going to suck my cock when the time comes. Except youâre going to squeeze the root and give me a little teeth on the bottom. Try it.â
Itâs so Henry to give me a tutorial on sucking his cock. I wrap my hand around his fingers and give him a little graze with my bottom teeth.
âOh yeah. Perfect.â
He pulls out his fingers and anoints my nipples. They pebble in the cool breeze coming off the water.
âOnly I see you.â
He pulls aside my panties with rough efficiency and curses, low and rumbly, when he finds me waxed and wet.
âFuuuck,â he groans. âWhat have you been hiding under these librarian skirts?â
âNot books,â I say.
His fingertips brush my sensitive clit, sending a jolt of pleasure through me, making me gasp.
A dimple appears on his cheek and I kiss it. It goes away, but then it appears again and I kiss it.
âWhat are you doing?â
âBeing so into you I can barely think,â I say.
He pulls away, panting, eyes wild, beard stubble sparkling. âOh, yeah?â
Suddenly I feel bare to him. Not just physically, but soul-deep bare. As if his fingers are everywhere inside me. âYeah.â
He slips rough, thick fingers deeper between the folds of my sex. My head tips backwards onto the hard pillar, eyes drifting closed.
âOh, yeah,â I say as he slides them against my clit with the perfect motion. He changes his angle, and this new sensation swirls through me, making me senseless and lightheaded.
âDo the nipple pluck thing,â I whisper.
He breathes out a shaky fuuuuck. âYou are soâ¦everything.â He does the nipple pluck thing and I cry out. Itâs rougher than I expected. Better than I expected.
He exhales a shaky breath and kisses my cheek and then my ear. His teeth graze my earlobe, sending wicked lightning all through me. He plucks my nipple again, softer this time.
Itâs like heâs learning me. Exposing my secrets. Stripping me bare for the first time.
His fingers send rippling heat up through my core.
His strokes go long and strong. He slides two fingers in. I suck in a short, sharp breath.
âI gotcha, baby.â
I crash over the edge. White-hot pleasure. Naked and alive.
âI gotcha, baby.â He pins me to a pillar high above the city, raining kisses over my face. Iâm lost. Iâm found. I clutch his arms, kissing him back.
âDamn,â he says again. As though the whole thing surprised him.
I feel shaky all over. And fresh and new.
I donât care whatâs real or not.
Iâm all-in.
I drop to my knees, gazing up at him. I fit my hand over his bulge and give it a small squeeze.
âJesus.â He tunnels both hands into my hair, half ripping it out of the ponytail holder.
With shaking hands I undo his belt. He takes over, quickly undoing it. âLeave it to the professionals,â he says.
And then he touches my chin. I think heâs about to explode, but he touches my chin. Like he kind of canât believe Iâm in front of him.
I love his eyes on me. I love the sunshine of his gaze. I usually prefer the shadows, but Henryâs breaking all the rules.
I pull him out; heâs big, broad, and club-like, pink at the tip. Soft as silk.
Watching him from underneath my lashes, I give him a lick.
He stutters out a breath. âDo you know how hot that is?â
So I do it again. I really will give him anything.
I turn my attention to his cock in earnest. I take him into my mouth, squeezing him at the root. A pained sound escapes him. Fingers close over my head. He starts to thrust gently into me, guiding my head but not forcing it.
A triangle of his belly is exposed and it pulses in and out, like heâs breathing double time.
I squeeze the warm, velvety base of him. I take him deep.
His fingertips pulse and curl at my scalp with every thrust, like his excruciating pleasure is coming out his fingers. I sneak a look at him standing over me, broken and beautiful.
And then I give him a little teeth, just a graze at the bottom. âHoly shit,â he says.
He clamps his hand onto my head and takes over the motion, fucking my face, coming with a strangled cry.
After he pulls out, he kneels in front of me. âHoly shit,â he whispers.
âYeah,â I say.
He traces my lips with his finger. âIt was more. How you were was more than I imagined. Youâre always more.â
I put my camisoleâs bra cups back over my breasts. He starts buttoning up my buttons. Clumsily.
âThe professionals,â I say, taking over.
He stands, tucking in his shirt. âGotta get you cleaned up.â We get ourselves together and drift over to the elevator.