The Dom of My Dreams: A BDSM Novel (31 page)

I blushed at her brazenness and glanced up at Seton.
 
He was staring down at my feet, his eyebrows collected into a frown.
 
He was looking at the ankle bracelet, which peeked out of my old Nikes.
 
Shit!
 
Why couldn’t I just take the damn thing off?

His gaze rose to mine and studied me, his face expressionless, eyes deep green pools that glimmered with an unidentifiable emotion.
 
He surprised me by flashing me a dimpled smile.
 

“No, thanks, sis.
 
Shopping isn’t for me,” he drawled, replying to Dana’s quip.

I let out a surprised breath when he suddenly curled a hand around my waist and enveloped me in a one-armed bear hug, resting his chin softly on the crown of my head.
 
I stood stiffly against him, my arms sagging on either side of me.
 
He lingered there as his hand slid from my waist down to my derriere—giving it a firm, possessive squeeze.

I gasped in shock and palmed a hand over his chest, trying to push him slightly off of me, but he didn’t budge an inch.
 
So I just stayed there and took a deep breath to calm my now speeding heart, but my senses were filled with the scent of him.
 
The spiciness of his aftershave and cologne combined with sheer masculinity did funny things to my pulse rate.

Finally, he pulled away and took a few steps back.
 
A naughty little smile tugged his lips—lips that were full and lush and begging to be kissed.
 
I shoved my hands into my pockets and tried to ignore the tiny sparks of desire that flared through me.

“See you soon, Miss Fordham,” he said softly, looking at me like the Cheshire cat before turning away.
 

Dana flashed me one last grin before she joined her brother.

I said nothing, just stood there, stunned, as I watched Seton and Dana stride toward the park’s exit and to his Mercedes.
 
I bit my bottom lip in mortification when I heard Dana softly ask, “Did you just grab her arse?”

 

 

 

Chapter Ten

 

I knocked on Mitch’s door just before nine o’clock, two bottles of red wine in my hands.
 
I fidgeted and bobbed one of the wine bottles against my hip as I waited.
 
I’d had a couple of martinis at a bar on my way over to gird my loins.
 
I would have sex with Mitch tonight, no ifs or buts.
 
This was my last resort, one last desperate attempt to forget about Seton.
 
It was either this or a lifetime of obsessions and heartbreak.
 

 
          
I had tried everything, Lord knows I had, to forget about Seton, and yet I turned to mush the moment he approached me.
 
When he cupped my rear end at the park, I knew I’d sleep with him again if he asked me—or rather, ordered me—to do it.
 
And speaking of which, why had he done that?
 
What was with the public display of flirtation, and in front of his twin sister?
 
He was just as bold when we danced at Samantha Minou’s book launch party three weeks ago.
 
One minute he was cold and distant in public, and the next minute he didn’t seem to care if others saw us together.
 
Which begged the question, why?
 
Why was he so full of contradictions?

I was getting tired of trying to figure Seton out.
 
Tonight I would enjoy myself.
 
I’d have sex for the sake of having sex, just like old times.
 
Just soak it up.
 
Live for the moment.
 
Fuck ‘em and leave ‘em.
 
Have fun and move on.
 
Never look back.
 

Mitch answered the door, looking adorable in a burgundy UMASS t-shirt (my alma mater) and black jeans.
 
He brushed a soft kiss across my cheek as he took the wine bottles and let me in.

           
“You look nice,” he said as he walked to his kitchenette.
 
He put one bottle in the fridge and twisted the foil off the other, removing the cork from the bottle’s neck with ease.

           
I muttered a thank you and studied my reflection in a full-length wall mirror.
 
I had made an effort to look at least somewhat presentable for our tryst.
 
I wore a navy blue camisole and a denim skirt that reached mid-thigh. Three-inch strappy sandals covered my feet.
 
I wore no bra—only a blue silk thong—to feel sexier.
 
But I didn’t feel sexy.
 
I felt nervous.
 
Sighing, I wound my hair tighter against the butterfly clip that held it together and ambled over to the living room.
 

           
“Thanks for coming,” he went on as he served wine into two glasses.
 
“I didn’t think you would.
 
What with you thinking I wasn’t good enough for you and all.”

           
I rolled my eyes at him.
 
“When have I said that?”

           
He flashed me one of his naughty Mitch grins and shrugged.
 
“Never.
 
I just wanted you to contradict me.
 
It’s always nice to be reassured.”

           
 
I snorted softly and scanned his bachelor pad.
 
Mitch owned one of those expensive condos on New South Street.
 
He had the usual bachelor-like furnishings—lots of leather and expensive gadgets and sports paraphernalia.
 
He even had one of those tacky leopard-skin area rugs on the hardwood floor.
 
Piles of boxes were strewn across one corner of the living room.
 
He had started packing already.

           
“What are you going to do with this place after you move to New York?” I asked him.

           
He was moving around the kitchenette in an energetic, almost agitated state, putting away things, washing off something in the sink, keeping busy doing all kinds of unnecessary stuff.
 
Hmm.
 
How very odd.
 
He usually just got down to the business at hand—meaning sex.
 

           
“I’m subletting it to a couple of Smith girls,” he answered after taking a long swig of wine from straight out of the bottle.
 
Then he sauntered over to the living room with the two glasses of wine.
 
Under normal circumstances, I would have cringed at his bad manners, drinking out of the bottle like that, but since he and I were about to exchange bodily fluids, I figured there was no point in being nitpicky about such things.
 
“WASPs, politicians’ daughters who refuse to share a dorm room with a lowly scholarship student,” he added, scowling.

“But I thought you liked the Smith girls.”

           
“Not when they’re snobs.”

           
I smiled at that.
 
It was nice to know that shallow Mitch had some decency after all.
 
“Where will you live in New York?”

           
“I’ll be staying with one of my new colleagues while I look for my own place.”

           
“It won’t be easy finding a place there.
 
You’ll be paying more rent for far less square footage than what you’ve got here.”

           
He sighed.
 
“I know.
 
It sucks.”

           
“Whatever extra money you make from the magazine won’t be of any use to you.
 
You’ll spend it all in your rent.”

           
“Is this your way of telling me that you want me to stay?”

           
I laughed.
 
“Yes, Mitchell, please stay!”

He smiled.
 
“Sorry, babe, but I can’t.
 
Not even for you.”
 

           
Smiling, I sat at one end of his big black leather sofa and tucked my legs up under me in what I hoped was a sexy and relaxed way.
 
Mitch sat at the other end and set the glasses on two coasters on the coffee table.
 
He smoothed down his jeans with his palms and threw a sideways grin my way.

           
“So, this is it,” he said.
 
“Our last night together.”

           
Nervous, I reached for my wine and downed half of it in one gulp.
 
“Uh huh.”

           
He laughed.
 
“Well, don’t look so distraught about it!”

           
I shrugged.
 
“I
am
sad.
 
You were a good friend to me, Mitch.”

           
“But you don’t want to sleep with me?”

           
“I do want to sleep with you!”

           
“You broke up with me, remember?”

           
I rolled my eyes.
 
“We didn’t break up,” I reminded him.
 
“We weren’t dating.
 
We were just fucking.
 
So I ended our… whatever.”

           
He nodded.
 
“I know that, babe.
 
But what about tonight?
 
Do you want to sleep with me, or don’t you?”

           
“I do.
 
Why would I be here if I didn’t?”

           
“I honestly don’t know.”

           
I drank more wine.
 
Mitch seemed strange tonight, kind of snappish.
 
He was hardly ever snappish.
 
He was happiness personified.
 
What was wrong with him?
 
Did he need another dose of ego boost or something?
 
“I do want to sleep with you tonight, Mitch,” I said in earnest.

He snorted softly and sank back in the sofa, one leg swinging idly.
 
“You gulped down your drink.
 
You always do that when you’re nervous about something.”

I raised an eyebrow at that.
 
He’d noticed that about me?
 
Amazing.
 
“It’s just…I…I’m going to miss you, that’s all.”

He believed me, because he slid over to my side and wrapped a hand behind my neck, pulling me toward him so he could kiss me.
 
Mitch wasn’t a bad kisser.
 
In fact, he was pretty darn good.
 
But as he moved his lips on mine, cupping my face with one hand and massaging one of my breasts through the flimsy camisole with the other, I wondered why he hadn’t stirred the same sort of response from me that Seton achieved with just one look.
 
At that moment, all I wanted to do was push Mitch away and tell him to keep his mitts off my body, because I felt nothing.
 
Nothing at all.

I palmed his chest with both hands and pushed him gently away.
 
He looked at me with quizzical baby-blue eyes.
 

“I can’t do this.
 
Sorry.”

He frowned.
 
“Why not?”

“Because I…Why did you run off at the park today?” I burst out.

           
A confused silence filled the room.
 
The sounds of the town square traffic filtered up from the streets below.
 
We were on the fifth floor, a couple of blocks away from the main streets, and you could still hear all of the Saturday night hoopla from way up here.
 
Mitch blinked at me several times before grabbing his glass and downing all of the wine.
 
Hmm.
 
Now
he
was the nervous one.
 
Interesting.

Other books

Kissing Midnight by Rede, Laura Bradley
Finding Miss McFarland by Vivienne Lorret
The Deceiver by Frederick Forsyth
In the Shadow of the Lamp by Susanne Dunlap
Barely Breathing by Lacey Thorn
Divine Evil by Nora Roberts