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Pink Petal Books Pink Petal Books, an imprint of Jupiter Gardens Press, publishes romance novels where the r...
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Pink Petal Books Pink Petal Books, an imprint of Jupiter Gardens Press, publishes romance novels where the relationship is primary. It doesn’t matter if you want to read super erotic or sweet inspirational books. Pink Petal Books believes that love is a beautiful thing, no matter what form it takes. For more information about Pink Petal Books visit http://www.pinkpetalbooks.com/.
Additional Titles by the Author The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized editions and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated. Permission is granted to make ONE backup copy for archival purposes.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, places, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
SPINNING ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ISBN# 978‐0‐9827637‐4‐2 Copyright © JAIME SAMMS, 2010 Cover Art ® 2010 by Winterheart Design Edited by Mary K. Wilson
Electronic Publication Date: June 2010 This book may not be reproduced or used in whole or in part by any means existing without written permission from the publisher, Jupiter Gardens Press, Jupiter Gardens, LLC., PO Box 191, Grimes, IA 50111 For more information to learn to more about this, or any other author’s work, please visit http://www.pinkpetalbooks.com/
Ken gazed out the back window of the house to the waves; dark, rolling mounds lifted the horizon and dropped it again into the abyss on a rhythmic schedule. Gulls wheeled and cried over the water, white dots between the grey overcast and the darker ocean. "Newfoundland?" The incredulous accusation jerked Ken's attention back to the phone call, "Seriously?" "What about it?" Ken tossed his soccer ball up and caught it one‐handed. Held in his other hand, the cool plastic of his ancient cell warmed against his ear. "Um...it's a rock, for starters." Mikko's indignation echoed thinly across the poor Atlantic connection. "Nothing grows there." Ken's breath caught and his grip on the phone tightened. "So?" Belligerence, he noticed, had no echo. "You can't re‐grow a broken heart, anyway." Gardening is for idiots who fall in love. He fixed his gaze on the barren rocks outside the window, taking comfort in their never‐ changing strength. The waves rose and fell on the same cadence as his breathing. Or maybe it was the other way round. Silence didn't echo either, strung out along the line. He hung up. Sea waves splashed up over the rocks. He gulped in great breaths around the jagged edges. After a moment, the chirping ring tone soothed over his uneven breathing, and he flipped the phone open. "I know it's tough, Kenny." "You don't know fuck all." He snapped the phone closed again. A minute passed. Another. His knuckles ached. If he loosened his grip, he'd throw the damn thing. It wasn't Mikko's fault. Or the phone's. Still, he turned it to vibrate and tossed it onto the coffee table as another minute ticked past. The ring's vibration carried it almost to the floor before he lunged after the phone. His momentum carried him to the window and he leaned his forehead against the glass. The waves rolled in steadily as he opened the phone and held it to his ear. "So where are you staying?" Mikko's voice drifted, soft over the connection. He never stayed properly hung‐up on. "Why does it matter?" Ken turned away from the ocean view and tossed the ball. This time it thumped off the wall, onto a bare table behind the couch, and obediently back into his hand, just like a soccer ball should. Gravity was predictable that way. Not like men. "Because if I know you," came Mikko's reply, "and I do, you searched out some pre‐ furnished dump of an apartment and are sitting on someone else's lice‐ridden mattress bouncing that ball of yours against paper‐thin walls. Any moment now, an irate neighbor's going to come screaming down on you, and I should know where to send the cops after your bruised and bloodied self." "It's a room, actually." Ken caught the ball on its second trip and hugged it against his chest. "I'm not sitting." He glanced at the grungy couch and grimaced, turning back to the comfort of the watery view. "No one wants to live this close to the ocean since the Wave hit. It was cheap." "Even better." "Shut it."
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Spinning Jaime Samms
PPB
Chapter One Ken gazed out the back window of the house to the waves; dark, rolling mounds lifted the horizon and dropped it again into the abyss on a rhythmic schedule. Gulls wheeled and cried over the water, white dots between the grey overcast and the darker ocean. "Newfoundland?" The incredulous accusation jerked Ken's attention back to the phone call, "Seriously?" "What about it?" Ken tossed his soccer ball up and caught it one‐handed. Held in his other hand, the cool plastic of his ancient cell warmed against his ear. "Um...it's a rock, for starters." Mikko's indignation echoed thinly across the poor Atlantic connection. "Nothing grows there." Ken's breath caught and his grip on the phone tightened. "So?" Belligerence, he noticed, had no echo. "You can't re‐grow a broken heart, anyway." Gardening is for idiots who fall in love. He fixed his gaze on the barren rocks outside the window, taking comfort in their never‐ changing strength. The waves rose and fell on the same cadence as his breathing. Or maybe it was the other way round. Silence didn't echo either, strung out along the line. He hung up. Sea waves splashed up over the rocks. He gulped in great breaths around the jagged edges. After a moment, the chirping ring tone soothed over his uneven breathing, and he flipped the phone open. "I know it's tough, Kenny." "You don't know fuck all." He snapped the phone closed again. A minute passed. Another. His knuckles ached. If he loosened his grip, he'd throw the damn thing. It wasn't Mikko's fault. Or the phone's. Still, he turned it to vibrate and tossed it onto the coffee table as another minute ticked past. The ring's vibration carried it almost to the floor before he lunged after the phone. His momentum carried him to the window and he leaned his forehead against the glass. The waves rolled in steadily as he opened the phone and held it to his ear. "So where are you staying?" Mikko's voice drifted, soft over the connection. He never stayed properly hung‐up on. "Why does it matter?" Ken turned away from the ocean view and tossed the ball. This time it thumped off the wall, onto a bare table behind the couch, and obediently back into his hand, just like a soccer ball should. Gravity was predictable that way. Not like men. "Because if I know you," came Mikko's reply, "and I do, you searched out some pre‐ furnished dump of an apartment and are sitting on someone else's lice‐ridden mattress
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bouncing that ball of yours against paper‐thin walls. Any moment now, an irate neighbor's going to come screaming down on you, and I should know where to send the cops after your bruised and bloodied self." "It's a room, actually." Ken caught the ball on its second trip and hugged it against his chest. "I'm not sitting." He glanced at the grungy couch and grimaced, turning back to the comfort of the watery view. "No one wants to live this close to the ocean since the Wave hit. It was cheap." "Even better." "Shut it." "So. Where?" "What difference does it make?" You let me go. He smothered the logical, unwelcome follow‐up that'd been impossible to stop, and Mikko had never been far, oceans notwithstanding. He always, always, answered his phone. Maybe he was a bit more like gravity than he was like other men. "Kenny" Mikko's voice caressed his soul, even over the crappy connection. "Talk to me. Tell me what happened." He could be so gentle. Ken's fingers shook as he closed the phone on that sweetness—that gentle caring. Not even a minute passed before the phone amplified his trembling with its vibration. He opened it, brought it to his ear. This time, Mikko did not speak. "Everyone leaves," Ken whispered at last, into the waiting silence. Bits and pieces. Memories more recent that Mikko, more painful, loomed up again. A back turned, a broken admission. "I'm not strong enough. I can't keep you in check." Those words had been the end. If Ken left physically, it was only because there was nothing to stay for. Those memories were the rocks he smashed himself on again and again. "You're the one half a world away from him." Mikko's voice tugged him carefully back. "I don't want to talk about this." "You don't want to tell me where you are. You don't want to tell me how you got there. Why did you call in the first place?" Ken choked a countering question past the tight constriction in his throat. "Why do you keep calling back?" Because you're you. He knew that answer already, and behind Mikko's sigh came the tap of computer keys. Trust Mikko to still be using a physical keyboard when holo‐ keys and virtual screens worked so much faster. Trust him to know Ken would use a phone just as old as that computer; a phone only its ancient contemporary could trace. Ken smiled to himself. Trust Mikko to keep that old shit around, on the off chance Ken gave him the opportunity to need it. Swallowing hard, Ken pulled the phone from his ear, and held it where he could stare at it, where he could watch his own hand not closing it. His fingers tightened around the instrument, his arm around the ball, crushing it to his chest. It was time to hang up again. The distant drone of a motor, tires rattling on the gravel road outside the house, caught his attention. He had a bike. Ken gravitated toward the front of the house, but his little room in
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the back didn't have even a window that showed the street. The sound rumbled by without slowing. Ken's attention drifted back to the phone. Time... His own name, crowed down the line, compelled him to draw it back to his ear in time to hear Mikko let out a little huff. "Gotcha." He closed the phone and set it on the coffee table again. If he was going to run, it had to be now. He glanced over his shoulder, to the arch in the wall and the alcove beyond. His backpack sat on the bed, packed before he'd first dialed Mikko's number. He'd managed to stay at least one step ahead of his former lover for years, spurred by Mikko's disinterest in him to keep his distance and search for the connection he craved in the arms of anyone who'd treat him with a firm hand. He'd never done well without that guidance. He needed someone to submit to when things inside him got loose. He had never found a way to get the chaos settled, get the pieces back in place without help. By the time Mikko had noticed he was in trouble, he'd already fled. Funny how his lover had no time to worry about him until he was gone, and then he'd spent every waking hour for months trying to track him down. And Mikko was a good Tracker. The best. Ken knew this. He'd learned how to be very elusive prey. Hard experience taught him not to trust in the safety of promises, so he never gave Mikko the chance to make them. He couldn't be hurt by broken ones if Mikko couldn't make them in the first place. Most of all, over the years of avoiding going back to the one place he'd almost felt safe, Ken had learned not to fall in love. Until now. Until him. The last guy had slipped under his guard, needing just as much as Ken had, and for a while, they'd leaned on each other. It would have worked, too, if Ken hadn't lost control and scared them both. In the end, his lover hadn't been able to help, and all Ken had left was the jagged edges of more broken promises. He'd come so close to feeling safe. Secure. He'd built a home for them, planted a garden, done all the things a man happy and in love does. Then just as he began to let go, to trust, to share what he truly was, he was told no, his truest heart turned away. And Ken did what Ken had always done. He ran. To the most barren place he could find, where there were no pretty houses, just the run down, worn out remnants of the old order. Nothing grew here. Mikko was right about that. It would take a supreme effort to create anything resembling a garden on the rocks outside this house, and Ken liked it that way. No reminders of what he'd almost had. At first, he might have hoped the sea would swallow him up, but it only rocked the horizon, washed the rocks and lulled him into stopping, staying, letting the loneliness drive him almost beyond hope. Now, he wrapped himself up in the knowledge Mikko was coming. He couldn't run another step, except into oblivion. But even Mikko was at the mercy of commercial airlines. Since the crackdown on private jets and giant air busses with their environmentally hideous fuel consumption, crossing the ocean had become prohibitive and time consuming. That gave Ken time to fade back into the world, away from his former lover. All that bound them could remain loose. He'd be alone. But he'd stayed on the line just long enough for Mikko to find him, and that simple act meant something.
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Besides, here, he'd found something he'd never encountered in the rest of his travels. He couldn't explain what it was. The Waves that had devastated so many coastlines at the beginning of the century had nearly wiped out this city, and recovery had been slow. Now, he knew, on a bone‐deep level, such devastation was not going to happen here again. He didn't understand how he knew. He just knew. That knowledge of safety from nature's wrath slowed his flight impulse, but didn't quite stop it. Without realizing he'd done it, he'd risen, moved toward the bed and his belongings. His fingers closed over the collar of his coat on its hook, but he didn't lift it free. On the couch, the red patches of leather on his soccer ball bounced the light from the bare bulb dully back at him. His phone remained quiet on the black plastic table. Why had he called? Why had he stayed on the line? Simple questions. And an even simpler answer. Everyone left. Even he had run when he'd gotten scared. But not Mikko. Never Mikko. Ken let go of the claw‐hold on his coat and slumped back to the couch. Elbows on knees, he leaned forward and touched one finger to the red plastic of the phone. They could be safe here, if he stayed. If he waited. "Hurry, Mikko."
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Chapter Two Ken couldn't stay cooped up forever, though. He watched out the back window, gaze skimming over the desolate rocky yard to the waves, already black where the setting sun didn't reach them. The last rays, turning the spray golden as it rose into the air, beckoned him out to the edge where rocks met sea. Stretching out his hand, he let the sea's burnished droplets settle over his skin. Each drop could be a tiny piece of himself, lost on the run and found in the peace of this spot. If only reconnecting wasn't an agony of all those sharp, broken edges piercing his heart. He could barely remember the last time he'd felt whole, and what he did remember of it wasn't pleasant. Fractured hurt less. Here, on the very tip of the east coast, perched over the ocean, it felt like the end of the world. People called it The Battery, maybe because of the way the ocean battered itself against the cliffs. Sometimes, the fury of it shook the earth under the constant onslaught. Ken just felt connected, to the solid rock under his feet and the constant movement of the water. He couldn't explain it. He wasn't sure he wanted there to be an explanation. The last rays dipping below the roof of the house behind him took the glimmer of water on skin with them. He shivered. Shadows closed over the world, pushing him back inside as darkness encroached. Even with every light in the room on, he felt shadows creeping in the cracks around doors and windows. Dark seeped into his soul until he couldn't stay still, had to outrun it. Grabbing up his coat and keys, he headed for the door. No one went out in the Battery after sunset anymore, reinforcing his suspicion the night was alive. He dared the prowling darkness to touch him, goading his own fear into belligerence as he wheeled his only real possession from the garage. He'd bought this motorcycle used and damaged almost beyond repair, but he'd figured out how to fix it, searched out the parts, and now it ran like a charm. No hover bike for him. Even the smallest personal hover vehicle required an implant, and he had no interest in the innocuous chip that would communicate with Central Core to power the anti‐grav units that kept the things afloat. The bike he had required a tank of biodiesel and his hands on the bars. That was as technological as he got. He climbed on, ignored the pulsing darkness and revved the engine in defiance. Turning the bike southwest, he headed inland. The Outer Road was deserted, and the loud roar of his bike drew no attention from the mostly dark houses. At the end of Outer Battery Road, he closed his eyes and let the wind choose his direction. It nudged him left, out of town and up toward the cliffs overlooking the tiny cluster of houses. He sped off up Signal Hill Road. The long backtrack toward the ocean had the wind spraying in his face, cold and salty against his skin. More than once, he closed his eyes to better feel the icy fingers through his hair, caressing his cheeks. The bike sailed Spinning 5
along the cracked highway and he grinned wildly as it bumped and jolted over the rough road. Nothing like a hover bike, this machine was alive. He felt every nuanced twist of the metal beast between his legs. The road spoke to him through the vibrations, and he didn't need his eyes to keep a steady line down the middle of the old tarmac. If he didn't need to keep his hand on the throttle, he could have spread his arms wide and flown, as free as he ever got, shedding the broken bits and pieces like old skin, washed clean by sea spray and wild wind. His own voice drowned under the growl of the bike as he laughed. Mikko was coming. The dark couldn't touch him through Mikko or the salt wind of the ocean. He let himself sink into the hot vibration and sound of his machine, hunkering down and sensing the sheer drop of the cliff to his left, the expanse of empty rock plain to his right. Once again, his eyes drifted closed. The wind spoke to him of the undulations of the land, the smoother expanse of the road, the void of the drop off; a whisper in his ear telling him when, where, how fast. It seeped into his skin and bone, sang through his blood, connected him to the untamed land and sea. The whine of a hover truck couldn't compete with the animal grind of gears and tires on the hard surface. The song of the wind pulled back from the intrusion, and only the glare of lights and the sheer grinding of the truck hitting earth alerted him. Gravel sprayed into his face, abrading skin and stinging against his exposed throat. He jerked the handle bars to the left, skidded into a long tail spin that left the back wheel of his bike whirring into space, the entire machine skidding to a stop on its side. For a moment, he lay with it, one leg pinned, his mind spinning off down the road without him. The sound of the hover's engine purring back to life, pumps whooshing and the pop of the anti‐grav unit displacing the vehicle back into the air registered in his brain. The choking cloud of dust it left behind brought him back to himself. "Fuck." He struggled a minute, trying to sit up and get a look at the retreating vehicle. He shouldn't be surprised they left him there. Not many people who still owned wheeled vehicles were people you wanted to meet alone on a dark, deserted road. After a few attempts, he flopped back, arms spread on the hard ground. "Bloody hell." If he stayed there too long, all the tiny shards of himself would catch him up. Determined not to let that happen for one night, at least, he struggled up, kicked at the bike until his leg was free, and felt along the stinging flesh for any really bad lacerations. His fingers met with lots of shredded denim and skin and bloody gravel, but nothing deep. The sharp agony of his own touch drove the last shocked fog from his brain, and he stumbled to his feet. Out across the expanse of water, the old lighthouse still stood guard, casting its brightness onto the mirror of dark water and throwing a beam along the rocky shore. Far below where he stood, it illuminated a graveyard of tankers and fishing trawlers where they poked brokenly from the swells. The last great Wave to hit this shoreline had torn them all away from their berths, decimated the docks and harbor and deposited the shattered hulls here, where wave after endless wave of angry sea continued to batter them to pieces. They were home now to the sea life they and their sailors had almost decimated, the resources to build more locked in their decaying metal flesh. That disaster had been among the last of the really big ones, the East Coast Waves having died down less than a decade earlier. People still waited fearfully for the next devastation. Ken knew, as deeply and as surely as he knew anything, that the Battery was safe, that the entire
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city was safe, and Newfoundland and her inhabitants had made the right decisions, not rebuilding in the same vein as what had been destroyed. He tried to recall when it had started, but there was no one day the world fell apart. It came on so gradually; a river flooding that hadn't breeched its banks in a hundred years. A tornado on a logging road north of nowhere where tornadoes didn't happen, forest fires threatening homes, electrical storms, heat waves, droughts, and Britain buried in snow. Then Thailand, New Orleans, Haiti; and those had just been the beginning. In the intervening decades, the sea had risen up against the land, or at least, those dwelling on it, storms battered humanity's strongholds, and the earth shattered their cities. At some point, natural disasters stopped being news in the same way car accidents lost their novelty except for those left behind. Only so few seemed to be left. He remembered the first news cast when the announcer sat stupidly watching with his audience as the live camera panned over the devastation and no one offered up a body count. Maybe the day they stopped counting is when people knew it wasn't going to go away. And some, like Ken, like Mikko, watched it all. Long after they should have fallen victim themselves, if not to nature's wrath, at least to time, they watched nature wreak havoc, watched humanity decimated, and hid their own inexplicable survival, mostly by moving. When you never aged, staying in one place more than a few years got dangerous. Especially when the Ageless seemed to be universally spared the agonizing deaths of disaster aftermath; disease, drought, hunger, they realized remaining in one place too long would be the thing that killed them. They searched out safety in numbers, sometimes; Amsterdam being the first and most secure haven for those who couldn't or wouldn't disappear. Ken might have chosen the safety of an Ageless enclave if he'd realized he had the choice. But he'd met Mikko, and at the time, it had seemed enough. For those first, heady years, Mikko had wanted him, and the rest of the world had gone away, to hell and back, but Ken had been too preoccupied to notice anything other than Mikko. Not until Mikko had started taking more of an interest in the world, and less in Ken, did Ken think to worry about his own safety, and by then, it had been too late. Amsterdam was a closed city and the others like it had quickly followed suit. Civilization should have fallen apart. Everyone had expected it to. But somehow, the old dog of humanity learned a new trick, and people started to get along, if only for a while. Most were convinced technology saved them. Maybe. Ken doubted that. He'd survived it all without a single enhancement, without tapping into the Central Core in even the most basic of ways that almost every citizen on the planet was connected. Sure, there were plenty of non‐citizens who weren't connected, but they tended to keep to themselves, live closer to nature and have less interest in what was left of civilization. They had mostly rejected the cities long before the cities rejected them. Ken was just stubborn. He could live a loner life, but he couldn't survive alone. It was a fact of his nature he'd come to accept; the physical discipline of a good Dom didn't leave him emotional room to fall apart. The trouble had always been finding a good Dom. Plenty of bad ones had come and gone. Maybe he just couldn't tell the difference any more, but none of them could contain the wild instincts to flight or fight anymore. Crouched on his cliff top, Ken peered down into the waves. The eternal lights on the ghost ships, charged by sunlight seeping through the shallow tide by day and glowing up from the depths by night, made the roll of water surreal and vibrant. The shadows of halibut and cod, finally left to grow to their natural, full lifespan, floated through the old hulks. He
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pressed his palms against the rock under his hands and felt the waves' reverberation right up through the stone. It sent an answering tremor of pleasure through him, and he strove to recapture the exhilarating brush of the feral wilderness on his soul. Under his palms the rock warmed. Heat rose up through him, soaking into his skin, flushing through his blood. His hands sank into hard granite. For a heartbeat, it was the most natural thing in the world to see the stone respond to his touch. Then reality set in and he scrambled back. Left impossibly in the rock's surface were two parallel hand prints. The adrenalin rush of fear helped him right the bike. It roared back to life and carried him away down the highway and back toward civilization where insane things might happen, but at least not impossible ones. Miles disappeared behind him, and before he could shake the panic, Murphy's Line loomed, one dim street light picking the intersection out of the surrounding black. The deserted conference center passed, a ghost building looming grayish and empty, and then Cabot Avenue. He ignored the urge of the wind to turn his machine toward home and instead pointed it along Duckworth Street toward town, a drink, and the possibility of someone else's control taming his chaotic thoughts. He ended the ride at Anthony's, where the drink was assured. The company he sought might not materialize, but he hoped just being among other people would be enough, even if few of them were Ageless. They didn't have to know he was. Not tonight. Inside, music permeated every corner, vibrating up through his feet and setting his bones to quaking. The main room of the little bar was full, if not packed, though few of the faces were familiar to Ken. He didn't go to town more often than he had to, and those he came into contact with when he did weren't the type to frequent a fetish bar. So many people. The dim lighting offered everyone the same vague disguise, the same shadows where they could flit around the edges of the light. The shadows gathered closer about Ken. Dark fog drifted up, seeping into the room through the floor boards leaving pale, uninterested faces floating around the room. He ran a hand over the back of his head, wondering suddenly if he'd rattled it against the pavement when he'd gone down. He blinked and shook his head, slightly. There was no blood back there, no lump. The room cleared, or his vision did, and people moved about again as they should. Ken backed a few steps toward the door and turned, just in time to plant his nose into the chest of a very tall, wide shouldered man. "Uh." He stopped, rigid, one hand coming up automatically to brace himself and landing against the man's hard muscles. A huge mitt of a hand gripped his wrist and lifted it off. "All right there?" The deep, east coast accent, coupled with the firm fingers circling his wrist and an all‐over body tremble left Ken breathless. Here was the company he needed. He fixed his gaze on the denim shirt covering the broad chest in front of him, and nodded. Am now. "Come on." A wild flight of nerves left Ken feather light and easy to lead away toward the back of the room. They traversed the loud main floor of the club in a few long strides, though each time
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Ken set down his injured leg, a jolt of pain made him gasp. He doubted his companion noticed. They pushed through a thick curtain covering a doorway in the far wall, and Ken noticed this room was slightly better lit, if smaller. There were few people back there, and all the small alcoves and private corners seemed deserted for the moment. The man holding onto him pushed him through another heavy curtain. He'd expected to find himself in a small, private room, ideal for a good, quick pounding or a pumping blowjob. Instead, he was hauled into a well‐lit storage room and deposited on a high stool. "Sit." He didn't have much of a choice. The man was huge, probably capable of crushing Ken's bones with his bare hands. He sank onto the stool, bottom lip tight between his teeth, and after a moment, when nothing happened, he looked up. His companion was a big man. And a gorgeous one. Dark eyes gleamed out of a wide, high‐cheek boned face, and full lips curled into a tiny bit of a smile. He watched Ken's face for a long minute before he spoke. Penetrating brown eyes looked right past the fuck‐me‐now mask Ken had plastered on. "You're a mess." Ken frowned. "So fix me." The man leaned close. His breath smelled of smoked fish and beer, but not overpoweringly so. Like he'd had it for dinner, not like he'd been in a bar drinking all night. "Doesn't work that way, precious. Fix yourself." "Fuck me, then," Ken offered, needing at least the grounding of a strong hand holding him down, settling the chaos of twitching muscles and restlessness. Instead, the man kicked a box toward Ken and nodded at it. "Put your foot on there." "What?" Ken glanced at the box, and back at the man. "Your foot." He gestured to Ken's scratched up leg. "There." He pointed to the box. Ken glowered. "Okay." The stranger stepped back, crossed his arms over his chest and tilted his head to one side. "Let me take care of those cuts, then," he tilted his hips forward, accentuating the generous bulge at his crotch. "Then you can take care of me." Ken nodded. "Good." The man knelt down to one knee and proceeded to untie Ken's boot. "You should probably lose the jeans, too." He stood and backed away again, giving Ken room to get them off, freeing his own burgeoning erection from the tight denim. It made a striking impression against the fabric of his underwear, and he knew it. He'd long ago lost the guile to care that his body reflected every thought that went through his head. Just the idea of kneeling at the big man's feet was enough to get him going, and the anticipation of taking that big of a cock in his mouth made him hard. He saw no point in hiding it. People came here to get off. He'd come to find someone to get off on dominating him. Pretending otherwise was pointless. The guy made no secret of appreciating the effect he had on Ken, either, though he did shake his head a bit. "Trading first aid for sex. Quite a piece of work you are."
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"That a problem?" Ken's heart thudded, his nerves jumping sporadically, stomach churning with sudden uncertainty. "We'll see." He pulled a first aid box off the wall and once again knelt at Ken's feet. His touch was surprisingly gentle as he swabbed at the worst of the abrasions. "You did a number on yourself." "Bike skidded." He nodded. "Then you're lucky." Ken said nothing as he watched thick fingers carefully wield the antiseptic pads to slough away blood and gravel. As gentle as he was, it hurt, and the pain fogged over his clear thought. "Mostly not as bad as it looks," the guy declared at last. "Or feels, probably." Ken lifted a shoulder, which set off a hard shudder through his entire body. The ache and sting had given him something on which to focus that wasn't rock melting under his fingertips or shadows creeping out of the corners to enfold him. While he was trying not to flinch, he didn’t have to wonder why he couldn't hold himself together. Another violent judder just about knocked him off his stool, and he put out a hand to brace himself. "Okay." The man steadied him. "Not much more. Just want to bandage up a few of the worst bits. Handle it?" Ken nodded. Let him think it was a few scratches that had him shaking and shivering with uncontrollable chills. Explaining would only make him look crazy, and he'd been down that road enough times not to want to go there again. Some Doms did unpredictable, unpleasant things when they thought their subs were too out of reality to care. Tonight, Ken wasn't that far gone. The bandaging step didn't take that long, though Ken still shivered uncontrollably as his companion cleaned up the bloody pads and bandage wrappings. "You did good." That unexpected bit of praise brought Ken's head up. "Come on. This is no place to take care of you properly." "You said..." Ken's protest drifted off into silence as the guy gathered up his boots and socks and jeans, then him, with an arm around his waist, and led him from the room. None of the few guests in the outer room bothered to even look up as he followed, half dressed, from the storage room to another door, this one with a lock on it. The guy pulled out a key and opened the heavy, mahogany door. "Lock?" That wasn't good. The dull ache of the wounds on his leg, worse for them having been prodded at and poked for the past half hour, eclipsed Ken's ability to form a complete thought. But locked doors, with a bigger, stronger man holding the key, didn't translate well, even in his pained and chaotic state. "Don't worry. I'm not going to hurt you." Ken twisted around, back the way he had come, but the door closed in front of him, and he heard it click. He'd learned over the years—the hard, devastating way—when to fight and
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when not. He turned around again to face the man, hands clasped in tight knots at his sides. A deal was a deal, and he had his bandages. A quick glance around showed him they were actually in an office, complete with heavy wooden desk, a small kitchenette in one corner, and a long, comfortable looking leather couch near the door. A large expanse of windows, now thoroughly covered against the night by thick drapes, took up almost one entire wall and a floor to ceiling laden bookcase another. Not what he would have expected in a bar. "Sit." The guy offered the couch with a gesture. "Not a social call," Ken pointed out. He bent his bandaged leg, feeling out how best to get down on his knees or his ass in the air, whatever the guy wanted, and get out. "Sit. Down." Ahhh. If only his body didn't react to the power in that voice before his brain did. Or maybe it reacted instead, because his brain shut down. His knees buckled and he plopped his ass on the couch. "Better." One of those beefy hands caressed his face, curling through his hair, and lifting his chin. Ken's heart pounded, his pulse raced and he lifted up reaching toward the promise of giving over control. But that was all he did. He just looked at Ken, studying his face. "Do you have a name, then?" "I can be—" The handsome face hardened, his gaze darkened slightly, burning through some of the confusion and focusing Ken's attention. "Your name." "Ken." Barely a whisper of breath carried the truth out of him, though he'd long ago determined not to reveal anything real to strangers. "Good Boy." Ken shivered in response to the praise. "Call me Dean." Even with the hand holding his face, Ken managed a nod. "When's the last time you ate?" "Wha‐‐?" "Food? Did you eat today?" As though the question set off his body's awareness of itself, Ken's stomach turned over and he shook his head. Dean's thumb caressed Ken's lips. "Who would leave a creature so exquisite in such a state?" he wondered aloud. "He didn't mean...He wanted...It wasn't like that," Ken finished lamely. "I left him."
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The man shook his head, denying the words. As if he knew anything at all about anything. Abruptly, the big man stood, turned on his heel and strode to the kitchenette where he puttered for a few minutes, speaking over his shoulder. "You didn't leave of your own volition no matter who hung up on who or who walked out the door first. He did something to make you feel like you were already alone. A boy like you doesn't leave his Master. Can't." He came back and handed Ken a small bowl of very hot soup. He wasn't my Master. But they'd been in love. It had taken months and months to finally admit he wasn't ever going to get what he'd needed from his lover, though, and the agony of knowing he had to leave had nearly killed him. "How would you survive on your own?" Dean asked. "Coming here is like a vampire surviving on rats. Some subs just need a Dom. I understand that, but some need more than just any Dom. Ken scowled into the bowl of soup, decided it was miso, and took an experimental sip. "Good soup." "Of course it is." After a minute of watching him, making sure he sipped, Dean reached over to brush a bit of hair from Ken's eyes. "You can't keep doing this." "Doing what? Ken looked up from the delicious food to find the guy holding out his boots, socks and a pair of sweats. "I own this place. It isn't the first time you've been here." "So?" "So." Dean sat on the couch beside him. "Take the clothes. Probably huge on you, but those jeans are done, and it's getting cold out. Sea Witches coming in tonight." His smile was not quite as mocking as it could have been at mention of the old wives' tale. "Drink up and get home before it gets any worse." Ken finished the last of the soup and set the bowl down. "Worse?" He tried to make his voice light. "What's worse than marauding sea witches?" He took the offered clothing and crumpled it in a pile in his lap to hide his cooling erection, his fingers clenching around lost hope. "You know it's out there." Dean rose, paced, settled with his ass on the edge of the desk across the room. "I saw it in your eyes when you came in. You know something is out there, and it doesn't like us." "Us." Ken's fingers tightened on the clothes again, clenching sporadically around nothing. "People." "Ageless," Ken guessed. "People in general, but maybe Ageless in particular." Ken squinted at him. There was never anything conspicuous about them. Only the feeling they'd seen more, knew more than they wanted. Or maybe, that was just Ken's seeing himself reflected in the dark eyes. "You're one." He didn't really need confirmation. As soon as he said
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it, the feeling fell into place, and he knew Dean was a whole hell of a lot older than he looked. "Do you think it's true? What they say about us? That nature created us to fight for her?" "I think we're immune to a lot of things the Young are not. I think I'd rather spend my time creating than tearing down, and that I can see things, ramifications to the environment others just don't understand." "As though someone is telling you." He nodded. "This is good," he held out one hand, palm up, "this is bad. Don't do it." He held up the other, then closed it into a fist. "Mikko says that's why he joined Morgan's Green Peace in the first place. To stop the shit that shouldn't be happening. I don't know if he still feels the same. Not about the world, but about Morgan..." "And Mikko...?" Dean moved back, perching on the coffee table in front of Ken. "Is he the one you left?" "No." Ken dropped first his gaze, then his head. "He's coming for me." "Then what are you doing here?" The question came across with that baritone slant of sea and wind in his voice, and Ken looked up. "It's hard. Being a submissive without a Dom, but you won't find peace here. Not the kind you're looking for." "You?' "Have a very willing partner, tempting as a lovely, needy thing such as yourself is." "Too bad." Ken openly eyed the man's broad chest, his slim hips and sighed. It would have been nice to have those big, strong hands manhandling him into whatever position was required. At six‐one, and well‐muscled, bigger and stronger weren't things he found often in a decent Dom. "Not that I wasn't tempted, you understand," Dean clarified. "But I'm no more what you need than any other random stranger." "And yet." Ken smiled. He felt calmer, more centered than he had in weeks. He lifted up one hand and it didn't tremble. "I have that effect on people, I'm told. Now get dressed and get on home. I wasn't kidding about things getting dangerous. I can't put my finger on what it is, but the wind doesn't like it any more than I do." Ken remembered the rock under his hands, the way it conformed to his half‐thought, like wet cement to pressure, and shuddered. He didn't ask Dean what he meant by the wind comment. He wasn't sure he wanted to know.
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Chapter Three Mikko called from the airport two days later. While Ken's interlude with Dean had calmed him for a time, the intervening days of waiting, of listening to the odd wailings of the wind and the sea surging against its bounds, of remembering all the sweet kisses and tender touches he'd left behind, intimacies with a lover who couldn't handle him, had unhinged him. Remembering the man he'd loved more than life and his inability to give Ken what he needed, had turned him back in on himself again. He didn't think Dean would appreciate his showing up for another round of pep talks, though, and so he'd weathered the wait alone in his room, looking out to sea, and avoiding going outside if he could help it. Only in the early mornings, when the quay was almost deserted did he venture to the city outskirts to a small coffee shop where he could watch the arrivals announcements on the public holo‐screen. No one travelled through the air now without the whole world knowing and watching. Only Morgan and his organization managed to foil roll call, so Ken had to watch for likely flights, and ignore the names. Mikko would never travel as himself. With that in mind, the morning the first flight from Amsterdam arrived, Ken moved his vigil to the airport. The security scans stopped him cold at the door, erecting an almost solid invisible wall of resistance as red lights and micro‐vibrations washed over him. People took the next gate over, casting suspicious glances and whispering, never quite loud enough for him to hear, but obvious enough to make his hackles rise. That cost him another scan as the monitors recorded his elevated body temperature. He forced himself to relax and let the technology screen him, yet again, into the suspicious entity category. He'd been wandering around the airport, making himself inconspicuous for a day and a half when his phone finally vibrated in his pocket. He fixed his gaze on the arrivals gate as he pulled it out and flipped it open. "That was inhumanly fast," his fingers whitened around his phone. The deadly grip didn't help to keep his voice from shaking.
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"I have inhuman amounts of cash to throw at things that matter." Mikko's voice purred slightly under his matter‐of‐fact tone. The warmth was soothing, and Ken's fingers relaxed a fraction. For the first time in forever, Ken smiled. He mattered. "Now. Come pick me up." The ring of command may have been light, but it was there. It seeped under Ken's skin, into his bones. A shiver ran up his spine, and his hand shook as he lowered it onto Mikko's shoulder from behind. To his credit, Mikko didn't even flinch, just tilted his head slightly. His earpiece zipped neatly into its little shell‐like case behind his ear, the thin mic snapping up into its slot. He turned, and his bright blue eyes riveted Ken in place. "And here you are." "Here I am," Ken agreed. His heart pounded, but the butterflies he'd fought for two days settled. Mikko had come. After years of Ken's shit, he'd come. "Been waiting long?" Mikko slung the strap of his duffle over his shoulder and snapped open the long black plastic handle of his suitcase. Ken shrugged. "First plane from Amsterdam arrived yesterday morning at nine." Ken eyed the earpiece with a little frown, his hand rising slightly, like he might touch the modification. A smile touched Mikko's lips. "Amsterdam. You give me credit I don't deserve. They don't let just anyone in there, you know. Not even their own kind, anymore." He frowned and adjusted the strap over his shoulder. "Our own kind. The last time they opened their boarders, they had to turn people away, and they refused more of us than Young. Our kind are not all that, Kenny, and the Young are getting nervous. Frankly, I don't blame them." "Our kind," Ken muttered. "We're all human." "But only a select few of us, relatively speaking, live three hundred years, and counting. When's the last time you met an Ageless actually dying of old age? They're bored. Here." He swiveled the suitcase and held the handle for Ken. "You can take the heavy one." "Shit." Ken gripped the handle tighter. "What the hell is in here?" Mikko's eyes lit up and he smirked. "You're high maintenance, you know. I came prepared." "It never occurred to you a grav‐lift would be handy?" Ken scowled at the heavy case before yanking it onto its two wheels. "Unnecessary technology." Mikko clucked his tongue. "We're Ageless. Technology only gets in the way." He turned Ken toward the exit. "Wheels on the ground, my friend. Otherwise, you get nowhere." "So then what's with the mod?" Mikko tapped the shell‐like implement, now resembling a simple decoration, fused to the skin behind his ear. "Staying connected," he wagged a finger at Ken, "that's different. You call at the most inconvenient times, and far be it from me to miss a call because I lost my phone. Besides, every legit Tracker has mods coming out every orifice. Keeping up appearances makes life easier." He led the way toward the exit.
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"A study in contradictions," Ken grumbled. "You told me most Trackers are Young, so they need mods to keep up with their prey. I thought you kept yourself clean to prove some point or other about the Ageless. So no one could track the Great Tracker." Mikko turned, fixing Ken with a pinched little smile. "Sometimes, staying under the radar means hiding in plain sight. If they can see the blip, they can ignore it. A blank screen makes them nervous, hence the need for Trackers in the first place. But no one looks twice at the guy just doing his job. A small concession," he ran his index finger over the earpiece, "to keep them from looking too close." "And what do you have to hide?" Ken smirked, a cold pleasure creeping into his gut at the thought of Mikko—perfect, untouchable Mikko—hiding out from Big Brother. "You." Mikko touched Ken's cheek tenderly. "For me." This time, Ken did reach up and touch the modification. His fingers brushed the shell of Mikko's ear, trickled down his cheek, where the mic hid behind seemingly flawless skin. "You did this for me?" "Kenny." Mikko pulled the hand away from his face, squeezed his fingers, and let him go. "You just don't get it, do you? Come on." He walked away again, tossing a quick glance back over his shoulder. "One small modification is nothing. No one stays off the grid anymore. Trying just makes them peer at you more closely." Ken wondered who they were. The last he'd heard, Mikko worked for them, so why would he be worried? "What about wheels to the ground?" he asked. Mikko grinned. "You still have that bike, don't you?" Ken nibbled on the inside of his cheek. "Maybe." Mikko chuckled. "Then you're half way there." Ken didn't bother to point out, however they looked at what he'd done with his life didn't amount t0 much more than spinning his wheels. That's all he'd been doing for years. He followed as Mikko stepped through the sliding doors. The security scans didn't even blink at Mikko's passing. They flashed bright red as Ken stepped through, making people glance at him and look quickly away. Someone muttered something about how old he might be, and he scowled. The invisible barrier slowed him, resisting his forward progress as he was scanned again, and the mumblers drifted away. He sighed and stopped, allowing the crimson tide of light to wash over him. After a pause, the barrier thinned, and he was allowed to pass through it with a little pop of air in his ears. "What have you been up to?" Mikko wondered aloud. Ken didn't answer. Security scans had never liked him. He was used to it. At the curb, and hovering five feet above, a dozen cabs waited in two rows for convenience. Ken headed for the ramp to the hover platform and the faster conveyances, but Mikko had already pulled open the door of a wheeled vehicle and ducked his head in to request the trunk be opened. Ken sighed and changed course. "Wheels on the ground," he muttered. Mikko waited on the sidewalk, watching Ken heft the weighty bag into the trunk, and then motioned Ken into the back seat beside the duffle he'd tossed there. When Ken was 16 Jaime Samms
seated, Mikko slammed the door closed, preventing his escape, and slid into the front seat. He turned and peered through the gloom of the interior. "So? Take me to this lousy room of yours." Ken glanced from Mikko to the cab driver; anachronistic, being driven around by some grunt, but trust Mikko to avoid the programmed vehicles. "A hotel?" Ken suggested. Mikko's frown indicated well enough the suggestion was not going to fly, but Ken continued anyway. "There's a nice one downtown for you to toss some bills at..." "No." "My place is...I don't think you'll—" "Like it?" Mikko's brows rose. "You know I won't. You'll still show me." "You don't own me." Ken's teeth sank viciously into the inner flesh of his cheek. "I'll take you where I damn well please." "I want to see the place you picked for yourself. The place you think is worthy of you." You don't own me! Ken sat back with a sigh. Wasn't ownership what he wanted? But what he wanted didn't necessarily go with love. He'd loved Mikko once. And he still loved the man he'd left. After a minute, he managed to draw his gaze back up. Mikko watched him, waited, no indication why he was really here. A phone call, after so many years of running away, shouldn't be enough. The plastic door rest was cool under Ken's fingers. The door wasn't locked, the cab not moving. He could step out. He didn't. His gaze dropped, focused on a small split in the vinyl that covered the back of the front seat. "That's what I thought," Mikko said, his voice remaining gentle, soothing. "Meter's running, Kenny." Only a slight hesitation separated one moment from the next—Ken's defiance from his acceptance. This time. He muttered the address. The cabbie's expression was sure to give Mikko enough information on the type of neighborhood it was. Ken wondered if that's why he frowned.
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Chapter Four "Wow." Mikko stepped out of the cab and stared at the surrounding houses. "You can pick 'em, Kenny. Is this the most barren part of the rock?" "Shut it." Ken gazed at the house he'd been calling, if not home, at least shelter, for the past few months. Once‐white paint peeled and faded to blend into the overcast and the grey sea behind. Shutters and trim— possibly a remnant of the blue the landscape used to reflect, the deep color the sea might have once been—stood out in garish relief, like dark circles of exhaustion in a tired face. It had felt so fitting at the time. Now that echo of his inner self, exposed to Mikko's scrutiny, made him shift his weight, scrub a hand through his hair, look anywhere but at his guest. "Around back," he muttered, wheeling the suitcase along the cracked sidewalk between the house and the neighbor's sagging chain‐link fence. Mikko followed silently. At the back of the house, he paused and gazed across the yard. "Awfully close to the water, aren't you?" Ken glanced over his shoulder at the rolling waves. "Just water." He certainly wasn't prepared to explain the way the sea drew him, or how he knew it wasn't a threat—things he didn't understand himself. "Ken. It's the fucking Atlantic Ocean. Only a matter of time before the next Wave." Ken shook his head and turned back to the door. "Not here." "How do you know?" "Just do." He ignored the Mikko's calculating look. "The levies will hold." He parroted the official line, though his reasons had nothing to do with the levies. "Huh." Mikko didn't question him further, but his attention did remain on the yard. "Any of this yours?" "I rent a room." Ken jammed his key into the flimsy lock and yanked the door open. "What do you think?" 18 Jaime Samms
"I think," Mikko followed him in and closed the door carefully behind him, "that looking at that overgrown mess back there and doing nothing about it must be killing you." He glanced around the room, lifted an eyebrow, and gazed at Ken. "This just gets better and better." "Fucking strangers just doesn't pay like it used to," Ken snarled, dropping the suitcase in the center of the room. The lash meant for Mikko snapped back at him, though, and he grimaced. "Maybe it's time you found a new line of work, then," Mikko suggested mildly. "Where's the bedroom?" Ken pointed to the gloomy alcove. "I sleep on the couch." "Not anymore." Mikko strode to the recessed space, what might once have been the home's dining room before it was butchered to make rooms to let by the week. "Now, you sleep in the bed with me." Ken ground his teeth. "I should let you drown in your misery here?" The look Mikko gave Ken penetrated his soul. Ken found his hands shaking again. "You don't have to stay." "Might as well say I didn't have to come in the first place." Mikko picked up his duffle bag. "Stay!" Ken's fingers closed about Mikko's wrist. "Please," came out much softer. Mikko's pale blond brows rose up, and a thin, worried line appeared between them. His free hand lifted to rest on Ken's cheek. "Relax. I'm not letting you out of my sight." Ken flushed, heat rising into his cheeks, sweat dripping and cooling down his back, making him shiver. He leaned, shifting closer to Mikko. "The couch—" "Is off limits. Starting tonight, you sleep in the bed with me," Mikko reiterated. His fingers slipped down Ken's cheek, across his jaw. "Shave first, though." Instinctively, Ken's head turned into the touch, prolonging the contact. Mikko only smiled, carefully twisted his other arm free of Ken's grasp, and turned his back, facing the alcove and the bed inside. Ken ran a hand over his own jaw. "You don't own me," he whispered. Decidedly less venom seeped through the words this time, and he followed, a moth to Mikko's flame, as the man moved toward the bed. A deep frown turned Mikko's delicate lips down, shaded his blue eyes to grey. Ken watched, gnawing on his cheek and stuffing a hand into one pocket. The bed dominated the small space, though it was only a double; cramped for two full‐ grown men. The entire thing sagged on its metal frame, and one leg was propped up with an ancient Webster's Dictionary to make up for the missing wheel. A pale, green‐flowered sheet dragged on the floor on one side, and the thin quilt, shredded in some spots, didn't quite cover the whole thing. A lone, flat pillow leaned against the wall. Ken had never slept on that bed.
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Mikko approached, pried open the pack sitting on the mattress, and peered inside. Ken expected a comment that never came. Mikko just eyed him, picked up the pack, and set it on the floor in the corner. "Leave that." He motioned to the suitcase Ken was holding and waved him closer. "A proper welcome, now, yeah?" And there it was, what he knew had to come, and yet, Ken suddenly wished for more time. His limbs loosened, while his spine stiffened and his shoulders tensed. He needed space, time to process Mikko's presence before this. But Mikko was never one to back down or back off. He had come here for Ken, and now, he'd claim what was his. "Come here." Mikko reached and caught Ken's slightly swinging hand by the wrist to pull him across the floor. "Mikk—" The vague protest died on his lips as Mikko's descended. Ken braced himself, muscles along his shoulders tightening to near‐painful strain. Mikko's lips brushed his in the briefest, tenderest peck, barely a kiss at all. "So tense." Mikko caressed his cheek with soft fingers, searched his eyes. "What were you expecting? What did they do to you, Kenny?" Everything. Ken closed his eyes so Mikko could not read that answer in their depths. "Nothing you didn't let them do, though, love." Mikko's forehead rested against Ken's cheek, and he let out a sigh. The bit of warmth puffed across Ken's throat and collar bone. "But why, I wonder?" All his instincts drove Ken to snap an answer at Mikko. Because you weren't there. You let me go. He left. What was I supposed to do? It's all I know… So many answers. But not even Mikko could have held him back then, and Ken was the one who had never said no to the men who didn't care about anything except that he was a willing body. He had the scars, inside and out, to prove it. "Well." Mikko straightened, tugging Ken's shirt collar straight. "No more. From now forward, only good things. Starting with food." Mikko's hand grazed down Ken's side, somehow finding ribs and hip bones even through his clothes. "Skinny." He shook his head. "That will never do. What's in your refrigerator?" Imagining Mikko's reaction to what he'd find in there prompted Ken to grab him, hold him, offer something, anything else, even what a moment before he might have refused to give, if only Mikko would let this go. He didn't want to open that fridge and let him see the back‐lit emptiness and old waste. If his intentions showed, Mikko ignored it, marching past, toward the dim corner of the room that housed the fridge and cook top. "Let's have a look, shall we?" Ken sprinted after him, reaching around to plant a hand firmly on the door of the fridge. "No. Uh..." He scrubbed a hand through his hair, shuffled to place himself between Mikko and the appliance. "Let's just go out. Plenty of Indian places close by. You like..." "Move, Ken."
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"Look, I'll clean it later, all right? You'll be tired right now. Jet lagged. Let me take you out to eat, and then you can relax…" Mikko watched him patiently through the rushed diversion that was no diversion at all, but a screaming neon arrow pointing right at what he would have Mikko distracted from. "Unless you're keeping a dead body in there, I'm pretty sure some smelly milk and a few rotten apples are not going to be a huge surprise." Ken gulped a lungful of air, flushed at the unwitting accuracy of the barbed words. Maybe not an actual dead body, but the remnants of a plan… Well, he hadn't gone through with it. There was nothing to hide, really. Nothing Mikko couldn't, or wouldn't, guess soon enough anyway, and Ken was alive, had made it through the darkness, all on his own. He hadn't even called Mikko until that particular demon had been vanquished. He was fine now. Except he hadn't been strong enough to go back in the fridge and clean away the last evidence of his depression. Now, Mikko would piece the bits together easily enough. Still. Moving implied subservience. Offering that kind of trust and having it thrown back in his face hurt too much to risk. The memory of that pain pulled him like gravity toward defiance and non‐compliance; not putting himself in the hands of another man. He squared his shoulders. "Fine. It's a disgrace. Why bother, if we both know what you're going to find?" Mikko reached over, gently closed his fingers over the back of Ken's hand, and Ken realized he'd been rubbing at his own wrist fiercely. The spot burned now, showing bright red under his pale fingers and Mikko's tanned ones. "I know what I'll find," Mikko agreed, turning Ken by his light grip and walking around him. "Now I want to know how bad it is." "It's over, Mikko. It's passed." "How long have you been running from me, Kenny?" Mikko raised one fine eyebrow. "I can outwait you. You know this." A deep exhalation, full of reluctance, moved Ken out of the way at last. He pulled the door open as he moved. "Well." That delicate, expressive line appeared between Mikko's eyebrows again, though the rest of his face remained impressively neutral and calm. "How long has that been there?" A distinct odor wafted through the room, overpowering the dry scent of dust and disintegrating carpet. "Eggs." Mikko eyed the soggy carton. "Well." The heavy sigh was not lost on Ken. "At least you bought them in the first place. But why are they all broken, I wonder?" He looked up, and once again, Ken could not look away from his blue, penetrating gaze. There had been a vague plan. Rotten eggs stank faster than dead bodies, and Ken didn't want to be found a decayed, horrific corpse. He had the feeling Mikko read every intimate, painful thought right out of his head. He looked away. "Kenny." Ken couldn't look at him again. Not yet. Maybe not ever, now he knew how weak he really was. Spinning 21
"Ken." Mikko pulled his face around. "I'm glad you called me instead." The strained look Mikko fixed him with pierced his heart, and he could only nod. Guilt flushed his cheeks, made his palms sweat, forced him to drop his gaze again, though Mikko did not relinquish his firm grip. "You'll clean this out, now." "Yes," Ken whispered. Refusal never even entered his head. "Good boy." He touched his fingers to Ken's hair, as though he might ruffle it, then let his hand fall. If his voice was low, strained, Ken knew better than to react to it. It took more than an hour to get all the rotten food and the resultant stink out of the refrigerator. Mikko leaned against the back of the couch, watching silently, his expression troubled. As Ken pulled the egg carton out of the fridge at the very last, Mikko finally spoke. "Would you really have done it?" Ken stopped, unable to move, the limp carton in his hands and his eyes watering from the stink. "I called you, didn't I?" A thick glue of emotions clogged his throat and made the words hard to utter. "Yes. You did." Mikko's brow furrowed deeper. He crossed his arms over his chest. "This guy you left—" "Don't!" Suddenly, Ken was free to move. He tossed the carton into the bin, deep, protective instincts bringing him to his feet. "Don't put it on him. My shit predates him, and you know it. He was good to me." "He left you!" "He tried!" Ken's fingers tightened into fists. "He tried so hard. You don't get to judge him. You didn't even know what to do with me!" "I'm not judging anyone, Kenny. I just want to understand." Ken subsided, sinking back to finish his task, focusing his attention on pulling bits of egg carton off the glass of the refrigerator shelf. He scrubbed and rinsed, sprayed, scrubbed some more, before finally resting back on his heels and looking up at Mikko. "He tried, Mikko. He really did. He just wasn't strong enough. It wasn't his fault. It felt like it was at the time," he shook his head, "but it wasn't." "You still love him." For the first time, Ken heard uncertainty in Mikko's voice. "I might always love him. It doesn't go away because he stopped loving me." "I could kill him for hurting you." Ken shuddered at the darkness, the edge in Mikko's voice. "If you murdered everyone who ever hurt me, you'd be your own natural disaster." "Not everyone. Just the one who drove you to this." "If you hurt him, you'd lose me."
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"He deserves to hurt the way you've been hurt. He shouldn't get away with that." Mikko had pushed to his feet, balled up his fists. His grey eyes darkened with storms of fury. It took all of Ken's willpower not to rise again, to pin Mikko and his anger until he subsided. He managed to remain kneeling, but he did lift his chin. "No one deserves this. You leave him alone." Mikko smiled, not a break in the storm of his anger, but a flash of vicious lightning, reminding Ken just how dangerous he was. "I still own you, if you want to admit it or not. I was the first one who had ever tamed you. You always come back. I could make you do anything I want, and you think you can tell me what to do?" "This one thing," Ken insisted, his voice soft, but the rest of him ready. He'd break this last tie, sever his connection to Mikko forever if he had to. No one was allowed to threaten his lover, ex or not. He set his jaw, lifted his chin a little higher. "This one thing." Mikko sauntered over, limbs loose and shoulders swaying, to touch a finger under Ken's chin. The contact connected to that place in Ken that had never quite let go of them, their past, everything he'd always hoped for from this man, and he shivered. "And what would you say if I decide you only get one thing? Will you still waste it on him?" "Even if it means becoming your slave, yes. His happiness and safety are not a waste." "You'd risk your freedom? Your own safety and well‐being for him?" Mikko gripped his chin, lifted it a bit higher. "You would never harm me," Ken told him, his voice shaking only a tiny bit. "And that's the difference, Kenny." Mikko released him to pet a hand through his hair. The smile lost a bit of its glare, turned soft as his eyes gentled. "That is the difference." He backed off, then, and shoved his hands into his pockets. "He's safe. I won't touch him." "He's tougher than he looks, anyway. You probably couldn't touch him." Mikko smiled a real smile at last. "I'm sure. You don't fall for fools or weaklings. Thankfully, we won't have to test your theory. You asked me to leave him alone. I don't have to like him for doing this to you, but I will leave him alone. Your wish, after all." He jutted his chin at the fridge. "You done?" Ken nodded. "Good. Put out the trash and take a shower. We're going to the market." He paused. "This place does have a market?" "Aren't you tired?" Mikko merely lifted an eyebrow in reply. Ken blushed, turning his attention to the ties on the trash bag. When he was done securing it, he looked again up at Mikko, an automatic gesture for permission to rise, performed before he even thought about it. Mikko nodded, his expression unreadable.
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It was enough. For now, Ken took it as tacit permission, and scrambled to his feet. So far, none of Mikko's orders had anything to do with sex. That reassured Ken, but after so long, subbing for so many men, searching for just a taste of what he'd almost had then lost so abruptly, Ken defaulted. Mikko just accepted it as though he'd expected it all along. Not, Ken noted, with the enthusiasm of someone who wanted it. Ken's insides churned, and he forced down the memory of those few words that had sent him out from the warmth and safety of love he'd been so sure would last forever. Trying to hang onto the numbness he'd found here, he tossed out the trash and headed for the shower.
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Chapter Five The market had been built after the last Wave had hit this region. Scavengers had used the remains of the city that had almost been destroyed. On the outside, the black rubber of the tires forming the walls had been painted over, and the concrete roof, rounded and cupped to capture the rain, looked out of place, like a series of mushroom‐shaped huts, huddled at the feet of the steel and glass high‐rises that mocked nature. Closer inspection of the older buildings showed the ugly tarnish of salt water and the distorted warp of Plexiglas used to replace the panes of glass the sea had destroyed. The shine of modern buildings had been washed away with years of waves, and the levies that had protected the Battery had diverted the devastation right to the city's feet. Inside, the market space was bright, flooded with natural light and the vibrant colors of fresh‐grown fruit and vegetables. A display of apples arranged in rows of golds, greens and reds captured Ken's imagination, tugged him back to thoughts of the apple trees he'd grown in their garden. He'd been so close. The reminder caused a hard constriction in his chest. "Do you cook?" The question caught Ken off guard and pulled him back from his thoughts. Just as well. He diverted his gaze from the stand holding the baskets of apples and gripped the handle of the pushcart. The wheels squeaked along over the cement floor, rattling the metal cart as he pushed it forward, and heads turned. Around them, most shoppers had their own grav‐lifts trailing in their wake. It left the market eerily quiet, and Ken gave the cart an extra little shove just to fill the void. He shook his head. "No. He did. I guess I just bought the food to..." he let out a huff of a breath. "Protein packs are fine." "Not likely. We'll start with easy stuff." Mikko chose a bunch of carrots and a head of celery and placed them into the cart. "Grab one of those, will you?" Ken followed his pointing finger to the pile of ten‐pound bags of potatoes. "Easy stuff?" He grunted as he lifted the bag into the cart. It dropped into place, sending up a whiff of dry, clean dirt.
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"Baked potatoes, steamed carrots. Easy stuff." "You want me to cook?" "Not want. Require." Mikko stopped at the next display and picked up a tomato. "These are plum tomatoes." He held up the oval fruit for Ken's inspection. "They're good for cooking; spaghetti sauce, soup, things like that." "Hey. I didn't agree to this." Ken let go of the cart and backed up a step. "I'm not—" "Give a man a meal, and you feed him for a day." Mikko set the tomato aside and picked through the rest of the display for the ones he wanted. "Teach me to cook and I feed you?" Ken glared. "Something like that," Mikko agreed mildly. "No. I'm not going there again. In bed is one thing. You want a wife. He wanted a wife with a dick. Fuck. He didn't know what he wanted. I didn't..." "You have to trust me, Kenny." Mikko touched his face, turned his head to bring his attention back to vegetables. He pointed to the small pile of choice tomatoes and handed Ken a bag. "Please?" "I do trust you." Ken took the bag and held it open. "No you don't." Mikko gently loaded the tomatoes into the bag. Ken sighed, watching Mikko's profile. "No. I don't." "I'm not him. I'm not leaving." "He said that, too." Both men watched Mikko's repetitive motions of putting the fruit into the bag. Ken imagined doing this with Mikko years from now, imagined what that might feel like. "I‐I can't." "You can't be happy?" Mikko gave him a look, as though he'd read Ken's thoughts. "T‐trust." Ken slowly rolled up the bag. "Everyone leaves. If you told me no, too…if I gave you this part of me, this power, and it turned out you didn't…couldn't." Ken looked up at him, unable to hide the tears he'd been shedding every day for months. "If you didn't want me either, I'd have no one else to call…" Mikko took the bag and placed it in the cart. "I will let you put that on me for now, Ken, because you need to protect yourself a little while longer. At some point, we will have to redress it. Today, we buy groceries and make dinner, and if I ask you to do something, you do it with the knowledge I'm asking for a reason, and the reason is good for you, okay? Tomorrow, we'll decide if we continue." "'Kay." Ken cleared his throat, nodded, and tried again. "Okay." They gathered onions, garlic, peppers and moved from produce to meat where Mikko chose some lean beef and a package of spiced sausage. "It will be okay, Ken. I promise."
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"No promises." Ken still stood apart, hands clenching and unclenching. "No promises. They'll only get broken." "Be careful, Ken. I'll allow you're skittish. I won't allow you to pin other men's shortcomings on me. I have plenty of my own, and you will have the chance to point out the legitimate flaws. I know you don't trust me right now. You don't even trust yourself, but don't worry. You will." Ken watched as conviction changed Mikko's face, made it sharper. He wasn't sure he liked being on that knife edge. Mikko set the meat in the cart, touched Ken's arm, and smiled a smile that stretched too thin over his impatience. "Push the cart, Kenny. Let's get this chore done so we can go home." Ken nodded, rested his hands on the cart handle, and took a few slow steps. Moving released some of the tension, and he examined the cart’s contents. "What is all this stuff for, anyway?" Ken followed Mikko through the aisles as he selected spices and few more items. "Mostly, spaghetti sauce." "The one you always used to make?" Ken's mouth watered at the thought. He hadn't eaten real cooking in so long, and bubble packs of protein supplement and fiber replacement might be cheaper, but it was not the same. "I love that stuff." Mikko turned a mild smile on him, the mood of a few moments ago evaporated. "You're going to make it." "But—" "I'll take you through it. It's not hard." Teeth firmly planted in his cheek, Ken nodded. The rest of the shopping happened quietly. They made a quick trip through the home section, where Mikko chose new bedding and linens that Ken would have had to perform unpleasant things to even worse men to be able to afford. Mikko just tossed it into the cart without ceremony. He pointed kitchen items out, explained, and asked what cooking implements Ken had. Ken listened to the lecture, thoughts snagging on the expense of the items in the cart. No one spent that much money on someone like him without expectations. He chewed his cheek raw, and shrugged a lot, only half listening to Mikko's questions. He couldn't answer most of them, and each one he couldn't respond to turned his stomach until it was in knots. It was terrifying, how little he knew about basic things. Or maybe the terror came from revealing his ignorance to Mikko and risking the other man's judgment. Mikko had to be wondering how he had survived so many years on his own. He dreaded the confessions that would come when he finally asked. "No one else ever required me to cook for them," he snarled as Mikko asked yet another cryptic question. "While it's true the services that have been demanded of you in the past haven't required a lot of specific skills, you'll find my requests are going to be a little more involved." Mikko had been scanning the boxes on the shelves as he walked. Now he turned to look at Ken. "You've relied on strangers for too long, Kenny, and I can't imagine what most of them have offered has been kindness. You'll have to stretch yourself now. Try." Ken pointed at the cart. "This seems more like you want me to be your housewife! How do you expect me to pay for any of this?" Ken gave the cart a little shove, sending it against Spinning 27
Mikko's leg and the contents sliding out of their neat piles. Mikko's cold gaze set Ken's nerves quivering. He'd pushed too far. He didn't want to hear the words of reproach, the disappointment Mikko would surely reveal if he opened his mouth. Ken turned, already traveling the shortest path to the door. "Ken!" The sharp, whip‐crack sound of his name catapulted Ken out of his anger. For one split second he was in another place, under gentle rain falling on a roof built with his own hands. In his mind was a different voice, a different face, a different fear. The world dropped from under him. He buckled. "We'll discuss this at home." Mikko's voice in his ear stopped the fall. His hand on his back grounded him, and he blinked. He was back in the market with the freckled face of a concerned cashier peering up at him, unsure how he'd arrived there from the aisle. Ken twisted away from her, fixing his gaze on Mikko's shoulder. "I want to go." "We have to pay." Mikko placed Ken's fingers on the cool metal of the conveyer belt counter, and for the next ten minutes, Ken breathed, focused on Mikko's slim hands bagging groceries, on the steady beep of the scanner, and tried not to think. "You're okay," Mikko assured him as they finally left the market. "Nothing is okay." He didn't really remember the trip home. His mind drew him back through too many sweet memories, promises, kisses, so many things to miss. Why couldn't he remember any of that stuff with Mikko? Had it been so long? Had there been so many men in the intervening years? Or maybe the kindness was a fiction he'd created that had never really existed. He glanced beside him on the seat of the cab at the mound of bags full of fresh, expensive fruit and bit his lip.
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Chapter Six "How did it fall apart?" Ken sat on the crumbling upholstery of the couch, with the soccer ball crushed against his chest, a cold, useless comfort. Mikko had firmly insisted he help with unpacking, but the task had been lost in the same roiling fog as getting home. His mind couldn't focus on the simple motions of putting cans on shelves, but it flung itself about inside his head, poking at all the open wounds and tinging the sweetest memories with a bitter edge. Now, he stared out the window and gripped his ball as though it might offer some sort of protection from that acid touch left behind on everything he loved. "Things fall apart sometimes, Kenny." Matter‐of‐fact again. Ken glanced up, looking into Mikko's blue eyes, but he looked quickly away again. There was no sympathy there. No hurt feelings, either, or damaged pride. Just...Mikko. He settled himself next to Ken on the couch and reached over, resting his hand on the top of the ball. "Sometimes, you just can't stop life from happening, and it isn't always going to happen how you might like." "We made so many promises," Ken whispered. "People do." "I was never going to leave him. Not ever." Mikko pushed hair out of Ken's eyes. "You still haven't. Not really." He slid a little closer, bending to try and peer into Ken's face. "But he's no good for you, Kenny." "Don't speak against him!" Anger finally raised Ken's voice, strengthened his spine, and he uncurled a little bit. So much anger. It had kept him alive for a long time. Anger was easier than the rest. "I'm not." Mikko didn't even raise his voice. "I didn't say he isn't good. Just not good for you. Not right now, and you're no good for him. Not like this." "I'm a mess." "Yes, you are." Mikko's hand moved from his hair to his cheek. "How did this happen, Mikko?" As if Mikko would have any answers. "Does it matter?" The anger began to bleed out, leaving Ken feeling pale and thin. "If I don't know how I got here, how do I get back?" "Come here." Mikko pried the ball out of Ken's tight grip and dropped it on the floor as he pulled Ken, unresisting, toward him. Ken settled against his chest, closed his eyes, and concentrated on the feel of Mikko's fingers stroking through his hair. "Maybe the trick isn't to go back. Maybe you need to start from where you are and find a way to go forward. You've stumbled through life letting people prod you in whatever direction they saw fit. It's time to start watching where you're going, Kenny. Making decisions and living on your own terms." "You make it sound easy."
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"Hardly that. It won't be. But I'll help." Ken shivered, goose bumps rising along his scalp in the wake of Mikko's touch. Mikko settled back, pulling him to lie down across him. He rested his head in Mikko's lap, unease filling him. Everything Mikko said was probably right. But Ken had said so many cruel things to this man who had only ever treated him fairly and honestly. Ken had never given him a chance to fix things; he'd just left. "I don't deserve you." He barely moved his lips, barely breathed the words he knew were the largest truth in his life right now. "You shouldn't forgive me." Mikko's hand tightened on his arm, his fingers and palm resting for a moment flat against Ken's hair. "Forgiveness isn't about what you deserve. Now rest." The stroking started up again, and after a few minutes, Ken managed to let go of the queasiness in his belly and close his eyes again. For the first time in years, since he'd left Mikko, he remembered something other than the loneliness. He remembered Mikko's touch, the feel of his lips and hands, and none of it overlaid with the painful experiences between that day and this. They'd been together six years, and Mikko had never done a thing wrong. It wasn't until Morgan entered their lives. That's when things had changed. When Mikko had changed, disappearing to work for days on end and leaving Ken alone. They'd just started to explore Ken's submission, then Morgan had taken all Mikko's time and attention. Ken squirmed on the couch, trying to find a better position. A vague sense of not wanting to close his eyes, not wanting to take the chance. He twisted around to look up at Mikko. "I'm still here. I'm not going anywhere, Kenny." Until Morgan calls. "Go to sleep." Ken settled again, and Mikko's hand moved through his hair again. It comforted Ken, let him drift on the repetitive sensation. At least for now, he was safe. He could let go. For a long time, he remained still, half dozing. "No one's calling me away this time, Love. I promise. You have me. Undivided." Mikko's words might have been meant for his sleeping ears. He wasn't sure. They were whispered so quietly and spoke so completely to his fears. Maybe he'd just never given the man enough credit. Ken woke, still on the couch, his head still cradled in Mikko's lap. He didn't want to get up. How long had it been since he'd hung up, disappeared from Ken's life? How long since Ken had felt safe like this? Secure? Mikko's fingers played idly in his hair, and a holo‐screen hovered a few feet in front of him where silent figures played out a dragon‐riding fantasy adventure. The absolute lack of sound must mean Mikko was listening to the movie through his implant. Ken could see the dim evening light coming in the window through soaring dragon wings. Either Mikko was far better at tuning out the ambient visuals or the picture was also enhanced by his implant. Ken reached up and waggled his fingers behind the holograph, giving a gaping creature a mouthful of tongues. Mikko knocked knuckles softly against his temple. "Welcome back." He leaned down and kissed Ken's cheek, fingers still running in tiny circles against his scalp. "Feeling better?" 30 Jaime Samms
Ken rolled until he could look up at Mikko. "I think." "Good." Bluish smudges tinged the skin under Mikko's eyes, and high spots of pink colored his otherwise very pale face. Ken sat up. "You're exhausted." The movie disappeared as Mikko blinked exaggeratedly and tugged a smile onto his face. He touched Ken's cheek, nodded. "Bed?" "Bed." Ken breathed the word, pushing away memories. When Mikko stood, he stood, and gave Mikko a tiny shove toward the bathroom. "Go have a shower. I'll put the new sheets on." Mikko nodded, touched his cheek one more time, almost as though he thought Ken might have become a hologram himself, then brushed a soft kiss over his lips. "Thank you." At the bathroom door he stopped and looked back. "You don't have to believe me, but it will get better." "What if I just always love him?" Mikko's smile was a quiet one that gentled the blue of his eyes and softened the lines and angles of his thin face. Too thin, Ken noticed. He was too thin, too tired, and there were tight lines of stress supporting him that Ken hadn't taken the time to notice until now. "You were made to love him. I expect he'll always be a part of you. You don't think I want you to give that up?" "I guess...I didn't know what to expect. What you expect." "All I will ever ask of you is trust. Right now, you might think it would be easier to call down the moon for me, but that's okay. You'll get there." "How long will you stay?" "Just as long as you do, love. Just as long as you do." There was nothing else for Ken to say. He nodded, and Mikko disappeared into the bathroom. After a few minutes, the spray sounded, and Ken rooted through the pile of new linens for the sheets.
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Chapter Seven Ken marked the days by meals, making it through one breakfast, one dinner at a time. Mikko, ever the patient teacher, helped him cultivate a new skill he'd never imagined needing. To Ken's surprise, it came much easier than he expected, and he found it as natural as the one other talent that he enjoyed: growing things. "Why is it a shock you should be good at something?" Mikko was leaning against the doorjamb of the bathroom as Ken showered, talking over the sound of the rushing water. True to his initial word, even after the passage of weeks, Mikko had never let Ken out of his sight. Not even to shower. Such close scrutiny should have felt oppressive. Ken glanced through the fogged doors. He could only make out Mikko's silhouette, but that was enough to send a rush of mixed emotions through him—security and peace, mixed with old fear, old guilt he knew he was meant to give up at some point. It was a sensation he was almost getting used to. "I'm good at a lot of things," Ken muttered. What he was good at, Mikko had no apparent interest in, though, and even still, Ken couldn't help but imagine using some of those skills on his new roommate. His physical reaction to those fantasies was immediate, and he turned his back to Mikko. "I'm talking about things that don't require you getting on your knees or spreading your legs," Mikko said, his tone mildly acerbic. Ken growled quietly in frustration, glad Mikko couldn't see him clearly enough to notice him wince. The snide comment didn't quell his cock's enthusiasm one bit, however. It just fuelled the fantasy of Mikko's fingers, tight in his hair as he sucked. He licked his lips, ran his fingers lightly up his throbbing cock, and let out a sigh that carried more than he'd meant it to. The growl that came next carried a lot less frustrated anger than it did need. "Ken?" He tightened his fingers around the base of his cock and leaned on the shower wall. He couldn't do this with Mikko standing guard over him. 32 Jaime Samms
"Do you mind?" Ken snapped. "What I do on my knees is none of your fucking business." He squeezed his eyes shut. Mikko had made it abundantly clear he had no interest in those talents of Ken's, and it surprised him, the strength of his disappointment in admitting that. "Everything you do is my business." "Fuck off." "This would be the point where you hang up on me, right?" Ken's lip curled. "I wish." "You want me to leave the room?" There was a sneer in Mikko's voice. "You shouldn't be ashamed of a little hard‐on, Kenny. Go ahead. Take care of it." It irked Ken that those few words of permission, rather than quelling his need, only fuelled it. He turned to glare at the Mikko‐shaped shadow on the other side of the glass, his erection swaying out from his body as he did. No doubt that outline was clear enough, even through the steam and soap film. A low whistle confirmed his thought. "So glad you find this entertaining, asshole," Ken grated, wishing there was more reproach in the words, and less of a hitch. He was fighting a losing battle. He'd had a month and more to prove that he liked following Mikko's rules. Now, his speeding heart, his shaking hands, and quickening breath, the tight knot of excitement taking over his belly, all evidenced that knowing Mikko was seeing him like this was far from unpleasant. Only his fear kept him from admitting he wanted more from him than cooking lessons and companionship. He wanted rules that extended beyond the kitchen and into the bedroom, and this might well be as close as he ever got to that. "It'd be even more entertaining if you opened the door," Mikko said, voice sly and a little husky. Ken moved automatically, gripping the handle in tight fingers and making it rattle in time to his own trembling. He didn't pull it back. Desire and caution still warred within him. What if Mikko really didn't want him this way? "Open the door, Ken." Swallowing his fear, Ken slid the door open on the noisy track, but kept his hands off himself and his gaze cast down. Spray spattered the bath mat and dark tiles, creating a puddle he'd later have to clean up, but that didn't matter. He only looked up when Mikko cleared his throat. "What are you waiting for?" One eyebrow rose. "Permission?" Ken nodded, struggling to not drop his gaze again, despite the flush rising up into his cheeks. A crooked smile softened Mikko's sharp features. Ken's heart pounded in response, but he still couldn't make himself move. "Touch yourself, Ken." The low, compelling, almost gentle command, so different from what he was used to, snagged at his breath. Strangers tended to be harsh, demanding, sometimes cruel, sometimes overcompensating for their kinks. He had been kind; he cared, but not like this. Ken had been so frightened then, so desperate to please him. To keep him.
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Only in the past weeks had he begun to see just how terrified and needy he'd been. That hadn't been love. Not the way the man had deserved to be loved. Now, looking into Mikko's eyes, he saw such certainty. Mikko had no doubt Ken would do as he was told or accept the consequences. There was no fear of rejection behind Mikko's command, no uncertainty under the patience. He just waited for a decision. Ken reached up at last, gripping the top track of the shower door. His other hand he wrapped around his hard cock, and he dropped his gaze again. This was more intimate than doing such a thing in front of a stranger, and he couldn't put on a show. He could barely keep himself on his feet and breathing through the anxiety and the strength of his need for release. There was no way he could watch Mikko watching him or let him see the doubt. Mikko straightened, his feet shuffling across the floor as he stepped forward. "Ken." Gentleness won out, and Ken looked up. He couldn't explain the bright prick of tears, or their flow as he began to stroke himself. He'd jacked off in front of guys plenty of times. It was an easy way to make a few bucks, but Mikko's complete, undivided attention on him made this different. It might be at his command, but it was not about Mikko, or his pleasure, despite the fact it was clear he liked what he was seeing. He didn't touch himself, though; didn't even acknowledge his own hard‐on straining in his pants. Ken tightened his grip on his cock and on the bar overhead. His body flushed with heat, and a deeper warmth flowed through him, growing from the flame of interest in Mikko's eyes as he watched. Ken hadn't touched, or been touched in this way since Mikko's arrival. He was weak to the sensations, greedy for speed and friction, and he couldn't keep his attention on Mikko in the face of his own physical distraction. His head drooped, and his body sagged, held up only by his grip on the metal. The track dug into his palm painfully, but if he let go, he'd fall, his legs were shaking so bad. He lost himself in the scent of his own arousal rising over the shampoo and shaving cream. The shower door rattled, his harsh panting filled the little cubicle, and the lewd smack of skin on skin drove him to frantic need. He could feel Mikko's gaze on him, like a caress, a breath of pure pleasure touching deeper than any physical contact could. Ken gasped, breathing in the approval, allowing himself to let go of his doubts and accepting his own shameless desire to please. A moan leaked past the ache of emotion tightening his throat. Knowing Mikko wanted those greedy little sounds of pleasure, the scent and sight of Ken's body finding release, spiraled him into a final panting, keening frenzy. His orgasm hit hard. He locked his knees to stay on his feet as cum spattered over the water‐darkened bath rug, dribbled over his fingers, trickled its way down over his balls. He couldn't catch his breath or stop his shaking. He wasn't even sure he wouldn't still fall over, swaying under another wave of heady relief shuddering through him. He didn't hear Mikko move, didn't feel anything but aftershock until Mikko touched him. A soft caress of fingers over his bicep pulled a tiny whimper from him. "You're beautiful," Mikko whispered.
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Ken released his grip on the bar, pitched himself forward, trusting Mikko to catch him. More than he'd needed that release, he needed reassurance, and Mikko barely staggered as he took Ken's weight. "You're beautiful, Kenny." He held tight with one arm, supporting Ken, stroking his back and nuzzling against his neck. "That was perfect." Ken sighed, relaxing against Mikko's support, and wrapped one tentative arm around his waist. "Thank you." Mikko stood back just enough to look into Ken's face, but not so much as to let him go. "I should be thanking you." He cupped Ken's face with one hand and smiled. The kiss Mikko offered this time was real, deep, and Ken shivered further into his embrace. He could feel the hard pressure of Mikko's arousal pressing against his belly, and he reached down to hold it. "No." Mikko pushed away. "No." He took Ken's wrist in a gentle grip. "That isn't what this is about." "I want to." "I know you do. And that's exactly what a good sub should do, but—" "You don't want me." Ken's gut tightened, his muscles tensed for the drop into nothing. Mikko lifted both hands to Ken's face. "Do not put words in my mouth or thoughts to my actions. Never presume to know why I tell you to do things, or why I don't. I know what's good for you far better than you do right now, so let me do my job, and you do yours. Obey me, yes?" Ken nodded, but still, his eyes watered and stung. "Good." Mikko smiled. "I know what I'm doing." He kissed both Ken's eyelids, then his lips, soundly, taking his breath and weakening his knees, before stepping back, releasing him completely. "Finish your shower." He glanced down at the rug. "Clean up your mess. I'll come to you when I'm ready." Ken nodded again, but Mikko was already gone. It wasn't a surprise to hear the door lock from the outside. Automatically, Ken glanced at the window, at the heap of his clothing on the bathroom floor, and he even ran his fingers over the lock on the window sash. For the first time in his life, there was no urge to run, buried under the mess of emotions. In fact, the mess wasn't such a mess. There was mostly the desire to hear Mikko tell him he'd done well, and so he closed the shower door, turned the spray a little hotter, and picked up the soap. ~* * *~ A pall of dust rose as Ken pushed the curtain aside from the window and peered out. All the snow was gone. It had been mostly melted when he'd first arrived, but now, the sun shone down on the bare rocks and dry, golden remnants of grass poking between them. Ken found himself searching those tiny oasis for spears of green. There was no sign of it yet, but it had to come. The world wasn't that dead yet.
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Mikko hadn't left him alone in the bathroom very long and didn't bother to hide having relieved his own needs. He'd stepped into the shower behind Ken just as he was finishing washing and demanded Ken stay to scrub his back, wash his hair, and be attentive. Being allowed to touch him, even in that simple way, was enough approval to ease Ken's worries. Now he was content, comfortable. He could even say he was happy. Almost. He listened to Mikko pad across the old carpet behind him and let out a sigh when his hand rested on Ken's shoulder. "Things will be growing soon," Ken murmured. "You were right. I can't stand looking at it. This place." He shifted, and Mikko was there to take his weight as he leaned back. "It's depressing." "I thought that's what you liked about it." Mikko's arms tightened around Ken's waist, and he rested his chin on Ken's shoulder. "A month ago, I didn't like anything about anything. Not even myself." "And now?" "Now?" Ken tilted his head so Mikko's hair tickled his cheek. "I'm not better yet." "You're not." "When I was a kid, a really little kid, someone told me the only person I had to answer to was myself. Always make sure I could look myself in the eye and not flinch." He smiled with a bitter little twist of his lips that mocked him from his ghostly reflection in the window. "You tell that to a six‐year‐old, it doesn't mean much. Tell it to a man who thinks sleeping with people for money, so he doesn't have to sleep on the street, or just so he's not sleeping alone, to a guy who thinks the answer is a bullet in his head—" He sighed. "It was pretty easy to let him come up with all the answers for me. I didn't have to look too close at my own shortcomings if he was willing to look past them. It felt like love. It really did." Mikko remained still and quiet behind him, and Ken touched the back of his hand. "Don't look past me, Mikko." "This is about you. If you want me to help you, I will. If you want me to look after you, I will, but only by making sure you are looking after yourself. The only promises I can give you are that it won't be easy, and I won't give up on you." Ken nodded, sighed a little, unsure what he'd hoped to hear. Mikko nuzzled his neck, dropped a kiss just below his ear. "I love you, Kenny. I'm going to do what's good for you and make sure you do what's good for you. Trust in the process." Ken squirmed around until he was facing Mikko and could look at him. "I put you through hell, didn't I?" Mikko leaned his forehead against Ken's and his eyes closed. "I was so furious with you. And scared shitless for you. And mad. I loved you so much." "Then why did you leave me?" "So much...happened." Mikko moved back and Ken could see clearly in his blue eyes all the reasons Mikko thought he had. He saw, too, the reasons staying behind a wall beyond
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which he was never going to be allowed. Mikko had secrets, and Ken would not be privy to them. "It'll happen again," He said, pulling himself free. "You'll get a call, and...I can't." Mikko touched the mod at his ear. "Only you have this number. Morgan is out of my life. I won't lose you to him again." "You won't answer when he calls?" Ken couldn't believe Mikko would give up the fight he'd spent so much of his life at. He'd believed in what Morgan was doing, trying to take down big businesses and restore the damage they'd done to the world. "You won't go to the rescue of some whales somewhere or save a rainforest?" "Morgan never saved a whale in his life. He wasn't what I thought he was, Kenny. I made a mistake. I almost lost you because of it. Because of him. I won't let him come between us again. That is one promise I can keep. I'm going to keep you safe and close. You won't have to go out on your own again, or do the things you did. Never again." "He said the same thing." "And does he have a name?" Ken shook his head. "You'll hunt him down." Mikko laughed softly and pulled Ken close again. "I already promised I wouldn't. Tell me his name." "What difference does it make now?" Ken lay his head against Mikko's shoulder. "I can't put you through hell again. I won't. You came for me." "You put yourself through hell, Kenny. It was hard to watch, and there was never any guarantee you wouldn't self‐destruct before I could get to you." Ken picked himself up off Mikko's shoulder to look into his yes again. Did he know how truly shattered Ken was? Would he stay if he knew? "I almost did." "You almost did." Mikko stroked his cheek, kissed him, rested his forehead against Ken's. "I still can't do anything for you that you don't want to do for yourself. I can't do it for you, and it's going to be hard." "That's encouraging." Mikko stepped back, though he didn't let go. "I won't lie to you or sugar‐coat anything. This won't work if I do." Ken nodded through a deep breath. "This is about as far from wheels on the ground as it gets for me. You realize that?" "I think you might be surprised, Kenny. You've just been spinning in place so long you forget. All I'm offering is traction and a map. The power to get anywhere is yours. It always has been." "Tell me what I have to do." Mikko smiled and stepped back. "Be honest. Don't lie to me. Don't hide anything from me, no matter how humiliating you think it might be, or how much you think it might hurt me."
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"You don't want me to be sensitive to your feelings? You're not indestructible." "True. But if you don't tell me something because you think I might get mad, how can I know I'm making the right decisions for you? If I require something of you, and you don't do it, how am I to know unless you tell me? Lying to avoid punishment, not letting me deal with my own feelings on things, that just puts us in the same boat as it put you with the last guy, and you end up where I found you." Ken shivered. "I'm not an idiot. I can see how much you love him still. Either it’s enough and you end up strong enough to really be with him in a way that means something, or it isn't, and you find a different path. But Kenny, wherever your road leads you, you have to travel it on your own. With me, with him, or alone, it's no one else's path, and no one else can do it for you." "I want you to be happy, too. You deserve it." Mikko smiled a smile Ken had known so long ago he'd forgotten. It lit up Mikko's face, lit up the grungy room. "If I get to teach you even a little bit of what you need to move forward, I'm happy. If I help you become who I know you really are, there's nothing else you can give me that would mean more to me. I've waited a long time to hear you say yes to that one thing." "Then yes." Just like that, the tension underlying Mikko's every move fell away. He shuffled, embracing Ken in a hug that made his ribs groan. "It's going to be okay. You know that." Ken nestled his head onto Mikko's shoulder and nodded. No one was as selfless as Mikko seemed in that moment, but he inspired the feeling in Ken anyway. He wanted more than just to please this man who might not have actually stopped him pulling the trigger, but who had saved him, just the same. He was determined to improve everything about himself, to make Mikko proud, to serve him by becoming the man Mikko seemed so convinced he was under all the scars and damage. After a minute, Ken backed off, squared his shoulders. "I just have one thing I want." Mikko's eyes narrowed. "I'm listening." "This house." His eyebrows shot up. For a split second, Mikko gaped. "Why?" "I know. It's ugly, depressing. It's falling apart and decaying. But I can fix it. Buy it for me, and I'll show you. I can make it home." "You don't know the first thing about construction." "I can learn. There aren't any tenants left but me. You wouldn't be putting anyone out on the street, and no one wants to live in this neighborhood unless they're desperate. The guy who owns it isn't really a slum lord. You'd be doing him a favor, taking it off his hands. Please." Mikko shook his head, his mouth still a little agape. "Some submissive you are. First thing out of your mouth is buy me a house. How do you figure that works?"
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Ken clamped his jaw tight over disappointment. It had been the garden that prompted the wish, and his vision of what the rocky ground could really support with enough love and attention. But Mikko was right. He'd overstepped. "I'm sorry. It was—" "A good idea." Ken lifted his gaze, too uncertain to smile, but hopeful. "I like it. I need an office to work from, you need a project. Now go make supper. I'll work on it." Ken grinned. "Thank you." He scurried in the direction of the kitchenette, but Mikko called after him. "This is your one thing, Kenny. From now on, I'm in charge." "Yes, Sir." The grin, though, didn't leave Ken's face as he rooted through the fridge for leftovers.
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About the Author Visit Jaime's website at http://www.jaime‐samms.net/
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Love is Scary by Cheryl Dragon Ryan’s brain child of an adults only haunted house with club attached is big risk…he needs Wes’s genius to make it real. But when the men meet, it goes way beyond business. Off relationships, Wes can't handle another high maintenance man half in the closet. Ryan has so much in his work life that sex only sounds good to him. When passion overflows into their common goals, love has a way of sneaking through.
Chapter One Starting a new business was one of the scariest things a person could do in any economy. But for Ryan Elliott, the hot guy helping him gets things off the ground was even scarier. Ryan
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had been emailing and trading phone calls with Wes Taylor for months in the hope that this venture would materialize. One of Wes’ creations, a haunted house in New Orleans, had blown Ryan away in California, so Ryan had tracked the man down. He’d never seen a picture of Wes and never imagined the creative genius would turn out to be so unassumingly sexy. In the building Ryan had recently bought on the cheap, thanks to the crippling real estate bust, he tried not to stare at Wes’ hard body encased in worn dark blue jeans and a T‐shirt about Cajuns. Wes was from New Orleans and had traveled here for this job. He’d leave Vegas once the haunted house was up and running. Ryan had to remember this visit was temporary. But the hard muscles on Wes’s six‐foot–four‐inch frame made Ryan forget everything. Wes’s green eyes caught Ryan’s and the sizzle hit him. Clutching his travel mug, Ryan sipped his coffee despite the heat of a Vegas summer and the sparks with Wes. Caffeine and work were his addictions. Men he could avoid—most of the time. “Look okay?” Ryan gestured to the big empty club area. Wes turned to him and smiled. “Looks great. You’ve got room for the bar in back and plenty to work with in the front club section. The place looks laid out already.” “It was a bar before with a huge dance club in front. The former owner couldn’t handle the mortgage anymore so it was a steal. Needs a little work.” Ryan looked around the unfinished space and tried not to stare at Wes. Wearing black dress pants and gray striped shirt for a meeting that afternoon, Ryan felt overdressed. Juggling his day job in advertising and a new small business venture sounded crazy, even to him. His family back home thought he was nuts. Keep your day job and stay safe. They all wanted security but then again, so did everyone else. Ryan needed to try. His idea was solid, if he could make it happen. Wes had the experience. “We’ll add on a little in front, make it more of a maze feel. Go through several rooms and themes and the end will dump them into the bar area.” Wes nodded. “You have people who can do this?” Ryan asked. “I brought the key members of my team. Don’t worry.” Wes patted Ryan’s shoulder. “Your idea is great. An adults only haunted house with a bar and club at the end.” “Horror movies are huge hits year round now. Why not have a year round attraction in Vegas?” Ryan smiled. Wes’ approval meant a lot. He’d been in the haunted house business for years. His designs were elaborate and innovative. “The adults only part might help or hurt. I haven’t decided yet.” Wes measured the front door, leaning over to read the tape. Ryan tried not to look at Wes’s tight jean‐covered ass. “Well, its Vegas. T&A sells. Plus, if you look at all the DVD sales of horror movies, it’s the unrated versions that do the best. Producers film stuff they know will get cut for the theaters just to put it in the unrated DVDs. If this takes off, we can always do a PG version for kids. No bar, but food and stuff. That’d be phase two. One step at a time.” “Sounds good to me. I appreciate the work and the confidence.”
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“I’ve seen your work. It’s excellent. New Orleans still slow?” Ryan asked. Wes nodded. “Not everyone moved back. A lot of crime and poverty still. Nothing like the tourism we used to have. I travel around to do haunted houses so this is nothing new. But I used to do my own unique one in New Orleans every year. However, the last few years, it hasn’t paid off.” “That’s too bad. It’s pretty down there.” Ryan took another drink of coffee. “I definitely want to update the theme here every year. So I’ll be calling you back in if that works.” “First let’s get you opened. I’m not qualified to set up the bar but I’ll get the building permits, a small construction crew together and start work soon.” The control freak in Ryan took over. “You’ll show me the plans before you start anything major. I want to be involved even if my schedule doesn’t really let me.” Wes moved in closer and, to Ryan, made the huge club feel like a tiny closet. “Don’t worry, I’ll keep you advised. I’ll have sketches done tonight. I’m a night owl and do my best creative work after dark. We could meet in the morning to go over them if that works.” Wes looked him in the eye. “I can’t tomorrow. I have a meeting in the morning and conference calls in the afternoon. I can swing the club but I’d like to keep the steady cash flow of my day job. I might be leaning on you more than your other clients.” Ryan hoped that he didn’t sound as sexual as his mind played it. “No worries, Ryan. I don’t blame you. A constant income to fall back on makes it easier to go after your dreams. I’m behind you.” Wes stood only inches away. The sexy smell of wood and leather came from Wes. It had to be a tool belt. Ryan wanted to lean in and get more, but he’d always kept his private life out of business. It made things so much easier in the Vegas advertising world that revolved around sex. He spent so much time working that it left him with no social life. “Thanks. My family thinks this is all crazy. They think I should just keep my job and forget about the club.” “You want a tip?” Wes leaned in. Ryan nodded and locked his eyes on Wes’s mysterious green ones. “Don’t listen to them. Play it safe your whole life and you’ll end up wondering what if. I did some construction, got roped into doing play sets and then haunted houses. I finally found something I loved. Scaring people, the designs and mechanisms. It’s a thrill for me. I could have had a safe boring construction job and now I’d be totally out of work with building so slow. In New Orleans, it’s not moving as fast as people thought it would to recover. But I can do this, turn a club into a haunted house. So you’re sticking with the theme we discussed?” Ryan cleared his throat. “For the opening, yes. Gaming hell. Haunted Vegas casino. Roulette wheels, slot machines, naughty show girls, etc.” Wes made notes on a pad and shoved it into his belt and the short pencil behind his ear. “Got it. Sounds good. I’ve got some of the concepts and sketches done. I’ll flesh it out now that I’ve seen the space. It’ll give me something to do this afternoon.”
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“You’re settled in the hotel room?” Ryan had called in a favor and got Wes and his core team some comped rooms at a hotel on the strip. “Yes, it’s great. I never had a room like that in Vegas before. Why don’t you come by after your afternoon meeting? We could go over the concept and grab dinner.” Ryan swallowed hard. He wanted to be alone in a hotel room with Wes, badly. They’d hit it off over the phone, email, and texts. But in person, the chemistry was hard to fight. “I may have to take the clients to dinner. Could be late.” “I understand. Gotta keep your bosses happy. Call my cell when you’re done. I’ll be up, if you’re up for it. Got my number?” He had it memorized, but Ryan tried to play it cool. “Yeah, it’s programmed into my contacts. Sounds good. I’ll call.” Definitely want to keep the focus on the business. He checked his watch. No way could he be late. “One last question and I’ll let you go.” Wes took a step back. “I assume since you said T&A, it’s a straight adult concept?” Ryan felt his skin go hot. Wes made him. “Yes, straight. We need to play to the odds in Vegas. Is that a problem?” His instinct told Ryan that Wes was gay. “No problem here. Naked ladies make money and it’s better. They don’t distract me from my work.” He kicked a broken floor tile with his alligator skin boot. “See you tonight.” Ryan smiled and lifted his mug. He didn’t trust his voice just then. He watched Wes walk out to his rented truck. Ryan knew he was in trouble. ~* * *~ Setting his sketches out on the coffee table, Wes checked the logic in his flow and it worked. His creativity took over and went all out. The vision and scope came together well. Wes sat back on the sofa and took a deep breath. It felt great to be on a design project instead of demolishing an abandoned, or condemned, home. The creative work had dried up in the Big Easy and even building was slow. Ryan’s image crept back into his mind. Wes tried to ignore the stab of arousal. Long distance, their business plans matched up perfectly. They were on the same page and it all clicked. He should’ve known that’d spell trouble. No way would Wes screw up this job by hitting on Ryan, no matter how hard Ryan stared. The chemistry was hard to ignore. Besides, Wes had sworn off relationships. Ryan didn’t seem like the random, or casual, sex type. Wes’s cell phone rang a Vegas tune and he grabbed it. At some point, he’d given Ryan his own ring tone and Wes felt like an idiot with a crush. “Wes Taylor,” he answered like any other business call. “It’s Ryan. Too late to look at your samples?” he asked.
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Wes almost said no just to keep his self‐control. But business had to come first. “Never too late for me. Come over whenever you want.” “Okay, I’ll be there in ten minutes. Can I get you a coffee?” he offered. “Nope, I’m good. See you soon.” Wes ended the call. Vegas prices were crazy. Wes had made a run to a discount store and stocked up on water, soda, beer, and snacks. Wes straightened up the hotel room a little and grabbed himself a bottle of water. Ryan knocked on the door and Wes’ stomach knotted. This high‐strung ad exec with a dream somehow had gotten to Wes. He opened the door and Ryan smiled, sexy as ever. Those hazel eyes fit Ryan perfectly, a mix of things in which someone could get lost. “Come in,” Wes said. Ryan entered, still toting his travel mug of coffee. Wes noted that Ryan’s light brown hair was a bit more mussed than earlier and his sleeves were rolled to the elbow. Just what Wes needed to see, lean muscled arms. “I’ve got water, beer, and soda.” Ryan had to be overdosing on the coffee now, since it was now after eleven. “I’m good.” Ryan sat on the sofa and looked at the sketches. “Did you go to some fancy steakhouse for dinner with the clients?” Wes asked. “Yeah, at the hotel the clients are staying. I didn’t really eat much. These sketches are perfect.” Wes sat down next to Ryan. “Glad you like them. I’ve got some leftover chicken strips in the little fridge if you want. They’re spicy.” Ryan scooted back a few inches. “No thanks. I don’t eat much in general. Coffee and work.” “You’d never make it in New Orleans. Food and fun is our business.” “I like New Orleans, just not a big eater. Vegas has a ton of food but I live here. I don’t even notice it anymore.” He grabbed one of the sketches. “She’s topless?” Wes chuckled. “Yeah, a topless zombie blackjack dealer. I don’t draw breasts a lot. The players are transfixed on her assets and when people get closer to look, the players turn on them and they’re disfigured. They try to pull the people in to take their places.” “Perfect.” Ryan leaned closer. “And there are more people who jump out from behind and guide them to the roulette wheel.” Wes inhaled Ryan’s subtle aftershave and the scent of coffee. Fighting this attraction would really be impossible. “What happens at the roulette wheel?” Ryan looked up at him. Wes’ brain stopped over‐thinking things. “People keep their hands on their bet and all the losers get their hands chopped off. You’ll like the craps table. A hot naked guy lying on his stomach is the table. His back’s painted and they throw dice on it.” Ryan stiffened. “Why would I like that? It’s good to have something for the women to enjoy as well. It needs to be balanced, but why would I care?”
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Grabbing Ryan by the shoulders, Wes suppressed a chuckle. A closet case. At least there was no pressure. “Don’t worry. I’m not after a relationship. I’ve been screwed too many times. But you’re driving me crazy.” Wes yanked Ryan’s dress shirt open and pushed him back on the couch. Ryan held onto Wes’ shoulders. “What are you doing?” he asked. If that was his idea of fighting off a man, Wes knew he’d win in seconds. Stretching out on Ryan’s lean form, Wes cupped the back of Ryan’s head and pulled him closer. Wes kissed him, no finesse or subtly. He possessed Ryan’s mouth. Ryan’s hands pulled on Wes’ t‐shirt as his mouth opened eagerly. Just sex! Wes reminded himself as the warmth of Ryan’s hard body melted what resolve he had left. This was no club hook up. Kissing down Ryan’s lean chest, Wes could feel every muscle with his tongue as he teased Ryan’s nipples and let the crisp chest hair graze his cheek. He unbuckled Ryan’s belt and opened his fly over the hard cock. His boxers tented and Wes teased him through the slippery fabric. “Don’t.” Ryan’s hips lifted in direct opposition to his words. Not interested in high school games, Wes let go of Ryan and sat up. “Okay.” Ryan’s eyes opened wide and his ragged breath slowed. “What the hell?” “I’m tired of games. I’ve been through enough crap. I don’t want a relationship. I’ve tried it and always get the wrong guy. But I’m not going to play sex games either. You want me or you don’t. Don’t be a tease.” “You’re serious. Just sex?” Ryan asked. “Yeah, nothing more. Business and sex. I can’t deny the attraction but I’m done getting the short end in a relationship. I’m tired of trying. But I’m not into games like hard to get either.” Wes sat back on the sofa and took a deep breath. “Let’s get back to work. Just forget the sex.” He meant it, but when Wes felt a tug on his denim fly, he knew Ryan had reconsidered the situation. Pulling off his shirt, Wes watched as his erection sprang free into Ryan’s large hands. Ryan sucked Wes’ balls not saying a word. Wes groaned, lifting his hips. He grabbed the back of Ryan’s neck and guided him up to the shaft. Ryan’s tongue snaked around and up, leaving Wes off balance and in need. “Suck it!” Wes couldn’t decide if Ryan was a tease or less experienced than he thought. But Ryan made his way up the long member to the tip and finally sucked. Thrusting up, Wes kept a hand on Ryan’s neck, pressing him down to suck further. Ryan’s tongue teased the tip of Wes’ cock but his strong lips pressed to the flesh about halfway down his cock. His hand gripped the bottom half of his erection and squeezed until Wes’ hips fucked up in time. Cursing, Wes thrust harder when Ryan pulled his mouth away. His tongue flicked over the tip and Wes moaned. “Ryan, you’re a damn tease.”
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Ryan’s probing tongue worked the tip until Wes thought he’d come. Then Ryan sucked down to the base. Finally, Ryan hit a pattern of sucking and release that made Wes grab the back of the sofa and fight his release to keep the contact going. Ryan’s persistent tongue rubbed the head of Wes’ cock until he gave in and came on Ryan’s broad tongue. With a whole day of thinking about Ryan, Wes had no chance to last long. Wes watched Ryan suck and swallow every drop and then lick the shaft from base to tip. Just when Wes thought it was his turn, Ryan shifted focus to Wes’ sac and rolled it around in his mouth and tugged. Playtime had to wait. Wes needed to suck Ryan off. He grabbed the sexy man by his expensive collar and pulled him up until they were face‐to‐face. “Sorry, I grew up in the bible belt. I tried to not…I don’t have a lot of experience. I can’t stop.” Ryan exhaled hard. Wes smiled. “Stop fighting it.” He kissed Ryan slowly and slid them both off the couch and onto the floor. Pushing the coffee table out of the way, he pressed Ryan flat on his back and kept kissing him. Reaching into those fancy boxers, Wes freed Ryan’s cock and rolled his balls firmly in his hands. “Wes, please.” Ryan changed the angle of the kiss and wrapped his arms around Wes’ neck. They both needed this. Wes could feel Ryan’s cock pulsing. Moving lower, he kissed Ryan’s neck and slipped his grip to kiss Ryan’s hard chest. This time he moved swiftly down to Ryan’s stomach and hips. “Yes!” Ryan gripped Wes’ hair and pushed him down to his cock. Wes tongued Ryan’s sac, teasing as good as he’d gotten. Sucking Ryan’s balls and rubbing a finger beneath them, Wes watched Ryan’s body bow. “I can’t take it,” Ryan insisted. “But you can dish it out?” Wes took pity on him and sucked Ryan’s cock into his mouth fully. The head bumped the back of his throat and Wes groaned with the intense satisfaction of pushing his own limits. Ryan was the perfect size. He could deep throat him and get enough pressure to turn Wes on as well. Thrusting up carefully, Ryan paused. “I don’t want to hurt you.” Wes groaned and released Ryan’s cock. “Not possible. I have plenty of experience.” He licked his fingers and slid them between Ryan’s firm ass cheeks to rub the sensitive spot between Ryan’s sac and asshole. “Oh, God!” Ryan’s eyes rolled back in his head. “Exactly. Fuck my mouth and don’t play games.” Wes nipped at Ryan’s balls before sucking his erection to the base again. He rubbed and pinched Ryan’s rear until Ryan pumped up, fucking Wes’ mouth like a desperate man.
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Pressing his fingers firmly against the length of Ryan’s shaft with each cock thrust, Wes knew Ryan wouldn’t last long. Ryan gripped Wes’ hair and fucked faster. Wes increased the suction, trying to keep Ryan’s cock. Suddenly Ryan pressed and held, coming deep. Wes’ mouth was full and he let the taste of Ryan roll over his tongue as Ryan thrust a few final times. “That was incredible.” Ryan tried to sit up. Holding the sexy man down, Wes licked and sucked Ryan’s tired cock before rubbing his tongue over the tip for the final drops. “Yeah.” Wes knew amazing sex when he had it, but he had to stick to the plan. He couldn’t let himself get romantic about Ryan. “We better get back to work. The crew will be there at eight am sharp.” He wanted to kiss Ryan and get things going again so Wes could fuck that tight ass, but not now. He needed to remain in control or he’d really be screwed.
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Fire Season by Lex Valentine Black dragon Holden Antaeus isn't looking for a mate. His life is filled with family, work, and dating. Women adore him and he's never short of offers for sex, but a relationship isn't something he's interested in. When Holden's brother Sean hires a new executive for Antaeus International, Holden's whole world, and everything he's ever believed about himself, is blown to bits. Garret Renquist is a green dragon, intelligent, witty, bi‐sexual, and hot for Holden. Despite the fact that Holden is positive he's heterosexual, the moment he meets Garret, something happens inside him. What follows is a journey through stereotypes and ingrained beliefs as Holden struggles with the fact that his destined mate is a man.
Prologue Alfred Stone leaned back in the sauna, casually adjusting a white towel over his naked lap. His voice sounded as casual as his demeanor, but to his one man audience, the tone rang more warning bells than a three alarm fire. “I am Magia. My job is to ensure that nature’s intended matings actually occur.” Sean Antaeus stared at his best friend in shock. “You have got to be joking.” Nothing in his life had prepared him for the words Alfred had spoken. It wasn’t so much what Alfred had said about Sean’s younger brother, it was what Alfred had revealed about himself. The Darkworld held people with power and powerful people. Sean had been living in a dream world thinking that Alfred, as the head of the Funeral Directors Guild, was merely a powerful person. Now, he knew the truth. “Sean, I wouldn’t have told you if I didn’t think you could handle the information. My job isn’t always easy. Your family has been especially hard. In fact, I need Marius’ help too. His family is going be just as tough.” Alfred’s brow crinkled with worry as he spoke. Sean arched a sardonic brow at him. “So you’re letting Marius in on the secret too?” A sigh escaped Alfred. Spinning 47
Sean thought it sounded rather dramatic and long suffering, which made him feel like he’d walked into some kind of set up. “If you knew what I was up against, you wouldn’t ask me that,” Alfred replied in a morose voice. Now, Sean knew he’d been played. Maybe not a lot, because at the core of it all, he knew instinctively that Alfred had spoken the truth, but Sean also could tell when he’d been manipulated. After all, he was a master of manipulation himself. Took one to know one. “So you’re telling me that both Diandra and I were the victims of your…gift?” Sean put his friend on the spot. Alfred shifted uncomfortably on the sauna’s seat. “Not victims, Sean. Recipients of a power that managed to keep you from fucking up your life. If it weren’t for me, do you think either you or your sister would have ended up mated? Both of you were so stubborn and arrogant, refusing to see the truth, not wanting to be seen as weak.” Alfred made a rude sound and his gaze locked with Sean’s. “If I hadn’t butted in and used my gift to help you, both you and Diandra would be single today and unhappier than you could ever imagine,” he said solemnly. Sean bit back his own sigh. He couldn’t imagine. His life would be awful if he didn’t have his mate and wife, Careen. Yet, getting to the place where he’d accepted that he had a mate, a woman he loved beyond everything else in his life, had been a particularly rough road. The same had held true for his sister Diandra. Her path to love and marriage had been every bit as rocky. Now, Alfred made it seem like neither he nor Diandra would have managed to mate without a nudge from Alfred’s power. “Please tell me that you didn’t pick our mates,” he growled, feeling unnerved by everything Alfred had told him. “Of course not. Those are nature chosen. But it’s my job to ensure that those who are resistant become…more amenable to having a mate.” Alfred smiled, something Sean knew he rarely did. “I smooth the path in any way I can without disrupting the natural flow of a mating.” Sean’s brain raced as he absorbed Alfred’s words. “And now you’re telling me that Holden is in trouble?” Alfred nodded solemnly. “A lot more trouble than you and Diandra put together. I need your help, Sean, or your brother will be unhappy until the day he passes to the Afterlife.” “Fuck.” Alfred had him. Sean loved his younger siblings fiercely. He would fight anything that threatened their lives and happiness. “So you’re in.” Alfred looked at him expectantly, triumph already shining in his eyes. This time Sean did sigh. “Yeah. I’m in.” He shook hands with Alfred and realized that he’d sealed a pact of duplicity and manipulation as he did so. Luckily, being Machiavellian was second nature to Sean, and he bet Alfred knew that fact quite well.
Chapter One 48 Jaime Samms
The first to arrive, Holden slipped into his seat and opened his leather covered notepad with irritation. He disliked rah rah meetings. Despite all the team building pep talks, things always went back to the way they had always been…with his oldest brother Sean wielding his iron fist and micro‐managing while he and his other brother Declan struggled not to let Sean overwhelm them. In Holden’s opinion, corporate life had been worse while Declan had been gone. During Declan’s tenure at a European conglomerate, Sean had refused to replace him. Instead, Holden’s oldest brother had taken on acquisitions himself in his brother’s absence. Sean had gone crazy buying up whatever he could. Declan had a lot more finesse and savvy when it came to choosing the funeral homes and cemeteries that offered the best value. The company needed Declan’s firm hand and cool head when it came to acquiring new businesses and Holden had been relieved when his brother returned to Antaeus International. Declan’s return to the company heralded the end of their sister Eden’s term of employment in the corporate world. Her contributions to the company were myriad, but all of them had been tainted by her unhappiness in that environment and Sean’s determination to keep her there. It had all come to a head not long after Declan’s return. Eden had ditched her marketing job at Antaeus International, packed up her cameras, and headed to New York City. Within a few months, she’d become the fashion industry’s new hot photographer, making her name shooting nearly naked men in designer underwear. Sean’s fury knew no bounds over her defection and both Holden and Declan had borne the brunt of it. The door opened and a muscular man with unruly black curls entered the room. Holden cocked one brow up at Vahid Delrey, his brother Sean’s right hand man and the company’s Chief Operating Officer. Vahid had also been Eden’s live‐in boyfriend for two years prior to her departure from all things Antaeus. Holden had always been amazed that Vahid had retained his cool demeanor, his deepest emotions, if he had any, masked from everyone when Eden had dumped him. Not for the first time, Holden wondered how Vahid had ever gotten together with his free‐spirited sister. They seemed like such polar opposites. “This is another attempt at a team building meeting, isn’t it?” Holden asked as Vahid took the chair opposite him. A dry chuckle escaped Vahid. “You know Sean. He may suck at something, but his determination won’t let him stop trying to master it anyway.” Holden felt his lips curl in a derisive smile. “My brother is a force unto himself that’s for sure.” Now, Vahid’s brows rose. “Nice way of saying he’s an arrogant ass.” The door whooshed open and the subject of their conversation strode in with Declan and another man behind him. Holden’s nose twitched. The scent of spearmint assailed him. “Thanks for the compliment, Vahid,” Sean said smoothly, a sardonic expression on his hawkish features. Declan took the chair at the foot of the table, seating himself on Holden’s left. Sean took the chair at the head of the table. The spearmint scent intensified as a man Holden didn’t know took the seat beside Vahid. More staff rushed in to join the meeting, but Holden found his gaze caught by the newcomer. Intense green eyes gazed back him, an indefinable emotion Spinning 49
churning within them. Holden had no clue as to the man’s identity, but an odd sense of familiarity pricked his awareness as he stared into those enigmatic eyes. It was as if knew the man, but couldn’t place where or how. The green gaze shifted as a tall, blonde woman strode into the room. Dressed in an unrelenting black suit and matching silk shirt, her pale hair twisted into a neat chignon, Emily Carrington looked like a fashion model until one noticed her stern visage. As one of the most powerful people at Antaeus International, she held the company’s purse strings in her long‐ fingered, capable hands. The new man smiled at her as she took a seat beside him. Her expression turned smug and the new guy’s identity dawned on Holden. The wunderkind of the death care industry’s financial sector, Garret Renquist. Sean and Emily had somehow managed to lure Garret from his position as the head of finance for Stone Mortuary Services, a job he hadn’t even held very long. Alfred Stone had hired him away from the biggest British mortuary conglomerate in the hope of turning him loose on the Funeral Director’s Guild’s financials, a big project that Alfred had spearheaded as the head of the FDG. Instead, Sean and Emily had whisked the whiz kid to Antaeus International. With an internal smirk, Holden briefly imagined the acquisition of the stock market genius taking place over a round of golf. His brother Sean golfed regularly with Alfred and Marius Granville of Granville Cemetery, the oldest cemetery in their part of the Darkworld. Holden figured the three powerful men brokered all kinds of industry related deals during those golf games. Something told him that Garret Renquist might just have been one of those deals. “Let’s get started,” Sean said from the head of the table. “This will be a short meeting anyway since we’re all leaving.” “Leaving?” Holden asked, startled. What the hell was his brother up to now? Sean’s intense golden stare turned on Holden. “Yes. Leaving. I’ll get to that in a minute.” Holden watched as his older brother’s hawk‐like gaze settled on the new guy. “Has everyone met Garret? Garret Renquist is our new Chief Investment Officer. He’ll also be working in the capacity of Budget Director under Emily, which means he’ll be working with all of you on your budgets. He comes highly recommended and has a great reputation for increasing a company’s investment returns. If you haven’t had an opportunity to introduce yourself to him, I suggest you do so over the next four days…” Sean’s voice trailed away and Holden mentally braced himself. He knew that tone. Sean was up to something that would probably irritate the hell out of him. His brother’s suggestion that everyone introduce themselves to Garret was a thinly veiled order. Since Eden’s departure, Sean regularly did things that he knew would force his younger brother out of his comfort zone and push the limits of his patience. In the past, Holden had always bounced back from Sean’s Machiavellian power trips. Lately, he found himself beyond angry when his brother’s machinations involved him. Turning his gaze to his notepad so his brothers wouldn’t see the anger beginning to simmer inside him, his nostrils flared as the scent of spearmint wafted toward him again. Who the hell smelled like mouthwash? “I’ll be closing this meeting in a few minutes, but we will reconvene tonight at six over dinner at the Gargoyle Resort. You are all to go home and pack. We’re headed out to the mountains for a retreat.” 50 Jaime Samms
Holden’s head shot up and his eyes met his older brother’s. A gleam of triumph lit Sean’s amber eyes. Holden’s jaw tightened. Sean had made his feelings clear a few weeks before regarding the woman Holden had been dating. Since Sean had never interfered in his sex life before, Holden had been surprised that he’d even mentioned her. He’d brushed off his older brother at the time. Holden really didn’t give a shit whether Sean liked who he was fucking. It was none of Sean’s business and it wasn’t serious anyway. Now, however, Sean’s machinations had pissed him off and cost him money. Holden had cleared his calendar for two days so he could have a long four day weekend. His intent had been to spend those days in a sexual stupor at an exclusive spa in Santa Barbara. The steep deposit he’d put down with his reservations for two would now be lost, and the woman he was seeing would require placating. Fury rose within him. The loss of the money didn’t irritate him so much, but the thought of having to soothe Gina’s ruffled feathers made Holden furious with his oldest brother. Even though Gina had a tongue that could lick all day, she also had a rather bitchy attitude that showed up when she didn’t get her way. Thanks to Sean, Holden would now be the recipient of the bitching rather than the licking. “This will be an opportunity for us to work on some team building and strategizing. It will also give you all a chance to spend some time with Garret to see how he can help each of your departments maximize your budgets.” Sean’s smile widened as Vahid got up and handed out brochures and packets to everyone. Holden opened his folder and stiffened. Sean had paired everyone up, forcing them to share rooms. Sean and Declan were together. Vahid shared with Todd Ryan, the Chief Technology Officer and Holden’s draw was…the new guy. His head shot up and his gaze collided with Garret’s intense stare. A little smile quirked up one corner of the man’s mouth. That little smile kicked Holden’s irritation up a notch. He frowned, wondering what it would take to get Vahid to trade with him. Holden’s eyes tracked Vahid around the table. When the head of Operations returned to his seat, he cocked a brow up at Holden. His smirky expression dashed Holden’s hopes for a trade. Vahid obviously knew that Sean had put the new executive with his youngest brother for a reason. Fuck! Anger tore through Holden at his brother’s little games. Grinding his teeth together, he eyed the itinerary included in the packet. All the rah rah stuff was there and, even worse, there were scheduled strategizing sessions between each set of partners. Great, now he had to talk business with the finance geek all weekend instead of spending his time getting blown and fucked by the hottest woman he’d dated in a year. The law degree and MBA hanging on his office wall had made Holden the company’s General Consul and Chief Legal Officer. He dealt mostly with contracts and the mergers that Declan arranged. Anything related to litigation got shuffled off to a firm on retainer. Holden answered directly to Sean, but spent most of his time working with Declan. Looking at the itinerary for the next four days he couldn’t believe Sean hadn’t paired him with Declan. It made better sense to him because he and Declan were in the middle of some delicate takeover negotiations with an Australian company. He didn’t have any strategizing to do with the bean counter, Holden thought with annoyance. Pairing him with the whiz kid had to be yet another Sean Antaeus production. Holden watched Sean close the meeting. An odd glow of triumph lurked in the golden depths of Sean’s eyes. Holden’s dragon senses pinged. A triumphant Sean wasn’t necessarily a Spinning 51
good thing for the members of his family. He jerked his attention from his brother and gathered up his things, fury propelling him out of the board room. Fuck Sean. Maybe he’d just not show up at the retreat. That would teach his brother. The scent of spearmint caused his nostrils to flare. He turned his head to find that Garret Renquist had followed him out of the board room. His frown deepened. “I gather you’re unhappy about being paired with me.” Visions of a cool woodland waterfall flitted through Holden’s mind at the sound of the British accented baritone. Holden didn’t know why it hadn’t dawned on him that Garret was British. The man had come from a British based company. Holden stepped into his office and Garret followed. Holden shut the door and waved the financial whiz kid toward a chair. As he sat down behind his desk he noticed that Garret’s green eyes flickered over the wall of certificates, awards, and degrees. For a moment, Holden again had the sense that he knew the man. The spearmint scent apparently came from Garret. Holden’s office smelled like a bottle of mouthwash. “You’re the General Consul.” Garret’s clipped British accent made the words sound almost accusatory, though Holden knew that wasn’t his intent. With a nod, he gestured toward the wall of plaques. “I went to Harvard Law School. I wasn’t top of my class, but close.” He smiled a little and joked, “All the Boston beauties kept me from studying too hard so I missed out on the top three spots.” Garret’s eyes glowed a little and his mouth quirked up in the same smile he’d displayed in the board room. “I’ve been to Boston. There are a lot of good looking women there. It’s a very academic town, isn’t it?” Holden nodded absently. Something about the spearmint scent bothered him, but like the sense of familiarity he had when he looked in Garret’s eyes, he couldn’t quite place it. He studied the man before him more closely. They had similar builds and were about the same height. Garret stood perhaps an inch taller and he appeared to be a little leaner than Holden. His chestnut brown hair was cropped close around the back of his neck but fell over his forehead with a wave in front. He had a boyishly handsome face, but his reserved demeanor made him look rather stern. Holden wondered if the golden boy of the stock market ever had any fun. He certainly looked all business. With a mental shrug, Holden studied the man’s very green eyes. They held an open expression, but Holden felt sure that behind that expression, Garret Renquist was quite guarded. Had he been the new guy, he’d be totally on his guard. “I’m not unhappy about being paired with you. I’m unhappy about the whole weekend,” he explained, reaching out to grasp his pen, twirling it absently in his fingers. “For one, my brother Sean likes to play at being the puppet master, making us all dance on strings. For another, I had plans.” Two beats of silence followed his words. Then Garret’s eyes clouded, the emerald green irises darkening. Holden figured the man didn’t like the idea of Sean being a manipulator. It sure as heck wasn’t something he’d want to know about his boss’s boss on the first day of a new job. He felt a little sorry for Garret now. He’d obviously had no idea what Sean Antaeus was like when he accepted the position at Antaeus International.
52 Jaime Samms
“Look, we’ll just have to make the best of it, as we do with any of these team building things Sean springs on us. I’m sure we’ll find something to work on during the strategy sessions,” he said easily, hoping he hadn’t scared off the new guy. Sean would kill him if he did. One of Garret’s brown brows arched up. “You don’t think we’re a good match?” Holden blinked at the man’s odd choice of words. “There’s not a lot of interaction between my department and yours. I work more closely with my brother Declan. Declan works with Emily. I’m not sure why Sean put us together.” Garret’s mouth quirked knowingly as if he had knowledge Holden didn’t. Resisting the urge to shift uncomfortably in his chair, Holden snuck a glance at the guy. He sat there cool as a cucumber, his expression enigmatic, while Holden could barely keep from fidgeting. Holden looked down at his hands then and dropped the pen he’d been twirling. When he raised his head, his gaze collided with Garret’s. The scent of spearmint intensified and a nervous sweat broke out on the skin between Holden’s shoulder blades, making his clan mark itch. He sucked in a breath as realization hit him. “You’re a dragon.” Garret nodded, the enigmatic expression giving way to amusement. “Your natural enemy. I’m a green.” Holden made a rude sound. “The dragon clans haven’t fought in a millennia. And even then, there was nothing natural about it. All the wars were about power. Not color or clan. Legend says we were all one color in the beginning. Our natural enemies were humans, not each other.” A huge smile broke out on Garret’s face. “You’re a purist.” Holden’s stomach lurched. Geez, the man had the most brilliant smile he’d ever seen. He shook his head. “I’m a realist. Dragons were not born to kill each other. We were never each other’s natural enemies. Humans on the other hand instinctively want to be rid of any being stronger than themselves. Their fear drives them.” Both of Garret’s brows rose, but his smile stayed intact. “A psychology major.” “Biological Anthropology.” Holden grinned, beginning to relax. Maybe the weekend wouldn’t be so bad after all. In fact, it would be perfect if he had a victim. “Hey! Do you play…?” “Tennis,” Garret finished for him with a nod toward Holden’s college trophies. “Although not in your league.” “That was years ago. My reflexes aren’t so fast anymore. I sit at a desk all day after all.” Garret’s brow cocked up again. “You don’t look so out of shape.” Holden shrugged. “I’m not, but I don’t play much anymore and to stay at the top of your form you have to play every day. I had the skill to go pro, but not the drive. I like working for my family.” He grimaced. “My brother is a pain in the ass, but I wouldn’t work for any other company.”
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“Your brothers, this company…Antaeus is a powerful name in this industry,” Garret said quietly. “I was flattered that Alfred wanted me for the FDG and Stone. I was floored when Sean said he’d pay me more to come here.” Holden laughed. “I’ll bet Alfred was tweaked. He’s one of Sean’s closest friends so I’m sure he gave my brother an earful, but the rest of us would never know it.” “Strangely, Alfred took it all very calmly, as if he had expected it to happen.” Holden prepared himself for the sense of familiarity when he met Garrett’s gaze. “I’m sorry if I gave you the impression I was pissed at having to share a room with you.” Something indefinable flickered in Garret’s eyes. He rose from his chair. “It’s all right. I’ve been feeling a bit out of my element today so I overreacted.” He turned toward the door. “I’ll see you up at the resort. Maybe we can get in a couple of rounds of tennis while we’re there.” Holden smiled. “I’d like that. Welcome to Antaeus International, Garret.” The other man looked back over his shoulder. “Thank you.” A brief smile flashed across his face and then he was gone. Holden sat staring at the closed door for long minutes, the scent of spearmint lingering faintly in the office. The anger he’d felt at Sean’s manipulations had fizzled during his conversation with Garret. He should know better than to get pissed anyway. It never changed anything. Holden had never known anyone to get his way more than Sean. On his way to the elevator, he ran into Declan. “Nothing from Australia?” he asked. His brother shook his head. “Not yet.” They both stepped into the elevator. As the door closed, Holden said, “Why did Sean stick me with the new guy?” Declan shrugged. “Why does Sean do anything? Everything is about control with him.” “Has he messed with your private life too?” Holden’s gaze sharpened as he looked at his older brother. “What private life?” The words were cool and sardonic with a bitter edge. Sympathy washed over Holden. His older brother had a huge thing for Elysia Granville, one of the most powerful women in their industry. However, she was engaged to the industry’s biggest asshole, Austin Stone. Holden didn’t understand how such a smart woman had ended up with such a monumental jackass. A woman like her belonged with a man like his brother, not a weasel like Austin. “I gather Sean’s little jaunt to the mountains is interfering with your plans,” Declan said, his voice rumbling out of his broad chest. Holden looked up to find his brother’s expression filled with understanding. “Yeah. It’s gonna cost me a bundle too between the deposit on the suite at the spa and keeping Gina from being disappointed.” Declan’s eyes twinkled. “Buy her an expensive bracelet. She’s mercenary enough to be placated by rocks.”
54 Jaime Samms
The elevator stopped at the underground garage and they headed toward their assigned parking spots. “Why do you and Sean think that’s all Gina wants from me?” Holden grumbled as he watched his brother’s tall form move toward his Mercedes. Declan shot him an amused glance over the roof of the car. “Because it’s obvious?” Holden grimaced. “Money isn’t the only thing she wants. She likes my cock too.” His brother grinned, white teeth flashing in his tanned face. “Well, she should. Especially when the man attached to the cock buys expensive presents. Just watch it with her, little brother. She wants the gold ring with rocks and you just want to get your rocks off.” Holden walked over to his SUV. “Yeah, well, she can want the ring, but that doesn’t mean she’ll get it. I’m not the marrying type.” “Neither was Sean.” Declan laughed and unlocked his car, the headlights flashing as the alarm disarmed. “I’ll see you at the resort. Good luck appeasing Gina.” As Holden drove to his condo, he pondered his brother’s words. He knew Gina wanted to marry him. He knew she was dazzled by his job, his money, and his good looks. He also knew that a woman like her would never fit in his family. For all their money, the Antaeus siblings were all about home and hearth and true mates. Holden wouldn’t dream of marrying a social climber like Gina. A woman like her could never be his mate. Maybe Sean’s interference wasn’t such an inconvenience after all. Although left with only his hand to see to his sexual satisfaction, being rid of Gina and her demands was more of a relief than he’d wanted to admit. Holden’s condo was in a high rise condominium complex only two blocks from the beach. He drove into the underground garage and parked in the space reserved for the penthouse. His footsteps echoed in the cement structure as he walked to the elevator. Thoughts echoed in his head too. Everything from Declan’s bitterness to Sean’s manipulations to the prospect of kicking Garret’s ass at tennis. The weekend was starting to look up. In the elevator, he punched in the security code that took him to the penthouse level. The elevator opened onto a foyer that had but one door, his. Unlocking the penthouse door and automatically disarming the alarm, Holden stepped into his home. From his living room, he had an unparalleled view of the coast in both directions. His expensive, but comfortable furniture softened the starkly modern architecture. It was a bachelor’s home, not meant for entertaining in spite of its size. Holden jerked off his tie and jacket, tossing them on the brown leather couch. In the kitchen, he pulled open one side of the huge brushed aluminum refrigerator and took out a bottle of water. As he drank, he eyed the crayon drawings stuck to the refrigerator with magnets. His sister Diandra’s twins were the only Antaeus offspring. He, Declan, and Eden were unmated. Sean and Careen hadn’t had any children yet. Holden figured his brother wouldn’t have kids until all his siblings were mated. It was a very Sean way to go about things. For himself, he didn’t even wonder if he had a mate. He didn’t particularly care. Kids and a white picket fence and the kind of woman who would want that life were so not his style. On the other hand, society type women and career women weren’t really his type either. People with that kind of driven personality irritated him which is why he was no longer pissed at missing his weekend with Gina. He really only had one use for her and now that he realized it, he was too nice a guy to continue fucking her when he didn’t even like her.
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As he headed for his bedroom, Holden wondered if Garret Renquist was the driven type. He didn’t seem that way, but it was tough to tell with wonder boys. Things seemed to come so easily to them that if they were driven, those around them never noticed. Holden opened his packed suitcase and changed some of the items so that now his clothing was more suited to a mountain business retreat rather than a beachside spa. Once the suitcase was ready to go, Holden picked up the phone and called the exclusive jeweler his family always used. He ordered an elegant ruby bracelet to be delivered to Gina that evening and headed down to his car. He figured he’d call Gina while he drove so she’d know he wasn’t lying to her about having to go to the mountains. It was going to be an uncomfortable call, so doing it while driving also gave him the excuse of the call dropping if he got tired of listening to her rage or whine. The more he thought about how unpleasant the call would probably be, the more he just wanted to be rid of her. And so, when he was halfway up the mountain pass on the way to Gargoyle Resort, Holden found himself breaking up with Gina over the phone. She whined. She raged. She cursed him in Italian. And then he hit a dead spot and the call dropped. Sighing with relief, he shut off his cell phone. The remainder of the drive to the resort relaxed him and by the time he arrived, Holden looked forward to playing tennis with Garret. He loved tennis and rarely got the opportunity to play anymore. He hoped Garret played well enough to challenge him. Holden’s shared suite turned out to have two bedrooms and a well stocked wet bar in the sitting room between the two rooms. Since he was the first one there, he picked one of the rooms and unpacked. As he stowed away his suitcase, he heard the door open. He walked into the sitting room to find Garret standing in front of the door, taking in his surroundings. “It’s a two bedroom suite,” Holden said with a grin. He gestured toward the door across from him. “That one’s yours.” Garret returned his smile and picked up his suitcase. “Thanks.” “Can I get you a drink while you unpack? It’s an hour until dinner and there’s a fully stocked bar here. No mini bottles.” Holden’s nose twitched as the spearmint scent reached him. He’d never smelled cologne like that before. “That would be great. Just a glass of red wine if they have it, please,” Garret replied as he walked toward his room. Holden heard the sound of Garret opening his suitcase and then the closet door. He searched through the wet bar’s stock of alcohol looking for wine and found a full size bottle of Merlot and one of Cabernet Sauvignon. The Merlot was a decent vintage and he decided he’d have a glass. He pulled out a corkscrew, expertly removed the cork, and poured two glasses before ambling over to Garret’s bedroom door. The British man had his back to Holden, putting folded shirts in the dresser. Holden noticed absently that they were dressed similarly in khaki slacks and polo shirts. Without the suit jacket covering his torso, it was obvious that Garret was taller, yet leaner, with a narrow waist and broad shoulders. “Here’s your wine. They had a decent vintage of Merlot. Surprised me,” Holden said as he watched Garret finish unpacking. The whiz kid had an elegance of movement that was graceful in its economy. Certainly not what he expected of a bean counter.
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Garret stowed his suitcase, turned, and took the glass of wine from Holden, their fingers brushing briefly. A frisson of awareness trickled down Holden’s spine at the touch of Garret’s warm hand. Something about him affected Holden physically. First, there was that odd prickling of his clan mark that he’d felt earlier and now the touch of their hands made him feel flushed. Not to mention that damned spearmint scent that assailed his nose. Magia. The thought flashed through Holden’s mind and he wondered if Garret was more than just a green dragon. Sometimes dragons had magical abilities, but usually those that did belonged to the community of Magia rather than the dragons. He wished he understood what unsettled him so much about the other man. Abruptly, he turned and walked back into the sitting room, opening the slider to the balcony. He stepped outside into the crisp mountain air and sat down on a comfortable patio chair. Garret followed him and took the chair on the other side of the small table. “This is a very tolerable Merlot.” The smooth British accent caused Holden’s clan mark to prickle yet again and even though they were outside, the spearmint scent was just as strong as it had been inside. Holden didn’t understand why the man had such an odd impact on him. Again, he wondered whether Garret was Magia. It would certainly explain his reactions to the guy. His annoyance at being unable to figure out Garret rose. “So how are you settling in?” he asked abruptly. “Are you looking for a place to live?” Garret nodded, his eyes twinkling a little as if he had a secret. “Yes. Something with a view of the coastline, rather more modern than not. Nothing I need to spend time keeping up…that sort of place,” he replied. “You should look around my neighborhood. There are lots of very nice condo complexes like that. In fact, I can ask my association manager for a list of availabilities if you’d like.” Holden couldn’t believe what had just come out of his mouth. He didn’t need the new guy living in the same building! Not that he could take the words back now… “Thank you. I would appreciate that very much.” Garret’s cool, even tones set Holden’s back teeth to grinding silently, although for the life of him, he didn’t know why. “I’ll call her this weekend and have her fax a list to you at the office,” he muttered, lifting his wine glass to his mouth and gulping down half the contents. The emerald eyes of his companion glittered knowingly. Frustrated by how the man unsettled him, Holden knocked back the rest of his wine and rose to his feet. “It’s almost time for dinner. I’m going down to the restaurant.” Garret’s expression turned sympathetic as if he knew how Holden felt. He didn’t speak, but those uncanny eyes watched him like a hawk. A muffled sound of exasperation escaped Holden. “I don’t get you,” he ground out in a low tone that expressed his frustration. “Are you Magia or what? Cause I’m all edgy and weird around you and I don’t know why. My clan mark is prickling. You smell like a pack of spearmint gum. Every time I look at you, I think I know you from somewhere, but I can’t place where! What the hell is going on?” The glow in Garret’s eyes intensified as he rose to his feet, facing Holden. “Think about what you just said to me, Holden,” he said quietly. “Think about what those things might
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signify. I’m not Magia, but as far as you’re concerned, I’m something far more rare and important.” He walked over to the sliding door and then stopped, looking back at Holden. “Open your mind, Holden Antaeus. Life doesn’t always fit in neat little boxes or compartments. Things happen for a reason.” Garret stepped into the sitting room, disappearing behind the blinds. Holden stared at the empty doorway for long moments. Emotions tugged inside him. Even though Garret had gone inside, Holden could still smell his spearmint scent. His eyes narrowed thoughtfully. That scent…his dragon lore came rushing back to him and his jaw went slack with shock. Holy shit! No fucking way! He shook with reaction, his fingers clutching the empty wine glass convulsively. It couldn’t be true. It wasn’t possible. Somehow Sean had set him up. His brothers were punking him, playing him off against the British man somehow. The guy was probably some tennis stud who would kick his ass six ways from Sunday the moment they took their rackets out. Yet, how could they have manufactured his scent and Holden’s reaction to that scent? Holden stormed into the suite, fumbling a little with the door and the blinds. As he stumbled into the sitting room, Garret turned, his hand dropping from the handle of the suite’s door. Their eyes met, Garret’s sympathetic. Holden knew his expression was wild with disbelief. This couldn’t be happening! Garret sighed loudly and turned his back on the door, facing Holden fully. “It’s not as complicated as you think, Holden,” he said quietly. “I don’t know why either. I just know it is and I recognized you right away. What you do with the knowledge, how you deal with it, is up to you, but you cannot change it unless one of us dies.” A growl began deep in Holden’s chest as fear took hold of him. “Something’s wrong!” he burst out, his emotions wildly overwrought. Garret shook his head. “No. Something’s very right.” He moved, crossing the room swiftly to stop a few inches from Holden who wanted to recoil but somehow managed not to. His voice when he spoke was soft, but firm. “Holden, you’re my mate.”
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