Our Little Secret
Weston Parker
BrixBaxter Publishing
Contents
Find Weston Parker
Description
Dedication
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Epilogue
Insider Group
About the Author
Copyright
Find Weston Parker
www.westonparkerbooks.com
Description
Dating university staff is against the rules. Dating being the key word.
We met at a staff mixer, and it was all I could do to keep my hands off of her.
She’s everything I want in my life and my bed, but I’m on track to achieve my career goals.
A beautiful smile and great hips aren’t messing up that plan.
Until I figure out that she’s carrying a secret around campus.
Our little secret.
No way in hell I was looking to be a family man before this, but knowing what I know and falling for this woman are changing me fast.
Crazily enough, this woman turns out to be the Dean’s daughter.
You can’t make this stuff up.
The tighter the situation gets, the more I realize rules were made to be broken.
Dedication
To my taboo readers out there! I love a good story where there are rules in the way. Nothing like having love BUST through those rules and take the victory. That’s how this one felt. Sure hope you love it.
Weston
Introduction
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1
River
I made my way over to one of my most promising students’ workstation. I stood behind her and watched her use small brushstrokes to create what appeared to be the face of a young girl. She loved impressionism. So did I. Maybe that was why I was naturally drawn to her art. I stared at the image of a little girl sitting in a field of wildflowers. The painting was good enough that I could actually smell the earth and feel the sun on my face. It wasn’t even done yet. I couldn’t wait to see the finished product.
“Your palette is lovely,” I said from behind her. “Your color blends are harmonic.”
“Thank you,” she said and stopped painting. “I wasn’t sure if I should stick with pastels or try something new. I feel like I’m always using pastels.”
“There is no right or wrong way,” I told her. “This is your art. This is you expressing what you see and feel. If you see in pastel, stick with it. Every artist has their own view of the world. I want to see your view. It’s beautiful.”
“Thanks, Miss Owens,” she said and got back to work.
I moved around the large classroom to inspect the progress of my other students. This was a second-year art class. I didn’t teach a specific style of art in this class. This particular class was about shaping young artists into future experts. I guided them as they grew in their chosen style of art. I provided counseling and advice about how they could improve their technique. I couldn’t possibly teach them how to be better artists.
I did have a few students who took the class just because they thought it was an easy credit. There wasn’t much I could do about that, but I hoped everyone that walked through the door learned a little something. If they weren’t going to be artists when they left school, I hoped they could appreciate the art they did see.
“Nice work,” I said in a quiet voice as I tapped another student on the shoulder.
The large open studio was a dream for me. When I was offered the position, my first question had been about the classroom. I wanted lots of natural light. I wanted open and airy. I didn’t want my students sitting on top of one another. I taught painting and it could get messy. This space was perfect. On one wall, I hung a variety of past and current students’ work. I even had one of my own paintings on display but never advertised it was mine.
“Marcus, I love it!” I exclaimed when I saw the cubism painting the man was working on. “I had no idea you liked this style.”
The man, who I guessed to be in his mid-thirties, looked up and smiled. “Neither did I.” He laughed. “I saw it in a book and wanted to give it a try.”
“You’re very talented. It’s a style I’ve never been able to master. I can’t wait to see the finished product.”
“I guess you can teach an old dog new tricks,” he teased. “My wife thought I was crazy when I said I wanted to take art classes. I hope I can actually make some money doing this or she’s going to make me go back to being a salesman.”
“Hey, if you’re old, I’m right there with you, and I am not old,” I said with a laugh. “And you keep painting like this, you will definitely make some sales. This is all the rage right now. “
“You can’t be more than twenty-two,” he said with a flirty smile.
“Yeah, we’ll stick with that,” I said and walked to the next station.
Not every student had a future as an artist, but I always encouraged them. I offered them constructive criticism. Art wasn’t exactly something that was a life or death job. If they failed an art class, I didn’t think it was the end of the world. They could still go on to do something else that paid the bills. There was no reason people shouldn’t do what made them happy if it didn’t hurt anyone. Art gave people an outlet to express their feelings.
I wished I had the same support when I was growing up. Dad was not thrilled about my interest in art. He thought art was a hobby, not a job. When I insisted it was what I wanted to do, he had been very upset. He thought I was wasting time. He was convinced the only option was a degree that had me sitting in an office. He refused to look at my art. He always brushed it off and considered it a hobby, not a passion. He insisted I have a backup plan because art was not a career. I enjoyed proving him wrong every single day.
I smiled when I stopped at my next student’s canvas. “I love your use of colors,” I said. The painting was very elementary and it was clear the kid didn’t have a future as an artist, but I wouldn’t discourage him.
“Thanks, Professor Owens,” he said. “I’m trying. I really am.”
Professor Owens. That’s right. My career and my passion had gotten married. I was an art professor. It was my dream job. I loved teaching and I loved sharing my love of art with young, impressionable people who were trying to find their way in life. Some just dabbled in art, but some were extremely talented and would go on to be very successfu
l artists in their fields.
“Okay, everyone,” I said and made my way back to the front of the room. “Let’s take a poll.”
Some continued to paint while others put down their brushes and gave me their attention. It was a small class. Only twenty-two students. This was the advanced class of sorts. This was the class the more serious students interested in becoming artists took.
“Who feels like they are on their way to an A for their semester project?” I asked.
I hoped everyone would raise their hands. That wasn’t the case. I made a mental note of the few students who did not raise their hands. I would devote more encouragement and guidance to them.
“Why, David?” I asked one of the students who had made very little progress on his project.
The young man shrugged his shoulder. “I don’t like where it’s going,” he said.
“Can you change it?” I asked him.
He grimaced. “I don’t know. I think I’m too far into it.”
We clearly had very different ideas about his progress. This was one of those students that somehow got into my class with no intention of actually learning or growing from it. There was always one.
“I would suggest you sit with it,” I told him. “You started it with a vision in mind. It’s easy to lose your way when you’re in the thick of it. You need to go back to the beginning and remember what your original vision is.”
“Thanks, Prof,” he said.
I smiled at his nickname for me. I was sure it was what he called all of his professors. “Everyone, please put your canvases in your lockers and we’re done for the day. Get out and get some inspiration from the changing colors. Love where you live!”
Most of the students were from the Richmond area, but there were some who moved to Virginia to go to school. I wanted them to get out and enjoy the beauty of the area. I always found it to clear the creative blocks that came from sitting inside a classroom for too long.
While they cleaned up and put away their palettes and canvases, I sat down at my desk to go over the syllabus for the afternoon class. It was Drawing 101. Not my favorite by any means, but I was on a three-three contract. I needed to teach three classes both semesters. It paid the bills and it allowed me to do what I loved. And teaching drawing forced me to be better at it. That was where the real bread and butter came from
“Bye, Professor,” the students said as they filed out of the classroom.
I waved and nodded as they left. I opened my laptop to check my email. I did some freelance work on the side and I was expecting a job offer to come in. I liked flexing my artistic muscles. I did some illustrating on the side to help make ends meet. One day, I was going to buy a house. I just needed to have a little more saved up.
There was nothing in my email, which was a little disappointing. I closed the laptop and got up from the desk. I turned off the lights and locked the door behind me. I was thinking about leaving campus to get lunch but was too lazy. I didn’t want to mess with walking all the way to the staff parking lot and then dealing with traffic.
I had office hours scheduled in thirty minutes. I would eat after the day was done. I walked down the hall with the wooden floors. My heels clapped against the wood, creating an echo around me. I had my keys in my hand and jangled them in time with the sound. I opened the small mailbox mounted to the wall outside my door and pulled out a single envelope.
I unlocked the door and went inside. I put down my laptop bag and turned my attention to the envelope. I quickly opened it and groaned. “No thank you,” I muttered.
It was an invitation to a staff mixer. That was about the last thing I wanted to do. I was one of the younger professors at the college. I was thirty-one and spent way too much time with old people. Maybe not old, but most were old enough to be my parents. I did not want to spend my Friday night hanging out with people I worked with. Professors weren’t exactly a lively bunch. There was always a lot of politics at those things.
I preferred to spend my weekends home alone. Not exactly living it up, but I preferred my own company over the idea of making small talk with people I didn’t necessarily like and had nothing in common with. I tossed the envelope and invitation on the desk.
I still had some time before I had to officially be open for student questions. I closed the door behind me and sat down. I needed to start thinking and planning for next semester. I tried to change things up now and again to keep things exciting. I got bored teaching the same thing all the time.
There was a knock on my door. I assumed it was a student stopping by early. I opened the door to find a very handsome man staring back at me. He didn’t look like a student. I had never met a student that dressed in a suit. A tailored suit at that. One that looked like it cost a small fortune.
His hairstyle befitted a younger man. It was short on the sides and just a little longer on the top. It was purposely styled to be messy. It was sexy. The hazel eyes staring at me with irritation snapped me back to reality. He wasn’t a student. “Can I help you?” I asked.
He held up the envelope that looked identical to the one I got. I quickly made the assumption he was faculty. I thought he looked vaguely familiar but I couldn’t say for sure who he was or what he taught. Did he teach? Maybe he was on the faculty board. I didn’t know of any professor that wore expensive suits. I was used to the standard cheap suits and sweater vests. I had stopped looking to my colleagues as a potential dating pool.
But this man, damn, he was hot.
And off limits, River.
2
Lukas
I stared at the woman that was openly checking me out. I didn’t know her. I had walked by this office every day for the last month and I had never seen the occupant of the office. Her door was always closed, or she was never in the office. I knew she was the art teacher, but she didn’t look old enough to be a professor.
She did not look like a professor at all. She was young and beautiful. Her green eyes pulled me in. I couldn’t look away. I barely noticed the long brunette hair falling around her shoulders. She was absolutely stunning.
“Hello,” I managed to get out. I probably looked like a total idiot openly staring at her.
“Hello,” she answered with a small smile.
“You must be River Owens,” I said.
“Must I?”
That confused me. “Are you?”
Her smile widened. “I am.”
She was playing coy. “I’m Lukas Constantino,” I said.
She nodded. “I’m River, but you apparently already know that.”
I couldn’t believe I was looking at the woman I had made so many assumptions about. I remembered my art teacher in grade school. She was an older, hippie lady with long silver hair. She always smelled funky. She always wore flowery dresses and used her hands to talk a lot. I assumed all artsy types were the same way.
And now I knew they weren’t. I held up the envelope that had been on the floor in front of my door. “I found this,” I said. “I think it’s yours.”
She smiled. “It isn’t.”
“How can you know? You didn’t even look at it.”
She turned and grabbed an identical envelope from her desk. “Because I have one already.”
“Oh,” I said and felt like an idiot.
“Did you open it?”
“No.”
The way she was looking at me made feel like a complete idiot. I felt it because I was certain that was what she thought. “Anything else?” she asked.
She was dismissing me. “No. Sorry to have bothered you.”
“No problem,” she said with a tight smile and closed the door in my face.
I blinked several times. “Okay then,” I muttered before going into my office to grab the thumb drive I needed.
That had been unusual. I wasn’t used to being looked at with admiration yet blown off like I was an annoying fly to be swatted away. That was a class in mixed messages. I brushed it off and quickly locked my office bac
k up. I should move offices. This wasn’t supposed to be my office. When my building had been going through renovations, those of us that worked in the math and business building were scattered across the campus. These were supposed to be temporary quarters, but it had been a pain in the ass to move in here. I didn’t want to move back because it meant more shit lost and more chaos.
I hated chaos. I needed things organized. I tended to see everything as a problem to be solved. It was my math background. I loved math. I loved finances. People thought I was crazy, but it was what made me happy. Yes, I was a nerd. I didn’t care.
I strolled through the halls of the art building. It actually smelled artsy. I could smell paint and an acrid odor of what I assumed was some kind of chemical for cleaning paint. There was a funky vibe to the building. The students I passed had that same artsy thing going on as well. They looked at me with confusion.
“One of these things is not like the other,” I murmured to myself as I pushed open the door and stepped into the cool fall day.
I crossed the campus littered with maple trees in full fall colors. Students milled about in varying stages of dress. I remembered my days in college. The freshman girls showed up dressed like they were going to a club. Freshmen guys looked like they rolled out of bed and picked up whatever was lying on the floor. The upper classmen seemed to flip fashion standards. The young women wore sweats and hair piled on their heads with little makeup while the guys dressed in casual wear.
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