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Sold as a Domme on Valentine's Day

Page 62

by Juliana Conners


  The doorbell rang, and my balls tingled. She was here.

  I strolled to the foyer, and when I opened the door, my breath caught. Standing in front of me wasn’t the masked vixen in the little black dress from last night, but she was just as stunning.

  She wore her hair back in a tight ponytail and a flash of yanking her head back while I took her from behind, crashed into the forefront of my mind. She wore black-rimmed glasses that accentuated her green eyes. Last night, I hadn’t been aware of how vivid they were. Her skin was fresh and scraped free of makeup, and the Manhattan wind had reddened her cheeks and nose.

  She stood there, biting her inner cheek the way she had last night. As if my cock wasn’t already hard enough.

  She held out her hand and said, “Mr. Palmer, I’m Paige Matthews from The New York Reporter. You were expecting me? Sorry, I’m a little late.”

  She gave me a dimpled smile, and I wondered how I’d missed her dimples the previous evening.

  “I’m not a fan of lateness. I usually make people pay in some way to teach them a lesson, but I’ll let it go this one time.”

  Her smile faltered a little. “Um, thanks and good to know. Can I come in, or would you like me to interview you in the hallway?”

  She grinned, and my heart stuttered. I hated myself for loving to see her smile. She glanced down at her fingers, and I realized I’d ignored her outstretched hand.

  I took her small palm and enveloped it in mine, and the second our hands touched, it was like she’d reached down and caressed my cock. Inviting her to my apartment could turn out to be a bad idea for both of us.

  I had iron willpower, but this little mouse could possess enough power to bend it.

  A flash of something ran across her eyes. Was it recognition? Did she feel the same thing I did when our hands touched?

  She quickly blinked and stepped into my apartment— like everyone who entered my home always did. Her eyes widened, and her jaw slackened at the view of Central Park from my living room windows. It was something I would never grow immune to. From my vantage point, I could see the entire fucking span of the park.

  “Wow. Just wow.” She turned to face me, her face filled with awe. “You live here alone?”

  Not giving me a chance to answer, she continued, “How big is this place? How do you get any work done with this view?”

  I smiled at her childlike enthusiasm.

  “Almost 4000 square feet. And to answer your other question, yes, I live here alone, and I get a lot of work done that way. You should see the view of Central Park when it’s covered in snow. It’s breathtaking.”

  “I bet. When I was a kid, I used to dream about having the ice rink all to myself. I’d imagine gliding across the ice with the skyline in the background.”

  She lost herself to her thoughts, and a happy sigh floated from her lips, reminding me of how she’d sounded after her second orgasm.

  “If you’d like to see the view at night, you’ll have to stop by some evening.”

  I was flirting and enjoyed the way her cheeks reddened at my not-so-subtle invitation. I stood behind the sofa, hoping it would hide the hard on straining against the crotch of my jeans. I wanted to order her to strip her clothes off, so I could view her body in the daylight to see if it was as exquisite as I remembered from when we were in the dimly lit club.

  But if I wanted to find out more about this little mouse who didn’t seem so mousy today, I had to bide my time. She dropped her bag onto the sofa and shrugged off her coat. I noticed she didn’t take as much care of her things as she had last night. Probably because she didn’t have a phone hidden anywhere.

  Her tight jeans accentuated the curve of her ass. The ass that had been on the end of my hand, but her sweater sadly only showed a hint of her beautiful tits.

  She tilted her head, and a perplexed expression crossed her face. “You don’t decorate for Christmas?”

  I shrugged. “There’s no point since I’m the only one who is usually here and when I am, I’m working. No one would get to enjoy it.”

  “Shame. You could fit a twenty-foot tree in here and still have room for more.”

  “I’ll take it under consideration,” I said with a smile.

  “Ready?” she asked.

  I grinned— it was the same question I’d asked her last night.

  “Ready,” I replied. “Promise you’ll be gentle.”

  She gave me a lopsided grin. “If I get too tough, you can use a safe word.”

  She giggled, and it was a delightful tinkling sound.

  I did a double take and raised an eyebrow. “Excuse me.”

  “Sorry.” She said, taking a pad of paper and pen from her bag. She pointed the pen towards the TV. “Looks like you were watching The Office before I got here. It’s one of my favorite shows. Michael and Jan’s safe word is Foliage.”

  “I know,” was my only reply.

  She sat a voice recorder in the center of the table and pressed record. And once I had my dick under control, I sat down on the sofa directly opposite her.

  Paige began her interview by asking, “Wouldn’t you prefer someone who’s much more experienced than I am?”

  “Is that your first question?” I asked, startled.

  “Yes.”

  She pursed her lips at me, and I wasn’t sure if she meant the question to be a double entendre. This little Paige Matthews was full of big surprises. Oh, how I wished I could tie her up and teach her that I was the one in charge. Instead, I had to act professional and answer her questions, but she was making that task— and my fucking cock— very hard indeed.

  Chapter 9 – Paige Palmer

  Wyatt looked a little uncomfortable when I asked my first question— which was exactly my intention, because I liked to be the one in charge of my interviews, and plus I was having fun toying with him— but he soon cleared his throat and regained his normal, impressive, composure.

  “On the contrary,” Wyatt replied, “I prefer someone who’s learning the ropes. I find it much more satisfying that way.”

  Oh, boy! I hadn’t expected that answer. Everything he said had a hint of innuendo, and that wicked smile of his was all I needed to picture those innuendos.

  Something about him was so familiar, and I couldn’t shake the feeling that I knew him from somewhere. But I’d never met him before, and I’d never been in his social circles and never would be.

  If he kept flirting with me, getting through the interview with my panties still intact would be tough. There was no denying he was as sexy as all get out. The slightly tousled brown hair and roughened square jaw left me weak at the knees. Mischievousness filled his silvery blue eyes, and every deep word that fell from his full lips sent shivers down my spine. If I were into older men, which I was not, I could fall for him.

  He had the confidence of a man who didn’t have to worry about money or how to pay next month’s rent. His presence reminded me a little of the masked man from last night, but I couldn’t picture Wyatt ordering me around or fingering me to a double orgasm.

  In the short amount of time I’d had to research him, I hadn’t been able to find any whisperings on the gossip sites or online about him being involved in anything that wasn’t philanthropic. No girlfriends and no scandals. Definitely no rumors of sexual kinks or being a member of a sex club. It wasn’t like I could come right out and ask him if he was a member of Expose with a penchant for spanking women who walked into his room.

  I shifted on the sofa, and the memory of the masked man’s hand hitting off my ass came to the front of my thoughts, not that I hadn’t thought about it every other second. My backside still smarted. I didn’t mind because I liked the sensation of my lace underwear scratching my skin, but now wasn’t the time to get all horny and turned on.

  I had a job to do, and that job was to interview Wyatt Hot-as-hell-billionaire Palmer.

  He cleared his throat again and leaned back on the sofa, spreading his arms over the back cushions. He had the air
of someone who knew the room was his and was going to make it known— and not just this room that actually was his, but any room he was in.

  “So,” I began, “you’re telling me you prefer someone who doesn’t know what they’re doing?”

  “I don’t recall saying that.” He quirked an eyebrow and gave me a smile so wicked, my heart stopped. “It’s not like a journalist to twist words. Inexperience and incompetence are not the same things. Someone who’s new often has a hunger, is more enthusiastic, and at times does a better job than someone with years of experience. Plus, your advice column makes me smile— Advice from a Millennial Mind. Catchy title.”

  “Dear Abbey was taken, and Dear Paige didn’t have the same ring.”

  I said it with sarcasm, but I was embarrassed he’d seen my column. I wished I’d had something more serious for him to find.

  “After researching you some more, I decided… I wanted you.”

  His reply took my breath, and I momentarily sat as still as a stunned squirrel. I finally decided to give it back just as obviously as he was giving it to me. He was a powerful man, but it was obvious he was intrigued with me, and that was power that I could use to my advantage.

  “If we’re going to get anywhere with this interview, you have to stop flirting with me, Mr. Palmer.”

  He held up his hands in surrender. “You’ve got me. I’ll stop.”

  I glanced over the list of questions Alec had given me and then set them to one side. This was my interview, and I would ask my questions.

  “When you were a young executive, you punched your boss in the face. You never really said why.”

  “You’ve done some research, I see. I was twenty-five, hot-headed, and didn’t suffer fools. I still don’t, but I handle them in different ways now.”

  “But what was the reason?”

  “It was over my ex-fiancée.”

  He smiled, but I didn’t miss the bitter edge to his words.

  “Linda Phelps?” I glanced at my own notes. “In August, five years were added to her sentence for a credit card phishing scam.”

  He shrugged. “She’s good at getting the information she wants. Doesn’t matter who she hurts along the way. And I’m sure her time behind bars has taught her a trick or two.”

  “Is she the reason you’ve never married?”

  This wasn’t how I expected the interview to go, but I ran with it.

  “Alec would never have asked anything so personal.”

  “He would have asked you about your golf handicap and the usual tedious crap he always asks. I want readers to know who you are. Not the financial guru, not the motivational speaker. Beneath the surface, who are you?”

  “Tell me, Ms. Matthews, why are you working at The Reporter?”

  “You’re avoiding my question.”

  “Perhaps.”

  “My dad worked there. He died covering a story, and I guess I wanted to carry on his legacy.”

  “You’re carrying on his legacy by answering questions from someone who wants to know what’ll happen if he sends his colleague unsolicited dick pics?”

  I resisted the urge to visibly grimace. Answering that question hadn’t been one of my proudest columns, but Henry had insisted I do it, for the shock value. He’d said “no press is bad press” and that it would rocket me to stardom, but that wasn’t exactly the kind of stardom I’d had in mind. I wanted real journalist credentials, not cheap laughs or edgy social media shares.

  “It’s temporary,” I insisted. “Once I prove myself to my boss, I’ll—”

  “And how do you hope to do that?”

  “I’m working on a story.”

  “Care to share?”

  “Who’s interviewing who here?” I asked and then laughed. “Back to my question. Is Linda’s betrayal the reason you’ve never settled down?”

  He gave a slight nod. “One of them.”

  “What are the other reasons?”

  “Time and desire.”

  “I understand time, but not so much the desire. I’ve seen photos of you with some of the world’s most beautiful women. You didn’t desire them?”

  “Being attracted to someone and desiring them isn’t the same.”

  Needing to understand his reasoning, for personal reasons as much as story reasons, I leaned forward. “How so?”

  “Desire is when you long for someone or something and, if that desire is strong enough, it leads to motivation. I’ve never desired settling down with anyone enough to make it happen.”

  Interesting.

  “Since Linda, you haven’t desired anyone?”

  “Many times, and in many different ways. For instance, I desire you, but I haven’t decided if I’m going to act on it.”

  To hide my shock, I laughed.

  “There’s a compliment in there somewhere. Time to move on, I think.”

  He mirrored my body language and leaned forward.

  “You don’t think you’re desirable?”

  “Not that I’ve been told,” I said, scanning Alec’s interview questions. “Let’s move on, shall we?”

  “If it’s what you want.”

  “I do.”

  The subject matter was getting too personal, and I decided the best course of action was to follow Alec’s guidelines. The next question I asked Wyatt concerned the business principles he applied when managing his company.

  The rest of the interview, while enjoyable, wasn’t nearly as breathtaking as the beginning, but it was much safer for my panties and heart.

  I glanced at my watch. Four hours had passed, but it seemed like one, and I had more information than I could possibly use.

  I pressed stop on the voice recorder, and said, “Thank you so much for your time, Mr. Palmer. I really appreciate it. Before we go to print, I’ll send you a proof copy for your approval.”

  “No need. I trust you’ll give an accurate representation. You don’t strike me as a hack.”

  I appreciated the compliment.

  “I’m not. I only write the truth.”

  “Can I have your number in case I want to add anything?”

  “Sure. I’d like it if you called me.” Heat flamed my cheeks, and I shook my head. “For the story, I mean. I can give you a temporary number for now. I lost my phone last night when I was at a Christmas party.”

  “That’s unfortunate. Did you call to ask if they’d found it?”

  “I went back today, but no luck. I left my temporary number. I hope I get a call to say they did find it because it has pictures of my grandma. I don’t want to lose them.”

  “Are you close to her?”

  “I was,” I said, scribbling down my new and old numbers. “She passed last year. After my dad died, my mom couldn’t handle it and took off. My grandma raised me. I still live in her rent-controlled apartment.”

  I looked up from the scrap of paper into his concerned and sympathetic eyes, and the desire he’d talked about welled up inside of me.

  “Sorry. I didn’t mean to spill my guts.”

  “I like hearing about your life. Maybe you could tell me more over dinner sometime.”

  “Dinner? Sure. Sometime.”

  I was uncertain if he’d asked me out or if he was being polite. Perhaps he meant there would be more occasions for me to interview him in the future—which I’d welcome for my career. I didn’t want to get a big head and assume he meant he was interested in me, even though his statements had certainly indicated that he was.

  Powerful men flirted with a lot of women, I told myself. It was just what they did, and I shouldn’t think it meant much.

  I handed him the paper with my numbers on it, and said, “Thanks again for your time, Mr. Palmer.”

  “It’s Wyatt.”

  When he reached for the paper, our hands brushed, and my pulse thundered. There was no way he didn’t notice my intake of breath.

  “My pleasure, Ms. Matthews.”

  ***

  I was happy to get out of Wyatt’s apar
tment and into the elevator. Not because I was glad to get away from Wyatt; I could have stayed there all day talking to him. The reason I was happy was because my attraction, or should I say my desire, for him was way too much to deal with.

  He seemed to like me, but maybe I’d imagined that. Despite what he’d said, no way would a man like Wyatt— one of the world’s wealthiest men— be attracted to a broke college graduate who wrote a sarcasm-laced advice column.

  Before I left The Avalon, I stopped by the café to grab the hot chocolate I’d promised myself. When I reached the counter, my phone rang. I dug it out of my pocket and answered.

  “This is Jimmy from Expose Club. We found your phone. Come by tonight after nine.”

  He hung up before I was able to get a word in. I pushed his rudeness away and focused on my phone being found. Relief, the size of Niagara Falls, washed over me.

  Excitement and fear soon replaced the relief. Had the masked man found my phone? If he had, had he looked through it before I’d locked it? I’d hold out hope that a cleaning lady or someone else had been the one to find it. Otherwise going back to the club could be a mistake I’d live to regret.

  I forgot all about the hot chocolate I had been wanting. My nipples tightened to points and anticipation clenched my gut.

  This isn’t because I wanted anything to happen when I went back, I told myself. Fight or flight was the reason for my body’s reaction and nothing else.

  Yeah, right, I thought, and a bear doesn’t shit in the woods.

  Chapter 10 – Wyatt Palmer

  As soon as Paige left my apartment, I’d called Jimmy and asked if a girl had come into the club looking for a phone. He’d said someone called Patricia had. She’d left her number. I’d asked him to call her to let her know her phone had been found, and to instruct her that she was to come back tonight at nine.

  He’d tried to ask if he should report her for breaking club rules. I’d told him I would handle it and that it was none of his business. Jimmy knew his place, and shut up about snitching on her.

 

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