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The Campus Jock: A College Bad Boy Romance

Page 89

by Serena Silver


  “Solomon I know what I have done has hurt you” she stuttered softly, her usual controlled tone gone. “but you have to understand,” she continued “I have plans,” she hesitated “for us.”

  Solomon slowly looked up at her.

  “I don’t know if I like these plans,” he said in a low childish voice.

  “You will,” Alma replied quickly with her usual confidence. “But in the meantime can you forgive me?” She said in an even more childish tone than he had just used. Solomon said nothing but held her gaze firmly. Alma felt an overwhelming sensation to kiss him. She leaned in. Solomon didn’t lean in back, but he made no effort to stop her. As soon as their lips made contact, Solomon’s tense body relaxed in soft shivers. Solomon slowly moved his hands up to her thighs, then up to her hips and finally up to her breasts. He quickly moved his hands to her armpits and forcefully picked her up, spun her around and pushed her against the wall. Alma had never seen this side of Solomon before, but it was enough to put her over the edge. She moaned as he kissed her, she could feel his hard cock pressing against her slit through his tattered britches. Alma decided that she couldn’t take it any longer. She pushed him off of her and dropped to the floor. Her hands went straight to the strings of his pants.

  He was not prepared for her aggressive response to his.

  “wha what are doi…” his voice cut off as she wrapped her hand around his cock and pulled it from his trousers. She took his cock and pulled it towards her lips. Solomon’s eyes gazed down at her as she slowly placed it in her mouth. His body trembled, and his head leaned back from the pleasure. Alma stood up and pushed Solomon onto the dirt floor. She took off her clothes and crouched over Solomon, rubbing his cock on her clit. Solomon’s eyes darted from her eyes to her breasts to her slit. He reached forward and grabbed the inside of her thigh, pulling her towards him.

  “Fuck me.” Alma moaned.

  She pulled the head of his cock against her opening and slowly inserted it. Solomon moaned loudly as she sat down on his cock. Even though she was the wettest she had ever been, getting his cock inside her was not easy. Almas jaw opened widely as his cock stretched out her pussy. She quickened the pace. He moaned and moaned as she rode him, right there in the stables, and Alma had more orgasms than she remembered having at any other point in her life. She dug her fingernails into his skin as she came—and he came with her.

  “I love you,” he whispered, bringing her close.

  “Don’t,” she said. “I have to do something that will hurt you.”

  “I don’t care. I love you.”

  She couldn’t say it back because she knew what was coming; and she knew that it would be a long time before she and Solomon could openly be together. But there was love in her heart. There was no denying that.

  She rode and rode as the temperature rose and once again summer came to the Mojave. She received a letter from Elise, who was living with her sister and enjoying a life which did not involve whoring. Alma did not write back. Perhaps it was paranoia, but she feared her letter might be intercepted. The sheriff had not mentioned the wanted poster. Nobody had. But she could not be too careful. In any case, she wished Elise luck and good health. She liked the old crone.

  She knew she was reaching the last stage in her plans, but she also knew that the last stage could take a long time. But it would be worth it.

  She had a clear picture in her mind each morning when she woke: she and Solomon, sitting on a shaded porch, gazing out over the Mojave with servants offering iced lemonade and cakes.

  Chapter Thirteen

  She knew that the letters had worked when Wallace busted into the office with an ear-to-ear grin on his face. He paced up and down the room, as he often did when he was excited. She had come to know him so well – to be able to read the quirks in his character so well – that she knew by the pulsing of head just beside his eye and the clenching of his jaw that something had happened. She rose to her feet, hardly daring to hope, and then she saw that he had a notice of ownership clutched in his hands.

  “He sold it to me!” Wallace exclaimed, waving the paper in front of her face. “I can’t believe it . . . He called me into his office and sold it to me right then and there. Like something out of a romance, he was shaking and trembling, and he said, ‘I want you to have it,’ and when I asked him why he just shook his head and named a price far less than I would have paid. I am now the sole owner of the Silver King Mining Corporation!”

  Here it was. This was what her scheming and her fucking and her beauty and her work had led to. Here was the prize laid out before her, a prize that would take years to properly win, but would hinge on the next few moments. If she won now, she would have won forever. She felt certain of that. She arched her back and smiled warmly at him, shining the full light of her beauty at him: aiming it like a cannon.

  He smiled back at her.

  She approached him and touched his leg, just beside his groin, and kissed him on the cheek. “I want you,” she whispered, moving her lips to his ear. “I want you, Wallace. Will you have me?” He made to touch her cunt, and she grabbed his wrist. “Not just like that,” she moaned. “I want to be your wife. Be my husband, Wallace. Be my dear husband. I have dreamed of it for so long – how I have dreamed! – And I cannot restrain myself any longer. I know it is not proper, but, please, please, ask me. Ask me, and I will say yes in a moment.”

  She hated the desperation in her voice, hated even more that some of it was real. The idea of spending two years in this place and losing now sickened her. She truly was desperate. She leaned back and regarded his face. It seemed torn between embracing her warmly and pushing her away. But she knew him. He was weak and body-led. Cock-led.

  She reached down and grabbed his cock through his britches. He hardened immediately. “Don’t you want me?” she said, giving him an under-the-eyelashes look. “Don’t you want to be with me?”

  He let out a long breath. “Of course I do,” he said. “Of course I do, Alma.”

  He clamped his hand down on her groin.

  * * *

  After the wedding, Alma thought she might be sick. She had been born into a situation where she was tethered to a man she did not love, and now she had put herself in another situation like that. She consoled herself by repeating, over and over in her mind: It is not permanent. It is not permanent.

  But it did not make Solomon’s gaze, as he watched the happy couple emerge onto the sunbaked streets of Calico, any easier to take. Something reflected the sunlight on his cheek. Alma wanted to go to him and wipe the tears away, but she couldn’t. Not yet. She had to play the Dutiful Wife, the Doting Woman. She had to play the absolute antithesis of herself.

  “We’re going to be the happiest couple alive!” Wallace laughed, rubbing her shoulder.

  Maybe she should have felt guilty for what she would do. Maybe she should have felt ashamed. Or maybe she should have felt triumphant. She had been used by men her entire life. Now it was her turn to use them.

  * * *

  She couldn’t help herself.

  They were staying in Abraham’s house – the house he had built upon arriving in Calico – and Wallace was fast asleep after their lovemaking. Alma knew it was foolish, but Wallace had drunk a large quantity of whiskey and was exhausted. He snored loudly and lay on his front, away from Alma.

  Alma rose to her feet, put on her clothes as quietly as she could, and crept down the stairs and out of the door. She knew that Solomon sometimes slept in the store cupboard at Beryl’s, and when she walked into the dead bar and through the moon-touched shadows that was where she found him. She nudged him with her hand.

  “Solomon,” she whispered.

  He sat up and rubbed his eyes. He recoiled when he saw who had woken him. “What are you doing here?” he gasped.

  “I have to say something to you.”

  “I loved you. I thought you loved me. Now—”

  “That’s why I’m here, you silly man,” Alma said. “I do lo
ve you. This won’t be forever, Solomon. I promise you that. One day, we’ll look down on the whole damn bunch of them: the men and women who thought we were chattel will smile and bow to us. I promise you, my love.” My love . . . The phrase she had used so often with her now-husband, but she meant it this time. “I promise. I have to go now, though. Don’t forget me. I won’t forget you.”

  When she returned to the house, Wallace was still asleep. She took off her clothes and climbed into bed beside him. She was the queen of the Mojave, but the man beside her was not her king.

  Her king was asleep in the store cupboard of a hotel.

  She would be reunited with him. She knew people would frown upon them, but money and power talks.

  They would have both.

  Epilogue

  “Is it true that a negro and a woman own the mines?” Jack asked as he sipped his whiskey.

  The old barmaid and the owner of the hotel came up the bar and leaned over conspiratorially. Jack was looking for work and had never heard of a negro and a woman ruling over so many men.

  “That negro used to work for me, right here, only three years ago,” she said, looking up and down the bar as though somebody was listening. It was the middle of the day, and the place was dead. “He used to serve drinks and clean the place up. He slept in the store cupboard. The store cupboard! And the woman, she stayed here for a long while. Two years, I think. She married Wallace Saville, Abraham’s boy.”

  “I remember the name,” Jack said, sipping his whiskey. “The old fella died of a stroke, didn’t he? Never heard what happened to the young fella.”

  “I’ll tell you,” Beryl said, refilling Jack’s glass. “Miss Abrams married him, you see, but the marriage must not have been very enjoyable for Wallace. He lost a lot of weight, and his hair started to go gray early, and he became like a mouse, and his voice was quiet, and he never met your eye. Nothing at all like his old self or his Father.”

  “He killed himself?” Jack said, casually, already growing bored.

  “No, no,” Beryl said, rushing to fill up his drink even more. “He ran away, east. He lives in Boston, last I heard, with a new wife and a child. Before he left, he sold the company to his wife. She divorced him – a scandal, it was – and now she lives with the negro. Imagine that. Of course, they aren’t married, and he doesn’t ‘own’ a thing on paper, but they ride together and live together, and folks talk of seeing them walk hand-in-hand, right there in the open.”

  “Wow,” Jack said, thinking he’d have to meet this pair. “Where do they live?”

  “Just outside of town.”

  She gave him the directions.

  When he approached the house, he saw the most beautiful woman he had ever seen – she was so beautiful he actually stopped walking for a moment – wearing trousers and a shirt with her legs crossed and a glass of lemonade in her hand. She sat on a chair which looked like it belonged in an office, out of place on a porch: an almost throne-like chair. Beside her sat the man who must have been Solomon Crawford. He was a hulking, scarred fellow, but he had a wide smile on his face, and he, too, held a glass of lemonade.

  Beside the house, a mare explored the earth with her hoof.

  As Jack got closer, he saw a young girl who must have been their servant emerge from the door with another jug of lemonade. “Would you like some more, miss, sir?” the girl said.

  “Howdy, there!” Jack called, as he approached the porch. He took off his hat and held it to his chest. He looked into both Solomon’s and Alma’s eyes. It was clear to him they were equal partners, and he had to impress them both. “I am in the Mojave looking for work, and I have heard that you two are the kindest, shrewdest businesspeople this far west . . .”

  THE END

  The King’s Brother

  A Medieval Romance

  Caroline Lake

  The King’s Brother

  Copyright 2017 by Caroline Lake

  All rights are reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal.

  NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR:

  This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to a person, living or dead, actual events, locale or organizations is entirely coincidental.

  Warning: Due to mature subject matter, such as explicit sexual situations and coarse language, this story is not suitable for anyone under the age of 18. All sexually active characters in this work are 18 years of age or older, and all acts of a sexual nature are consensual.

  Chapter One

  Light streamed in through the window, creeping across the sheets that draped across her body. She had watched it crawl closer to the tips of her fingers, not bothering to get up as the sun rose. It was the inevitable knock on the heavy wood of her door that had her sitting up finally, sighing softly. Soft, brown curls dusted down across her cheeks and bounced gently as she moved to sit up and adjust the light material of her night clothes. The swell of her chest had attempted to fall free overnight.

  “Come, I am awake.”

  As soft as the strains of her voice were, it carried across the room in a way that had the door clicking and shuffling open. Gray eyes gleamed at her through the scant opening, and then a mouse of a girl was stepping through, dropping her gaze as she did so.

  “Your Highness, the King… grows impatient…” The poor girl seemed uncomfortable with her message.

  “Help me into my dress, Tia. Do take all the time you need, my husband could use a dose of patience… don’t you think?” She smiled as she stood, feet delicately dropping to the stone floor. Her voice was pitched with playfulness, amusement, of course. After all, the Queen couldn’t have anything truly awful to say about the King… could she?

  Never.

  “Of course, your Highness… Is there a particular gown you would like this morning?”

  Her own head tipped, curls tumbling over a shoulder as she moved to sit at her mirror and untangle the locks. “The blue one…” The handmaiden hadn’t moved an inch until she’d gotten her answer, but then she was moving to find the dress.

  “Ah… which… your grace?”

  “Dark blue with the silver flowers around the neckline?”

  “Of course.”

  It wasn’t long before she was swathed in folds of cerulean fabric, curls braided and pinned back away from her face to reveal delicate cheek bones, a soft jaw line, and the glittering sapphire of her eyes. Blue really was her color, it did much and more for her eyes. Her fingers smoothed down the bodice of her dress as she peered in her mirror, a breath sucked in so that her tiny waist shrunk more and her chest filled the bejeweled neckline.

  “If I may say so, your grace, you look beautiful.” The handmaiden’s voice was soft and meek but heard well in the quiet of her room.

  “Yes…” It was a quiet, thoughtful answer of agreement as she eyed her own reflection. Then she was moving to leave the room, down the stone hallways of the castle, but she paused before entering their smaller dining hall. Her eyes closed for a moment and she drew in a fortifying breath, fingers curling at her sides. One of the last things her mother had told her before her marriage had been to make sure that King Harold believed she was entirely devoted to him. Regardless of how happy she was to be there.

  Perhaps she should have been happy… she was a Queen. Who wouldn’t be happy to be Queen?

  She could still hear her mother’s words, “many would kill to be in the position you are.”

  As many times as those words had echoed in her thoughts, she could not help but think that she would kill to get out of the position she was in. But that was a treasonous thought, wasn’t it? Not something that could be voiced aloud right then… or at any point in time. I
n the castle, the walls had ears and eyes that no doubt reported back to the King.

  As she walked into the room and took her seat, she smiled ever so softly at her husband. Her gaze lingered over every feature of his face as though trying to memorize each wrinkle and curve of skin. To any outsiders the look might look loving, adoring even, but the truth of the matter was that she was noticing everything that displeased her. While it was true, there was no slouch to his shoulders nor a gray hair on his head… it seemed like even the way he spoke displeased her.

  His hair was lank and brown, face rounded and soft, eyes an uninteresting brown. One after the other his features were ticked off the list in her head. There was a paunch to his belly and a dopy look to his face. She really wondered if he had the slightest clue how uninterested in him she was. He seemed flattered enough with the way she gave him a once over. The fool. He ought to have been dressed in motley.

  “Hm?” The noise came from her, he’d asked her something, but she hadn’t the faintest clue what. She hadn’t exactly been paying attention.

  “My brother Jeffrey will be joining us; I had asked if you remembered him from our wedding. Of course, there were so very many people there it would hardly be surprising if you did not remember him entirely…” He continued speaking even after she’d looked away, thoughts drifting back to that awful night that she’d had to endure. Before the day had been done, she had consumed enough wine that it was entirely a blur.

 

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