by Jesse Joren
"Welcome home, Alex." Tears sparkled in your eyes, but you smiled as your lips brushed against my throat. Then your legs were caressing my body again, pulling me closer.
"So you found at least one of my stories in the trash. I guess I didn’t tear it up enough." There was mischief in your eyes, and a sparkle I hadn’t seen in a very long time.
"You make a good stalker," you teased, "but did you make it to any of the other stories? Are there any other strangers I need to worry about tonight?"
My cock stirred as I held you closer. "There were some others I happened to read…"
* * * *
The party was in full swing when Jenna arrived. Her best friend met her at the bar as planned. Her greeting kiss left a black mark on Jenna's cheek. It was the Goth thing to do.
"You’re so late, but I love the costume! Where’s Alex?"
Jenna ordered a Chalk Hill Pinot Gris. "He left pretty early this afternoon. I did candy duty alone tonight."
Stacey’s face was sympathetic.
"Again, huh? That’s a shame, chica. But we’ll have fun no matter what. Best costume contest is at midnight. First prize is a bottle of Silver Oak. The way you have that shirt draped, you might win."
Then she peered more closely. "Holy shit. You don’t even have any buttons on it. You sure like to live on the edge."
Jenna laughed as she glanced casually around the crowd. Across the teeming hotel ballroom, a dark figure was watching. Ice-blue eyes met hers as he lifted his drink to her in a silent toast.
Stacey stared. "Wow, check out that body. I didn’t know Death could be so hot. Do you know him? He sure seems to know you."
Jenna shrugged. "Hard to tell with the mask."
She took her wine from the bartender and returned the toast. Death bowed with formal exaggeration. Several nearby women looked at him with admiration and moist-lipped smiles, but his eyes never left her.
"You better be careful," Stacey joked. "He looks like a man who gets what he wants. He might follow you home. What would Alex make of that?"
Jenna smiled.
"That’s a good question," she said.
The End
If you liked this story, please keep reading for an excerpt from MASTERFUL by Jesse Joren.
MASTERFUL
Jesse Joren
Copyright © 2015 Jesse Joren
ISBN-10: 1512141550
ISBN-13: 978-1512141559
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any manner whatsoever without prior written permission from the author. Brief quotations for critical articles and reviews are excepted.
This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters, etc. are either created by the author or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to real-life persons, situations, etc. is purely coincidental.
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APRIL 23
PROLOGUE
Tonight I've committed serious crimes. Quite a few, actually, but no one is better than me at not getting caught. Sometimes the only way to set things right is to break every rule.
Darkness has folded around me like the old friend it is. Soon she'll be home, but she doesn't know I'm here. By now I know her habits almost better than my own.
She thinks she's a free spirit without patterns, but everyone believes that. Realizing that common mistake made my fortune. Exploiting it gives me power.
Finding her has taken a lot of time and expense. She's worth it, but she doesn't know that either. Everything is about to change for you, Evangeline Bright.
Yes, I know your real name. I know everything you hid from me, and even from yourself. Whatever I have to do – for you or to you – you're going to see things my way.
Or else.
CHAPTER ONE
When I unlocked my apartment late that Friday night, I stopped with my keys still swinging from my hand.
Something was different.
A dim beam from the outer hallway light cut into the darkness of my small living room. The deadbolt had been locked when I pushed in my key. The security system had beeped when I entered the code.
There was no back door to worry about. My second-story windows were safe unless Spiderman had turned to a life of crime.
Nothing was out of place. There was silence except for the hum of the fridge and the ever-present throb of Atlanta traffic.
It was all very ordinary. After two years I knew every creak and every scent in every corner.
But my guard was up. Way, way up. Something was in the air that had nothing to do with my life.
A primitive part of me suddenly spoke up.
Run, Eva. Right now. Even if you feel stupid later.
My mind fluttered for a logical reason, found one, seized it with relief.
Maintenance had finally replaced the carpet last month. It looked better, but there was still a faintly unpleasant chemical after-smell.
How stupid to let that worry me. I was getting paranoid at the ripe old age of twenty-two.
It's not the same, and you know it.
"Stop being a chicken," I muttered, reaching for the light switch.
Click-click-click. Nothing.
A shadow moved behind the door, knocking it shut. A strong hand caught the back of my head as a cloth covered my face.
Keen scent filled my nose and throat. That was it. The thing that didn't belong here.
Fucking security system. I want a refund.
That childish, useless thought followed me into unconsciousness.
"Wake up, Eva."
Grayness was inside my head as I considered that voice. Deep and male, a hint of rasp.
A cool curve of glass touched my dry lips. Suddenly I was swallowing cold water on reflex.
The brain fog scared me. Something was happening. Something bad. A single thought burst forward with half-awake urgency.
Face. Don't…look at…face…
I squeezed my eyes shut as hard as I could. Pressure starbursts bloomed behind my eyelids.
"I don't have a lot of money," I croaked. "It's in the bathroom, taped under the sink. Just take it and go. I didn't see your face."
His low chuckle stroked my ears.
"I don't need your money. Or your car keys. Or your jewelry, if those are your next offers. Open your eyes. I'm not going to kill you."
The fog was fading faster as I woke up. I was on my back in what felt like my bed. My arms were restrained over my head.
Oh hell. This wasn't good.
"If I wanted you dead, you already would be," he said mildly.
He had a point there. Slowly I let my eyes open.
My bedroom was undisturbed, mostly dark. Light from the kitchen sent a glow down the short hallway and into the room.
It was all very normal except for the dark shape sitting next to me on the bed. Even in the dimness, he radiated power.
"I'm going to turn on the light," he said.
"Don't do that, I—"
The bed shifted as he leaned to click on the small bedside lamp. Forty watts had never seemed so bright, making me wince as my familiar room came into focus.
Then, against my better judgment, my gaze touched his face.
His steady gray eyes held no particular expression as they studied me. Short, dark blonde hair. Skin that looked tanned, though it was hard to tell in the semi-dark.
The lamp side-lit his face, accentuating its strong, lean lines. He was almost beautiful, but his expression was just a shade too serious to allow perfection.
His mouth was well-shaped, firm. The type of lips that can be stern or sensual, depending on the mood of their owner.
Controlled power was outlined in his broad shoulders and chest under the fit of his dark T-shirt. His arms were lean and seemed to ripple with cords of muscle, even though he wasn't moving.<
br />
He made no move to touch me. He just watched as I took stock of him, of my situation.
The light confirmed what I already knew. I was in my bed, arms tied over my head.
Glancing down, I saw that I was still wearing my gray Braves T-shirt and my worn panties, once a pretty shade of cobalt blue. The rest of my clothes were gone.
Since he wasn't saying anything, it seemed like it was up to me. My voice surprised me with its calm.
"We don't know each other. Let's keep it that way. You don't even have to untie me. Just take my money and leave. I'll get loose once you're gone."
He chuckled again, a rumble in his throat.
"I already told you. I'm not here for money."
Attorneys advise not asking questions unless you know the answer. But I'm no attorney, just a damn-awesome receptionist in one of the best legal offices in Atlanta.
"Then what is it you want?" I blurted, testing whatever held my hands. It was soft, firm, and tight.
A tiny smile crinkled the corners of those mesmerizing eyes.
"You," he said simply.
A short silence followed. Inside I cussed at myself for asking such a stupid, dangerous question.
He went on, saving me from a response.
"You're wrong. We do know each other, quite well. My real name won't mean anything to you, at least not yet."
"Call me what you always have. Hex."
Hex.
I'd never heard that name said out loud, not even by me. It was the passport to my secret life. The one I manifested on my computer or phone, dismissing it at my will.
My eyes raked him again. Somehow he didn't look like a man who would be easily dismissed.
"Bullshit," I said. The tremble in my voice robbed the word of power.
"Really? Who else would know that, Cherry-on-the-Bottom?"
A hot flush stained my throat and face.
"You could be anyone," I said, mustering all the contempt possible while not wearing pants. "Any little jerk can swipe an online account. Didn't some kid take down the Canadian power department?"
"Tax department, but yes he did. You're right to demand proof. The real Hex would have something to prove he wasn't a two-bit hacker who decided to stalk you."
Reaching to the floor by the bed, he came up with a dark nylon backpack.
"Did you think I was joking about my bag of tricks?" he asked with a little grin. "Well, here it is. The one at home holds more interesting things, but this travels better."
"That doesn't mean anything," I said. "If you hacked the account, you saw the conversations."
Very plausible, very logical. Elementary, my dear Watson. But deep inside, part of me squirmed.
Holy hell.
Those oh-so-intimate exchanges about that bag and what it theoretically held. Tricks of sensual torture that had held me spellbound, a deviant side of me brought to dark life.
"What you really need is something that leaves no doubt about who I am. I just happen to have it," he said.
As he reached into the bag, I tensed.
Would he strangle me, cut me, burn me, beat me? Something worse? Whatever it was, whoever he was, I wanted no part of it here in the cold, practical light of my real life.
I still wasn't prepared for what emerged. Pale green, delicate, completely undeniable. A personal instrument of torture worse than any I'd imagined.
He held it out to me. A handful of fragile lace rested in his hard-looking palm, accusing me with its dainty perfection.
"Something like this," he said. "I asked for your scent, and this is what you mailed. Just before you disappeared. Tell me what these are, Eva."
He knew very well what they were. So did I.
Expensive Victoria's Secret panties with the scent of a very intense orgasm on them. Used but never worn, for one very obvious reason.
Those lace wisps were size two. On a good day, I fill out a size eighteen. On a less good day, closer to twenty. He'd half-stripped me while I slept, so there was no way this fact could have escaped him.
Just one of the lies I'd told in the process of making myself better. The way I should be.
"They came with this," he added, unfolding a red Post-It note.
It was tattered and wrinkled, as though handled many times. I didn't have to see it to know what it said.
He read my words back to me anyway.
Dear Hex – my scent, made just for you.
I said your name when I came.
Yours in all ways, Cherry.
The room started to spin, and I closed my eyes again. He was right. Undeniable proof.
There were plenty of real worries I should have right now: robbery, rape, mutilation, murder. A man who would do this was capable of anything.
Whatever screwed-up things it said about me, I almost hoped for murder. Anything to erase the humiliation of being exposed as the fraud I was.
How does that old saying go? Things can always get worse. As it turned out, they did.
CHAPTER TWO
"Answer me," he said. "Do you recognize these?"
My throat was too tight to speak. What would I even say?
I wouldn't have sent them if I'd known you're crazy.
You don't have to kill me. Humiliation is doing that.
Maybe just the ever-popular go to hell.
Keeping quiet seemed safest. I hoped for a fire. An earthquake. A meteor strike. Anything to get me out of this.
When nothing arrived, there was only one thing left. I leveled my best go-to-hell stare at him.
He brought the panties to his nose and inhaled with unfeigned appreciation.
"It's faded, but still so goddamn beautiful. You lied about these being yours. Is this really your smell? Or did you pay someone to finish up your lie?'"
Whatever he saw in my expression made him nod, as if I'd agreed with him.
"You got your proof," he said. "Now I'm going to get mine."
The dim light played over the lines and planes of his face. He'd said he was twenty-six, but there was a control and tightness about him that made him seem older.
"I knew from the first time we talked that you weren't being straight with me," he said. "I just couldn't tell where the line was. Some was truth, some was outright lies. Like this."
His fingers traced the curve of my cheek. Under that touch I froze, unable to pull away from him. This must be how a mouse felt when a predator was closing in for the kill.
"You lied to me about this. About what you look like," he said. "You sent that picture, but it's not really you. You didn't go to a cosmetic surgeon for change, just to Photoshop."
Surreptitiously I tugged at my hands. There seemed to be a tiny bit of slack.
"That makes you the worst kind of liar," he went on. "The kind who lies for no reason. Why would you change this beautiful face? To make it thinner? Like that fake weight on your driver's license?"
A welcome burst of anger finally flooded my body, drowning the horror he was carving into me a word at a time.
"If you're going to do something awful to me, then just do it," I snapped. "But stop playing with me. I'm not interested in your sick games."
"Another lie," he said. "You love my games, sick or not. And you know what, Eva? I don't need to do awful things to you. You do a good fucking job of that on your own."
I dropped my eyes from that almost-perfect face to his broad chest. It only gave me a renewed sense of his body, muscular and hard. His few online words about that came back to me.
"I don't have time for a gym. I work hard, and that keeps me in good shape. I like being outside too, and fuck sunscreen. The body adapts."
The irony. He'd been honest about his looks, but I'd lied at every turn. He conveniently forgot to mention being a stalker.
Too bad there was no checkbox for that in an online profile.
His finger was under my chin, tilting my face upward to his gaze.
>
"Don't look away from me again, or I'll strip you all the way down. Is that what you want?"
I shook my head until my hair was a storm around my face.
His gaze was hypnotic as he took inventory of me, starting with the wild snarl of my hair on the pillows. His hands cupped my face, touching as though seeing me through his fingers.
When his eyes started lower, I froze again. The greatest part of my façade was about to be examined in all its fleshy glory.
Embarrassment twisted inside of me.
He broke into your house. He drugged you. He's probably going rape, kill, and eat you, not necessarily in that order. And you're worried about being overweight?
Holy shit. You're crazier than he is.
Probably, but there it was anyway. Raw truth coughed up from deep inside of me. I was terrified not because of what he would do, but because of what he would see.
My skin was pale, scattered with freckles. It was nowhere close to the golden tan I'd described in glorious, phony detail.
The body under that skin was round and soft. There was no sign of the gym addiction that I'd pretended to have. The Braves shirt and sensible panties clung to every oversized curve.
If he decided to torture me with stretching, I'd break in half before reaching the five-foot-nine I'd claimed to be.
How airily I'd tapped out all those lies.
No skyscraper heels for me! My legs are already long and lean enough. Skirts are always too short, but no one complains.
Every extra pound – and there were plenty of them – mocked my pretended passion for running and volleyball. All the lies of being a sporty girl. The truth about being an excellent swimmer didn't deserve much credit. It was pretty easy for me.