School's in Session

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School's in Session Page 9

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  “Exactly.”

  Aha! Griff saw exactly where his Ali was going an instant before she went there, and watched with pride as she went in for the kill.

  “So, if Mr. McCarthy has a valid license, that means the ticket you gave him—excuse me—the mysterious missing thief at the scene—has been paid. Is that correct?”

  Griff stole a glance at Dirk and watched as the color drained from his face. He jumped up and shouted, “Objection.”

  “What is the basis for your objection, Mr. Stewart?” the judge asked.

  “Um, she can’t…that’s not…I mean…”

  “Sit down, Mr. Stewart. This is just starting to get interesting.” The judge leaned forward and nodded to Ali. “Please continue.”

  “In your experience, Officer Claypool, have you ever known of a person who stole someone’s ID and got a ticket and then went on to pay that ticket themselves?”

  The officer finally figured out the point Ali was trying to make and he laughed. Hard. “No, in my twenty five years as a police officer, I’ve never known of a thief who paid a traffic ticket for someone else.”

  Ali gave the officer her sweetest smile. “Thank you, Officer Claypool. No further questions.”

  Later that afternoon there was a big party in the trial advocacy internship office, with Ali and Griff as the guests of honor.

  Ali had told the story about finding the parking ticket in her purse, though she’d left out the spanking the preceded it, over and over. The rest of the class even took up a collection to pay her ticket for her and another student took the money and the ticket to the police department and paid it, coming back to report that since they were backed up on their paperwork, Ali’s license had not been suspended yet.

  The judge had ordered Kevin McCarthy to pay all of Melanie Clayton’s expenses related to the accident as well as an additional fee for the damage his lie had caused to her credit rating and reputation.

  Although it had felt fantastic to win at trial, especially to beat Dirk the Jerk, the best part was seeing the relief on their client’s face. “Thank you, so much,” she gushed. “And I’m sorry that I doubted you. You did a great job. I can’t wait to see what you do once you become real lawyers.”

  “Yes.” Professor Dearing joined the conversation. “The future looks very bright for this formidable pairing.”

  The End.

  Detention With Professor Black

  By

  Dinah McLeod

  ©2014 by Blushing Books® and Dinah McLeod

  All rights reserved.

  No part of the book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  Published by Blushing Books®,

  a subsidiary of

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  is registered in the US Patent and Trademark Office.

  McLeod, Dinah

  Detention With Professor Black

  eBook ISBN: 978-1-624750-521-5

  Cover Design by ABCD Graphics & Design

  This book is intended for adults only. Spanking and other sexual activities represented in this book are fantasies only, intended for adults. Nothing in this book should be interpreted as Blushing Books' or the author's advocating any non-consensual spanking activity or the spanking of minors.

  Prologue

  Josh

  Though I had a pretty good idea of what to expect, I was trying to keep an open mind as I sat across from Amanda. We'd been dating for the last three months and while it hadn't been an instant love-connection, I did enjoy spending time with her. Somehow, looking at the indifferent mask she wore wasn't reassuring.

  "It's just not working out," she blurted out, her cheeks pinking slightly after the words were out of her mouth.

  "I see. Would this happen to have anything to do with the spanking I gave you last night?"

  "Josh!" she hissed, glancing around wildly to make sure no one had heard. "What the hell?"

  My lips tightened together. I didn't approve of cursing, something she knew already, but if she were breaking up with me, I no longer had the right to say anything.

  "It's not that. It's…it's just…I don't know. Things don't seem quite right, you know? It's not that."

  Sure it wasn't. That's what it always was; just once, I'd like to date a girl who had the courage to admit it. Better yet would be to date a girl who appreciated a firm hand, but it didn't look like such a girl existed. At least, not in Pike County.

  She reached for her purse, digging around until she found her wallet. "I'm sorry to give you bad news and run, but I'm going to be late for work."

  It was a white lie, another thing I wouldn't have tolerated. She didn't have to be to work for another half hour and we both knew it, but I let it slide without comment. "Please, it's on me."

  Amanda hesitated, her hand in mid-air. "Are you sure?"

  "Of course."

  "Thanks, Josh. And…I hope we can still be friends."

  Despite my irritation—why did they all say that, knowing they never had any intention of so much as saying hello?—I gave her a smile. "Sure. See you around. And I hope you find what you're looking for."

  If I couldn't, at least someone should, I thought as I threw a twenty down on the table and stood to leave. I had to face facts: I had a good life. A great life, actually. I had my own place, a job I loved and lived in a great community where everyone knew everybody. The only thing I didn't have was a woman I could love, who would love me for exactly who I was. But no one could have everything and I was just going to have to learn to live with it.

  Easier said than done, I thought to myself as I walked out the door.

  Chapter 1

  Michelle

  Only bodily force or divine intervention could have convinced me to go back home. The only one there was my father, whom I hadn't seen in six years despite the mere three hour drive separating us. While I certainly wasn't relishing the thought of seeing him again, I had little choice. I didn't have a place to live or a job and the meager amount I'd managed to sock away in savings was nearly gone. At the moment, I had seventeen dollars to my name and the only way I could keep it was if I ignored my growling stomach for the last hour of the drive.

  "Let's hope he's got food in the fridge, for a change," I muttered to myself, flicking ash out of my open window. It was probably the worst day for a long drive. It was the hottest day of summer and my AC was broken. Sweat had been beading on my brow practically from the moment I'd climbed into the car. My shirt was sticking to me in a way that was distinctly uncomfortable, but I tried my best to ignore it as I puffed on my clove cigarette.

  Last one, I promised myself as I finished and tossed it out the window. It was a promise I knew I wouldn't keep, but it made me feel better to make it. I wasn't a smoker, not really. It was more of an outlet for stress and well, if things had been continuously stressful for the last eighteen months, that wasn't my fault, was it?

  It had started with pain in my throat and difficulty swallowing. After a visit to my family doctor, who'd run a series of tests, I'd been given the diagnosis of thyroid cancer. I'd never wanted my mother more in my life—I'd been shocked and scared and every other emotion in-between. The doctor told me that we'd caught it early and the surgery that followed seemed to have cured me, but it was always in the back of my mind that that prognosis could change at any time.

  The only thing that had made the awful ordeal even slightly bearable had been my boyfriend, Ben. We'd been together for six years and during the long, horrible ordeal of chemotherapy, he'd been my rock, driving me to every appointment and holding my hand through the worst parts; I wouldn't have been able to get through it if not for him. I had been terrified out of my mind, even though I tried not to
show it, and he was the only thing that had made getting out of bed in the mornings worth it. And on the days I just couldn't make it, he'd stayed under the covers with me, making me laugh, holding me tight, as though he would never let go. Which was why it had been such a shock when, only days after receiving a clean bill of health, he'd told me he wanted to call things off.

  "You're kidding me, right?" I'd gasped, staring at him with my mouth agape.

  "Come on, Shel. Is this the kind of thing you think I'd kid about?"

  "Please be kidding," I murmured, reaching behind me to grasp the coffee table. I needed something to hold onto. It was the way he looked at me, with eyes full of regret that convinced me.

  Neither of us said anything for a long time, then, "I know this seems like an asshole thing to do, especially right now, but—"

  "No kidding?" I'd snapped, feeling my anger stir to life. How could he do this to me? To us? And not that I wanted to play the cancer card, but what the hell?

  "I'm sorry, Michelle. I really am."

  "Just tell me why," I'd demanded, my fists clenched into balls at my sides. It was much easier to get angry rather than face the pain that was threatening to swallow me up and spit me back out when it had crushed the very last bit of my spirit. "Is there someone else? Is that it? I know I've been a little distant lately, but it's not like I haven't had a good reason!"

  "You always have a good reason, Shel. That's the problem."

  "What is that supposed to mean?"

  But he hadn't answered. He'd given me that insufferably patient look of his and let me rail at him, which I'd done with gusto at the top of my lungs. He let me call him every name in the book; I even got away with slapping him across the face, which I regretted even before I felt the sting in my palm. Still, the one thing I hadn't gotten was answers and I hadn't felt any better for throwing the tantrum.

  Six years down the drain. I felt a familiar ache in my chest that came with thinking of him.

  My fingers itched and I reached for the half-empty pack of cigarettes, only to draw away a second later when I realized what I was doing. Hadn't Ben already done enough damage? I wasn't going to let him be the catalyst to developing a full-on addiction.

  Six weeks after Ben dumped me, while I was still walking around in a depressed stupor, I'd found out that the credit union I worked for was merging with another larger bank and that I was out of a job. I'd gotten three weeks' notice, and while I'd socked away every penny I'd earned during that time, it could only last so long. Even with living on Ramen noodles and cutting off the cable, it was gone before I knew it. It wasn't like I hadn't looked for a job—I'd looked. Hell, I'd begged and badgered, all to no avail. There just wasn't much to be had at the moment. I'd even tried my hand at serving and would still be doing it if it had paid the bills. Anything would be preferable to where I was now.

  Anything was better than going to live with my dad. I didn't really believe in Divine Intervention—or God, for that matter—but it sure felt like my version of Hell come to Earth. To say that we had a rocky relationship would be putting it mildly. The truth was, we hardly had any relationship at all and that was the way I preferred to keep it.

  Damn, I wanted a cigarette. I pressed my lips together and resisted the urge. Just thinking about him had a debilitating effect on me, which was why I tried to do it as little as possible. Oh, sure, I hadn't always hated him; once upon a time, we'd all been one big, happy family, but like most fairy tales, it was doomed to end.

  I must have been in middle school when he lost his job—his third in six months—and had begun spending most of his time at the horse track. My dad was fascinated by the law of averages and taking high-stake chances. It wasn't until many years later, when I was paying my own bills, that I came to understand how hard it had to have been for my mother supporting our family and his habit. She raised me and my sister pretty much by herself, while my dad squandered every dime she didn't manage to hide from him.

  She had never let on how difficult things really were. Money had to be tight with only one steady income, but we never went without. Nor did she ever badmouth my dad to either one of us, which was just further proof of her patience and generosity.

  Perhaps it's because she never said anything that their divorce came as such a shock. I knew kids whose parents were divorced, of course, but I'd never expected to be one of them. Unaware of the sacrifices she had made, I'd reacted very badly when she gave us the news. My father was nowhere to be seen and I'd lashed out, hurt and angry, effectively shooting the messenger. I was still pained by the memory.

  My dad had always been the "fun" one, always ready to take off on an adventure at a moment's notice. Some days, he signed us out of school early and as long as we promised not to tell Mom, he'd stuff us full of cotton candy and all the Ferris Wheel rides we could handle. Ordinary days became something special when he was around. He'd take us hunting in the "jungle" and we'd see our backyard with brand-new eyes. Or we'd play games of hide and seek, darting in-between the hanging clotheslines, unable to hide our giggles.

  If our mother minded finding exploded volcanoes on the floor or play-dough stuck and hardened behind couch cushions, she never said. She let me be wholly infatuated with the man I believed my father to be. He truly was a superhero in my eyes and he could do no wrong. She must have known that, when she'd told me. She must have known that I would attack her and defend him. Yet, she'd never said one word to make me feel guilty and as time passed, I had come to see the truth for myself.

  I could still remember exactly how he'd looked the day he'd moved out. I'd been eleven at the time, watching from the doorstep as he lugged a battered suitcase to the car. He'd looked so forlorn and lost and I'd looked to my mother, silently begging her to change her mind, glaring when she hadn't. Only when I saw the memory with the eyes of an adult did I recall the way her lip had trembled and the sheen of tears glistening in her light green eyes.

  Mom had done her best to keep things as normal as possible and eventually I just couldn't stay angry at her. Especially when my dad skipped out on most of the weekends we were supposed to spend with him. In the beginning, he'd been full of excuses, apologies and promises, but before the divorce had even been final for a year, he'd stopped calling—he just didn't show up.

  The last time I'd seen my dad had been at my mother's funeral. She'd only been forty-nine when she'd had the heart attack that had claimed her life. She was much too young to die and I couldn't help but blame my dad. If he'd done what he was supposed to do by providing for our family—even if that had meant just paying his child support once in a while—Mom wouldn't have had to work so hard. Maybe it would have been enough to keep her with us.

  There was no way to know for sure, but that didn't mean I didn't hold him responsible. I hadn't even spoken to him at the funeral; I'd pretended that he didn't exist—because, after all, he'd more or less ceased to exist years ago as far as I was concerned. Every week until she'd died, Mom had encouraged me to forgive him, but I wasn't interested.

  Just the thought of seeing him again filled me with dread. I wouldn't be doing it at all if my options weren't limited—and that was pretending that I had any other option. If I had, I wouldn't have been pulling into his driveway, looking at the ramshackle one-story that was in desperate need of a new coat of paint, knowing that I would now call it home.

  I stayed in the car for a few more moments, looking at the house and trying to harness my emotions that were running rampant. I'm a grown woman, I reminded myself. Damn near thirty years old. He can't do anything to me—he can't hurt me anymore. Yet, in spite of the pep talk, I remained unconvinced. Just knowing I would see him, knowing I had to rely on him for anything, made me feel like that little girl who went to the window on Saturday morning, looking out at all the cars passing by and desperately praying that one would pull into the driveway.

  Just when I was mustering up the courage to get out of the car, the door to the house swung open. A middle-aged, graying
man stepped out on the porch, looking back at me solemnly, his hands jammed into his jean pockets. His jeans were fraying and tattered, his wife beater dingy and stained. With a sigh, I pulled the key out of the ignition and stepped out of the car. I slammed the door with a bit more force than necessary and crossed my arms in front of me, refusing to be the one to make the first move. Didn't he owe me that much?

  "Hey there, Shelly," he called out, walking toward me in slow, ambling steps.

  "It's Michelle. I know you haven't been around much, but I didn't think you would have forgotten my name."

  He took the barb gracefully, which just made me all the more determined to draw blood the next time. "Do you need help with your bags?"

  I rolled my eyes and scoffed, but popped the trunk. He didn't say a word as he collected my things—one large suitcase and a duffle bag—and walked into the house. I stared after him, wondering if I could make my feet move if I wanted them to. From the moment I'd seen him, my feet had felt heavy, as though they were glued to the pavement.

  "You comin'?" Dad asked, poking his head out the door.

  No, I thought, but my feet did not seem to hear. When I stepped inside, I was surprised to see that the house was relatively tidy. At least the living room was, anyway. I looked around warily, surprised that his furniture, while dinged and nicked, was polished clean. The couch was ugly, but looked comfortable.

  "I've got the guest bedroom all fixed up real nice for you."

  An unladylike snort was all the reply I could manage.

  "What? You don't believe me?"

  "Do I believe you've been eagerly anticipating my visit, putting out fresh linens and a mint on my pillow? No."

 

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