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Friends With Partial Benefits (Friends With… Benefits Series (Book 1))

Page 23

by Luke Young


  “She really looks like she’s, uh, enjoying that,” Jillian said slowly, as she moved her hand to Brian’s bulge.

  “You guys should steer clear of that position until you get some practice under your belts,” Victoria said.

  Jillian leaned to Brian and kissed him passionately as she continued rubbing his groin. He breathed heavily and ran his hands all over her ass.

  “You are so sexy,” Jillian said.

  The horny couple was both lost in the moment and still high while they continued making out and groping on the sofa next to Victoria. She watched them with a sexy smile as she found the real life action a little more interesting than the actors on the screen. Jillian grabbed Brian’s zipper and began to pull it down. He put his head back and closed his eyes. She got it halfway down before she stopped and then turned to look at Victoria. “Oh sorry, I…uh…”

  “Don’t be sorry.”

  “I think we’re going to go,” Jillian said.

  “You could stay, and I’ll walk you through the whole process,” Victoria said. “I’ve got this special lube that is perfect for backdoor.”

  They gave her skeptical looks. Victoria said, “You could be my case study. You’d really be helping me out.”

  Brian and Jillian shrugged and then shared a look that said this was a good idea. The pot was really kicking in. They widened their eyes and then nodded. Victoria smiled.

  End of excerpt - FRIENDS WITH FULL BENEFITS is available now.

  Tennis 101

  In tennis, players alternate serving for an entire game. The game is pretty simple. Just hit the ball over the net, keep it between the lines, and hit it before it bounces twice. A player gets two chances to hit his/her serve into the service box. A serve that fails to go “in” is called a “fault,” and two faults back-to-back are called a “double fault.” If you double fault, you lose a point. It takes four points to win a game, but you must win by two points. The scoring goes this way: love or zero, fifteen, thirty, then forty, and then the next point is the game. (Don’t ask me why it isn’t thirty, forty-five… and could the term love make tennis sound any wimpier?) If the players are tied at forty, it’s called “deuce,” and at that point, a player must win by two points. Once a player wins a point after deuce, he or she is said to have the “advantage,” since only one more point is needed to win the game. Matches are broken into “sets.” The first player to win six games wins a set, as long as he/she wins by two games. If players are tied at six games all, the set will be decided in a “tiebreak,” during which points are counted one-by-one, and the first player to seven points wins the tiebreak. More on tiebreaks later…

  Matches are won when a player wins two out of three sets, although longer, five-set matches are played in Gram Slam tournaments like Wimbledon and the U.S. Open. Players are generally expected to win, or “hold,” their serve. A serve hit so perfectly that the other player does not touch it is called an “ace.” A player who loses his/her service game is termed to have his/her serve “broken.” A shot hit so well that the other player does not get their racquet on it is called a “winner.” A series of shots between players is called a “rally.” Players who rush the net in an attempt to aggressively end a rally are called “serve and volleyers,” while those who avoid the net and stay back are called “baseliners.”

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