Authors: Donna Milward
“There’s nothing to say,” She started to back away. “It’s over.” She
couldn’t do this right now. Time to retreat to the pit until Kevin left or
someone called the cops, whichever came first. His dirty fingers fastened
on her wrist, preventing her escape. His touch was hot and clammy.
Feverish.
I must be out of my mind, Adrian thought. Assholes like this were
processed through the courtroom, whack-a-mole style. This skinny loser
had nothing on him weight-wise, but Adrian never underestimated
anyone under the influence. The sour smell of rye alone gave him pause.
This creep had the strung-out demeanor of a hardcore drug user, like the
twitch in his hollowed cheeks. That upped the ante.
Adrian arranged his legs in his Kendo stance, feet parallel and his
balance forward on the balls of his feet. What he wouldn’t give for his
shinai right now. This guy could use a bamboo sword cracked against his
skull. Still, his training might give him an edge in a scrap. Or maybe he
should just let the guy hit him and have his ass thrown in jail.
Welcome bulk arrived at Adrian’s shoulder. “No, I’m a lawyer.” He
jerked a thumb behind him where Gary waited for action. “He’s the
bodyguard.”
This guy had no balls. “Buddy” let go of the girl’s arm and backed
off, mumbling something about not being afraid of them. Yeah, sure. The
cave dweller wasn’t so brave against his own gender. He hated guys like
that. He glanced over at Jenny’s friend as the Neanderthal made a loud
exit, trying in vain to slam a hydraulic door.
“I told you he was an asshole, Poetry,” Jenny said. She didn’t sound
too sympathetic. “Now what if he’s waiting for you outside? How are
you going to get home?”
The girl, Poetry, placed a shivering hand over her mouth and turned
an unflattering shade of pale yellowish-green. Geez, she looked pathetic.
Like a Tim Burton movie extra.
“Did you walk here?” he asked. She nodded, swallowing hard.
“Jen’s right,” Ranjan said. “What if that creep is still out there?”
Adrian sighed. He had a bad feeling about this. In fact, he didn’t see
how this chick and her dumb choices were any of his business. But when
he peered into Poetry’s frightened brown eyes, it seemed like the right
thing to do.
Fifteen minutes later, Adrian trudged up the rubberized steps behind
Poetry. He hadn’t lived in an apartment like this since university. He’d
forgotten how the stairways smelled in these cheap buildings, like old
mud mixed with a variety of starchy and ethnic foods. He could detect
Ichiban on one landing and spicy paprika on the next. Poetry’s floor
reeked of macaroni and cheese.
“Bad kitty.” And her voice had all the rancor of rainbows and ice
cream. She retrieved a stuffed white mouse from the top of the
refrigerator. It jingled as she shook it, and the cat’s blue eyes riveted to
the toy held in her fingers.
“Strange name for a cat,” Adrian said.
Poetry’s eyes never left the tumbling chunk of lint, but she smirked.
“I named him after my favorite rock star, Amir Derakh, lead guitarist
of Julien K.” Poetry made eye contact with him. Her grin grew wider
still. “He’s Persian-American.”
Adrian took off his sneakers just inside the kitchen area. He didn’t
want to lose them in the pile of women’s footwear strewn in the foyer.
Women and their frickin’ shoes.
Adrian took a deep breath and went into kamae. He placed his right
foot parallel in front of his left, with his improvised weapon held an inch
from his belly button.
Bright sunlight from the west-facing windows caught floating dust
and cat hair as he slid across the dingy carpet. This is why kendokka
practiced barefoot on hardwood floors. Maintaining strict form here
could put holes in his socks and give him rug burn on the balls of his
feet.
First stop, Jenny’s room, or so the Hello Kitty sign on the door
informed him. Adrian wanted to gag. How old was that girl? Twenty-one
going on twelve?
The door creaked open with a nudge, and Adrian’s eyes were
assaulted with unicorns on the walls and stuffed animals on the bed. He
didn’t quite stifle a groan.
A cluttered desk in the corner displayed mason jars of beads and
fasteners surrounding a laptop. Haphazard rolls of wires lay next to
boxes of Slow-Dry art clay.
One was a certificate from a school called Valentin Yotkov Studio in
New York for metal sculpting. Impressive. Adrian developed a bit more
respect for Poetry and her claims of artistry. No doubt she took her career
seriously. The other picture appeared to be a massive collage, under
construction and growing. He hadn’t seen one of these since grade five
art classes.
Photos of seascapes with quaint villages, Greek if he identified the
white buildings and blue domes correctly, mixed with brochures for other
art academies. She’d glued in magazine pictures of designs and
techniques. The whole vision came together with strategically placed
beads and chains to bring them together like a dream.
It hit him. Not a dream. A timeline. This paper tangle represented
Poetry’s life plan. And she aimed high. She wanted to study and learn her
craft before moving to Greece someday.
For a strange moment Adrian shared her hopes. He found himself glad
he hadn’t brushed her off. Maybe they did have some common ground.
The difference between himself and Poetry was she’d taken her hobby
and made it her life’s work and he’d gone to law school instead.
He hadn’t zoned out long, but he realized he stood alone in a
stranger’s bedroom. Thoughts of forgotten aspirations left him with a
gaping emptiness.
He crept past hair appliances and products on the sink and pulled the
shower drape back. The squeal of metal curtain hooks scraping across the
rod coaxed a yelp from Poetry somewhere behind him. Nothing and
nobody. Outside the bathroom pattering paws and claws made little tears
in the rug and the ringing of the mouse’s bell continued. Poetry shut both
bedroom doors.
“He’s not here,” Adrian said. He hoped Poetry didn’t notice the
embarrassing way he let his breath out. He left the cluttered space and
headed through the living room to the exit, peeking in the kitchen to be
sure. Poetry followed, still trying to act brave.
He tied his shoes and straightened before meeting her gaze. “Not a big
deal. I’ve seen guys like him come through court all the time.” Usually
on assault charges.
She scrutinized the kitchen floor as she hugged herself. Her shiver
brought another of those annoying pangs of sympathy. She couldn’t be
cold in this brutal heat. He’d worked up a sweat in the five minutes he’d
been there.
Yeah, right. But his stomach rumbled on cue.
“Have you eaten yet?”
Why he was he doing this? He had no interest in this girl. But he
could tell by her anxious expression that she’s rather be anywhere but
here.
“I know this great Cajun place not too far from here.”
“Louisiana Purchase?”
“That’s my favorite. Get your shoes and let’s go. I could use a beer.”
A smile burst across her face. “Me too. Let me get changed.”
Strife stared at Ares’ toes as her aching hips slipped up and down his
cock. Her mind focused on his stunning girth, an immense size that Earth
girls paid for in tawdry shops with frosted glass windows. It hurt at first,
such a long time since she’d had this enormous flesh, but an orgasm was
already building.
She could still taste his filth, smell his clammy sweat. It didn’t matter.
She’d almost unhinged her jaw sucking him stiff and now she would take
her pleasure. She rolled her head back while her steady rhythm propelled
her to gasping, ferocious joy.
She yielded to it, dimly aware of her squeals echoing off the high
ceiling of her loft, of the creaking of her mattress springs as she exploded
in ecstasy. She ground her pussy down, savoring the waves of
gratification and squeezing every sunburst of intensity from the moment.
The black and white prints on her walls dimmed and blurred when her
vagina clenched, and she cried herself hoarse.
“We are not finished, whore.” He shoved her forward, forcing her to
her hands and knees. His fingers dug into her hips as he jammed his
massive prick in once again.
“You are nothing but a common slut, Strife,” he said through his teeth.
“You think you can use men for your own, but you need to be fucked like
a rented cunt.” He delivered a stinging slap to her ass.
Strife moaned and shut her eyes as her traitorous body pushed against
him. Another shockwave of wet desire rippled through her with each
pounding stroke. Animal grunts that shouldn’t belong to her tore from
her throat. Another spanking smarted her skin. She wouldn’t let him
make her come. He had no power over her. But her body tightened in
anticipation.
Strife grabbed handfuls of sheet, tried to crawl away. Ares threw his
body weight on top of her. Her nipples stung with abrasions from the
Egyptian cotton sheets. He pinned her wrists with both hands, ramming
her until her pelvis bounced off the bed with each plunge.