Read Bedding Down, A Collection of Winter Erotica Online
Authors: Rachel Krame Bussel
destroyed her belief in “happily ever after.” Not that she de-
served a fairy-tale ending, she told herself bitterly. She had seen what infidelity did to her parents’ marriage and then managed
to break every rule she believed in anyway.
She looked at her sister, so wide-eyed and hopeful that mar-
riage would provide the stability their dysfunctional childhood never had. She ruffled Liz’s auburn hair the way she had a thousand times during those difficult years after their father had
run off with his mistress and their mother had left Minerva to
follow her newly divorced boyfriend to New York. Susannah
couldn’t fault Liz for trying to find her own happiness, she just didn’t believe in the possibility for herself.
“I’ll do whatever you need me to do,” she told her sister.
“It’ll be all right. You’ll see.”
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Nothing would be all right until she was out of Minerva and
back in Seattle, but Susannah nodded anyway. “Of course it
will.”
“Good. Now we’d better get changed. The florist is supposed
to be delivering the flowers to the inn by five,” Liz said. “You should see them; they’re all white, of course, with greenery and ebony ribbons.”
Still talking, Liz floated out of the dressing room on a cloud
of satin and hope. Susannah shook her head, but she couldn’t
help but smile. She’d never been like Liz, so head-over-heels
in love with the idea of love. Of course, she’d had a little help in coming to terms with reality. Having their father abandon
the family for his mistress, then seeing her mother become “the other woman” in a scandalous relationship that made her abandon her daughters, had taught Susannah a few things about love
and marriage. She cursed under her breath as she tried to free
herself from the satin ties that laced up the back of the dress.
“Liz?” she called. “I need help.”
The dressing room door squeaked behind her just when she
thought she’d have to sleep in the damned gown.
“Help me get undressed, will you?” Her arms were twisted
behind her in a futile attempt to free herself from the knots
she’d made attempting to untie the laces. “I need to get out of this dress
now.”
“My pleasure,” said a deep and achingly familiar voice.
Susannah turned slowly, catching a glimpse of his profile in
the three-way mirror, and her first thought was that he hadn’t
changed a bit. That thought fled when she faced the real deal.
He looked older. More . . . masculine. His shoulders looked
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broader and his jaw seemed harder, but it was more than physi-
cal; there was a seriousness in his expression that contradicted the memory she had of a happy-go-lucky player with nothing on
his mind but sex and booze.
“Maybe you didn’t notice, but this is the women’s dressing
area,” she said, managing to keep her voice even. “The men’s
tuxedo shop is on the other side of the store.”
His lips turned up in a faint smile, as if it took too much ef-
fort to turn on the charm. “I thought it was the bride who was
supposed to wear white.”
“Not my idea, believe me.” Turning her back on him, she
returned to her task of untying the laces.
“I could help you with that.”
There was no hint of a come-on in his words and she felt a
twinge of disappointment mixed in with relief. The sooner she
got out of the dress, the sooner she could get away from him.
“Thank you.”
He worked the knots loose, but he wasn’t gentle about it.
She heard a startling rip and was suddenly able to breathe. The relief at being free of the offending garment was countered with dismay.
“Did you have to be so rough?”
“There was a time,” he said, his fingers running up the length
of her spine and making her shiver, “when you liked it rough.”
As if her body was detached from her brain, she found herself
leaning into his touch. She knew she should pull away, demand
he get out and make sure he didn’t touch her for the rest of the weekend, but . . . she couldn’t. Part of it was because she hadn’t been touched like this—slowly, sensually—in longer than she
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cared to remember. The other part was simple: as much as she
loathed him, she had never been able to forget Derrick.
“You not only liked it rough, you begged for it,” he mur-
mured in her ear as he caught her long hair in his hand and gave it a firm tug. “Remember?”
She closed her eyes and gasped at the sensation that ran along
her scalp and made her weak in the knees. “There are some
things I’d rather forget,” she said, hearing the catch in her own voice.
“Not me,” he said. “I remember pulling your hair like this
while I fucked you, so deep inside you I thought I’d died and
gone to heaven and I didn’t give a damn.”
She couldn’t help herself—she whimpered and moved back
against him. His erection was impossible to ignore through the
thin material of her dress. She pressed her ass against him, feeling him hard and hot through the layers of clothing.
He groaned and tugged her hair hard. “A month with you
wasn’t damn near enough.”
His words were like a splash of cold water in her face. She
took a deep breath, reminded herself of why she was here, and
pulled away, ignoring the sting in her scalp when he didn’t re-
lease her hair immediately. She met her gaze in the mirror and, galvanized, turned to face him—and her past.
“Things have changed, Derrick.”
He arched one cocky eyebrow. “Really?”
She raised her left hand, hating herself while also feeling re-
lieved. “I’m the married one this time. I take my vows seriously.”
He laughed in disbelief. “I have a hard time believing that
with the way you whimpered and rubbed against me just now.”
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Despite a flush of embarrassment, she remained firm. “Believe
it.”
He was staring past her, at her reflection in the mirror. “You’d be more convincing if your dress wasn’t unlaced down to your
very sexy ass.”
She fumbled behind her, attempting to hold the fabric to-
gether, which only served to make the bodice of her dress slip.
“Would you please get out of here?”
He opened his mouth as if to speak, then shook his head.
“Whatever you say, Susannah. Just one thing—”
“What?”
He dipped a finger into her cleavage, setting her skin on fire
and causing her to gasp. With a tug of the silky fabric, he pulled her up against him until his erection was pressed at the juncture of her thighs. He stroked the swell of her breasts, rocking his pelvis against her, fucking her through their clothes. He moved his hands lower until his fingers grazed her hard nipples, leaving a trail of heat everywhere he touched her.
She pushed her breasts toward him, nearly out of her mind
with desire and oblivious to the fact that her dress had fallen to her waist. Her eyes fluttered closed so she wouldn’t have to gaze at his hungry expression that she knew mirrored her own. Her
nipples ached to be pinched and tugged, but he wouldn’t give
her the satisfaction she craved; he touched her gently, teasingly.
Her barely controlled arousal flared again and her pulse raced, despite her good intentions. She moaned, and the sound echoed
off the mirrored walls of the dressing room. She wrapped her
fingers around his wrist and held him to her breast, silently
pleading for more.
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“There’s still some unfinished business between us,” he whis-
pered in her ear as he finally gave her what she needed and tugged one nipple insistently. “That rock on your finger isn’t a shield.
I’ll respect your marital status only as long as you do.”
He was gone before she could open her eyes, which was prob-
ably for the best. Her pulse pounded in her ears and she was
slick and wet with desire. If she had been able to utter any response at all, it would have been a plea for him to put her out of her misery and fuck her senseless.
“Too late,” she muttered to herself. “I’m already out of my
mind.”
Chapter 2
Since the lease had run out on Liz’s apartment, she was staying with Brad’s parents until after the wedding. Which meant Susannah was, too. Holding to the old-fashioned tradition hadn’t
surprised Susannah. Liz seemed to believe that if she followed
the rules, she would be happy. Thankfully, the groomsmen
would be staying at Brad’s house. Susannah was still throbbing
hours after Derrick touched her and she didn’t think it was a
good idea to be alone with him again.
“It’s only for two days,” Liz said later that evening when
Susannah tried to make a joke of her concern about getting
through the weekend without causing a scandal. “Surely you can
get along for two days.”
She didn’t tell Liz the truth—she wanted far more than to
“get along” with Derrick and it was the nights she was thinking about, not the days. Instead, she smiled at her earnest younger
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sister and ignored the ache between her thighs. All her good intentions of keeping her distance and getting out of town as fast as possible had fled when she’d felt the proof of his arousal. He still wanted her—as much as she still wanted him. She tried to
tell herself it was only physical, only sex, but it wasn’t a comforting thought.
“Of course we can,” she said. “Your wedding will be perfect
and if that jerk does anything to ruin it, I’ll smack him silly.”
Liz glanced up from the wide, white ribbon she was making
into elaborate bows for the reception tables. “I’m not worried
about him.”
“You think I’m going to do something to ruin your
wedding?”
Liz worried her bottom lip between her teeth. “No, of course
not. I’m just worried that, you know, you haven’t dealt with your emotions where he’s concerned.”
Susannah shook her head, hurt and anger bubbling inside
her. “Come on, Liz, you know me. He caught me off guard,
that’s all.”
She hadn’t told her sister all that had transpired in the dressing room, but Liz had heard enough. Susannah cursed her lack
of control and vowed to make Liz’s wedding day the best it
could be.
“What’s next on the agenda?”
They were squirreled away in Mr. Montgomery’s study for some privacy, a fire roaring in the massive brick fireplace to ward off the cold in the big Colonial house. Brad’s parents had gone to bed an hour ago, but his sisters Kelly and Dana were watching chick flicks in the living room. Susannah suspected Liz didn’t
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really get along with Brad’s family as well as she pretended, but not having a family of her own made her try that much harder.
Brad and Derrick had gone to pick up the two other groomsmen
and were planning to stop by on the way to Brad’s house. Susan-
nah planned to make herself scarce when they did. The farther
she stayed away from Derrick, the better.
Liz paused for a moment, as if she might say something else,
before taking off on a tangent about the flowers and caterer.
Susannah let out a breath she didn’t realize she’d been holding.
Liz was all the family she had and she wouldn’t do anything to
jeopardize her sister’s happiness. Derrick Frost wasn’t worth it.
“Susannah, you haven’t heard a word I said.”
She shook herself out of her thoughts. “Sorry, just jet-lagged.
What did you say?”
Liz gestured out the window, where snow swirled across the
broad expanse of lawn. “I said, do you think it’s good luck or
bad luck that it’s still snowing?”
“Rain is good luck, so why not snow?”
Liz shook her head. “It wasn’t good luck for the florist. I can’t believe the flowers won’t be delivered until tomorrow afternoon.
I’m going to be a wreck by Sunday morning.”
“I think it’s fabulous that Mother Nature decided to coordi-
nate her decor with your wedding dress,” Susannah said.
“And yours.”
Susannah wrinkled her nose. “I’m still not sure I should
be seen in white around here. The locals are likely to tar and
feather me.”
“Don’t be silly.” Liz looped ribbon around her fingers and
pulled it through, making an enormous white bow. “That’s all
in the past.”
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“Is it?”
The sound of the front door opening interrupted whatever
Liz might have said. Her face immediately brightened and Su-
sannah felt a twinge of envy so strong it made her heart ache.
What must that feel like, she wondered? The ring on her finger
hadn’t guaranteed that feeling for her.
“Can we take a break?” Liz asked, looking anxiously toward
the closed study door. “I need to talk to Brad and I want to say hello to Marcus and Elliot.”
Susannah waved her away. “Don’t worry about me. I’m not
feeling very social right now anyway. Go be with your man and
his friends. I’ll make bows until sunrise or the ribbon runs out, whichever comes first.”