Authors: Lauren Gallagher
Tags: #Fiction, #Erotica, #General, #Literary, #Romance, #Erotic Contemporary
“I am.” We shook hands and took our seats. “I am so sorry I"m late. My son
called and needed me to walk him through something on his math homework, and I
didn"t realize the call had taken me so long.” He made a flustered gesture and shook
his head. “And then I was in such a hurry to get on the road and get here, I forgot I
hadn"t put your number in my phone.”
And with that, the man is redeemed.
“It"s okay.” I smiled. “Kids come first; I know how it goes.”
At that, he released a breath and relaxed a little. “They do, don"t they?”
“Always.” I folded my arms on the table and leaned on them. “Mine have to call
their dad for help on math homework too. It never has been my best subject.”
“My son would do fine with it if he worked at it.” He rolled his eyes. “Doesn"t
help that his mother coddles him when it comes to his schoolwork.”
Ripping on your ex before we’ve even ordered. Lose two points.
“Oh,” I said. “Well, I—”
“The thing is, the kid"s sharp as a tack,” Bill said. “If he"d put the effort in like
his brother, he"d easily be a straight-A student.”
“Maybe math just isn"t his strong point,” I said drily.
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Lauren Gallagher
“Maybe not, but it"s not as weak as he likes to think it is.” He sighed. “My ex-
wife is convinced he has a learning disability. The only disability he has is learning
to sit down and study.” He laughed. I didn"t.
Ripping on your own kid. Disqualification.
At least he didn"t spend the entire evening criticizing his offspring"s every
shortcoming, but he talked about his ex-wife more than himself. Though his profile
picture matched his appearance, he"d left “ranting about the ex-wife"s every
imperfection” out of the hobbies-and-interests section. I tried to steer the
conversation toward less incendiary subjects, but somehow she kept creeping back
into it, along with her infidelities during their marriage, her inability to cook like
his mother did, and the way her body was never the same after she had his
children.
Well, aren’t you just a prime catch, Bill?
This date couldn"t be over fast enough, and after dinner, a promise to call, and
a tactfully dodged good-night kiss, I resisted the urge to ask for his ex"s phone
number so I could have coffee and commiserate. Instead, I went home for a glass of
wine that wasn"t soured by unpleasant conversation.
Sipping my wine in the silent darkness of my empty living room, I closed my
eyes. Not every date was like this, not every guy had the kind of deal-breaking flaws
as Bill, but every one of them left me with this same empty, discouraged feeling.
This teeth-grinding “what the fuck was the point of that?” frustration. Did it ever
get better?
Michael and I had married right out of high school, and jumping into the adult
dating world in my late twenties had been a rude awakening. One that hadn"t
presented me with a hell of a lot of hope. If I could connect with someone enough to
even get a date out of it—meaning he didn"t balk at the fact that I had children—
then something happened, or didn"t happen, to make the date a dud. Every date left
me wondering why the hell I bothered anymore.
And lately, to frustrate me just a little more, every date, every good-night kiss
cooling on my lips, every empty promise to call me, every one-night stand riding off
into the sunset, had as its backbeat the rhythmic banging of a phantom headboard
against a pastel wall beneath a bland watercolor painting.
Damaged Goods
29
Chapter Five
On Friday, one of my coworkers, Janie, caught up with me on my way out of
the millionth staff meeting this week. She fell into step beside me in the hallway.
“You going out for drinks with us tonight?” she asked.
I shook my head. “Can"t. I have the kids.”
“Oh, damn,” she said. “Well, we"re all going out to lunch too. You want to go?”
I held up the thick stack of file folders in my hand and gave an apologetic look.
“I"d love to, but I have to work through lunch today.”
“Really?” She wrinkled her nose. “They loading you up that much?”
“That, and I"ve got a meeting this afternoon that"s going to cut into my time to
get all this crap done.” I shrugged. “Such is life, right?”
“Well, as long as they"re not making you stay late,” she said.
“God, don"t give them any ideas.”
She laughed. “Okay, well, let me know when you"re free one of these nights so
you can go get trashed with us.”
“Will do.”
She stopped to wait for the elevator while I kept walking.
“How much did I miss?” I asked when I got to my assistant"s desk.
Laura, my assistant, held up a delightfully thick stack of pink phone
messages. “Phone"s been ringing off the hook.”
“Great.” I flipped through the stack, skimming for anything urgent.
“Hey, I just noticed,” she said. “You actually wore your hair down for once.”
I brushed it off my shoulder. “Yeah, I was in too much of a hurry this morning
to put it up.”
“Looks nice.”
“Thanks.” I smiled. “Oh, by the way, I"ve got a meeting at two with a potential
new client. His name is Mr. Hendricks. When he gets here, please let me know right
away.”
She nodded. “Will do.”
“And it"s a „don"t let anyone interrupt me unless the building"s on fire"
meeting,” I said. “So, you know the drill.”
“Hold your calls and barricade the door,” she said, laughing. “Got it.”
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Lauren Gallagher
With messages and a shitload of work in hand, I went into my office and shut
the door. I leaned against it, closing my eyes and letting out a breath. Days like
this, I needed a break like nobody"s business.
Breaks were for people with time, though, so I pushed myself off the door and
took a seat at my desk to catch up on all the e-mails, voice mails, and handwritten
phone messages that had avalanched in during the staff meeting. Yet another
reason staff meetings were, in my completely humble opinion, worthless wastes of
time.
But what the higher-ups wanted, the higher-ups got, so now I jumped in and
got caught up. I ate lunch at my desk in between making and taking calls. I
completely lost track of time and didn"t even blink when my phone rang for the
seven hundred thousandth time while I tried to finish everything else.
This time, Laura"s extension lit up the screen. I picked up the handset. “Yes,
Laura?”
“Mr. Hendricks is here for his appointment.”
Already? Absently smoothing my shorter-than-usual skirt over the garter I"d
never worn to work before, I checked the clock on my computer. Sure enough, it was
two o"clock sharp.
“Excellent. I"ll be out in a second.” I hung up the phone and put away all the
papers I"d been working on, restoring my desk to its bare, immaculate state.
On my way out of my office, I stopped with one hand on the doorknob. Deep
breath. Deep, cleansing breath.
Then I opened the door, stepped out into the busy reception area, and my
attention was immediately drawn to my waiting client.
Oblivious to the hustle and bustle all around him, he was the very picture of
relaxed and casual. Legs crossed at the knees and hips twisted just slightly. Button-
down shirt with the top button left open. Elbow on the armrest. One finger absently
tracing the side of his neatly trimmed goatee. We made eye contact from across the
room, and when he grinned, my nipples hardened.
He watched me come around to the front of Laura"s desk, his eyes making a
slow trek from my slightly low-cut blouse to my hemline, then down my legs. When
he got to my shoes, which were a good inch and a half higher than I ever wore to
work, he gave the subtlest nod of approval. Then his eyes flicked up and met mine.
“Mr. Hendricks,” I said, exchanging a knowing look with him as I extended my
hand. “Glad you could make it.”
He rose before shaking my hand. “I hope I"m not keeping you from anything,
Ms. Rhodes.” My real name sounded like pure filth coming from him.
“No, of course not.” I gestured toward my office. “Shall we?”
“After you.”
Damaged Goods
31
I started toward my office, and Sabian followed. He kept a few feet between us,
and when I looked over my shoulder, I did so just in time to catch him giving me a
conspicuous top-to-bottom glance.
In my office, he was even less discreet, tracing my figure with his gaze before
meeting my eyes again.
I grinned. He winked. I shivered.
It didn"t matter if he meant it or if it was just because I"d paid him to do it. It
had been too long since someone had looked at me that way, and damn it, I liked it.
“So, Mr. Hendricks.” I couldn"t help smirking at his false name. “What can I do
for you?”
He raised his chin just enough to emphasize our height difference. “I don"t
know, Ms. Rhodes. What
can
you do for me?”
“The customer"s always right.” I folded my arms across my chest, and he
looked down the front of my blouse in the same moment I surreptitiously pushed my
breasts up. “You tell me.”
“Hmm, well.” He reached for my waist, and my suit jacket wasn"t nearly thick
enough to keep the heat of his hand from my skin. “I was thinking the company
could use some different branding. Something with”—he watched his hand drift up
my side—“smoother lines. Maybe some curves to catch people"s eyes.”
Willing my voice to be steady, which was not easy at all, I said, “I think that
could be arranged.”
“Do you?”
I gulped. “Just tell me how you want it, and I"ll do it.”
“Oh, I have no doubt about that.” He trailed a finger down my side, over my
hip, across my thigh. “And I don"t want anything complicated. Simple, nothing too
busy. I like things…” Leaning in close, stopping with our lips nearly touching, he
whispered, “Tight.”
I sucked in a breath, and Sabian laughed, letting his lip just graze mine before
he pulled back. He walked around me. I stayed still, but my senses homed in on his
every move, following him past the edges of my peripheral vision until he stopped
behind me. I closed my eyes, listening, sensing, trying to guess where he"d touch
me—
if
he"d touch me.
Fingertips landed softly on my shoulders, and I jumped, pushing against his
hands.
“This okay?” The playful lilt in his question told me he knew exactly how okay
this was.
“Yes,” I breathed.
“Good.” He gathered my hair and drew it back into a handheld ponytail. Hand
over hand, he stroked my hair, not pulling enough to hurt, but tugging just enough
to let me know he could make it hurt if he wanted to.
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Lauren Gallagher
After a moment, he laid my hair over one shoulder. Then he held my hips and
pulled me against him, and when he spoke, his lips brushed my neck.
“What do you think, Ms. Rhodes?” His soft goatee and softer breath tickled my
skin. “Do you have what I"m looking for?”
I turned my head, bringing him back into my peripheral vision. “I guess you
should find out, shouldn"t you?”
“I guess I should.” He cupped my jaw in one hand and craned his neck enough
to kiss me.
Then he let me go. He walked around my desk and sank into my chair. The
chair offered a halfhearted creak as Sabian got comfortable. Putting one ankle on
his opposite knee, he beckoned to me. I came around the desk and faced him.
Leaning his elbow on one armrest, he thumbed his goatee. “Let"s see what
you"ve got, then.” With his other hand, he gestured at me. “Take off your coat.”
I shrugged it off. Sabian was in my chair, which was where I usually hung it,
so just this once, my neurotic anti-clutter mind would have to deal with my jacket
draped over the top of the file cabinet.
“I"d have you unbutton your blouse,” he said. “But it looks like you"ve already
gotten a head start.”
I looked down. I"d deliberately left the first couple of buttons open, keeping it
within the realms of office-appropriate while still giving someone like him, a few
inches taller than me, a good view.
Looking at him again, I said, “Sorry to disappoint.”
“Oh, you didn"t disappoint.” He traced his lower lip with the tip of his finger,
and if I hadn"t already been turned on beyond reason, that asymmetrical grin would
have done the job. “You didn"t disappoint at all.” The same finger gestured at my
blouse before returning to his lip. “Unbutton the next two.”
Once I"d done so, he nodded with approval.
“I like it just like that. So I can see some, but not all.” His lips curved into that
devilish grin that was rapidly becoming familiar. “Leaves my imagination to fill in
the rest.”
“You"ve seen the rest,” I said.
“Not with that bra, I haven"t. Red lace looks good on you, by the way.” He put
his foot down and sat back, folding his hands over his belt buckle. “Come a little
closer.”
I did, stopping when our knees nearly touched. He gestured at my foot and