Selling Seduction (Your Ad Here #1) (6 page)

BOOK: Selling Seduction (Your Ad Here #1)
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Chapter Nine

Ian did one last walkthrough of the office building, calling
hello
in each room and making sure the lights were out. Even though at least half his staff lived in the mountains, within a few miles, the two feet of fresh snow in the last couple of hours prompted him to send them home early. Those who lived in the valley left long before that, and he was grateful he’d shut down work for the day. The canyons were closing to any vehicles without chains or four-wheel drive.

He trudged to his SUV through the white, unable to keep it from soaking his slacks halfway up to his knees. Years of experience navigating the roads in weather like this made it no less treacherous. Too many people drove too slow or too fast. With the twisty, windy mountain roads, that got dangerous. He was glad Liz knew enough to stay in Salt Lake for the evening. She’d already told him she wouldn’t be back tonight. One less thing to worry about.

He maneuvered his car along a route that should be familiar but looked foreign when it was covered in a white blanket. When he started sending employees home, he called Mercy. She didn’t pick up, and he sent a text, asking her to let him or Liz know she was okay.

That was hours ago, and neither he nor Liz had heard back. Logic told him there was a rational explanation, but as he crept the vehicle along more slowly than he could walk, concern built inside. Liz dropped Mercy off at the house this morning, before she went down to Salt Lake. If Mercy wasn’t at his place now, that would mean she called a cab, and Ian didn’t trust any taxi driver, experienced or not, in this weather.

He still wasn’t sure why he insisted Mercy work at his place today. On the surface, his reasons looked good. Mercy was on a deadline and those sucked. But underneath it all, he knew he wouldn’t have made the offer to anyone else. He just couldn’t figure out why.

Talking to Mercy yesterday, the way her face lit up and she almost glowed when he asked about work, almost made him forget it was a bad idea to ask her to join him in a back room somewhere. His cock had perked up for attention, and his brain argued that he was enjoying the conversation. He needed to get his head on straight, when it came to her.

Home was usually a fifteen-minute drive. Nearly forty-five minutes later, he pulled into his garage, gripping the steering wheel until the car was completely stopped. He lost track of how many cars around him slid in awkward directions along the way. Adrenaline thrummed hard and fast through his veins. He needed a drink. Neat.

The house was too quiet when he stepped inside. An odd thought, since it was always quiet, but he hoped Mercy was still here. Only because he needed to know she was safe. “Mercy?”

No answer.

He stripped off his coat and shoes and left them by the door leading to the garage. His suit jacket wound up draped over the back of a chair. He’d take it upstairs later. As he made his way to the liquor cabinet in the study, he strained his ears hard enough nothingness hummed back. And then another noise.

Was that keystrokes?

He paused in the study doorway and saw Mercy, head down and typing away. A tension he didn’t realize was there evaporated from his neck. She sat half-turned toward him, focused on her laptop and wearing earbuds. It took him a moment to drag his gaze from her long, slender neck—exposed because she’d pulled her hair back—and the way her bottom lip caught between her teeth.

Time to stop staring. He had to shake himself. He knocked on the doorframe, and she still didn’t look up. Temptation snaked through him—the desire to slide up behind her, tug on her ponytail, and drag his mouth along her neck.

This was his sister’s best friend, and that was a relationship he couldn’t breach. Liz had lost too much already. He strode across the room and stopped next to Mercy. When he placed a hand on her shoulder, she jumped and let out a little
eep.

She plucked out her earbuds and slid her chair back. “I must have been more in the zone than I thought.”

A laugh of relief slipped from him. “I’m glad you’re all right.”

“Why wouldn’t I be? What do you know that I don’t?” The light in her eyes and quirk of her lips said she was teasing.

“You weren’t answering your phone. Speaking of—text Liz, tell her you’re alive.”

She glanced at the device next to her laptop. “Oh, that. I shut off my phone and told everyone in the office, if they needed me, it had to wait. I don’t know if this place has some kind of magic mojo, but I haven’t lost myself in work like this in ages. Thank you for that, by the way.”

There was that gorgeous look again. The same one she had last night. Bright eyes, a hint of pink on her cheeks, and a lilt to her voice that made him think she was barely keeping a rein on whatever was in her thoughts.

“I’m glad you got something done,” he said.

“It’s only two.” She glanced at her laptop. “Do you keep some kind of CEO, half-day hours?”

He nodded toward the balcony window behind her. From here, it was a view of the mountainside. On a clear day, anyway. Right now, it only showed clouds. He tugged her to her feet and let his touch linger, as he led her toward the sliding door. “Look outside.”

“Oh. Wow.” A cool blast hit them when she slid the glass open and stepped into the storm. “So much white.” She only stood there for a moment before rushing back inside.

“The roads up from the valley are all closed, and most of the city is shutting down. Liz is staying in Salt Lake for the night.”

“I should get back.” Her gaze kept drifting toward the balcony.

“You may want to wait out the storm. The roads are a bit scary. I know; I was just on them, and the plows take their time getting up here.”

“Even after all these years. I’m not surprised.” She gave him her attention. The spark hadn’t faded from her face. “Is that your excuse to keep me here?”

The hint of playfulness mingled with the adrenaline from his commute and flipped a switch on his thoughts. “I don’t need excuses. I’m asking you outright. Stay.”

“For my own safety. Right?”

This was too easy with her. Too much fun. “Not only for that, but mostly.” It wasn’t as if they were going to repeat the other night. Though, the way she licked her lips, his imagination leaped ahead to that possibility. This was spending an evening with an old friend. With his sister’s friend. “Finish what you’re working on or wrap it up, and then decide. If you spend the next forty-five minutes white-knuckling it, while the cab slips and slides along the hillside, you’re not going to get anything done when you get to the hotel.”

She glanced outside again, over her shoulder, concern whispering across her face. “That long?”

“That’s how long it took me.”

“So the Porsche isn’t just your way of compensating? It serves a purpose?” There was no accusation in her light question.

“You tell me. Do I need to compensate?”

The way she traveled her gaze over him, from head to foot and back again, pushed his thoughts aside and left room for his nagging lust to surge to the surface. The corners of her mouth twitched. “I don’t think so. But I’m not the one who bought it.” The lights in the room dimmed, flashed back on, and then went out completely, leaving the reflection off the snow outside to illuminate the room. Mercy furrowed her brows. “Laptops and battery power are a lifesaver. You know?” She stepped around him, then clicked a few things on her computer before giving him her attention again. “Unless you have backup power, I’m not getting any more work done anyway.”

“No backup. It doesn’t really stay out long enough to need one.”

“Oh. So… I’ll wait, then.”

He grabbed her hand and tugged her toward the couch at the far side of the room. “As long as you’re doing that, keep me company.”

 

*

 

Mercy should have been more bothered by having her afternoon of work interrupted. Instead, she was grateful the power had been out for over an hour and the roads stayed a wreck. It was an odd sensation, the desire to spend more time with Ian, not because he’d done amazing things with his fingers, but because she wanted to catch up.

They’d moved into the living room, to be next to the fireplace. Outside, the clouds blocked a setting sun, but the reflection between snow and sky was bright enough it spilled through the windows, keeping the room from seeming too dark.

Ian wandered back in and settled next to her on the sofa. He’d changed into jeans and a sweatshirt. The first time she’d seen him in something casual this trip, and he still looked temping. His knee brushed hers, as he shifted sideways to see her. “The power company says ice took out the lines across most of the city. They don’t have an ETA for when it will be back on. As much as I hate to say it, the resorts—like your hotel—will probably get power long before I do.”

She gave him a pout and hoped it came off as teasing, despite the twinge inside “Are you trying to get rid of me?”

“Not even close. I’m trying to make sure you’re comfortable. I can’t even offer you dinner if you stay here.”

“I make a mean PB and J.” They’d spent their time flitting from one topic to the next, but nothing stuck. It wasn’t the same easy banter they had the other night at dinner, and she didn’t know how to find that mood. “And it’s warm by the fire.”

“Peanut butter and jelly, huh?” He trailed his finger on a lazy path along her leg. “Your domestic skills astound me.”

She stuck out her tongue. “Don’t knock the value of an incredible sandwich. I’m gifted at two things. Peanut butter sandwiches and blow jobs. Sometimes I wonder if I should have opened a daycare. All dads would want to drop their kids off.” Even as the words slid out, she knew the joke was bad. A leftover she used, to keep people at arm’s length. His frown said he felt the same. Why had she said that? Defensiveness kicked in. An old scar she couldn’t ignore. “What?”

“You’re worth more than that.”

“It’s a joke, Ian.”

“It’s a shitty one.”

“Fine.” Time to try yet another approach. “Let’s play a game.”

“I’ll bite. What game?”

“Never Have I Ever.” Everyone loved a good drinking game. Maybe she was too old for that, but a little alcohol would loosen them up, and they could get to know each other in the process. The rules were really easy. One person said something they’d never done, and if the other person had, the other person had to take a drink

“No.”

There went that idea. “If you’re worried about me emptying your liquor cabinet, I’ll replace whatever we drink.”

“Stop trying so hard.”

The words dug deeper than she thought possible. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“I don’t want you drunk. I don’t want to play a game. I want to know more about you.” His tone implied
more
went beyond superficial banter.

“Why?”

He draped his arm over the back of the couch and rested it against her shoulder. “Because the last few days have told me you’re more fascinating than Liz realizes. More intriguing than the girl I used to know. I want to uncover that.”

“You might say that now, but really you don’t.” There were those fucking scars again. The whispers telling her no man wanted more than what they saw on the surface. A trophy. Bragging rights. She was fine with that. It was when she let herself believe they
did
want more, that it hurt. “I’m really not that interesting.”

He placed a finger under her chin and raised her face, to hold her gaze. “I’ll be the judge of that.”

She shouldn’t read too much into his words—knew better than to fall into the illusion—but a glowing ember in her chest desperately wanted his interest to be sincere.

Chapter Ten

Twelve Years Ago

Ian shoved the last duffel bag into the trunk of his car. He was supposed to wait until morning, to pack up the last of his stuff, but it was almost 1 AM. He might as well do something useful with his insomnia.

He started when someone stepped from the shadows near the garage. “Fuck, Mercy. You scared me.” He gave a quiet laugh.

She stood out of the light’s reach. It was August, one of the few months when it was warm enough at night for shorts and a T-shirt. There were times he wished she were just a few years older. Closer to his almost-eighteen, instead of his sister’s fifteen. Most of the time he was grateful it kept her off limits.

“I saw you moving around over here. I wanted to talk. Is that okay?” she said.

“Always.” Well, until tomorrow morning. Then he’d be driving across state lines for college. “What’s up?”

“You have to take me with you tomorrow. I have money for gas and enough to feed myself for a while. I’ve been saving up. I won’t tell anyone. I’ll be at the gas station. You can pick me up on your way out of town.”

Shit. She’d given this some thought. He closed the distance between them, so he could keep his voice low. “I can’t do that.”

She furrowed her brow. “Why not?”

“Besides the whole
you’re a minor and it would be kidnapping
aspect of the idea?”

“I can’t stay here.” A desperate edge crept into her whisper. “It’s devouring me.”

“You’re being melodramatic.” Despite his words, he felt bad for her. He couldn’t imagine what it would be like to clash with his family the way she did with hers.

“And you don’t have to put on a dress and be paraded around in front of your family’s peers every Sunday morning.”

He gave her a dry smile. “I’ve done my share.”

“Please?” She grabbed his hand.

He kissed her on the forehead. “No. You’ve got this. Three years, and you’ll be out of here, too.” He pulled from her grasp and turned away.

“I hate you.” Her words landed against his back.

“I’m sorry, Mercy.”

“Fuck you. I hope college sucks.”

 

*

 

Now

Ian wasn’t sure what to make of the vibes rolling off Mercy. It was as if she was perched on a ledge and could be pushed in either direction with a single breath. He didn’t like being uncertain about what to say next.

“We’ve talked a lot about me.” Her tone was even and neutral. “I’d like to hear more about you. Why did you leave me behind?”

He didn’t want to make light of that, but it seemed so long ago, and despite her reasons back then, the parting was childish. “You know why. Are you still upset?”

“Would you feel bad if I am?” Still no emotion reflected in her eyes. Her face was a blank mask.

“I’ve always felt bad, but I wouldn’t do it differently.”

Finally, the corners of her mouth tugged up, and a smile teased her eyes. “No. I’m not still upset. I hated you then, but I’m grateful now.”

“I didn’t expect that.”

She shook her head, then leaned it against his arm, on the back of the couch. “I know it was awkward with my dad today, but while he summons the timid girl in me, sticking it out made me stronger once I left.”

“Where did you go, anyway?”

“I noticed how quickly you turned this back on me.” She shifted her weight, to lean better against the couch, and tucked her legs under her.

Even in the faint light bouncing through the windows, combined with the flicker of the fireplace, she looked amazing. Seeing her curled up and comfortable short-circuited his thoughts in a way he didn’t expect. “I already know everything there is to know about me.”

“Do you?”

“You do a lot of that—counter my questions with your own.”

Her smile vanished, and her eyes went flat and dull. “Don’t you?” A smirk, and then a laugh slipped out, before she finished her question. “I’m being weird. I don’t know what’s up with that.” The weight of her head against his arm was warm and tempting.

“I like it.” He adjusted his position enough, to trail his fingers through her hair. He wasn’t sure where the impulse came from. Relief trickled inside, when she leaned into the gesture instead of pulling away. “Ask whatever you want, and we can talk about me,” he said.

She scrunched up her face for a moment. “Are you happy with your job? Are you glad you took over the family business?”

“That’s two questions.” He didn’t know why he was stalling. The answer was
yes.
Wasn’t it?

“It’s the same question. And it’s the second time you’ve avoided answering it.” She straightened in her seat. “I bummed around Europe and South America for a couple of years, then came back here, to work.”

“And met Andrew Newton somewhere along the way.” He didn’t think his change of subject fooled her, but he didn’t have an answer for himself, so he couldn’t give her one. The uncertainty nagged him more than not being able to read her earlier. He always had an idea what was going on in his head.

“Yes. And I helped him market his porn site.”

“I don’t know.” Ian hated those words. He never said them to anyone, even when they were true. He always had an answer.

Her expression softened, and she scooted closer, until her knees touched his leg. “Don’t know if you like your work?”

“There are parts of it I like, but I’m not sure I’m happy I took over the company.”

“So why did you do it?”

She had to go and ask the difficult questions. Then again, that had always been her. “What else was I going to do?”

“What you wanted, instead of what was expected of you.” She fiddled with a loose thread on the tear in her jeans. “You taught me that.”

“And you’ve never looked back?”

“Nope. Not really.”

He dragged a finger along her arm. She closed her eyes and parted her lips in a tiny sigh. Images skipped through his mind. Leaning in, to press his lips to hers. Sliding his hands up her sides and stripping her shirt off in the process. Vivid and intense, they refused to be ignored.

He wanted to keep the conversation going, though. “What did you do after I left? The stuff you didn’t tell Liz.”

She met his gaze, an impish look on her face. “What makes you think I keep secrets from Liz?” Behind her, a log in the fireplace crackled as it split, and a flare of light danced through the room before dimming again.

He’d have to toss another one on soon. It was a good thing he’d refused to do the gas-powered replacement that required an electric switch. “Did you tell her you asked to go with me that night?”

Mercy shook her head. “Did you ever tell her how you… what were your words? Corrupted me?”

“I did say that, didn’t I? No, I never told her you were the first person who listened to my ramblings about thinking for yourself and questioning authority, if needed, and shunning indoctrination. That shit got me kicked off the baseball team in Chicago, you know.”

“I had no idea you played baseball in high school.”

He tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. He wasn’t sure where the intimate gestures came from, but they felt right, and she didn’t seem to mind. “I didn’t,” he said. “I tried out and made the JV team. First day of practice, the coach got on my case for something… I don’t remember what, now. I was wearing my socks wrong or something.”

She shivered and rubbed her arms, drawing a frown from him. He hadn’t realized how far the temperature had dropped. Nudging her to straighten, he pulled the throw from the back of the sofa. He prompted her to turn and tugged her into him. As she settled with her back to his chest, he pulled the throw over them both. “Better?” he asked.

“Much.” She rested more of her weight against him.

The faint floral scent of her shampoo seeped into his thoughts and fuzzed them. He’d never liked cuddling, but this was comfortable.

She pulled one of his arms more tightly around her. “What did you say to him that got you kicked off? I’m assuming that’s what happened.”

Right. Ian was telling a story. He rewound the last several seconds of conversation, until he could think clearly enough to pick up where he left off. “I was reading a lot of Marx at the time—Karl, not Groucho.”

“I figured.” She giggled.

“So I went off on this long-winded rant, about how he was only a baseball coach because the bats made him feel like more of a man. How we weren’t the subjects of some grand and mighty czar, and as collective, as a team, as a group who would be strongest if we supported each other, we should be allowed to wear our socks however we wanted.”

“I’d have kicked you off the baseball team, too.”

He rested his chin on her shoulder. “I think in the end, we were all happier that way.”

Silence fell between them, punctuated by the crackle of the fire. Her steady breathing pressed against him, and he felt her heartbeat, slow and even, lulling him toward peace.

“I made friends.” Her quiet words blended with the background noise. “Online, I mean. When I wasn’t working or in school, I joined a butt-load of couch-surfing communities and made contacts all over the world. The day I graduated, I rented a cheap-ass motel room and stayed there long enough to have my name legally changed and get a new passport and ID. I took all five hundred dollars I’d saved, bought a ticket to Brazil, and played it by ear from there.”

He knew part of this story. It wasn’t a secret Mercy had bummed around the world. He’d never heard any details. Hadn’t asked, and Liz never offered. “And you survived for the next three years on a couple hundred bucks.” He couldn’t keep the disbelief from his voice.

“No.” She tilted her head back enough to look at him. “Sometimes I stayed on couches, sometimes I got cheap rooms. In between, I picked up work here and there. I washed dishes in Venezuela. I taught English in Portugal. And somewhere along the way, Andrew’s sites started making money, and he paid me to make sure that trend continued.”

“If I scan his archives, will I find pictures of you?”

She met his gaze. “Ian Thompson, are you asking if I ever did porn?”

“I guess technically I am.” It wasn’t what he meant to ask, but he was curious.

“He’s got pictures of me, but I never signed the release.”

A ping of jealousy rocked inside Ian, and he struggled to understand it. “I don’t know if I’m disappointed or relieved.”

“If you want to see me naked, you just have to ask.” She stretched her arms over her head, grinding her ass into his hardening cock. Her sweater pulled up, leaving his hand resting on her stomach, and she didn’t move to tug it back down when she was done.

“You’re obviously not making that offer to everyone, or I’d be able to find those pictures.”

“I’m not. But I yield for the right man.”

The way she kept adjusting herself in his lap, added to the not-so-subtle teasing, had him rock hard. His mind was already tripping ahead, over different ways to strip her down. “So… we keep giving into these one-offs until the week is up, and then we go our separate ways?”


Keep giving in.
This is twice.” She nudged his palm higher on her chest. “Yes, I’m keeping count. And yeah, that’s how it works. Besides, the first time was really more like intense making out.”

He chuckled. “I know. If you only put the tip in, it’s not really sex.”

“That’s what the girls at church told me.” Laughter danced in her words.

“I’m not stopping at the tip.” He skated his thumb over her bare skin. “And if you tell me yes, I’m going to make sure you stay warm until morning—or until the power comes back on. Whichever comes last.”

“I’ve always liked the way you think,” she said with a gasp, arching her back when he bushed the bottom of her breast. The tiny sounds she made, combined with her faint scent and the weight of her body against his, plowed through his restraint.

He yanked her shirt over her head and trailed his mouth along the back of her neck. “And I’m intrigued that it’s not easy to tell what you’re thinking.” He spoke against her skin. He had a feeling this was going to be a night he remembered for a long time, even after she went back to her life on the other side of the country.

BOOK: Selling Seduction (Your Ad Here #1)
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