Shopping for a Billionaire 3 (7 page)

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Authors: Julia Kent

Tags: #BBW Romance, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Fiction, #General, #Genre Fiction, #Humorous, #Literature & Fiction, #New Adult, #New Adult & College, #Romance, #Romantic Comedy

BOOK: Shopping for a Billionaire 3
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No words. The leather
seat
presses against my knees and he brushes my hair away from my face, tucking it behind an ear with such precision as he tongues my breast and makes me stop. Stop t
h
inking, stop wiggling, stop the world—stop
time
, because I am everything and nothing
in
his arms
.

My own body moves in long, even strokes against his, and then without warning he’s above me,
out of me, leaving me with a hollow ache that cries out for more
. Declan’s arm wraps around my waist and he spins me effortlessly under him, the limo seat so wide we can fit comfortably, our thighs slick with sweat and more, his face filled with passion and a tantalizing seriousness that bring
s
back a handful of words.

“You’re beautiful, too,”
I whisper, looking up at him as anticipation is poised between us in that timeless moment before we break through the invisible wall. The wall that separates every couple before they knowingly –
willfully
– breach it to connect two separate beings, making one flesh, one desire, one need.
 

O
ne climax. Giving yourself to another person is one thing. Truly letting go as you lose yourself in them is quite another.

“I didn’t know there were men like you out there,” I add, reaching up to push a lock of hair out of his face. He’s so intense, so purely centered on me, eyes alive and fully in the moment. We’re on a threshold, and I have so much bursting inside me that I want to say.

“You make me feel like it’s okay to be me, Declan. No one’s ever done that before.” Our breath mingles in the small space between us, my legs tightening around him, my body and heart wanting to be as close as possible. I’d have to crawl inside him to be any closer, and I’m shaking with an all-consuming force that is so much more than anything I’ve felt.

“I wouldn’t want you to be anyone else, Shannon.”

I
smile wide
as he drives home inside me, his face dipped down to kiss me, his mouth fire and ice as he thrusts, my body filled with a kind of madness that makes me seek release at the same time that I can’t help but cling to him.

His hands rest o
n
my waist as he tightens, his face hot over mine, our bodies half clothed. This feels so illicit, so naughty, and as the limo comes to a pause at a
stop
light a massive plume of boldness blooms in me.

This is who I am. Declan is who I want. His face shifts as he pushes over and over, my legs shaking and my hands seeking whatever skin he has exposed,
the connection morphing into something so illicitly primal.
 

And when he lean
s
down, still in control, his hand between my legs and giving the slightest butterfly touch where I need it most, I utter his name in a fevered moan, my climax hitting without reservation, all restraint gone, my mouth full of whispers and groans, my fingers digging into his shoulders as he tells me to come, to come, to
come
.

I do.

He joins me,
torso and chest
tense and hands digging into the leather seat on either side of me, my legs wrapped around his waist, his murmurs in my ear as he bites the lobe and shudders like
he’s captivated by
a series of prayers to a god I can believe in. The air around us is hot and spicy, like woman and man mingling together, the scent of sex and sweat and perfume and cologne burning into my brain.

This is the scent of mind-blowing sex.
Yankee Candle needs to patent it.
 


You,” he says with a hiss, pulling out of me and turning around. He ties off the condom and throws it discreetly in a small trash can with a little swish lid that makes me laugh. I don’t know why. The giggles descend on me and I cannot stop.
 

“That’s a first,” he says.

“Sex in a limo?” I gasp between chuckles.

H
e gets a surprisingly sheepish look on his face. “Uh, no,” he says slowly.
But not
a
pologetically.

If this awkward turn of conversation is supposed to spoil the mood, it doesn’t. I just laugh even more. Absurdity makes me laugh. Having sex for the first time in a year makes me giggle. Fucking Declan in the back of a limo makes me sputter.


What’s a first, then?”
 

“A woman overcome with giggles after sleeping with me. Most don’t find it so…comedic.”


I just had sex in a limo,” I explain.
 

“You know what comes next?” he says as he pulls up his pants and snaps and zips up. I realize I am completely naked from the waist up and scramble to find my shirt, unable to think. Naked! In a limo! With Hot Guy! Laughing!

“What?” I ask as I shove my arms into my sleeves and pull the shirt over my head. Wait. Where’s my bra? Oh. There it is. Hanging on the door handle, one strap wrapped around the gleaming metal, the other on the neck of a crystal decanter of something amber,
lounging lazily
.

“Love in a helicopter.”

C
hapter
Six

“Is that a promise or a threat?” I ask
as my head shoots through the neck of my shirt, my hair caught under it. I’m sweaty and feel like I’ve just climbed Mt. Declan, legs aching and body buzzing. But
ahhh
, the summit was damn nice, and the view…
 

“Both.” He
laughs and rides his hand up over my thigh.
 

“I like both.” I close my eyes, trying not to cringe as I feel him brush against my decidedly not-smooth leg.

H
e senses the change in me and caresses my jaw with his fingers, turning my eyes to him. “What is it?”

This is the moment when every
woman balances between saying “fine” and telling the truth. I’m sitting in a limousine with a man who holds more power than two hundred of me combined, and all I can think about are my stubbly shins.
 

T
he divided mind turns me in two distinct directions:

He’s different.
Real and genuine.
Go with it.

and

He’s about as interested in the truth as he is in going to CVS to buy you a pack of tampons.

I go for the former, because the cocky grin he’s giving me right now is so authentic that it feels right to be honest and open, vulnerable and real, and to stop worrying about what I think he’s thinking.

How about I try just saying what I think?

Deep breath. Deep breath. The car lurches forward and his hand tightens on my thigh, his other arm snaking around me protectively. I nestle in and say:

“I wasn’t exactly prepared for a date.”
I run my own hand against my legs and say, “
Skritch skritch skritch
.” And then I close my eyes and wish for a tornado to appear and take me away so I can wake up and realize this is all a dream. Plus the ruby shoes would be a nice addition to my wardrobe.
 

I
can’t believe I just said that. Skritch? What am I, an animated character from
Ice Age
?

“Sound effects?” His booming laugh fills the car. Bright lights dot the horizon as the sun nearly finishes setting, and I realize we’re at a small airport. “You’re giving me sound effects?”

He runs his hand along my leg and up between my legs. A rush of heat, and yet more arousal fills me. How can I want more?


I like sound effects,” he adds, “but the ones you made a few minutes ago were far superior.”
 

“I—” My lips turn to liquid, like he just shot me with ten times my weight in Novocaine.

“If I want a smooth woman, I’ll put you in my clawfoot tub at home and shave you myself,” he says.

Blink.


I’ll run you a hot bath, undress you with my own hands, soap you up and make you com—” He licks his lips and looks me up and down, then continues.
“—
fortable. And that’s a promise,” he adds, leaning down for a deep kiss. I can imagine the scene; his eyes show it to me.
 

The car comes to a slow stop and the engine goes silent. I can’t speak. Can’t move. Can’t think. I’m one big, throbbing hormone.

Declan pulls away and points out the window to a helicopter. A sleek black machine that looks like something out of a movie,
like the insect version of a Transformer
.

“What are you, Batman?” I ask
as words return to me
, marveling at all this.
A headphoned pilot is at the controls, and the blades aren’t moving. Lights blink and Declan steps out of the limo, waving to the driver, who climbs back in the front seat.
 

I
step out on legs that feel strong and well used. The copter blades start a slow circle and sound revs up.

“I wish. But you’ll have to settle for plain old Declan,”
he shouts.
 

“You’re anything but ‘plain,’”
I call back.
 

Cupping a hand over his ear, he shakes his head. He didn’t hear me.
That’s okay, though, because he doesn’t need to.
 

The ground feels springy under my feet as I hold my hair in one hand to keep it from whipping around my face as the helicopter blades rotate faster. The wind the machine creates is magical, the contraption about to elevate us into the air, high above the city. I have no idea where Declan is taking me and I don’t care. My body throbs and I’m sore from that amazing encounter in the limo, but I get the distinct sense that
that
?

That was only the beginning.

Love in a helicopter? No way. The pilot gives me a sharp nod, the engines roaring so loud I can’t hear a thing. Declan offers me headphones and I put them on,
muting the
chuk chuk chuk
sound.
 

“Welcome aboard, Ms. Jacoby,” says a new-to-me voice. The pilot raises his hand with a wave.

“That’s Joel,” Declan’s voice explains, crackling over a static-y connection. He points to a little knob on his own headset and I realize it’s the volume control. I fiddle with mine and get the sound to the right level. Speaking in a normal voice is all that’s needed.

Joel speaks a bunch of Flight Language to some sort of tower personnel. He might as well be casting a spell or getting directions to Hogwarts. The words and numbers make no sense to me, but I’m in awe of it anyhow. That a human being can learn how to successfully navigate a machine like this, not only through space but through three-dimensional space, is amazing.

Driving a car on
the ground
is hard enough, but to know which direction you’re going and to keep track of where you are vertically? It’s like rubbing your tummy, patting your head, and playing Farmville while singing “
T
he Star-Spangled Banner” at the same time.

And this is why I never became a pilot. That, and failing Physics 101. Pesky detail.

Declan’s speaking in code with Joel, his hip digging deep into mine as we cram next to each other on the helicopter. He closes the door and the sound of the blades changes.
I
t’s like someone shoved a feather pillow over them. The helicopter begins to jostle and I dig my fingers into his thigh.

He smiles at me,
all stubble and
dimples and bright irises.
A reassuring arm wraps around me. “Takeoff is always hardest,” he says.
 

“I’ll bet you say that to all the girls.”

Joel makes a snorting sound, then cuts his mic. Declan shoots him an annoyed look, but returns his attention to me. “I’ve never taken a woman in my chopper before. Not on a date.”

“Is that what you call this?” I can’t stop touching him. My hand goes to the collar of his shirt, where a smattering of dark hair covers his collarbone. I want to lick him. Taste him. Nestle my cheek against his chest and hear his heartbeat. I want him in me again, the feel of his release, of his trust to give in to me.

Divergence is turning my life into something unrecognizable. A few weeks ago I knew what to expect from your average day. No, I couldn’t plan it meticulously, no matter how hard I tried, but a certain contentment made each week pretty predictable. Settled. Relatively comfortable, if a bit lonely. Get up, have coffee, go to work, do mystery shops, prepare presentations, come home to Chuckles, hang with Amy and Amanda.

Lather, rinse, repeat.

Drive my junky car. Have dinner at Mom and Dad’s. Overthink and overplan everything, then obsess about my tendency to overthink and overplan.

A billionaire player like Declan was, most definitely, not part of any plan. Not even part of my fantasies, which had taken a bizarre turn toward the superhero realm. If you can’t have a superman, you might as well get off on dreams of threesomes with Iron
M
an and
Loki
.

My Batman joke really was just a joke, though.

Declan
i
s better than
t
he Avengers and the X-
M
en combined.
As I stroke the fine weave of his wool suit pants, his thigh shifts under my measured touch. Rippled steel bands react under my palm, the soft inner thigh flesh yielding the tiniest bit as I grasp him, feel his response. He inhales slowly and rests his chin on the top of my head, closing his eyes.
 

He’s enjoying this. Letting me explore him, confirm he’s real and under my inventory. Here’s his forearm. There’s his biceps. And the chest is right here. The scruff on his cheek makes contact with my cheekbone and I soften into him. Our bodies fit beautifully together. We fit together.

We.

We can’t say a word to each other right now unless we want the pilot to hear, so we sit in silence. His hands mimic mine, soon finding my curves and valleys, swells and peaks. The way he touches me makes me feel desired. Appreciated. Not just wanted, because anyone can be wanted.

He makes me feel
cherished
.


Check out the Red Sox game,” he says, pointing to the well-lit Fenway Park. It’s an early game for the season. Everyone seems so tiny, so insignificant, and yet thousands—tens of thousands—of people are all congregated to watch the game, to party, to be one with the energy of the crowd.
 

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