Read The Bikini Diaries Online
Authors: Lacey Alexander,cey Alexander
to mention painful. He almost wished he'd never met her. Except he couldn't imagine
not
having met her, because she'd sort of... changed every second of his life since then.
He thought about her all the time. He wondered what she was doing, if she was happy.
He hoped she wasn't fucking other guys because the very idea made him want to strangle
somebody—mainly the other guys.
He'd confided the whole pathetic story to Pete last Saturday when they'd taken one of
Pete's boats fishing in the bay, and his buddy had formed the theory that Brandon was in love. "That's why you're acting like an immature idiot. Most guys fall in love for the first time when they
are
still an immature idiot. I was eighteen. You're what—thirty-six? No wonder you're so fucked up about it."
Brandon's initial response had been denial.
But the reality was—Pete was probably right. Brandon was in love with Wendy, the best
fuck of his life, his new board member, and the woman who'd made it clear in her diary
that she didn't care for him in any significant way.
Even though Brandon had seen them only for a few minutes, the words he'd read there
played in his head over and again. They'd made him feel so... incidental. Like he could be any guy. Any cock would do.
He didn't hate her, and he wasn't mad at her, despite what he'd probably given her reason to believe—but hell, the truth was that he simply didn't know how to handle the hurt, a
far deeper hurt than he'd known he could even feel.
It made him angry at himself—successful CEO and resort magnate Brandon Worth was
acting like a baby because the girl he wanted didn't want him back. Well, at least not the way
he
wanted
her.
Maybe in the end, what it came down to was: Wendy really was a bad girl, exactly the
kind of girl who could fuck a guy's brains out and not give a damn when it was over.
Which was usually fine with him—but with her, things were different. She'd had him so
fooled—until he'd happened to pick up that damn diary.
He tried to look on the bright side. Despite what had happened, Emerald Shores had
ended up with a huge influx of cash thanks to Wendy's recommendation to Walter
Carlisle. It had saved his fiscal ass and allowed his dream, and his career, to continue.
The resort was now in good financial shape, lifting a world of professional worries off his mind.
So he thought he should feel better, given that Emerald Shores was his main concern in
life.
But maybe that had been before Wendy Carnes had come. along.
He didn't know what to do, how to fix this. It was like he'd woken up in some foreign
land where everything was different, where he didn't understand the language or the
customs and just kept making mistake after mistake. He felt lost. And that was the
problem—he'd never felt lost in his life, and he didn't know how to find his way back to where he'd come from.
Wendy strolled out onto the beach in shorts and a tank late Saturday afternoon. She
hadn't quite been in the mood to don her bikini and soak up rays, even though maybe that would have relaxed her. But she'd decided to come out now that the day was waning and
most of the beachgoers were gone and the boys who worked on the beach were busy
taking down umbrellas and chairs like Brandon once had.
The soft sand felt warm, somehow comforting, beneath her feet, and the sea breeze
refreshing. She walked up the shoreline, watching the water, the sand, the last few
families and couples who were packing up their sand buckets and towels, ready to call it a day. She saw a little boy with a sunburn and felt sad for him, knowing he'd be crying
later. She thought about all the people who flocked here for so many reasons: relaxation, fun, a getaway, a tan... and sex.
Just then—oh God—Wendy spotted her, walking up the beach!
White Bikini Babe.
Again in her stunning, sexy white bikini, heading straight in Wendy's direction. They would
pass at the water's edge in just a few moments.
The girl was as gorgeous as Wendy remembered, and just as wholly sexual, her breasts
bulging from those slender white triangles, her hair blowing in the breeze, her beautiful face filled with confident arrogance.
And God help her, Wendy
still
wanted to be her. Even after all of this.
But maybe for a different reason now. If she were that woman—that idealized woman in
her mind who could fuck and not care—she wouldn't be hurting so badly over Brandon.
Wendy considered saying hello when they passed, maybe even trying to start a
conversation, trying to get a window into the other woman's world to see what was
happening there, what her life was really like... but just as quickly, she realized she didn't want to know. She didn't want to lose that almost magical image White Bikini Babe had
held in her mind for so long now.
There remained some part of Wendy that still wanted to believe a woman existed who
could live that life, who could soak up the physical pleasure without experiencing any of the emotion from being that close to a man.
Even so, as they passed each other, leaving two sets of footprints headed in opposite
directions, she was forced to recognize the
real
truth—magical image or not. The real truth was that no matter how perfect that woman looked or what message she sent out, no
one had a perfect life. Even White Bikini Babe had problems. Possibly big ones. Possibly she was in love with someone right now who didn't love her back.
And that quickly, Wendy stopped feeling envious.
Well, mostly. She still wouldn't mind having that ass and those firm, perky boobs, but it was official—she was perfectly happy with who she was and she didn't want to be
anyone else.
Walking farther, Wendy noticed an older but striking woman, probably in her fifties. She sat on a beach blanket wearing summery white pants and a roomy white tunic with
metallic gold trim, her dark hair pulled up onto her head in a bun. She wasn't beautiful, but there was something about her, an understated elegance that Wendy found instantly
compelling. She looked happy and content to be by herself at the beach, not even
remotely intimidated by anyone in a racy bikini.
And Wendy amended her last thought just a little—because
that
was who she wanted to be: someone who was that comfortable in her own skin.
A quiet wisdom radiated from the dark-haired woman and Wendy almost wanted to go
talk to her, share her troubles, seek her advice.
But maybe she didn't want to risk disillusionment there, either.
Or maybe she just thought she was a big enough girl to solve her own problems. She was
on the board of directors of a major vacation resort, after all—she needed to start acting like a woman in control of her own destiny.
And maybe that woman, that woman she wanted to be— that powerful, in-control
woman-deeded to be the bigger person here.
She was still hurt by the way Brandon had handled this, and she still wasn't certain
whether his reaction had to do with ego or truly caring for her. But she needed to take the situation in hand and find out once and for all, even if it put her at risk, both personally and professionally.
I’m starting to think Brandon is an obstinate idiot.
Because I care for him, so freaking much, but he won't listen or give me a chance to
explain. He read something I spilled recklessly into this book, something private, meant
only to allow me to purge my
thoughts
during a highly intense time of my life, and he
acts as if those words are all that matters.
Doesn't he remember the great talks we had? Doesn't he remember the times we held
hands or just kissed and kissed and kissed, or
the
way we looked into each other's
eyes? Doesn't he know I couldn't have done any of those
wild
things if he hadn't been
there with me, encouraging me to experience it all, treating me with kindness and
respect?
Isn't he a smart enough guy to look back on all that and realize it adds up to a hell of a
lot more than a few journal entries where I was trying to convince myself I didn't caret
Isn't he a compassionate enough person to look past that and see how much more we
shared?
Isn't he a wise enough man to realize that I LOVE him?
Chapter 15
W
endy quietly stuck a ribbon in the journal, marking the page she'd just filled. Then she left the Shellside Towers and walked to the nearby building that held Brandon's
penthouse.
' She thought of all the ways this could turn out. He could never mention it and she'd
never know what he thought. He could continue being belligerent and confusing. He
could have his ego repaired and it could make way for more cordial working
conditions—but nothing more. Or... well, she wouldn't let her mind go to the best
possible scenario. Glass-half-empty girls tended to work with worst-case scenarios
instead, because how often in life did the best possible outcome occur?
She thought she would be nervous about this, but she 'felt weirdly calm. Like it was a
thing that simply had to be done, regardless of the result. Like she
had
to tell him,
had
to let him know—even if he
was
acting like a jerk. She had to put this on the table once and for all. If she didn't, she'd never feel a sense of closure, and she was a person who
needed
closure.
Approaching the grand double doors to his condo, she quietly laid her journal outside,
then turned and walked away.
On Sunday, Wendy rented a bike and went shopping at some of the resort shops. She
needed more "beach wear." Or at least she hoped she did. She hadn't heard from Brandon, and she only prayed what she'd done wouldn't somehow worsen the situation and make it
downright impossible to work together.
As she shopped, she made a point to steer clear of the Beach Bazaar. Just for now. She
simply felt compelled to keep a low profile until she and Brandon got things resolved one way or another, and she didn't want to have to fake her way through a conversation with
Stacy should Brandon's name come up. Besides which, what if Stacy wanted to fool
around again? Wendy couldn't deny the sensual pleasures she'd shared with the pretty
girl, and she might not mind sharing them again sometime—but she was pretty sure that
if Brandon hadn't been there, involved on the periphery, her hot tub encounter with Stacy would have felt as empty as her kisses with Matt back in Chicago. She was still finding
her way through all the new recipes for sex in her life, but she was pretty sure Brandon was a required ingredient.
By dinnertime Sunday evening, she'd still had no contact from Brandon and it hit her that she would have to go into the Emerald Shores office tomorrow, her first official day on
the job, and face him having no idea what he'd thought of her journal entry. Sheesh. It
had seemed like such a bold, take-charge, forward step at the time—but if he didn't
respond, that made it kind of useless, and possibly problematic, since it left her having no idea where they stood. Not that she'd exactly grasped where they stood
before
yesterday, either—that was the whole point of putting her cards on the table and telling him how she felt
After a light dinner of soup and salad at a cafe near her building, she decided to go for another walk on the beach. It was either that or hole up in her condo and cry. She
believed strong women cried, too, sometimes, but she just didn't want to give in to her
girlish emotions yet She truly was a tougher, more confident woman since her week with
Brandon, and she wanted to keep it that way. Even if her heart was breaking a little more with each passing minute she didn't hear from him.
Maybe you were right in the first place and this was ail about his ego. Maybe, when all is
said and done, he just doesn't love you back. Maybe seeing those words on the page
freaked him out and sent him running in the other direction.
She sighed at those sobering thoughts as she descended the same steps to the beach that
she and Brandon had taken together that first night.
It was later than she'd arrived yesterday, so the wide white beach was mostly empty, the umbrellas packed up for the night— although a few beachcombers walked along with
metal detectors, and the occasional young family played near the water.
In the distance, she spotted the cabanas in front of Brandon's building—they were heavy
enough that no one could steal them, so she supposed that was why they weren't put away
at day's end, why they'd remained there to be fucked upon that first night and why they
were there now.
Her skin sizzled at the memory of that very first penetration. She sighed, bit her lip, her pussy aching for more of what, apparently, only Brandon could give her.
That was when she saw him, stretched out on the very same padded cabana chair on
which he'd delivered those glorious strokes with that glorious cock. Oh God, he was just as beautiful as ever, his pale hair messier than usual—from the sea breeze, she supposed.
He wore a white linen button-down shirt over light beach pants, rolled up around his
legs—she guessed he'd been walking in the surf.
His eyes met hers then, but she couldn't read them—so she walked toward him, albeit
cautiously.