Read Bound and Determined Online
Authors: Jane Davitt,Alexa Snow
going about it the wrong way.” He took a step toward Sterling, his expression
closed off and forbidding. “Back off,” he said distinctly. “Now.”
And, for once in his life, Sterling took a deep breath and did what he'd
been told. He didn't speak, he didn't push the issue. He lowered his head and
looked at the sidewalk, forcing his shoulders to relax. He was aware of the
picture he made with his blond-tipped hair and his erect cock plainly visible,
and he could only hope that Sawyer would like what he saw.
“Better,” Sawyer said indifferently, casually, his anger fading as if
Sterling's show of obedience had calmed him down. Sterling took a quick,
hopeful breath, waiting—and Sawyer turned and walked away, disappearing
around a corner before Sterling could find the words to stop him.
12
Jane Davitt & Alexa Snow
Chapter Two
Owen shouldn't really have been driving when he was this keyed up, but
right then he just wanted to go home. He pushed his emotions aside to be dealt
with later and concentrated on the road, navigating the familiar route between
the club and his house with his hands gripping the wheel tightly to stop them
from shaking.
Carol and that goddamned boy…an ending and a beginning side by side if
he wanted it to be that way. Did he? He wasn't sure—and that indecision
troubled him more than his failure with Carol.
He'd left a light on, and it made the empty house look welcoming as he got
out of his car in the driveway and walked up the narrow, twisting path to the
front door. The path was edged with low bushes of lavender, aromatic in the
damp September air, and roses, some still with a few tattered petals clinging to
the thorny stems. Owen had inherited the large 1900s house from his parents,
who'd moved into it after he'd left for college and partially restored it. It was
only now, three years after their deaths in a car accident, that it was beginning
to feel like his home, not theirs, a change that brought with it some guilt as he
painted over walls they'd decorated and disposed of furniture they'd chosen.
He got inside, kicked off his shoes, and headed for the master bedroom,
walking slowly up the curved wooden stairs. This room was the first that he'd
made his own, unable to bear the thought of sleeping in his parents' bed for
even a single night, the shock of their loss making logic and reason disappear.
He'd slept on the couch for a week until the redecorating was complete and his
own furniture had arrived, waking stiff-necked and cramped each morning. The
pale rose walls and cream carpet that his mother, Anne, had chosen and his
father had endured, had been painted over and torn up respectively, and the
room, with its high ceilings and long, narrow windows, was now hunter green
with a hardwood floor in a rich chestnut wood. Against the deep, traditional
colors, the black metal frame of his high bed could have looked
uncompromising, but the way the metal was worked into an airy design, simple
but visually interesting, saved it from that.
Or so the salesman had told Owen, who had been more interested by the
linked double posts in each corner, rising up a few feet above the frame, and
the numerous places on the frame that would take a cuff or a tether.
He showered, keeping his mind deliberately blank, and pulled on a
disreputable but warm navy robe that dated back years over a short-sleeved T-
shirt and shorts. It was still early, barely ten, and he went back downstairs to
Bound and Determined
13
get a drink. The bottle of Lagavulin looked almost empty, but tipping its
contents into a glass ended up giving him a lot more than he would usually
have allowed himself as a nightcap.
Shrugging, he swallowed a third of it before going to sit in the wide, low
leather armchair by the fireplace. A discreetly modern and effective heating
system meant that he rarely went to the trouble of kindling a real fire, but he
wished that there was one burning to chase away the chill that the hot shower
and whiskey couldn't touch.
With no more reason to put off the inquest, he pictured Carol's face as
he'd last seen it, anguished and contrite. Did he feel even a flicker of interest in
her? He had to admit that he didn't. She was beautiful, not that it mattered to
him as much as other factors, and she was exquisitely responsive, but God,
she was so boringly predictable. Too many small flaws marring her
performance too, flaws other Doms had let her get away with because of that
shining fall of hair, those wide, beseeching eyes, and full, lush mouth.
Owen had taken her on because she'd begged him to and because he'd
seen her potential, but she just didn't get it, none of it. The physical pleasure
she got from what he did to her—that, yes, but she was incapable of
understanding why something worked for her, and trying to coax anything
other than a rote, “I like anything you do to me, Sir,” from her had proven
impossible.
He didn't feel too sympathetic or regretful. She'd find someone else before
the marks he'd striped her back with had faded, and they hadn't formed a real
connection. She'd enjoyed being seen with him because he had a reputation for
being choosy, but she hadn't been interested in him beyond what they did at
the club.
Owen raised his glass in an ironic, silent toast to her, took a sip of
whiskey, and forgot about her.
He wished that young Mr. Baker was as easy to ignore.
* * * * *
again. The weather was gray, the sky threatening rain that Owen felt confident
would hold off until the afternoon, and he was still keyed up enough after the
weekend that he felt the need to burn off some of his nervous energy. He liked
to run—had since he'd been a teenager—and mornings seemed the best time to
do so if he wanted to lose himself in the rhythm of the exercise.
He definitely preferred the track to running in his own neighborhood; for
him, the whole point was to be able to concentrate on putting one foot in front
of the other, not to have to worry about whether cars or errant dogs might
make him a target. Before noon, few students seemed to use the college track.
Tightening the laces of his fairly expensive running shoes, Owen stretched
a little and started to run. He kept it slow at first, easing into it, and made two
complete laps, a total of half a mile, before he sped up. As he did, starting the
14
Jane Davitt & Alexa Snow
third lap, someone else joined him, pacing him. He glanced over and saw, more
surprised than he should have been, that the someone was Sterling Baker.
“Hi,” Sterling said.
Owen had been using the track for months, but he didn't recall seeing
Sterling do anything more athletic than tapping his pencil against his desk
until Owen's fingers had itched with the need to spank the brat out of him. It
was a second surprise to see just how fit Sterling looked, his long, muscular
legs emerging from a pair of clinging running shorts that showcased an ass
usually hidden under overly baggy shirts. Owen didn't pay much attention to
the sporting side of the university, though; for all he knew, Sterling could be a
star of track and field. Once the young man had left Owen's class at the end of
his freshman year, their paths hadn't crossed often.
Now it seemed they were about to cross frequently unless he swatted this
persistent bug with enough force to drive his message home. Telling Sterling to
go away wasn't an option given their location; Sterling had every right to be
here. Retreating was equally impossible; it went against Owen's natural
inclinations, and he was only partway through his run.
Sterling was watching him with just a little anxiety in his eyes, very
different from the cool arrogance he'd shown Owen so often in class, but there
was a tilt to his chin that didn't look at all meek.
“Good morning,” Owen said pleasantly, glad that he wasn't at all out of
breath. “Should I e-mail you my schedule for the week so that you don't miss
any opportunity to accidentally bump into me, or can we end this game right
now?”
“I don't want to end it,” Sterling said just as pleasantly. “We're just
starting. So yeah, feel free to e-mail me your schedule. Or not—I'm stubborn.
I'll figure this out either way.”
Younger and apparently just as fit, Sterling kept pace with no apparent
effort—not impressive yet, not when he'd just started, but if it continued… If it
continued, Owen
would
be impressed, and that wasn't part of his plan as to
how this would go, not at all. Owen put on a bit more speed, testing, and
Sterling sped up too.
They ran side by side in silence for a while, their paces perfectly matched,
their feet striking the surface of the track in an insistent rhythm. Not good, and
Owen, determined to break the unwanted synchronicity, fell back with an
abruptness that left Sterling forging ahead for a few paces until he realized that
he was running alone.
Owen gave him a bland smile and continued to jog at an easy,
undemanding pace, frustratingly slow for him and, he was sure, maddeningly
so for someone as athletic as Sterling. Now Sterling had several choices; he
could match Owen's speed, following his lead, demonstrate his strength and
endurance by sprinting off, or continue at his present pace. Or give up. Owen
didn't really care what Sterling did; any choice he made would reveal
Bound and Determined
15
something about him, and that was what Owen wanted. Know thy enemies…
Sterling wasn't an enemy, but the theory was sound.
At first Owen thought Sterling had chosen to continue at the same speed
they'd been at, but slowly, almost casually, he slowed down until he was
running beside Owen again. He flashed Owen a friendly smile, somehow
managing to keep any hint of pride out of it.
“I'm still an English major,” Sterling said.
Owen refrained from rolling his eyes. “Am I supposed to consider that an
accomplishment?”
“After the hard time you gave me in your class? I'm surprised I didn't
transfer schools.” Sterling's tone was light, joking.
“And miss the chance to repay the favor by giving me a hard time when
I'm
not
in class?” Owen didn't give Sterling a chance to reply; he wanted to run,
feel the pleasant ache of tired muscles vanish in an endorphin rush as he
pushed his limits. “Two laps,” he said, and allowed a hint of challenge to
roughen his voice. “Show me what you've got.”
It was a strange relief that Sterling was left behind in Owen's metaphorical
dust, even if it was only for a few seconds. At least it reassured Owen that the
boy wasn't perfect. It was stupid of him to think otherwise, of course—but God,
Sterling was so young and beautiful. And quick too—he caught on and caught
up in less than thirty seconds, long legs matching Owen's speed stride for
stride.
It felt good, running so fast. The world passed by in a blur of color, Owen's
nostrils flaring like he imagined a horse's would as he went faster and then
even faster. He was aware of Sterling beside him, arms and legs pumping.
Owen wasn't running at top speed—this wasn't about winning, it was about
discovery, and he wanted to know what Sterling was capable of. A hell of a lot
more than he was himself, if this was any indication. Owen was sixteen years
older and, while fit by almost any standards, no match for a twenty-year-old
with a chip on his shoulder.
He shouldn't be doing this—not the running, which was exhilarating, but
what it implied. Sterling was barely more than a kid, a kid who had no idea
what he was getting himself into. Or trying to get himself into. It'd be okay,
though, because Owen would set him straight.
The second lap was almost over when Owen broke from a position that
had given him an excellent view of Sterling's ass for the last few minutes and
poured everything he had into the last few hundred yards, soon passing
Sterling, who'd run a valiant race at a speed just a fraction too much to sustain
over the distance.
As he'd expected, he heard a grunt of sheer determination from behind
him, Sterling's breath sobbing in his dry throat, and he could almost
feel
Sterling straining every muscle to regain the lead. Did the boy think winning
would give him what he wanted, whatever that was? And what would happen if