Authors: Lauren Gallagher
Tags: #Fiction, #Erotica, #General, #Literary, #Romance, #Erotic Contemporary
hips. Then he drew and released a deep breath, picked up speed again, and my
vision once again clouded over.
Until he faltered again. Recovered. Slowed down.
A heartbeat"s worth of clarity pierced my fog of ecstasy long enough to make
me realize he was close,
that
close, but probably held back until I gave him the
word. How he"d made it this far, when any guy I"d ever been with before would have
long ago been snoring away beside me in post-orgasmic bliss, I had no idea.
I licked my dry lips and somehow managed to speak.
“I want… I-I want you to come.”
He didn"t hold back. At all. He fucked me harder than before, faster than
before, and it was enough to bring tears to my eyes. His fingers dug into my hips,
his breath caught, and with a low groan that reverberated through every nerve
ending in my body, he took one last thrust and came.
Everything was still. The room was completely silent except for my thundering
heart and Sabian"s sharp, uneven breaths.
Steadying me with a hand on my hip, he pulled out.
“Get on your back again,” he said. “I"ll be right back.” While I changed position,
he got up to get rid of the condom.
I glanced at the clock I"d warily watched before his arrival. Still plenty of time
between now and when the proverbial meter ran out. So did we both catch our
breath? Talk about the watercolor on the wall? Another area where my knowledge
of prostitute-client protocols was sketchy.
Sabian, of course, didn"t have any such issues. He rejoined me in bed and
kissed me deeply as he put an arm over me.
“Doing okay?” he asked.
I nodded. With a shy laugh, I said, “Definitely getting my money"s worth.”
He chuckled. “That"s what I like to hear.” He craned his neck to look at the
clock. “And it looks like you have plenty of time left, so…” He kissed me again.
Damaged Goods
13
Where he got his energy, I had no idea, but he didn"t quit until the time was
up. By then, God knew how many orgasms I"d had, and Sabian had come twice. I
couldn"t help noticing he was hard again when he got up to get dressed. A shiver
ran down my already tingling spine. How much longer could he have gone? Did I
dare cough up the money and find out?
Tempting though it was, another round with him probably would have killed
me. As it was, I had no doubt I"d be sore tomorrow, and it was worth every minute.
Every minute and every dollar.
Watching him button his silk shirt, I grinned to myself.
That was two hours
and three hundred bucks
well
spent.
With his time up, Sabian made a quick but polite escape, leaving me with his
kiss still lingering on my tongue in the room with boring watercolors and haphazard
sheets.
Lying back on the other bed, I laced my fingers behind my head and stared at
the ceiling.
So that was what a night with a prostitute was like. One-night stands and
unemotional sex were nothing new to me, but this had been different. A lot
different. Even with a one-nighter that I knew wouldn"t go any further, I"d always
felt the pressure to at least pretend there was more between us than there was.
With Sabian, I was free to lie back and enjoy the ride.
That"s not to say sex with Sabian was cold or unfeeling. Far from it. With no
pretenses of this extending beyond the allotted, prepaid time limit, there"d been no
pressure. It was lust for me, business for him, and we both made damned sure I got
my money"s worth. I got my orgasms, he got his money, and we parted ways with
what we both came for and no fear of unmet expectations on the other"s part.
I sighed. Why couldn"t it be like this with
every
guy?
14
Lauren Gallagher
Chapter Two
Sabian refused to be forgotten the next day.
While I sipped my morning coffee in my deserted kitchen, every last inch of my
body ached, and my head was still light from the orgasms he"d given me. He"d made
me climax more times than my previous boyfriend had over the course of several
months. I had never considered myself to be multi-orgasmic, but Sabian either
assumed I was or decided I would be.
He was incredible. Hell, of course he was. He didn"t get paid for it because he
was lame in bed.
Paid for it. I cringed. I still couldn"t believe I"d resorted to a prostitute. More
than that, I"d enjoyed it. And now I craved it. Hot sex, no bullshit, no one treating
me like damaged goods because I had the audacity to have a couple of kids—what
wasn"t to love?
Well, besides the price tag, the stigma, and the regret that really wasn"t regret.
How could I simultaneously regret it and want so badly to do it again?
My smoker friends might be able to answer that question.
Pouring my second cup of coffee, I groaned and rolled my eyes. It wasn"t an
addiction. It was a onetime indulgence to blow off some steam. I"d gotten it out of
my system, and that was that. And now that it was out of my system, it was time to
get back to real life.
It was Sunday, which was the day my ex-husband and I traded the kids for the
week. I spent the day getting everything done that needed to be, all the cleaning we
would negate before the week was up, and I tried unsuccessfully not to think of
Sabian the whole time. That evening, on my way over to Michael"s place, my
stomach was still a ball of guilty, self-loathing nerves.
I couldn"t decide what bothered me more: that I"d done what I did with Sabian
or that my love life had gotten so pathetic and frustrating that I"d even felt the need
to resort to it.
Oh, well. There would be time to wallow in it later. Starting now, as I pulled
into my ex-husband"s driveway, I needed to switch on parent mode.
I rang the doorbell, and Carrie, my ex"s wife, answered.
She smiled and stood aside to let me in. “Right on time, as always.”
“Would you expect anything different?”
Damaged Goods
15
She laughed. “Not at all. Come on in. Michael"s upstairs helping them get their
schoolbags and everything together. They"ll all be down shortly.”
“No rush.” I followed her into the kitchen. From upstairs came footsteps,
voices, shuffling papers, and drawers opening and closing.
“Can I get you some coffee?” Carrie asked.
“Oh, no, I"m fine. Thank you.”
She picked up her own coffee cup. “So how are things?”
“Same old, same old,” I said. “Work, work, work. That place is going to send me
into an early grave, I"m telling you.”
Scowling, she nodded. “God, yes, I know the feeling. I"m starting to think
meetings were invented solely to waste time and drive me insane.”
“I figured that out the day they invented PowerPoint.”
Carrie groaned. “Ugh, that program is the bane of my existence.” She gestured
toward the stairs with her coffee cup. “You know, Michael was at an awards
banquet recently, and some guy broke out a PowerPoint presentation in the middle
of dinner.”
I blinked. “You"re kidding.”
“Not even.” She sipped her coffee and set the cup down. “He said it killed every
last person"s buzz, so they all had to start drinking all over again.”
“Maybe the guy had a deal with the bartenders, then,” I said.
She laughed. “Maybe so.” She started to speak again, but footsteps on the
stairs turned both our heads.
Michael appeared in the kitchen doorway. “Hey, Jocelyn.” He gestured over his
shoulder with his thumb. “Kids are just about ready to go.”
“I"m in no hurry,” I said. “Carrie was just telling me about your death by
PowerPoint at a banquet.”
“Oh, God.” He rolled his eyes. “That was some bullshit, let me tell you.”
“Of course it was,” I said. “That"s why they were using PowerPoint to present
it.”
He chuckled. “Good point.” He rested his hands on the back of one of the
kitchen chairs. “So, kid stuff. Mikey"s got tryouts for wrestling on Wednesday after
school. Will you be able to pick him up?”
“What time will it be over?”
“Four thirty.”
I nodded. “I may have to shuffle a couple of appointments around, but I think
I"ll be able to, no problem.”
“If not, let me know,” Carrie said. “That"s my work-at-home day, so I can get
him if you need me to.”
“Okay, thanks, I"ll let you know.” To Michael, I said, “He turned in his
paperwork from his physical, right?”
16
Lauren Gallagher
“Yeah, I made sure he had it in last week.”
“Okay, good.”
“Oh, and on the twenty-seventh, there"s a father-son thing for scouts,” he said.
“It"s a Tuesday, during your week. Do you mind if I take him, and we can switch
another day?”
“Sure, yeah,” I said. “I think I still owe you a day from when I took them
camping a few months ago anyway.”
“Do you?” He furrowed his brow, then shrugged. “I don"t know, I can"t keep
track.”
I laughed. “Well, you take him for the father-son thing, and we"ll call it even.”
“Sounds good to me.” He glanced toward the stairs. “Let me go see what"s
keeping them.” He left the kitchen, calling to the kids to tell them to get their stuff
together.
There were a lot of things I could say about being divorced, but if I had to have
an ex-husband, I was glad it was Michael. We"d both watched plenty of couples fight
over their kids, nitpicking custody arrangements down to two-minute increments,
and each pitting the kids against the other, and we"d both sworn not to do that to
our children. If anything, we got along better now and were better parents like this
than we ever were before we"d split. If one of them wanted to stay an extra night at
Michael"s one week or have a birthday party at mine during his week, we didn"t
make a big deal out of it.
Sex and dating as a single mom may have sucked, but I thanked God every
day for such an easy, amicable parenting arrangement with my ex-husband.
“Hi, Mom!” Alexis, my seven-year-old, trotted into the kitchen, arms out.
“Hey, you.” I hugged her. “Got everything for the week?”
She nodded. “By the door.”
“Okay, good. Where"s your brother?”
“I"m right here,” Mikey, my twelve year-old said, shuffling in the way his sister
had come. He offered a brief hug. Ah, the joys of a preteen.
Glad to see you, Mom,
but don’t get all mushy.
“You both ready to go?” I asked. They nodded, so we all migrated from the
kitchen to the front door. Hugs, good-byes, and my custody week began.
For the rest of the evening, the kids kept me occupied. It was “guess what
happened at school this week” and helping with homework, figuring out
extracurricular activity schedules, and packing lunches until it was time for them to
go to bed. Once they were asleep, I settled onto the couch for a glass of wine and an
hour or so of downtime before I went to bed myself, and what a surprise, my mind
went right back to last night.
The pendulum swung back and forth between feeling guilty and wishing I
could do it again. Having the kids in the house intensified the guilt, like I should
Damaged Goods
17
have felt even worse because I wasn"t just a single woman. I was a mother. I was
supposed to be respectable or something.
Back and forth. Back and forth. I was reading too much into it, wallowing too
deeply in something that wasn"t a big deal. I was pretending it was no big deal
when it was. I hated myself for doing it, and I wanted to do it again.
Eventually, I finished my wine and went to bed, pretending I stood a chance at
sleeping without thinking about Sabian.
After I"d seen the kids off to the bus stop the next morning, I put myself
together and headed off to work. One more step back into the world of being a
responsible, respectable adult. I"d only escaped this life for a few hours on Saturday
night, but it was surreal going back into it, whether as a parent or employee.
Come on, Jocelyn, get it together.
In the parking lot at the foot of my company"s building, I took a deep breath.
That night was supposed to relieve some stress, and it had. No sense canceling out
the effect by stressing that it had even happened.
One more deep breath, and I was out of the car and on my way in to get to
work. As soon as I walked in the door, Laura, my assistant, handed me a thick stack
of phone messages and a thicker stack of files and forms for me to peruse, sign,
correct, reject, scream at, shred, or forward. Fortunately, I had the kind of job that
offered little downtime, which meant not a lot of time to think. Or dwell. Or wallow.
Sabian was still on my mind but relegated to the back of it for now, because I had
too much to do.
My desk was deceptively clear. Only my computer monitor, coffee cup, and