Delilah Devlin
Copyright © 2015 Delilah Devlin
Kindle Edition
When Amanda meets her old high-school crush, he doesn’t remember her. A bouquet of flowers and a lost towel spark an affair neither one will forget.
This is a 5000-word erotic short story. It may be short in length, but it’s not short in passion!
To those of you who’ve read me before—hello, friends! To new readers, welcome to my world!
As you’ll discover (if you continue to read me), I tend to bounce around in different genres, from contemporary to paranormal and sci-fi—all are very sexy,
so be warned
. I also write in many lengths from short story to full-length novel. If you can’t tell, I love to write. And when a story is fast, it’s short. If my characters need more pages, well, you get the picture. I’m a slave to my muses (I have three—or so three different psychics have told me!).
I love hearing from readers, have a very active blog and Facebook friend page. I run contests, talk about my favorite TV shows, what I collect, what drives me crazy. I ramble a bit. I’m doing it right now. But if you’d like to learn more about me and what I’m doing or writing about, be sure to check out the “About Delilah Devlin” page after the story.
And if you enjoy
this
story, please consider leaving a review on your favorite retail site or simply tell a friend. Readers do influence other readers. We have to trust someone to tell us whether we’ll have fun when we open a new story!
Sincerely,
Delilah Devlin
‡
A
n arm filled
with red and pink blooms, Amanda Blakely tugged down the hem of her pink uniform shirt, drew in a deep breath for courage and rang the doorbell.
One minute stretched into two. She rang again.
“All this stressing out over seeing him again, and he’s not even home,” she muttered.
Although why she’d been so excited when she’d written down the name the woman on the phone provided, she couldn’t have said. The high-school memories she had of Dustin Fremont, if he was even the same guy, weren’t exactly ones she pulled out when she wanted warm and fuzzy feelings. Maybe she was just plain curious.
Or hopeful—that he’d grown a paunch or lost all his thick brown hair.
She shifted the large bouquet in her arms and sighed. This was the last delivery of the day, and she was damned if she would try him again later. The roads were getting slushy and a freeze was forecast for the area. She needed to head home soon. She gave the bell one last poke and leaned her ear against the door.
The door swung open and with a yelp, she fell forward.
Strong hands gripped her forearms, holding her away, but she thrust out the hand not holding the flowers and her palm slid across damp, naked skin. When she’d caught her balance, she drew in a shaky breath, cringing inside, and lifted her gaze to meet that of the boy she’d crushed on throughout high-school.
Good lord, there was even more of him to swoon over now.
And
so
, not a boy anymore.
She forced herself to curl her fingers off his hot, humid skin and straightened away.
“Are you all right?”
His voice was deeper than she remembered but still recognizable for the way it made her body react—with a wash of melting heat. She glanced up and lost her train of thought as her gaze locked with his hazel eyes.
Heart racing, she cleared her throat and nodded, the greeting she’d rehearsed evaporating from her mind like the droplets of water on his skin.
He’d changed. Gotten…thicker.
Everywhere.
Tanned skin stretched deliciously over a well-muscled frame.
She had a reason for being here—but what was it? She was sure it had nothing to do with the towel beginning to loosen at his waist.
“Flowers,” she said, thrusting the bouquet of roses and carnations forward.
The blossoms slapped his naked chest, and he instinctively curved an arm around them, his expression bemused.
He should have looked ridiculous, holding a pretty, feminine armful of flowers against his golden chest with a white towel tucked around his hips, but Mandy couldn’t suppress the little whimpering sigh that slipped between her slackened jaws at the sight of all his manly glory.
His head canted at the sound, his gaze narrowing on her as though seeing her for the first time.
“They’re for you,” she said stupidly, wishing the ground would open up and swallow her whole.
His gaze went to the flowers, and his eyebrows lowered as he stared at the bouquet.
The gesture showed a hint of irritation that pricked her to gather her wits. “There’s a card. From Simone. Says thanks for…everything. Not that I know what ‘everything’ is, but she told me what to write. Phone-in order.” She clamped her lips shut to keep from babbling more.
The corners of his lips twitched. “Guess I should get them into water.”
“She seemed especially eager to get them to you today,” Mandy blurted, then turned crimson. She sounded accusatory. Like it was any of her business why a girlfriend of his would send him flowers as a morning-after thank you.
“It’s not what you’re thinking, I’m sure,” he said, his tone wry. Then his eyes narrowed on her face again. “Do I know you?”
Rather than answer the question because she’d already embarrassed herself enough, she blurted again. “I was thinking you must be really good.” Good lord, had she really just said that?
“I’m not—” He shook his head. A bark of laughter shook his chest. “Guess I can’t deny it too much or you’ll think I’m gay or sexless.”
“I’d never think that.” Sweet Jesus, would she ever learn to just shut up?
“I know you. That voice.”
No doubt, he recognized her penchant for babbling every time he’d smiled at her in the hallway at Reagan High. Her cheeks burned. “Um,” she pointed her thumb down the hallway. “I better go. Delivery boy called in sick. Hope you like the flowers.” She turned and hurried away.
“Wait! What’s your name?”
Amanda kept on walking, pretending she hadn’t heard him. He’d never known it in high-school. Now, she was double-damn sure she didn’t want him learning it today.
She turned the corner, hurrying toward the elevator and hit the button. Her heart pounded so loudly, she never heard him coming.
A finger tapped her shoulder. “You didn’t stick around long enough for me to tip you.”
The glance she aimed over her shoulder slid down to his towel, which was still loosening. Because she couldn’t take the stress any longer, she reached for the ends working their way free and pulled them together, retucking them at his hips.
When she realized what she’d done, she froze, her fingers still trapped against his warm skin.
The elevator door slid open behind her and she didn’t dare glance back.
His still features didn’t change. Must have been in shock, which suited her fine.
Things couldn’t get any worse, but she had to get away. She pulled free her hand and stepped backward into the elevator, her mouth gaping when his towel puddled at his feet. A second later, the doors slid closed between them.
“Oh my,” came a breathy whisper from behind her.
Mandy glanced at an elderly woman whose grin stretched wide across her face.
“Thanks, my dear. I’ve wondered about him for years.”
“You’re welcome,” Mandy muttered.
The elevator stopped twice more on the way to the bottom floor. Only then did she breathe a deep sigh of relief, happy the ordeal was over and ready to go back to the shop to lick her wounds in privacy. Seriously, could she have mucked up things any worse?
She stepped out of the elevator, but only made it three steps before a hand wrapped around her wrist, and she was pulled into the stairwell next to the elevator and trapped between the wall and Dustin Fremont’s broad chest.
“I didn’t want a tip,” she said, shocked to her toes that he’d run down four flights of stairs to stop her. But why?
“We weren’t finished.”
She glanced down. The towel was back in place. She wasn’t sure if she felt relief or not, but now that she knew exactly what the fluffy terry hid, it wasn’t any protection. And what it hid tented against the material.
“Ignore it,” he bit out.
“Impossible,” she sputtered and looked into his eyes.
“Your own damn fault.”
“How? Did I ask you to answer the door naked?”
“You rang the bell three times. You could have taken that as a hint I wasn’t ready for company.”
“I didn’t want your flowers to wilt,” she said, then pressed her lips together as she fought the urge to again cut her gaze down to the towel.
“So you can conduct a conversation,” he said slowly, his voice deepening to a sexy rumble.
“This is an argument. Which we can end as soon as you let me go.”
He snorted. “Go out with me.”
“What?” Words she’d dreamed of hearing years ago.
“Sorry, but there’s a breeze in this stairwell and I don’t have time for niceties. A date. I buy you dinner. You tell me your name.”
“I know what you’re packing. Think I don’t know what you really want?”
“Is that a problem?”
If anyone else had said that, she’d have slapped him silly, but hadn’t she been thinking about just what he inferred even before he opened the door to his apartment?
Before she’d rang his bell, she’d tried to shore up her confidence to ask him out, reminding herself that she owned her own business, sat on the neighborhood development committee where she could string reasonably educated sentences together. But then she’d reverted to a stammering geek at the first sight of his manly frame.
Some dreams were best left behind in high school.
“I respectfully decline, Mr. Fremont.”
“Why?”
“Has no one ever turned you down?”
His brows lowered, and he shook his head. “No.”
“Then let me teach you one of life’s little lessons. Sometimes, you can’t have what you want.”
A deep exhalation caused his shoulders to droop. His hand dropped away. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to assault you.”
“Since I didn’t exactly conduct myself like a lady either, I forgive you.”
He cleared his throat, and one hand went to the knot at his hips to hold the towel in place.
She breathed a little easier.
“Who are you?”
Mandy rolled her eyes. “The delivery girl for Passionate Posies.”
“Your name.”
“You always this stubborn?”
One corner of his mouth kicked up. “I’ve never exposed myself to someone whose name I don’t even know.”
“Well, let me be the first. I have to go.” Since he still cut off the exit with his bulky frame, she gave him a pointed stare. “Nice seeing you again.” Then her cheeks flushed with heat when she thought a second about what she’d just said.
One side of his mouth slid upward. “Wish the ‘seeing’ had been mutual.”
Impatient now because his expression was filling with amusement the hotter her cheeks got, she pushed against his chest. “I have other deliveries. You’ll get me fired,” she lied.
“Sure,” he said, standing to the side to let her leave. “And I better get back before someone calls the police.”
“Or takes a picture. I’m sure this isn’t the one you want posted in the business section.”
He quirked an eyebrow. “You’ve seen my pictures there?”
“I’m a business woman myself. Of course, I read that section.”
“I’ll be seeing you again.”
She shrugged. “Bound to run into each other sometime.”
When she left him, she couldn’t help the smile that tugged at her lips. She’d survived. And she’d intrigued him. She knew it from the glint of challenge in his gaze.
No one had ever turned him down before.
*