Buy Me Sir

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Buy Me Sir Page 21

by Jade West


  Alexander Henley actually holds me.

  “Fuck,” he says, and I can tell he’s smiling.

  It takes me by surprise, and I giggle.

  “That was… intense…” I hold up the opal to the morning light. “Lucky,” like I said.

  “Lucky?”

  I nod.

  “You’re putting a good anal pounding down to a lucky crystal, are you? Tell me how lucky you think it is when you’re limping through the foyer later.”

  Later.

  He realises what he’s said, I’m sure of it, because he reaches for the remote control on the nightstand and flicks on the TV clock.

  It’s gone six in the morning.

  “You must be tired,” I tell him.

  “I don’t sleep.”

  “You don’t?”

  “Not easily.”

  I turn over to face him. “Not even in a comfy bed at a swanky spa resort?”

  “Not even in a comfy bed at a swanky spa resort.” His eyes are so tired. “But you could.”

  My tummy flips. “Here?”

  “If you would like.”

  I’m stupidly nervous given that he just spent the whole night in every single part of me. “And you? Will you stay too?”

  He takes a breath. “I have to get home.”

  “Okay,” I say, and I can’t hide the disappointment. I don’t want to.

  He looks as though he’s going to add something, so I wait quietly, giving the pause he needs.

  It works. I can’t believe it works, but it does.

  “I’ve got a dog,” he tells me, and my heart jumps at the fact Ted Brown told me something real about Alexander Henley. He stares right through me. “But I could stay awhile. Until you get to sleep.”

  I smile so bright. “I’d like that.”

  He shunts enough to pull back the bedcovers and I slip inside. He fluffs up the pillows and rolls to face me.

  “I don’t sleep,” he says again, “but don’t let that stop you.”

  But he does sleep. I know that because I’m still watching him through pretend-closed eyes as his close for real.

  Alexander

  It’s gone ten when I get home to poor Brutus. A cunty move that takes me completely by surprise.

  I wasn’t lying – I don’t sleep. Only I did fucking sleep. I slept like a fucking log for four fucking hours straight, tangled in the limbs of a stranger with her pretty face against my shoulder, as though I was in the arms of a fucking angel.

  Yes, it’s that fucking ridiculous.

  I feel grimy in yesterday’s suit, my shirt crumpled to fuck and my hair fresh from fucking bed in my haste to get back for him.

  My grumpy black beast pads nonchalantly through from the conservatory as though he’s hardly noticed I’ve gone as I deactivate the alarm. I love how he plays it cool.

  He’s left me a couple of parcels by the back door, and looks surprisingly pleased with himself as I busy myself cleaning up.

  “I’m a prick,” I tell him. “I fell asleep. Who’d have fucking thought it, hey?” I ruffle his ears when I’m done. “A dick move, boy. It won’t happen again.”

  He grunts as though he understands me, and I think all is forgiven as I dish up his breakfast.

  I’ll have to be more fucking careful next time.

  Oversleeping. Racing through spa foyers like a dirty stop-out on my way home. Sharing a bed.

  None of this is me. Not even close.

  But I feel strangely sated. More relaxed than I can remember in years.

  My balls are well and truly fucking empty, my cock sleeping the dead kind of sleep that fucking all night long gifts to you, and my mind is quiet.

  Free.

  I slump down in the armchair I haven’t enjoyed for an age, breathing in the scent of orchids, and I feel fucking amazing.

  I could sleep again, right here right now, with a smile on my face and the smell of Amy’s gorgeous pussy still on my fingers, but Brutus has other plans.

  He nudges my elbow, glaring up at me with his overbite in full gruesome splendour.

  “You want out?” I ask, and he gruffs at me. Yes, he wants fucking out.

  No rest for the wicked, but that’s okay. I can live with that.

  I grab his leash.

  Melissa

  Joe calls Saa at me happily when I step in through the front door, bouncing along to his favourite TV show as Dean tries to give him lunch.

  Dean doesn’t look quite so impressed. He drops Joe’s little train fork in the bowl.

  “Jeez,” he snaps. “Where the hell have you been?”

  He’s worried, of course he is, and he has every right to be. I tell him so.

  And then I tell him how I slept in Alexander Henley’s arms and he slept too. I tell him how he smiled at me as he left this morning, taking a moment to kiss my lips before he shot out through the door in a cloud of expletives.

  “You could’ve phoned!” he tells me, but I couldn’t have. How could I? How could I have possibly explained a call to a male friend at home taking care of my baby brother?

  I explain my logic and Dean shrugs. “So what are you gonna tell him?”

  I stare blankly. “What do you mean?”

  “You are gonna have to tell him something, Lissa, You can’t keep this act up forever.”

  “Just for six months…” I say, and I realise how stupid that sounds.

  I don’t need Dean to spell out the obvious, but he does it anyway. “Six months is a long time. One day you hardly know the guy, the next he’s sleeping next to you, signing up to pay you crazy cash every weekend for half a year straight. This is crazy, Lissa. It can’t work. You have to tell him.”

  “Tell him what?”

  He shrugs. “The truth?”

  I laugh out loud. “That’s crazy.”

  “No,” he says. “This is crazy. He’s gonna find out, sooner or later. He’s gonna find out and he’s gonna be pissed. Fess up now, get it over with.”

  My stomach lurches. “He wouldn’t want to know me… not if he knew…”

  He shrugs again. “You don’t know that. Guy seems pretty keen to me.”

  But I do know that. Of course I know it.

  I feel Dean’s glare. “Stop it now,” he says. “Before you get in too deep to get out. I’m serious, Lissa, this ain’t gonna end well, not unless you fess up and iron this crap out before it gets out of hand.”

  I’m already in too deep to get out, and my face says it all.

  He shakes his head. “This is so messed up,” he says, and I don’t argue. I couldn’t argue.

  So I don’t.

  I get him to count my money instead.

  Alexander

  I order Brenda to summon Janet Yorkley to my office first thing on Monday morning.

  She’s dithery as she presents herself at my door. I wave her in, and silence her as she starts gabbling on about how she hopes the new cleaner is doing a good job.

  “The new cleaner is fine,” I tell her. “She’s excellent, in fact.”

  Her relief is palpable.

  I don’t give her chance to enjoy it. “Which is exactly why I want to increase her hours. I need her on a Sunday morning. Early. My dog needs walking.”

  “A Sunday morning?” she asks.

  I hate having to repeat myself, so I don’t. “I may be in, or I may not, but that’s irrelevant. I need her to let herself in before seven regardless, feed him and take him out. She should be done before nine.”

  Janet nods. “I’ll arrange it, Mr Henley. I’m sure Melissa will be pleased to assist.”

  Melissa.

  Her name zips right up my spine.

  “Advise Melissa to be careful of dog presents in the conservatory. He may well have had a long evening.”

  “I’ll let her know,” she says.

  She plasters on a fake smile as I dismiss her, being so careful to close my door quietly on the way out.

  Melissa.

  Not a Molly May after all. Not eve
n close.

  It would have been handy to know this before I attempted to chase her down my fucking street a few weeks back, but none of that matters now.

  I have other interests to keep me occupied.

  Melissa

  I feel sick as I head for Janet Yorkley’s office, freshly summoned via my work phone before I’d even finished clearing Mr Henley’s breakfast things away.

  She calls me inside as soon as I tap on her office door, and the sickness eases off just a little. She’s smiling. That’s got to be good, right?

  She tells me to take a seat and I do.

  “Excellent news,” she says. “Mr Henley has expressed his approval of your cleaning standards. Very well done. His praise doesn’t come easily.”

  I feel like such a fraud as I grin back at her, as though she’ll see straight through me and realise I’ve been up to no good. As though she’ll know I’m overstepping every boundary in my employee handbook and then some.

  “Thanks, I’ve been working really hard.”

  “I don’t doubt it,” she says. “And you’ll be working harder from this week onwards.”

  I stare blankly and she keeps on smiling.

  “Mr Henley would like to increase your hours. You’ll be taking his dog out on a Sunday morning before seven. You should be done by nine.”

  I feel the blood drain from my face. “Sunday morning?”

  She nods. “He advised he may be in, or he may not be, but not to let that deter you. Of course, we prefer discreet, always,” she waffles on and on as I struggle to form words.

  Finally, she stops. Waits for a response.

  “But I, um… Sunday?”

  She groans. “Yes, Miss Martin. Sunday. Every Sunday, seven a.m. at the latest.”

  I can’t even begin to hide the horror. “But I can’t! I really can’t… not on a Sunday…”

  Her eyes turn cold in a heartbeat. “What do you mean you can’t? We don’t do can’t, Melissa, not where Mr Henley is concerned.”

  “But Joe…” I bleat. “My brother… he needs me… I said at interview…”

  “Your responsibilities wouldn’t be a problem. That’s what you said at interview.”

  And she’s right, I did.

  “I really can’t,” I tell her, even though it pains. “There’s no way I can do a Sunday, really there isn’t. I’d love to, really I would, but I can’t…”

  She raises a hand. “You want me to tell that to Mr Henley, do you? That you just can’t?”

  My mind spins.

  He wants a cleaner on Sunday morning because…

  “I can’t,” I repeat. “I’m really sorry, Janet, but I can’t.”

  The stand-off takes forever. My fingers fidget under the desk, contemplating the inevitable, contemplating having to walk away from this. But I can’t do that either.

  I really can’t.

  “This is worth losing your position over, is it?” she snaps. “Plenty of our staff would love to work in Mr Henley’s house. It’s a privilege.”

  “I’m lucky,” I say. “I know it, but I just can’t.”

  It doesn’t matter how many times I say it, her eyes are still piercing. Still angry.

  I lay it on the line, because I can’t see any other option. “I’ll resign,” I say. “I’m sorry to let you down.”

  Her mouth opens. “Resign?”

  I nod. “Please send my apologies to Mr Henley.”

  There’s a tickle of relief under the disappointment once the words are out there. Maybe I’ll never have to tell him, maybe he’ll never know who I really am.

  It’s clutching at straws, but straws feel pretty good under the circumstances.

  “Shall I leave my uniform?” I ask, ready to pull the cap from my head. It would be more than a tickle of relief to ditch this crappy outfit.

  Now it’s Janet struggling for words. “Let’s not be hasty,” she says, and then she tuts at me like I’m a naughty child. “I’m disappointed, Melissa, but under the circumstances maybe someone else can take the Sunday shift.”

  My heart pounds as she picks up her telephone extension. “I need Miss Webber down here, quickly please.”

  I wait in silence.

  Janet does too.

  When Sonnie enters the room she looks just as worried as I was. She takes a seat at my side nervously, clearly trying to work out what the hell she’s done wrong.

  “An opportunity has come up,” Janet tells her. “We need you to clean Mr Henley’s house on a Sunday morning. You’ll be taking his dog out in particular. You’re available, yes?”

  Sonnie looks as horrified as I did. “But isn’t that Lissa’s job?”

  I hope my eyes tell her how sorry I am. I know she has little kids at home. I know she didn’t mention it at interview.

  “Miss Martin is unavailable,” Janet says, and I feel like an asshole. “Please don’t tell me you are too.”

  I’m waiting for it, the stream of excuses as Sonnie tries to get out of it, but she doesn’t. Although she looks stressed as hell she plasters a bright smile on her face.

  “I’ll do it,” she says. “Hell, I’m always up for a promotion.”

  “Then it’s done,” Janet tells us. “I’ll find a stand in for your duties this week, Miss Webber. You’ll be shadowing Miss Martin in preparation for the weekend.”

  I smile.

  Sonnie smiles.

  Janet smiles too.

  I’m a long way away from her office by the time I breathe easily again.

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Melissa

  “Whoa,” Sonnie says. “This is some pad.”

  I swell with pride as I lead the way to Mr Henley’s front door. Stupid, I know.

  I hand her a piece of paper with the alarm code written down. “The keypad is under the stairs, you have to be quick.”

  “I’ll be like lightning.” She nudges me with her elbow as I sort through the keys. “Look at us little scrubbers from floor seven, making it all the way to Mr Henley’s place. Did you really do it? Sniff his underpants?”

  “Course I do. I wear them on my head while I’m scrubbing.” I shoot her a goofy smile, and she laughs as I turn the key in the lock. “You have to be careful of Brutus,” I tell her. “Never come here without fish treats. I’ll give you a pack.”

  “Cindy warned me already. Said he’s a monster.”

  I feel strangely protective. “He’s not a monster. He’s just… misunderstood.”

  “Like his master, eh? Up to no good sticking his dick in hooker pussy.” She grins. “I know Cindy told you. Said you looked damn like you were gonna get yourself down there to Harley’s tavern yourself.”

  “She told me a lot of things,” I say, and my cheeks burn as we step inside. Sonnie really does make a dash for it, scooting through the hallway in her bid to deactivate the countdown timer. I’d forgotten how efficient she is.

  The alarm stops beeping and she takes a look around the place, jaw open.

  “Yep, just as I thought. Swanky as hell.”

  She hasn’t seen anything yet.

  And she hasn’t seen Brutus yet, either.

  He takes her by surprise, his growl crazily intimidating as he checks out the intruder in his house. It’s a sound I haven’t heard in a while, and I’m dithery as I rustle for the treats in my apron pocket. I toss them to her.

  My heart is thumping as she catches them, and she’s even more dithery than I was.

  Shit.

  “Hey boy, good boy,” she flusters, but he isn’t having any of it. He stalks her with his teeth bared, and she backs away before I can tell her not to. It’s a mistake.

  He launches himself in her direction, and she tears off with a shriek, heading right back out the front door as he throws himself against the other side.

  “Brutus!” I call, but he isn’t listening. “Shit, Brutus, no!” I shout, but he’s still clawing at the woodwork as she grips the handle tight on the other side.

  “Help!” she calls,
and my actions are automatic. I just do it.

  I put on my bravest voice, just like I heard on that dog whisperer show, and head over calmly to take hold of his collar.

  “Stop!” I tell him. “No!”

  He’s still growling as he turns his head, teeth still bared as he clocks my expression.

  “Brutus! No!”

  I’m sure he’s going to bite me, positive I really will be fired for spilling blood over cream carpets, but the fight in his eyes simmers down, and he grumbles, groans a bit before sitting his ass down on the floor.

  “Christ, Lissa. Is it safe? Are you still alive in there?”

  I tug Brutus away from the door. “Stay,” I tell him, and hope he knows that word. I ease it open just a crack and Sonnie’s terrified eyes greet me on the other side. “Sorry about him,” I say. “He takes a while to get used to new people.”

  She’s shaking as she eases herself back through the doorway. “Ain’t you who’s got to be sorry, hon. He ain’t your monster.”

  A tiny pang in my stomach, and I realise why I’ve been feeling so off since we set off from the office earlier.

  Reality. The burst bubble that comes with realising I really am just a cleaner and this isn’t my house, or my dog, or my life.

  Brutus isn’t my monster, and neither is Alexander Henley. Not even if I wash his underwear and smell his sheets.

  Or take his beautiful cock in my ass all night long.

  Alexander Henley doesn’t even know my name.

  Sonnie flinches as Brutus drops to the floor, but he’s not doing anything other than giving her the eye. “How’d you get him to like you so much?”

  I shrug. “Persistence and fish treats.” And love.

  The addition shoots through my mind, and it gives me a shiver. That’s the key, when it really comes down to it. It’s all about love. All about putting your heart on the line for someone and trusting they’ll see right through to your soul. Like Brutus did with me when I offered him the first fish treat from my fingers and stared him right in the eye.

  “Persistence and fish treats,” she repeats, and takes a breath. She pulls one from the packet and tosses it between his paws. “There you go, boy. Nice fishy snack. Nom nom.”

 

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