by Dark Angel
I smile at him and lean against him, my head on his shoulder.
“You always had good taste,” I say.
He chuckled. “And I got the girl I wanted.”
We stand together in silence for a while. Then Keagan moves away from me, and I look at him, confused. He has a strange expression on his face, and he swallows hard, like he’s nervous.
“Are you okay?” I ask.
He nods. “I brought you here because I wanted to come full circle.”
I frown at him. “Full circle? What do you mean?”
Keagan drops to his knee, and it takes me a moment to realize what he’s doing. He takes a small black box out of his pocket, and I clap my hands to my mouth, a lump suddenly in my throat.
“I love you, Dana White,” Keagan says, opening the box to show a ring with a stunning diamond. “Marry me.”
“Oh, my god,” I say, stunned. I don’t even have to think about the answer, though. “Yes!”
Keagan grins at me and takes out the ring, sliding it onto my finer. I wrap my arms around his neck and kiss him.
“I love you, too,” I say.
I can’t believe it. We’re engaged. When I let go of him, I study the ring closer. The diamond is huge, but it’s set in smaller diamonds that make an intricate pattern all around it. It’s fit for a princess.
“Do you like it?” he asks.
I nod. “I love it,” I say. I would have been happy with anything. I’m engaged to Keagan now, and that makes me happier than anything in the world. But the ring is gorgeous.
I hug him again, and he cups my face in his hands and kisses me. When he breaks the kiss, he takes my hand in his, and our fingers interlink. I’m aware of the ring on my finger, the feeling still foreign, but oh so welcome. Hand in hand, we walk back to the car.
The parking lot is empty, and there’s no traffic passing the area where the old school is situated. We’re the only ones around. Keagan pulls me against him, pressing me against the car. His hands are on my hips, and he nuzzles my neck. I laugh because it tickles. He presses his crotch against me, and he’s hard.
“Are you turned on?” I ask.
He nods against my neck, his lips working the skin, and I’m starting to feel aroused, too. He knows just which buttons to hit.
“Being engaged to you makes me horny. We should have sex to seal the deal.”
“Isn’t that when you get married?” I ask.
“Okay, we’ll do it then, too.”
I laugh. He cuts off my laughter with another kiss, and his hand slides onto my breast. We are in public, and I look around.
“No one’s here to see, baby,” Keagan says. His eyes are on me, and they’re drowning deep.
“I want you here and now,” he says.
“But we’re in a parking lot.”
He presses himself against me again, and my body responds. Heat washes through me and pools between my legs. I’m suddenly breathing harder, and I ache for him, now.
“Do you think?” I ask, looking at the back seat.
“Definitely,” Keagan says and opens the door.
He climbs into the backseat first, and I follow. The door is barely closed when his hands are on my breasts, kneading, tugging at my blouse. I can’t take it off out here, but he works his hand into my collar, and his fingers find my tight nipple. He pinches it lightly, and I gasp.
His hand trails down my body and onto my crotch where he cups my pussy through my pants. I want him badly now.
I sigh in frustration and start undoing my pants.
“When we get caught, the bail money is coming out of your account,” I threaten.
Keagan laughs. “It’s a price I’m more than willing to pay.”
He looks down at me as I peel off my pants, hunger clear on his face. I reach for him, undoing his buckle and unzipping his pants. It’s easier to get to him than it is to get to me.
I take his hard cock out of his pants, and it stands up, hard and proud. I struggle to get onto his lap in the confined space, but then I’m straddling his hips, and I sit down on him. His cock pushes into me and we both groan.
I sit down on him and he cups my breast again. I look around to see if we’re being watched at all, but there’s no one.
I start bouncing up and down on his cock, and the sounds of our moaning and groaning fills the small space in the car, wrapping around us. My hands are on his shoulder, and the diamond ring glints on my finger. I keep bouncing up and down, fucking him, and his breath becomes ragged. His eyes are on mine the whole time, and even though it’s quick and dirty out here, it’s more like making love than fucking.
Keagan is closer to coming than usual. I can tell by the way his eyes change, and he gets a look of concentration on his face. It takes time together to read each other, and we’re getting to know each other better and better.
I want to orgasm when he does. It’s my favorite when we do it at the same time. I reach between my legs and find my clit. I rub it furiously while I’m bouncing up and down on his cock, bringing myself to the brink of an orgasm. The thrill of doing it in public, of maybe being caught, pushes us both closer in record time.
When Keagan swallows hard and tips his head back, I know that he’s there, and I sit down on him, hard. He releases inside me, cries out, and the sound and sensation kicks me over the edge, too.
We orgasm together, his cock twitching inside me, my body squeezing him, milking him, and we’re caught in a flurry of passion for a moment.
The orgasms, albeit strong, are over as quickly as they came, and I clamber off Keagan and find my pants, pulling them up. I know it’s going to be a mess, but I’ll clean up at home.
“I’m not nearly done with you yet,” Keagan says to me in a throaty voice when he watches me get dressed. “That was just an appetizer.”
I grin and kiss him. We get out of the back seat and walk around to the front seat. Keagan gets behind the steering wheel, and I sit next to him. He pulls out of the parking lot.
“That was spectacular,” I say.
Keagan nods. “I can’t wait to spend the rest of my life with you,” he says.
I smile. I can’t wait for that, either.
When Keagan pulls into traffic again, the smell of sex and happiness hangs in the car. He’s holding my hand as we drive. I look out of the passenger window at the cars passing us.
“What do you think Chris and my mom will say?” I ask.
Chris hasn’t exactly been happy about us being together, but there wasn’t much he could do about it. He didn’t tell us off every other day, so it was fine. But I would have liked to have his blessing.
Of course, we are old enough to do what we want, and this is going to happen either way.
“I think Susan will have seen it coming,” Keagan says.
My mom always knows things in advance. I nod.
“And my dad will just have to get used to the idea,” he adds. “He knows what love is, and he can’t deny that we love each other. That’s all we need.”
Keagan kisses my hand again, and we drive in silence toward home. We’re going out to dinner, but I know that Keagan will have his way with me again first. And I’m more than happy about that.
Be one of Cara’s Angels
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Prince Me Harder
A Bad Boy Prince romance.
Waiting for Prince Charming to come and save you?
Tell him to stand in line while this filthy Prince fucks you…
The world can kiss my fucking ass.
Known to billions of people as the Bad Boy Prince, I’m desperately trying to run from my destiny.
How do I run?
The only way I know how.
Being lewd, crude, and completely out of control.
Until I meet Nicole.
Now, all the girls who sucked my cock are a distant memory.
&nb
sp; Every single slut that I banged is cause for regret.
Because all I want more than anything in the world is...
Her.
So when my ways put it all at risk and I have to choose between the good of the kingdom and the good of the woman I love, I’m put in a pickle.
Which will I choose?
***Come enter a world of modern fairytales in this full-length standalone romance by Cara Angel. No cheating or cliffhangers but it's going to contain very mature themes with scorching scenes. HEA? Always.***
Nicole
Something about summer and coffee makes me nostalgic. The smell in the air, the taste on my tongue, and the reminder of days gone by. The way the two spells out good memories has to do with my childhood, I think.
Schools are out, kids play in the street, and I have only one assignment for college. I'm procrastinating. I'm not in the mood to sit at my desk in my apartment and study.
I'm sitting in a Starbucks just a few blocks away from my place, looking out the window facing the street. I watch New York City walk by, and the sense that I'm part of something bigger overwhelms me. The people in the coffee shop mutter to each other, and the hissing of the coffee machines interrupt them after every order. Every time the door opens, the smell of summer clings to whoever walks in.
I sip my coffee and page through Sigmund Freud’s On Dreams. It's recommended reading for my program. At least I'm doing something. No one else in the third year of Psychology reads what's on the recommended list, only what's on the compulsory one. I'm not like the rest of the students. I don't want to become a psychologist for the money.
I want to help people. I'm still far away from that, but I'll get there, eventually.
Movement in the corner of my eye draws my attention away from the book, and I watch a young man cross the road. His hair is ruffled and wind-blown, like he’s just come from a run on a beach somewhere. His pale skin tells me that's not the case, but it doesn't detract from his looks. He walks past the window right in front of me.
He glances sideways and catches my eye. A ghost of a smile appears on his lips. I turn my attention back to my book. I'm not going to stare.
A moment later, the door opens, letting in another burst of summer. I look up and freeze. He enters the shop. I watch him as he walks to the counter. He moves like he belongs here, like he's right where he needs to be.
I envy that kind of confidence.
He walks to the line. While he stands there, he turns a little and looks over his shoulder, right at me. I flush and turn back to my book. I feel like an idiot for getting caught staring. The first time he walked past, anyone could look up and watch a stranger passing by. This time, it's obvious.
I try to focus on my book, but his eyes burn my skin. I glance up at him. He stands with his hands hanging loosely by his sides, body slightly turned, staring at me. I shift in my seat and rake my hair back with my fingers. I read two pages without taking in a single word.
He's still staring at me. Every time I look up, my eyes meet his dead on. He isn't even ashamed about it. His stare is disconcerting. He looks like he has every right to stare, like whatever I'm doing is exactly his business. It makes me uncomfortable. But I guess I started it.
I read two more pages without seeing a single word. My attention is on the stranger with the dangerous eyes. I'm not looking at him, but I know exactly where he's standing when he steps forward along with the line that is waiting to order. I know what he looks like without having to look again. He's handsome, I can tell, even when I'm not glancing up at him, that his easy confidence is well earned. He has nothing to hide with his careless blond hair and smoldering dark eyes.
What's his problem? Surely, we are square now? He’s made his point. I turn around in my chair so that my back is to him and faced the other way. I'm not going to look at him, and he has no reason to look at anything other than my back, either.
I manage to focus on my book again. Freud is going into depth about dream analysis. I reread the same two pages, concentrating on what I'm reading this time. Someone sits down right next to me. When I look up, I look right into his eyes.
I drown in the deep, dark depths of them. I shudder.
"The virtuous man contents himself with dreaming that which the wicked man does in actual life." His voice is deep and smooth like velvet.
"What?" I ask.
He nods to my book. "Freud."
Did he just quote the father of psychology to me?
"Are you a fan?" I ask.
"Of doing things rather than dreaming?"
I shake my head. "Of Freud."
He shakes his head and smiles. His teeth are too white to be real.
"Only when his theories suit me."
I raise my eyebrows. "That’s a glib way of living."
His smile doesn't fade. He sits sideways in the chair, one hand resting on his leg, fingers relaxed. The other hand is on the table, holding loosely onto the cup of coffee he just ordered.
He doesn't respond. He doesn't leave. He sits next to me as if he’s been invited, looking at me with a stare that makes me feel naked.
"Don’t you think Freud’s theories are outdated?" he asks.
One sentence, and I have my back up. "If he was outdated, the field of psychology wouldn’t be based on his findings."
The stranger shrugs. "He suggests that we’re all programmed to function a certain way, and that’s it. We have to play the hand we’ve been dealt."
I ought to tell him off. I should tell him to leave. He's rude and invasive.
"You don’t believe that we're all put together in a way that can be understood?"
"I believe in free will," he says.
I can't tell him off. He's so comfortable in his own skin; it makes me uncomfortable in mine. How do you tell someone they're wrong when their existence screams that they believe they're right?
Yes, he's probably using all the right cues. He knows his body. He’s mastered the language of speaking without words. It doesn't mean anything.
He is also incredibly hot. I see men often, but I rarely want to look twice. He smiles at me as if he knows what I'm thinking. His eyes make me uncomfortable, like they're looking into my soul.
I clear my throat. "Was there something you meant to tell me?" I ask. "A reason why you’re sitting here?"
He shakes his head. His eyes never stray. He doesn't look out the window, or at his hands, or at the floor. His gaze is unfaltering.
"The chair was empty."
"So, you invited yourself to join me?"
He looks around for the first time, taking in the other patrons.
"I wasn’t interested in anyone else."
I can't help myself. I blush. Heat creeps up from my collar, and I know my cheeks are bright red. To confirm my suspicions, he grins broadly.
"Who are you?" I ask. Anything to get the attention away from me.
"Thomas," he says. Such a classic name. "Thomas Silber."
Classic and foreign.
"Nicole," I say. "Shoemaker."
"That’s German, you know."
I nod. I was aware that I had German blood somewhere in my lineage. "Everyone in America was someone else, once, before they became Americans."
Thomas shrugs. It's a beautiful shrug, confident without being offensive.
"What is a beautiful woman like you doing indoors on a day like this?" he asks, gesturing toward the window.
I laugh. "Did you just use a line?" I ask.
"Yes," Thomas says. "I did. No good?"
I shake my head. "Ordinary men use lines."
"And I’m not ordinary?" he asks with the ghost of a smile lingering around his lips.
I shake my head. "You’re not."
Thomas nods and shifts in his seat, sipping the coffee he bought.
"You choose your words carefully," he says.
"Why use many words when only a few will do?"
Thomas smiles. "Did you just use a line?" he asks, mimicking me. I sha
ke my head.
He has a beautiful smile. It spreads slowly across his face. It makes me feel like it's because of me. I know the tactic.
"I'm doing recommended reading for my course, if you must know," I say. "I’m studying psychology."
Thomas nods. "That explains why you’re a fan of Freud."
"I’m not a fan of Freud. He’s the father of psychology, the first person to really analyze the relationship between the conscious and subconscious mind. Saying I’m a fan suggests there are those who have an aversion to him."
Thomas’s eyes are on me, and they're intense. "Aren’t there?" he asks.
I shake my head. "That’s like saying you’re a fan or a hater of Florence Nightingale when today’s healthcare is largely due to her efforts. It’s not something people disagree with."
"But healthcare doesn’t suggest who you are. Psychology does."
I narrow my eyes at him. "I think your ‘aversion’ isn’t for Freud. It’s for anyone who might tell you who you should or shouldn’t be."
Thomas sips his coffee. I'm starting to think he’s only come into the coffee shop to stare at me, and he’s only joined me to pick a fight.
"You’re very observant, Miss Shoemaker."
"Nicole, please."
"Nicole," Thomas says. I like the way he rounds his lips to say my name, and I like the way it sounds in his mouth. He says it like it isn't just an ordinary name but something exotic.
"What do you do?" I ask.
"I just finished my MBA at Columbia. This summer, I'm a free man."
"This is the second time you’ve mentioned freedom," I say.
"Are you counting my words? Freedom isn’t noticed enough these days."
I chuckle. "We’re the freest country in the world. We have rights and equality and choices. If that’s not free, what is?"
Thomas nods slowly. His eyes are on his coffee cup now. He turns it around and around.
"Choices," he says. I wait for him to carry on talking and finish the sentence he started.