Rhodium

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Rhodium Page 1

by Elise Noble




  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Epilogue

  What's next?

  What's next?

  What's next?

  Want to stalk me?

  End of book stuff

  Other books by Elise Noble

  RHODIUM

  Elise Noble

  Published by Undercover Publishing Limited

  Copyright © 2018 Elise Noble

  ISBN: 978-1-910954-74-4

  This book is a work of fiction. Names and characters are the product of the author’s imagination and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the author.

  Edited by Amanda Ann Larson, Dream Raven Editing and Nikki Mentges, NAM Editorial

  Cover art by Abigail Sins

  www.undercover-publishing.com

  www.elise-noble.com

  Never trust a shiny surface.

  They hide a multitude of flaws.

  CHAPTER 1

  DEGRADED. MORTIFIED. EMBARRASSED. That was how I felt as I slammed the door of Rhodes, Holden and Maxwell and stepped out onto the busy street. All around me, life carried on as usual. Businessmen walked past on their way home, couples strolled towards nearby restaurants in search of dinner, and joggers dodged puddles in their quest for fitness. Normal activities on a normal day at the beginning of September.

  For me, life would never be normal again. And now, to cap it all, I’d been utterly humiliated by Oliver Rhodes. I’d never felt so ashamed in my life, and considering I used to sleep with men for money, that was an achievement. The man was a massive cock.

  In every way.

  I reached the bus stop and sank onto one of the cold metal seats with a low groan. Oliver Rhodes, the man who took the worst night of my life and turned it into the best. I still clenched my thighs together every time I thought about it.

  Except now I clenched my fists. Oliver was an asshole. An arrogant, rude, condescending asshole, who wore made-to-measure suits and a Patek Philippe watch that cost more than my parents’ first home, and whose smooth hands I hadn’t just spent the past hour glancing at as he twirled a Montblanc fountain pen around his fingers.

  Dammit, Stef! Don’t think about the hands. The trouble was, I knew what they were capable of. How they could make a woman come so hard she forgot her own name.

  No. NO! I shook my head to clear my wayward thoughts. Oliver Rhodes was bad news from the ends of his dark-grey hair to the toes of his Italian leather wingtips.

  And where was the damn bus?

  Probably I should start at the beginning. What bizarre twist of fate led me to be sitting here at a shabby bus stop in downtown Richmond, wishing I had the courage to jump off a bridge or hurl myself under a passing semi? Well, it started with my ex-roommate, Christina; a faux-fur jacket; and a man old enough to be my grandfather…

  “It can’t be the fifth. The fifth is tomorrow.”

  Chrissie rummaged through her purse, tossing aside lipstick, tissues, condoms, and mascara as she dug deeper and deeper.

  “Are you looking for your phone?”

  “Yes.”

  “It’s here.”

  I picked it up off her nightstand and passed it over, then took another sip of my strawberry milkshake. I preferred chocolate, but it was important to stay healthy.

  Chrissie scrolled through her calendar then flopped back on the bed with a huff. “Shit. It is the fifth. I could have sworn it was only the fourth.”

  “Why does it matter?”

  “Because my mom’s flying in for a layover on the fifth, and I have a date tonight.” She used her fingers to form air quotes around the word “date.”

  “Oh. One of those dates?”

  Chrissie was a girl who’d tried every job going. She got fired from her waitressing job because she kept dropping things. Mild dyslexia meant her two weeks as a filing assistant were a disaster, and she walked away from a stint as a receptionist after her boss propositioned her. Now she’d decided to give something new a go.

  “Hey, don’t knock it till you’ve tried it.”

  I suppressed a shudder. “Doesn’t it creep you out? Having to do…things with men like that?”

  Her tinkling laugh exploded. “Stef, don’t be such a prude! It’s perfectly normal nowadays, and I don’t sleep with all of them. Some just want a nice girl on their arm to avoid unwanted attention. Last week, a client gave me an obscenely expensive dress and took me to a charity gala, and all I got at the end of the evening was a wad of cash and a kiss on the cheek…” She grinned as she glanced over at the turquoise box on her dressing table. “And that bought me a necklace from Tiffany’s.”

  Expensive jewellery was something I only dreamed about. Right now, I couldn’t even afford the textbooks I needed. Or my half of this month’s rent. My credit card was maxed out, and every time I got a collection letter, I shed a tear and buried it in the pile with all the others. I tried to laugh.

  “At least Julio gives me as much coffee as I can drink.”

  “You can’t wear coffee.”

  Couldn’t you? Julio, my persnickety boss at The Daily Grind, the coffee place I worked at after class on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Fridays, would disagree. Most of the time we got on well, but some days, like today, I wanted to smack my head on the counter. Or better still, his head. He’d insisted I dress up as a giant coffee bean and hand out coupons on the street, and I’d nearly frozen to death. He could have at least warned me so I wore appropriate shoes.

  “I need a new job.”

  I also needed to stop chewing my hair. I pulled the ends out of my mouth and chided myself. It was a habit I wished I could break.

  “Meanwhile, I need to work out what to do with Sanderson Everett.”

  “Sanderson Everett? You mean the Sanderson Everett? The guy who franchised himself across America?”

  I’d done a case study on him last month for my business degree—he’d spot an opening in the market and set up chains ranging from phone stores to pet-grooming parlours to burger restaurants, making a fortune in the process. Every biography said he was married to his job.

  “If that’s the same Sanderson Everett who likes me to strip down to my underwear and serve him dinner every couple of weeks, then yes. All the girls love him. Easy money.” She rubbed her thumb and fingers together. “He’s got a mas
sive house, but I’m not sure the rest of him measures up.”

  I nearly choked, and strawberry milk dribbled down my chin. “I can’t believe that. The man’s a genius, and he hires escorts from Rubies?”

  Chrissie had started plying her trade through Rubies are a Man’s Best Friend a few months back. Clients booked via the website, and the owner forwarded the details on to her. She went out most nights now. Each girl got rated from one to five rubies, and as they gathered those gems, their pay grade went up accordingly. Chrissie had reached level three and had that fourth ruby firmly in her sight.

  Now she carefully outlined her lips in a deep red. “Guess he can afford it. I mean, who needs a normal maid when you can have one with double D cups and a thong?”

  “Well, you’re lucky to meet him. He doesn’t even give interviews anymore.”

  She turned to me with a worrying look in her eyes—the wicked gleam she got when she had a great idea she knew I wouldn’t like. “If you want to meet him so much, why don’t you go tonight instead of me? Then I could see my mom.”

  “Oh, no. No way.”

  “Why not? You said you were short of money.”

  “I am, but there’s no way I could sleep with a stranger. Or even Sanderson Everett.”

  Or, in fact, anyone. A quick fumble in the back of a car with the guy I dated in high school was as far as I’d got. Since I arrived in Richmond, I’d put all my efforts into work and college because I didn’t want to graduate with a millstone of debt around my neck.

  Chrissie burst out laughing. “The guy’s a hundred years old. I bet he can’t even get it up anymore. He hires a girl nearly every night, and not one of us has ever had sex with him.”

  “Really?”

  “Really. And he pays three hundred dollars. Still cheaper than a wife, he told my boss.”

  Three hundred dollars was an awful lot of cups of coffee. “And all you do is serve him dinner?”

  “Serve him dinner then stand by the table while he eats. And afterwards, we bring dessert and coffee.” She gave me a full-on smile. “You’re good at coffee.”

  “I can’t. I mean, not in my underwear.”

  “Oh, come on. You’re miles prettier than me, and it’s no worse than wearing a bikini on the beach.”

  I considered it. My last vacation had been three years ago when I was eighteen. Mom and Chester, my stepfather, treated me to a week in Florida, a final goodbye before I went off to college. I remembered walking around the marina, thinking how much fun those girls sunning themselves on the big yachts must have. No work, no studying, just days of relaxing in the warm weather. And most probably sleeping with the owners. I’d be kidding myself if I thought they were there with anything else in mind. But still…

  “I don’t know… Isn’t he expecting you?”

  “It won’t be a problem to sub in. He likes variety. Just tell him I’m not feeling well. Please? I’ll clean the whole apartment this weekend.”

  Three hundred dollars, a clean apartment, and the chance to meet one of my business idols?

  “And you’re absolutely sure he won’t want sex?” I whispered the last word. The very idea of it scared me.

  “No, he definitely won’t. I promise.”

  “You’ll need to tell me what to wear.”

  “Easy. Oh, and you’ll need a name.”

  “A name? I have a name.”

  “Stefanie’s hardly worthy of a Ruby.”

  “Gee, thanks.”

  “Don’t look at me like that. It’s nothing personal. Hey, I call myself Crystal.”

  “So what do you suggest?”

  She gave me her lopsided little smile, the one that made every man within a ten-block radius go nuts over her, and then her gaze drifted past me to the faux-fur coat hanging on the back of her door.

  “Sable. We’ll call you Sable.”

  And that was how I ended up parading around a mansion in black lace panties, carrying a roast dinner on a plain white china plate. I lost a little bit of respect for myself that night, and a lot for Sanderson Everett. It was hard to admire a man when he ordered you to “sit” and “stay” like a dog. Thankfully he didn’t try “come,” because at that point I had no idea how to. No, it took Oliver fucking Rhodes to teach me that trick.

  But three hundred dollars was three hundred dollars, and how much worse was it than the coffee outfit? At least I was making a fool out of myself in private, and I didn’t have to invite Sanderson Everett to “come and grind with me.”

  “So, how did it go?” Chrissie asked the next morning.

  “I served up veal piccata. Everett read the business pages. Then he ate half a custard tart and asked me to close the drapes, tucked a hundred-dollar bill in the side of my panties, patted my bottom, pointed at the door, and said, ‘Go.’”

  “Wow, he must have really liked you. He only gives me fifty.” She glanced at her watch and took another bite of toast. “Shit, I’m running late.”

  “You don’t think that’s utterly crazy?”

  “Yeah, it is, but it’s also normal. Last week, an octogenarian asked Maggie to dress up like a horse, and get this, the tail came on a butt plug.”

  I spat my orange juice across the table. “Are you serious?”

  She looked down at the sticky mess and made a face. “Yeuch. Yeah, totally. But you should consider signing up. I mean, where else can you earn that much cash in a night?”

  “Are you insane? You just told me a story about a butt plug.”

  She waved a hand dismissively. “Oh, don’t worry about that. Maggie’s got five rubies. She’ll do anything. A-ny-thing. If you start off at one ruby, that’s, like, holding hands. And sometimes you get taken out to really nice places.”

  “It’s not for me.”

  “Think about it.”

  I did think about it. When I got up at six to catch the bus to The Daily Grind, I thought about Chrissie still asleep in bed. When a businessman snapped at me because I’d forgotten his shot of caramel syrup, I realised he was even ruder than Sanderson Everett. When I put on the damn coffee-bean costume once more, I recalled that although I’d been in my underwear at Everett’s house, his heating system had made it the perfect temperature. And when I counted my cash and found I was a hundred and thirty dollars short on the rent—again—I began to wonder if being a Ruby mightn’t be so bad after all.

  CHAPTER 2

  MY FIRST OFFICIAL date as a lowly one-ruby saw me accompany a businessman to a charity gala. You’ll notice I called it a date? Well, that’s because I didn’t want to admit the truth—that I’d become a man’s plaything and got paid three hundred dollars for the privilege.

  Not much of that first paycheck went on the rent, though. When Chrissie saw what I’d put on to go out—a knee-length black number left over from a failed real date—she dragged me into her room and sat me on the bed.

  Hands on hips, she stared down at me. “Stefanie Amor, I swear you’ve got more looks than sense.”

  “What are you talking about?”

  “Have you even glanced in the mirror?”

  At least twice. “Of course I have.”

  “Then why on earth are you dressed as if you’re going for a job interview? The Benford Association’s gala will be full of leggy models in slinky dresses. You can’t go like that.”

  “I don’t have a slinky dress.”

  She turned and threw open her closet doors. “It’s a good thing I’ve been at this longer than you, isn’t it?”

  Not only did she fasten me into a bright-red halterneck, but she also insisted on redoing my make-up vamp-style and pinning my hair into an elegant updo. By then, I’d missed the bus and needed to leap into a cab to meet my client outside his office at the appointed hour. That was twenty dollars gone.

  The rest of that evening’s earnings went to lipstick, mascara, a handful of outfits, and a torture session, otherwise known as leg waxing. Chrissie came with me, and we had a small difference of opinion over some of my purchases.


  “You’ve got no underwear,” she pointed out.

  “I don’t need any new stuff.”

  “Oh, please. Everything you own is white cotton. You look like a Catholic schoolgirl.”

  “What does it matter? I’ll be the only one seeing it.”

  “You’ll never earn the big bucks thinking that way.”

  “Fine by me.”

  Small bucks suited me just fine. I took a couple of bookings a week, and that allowed me to quit The Daily Grind and knuckle down to my studies. My grades crept up slowly but surely since I had more free time to dedicate to my assignments.

  Every couple of weeks, I’d have a crisis of confidence, usually before a date with a new client or if I happened to glimpse someone I knew while I was out working—more than once I’d seen a fellow student waiting tables in one of the high-end establishments we visited. But the job itself wasn’t as bad as I feared it would be. Occasionally, I got a man who thought he could help himself to more than he’d paid for, but a few hints from Chrissie on how to say no plus the canister of pepper spray I’d taken to carrying in my purse gave me the confidence to deal with them.

  Octavia, the owner of Rubies, wasn’t at all what I’d imagined. A dark-haired lady who dressed like a star from old movies, she acted as a bizarre cross between a pimp and a mom, checking up on us personally to ensure we were happy and also that we looked tidy. She took pride in her services. One weekend when she was in Richmond, we met up for coffee—her, me, and Chrissie.

  Of all the things I’d expected to be doing that Saturday, it was safe to say having a conversation about breast implants and kink in the local branch of Starbucks didn’t make the list. At least we weren’t at The Daily Grind. My old boss would have had a field day eavesdropping on that one.

  As we moved on to our second cups, it dawned on me this wasn’t so much a check-up as a sales visit, although Chrissie didn’t need much persuading. For weeks, she’d been talking about getting her fourth ruby, and when Octavia finished describing the extra services she’d have to offer, she nodded enthusiastically.

 

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