Test Drive (Watchers Crew)
Page 1
Contents
Product Description
Copyright
Front Matter
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Cruise Control
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Back Matter
Ellie has never taken a wrong turn, until she gets lost dropping off a classmate on the wrong side of town. To make matters worse, she blows a tire and is surrounded by a group of gorgeous, hot street racers. They offer to help her out…for a price.
It’s not currency that Hawk, the leader of the Watchers Crew, wants. He wants to sink his claws into Ellie’s sweet, untouched flesh. Once he does, the kinky gentleman aims to share Ellie with the rest of his crew.
After a wild ride beyond any erotic dream, Ellie must decide; will she go back to her old life which was planned out, safe, and orderly? Or will she take the wrong turn her perfect life needed with a man who sets her heart aflame, and the crew who has become her family?
Copyright
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Copyright 2015 by N. S. Johnson Seneb
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior permission of the author.
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition July 2015
Second Edition June 2016
This book was previously published under the pen name Marie Louis.
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Chapter One
I hadn’t realized it was so late by the time I came out of the lab. The night was a thick cloak. The air humid and wet. But it pulsed with life. I heard crickets chirping. Beetles rustled leaves. Off in the distance, fireflies flashed their lights on and off like a beacon beckoning me to come deeper into the night. I put my head down and continued on towards the parking lot.
Nighttime and darkness weren’t familiar to me. I’d grown up with a curfew to be inside before the street lamps came on. My entire life seemed timed around those man-made suns. As a kid, I left for school in the morning when the lights shut off. I was safe inside each night before they blinked back on again. The street lamp in the parking lot outside of the Biology building beamed brightly now.
“Ellie, wait up.”
I turned at the sound of my name.
Shakira James made her way over to me. Her thick, gold-hooped earrings caught the streetlight and twinkled. She was a sophomore taking Biology 101. I’d been helping her prepare for finals. At the first glance of her mini skirt and halter top, I’d assumed we’d be starting from the beginning with the birds and the bees; the classifications of those organisms, not their mating habits. But it turned out Shakira had an excellent grasp of the basics. Her questions ventured more into the theories of evolution and natural selection.
“You think you could you give me a ride, sis?”
I hesitated. I’d only known Shakira a few days. I assumed she would live on the bad side of town. Not because she was black -or was it politically correct to say African-American? My assumption wasn’t based on her race, but more because her boobs spilled out of her top. Girls from good families didn’t expose their underwear as part of their ensemble.
But then I caught myself. I had a habit of doing that; judging people based on their appearances. It was a habit I’d picked up in my field of study. As an entomologist I observed insects and made inferences based on those observations. It worked well with insects, but not so much with humans. I often found my foot shoved uncomfortably into my mouth when I addressed Homo sapiens. I’d already assumed Shakira wasn’t smart based on how she dressed. I was probably wrong again with her socioeconomic status. Maybe she was just a rebellious youth and her parents were pastors in an upper middle class neighborhood.
“Sure,” I said.
We made our way over to my car. My patent leather shoes tapped the ground quietly as though to not disturb the asphalt. Shakira’s stilettoed boots struck the pavement with an attitude that would’ve awakened the worms burrowed in the warm earth.
“Wow,” Shakira said as I unlocked the doors of my car with the fob. “This is your ride, sis?”
I nodded, my chest swelling with pride inside my cardigan. I’d never been one to be flashy with my clothing or makeup. My car was my only statement piece.
“I guess it fits your personality.” Shakira wrinkled her nose as she ducked inside.
I frowned unsure if she’d given me a compliment or not?
“I mean, I get it, sis.” Shakira strapped on the seat belt. “You’re studying to be an entomologist and you have a ladybug car.”
My car was a red Volkswagen Beetle with black spots. Bugs had fascinated me since I’d seen an army of tiny ants lift a potato chip I’d dropped during a grade school picnic. Being petite myself, I wanted to understand how those small creatures managed such a hefty feat. My inquiry of ants led me down a rabbit’s hole into an amazing, intricate, miniature world where the smallest creatures had the largest powers.
Shakira’s directions took us away from campus. We headed away from the trendy market district, where most of the college students did their shopping and entertainment. We drove past the docks where many of the underclassmen who didn’t work coalesced. We pulled up into a seedy part of town.
I doubted any pastor would set up a church on these outskirts. I clutched at the wheel as the streetlights became sparser, and some weren’t lit at all. People were out on the streets. Young boys and grown men leered at the tween girls and grown women who walked by in skirts shorter than Shakira’s.
“It’s just over here.” Shakira pointed to a one-way street with no houses. Lined up in the parking lot of an abandoned factory were rows upon rows of sleek cars.
“Where’s your house?”
“Girl, I don’t live in this jacked neighborhood. I’m just meeting this guy here.” Shakira moved her hips side to side in the seat causing a squeaky sound.
I was sure Shakira’s movements were unconscious, but it was a movement I’d observed before. Many insects let off a vibration by moving their legs together to indicate they were ready to mate. Outside the car, I could hear crickets strumming into the night air.
“Is he your boyfriend?”
Shakira didn’t
get that dreamy look that girls got when they thought about a guy they liked. Her face crunched into an expression between a grimace and a snicker. “He’s not boyfriend material, sis. Just someone I’m hooking up with.”
Her cavalier attitude shouldn’t have shocked me. Most insects were not monogamous, not in the human sense of the word. Take the honeybee, for example. The queen had a ton of lovers at her beck and call to service her needs, and not one of the thousands of female worker bees in her kingdom would dare call her out of her name.
I’d had exactly one boyfriend during my twenty years and we had done little more than chaste kissing the year we’d been dating. We had gotten to second base over Spring Break, but I think it may have been an accident on his part.
“Thanks for the ride, sis.” Shakira did a quick application of lip-gloss in the vanity mirror.
I looked out the car window at the festivities. Someone had lit a fire in a trashcan. People were dancing around on the asphalt. Girls were shaking their barely covered behinds while guys leaned back on cars and watched.
“Is this someone’s birthday party?” I asked.
Shakira cast me a side-glance. “It’s a street race.”
I looked out the window and saw no one in a tracksuit. Then I realized she must mean a streetcar race. I looked again at the line of cars in the lot.
“I’ll see you on Monday, sis.”
She didn’t even think to invite me. Who was stereotyping who now? But she was right. This wasn’t my scene. If I wasn’t out with my boyfriend at a fancy restaurant, I spent my evenings watching reruns on the National Geographic Channel.
I watched Shakira switch her hips up to a group of guys. She wasn’t the only woman sashaying around them. In the middle of all the bare skin was what I could only describe as a magnet. I tried to look away from him, but my eyes caught on his muscles, which seemed to burst through his blue mechanic’s shirt that had the sleeves cut off. My eyes latched onto his close-cut hair, which reminded me of Vin Diesel in that racing movie; my only reference to or experience with street racing. This magnet of a man was deeply tanned, not brown-skinned, but not white either. I wasn’t good with identifying other cultures having grown up lily white. But he looked exotic to me.
He was surrounded by three other guys; all three were big with muscles. They were a United Nations of colors. They reminded me of the United Colors of Benetton ads from when I was a kid.
The guy closest to the magnet was black. Or should I say African-American? I wished I’d asked Shakira, but she’d probably look at me with that side-eyed glance again. Unlike the diesel god standing next to him, the black guy had a baldhead. He was laughing at something a blonde-haired Adonis said. The Adonis would put Paul Walker to shame with his blue eyes and dimples. I watched as Shakira sauntered up to the Asian guy who rounded out the group. The Asian’s muscles were sleek and honed. His dark eyes watched her with silent intent.
My hand rested on the gearshift, which was still in the P for park position. The streetlight blinked on over top of me casting me in a spot light. The Diesel-magnet looked up at the blinking light. Then tilted his head down and found me.
I expected his eyes to look away, but they didn’t. They caught and held. He tilted his head to the side, looking at me as though… interested.
My breath caught in my throat under his dark gaze. I gulped. My legs rubbed together, the friction heating me. A wetness bloomed in my panties, behind my knees, in my palms. The Diesel-magnet’s eyes narrowed as though he could tell what was happening with the increased fluid levels all over my body.
He tilted his head in the other direction, eyes still on me. I watched his lips move. Shakira leaned over to him. She looked back, at me. They both stared a second. Then she spoke to him. Her motions were dismissive. I was sure she was telling him I wasn’t worth his time, that I was an inconsequential girl, probably racist, definitely sheltered, who stayed in the back of a lab marveling over insects and creepy crawlies.
Having given him her estimation of me, Shakira looked away. But he didn’t. A slow smile spread across his face as he held me there in my car under the glaring light. His tongue snuck out of his mouth and he licked his slips, slow. First the pink tip traced the upper lip. It climbed the hill of the fleshy region, dipped into the deep crevice in the center, and then began the descent down to the bottom lip.
I sat there frozen under his gaze, watching his tongue, transfixed.
Until he turned away.
I hadn’t noticed he’d been leaning against a car; a black Charger. I only knew that because it was the same car that Vin Diesel drove in that string of movies. Diesel’s look-alike turned away from me. His attention focused on another girl. His hands, along with the black guy and the blonde guy’s hands, felt up the girl. They didn’t take turns. They all mauled her at once, but she didn’t appear to mind. She looked like she reveled in the attention.
Without another look at me, he hopped into the driver’s seat of the muscle car. The other guys followed suite, hopping into other muscle cars of various makes and models. They all lined up for what I assumed was the race.
A girl in scanty shorts held a scarf up in the air in front of all the cars. I watched the scarf drop and the cars take off. They roared past me in a stampede going the wrong way down the one-way street. The street light above me blinked. The lot emptied out after them and I was left alone in the darkness.
Chapter Two
Long after the lot emptied, I sat there in the darkness. My heart pounding after the roar of those engines had long since receded. My slick thighs stuck together from the sight of that thick tongue tracing those full lips while looking at me.
No one had ever looked at me like that, not even Jerry, my boyfriend. People rarely looked at me at all. All my life I’d felt like a firefly that only came out during the day. There was nothing remarkable about shining your light under the dazzling rays of the sun. But when he’d stared at me, it was like he knew that there was a spark in me; a spark that no one could see because I was so often standing in the light of day and safely tucked away when night fell.
But not tonight.
Tonight I was out in the thick of it. The party was louder than crickets chirping or beetles rustling leaves. I heard people laughing. I heard the loud music. Everything in the surrounding darkness pulsed with life. It thrummed through me, shaking something loose. I had the inclination to reach for the door handle and step out into the night, to step out of myself. To shed the skin I’d been cocooned inside and shake free my newfound wings and fly.
A beeping sound broke me from my trance. I snatched my hand away from the door handle and picked up my phone. It was a text message from Jerry. “Can’t wait to see you next weekend,” it said.
Right. Next weekend.
I sighed and put my phone away. We’d been planning next weekend for a while now. Jerry and I had been dating for almost a year. He’d never pressured me, not once, about sex. So, I was shocked last week when he brought up the idea of a weekend away together. He’d clarified that he would like to engage in intercourse with me.
He’d said it just like that. “Ellie, I’d like for you to entertain the idea of intercourse with me.”
It hadn’t made me rub my thighs together like a cricket in heat. But I felt it was time. Our relationship had progressed along as though we’d ticked off an updated Victorian courting calendar.
Our courtship had begun with several dates. A handshake ended the first, a hug the second, a chaste kiss on the cheek for the third. Jerry hadn’t migrated to a kiss on my lips until after a month of dates. He hadn’t used his tongue for another two months. I’d met his parents during Thanksgiving and he met mine over Christmas. And then there was the boob grazing over Spring Break. It had taken a long time to reach third base, and though my knees weren’t making music, I found myself eager to cross over the home plate.
I texted Jerry back a smiley face. Not the one with the hearts in its eyes. Not the one blowing kisses. Ju
st the plain standard smile.
The streetlight above me blinked back on to its full light, taking me out of the darkness and back into full light. I looked up at the cleared lot. The onlookers of the race were likely going to wherever the end point was.
I thought about following them. I considered heading over to the end point of the race, getting out of my car, and standing out in the darkness. Stepping into the glare of head beams, so he could see me again. Maybe take his tongue around the track of his lips again. Maybe he’d blow me another kiss and ignite me with more than a look. I was sure girls sent him all kinds of suggestive emojis along with a string of heart-shaped kisses.
I looked down at myself. My skirt came down past my knees. My shoes were flats with no spike. I had on two layers of shirts; a camisole and a long sleeve cardigan. I caught my reflection in the rear view mirror. My blonde hair was pulled back in a ponytail that looked childish suddenly. I shut my blue eyes, pulled the gear into drive, and headed down the proper direction of the one-way street. I reached the end of the street only to realize that I did not know where I was going.
I took a left, but that street looked unfamiliar.
I took a right, but felt as though I were going in circles. This part of the neighborhood looked even rougher than the parking lot.
I heard a loud roar behind me. I saw headlights getting closer and closer. I realized I was in the line of the race. I pulled my Bug over to the curb, but heard a loud pop and felt a bump. Dread crawled up my back when I realized I’d blown a tire.
Four cars zoomed past me. Once they passed, I got out of my car to confirm that I had rolled over broken glass and my tire was indeed flat. There was a blinking streetlight above me. I pulled out my phone to see I had one bar of service out in this satellite tower desert.