Yours to Savor

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Yours to Savor Page 26

by Scarlett Edwards


  She was ready for it.

  As their bodies stormed together, and she fell into the power of his heat, Sandra realized that Brandon’s passion mirrored his emotions. And knowing that she was the one to spark such strong feelings in him made her, somehow, more open to him.

  When Brandon held her neck down and feasted on the exposed flesh, Sandra realized she was angry, too. Angry at herself for mistrusting Brandon. Angry for being so quick to judge him after finding Clarisse on the bed. Angry for all the time she’d wasted holed up in her dingy little apartment, too consumed by guilt and fear to live her life.

  So, she raged against him. She pressed her teeth into his flesh, dug her nails into his shoulders. She clasped her legs around his waist in a tight vice and pulled him in.

  Surprise flashed across Brandon’s face. He was the one in control, of course, yet now he knew Sandra wasn’t afraid to fight back. She welcomed him. A raw intensity erupted on his face as he matched her, rush for rush.

  Brandon’s expert hands wore away her body. They were forceful, powerful, and overwhelming. His strength, his pure dominance annihilated her body’s last defenses. His teeth assaulted her breasts, his fists pulled tight against her hair.

  With a sudden growl, he flipped her over. A tightened grip on her hips brought them straight in the air.

  “Hands,” he commanded, “on the wall.”

  Sandra complied.

  A faint alarm went off in her head as Brandon’s hand circled her throat. When his other hand pressed into the small of her back to curve her spine down, a whimper escaped her lips. But it wasn’t fear. It was anticipation.

  Brandon’s smooth voice sounded in her ear immediately. “Don’t be afraid.”

  She tossed her hair to meet his eye. “Never.”

  Brandon grunted, and pushed her spine farther down. Pain flared through muscles that tightened in protest. Sandra knew she was completely defenseless, now. But this is what she wanted. This is what she craved.

  She cried out when Brandon entered her with that first heavy thrust. All her feelings converged into razor-edged pleasure in her mind, and she was consumed by the ecstasy of Brandon deep inside her. Pain enhanced her senses. She sobbed out as he thundered into her, a plea for him keep going, a plea for him to keep feeding the primal desire within her.

  Tears blurred her vision. Brandon’s hand turned her head so his mouth could descend upon hers, muffling the screams. Her breasts heaved as he forced himself in and out. Each stride sent a jolt of pain through her arched, stretched back; each thrust was followed by a surge of pleasure through her deepest synapses.

  Brandon’s mouth lifted from hers, and her muffled cries became screams again as she was rocked by a blizzard of pleasure and pain. The flexion of her spine, the feeling of him inside her, the rough way his hands continued to grab at her body assailed her senses to the point of breaking. And when the first wave of orgasm rocked her body, all she could do was cry out Brandon’s name as he owned her entirely.

  Behind her, Brandon unleashed a roar of pure erotic triumph as his own climax tore through him.

  Sandra was left gasping and raw, amazed by the way Brandon had ravished her.

  He had been completely unrestrained in his anger. And she had responded in a way that let him take control.

  She was afraid if she tried standing anytime in the next week, her trembling limbs would not be able to hold her.

  What amazed her most of all was the way Brandon made her feel whole. Even through the angry passion, the consummate way their bodies linked together was unlike anything Sandra had ever experienced before. She realized, at that moment, that no other man alive could make her feel that way again.

  She looked over at Brandon. His chest was heaving, his body lined with sweat. But the anger had evaporated, and there was a softness in his eyes, now. “I’m sorry,” Sandra whispered. “I should have known better than to pretend to be angry with you.”

  Brandon grunted. “I want you to know how important you are to me. And a joke like that… the thought of losing you was unbearable.”

  “You really care that much?”

  Brandon turned his head and looked at her, those beautiful green eyes so intense and heavy Sandra thought he could read her soul. “Sandra, how can you even ask that? Of course I do. I care for you more deeply than I remember ever caring about anybody else. You’re changing me. Even last week, I would have never imagined I’d be in this place. But you’re waking feelings in me I thought I’d suppressed long ago.”

  “Really?”

  “Really.”

  Sandra smiled, and Brandon put an arm around her. She was amazed that after all that, he could still hold her so sweetly. “Brandon?”

  “Yes?”

  “I don’t want to lose you, either.”

  Brandon looked at her again, and trailed one finger from the bottom of her belly all the way up to her neck. “Babe, I don’t think you ever will,” he whispered.

  Maybe it was the sincerity of his words; maybe it was the shock of their implication. But whatever it was, Sandra found herself speechless as her heart began to flutter in a way completely foreign to her. “…What do you mean?” she managed finally.

  “What I mean, Sandra, is that I’m falling in love with you.”

  Her jaw dropped.

  “I know this is the worst time to say it,” Brandon continued. “And I don’t want you to think the words are tarnished by what we just did. But the truth is, Sandra, all my life, I’ve waited for somebody I could be free with. Somebody with no pretensions, no expectations of me. Somebody who isn’t there because of my money. Somebody who’s there because of me.”

  Brandon paused, as if choosing his words. “I think you are that somebody, Sandra. You proved it to me today. All the emotions you made me feel, how crazy I thought I’d go if I lost you… I’ve never reacted that way to anyone before. And if you had walked out that door, I would have chased after you, through the worst hell and back. I would have never given up. If you were anyone else—anybody else!—pride would have stopped me from doing it. But you’re not. You’re you, and that’s all that matters to me.”

  He turned his head to look at her again, and his words became softer. “It isn’t… it’s not something I can explain. But it’s something I feel right here.” He took her hand, and placed it over his chest. “In my heart.”

  Sandra closed her eyes and drew a deep breath. Her body was too spent to process this new information properly.

  “Brandon…” she began. She knew she should say something that would protect her from being so exposed, protect her from making herself vulnerable to him. But instead, she found her heart guiding the way. “Brandon, I’m already in love with you.”

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Brandon sat against the headboard, deep in thought, as the woman he treasured lay slumbering in his arms.

  He had hesitated earlier, saying that he was falling in love with her. When she had admitted her own feelings for him, all the walls had come crashing down. He wasn’t falling.

  He was lost in love’s depths.

  It was the little things that had drawn him in, at first. The way Sandra’s hair smelled; the way her hips curved just right. The way she opened herself up to him, completely unrestrained, when he was inside her. The way the tip of her nose curled up like a delicate clover. The way she projected such confidence and poise to the outside world, yet could be so nervous and uncertain when alone with him.

  Those were all small things, the miniscule things… when taken separately. But, when put together, when made part of a whole, and compounded upon the foundation underneath… it made Sandra irresistible. She was strong, intelligent, pure. Unspoiled.

  Brandon couldn’t deny being in love. He knew it had happened fast, but love didn’t come with a schedule. It was erratic, unpredictable, and utterly consuming. Today’s scare had made him realize that Sandra was the person he’d been waiting for his whole life. He couldn’t imagine ever bein
g away from her.

  Of course things were never going to be that easy. Of course there were going to be complications. Life always ensured there were.

  On the one hand, he’d promised Sandra the truth. On the other, he knew what it would do to her. The truth about his income stream, the truth about their shared past. Indecision paralyzed him. Should he reveal those things, or should he keep them locked up? He didn’t know. Not knowing what to do put him in a frightening and unfamiliar position.

  Sandra had a personal reason to hate drugs: they’d taken her sister away. Before, all he’d had to fight was the negative stereotypes about drug dealers in her mind. Now, he knew that those stereotypes were backed up by a lifetime of deeply entrenched beliefs. If he told Sandra where his past money had come from he would lose her. The connection they’d built in the past few days was strong, but it wasn’t yet strong enough to overcome a lifetime of beliefs.

  Was he being selfish? Was the obligation he thought he owed her about the truth somehow misplaced? What mattered was what they had between them now, not what may have happened in the past. It was more important what Sandra felt now, how she behaved now, that she was happy now. He should not ruin those things.

  Brandon saw the way Sandra’s eyes lit up around him. Bit by bit, he was winning his personal battle to set her free. He cared about her, and wanted her to live life without all the self-imposed limitations she harbored. Revealing his secrets now, just as their relationship was starting to form would be the worst possible time to do it.

  As long as she hasn’t asked, you haven’t lied. He knew it was a fucked up way of thinking about things. But, it was the only way to protect Sandra. And he would keep his promise to her: if she ever asked, he would tell her everything.

  But only if he were certain that the love built between them was strong enough to handle it.

  That’s it. Brandon pressed his nose to Sandra’s hair and breathed deep. His decision comforted him almost as much as the familiar scent of her hair. He knew that his mind wouldn’t be troubled any more.

  “I’m worried about Josh,” Cassie announced one morning as Sandra picked up her customary pre-work coffee.

  Two weeks had passed since those astonishing few days with Brandon in Seattle. Two weeks of Brandon surprising her at work; two weeks of him taking her out on wonderful dates. Two weeks of the most amazing sex of her life. Two weeks of her falling deeper and deeper in love with that spectacular man.

  Brandon was the best thing that had ever happened to her. Sandra was more open and less restrained around people. She’d gone out with Cassie and her friends four times, and discovered just how much she missed having female friends. She’d called her parents, and cried when she heard her mother’s voice. And she broke down again when she spoke to her dad, who made her promise never to disappear like that again.

  But, most amazing of all, Sandra had gone a fortnight without suffering her nightmares.

  “Oh? How come?”

  “I found this.” Cassie placed a thick envelope on the table. She pulled open the flap, and Sandra saw that it was padded with fifty- and hundred-dollar bills. Sandra’s eyes widened. There must have been at least three, four thousand dollars in there! “It fell out of his backpack when I moved it to clean the floor.”

  “Where did he get it?”

  “Well, there’s no way he made it from me.”

  “Maybe he’s been saving up,” Sandra said. “He’s worked here for a long time.”

  “No way. Half of what he earns goes to his mother’s direct deposit to pay for rent. He made sure that’s how I set things up when I hired him. And of the rest, three-quarters goes into a college trust fund.”

  Sandra did not like the implication. “So then, where did that money come from?”

  “That’s what I’m worried about. How many legitimate ways are there for a high school kid to make that kind of money?”

  “Not many,” Sandra admitted.

  “I know he’s seen how you’ve taken after that new guy of yours. He’s seen him flaunt his cash around, and I think, well…” Cassie leaned in close, “…I think that Josh is trying to impress you.”

  “Impress me? Why?”

  Cassie shot back up, all dramatic indignation. “What? Are you blind? He’s had his eye on you from the first day you met.”

  “That’s ridiculous. He’s like a brother to me. Besides, he was just a kid when we first met!”

  “And,” Cassie said slowly, “I think he resents himself for that. I told you I care about my customers. Well, I care about my staff even more. Their business is my business. I know every worry that’s ever crossed that boy’s mind. Most of them have to do with you. Maybe he thinks if he makes himself some cash, you’ll start thinking of him as a man. As a grown up.”

  Sandra shook her head. “That’s crazy.” She glanced over, and realized Josh was looking at her. Their eyes met for a flicker, and he turned away, pretending to be busy scrubbing a spot on the counter. “But… I’ll talk to him. We’ll straighten things out.”

  “See that you do. He’s a good kid, and I don’t want him to get tangled up in the wrong business.” Cassie took the envelope back. “Now, go distract him a bit while I put this back.”

  Sandra nodded and walked toward Josh. He had grown, she realized. She’d just been too dense to see it. He was taller now than when they’d first met, and starting to fill out his lanky frame. His cheeks were still smooth, but maybe he had just shaved.

  Sandra smiled as she came up to him. “Hey.”

  Josh looked at her. “Hi.”

  “So… how are you doing?”

  “Good.”

  “Graduating soon, huh?”

  “That’s right.” He looked at her and squinted. “You’re acting funny.”

  “No I’m not.”

  “Yes, you are.

  “No. I just… haven’t talked to you a lot recently.”

  “That’s okay. You’re dating that guy, anyway. What’s his name again? Brady?”

  “Brandon,” she corrected. “But that doesn’t matter. I should always have time for my favorite high schooler.” Josh cringed, and Sandra wished she could take the words back. “I mean—”

  “I know what you mean,” he said, sullen.

  “No, come on, Josh! I’m not like that. How’s your mom doing?”

  “She’s alright, I guess. The same as always.”

  “Do you know what you’re doing next year? I know how much Cassie likes having you around, but I don’t think working as a barista is a permanent career for you.” She forced an awkward smile.

  “Well, I got accepted to the University of Washington.”

  “You did? That’s great! When? Why didn’t you tell me before?”

  “I haven’t told anyone,” he admitted. “You’re the first to know.”

  “Well, I’m honored. When did you find out?”

  “A few weeks back. But… I don’t know if I’m going to go.”

  “What? Why not? UDub’s a great school. And I know Cassie’s been helping you save up, so tuition shouldn’t be a problem—”

  “It’s not. I’m in-state anyway, so they gave me a scholarship.”

  “Josh, that’s great!” This time, the smile came unbidden. “I’m so happy for you. I guess I can’t think of you as the kid working in Cassie’s Blend anymore. You’re growing up.”

  He grinned, pleased with the compliment. Sandra noted how perceptive Cassie’s advice had been. “So, how about we hang out before you make your decision?” Sandra continued. “You know, as friends. See if I can’t convince you to change your mind about going.”

  Josh’s eyes lit up at that. “That sounds good.”

  “Alright. How about today, sometime after school?”

  “Sure.” His smile widened.

  “Great. I work until five. You want to meet by your house?”

  “Down the street near the gas station,” Josh suggested.

  “Awesome. I’ll meet you there.
’ Sandra glanced at the clock. “I’ve got to get going, but you should tell Cassie about the acceptance. She’ll be ecstatic.”

  “I’m thinking of getting a bike,” Josh said as he and Sandra walked along a quiet residential street, angling toward the beach. Sandra had met him outside the gas station after work. “I’ve got some money saved up.”

  “Really?”

  “Yeah. There’s this cool one I saw in an ad last week.”

  “What kind?”

  “A Suzuki GSX-R. It’s a sport bike, but it handles really nicely on the street.”

  “Have you ridden one before?”

  “No. But there’s a free course set up at the DMV that teaches you how before you get your license.”

  “Sounds pretty cool.”

  “You think?”

  “Yeah, absolutely. Especially if you have enough money for it. How much would it set you back?”

  Josh didn’t even blink when he answered. “About fifteen grand.”

  Sandra stopped, gaping. “Fifteen thousand dollars? Cassie doesn’t pay you that much.”

  “Well,” he admitted, almost shyly, “I’ve got some other ventures going on the side.”

  “Really? That’s the first I’m hearing of them.”

  Josh shrugged. “I haven’t told many people because I wasn’t sure if they were going to work out at first.”

  “Apparently they did.”

  Josh laughed. “Yeah, they did.”

  “So, what kind of ventures are they?”

  “Oh! It’s um, an online business.” The pause in his words was fleeting, but it stood out to Sandra’s mind compared to the flow before. “I… buy computer parts from China. And sell them to people around here.”

  Sandra frowned. “I’ve never known you to be tech-savvy.”

  “There’s a lot you don’t know about me.” Josh shrugged. “The business is pretty simple, though.”

  “How’d you get started?”

  “I just got lucky, I guess.” Sandra noticed that Josh wasn’t making eye contact with her as he spoke anymore. “I just read something online about finding suppliers and got inspired to do the same. I contacted a bunch of them, and some wanted to work with me. I used what I’ve saved up from Cassie for the first order. And then sold the parts here.”

 

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