Maliciously Obedient (BBW Erotic Romance) (17 page)

BOOK: Maliciously Obedient (BBW Erotic Romance)
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“Picking up a hot rich chick,” Jeremy said, nodding. “So far, all I see are Botox Barbies.”

“It doesn’t work that way, dude. The hot chicks come here to pick up the ugly rich dudes.”

“Oh. So who bagged you?”

Mike paused, a bit perplexed and not sure how to explain it. Instead, he let frustration seep into him. “It’s complicated.”

“It’s
always
complicated, Mike.”

“This isn’t about me. Why are you here? And,” he cringed, taking in Jeremy's outfit, “why do you look like Tim Gunn's worst nightmare?”

“I am here because I think the cause of autism and research is important,” Jeremy said in a loud voice meant to carry. Mike stared at him, hard. He didn’t doubt that; he knew that Jeremy had a nephew with autism. In fact, Jeremy had been the one to get him involved in this particular non-profit organization, but he had always been an anonymous donor behind the scenes.

Finally, it hit him. “You thought I might bring Lydia here and you wanted a chance to see her.”

“Maybe.”

“If you wanted to meet her, why don’t you just swing by the office?”

“I can’t do that, Mike, because you’re not Mike at the office.”

“Shit.” Which was precisely why he hadn't approached her tonight. “So, you came all the way here looking like Weird Al Yankovic playing a homeless dude just so you could catch a look at Lydia?”

“I didn’t have anything better to do.”

“You
never
have anything better to do, Jeremy.”

“Life of the idle rich.”

“Must be nice,” Mike sighed.

“It
is
nice, Mike, and you can do it too.” Jeremy thumbed his fist at the doorway. “And that Lydia is one fine lady in red.”

“No, I can’t.” He frowned. “And if you're thinking what I think about Lydia, I don't think she's...you know.” How she spoke so freely about MFM and menage ran through his head at rapid-fire pace.
Tuck the thought away for later
, he told himself.

“Yes, you can.”

This was a well-worn argument between the two and Mike was having none of it. “Fine. I
can
, meaning I am able to, but I categorically reject the premise.”

“Why?” Jeremy had made it no secret that he wished that Mike would be his traveling buddy, his companion on world adventures. And that he wanted to find another Dana for them to share. Mike knew that he would just end up being his caretaker and vomit wiper, and would essentially get him out of whatever messes he got himself into. On three different occasions he had had to take a plane across thirteen time zones in order to rescue Jeremy from some mess.

Only once had it involved law enforcement, but that one had been a doozy, when Jeremy had attempted to procure the services of three different prostitutes at once, two of whom were underage and one of whom was an Interpol agent. He suspected that mess had been less intricate and had fewer implications, though, than what he was facing right now.

“Let me be really clear here, Jeremy,” Mike said, going cold. “She’s off limits.”

The last response Mike expected was for Jeremy to peer, intently, at the pocket of his tux jacket. “Nice pocket silk.” Poke. “What is that? You don't normally have silk there.”

Caught!
“It's just some standard piece of – ” Jeremy's fingers deftly pinched the top corner and pulled, Lydia's panties unfolding out of the pocket, lace and frills dangling from his friend's enormous hand.

“Give me that,” Mike growled, snatching it back. Laughter poured out of Jeremy in great whoops. What Mike had thought would be a fun secret for himself had just turned into a humiliation he didn't need.
Fuck
.

Jeremy recoiled slightly, his face slack with concentration. Mike hadn’t seen that look in nearly a decade. “Are those Diane's or Lydia's.”

Mike refused to answer, trying to stare him down.

“You’re really falling for her, aren’t you?” Hating that he had to look up to answer, his eyes burned into Jeremy's, which exuded a humanity, an approval, that Mike didn't expect. Competition? Sure. Acceptance?
Wha – ?

“I’m not falling for anyone. I have a television show that needs to be successful so that I can get the bump in profits that I need to get the payoff that I want. I don’t want you, or anyone else, to jeopardize that.”

Jeremy golf clapped politely. “Nice speech. How long did it take you to memorize that?” He hadn’t had this kind of conversation with Jeremy since intense arguments over code reviews years ago. With no more words, he simply broke the gaze, and walked to the car where he knew Dom waited for him.

Chapter Seven

The nightclub was absolutely packed. Part of a three story entertainment complex with a huge dance club and bar on the top floor, a bowling alley and arcade on the second floor, and an enormous restaurant on the bottom. A group of friends from work, which thankfully did not include Dave, had decided to convene for drinks, discussion, and of course – office gossip.

Lydia needed this
so
much. She didn’t hang out often with her co-workers and Krysta, though technically one, worked five stories down in purchasing and receiving, processing paperwork and like Lydia, a Bachelor’s-degreed woman who was vastly underutilized. Lydia was more vastly underutilized, possessing a Master’s degree, but she didn’t like to think about that. Especially with a few drinks in her.

In that crazy, territorial way that corporations had, the fact that Lydia invited Krysta meant that she had included someone from another tribe. Too bad. Over the past two years, people had just accepted it. Both she and Krysta noticed that very few of Lydia’s co-workers ever spoke to Krysta beyond the requisite “Hi.” By the time the dancing started, though, no one cared. It was all bacchanalian, alcohol-infused fun and for a few hours she could pound, stomp, wiggle, shimmy and shake her worries away.

She was on her third Cosmo (
and by the looks of it these were three or four ounces of alcohol per
) when a familiar face walked in the nightclub. Even in the dark, those green eyes practically glowed. She ducked her head, leaning in toward Krysta, who was sitting with her, trapped in the giant, semi-circular booth with what felt like a hundred people on either side of them.

“He’s here!” she told Krysta.

“Who?” Krysta’s head twisted wildly around the packed nightclub. “There are lots of ‘he’ types here.”

“Him. Matt Jones,” Lydia whispered and then realized she didn’t need to. In fact, she could have screamed his name and he wouldn’t have heard.

A throng of dancers, arms up in the air, breasts bouncing, chests pumping, hips gyrating, separated him from their group at work. Until Krysta turned traitor, raised her arm in the air, stood up and let out a wolf whistle, the kind you hear at baseball games, except this one was a
come hither.

She cupped her hands around her mouth and shouted, “Hey, Matt! We’re over here!”

Lydia had two choices. She could die on the spot or she could kill Krysta. Instead, she froze, then grabbed the fresh Cosmo and drank it all down in one big slurp.

“You’re supposed to
sip
those.” Krysta’s eyes were wide, calculating what Lydia had just done and the aftereffects of it.

“You’re not supposed to invite the enemy,” she retorted, feeling angry and empty and most of all, indignant that her brain couldn’t assemble the right burning response right now.

“What?” Krysta played innocent. “Just including a guy from the office in our – ”

“Yeah,
right.

“So one minute you let him slip your panties off you, the next he's the enemy?”

“My logic needs no explanation.”

“'Logic' isn't the word for it. 'Bullshit,' on the other hand...” Krysta just shook her head and took another sip of her magarita.

Matt’s eyes locked on Lydia’s. Suddenly, no one else existed in the room. Just him, with those bright green eyes, that sandy brown hair, those broad shoulders that, even in business casual clothes, made him look sensual. She knew that he was muscular, strong,
tight
– that those biceps underneath could lift her easily if they wanted to. She knew that his ribs tapered down to a narrow waist and that beneath that –

“Hey, how's it going?” he asked, smiling.
How in the hell did he manage to make it here so fast?
she wondered. Time blinked. One of her favorite songs popped up and she jumped at the chance to get away from what was turning out to be a very,
very
uncomfortable situation.

A million people – no, actually, six on one side and eight on the other – blocked her from getting out of the giant booth. Some matched up as couples in various states of intimacy, tongues in throats, hands on thighs. Frustrated that she and Matt were not one of those couples, and nearly in tears that he hadn't talked about their latest encounter with her, she decided to get away from him.

And so, in a stroke of brilliance, she just climbed under the table, finding herself at Matt’s feet as she crawled out through the other end. Lydia looked up, head pointed directly at his belt buckle. She tipped her face up to see him smiling down, a wolfish grin on his face.

“Well, hello there. That’s some table service.”

Mike had groaned inwardly when Jeanie from accounting had invited to go out with “the gang,” as she called them, a group of about ten or fifteen folks from work who occasionally went to a giant entertainment complex to unwind, hang out, have fun. It sounded very mid-twenties to him and while he had had his share of those nights, he wasn’t sure that getting
that
close to his employees was a good idea.

When Jonah had caught the invitation on camera after Jeanie left, a perfectly timed phone call made Mike realize just how watched he was.

“So, hey, Mike,” Jonah said, that voice still filled with oil and, Mike knew, vinegar. “Mike, we saw that whole clip with Jeanie inviting you to the bar and we think that’s a
great
idea. You should go and we can follow with the cameras and, you know...”

“Cameras? How are you going to do that, Jonah, without tipping everyone off?”

“Oh, it’ll be great. You can wear a hidden ca – ”

“No. No. Nope. No way.” His voice was cold steel. There were lines that he needed to draw in this reality television mess. “I don’t wear a wire. I don’t wear a hidden camera. I don’t play ‘Mike cam’.”

“Ooooo, ‘Mike cam’ I like that. You have a way with words.”

“Jonah,” Mike said menacingly.

“I understand. I really do,” Jonah told him in a fake tone that made Mike's teeth ache. “But you gotta show some kind of spirit here. The clips we’re getting are pretty dry.”

“Really? The meeting with Dave? That wasn’t intense enough for you?”

“No.
That
was good. The way you stood up for Linda – ”

“Lydia.”

“Lydia. Yeah. The way you stood up for her and the way Dave was just, you know that – well...” Jonah faltered, then came back with a stronger voice, “It was a good clip but frankly Dave played the Don Draper character there and that’s what we wanted from
you
.”

Mike let silence say everything for him, holding out for thirty seconds, one minute, and after a minute and a half he realized that Jonah was matching him. He knew, though, that he would win, because he could walk away from this whole thing and lose the profit opportunity at worst. Jonah? Jonah had somebody
else’s
money sunk into this project and he had more to lose.

When you’re in a showdown you always want to be the one who has the least to lose.

He gave Jonah credit. Two minutes and thirty eight seconds went by before he cracked. “Yeah, so, we think we can work with that thought because for one show we can shape
you
as the feminist throwback, the whole
Get me my coffee, woman!
kind of guy. Later, we can show how Lydia redeems you and turns you into a more modern, touchy-feely kind of dude.”

No one had
ever
used the phrase
touchy-feely
in relation to him. “Let me tell you something, Jonah. I’m about one step away from being done with this, so you better start working on convincing me why I should stay.”
Click.

Three seconds later the phone rang. Jonah. Mike had rolled his eyes and answered it grudgingly. “So does this mean you won’t wear a hidden cam – ”

Click.

Maybe a night of drinks wasn’t such a bad idea after all.

Lydia was at his feet, her face in the most intimate of positions, one that had him fighting for control as his body ran through the implications of her location in a rather rapid manner, blood pumping to places that were about to be made public if he didn’t say or do something. Submissive and below him, ready for whatever he wanted to take, desire and power stirred within to make a chaotic blend of heat and need.

It was when she reached over and rested her cheek on his calf, looked back up with wide, unfocused eyes and screamed, “Oh my God! It’s the Green Lantern!” that he realized just how drunk she was. He offered her a hand and the one she gave him was a limp noodle. Pulling her up was harder than he thought it would be, not so much because she was a full-figured woman, but more because she was about as coordinated as a sloth on Xanax.

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