Tasting Notes: A Steamy Blindfold Romance by Violet Ashford

Violet Ashford with lavender hair standing in a rustic wine cellar with a male sommelier, cover art for steamy blindfold romance story Tasting Notes.

In the cool silence of her private cellar, a perfectionist collector learns that true taste requires shutting out the world. A sophisticated sensory deprivation romance about the intoxicating mix of fine wine and absolute surrender.

— Violet Ashford —

I’d been expecting him at seven precisely. Philippe had warned me that Dominic was punctual to the point of compulsion, which I’d found rather appealing given that most people in Blackthorn treated time as a flexible suggestion rather than a binding commitment. When the security system chimed at six fifty-eight, I allowed myself a small smile as I moved through the entry hall toward the front door.

The man standing on my doorstep wore dark trousers and a charcoal button-down with the sleeves rolled to his forearms, and he held a leather portfolio case that suggested he took his work seriously. What Philippe hadn’t mentioned was the way he carried himself—grounded, unhurried, with the kind of presence that came from genuine confidence rather than performance. He was perhaps forty, with dark hair touched with silver at the temples and eyes that assessed me with the same careful attention one might give to a rare vintage.

“Ms. Ashford,” he said, extending his hand. “Dominic Beaumont. Philippe sends his regards and his apologies for not being able to assist with your collection evaluation himself.”

“Violet, please.” I took his hand—warm, callused, steady—and held it perhaps a fraction longer than strictly necessary. “And I’m grateful for the recommendation. Philippe speaks very highly of your expertise.”

“He’s generous.” Dominic’s mouth curved slightly. “Though I suspect he’s more interested in ensuring your wine cellar receives proper attention than in praising my credentials.”

“Philippe knows I don’t tolerate mediocrity.” I stepped back, gesturing him inside. “Particularly not where wine is concerned.”

The entry hall never failed to make an impression—marble floors that echoed footsteps, the grand staircase curving upward, the antique chandelier I’d liberated from my family’s estate casting fractured light across the walls. I watched Dominic take it in with the same measured attention he’d given me, his gaze moving from the architectural details to the paintings to the ocean view visible through the far windows.

“Beautiful home,” he said simply, and I appreciated that he didn’t gush or perform admiration he didn’t feel.

“I’ve worked rather hard to make it so.” I moved toward the hallway that led to the wine cellar, aware of his presence behind me, the sound of his footsteps steady against the marble. “The cellar is this way. I’m particularly interested in your assessment of the French acquisitions—Philippe helped me source several cases last year, but I’d like an independent evaluation of their condition and optimal drinking windows.”

We descended the stone steps into the cellar, and the temperature dropped deliciously as we moved underground. I’d designed this space with the same attention to detail I applied to everything—temperature-controlled, humidity-regulated, with custom racks that held nearly three hundred bottles arranged by region and varietal. Soft lighting illuminated the labels without exposing them to harmful UV, and the air smelled of old stone and oak and the faint mineral scent of wine aging in glass.

Dominic set his portfolio on the tasting table—a beautiful piece of reclaimed oak I’d had commissioned specifically for this space—and began to unpack his tools. Decanter, stemware, notebook, a small LED penlight for examining bottles. He moved with the efficiency of someone who’d performed this ritual hundreds of times, and I found myself watching the way his hands moved rather than cataloguing what he was unpacking.

“Shall we start with the Burgundies?” I suggested, moving toward the French section. “I’ve a 2015 Gevrey-Chambertin that Philippe was quite excited about.”

“An excellent starting point.” Dominic joined me at the rack, his shoulder nearly brushing mine as he examined the bottle I’d indicated. “May I?”

I nodded, and he withdrew it with the careful reverence one might show a sleeping child. He held it up to the light, examining the fill level and sediment, then turned it slowly to check the label’s condition. Everything about his movements suggested competence and care—the hallmarks of someone who understood that wine was more than just a beverage, that it was history and chemistry and artistry compressed into glass.

“Beautiful specimen,” he said quietly. “The 2015 vintage was exceptional. Structure and elegance.” He glanced at me. “Shall we taste it?”

“I’ve been waiting for an excuse to open it.”

We returned to the tasting table, and I watched as Dominic opened the bottle with practiced ease—no struggle with the cork, no excessive force, just smooth mechanical precision. He poured two glasses with the exact same level, the wine catching the light like liquid garnet, then set the bottle aside to breathe.

“Tell me what you know about this wine,” he said, his tone conversational rather than testing.

I picked up my glass by the stem, holding it up to examine the color. “Gevrey-Chambertin, grand cru, from one of the oldest vineyards in Burgundy. The 2015 vintage benefited from ideal growing conditions—warm days, cool nights, minimal rainfall during harvest. The producer is known for traditional techniques, aging in French oak for eighteen months. Flavor profile should include dark cherry, earth, subtle spice, with firm tannins that soften over time.” I swirled the wine, watching it coat the glass. “Drinking window is generally considered to be five to fifteen years from vintage, placing this bottle in its optimal range.”

Dominic watched me recite this information with an expression I couldn’t quite read—not impressed, exactly, but something more nuanced. When I finished, he nodded slowly.

“Everything you just said is correct,” he said. “And yet you haven’t tasted it.”

I blinked. “I beg your pardon?”

“You’re reading the wine, Violet. Not tasting it.” He set his own glass down, untouched. “You’ve catalogued the facts—vintage, region, production methods—but those are external data. They tell you what the wine should be, not what it is.”

Something shifted in the air between us. “I’m not certain I follow.”

He picked up his own glass, swirling it gently. “I used to do the same thing. Back when I was training, I’d memorize every technical detail—soil composition, barrel aging, malolactic fermentation timelines. I could recite facts about any wine in front of me.” He paused, studying the wine. “Then my mentor blindfolded me during a tasting. Told me to stop performing knowledge and start actually experiencing the wine. It was… humbling.”

I felt something catch in my chest—recognition, perhaps. “What happened?”

“I realized I’d been tasting with my eyes and my ego rather than my palate.” He met my gaze. “The wine I thought I knew became something completely different when I couldn’t see the label. Wild. Unpredictable. Far more interesting than what I’d expected.”

The vulnerability in that admission surprised me. He wasn’t lecturing—he was sharing something personal, something that had clearly stayed with him.

“May I show you?” He gestured toward my glass. “Just as an experiment. One taste, without the label influencing your experience.”

I should have declined. Should have maintained the professional distance I’d carefully established. But something about his honesty, the way he’d admitted his own limitations rather than positioning himself as an expert, made me curious.

“How would we—” I started.

Dominic reached into his jacket pocket and withdrew a pocket square—silk, charcoal grey, neatly folded. He held it up with a slight smile. “Just for a moment. If you’re willing.”

I stared at the silk, my pulse accelerating. The rational part of my mind noted the intimacy of such a gesture, the trust it would require. But another part—the part I’d been suppressing for years—whispered that perhaps this was exactly what I needed.

“Alright,” I heard myself say. “But only for the tasting.”

“Of course.”

He moved behind me, and I felt the silk brush against my temples before settling over my eyes. His fingers were careful as he tied it loosely at the back of my head—not tight enough to hurt, but secure enough that no light penetrated. The world went dark, and suddenly every other sense sharpened with almost painful clarity.

I could hear his breathing, slow and even. I could smell the wine more intensely now, the cherry and earth notes suddenly vivid. I could feel the cool air of the cellar against my exposed skin, the weight of the glass stem in my fingers.

“Now,” Dominic’s voice came from beside me, closer than I’d expected. “Stop thinking about what you’re supposed to taste. Just experience it.”

He guided my hand—his fingers wrapped around my wrist, warm and solid—bringing the glass to my lips. I tilted it carefully, and the wine touched my tongue.

Oh.

Without sight, without the label and the facts and the expectations, the wine became something entirely different. It wasn’t the structured, elegant grand cru I’d anticipated—it was wild dark cherry and damp earth and something almost feral underneath, a tartness that made my mouth water, a complexity I’d completely missed when I’d catalogued it intellectually. The tannins gripped my tongue not like firm structure but like velvet dragged across skin, and the finish lingered with a bitterness that tasted like autumn and longing.

I made a sound—small, involuntary—and felt my breath catch.

“What do you taste?” Dominic asked quietly.

“I—” The words felt inadequate. “It’s not what I expected. There’s this wildness underneath the elegance. Like something untamed that refuses to be completely civilized.”

“Yes.” I could hear the satisfaction in his voice. “That’s what makes this vintage special. Philippe noticed it too—said it reminded him of something you’d appreciate.”

His fingers were still wrapped around my wrist, and I became acutely aware of how close we were standing, how the darkness had stripped away the usual social distances. The silk blindfold pressed softly against my eyelids, and I felt more present in my body than I had in years.

“May I remove this?” I heard myself ask, though I wasn’t entirely certain I wanted him to.

“Of course.”

He untied the silk, and the blindfold slipped away. The light felt harsh after the darkness, and I blinked, disoriented, as my vision adjusted. When I could finally focus, I found Dominic watching me with an intensity that made my pulse stutter.

We were standing very close. Close enough that I could see the flecks of gold in his dark eyes, the way his pupils had dilated slightly, the tension in his jaw.

For a long moment, neither of us moved. The air between us had changed—charged with something that had nothing to do with wine evaluation. I could step back. Could thank him for the lesson, restore the professional boundaries. Return to my carefully controlled life where no one ever got this close.

Or I could acknowledge what was happening.

“That was—” I started, then stopped, unsure how to finish.

“Different,” Dominic supplied, his voice lower now. He was still holding my wrist, his thumb resting against my pulse where it betrayed me. “I should apologize. That was more intimate than a professional tasting usually requires.”

“Don’t.” The word came out sharper than I’d intended. I softened my tone. “Don’t apologize. You were right. I was missing something essential.”

He studied me for a moment. “May I ask you something?”

I nodded, not trusting my voice.

“Why did you really invite me here tonight?” He released my wrist but didn’t step away. “Philippe offered to come himself. You could have hired any sommelier in Blackthorn. But you chose me—someone you’d never met.”

The question caught me off guard. I could deflect, could offer some professional explanation. Instead, I found myself saying, “I suppose I wanted someone who wouldn’t know me. Wouldn’t have expectations.”

“Expectations of what?”

“Of who I should be.” The admission felt dangerous. “I’ve spent seven years building this life. This house, this reputation, this… perfection. And sometimes I wonder if I’ve built a prison instead of a sanctuary.”

Dominic’s expression shifted—recognition, understanding. “I know that feeling,” he said quietly. “After my mentor died, I took over his business. Spent three years trying to maintain his standards, his reputation, his way of doing everything. I was so busy performing his version of excellence that I forgot to find my own.” He paused. “It took me a long time to realize that control and competence aren’t the same thing. That sometimes the most skilled thing you can do is let go.”

Something in my chest loosened. He wasn’t telling me what I needed—he was sharing his own experience, offering it as a mirror rather than a prescription.

“I don’t know how to let go,” I heard myself admit. “I’ve forgotten how.”

“I think you just did.” He gestured to the wine glass. “You let me guide you into darkness. Let yourself experience something without analyzing it first. That took courage.”

“It was just wine.”

“Was it?” His gaze held mine, and I felt heat spread through me. “Because from where I’m standing, it felt like something else entirely.”

He was right. God help me, he was right. The blindfold, the trust, the surrender of control—it hadn’t been about wine at all.

“I don’t do this,” I said quietly. “Invite strangers to my home and—”

“Neither do I.” Dominic’s mouth curved slightly. “I’m usually much better at maintaining professional boundaries. But there’s something about you, Violet. The way you hold yourself so perfectly still, as if you’re afraid that if you relax for even a moment, everything will fall apart.”

I felt exposed, seen in a way I hadn’t allowed in years. “And if it does? Fall apart?”

“Then maybe you rebuild it differently.” He reached up slowly, giving me time to pull away, and traced one finger along my jaw. “Or maybe you discover that falling apart isn’t the disaster you’ve been afraid of. That there’s something beautiful in the breaking.”

I couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t think. Could only feel the weight of every decision I’d ever made, every moment of restraint, every carefully maintained boundary pressing down on me.

“What are you asking me?” My voice came out barely above a whisper.

“I’m not asking anything.” His finger moved to my lower lip, dragging across it with maddening lightness. “I’m offering. If you want to explore that feeling from the blindfold—that surrender, that experience without analysis—I’m here. If you want me to finish evaluating your wine collection and leave, I’ll do that too. But I think we both know that’s not why you’re still standing this close to me.”

He was giving me the choice. Not assuming, not pushing, not pretending to know what I needed. Just offering himself as a possibility and waiting to see what I would decide.

“I want—” I struggled to articulate it. “I want to finish the evaluation. But not of the wine.”

His smile was slow and devastating. “Then show me where.”

“Upstairs,” I managed. “Third floor. Master suite.”

“Lead the way.”

I pushed away from the wine racks, my hands shaking slightly as I smoothed my dress. Dominic watched me attempt to restore some semblance of composure, that small smile playing at his lips, and I realized that he found my nervousness endearing rather than disappointing.

We moved through the house in charged silence—up the stone cellar steps, through the marble entry hall bright with late afternoon sun, past all the carefully curated spaces I’d designed to demonstrate my independence. My heels clicked against the hardwood, and behind me Dominic’s footsteps were steady, patient.

At the base of the grand staircase, he caught my wrist and turned me to face him. Before I could speak, he kissed me—not the tentative first kiss of people still figuring each other out, but something deeper, more honest. A kiss that acknowledged what we both knew was about to happen.

“Tell me to stop,” he murmured against my lips, “and I will. Any time. For any reason.”

“I know.” And I did know. That’s what made this feel safe enough to continue. “I don’t want you to stop.”

“Good.”

We climbed the stairs with his hand on the small of my back—not possessive, but grounding. We stopped twice to kiss against the banister, and by the time we reached the third floor hallway, my lipstick was smeared and my breath was coming in gasps and I’d stopped caring about maintaining composure.

I opened the double doors to my bedroom, and we stepped inside.

The room was exactly as I’d left it—California king bed with silk sheets in deep purple, floor-to-ceiling windows facing the ocean where sunset was beginning to paint the water in impossible colors. Everything perfect, beautiful, exactly as I’d designed it.

Dominic took it in with the same careful attention he’d given everything else, then his gaze returned to me. “This is your private space,” he observed. “You don’t bring people here.”

“No.” My voice came out smaller than I’d intended. “Never.”

“Then I’m honored.” He closed the distance between us and wrapped one arm around my waist. His other hand came up to cup my face, thumb brushing across my cheekbone. “And I promise to treat it—and you—with the respect that deserves.”

The gentleness of it, the acknowledgment of what I was offering, made my eyes sting unexpectedly.

“I’m a mess,” I whispered, because I could feel my perfectly arranged hair falling loose, could feel every carefully maintained façade crumbling.

“You’re beautiful.” He said it like fact rather than flattery. “And if you’ll let me, I’d like to show you what it feels like to stop holding all of this so tightly.” He gestured around the room, but I knew he meant me. The control, the perfection, the relentless maintenance of an image.

“The blindfold,” I heard myself say. “In the cellar. That feeling—I want that again. If you’re willing.”

Something shifted in his expression—heat and understanding. “You want to surrender without analyzing it. Experience without performance.”

“Yes.” Relief flooded through me that he understood. “Exactly that.”

He reached into his pocket and withdrew the silk pocket square. “Then we’ll do this properly. At your pace. You tell me what you need, and I’ll help you get there.” He held up the silk. “May I?”

I nodded, not trusting my voice.

He moved behind me, and I closed my eyes instinctively as the silk settled across my eyelids. His fingers worked at the back of my head, tying it securely but gently, and then the world disappeared into velvet black.

“Breathe,” he murmured against my ear. “I’m right here. And I’m not going anywhere unless you tell me to.”

The darkness amplified everything.

Without sight, every other sense sharpened to almost painful intensity. I could hear my own breathing—already faster than normal—and beneath it, the steady rhythm of Dominic’s. I could smell my perfume mixing with his cologne and something rawer. I could feel the air moving across my skin, cool from the ocean breeze through the open windows.

“Stand still,” Dominic murmured. “Just feel.”

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Billable Hours: A Corporate Power Exchange Romance by Azure Delacroix

Romantic illustration of a silver-haired businesswoman and a man in a suit sitting at a luxury bar, cover art for corporate power exchange romance story.

When negotiations end, the real power play begins. In this steamy corporate romance, Azure Delacroix discovers that surrendering control might be the ultimate luxury.

— Azure Delacroix —

The conference call should have ended twenty minutes ago.

I watched the pixelated faces in their little squares on the monitor, each one waiting for someone else to make a decision. Three weeks of negotiations, and we were still circling the same three clauses like vultures who’d forgotten how to land.

“The liability language is standard,” I said, keeping my voice level. “We’ve used this exact phrasing in twelve other contracts. It’s not changing.”

A pause. One of the faces—Mitchell from their legal team—cleared his throat. “We’d just like to review it with our board one more time—”

“You’ve reviewed it with your board. Twice.” I leaned forward slightly, let them see I was done. “You have until Friday at five PM to sign. After that, the offer is off the table.”

Silence. Good.

“Friday,” Mitchell repeated weakly.

“Friday.” I ended the call before anyone could add another pointless comment.

The monitor went dark. I sat back in the leather chair, rolled my neck once to release the tension that had been building there since lunch. This was the part of running LustLit that no one saw—the endless contractual negotiations, the business partners who couldn’t make a decision, the lawyers who wanted to re-argue settled points.

I loved the work. I just hated when people wasted my time.

“Have a good evening, Azure.” LUNA’s voice came from the doorway, her holographic form shimmering in the conference room’s dim light. The AI receptionist tilted her head, reading my expression with whatever algorithms powered her personality matrix. “Rough day?”

“Long day,” I corrected, gathering my tablet and bag. “There’s a difference.”

“Noted.” LUNA’s smile was warm despite being made of light. “See you Monday.”

The elevator down to the lobby was empty. I checked my phone—three emails, none urgent. Outside, the November air carried that particular bite that meant winter was coming whether Blackthorn was ready or not. My driver had the limo waiting at the curb, exactly where he should be.

I slid into the back seat, let the door close behind me with that satisfying heavy thunk of expensive cars. The leather was cool against my legs.

“Apex Tower,” I told him, then reconsidered. “Actually, take the long route. Through the Victorian Quarter.”

I needed to decompress before going home. The limo pulled into traffic, and I let myself sink into the seat, watching Blackthorn slide past the tinted windows.

We passed through Central Plaza first—the cultural heart of the city, all clean lines and carefully maintained public spaces. The fountains were lit from below, turning the water gold in the early evening. A few people walked past the plaza’s edge, heading to dinner or drinks or wherever people went on a Wednesday night when they didn’t spend twelve hours negotiating contracts.

The Victorian Quarter came next. I’d always liked this neighborhood—the gaslit streetlamps, the old brick buildings with their iron-worked balconies, the way it felt like you’d stepped back a hundred years. We passed Chapters & Verse, the bookstore where Scarlett used to work before LustLit. Mrs. Chen was probably still behind the counter, recommending novels to anyone who walked through the door.

A couple stood outside the shop’s window, looking at the display. The woman was laughing at something her partner said, her face bright with it. They looked happy. Easy.

I looked away.

The Meadow District rolled past next—Rose’s territory, all farmer’s markets and community gardens and that pervasive smell of fresh bread from the bakery on the corner. Even in November, people sat at the outdoor tables of The Honey Pot Cafe, bundled in jackets but determined to enjoy the weather before real winter hit.

We turned toward The Skyline District and the city changed. Clean architecture, glass and steel, everything reaching up. My neighborhood. My territory.

I realized I didn’t want to go straight home. Didn’t want to walk into my empty penthouse, pour a drink, stand at the window looking out at the city like I did most nights. I wanted…

I texted the driver: Stop at main entrance. I’m going to the Lounge first.

The limo pulled up to Apex Tower’s entrance—sixty-two floors of glass and ambition. Obsidian Lounge occupied the ground floor, its entrance separate from the main building. I’d been there a hundred times, knew exactly what it would be like inside: low lighting, good music, people who worked in the building stopping for a drink before heading home.

Perfect.

Julian looked up when I walked in, already reaching for the bottle of Grey Goose before I’d reached the bar. “Long day?” he asked, pouring two fingers neat.

“Is it that obvious?”

“You have a tell.” He slid the glass across the polished wood. “You get this line right here”—he tapped the space between his eyebrows—”when you’ve been dealing with difficult people.”

I touched the spot, felt the tension there. “I need to work on that.”

“Or you need to work with better people.” He moved down the bar to help someone else, leaving me with my drink and the low hum of conversation around me.

I took a sip, let the vodka burn pleasantly down my throat. Better already.

“Is this seat taken?”

I glanced to my right. A man stood there—tall, easily over six feet, with dark hair that looked like he’d run his hands through it a few times today. His suit was charcoal gray, well-tailored, the kind that cost real money. Broad shoulders, narrow waist, the build of someone who actually used his gym membership. Mid-thirties, maybe. Strong jaw with just a hint of stubble, dark eyes that held steady contact.

I assessed him the way I assessed contracts. Professional but not stuffy. Confident stance, but not cocky. Good posture—he carried himself like someone used to being listened to. He was holding a Manhattan, which meant he had decent taste or at least knew how to order.

“It’s a bar,” I said. “All the seats are available.”

He sat two stools down—close enough to talk, far enough to not be presumptuous. Smart. Points for spatial awareness.

“Long day?” he asked.

I almost laughed. “Does everyone ask that?”

“You have a tell.” He gestured vaguely at my face. “Right there, between your eyebrows.”

“So I’ve been told.” I turned to face him properly, continued my evaluation. Good-looking in an understated way—those dark eyes, strong hands wrapped around his glass, the kind of physical presence that took up space without trying. No wedding ring. No nervous energy. He waited for my response without filling the silence.

Interesting.

“Let me guess. You work in the building.”

“Thirty-seventh floor. Corporate consulting.” He took a sip of his drink. “Just moved to Blackthorn last month. Still learning the city.”

“And you’ve already found the best bar in Skyline.”

“I’m a quick study.” His smile was slow, deliberate. “What about you? Do you work here?”

“Sometimes.” I wasn’t about to explain LustLit to a stranger. “I live here. Upstairs.”

“The penthouse floors?” He raised his eyebrows slightly. “Impressive.”

“It’s convenient.” I finished my vodka, let myself make the decision I’d been considering since he sat down. Looked at him again—the stillness in the way he held himself, the fact that he hadn’t tried to move closer, the width of his shoulders under that expensive suit. “What’s your name?”

“Marcus.”

“Marcus.” I tested it, decided it fit. Solid. Professional. No diminutive. “I’m Azure.”

“Beautiful name.”

“It’s gotten me this far.” I set my empty glass on the bar. This was either very efficient or very reckless. I was doing it anyway. “Marcus, I’ve had a long day. I’m not interested in small talk or getting to know each other over drinks. But if you think you can follow directions, you can come upstairs with me.”

He blinked once. Then his expression shifted—interest, heat, a kind of focused attention that I recognized. “Directions?”

“I’m going to tell you exactly what I want. If that works for you, this will be good for both of us.” I kept my voice level, matter-of-fact. “If it doesn’t work for you, finish your drink and have a good evening.”

He studied me for a long moment. I could see him processing, deciding. No rush to answer. Another point in his favor.

Then: “I’m very good at following directions.”

“Let’s find out.” I stood, pulled my bag over my shoulder. “Come on.”

We walked through the lounge together, not touching. Julian caught my eye as we passed, gave me the smallest nod—his way of acknowledging he’d seen us leave together, that he’d remember Marcus if I needed him to. I nodded back. Seven years working in the same building, we had an understanding.

The elevator to the penthouse levels required a key card. I swiped mine, and the doors opened immediately. We stepped inside, and I hit the button for the top floor.

The doors closed. We were alone.

“So you just moved to Blackthorn,” I said, watching the numbers climb. “What brought you here?”

“Better opportunities. Fresh start.” He was standing close but not too close, giving me space. “The consulting firm wanted someone local. I wanted a change of scenery.”

“And how’s that working out for you?”

“It’s looking up.” His voice carried a hint of humor, but underneath it was something serious, something genuine.

I did not usually do this. Did not invite strangers to my penthouse after fifteen minutes of conversation. This was inefficient. Potentially reckless.

I was doing it anyway.

“For the record,” he said, “I’ve never done this before.”

“Done what?”

“Gone home with someone I just met in a bar.”

“Neither have I.” The admission surprised me. “But I’ve had a very long day, and I know exactly what I want. It seemed more efficient than playing games.”

“Efficient.” He smiled. “I like efficiency.”

The elevator opened directly into my penthouse—private entrance, no hallway, no neighbors. The security system recognized my key card and disarmed automatically.

Marcus followed me into the open living space, and I saw him take in the floor-to-ceiling windows showing the Blackthorn skyline, the modern furniture in clean lines, everything minimal and precisely arranged. No clutter, no unnecessary decoration. Just space and light and the city spread out below us.

“Nice view,” he said.

“It’s why I bought the place.” I set my bag on the table by the entrance, turned to face him. “Drink?”

“Sure.”

I moved to the bar cart near the windows, poured us both two fingers of Grey Goose with ice—no reason to switch now. When I turned back, he was closer than I’d expected, his height more obvious now that we were alone in my space. I handed him his glass, our fingers brushing.

“So,” he said. “Directions.”

“I’m going to tell you exactly what I want,” I repeated, my voice steady. “I expect you to listen. If something doesn’t work for you, say so. But otherwise, I’m running this.”

“Understood.”

“Good.” I took a sip, felt the vodka run through me like warm fingers down my chest. “I need more than gentle. I need rough. I need to stop thinking. Can you do that?”

His eyes darkened slightly. “Yes.”

“Say it.”

“I can do that.”

“Then come here.”

He closed the distance between us, and I set my glass down on the side table before reaching for him. His mouth tasted like Manhattan—vermouth and whiskey and something underneath that was just him. I kissed him hard, let him know immediately what I wanted.

His hands came up to my waist, pulling me closer, and I made a small sound of approval. Heat flooded through me—the kind I’d been wanting all day without knowing it. I deepened the kiss, pressed my body against his, felt the solid warmth of his chest, the strength in his arms.

He kissed me back with increasing intensity, his tongue sliding against mine, and I felt myself getting wetter, my body responding to his touch in ways that made control harder to maintain. I wanted this. Needed it.

I pulled back just enough to catch my breath, my lips tingling with electricity. “More.”

His hands slid down to my ass, pulling me flush against him, and I could feel he was already getting hard. Good. I kissed him again, harder this time, biting his lower lip just enough to make him groan.

“Bedroom,” I managed between kisses. “Now.”

We moved through the living room without breaking apart, stumbling slightly as we navigated around furniture. His mouth was on my neck now, finding that spot just below my ear that made my knees weak, and I had to focus to guide us down the hallway to my bedroom.

The door was open. We crossed the threshold into the space I’d designed for exactly this—king bed with white sheets, modern nightstands, clean lines, and that full-length mirror positioned just so against the far wall. I’d had it installed specifically for mornings when I wanted to watch myself get ready. Now it would serve a different purpose.

Marcus looked at the mirror, then at me. Understanding flickered across his face.

“Smart,” I said, breathless from kissing. “Let’s see if you’re as good at following directions as you claim.”

I reached for the buttons of my blouse, started undoing them one by one, my fingers not quite steady. He watched, his breathing getting heavier, his eyes tracking every movement. When I shrugged the fabric off my shoulders and let it fall to the floor, he stepped forward like he couldn’t help himself.

“Wait.” I held up one hand, even though my body was screaming for him to touch me. “I didn’t say you could touch yet.”

He stopped immediately, his hands flexing at his sides.

“Good.” I unzipped my skirt, let it pool at my feet. Stepped out of it wearing just my bra and panties—black lace, expensive, simple. His eyes tracked every movement, and I could see the bulge in his pants getting more pronounced.

I reached for his tie, loosened it slowly, pulled it over his head. My fingers went to his shirt buttons, working them open one by one. His hands came up to help, and I pushed them away. “I’ll do it.”

“Yes ma’am.”

“Don’t call me that.” I finished with his shirt, pushed it off his shoulders, and had to pause to appreciate what I was seeing.

He was built—defined chest with just the right amount of dark hair, abs that showed he put in real work, arms that looked like they could hold me up without effort. His skin was warm under my palms as I ran my hands across his chest, down his sides. Exactly what I’d been hoping for under that suit.

I undid his belt, his pants, pushed them down his hips. He stepped out of them, and now he was just in black boxer briefs that left very little to the imagination. The outline of his cock was obvious, thick and hard, straining against the fabric.

My mouth went dry.

I reached for my bra, unhooked it, let it fall. His eyes went immediately to my breasts, and the raw want on his face sent another pulse of heat through me.

“You’re beautiful,” he said, voice rough.

“I know.” I hooked my thumbs in my panties, slid them down, kicked them aside. Stood there completely naked while he was still partly covered. “Your turn. Take them off.”

He hooked his thumbs in the waistband of his boxer briefs and pushed them down. His cock sprang free—thick, flushed dark at the head, already leaking. Exactly what I needed.

I walked to the bed, the mattress firm under my knees as I climbed onto it. Positioned myself in the center, propped up on the pillows. From here I could see both him and our reflections in the mirror across the room.

“I want your mouth first,” I said, letting my legs fall open. “I’m going to tell you exactly where and how. You’re going to listen. Understand?”

“Yes.”

“Then come here.”

Marcus moved onto the bed, positioning himself between my legs. The sight of him there—this confident, composed man about to go down on me at my command—sent a thrill through my entire body.

“Start slow,” I said, threading my fingers through his hair. “I’ll tell you when to change.”

He leaned forward, and the first touch of his tongue against me made my breath catch. Soft, tentative, learning. I tightened my grip on his hair slightly.

“There. Right there. Slower.”

He adjusted immediately, his tongue moving in slow, deliberate circles around my clit. My thighs tensed, heat building already.

“Use your fingers too. Inside me.”

I felt him shift, felt one finger slide into me carefully. The combination made my head fall back against the pillows.

“Two,” I said, voice rougher now. “And curl them up. There—fuck, exactly like that.”

He was a quick study, I’d give him that. His mouth stayed focused on my clit while his fingers worked inside me, finding that spot that made my legs shake. I had to brace one hand on his shoulder to keep steady.

“Don’t stop,” I managed. “Faster with your fingers. Keep your tongue—yes, God, just like that—”

The orgasm built fast, coiling tight in my lower belly. I could see us in the mirror if I lifted my head—my face flushed, my chest heaving, my fingers tangled in his dark hair while he worked between my legs. The visual added another layer, made it hotter.

“I’m close,” I warned him. “Don’t you dare stop.”

He didn’t. His fingers curled harder, his tongue moving in tight circles, and I felt it crest—that perfect moment before—

“Fuck—”

The orgasm hit hard, pleasure rolling through me in waves, my whole body clenching around his fingers. He didn’t stop, just gentled his touch, working me through it until I had to pull his head back because I was too sensitive.

“Good,” I breathed, looking down at him. His chin was wet, his eyes dark with want, his cock visibly hard between his legs. “Very good.”

I pulled him up to me, kissed him hard enough to taste myself on his tongue. My hands roamed across his back, feeling the muscles flex under my palms, then moved lower to cup his ass, pull him against me.

“On your back,” I said against his mouth. “I’m not done with you yet.”

He obeyed immediately, rolling onto his back on the bed. I moved to the nightstand, opened the drawer, pulled out what I needed. Condoms. Lube—the good kind, flavored, watermelon, my favorite. I set them on the nightstand where we could reach them.

I picked up a condom first, tore open the packet with my teeth. “Stay still.”

I positioned it at the head of his cock and rolled it down slowly, smoothing it over his length. He was thick—my hand looked small wrapped around him. I made sure it was secure, no air pockets, properly fitted.

Then I reached for the lube, poured some into my palm. The watermelon scent filled the air immediately.

“I like this,” I explained, warming it between my hands before wrapping them around his covered cock. He hissed, his hips jerking up. “It makes everything feel better. Taste better.”

I stroked him slowly, thoroughly, coating the condom completely. The lube was slick and warm, and I watched his face as I worked—the way his jaw clenched, the way his breathing changed.

“Fuck,” he breathed. “That feels—”

“Perfect.” I finished coating him, wiped my hands on the towel I kept in the nightstand for exactly this purpose. Then I climbed over him, positioned myself above his cock, and reached down to angle him against me.

The head pressed against my entrance, and I sank down slowly.

The stretch was intense—perfect, filling, exactly what my body needed after that first orgasm. The lube made him slide in easily despite how thick he was, but I could still feel every inch. I took him completely, bottomed out with a gasp, and just stayed there for a moment, adjusting to the fullness.

“Christ,” he breathed. “You feel incredible.”

I didn’t answer, just started moving. Slow rolls of my hips, finding the angle that made us both groan. The lube meant there was no friction, just smooth gliding heat. I could feel it slicking between my thighs, coating us both.

“Touch me,” I said. “My breasts. I want your hands on me.”

His hands came up immediately, cupping my breasts, thumbs brushing over my nipples. I arched into the touch, riding him steadily, my pace increasing.

“Harder,” I instructed. “Pinch them. Don’t be careful.”

He obeyed, and the sharp sensation made my rhythm stutter. Good. I wanted that edge of pain mixed with pleasure. My hands braced on his chest as I rode him harder, chasing more sensation.

I reached down between us, ran one finger along where we were joined—felt him sliding in and out of me, felt the combination of our arousal and the flavored lube coating everything. I brought my finger to my mouth, tasted it.

Watermelon. Me. Him. Salt and sweet and dirty all at once.

Marcus watched me do it, his eyes going impossibly darker. “That’s the hottest thing I’ve ever seen.”

“I know.” I leaned forward, braced my hands on his chest more firmly. “Now fuck me properly. Hard. Don’t hold back.”

His hands went to my hips, gripping tight enough to bruise, and he started thrusting up into me hard. I matched his rhythm, our bodies slapping together now, the careful control evaporating. This was what I’d wanted—the roughness, the intensity, the feeling of being completely claimed.

“Position change,” I gasped, my second orgasm already building. “Hands and knees. I want to watch in the mirror.”

We separated long enough to rearrange. I moved to the edge of the bed on my hands and knees, positioning myself so I could see the full-length mirror across the room. Back arched, ass up, knees spread. I looked over my shoulder at him.

“Behind me. Now.”

Marcus moved into position behind me, his hands gripping my hips. The first thrust from this angle made me cry out—deeper, fuller, hitting spots that made my arms shake. I could see us in the mirror—my face, his body behind mine, the way his muscles flexed as he fucked me.

“Harder,” I demanded. “I said don’t hold back—”

He gave me what I asked for. Rough, driving thrusts that pushed me forward on the bed. My arms shook with the effort of holding myself up. I watched his face in the mirror—concentration and pleasure and something almost feral.

“Talk to me,” I said, though my voice was breaking now. “Tell me—”

“You’re perfect,” he ground out. “Watching you take me—fuck, Azure—”

The second orgasm built differently, starting deeper, more intense. I could feel it in my thighs, my core, spreading outward. My instructions were getting less coherent now, just fragments: “Harder—there—don’t stop—”

And then it came out, unbidden: “Mine.”

The word hung in the air between us. I hadn’t meant to say it. Didn’t do possessive. Didn’t claim.

But my body didn’t care what I meant to do.

“Say it,” I heard myself demand, and my voice sounded desperate. Uncontrolled. “Say you’re mine.”

“I’m yours,” he said immediately.

The crack in me widened. Dangerous. This was dangerous.

“Again—”

“Yours, Azure. Fucking yours—”

The orgasm hit like an earthquake, my whole body locking up, clenching around him so hard he groaned. I couldn’t stay up on my hands, collapsed forward onto the bed as pleasure rolled through me in waves. Bigger than the first one, deeper, leaving me shaking and gasping and split open in ways I hadn’t planned for.

He slowed but didn’t stop, working me through it with shallow thrusts until I could breathe again.

“Shower,” I managed when I could speak, my voice still unsteady. “I want you in the shower.”

“Now?”

“Unless you’re done?”

“Not even close.”

I pulled forward, felt him slide out of me with a wet sound. My legs were unsteady when I stood. I hesitated for half a second, looking at him—at what we’d just done, at the line I’d just crossed.

This was not how I did things.

I was letting this go further than intended.

I held out my hand anyway. “Come on.”

The bathroom was all glass and marble, the shower large enough for three people, with a floor-to-ceiling mirror on one wall that I’d had installed for mornings when I wanted to watch myself get ready. The rainfall showerhead was one of my favorite features, along with the wall jets that could hit from three different angles.

I turned on the water, adjusted the temperature until steam started to rise. Marcus followed me in—I saw him discreetly remove the condom, drop it in the trash, then grab a fresh one from the small container I kept on the bathroom counter. Smart. Prepared.

The hot water cascaded over both of us immediately. I tilted my head back, let it soak my hair, wash away the sweat and lube and everything we’d already done.

When I looked at him, he was watching me with that same hungry expression. I saw him roll the fresh condom on efficiently, saw his cock hard again despite two intense sessions.

“Thinking ahead,” I observed.

“Seemed practical.”

I pulled him closer under the spray, kissed him. The water streamed down between us, making everything slippery and warm. I could taste the water on his lips, feel the solid heat of his body against mine.

I broke the kiss, turned around, braced my hands against the glass of the mirror. The surface was already fogging from the steam, but I could still see our reflections—ghostly, indistinct, but enough.

“This position,” I said, looking at his reflection. “Same as before. I want to watch.”

Marcus moved behind me immediately, and I felt him line himself up, felt the head of his cock pressing against me. Then he pushed in—one smooth stroke that made us both groan.

This angle was even deeper. The water ran over us, creating additional slickness, and I watched our distorted reflections in the steaming mirror as he started to move. Slower than before, more deliberate, building up gradually.

“You feel different like this,” he said, his voice rough in my ear. “Tighter. Fuck—”

“You can go harder,” I told him, bracing my hands more firmly against the glass. “I can take it.”

His grip on my hips tightened, and he gave me what I asked for. Hard, driving thrusts that made my breasts bounce, that sent water splashing everywhere. I kept my eyes on the mirror, watched him fuck me, watched my face show everything I was feeling.

“You like watching,” he observed, breathless. “Seeing yourself.”

“Yes.” No point denying it. “I like knowing what I look like. How you look when you’re inside me.”

“So fucking hot,” he muttered, and increased his pace.

I reached back between my legs, found where we were joined, pressed against my clit with wet fingers. The additional stimulation made me clench around him, and he made a sound that was almost a growl.

The third orgasm built fast—my body already primed, already sensitive from the previous two. I watched myself in the mirror as it approached, saw my face change, my mouth fall open.

“I’m close,” I warned him, rubbing harder. “Don’t stop—”

“Not stopping,” he ground out, his rhythm getting erratic. “Fuck, Azure—”

The orgasm hit hard—a bright sharp burst of pleasure that made my knees buckle, made me cry out loud enough that it echoed off the tile. My whole body clenched around him, and I heard him curse, felt him getting close.

Before he could finish, before that wave could take him over, I made a decision. I slid forward, off his cock, feeling him slip out of me. Turned fast, my hand already reaching for him.

“What—” he started, confused, breathing hard.

“Take it off,” I said, gesturing to the condom. “I want to watch you come.”

His eyes went wide, but he obeyed immediately, rolling the condom off and dropping it. I wrapped my hand around his bare cock—hot and slick and so close to the edge I could feel him pulsing.

“Come for me,” I said, stroking him firmly, deliberately. “Let me see it.”

It took maybe three strokes. He came with a groan that sounded like it was pulled from somewhere deep, his cock pulsing in my hand. I watched his face—that moment of total surrender, jaw going slack, eyes closing—as ropes of cum shot out, white against the tile, mixing immediately with the shower water running between us. Some of it hit my stomach, warm for a second before the water washed it away.

I kept stroking him through it, milking every last pulse, watching the cum and water run together down the drain. His hand came up to brace against the wall beside me, his breathing ragged.

“Fuck,” he breathed when he could speak. “That was—”

“Yeah.”

My legs finally gave out. I slid down the tile wall to sit on the shower floor, the water still running over us. Marcus followed, sitting beside me, both of us spent and breathing hard.

“I can’t move,” I admitted, my head falling back against the tile.

“Same.” He reached for me, pulled me against his side.

I went, too exhausted to maintain any distance, and let my head rest on his shoulder. We sat there on the shower floor, water cascading over us, steam filling the air. His arm was around me, my hand resting on his thigh, both of us too tired to do anything but breathe.

This was not protocol. I did not sit on shower floors with men I’d just met.

I was doing it anyway.

“That was…” he started, then trailed off.

“Intense,” I finished.

“Yeah.”

I closed my eyes, felt the hot water on my face, felt his heartbeat against my cheek. For the first time all day, my mind was quiet. No contracts, no negotiations, no tension between my shoulders. Just this—warmth, exhaustion, satisfaction.

Several minutes passed. The water started to cool.

“We should get up,” he said quietly.

“Probably.”

Neither of us moved immediately. Finally, I forced myself to stand, offered him my hand. He took it, and I pulled him up. We actually cleaned up then—quick, efficient, practical.

When we were both rinsed and the water was running cold, I turned it off. Handed him a towel from the warming rack.

We dried off in silence. I pulled on a silk robe from the hook on the door, tied it at my waist. He wrapped the towel around his hips.

“I should probably go,” he said, though he didn’t sound like he wanted to.

I checked the time on the bathroom clock. Nearly midnight.

“Or you could stay,” I heard myself say. The words surprised me.

He looked at me. “Are you sure?”

“I don’t say things I don’t mean.”

He smiled—slow, genuine. “Okay.”

I gave him lounge pants and a t-shirt from the closet, watched him dress. The clothes fit him well enough—I kept guest sizes for a reason, though I’d never actually had guests before.

We moved back to the bedroom. I adjusted the thermostat down two degrees—he’d be warmer than I was used to. Put a glass of water on his nightstand without comment.

Then I picked up my phone from the dresser.

“You’re probably hungry,” I said, pulling up the building’s restaurant menu. “I am.”

“Starving, actually.”

I scrolled through the options, selected efficiently. “Do you have any allergies?”

“No.”

“Good.” I added items to the cart without asking his preference—wagyu steak, truffle risotto, seared scallops, the chef’s tasting of appetizers. Enough for two people to share. When the total came up, I didn’t hesitate, just confirmed the order. “Forty-five minutes.”

“That’s a lot of food.”

“You earned it.” I set my phone down, looked at him. “Consider it payment for following directions.”

His smile was slow. “Best consulting work I’ve done all month.”

We climbed into bed to wait—my bed, the sheets already rumpled from earlier. He settled next to me, and after a moment’s hesitation, I moved closer. Not touching, but close enough to feel his warmth.

“Azure?” he said into the darkness.

“Yeah?”

“Earlier, during… you said ‘mine.'” He paused. “Did you mean it?”

I was quiet for a long moment, thinking about that crack that had opened in me, that unexpected possessiveness that I still didn’t understand. I was supposed to be controlled, clinical, not someone who got attached after one night.

But I’d also learned from seven years with Dr. Morrison that sometimes the things we didn’t plan for were the things we needed most.

“I don’t know yet,” I said honestly. “But I didn’t hate it.”

“Neither did I.”

He reached out in the dark, found my hand, linked our fingers together. The gesture was simple, intimate, unexpected.

I didn’t pull away.

We stayed like that, waiting for dinner, his hand in mine, the city lights filtering through the windows. Neither of us overthinking what any of it meant.

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Second Helpings: A Steamy Cozy Domestic Romance by Scarlett Hawthorne

A steamy photo of a couple embracing on a kitchen counter, illustrating a cozy domestic romance scene with soft lighting.

A cozy, intimate night in the Victorian Quarter where comfort food leads to a very different kind of hunger. Scarlett learns that sometimes, the best part of dinner is asking for seconds… in the bedroom.

— Scarlett Hawthorne —

The Literary Bean smelled like dark roast and old paper, which was exactly why I’d claimed the armchair by the fireplace as mine three years ago. Morning light filtered through the tall windows, catching dust motes and turning them gold, and I had my laptop open on my knees even though I’d written maybe two sentences in the past hour.

James was there again.

He’d been there every morning for two weeks now, always at the same table near the window, always with a battered leather notebook and a cup of black coffee that Nora never had to ask about anymore. I’d noticed him the first day—hard not to, the way he moved through space like he was taking up exactly the amount of room he needed and not an inch more. Tall, lean in the way runners are lean, dark hair starting to gray at the temples even though he couldn’t be more than thirty-four. He had writer’s calluses on his fingers and a quiet warmth in his eyes, the kind that made you want to tell him things.

I’d introduced myself on day three, because that’s what you do in the Literary Bean. It’s not Starbucks. You don’t hide behind headphones and pretend other people don’t exist.

“Scarlett,” I’d said, and held out my hand.

“James.” His handshake was warm, gentle, lasted just long enough to feel genuine. “I’ve been wanting to introduce myself but you always look so focused. Didn’t want to interrupt.”

“You can always interrupt,” I said, and meant it. “Writing is just procrastination with extra steps most days.”

He’d smiled at that—a real smile that reached his eyes. “Same. I spend half my time staring at blank pages and convincing myself it’s ‘thinking.'”

I’d liked him immediately, which was dangerous. I liked most people immediately, which meant I usually ended up carrying more weight than I’d planned to.

But James was different.

Over two weeks, we’d fallen into an easy rhythm. Morning coffee, conversations that wandered from books to weather to the small absurdities of daily life. He asked about my work but never pushed when I deflected. He told me about his novel—something about loss and learning to want things again—and the way he talked about it was vulnerable without being heavy, honest without demanding comfort.

“How’s your story going?” he’d asked yesterday, stirring sugar into his coffee.

“Slowly,” I’d admitted. “I’m stuck on this character who doesn’t know what she wants anymore. She’s spent so long taking care of everyone else that she’s forgotten how to want things for herself.”

“That sounds lonely,” he’d said quietly. Then: “Do you relate to her?”

The question was gentle, genuinely curious, and I’d found myself answering honestly. “Maybe. Sometimes.”

He’d nodded, didn’t push. Just said, “I hope she figures it out. She deserves to.”

The way he’d said it—like he meant me, not just the character—had stayed with me all day.

This morning, he looked up when I walked in, and his face brightened in a way that made warmth bloom in my chest.

“Morning, Scarlett.”

“Morning.” I got my oat milk cappuccino from Nora, who winked at me in a way that suggested she’d noticed the way James and I gravitated toward each other, and settled into my chair.

“Can I ask you something?” James said, closing his notebook. “And you can tell me if I’m overstepping.”

“Sure.”

“You always ask about other people,” he said, voice gentle. “What they’re working on, how they’re doing. I’ve never heard you talk about yourself for more than a sentence or two before you redirect. Is that just writer humility, or something else?”

I felt my cheeks warm. “I don’t know. Habit, I guess.”

“Mm.” He took a sip of his coffee, considering. “I do the same thing sometimes. Spent the year after my wife died deflecting every conversation away from myself. Easier than admitting how not-okay I was.”

The vulnerability in his admission made something in my chest ease.

“Your wife?” I asked softly.

“Sarah. She died two years ago. Car accident.” He said it simply, matter-of-fact, the way you talk about old pain that’s been worn smooth. “For a long time after, I couldn’t talk about myself without it becoming about grief. So I just… stopped. Asked about everyone else instead.”

“I’m sorry,” I said.

“Thank you.” He smiled, a little sad but genuine. “I’m better now. Mostly. But I still catch myself doing it—hiding behind questions about other people. So when I see someone else doing the same thing…” He paused. “I recognize it.”

I felt seen in a way that should have been uncomfortable but wasn’t.

“What made you stop?” I asked. “Deflecting, I mean.”

“Therapy, mostly.” He laughed softly. “And realizing that the people who really cared about me wanted to know how I was doing. Not because they needed to fix me, but because they actually cared. That was hard to accept.”

“That people could care without needing you to be okay?”

“Yeah. Exactly.” His eyes met mine, warm and knowing. “Anyway. That’s my oversharing for the morning. But I meant what I said—you don’t have to redirect with me. I’m genuinely curious about your writing, your day, whatever you want to talk about. No pressure, though.”

I smiled, feeling something unfurl in my chest that I hadn’t realized was tight.

“Thanks, James.”

“Anytime.”

We walked together that evening.

It wasn’t planned—we’d both left the Bean at the same time, and the autumn air was crisp enough to make walking feel good, and somehow we’d ended up on the path through Crescent Green Park, where gaslamps were starting to flicker on and the last golden light was catching the Victorian houses in a way that made them look like paintings.

“I love this time of year,” James said, hands in his pockets. “Everything’s dying but it’s so beautiful.”

“Morbid.”

“Little bit.” He grinned. “Occupational hazard. Writers and death, you know.”

“What’s your novel about? Really about, I mean. Not the elevator pitch.”

He was quiet for a moment, considering. “It’s about learning to want things again after loss. How grief can make you afraid to reach for anything because you know how much it hurts to lose it. And how you have to do it anyway, or you’re not really living.”

“That’s beautiful,” I said softly.

“Thanks. It’s also terrifying to write.” He glanced at me. “What about yours? The one with the woman who doesn’t know what she wants?”

“She’s spent her whole life being useful,” I said, surprising myself with the honesty. “Being the person people come to when they need something. And somewhere along the way she forgot that she’s allowed to need things too. To want things just for herself.”

“Do you think she’ll figure it out?”

“I don’t know how to write that ending yet. I’m not sure what it looks like.”

James stopped walking, turned to face me. The lamplight caught his face, made the gray in his hair look silver.

“Can I tell you what I think?” he asked gently.

“Please.”

“I think maybe she needs someone who wants her just because. Not because of what she can give them. Not because she makes their life easier. Just because of who she is.” He paused. “And I think she probably deserves that, even if she doesn’t believe it yet.”

My throat felt tight. “That’s a good ending.”

“Yeah?”

“Yeah.”

We started walking again, and when we reached the corner where he’d turn toward his building and I’d head toward mine, he touched my arm lightly.

“Would you want to have dinner sometime?” he asked. “My place, maybe? I make a decent pasta, and I’d really like to keep talking to you. No agenda, just… company.”

The way he asked—hopeful but not presumptuous, genuinely wanting my company—made my answer easy.

“I’d like that.”

“Tomorrow? Seven?”

“Perfect.”

He smiled, and I felt it in my chest.

“See you tomorrow, Scarlett.”

I arrived at seven-fifteen with a ceramic dish of baked ziti.

I’d told myself I wasn’t going to bring anything, that James had invited me just for company, but the habit was so ingrained I’d found myself cooking anyway. Something warm and comforting, because that’s what I did. I took care of people.

His apartment was on the third floor of a restored Victorian on the edge of the Quarter, the kind of building that had original hardwood floors and crown molding and windows that rattled slightly when the wind picked up. He opened the door in jeans and a soft gray henley with the sleeves pushed up, and his face lit up when he saw me.

Then his eyes dropped to the dish in my hands, and he laughed—warm, delighted.

“You brought food.”

“I know, I know, you said you were cooking, but I couldn’t help myself.” I felt my cheeks heat. “Old habits.”

“It’s sweet.” He took the dish from me, and when our fingers brushed I felt the contact like electricity. “Really. Thank you. We’ll have leftovers for days now.”

He set it on the counter and turned back to me, and there was something soft in his expression that made my breath catch.

“I’m glad you’re here,” he said simply.

“Me too.”

The apartment smelled like garlic and tomatoes, warm and inviting. Books everywhere—on shelves, stacked on the coffee table, piled next to the couch. A writer’s space, lived-in and loved, the kind of place that felt like someone actually used it for thinking.

“Wine?” he offered, already reaching for a bottle.

“Please.”

He poured two glasses and handed me one, then gestured to the small kitchen table where he’d already set two places. Candles, even. Simple white ones that flickered softly in the dimming light.

“This is lovely,” I said.

“I wanted it to be nice.” He seemed almost shy about it. “You can sit, or you can keep me company while I finish cooking. Whatever feels comfortable.”

I sat, watching him move around the kitchen with easy competence. He stirred sauce, tasted it, added a pinch of something. The way he moved was unhurried, present, like he was enjoying the process.

“Can I ask you something?” I said after a moment.

“Always.”

“Why did you move to Blackthorn? You said you needed a change, but…”

“Sarah and I lived in Seattle,” he said, not looking away from the stove. “After she died, everything there reminded me of her. Our apartment, our favorite restaurants, the running trails we used to do together. For a while that was comforting. Then it started to hurt more than it helped.”

He turned to face me, leaning against the counter.

“I needed to be somewhere that was just mine,” he continued. “Somewhere I could figure out who I am without her. Not because I want to forget her—I don’t. But because I need to know I can still be a whole person on my own.”

“And Blackthorn?”

“Seemed quiet. Beautiful. A good place to think.” He smiled. “And the Literary Bean has excellent coffee.”

“It does.”

“Plus,” he added, voice going softer, “I met you. So that was a bonus.”

Heat flooded my chest, my face. “James—”

“Too much?”

“No. Just… unexpected.”

“Good unexpected or bad unexpected?”

“Good,” I said quietly. “Definitely good.”

He held my gaze for a long moment, something electric passing between us, then turned back to the stove with a small smile.

“Dinner’s almost ready.”

We ate and talked about everything—books, writing, the ways loss changes you and the ways it doesn’t. James asked questions that felt like genuine curiosity, not interviews, and when I found myself deflecting he didn’t call me out on it. He just waited, patient and warm, until I felt safe enough to answer honestly.

“Tell me about your ex,” he said over the second glass of wine, voice gentle. “If you want to. No pressure.”

I surprised myself by wanting to.

“David. We dated for eight years. I thought—” I stopped, started again. “I thought if I was good enough, supportive enough, if I took care of everything, he’d stay.”

“And he didn’t?”

“He left for someone who didn’t try so hard. Who didn’t make him feel like a project.” I laughed, but it wasn’t funny. “The worst part is, I understand why. I must have been exhausting.”

James was quiet for a moment. Then: “Or he was taking advantage of someone who gave more than he deserved.”

“Maybe.”

“Scarlett.” He reached across the table, and when I gave him my hand he held it gently. “From what I can see, you’re someone who cares deeply. Who pays attention to people, who wants to help. That’s not a flaw. That’s a gift.”

“It doesn’t feel like a gift when people leave anyway.”

“Then they weren’t the right people.” He squeezed my hand. “The right person wouldn’t make you feel like caring is too much. They’d know how lucky they were.”

I felt tears prick at my eyes and blinked them back.

“How are you so kind?” I whispered.

“I’m not. I just know what it feels like to be with someone who saw you.” His voice went rough with emotion. “Sarah used to say I gave too much of myself to my writing, that I forgot to save anything for us. She wasn’t wrong. And after she died, I realized I’d give anything to have the chance to be better. To be present. To actually show up.”

“I’m sorry—”

“Don’t be. I’m telling you because I want you to know—I see how hard you try. How much you care. And I think that’s something to be celebrated, not hidden.”

The tears spilled over then, and I wiped at them with my free hand.

“Sorry, I don’t know why I’m crying—”

“You don’t have to apologize.” He stood, came around the table, and crouched beside my chair. “Hey. You’re allowed to feel things.”

“I just—” I took a shaky breath. “I’m so tired of feeling like I’m too much. Like if I just need less, want less, I’ll be easier to love.”

“Scarlett.” His hand came up to cup my cheek, thumb brushing away tears. “What if the problem wasn’t that you were too much? What if they just weren’t enough?”

The words settled into my chest like truth.

“I don’t know how to believe that,” I whispered.

“That’s okay. You don’t have to believe it tonight.” He smiled, gentle and warm. “But maybe eventually.”

I leaned into his touch, and when he stood he pulled me up with him, wrapped his arms around me in a hug that felt like safety. I buried my face in his chest and let myself be held, just for a moment, without having to give anything back.

“Thank you,” I said into his shirt.

“Anytime.”

When I pulled back, we were close enough that I could feel his breath on my face. His eyes dropped to my mouth, then back up, a question in them.

“Can I kiss you?” he asked softly.

“Please.”

He kissed me slowly, sweetly, his hand cradling the back of my head like I was something precious. It was gentle at first, tentative, and then I made a small sound and his other hand came to my waist, pulling me closer.

The kiss deepened, turned hungry, and I felt heat flood through my whole body. My hands fisted in his shirt and he groaned into my mouth, the sound sending sparks down my spine.

When we broke apart, both breathing hard, he rested his forehead against mine.

“I’ve been wanting to do that for weeks,” he admitted.

“Why didn’t you?”

“Wanted to make sure you wanted it too.”

“I do.” My hands slid up his chest. “I really, really do.”

His eyes darkened with want. “Do you want to stay?”

“Yes.”

He took my hand, laced our fingers together, and led me down the hallway to his bedroom—a space full of warm lamplight and books and a bed with rumpled sheets that looked slept-in and real.

When he closed the door behind us, the sound felt like permission.

Like inevitability.

Like everything I’d been trying not to want but couldn’t help wanting anyway.

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Eight Ball & Bruises: A Competitive Enemies to Lovers Romance by Amber Kane

A stylized, gritty illustration of a woman, Amber Kane, intently leaning over a pool table to take a shot under a warm hanging lamp. The high-contrast cover art sets a tense, atmospheric mood for a competitive enemies to lovers story in a dive bar setting.

In the neon glow of a dive bar, a high-stakes game of pool turns into a battle for dominance. Amber hates losing, but when the wager involves submission, she might just enjoy the penalty…

— Amber Kane —

Blacklight Tavern was packed that night—the kind of crowded where the air turns thick with sweat, spilled whiskey, and the low thump of bass I felt rattling my ribs. Neon from the signs outside bled through the windows in pulses—red, blue, electric pink—washing the crowd in colors that made everyone look half-dangerous.

Six games down, six wins, and my pocket was heavy with crumpled bills. I was leaning over the far table, lining up an easy corner pocket on the eight-ball, when I felt it. Not a glance. Not a casual look. Watching.

I sank the shot clean, straightened slow, and turned.

Jax Harlan.

He was leaning against the bar rail like he’d been there all night, one elbow propped, a rocks glass halfway to his mouth. Tall. Dark hair a little too long, falling into his eyes. Sleeves pushed up to show forearms that looked like they’d done real work—scarred knuckles, a faded tattoo I couldn’t make out from here. Leather jacket slung over the stool behind him, worn-in jeans, boots that had seen some miles.

But it was the scar I noticed first. Thin line slicing clean through his left eyebrow, white against tan skin. Old. The kind you get in a fight that mattered.

I’d seen him before—three, maybe four times over the past month. Always quiet. Always alone. Always betting big on the games he played, and I’d never seen him lose. He had the kind of stillness that made you wonder what he was thinking, and the kind of eyes that didn’t look away when you caught him staring.

Tonight, he wasn’t playing. He was watching me.

I smirked, chalked my cue, and called out loud enough for the whole bar to hear. “Next game’s open. Hundred bucks. Loser buys drinks all night.”

The crowd shifted. A few regulars laughed—the usual Blacklight mix of leather and ink, people who came here because nobody asked questions. Lou, the bartender, shook his head from behind the taps like he’d seen this routine before. Gruff bastard never said much, but I caught the hint of a smile before he turned back to pouring.

Jax pushed off the bar and walked over. Didn’t ask if the table was free. Just set his glass down on the rail, picked up a cue from the rack, and started racking the balls with steady hands.

“Make it two hundred,” he said. Voice low, rough around the edges. Not cocky. Just certain.

I felt the first real spark then. Not annoyance. Heat.

“Done.”

We didn’t bother shaking on it.

Game One

I broke hard. Balls scattered like they were scared of me—two stripes dropped clean. I ran three more before I had to bank a tough shot off the far cushion. Missed it by half an inch.

Jax stepped up calm as hell and cleared four solids without blinking. When he leaned over the table for his fifth shot, I caught the flex in his shoulders, the way his jaw tightened in focus. The scar through his eyebrow pulled when he squinted down the cue. I wanted to touch it.

He sank the shot. Then the next. By the time he was lining up the eight-ball, I was leaning against the wall with my arms crossed, watching him the way he’d been watching me.

He pocketed it clean, straightened, and met my eyes. “Your break,” he said.

I laughed—short, sharp. “Tied at one-nothing isn’t exactly winning, Harlan.”

His mouth twitched. Almost a smile. “Didn’t say I was winning. Just said it’s your break.”

I grabbed my cue and stepped up to rack. He didn’t move. Just stood there, close enough that I could smell leather and something else—faint cologne, maybe, or just the heat coming off him. When I bent to set the triangle, I felt his eyes drop. Good.

I took my time standing back up, letting my tank ride up just enough to show the cut of my abs. Turned my head, caught him staring, and grinned.

“See something you like?”

“Yeah.” No hesitation. “Your break’s sloppy. You’re telegraphing the shot.”

I wanted to punch him. Or kiss him. Maybe both.

Instead, I stepped up and broke so hard the cue ball nearly jumped the table.

Game Two

This one was closer.

We traded shots, trash talk climbing with every round. I leaned over the table more than I needed to, letting my jeans pull tight across my ass. He noticed. Didn’t stare—just a flicker of his eyes before his next shot went wide.

I grinned, called my pocket loud, and sank the stripe clean.

“Tied,” I said, stepping close enough that my cue brushed his hip. “Want to make this interesting?”

He tilted his head, and the scar through his eyebrow caught the neon glow bleeding in from Emberline Street—red light washing across his face, turning his eyes darker.

“How interesting?”

“Double or nothing,” I said. “Four hundred. Winner calls the shots after close.”

The bar had gone quieter now. Not silent—never silent at Blacklight—but the crowd around us thinned, conversations dropping to murmurs. Even Lou stopped wiping down glasses to watch.

Jax didn’t blink. Just held my gaze, and I swear I felt the weight of that stare between my legs.

“Five hundred,” he said. “And the winner decides what happens in the back office.”

My pulse kicked. Hard.

I should’ve told him to fuck off. Should’ve walked away. Should’ve taken my winnings and called it a night.

Instead, I smiled sharp and said, “Deal.”

Game Three

This one hurt.

We were both sweating now—jackets off, sleeves rolled. The bass from the jukebox synced with my heartbeat, and every time I bent over the table, I knew he was watching the line of my back, the way my tank clung to my ribs, the flex in my thighs when I braced for a shot.

When he leaned in, I watched the way his shoulders moved, the tightness in his jaw, the scar pulling when he focused. I wanted to trace it with my tongue. Wanted to see if it was as rough as it looked or if the skin there was soft.

The score stayed neck and neck. Him pulling ahead by one. Me clawing it back. The crowd that was left had stopped pretending not to watch. Someone turned the music down halfway through, and the click of balls, the scrape of chalk, the low murmur of our voices—it all felt louder than it should.

I had one ball left. Then the eight. He had two.

I lined up my shot—a straight sink into the corner pocket. Easy. Should’ve been automatic.

But I was watching him instead of the table. Watching the way he leaned against the wall with his arms crossed. Watching the way his eyes stayed on me, unblinking.

I pulled the shot. Scratched.

Fuck.

The room exhaled. Someone whistled low. Lou shook his head and poured a shot for himself.

Jax stepped up to the table. Calm. Didn’t smile. Didn’t gloat. Just ran the rest of the table. Clean.

The eight-ball dropped into the corner pocket with a soft, final clack.

Last call had come and gone. The lights flickered to half-strength—neon bleeding through the windows the only real color left in the place. The handful of people still lingering started filtering out, but no one said a word to us.

Jax picked up the stack of bills from the rail—five hundred in crumpled twenties and fifties—and walked over. Slow. Deliberate.

He didn’t hand me the money.

He slid it into my back pocket, fingers lingering just long enough to press against my ass through denim.

“Drinks are on you,” he said quietly. “But I’m calling the shots.”

I should’ve shoved him off. Should’ve told him where to stick his winnings.

Instead, I felt my pulse in my throat and between my legs, and I laughed—low, rough, the sound scraping out of me like I’d already lost something I hadn’t meant to bet.

“Back office,” I said. “Now.”

Lou had already disappeared into the back. The last stragglers were gone. The bar was dark except for the neon bleeding red and blue through the windows.

I walked ahead of him, hips swaying deliberate, and I heard his boots on the floor behind me—steady, unhurried, like he had all the time in the world.

The back office door was half-open. I pushed through, and he followed.

I locked the door behind us.

The office was small—beat-up leather couch shoved against one wall, desk cluttered with invoices and empty beer bottles, single bare bulb swinging overhead. The bass from the bar still thumped through the walls, muffled but steady, vibrating the floor under my boots.

I turned, ready to take control back—ready to shove him against the wall and make him work for whatever he thought he’d won.

But he was already on me.

One hand fisted in my hair, yanking my head back hard enough that I gasped. His mouth crashed into mine—no asking, no hesitation, just teeth and tongue and the taste of whiskey sharp between us.

I bit his lip. Hard. Tasted copper.

He growled low in his throat and spun me, bent me over the desk so fast my palms slapped wood.

“Thought you were gonna call the shots,” I said, pushing back against him, testing.

“I am.”

I shoved off the desk, twisted in his grip, and swung. My fist caught his jaw—not hard enough to drop him, but hard enough to make him let go. He stepped back, hand coming up to his mouth, eyes going dark. Good. I wanted him to work for it.

He came at me again, and this time I met him halfway. We grappled—his hands on my wrists, mine clawing at his shoulders, both of us breathing hard, neither one giving. I hooked my leg behind his knee and tried to drop him. He shifted his weight, spun me again, slammed me back against the desk.

This time he pinned my wrists above my head with one hand.

I could’ve kept fighting. Could’ve kneed him, bitten him again, made him bleed before he got what he wanted. But I felt the heat of him pressed against me, felt the way his chest heaved, saw the scar through his eyebrow catch the light as he stared down at me—and I realized something.

I didn’t want to win this one. I wanted to see what happened if I let him.

So I stopped fighting. And smiled.

“About time,” he said, voice rough.

Then he yanked my jeans open.

My jeans were too tight to rip off—he had to work them down, dragging them to mid-thigh with my thong caught in the waistband. Cool air hit wet heat, and I heard him exhale like he’d been holding his breath for hours.

“Jesus… you’ve been like this the whole time.”

“Less talking.”

He dropped to his knees.

One lick—long, deliberate, tongue flattening as it dragged from my clit down to my entrance. I bucked. He pinned my hips to the desk with one forearm and did it again. Slower this time. Then a third, pressing inside just enough to make me curse.

I tried to push back, tried to take more, but he held me still—strong, controlled, making me wait. I hated it. I loved it.

“Fuck,” I breathed when his tongue circled my clit. “Don’t stop.”

He didn’t. Just kept working me—licking, sucking, tongue pressing flat and then pointed, finding every spot that made me gasp. When he slid two fingers inside me, curling them just right, I felt my knees go weak.

“That’s it,” he said against me. “Let go.”

I came on his mouth—hard, sudden, gripping the edge of the desk so tight my knuckles went white. He worked me through it, tongue still moving until I had to push his head away because it was too much.

When he finally stood, I heard his belt hit the floor, heard the rasp of his zipper. Felt the blunt head of his cock drag through my slick once… twice… teasing.

“Tell me you want it.”

“Fuck you.”

He pushed in an inch and stopped.

“Tell me.”

I clenched around that inch, trying to pull him deeper. He pulled back.

“Say it, Amber.”

I turned my head, met his eyes over my shoulder, and smiled sharp. “Fuck me, Jax. Hard. Or get the hell out.”

He slammed in to the hilt.

The sound I made wasn’t dignified. Neither was the second when he pulled out slow and did it again—harder, deeper, splitting me open until I felt him everywhere.

He didn’t ease in. Didn’t give me time to adjust. Just set a brutal pace—one hand fisted in my hair again, the other gripping my hip hard enough that I knew I’d see bruises tomorrow. Every thrust shoved me against the desk, papers scattering, pens rolling off the edge, my tank riding up so my stomach pressed flat against rough wood.

I came fast—shocked at how quick he got me there, how hard it hit. My pussy clenched around him so tight he groaned my name like a curse, but he didn’t stop. Didn’t even slow down.

He kept fucking me through it, dragging it out until I was shaking, until I couldn’t tell where one orgasm ended and the next began. Then he slowed—rolled his hips instead of pounding, grinding deep, hitting something inside me that made my vision blur.

“You thought you had me,” he said against my ear, voice ragged. “All that trash talk. All that leaning over the table just to distract me. And now look at you.”

I laughed—breathless, wrecked—and reached back to dig my nails into his thigh. “Shut up and make me come again.”

He did.

Pulled me upright, back to his chest, one arm banded under my breasts, the other sliding down to circle my clit while he fucked me standing. I came again—harder this time, legs shaking so bad he had to hold me up.

When I could breathe again, I twisted in his grip and shoved him backward onto the couch. His shirt was still on. That wasn’t going to work.

I yanked it over his head—took in the scars, the ink, the muscle—and raked my nails down his chest hard enough to leave welts. He hissed, grabbed my wrists, tried to pin them. I bit his hand.

He let go, and I climbed on top of him, sank down slow, watched his face as I took him inch by inch. His jaw tightened. The scar through his eyebrow pulled. His hands came up to my hips, gripping, trying to control the pace.

I slapped his hands away. “My turn.”

I rode him slow. Torturously slow. Rolling my hips, clenching every time I sank down, watching him fight to keep his eyes open. When he tried to thrust up into me, I lifted off, hovered just out of reach until he stopped.

“Beg,” I said.

“Fuck you.”

I smiled. Sank down. Clenched. Lifted again. “Beg.”

He cracked. “Please—”

I gave him what he wanted. Rode him hard and fast, chasing my own release, nails digging into his shoulders, his chest, anywhere I could reach. I felt the moment his control snapped—felt him try to flip me, try to take back over.

I raked my nails down his back instead. Deep. Hard enough that I felt skin split under my fingertips, felt the heat of blood slicking my palms.

He cursed, grabbed my hips, and slammed me down one last time.

I came on his lap—third orgasm ripping through me so hard I bit his shoulder to keep from screaming. Tasted salt and copper and heard him groan as my teeth broke skin. Good. Let him wear my marks out of here.

We didn’t stop.

He pulled me off him, turned me, bent me over the arm of the couch. This time he went slow—maddeningly slow, dragging it out until I was begging again, until I was so wet I could hear it every time he pushed in.

“More,” I gasped. “Harder—”

He slowed down even more.

“Jax—”

“Not yet.”

He edged me. Brought me right to the edge and pulled back. Again. And again. Until I was shaking, until I couldn’t think, until all I could do was feel.

“Please,” I heard myself say, and I hated how desperate it sounded but I couldn’t stop. “Please, I need—”

“What do you need?”

“You. Fuck. Just—don’t stop, please don’t stop—”

When he finally let me come, I screamed into the couch cushions—muffled, raw, everything in me breaking open at once.

He pulled out.

I was still shaking when I felt his hands on my hips again. But this time he didn’t push back in. He waited.

I realized what he was asking—what he wanted—and I felt the weight of that choice settle between us. I could say no. Could flip over and pull him back into me the regular way. Could end this now and walk out with my head high.

Instead, I pushed up on my elbows, reached over to the desk drawer, and pulled out the half-empty bottle of lube I kept there for exactly these nights. Tossed it to him.

“There,” I said, voice rough. “Now.”

I heard him exhale—something between a laugh and a groan—and then I felt the slick coolness as he worked me open. Slow. Careful. One finger, then two, stretching until the burn eased into something else.

“Relax,” he murmured, and I felt his other hand stroke my lower back. “Let me in.”

When he finally pushed in, I felt every inch. The stretch. The fullness. The way he had to work for it even with the lube, even with me wanting it.

He started slow. Too slow. Like he thought I’d break.

“Harder,” I said.

“You sure?”

“I’m sure. Fuck me like you mean it.”

He gave me what I asked for.

Gripped my hips, pulled me back onto him, fucked me deep and steady until the burn turned into heat, until I couldn’t tell pain from pleasure, until I was clawing at the couch and gasping his name.

He reached around, found my clit, and I came one more time—vision whiting out, every muscle in my body locking tight, the orgasm so intense I forgot how to breathe for a second.

He followed right after—buried deep, hands bruising my hips, saying my name like he’d earned the right.

After, we didn’t talk much.

Cleaned up with bar towels. I zipped myself back into my jeans slow, deliberate, feeling every ache, every bruise forming under my skin. He tucked his shirt back in, and I caught sight of the scratches I’d left—red lines down his back, some still bleeding faintly. Good.

He walked me to the door, stopped, looked at me.

“Rematch?” he asked.

I smirked, still tasting him on my lip. “Next week. Same stakes.”

He nodded once and walked out into the neon rain.

I locked up, leaned against the door for a second, and laughed into the quiet.

Then I walked back to the bar.

Blacklight Tavern was dark now—chairs up on tables, neon signs humming in the silence. Lou had left the back light on for me like always, but the front was all shadows and scattered glass.

I poured myself a shot of whiskey from behind the bar. Drank it standing. Poured another.

My hips ached. My thighs were shaking. I could still feel him—inside me, on me, in the bruises blooming under my jeans and the scratches I’d left on his back.

I touched my hip where his fingers had dug in. Pressed until I felt the ache sharpen. Smiled.

I’d lost the money. Lost the game.

And I wanted the rematch more than I’d ever wanted a win. Not to beat him. To see if he could break me again.

I finished the second shot, set the glass down soft, and walked out into the rain.

By the time I got home, I was already planning next week’s wager.

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