The Bet – Dangerous Desires Read Online S.E. Law

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Erotic Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 99
Estimated words: 93224 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 466(@200wpm)___ 373(@250wpm)___ 311(@300wpm)
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My phone is on the nightstand, face-down. I keep it on silent. Sometimes I think about turning the ringer up, just to feel the vibration in my pocket, but I never do. Not anymore. The last time I heard from Thomas was the day he told me to leave the key on the counter. After that, nothing. Two months of total radio silence.

I don’t even text Stella, except when I have to because of rent, bills, and housekeeping. Otherwise, most days, I don’t. I keep my head down, do my job, pay rent on time, and pretend the rest of it is just static.

On my desk, the rough drafts from my writing workshop spill out in all directions, paper clipped in sets but never quite orderly. I’m halfway through revising a short story about a girl who drowns in her own bathtub, but the instructor’s comments are all about “voice” and “arc,” never about what really matters. I pour myself into these stories, because it’s safer than pouring myself into a person.

I check the time—5:48, almost late—and grab my bag from the hook. It’s already packed: apron, black flats, three granola bars, and the notebook where I write down all the things I’d rather not say out loud. I stuff the phone in the outside pocket, still face-down, and catch my reflection one last time in the mirror.

Chin up. Neutral face.

I exhale, the breath slow and cold.

The door to the common space opens with a sound like a scream, but it’s only the cheap metal hinges. I step out, already bracing for the shift in air, the brightness of the hallway. But there’s no one there. Just the smell of something fried from a neighboring unit, and the low rumble of a distant TV.

I make it all the way to the elevator before I realize I haven’t spoken a word in hours.

Downstairs, the street is hot, the sunlight mean and flat. I slide my sunglasses on, tuck my hair behind my ear, and keep walking. Each step is measured, deliberate, as if the world is just waiting for me to slip.

But I won’t. Not today.

Maybe not ever.

I keep going, the apartment complex receding behind me, the city folding itself open like a new chapter. For a second, I want to turn around and look at the apartment—see it from a distance, see if it looks as different as I feel. But I don’t.

Instead, I walk forward, into the gold dust and the heat, my bag heavy with everything I haven’t unpacked.

The catering shift is waiting. The night will be long.

But I am ready for it.

Even if I have to fake every minute.

The Faculty Club’s ballroom is all understated glamour: every inch waxed, every surface polished to a sheen. The chandelier is a monster of polished brass, heavy with teardrop crystals that splinter the light and paint gold across the ceiling. The carpet is thick and ancient, in some shade of maroon so deep it eats the shine off patent leather. There are at least a dozen buffet tables, each set with mirrored platters, pyramids of fruit, and the kind of imported cheese that sweats under the heat of a hundred bodies. Nothing ever tastes as good as it looks, but that’s not the point.

I move through the crowd like a rumor—quiet, fast, unobtrusive. The black-and-white of my uniform is so severe it turns me invisible, just another piece of the night’s machinery. The tray of champagne flutes I balance on my palm is a disc of pure anticipation; the stems are so thin I’m half sure they’ll snap if I look at them too hard. It’s the same brand of sparkler they always serve at these things—dry, sharp, not really sweet, but I never get to drink it. My job is to move it, not to want it.

There are more people than usual tonight. The fundraiser is for the college’s new science building, which means the room is thick with money. Men in tuxedos and women in glossy sheaths, laughing with their teeth out, hands landing a fraction too hard on each other’s arms. The air smells like white wine, narcissus, and that fake “new carpet” chemical the cleaning crew uses after hours. The sound is a low, rich hum: voices, glassware, the metallic scrape of silver on chafing dish.

I keep my head down, eyes skimming just above the level of the tray, but even so I clock everyone. That’s another part of the job—anticipating the needs of the room, the hunger in the guests, the thirst, the boredom, the thin places where the mood could tear.

I’m on my second circuit around the grand hall when I see him.

He stands with his back to the balcony, a wall of windows at his shoulder, the city glittering dark and far-off behind the glass. The tuxedo fits him perfectly, the sharp lines echoing the cut of his jaw, the set of his broad shoulders. His hair is dark, longer than the last time I saw him, and when he turns to say something to the woman beside him, I see the silver at his temple. Thomas.


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