Billionaire Erotic Romance Boxed Set: 7 Steamy Full-Length Novels (61 page)

Read Billionaire Erotic Romance Boxed Set: 7 Steamy Full-Length Novels Online

Authors: Priscilla West,Alana Davis,Sherilyn Gray,Angela Stephens,Harriet Lovelace

BOOK: Billionaire Erotic Romance Boxed Set: 7 Steamy Full-Length Novels
10.31Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

Sasha shook her head, sending her dark hair flying around her face. Before she could say anything, Linc shoved her toward the exit.

 

“See you later,” he called out.

 

Chapter Two

 

At her apartment, Sasha dropped her keys on the hook by the door, quickly stripping off her clothes as she went but carrying each item of clothing she discarded with her. Her studio was small and she defiantly kept it neat and clean; a habit ingrained in her from spending years in the foster care system. Keep things neat and easy to find. That way, when it was time to go on the next place, all she had to do was grab her few belongings and was out the door.

 

The walls of her little apartment were the same eggshell white as when she moved in five years before. Still unadorned. The only truly personal items were the small shelf of books near her full-sized bed and the photo of Marshall Taylor, her first trainer who had been like a father to her. One of the first people to treat her with decency, kindness, and respect.

 

Naked, Sasha dropped her clothes in the bathroom’s laundry hamper and turned on the shower. Forty five minutes later, she was clean and dry. Unscented lotion smoothed into her tanned skin and the barest amount of make-up on her face. Her hair she wore pinned up into a simple French twist and diamond studs dotted the lobes of her small ears. She stood in front of her closet in her bra and panties, a hand on her hip.

 

“What the hell do you wear to a party with a bunch of rich muckety mucks?”
A dress, like a real girl?
a sarcastic voice chimed from the back of her head.

 

She stared at the endless parade of slacks, jeans, t-shirts, wondering if she even had a dress in there after her last round of purging.

 

Then, she remembered the dress and heels she’d bought for a funeral nearly eight months before. She grabbed them from the back of her closet and quickly put them on. As she dressed, she tried not to think about the reality of where she was going and who had invited her there. If not for the incredible win at the Derby, she would probably be more nervous about rubbing elbows with the Richie Riches than she already was. But at least they wouldn’t kick her out of the party for looking like a peasant. In the mirror, she looked fine enough; the knee-length, black dress scooped just under her collar bones and clung slightly to her figure from the few pounds she had deliberately put on to get back up to a hundred pounds.

 

She walked across the hardwood floors, feeling the unfamiliar exaggerated rocking of her hips from the high heels. Sasha grabbed her keys from the hook, then she paused, looking at the picture of Marshall on the dresser. Tall and lean, stern looking with his bald head and small scar on his right cheek. The face of a kind man.

 

She smiled at the photograph, knowing how proud of her he would have been today. “Wish me luck,” she said softly.

 

Then she opened the door and left.

 

Chapter Three

 

Sasha parked her little white Honda Civic in a lot near the address that Damien had given her. With the traffic passing by in a steady hush past her, she strolled along the sidewalks of downtown Louisville looking for the address. She hummed softly beneath her breath with each step. Happy.

 

After nearly four years of riding professionally, she was living her dream of being a Derby winner. At twenty, she now felt she had the world at her feet. Only one thing would make her triumph even better. But her mind shied away from that desire. A lover. The beginning to a family of her own to love. No. That would have to wait until the end of her career. This was just the beginning of things. Her voice faded away into the night, the happy song draining away.

 

Ah, well. Don’t be greedy. You can’t get everything you want.

 

She shrugged mentally and kept walking. The high heels forced her to go slowly, holding her little black purse under her arm as she searched the buildings she passed for the right set of numbers. The breeze teased at her upswept hair, blowing kisses against the back of her neck.

 

I won the Kentucky Derby.
The memory of her triumph came to her again and a brilliant smile swept over Sasha’s face. This is who I am today. A winner.

 

“Is that smile for me?”

 

The voice startled the smile from her face. She lifted her head for its source and saw Damien Taylor standing on the steps of a high-rise building glittering with green glass in the light from the lowering sun. He stood with a hand in his pants pocket, another on the cell phone he lowered from his ear. Damien slipped the phone in an inside jacket pocket and waited for her to come to him.

 

As he stood bathed in the streetlights, the crisp illumination from the doorway of the building, Sasha stared. The suit he wore was obviously tailored to his impressive body, a pin-striped gray that brought out the paleness in his eyes. He looked like James Bond; confident, sexy, and a lot dangerous.

 

Damn.

 

She forced her heavy tongue to move. “No,” she said in response to his question. “I was actually thinking about the pile of laundry I have waiting for me at home.”

 

He hummed a low noise of disappointment, though his mouth quirked up in amusement. “Pity.”

 

As she walked closer to him, she became even more aware of the movement of her hips under the dress, the shoes elongating her legs and making her butt sway more than usual. By the way he watched her so carefully, she knew he saw all these things. Did he look at her and think she was trying too hard? That she didn’t pull off the girly outfit as well as other women who wore the same trappings every day?

 

“You look lovely,” Damien Taylor said.

 

Sasha almost tripped over her feet. She felt a blush overtaking her cheeks. She cleared her throat. “Thank you.”

 

“You’re very welcome.” He offered his arm to her when she stood within two feet of him. “Shall we go up?”

 

She stared at the suited arm, overwhelmed again by the elegance of the man, his utter sexiness. Butterflies assaulted her stomach.

 

“Sure.” Sasha took his arm, immediately aware of the corded strength beneath the expensive suit. His scent, a mixture of sandalwood and citrus, immediately surrounded her.

 

He led her into the building, past the concierge who waved to him with a wide smile, and to the elevator. She released his arm as he pressed the button for the penthouse, suddenly conscious of the small space. Conscious of how her pulse raced when she was with him. It was one thing to fantasize about him while he remained aloof and far from her reach; but to have him so close, the smell of him teasing her, the recent memory of his strong warmth under her hand. Sasha drew a single, silent breath.

 

“You were wonderful out there today,” he said after a long moment. “It was truly a magnificent ride.”

 

“Thank you,” she said, desperately grabbing at inane piece of conversation. “High Impact is a champion. He was born to win. It didn’t matter if it’s with me or someone else.”

 

“I doubt that very much. That horse loves you. He’d fly to the moon for you. I understand now what he sees in those honey-colored eyes of yours.”

 

Another blush claimed Sasha’s cheeks. She hadn’t turned red this much since her sunburn two summers ago. What was this man doing to her? She drew a quick breath of relief when the elevator bell sounded and the doors parted. Sounds of the party flooded into the small elevator—classical music, conversation, laughter, the clink of glasses. Her mouth literally dropped open as she saw the penthouse.

 

The elevator door had opened into a gleaming palace. Signs of extravagant wealth surrounded the elegantly dressed people parading through the posh space. Gleaming hardwood floors. Marble busts arranged on pedestals and facing the guests with their scowling, aristocratic faces. Two glass walls made into an L-shape which allowed in the blazing sunset, a gorgeous spectacle that everyone at the party mostly ignored. And why should they care that nature was doing what she did every night when so much was happening in here?

 

Waiters in black trousers and white, long-sleeved shirts walked between the guests with silver trays held aloft in their capable hands. The trays the waiters carried held champagne, mint juleps, tumblers of whiskey.

 

Among the beauty and opulence, she felt suddenly out of place, a black-eyed susan in a field of orchids. She felt herself wanting to shrink up against Damien. But he belonged here too among these glorious beings. She did not. Just as she was contemplating making her excuses to Damien and running away like a coward from the big bad rich people, a woman sauntered toward them from a nearby entryway.

 

She was flawless. Five-inch black heels, an orange dress that looked like it had been painted on her tall, fashion model’s body. Her black eyes were hawk-like under a swoop of frosted blond hair that looked shocking against her teak skin.

 

“Damien! You made it.” She kissed his cheek a moment before she was looking down from her over six foot height at Sasha. “And who is this?”

 

She opened her mouth to introduce herself, sure that he didn’t remember her first name.

 

“This is Sasha. She is the one who handled High Impact so well this evening.”

 

The woman’s glance grew even more interested. “Oh, a female jockey. How delicious.” She offered her hand. “I’m Amelia, my dear. You must let me take you around the room and introduce you.”

 

Without waiting for Sasha to accept or decline her invitation, the tall woman—Amelia—curled her long fingers around Sasha’s arm and drew her deeper into the penthouse. The woman introduced her to what Sasha felt was nearly everyone in the cavernous and beautiful place. Surprisingly, Damien kept pace with them, offering tidbit about her that she did not think he knew—“Yes, she became a jockey at sixteen. Sasha was a very precocious young lady,” while continuously fetching her champagne, and making sure she never ran out.

 

His presence soothed her. It pushed the nervousness to the back of her consciousness until she could almost fool herself into believing she wasn’t nervous anymore. She laughed when someone made a joke; she answered questions; smiled for the camera when someone asked for a photograph.

 

“I didn’t know there were women jockeys,” one man exclaimed, cooing over her like some exotic pet. He fingered his mint julep, looking like he wanted to take her home.

 

But he was the only one who treated her that way. Everyone asked her about the race or about High Impact or how it was working for such a task-master as Damien. Most of the questions were firmly on the business of horses despite the looks of speculation moving from her to Damien as he stood at her side. Thankfully, he showed no signs of being ready to leave her on her own.

 

It wasn’t long before her head was spinning from all the champagne she’d consumed. Giggly and relaxed, she allowed Amelia  to take her still from group to group, introduced her as Damien’s “brilliant young jockey” even though the woman had no idea how old she was. Everyone was friendly and inquisitive, complimentary. But crowds had never been Sasha’s favorite thing.

 

Talking with a pair of elegant matrons who wanted to know if she planned on going for the Derby again next year, Sasha suddenly realized that Damien was no longer at her side. The thought of it unsettled her, being strewn among strangers like so much kibble to hungry dogs. She bit the inside of her cheek to stop herself from giggling.

 

As soon as was polite, she excused herself from the women and fled to the balcony. She closed the sliding glass door behind her with a sigh of relief. Outside, the quiet was almost sensual in its perfection. No clattering voices. No one asking for a photograph. No eyes picking her outfit apart. Sasha’s eyes flutter closed for a moment as she enjoyed the breeze moving over her face and throat. She leaned back against the closed glass door, her head thrown back. Her hands resting lightly on the door handle behind her.

 

“This is a sight I can get used to,” a masculine voice said.

 

Without opening her eyes, she knew it was Damien. Slowly, she opened them to get the full effect of him, surprised to see him on the balcony away from the people inside who seemed to be alternately in awe and afraid of him. The wine bubbled in her veins as she looked at him. Had she known a more perfect man? She quietly sighed.

 

“I thought for sure you’d be still in there somewhere,” Sasha said.

 

He shook faintly shook his head. “I just needed to get away from the crowd for a moment.”

 

She nodded. “I know what you mean. Everyone is so nice, but I just don’t feel like being in there with them right now.”

 

Sasha pushed herself away from the door and walked to stand by his side. Inside, she smiled, enjoying his eyes on her every movement.

 

He likes me!
she thought, a bubble of joy floating inside her.

 

She looked away from him with an effort. Beyond him, the city was awash in glittering lights. The evening sun had fallen completely away. Night and her cape of lights now blanketed the city. At her side, Damien watched the city too. His breaths came easy and deeply, hands resting near hers on the railing.
Such beautiful hands he has
, she thought through the pleasant fuzz blanketing her brain.

 

“Are you ready to go?” he asked.

 

His eyes were as bright as the city lights, glimmering with an intensity that made her shudder. A slow, melting fire started in the pit of her as she stared up into Damien’s face. His look pulled her close then closer to him until her hands rested lightly on his chest. She tilted her head up to his, swimming in the intoxication of his presence, and the champagne.

Other books

Tragic Love by M. S. Brannon
A Conspiracy of Paper by David Liss
Theodora Twist by Melissa Senate
The Outsider by Rosalyn West
Midnight on Lime Street by Ruth Hamilton
Breath of Air by Katie Jennings
Raven's Peak by Lincoln Cole