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Authors: Bad Thing She Did a Bad
you and James called it quits.”
Since he dumped me, Jane corrected silently. And although she acknowledged that James
wasn’t the love of her life, his parting remark still cut to the bone.
Gawd, Jane, you’re such a bore. His offhand slight had sent her into a funk that she hadn’t
yet recovered from. Her cheeks still burned when she relived the memory.
“I don’t have time to date,” she said, then smirked. “Maybe I should talk to my boss about
cutting back my hours.”
“Touché. As soon as we go nationwide,” Eve said, linking her arm with Jane’s and walking
with her to the exit, “we’ll both get a life.” Suddenly a serious expression crossed Eve’s face.
“You haven’t heard from Liza, have you?”
“No, why?”
“No reason, really. She’s just been on my mind today.”
“Mine, too,” Jane admitted. “Wonder where she is?”
Eve shook her head. “Knowing Liza, she could be on the moon.” She waved. “See you
tomorrow.”
Jane waved and watched her friend walk away. Eve, she knew, still had hours of work
ahead of her before she could leave the station.
Eve Best deserved to make it big—the woman worked twice as hard as anyone else on the
show. Even when they were young, Jane had the feeling that her two friends were destined for
great things.
Then Jane worried her lower lip with her teeth. Maybe this emotional slump was simply a
phase she was going through. But with Liza gone, she couldn’t help but feel that the big break they were all waiting for would only tear them further apart…
Pushing aside the troubling premonition, Jane left the station and climbed into her old but
trusty Civic. Dusk was falling on the chilly spring day and fatigue pulled at her shoulders as she pointed her car in the direction of her condo. On normal days, the commute was manageable—a
miracle by Atlanta traffic standards.
But today she was behind a minor accident and construction backup on Peachtree Street.
At the last minute, she decided to veer off to pick up Chinese food in lieu of cooking. It was already dark by the time she pulled into the parking garage for her building.
When she rounded the corner to her assigned parking spot, she bit back a curse—a little red
sports car occupied her place, next to an enormous black SUV that belonged to her new
neighbor. She hadn’t yet met him, but she’d heard him moving in yesterday and hoped that he
would be settled by tonight. Indeed, it appeared that he already had a guest over and was already violating the building rules.
She resented the people who thought living in a condo was like living in an apartment—the
man was a homeowner and he’d better start acting like it. Fuming, she parked in the cramped
guest parking area and headed inside.
The sooner he was indoctrinated to the rules of condo living, the better.
She stopped in front of her neighbor’s door and juggled her shoulder bag, an armload of
catalogs, and the bag of Chinese takeout to ring the doorbell. From behind the door she heard music pulsing with a throbbing bass. She rang the doorbell again and after several long minutes, the door swung open.
The angry words at the back of her throat dissolved.
The man stood well over six feet tall. His hair and eyes were dark, and his jaw sported a
couple of days’ worth of scruff. His skin was golden brown, and since he wore only faded jeans, she could see a lot of it. His shoulders were wide and muscled, his chest covered with a mat of black hair that disappeared into the waistband slung low enough to make her wonder if he wore any underwear. From the way he held his long body to the magnetism that rolled off him like a natural cologne, the man appeared to be built for sex.
In a word, he was devastating.
He appeared to be studying her, too, but from the way he tipped up his bottle of beer, he
apparently found her slightly less noteworthy. “Can I help you?” he drawled.
“Uh…I’m your next door neighbor. Jane.”
He nodded and flashed a killer smile. “I’m Perry. Nice to meet you.”
“Same here.” She shifted the precarious load in her arms and decided against extending her
hand. “Do you drive a black SUV?”
“Yeah.”
“There’s a red car next to it in my parking spot. I thought you might know who it belongs
to.”
“Kayla,” he yelled over his shoulder, then took a pull on his beer.
A lush brunette appeared, impossibly tiny and curvy in a Barbie Doll kind of way and
sporting a midriff revealing sweater. For some ridiculous reason, Jane was disappointed in the man’s taste, but then what had she expected?
“What, baby?” the girl crooned.
“Did you park in guest parking like I told you?”
She pouted. “The spots were too close together—I didn’t want my car to get dinged, so I
parked next to your SUV.”
He looked at Jane and shrugged apologetically. “Sorry, uh—what did you say your name
was?”
“Jane,” she said through gritted teeth.
He pointed his finger like a gun and made a clicking noise. “Won’t happen again.”
She opened her mouth to ask that his guest move her car, but the door closed in her face.
Jane scowled, hoping the man—to paraphrase Jane Austen—improved upon closer acquaintance.
The building housed only forty condos. A few jerks—or one large one—would be enough to
cause problems for everyone. And since she and Perry shared a wall and a divided balcony, she would bear the brunt of it.
Heaving a sigh, she unlocked the door to her own condo. Inside, she dropped her load on
her desk, then carried the bag of Chinese food to the living room, turning on lights along the way.
The sight of her condo never failed to calm her—she’d purposely decorated in a minimalist
style in soothing shades of taupe and sky blue to make the space her own personal haven. Her
walls were white, her furniture streamlined. No clutter to distract her, no mess to create more work when she should be winding down.
Jane sighed and felt the stress of the day drain away. She changed into comfy sweats and
pulled her hair back into a ponytail. A glance at the clock had her rushing to the kitchen for a bottle of water and a TV tray. Time for her show.
Guilty pleasure filled her chest—would Victoria and the cop Nate get together? Or would
Nate arrest Victoria for murdering her neighbor?
Settling onto her overstuffed couch, Jane slipped off her shoes and dug her toes into the
plush area rug, then clicked on the TV and reached for the bag of takeout. Suddenly the blare of pulsing music invaded her space.
Jane frowned in the direction of the shared wall. The previous owner had been quiet—and
had traveled often. Hopefully her new neighbor would soon realize that the walls of multi-
family-unit buildings could be thin.
Tamping down irritation, she increased the volume of the TV to counter the sound of the
music coming through the wall. From the bag she removed a container of crab wontons and
another of lo mein.
She unwrapped the chopsticks and had a wonton halfway to her mouth when the sound of a
woman’s voice came through the wall.
“Ahh…ahh, yeah, baby, that’s it…yeah.”
Jane stopped and turned her head toward the wall. It wasn’t…they weren’t…
Incredulous, she lowered the volume on the television, only to be treated to a new string of
sexpletives.
“Oh, oh, oh…yes! Yes! Do it! Harder! Faster! I-eeeee! Omigod, omigod, omigod, that
feels so good! Talk dirty to me—yeah, that’s it…you nasty, nasty boy.”
Jane’s eyes widened. Nasty boy?
A rhythmic banging sounded on the wall and she thought at first that one of them was
hitting the wall with a wayward limb…then she realized with the accompanying squeaking
noises that it was the man’s headboard that was banging against their shared wall.
“Oh, good grief,” she muttered, feeling a little dirty, like a voyeur, yet curiously unable to stop listening. The woman’s caterwauling escalated in time with the banging noise and was
joined by a man’s low voice.
“Now!” she screamed. “I’m coming! Now! Now! NOWWWW!”
From the synchronized clamor, it appeared that they arrived together. Jane sat unmoving,
unable to believe what had just transpired, but distantly aware of a heaviness in her breasts and a tingle of desire in her midsection.
Embarrassment swelled in her chest and she grappled with the remote to increase the
volume over the music still pounding through the wall. She tried to concentrate on the storyline of the show, but her mind kept returning to the fact that she’d just heard her new neighbor have sex.
As far as neighbors went, that fell under the category of TMI: Too Much Information.
Especially since she could visualize his long, muscular body naked and sweaty, tangled in the sheets…And she wondered what kind of nasty things he’d said to the woman that had made her
scream as if she’d hung between life and death.
Working her mouth back and forth, Jane studied a crab wonton, then popped it into her
mouth. It was the most satisfying thing she would get tonight.
But as her attention continued to wander and she realized that she’d missed huge chunks of
the program, her irritation ballooned again. Nasty Boy had foisted his sex life on her and
completely ruined her evening. And while she stewed about the man’s crudeness—and
rudeness—the rhythmic thumping started up again along with the woman’s commentary.
“Oh, baby, that’s it…that’s it…oh, yeah. Say something nasty…oh, yeah.”
Jane stuck her tongue into her cheek. Not again. She hadn’t even had time to finish her
dinner! Worse, she had no idea what was happening on her show.
She stabbed at the lo mein as the movement on the other side of the wall grew more
frenetic. Nasty Boy apparently had stamina…and finesse. He knew just where to put it, oh baby, he knew just how to do it, oh yeah.
It was like bad song lyrics.
What was he saying to her? She leaned closer to the wall, but couldn’t make out the low
murmurings. With a jolt, Jane realized that she was rocking in time with the couples’ rhythm and she was feeling…warm.
And…moist.
How long had it been since she’d had sex? There hadn’t been anyone since James, and the
last few times with him had been a letdown.
Who was she kidding? Every time with James had been a letdown. Every time with every
guy—not that there’d been that many—had been a letdown. None of her encounters with men
had lived up to the fantasies she’d spun in her head, not one of them had left her feeling like this…with desire coiled tightly in her stomach, aching for release.
Meanwhile, next door, the woman let go with the intensity and the volume of a hurricane,
screeching and banging in a clatter that grated on Jane’s nerves like a fire alarm sounding.
Unreasonable anger rose in her chest and she pushed to her feet. She would not be subjected to this kind of…exhibitionism in her own home!
Striding out into the hallway, she knocked loudly on Perry’s door, and when he didn’t
answer, she knocked again, her ire rising even higher. She had lifted her arm to bang on his door again when it suddenly swung open, revealing her neighbor in his long glory, his hair tousled and wearing the jeans that now were only half-zipped. And she had the feeling that this time, he
definitely wasn’t wearing underwear.
He gave her a lopsided smile. “Can I help you, uh…what was your name again?”
“Jane,” she snapped.
“Right. What can I do for you?”
“You can take it down a notch.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean that you and I share a wall and I can hear your…music.”
“Okay, I’ll turn down the volume on the stereo.” He started to close the door, but she held
up her hand. Knowing what he’d done to generate the sheen of perspiration on his chest
threatened to tie her tongue in knots, but she reminded herself that she was the victim here. “I can also hear your, um…activities.”
He blinked. “Activities?”
She crossed her arms and gave him a pointed look. “Both times.”
His dark eyebrows shot up, then a devilish smile curved his mouth. “And on a scale of one
to ten?”
She gasped, outraged. “I didn’t come over to score you, Mr.—”
“Brewer,” he supplied.
Her mouth tightened. “Mr. Brewer, I came over to ask you as a neighbor to please keep the
noise down.”
“I’ll try,” he said cheerfully, “but I can’t make any promises.” Then he stepped back and
closed the door.
Jane stood there for a few seconds, feeling like a fool. She slunk back to her condo, furious to see that her show had ended, then paced the living room with pent-up energy. To escape, she poured herself a glass of wine and went out to sit on her tiny balcony that faced west,
overlooking the lights of Midtown.
Adrenaline coursed through her body—anger, embarrassment, frustration. She felt as if she
were coming out of her skin, and couldn’t rightly blame all of it on her neighbor’s unwitting intrusion. Maybe she was coming down with something…maybe she was experiencing some sort
of chemical imbalance. That would explain this profound restlessness that, in truth, had preceded her breakup with James, but had escalated afterward. She had the strangest sensation that her life was careening downhill, picking up speed, but headed nowhere. It wasn’t anything she could put her finger on, just a feeling of being…unfulfilled.
When she heard the slide of her neighbor’s balcony door opening, her heart sank—with
him permeating her living space, her balcony was her last sanctuary. A tall concrete wall
separated their balconies, but that wouldn’t keep her from hearing their call of the wild should they decide to move their gymnastics outdoors. She braced herself for more lewd noises.