Authors: Piper Vaughn
started to feel more like home than the place I
shared with Erik and Rue. Mainly because Asher
was there. I had a feeling the location itself would
never matter as long as he was in it.
He texted me while I was driving to ask if I
wanted him to order a pizza. At the next red light, I
typed up a quick reply telling him that I would
cook, even if it was already going on nine. It
seemed a waste to order food when we had a
whole refrigerator and pantry full of groceries.
When I got to the apartment, Asher greeted me
at the door with a kiss and took my tote bag from
my shoulder. “Are you sure you don’t want to
order something? I don’t want you to feel obligated
to cook. I know you’re tired.”
I shook my head and leaned against him for a
moment. “I am, but I’ll just make some pasta really
quick. Let’s save the money.”
His lips brushed across my temple. “Okay.
I’ll help you, then.”
FIFTEEN minutes after walking through the door,
I’d changed into a purple tank top and my favorite
pair of black drawstring sweatpants, and was in
the kitchen chopping up tomatoes and green
peppers for my homemade spaghetti sauce. I had
Asher working on an onion, the oven heating for
our garlic bread, and water warming on the stove
for the noodles. While they cooked, I’d throw
together a simple salad, and we’d be good to go.
Easy meal, leftovers for the next day, and no need
to tip a driver.
I was glad Asher didn’t seem to mind all the
vegetarian dishes I’d been making. Occasionally,
when we went out, he ordered something with fish
or chicken, but he never complained about the lack
of it in my cooking. Well,
our
cooking. A lot of the
time he joined me in the kitchen to help, and it
always felt so homey and domestic. I hoped in the
future it might become an everyday thing.
Once the water was boiling, I dumped in the
spaghetti, but when I reached for the wooden pasta
server I normally used to separate and stir the
noodles, it wasn’t in the utensil holder where I
thought it would be. I was fairly sure I’d used it
since the move, but I couldn’t remember for
certain. Rue had helped me unpack the kitchen, and
it was entirely possible he’d stuck it in some
random drawer.
I pulled the dishwasher open first and
checked in there, just in case, but it was empty.
“Ash,” I called as I started hunting through the
drawers, “do you know where the pasta stirrer
is?”
“Pasta stirrer?” Asher appeared in the
doorway to the kitchen, brow furrowed in
confusion. “What does it look like?”
“Oh, you know,” I said as I yanked open my
third drawer and started rummaging, “like a spoon-
slash-fork but not a spork.”
“Um….”
“I wonder if we left it at your old place.”
“Not sure.” Asher bent over and started
looking in the cabinet next to the fridge.
I kept searching, working my way down the
counter, but I was starting to think we
had
left it
behind. I couldn’t remember exactly when I’d seen
the thing last.
I reached the final drawer and peeked inside.
Yeah, the pasta server was officially missing in
action. Nothing in there but junk—pens, rubber
bands, a random box of pushpins, a couple of
screwdrivers, and… paperwork?
I started to pull it out, thinking it was
something Asher might need and have forgotten
about with it shoved all the way in the back, and
saw that it was a blank, crumpled apartment
application. I turned to wave it at him. “Hey, do
you need this, hon? I found it in the junk drawer.
Want me to toss it?”
Asher glanced over his shoulder to see what I
was holding, and I was surprised to see him flush.
He straightened up and cleared his throat. “Uh…
actually, that’s for you.”
I blinked at him, knowing I probably looked
as puzzled as I felt. “For me?”
Asher’s flush darkened. “I… sorry, I didn’t
mean for you to find out like this. I was going to
wait until I thought you were ready.”
“Until I was ready?” I echoed. Suddenly, it
occurred to me what he was saying. “You mean
you want me to…?”
Asher nodded. “Yeah. I asked the landlord
what I’d have to do to add a roommate to my
lease… and I was hoping that roommate would be
you.”
I couldn’t say I wasn’t a little shocked. I
mean, sure, I was practically living with him
already, but unofficially. Any time he didn’t want
me there, all he had to do was ask me to leave.
With me on the lease, it would be something else
entirely—
our
place instead of his. Not a small
step, all things considered. We hadn’t even been
together for half a year yet, and though I was sure
of him and our relationship, it would be a rather
big deal for both of us. I knew he hadn’t lived with
a boyfriend before, and I had never shared a place
with a partner either. Gary had liked his space and
privacy too much to ever cohabitate, and in
hindsight, I was damn glad of that. If it was going
to happen for the first time, there was no one I’d
prefer to experience it with than Asher.
“You don’t have to decide right now,” Asher
said when I hesitated. He looked nervous, and his
voice wavered, and that was enough to snap me
out of my indecision.
“Yes.” The word was breathless and
trembling, but I rushed on before I could lose my
nerve. “I’d love to.”
Asher’s smile was like the sun rising, bright
and beautiful and warm. The sight of it made my
heart squeeze almost to the point of pain. God, I
loved him so much. I couldn’t imagine wanting
anyone else—not as desperately as I wanted him.
His touch set my body on fire every time. I would
have been afraid of the effect he had on me if it
wasn’t the very thing I’d been waiting my whole
damn life to feel.
He crossed the kitchen and took me into his
arms before I could say anything else. “Do you
mean it?” he asked. “I can’t think of anything I’d
like more than having you here with me every
day.”
“Me too.” I tilted my face up to his, and he
kissed me slowly, his tongue slipping into my
mouth, twining with mine, stealing my breath.
We stayed that way, kissing and touching,
rocking together, getting more and more turned on,
until the timer for the garlic bread went off, and we
realized the sauce was making a mess on the stove
and we’d let the pasta overcook. But that was
okay. Even if it had burnt to a crisp, I was so
happy it still probably would have tasted good.
AN HOUR later, once we’d eaten and the kitchen
was clean, we were lying in bed together, naked,
breathing raggedly, sweat still cooling on our
bodies. He’d bent me over the mattress, grabbed
onto my shoulders, and pounded into me until I
came without a single touch to my cock. Christ, it
had been incredible. I loved it when a man could
do that to me, make me come by just working his
hips, knowing exactly when to speed it up or slow
it down. Guys like Asher were the reason I
preferred to bottom, but no one had ever felt as
amazing as he did. He was perfection, totally and
completely.
“I’ll talk to Rue and Erik this weekend,” I
murmured, skimming my fingers across his
abdomen, loving the feel of hard muscle and warm
skin. “Make sure they’ll be able to cover things
without me there. I don’t want to leave them in a
lurch, you know?”
Asher nodded and ran hand along my spine.
“Yeah, I get that.”
“I’ll stay there if they need me to, but I think it
should be fine. Erik’s new book just came out last
month, and I know he got another contract at the
end of November. I think he’s picked up some
proof work too, and Rue is making a
lot
more than
he was back in Delaware.”
“Well, if they need you to stay until they can
work something out, we’ll wait.” Asher dropped a
kiss on the top of my head. “But I hope we don’t
have to.”
“Same here.” I reached across his chest to
lightly touch the tattoo on his right arm. “I keep
meaning to ask you about this, but usually I notice
it most when we’re naked, and then I get distracted
by… other things.”
Asher laughed. “It’s
The Moon
by Alphonse
Mucha. Part of his The Moon and the Stars series.
I’ve been a fan since I discovered his paintings in
high school.”
“It’s beautiful,” I said, tracing the lines of the
figure’s flowing blue gown. “Why don’t you have
any others?”
Asher half shrugged, moving the shoulder that
wasn’t under my head. “She’s my favorite.” He
pulled back a bit so he could look at me. “You
ever thought about getting one?”
“No.” I smiled a little. “I’m more of a
piercing guy.”
Asher’s right hand moved to my face, his
fingers tracing over the studs on either side of my
lower lip. “I can see that.”
“Do they bother you?” I asked. Unlike
Archer, I thought Asher would be too nice to ever
say.
He shook his head. “Not at all. Didn’t you
have one in your nose the first time I saw you?”
I nodded. “I took it out. Archer said he didn’t
like it, and I… well, I was being dumb, I guess. I
thought he was you, and that it’d be a small thing to
give up to be with you.”
Asher sighed. “Effing Archer. It’s fine by me,
hon. Don’t keep it out on account of him.”
“No, it’s okay. I’ve gotten used to it not being
there.” I pressed a kiss to his chin and snuggled
against his side, tucking my head into the curve
where his neck met his shoulder. “And I know
now. I know you would never ask me to change.
That should have been a big clue. I think I’m just
always trying to please people for some reason.”
Asher’s arm tightened around me. “You
please me exactly as you are.”
I smiled again, sleepy and slow. The
exhaustion had finally caught up to me it seemed,
not to mention the aftereffects of the workout I’d
just gotten. I could barely keep my eyes open.
“You too,” I murmured. “Love….”
If he replied, I didn’t hear it. In less than a
second, I was dead to the world.
Asher
I PULLED into the grocery store right around the
time that everyone and their mom decided to stop
by after work. The parking lot was jammed, and I
had to park about a mile away from the front door.
Halfway through my trek to the store, my phone
buzzed. It was Dusty texting to ask if I could please
grab some milk and a bag of baby spinach too. He
apologized and said he loved me. I smiled, hardly
able to believe that Dusty was a few boxes away
from living with me permanently. There hadn’t
been an official moving day, but he’d slowly filled
the empty drawers in my new dresser, and the
empty half of the closet (and then some). His
eyeliners and millions of hair products had
migrated to the bathroom, and his plaid comforter
was folded along the bottom of our bed.
Sometimes when he wasn’t home, I’d open the
closet or the drawers, just to see his stuff in there.
It was odd, I knew. But I’d only ever lived with
my parents, and then Archer. It felt so good, so
real, to have Dusty’s stuff cluttering up our place
and making it look like both of us lived there. I
figured I’d get over the novelty someday, but so far
it hadn’t happened.
Once I got in the store, I wandered around
happily, picking out salad greens and vegetables
for Dusty, cereal, chicken for me, even though I
rarely ate it anymore. I grabbed a couple new tins
of tea to go on Dusty’s tea rack and was headed for
the checkout when my phone buzzed again. It was a
number I didn’t recognize, but local.
“This is Asher,” I answered. My typical
answer for customers.