Authors: Jane Davitt,Alexa Snow
Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #gay, #LGBT, #BDSM LGBT, #erotic romance, #BDSM, #erotic romance; gay; LGBT; BDSM
bring anything to the table but his experience managing a bar—and without noticing,
he’d let it slide into the red, so that wasn’t much of a contribution.
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“I feel like your employee,” he said, sprinkling salt and the vinegar he’d asked for
over his fries and squeezing out a dollop of ketchup. He’d been here for long enough
that he didn’t call his fries
chips
, but he was never going to eat them without vinegar.
“Well, I don’t plan to pay you any wages, so if I were you, I’d think again.”
“Then I want final say in the changes.” It wasn’t fair, but Benedict was asking, and
Shane had never been averse to telling, even when his input wasn’t requested.
“You’re on crack,” Benedict said calmly.
Shane dipped a french fry into the puddle of ketchup. “Yeah, probably.”
Benedict sighed and ran a thumb along his lower lip in a gesture that had to be
innocent even though it drew Shane’s attention as surely as flame drew a moth. He
studied Shane, waiting as if he expected Shane to say something else to support his
case, and Shane waited too. He might seem like an impatient sort of bloke, but he could
be patient when it mattered.
“Okay,” Benedict said finally. “Okay, fine. You win. Final say. But.”
“There’s always a
but
,” Shane muttered.
“But you have to promise you’ll listen to my ideas. Really listen, and think about
them, and remember I care what happens to this business too. I mean…” Benedict
trailed off and looked at his chicken entrée without any pleasure. “I know I’m not as
emotionally invested in the bar as you are. Maybe I never can be. You’ve got a hell of a
head start, and there are a hundred things you know I’ve never even thought of. But
there’s other stuff I know. Stuff that can help. I want this to belong to both of us—not
just on paper. For real.”
Wanting to belong… Shane could relate to that, but it was a yearning that had
long since withered for him. He hadn’t fit in at home, at school, or at any of the places
he’d worked before the Square Peg. Now that he had found a niche where he was
accepted, even liked, it was too late for him to enjoy it without reservations, because he
had the superstitious feeling if he did, it would get taken away from him.
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Maybe that was exactly what was happening now.
He didn’t fool himself into thinking that if the bar closed he’d stay in touch with
people. The staff, the friends he’d made with some of the regulars…they’d drift away.
People did. He’d done it himself.
“Shane?” Benedict touched his hand tentatively.
Shane drew in a deep breath. What the fuck was wrong with him? Wallowing in
self-pity wasn’t the answer. “Yeah. I can see that. It’s the last thing you’ve got of your
dad’s. And don’t tell me you hated him, because even if you did, and even if he
screwed up, he was a mate of mine.”
“You’re very loyal.” Benedict ate a few mouthfuls of chicken, then set his fork on
the plate. “We should look at it from the point of view of the customers, not just our
own preferences. What type of customers do we want to attract? What would appeal to
them in the way of, well, ambiance, though that sounds pretentious as hell?”
Put that way, it made sense. Shane gave it some thought. “I want it to be a gay bar.
Straights welcome, sure, but I’m not going to have the balance tipped so people like us
are in the minority, looking around to make sure no one’s watching if they want to hold
hands.”
“Agreed,” Benedict said immediately. “Though I’m not happy about sex in the
bathrooms. It could make some people uncomfortable, and we don’t want to drive
people away. It’s unacceptable.”
And there was Benedict being clueless about how the world worked, right on cue.
Shane smirked at him, remembering how hot to trot Benedict had been after that
overheard blowjob. If Shane ever found out who the two men were, he’d buy them a
pint. “Yeah? Got you going, though.”
“That’s not the point. I’m not saying we should turn the place into something it
isn’t. I want the people who’ve been loyal customers for years to be happy about the
changes. To feel like we did something good for them, made things nicer. I don’t want
them to think they turned around and ended up in an alternate universe.”
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“Aside from the fact I’ve no idea what you’re talking about half the time, I agree
with you,” Shane said. “I think. So, same general idea, spruced up. None of that’s going
to change the location, though.”
Benedict pushed his pasta around on his plate. “It’s not a bad location.”
“No, but it isn’t a brilliant one either. Most of the regulars live within a couple of
miles. Half of them within walking distance.”
“It’s a city with a population of a quarter of a million people,” Benedict said.
“There are hundreds of potential customers within walking distance, gay and straight.
We just need to figure out a way to help them find us.”
“Lots of straight people aren’t going to want to hang out at a gay bar,” Shane
pointed out, a little annoyed he had to. Benedict was a bright man; these things
shouldn’t have to be spelled out for him.
“And lots of people aren’t going to care. They just want a comfortable place to
hang out with their friends, have a couple of drinks, and not have to worry about
walking in on an orgy when they open the bathroom door.” Benedict seemed to be
considering what he’d said, though. “We can be subtle without being deceptive. I have
a cousin in advertising, I’ll check with him and see if he has any advice, how to word
things.”
“Fine,” Shane said with a sigh. Benedict seemed to know a lot of people, but
unless they were going to drop by and order champagne every night, he wasn’t sure
they were going to be as useful as Benedict seemed to think they were. “Look, we need
to stand out. We’re not the only gay bar in the area. Vincent says a lot of his mates go to
some dive called Dregs. I went once, and Jesus, it makes our place look like the fucking
Ritz, but it was packed.”
“Why?”
“Well, it probably had a lot to do with all the drug dealing going on in the
bathrooms—makes a blowjob between friends seem pretty tame, doesn’t it?—but they
like it because everything’s painted black; you can’t see your hand in front of your face,
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or hear yourself think, because the music’s so loud, and their Happy Hour is from ten to
midnight.”
Benedict shook his head. “That’s not the way I want our place to be,” he said
decisively.
“Nor me, but they’ve got a hook, see? We need one. Hook and bait.”
“We’re going around in circles and getting nowhere.” Benedict glanced at his
watch, then signaled to their waiter. “We need to leave. Ade said we should make sure
we gave ourselves enough time to look around before the auction starts. Maybe
something we see will spark an idea for a theme, but if not, well, we go for chairs we’d
like to sit in ourselves.”
“We’re not the customers,” Shane couldn’t help pointing out. “And you and me
are so different, if one of us likes it, the other won’t.”
Benedict closed his fingers around Shane’s wrist, pinning it to the table for a
moment before releasing it, the action so out of the blue, so quickly over, Shane jerked
with shock, his heart rate increasing. His wrist felt warm where it’d been held, a heat
that pulsed through him, leaving him aching for something he couldn’t have.
“We agree on some things,” Benedict said meeting Shane’s gaze calmly. “Don’t
we, Shane?”
“You and me,” Shane said when he could speak without his voice betraying him,
“we’re going to have a little chat later. Count on it.”
He pushed away from the table and walked out, leaving Benedict to settle the bill.
He needed the chilly February wind to cool his face, a moment alone to get control of
himself.
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Chapter Nine
Ben was starting to wonder if this auction thing had been a good idea. He didn’t
doubt they’d be able to get some quality items at reasonable prices. He was more
worried he and Shane might glare each other to death before the night was over.
They’d managed to get through the preview part before the auction started
without any arguments. However, now they were walking on eggshells, as careful as a
parent waiting for a toddler to have an inevitable tantrum but hoping it could be put off
until after Grandma’s hundredth birthday party. It was stupid because Ben knew they
were both too mature to do anything stupid in public.
At least, he hoped they were. He kept reminding himself Shane wouldn’t have run
the Square Peg so successfully—from a community standpoint if not a financial one—if
he started throwing punches every time he got annoyed. Shane came across as someone
who got annoyed on a semi-regular basis, and that would have been a lot of punches.
They had one bid paddle between them and a shared catalog that detailed all the
lot numbers of the items being offered. Ben had made a lot of notations in the catalog
when they’d been wandering around, but somehow Shane had ended up with it as the
auction started and didn’t seem eager to hand it over. Ben wasn’t going to rip it out of
his hands. Shane probably just hadn’t realized what he’d done, but Ben knew if he said
something, there was a chance it would come off wrong, so he waited.
He was uneasily aware he’d crossed a line in the restaurant, a line he’d drawn,
which made his actions inexcusable. He couldn’t seem to keep his hands off Shane, and
when Shane kept needling him, he didn’t want to. He knew what Shane was capable of,
and it was frustrating as hell to sit beside him and pretend to ignore what lay between
them.
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Shane had been furious when he got into the car, slamming the door with a
closed-off expression that dared Ben to comment. It’d taken the twenty-minute drive to
the auction for him to calm down, and Ben couldn’t help wishing they’d been
somewhere less public. He had a feeling their differences could have been resolved
pretty easily then.
Except they’d agreed sex would complicate an already fraught relationship.
Ben glanced down at Shane’s thighs and wanted to run his hands over them, push
Shane’s knees wider and make Shane hold them there while he looked his fill. He could
picture Shane’s lost, vulnerable expression changing to a desperate, hopeful trust as Ben
stroked his cock, making it go harder, thicker, ready for him to taste…
“It’s those fucking chichi bar stools you wanted,” Shane hissed and elbowed him
in the ribs. “Wave your paddle, or you’ll miss them.”
“What? Oh!” Ben shot his paddle into the air and got a nod from the auctioneer.
“I have one hundred dollars—do I hear more? One hundred on this set of six bar
stools, ladies and gentlemen—one twenty-five, thank you, sir. Do I have one-fifty—”
Ben lowered his paddle and gave Shane a questioning look. “Do you really hate
them?”
Shane shrugged, a sulky, mutinous pout on his face. If the bid paddle hadn’t been
a flimsy piece of wood but something more substantial, Ben would’ve been tempted to
apply it to Shane’s ass. And God, thoughts like that weren’t helping his concentration.
He rejoined the bidding until it went beyond the limit he’d placed on them in the
pre-auction walk around. He let them go. Damn. He’d liked them. Solid, and yes,
perhaps the carving on the legs had been on the ornate side, but they’d catch the eye.
Illogically and unfairly, he blamed Shane for their loss even though they’d gone for
twice what he’d been willing to pay.
“Thought you said we’d get some bargains,” Shane said. “Overpriced junk, if you
ask me.”
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“At least we didn’t overpay for them.” It was time to concentrate on what was
important. He’d worry about this thing with Shane later. “Okay, what about these
chairs?” He held the catalog so Shane could see it.
Shane deigned to glance at the tiny photo. “They’ve got arms.”
“And?”
“And drunk people don’t do well in chairs with arms.” Rolling his eyes at Ben’s
confusion, Shane went on. “They tip them over, then get mad at us, and we end up
having to give them free drinks to soothe their wounded pride.”
“Oh. Right.” Ben felt like an idiot for not having realized. He handed the catalog
to Shane and asked meekly, “Would you pick some that might work?”
Shane sighed and reluctantly starting leafing through the pages. “These look
sturdy enough,” he said, pointing to some wooden chairs with upholstered seats.
“Padded vinyl’s not as long lasting as wood seats, maybe, but it’s a hell of a lot more
comfortable. Don’t want people deciding to make an early night of it because the chairs