LOGIN“Absolutely not!” I gasp, turning back to Nico, leaning over the bar and grabbing his walkie-talkie from his waistband. “Sel!” I hiss into the device.
“What? Is he really ugly?” Comes her voice through the crackly speaker. “It’s fucking David!” I spit back. “Stop it! You’re joking?” The walkie-talkie clicks, telling me she’s let go of the button, and I can imagine her swinging round in her chair, clicking through the camera screens on her computer to try and spot him. “Holy shit.” “I'm not doing this.” I say into the device as I quickly look back over my shoulder at him. Yep, it's definitely him. He's watching Violet, who's dancing on the pole at the moment, sipping a glass of whiskey, completely unaware that his secretary is 20 feet away from him. “Look I really need to get payroll done, and I meant it when I said that you have to do something tonight. You just need to do the introduction stuff, it’s not like I’ll set you up with him.” Sel says to me, and I close my eyes, my head thumping onto the bar as Nico just watches with his arms folded over his chest. “He won’t recognise you.” Nico says. “And if he does, I’ll come and grab you before he can say anything.” I look at Nico, knowing that he will do exactly as he says. He’s done it multiple times for me, grabbing me when situations have gotten a bit hairy. I really can’t help thinking that this is a very, very bad idea though. The introductions aren’t exactly… hands off. “I’ll give you a night off from Casey.” Sel says through the walkie-talkie. “Hell, I’ll give you a night off altogether. Come on babes.” She urges. “I don’t trust anyone else to do intros, you know that.” “You fucking owe me.” I hiss back to her, throwing the device onto the bar top. Nico picks it up and holds it to his mouth. “You’ll have eyes on her?” He asks Sel. “Fuck yeah. I'll be damned if I miss a second of what happens next.” She laughs in response. I give Nico a look, a pointed look, but he just reclips the walkie to his waistband then shrugs. “You know she means it in a nice way.” He says, his mouth trying desperately to stop the smile that's threatening to creep over his lips. “Probably.” He sniggers once, then stops himself. I glare at him, then I spin on my heel, and walk away from him. Breathing as I walk, I think about all the things I have to do. I also think about all the things I should do, but can probably get away with not doing, because I don’t want to be doing them with my boss. Conversation? Fine. Seeing the rooms? Also fine. Getting his desires out of him? That may be toeing the line. Trying out some ‘green light’ toys? Nope. Definitely not. I try to take another breath as I get closer to the back of his chair, but I find that this one feels particularly difficult. I roll my shoulders, trying to ease the nerves, and self-consciously touch my mask and my wig, making sure that they're still in place. Here we go, I think. Just another customer. Just any old, run-of-the-mill customer. I place myself to his side, my weight transferring to my right leg, putting my hands on my hips, and clear my throat, the soft volume of the music making me audible to him. He turns, and, just like usual, his eyes freeze on my outfit. Wearing these corsets always makes me feel more confident. And who wouldn’t, with the way that people look at me in them? The corset itself is a deep purple, with black lace detailing over the cups and snaking down my stomach, to match my mask. The way I tighten them gives me a perfect hourglass shape, with the swell of my breasts threatening to spill out of the top. It has a small skirt that fans out at the bottom, which I always pair with matching purple and black hipster style panties, suspender straps connected to skin-coloured stockings with a simple black lace band, and a practically sheer, satin black robe. It's the perfect mixture of showing off the goods without showing very much at all. The responses are the same every time. Guys drool over the lingerie, particularly the boob area, and only look up when I speak. I wait to see what he'll do. His eyes flick down to my heels, and travel back up, quicker than I'm used to. He barely pauses at my chest, his eyes instead finding mine in mere seconds. I swallow, trying to make it as subtle as possible, trying to not give away that his blue eyes are making me warm. He stands suddenly, leaving his glass on the table beside his chair, buttoning his suit jacket up and steps forward so that he's in front of me. Then he holds his hand out. I look down at it, wanting to laugh. No one has ever offered to shake my hand before. “Reid. David Reid.” He says, his familiar, smooth voice running over my entire body. I flick my eyes back up to his, seeing them not wavering an inch, and I step forward, sliding my hand into his and squeezing it gently. “Nice to meet you, David.” I reply coolly, dropping my voice a note or two in the hope that he won’t recognise it. Not that I ever call him David anyway. He brings my hand to his mouth, kissing my knuckles gently, respectfully. His eyes look between mine as I drop his hand. “I hear you’re interested in becoming a member of The Red Room?” I query, and he nods once. “Then please, follow me.” I say confidently, already walking towards a side booth, knowing he'll follow me. They always follow me. I settle into the booth, sitting dead in the middle of the sofas, resting my hands on either side of me, leaning back slightly as I watch him with careful eyes as he analyses the seats. He decides to take the seat opposite me, and I smirk. As he unbuttons his suit jacket to sit comfortably, I find myself watching the movement, my tongue darting out across my bottom lip to cover up the feeling of them being suddenly dry. He leans back, and I can see the infamous arrogance he usually exudes is starting to come through from the way he rests his elbow on the arm of the chair, his hand coming to his mouth, his finger gliding over his lip as he stares at me. I hold his gaze, even when Nico stops by to put my drink down, and one down for him, even when I thank him and he walks off. I pick up my glass, a gin martini, and take a sip, keeping him in my sights over the rim of the glass. I put the glass down. “Who recommended you?” I ask, finally breaking the tense silence. “Does that matter?” He counters. “Yes.” I admit. “Some clients have been blacklisted. We have to make sure that any of their associates are also not permitted.” He breathes a couple of times before answering. “Kieran Voss.” He states, and I feel my stomach lurch uncomfortably. I didn’t know that Kieran was a member. Maybe he's assigned to one of the other girls. Kieran works in the IT department at the office. Now I can never look at him the same way. Just like I won’t be able to look at Mr. Reid the same way anymore. “And what is it that you think we do here?” I ask, trying to divert my brain from images of Kieran in one of these rooms. “Aren’t you supposed to be telling me that? Selling it to me or something?” He says, smirking, while also narrowing his eyes at me. Like he's suspicious of the business model. I smile a tiny bit to hide my scoff. “We find that a lot of people who come here, they come with preconceived notions of what they're expecting. I can tell you in two seconds whether we can meet those expectations. So, Mr. Reid,” I say, allowing my breath to come through my words a little, leaning forward on the sofa, and slowly crossing one leg over the other, before clasping my hands around my knees. “Please share.” The position I get myself in makes the ‘girls’ squish together, and is usually a very subtle tactic to make the client get into the right… mood. I smirk when I see his eyes flick down for a split second. He shifts a little in his chair, and takes a sip of his whiskey. Then he leans forward to place it on the table, and rests his elbows on his knees, his hands clasping together in front of him. Seems that both of us are engaging in positional play. “I've heard that people can come here, explore their desires, and leave their day to day behind.” He says simply. “And what exactly are your desires?” I ask automatically. It's the question I have to ask everyone, so it comes naturally from the conversation. Only after I say it, do I realise that I just asked my boss what he wants, sexually. I feel warm. “I think that depends on the person.” He replies with a tilt of his head.The bedroom door is barely closed before David's hands are on me, sliding up under the thin silk of my robe as he backs me against the wall.I tilt my head back against the cool plaster, letting him kiss down the column of my throat while my fingers work the buttons of his shirt open. His skin is still firm under my palms, though the muscle has softened slightly with the years, the hair on his chest is more silver than dark now. I love every change. Every line around his eyes when he smiles, every grey at his temples, every scar from nights we almost didn't survive. I trace them with my fingertips as I push the shirt off his shoulders."You smell like trouble," he murmurs against my collarbone, voice low and rough the way it gets when he's already half-gone on me."Good trouble?" I ask, sliding my hand down his stomach, feeling the way his muscles jump under my touch."The best kind." He catches my wrist, brings my palm to his mouth and kisses the centre before guiding it lower and th
Wow. I can’t believe I’m writing this. Two chapters and one epilogue ago, we were still holding our breath. Now here we are… at the end of SIR. For good this time. I don’t even know where to begin. Thank you. Truly. Thank you for stepping into this world with David and Nora. Thank you for riding every high, surviving every heartbreak, arguing with me in the comments when I stressed you out, and loving these characters as fiercely as I do. What started as an idea became something so much bigger because of you. Writing this book breathed life into my lungs in ways I can’t even explain. There were days when this story carried me just as much as I carried it. David and Nora’s journey wasn’t just ink on a page for me. It was healing, it was cathartic, and most importantly... it was home. And now… BOOK THREE! After so many debates with my editor and so many passionate discussions with you all, I’ve finally made the decision. Book 3 of SIR will follow Lucia. Yes. Our little Luc
Maya jerks backward from the impact, the bullet tearing through the meat of her shoulder. She staggers two steps with her right hand clamping over the wound and blood already seeping between her fingers. The knife she’d pulled from her boot clatters to the floor. Her eyes are wide and locked on the smoking barrel in David’s hand.I’m still on my knees beside Vincent’s body, his blood soaking through my jeans. My ears are still ringing from the shot. Everything feels slow and too loud at the same time.I turn and see David standing in the doorway, holding the gun steady even though his knuckles are white around the grip. He doesn’t look at me first. His eyes stay on Maya.I push myself up slowly, legs shaky under me. “I thought I told you to stay outside and let me handle this on my own.”He finally glances my way. Just a quick flick of his gaze enough to make sure I’m still breathing, before returning to Maya.“I heard you,” he says. His voice is calm, almost conversational. “And if I
Maya stands frozen under the bright lights of the Red Room, her chest rising and falling too fast, eyes wide with the kind of shock that only comes when every careful plan collapses in the same heartbeat. Blood is drying on my arms, sticky and warm, but none of it is mine. The bodies of her men lie scattered across the carpet like broken dolls – some still twitching, most already gone. The air smells of copper and gunpowder and fear. I keep the pistol steadily pointed to her chest. My voice comes out calmly. “All I want is an apology, Maya. One honest apology. Say it, and I let you walk out of here.” She stares at me for a long second, then laughs. The sound starts small and builds until it echoes off the crimson walls. “That’s it? That’s why you staged this entire circus? For a fucking apology?” I don’t smile back. “Not everyone is an evil genius.” Her laughter cuts off suddenly and she wipes a smear of blood from her cheek with the back of her hand. “No. You’re right. You’re far
Maya settles deeper into the leather armchair in the surveillance van parked three blocks away with her legs crossed and a tablet balanced on her knee. The feed from the six micro-cameras she planted throughout David and Nora's apartment is crisp, the audio clean enough to catch every breath and every word. She has watched David and Nora return from the federal building, watched him hold her too long in the foyer, watched them disappear into the master suite for what was obviously not a conversation. The rage that had simmered since the chapel wedding is now a steady burn in her chest, but she keeps it contained. Rage without control is useless. She has learned that lesson the hard way. On the screen, Nora moves alone through the hallway toward the front door. She kisses David on the cheek just before she steps out, and promises to be back home soon. Wouldn’t be so sure if I were you, Maya thinks to herself. Nora steps out holding a black leather bound
The sight of Maya on our couch with her legs crossed, looking like she’s waiting for room service, snaps something inside me and I just move. I cross the living room in three strides, my hands already curling into fists, ready to wipe that calm smile off her face with every ounce of rage that’s been building since the day stepped into that warehouse. I almost make it. The cold press of a gun barrel against the back of my skull stops me dead. “Easy now,” a man’s voice says from behind me. “Hands where I can see them.” I raise them slowly, doing my utmost to quell the rage building up within me. Maya sets her glass down on the coffee table with a soft clink. “Well,” she says, standing smoothly, “now that we’ve gotten the initial hostility out of the way, perhaps we can behave like adults.” David puts himself between me and the gunman without hesitation. “Get that thing off her head,” he says in a voice that's danger







