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I gulped down the last of my lemonade, ice cubes gently clanking as I continued to melt in the sticky Boston summer air. Maggie and I had been politely laughing at the jokes of various well-meaning parents for about thirty minutes, while we waited for the rest of our high school friends to arrive. None of us had seen each other for ages, and it seemed fitting to do a small post college graduation reunion at Maggieâs brotherâs high school graduation party. All of us had already done our graduation partying at our respective universities and on a variety of globe-trotting trips, but we had agreed to return home to Boston and see each other before starting at our medical schools, PhD programs, and consulting jobs.Â
I gazed idly past the other guests on the patio toward Maggieâs warmly lit house. Everywhere I looked seemed to hold a reminder of our giddy, reckless youth. There was the liquor cabinet we raided to get irresponsibly drunk for the first time, the back garden door we always snuck out through to go to underwhelming parties, the balcony where we would smoke cigarettes to cosplay as adults, and the high kitchen counters where we would perch late at night to nurse our first heartbreaks. Four years and several degrees later, it felt like we had lived through immeasurable pain and countless joys. We had gone separate ways in college, growing up and apart from each other, guarding our hard-earned friendships through FaceTime calls and occasional cross-country visits. We all managed to find our own versions of academic and professional success by graduation, returning now to Boston on a victory lap.Â
I had grown into who I always wanted to be, someone my younger self would hardly recognize. Gone was the girl who was so afraid of the sting of rejection that she would never ask, only wait to be asked. Who would never say âI love youâ first even when she knew as much as anything that she felt it to be true, humming in her chest. Who could not bear to end a relationship that had been passionless for months because she was terrified of the vulnerability that comes with being alone. After a vicious break up, I learned to live in that vulnerability. I learned that the embarrassment of rejection means nothing in the face of the richness of human connection that only honesty can bring. I learned how to fall again, and again, and again, and how to get up every time. I was confident now, I knew my worth, I was unafraid to ask for what I wanted.Â
Maggieâs youngest sister Emmy shrieked from the garden. She was only nine and could still find endless entertainment chasing her school friend Charlie around the carefully manicured hedges. I stood up, grabbing my glass and making my chair scrape across the patio stones.
âAnyone want more lemonade?â I gestured with my cup at the rest of the table. Hearing only murmurs of no thank you, I strode toward the sliding glass doors, desperately excited for the reprieve of the aggressively air-conditioned kitchen. The houseâs front doorbell sounded just as the patio door slammed behind me.
âChloe, can you let them in?â Maggie shouted at me, her voice muffled through the glass. I grinned, setting my cup down on the marble countertop, nearly skipping to welcome my old friends.
I flung open the front door and my breath hitched. It was not a gaggle of young women waiting there for me but an unfamiliar man, with salt and pepper stubble and an even buzz cut, wearing Steve Jobs glasses and athletic wear I recognized from Wirecutterâs âBest ofâ lists. He looked like the founder of a biotech start up. Like a Boston Symphony Orchestra Board of Trustees member. Like tenured faculty at a Greater Boston area college. And he was tall. So tall that even at 5â8â I had to tilt my head a little to meet his gaze that flicked down over my narrow frame, assessed by his steely grey eyes so quickly I nearly missed it. I felt self-conscious now in my ankle length but paper thin, clinging summer dress. I was hyper-aware that I had chosen that morning, seeing the sweltering forecast, not to wear anything underneath. I noticed he wasnât wearing a ring.
âIâm here to pick up Charlie Adamson.â His quiet baritone broke my stunned silence. âIâm James, Charlieâs dad,â he offered for further explanation after I missed a beat.
I recovered promptly, offering a smile and extending a handshake, âOf course. Iâm Chloe, Maggieâs friend from back in high school.â His rough fingertips grazed the smooth back of my hands, sending a flutter to my heart and between my legs.
He followed me through the house as I led him to the back patio. Conscious of his gaze, I would have tried to walk with a seductive sway in my hips if I had anything back there that would move. Instead, feeling more like a teenager than I had in years, I focused on not tripping over my own feet and hoped that I was giving âpoised runway modelâ rather than âlanky newborn colt.â After Maggieâs mom convinced him to stay for drinks, I watched for the next hour as nearly every other mom at the party flirted with him. I certainly didnât blame them. His quiet but commanding demeanor, so intense when he would fix his sharp and level gaze on you, softened only occasionally by his lopsided smile. It was all enough to leave these middle-aged women swooning and me fantasizing about him holding me down, putting his mouth on my soaking pussy, and ordering me to beg to finish. Even when my friends finally arrived and got into reminiscing about high school, I stayed distracted by his low tones floating across the patio through fragments of dialogue. When I glanced over for the umpteenth time, he caught my gaze and held it just for a moment before dropping it and turning back to his conversation. I shivered in the muggy heat.
When I saw him murmur an excuse to the woman he was talking to and slip inside the house, I counted twenty seconds and then followed him in, mumbling to my friends something about more lemonade. I found him waiting for the guest bathroom that was near the front door, tucked away to the side of the cavernous atrium. I formed a line behind him.
He turned and looked down at me through his glasses, his gaze considering. âChloe, right?â This close to him, I could smell his cologne, sandalwood and citrus and hopelessly intoxicating. âIf youâre Maggieâs friend you must be, what, a senior in college now?â His brow furrowed ever so slightly with the mental math.
âJust graduated.â My nipples were hard in the air-conditioned space, piercings clearly outlined under my dress, and I thought I caught him glancing down at them. âStarting medical school in a few weeks.â
The bathroom door slammed open, and one of the other dads stumbled out and across the atrium to the rest of the party, leaving us alone.
âYou can go ahead, if youâd like.â He gestured toward the bathroom, chivalrous or something. I stepped past him and hesitated in the doorframe, feeling the heat of his gaze on my back. The short space between us felt charged with electricity. I wanted him, desperately, and in that moment I was willing to put everything on the line for him. Even if the chance to actualize this fantasy meant risking brutally embarrassing rejection, I knew I was ready to take the risk. I turned to him and pulled out the one line that had always worked on college boys.
âDo you want to see my tattoos?â
He smiled, slightly taken aback. âUh, sure.â I stepped into the bathroom, lit only by the late afternoon light coming in from the high window.
I grinned, the warmth of desire in the pit of my stomach unfurling and filling me with confidence. âCome in and lock the door, then.â
He inhaled sharply. âChloe, IâChrist.â
I peeled off my summer dress, letting the delicate sage fabric pool around my ankles. The soft summer light illuminated my pierced nipples that stood at attention, capping my small, pert breasts and my tattoos, one at the very top of my thigh and another on my lower abdomen nestled into the sharp line of my pelvic bone. They were girly designs, both highly detailed clusters of rose buds, but anyone with a passing knowledge of tattoos could immediately recognize the demonstration of a high pain tolerance encoded in these flowers. Fully exposed before him, fully vulnerable to this near stranger, I was desperately aroused. His eyes raked over my body, leaving my steady, burning gaze to take in the carefully groomed, now glistening curls between my toned legs. I noticed a bulge starting to press at the seam of his charcoal joggers.
âWe shouldnât,â he breathed, eyes fixated on my mouth.
âIâm not going to try to convince you of anything.â I stepped out of the pile of my dress and closer to him. âIâm offering myself to you, and anything you want to do to me. If youâre not interested, Iâll go back to the party.â
Full story is at ReadAurore.com
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