Synopsis
: Molly and Nick have known each other since they were in college. They've danced around each other for years, even lived together for a while. Now their relationship has found a new edge, and neither of them is exactly sure what to do with it. Chapter One of a BDSM-themed friends-to-lovers romance novella.
Chapter content note:
The story is a little bit of a slow burn, and there's no explicit sex in this chapter, although that will change as the story progresses. There is some kink play and someone does get off, though.
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Chapter 1: Where Were You Last Night?
The door to my apartment blew open, and Molly flung herself through it like an April thunderstorm. I set a pot of water to boil and wiped my hands on a dishtowel. By the time I got to the living room, Molly had already thrown her jacket in one corner, her shoes in another, and herself across my recliner.
"What, aren't you going to offer me a drink?" she chided jokingly.
"Hi, Molly, it's nice to see you, too."
She jumped out of the chair almost as quickly as she'd jumped into it, throwing her arms around my neck and kissing my cheek. "Oh, Nick, you know I'm just giving you shit. Dinner smells great; what are we having?"
"Nothing special," I said, returning her smile.
"Come on. Your 'nothing special' would
be
the special at most restaurants I've been to lately."
"You've been eating in the wrong restaurants then. It's just my personal twist on Beef Stroganoff -- and it'll be ready in about fifteen minutes."
"Perfect. I'm starving."
Molly had a dancer's body: tall, lithe, sleek as a cat and just as graceful. She wore her usual black tank top over a comfortable pair of black jeans, which made her short dyed-silver hair and undercut stand out. I let myself stare for a moment as she turned away from me and picked a different chair to sit in this time.
"Can I get you a beer? Red wine?"
"You ask that as if you haven't already picked out a bottle of wine for dinner."
"You got me. A glass of CΓ΄tes-du-RhΓ΄ne for the lady, then."
"If I'm a 'lady' then
you've
been hanging out with the wrong women."
Molly was an old college friend. In those days I fancied myself a writer; she studied chemical engineering. We flirted shamelessly all through college, but I was too boring for her and she was too wild for me. We'd even lived together for a short while after we graduated. When I couldn't support myself with writing and took a job washing dishes, she covered part of my rent; when she got laid off from her first engineering job, I made sure she didn't go hungry. Some old unresolved sexual tension stuck around, but mostly we just laughed it off.
"Can I change the playlist?"
"Does it matter if I say 'yes' or 'no'?" I yelled from the kitchen, turning down the heat on the steak and picking two wineglasses off the shelf.
"Not really."
I'd left my laptop open on purpose. There was no point making the music player hard to find; she was going to mess around with it regardless.
I never gave up on writing, but I never figured out how to make a living at it, either. At least working in restaurants paid the bills. From my start in the dish room, I'd worked my way up to serving tables, then tending bar, and eventually back to the kitchen. Along the way I'd made some friends in the industry, learned how to loosen up a bit, and turned into a pretty good cook.
The music stopped abruptly. I set a glass of wine for Molly down next to my laptop just as the opening riff of "London Calling" blasted from my stereo.
"The Clash? That's a throwback. Not what I would have picked--"
"--'for a quiet, romantic dinner for two', I know, dummy. You say that every time."
Molly and I got together every few weeks for dinner; I shopped for the ingredients and cooked, and she paid for everything, even the wine. She always said it was cheaper than trying to eat at the restaurants I worked in. I was just happy for the opportunity to see her semi-regularly. Molly was one of those people who moved through life from peak to valley and back again, never standing still for very long. It made her incredibly attractive, frustrating as hell, and nearly impossible to schedule with.
"Are you writing anything right now?"
"Eh, kinda. I've got a piece kicking around that I'd like to pitch to The Toast, or maybe McSweeney's. It's only half-finished."
"Can I read it?"
"Check the 'Drafts' folder on the desktop."
While Molly read through my latest effort, I turned my attention to finishing up dinner. I dropped the egg noodles into boiling water, combined the roux with stock and vegetables (and a few secret ingredients), and seasoned the tender beef strips.
It had been a while since I'd listened to this album. Actually, it was funny that she'd picked it; The Clash always reminded me of Molly, and the first and only time we tried going on a date. We'd ended up at this awful late-night diner off campus; the only things it had going for it were an actual vintage jukebox that ran on dimes and the fact that it was open all night. Molly had declared that "Rudie Can't Fail" was the only song worth listening to in the entire jukebox and she'd dropped an entire dollar's worth of dimes in, punching the same song ten times. Around the third time through, the manager figured out what she'd done, unplugged the jukebox, and asked us to pay our bill on the spot. Molly laughed all the way back to campus, dropping me at the front door to my dorm with a goodnight hug.
Like I said: unpredictable, attractive, and frustrating as hell.
I started plating our dinner. After all we'd been through over the years, Molly and I had emerged from our early 20s with a comfortable friendship that I really enjoyed. We were still close, or as close as possible given our various schedules and commitments. Whatever feelings I had for her back then, apart from the occasional pleasant flashback, I'd found ways to set them aside just like I had for the rest of my college crushes: tucked away in a mental shoebox, taped shut, and placed gently in a dark corner.
A bright burst of laughter eminated from the living room. "Nick, did you write this?"
Without turning around, I said, "Probably, why?" On second thought, why would she even ask that question, unless... "You're not poking around in my Drafts folder any more, are you."
"Uh... maybe?"
Of
course
she'd gotten bored and gone looking through my hard drive looking for other stuff to read. Of
course
she'd found the folder full of erotica I had saved up from many years of browsing the Internet. I could tell from the tone of her voice. Well, that was basically harmless.
"What did you find, Molly?"
"It's called
Careful What You Wish For
. Is it yours?"
I froze.
Of
course
she'd found not just the folder full of erotica, but the hidden folder full of stuff I'd written, back when I was writing smut for practice and occasionally a few extra bucks.
Of
course
she'd found the one I'd written about her.
I put down the dinner plates and turned to step into the archway between the kitchen and the living room. Molly had turned the laptop around to show me what she was reading, with a goofy grin on her face. I didn't actually need to look at the screen to know, but it was easier to do that than to look her in the eyes.
"Uh, yes. That's one of mine."
How had she found it? Why hadn't I deleted it? At least I'd changed our names. Maybe she wouldn't notice.