Trust Fall
Book One of The Trust Trilogy
Tess Quince
Chapter Ten
I'VE BEEN THINKING ABOUT BEN Sheppard since I sealed my panties in that envelope.
I thought of him as I met with Jack the appraiser at the bank. I held my legs close together even under the desk and crossed them carefully. Jack was flirty. He didn't do or say anything inappropriate. He's a sweet guy. It was all very innocent and low key. But I still felt a touch slutty sitting across from him without panties. He is cute. I flirted back, but after he left I thought of Ben Sheppard's hands on me. Holding me. Holding me down.
I was still thinking of Ben Sheppard during my quarterly review. I nodded at all the right places and used my furrowed brow to feign interest in what my director was telling me. I gave some rehearsed, canned feedback and verbalized an 'action plan' to improve on my numbers. What I really wanted to do was grab her and say, "I don't care. I'm thinking about Ben Sheppard."
I've not stopped thinking about him.
I think about those patches of silver hair on his temples. I think about his forearms. I think about his handwriting in that fine point blue ink. I think about his truck even. I think about his mouth on me, on my lips, on my neck, on my breasts and on my pussy.
I think about him inside me.
I think about his hand on my throat. I think about his palm coming down hard on my ass. I think of him holding me down and taking me.
I've been thinking about him since I sealed my panties in that envelope.
I am thinking of him when he doesn't ring my doorbell but knocks hard on my front door.
I try not to run to the door. I pace myself. It's not that I don't want to look eager. It's that I want to look calm and seductive. What I want is for me to open the door and him to step in and take me right there on the foyer tile. I want to feel his body hard against me. I want him to do something new. Something exciting. Like he did with his hand on my throat or with the toy.
I open the door. He smiles. His right hand is rubbing the stubble on his chin. The setting sun shimmers off the short, silver hairs. I sneak a peek past him at his truck.
"It's nice to see you again after a long week," Ben Sheppard says.
"Yes, it is." I lean in for a kiss and he does too. It's one of his brief, butterfly kisses that I can barely feel. I still sense the warmth of his lips. I feel the heat of his lips in my body.
I stand there looking up into his eyes and he looks down into mine. The moment is in danger of becoming awkward.
"Come in," I tell him.
As he walks into the living room I ask if he'd like some wine.
"Yes. What do you have?
I walk to my dust covered wine rack and pull out a bottle and turn to him.
"You know. I have no idea. I don't drink wine too often and I've gotten most of these as gifts."
"Mind if I take a look then?"
"Not at all."
I don't step away from the wine rack as he comes near. We're close. He's wearing dark jeans, a blue button down Oxford and a dark sport coat. The blue of his shirt is reflected in the silver at his temples. I put my hand lightly on his back. He pulls out several bottles.
"I made reservations for a sushi place. Is that all right by you?"
"Yes. I've never had it, but I'm willing to try."
"Then lets go with this Washington State Gewürztraminer. They're usually crisp and light. It'll be good to eat before sushi."
I nod. I don't hear anything he says about the wine, but I like the way he's holding the bottle. I snap out of it.
"I have a corkscrew in the kitchen, I think."
"No need." He pulls out a Swiss army knife, flips open a cork screw and twists it into the cork. He pulls the cork out. For whatever reason, I awkwardly touch his forearm. He looks at my hand then into my eyes. He smiles.
"I also got us tickets to a play. It's an outdoor theatre. Playhouse in the Park?
"That sounds nice," I say.
"It's a revival of Streetcar Named Desire. You seen it before?
"No. It sounds familiar."
"You've not seen it?"
"No," I confess.
I feel as if I should have seen it before.
"How's Danny doing in California?"
"He's good," I say. "He calls just about every day. It's hard with the time difference. He's missed a couple of days because he fell asleep but either Josh or his grandmother calls."
"That's nice—an adventure for him with his father."
"Absolutely," I say.
I like thinking about Danny, but my mind—or is it my body?—keeps bringing me back to this man in my living room.
"Your kids?"
"Mine are too busy to check in too often with the old man. We talk about once a week but lately with me out of town and them working so much it's been hard."
"Sorry."
"Nothing to be sorry about. I like them out there living their lives and embracing the world."
"How was your week at the bank?"
"Unexciting as usual. Except for your overnight letter."
"Thanks. That helped me get some things done."
He pulls my panties out of the inside breast pocket of his coat with those long fingers of his and he hands them to me as if he's giving me another glass of wine. I take them from him and notice a slight emerald glint to his hazel eyes. I put the panties on the bureau absentmindedly.
"You told me you had a review. That go okay?" he asks.
I take a sip and nod yes. I don't want to chit-chat. I'm dying to say, "Will you please fuck me, Ben Sheppard? Fuck me anyway you want. I trust you to do it right." Instead we sit on the couch and I say, "Yes, there's some areas for improvement, she says, but overall I'm near the top for my department."
"Congratulations," and he puts out his wine glass and we toast my 'exceeds expectations' quarterly performance review.
I'm lost in the stubble on his chin. Each silver hair seems to be standing at attention and reflecting back whatever color in my living room it catches. I'm not helping the conversation. After another silence, he says, "My week wasn't so great. I had to recommend to the company that they let a guy go. They did. He just wasn't going to learn my machine."
"I'm sorry," I say.
"Yeah. Makes you feel like crap but better that he learns his limitations now instead of after he screws up something expensive."
I put my hand high on his leg. It's a condolence but also an invitation.
He tells me we'd best be getting to our dinner.