Fallen Foe (Cruel Castaways #2) Read Online L.J. Shen

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Contemporary Tags Authors: Series: Cruel Castaways Series by L.J. Shen
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Total pages in book: 119
Estimated words: 112638 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 563(@200wpm)___ 451(@250wpm)___ 375(@300wpm)
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His lips trail my neck again, his hands cupping my breasts from behind. My head falls sideways, allowing him access to work his magic, while I arch my back, digging my behind against his erection.

“Break me, then.”

“I can’t.” His lips touch the shell of my ear. “You’re already broken.”

I turn my head, catching his lips in mine, and we kiss again. I’m ready for him. The emptiness inside me intensifies. Somehow, we find ourselves on the floor, starving and half-civilized, kissing, dipping fingers, stroking and licking and demanding more of each other.

“Tell me you have a condom around here.” His hands part my thighs, roughly pushing them apart. “Otherwise I just might die from blood loss on my journey to the nearest bodega.”

“No, no condom. But I’m clean . . .” I hesitate. “And as established, can’t really get pregnant.”

He stops kissing me. His eyes meet mine. There’s struggle behind them. “I’m clean too.”

The rest is unspoken. He positions himself between my legs, and in one swift push, he is inside me, filling me completely. I’ve never felt so desired, so sexy, my entire life. He starts moving inside me.

“Ah, this is no good.” He drops his head to my chest, kissing the valley between my breasts.

I run my fingers through his silken hair, dread filling me. “It’s not? Do you want me to . . . ?”

“No, you’re good. Shit, you’re perfect.” He is still inside me. “What I mean by this is no good, is that it’s too good. Way too good. I’m about to come, and I’m two thrusts in. I’ve never . . .” He raises his head, and he is thoroughly blushing. What a wonder. “Never without a condom.”

“Oh.” Relief washes over me, and I hug him tighter, moving underneath him, rolling my hips, making him go crazy. “Come whenever you want. I’m close too.”

“God, Winnifred. You’re so sweet, even when you’re killing me.”

We find our rhythm. It’s fast and intense. Urgent and needy. When he comes inside me, I stifle a cry it feels so good.

He stays over afterward. Sleeps in the bed Paul and I once shared. Or, rather, lies in Paul’s spot. Taller and larger in frame. His dark eyes watching me, instead of those sunshine baby blues I’ve been used to seeing from across the pillow.

There is very little sleep involved on our last night together. We have sex, then we pull away, talk a little. His arm is draped over me in a possessive gesture I’ll miss. And then he is inside me again, kissing, biting, moaning. Sometimes we fuse together before we even finish a conversation. We’re a jumbled, delicious mess.

When the sun rises, I’m dead to the world. The good kind of exhaustion takes over me. My bones feel heavy, and I’m lulled into a deep sleep. When I wake up, the clock says 11:20 a.m., and Arsène is nowhere in sight. I peel myself off a bed that smells like a stranger and make my way to the kitchen. Half-exhilarated after the night I’ve had, half-devastated that this is the end.

There’s a note waiting for me, stuck on the coffee machine, where he knows I will see it. It’s his parting gift. His white flag.

Call the doctor.

—A.

And so I do.

I call my OB-GYN. This time, I don’t hang up. I don’t let panic take over me. The receptionist announces cheerfully that they actually have an opening tomorrow, at around noon. I take it with both hands and thank her approximately five hundred times.

Before she ends the call, the receptionist reminds me to bring my insurance card, along with a photo ID. After I hang up, I rummage through my wallet. I can’t find the darn insurance card. It’s been a hot minute since I took care of myself, having spent the majority of this past year in deep hibernation.

Then I remember that Paul put our insurance cards, along with our passports, birth certificates, and social security cards, in the safe in his closet.

I walk over to our room, ignoring the mangled sheets, and open Paul’s closet. The safe stares back at me. I don’t have the combination for it. Paul didn’t share it with me. I never thought much of it at the time. Trust hadn’t been an issue in our marriage—or so I thought.

My extensive knowledge of movies reminds me I have only three tries before the safe self-locks. I rack my brain for what the code may be.

I try his birthdate first. Fail.

I try my birthday, letting out a wry chuckle when the light blinks red. No surprises there.

My Spidey senses tell me it has to be a birthday. It must. Paul lacked the creativity to come up with any other combination. He always used birthdates. I used to make fun of him about it. His Gmail, Facebook, Instagram passwords . . . all birthdates. Usually his own. He didn’t remember his parents’ birthdays. He was sure about the months but never about the days. His secretary had to remind him a week in advance to buy presents and schedule a call on his calendar.


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