Knocking Boots Read online Willow Winters, W. Winters

Categories Genre: Chick Lit, Contemporary, Erotic, New Adult, Romance Tags Authors: ,
Advertisement

Total pages in book: 72
Estimated words: 68055 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 340(@200wpm)___ 272(@250wpm)___ 227(@300wpm)
<<<<1018192021223040>72
Advertisement


“What do I get?” she asks.

“What do you want?” My dick twitches in my pants at the thought of her answering with that desire I see in her eyes.

“Let me think about what I want,” she answers in a soft voice.

She grabs the second to last fry and watches as I slowly reach the last one.

“What is it that you get again? You’re willing to do something for just a date?” she asks, forcing my eyes to reach hers.

“Nope. It’s more than just a date. It’s my family off my back.”

I nod to the phone and bite the fry as I wait for her response. Tell me what you want, sweetheart. I’ll give it to you.

“Okay then... you’ve got yourself a deal.”

“What’s my end of the bargain?” I ask her with a smirk on my face.

She bites down on her bottom lip and I know what she wants is right there, on the tip of her tongue, but she won’t say it. I know what she wants. She wants to go slumming, get all tangled up in the sheets with the man she thinks I am. All she has to do is ask. Hell, she can have me every night for these two weeks and then some.

“I’ll figure something out,” she says, shifting on her barstool.

I’m playing with fire, knowing damn well this girl wants to settle down. She doesn’t want to wind up with me, I know that much. But I’ll play along.

This is all for fun. I just need to remember that. It’s just a drunken deal; it probably won’t even happen.

Grace

I want you to knock me up.

I could feel the words on the tip of my tongue when I was making a deal with Charlie, even though I know that’s not realistic and sounds absolutely insane.

It’s not an even trade.

A baby isn’t a decision to make in a bar with a kind-of-friend.

I have officially lost my mind.

I’ll figure out how I’m going to deal with my… issues. But for now, I’m focusing on the positive. I have a date… sort of. It’s just pretend but… yeah, I’m going to treat it like a date because dammit I want a nice date and a refresher on exactly how to date.

As I drive home from Mac's, I can’t help the smile that lights up my face. It’s silly, I know. The very idea of Charlie going on a date with me is laughable. I get that.

But I still let my imagination run wild as I drive back into the city.

Fantasies about Charlie picking me up for the wedding run through my head and I just laugh it off. I’d wear a pretty pale blue dress, lacy but not scandalous, and dark blue heels. A giddy squeal leaves me when I imagine opening the front door to my apartment, and he takes a moment to look at me. Really look at me, and drink me in.

Standing there in his wedding tux, I assume… since he’s probably a groomsman, he looks fucking dashing. In the fantasy, I bite my lip and look downward, trying not to show him all the emotions just beneath the surface.

He whistles, long and low. My eyes drift up, catching his.

“Damn, you are the kind of girl I’d like to date,” he says. “As a matter of fact, I think you’d look even better if you were carrying my child…”

I can’t help but laugh out loud in my car as I pull into my parking spot. My reverie fizzles away, gone like smoke. How ridiculous!

Okay, so the real Charlie definitely wouldn’t say that and that’s not how this is going to go down, but I’d rather think of that than my nearly-forgotten, crap date from tonight. My cheeks hurt from smiling as I turn the car off and shake my head. I need to get my head on straight, because going to Charlie’s sister’s wedding isn’t even a real date. I’m probably not even on his radar, for God’s sake. It’s just meaningless flirting. For all I know, he’s not actually going to go through with this plan.

Yeah it’s definitely not going to happen and that’s just fine. It’s fun to daydream though. So long as my silly little heart keeps itself in check. Charlie is a friend and nothing else.

Sighing as I get out of my car, I lock up the idea at the same time as I lock up my car and then climb the two flights of stairs to my apartment. Only on the tenth stair do I feel the weight of the drinks I’ve had. I’m not too tipsy but I am more tired than I realized. I usually don’t stay out this long, but tonight, I didn’t want to leave.

It’s quiet out tonight, the city lulled to sleep by a long day of constant rushing.


Advertisement

<<<<1018192021223040>72

Advertisement