Lights lasered through the dark strip club in every direction. Women danced on small podiums set apart from the main stage. The music was loud, but Lola wished it were deafening so she wouldnât have to hear her thoughts. Sheâd gone from a prize on Beauâs arm to trailing behind him with her head down to hide her face .
Sheâd danced for men like Beau before, men who liked to flaunt that they had money to burn. Sheâd been most careful around that type. When she danced, music lived in her. It was intoxicating. Men could tell, and it was dangerous for them to believe they had that kind of effect on a woman.
Beau led her down a hallway of doors. If one was open, the lights were on, and it was chipped-paint black inside with just a pole and some scattered chairs.
He stopped at the last room. âHere we are, my queen.â
âWhy are we here?â She controlled the impulse to fidget by crossing her arms.
Beau gestured inside. âGo on. I warned you not everything would be comfortable.â
It was the VIP room. The round stage, centered in a round room, ensured a view from every angle. One pole cut through the middle. Red velvet walls bled into Bordeaux-colored sofas that lined the space. The bass of the music from the main stage thumped through the room.
Lola looked over her shoulder. A woman in only a shiny gold thong and pasties over her nipples came in. Numerous metallic ribbons threaded her hair. She trailed a finger down Beauâs shoulder. âGood evening, sir,â she said. âIâm Golden.â
âAnd Iâm Angel.â Another woman stepped into the room. Her fur-lined, white baby-doll negligee matched her G-string. She placed a headband with red horns over her blonde hair. âOr Devil,â she said pleasantly. âYour choice.â Lola didnât recognize either of them.
Beau crossed the room and fell into a sofa. He tugged on his collar a little. Golden pushed some buttons on a keypad and the room changed to fiery pink as the music started. A spotlight shone over the stage.
Angel danced first. Beau watched her spin around the pole, her negligee billowing to reveal a flat stomach. She landed with ease on towering heels and smiled at him. He remained impassive.
The lights changed from pink to deep purple. Golden sat next to Beau and whispered in his ear. He nodded. Lola stood motionless while Golden straddled Beau, hovering her lips above his as she danced for him. The room was blue now, turning the red velvet a blood-black color. Beau looked past Golden to Angel when she bent, touched her toes and displayed her barely-there underwear for him. His eyes shifted to Lola. âJoin me.â
She shook her head. Watching him with another woman did nothing for her except spark some disappointment. It hadnât occurred to her that he might involve anyone else in their evening.
âItâs not a request,â he said.
Lola went to sit by him. Goldenâs breasts nearly touched his cheek with each movement.
âAre you enjoying this?â he asked.
âWhy would you pay for an evening with me just to watch them?â
âIâm still with you.â He leaned over and kissed her harder than he had earlier. When she jerked back, he reached up to keep her there. His lips and hand were warm. Pulling away had been instinct, but theyâd be doing far more soon. Her jaw and shoulders relaxed. For now, it was just a kiss.
âItâs sweet,â he whispered into her mouth, âthe taste of your submission.â He pecked her again and looked up. âTouch her.â
Lola had momentarily forgotten about the other women. Goldenâs fingers were soft as she combed Lolaâs hair away from her face.
âHave you ever been with a woman?â Beau asked.
âOnce. To try.â
âDid you enjoy it?â
âNot enough to do it again.â
Golden ran a knuckle down Lolaâs cheek. She traced her way down the strap of Lolaâs dress to the neckline, but Beau grabbed her wrist. âWait.â
She dropped her arm to her side. Angel worked the pole, sliding over it as if it were silk against her skin, possessing it with her legs and hands. The white fabric of her top shone under the spotlight as she peeled it off. She stopped there. The topless-only rule hadnât changed since Lolaâs time there.
âKiss,â Beau said.
Lola snapped her head back to Beau. He was watching her, not Angel. The room became hotter. He nodded once. Golden leaned over and put her mouth to Lolaâs. Gently, she ran her tongue along Lolaâs bottom lip.
Lola backed away a little. Beau had left the taste of liquor in her mouth. The womanâs cherry lip balm would replace it. Any other night she mightâve preferred the cherry, but tonight she wanted Beauâs bitter flavor. Golden chased her down for another kiss as she felt Lolaâs breast through her dress. Lola shut her eyes briefly and gave into the shameful desire that it was actually Beau touching her.
âBeau,â Lola moaned, not because she enjoyed it, but because she didnât.
âTell me what you want, sweetheart,â he said.
Golden tweaked Lolaâs nipples into hardening.
âIf you donât like it,â he said, âjust say so.â
âI donât like it.â
âEnough,â Beau said. Golden pulled away, obviously confused.
âNow you, Lola,â he said when the song changed. He signaled Angel to get down.
âButââ
âItâs not up for discussion.â
âAsk them to leave,â Lola said. âIf I dance, itâs only for you.â
Beauâs lids lowered a little, but he blinked suddenly and the lusty look was gone. âHow many times do I need to ask before you do what I say? Hmm? You challenge me at every turn. Get up on the stage and dance.â
She stood.
âNow tell me why youâre doing this,â he said.
She opened her mouth, breathed softly. With the hardness in his voice, her determination not to enjoy herself slipped. He already had all the power, but he wanted more. With each passing hour, he pushed the limits of her submission. Not even Johnny held that kind of complete control over her.
âWhy?â he repeated.
âBecause you told me to.â
âVery good.â
She climbed onto the platform. The spotlight and room had turned red.
âYou get paid either way,â Beau said. âSo try to enjoy it.â
With one hand around the pole, Lola circled the stage. The gown would inhibit her, but she got the feeling Beau wouldnât mind. The music was fast. She found a slower beat within it. She jumped, grabbed on and spun with one leg partially hooked around the pole. Angel and Golden sat on both sides of Beau. He was unblinking, unwavering in his attention. Even in the red haze, she saw the gleam in his eyes, the black shape of his bowtie. Her body rattled like a speaker with the musicâs bass.
Facing Beau, she raised her arms behind her. She snaked down the metal, cool through the back of her dress, and back up. Beau stood suddenly and walked to the base of the stage. He took her calf and pressed his lips to the inside of her knee. His mouth left wet spots on her dress as he kissed up her thigh to her hip. He gripped her, nuzzling the fabric between her legs.
Lolaâs breaths swelled from her stomach. She felt himâfelt him thereâacutely for the first time. God, it was unfair. Heâd barely touched her and her will to fight him dissolved in seconds. She put one hand in his hair and pulled it with all the betrayal, shame and arousal she felt.
He looked up at her.
âTouchingâs not permitted in here,â she said.
His smile was more than just crooked and sexy. For all her effort to hide, that smile told her he knew he had her. He turned and cleared both women from the room with a word.
He backed away to the sofa, and this time, Lola went to him. She pulled her dress up around her thighs. One knee went outside his hip and one stayed between his legs. She held on to the cushion behind his head. She was careful not to touch him as she danced over his lap, but now and then her skin would brush against the fabric of his tuxedo pants. When he looked as though he might touch her, she got up, pushed his knees apart. She let her hands wander over her body as she swayed her hips. She dipped a hand between her legs and slid the other up her neck.
Beau reached for her, but she stepped back and shook her head. âYou canâtââ
âCome back here.â His level tone left no room for play. âDonât deny me when Iâm like this.â
When she was back at his knees, he took her wrist in one hand. âKneel.â
She got on the floor.
âYouâre all red,â he said.
âItâs the lighting.â
âNo, it isnât. Youâre hot.â He let go of her and pressed his cold tumbler to the side of her neck. She sucked in a breath with the chill. Condensation trickled between her breasts. He lifted the glass to her lips. She tilted her head back and let the liquor run down her throat.
He set the drink aside and nodded at his lap. âTake it out,â he said quietly.
This was it. This was why she was here. She had wondered several times what exactly lay under his suit, what was the source of his unshakeable confidenceânow she would know for sure. Hold it in her hand.
Her fingers were slow and shaky as she undid his fly. He lifted his hips for her to pull his pants down. Through his underwear, she pressed her palm against the bulging outline of him. His head fell back. She lifted the ends of his dress shirt, dragging her fingertips up the hard crevices of his stomach. His body expanded with each breath.
âDonât tease me, Lola,â he said. âI want your red lips on me.â
There was new desperation in his voice that made Lola ache badly for him. And this dealâthis promiseâsheâd already made it. Johnny, even, had made it. So she put a bullet through her guilt and gave Beau what he wanted.
She pulled him out, looking into his eyes while she took him in her mouth. He fisted her hair, then stroked it, then pulled it again. He thrust up, hitting the back of her throat. She tried to taste even more, wanting him deeper, wanting him to the last inch, but still he was too much, every bit as big and daunting as sheâd suspected.
âYour mouth alone could ruin me.â She paused, unsure how heâd meant that, but he kept her going with a hand on her head. âDonât stop,â he said. âI want to be ruined.â
With her tongue, she traced himâthe ridge of his head, the veins of his thick shaft.
âYouâre driving me to the edge,â he said. âI donât know whether to come, or bend you over and finally take you.â
She became ravenous from his rumbling, suggestive words. He responded, pushing her down so he was crammed to her throat with every bob of her head. Her underwear dampened with the way he thoroughly fucked her mouth. With both his hands tight in her hair, he came. She gripped the red velvet cushion and swallowed everything.
There was calm in the eye of the chaos, in the labored breaths, the pounding music, the room, which had turned pink again sometime during it all. But while they looked at each other, anything else, including the regret she thought she should feel, faded into the background.
On impulse, Lola stretched up and kissed him on the mouth. He wouldnât lower his head to meet her or move his arms from his sides. She pressed her hands down on his thighs, her breasts into his wall of a chest. His body breathed beneath her.
âHowâd you know?â she asked. âHow did you know Iâd react like this?â
He seemed to stiffen under her. âItâs not even midnight,â he said. âWe arenât finished.â
âI know.â
He touched her cheek with his whole palm. âYouâre burning up.â
She bit her lip. She could feel it too. âItâs a good thing.â
He helped her to her feet, and they left the room while it was blue.
âYouâre supposed to tip them,â Lola remembered once they were outside again.
âItâs taken care of. They wonât be millionaires after this, but theyâve been well compensated.â
âMillionaire,â she repeated to herself. She still couldnât wrap her head around it, and itâd be a while before she could. After tonight, sheâd be a millionaire and all this would be over. The thought didnât give her as much comfort as it once had.
In the car, driving down Sunset at a much easier speed, Beau asked Lola what she planned to do with the money.
âYou already know,â she answered. âWeâre buying Hey Joe.â
âI know what he wants. But what about you? Youâre the one doing all the work.â
Lola balked. âIt makes me feel cheap when you say that.â
âBelieve me, sweetheart. You arenât cheap.â
She shook her head and sighed up at the Lamborghiniâs roof. âI want us to be happy and have a shot at a real future.â
âBut what do you want for yourself?â
âThatâs what I want. Making Johnny happy makes me happy.â
âFine. Everybodyâs happy. Now give me something real. A new car? A trip to New York City? Whatâre you going to do for yourself?â
âTo tell you the truth, I havenât given it much thought. Iâm okay with what Iâve got.â
âSlinging drinks is what you want to do forever? Havenât you ever asked yourself what youâd do if money werenât an issue? You have some freedom now.â
âNot until the sun comes up,â Lola said.
Beau scoffed. âIâm glad to see one blowjob hasnât killed your spirit.â
What a blowjob itâd been. Lola was incredibly turned on, and sheâd barely even been touched. She made an effort to control herself, even though she squirmed in her seat a little. âWhat do you want me to say? That I love to paint landscapes, or Iâve always dreamed of backpacking through Europe? I donât and I havenât. Not everyone has hobbies or dreams. Thatâs not the kind of life I live.â
Beau slammed on the brakes. The car behind them swerved and honked. âSo tell me what kind of life you live.â
âWhat are you doing?â Lola asked. âYou canât just stop in the middle of the road.â
âConventional methods arenât working,â he said. âI donât want platitudes. Just give me a real answer.â
âAre you drunk?â Lola asked. âYouâre drunk, arenât you?â
âI didnât even finish my drink. I want to know more about the girl I played darts with. Who you are when heâs not around.â
Lola shook her head. âYouâre getting sentimental on me just because I let you come in my mouth?â
Beau barked a laugh. âCan you blame me? Youâre so charming.â
She smiled through the honking of passing cars. âYouâre really going to stay here?â
He nodded. âHereâs an easier question. Tell me something you donât want out of life.â
She squinted through the windshield. It was an easier question, and even though sheâd never articulated it, the answer didnât come with difficultly. âI donât want Johnny to lose his sense of self-worth along with the bar. I was afraid if he didnât have Hey Joe, heâd have to start over somewhere else, and heâd feel like heâd failed.â
âFailureâs good for us, you know.â
She looked over at him. âAre you saying I shouldnât have taken the deal?â
âIâm saying you canât be the sacrifice for the fulfillment of his dreams.â He took his foot off the brake and resumed driving. âWhen he asked what you wanted to do with the money, whatâd you say?â
Lola chewed the inside of her cheek. She wasnât sure Johnny had asked. Thereâd never been any other option. She was using the money to keep them intact. Johnny knew the ins and outs of Hey Joe. He was master of that domain. Maybe it wasnât her dream job, but sheâd never had a dream jobâso she wasnât losing anything. Only, Beau seemed to think there was more to it, and now she wondered if there was. âYouâve made your point.â
âYou need to figure out what you want,â he said. âNot what you want for him. Then you need to tell him.â
âI donât know if youâre right,â she said, âbut you might not be wrong.â
He pulsed his eyebrows at her once. âThatâs a start. So what would it take to get you to figure it out?â
They happened to be in a familiar part of town. Giving in to Beau had loosened her up a bit, and he was working hard to shine his spotlight on her, so she decided to help him out by moving under it a little more. âHow about a trip down memory lane?â
âWhatâd you have in mind?â he asked right away.
She pointed in front of them. âTake a right up here.â After only a few minutes of driving, she told him to park at a curb. âSee that place?â she asked, nodding through the window.
âThe Lucky Egg,â Beau read the flickering sign off the corner diner.
âWhen I was a kid, my mom worked there. Days and nights. The life of a single mom.â
âWhere was your dad?â
âGone. I donât have a lot of memories of him. I remember weird things, though, like the smell of his shampoo when heâd pick me up before leaving for work, or the time he kissed my elbow after Iâd fallen climbing a tree in the backyard. Then it was just me and her.â
âHave you seen him since?â
âNo. If heâd come back, I think my mom wouldâve killed him. She got so angry after he left. It flipped a switch in her. They married right out of high school, so sheâd never been on her own. She thought we were going to lose the house, or they were going to take our car. Sheâd get really rundown from working so much.â
âSounds the opposite of my mom. When my dad died, she became helpless. I kept waiting for that maternal survival instinct to kick in, but it didnât.â
âI donât even think it was maternal instinct for my mom. She just saw me as this little person who drained her meager bank account. Around seventeen, I moved in with some older kids. We partied a lot. The first night I went to Hey Joe, Johnny shouldâve kicked me out because I was underage. Guess he took pity on me, though. He gave me a tequila shot instead.â
âOr he was trying to get in your pants.â
Lola shook her head. âWe didnât start sleeping together for a while, actually. And when we did, I didnât take it seriously until he broke up with me.â
âI see. Obviously that didnât last.â
Lola kept her eyes out the window. âHe was sick of me screwing around. He gave me an ultimatumâgrow up or get out. Quit the drugs, the partying, theââ She paused. âHe saved me. Turned my life around. If not for him, I donât know where Iâd be.â
âYou should give yourself more credit. Youâre a fighter. That much is obvious.â
She finally looked at Beau. âIf youâre fighting against the wrong thing, the only person youâll hurt is yourself.â The digital clock on the dashboard changed. âIâm sure this isnât how you want to spend your precious few hours,â she added.
He looked at the clock too, then out the windshield. He turned the car around. âWhat happened to your mom?â he asked.
âOh, she still works there.â Lola turned her face away when he peered at her.
They didnât speak again until they were on Santa Monica Boulevard. âHow many women have you done this with?â Lola asked.
âNone.â
âYou expect me to believe that?â
âWhy would I lie?â
âTo seem like less of an asshole.â
Beau chuckled. âWhat does it matter if you think Iâm an asshole? I already got you here. If you donât like me by the time weâre done, itâs all the same to me.â
Her eyes drifted to the clock again. She assumed they were now going to the hotel, but she didnât ask. Beau had his own agenda. âIf you donât care either way, then I could be anyone.â
âThatâs not true at all.â He sighed and shifted in his seat. âIâve met a lot of women over the years. All kindsâblonde, brunette, athletic, short, sweet, married, single. Somethingâs different about you, Lola.â
Lola didnât think of herself as the same as or different from anyone. But she could guess the things she was compared to Beauâs usual women. For one, she didnât go for bullshit, but his world turned for it.
âSomethingâs different about you too,â she admitted. Lola wasnât proud that sheâd pegged Beau as another corporate asshole during their first meeting on the sidewalk. Heâd proved her wrong during their darts game, but thatâd only lasted until his proposition. Then heâd been worse than an asshole in her eyes. She worried he was proving her wrong again. That would make the evening entirely different. The Beau sheâd agreed to spend the night with was the repugnant one whoâd offered money for her bodyânot the sexy one sheâd known before that.
âItâs always been my opinion that different is good,â he said. âI hope you agree.â
âYou know, you arenât the first man to try and sleep with me behind Johnnyâs back.â
âDid you?â Beau asked.
âDid I what?â
âSleep with them.â
âNo,â Lola said emphatically.
âGood.â He hit his blinker and slowed for a light. âI donât like cheating. Itâs for people who donât think they can win. If you donât believe in yourself enough to play by the rules, you arenât worthy of the prize.â
âAre we still talking about sex?â
âCheating is always weak, no matter the circumstances.â
âBeau, some peopleâlots of peopleâmight call this cheating.â
âI donât. And I didnât try to sleep with you behind his back like you said. It all happened in front of his face. Johnnyâs aware of everything. He had his chance to put a stop to it.â
âHave you ever turned down a million dollars?â Lola asked wryly. Beau had been desperate before. Had he already forgotten how that felt?
âSure I have,â he said. âWhen the company on the table was worth more.â
âIâm not talking about business, Beau. Weâre people. Iâm talking about lives.â
He didnât speak. Money, sex, worth, peopleâit all shaded into a gray area for them. Had anyone asked her before all this, she wouldâve answered that a dollar amount couldnât be put on a personâs life. She still believed that, but the concepts were no longer completely unrelated in her mind.
âLetâs not argue about it,â Beau said, sighing again. Ahead, they were entering Beverly Hills. âI donât want you wasting any more energy. Youâre going to need it soon.â