Page 75 of Rum & Coke

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“I still hope there’s food, or we’re stopping at Raising Cane’s on the way home.”

“Why are you so hungry?”

I shrugged.

Melony gasped. “Oh my God. You got laid.”

My gaze flicked to the rearview mirror to see the driver make eye contact with me. I broke the stare and turned to face Melony. “Why do you think that?”

“Because you dance for a living, and I can see you go all shift without eating. But now it’s like you’re starving. They don’t call it ‘working up an appetite’ for nothing.”

I rolled my eyes and grinned. “And so what if I did?”

“Shut up!” She slapped my arm. “Tell me everything.”

“I’m not telling you shit.”

“Come on. I wouldn’t care if he didn’t fuck for a living.”

My gaze met the driver’s again, and I sighed. “Can we not talk about this now?”

“Please.” She waved me off then hooked her thumb toward the driver. “We’ll never see this guy again.”

I huffed. “Fine. We had sex, he spent the night, cooked me breakfast, and had sex again. I had to take four aspirins because I could barely walk afterward.”

“Holy shit. I want to screw a male escort now.”

I snorted. “I don’t think I fucked Duane though.”

“You think they bang differently?”

I chuckled, thinking about how we were talking about one person as though he were two. Maybe he was. He did ask if I thought Duane and Scarlett would have hotter sex than Vinny and Tessa. Maybe it was like role playing? I knew when I was Scarlett, I was acting. “Maybe.” I shrugged.

“You better tell me when you find out.”

“Maybe I will, or maybe I will keep that shit to myself.”

“You better not. I’m your best friend, and I need to know how the men of S&R are.”

“I’m only sleeping with one of them,” I reminded her.

“But if they are all still employed, they must all know what they’re doing.”

“Maybe you should hire one and find out for yourself,” I suggested.

Melony grinned. “Maybe I will. Who’s left?”

“Well, assuming I’ve met them all, Bradley and Nick.”

She thought for a moment, tapping her finger against her lips as the driver gave our name at the gate that led into a subdivision. “Maybe I’ll test drive both.”

We both started to laugh, and a few minutes later, the driver stopped. “We’re here.”

I looked out the window at the house we pulled up to. It was a three-story, stone mansion with a fountain in the center of the walkway that led to the front door. “Is this really his house?” I asked, looking back at Melony.

“I guess so.”

“Holy crap,” I breathed and opened the door, stepping out. Melony followed, and the car drove off. “I assumed he had money, but I wasn’t expecting this.”