Reading Online Novel

Down London Road (On Dublin Street #2)(51)



'Perfectly good sex?' Cam interrupted us, drawing both our gazes. His voice was low with some unnamed emotion. 'Abstain?' His now heated eyes ran the length of me before returning to meet mine. 'Then he isn't doing it right.'

My heart puttered to a stop before choking and wheezing. When it got back up to speed, it took off in a drag race. All that sexual heat rolled over me and I felt my knickers grow damp with want.

'Jesus C,' Joss croaked. 'Now I'm turned on.' She jumped off her stool, checking her phone. 'I think I'll go home and see if Braden's back from work.'

And just like that she left us simmering in our sexual chemistry.

I smiled weakly at Cam. 'How's Becca?'

A few customers approached the bar and we both moved to serve them. As we were preparing their drinks Cam answered tightly, 'Becca's fine. How's Malcolm?'

'Fine.' He'd taken me for lunch during my break from work that day and I'd managed to convince him that everything was hunky-dory.

'Cole text yet to say if he's home?'

I found myself grinning like an idiot at his concern, and my customer grinned back at me, clearly thinking the look was for him. I quickly handed him his change and turned to Cam. 'Yeah, he's home.'

His eyes crinkled at the corners, adding another one of his expressions to my favourites. 'Good.'

The rest of the night flew by. We worked, we talked, we joked, but the sexual undercurrent remained. When we walked home after our shift, we did so in utter silence. I could say it was just tiredness, but my whole body was vibrating like a tuning fork just strolling beside him. We said goodnight at his door, and as I took the stairs to my flat with his eyes on my back, I wished, not for the first time, for a different life  –  that Cam was single, that Malcolm wasn't a part of my life that I cared about, and that for once I could do what I really wanted to do.

And what I really wanted to do was Cameron MacCabe.

I checked on Cole and found him sleeping peacefully in his room. I even checked on Mum just to make sure she hadn't choked on her own vomit or anything like that, and I found her snoring away. That done, I changed into my PJs and crawled into bed. But I couldn't fall asleep.

My blood felt as if it was on fire in my veins, my nerves were sparking at the very ends, and I couldn't get the smell of Cam's cologne out of my nostrils.

I was so turned on, it wasn't funny.

How different would my night have been if Cam had followed me into Su's office when I'd gone in there to leave her new stock information? What if he'd come up behind me, pushed my hair off my neck, and pressed his hot mouth to my skin as his hand skimmed around my waist and down to the buttons on my jeans  …

 …  if he'd undone them, his long fingers sliding inside, beneath my underwear  …



       
         
       
        

My own hand smoothed over my stomach, slipping under my pyjamas and knickers so I could bring myself to climax, fantasizing about Cam screwing me against Su's desk.

I muffled my moan as I came and once the tremors stopped, I curled into my side, guilt cascading over me once again.

I was a terrible girlfriend.





13


A truth I hadn't been willing to face pushed its way to the forefront of my life over the next few weeks. The truth was, for a number of years now every day had been the same  –  had been constrained, dulled, vivid colours muted beneath the shadow of a wall. And behind that wall I walked in the same uniform every day  –  if I wanted to be really melodramatic, I'd call it a dull orange jumpsuit. But as the days of those few weeks flew by, I felt that uniform melting away, shredding into tatters and scraped from my body as I climbed the wall to the other side.

The wall was moving further away now, the shadow lifting, the colours brightening.

All because I was spending time with Cam.

We hung out as much as possible on weekdays. Every night, in fact, he'd stop by for coffee or dinner before his work shift, even if I was out with Malcolm. We walked back and forth to work together, and had a laugh with Joss during our shifts. I didn't see him at the weekends because he worked, trained at judo class with his friends and hung out with Becca. Last time, he'd taken Cole to watch the class, encouraging Cole to do more physical activity, and surprisingly, my brother was embracing the idea. My ears were bleeding from hearing about judo.

For me, Cam was a confidant. I told him more about my life and my hopes for Cole's future. For Cole, Cam was a soul mate. They drew comics together, they discussed comics together, they liked the same music, the same movies, and from what I could read between the lines, Cam also answered all those questions Cole wouldn't dare ask me.