Going Down Hard by Carly Phillips, now you can read online.
Prologue
Sweat poured off Derek West’s body as he manually trimmed the hedges alongside the Olympic-sized pool on the grounds of the estate where his father, Thomas, worked as the groundskeeper, his mother the maid. And where he and his family resided in the guesthouse on the edge of the property.
On such a blistering August afternoon, he’d rather be at Jones Beach with his friends, chilling out, drinking, and celebrating the dwindling days before college, but that wasn’t his life. His father needed him and he was here to help.
The Storms family liked their yard elegant and perfect, and Derek’s father was paid to comply. No electric hedge trimmer for him. Which meant as Derek worked under the broiling-hot sun, he could hear Cassie Storms and her friends at the pool, dishing gossip, as usual.
Cassie was his age, but she and her friends went to private school while Derek attended public. He was around enough to recognize the girls and know them by name. And he was more than interested in Cassie, especially since last night.
He’d been sitting on the porch of the guesthouse, drinking a beer long after his parents and younger sister had gone to sleep. He’d have to hide the bottle from his father, but that didn’t stop him. Cassie had been out by the pool with her friends, until one by one they’d left, leaving her alone. With a little liquid courage in him, Derek had made his way over to where she sat, her shiny brown hair hanging over her shoulders, her brown eyes wide as he’d joined her.
“Hey,” he said, sitting next to her on the lounge chair.
“Hey.” Her brows furrowed in confusion.
For as long as Derek had lived on the property, they’d managed to go their separate ways. He, taking a smaller driveway out to the main road, Cassie using the main entrance to the big house. But he’d always noticed her, and he’d be a liar if he didn’t admit to jerking off to thoughts of the girl in the mansion many nights as he lay in his tiny room and stared at the glow of lights across the way.
“Want a sip?” He extended his hand, offering her the bottle.
She shook her head. He wasn’t surprised. Cassie Storms was a good girl.
“Chicken?” he asked, goading her.
Her cheeks turned a cute pink. “No.” She paused as if wrestling with herself before coming to a decision. “Fine.” She grabbed the bottle from his hand and took a long drink, then wrinkled her nose.
“What’s wrong?”
“It tastes a lot different than wine.”
He held back a snort. Of course the rich girl drank wine.
“But I kind of liked the taste.” She drew her tongue over her lips, soaking up what remained of the flavor and causing his dick to harden inside his shorts.
He handed her the beer again and she took another sip. They talked about the heat and going away to school and shared the rest of the beer. She wanted to major in business and help run her father’s media company one day.
Derek? He just wanted a degree, a way out of being somebody’s servant, the way his parents were. He was good at computer coding, and he figured he’d start there since it came easily to him. His father had bought him a state-of-the-art computer for Christmas, and Derek knew his dad was still paying off the expensive machine.
“I should go inside,” Cassie said, but she didn’t seem in any hurry to leave.
Instead she turned toward him, her thigh brushing his, their skin touching. Everything about her was soft, from her skin with a light dusting of freckles on her nose to her voice, and he was mesmerized by her. Need rushed through his body, desire for her overwhelming.
He leaned closer until their breaths mingled, malt from the beer and sweetness from her. And though her eyes opened wide, she didn’t pull away. So he closed the distance and kissed her, his lips coming down on hers.
The kiss was sweet, no tongue, but it was the hottest thing Derek had experienced in forever.
“Cassie!” A female voice from the direction of her house yelled out her name.
“Oh!” She jumped back and rose to her feet. Golden flecks sparkled in her brown eyes as she stared back at him. “I have to go.”
“Meet me tomorrow,” he said, not ready for this—whatever this was—to end.
“But—”
“Late like tonight. Say you left something out by the pool. I’ll be waiting.”
She blinked and nodded. “Okay,” she said in a breathy voice.
“Cassandra! It’s time to come in.”