The line dies.
I squash my face down into my pillow, muffling my scream, my feet kicking the bed with joy.
I’m suddenly filthy rich. And less than forty-eight hours after meeting him, I get to see him again.
My very own daddy dom.
Chapter 6
Darius
I pace in front of the window that overlooks the pools, as if somehow, I’ll conjure her up out of the sea of people below. Yesterday morning, I paid her and sent her home, but no sooner had the door clicked behind her than I regretted letting her go.
It’s a mistake I won’t make again.
I look at the horde of people below, but it’s no use. Even if she were one of the nameless, faceless dots, I couldn’t get to her fast enough.
After one sleepless night without her, I swallowed my pride and called Sugar Daddies.
Miranda said she’d be here this afternoon, and I will not fuck this up.
I’m down the hallway to the elevator before I know what I’m doing. The mirrored elevator shows me wide-eyed and desperate, and is my hair sticking up? Jesus. That woman has made me lose my mind. This isn’t me. This isn’t how I am.
I run my fingers through my hair, just as the elevator door slides open.
“Mr. Morrow. Where to, sir?”
“Parking lot, please.”
I don’t want anyone’s eyes on her but mine. I don’t want anyone’s hands on her but mine. I will pay whatever I have to so she doesn’t leave my side for the next two weeks.
“Parking lot, sir?” I have my personal lot, but never venture to the public ones.
“Yes,” I snap. I’m so on fucking edge. “Parking lot.”
“Right away, sir.”
I tap my foot impatiently and glance at my watch on the way down.
“When was this elevator last serviced?” I ask. This is taking way too long.
He blinks. “Last month, sir. They are the most efficient in the country, sir.”
I don’t reply but only clench my jaw and watch the numbers descend.
When I exit the elevator, I can feel the eyes of others on me. Curious. Nosy. I walk straight to the entryway to the parking lot and call the driver I assigned to Katie.
“Sir?”
“Meet me at the first bay.”
“Certainly. We’re ten minutes away.”
I have no plans for when I see her, other than to take her by the hand and lead her back to my room. I still can’t believe I let her slip out of my fingers.
Who am I kidding?
I have plans for her for days.
What am I doing?
I look around me at the opulence. Sometimes it’s hard to believe I own this, that it’s all mine. I grew up with such humble means, it feels a little surreal, even now. Lights glimmer in the distance, strains of music filter through speakers, and all around me are the sounds of high heels clicking, murmurs of conversation, the energy I’ve come to love that’s the heart of the city that never sleeps.
And a part of me wonders if the reason I love this city life is because it’s in such sharp contrast to the world I was born into. I can still see the small, rundown farmhouse I grew up in, the acres of land fenced in with the rickety, handmade railing that was my job to repair and maintain, the large, wide-opened space where I first learned I could control the trajectory of my life.
I trained hard on that field. I ran until I collapsed on the sweet, lush green grass. I worked the crops and honed my muscles, and by my senior year in high school, I towered above everyone, earning the respect of my peers and a free ticket to Notre Dame. I studied by the low, dim, yellow light of my grandmother’s ancient lamp and aced my classes. Moving to college, pursuing collegiate football, it was my first taste of success. My first taste of something bigger than small town life.
My reminiscing comes to a screeching halt when I see the limo pull up. My heartbeat races like it hasn’t in years. I’ve been with women. Hell, I can have any woman I want, and have. But somehow, knowing I can have anything I want makes me feel empty inside.
And the truth is? I don’t want just any woman. I want her.
The car cruises to a stop, and the driver gets out. He nods respectfully to me, quickly walking to open the door for Katie. I don’t even breathe when the door glides open, and she exits, stepping into the overhead lighting, blinking against