How to Bang a Billionaire
Arden St. Ives #1
Alexis Hall
On Sale: April 16, 2017
Publisher: Forever Yours
The first book in an
all-new m/m romance trilogy by RITA Award-winning author Alexis Hall!
Rules are made to be
broken . . .
If England had yearbooks,
I'd probably be "Arden St. Ives: Man Least Likely to Set the World on
Fire." So far, I haven't. I've no idea what I'm doing at Oxford, no idea
what I'm going to do next and, until a week ago, I had no idea who Caspian Hart
was. Turns out, he's brilliant, beautiful . . . oh yeah, and a billionaire.
It's impossible not to be
captivated by someone like that. But Caspian Hart makes his own rules. And he
has a lot of them. About when I can be with him. What I can do with him. And
when he'll be through with me.
I'm good at doing what I'm
told in the bedroom. The rest of the time, not so much. And now that Caspian's
shown me glimpses of the man behind the billionaire I know it's him I want. Not
his wealth, not his status. Him. Except that might be the one thing he doesn't
have the power to give me.
If I’d been hoping to win another
smile, I was disappointed because all I got in response was, “Turn around.”
It was a phrase that had come my
way often enough and I was pretty fond of it. But the way he said it, oh God
the way he said it, turned my insides to honey. Not bossy or rough but
implacable.
A command.
If he did it in a voice like
that—all steel and velvet and the promise of his approval—I would have done
anything he told me.
No matter how slutty or
degrading.
Actually.
Strike that.
Especially if it was
slutty or degrading.
I turned around, trying to shut
down the porno in my brain. We were in a public place, and I was fully dressed
(in several layers of formal wear as it happened), but it felt vulnerable.
Giving this man, this stranger, my back. My trust.
His arm came around me from
behind. And the heat of it, the pressure. The tightening muscles of his forearm
made me a bit delirious. I leaned back and his body was right there, all hard
planes and angular curves for me to nestle into. I tilted my hips, wriggling my
arse until I was tucked in against him, pinned and protected at the same time,
at once safe and overwhelmed.
I tried to breathe and an excited
little moan happened instead.
Caspian tugged me in tighter
still. No humiliatingly inappropriate noises from him. But his heart was
thudding hard and fast against my spine. He pulled the bow tie out of my hand
and straightened my collar. A finger touched me lightly under the chin and I
tipped my head back against his shoulder, exposing my throat. That was when I
heard him growl. Softly enough I almost missed it, but there it was. This sound
of deep, primitive pleasure that shivered all the way down my back and headed
off in a few other directions as well.
As he leaned over me, his breath
grazed the top of my ear and that insubstantial caress felt so ridiculously
intimate it made my knees go weak. Like I was supposed to be on them. At his
feet. His other arm came around me as he did whatever you have to do to make a
bow tie happen. He didn’t fumble at it the way Nik had. His movements were
swift and assured. And, just for a moment, I felt a brush of warmth across my
pulse point, like a touch that wasn’t.
I only noticed he was done when
he gave me a little push. Too busy swooning into his neck and shoving my bum
into his crotch like the wanton hussy I was. I turned, stumbling a little,
discovering too late I was basically jelly, and just about managed not to end
up on the ground again.
“Um, thanks.” I lifted a hand
instinctively, wanting to feel the shape of the knot, but then stopped. I’d
only wreck it.
He just nodded, his eyes slipping
away from me again. I wished he’d stop doing that. Was my face that boring? But
his color was up, his breath a little unsteady. And, y’know, there’d been
movement back there. When I’d been doing my thing. So maybe he was
just…embarrassed?
“That’s some good tying,” I heard
myself say. “Is it practice or natural talent?”
Alexis Hall was born in
the early 1980s and still thinks the twenty-first century is the future. To
this day, he feels cheated that he lived through a fin de siècle but
inexplicably failed to drink a single glass of absinthe, dance with a single
courtesan, or stay in a single garret.
He did the Oxbridge thing
sometime in the 2000s and failed to learn anything of substance. He has had
many jobs, including ice cream maker, fortune-teller, lab technician, and
professional gambler. He was fired from most of them.
He can neither cook nor
sing, but he can handle a seventeenth-century smallsword, punts from the proper
end, and knows how to hot-wire a car.
He lives in southeast
England, with no cats and no children, and fully intends to keep it that way.
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