Authors: Piper Vaughn
seeing you.”
A pleasant warmth bloomed in my belly at
that. “Me too.”
You have no idea….
“Do you remember how to get here?”
“Not really.” I might have recognized his
building once I saw it again, but it had been dark
the last time I was there. And I hadn’t really paid
much attention in my rush to leave after he’d
walked in on me and Archer. I was still kind of
embarrassed about that.
“I’ll text you the address.”
“Okay. So, see you tomorrow then? Maybe
around five, if I can swing it?”
“Yeah,” Asher said. “Sounds perfect.”
I’d be seeing him, so yeah… it really did.
FIVE o’clock the next day took its time coming.
Every minute an hour, every hour a year. By the
end of my shift, which was at four instead of my
usual six thanks to Lane agreeing to cover for me, I
was fidgety as hell. I’d caught a few amused looks
from some of my coworkers, Lane included, but all
I could think about was getting to Asher as soon as
I could. We’d texted a bit during the day and
decided that he would pick up the ingredients I
needed and I would cook dinner for us when I got
to his place. We’d be alone, and that was all that
really mattered to me.
I
went
home
and
took
another
uncharacteristically fast shower, spared a few
minutes to chat with Erik and drop a kiss on
Alice’s sweet-smelling hair, and then I was back
out the door and driving my rust bucket over to
Asher’s building. I texted him when I got there, and
he buzzed me right in. A few agonizingly slow
minutes later I was in his apartment, releasing a
pent-up breath I hadn’t even realized I’d been
holding.
We stared at each other for a moment; then he
smiled softly. “Hi.”
“Hi,” I said, and I wasn’t entirely sure what
happened after that because suddenly his mouth
was on mine, his arms were around me, my fingers
were in his hair, and there was a second or two I
might have forgotten my own name.
“Sorry,” he whispered when we parted for
air, his lips brushing mine. “I didn’t actually mean
to do that.” He laughed, and I could tell from the
sound he was a little embarrassed, but he still
didn’t pull away. “I don’t know what came over
me.”
“Don’t be sorry.” I pressed even closer,
relishing the feel of warm skin and hard muscle.
His thin tank top left his arms and a portion of his
upper chest exposed. I rested my lips against the
dip in the middle of his collarbones, right at the
base of his throat. “Whatever it was, I felt it too.”
Asher shivered slightly, his arms tightening
around me. “I missed you. Is that weird?”
I shook my head and leaned back enough so I
could look up into his eyes, big and warm and
brown. God, they really were beautiful. “No. I
started missing you the second you dropped me
off.” I didn’t care if it was too soon for me to be
saying things like that. I wouldn’t lie—didn’t see
the need to—and the smile he gave me in response
was stunning.
“Let’s make some food.” He pulled away, but
kept one hand on my arm, trailing it down until our
fingers were laced together. “Come on.”
“Is Archer here?” I asked as Asher led me
across the apartment. It was the first time I’d even
thought about him in a couple of days. Sure, the
situation might get a little awkward if Archer
was
around, but I couldn’t bring myself to care.
Humiliating as it had been at the time, he’d ditched
me, not the other way around. And in all honesty, it
was the nicest thing he’d ever done for me. It freed
me to see Asher without any guilt.
“No,” Asher answered once we’d reached the
small kitchen. “I’m not sure if he’ll be home at all
tonight.” He paused for a moment, seeming to
hesitate over his next words. “Does it bother you?
That you might see him around, I mean. We could
go out instead.”
I squeezed his hand and shook my head. “I’m
fine with staying here. Unless it bothers you.”
Asher’s fingers tightened around mine. “Nah.
I don’t care. I only want you to be comfortable. I…
I would’ve never encroached if the two of you
were actually together, you know? That’s just not
me. But he… well, he would have never deserved
you, and I have no intention of hiding the fact that
you’re mine now.” As soon as he’d finished
speaking, Asher looked embarrassed. “Oh, God.
I’m sorry. That sounded a bit… I swear I’m not
trying to be all caveman and possessive. I just—I
really—”
“It’s okay,” I interrupted, reaching up with my
free hand to cup his cheek. He didn’t have to
apologize. I knew he hadn’t said it as some sort of
macho display. And besides, I had to admit, I liked
the sound of that. Being his. “I knew what you
meant.”
I could tell he was still embarrassed, but he
nodded slowly, his stubble scraping my palm.
After a moment, he cleared his throat and gestured
toward the groceries that sat on the counter beside
the sink. “I think I got it all. Like I said the other
day, I never really cook. Just tell me what you
need me to do and I will.”
I smiled and leaned up to kiss him on the chin
before releasing his hand. It felt natural to do it,
familiar somehow, as if we were together, had
been together, for months instead of at the very
beginning of what I hoped would be something
wonderful. “First things first,” I said. “Show me
where everything is.”
Cooking with Asher turned out to be a lot of
fun. I’d never prepared a meal with anyone before,
aside from Rue. Gary had loved my food, but he’d
never offered to help me make it. Asher gamely
followed my instructions, handing me ingredients,
rinsing vegetables for our salad, chopping and
slicing.
It amazed me how different he was from
Archer—at times quiet and maybe even a little shy,
at others flirtatious and playful. I couldn’t believe
how normal it felt to be there with him. Just
comfortable and easy and oddly right.
Before I knew it, we were settled at the small
table in the tiny dining room off the kitchen with
plates of eggplant parmesan and bowls of salad in
front of us and a basket of garlic bread still warm
from the oven.
“This is delicious,” Asher said after a couple
of bites. “Seriously. Best I’ve ever had.”
I smiled at him. He might have been
exaggerating, but he did sound impressed, and the
praise warmed my stomach. “Thanks. I love
eggplant. I can make it all sorts of ways. I’m
usually the one who cooks for us at the house.”
Asher was already cutting into his second
piece. “I can’t wait to try some of your other stuff.”
For a few minutes we ate without speaking,
the only noise the clink of silverware on our plates
and the murmur of a song coming from Asher’s
stereo system in the corner. He’d plugged his iPod
into it and put it on shuffle, just to break the
silence, he’d said, but the volume was so low the
lyrics were indistinct.
“So,” I said eventually, reaching for my glass
of the zinfandel Asher had picked up from the
store. “What do you do for work? When we talked
last night you said you were going to meet a client.
After we hung up I realized I’d never asked.”
Asher froze with a forkful of lettuce halfway
to his mouth. He blinked at me and frowned a
little, so clearly uncomfortable I almost took the
question back. Then he spoke. “I thought….” He
trailed off and cleared his throat, lowering his fork
back into his salad bowl. “I thought you knew
already. I’m a photographer.”
“Oh.” I couldn’t think of anything else to say.
I wanted to ask what kind of photography he did,
but Asher looked unsettled somehow, strange, his
eyes focused on his own glass of wine instead of
my face as they had been for most of the night. As I
watched, a deep red flush crept up his neck and
onto his cheeks.
“I could show you, if you want,” Asher said,
so quietly I had to strain to hear him. “I have a
couple of portfolios in my studio.”
I reached across the table and put my hand
over his. I wasn’t sure what had him so tense all of
a sudden. Maybe he was worried I wouldn’t like
the pictures for some reason. If he had clients, I
doubted they could be that bad, but even if they
were, I was more than ready to pretend they were
the most brilliant pictures I’d ever seen. I didn’t
have any real artistic talent to speak of, which put
me in no position to judge.
“I’d like that,” I murmured, and finally his
hand relaxed under mine.
Once we’d finished eating and cleaning up the
kitchen, things seemed to be back to normal. Asher
led me down the hall to his studio and gave me a
tour of the room, showing me the different props
and backdrops he had, some of the lighting and
other equipment. Eventually, he took me over to a
small table in the corner which seemed to serve as
his desk. There was a laptop and a few black
binders that looked like photo albums. He
switched on the small lamp on one corner of the
table and flipped the top one open.
“These are some of my more abstract shots,”
Asher said.
After the way he’d frozen up during dinner, I
wasn’t sure what I’d been expecting. Blurry,
amateurish pictures, I guessed. These were…
well, they were gorgeous. Admittedly, I knew next
to nothing about photography, but looking at his
pictures stirred something in me, a warmth that
built and expanded in my chest. Whether it was
because the pictures were truly good or simply the
fact that he’d taken them, I didn’t know.
“What
made
you
want
to
go
into
photography?” I asked as I carefully turned the
pages.
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw him shrug.
“From the moment my parents bought me a
Polaroid when I was five, I’ve been obsessed with
taking pictures. When I was a sophomore in high
school, I got into art for a semester, drawing and
painting and stuff. I was never very good at it,
though. I had the eye, not the talent. But, well,
being able to see, capture the beauty in things is
what makes for a good photographer, so….”
I’d started on the second portfolio before I
realized Asher had stopped speaking. I glanced up,
surprised, and found him watching me, his eyes
intent on my face. There were so many things in his
expression. Appreciation, definitely. Desire? Oh,
yes. And something else too. It took me a moment
to recognize it, but I thought it might be discovery,
like after years of waiting, searching, wandering,
he’d finally unearthed that rare, precious thing he’d
been looking for all the while. And I was it.
I swallowed once, twice, trying to dislodge
the lump in my throat. I felt shy under the weight of
his gaze, inexplicably embarrassed, even though he
was looking at me the way I’d been imagining in
my dreams. It was different seeing it in person—
overwhelming.
“Can I take your picture?” he asked abruptly.
I stared at him wide-eyed. “Wh-what?”
“I’ve never seen anyone more beautiful than
you.”
For a few seconds, I was too shocked to
speak. That was a lie, had to be. I knew I was
attractive enough, but no one had ever mistaken me
for a model. I was sure there were thousands—
maybe thousands upon thousands—of other men
who were better looking than me.
But… if I had to judge based on Asher’s
expression alone, I could in no way doubt his
sincerity. The truth was there, written in bold
capital letters, obvious even to me. So maybe…
maybe to him I really was that beautiful.
The thought was baffling and yet… not.
Because, for me, his beauty was beyond words. It
made sense that if he was my one—and I had a
feeling that he just might be—he would see me the