Then frowned harder.
“You alright?” Serenity asked, steering the cart into the meat aisle,
“Yeah, I’m just—” My mouth went completely dry.
“Stunned into silence over meat?”
She crossed her arms while I stared, while I lusted, while I briefly imagined becoming a butcher and licking the table after I prepared the food.
And then Serenity, in all her beauty, reached for some steak, sniffed it, then held it out. “This one’s good.”
I’d never been so wrongly aroused in my entire existence as she licked her lips, held the steak out to me, and provided the only two things I needed in life in one shiny package.
Her.
Steak.
Her.
Steak.
I felt my body give way. I tried to control the urge, but I was too late. I opened my mouth to say something, probably run, but before the word could get out, she grabbed my hand and jerked me into a door that was for employees only. She tore at her own arm then held it to my mouth.
I took her blood.
My wolf roared to life as I pressed her up against the wall, my teeth locking onto her wrist, my body pinning her next to the employee-of-the-month chart, my damn eyes glued on Bart, the winner of February, and then the chart fell to the floor as Serenity rubbed her body against mine.
The friction in my jeans was too much.
She reached down and flicked open the button.
And then my mouth was on hers.
Hers on mine.
This. This is what I should have done yesterday.
This.
She gripped my length as I rubbed instinctively against her, devouring every cry she made as if it was the sole purpose I’d been put on this earth.
Not here.
We couldn’t. She was better than that.
But I couldn’t stop.
I was going to have to call Ethan from prison.
And explain that I mounted my mate in the employee break room of Whole Foods — and liked it.
“Mason…” She purred my name as I cupped one of her perfect breasts in my hands. It was heavy and formed perfectly for my palm. It was mine.
I dug beneath her shirt, desperate for more, just as she reared back and sank her teeth into my neck.
My wolf roared within
My vision cleared as tiny particles of dust floated in the air around me, as the heartbeats of hundreds of people in the store flooded my ears, their thoughts, their souls in all their colors flashing for me to see.