Read online free
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Casual Sext


    Prev Next




      Table of Contents

      Epilogue

      Epilogue

      Epilogue

      Chapter One

      Chapter Two

      Chapter Three

      Chapter Four

      Chapter Five

      Chapter Six

      Chapter Seven

      Chapter Eight

      Chapter Nine

      Chapter Ten

      Chapter Eleven

      Chapter Twelve

      Chapter Thirteen

      Chapter Fourteen

      Chapter Fifteen

      Chapter Sixteen

      Chapter Seventeen

      Chapter Eighteen

      Chapter Nineteen

      Chapter Twenty

      Prologue

      Epilogue

      Casual Sext

      Lisa Lace

      Contents

      1. Cole

      2. Sophie

      3. Cole

      4. Sophie

      5. Cole

      6. Sophie

      7. Cole

      8. Sophie

      9. Cole

      10. Sophie

      11. Cole

      12. Sophie

      13. Cole

      14. Sophie

      15. Sophie

      16. Cole

      17. Sophie

      18. Cole

      19. Sophie

      20. Cole

      21. Sophie

      22. Cole

      23. Sophie

      24. Cole

      25. Sophie

      26. Cole

      27. Sophie

      28. Cole

      29. Sophie

      30. Cole

      31. Sophie

      32. Cole

      33. Sophie

      34. Cole

      35. Sophie

      36. Cole

      Epilogue

      Newsletter

      Ruined

      1. Edward

      2. Mia

      3. Edward

      4. Edward

      5. Mia

      6. Edward

      7. Mia

      8. Edward

      9. Mia

      10. Edward

      11. Mia

      12. Edward

      13. Mia

      14. Edward

      15. Edward

      16. Mia

      17. Edward

      18. Mia

      19. Edward

      20. Mia

      21. Mia

      22. Edward

      23. Mia

      24. Edward

      25. Mia

      26. Mia

      27. Edward

      28. Mia

      29. Edward

      30. Mia

      Exposed

      1. Maxwell

      2. Laura

      3. Maxwell

      4. Laura

      5. Laura

      6. Maxwell

      7. Laura

      8. Maxwell

      9. Maxwell

      10. Laura

      11. Maxwell

      12. Laura

      13. Maxwell

      14. Laura

      15. Maxwell

      16. Laura

      17. Maxwell

      18. Laura

      19. Maxwell

      20. Laura

      21. Maxwell

      22. Laura

      23. Laura

      24. Maxwell

      25. Laura

      26. Maxwell

      27. Laura

      28. Maxwell

      29. Laura

      30. Maxwell

      31. Laura

      32. Maxwell

      Epilogue: Laura

      Unwrapping Daddy

      1. Zoe

      2. Tom

      3. Zoe

      4. Tom

      5. Zoe

      6. Tom

      7. Zoe

      8. Tom

      9. Zoe

      10. Tom

      11. Zoe

      12. Tom

      13. Zoe

      14. Tom

      15. Zoe

      16. Tom

      17. Zoe

      18. Tom

      19. Zoe

      20. Tom

      21. Zoe

      22. Tom

      23. Zoe

      24. Tom

      25. Zoe

      26. Tom

      27. Zoe

      28. Tom

      29. Zoe

      30. Tom

      31. Zoe

      32. Tom

      33. Zoe

      34. Tom

      35. Zoe

      36. Tom

      37. Zoe

      Epilogue

      Mismatch

      1. Ethan

      2. Lily

      3. Ethan

      4. Lily

      5. Ethan

      6. Lily

      7. Ethan

      8. Lily

      9. Ethan

      10. Lily

      11. Ethan

      12. Lily

      13. Ethan

      14. Lily

      15. Ethan

      16. Lily

      17. Ethan

      18. Lily

      19. Ethan

      20. Lily

      21. Ethan

      22. Lily

      23. Ethan

      24. Lily

      25. Ethan

      26. Lily

      27. Ethan

      28. Lily

      29. Ethan

      30. Lily

      31. Ethan

      32. Lily

      33. Lily

      34. Ethan

      Epilogue

      Abduction

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Chapter 12

      Chapter 13

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      Chapter 18

      Chapter 19

      Chapter 20

      Blaze

      Prologue

      1. Nate

      2. Jenna

      3. Nate

      4. Jenna

      5. Nate

      6. Jenna

      7. Nate

      8. Jenna

      9. Nate

      10. Jenna

      11. Nate

      12. Jenna

      13. Nate

      14. Jenna

      15. Nate

      16. Jenna

      17. Nate

      18. Jenna

      19. Nate

      20. Jenna

      21. Nate

      22. Jenna

      23. Nate

      24. Jenna

      25. Nate

      26. Jenna

      27. Nate

      28. Jenna

      29. Nate

      30. Jenna

      31. Nate

      32. Jenna

      Epilogue

      Also by Lisa Lace

      Cole

      The newlyweds enter the reception at New York’s Midtown Loft and Terrace. The loft’s solid wood floors gleam under the lights of half a dozen chandeliers, and when the couple arrives, a string quartet begins to play. Waiters emerge from the sidelines like figurines on tracks, circling the room with champagne.

      I try to stay out of sight on the sidelines, carefully watching each of the guests, waiting for something special to catch my eye.

      The bride beams at everyone gathered around her. She wears a beautiful ivory gown with intricate beading and a never-ending train. Her long blond hair is twisted into sophisticated braids and curls that spill over her bare shoulders. She’s a vision.

      As people throw confetti their way, she’s clutching onto her new husband’s hand. The pink-and-white paper settles in her hair. She looks ravishing. As they welcome the couple into the reception, joyful friends and family form a path of well-wishers for the newlyweds to walk down.

      If the groom wasn’t a foot a
    nd a half shorter than the bride, it would be the perfect shot.

      Every time I try to get a clear picture, his head is obscured by the bride’s voluminous veil and tiara. When I switch to the groom’s side of the shot, they look comically mismatched.

      I step up onto a nearby chair to try some aerial shots, making the height difference less noticeable.

      My assistant videographer, Dennis, circles around the pair as they begin their first dance. As he’s faced with the same dilemma, his eyebrows turn downward in frustration. He ducks up and down in circles around them. The first dance song drifts through the hall.

      Ed Sheeran again. Everybody’s crazy for Ed Sheeran these days.

      I step down from the chair and crouch to snap pictures from beneath the swirling couple. As the bride and groom waltz toward me, I take a step back—and I feel my cell crunch beneath my heel. It has fallen out my pocket. I can feel shards of loose glass in the heel of my dress shoe.

      Fuck. Not again.

      I don’t have time to inspect the damage and risk missing a single magical moment of the couple’s first dance. It’s my job to meticulously capture every admiring smile, every teary eye, and each affectionate touch.

      Snap. Snap. Snap.

      Finally, Ed Sheeran’s tortuous crooning comes to an end, and the bride lowers herself to kiss the groom. I furiously take pictures while they’re the same height, then lower my camera for a moment.

      Dennis appears at my side, watching back the last few minutes of his video footage, and shaking his head.

      “I don’t think they’ve had that much trouble accounting for height differences since they made ‘The Hobbit.’”

      I chuckle. “I think I got a couple of good ones in at the end there.”

      “Did you see those heels she’s wearing? What in God’s name made her want to wear stilettos?”

      “Don’t worry. We got some good shots of them sitting down earlier. There’s not much else we can do.”

      I kneel down and pick up my cell. Broken—of course. I sigh and bounce the broken handset up and down in my palm.

      Dennis frowns and raises his eyebrows. “Again?”

      “I need to invest in a fanny pack.”

      “Or get a phone thicker than a tissue.”

      “It’s a good model.”

      “Not when it’s broken in two.” He takes out his clunky Nokia and shows it to me smugly. “I’ve had it almost eleven years and counting. Indestructible.”

      “I’m glad you have better taste in camcorders. Not sure you’d hold down this job for long with a VCR recorder on your shoulder.”

      Not that I can talk. It’s going to be back to my backup cell until I can afford to replace this one. Again. Is it just me, or are paid invoices thin on the ground lately? It doesn’t help that I can tell this bride is going to be a pain in the ass.

      “She had a twenty-one-item list of demands for today. ‘And if you don’t make it happen, you won’t see a dime.’”

      “Bridezillas tend to cool off after the big day,” he reassures me.

      “Let’s hope so.”

      Dennis grins. “You’re going to struggle to keep up with Tinder without the proper equipment. You’re facing a dry patch, my friend.”

      “I have Fifi’s number. I’ll just have to do it the old-fashioned way, won’t I?”

      “Remind me, what’s the ‘old-fashioned way”?”

      “The classic sext.” I grin at him. “Come on, Dennis! Don’t tell me you don’t remember being a horny teenager with your first cellphone.”

      “I wrote letters.”

      I snort. “Are you kidding me?”

      “What? There’s nothing wrong with a bit of old-school romance.”

      It doesn’t surprise me. I would bet that Dennis was a band geek in school or leader of the science club. Even now, with his giant square glasses and flat brown hair, most people would probably call him a dweeb.

      “You handwrote your sex messages?”

      He raises an eyebrow. “I was more a love poem kind of guy.” He laughs at himself. “I thought I was such a Casanova, but it never had the desired effect. Even now, you’re the one with Sophia wrapped around your little finger, while I haven’t had a date in months. Not that you’d know anything what that’s like, King Tinder.”

      I try to hide my smile. It was true—I’d had more luck on the dating app than most guys I knew. All it took was a handsome profile picture—and I guess you could say that I wasn’t the worst-looking guy in the world. I’m just touching six-foot-tall, with olive skin clinging to last summer’s tan, and dark blond hair that seems to fall naturally into a style that looks carefully planned. It probably also helps that I work out, and I’m not afraid to flash my abs on my profile.

      “Formerly King Tinder. I’m with Fifi now.”

      “You are? You’ve stopped seeing the others?”

      “I was never really ‘seeing’ them. It was only a couple of dates while I got to know the girls.”

      “While you were playing the field, you mean.”

      “Just looking for the right woman.”

      “Uh-huh. And if you fall into the beds of several others along the way, that’s just how it goes, right?” He makes a face. “You make it look too easy, Cole. So, you’re with Sophia now—sorry, Fifi.” He raises his eyebrows.

      “It’s a nickname.”

      “She sounds like your pet cat.”

      I laugh, then shrug. “I didn’t pick it.”

      “When are you seeing her again?”

      “I’m not sure. She’s flying out to Milan this week to see her folks.”

      “Italian, too. Typical.”

      “You could find a nice woman yourself if you lost that chip on your shoulder.”

      “And got laser eye surgery and a six-hundred-dollar haircut.”

      I focus my lens on a sweet moment between the bride’s parents, snapping them holding hands across the table, then turn back to Dennis. “You have to stop feeling sorry for yourself. Women appreciate a man with confidence.”

      “Easy for you to say.”

      “Seriously; all it takes is confidence and a little bit of charm. I mean, if this guy can do it—” I point my thumb toward the groom, standing on his tiptoes to share a kiss with the bride— “then a bad haircut shouldn’t stop you. Look. You can tell she’s crazy about him.”

      Dennis pats his head self-consciously, then sets his camera to record once more. “Enough of this chat. Shooting weddings is bad enough without hearing about your effortless sexual escapades.”

      “You’re right. Shooting weddings is bad enough.”

      Dennis casts me a sympathetic smile and returns to recording the party.

      I know why he’s looking at me like that. Not so long ago, I was an internationally-renowned photojournalist, traveling the globe and getting ahead of some of the biggest headlines worldwide. I faced searing heat and deadly environments; I had to figure out how to capture once-in-a-generation historical events in clear, sharp, poignant focus. Now, my biggest challenge is how to make two people look kind of the same size.

      How the mighty have fallen.

      Sophie

      I love Latte Latte, the coffee shop a block away from my little New York apartment. It’s a cozy little joint where single moms and college kids come to hang out on the squishy sofas and take pictures of the specialty-foam art. My latte is topped with a foam kitten with cocoa whiskers.

     

    Prev Next
Read online free - Copyright 2016 - 2025