The Mister Read online E.L. James

Categories Genre: Chick Lit, Contemporary, Erotic, Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 159
Estimated words: 157450 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 787(@200wpm)___ 630(@250wpm)___ 525(@300wpm)
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Men, where she is from, don’t cook.

Or dance while cooking.

The flex of his broad shoulders, the swivel of his slim hips, and his bare feet tapping in perfect time to the music are mesmerizing. She feels a delicious tightening in her belly. He rakes his fingers through his damp hair and then flips the bacon. Her mouth waters.

Mmm…the smell.

Mmm…the sight of him.

He turns suddenly, and his face lights up when he sees her on the stairs. His enormous smile mirrors hers.

“One egg or two?” he shouts above the music.

“One,” she mouths as she comes down the stairs and into the big room. She turns and gasps as she looks out through the floor-to-ceiling windows.

The sea!

“Deti! Deti! The sea!” she shouts, sprinting to the glass wall of doors that lead onto the balcony.

* * *

I lower the heat under the bacon and hurry to the balcony doors to join Alessia, who’s jumping from foot to foot, incandescent with excitement.

“Can we go down to the sea?” Her eyes are alive with delight as she bounces up and down like a child.

“Of course. Here.” I unlock the balcony door and slide it open so that she can go outside. A gust of glacial air catches us both by surprise. It’s freezing, but she rushes out, not caring about her wet hair, bare feet, or thin T-shirt.

Doesn’t this woman have any decent clothes?

I pick up a gray throw that’s draped over the back of the sofa and walk out after her. I wrap my arms and the blanket around her, holding her as she admires the view. Her face is lit up with wonder.

The Hideout and our three other holiday homes are built along a rocky promontory. A small winding path at the end of the garden leads down to the beach. It’s a bright, clear day. The sun is shining, but it’s bitterly cold in the howling wind. The sea is a chilly blue, flecked with white surf, and we hear the boom of the waves as they crash against the cliffs on each side of the cove. The air smells fresh and salty. Alessia turns to me, her expression one of complete awe.

“Come on, let’s eat.” I’m conscious that breakfast is on the stove. “You’ll catch your death out here. We’ll go down to the beach after breakfast.” We head back inside and close the door. “I just have to do the eggs!” I shout above the music.

“Let me help!” Alessia shouts back, following me into the kitchen area, still draped in the blanket.

I turn the Sonos volume down via the app on my phone. “That’s better.”

“Interesting music,” Alessia says in a tone that tells me that perhaps it’s not her thing.

“It’s Korean house. I use a few tracks when I DJ.” I retrieve the eggs from the fridge. “Two eggs?”

“No, one.”

“You sure?”

“Yes.”

“Okay. Just one. I’m having two. You can make some toast. Bread is in the fridge, and the toaster is over there.”

Together we work in the kitchen, and I’m able to watch her. Using her long, nimble fingers, she fishes the toast out of the toaster and butters each slice.

“Here.” I take the two plates out of the warming drawer and place them on the counter, ready for toast.

She grins as I serve up the rest of our breakfast.

“I don’t know about you, but I’m famished.” I abandon the frying pan in the sink, collect both plates, and usher her toward the dining table, where I’ve laid two places.

Alessia looks impressed.

Why does this make me feel like I’ve finally achieved something?

“Sit here. You can enjoy the view.”

* * *

“How was that?” Maxim asks.

They are seated at the large dining table, Alessia at the head, where she’s never sat before, and she’s enjoying the view, the seascape.

“Delicious. You are a man with many accomplishments.”

“You’d be amazed,” he says dryly, his voice a little husky. And for some reason his tone and the way he looks at her make her breath catch.

“Do you still want to go for a walk?”

“Yes.”

“Okay.” Taking his phone, he dials a number. Alessia wonders who he’s calling.

“Danny,” he says. “No. We’re fine. Can you bring a hair dryer over…oh, there are? Okay. Then I need a pair of Wellingtons or walking boots….” He looks directly at Alessia. “What size?” he asks.

She has no idea what he’s talking about.

“Shoe size,” he clarifies.

“Thirty-eight.”

“That’s, um…size five, and some socks if you have any. Yes. For a woman…It doesn’t matter. And a decent bloody warm coat…Yes. For a woman…Slim. Small. As soon as possible.” He listens for a moment. “Fantastic,” he says, and hangs up.

“I have a coat.”

“You won’t be warm enough. And I don’t know about the Albanian sock thing, but it’s cold out there.”

She flushes. She has only two pairs of socks because she can’t afford more—and she couldn’t ask Magda for another pair. Magda had done enough for her.


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