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Own Me (The Wolf Hotel, #5)(49)

Author:K.A. Tucker

The mime gestures six and six.

“Right … A tie, and you’ve used up all your shots. So, I could put it in any of these baskets and win. Even the lowest.” His mouth curves into a frown as he tosses with no effort. “Or I could just get another one of these.”

For a third time, the ball lands in the top.

“How are you good at everything!” I squeal as the mime jumps around, clanging her bell to declare the winner.

With a dramatic bow, she points to the top row.

“What’s your suggestion?” he asks her.

She holds up a finger as if to say “One moment” and reaches below the counter to pull out two silver clips.

“What are those?” I ask warily.

Without a hint of hesitation or shame, the mime peels off her suspenders and attaches the clips to her nipples.

I wince. She’s a naughty mime.

“I don’t think pain’s her thing,” Henry says.

The mime holds up another finger—she’s having too much fun with this. Reaching below the counter again, she pulls out a giant fist-shaped dildo.

I gasp. “Don’t you dare!”

He holds up his hands in surrender. “Okay, okay. Seeing as you were so interested in that one, we’ll take it.” He points to the silver plug.

My stomach stirs with nerves. “Yeah. For you, not me.”

“I guess you should have won, then.”

The mime—still wearing the clamps—uses a long metal rod with a hook at the end to retrieve a new one still in its box. She delivers it and a small bottle of lube with a bow, before waggling a finger between Henry and herself, then pointing toward the sign leading to the Fun House.

“Just the game, thanks. But maybe we’ll see you there,” Henry says pleasantly, leading me away.

“What was that about?” I ask.

“I think she was asking if she could fuck me in the Fun House.”

My jaw drops. “Are you kidding me?” I spin around, ready to march back and throw a ball at her head. Or her clamped nipples.

Henry lassos me with an arm around my chest. “Relax, I’m joking. Sort of.” He holds up the small package. “This is going to look so good in you—”

I elbow him in the ribs, earning his laugh before he pulls me in close.

I nestle against him as we move on. “You seem different tonight.”

“How so?”

“I don’t know. Playful. At ease.”

“I don’t get to be anonymous often. It’s a nice change. I can do whatever I want here, and I don’t have to worry about reporters or pictures. No one knows it’s me. No one cares.”

“I guess that’s the case for everyone.”

“Exactly. Which makes for an interesting night.”

Every circus character imaginable surrounds us—magicians, ventriloquists, people dressed as trained animals—and it appears no one has spared any expense for their sophisticated costumes.

“Are there any famous people here? Like actors and singers?”

“I’m sure there are, but we’ll never know unless they show us their face. That’s the beauty of the rules.”

Speaking of famous people … Up ahead, a sleek female moves through the crowd, her curves visible beneath the sheer black material draped over her body. She’s drawing attention from all angles.

“You were right.” There’s no mistaking Margo in her racy fortune teller’s costume, even with her gold mask. I’ve seen her naked enough times to recognize her pert breasts and long, svelte torso. The black thong she wears hides little. The tassels on her nipples, even less.

Joel—I assume—walks behind her, dressed as the strong man in a fitted dark red one-piece jumpsuit, the sleeveless top half artfully torn and open to show off his brawny torso. The shorts are tight, revealing runner’s thighs and a prominent bulge that would be considered obscene at any other costume party. His mime mask has the added touch of a painted-on handlebar mustache.

“Don’t you two look magnifique,” she croons in her accent, stretching on her tiptoes to double-cheek kiss Henry as if she didn’t just see him.

“How did you know it was us?” I ask.

“You are not hard to pick out.” She twirls my red braid in her fingers. “Have you found the others yet?”

“No, but we just got here.”

“Perfect timing. A show is about to start.” She beckons us to follow.

“They’re amazing.” I lean back against Henry’s chest as we watch two sets of acrobats twirl on aerial rings to sultry music, their outfits nothing more than a thick Lycra ribbon wrapped strategically around their sinewy bodies. The stage is in a structure that reminds me of a giant birdcage, separating the performers from the growing group of spectators.

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