The Future of Sex
Aubrey Parker
(The Future of Sex, #1)
Publication date: May 16th 2017
Genres: Adult, Romance, Science Fiction
Love doesnât matter. Romance doesnât exist.
In the year 2060, sex is a game of extremes. No desire is unexplored and even the unimaginable is possible.
Alexa Mathis, head of the monolithic O Corporation, has found a prodigy she believes will drive her sex empire to rapturous new limits: Chloe Shaw, a common girl with uncanny gifts that make her a powerful escort.
Chloe doesnât believe in love. She believes in ecstasy, and her employerâs newest tool to usher âthe future of sexâ: an intelligent network known as The Beam.
And so it is until she meets Andrew ⦠and the whole world changes.
The Future of Sex is a 12-part romance/sci-fi series exploring the line between todayâs conception of love and the sensations that await us in the future.
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EXCERPT:
âClose your eyes.â
Andrew was startled. Heâd been listening to music when Chloe entered, and hadnât heard her approach. His door was unlatched, without a digital lock. He hadnât been kidding about being poor. His connection was isolated to the terminal playing the music. He lived like a bohemian, and his apartment was little more than masonry and glass. She felt guilty about using her Beam connection to ferret out Andrewâs address, but once her hands were on his hips, her chest pressing into his back, Chloe no longer cared.
âYou surprised me.â
She reached toward the terminal â a simple, no-frills model â and touched his screen to change the music, choosing something soft and lyrical to replace it. Something sappy and lovelorn that her mother would mock.
âClose your eyes,â she repeated.
He hesitated. She couldnât see his eyes because she was behind him, but Andrewâs body language betrayed a man at attention. His moment of reluctance gave her pause until she realized his doubt was about himself rather than her.
âChloe â¦â
âJust do it.â
She sensed his eyes closing. Then she rested her hands on his chest, palm flat. The movement was sensual, but not sexual. Her default would have been to go below the belt, so she kept her hands high.
âWhat are you doing?â he asked.
âFeeling.â
âI wish I worked out more.â
âNot feeling you. I meant that Iâm attempting to feel. To emote.â
âHow is it going?â
âI donât know.â
And she didnât. Chloe was feeling just fine, but it was like an ingrained response to Andrewâs presence. If he were feeling doubtful or down, her chameleon nature would want her to adapt, to touch him in just the right ways and say just the right things. She wasnât sure if her genuine reaction â if sheâd ever felt such a thing â was the same.
âYou donât know?â
âWhat do you want me to say, Andrew?â
âIâm not sure what you mean.â
âWhat do you want from me? How would you have me feel?â
Andrew hesitated. âIs this a test?â
He sounded concerned, or even more doubtful than before â the opposite of his usual carefree, playful self. Something had been wrong at the park, and it had occupied Chloeâs mind, heavy like an anchor, ever since. That same thing was still wrong, but had matured into something else.
âNo,â she said. âItâs not a test.â
âI donât want you to feel anything. You feel what you feel.â
It was such a simple thing to say, yet Chloe didnât know if her body and mind understood.
âHow do you feel?â he asked.
âNervous.â It was the truth, but she wasnât sure if it was her base or something more meta. Was she nervous for her own reasons, or because she wasnât sure how she truly felt?
âMe too,â he said.
With her flat palms, Chloe could feel his heart. âI can tell.â
âI donât know what to make of you, Chloe.â His words were rushed as if heâd been dying to say them.
âNobody seems to.â
âI donât know if I like you for you, or if I like the person youâre becoming so that I will like you.â
Chloe turned Andrew around. She didnât have to tell him to open his eyes. He did so automatically, those usually-playful orbs suddenly so serious.
âSo,â she said, âyou can tell.â
âI donât know what I can tell.â
âYouâre conflicted. Thereâs something wrong.â
âConflicted,â he echoed. âBut nothingâs wrong.â Then: âAt least, I hope not.â
âBut you donât know.â
âHonestly? I donât.â
âMy whole life is about feeling, but itâs always as a response.â Chloe swallowed, hesitant to voice what was coming. âBut I know how I feel about that â about your hesitation.â
âI think I love you, Chloe.â
âBut you donât know.â
He shook his head.
A tear tickled the corner of her eye.
âAnd I know how I feel about that, too.â He moved to kiss her.
âDonât.â
âI want to.â
âBecause I want you to?â Chloe asked. âAnd I want you to because you want to?â
Andrew tipped his head a little; he didnât have to say that Chloeâs double-talk was confusing them both. He pressed his lips to hers, felt her lack of response, then pulled back. âDoes it matter?â
Author Bio:
I love to write stories with characters that feel real enough to friend on Facebook, or slap across the face. I write to make you feel, think, and burn with the thrill that can only come from getting lost in the pages. I love to write unforgettable characters who wrestle with life’s largest problems. My books may always end with a Happily Ever After, but there will always be drama on the way there.
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