Chapter 19
“Have I told you how much I love these bench seats?”
-Cam
“FUCK!” Aaron roars.
I snicker. “That’s what we were trying to do before we were rudely interrupted.”
Aaron pulls the truck over to the side of the fire road.
I look through the back window. “Looks like a park ranger.”
“Don’t move,” Aaron warns.
I laugh at the absurdity of it all. I’m fucking naked as a jaybird. Aaron’s pants are around his knees. He’s buried deep inside me.
“Where the hell would I go?”
Aaron wraps one arm around my waist, pulling me closer to his chest so that I don’t give the ranger an eyeful. He rolls down the window to greet the ranger whose brown hair is pulled back into a ponytail. He’s also wearing the kind of round wire-rimmed glasses that make him look more like an English professor than a park ranger.
“Chief Pearce?” the ranger looks confused.
Aaron coughs. “Hey, Elliot. How fast was I going?”
I bite my lip to hold back the laughter.
Ranger Elliot, not sure if that’s his first or last name, has the decency to look everywhere but at my breasts.
“Uh, actually, that wasn’t the problem,” Elliot coughs.
Aaron frowns.
The ranger lets out a laugh. “Now that I see the - situation - in here, this makes a lot more sense.”
“Spell it out for us, Ranger Rick,” I raise an eyebrow at him.
“It’s Ranger Elliot Acevedo, ma’am. Right. Of course,” Elliot laughs. “Your truck was moving down the fire road in - um - fits and starts. You’d be cruising along at 40 miles per hour. Then your truck would jerk and go down to five. I’ve been following you for about a mile.”
“Well, shit,” Aaron sighs.
That’s it. I can’t hold back the laughter any longer. The harder I laugh, the more I feel Aaron’s cock twitch inside me. Which is turning me on all over again.
“We’re sorry about that, Ranger Acevedo,” I smile. “Any chance you can let us off with a warning?”
“You think you should get off with a warning?” Ranger Acevedo asks.
When he saysget off, more laughter bubbles out of me. That causes Aaron to laugh. Ranger Acevedo is not amused and rolls his eyes.
“We’d appreciate it, Elliot,” Aaron adds. “And we’ll - uh - take this elsewhere. Okay?”
“Dude, you’re lucky there’s no one else out here right now,” the ranger warns but lets out a breath. “And the dash camera is rolling right now. So, here’s what I’m going to do. You’re getting that warning. Take this somewhere more private. I’m going to turn around and go back the way I came so that we can protect your lady’s virtue.”
“Oh, I think that ship sailed about 25 years ago,” I choke out.
Aaron glares at me but turns to Elliot. “Thanks, man. Appreciate it.”
Ranger Acevedo raises his hand in a two-fingered salute, then heads back to his vehicle. He does as promised, turning around and driving out of sight.