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He struck her again, out of nowhere, right on the back of the calf. Her leg almost buckled from the shock andthepain.

"Malcolm—”

"It’s all right…” He put his arm around her to hold her up. He cupped her chin in his hand, tilted her face up to his and kissed the tip of her nose. "It’s not so bad,isit?”

"No,” she said. In his arms, it wasn’t so bad. It wasn’t so badatall.

He struck her again. Mona closed her eyes as the pain washed through her. It wasn’t unbearable, but it wasn’t pleasant either. After a few dozen strikes, it might very well become unbearable,however.

Yet nothing would allow her to break before she’d earned what she wanted and what she wantedwashim.

He walked around her body, striking her with the crop high and low—on her thighs, on her stomach, on her breasts, on her backside, so often and so hard she knew she’d hardly be able to sit in a chair tomorrow. But what did tomorrow mean to her when she wasn’t certain she’d survivetonight?

The crop didn’t sting like a bee. It bit like a snake. Its fangs were sharp and burning and left sharp and burning bite marks all over her body. Malcolm was the snake-charmer and she was mesmerized by how he made the crop dance. He would twirl it in his fingers, casual, playful. Then he’d catch it quick, so fast she couldn’t see where the blow would come from and where itwouldland.

It would have been easier for her to close her eyes tight and pretend it wasn’t happening, wait it out, hide inside her mind. But she couldn’t. Malcolm wouldn’t allow that. After each strike he paused to kiss her, to fondle her breasts and nipples, to massage her hips and quivering belly. After each strike he’d tell her how beautiful she was. He’d tell her what a brave, brave girl she was. He’d tell her how aroused she made him with her submission to his crop. He’d kiss her on the mouth, before suddenly stepping back to strike her once more. Then the cycle would begin again. The crop, the pain, the tender words and tender kisses. Soon she was craving the crop because each strike meantakiss.

Before he’d begun, a hundred hits sounded like a hundred too many. But each strike earned such affection from Malcolm, such compassion, such sympathy that she was starting to think one hundred wasn’t nearly enough. He was forcing her to fall in love—not with him, but withthecrop.

She was in love with the crop. The crop, and Malcolm’s tendersadism.

And Malcolm too, of course. How could she not? He was inhumanly attractive. His eyes were so black and the room so dark she couldn’t tell the iris apart from the pupil. As he shifted this way and that to keep her guessing, the muscles in his thighs tensed and shone through his breeches. His boots sported gold buttons at the tops and she wanted to kiss them for some reason. The thought wouldn’t leave her head. She trained her eyes on them, on the glinting gold coins, and let them anchor her into themoment.

"You’re staring at my boots, love. Tell me why,” he said. He took her in his arms and held her close against him. The crop dangled from his wrist as he ran the flat of his hand down herbrutalizedback.

"I like them.” She panted between the words. Pain suffused her body. Her flesh smoldered like a hot sidewalk intherain.

"I’m very glad you do. What do you likeaboutthem?”

"The gold buttons,” she said. "I can’t stop lookingatthem.”

"I’ll tell you what, my darling girl,” he said. "If you can take ten strikes in a row without me stopping, I’ll let you kiss those buttons on my boots. What do you think? Would youlikethat?”

"Very much,”shesaid.

"What do you saytome?”

"Thank you,Malcolm.”

"That’s very nice, yes. Could you call me sir? I think I’d like to hear it from you. Everything you say sounds sopretty.”

"I’ll say anything youwant,sir.”

"Oh, that is even better than I thought it would be. Excellent. You’ve made me so very happy tonight.” He pressed a soft kiss to her lips once more. She would never tire of his kisses or his words of affection or his pride in her. How had she ever lived without this in her life? Without the crop and the counting and the pain that earned her such rewards, would she have eagerly signed up for a thousand strikes of the crop for the next thousandyears?

"Are you ready, dear? Only ten. I know you can do it. I know you will do it—for me,won’tyou?”

"Of course, sir,” she said, and her heart welled and she could have wept with love for him. What wouldn’t she do for him? Nothing. The answer was nothing. She would take his English kisses over French kissesanyday.

She took a breath in and braced herself. Her hands were still on her head. Her arms ached but shedidn’tcare.

When the strike came she was ready. It hit her on an unmarked patch of flesh on the side of her hip. The second strike came right after, in the very same spot. And the third. And the fourth. It was agony by the fifth, terrible agony by the sixth, screaming agony by the seventh. And the eighth and the ninth and the tenth passed in a haze as she wept andshook.

Malcolm caught her in his arms again as she swayed on her feet. "I’ve got you,” he said. "You’re safe. You’rewithme.”

She rested her head on his shoulder as he stroked her hair. She put her arms around his neck and helether.

"I know that hurt, didn’t it?” he asked and she nodded. "I’m sorry. You’re doing so wellthough.”

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