
Play for Me — Elise’s POV
An Exclusive Bonus Chapter from Her Best Student
by Aurora North
This bonus chapter contains explicit sexual content and is intended for readers 18+.
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Play for Me — Elise’s POV
I had been planning this for a week.
Not loosely — not in the vague, suggestive way of someone who had an idea they might act on if the mood was right. I’d planned it the way I planned lessons: deliberately, structurally, with a specific piece of music selected and a reward system designed and every escalation point mapped in advance. I’d thought about which passage would be the first threshold — the one where her accuracy would earn my hands on her shoulders. I’d thought about the second threshold, where the reward would be my mouth. I’d thought about where the piece would break, because it would break. She would break. The question was only when.
I was using my training for deeply unprofessional purposes, and I was going to enjoy every second of it.
The Ballade was the right choice. Technically demanding enough that she’d have to concentrate — genuinely concentrate, the kind that required her entire body — and emotionally exposed enough that the concentration would make her vulnerable. I’d watched Lena play under pressure before. I knew what happened: her focus sharpened, her breathing changed, her body became a tuning fork for whatever was happening around her. Under normal circumstances, that quality made her a remarkable musician. Under the circumstances I was constructing, it was going to make her exquisitely responsive.
She arrived at five. Hair down. The navy V-neck I liked. She sat at the Steinway and looked at the score I’d placed on the stand and her eyes widened — she knew the Ballade was beyond her sight-reading level, and she opened her mouth to say so.
“Don’t tell me you’re not ready,” I said. “Play.”
She played. The opening was shaky — sight-reading always exposed her nerves first — but by the eighth bar she’d found the melody, and her instincts took over, and the sound that came out of the Steinway was exactly what I’d expected: imperfect, brave, and completely committed. She played the way she always played when she forgot to be afraid, which was the way she played when I pushed her hard enough that fear became irrelevant.
I told her the rules.
“Every time you play a passage correctly, I’ll touch you. Every time you make a mistake, I stop.”
I watched her process it. The widening of her eyes. The parting of her lips. The flush that started at her chest and climbed — it always climbed, a visible barometer of arousal that I’d learned to read the way I read dynamic markings. The flush said: I understand what you’re doing. I want it. I’m terrified of how much I want it.
“That’s not a lesson,” she said. Her voice was already different — thinner, breathier, the voice she used in the minutes before I touched her.
“Everything I do with you is a lesson,” I said. “Play.”
She played.
I stood behind her. Close — closer than I stood during corrections, close enough that I could smell her shampoo and see the fine hairs at the nape of her neck standing on end. She played the first sixteen bars cleanly, her technique sharp despite the distraction of my proximity, and the discipline of it sent a pulse of heat through my chest that I hadn’t anticipated. I’d expected to enjoy the power. I hadn’t expected the power to make me wet.
I put my hands on her shoulders.
Her fingers stuttered on the keys. A fractional hesitation — not a wrong note, but a break in the flow, a catch in the machinery of a body that was trying to play Chopin while the woman it wanted was standing behind it with both hands on its shoulders.
“That was correct,” I said. My thumbs pressed into the muscle at the base of her neck, and I felt the shiver run through her — a full-body tremor that started under my hands and radiated downward. “Keep going.”
She kept going. She played the development section with a precision that bordered on supernatural — every note landed, every phrase shaped, every dynamic marked with the desperate accuracy of a woman whose entire nervous system was oriented toward a single goal: don’t give her a reason to stop touching me.
And I touched her. I rewarded every correct passage the way I’d planned: hands sliding from her shoulders down her arms. Fingertips tracing the line from bicep to forearm to wrist. The contact was light — barely there, a whisper of skin on skin — and the contrast between the lightness of the touch and the heaviness of its effect was the whole point. Lena played with her entire body, and I was playing her body the way she played the Steinway: with attention, with intention, with the knowledge that every note mattered.
She hit a wrong note at bar thirty-one. E-natural instead of E-flat.
I withdrew.
Stepped back. Hands off. Two feet of air where my warmth had been. The sound she made — a choked, involuntary inhale, the sound of absence — confirmed everything I’d hypothesized about how this would work. The withdrawal was more potent than the touch. The absence was louder than the presence. Lena’s body had learned, over months of lessons and corrections and praise, to orient itself toward my attention the way a plant orients toward sunlight, and taking the sunlight away was devastation.
I was devastated, too. Standing two feet behind the woman I loved with my hands at my sides and the ghost of her warmth on my palms, I was devastated by the wanting — the fierce, specific, meticulously calibrated wanting that was both the game and the truth underneath the game.
“Wrong note,” I said. My voice was steady. I made sure of that. “Play it correctly.”
She played it correctly. She played it so correctly that I could hear the ferocity of her concentration in every note — the absolute refusal to give me a reason to stay away. And I stepped forward and put my hands on her waist and slid them upward, and when my palms reached the sides of her breasts — a suggestion, not a touch, the ghost of contact through the fabric of her sweater — her hips rolled forward on the bench and a moan came out of her that was loud enough to fill the studio.
She was still playing. That was the part that undid me. The music was still happening underneath the arousal — slower now, more fragile, the melody thinning as her concentration divided between the keys and my hands. She was playing through what I was doing to her, and the through was the most erotic thing I’d ever witnessed. Not the moaning. Not the hip roll. The refusal to stop. The commitment to the music even as I was taking her apart.
I pressed my lips to the back of her neck. She played four more bars perfectly. I slid my hands under her sweater. She played three more. My fingers found bare skin — the warm, soft plane of her stomach — and her breathing went ragged and the notes started to blur and I could feel her losing it, the focus fracturing, the piece falling apart under the weight of sensation.
“You’re extraordinary,” I whispered against her skin. “Do you know what you look like right now? Playing through everything I’m doing to you. You’re the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen.”
She hit a wrong note. The piece collapsed.
I withdrew. Stepped back.
“Elise.” Her voice was wrecked. “Please.”
“Play it correctly. And I won’t stop again.”
She stared at me over her shoulder. The war on her face was beautiful — pride fighting need, stubbornness fighting surrender. I could see the exact moment surrender won. She turned back to the piano. Set her hands on the keys. And she played.
What came out of the Steinway in the next two minutes was unlike anything I’d heard in my studio. She played with a ferocity that transcended technique — a woman burning alive and refusing to stop running, every note a declaration, every phrase a promise: I will not give you a reason to take your hands away.
I put my hands back on her body and didn’t stop.
Under the sweater. Over the bra. I unclasped it through the fabric — a one-handed maneuver I’d practiced in my own mind more times than I’d admit — and cupped her bare breasts while her right hand carried the melody and her left hand lost coherence and the Steinway sang with the combined input of music and sex and the particular alchemy of a woman being played by two instruments at once.
My right hand left her breast and slid down. Over her stomach. Over the waistband of her jeans. I pressed the heel of my hand against the seam between her legs and her hips jerked forward and a moan tore out of her that drowned the piano.
The music stopped. Her hands left the keys.
“I can’t,” she gasped. “I can’t play anymore. I need you to —”
I pulled her off the bench. Turned her. Pressed her against the piano. My mouth found hers — hard, deep, the kiss of a woman who’d spent an hour building tension and was now demolishing it — and my hand went into her jeans and the first contact with slick, swollen, soaked flesh made my knees buckle.
She was drenched. From the playing. From the praise. From the withholding and the rewarding and the systematic, meticulous application of everything I knew about her body to the project of taking her apart. I slid two fingers inside her and felt her clench around me and heard my own name torn out of her throat and thought: This. This is what it felt like to perform. This is the audience leaning forward. This is the moment where the music stops being sound and becomes experience.
I fucked her against the piano. My fingers deep, my thumb on her clit, my mouth at her ear saying the things I’d been composing all week: “You played through everything I did to you and you didn’t stop and you were magnificent.” “You’re so good, Lena.” “Come for me. You’ve earned it.”
She came screaming. The orgasm convulsed through her and she gripped my shoulders and I held her against the Steinway and felt every pulse, every contraction, every aftershock, and I kept talking — kept praising — because I’d learned that the praise was as essential to her orgasm as the friction, and the two together were a combination that produced responses so intense they bordered on transcendent.
Afterward, she looked at me with dazed, wet eyes and said: “Armchair. Now.”
I sat. She knelt between my legs and looked up at me with an expression that was 50 percent devotion and 50 percent intent, and she said the two words that shattered every remaining wall I’d ever built:
“Was I good?”
She knew what she was doing. The self-awareness was crystalline — the deliberate invocation of the dynamic, the student asking the teacher for a grade while kneeling between her thighs with her chin wet. And the sincerity underneath the performance was the thing that broke me. She meant it. She always meant it. The asking wasn’t a game. It was the truth in a costume, the way all the best performances are.
“You were extraordinary,” I said. “Show me what else you’ve learned.”
She showed me. Her mouth was devastating — fluent, focused, every technique refined by weeks of practice and the natural instinct I’d identified in the first audition applied to a different instrument entirely. She knew exactly where I was sensitive. She knew exactly the rhythm that made my hands fly to her hair. She knew exactly the pressure that made me lose every word I’d ever learned except her name.
She slid two fingers inside me without breaking rhythm and I arched in the armchair and made a sound I didn’t recognize — high and desperate and completely uncurated, the sound of a woman who’d been in control all evening discovering that control was overrated when the alternative was this: Lena’s mouth on me, Lena’s fingers inside me, Lena’s eyes looking up from between my legs with the fierce, triumphant focus of a student performing at her absolute best.
I came with her name in my mouth and her hand in mine and the Steinway humming in the background like a witness.
We sat in the armchair together afterward. Her in my lap, my arms around her waist, both of us breathing hard and grinning and half-dressed in a piano studio on a Thursday evening. She tucked her face against my neck and said, muffled: “Was I good?”
I kissed the top of her head. Pressed my lips to her hair and breathed her in — floral shampoo and sex and the warm, specific scent that I would know anywhere, in any room, for the rest of my life.
“You were my best student,” I said.
She laughed. Full and real and startled, the sound bursting out of her like a wrong note in the best possible way. And I laughed too. And the laughter mattered more than the sex, more than the praise, more than any of the carefully planned, meticulously executed things I’d done to her that evening.
The laughter meant we were real.
“Stay tonight,” I said.
“The lesson isn’t even over.”
“The lesson has been over since the first bar.” I traced the line of her jaw with one finger. “Stay. I want to wake up with you tomorrow.”
“Yes,” she said. “Always yes.”
She stayed. And in the morning, I made her coffee the way she liked it — milk and two sugars, which was a crime against coffee and the most endearing thing about her — and she sat on my kitchen counter in my shirt and smiled at me with the crooked smile that was only mine, and I thought: This. This is what it sounds like when the music comes back.
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