Love Locked In (A Lock Story #1) Read Online Toni Aleo

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Novella, Sports Tags Authors: Series: A Lock Story Series by Toni Aleo
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Total pages in book: 32
Estimated words: 31149 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 156(@200wpm)___ 125(@250wpm)___ 104(@300wpm)
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Maggie: Fine, but question. How many books do you have on your TBR? I had a girl just come in with 600. Like, is she even reading?

Dermot: LOL. Right. I have about sixty, but I make a list at the beginning of the year and force myself to read them all before I am able to read anything new I see.

Maggie: That is a solid way of doing it. I don’t have a TBR.

Dermot: No way.

Maggie: Truly. I just read what I see. Total mood reader here.

Dermot: I couldn’t imagine. I need a plan.

Maggie: You? Need a plan? I don’t believe you.

Dermot: Har-har-har.

Tuesday, 12:47 p.m.

Dermot: Hey, Maggie.

Maggie: Yes, Dermot?

Dermot: Thank you for the ham and cheese.

Maggie: You’re welcome. I made it myself.

Dermot: No wonder it tastes so good.

Tuesday, 4:00 p.m.

Dermot: No buttholes today!

Maggie: Oh, thank God!

Maggie: What does your night hold?

Dermot: Reading, and hopefully texting you.

Maggie: You could call.

Dermot: Now?

Maggie: Now.

Dermot is calling…

Wednesday, 7:00 a.m.

Dermot: Kip wants to know if you want to take him on a walk.

Maggie: Now?

Dermot: Yeah, if you’re not busy.

Maggie: Yeah. I can meet him downstairs. Can you ask him to bring his dad?

Maggie: Oh, and I get to hold the leash.

Maggie: Unless his dad wants to hold my hand.

Dermot: I’ll tell him to tell his dad.

Dermot: His dad said that he’s holding the leash, so he can hold your hand.

Dermot: If that’s okay.

Maggie: It’s more than okay.

Wednesday, 8:21 p.m.

Maggie: I’m out of the shower.

Dermot is calling…

Thursday, 3:22 p.m.

Dermot: Have fun at your parents’.

Maggie: Thanks!

Maggie: We’re making sourdough. Do you eat it?

Dermot: Bread? Yes, I love bread.

Maggie: I’ll bring you some!

Dermot: Oh! Thanks. I haven’t had fresh bread like that.

Maggie: Mom sells it at the market. You should go sometime.

Dermot: Yeah, I should.

Thursday, 3:42 p.m.

Maggie: Oh! Tell me you’ve preordered the new dragon shifter romance!

Dermot: I can’t admit I read that trash. And yes, of course I did. I’m not an uncultured swine.

Maggie: I knew it. I got it too. Now, I wait. What are you reading right now?

Dermot: That new Toni Aleo romance.

Maggie: Hockey romance or her small-town series?

Dermot: The small-town hockey romance series, duh.

Maggie: How dare I be so uneducated. I’m sorry.

Maggie: Question, though. For someone who doesn’t watch hockey, you read it?

Dermot: I have no clue how to play or even what happens, but I love a good romance.

Maggie: I should take you to a game.

Dermot: I’d go.

eight

. . .

Maggie

“What is it going to take for this guy to ask me out!”

Willa looks up from where she’s kneading the sourdough with my mom. Sadie glances over at me from the counter, her blond hair falling in front of her as she snips her ends into the trash. She’s such a badass, because guess what I’m not doing? Cutting my own damn hair. The boys and Dad are in the den, playing PlayStation as we work on the bread, and it’s the perfect afternoon in the Welch household.

I love being in the home I grew up in. While Nashville holds a lot of the good memories, Holiday Ridge is the vacation home we always went to, and then it became our forever home. I was in middle school when we moved here, and nothing has changed. All the photos are still of us at young ages. Mom refuses to refurnish the house, keeping the ’90s feel that is so out-of-date but that she loves so much.

Guys, the den is wood paneling. The kind that sticks to the wall, and she will not take it down. Nope, my mom just keeps adding Gorilla Glue to spots that fall.

It’s weird.

“Mags, it’s been a few days,” Mom reminds me, and I blow out an exasperated breath.

“But I’m a damn good time!”

“Didn’t he sleep over?” Sadie asks, snipping her hair.

“There was no sleeping,” I say, waggling my brows. Then I point around the room. “All you people have dirty minds. We stayed up talking the whole night. It was awesome. It was everything, and it felt so easy. I like him. A lot,” I admit softly. “And we talk all the time, like, text every single chance, yet he hasn’t asked me out. I’ve even given him openings, but nothing.”

“Maybe he’s not into you,” Sadie says, and I give her a dark look.

“Don’t put that negative into the world.”

“Yeah, Sadie. Be kind,” Mom chides, but Sadie just smirks.

She’s a bit of an asshole.

Willa blows a strand of her blond waves out of her eyes and gives me a look. “He’s shy, Mags. You’re gonna have to just straight up ask him out.”

I bite my lip. “I don’t think he’s shy. I think he’s hesitant, and I don’t know why. We really haven’t talked about his past relationships. Maybe he’s been burned.”

“So, ask,” Willa suggests.

Like I hadn’t thought of that. “Maybe I will. I did say I was going to bring him a loaf of bread.”


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