Michael – The Hawthornes (The Aces’ Sons #9) Read Online Nicole Jacquelyn

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC Tags Authors: Series: The Aces' Sons Series by Nicole Jacquelyn
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Total pages in book: 84
Estimated words: 82715 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 414(@200wpm)___ 331(@250wpm)___ 276(@300wpm)
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“I thought you’d be smaller,” Grease said conversationally.

“You big,” Rhett mumbled, making his great-grandfather laugh.

“Where you think you got it?” Grease asked, chuckling. “Someday, you’ll be tall as me.”

“Okay,” Rhett breathed, making us all laugh.

“Hey, you wanna come help me get the table cleaned off? My wife’s a hoarder, and she’s got papers and shit everywhere.” Grease reached his hand out, and after a small hesitation, Rhett let go of me and moved toward him.

“Wife?” he asked curiously.

Grease pointed at Callie with his thumb.

“Oh,” Rhett said.

“Yup,” Grease replied.

“I’m not a hoarder,” Callie said as they passed her, backhanding Grease lightly on the belly.

“If the shoe fits, sugar,” Grease said with a laugh as he walked away.

“Juice?” Rhett asked as they moved out of view.

“There aren’t that many papers,” Callie said to us with a huff. “Come in, come in. Sit down. Take your coat off.”

“I figured you’d have the entire family here,” Michael said as I shucked my coat and hung it on the coat rack.

“Thought about it,” Callie said with a grin. “But we decided we wanted to have Emilia and Rhett all to ourselves this time.”

“Hey, what about me?” Michael asked with a laugh.

“We see you all the time,” Callie replied with a wave of her hand as she sat on the couch.

“I’ve been replaced,” Michael said jokingly, leading me over to a chair.

As soon as I’d sat down, Callie’s gaze rested on me again. “Where’ve you been, honey? You look like you’ve gotten some sun.”

The laugh that burst out of my mouth was awkwardly loud and short, and I slapped my hand to my mouth to keep any other weird noises from escaping. Yeah, I’d been in the sun a bit.

“We were in Arizona,” I said finally, dropping my hand to my lap. I cleared my throat uncomfortably. “My parents moved us there when they found out I was pregnant.”

“Seems pretty dramatic for a teenage pregnancy,” she murmured.

I looked at Michael, but there was no help from that direction. His face was emotionless as he watched me.

“My dad’s company had a branch down there,” I said, winding my fingers together in my lap to keep from fidgeting. “And since I’d gotten into Arizona State, they figured I could just transfer there.”

“And did you?” Callie asked curiously.

“For a while,” I replied softly. I forced a smile. “And then Rhett came, and I took care of him.”

“And you did a good job with that,” Callie said, glancing at Michael. “Heather said he’s a real sweetheart.”

“He is,” Michael agreed quietly.

The room went silent for a few heavy moments.

“They didn’t want me to contact Michael,” I said, straightening in my chair. “It was part of the deal we made so Rhett and I could stay with them.”

“Assholes,” Callie said under her breath.

“They always followed through,” I said, fidgeting a little. “So if I had contacted him—” I glanced at Michael, who was staring at the carpet between his feet, and then back at Callie. “I knew they’d kick me out.”

“Awful people,” Callie muttered. “Just awful. I’m sorry, Emmy, but that’s disgusting.”

“Yeah,” I breathed.

They had been awful. Terrible, manipulative, mean people. But they’d also been my parents. They’d giggled with Rhett and bought my favorite ice cream, and made sure that I had everything I’d needed.

Except for Michael. He’d been the one thing they’d refused to let me have. The memory of those arguments, the tears, the sense of hopelessness, the fear, rushed back in an instant, making my stomach lurch. I shoved it away.

I was back in Eugene. Michael was sitting less than five feet from me. Rhett was currently giggling in the kitchen at something his great-grandpa was saying.

They’d kept Michael from us. Kept us from him. But they no longer had that power.

“Her parents died,” Michael said as I snapped out of the memory. I must’ve missed Callie asking me a question.

“I’m sorry,” Callie said sympathetically. “For all their faults, they were still your parents.”

“Thanks.”

I was sorry, too. But mixed in with the hole their deaths had left and the things I missed about them was guilt and relief in equal measure. If they hadn’t died, how long would it have taken me to work up the courage to leave? I wasn’t sure. I’d told myself a thousand times that I would leave, get in the car and go—but it had taken their deaths and my desperation for me to do it.

I glanced guiltily at Michael.

“Ice cream,” Rhett said, practically flying into the family room. “Hamburgers.”

“Ice cream after the hamburgers,” I informed him in case there was any confusion.

“French fries,” Rhett announced happily.

“Come on into the kitchen,” Callie said, getting to her feet. “You can keep me company while I finish dinner. If I leave your gramps in there alone, we’ll be eating raw hamburger and burned fries.”

“I told you it wouldn’t be bad,” Michael said, stopping me with a hand on my arm.


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