The Woman in the Woods (Costa Family #8) Read Online Jessica Gadziala

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Crime, Mafia, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Costa Family Series by Jessica Gadziala
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Total pages in book: 79
Estimated words: 77205 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 386(@200wpm)___ 309(@250wpm)___ 257(@300wpm)
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There was no toying around.

Not with the clock winding down to one of the kids coming to look for us, or calling for us.

I rode him hard and fast, his hands digging into my ass, up and through an orgasm that had me crying out and falling against him.

Grabbing me, he rolled me under him, fucking me harder, deeper, taking me from one orgasm and into another that had us both groaning out our releases.

We collapsed together after, trying to slow our breathing, and listening to any sounds of distress from below us.

Hearing nothing yet, I climbed up on his chest, listening to the heart I’d fallen so damn in love with.

“The kids decided what they want to do on spring break,” I told him.

“Yeah?” he asked, his arms tight around me. “What’s that?”

“They want to go to the cabin.”

Yes.

That cabin.

Well, sort of.

We’d actually expanded it quite a bit over the years. Maybe it was morbid of us to want to keep it, to preserve it.

It was a place of so much death.

The bodies he’d buried that night I’d seen him. Storm’s littermates. Neeley and his men.

But it was also the place we’d met.

If not for the cabin in the woods, we never would have met, wouldn’t have fallen in love, or had our kids.

I wanted to keep it.

Besides, we both felt it was important for kids to have a place out of the city where they could really experience the outdoors.

“You’re kidding,” he said, sounding less than thrilled at the prospect.

I couldn’t blame them.

When we’d visited last summer before I had our youngest, the kids—despite endless lectures about leaves of three—had managed to both get into some poison ivy, and were absolutely covered in it and miserable for days.

“You can’t complain. I think they get their stubbornness from you,” I told him, pushing up to look down at his face that only seemed to get more handsome over the years.

“That’s probably fair,” he agreed. “Well, if we are gonna have a new puppy, having the woods to exercise that energy out of them in might be a good thing.”

“Look at you, seeing the bright side,” I teased.

“Must have learned that from somewhere,” he said, tugging a strand of my hair playfully.

“Probably from a very patient, very understanding woman,” I agreed.

“I was thinking it was from falling in love with a gorgeous, but messy, woman,” he said with a smirk.

“Just for that, I’m loading the dishwasher my way tonight,” I declared.

“Don’t you fucking dare.”

“In fact, I think the sink is full right now,” I said, smile big as I pushed off of him, and rushed toward my clothing pile. “Damnit,” I grumbled when he hopped up, shrugging on his pants in half the time it took for me to get back into my leggings. “Stupid girl clothes,” I added, watching as he disappeared out of the room as I pulled my shirt on.

By the time I got downstairs, he had our baby on his shoulder, holding him there with one strong hand, and was actively loading the dishwasher with the other.

Which left me free to let the puppies out and play with them with the older kids.

Perfect.

God, we were so freaking perfect.

Even if we all came down with poison ivy at the cabin.

“We want this one,” our son called, making both Silvano and I look over to see him and his sister trying to hold onto a squirming puppy.

The most hyperactive of the bunch.

Because of course.

Finished with the dishwasher, Silvano came over, plopping the baby on my lap, then hauling me up to his side.

“Guess we got two dogs now,” he said, his fingers sliding up and down my spine.

“Don’t get too comfortable with that number,” I said, kissing our baby’s head. “I have a feeling they are each going to insist on their own dogs over time.”

“I can live with that,” Silvano said, arm giving me a squeeze. “So long as you start organizing the spice rack alphabetically,” he said, making me laugh.

“Fiiiineee,” I said, tilting my head up at him, and shooting him a scrunched look.

“Love you, Mills,” he said, voice low.

It didn’t matter that he said it every single day.

I never got sick of it.

“Love you too,” I said, leaning up to kiss him, short and sweet. “And us,” I added, leaning against this chest to watch the kids race around after the puppies that had somehow found and stolen their shoes, laughing the whole time.

God, yes, I loved us.

And this hectic, beautiful life we’d built.

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