Grumpy Sunshine (Content Advisory #1) Read Online Lani Lynn Vale

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, Contemporary, Erotic, MC Tags Authors: Series: Content Advisory Series by Lani Lynn Vale
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Total pages in book: 69
Estimated words: 69807 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 349(@200wpm)___ 279(@250wpm)___ 233(@300wpm)
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I sat and wrapped my arms around myself protectively.

I didn’t like police.

After the first time my mom had fucked up then blamed it on Silver, my sister, and me, I’d had an abhorrence for them.

The cops had taken my mom at her word and had arrested Silver and me for theft.

From that point on, we’d been very, very careful about what we did and how we did it.

We always, always shared our locations with each other. We made sure to have each other’s backs in anything and everything, and we emancipated ourselves at the age of sixteen.

My sister, Silver, and I weren’t twins.

Well, I mean, I guess technically we were.

But in reality, I was conceived ten days before Silver was, and both of us had different fathers.

How did we know this?

Because my mother was forced to get a DNA test after both fathers had denied their involvement with my mother. Doctors had performed some tests, and it showed that my mother had conceived us at different times with different men.

Silver resembled her bio dad, who was half Native American and half Italian.

I, on the other hand, was conceived with a Swiss man that left to his home country before I’d even been born.

Silver’s dad had warmed up to being a father to Silver, but only Silver.

Meanwhile, my mom threw such a huge ass fit when Silver’s dad refused to take me or have anything to do with me that she’d gone to court. There, a court had decided that it was cruel to break up “twin” sisters, and had forced Silver’s dad, Barry, to take me with them on all major holidays and vacations.

Barry and his family hated me, and never went a day without showing it.

And when I emancipated myself, I also stopped going to any and all holiday events that pertained to the Donahue side of the family.

It was the best and worst decision ever.

One, it made it to where Silver didn’t have to constantly worry about me and whether I was having fun or a good time. Two, I no longer had to suffer the scowls and indifference of the Donahues anymore.

But just because they were in Silver’s life didn’t mean that they were great people.

Silver’s family was poor.

They’d been that way all their lives, and some of them had zero aspirations in life.

The most any of them accomplished was finishing high school, and most of them accomplished it by getting their GED.

Not that that was a bad thing, per se, but more so it was because all of them had dropped out of high school because it was “too hard.”

“Ma’am, can you tell me from the beginning what happened?” the older man, who I now realized was the chief of police, asked.

I gave him everything, ending with, “And I think that she was trying to frame the Truth Tellers. They fired her from her job last week. She had a month to find alternate accommodations.”

I was such a liar.

“What happened when you got to their compound?” he asked.

“I parked beside my mother’s car and got out,” I said. “I confronted her, and the rest you know.”

The older man pinched the bridge of his nose.

“Dad, there are quite a few reports filed against the mother, but none of them were ever substantiated,” the officer at my side, the detective, offered up as he scanned a laptop in his lap.

The elder Carter shook his head. “Give everything you have on the mother to Fort Worth PD. This isn’t our jurisdiction…thank God.”

My lips almost twitched.

“Do you know where the money is now?” the chief asked me.

I was already shaking my head before he’d finished his sentence.

“Nope,” I said. “I didn’t want to touch it.”

At least I didn’t lie about that particular bit of information.

I could honestly say that I had no clue.

“Okay,” he said. “Give me your number.”

I gave him my number, both my cell and my work phone, and stood up.

“You know Val?” the older man asked when I stood.

I smiled, and it was a genuine one to boot. “I do.”

I didn’t know her well.

She worked in the emergency room most of the time while I worked in med-surg—the place where people came for surgeries—and we rarely crossed paths.

But, despite the hospital being so damn big, it was kind of small. If you didn’t know them personally, you knew of them.

I’d heard about Val before I’d even met her.

She was the hero of the hospital, saving the life of a…

“Hey, is your son the cop she saved?” I blurted.

The eldest Carter stood up and said, “My youngest, Garrett. And yes, she did save his life.”

I grinned then. “You know she’s a legend in that hospital? They all talk about her and how she saved a gang banger.”

“She deserves that legendary status,” Chief Carter said. “Son, show your girl there out of the station. I’m calling Fort Worth PD to let them know they have an incoming with the crazy woman.”


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