House of BS & Lies (Don’t Date Him #1) Read Online Lani Lynn Vale

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Erotic, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Don't Date Him Series by Lani Lynn Vale
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Total pages in book: 70
Estimated words: 70004 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 350(@200wpm)___ 280(@250wpm)___ 233(@300wpm)
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On and on she went, telling me how she wanted to spend her day.

She did this for a solid fifteen minutes as we ate and cleaned up from lunch.

Only when we were done did she say, “Let me borrow your phone.”

I pulled it out of my pocket and handed it to her.

She tapped the screen, then handed it back to me. “Never mind. You didn’t charge it and it’s dead.”

I grimaced.

I sucked at remembering to charge it.

Before I was locked up, cell phones weren’t as popular as they are now. It wasn’t as taboo to not have a phone on you twenty-four-seven. So, I sometimes forgot to charge it.

I’d gotten a little better about it when I had someone I wanted to talk to all day every day that also had one, but since I was supposed to lie low, I’d reverted back to my old ways.

And, to be honest, sometimes it was easier when I didn’t know what she was sending me.

If it wasn’t right in front of my face, I didn’t have the urge to throw up.

Because that was how I felt almost all the time.

The urge to puke because of how I’d left her.

I just hoped that I would be able to make it up to her.

Twenty-Six

Falling in love makes you do stupid things. There was this one time I even got married.

—Cody to Mable

Mable

I turned my phone off as I shoved it into a hiding spot in Cody’s truck that she’d let me borrow.

Birdee shoved hers into the same spot and rubbed her good hand on her good leg. “Are we doing the right thing?”

I clenched and unclenched my fists in my gloves. “We have to talk to her. See what she knows.”

“And you’re sure I have to go?” she asked, sounding glum.

“You don’t have to go, Birdee,” I admitted.

She blew out a disgusted breath. “I owe you this.”

“You don’t owe me anything,” I corrected her gently. “We were both victims here.”

“Yeah, but if I wasn’t such a bitch to you, we might have figured this out years ago instead of now, when shit’s hitting the fan,” she pointed out. “We both should’ve asked more questions, but I spent a lot of time with her. Albeit forcefully. I should’ve seen the signs. This is my chance to make it right.”

“You didn’t do anything wrong,” I repeated myself. “Now, let’s get this over with.”

She and I both bailed out of the truck that we’d decided to park several businesses over and walked to the hotel that she and my dad were staying in—her much slower than me thanks to the crutches.

My dad’s friend owned the hotel and had apparently allowed him to stay here for free while they got this figured out.

My dad had a lot of friends like that. Ones that were willing to give him the shirt off their backs.

My dad wasn’t the same type of friend.

If the roles were reversed, he would’ve hung them out to dry.

Once they knew everything, though, I doubted that they stayed. My dad wasn’t a good enough friend for them to stick by.

“What room number did Cody say that they were in?” I asked.

“Three oh six,” Birdee answered. “They have an entrance off the back…there.”

The hotel itself was older. And there were parts of it that they’d turned into long-term housing, giving them separate entrances into the units that meant they didn’t have to go through the main lobby.

The few cameras that were there—which weren’t all that many in the first place—faced the parking area where most of the guests parked to come into the building.

Since we hadn’t entered that part of the building, no one knew we were here.

It also helped that it was late in the day, and so cold that only crazy people were out.

“I hate Montana,” Birdee grumbled as a particularly rough, cutting wind swept through the parking lot, kicking up fresh powdered snow in its wake. “I seriously think I could thrive in Florida. The warm weather. The sun. The beaches. The welcoming people. Does Florida count as being in the South?”

I shivered despite having three layers on under my big-ass coat. “I think so. I think everything below the Mason-Dixon line is considered the South. Why?”

“Because in my romance novels, they always portray ‘good southern boys’ as the crème de la crème. I want that.”

I smiled behind my scarf. “I didn’t know that you read romance novels, Birdee.”

She surprised me all the time.

I also found myself mentally smacking myself in the forehead because we had a lot in common.

Reading was one of those things.

“I like only certain kinds,” she muttered. “There has to be a happily ever after. There has to be no cheating. There has to be at least one baby produced by the end of the story. And there has to be no family drama. Because I have enough of that on my own.”


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