Maybe Don’t Wanna Read Online Lani Lynn Vale (Simple Man #2)

Categories Genre: Action, Alpha Male, Bad Boy, Biker, Funny, MC, Romance, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Simple Man Series by Lani Lynn Vale
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Total pages in book: 72
Estimated words: 72154 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 361(@200wpm)___ 289(@250wpm)___ 241(@300wpm)
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But when I looked back over at him, it was to see his hand clenched tightly into a fist on his lap, with him staring straight ahead as if he moved, he might very well lose it.

“Something wrong?” I asked.

“No,” he said in a suspiciously calm voice. “Are you hungry?”

He looked over at me opening my value-sized bag of peanut M&Ms and shook his head.

“Yeah, I could eat,” I admitted. “I was hoping to stop at Chick-Fil-A. Their breakfast minis are the bomb. Have you ever tried them?”

He shook his head. “Don’t really eat out all that much.”

“You don’t?”

He shook his head. “Eating out is not conducive with having abs.”

“You have abs?” I asked rhetorically.

I, of course, knew he had abs. I knew without a shadow of a doubt that the man had fucking insane abs. Abs that put all other abs to shame, and I knew quite a few men who had abs.

My entire life I’d been surrounded by men with abs. Men with a healthy obsession to stay fit and never lose their shape.

Rafe had abs, too.

But Parker?

His abs were sculpted. Sexy. Perfect.

I could run my tongue down each ridged section on my way to…

I squirmed in my seat as I tried to find a more comfortable position that wouldn’t make my clit feel like it was being touched with an electric probe.

“What?”

I looked up to find Parker staring at me while we stopped at a stop light.

“What what?”

He grinned. Then, the devil turned back around and kept that stupid grin on his face while he drove the car to the impound lot.

Chapter 15

Boys wake up with a boner. Girls wake up with an attitude.

-Fact of Life

Kayla

Overall, I’d had a pretty spectacular day.

That spectacular day took a downward spiral with about an hour left in Parker’s workday when we passed the house where the latest victim to the Lampshade Serial Killer had been murdered.

Since this serial killer had now gained national attention due to the number of victims, there was way more than just the local news crews in attendance. Now, there were so many that they lined both sides of the streets and even curled around to the side streets.

The mob of reporters and cameras outside the house, behind the police line, was insane. There had to be at least two hundred, if not more.

I shivered in my seat, and my good mood instantly fled.

“I don’t know what it is about this that’s freaking me out so badly,” I told him. “But it’s all I can see. I thought that I could handle that life…but with one look at that man—how his body was mutilated—my conceptions were proved false. I just…I can’t get over this.”

“Why?”

“Why?”

“Yeah, why?” he repeated.

I thought about that for a long moment, and the more I thought about it, the harder it was to say the words.

He allowed me to sit in silence as I tried to get out the words, and it wasn’t until we were pulling into the parking lot of our apartment complex an hour later that I finally released them.

“In his pictures…he looked like my dad.”

Parker shut the truck off, then released his seat belt.

The moment he did, I started to cry.

“I know it’s not rational. I never really even knew my father.” I drew in a deep breath. “But the way that Max, James, Gabe, Sam, Elliott, and Jack talk about him…I feel like I knew him. And I have some of our earlier videos. They’re all grainy, but for my eighteenth birthday, Cheyenne and Shiloh had them all digitally recreated. There are five twelve-to-fifteen-minute videos, and I watch them all the time.” I made this sound in my throat that had him releasing my seat belt and pulling me to him. “I feel like I know him.”

“Baby, you do know him,” he told me, holding me tight and allowing me to cry into his shoulder. “In that Wreaths Across America thing that I do, they want you to say the veteran’s name. They say that you die twice. Once when you leave this earth, and once when your name is spoken for the last time.”

My breathing hitched.

“I’ve lost a lot of friends. I’ve lost a mom. I’ve lost a sister. A nephew. But I talk about them. Always. Because they deserve to be spoken about. People need to know that this world lost some great people. And I need that reassurance, the reminder of their love.”

I blew out a breath against his neck, then threaded my arms around his back and clung to him.

His arms around me tightened, and I inhaled deeply, taking in his scent to help calm myself down.

“They all look like him,” I told him. “Even down to the dimpled chin.”

He didn’t say anything for a really long time, and I realized that he wasn’t going to.


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