Snowed in with Stud – 25 Days of Christmas Read Online Chelsea Camaron

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC Tags Authors: Series: #VALUE!
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Total pages in book: 68
Estimated words: 68716 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 344(@200wpm)___ 275(@250wpm)___ 229(@300wpm)
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Two people, one bed, one weekend snowed in together, and a ride that steadies the chaos inside both of them.
Retirement can be so nice.
Anthony "Stud" Brocato is living life on the wild side of retirement. Having served his twenty years in the Marines and then passing on his hot rod shop to his daughter, the former Hellions MC president is taking a much needed vacation.

Holley Truman hosts her mountain cabin as a short term rental in order to make ends meet as she was left with a debt from her ex leaving her finances tanking. Running behind on packing, she happens to be home when her weekend tenant arrives.

These two never expected to meet much less be stranded in a blizzard for days together. Christmas is a different holiday this year as these two opposites get snowed in together.

*This is a bonus story to the Hellions Ride Out Series. Total paperback page count is 366 pages. This is a full-length romance with a HEA

*************FULL BOOK START HERE*************

Prologue

Holley

Glistening catches my eye, the hum of the vacuum no longer soothing me as my curiosity is piqued. Cutting off the machine and shifting the sofa ever so slightly, there the metallic piece sits taunting me.

The earring under the couch.

It’s small and sparkly and absolutely not mine, and for a full three seconds my brain tries to make it something innocent. A friend’s? A coworker’s? Something that fell out of a bag?

Something, anything, other than what it is.

Even if my gut has been screaming at me for months that things aren’t quite right between us, love is blind right?

Then I see the smear of red on the inside of the cushion where the fabric dips—his shirt smeared with a similar shade on the collar. One random night he came home late, it all crashes through my head again. “Traffic is a bitch,” he explained, dropping a kiss on my cheek that smelled like a perfume I don’t own.

The earring glints up at me from the floor like it’s proud of itself.

I rock back on my heels a little and just… stare at it.

It’s quiet in the house. Late afternoon light comes through the front windows, warm and golden, making all the dust I haven’t bothered to clean float like lazy snow. The Christmas boxes are still in the hall closet, untouched, because I haven’t had the energy to drag them out. We were supposed to decorate this weekend. All thoughts of holiday spirit leave my mind.

I’m holding another woman’s earring in my hand instead.

My throat tightens. My heartbeat thuds in my ears. This can’t be happening.

“No,” I whisper, even as every piece slides into place. The drunken laughs on his phone late at night. The sudden gym membership, the new cologne, the way he started complaining that I was distant whenever I said I was tired.

I am tired. Tired from working the extra shifts. Tired from patching the budget, paying the bills he forgot. Tired from carrying both of us while he stays between opportunities that somehow always involve craft beer and networking.

And now I’m tired of being stupid.

The sound of the garage door opening snaps me out of it. The earring feels heavy in my palm.

I close my fingers around it and stand up.

The door from the garage squeaks open a second later. “Holls? You home?”

His voice is casual and warm, like we’re a normal married couple and there isn’t another woman’s jewelry pressed into my sweaty palm.

“In here,” I call, and I’m surprised my voice doesn’t crack. It comes out level. Almost bored. Is this where we have ended up? I am so shut down I’m numb.

He comes into the living room carrying a brown paper bag with the liquor store logo. Great. More liquor we can’t afford. His dark hair is mussed like he’s run his hands through it, his blue button-down is untucked, jeans slung low. He looks like the version of himself he likes to present to the world: laid-back, charming, and a little edge to him. The guy without a care in the world.

“Hey,” he greets, grinning, setting the bag down on the coffee table. “I thought we could do margaritas tonight, make it a thing. I grabbed that⁠—”

I open my hand instantly silencing him. The earring gleams between my fingers. Or maybe it’s in my head the way the light seems to beam down on the small metal jewel.

His words cut off like someone pulled a plug.

For a second, all the blood drains from his face. It’s subtle—just a beat, just a flicker—but I know him. I’ve known this man for twelve years, been married to him for eight. I know the blink too slow, the swallow, the recalibration. Then he plasters on a confused smile. “What’s that?”

I don’t blink. “You tell me.”

He laughs, but it’s too quick, too high. “Holls, come on. It’s an earring. Probably yours?”

“It’s not mine.” My voice is quiet, steadier than I feel. “Try again.”

He takes a step toward me, palms out like he’s approaching a skittish animal. “Babe, relax. It’s probably from— I don’t know, from when you had your sister over last month. Or⁠—”

“My sister wears hoops,” I cut in. “Gold hoops. You know that. She has since high school.” The bigger the hoops the better the whore, was her favorite motto for her earrings. I tilt the sparkling stud so it catches the light. It’s delicate and fancy. “This was under the couch. Near the nice red smudge on the cushion. The same shade that was on your shirt.”

We stand there in the middle of our living room, the silence thick between us.

His jaw works. He looks at the earring, at me, back at the earring. I watch the shift in his eyes as deny everything slams into she’s not buying it. His mind working overtime to fix this, fix me.


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