The Woman in the Garage (Grassi Family #8) Read Online Jessica Gadziala

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Insta-Love, Mafia, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Grassi Family Series by Jessica Gadziala
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Total pages in book: 78
Estimated words: 75373 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 377(@200wpm)___ 301(@250wpm)___ 251(@300wpm)
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The first stop on my list was Phil’s Autos. It was a place that had been around my entire life. Just a simple, old-school mechanic shop with six bays, four lifts, and a group of mechanics who seemed to know what they were doing. The place was always pretty busy, anyway.

But for the past two months, the shop had been open odd hours, if at all. I hadn’t been able to collect our money in all that time.

As a whole, I liked to give people a little grace. Everyone had shit going on. And, clearly, if the place was only open for odd hours here and there, something had to be going on. Sickness or a family emergency.

Still, I could only let it slide for so long. It set a bad precedent for the other businesses that paid us and did so on time each month.

I’d passed by the night before to find it bustling like it used to be, so I figured that whatever had been going on was over with.

The owner’s busted old red-and-white pick-up was nowhere to be seen. Parked in its place was an equally old and busted little orange hatchback with faded paint on the hood and cherry-printed seat covers.

So… not Phil.

But maybe new office staff.

Lord knew the place needed a little feminine energy.

I was all for authenticity, but just because Phil and his crew were old-school mechanics didn’t mean the place couldn’t benefit from a smiling face. And maybe some softer touches in the waiting room.

When I climbed out of the car and made my way inside, though, it wasn’t a woman I was met with. It was the same old shop manager I’d seen a dozen times before.

He was in the middle of handing keys back to a client, assuring them that there was nothing wrong with the brakes in such a strained way that I couldn’t help but think the owner of the car brought it in frequently to get checked out.

I waited for them to shuffle out before moving up.

“I’m here to see Phil,” I told him when I didn’t see recognition on his face.

“Phil’s dead,” he said, point-blank, no tiptoeing into it.

“What?”

“Dead,” he confirmed. “Had a heart attack sitting in his car at work a couple months back.”

So that was why the hours had been so wonky.

I probably should have known that. But it wasn’t like anyone thought to call the local mob when their loved one died.

“Right. But you’re still open, so…”

“Got a new owner. Relative,” David said, looking like he wanted to be rid of me already, so he could get back to work. And to be fair, there looked to be a lot of cars waiting to be worked on.

“Right. Well, can you take me to him?”

That, for some reason, got the man’s lips twitching for a second before he pressed them into a straight line.

“Why the fuck not?” he said, pushing through the door to the garage.

I was familiar enough with this place. Sometimes, Phil came out to my car to pay me. Other times, he was too busy to remember the schedule, and I had to be led into the back where the office sat tucked to the side of the garage.

It was a partly glass room, but Phil almost always had the blinds drawn to get some privacy.

The same was true now, only the door was also closed. Which wasn’t normal. Phil had been a bit of a control freak, always wanting to hear what was going on.

David rapped a fist against the door three times.

“Company,” he called, then turned and pushed open the door.

Which was rude as fuck.

And I couldn’t imagine why he’d done it.

Until the door swung open to reveal the new owner.

A woman.

But, fuck, not just any woman.

The most gorgeous one I’d seen in a long fucking time.

She was all soft curves in a bright floral dress that was almost hilariously out of place in a garage.

Her golden blonde hair was left loose around her delicate, round face.

She’d been leaning over on the desk, staring hopelessly at the piles of paperwork, but her posture stiffened as she turned to find me standing there, her pretty light brown eyes wide.

“Oh, uh, hi,” she said, shaking off her clearly frazzled mood to offer me a megawatt smile. “Sorry, did we have an appointment? I’ve gotten a little turned around today. Trying to figure out the, uh, books. If you can call them that. My uncle kept most of his records in old paper ream boxes. In absolutely no order whatsoever.

“I mean, would it kill him to learn how to spreadsheet? Granted, I don’t know how to spreadsheet either, but I didn’t own a business that required them. I guess I need to learn how to spreadsheet, huh? Sorry, did we have an appointment?” she asked, getting to her feet, making her skirt dance around her legs.


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