Woman Down Read Online Colleen Hoover

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Suspense, Thriller Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 114
Estimated words: 105667 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 528(@200wpm)___ 423(@250wpm)___ 352(@300wpm)
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He gestures for me to pull over. It’s just a quick motion of his head, but I feel like a small child caught with my hand in the cookie jar.

I pull over and shift into park as he pushes off his car and begins walking toward mine. I press the button to roll down my window, and the whirring sound of the glass descending seems impossibly loud in the sudden quiet.

“Get out, Petra.” His voice is low, commanding. Not angry, not yet, but with an undeniable sternness.

I hesitate, frozen by a potent cocktail of shame and fear. My cheeks burn. He sees my reluctance, and with a sigh, he opens my car door and reaches for me.

Before I can protest, he has me. One strong arm loops behind my back, the other under my knees. He lifts me, effortlessly, as if I weigh nothing. The suddenness of it, the unexpected intimacy, steals my breath. My hands instinctively grip his shoulders. My body feels surprisingly light, almost buoyant, as he carries me to the front of my own car.

With a practiced ease that makes my stomach flip, he sets me down on the hood, my legs dangling, the bottoms of my thighs sticking to the metal, warm from the heat of the engine.

His hands brace against the car on either side of my legs, trapping me between his arms. He leans in, his face close, his eyes dark with an unreadable intensity. The scent of him fills my senses.

“You better stop digging.” His voice is a low rumble, a warning.

I can feel the heat radiating off him, the solidness of his chest so close to mine. My pulse quickens. “I . . . I just . . .” I stammer, my voice thin, pathetic.

“You already know I’m married.” It’s not a question. It’s a statement, a reminder, heavy with unspoken implications.

My gaze drops, unable to meet his. Shame washes over me, a hot tide. “I was just curious about you,” I whisper, the words barely audible. They sound hollow, even to my own ears. A lame excuse for something far more complicated.

He sighs, a slow, deliberate exhalation that stirs the hair at my temples. “I thought we had an agreement.” His words are firm, a boundary drawn in the air between us.

My eyes flicker up to his. “I wasn’t going to do anything. I just wanted to see where you go when you aren’t with me. Where you live.”

“It’s not your business,” he says.

“I know. I just . . .” I can’t articulate myself right now. Men rarely, if ever, leave me speechless and nervous like Saint does.

I look back at his face and ask the one question I’m most curious about. “I just want to know things. Things that will help my book.”

“Like what?” he responds, his voice flat.

“Are you happy?” The question slips out before I can stop it, a desperate plea for some crack in his carefully constructed facade.

His jaw tightens almost imperceptibly. “Yes.” The word is clipped, definitive.

A bitter taste floods my mouth. “Then why are you cheating on your wife with me?” The accusation hangs in the air.

His eyes narrow. “You asked me to.” The bluntness of his reply stings. It’s a cold dose of reality. And it’s true. I did, maybe not outright. But I definitely initiated it, fueled by a reckless desire for something I knew I shouldn’t want.

“But do you feel guilty?” I press, my voice rising slightly, desperate to find a chink in his armor, a flicker of guilt, anything.

“Are you really asking these things because of your book? Or should I be worried you’re about to cross a line?” His tone is bordering on condescending. It makes me feel small, insignificant, just another secret to be kept among so many other secrets that he tucks away.

“It’s not fair to her,” I argue, a sudden fierce protectiveness for the woman I don’t even know rising within me. “I feel guilty and I don’t even know your wife.” I don’t even know what I’m doing or why I’m saying this. I just want to know what he feels, I guess.

He pushes back from the car slightly, enough to break the intense physical contact, but not enough to release me from his gaze. “Then I’ll stop coming over if that’s how you feel.” The words are delivered without emotion, a simple statement of fact, but they hit me like a physical blow. The thought of him not coming to the cabin, not filling that space in my life with his presence, sends a cold dread through me.

My breath hitches. He sees the reaction in my eyes. His gaze softens, a fleeting moment of something akin to understanding, or perhaps pity. He leans in again, closer than before, his voice dropping to a near whisper.

“I’m a good husband outside of what she doesn’t know. But if you’re starting to question doing the things she doesn’t know we’re doing, then maybe we should stop doing those things.”


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