The Fifteen-Minute Rule (Dickson University #3) Read Online Max Monroe

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, College, Contemporary, Funny, New Adult Tags Authors: Series: Dickson University Series by Max Monroe
Advertisement

Total pages in book: 139
Estimated words: 133655 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 668(@200wpm)___ 535(@250wpm)___ 446(@300wpm)
<<<<110120128129130131132>139
Advertisement


Tonight, we’re headed to his parents’ penthouse for dinner because Cassie Kelly insisted. And when Cassie Kelly insists, you go.

It’s barely a fifteen-minute walk from our apartments, but Ace insisted we take the subway instead of walking. Something about “adding spice to our foreplay.” He’s been holding my hand the entire time, his thumb grazing my knuckles while his other hand rests lightly on my thigh. His eyes keep drifting to my mouth.

“You know,” he leans over and whispers, lips brushing the shell of my ear, “if I weren’t such a gentleman, I’d already have you pressed up against that pole.”

“Ace,” I hiss, scandalized but smiling.

“You’re right,” he says solemnly. “Too many witnesses. But just know, I’ve been mentally undressing you this entire ride.”

“Only mentally? That’s disappointing.”

He grins like I told him it’s his birthday. “Lia. You can’t say sexy shit like that in public.”

“You started it.”

“True. But I’m finishing it,” he says as the train slows at our stop. “Hop on.”

“Hop on what?”

He turns, crouching slightly. “My back. Obviously.”

“You are not giving me a piggyback ride through Manhattan.”

“I absolutely am. Come on, it’s a tradition now.”

I laugh but oblige, wrapping my arms around his neck and letting him lift me off the floor like it’s nothing. “We’ve been dating for one week.”

“One week, and, like, almost two decades in the making. That’s tradition-worthy, baby.”

We draw a few stares as he jogs up the steps of the subway station with me on his back, dodging tourists and shouting about how I owe him a back massage after this. When we finally reach the elevator in his parents’ building, both of us are breathless from laughter, and Ace is still grinning like he won the lottery.

Which, according to him, he did. “Finally,” he mutters, pressing a kiss to my wrist. “You’re mine.”

The elevator doors slide open, and we step directly into the penthouse.

And that’s when it happens.

“Surprise!”

I jolt, nearly falling off Ace’s back as a wave of sound and confetti hits us like a brick wall.

Everyone—and I mean everyone—we know is standing in the Kellys’ massive living room.

And a giant balloon banner stretches across the room in bold letters: FINALLY!

Lexi and Blake are here, and so are Finn and Scottie, and all of Finn’s siblings. My sister Evie and Ace’s brother Gunnar. The Winslows are here. Ace’s parents are here, looking more excited and happier than I’ve ever seen them. And my mom is smiling, though my dad kind of looks like someone just told him Ace knocked me up.

Ace lets me slide off his back gently, one arm still wrapped around my waist. “Is it just me, or does this feel like overkill?” he whispers toward me, but his dad hears him.

“Overkill? Acer, I’ve been waiting years for this. Literal years,” Thatch says, refilling champagne flutes in a tuxedo T-shirt.

My dad glares at him like he wants to file a noise complaint with his soul.

Thatch wraps an arm around my dad’s very tense shoulders. “Don’t stress, K. Think of this as the start of something beautiful. Us? One big, official family someday soon.”

“Oh God,” Ace mutters into my ear. “Should we remind them about the crocodile incident before things escalate?”

“Don’t you dare,” I whisper back.

Everyone starts coming forward to hug us, pat Ace on the back, or whisper “about damn time” in our ears. The party kicks off around us with music, drinks, and so many appetizers that I briefly consider a second piggyback ride to the dessert table.

But then Ace turns to my father. “Hey, Mr. Brooks.”

My dad arches a brow. “Ace.”

“I just wanted to say…” Ace pauses, scratching the back of his neck in mock nervousness. “I’d like to formally ask for your daughter’s hand in marriage.”

Kline nearly drops his champagne flute. “Excuse me?”

My mouth falls open. “Ace!”

Thatch whoops from across the room, now wearing a cone-shaped party hat and blowing a noisemaker like it’s New Year’s Eve. “This is the happiest day of my motherfluffing life!”

Ace holds up both hands. “Kidding. I’m kidding. For now.” He winks. “But I’ll be back in five or six years.”

Kline Brooks does not look comforted. If anything, he looks eerily close to a cardiac event or a stroke or, I don’t know, seeing red and killing Ace with his bare hands. “Remember that time you asked me about a shotgun, Ace?” my dad tosses out before my mom grabs his wrist to purposefully tug him to the other side of the apartment. “Keep that in mind!” my dad still calls over his shoulder.

Oh jeez.

As the party buzzes around us, Ace leans in and kisses me softly with a brush of his lips before he whispers, “Love you, Lia.”

“Love you too.”

“And just so you know…” He reaches into his pocket and pulls out a folded piece of worn notebook paper. “I still have the marriage contract you signed when we were kids.”


Advertisement

<<<<110120128129130131132>139

Advertisement