Good Boy (WAGs #1) Read Online Sarina Bowen

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Funny, New Adult, Sports Tags Authors: Series: WAGs Series by Sarina Bowen
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Total pages in book: 91
Estimated words: 88490 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 442(@200wpm)___ 354(@250wpm)___ 295(@300wpm)
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“Tell me about it.” I can’t believe I just unloaded all that on her. Then again, Jess is studying to be a nurse. Maybe she doesn’t mind wading into other people’s shitstorms.

We go quiet for a beat. Jess turns the key in my macho mobile.

“You totally said cheezus,” I mutter under my breath.

“Did not,” she scoffs.

“Did so.”

“Did not.” She looks over her shoulder to check for traffic and then pulls out and guns it.

I stop arguing because I’m too busy watching a pretty girl drive my truck. At least one thing went right today. In a pretty blue dress that shows off her curves, Jess Canning handled my nutty family like a champ.

If I was ever gonna trust a woman again, she’d be the top seed of the tournament.

Chapter 18

We Stand on Guard for Thee

Jess

The next two weeks of my life are crazy.

I pass all my anatomy quizzes by never leaving the library except for classes and to sleep. Clinical observation work continues too, and lately we’re visiting a geriatric home. They taught us to take vital signs, so now we even touch the patients sometimes. The cases there can be sad, but not kids-with-cancer sad.

My friend Dyson works with geriatric patients, and when we chatted on the phone, he gave me a tip. “Sing Ella Fitzgerald,” he said.

“What?”

“Learn some Ella tunes, and sing one if the patient isn’t cooperating. Trust me. And your voice doesn’t even suck.”

That wasn’t exactly high praise, but just in case he was onto something, I memorized the lyrics to “They Can’t Take That Away from Me.”

A week later, I called Dyson back to tell him he’s a genius.

“Well, obvs,” he said. “But what did I do this time?”

“When I sing Ella, the oldsters will let me do anything. Came in handy on my first blood draw.”

“Oh, honey. I’m sure that went smoothly.” He giggled.

“The poor man gritted his dentures,” I confessed. “But when I sang about the way he wore his hat, he relaxed.”

“Good girl. And this shit takes practice. You’ll be findin’ them veins in no time.”

I hoped so. Even a couple of months in, I still wake up every morning with the feeling that I’m holding on by the skin of my teeth. My schedule is so crazy that I’ve barely seen my brother or Wes. Their schedules are nutty too, now that their hockey seasons have really begun.

But tonight, finally, I’m going to see Wes’s game with Jamie, who has a pair of comped season tickets. I missed the first one he invited me to because Violet convinced me that it would be a sacrilege to miss an evening lecture about medical ethics.

I deserve a night out, damn it. So even though I have a paper to write this week, I meet Jamie at the arena and follow him toward his seats. “We’re only a few rows up from the penalty box,” he says, pointing to two open seats in row E.

My feet freeze on the staircase though, because I see Mama Riley sitting in the third seat in. At six feet and change, even from the back, she’s easy to spot.

“What’s the matter?” Jamie asks, waiting for me.

“Um…” Shit! I haven’t spoken to Blake since the world’s most stressful baby shower. He hasn’t called or texted, and he didn’t turn up either of the nights I visited my brother. He might even be avoiding me. “Let’s get some food first,” I say quickly. “There’s something I have to tell you.”

He gives me his version of an irritated look—a flicker of disapproval and then a relaxed shrug.

I drag him back into the crowds and into line at a mac-and-cheese stand that calls to me. “Okay, this is going to sound crazy.”

“Yeah?” Jamie is reading the menu, unconcerned.

“A couple of weeks ago, I was Blake Riley’s date for a thing.”

“A thing?”

“A family party.” It’s the kind of story I would have told Jamie for giggles, except that Blake’s reason for needing a date was so awful I ended up keeping it to myself. “It’s a long story, but he told his family we’re dating.”

Jamie snorts. “You and Blake Riley?”

“I know, right?” My laughter has a tinge of hysteria in it. “It was a favor. He was supposed to tell his mom that we broke up later. But I don’t know if he did yet.”

Jamie turns to me with laughing brown eyes. “So the Rileys think you’re either his girlfriend or his ex, but you don’t know which.”

“Right.”

“Well, this will be entertaining.”

It’s our turn, so Jamie steps up to the counter and orders mac and cheese with pulled pork for both of us, along with two beers.

I pull out my wallet, but my little brother waves off my twenty. “My treat.”

He and Wes are always treating me, damn it. This whole year is all about regressing. Back in the dorms again. Back to being broke. Fun times.



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