No To The Grump (Alphalicious Billionaires Boss #9) Read Online Lindsey Hart

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Funny Tags Authors: Series: Alphalicious Billionaires Boss Series by Lindsey Hart
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Total pages in book: 74
Estimated words: 70546 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 353(@200wpm)___ 282(@250wpm)___ 235(@300wpm)
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I’m one of those people who just can’t believe there’s only ever a negative side to things. I’m more of a coin-toss girl. Unless the coin is rigged, there’s always a head or tail. Don’t talk to me about how the odds in life aren’t a coin toss, or if it is, then it’s most definitely rigged. In my head, we’re the coin toss. The heads and the tails. The two sides to everything.

Thaddius tried to hide how sad he looked yesterday at the garage when he paid for my car and gave me a wad of bills to get home okay. His face was too neutral, and I could tell there was a lot going on behind the curtain. A play that hadn’t played out yet.

Or maybe that was him just hiding his glee at finally seeing me off. He’s free again and can do whatever he wants with his life now. We didn’t come to a final decision about what to do about our families, but that’s for each of us to figure out, I guess. He did tell me to be safe and well, and when he said it and passed those bills over to me, there was a hitch in his voice, an extra bit of raw rasp I’d never heard before.

I wanted to hug him, but I didn’t. I wanted to throw myself into his arms and tell him I’d never had a kiss that made me feel anything like what his kiss made me feel. I wanted to say I’d miss him, even his surliness, and I wanted to tell him that I suck at goodbyes. But I thought maybe if I didn’t say the word, then it wouldn’t be a goodbye. I also wanted to tell him that I thought I needed him, but I was afraid if I admitted it, he’d tell me that I didn’t or that he didn’t want to be needed. Because that would hurt worse than anything I could move on from.

Maybe I read the situation all wrong.

Maybe there’s no hope, no coin toss, no other side.

Even though his grandma came this morning and talked to me and promised she’d go talk sense into Thaddius, she didn’t sound overly hopeful, and she didn’t make any promises. I didn’t admit how I felt, but I didn’t think I had to. She could see how wrecked I was the second she stepped into the small motel room.

I slept for about eighteen minutes last night, so after Thaddius’ grandma left, I hopped in the shower, hoping it would wake me up. I’m done with pacing the room. There’s no coffee maker in here, but I don’t want to leave because I don’t want to risk missing Thaddius.

Part of me keeps telling myself that he’s coming. The flip side of that emotion is that I start arguing with myself, telling myself not to get hopeful about it because I read things wrong, and yesterday was it. I’ve already had my time, and there isn’t going to be more. Thaddius isn’t going to listen to his grandma. He’s going to make up his own mind. He never wanted to get married or be with anyone anyway. The other day, I stood in his kitchen and told him that we could be adults and kiss each other and be with each other because we were lonely, and it felt right, and there didn’t have to be anything after, but deep down, I wanted an after. I didn’t tell him what I needed to tell him yesterday because I was sad and scared, so that’s on me.

If he comes, he has to come because he wants to. He has his own free will, and I won’t take it away from him. I know how horrible it is to find out that it was taken from me for years, and I didn’t even know it. That’s what started this whole thing.

Life is so clucking ironic, isn’t it?

I’m tired of walking around the room to keep myself awake. Maybe I’m even a little tired of trying to hope and keep the sparks of happiness burning. That fire is a hard one to maintain. It’s hard to try to be the sunshine like Thaddius always called me.

And right now, I’m just so tired.

I walk over to the bed and flop down on it, snow angel style.

It figures that as soon as I hit the covers, someone knocks at the door.

My heart is in my throat, and I scramble up from the bed. There’s one of those big round nineties-style lamps on the nightstand with a pleated shade, and in my scrambling hurry, I nearly send it flying.

“Clucking hell!” My hands are trembling, but I grab it just before it totters its way off the side. The lamp rattles against the wooden top, but it stays.



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