Outlaw (Mississippi Smoke #4) Read Online Abbi Glines

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Crime, Mafia, New Adult Tags Authors: Series: Mississippi Smoke Series by Abbi Glines
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Total pages in book: 117
Estimated words: 110694 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 553(@200wpm)___ 443(@250wpm)___ 369(@300wpm)
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By the time I reached the door that led into the kitchen, my heart rate had slowed, and I wasn’t about to burst into tears.

“Can I have thwee mowa, please?” Stevie asked as I stepped into the kitchen.

The windows went from the floor to the ceiling, facing the back of the house. The sunlight poured in and made the white and black kitchen appear even more spacious than it already was. The island sat between two sets of double ovens, and the gas range stovetop looked like something out of a commercial kitchen with at least ten different eyes. The circular bar, which had twelve barstools, was covered in food.

Stevie was on one of the barstools, sitting on her knees, with a glass of oat milk that had a curvy pink straw in it. Her gaze swung to mine, and her smile stretched across her face, causing the dimples I loved so much to pop out. “Good mownin’, Mommy! Jayda made bweakfast, and she gots lots and lots of bacon,” she called out to me.

“I see that,” I replied, making my way over to her. “I didn’t know you had woken up. I was scared when I couldn’t find you.”

Her face fell. “I’m sowwy. I thought you was asleep, and I was weally hungwy.”

Brushing her curls back from her face, I placed a kiss on her forehead. “I understand that. Just don’t go running off without telling me, okay? This house is big, and you could get lost.”

She shook her head. “But I didn’t get lost. I came wight hewah. And Jayda was making bweakfast. She got me some milk.”

I glanced over at Jayda. “Thank you. This looks amazing.”

She shrugged. “I like to cook. When I have people to cook for, I go a little overboard. When the guys have women over, they aren’t invited to stay for breakfast, so unless Linc’s son is visiting with his wife, I don’t get to do big breakfasts. Luther rarely eats until noon, and Linc is a four eggs, two pieces of toast, and a coffee guy. No room for creativity.”

I wasn’t a big breakfast eater either, but Stevie was.

“You might become her favorite person,” I told her. “Although we don’t require all this every morning. I would gain a hundred pounds. But Vivi Lu here loves her some breakfast food. She’d eat it for all three meals. We’ve done pancakes, cheese grits, and bacon for dinner many nights.”

Jayda smiled at Stevie. “I will remember that,” she told her and winked. “We might just have us some breakfast for dinner soon. Sounds like a fun way to mix it up.” She finished putting three pieces of bacon on a plate and placed it in front of Stevie.

“Thank you,” she said before snatching up a piece and taking a bite as if she hadn’t already had a plate of food.

“I can make you a plate, or you’re welcome to do it. I don’t know what all you like just yet, but I am a fast learner,” Jayda informed me.

I liked this girl. And if I wasn’t at least ten years older than her, we might just become good friends. She didn’t seem to have any claim on Linc or Luther. She wasn’t being territorial, which, honestly, was what I had expected to happen. The comment about the women they had over not being invited for breakfast was so blasé, as if it was no big deal to her. She didn’t sound catty or anything. Maybe I was wrong, and she didn’t screw around with the guys. It was just so hard to believe. She was gorgeous.

“No need to worry about me. I will feed myself,” I told her, not about to let someone wait on me. I might have to live here for a year, but I wasn’t going to turn into some diva who let other people wait on her.

I walked over to the island, and Jayda handed me a plate.

“Here you go. Are you a coffee drinker? Or maybe espresso? I make a killer caramel vanilla latte.”

I looked from the food back to her. “Really?” I asked, my voice giving away my excitement at the word latte.

Jayda grinned. “Before this job, I was a barista,” she replied. “Which one do you prefer?”

“That caramel vanilla latte sounds wonderful.”

“Cold or hot?”

I laughed. “I feel like I’m at Starbucks. Hot, please.”

“Tall, grande, or venti?”

My eyebrows shot up, and she smirked.

“That’s a joke.”

Another chuckle bubbled out of me as I turned back to the food and chose some berries, a pancake, and a slice of bacon.

“The bacon is weally good,” Stevie told me.

“Vivi Lu, I don’t think bacon can be anything but good.”

She giggled and stuck the end of the fancy straw into her mouth while she watched me.

I was almost to the stool beside her when Linc walked into the kitchen. If I had been eating, I would have choked on my food.



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