Pushing the Limits (Secrets Kept #2) Read Online Riley Hart

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Gay, GLBT, M-M Romance, Romance Tags Authors: Series: Secrets Kept Series by Riley Hart
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Total pages in book: 79
Estimated words: 75663 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 378(@200wpm)___ 303(@250wpm)___ 252(@300wpm)
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Read Online Books/Novels:

(Secrets Kept #2) Pushing the Limits

Author/Writer of Book/Novel:

Riley Hart

Language:
English
ISBN/ ASIN:
B09PFPX1NK
Book Information:

I was fourteen when my dad married Lane’s mom and our families became one, when my favorite moments were those spent staying up all night, talking or watching Lane create art.
There aren’t many things more inconvenient than loving your stepbrother. I know the limits, and that’s pushing them too far.
Over the years I’ve pulled away from him. It was easier when he left for New York, but now he’s back, not only in Atlanta, but in my home, trying to get back what we lost.
How can I tell my own stepbrother that I want him in my bed? That I want to call him mine? One kiss changes everything.
Our tight-knit family won’t understand. Our friends won’t either. But no matter how much I don’t want to disappoint them, now that we’re where we belong, I won’t walk away. Even if I have to lose everything to keep him.
Pushing the Limits is a stepbrother romance with a cocky main character, who shows his vulnerability through the one man he’s not supposed to want, sexy painting, and a love that defies the odds.
Books in Series:

Secrets Kept Series by Riley Hart

Books by Author:

Riley Hart



PROLOGUE

Isaac

Fourteen years old

I tugged at the stupid tie around my dumb neck.

Dad was married…married.

I couldn’t figure out how I felt about that. I mean, I liked Helena, my new stepmom. Oh crap. Would they expect me to start calling her Mom now that it was official? Nothing against her, but I wasn’t sure I could do that. Helena was nice and funny. She always asked how my day at school was, or if I was okay, because she’s big on emotions and sharing them. I never answer her honestly—not about how I’m feeling, at least—but it’s cool that she asks.

Dad had been eaten alive with his own grief in the beginning, and I hadn’t wanted to add to that, so I made myself be fine. I guess I played the part so well that when he got better, he didn’t ask… And I was okay, but I also wasn’t. I didn’t know how that made sense, but inside me it did.

All I knew was Helena made Dad smile again when nothing had been able to do that in years, not even me.

Especially not me.

A pang pierced my chest, making my heart feel like it shattered. Maybe he blamed me about Mom. Sometimes I did.

I pushed up from my bed, went to the window, and looked into the backyard. There were about fifty people down there celebrating. Music was playing. There was dancing, food, and smiles. When my gaze found Dad, he was laughing at something. Huge belly laughs, his head thrown back as Helena rested her hand on his chest, grinning at him like my dad was her favorite thing in the whole world. He looked at her the same. He used to look at Mom that way too.

I watched him watch her, and I could see how much he loved her. In a lot of ways, she’d brought him back from the dead. He’d been lost when Mom died. So brokenhearted that the house didn’t get cleaned, and food didn’t get cooked, and he didn’t go to work for weeks on end until I’d called my grandma to come and help.

She’d gotten him together some—got him back to work and helped me get the house in order. He was okay by the time she went back to California, but he hadn’t been happy. He’d hardly looked at me, and when he did, I’d seen the pain in his eyes.

Things got better, but he still didn’t laugh like he did today, the way he’d done with Mom, until he and Helena started spending time together.

Which meant I needed to stop being a spoiled brat. Maybe Grandma could help me get my shit together, like she had for Dad. But then, I guess they’d have to know how I felt for that to happen. I was better at hiding it than he was.

I swiped at the single tear that leaked from my eye, shoved closed the door in my head where I kept those kinds of feelings hidden, and blocked the memories from my thoughts.

My gaze tracked over the backyard, away from Helena and Dad, until it landed on Lane. We’d be going to the same school now. We were the same age too, but that was where our similarities stopped. His hair was too long, this mess of blond curls that looked like he hadn’t combed it in weeks, but I knew he had. Helena had made him before the ceremony, but it never stayed tamed. He wore a suit that matched mine, only his was baggier on him. He was kinda scrawny, all long, skinny limbs—that’s what Grandma said. He didn’t play sports like me or my friends. He didn’t ride bikes around the neighborhood or play night games on the streets until his legs hurt from running so hard. Even now, on our parents’ wedding day, he was sitting on the grass in the corner of the lawn, scribbling in the sketchbook he always carried around with him.

But hey, at least unlike me, he wasn’t crying in his room—which was now right down the hallway from mine because he and Helena had moved in.

This was so weird.

Lane was kinda weird too. Nice, but weird.

With a sigh, I turned and went for the door, then downstairs and back outside. By the time I got there, I’d pasted on the smile everyone was familiar with.

“Isaac! There you are! I was wondering where you went.” Dad’s eyes sparkled with joy. I went to him, and he wrapped an arm around me. “I’m so happy. I love you, kid.”

“I love you, Dad, and I’m happy too.”

Lane walked up then and stood close by, watching Dad and me, a curious look in his eyes, and cocked his head slightly. His gaze burned through me, like it slipped inside my pores somehow so he could explore parts of me I kept hidden from the world. I shifted uncomfortably, not liking that feeling at all.



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