Right To My Wrong Read Online Lani Lynn Vale (Heroes of Dixie Wardens MC #8)

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC, Romance, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: The Heroes of The Dixie Wardens MC Series by Lani Lynn Vale
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Total pages in book: 59
Estimated words: 75754 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 379(@200wpm)___ 303(@250wpm)___ 253(@300wpm)
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He had my whole heart, though.

He was such a good man, always there for me if I needed him to be.

He’d come to visit me when Lily made the trip.

He was a good father and a good friend.

Something that I desperately wished I had married instead of the man I had.

“So where are you going?” I asked, ringing up a man’s purchase as I did so.

The man gave me a funny look since I was on the phone, but I ignored him, stuffing things into the bag as I held the phone in between my ear and shoulder.

“Nine fifty seven,” I said.

The man gave me a credit card and I swiped it through the card reader before handing it back to him while listening to Lily tell me about Toni’s recital that was scheduled to take place in twenty minutes.

“You’re late,” I laughed. “Shouldn’t you have left already?”

I handed the man his receipt and he took it with a slight huff of annoyance.

“Yeah, about twenty minute ago. But we were having a meltdown because we couldn’t find the pink shoes, only the blue shoes,” Lily said. “We only found a single pink one, so now we’re wearing one blue and one pink.”

“Well, that works,” I laughed.

And it did.

What little girl wanted to wear blue shoes when she could wear pink?

“Alright, gotta go. I love you,” Lily said as she hung up the phone.

I rolled my eyes and shoved the phone into my back pocket before turning to Dane.

“What’s up with you?” I asked.

Dane smiled.

“Well, I have a prostate exam around four, and I have a colonoscopy next Tuesday that they’re going to make me shit…”

I stopped him.

“That’s enough information, Dane. Thanks, though.”

He shrugged.

“Well, you were the one who asked.”

That I did.

And I would not be asking that question anymore.

***

I walked out of the house that I was renting, into the late afternoon sun, annoyed and unbelievably pissed off.

“What’s that look for?” Sterling asked me.

I handed him the ticket I’d received.

“I got a ticket for a boat parked in front of my house that isn’t even mine,” I told him, walking to the passenger seat and hopping inside without prompting.

My neighbors hated me.

Literally hated me.

I was in a house that I’d rented through the chief of police.

It was nice to have a hookup through my other best friend, Sawyer.

She was currently married to the president of a motorcycle club.

The same club that Sterling belonged to.

Sterling wasn’t wearing his cut, the leather biker vest that he usually wore, which designated him as a member of The Dixie Wardens MC.

But I guessed it probably wasn’t the most comfortable thing to wear when you were outside working out in one hundred degree weather.

“So whose boat is it if it’s not yours?” Sterling asked from my open window.

I pointed at the man across the street sipping his beer with his feet up on the porch railing.

“That man’s,” I pointed at him.

Sterling looked at him, hunching down so he could see through the truck’s open windows, and grimaced.

“Hold on,” he said. “Be right back.”

I shrugged.

I’d already tried talking to the man, but he was a dick, so I just left.

I was planning on going up to the police station tomorrow and talk it out to whomever would listen, but if Sterling wanted to try that for me, then I’d let him.

I had enough on my plate to deal with without something minor like this.

I watched and sipped on my ice water through my Camelback water bottle that cost way too much money for me to own so many.

Sterling topped the man’s front steps and crossed his arms.

I could see his mouth moving, but other than that, I couldn’t make out what was being said.

However, by the tension in the man’s previously loose shoulders, I could tell that whatever was being said wasn’t very nice.

Or appealing to the older man.

“That’s where I’ve always parked my boat!” The man yelled.

Sterling said something calmly to the man, and the man reluctantly took the ticket that Sterling held out to him, ripping it from Sterling’s hands and shoving it down into his pocket.

I blinked, and then blinked some more, as I watched Sterling come down the steps and straight to his truck.

He got into his side, slammed the door shut, and started the engine.

Seconds later, he was driving away from the curb before he explained.

“The man’s going to move the boat tomorrow. And he’s going to go take care of your ticket,” he said without hesitation.

“That’s awesome. I can’t believe he was just going to let me pay it, though. I mean, who does that?” I asked.

He shrugged. “No clue.”

“Not sure why you’d even get a ticket for that. Seems inconsequential seeing as they had two murders in the city last night,” Sterling said, shaking his head.

Not knowing what to say to that, I asked, “Why aren’t you on your bike?”

He grinned as he turned to me, glancing quickly before he turned back to the road.

“It’s hard to carry a bat bag, balls, and plates in your saddle bags,” he said.

Ahh, that made sense.

“Huh,” I said. “So when do you go back?”

I didn’t have to explain what I meant by ‘go back.’

He knew exactly what I meant.

“I have to be back in Belle Chasse in another thirteen days,” he answered as he swung the wheel wide to get out of my neighborhood.

My mouth dropped open. “You’re already going back that quick?”

He nodded. “Yeah, but I’m not getting deployed, at least. I’ll be there for about three months while they decide what to do with us next. Normally we would be heading to California, so I’m lucky they’re allowing us to stay close to home.”

I just shook my head.

I just got him back!

“How often will you come back?” I asked softly.

I was fairly sure I was hiding my sadness well, but he placed his hand on top of mine where it rested between us on the seat.

His big fingers forced themselves in between mine as he said, “I’ll probably be back every weekend. Gotta get my boy ready for baseball. And I have a vested interest in someone special.”



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