Smoke and Steel (Wild West MC #2) Read Online Kristen Ashley

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, Chick Lit, Contemporary, MC, Romance Tags Authors: Series: Wild West MC Series by Kristen Ashley
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Total pages in book: 124
Estimated words: 126840 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 634(@200wpm)___ 507(@250wpm)___ 423(@300wpm)
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Not, I’ve missed out, tell me, what do you do for a living?

Not, Do you enjoy what you do? And by the way, what is it that you do?

But, You’re seeing a lawyer?

“He didn’t pay for my blouse, or my earrings, or my haircut, or my Tom Ford foundation. I did. And we broke up.”

The busboy came with the bread right before the server showed with Dad’s drink.

They left and Dad looked at me. “Your attitude is not enhancing our dinner.”

Liane squeezed my thigh under the table.

I shut up.

“Tell us about Granddad,” Liane urged.

Dad was returning his glass to the table after drinking from it.

“He’s not in good shape.”

“Is he ill?” I asked.

“He’s old. He didn’t take care of himself. He’s reaping those rewards.”

Well then.

That was the very definition of encapsulation.

“Uh, Mom said that things were pretty bad,” Li noted.

“He’s got diabetes. He didn’t manage that, so his feet are messed up. He has to go for dialysis. He’s got arthritis, so he’s constantly in pain. He’s recently stopped eating most everything, so he’s very thin. I think he’s just done. If I were him, I would be too.”

“Do you want us to go see him?” Li asked.

Dad leveled his gaze on her. “Since you’re his granddaughters, and you cut him out like you did me, before he dies, that would be nice.”

Even though that was a dickish response, I decided to make an effort.

I mean, he’d never showed he cared a lot for his father, but it was his father, and it sounded like Granddad wasn’t long for this world.

“Maybe we three should take this time to try to understand where we’ve been, and where we wish to be as a family,” I suggested.

“It would have been nice if you started with that,” Dad admonished.

Okay, I was done with my effort.

“It would have been nice if you started with telling us you missed us, we looked beautiful, healthy, and you were so glad to see that. Then you could have moved on to sharing you were delighted and so very relieved we agreed to sit down to break bread with you. After that, you could have asked us to catch you up with our lives. Who are we now? What do we do? Are we happy? Then you could have shared about your own. Instead, you asked if we knew what we were going to eat, made sure you’d ordered your drink and appetizer, informed our server she’d made the unforgiveable mistake of failing with the bread basket delivery, and made Li think she was something less because she didn’t put on mascara. In other words, par for the course of my twenty-three years with you.”

I’d hit a nerve with all of that, I was oh-so-unsurprised to see.

“You would think you’d sit across from me in a very nice restaurant, drinking a glass of wine I will eventually be paying for, eating an excellent meal I’ll also be paying for, and showing your father some goddamned respect for once,” he retorted.

But it felt like a dozen arrows shot through me.

Because…because…

Because I’d just realized he was the reason I was like I was with money.

The part about wanting a lot of it, but also the part about being mildly obsessed with it.

Dad was a workaholic.

And so was I (maybe?).

“It isn’t about who’s buying the meal, Dad,” Li said tersely. “Not everything comes down to money.”

“It’s always about that. How many times did your mother threaten not to let you come for visitations because she wanted money?” he demanded.

Not this again.

And yes, it was again. He always brought this up.

“Because you were making a hundred and sixty thousand a year, and she was making thirty-five, and you didn’t pay child support,” I returned. “She didn’t want money. She was demanding you pay what the court ordered. Oh, and then there were all of our games and concerts you didn’t show up for, she would get ticked about that. Oh, and of course all the visitations you couldn’t make because you were away on business. And I remember a lot of those, Dad. You were gone more often than you were home, we never saw you. Before the divorce and after. But oh boy, when you were ready to spend time with us, the world needed to stop spinning until you got what you wanted.”

He drew his glass to his mouth, murmuring loudly, “She sure handled her money problem, finding that painter to take you all on.”

To take us all on?

In all of that, the only thing he could focus on was Mom handling her “money problem” by marrying Andy?

I turned to Li.

“Out,” I ordered.

She was already exiting the booth.

“What—?” he began.

“My turn,” Liane said. Then to Dad. “Fuck you, Dad.”

His face started getting red.

The server was approaching with his oysters and Li’s mozzarella things, but she peeled off the other way.



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