The Bride (The Boss #3) Read Online Abigail Barnette

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, BDSM, Contemporary, Erotic, New Adult, Romance Tags Authors: Series: The Boss Series by Abigail Barnette
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Total pages in book: 151
Estimated words: 140874 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 704(@200wpm)___ 563(@250wpm)___ 470(@300wpm)
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“Then we don’t have to.” Neil was warming to the idea of grocery shopping, and it took me a second to figure out why.

“Oh, no. No, no. We are not going out for food in a Ferrari.” I shook my head firmly.

“We’re not?” he sounded amused. “Are you planning to walk?”

He had me there.

We bundled up and headed out to the enormous garage he’d had constructed on the grounds. It was really more like an airplane hangar, with dozens of painted lines on the floor.

“And you need all this space for cars?” I said with a laugh, and Neil looked away uncomfortably. My jaw dropped. “I know you have a lot, but you don’t really have this many.”

“Let’s just get in then, shall we?”

The car shone like a candy apple under the fluorescent lights, and I couldn’t help trailing my fingers lovingly over the hood. It was just so sexy, I had to. “So, it’s a Ferrari. What kind of a Ferrari?”

“A two-thousand-ten, four-fifty-eight Italia,” he said as we climbed into the tan leather seats. “Five-hundred sixty-two horsepower, nine-thousand RPMs—”

My stomach was dissolving itself for nourishment, and he wanted to talk about horsepower. “Forget I asked. All I care about is the lack of space for food. How much are we getting?”

“Enough to fit in your lap and on the floor between your legs?” He winked at me. “Come on, Sophie. I want to take you for a drive in a very fast, very cool car. It will make me feel young.”

“Make me feel unhungry, then I’ll worry about making you feel young.” I buckled my seatbelt, wondering if we wouldn’t be safer in harnesses or Hannibal Lecter-style restraints. Then again, thinking of cannibalism was probably not a great idea when I was so hungry. “I can’t believe I’m letting you do this.”

For the most part, Neil drove responsibly, and I had to admit, there was something sexy about a man downshifting to go around curves. He bemoaned the fact that there wasn’t room to “open it up properly,” but after he’d hit a straightaway and gunned it to demonstrate the quick pick-up—to ninety miles per hour—I was glad he didn’t get the opportunity to go any faster.

We found a supermarket about thirty minutes from our house, one my mother would have referred to as “fancy.” Due to Neil’s insistence on taking a ridiculous sports car, we really could only bring home what would fit in my lap.

He looked around a bit sheepishly as we walked through the doors. “Listen…you’re much better at this than I am…”

It had never occurred to me that Neil had probably had someone who shopped for him his entire life. “You’ve been to a grocery store before, right?”

“Yes, before,” he said, a bit uncomfortably. “Not in the past twenty-five years, that I can recall.”

“You haven’t been in a supermarket since before Emma was born?” This was serious. “How did you even get food?”

“Delivery services,” he said, as astonished as though I’d started talking out of my ears. “You fill out a list. Or, my housekeeper does. I suppose since we don’t have a housekeeper anymore, we’ll have to fill it out ourselves.”

He seemed overwhelmed by even that most basic task.

“Okay, how about…you do the wine,” I suggested. “Just follow the signs.”

He gave me an irritated glance and muttered, “I do know how a shop works, Sophie. I just don’t do my own shopping.”

We headed home with the bare essentials—a bottle of red wine, a head of broccoli, a jar of pasta sauce and some spaghetti noodles, a big loaf of crusty bread, with coffee and a carton of soy milk for the morning.

“I can’t believe you remembered bubble bath for me, but not food.” I laughed as we pulled up to the front door.

“I remembered what was important. I’m sorry if naked, wet, and soapy Sophie is higher on my list of priorities than well-fed Sophie.”

“Jerk.” I passed the bag from the floor off to him and grabbed the handles of the one in my lap. “We’re going to have to get a sensible family car, you know? In case we need things like food or toilet paper—”

“Oh no.” His eyes went wide, and for a moment I panicked, until I remembered that I’d used the bathroom twice already, and there had been plenty of paper. He grinned at me, and I tried to kick him in the butt as he punched the security code in to unlock the kitchen door.

The kitchen was lovely and spacious, with beautiful reclaimed hardwood floors evenly sanded and varnished to a glassy shine. A hexagonal breakfast nook with a lovely round table for six had high, symmetrical arched picture windows that matched the larger one that looked out over the gorgeously manicured lawn to the east. The warm beige walls positively glowed with sunlight during the day, and inset lighting burnished them at night. Large squares of copper ceiling nestled between the dark wood beams overhead. The center island was topped with one giant oval slab of black, brown, and white marble, with a long rectangular inset bar sink, appropriate for filling with ice and lodging beer bottles in.



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