Don’t Forget Me Tomorrow (Time River #2) Read Online A.L. Jackson

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Time River Series by A.L. Jackson
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Total pages in book: 132
Estimated words: 128801 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 644(@200wpm)___ 515(@250wpm)___ 429(@300wpm)
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“No promises, darlin’.” Cody’s grin was easy, dude charming the panties off the girl without even touching her.

“Well, I might make an exception. I’m hanging out with my friends in that booth over there.” She pointed to the other side of the bar. “You know where to find me.”

She waltzed off and Cody watched her go.

Ryder chuckled, a grin taking hold. “Some things never change.”

“Why would you change them when they’re so damned good?”

“Cocky asshole.” Amusement pulled around Ryder’s mouth. “That’s going to catch up to you one day.”

“Me, cocky? Nah. I just love giving the ladies what they need, and what they usually need is a little bit of me.”

His smirk spread as he sat back farther in the booth, and he lifted his beer and gestured with it out into the crowd. “And don’t tell me you haven’t been balls deep in half the women here. Rumor has it, you have a different chick stumbling out of your apartment every morning. Sometimes two.”

Cody’s brow lifted, daring him to deny it.

Ryder laughed an uneasy sound.

The guy wasn’t off-base, but that shit was getting old.

Guilt climbed his throat when Dakota’s face flashed through his mind. The thought of her out with that little prick tonight had him in a stranglehold.

Still, he hiked an indifferent shoulder. “What can I say, I’m a man who likes to indulge.”

Cody chuckled, smiling slowly. “And I’m the cocky one?”

The mood shifted as his oldest friend sat forward to fully face him. “So, what are you doing with your life, Ryder?”

A gust of disquiet blew through him. The two baggies he had left in his front pocket burned like an admission of guilt. Before he’d met up with Cody, he’d gotten rid of enough to appease Dare, but that appeasing had left him covered in a sticky slick of contempt.

“What is this? Some kind of intervention?” Ryder tossed it out light. A joke.

Cody laughed, but there wasn’t anything playful about it. “Nah, man, just want to make sure you’re good. I want you to know that I’m always here, no matter what is going on in your life. What you’re going through or dealing with.”

No doubt, Cody hadn’t been blind to the deviance Ryder had devolved into.

“I appreciate it, man, but I’m all good. And I hope you know the same stands for you.”

“I know you’ve always got my back. Just…” He let his attention wander over the crowd before he returned his focus to Ryder. “Be careful out there, yeah? Take care of yourself. Don’t want to have to hunt some shady motherfucker down for messing with my best friend.”

He tacked a tease on the last.

“Don’t you know I’m the shady motherfucker?” Ryder grinned, all teeth.

Cody cracked up. “Hell yeah, man. If I didn’t know you, I’d cross the street if I saw you coming. Why do you always look like you’re about to commit murder?”

“Now you’re just hurting my feelings.”

It felt good. Joking with Cody this way. Easy the way it used to be.

He could feel the change coming. The fact he hadn’t been high in two weeks was proof of that.

Ryder had come to realize there was no outrunning the shame. He couldn’t cover it or distort it, and he knew there was no fucking way to blot out the sound of his mother’s voice. He’d tried, but it didn’t work, and it might fucking destroy him to let himself feel the full force of it, the grief of losing her, but it was time.

The truth left agitation clamoring through his spirit.

Because it wasn’t like he could dust off his hands and walk away from the life he’d been living, but however it went down, he was going to find a way.

Cody drained his beer and slammed it down on the table. “Now, if you don’t mind, I think I’m going to go take Luce up on her offer.”

“Ah, I see how it is, ditch me to get your dick wet.”

“Don’t blame a man. Have you seen her?” Cody pushed out of the booth, dug into his wallet, and tossed two twenties onto the table. “Do you want to join me? Her friends are usually game for a good time.”

Ryder polished off the last dregs of his whiskey. “Nah, man, think I’m going to call it.”

“Your loss.”

“I’m doing you a favor. Luce gets a closer look at me, and we know it’s your ass that’s going to be getting ditched.” He grinned as he slid out.

Chuckling, Cody leaned in and clapped him on the back, the teasing going nonexistent. “Fuckin’ missed you, brother. Thank fuck you’re coming through.”

Ryder clapped him back. “I’m right here, man.”

Ryder pushed out the swinging door and into the night. The sound of country music and the clatter of voices faded behind him as he crossed the lot and took the side street, heading in the direction of his duplex.


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