Kind of a Bad Idea (The Mcguire Brothers #7) Read Online Lili Valente

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Erotic Tags Authors: Series: The Mcguire Brothers Series by Lili Valente
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Total pages in book: 68
Estimated words: 64337 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 322(@200wpm)___ 257(@250wpm)___ 214(@300wpm)
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And…so do I. I’ve worked too damned hard to turn my life around to fuck it up now. I don’t want to spend my golden years plagued by guilt or feeling like a selfish bastard or a burden.

My only choice is to walk away and do whatever it takes to get this woman out of my head, even if it means taking Pammy up on her offer to stay at her mother’s timeshare in Cancun this December. We haven’t done anything more than kiss goodnight at this point, but maybe it’s time we should.

Maybe if I start touching someone else, then not touching Binx will get easier.

But when she reaches out, grabbing a fistful of my sweatshirt in her hand once again, I don’t pull away. I hold my ground as she steps closer, and even the feel of her knuckles against my skin through the cotton is enough to make me hard. “Come on,” she murmurs, tilting her chin back to hold my gaze. “Tell me. You have your faults, but I’ve never known you to be a coward.”

“I’m going inside,” I tell her, but my hand is already curling around her hip.

“Then go,” she says, gripping my shirt with her other hand now, too, holding on tight. I bend closer, until our lips are only inches apart, and I’m practically crawling out of my skin with the need to kiss her.

I want to lift her into my arms, pin her against the fence, and show her exactly why I told Pierce to get his hands off her. It’s because I want my hands all over her, memorizing every inch of her skin, giving her pleasure, making her scream my name, showing her that she’s all I think about these days when I’m alone in bed and reach down the front of my boxer briefs.

I’m about to do it—to let this genie out of the bottle and ruin both of our lives—when a strident voice calls across the patio, “Binx, what are you doing?”

We startle apart, Binx releasing my shirt with a spasm of her hands as we both turn to face the petite woman standing just outside the back door. She has salt-and-pepper brown hair and eyes the same brilliant blue as Binx’s.

Fuck, it’s her mother. We’ve never been introduced, but I’ve seen her around town with her kids and grandkids. She’s usually smiling and saying hello to everyone, playing her role as “pillar of the community” to the hilt.

But she’s not smiling now. She’s looking at Binx like she’s a naughty child and I’m a pile of dog shit she’s been playing in while the grown-ups were distracted.

“Nothing,” Binx says with a rush of breath. She flaps a hand toward the kitchen door. “I was just talking to Pierce about his tattoo while he finished up the barbeque, and then Seven said he might…want something.”

Her mother scowls. “Want something?”

“Yeah, a tattoo. A, um, a flower or a bee or something. What was it you said you wanted? I’m sorry, I’ve been running around like a crazy person all day making Jello shots.” She glances up at me with a “thinking face” that looks nothing like her real thinking face.

She’s a terrible actor, and her mother isn’t buying any of this, but I nod anyway and say, “A bee, yeah. Maybe with blackberries around it. I thought we could weave it into my sleeve on my left arm.”

Binx hums a little too loudly. “Oh yeah, that’s right. Sure, we can totally do that. Just come by the shop next Wednesday night. That’s when I have apprentice hours.”

Apprentice hours…

So, she still hasn’t told her mother about changing jobs. And tattooing for a living is a lot less scandalous than dating an older man who spent eighteen months in prison for driving a getaway car, who also has a kid.

“Cool,” I say, with a stiff nod. “I’ll do that.”

Her mother lets out a long-suffering breath. “Well, anyway, your song is up next. We’ve been looking for you everywhere. I know you aren’t a big fan of singing in public, but it means a lot to your brother.”

“I know, Mom, I’ll be right in, I promise,” Binx says, but her mother doesn’t budge. She just stands there, glaring at her daughter with increasing disappointment until Binx shoots me an apologetic glance and whispers, “Call me later, we’re not done with this discussion,” before hurrying across the patio.

But I’m not going to call her later.

Iam, in fact, going to ignore her texts for the next five hours before blocking her number.

Then I’m going to call Rob and ask him to cover for me at work while I take my mother up on her offer to watch Sprout while I go on a last-minute, rock-climbing trip for a few days. When she first suggested the trip this morning, I shut her down without hesitation, citing all the shit I have to do to get the cabin renovations finished before winter sets in.


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