Line Change (Northport U #1) Read Online Heidi McLaughlin

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Sports Tags Authors: Series: Northport U Series by Heidi McLaughlin
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Total pages in book: 101
Estimated words: 95559 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 478(@200wpm)___ 382(@250wpm)___ 319(@300wpm)
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“Spill,” I say to my sister. “I want to hear it all, or I’m walking out of here and never coming back.” It’s a threat, but one I will never follow through on because of Lacey. If she weren’t in the picture, I would’ve been gone a long time ago.

Ally inhales deeply and then nods. “Austin Nelson is Lacey’s father. We dated for a bit, it was off and on, and then right after I found out I was pregnant, everything went south, and fast.”

“Where’s Austin?” I ask. “Is he the kid in jail?”

Ally nods. “After he got locked up, his dad visited me. He told me to keep my mouth shut about who Lacey’s father is—if his son was even her father. He said I’m nothing more than trailer-park trash and I’d never see a dime of the Nelson fortune if I even hinted at Austin being Lacey’s dad. He told me he had the money to take my child away from me and make my life hell.” Ally wipes away her fallen tears.

“Have you spoken to Austin?”

She shakes her head. “Not since he called me the night he was arrested.” She pauses and gathers herself. “The day everything went down, I was working as a receptionist. Austin called me and told me he had been busted for dealing. I knew he supplied the construction workers on his dad’s job sites, but he told me to mind my own business, so I did. About a week later, I was out on the street because my name wasn’t on the lease, and his dad refused to help, even after I told him I was pregnant. And then, a few days later, while I was packing my belongings into my car, he came up to me in the parking lot of the complex we lived in and said those things. So, I listened. I packed what I could and headed back to Mom's.”

Ally leans into me and cries. “I don’t even know how he found out we were here or why he showed up. I haven’t told a soul about Austin, ever.”

“He found you because of Thea,” I tell her. Ally stiffens in my arms. “I’m sorry I ever brought her into our lives.”

The last place I want to be right now is on the ice. We’re down by two goals, both resulting from power plays when I was sent to the sin bin. All night, this jackass has jawed in my ear, saying shit to piss me off. I get it, it’s a normal tactic, but tonight is not the night to fuck with me. I should’ve told Coach I couldn’t skate, but it would have to be a cold day in hell for me to utter those words. For as long as I can remember, hockey has been my life. The rink is usually the one place where I can escape everything, but not tonight. As soon as I walked into the locker room, Jude was on my ass for making his sister cry. Fuck him. And fuck her. She put my niece in harm's way. She continued to see her ex behind my back, even going as far as to ask my permission to hang out with him. I must be some kind of idiot.

The line switches, and I head off the ice. “Rose, do you plan on playing tonight, or are you just wasting space on the ice?” Coach asks. I don’t answer because there isn’t a good one to give. “Answer me,” he says as he whacks my helmet. I stand and face him. Even without skates on, I’m taller than him, and right now, I tower over him.

“Don’t fucking touch me.”

“Get the fuck off my bench,” he yells and points toward the door which leads to our locker room. I do as he says without hesitating, with no questions asked. I don’t bother showering, and I don’t even wait for the game to end before I’m out the door and heading toward my car. Thea’s voice rings out from behind me. I ignore her and continue to my car, lengthening my stride to get away from her.

“Kyler, please.”

She can beg all she wants. I’m not stopping. I reach my car and get it, locking the door as I start the engine. My headlights flash on Thea just as I pull out of the parking spot. One look into my rear-view mirror, and I see her standing in the middle of the lot, watching me drive away. I’m not wrong in how I feel. I told her from the get-go I don’t let people into my life because I don’t trust them. I made the mistake of trusting her, only to be let down. Lesson learned.

Instead of going home where I know Thea and the others can find me, I drive toward the southside of town to the warehouse hosting tonight’s fights. Throughout my very short relationship with Thea, she begged me to stop. I’m glad I didn’t listen because I need to hit something or someone tonight.


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