Olivier (Chicago Blaze #9) Read Online Brenda Rothert

Categories Genre: Billionaire, Contemporary, Romance, Sports Tags Authors: Series: Chicago Blaze Series by Brenda Rothert
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Total pages in book: 54
Estimated words: 53233 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 266(@200wpm)___ 213(@250wpm)___ 177(@300wpm)
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“The police are on the way!” a man yells from the row of bystanders. “Don’t move her! Let them do it.”

The fucking car is on fire. And with rush hour traffic and no sirens approaching, I might be this woman’s only hope.

I try to open the front door, but it’s crunched into the ground along with the roof, and it doesn’t budge at all.

“I need a knife!” I yell to the crowd. “Somebody get me a knife!”

Taking a deep breath, I open the back seat passenger door. The car is sitting at an angle, and the door won’t stay open unless I’m holding it. I grab the fabric of the car seat, the floormat—anything I can get my hands on to hoist myself up. Nothing works.

Shit. I have to get into that car. I can feel the heat from the fire, which is dangerously close to the unconscious woman. I get my hand on a piece of metal beneath the driver’s seat, and I try to pull myself up on it, but it’s not big enough.

Thoughts race through my mind. There’s no time. I can’t let this woman burn to death just because I can’t figure out how to get in this car. There has to be a way.

“I got you,” a deep voice says behind me.

I turn to see a tall, broad-shouldered man with a bald head and a determined expression. He bends down, slides his head between my legs so I’m sitting on his shoulders and stands up, raising me high enough that I can slide all the way into the back seat.

It’s hot. I cough as smoke fills my lungs, getting in my eyes and making it hard to see.

“I’ve got a knife,” the man calls out, passing it up to me. “Careful, it’s a hunting knife. It’s sharp.”

He backs up several steps, probably because this car could blow up at any moment. My heart pounds as I grab the knife handle from him.

Since I can’t see through the smoke, I rely on my hands. I run them down the back of the driver’s seat until I get to the point where the seat belt should be. I find it, but everything is so goddamn hot.

Coughing harder now, I set to work cutting through the seat belt. The flames are so close to her that this feels like an impossible task. It’s not just my will to save her, but my will not to die in this fire myself, that drives me to saw through the seat belt at her waist.

Tossing the knife into the burning passenger seat, I move my hand up her arm until I find her shoulder. The heat and smoke are almost too much. I’m not leaving without her, though.

I get my hands through her armpits and I take two giant handfuls of her shirt. I’m about to start pulling when I see that my own shirtsleeve has caught fire.

“Come on, man!” the guy who hoisted me into the car calls out. “I’m right here! You can do this!”

Squeezing my eyes closed, I pull. The woman moves a couple inches. She’s stuck.

A sound escapes my throat—half frustration, half terror. I regroup and pull again, her body rising off the seat but not coming back. It feels like I have almost all of her weight, but her lower right leg, or maybe her foot, is stuck.

I don’t have time to think about it. There’s a risk I’ll hurt her if I keep pulling, but the alternative would be worse.

With a deep breath of smoky air that makes me lightheaded, I slide my hands down to the waistband of her pants and pull there instead. I pull until my shoulders ache with exertion, and suddenly, her body is free.

Scrambling, I grab her beneath the armpits again and pull. My head is swimming and my throat feels raw. Is that burning skin I smell?

The door I entered the car through is being held open by someone. Not knowing how much time I have left, I hurriedly slide the woman to the opening and push. I have to hope the guy who helped me into the car is there to catch her.

“I got her,” a voice says.

There are frantic yells. I focus on staying conscious long enough to try sliding myself out of the car, waiting for the impact of the pavement.

It never comes, though.

Chapter Two

Daphne

Everything feels heavy. It’s not just my eyelids—which feel like they’re made of lead—but my mouth, arms and head. Something’s not right.

If this is a dream, it’s a really shitty one. I can’t move, everything is dark, and the only sound is my Grandma Jo ranting.

“Where’s your little hussy, Aidan? Is she sleeping after last night’s shift at the gentleman’s club?”

The dream just went from bad to worse. Why would my subconscious summon my ex?


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