Provocative (White Lies Duet #1) Read Online Lisa Renee Jones

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Erotic, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: White Lies Duet Series by Lisa Renee Jones
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Total pages in book: 89
Estimated words: 83912 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 420(@200wpm)___ 336(@250wpm)___ 280(@300wpm)
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“Working that theory, Faith would have to have connections to my father, who she’d need to have killed, right along with her mother.”

“Which I have yet to find.”

“What about her sharing a link to anyone connected to my father?”

“Nothing, and I dug through layers as deep as a phone book.”

I consider everything he’s said to me. “Meredith forcing Faith to sell and taking off with a hot young thing for the money makes sense to me. What doesn’t is how my father fits into this. Why the fuck was he writing her checks? Wait. Fuck. He wanted in on the sale of the winery.”

“Then why pay Meredith the money?”

“A down payment on him buying it is my guess.”

“But they’re both gone, and so is the money.”

“Which means you need to—”

“Find the money. I plan on it.”

“Call me,” I say, but when I’m about to end the connection, he says, “Nicolas.”

“I’d tell you to stop calling me that, but it clearly won’t matter.”

“Be careful with Faith Winter. She could have the money. She could want to sell herself.”

“Then why go through this hell?”

“Because not going through it makes her look guilty. Like I said, man. Be careful.”

With that blow, he ends the call, and I stand there, aware that I am guilty of not wanting her to be guilty, but no matter how many times I warn myself of this danger, it doesn’t change. I’m going there again. It is what it is. I want her to be innocent. I’m boring myself with the repeat of this conclusion. Accepting what is allows me to manage what is.

Moving on to what I just learned. Yes. Faith has motive to act against her mother, with financial gain, but I don’t believe she wants to sell the winery. More like save it from her mother selling it, but she could have done that through the court system. But to believe that she would have, or could have, plotted out and killed my father and her mother is a stretch I can’t make. I scrub my jaw. But I don’t want to make it, either. I just admitted that.

I glance at my watch and then scan the horizon with no sign of Faith. I estimate I have fifteen minutes until Faith will be here. Just enough time to nose around upstairs if I hurry. Scanning the horizon one last time, I settle the curtain back into place, then waste no time making my way to the stairs. I don’t hesitate when I start the straight climb up. I’m helping her. She just doesn’t know it, and I’d be fine with her never knowing it, but that’s not possible.

At the last step, I turn right under an archway, and I find myself in a room with a steepled ceiling that literally stretches the entire top level of the house. The wood floor has been glossed with some sort of finish I assume is easily wiped clean. There are two arched windows consuming the wall in front of me, both endcaps to the space. And there are random easels sitting around the room, all uncovered, all demanding attention I can’t give them. My gaze lifts to a door to my left, which I hope is an office. Moving in that direction, I enter and flip on the light, and sure enough, I find a heavy dark wood desk, a deep leather chair in the corner, and random works of art on the wall that are absolutely Faith’s signature strokes and colors. And damn, there really is something sexy about a talent I’ll never have.

Another arched floor-to-ceiling window sits behind the chair and illuminates the room, allowing me to round the desk and sit down without a light, and then to quickly locate random financial documents. I pull out my phone, set my alarm for five minutes, and start snapping photos. It goes off right as I find her father’s will, and I risk the extra minute to click shots of it. Out of time and nowhere near done, I stand up and exit the office. I fully intend to hurry to the archway, but I notice the table and color palette sitting next to one easel, which means it has to be what she was painting yesterday. I take two steps in that direction and stop myself, some instinct in me telling me that looking at that painting is far less forgivable than searching her house, at least now that I have every intention of saving her from the hell she’s in.

I turn back to the door, and that’s when I hear the front door open and Faith’s footsteps downstairs. Fuck. I run a hand through my hair and make an instant decision. I have to own up to being up here, and if I let her walk around looking for me, that’s only going to make this worse. Inhaling a jagged breath, I walk to the archway and step to the landing above the stairs. As if she sensed I was up here, she’s at the bottom, looking up at me, her blond hair tousled from the wind, her hand on the railing.


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