Skies Over Caledonia (The Highlands #4) Read Online Samantha Young

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Erotic, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: The Highlands Series by Samantha Young
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Total pages in book: 105
Estimated words: 99960 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 500(@200wpm)___ 400(@250wpm)___ 333(@300wpm)
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At the tinge of bitterness, I said, “I didn’t realize things were rubbish between you and your parents.”

Lowering her gaze, she shrugged. “It is what it is.”

There was a coolness in her response, a distance.

She didn’t trust me with the whys and hows. And why should she? I had made it clear I wasn’t interested in being her friend.

I had to make the first move.

And the only way I was going to get over the fear that she’d judge me for who I really was—and maybe even end this ruse between us because of it—was just to tell her.

The words stuck in my throat. I didn’t tell my story often. In fact, I hadn’t really told my story to anyone but Granddad and Sarah. Georgie knew bits and pieces. I was rusty at trusting people with that part of me. That kid seemed like a world away from who I was now.

“I’m not close to my parents.”

As soon as the words left my mouth, I had Allegra’s focused attention.

I gave her a joyless smirk. “My grandfather was my dad’s dad. Unlike Sarah’s dad, mine decided that life in a wee Highland village on a farm was beneath him. He left Ardnoch as soon as he could. Moved to Glasgow. Got mixed up with drugs and crime. Knocked my mum up. She grew up in foster care, so she had no one. And my dad bailed on us when I was four. My dad had previously asked my grandparents for money, so they knew about me. I’d met them. They tried to help when they could, but my mum was too proud to ask for it. She’d send me here for the summers, but she wouldn’t take anything from them. My granddad used to slip cash into my bag before I went home, told me to hide it and use it if I needed it.

“Sometimes we really needed it. Mum tried. She did. She worked hard, but it meant leaving me alone a lot. And she went through men like …” I shook my head. “Looking back, I can see it for what it was. She was just desperate to find someone to take care of her. But she also let them treat her like shit. Let them treat me like shit. I can’t tell you how many punches I took so she wouldn’t.”

Emotion gleamed in Allegra’s eyes. “I’m so sorry, Jared.”

“Don’t be.” I huffed a wee bit shakily. It was only then I realized my heart was pounding with this trip down memory lane. “I was a wee prick too. Angry at my dad, angry at her, angry at life. I started knocking around with the wrong lads. It was easy to find trouble. We jacked cars. We sold drugs. Broke into homes and took things from people who barely had anything.” I sneered at that past self. “I was scum. And it took my mates almost beating one of our own boys to death before I woke up. I didn’t want to be that. I wanted to be better than my dad. I wanted to just be better.”

“Is that how you ended up here?”

She didn’t look horrified.

Only sad. Sympathetic.

My heart slowed a little and I nodded, remembering vividly that night after I’d dropped Welsh off at the hospital. The pure self-loathing I’d felt after dumping him at the entrance and driving off to save myself from being charged. I was twenty-one. Living in a shithole with a mate I didn’t particularly like, surrounded by stuff we’d stolen. Leaving a guy who was supposed to be my pal alone to possibly die, all because he’d shagged the wrong girl. Thankfully, he’d lived. And I’d called my granddad and told him I needed help. That I needed to get away. Far enough away the guys I ran around with wouldn’t follow.

“My grandmother had died a few years before, and a few years before that when Sarah was about twelve, they’d taken her in. After her dad died, her mum took her away and she’d had a similar childhood to me. She was smart enough to ask for help earlier than I did.

“My grandfather didn’t hesitate. He told me there was a place here if I was willing to work hard, and so I jumped on a train the next morning and never looked back. My mum is still in Glasgow. She sends a Christmas card each year, but we haven’t spoken in over a decade. It’s sad, but I don’t miss her like I should. She always felt more like a roommate than a mum. And Granddad … he was how I always thought a dad should be. He could be a belligerent auld bastard.” I chuckled, grief burning in my throat. “But he loved me and Sarah. He gave us a second chance at life. I’ll never be able to repay him for that.”


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