Smooth Sailing (Wild West MC #3) Read Online Kristen Ashley

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, Contemporary, MC, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Wild West MC Series by Kristen Ashley
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Total pages in book: 135
Estimated words: 137310 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 687(@200wpm)___ 549(@250wpm)___ 458(@300wpm)
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“I’m thinking of downsizing,” Dad said from the bar.

That sorta hurt.

Why did that sorta hurt?

“It’s a lot for one man,” Hugger noted.

“Precisely,” Dad agreed.

Okay, the strange quotient kept climbing, considering Dad hadn’t even roused himself to look askance at a big dude with long hair and an unkempt beard wearing nice jeans and a shirt, but doing this with motorcycle boots.

Dad approached with a fancy tall glass filled with chipped ice and Coke and gave it to Hugger.

“Thanks, man,” Hugger muttered, taking it.

Dad returned to the bar asking, “How did you two meet?”

“In an elevator,” I said quickly, glancing sideways at Hugger.

He was smiling into his Coke.

Dad had no more to say, even when he came to me with a filled martini glass that included a silver pick stabbed through four fat olives.

I took it from him with murmured gratitude and tried not to down it in one.

He made his own martini (with the Hendrick’s) and moved to sit opposite us.

Now the strange quotient was off the charts, because my father was sitting opposite me, but I had no clue what to say.

“How is Suzette?” Dad asked.

“She’s been moved to protective custody,” I told him.

Was it me? Or did his shoulders slightly slump with relief?

“I think that’s wise,” he remarked. “Was she okay with it?”

“She’s with her parents, so yes,” I said.

Dad’s brows drew together. “She’s with her parents?”

“Actually, her name is Madison. She was abducted in Texas, trafficked, purchased by Imran Babić’s son, who was the one, along with a couple of his buds, who violated her,” I shared.

Dad winced.

“Imran got in touch with her, threatened her, forcing her to make a false report,” I went on. “All that’s straightened out now.”

“In the end, you should know, I was pleased you encouraged me to drop him as a client. I can’t say all my clients are angels, but, particularly, Babić is not a good man,” Dad proclaimed.

I didn’t exactly encourage him.

But if he wanted to look at it that way, I’d take it.

Dad kept going.

“His son is…” a long hesitation before he finished, “worse.”

I’d never met the guy, didn’t want to, but I knew he was definitely…worse.

Dad then looked to Hugger. “Thank you for looking after my daughter and, erm, Madison through that.”

“My job as her guy,” Hugger replied smoothly before sipping from his Coke.

I bumped him with an elbow.

He made no show I did it except I caught an upward twitch of his beard.

“All right,” Dad said, suddenly talking in his booming lawyer voice, which made me jump.

Hugger slid an arm along my shoulders.

Dad kept talking, and he did this directly to me.

“I’d like to get past this first part as it might be something that will make you annoyed, but it must be done, so let’s do it and move beyond it.”

Here we go.

Before I could waylay him in possibly being a dick, Dad kept going.

“I’ve set up a trust with what I’m assuming was your tuition, and also rent and an allocation for food and sundries,” he began. “This for both your undergraduate and graduate degrees. There will be tax implications for any income and distributions you get from it. But you don’t have to pay taxes on the principal. If you have any questions about any of that, you can speak to my accountant.”

I sat very still and said not a word.

Because I very well knew that if he was covering those expenses, that trust had to be well over a hundred thousand dollars.

“I would really rather you not attempt to refuse it, Diana,” Dad stated. “It’s yours. It was my privilege as your father to offer it to you. I didn’t get that chance, and I understand why. This is simply me, in part, rectifying my mistake.”

When the silence stretched so long after he stopped talking, I forced myself to say something.

“I, uh…Dad, that has to be a lot of money.”

“It was set aside for you already,” he returned. “At least for your undergraduate. I just added to it when I heard you got your master’s.”

I was processing a lot, but…

Hang on a second.

This wasn’t the first time he noted stuff about me that he shouldn’t know.

I mean, he said he had friends who were clients of Annie’s, but, although I was on Annie to update her website, which was barely functional outside giving people contact info and a list of services, she did not have bios of staff on there. And as far as I knew, she didn’t hand my CV to current or prospective clients.

In other words, this was fishy and gave me a funny feeling.

“Who told you I got my master’s?” I asked.

He sipped from his martini before he murmured, “Your mother delighted in keeping me informed of all I’d been missing.”

Uh-oh.

Color me still raw about the situation with Mom and her defunct visit, but I was getting mad.


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