The Rising (Unlawful Men #4) Read Online Jodi Ellen Malpas

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Angst, Contemporary, Dark, Mafia, Romance, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Unlawful Men Series by Jodi Ellen Malpas
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Total pages in book: 217
Estimated words: 207224 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 1036(@200wpm)___ 829(@250wpm)___ 691(@300wpm)
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My wife.

“I’m giving you one last opportunity to be reasonable and get them on a plane to Miami.”

Or else?

My shades slide down the bridge of my nose, sweat assisting, so I push them back, facing Rose. She’s always a pleasing sight, but today especially so, with her ever increasingly curvy body adorned in a gold bikini, her boobs bulging against the material, her hair bundled up high.

I feel myself twitching against my wetsuit as I reach for her and pull her close, pushing a wave behind her ear as I kiss the corner of her mouth. “You’ve caught the sun,” I whisper, pulling back and slipping a finger past the taut material of her bikini top and easing it down a fraction, revealing a tan line just north of her nipple.

She peeks down too, but not for as long as me. “Don’t change the subject.” She pushes my hand away and slips her fingers into my hair, holding my dark waves in her clenched fists threateningly. “Are you really that passionate about keeping Otto away from your mom?”

For fuck’s sake. She doesn’t say it, but I know she’s mentally considering the fact that I’m also keeping her away from that Benson bloke. “This has nothing to do with Otto and everything to do with Daniel’s stability and education.”

“Stability? He’s there, and I’m here. And he can have a private tutor in Miami. Are we going back to St. Lucia?”

Won’t she stop? I groan and swoop in for another kiss. And get blocked with a dick-slicing glare. I roll my eyes—though Rose can’t appreciate my silent mocking with my shades hiding it.

She reaches for my glasses and lifts them, revealing my eyes. “Don’t roll your eyes at me.”

“I didn’t,” I say, stealing a kiss before she can shove me away. Her rejection is probably a good thing. My tight wetsuit might become tighter. I’m not arguing with her. We’ve done enough of that recently. So . . . “You’re staying here, and Daniel is staying there.” I’ll tell her instead. Another stolen kiss as I pass her, heading for the cabin. She’s soon chasing my heels, protesting. “You’re being unreasonable.”

“I know,” I say over my shoulder, not denying it.

“What?”

I stop, exhale loudly, and face her frown. “If you think for a moment I’m letting you go back to St. Lucia without me—”

“In case I’m swept off my feet by a single, handsome banker?”

I seize her face, squeezing her cheeks until she has duck lips. Why must she rile me? “There will be no sweeping, there’ll only be mopping.” Blood. “Remember that if you’re ever tempted to be swept.” I slam my lips on hers, kissing away her scowl. “Are we clear?”

“Fuck off.”

Smiling darkly, I watch her wrench herself away, but my amusement loses its darkness and gains some true light when my focus lands on her arse as she stomps away, the two curvy peaks jiggling beautifully, her bikini bottoms cutting high across each one. I groan on an exhale and push my shades up into my hair, fixated as I blindly pick up my cigarettes off a nearby wall and light one, never taking my eyes off my wife.

She stomps up the steps to the cabin as James exits with Brad, and they both part to let her through, following her path with raised, knowing brows. She tosses both arms in the air, and the wind carries her muttered insult to my ears. She hates me. I’m an arsehole. “Same story, different day,” I say to myself as the boys look my way. They’re both freshly showered after a few hours out on the water with me. I’ve been distracted by the ocean and a willful wife during the time it’s taken them to change. I make my way to them and up the steps, puffing my way through my cigarette.

“All right?” Brad asks as I pass through the middle of them and take a right into the café.

“Brilliant,” I mutter, grabbing a water from the fridge and holding it up for the young girl who’s serving to see, prompting her to run it through the system and add it to my tab. “Where are the others?”

“Out on the balcony,” James says, taking a beer instead of a water. I look at it in his hand as he screws the cap off. He’s drinking more lately, a result, no doubt, of stressing over where Beau is every second of every day or, more to the point, who she’s with. That woman would give Houdini a run for his money. “I just checked in with Leon on the delivery for Friday.”

“Where’s Beau?” I ask, prompting James to point his bottle to the decking and me to look through the open concertina doors and past the dozens of occupied tables. I spy her at the very end of the wharf, reclined in a chair, her feet kicked up onto the railing, her face pointed upward. Toward the sun. “Still nothing from Burrows?” I ask, chugging down some water.


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