Wicked Read Online Amo Jones

Categories Genre: Angst, Biker, Dark, Mafia, MC, Romance, Suspense Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 110
Estimated words: 102335 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 512(@200wpm)___ 409(@250wpm)___ 341(@300wpm)
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I turn back around, my eyes landing on Ruby, who’s following my footsteps down. “Did you see where she went?”

She rolls her eyes and I have to fight with myself not to wrap my hands around her throat and pin her up against the tree. “She’s probably pashing someone in the house, Wicked. Stop being so fucking dramatic. She’s safe here, or have you forgotten where we are?”

I haven’t, but where we are is precisely the issue. She doesn’t know that, though, of course. The naïve little brat would never know.

I move around her, circling the smaller groups of people talking and drinking, before going back to the side of the house and to the front, where the guard stands near the front door, exactly where I left him.

I point to the house. “You seen Poppy?”

He looks from left to right, taking the steps down to meet me. “No? No one has come around the front.”

I leave him behind and push through the front door. I don’t see anything. My vision caves in around me in a single circle, as if I have tunnel vision just for her. Pulling out my phone, I hit the second floor while tapping her name on my contacts list. Her phone rings three times—

“If I haven’t answered my phone, it’s because you’ve called me off a number not in my contacts. Rude. I feel violated. Don’t call me unless you know me. K, thanks, BYE!”

I want to pin her right beside Ruby on that tree, but I shove through every bedroom, clearing each one before realizing she’s not in here either. Jogging down the stairs, I exit through the back doors, hitting her name again, only this time it goes straight to voicemail. Dread fills my veins when I realize something isn’t right. Poppy may be a headcase and the equivalent to a stray cat when it comes to keeping track of her, but she’d never purposely ignore me. She knows how much I stress and how controlling I am. She knows it’ll just be easier to answer the phone, tell me she’s fine and to stop being a dickhead, and then hang up on me. She’d never do this.

Call it brother intuition or whatever, but when I push through the back doors that open back onto the same area I was just talking with Ruby, it’s as though I see the party in a different light. The groups of people who are here seem older. Not the age group I would expect for Ruby to be around. The alcohol isn’t sprawled out, and no one is being messy and stupid. Aside from the small group near Betty, who is the same that Ruby always hangs with, the other people are almost out of place.

I jog down the steps, stopping right beside Ruby and Betty, and the other boys they have around. I notice one of them from the party earlier. “Who the fuck are all these people?” I gesture out to the people behind us. The energy in the air shifts when Ruby turns to follow my sight.

I watch her face as her mouth twists into a confused line. “I—I don’t actually know.”

“Jesus fuck!” I whack the bottle of vodka out of her hand. “How fucking much have you had to drink to not notice any of these people until just now?”

“I know—I’m—” I ignore her, turning back to face the side of the house where the freshly cut lawn merges into the forest.

“What’s behind these trees?”

Ruby dials someone on her phone, bringing it to her ear before hanging up. “I don’t know. I’ve never been back there. I’m guessing trees?”

I glare at her. “You’re not funny.”

“I wasn’t trying to be.” Her eyes fall to the ground, but I don’t have time to coax her bruised and drunk ego.

I point to the people who are here. “Call your daddy and tell him there has been a compromise, and if I don’t find my sister? When I get back, people are dying.”

“Wait!” Ruby jogs after me. “I’m coming with you.” I ignore her as she continues to dial Victor. It’s not until we hit the entrance to the forest that I turn and see they all fucking followed. Boys in tow. Climbing over the fence, I land on the ground in a thud and turn on the flashlight on my phone. The light beams, and I scan across the fence line, looking for any movement of ground. It’s obvious that people haven’t been on this side. Not a single footprint or shoeprint.

“Yo!” one of the boys calls out. “There’s a boot print…”

I turn back around, colliding with Ruby. Moving her out of my way with the back of my hand, I stop where Jackson is, narrowing my eyes on a clear print of a boot. Lifting my light up, I start following that same trail. The prints are clear as fucking day, but there’s only one set.


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