American library books ยป Other ยป Irresistible Bachelors: Books 1-5 by Landish, Lauren (bts books to read TXT) ๐Ÿ“•

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got away with nothing but a small scar under my chin. In fact, itโ€™s still visible if you know where to look.

I step up onto the same sidewalk that I used to hopscotch down for hours, using chalk that Iโ€™d gotten from anywhere I could. I donโ€™t know why I was such a hopscotch nut. All of my friends outgrew the game by third grade, but Iโ€™d stay out until the streetlights came on and Mama would holler out at me from the kitchen that it was time to come inside for dinner. Thereโ€™s nothing drawn on it now, but to me, I can still see the ghostly outlines in pink, yellow, blue, and green and feel the bounce of my ponytail as I hopped along.

I shake my headโ€”that girl hasnโ€™t been around for over a decadeโ€”and cross the yard. It needs some maintenance. The sign on the house is dusty, and clearly, the place has been up for sale for a while. Stepping closer, I can start to see why. While the rails on the porch have a relatively fresh coat of paint, the floorboards themselves are listing a little. I remember sometimes, right at the end before Mama and I moved, sneaking out to avoid the sounds coming from her bedroom as she and her latest boyfriend did things I didnโ€™t quite understand at the time. This was during the bad years, after Dad left, and Mama . . . well, she needed men like some people need water.

So I used to sneak out, sometimes to sleep in the treehouse I had in the backyard, sometimes just to walk around and smell the night air. I remember that the board just to the left of the window used to always squeak, no matter how hard weโ€™d nail it down. Now, though, thereโ€™s no way Iโ€™d trust myself to the porch. Half of the boards look dry rotted, and the whole thing is listing slightly to the back. Knowing my luck, if I take one step on that thing, Iโ€™d fall right through and end up with a splinter the size of a ballpoint pen in my ass.

I walk around the side, down the dirt driveway to the parking area in the back, what people in this area call a โ€˜dooryardโ€™. The garage is gone, just a concrete slab now, but other than that, littleโ€™s changed. I can almost see Mama standing in the sagging screen door, calling my name. My eyes start to prickle with tears. I can almost feel a whisper of her there, but sheโ€™s not. Sheโ€™s been gone for a couple of years now. While Dad and I are on polite terms, his lifeโ€™s not around here anymore. He probably hasnโ€™t been back here in twenty years.

But this . . . this is where I see Mama. Itโ€™s in the buzz of the cicadas, the humidity, and the sunsets where the air hangs thick like sap around you. A place where your skin glistens five minutes after you dry off from the warmth, and every meal is accompanied by a glass of iced tea or lemonade just to get that cool kiss before diving into something spicy and most likely fried.

I check the back door. Itโ€™s locked, of course, but the windows are just high enough that I can look around. The kitchen looks a mess, but the trained evaluator in me sees that itโ€™s surface mess.

Going around, I see the same thing repeated time after time. Most of the damage in the house is superficial, although thereโ€™s some thatโ€™s due to age. When I get to the corner room, where my old bedroom used to be, I know. This is my next project, the first one from find to finish, all mine.

Iโ€™ll talk it over with Oliver, of course, mainly because Iโ€™ll need the time to do all of this, but thatโ€™s okay. Iโ€™m going to make this house all the things I wanted as a little girl. There were so many things that Mama said sheโ€™d fix but never did. The reason we could never fix anything was the same. โ€œWe donโ€™t have the money right now, honey,โ€ Mama would say, and while it was true, she spent more than enough money chasing after her boyfriends, usually on clothes to attract them or some other man.

But this house . . . I know what I need to do. Going around front, I take a few pictures of the property, then make sure I get the number on the For Sale sign down before I get in my car. I start up my engine and give 614 Douglas another look before pulling away. Iโ€™ve got one more house to look at for Oliver, and then I need to get home.

Iโ€™ve got research to do, and shopping for shoes online can wait.Caleb

โ€œMy name is Sue! HOW DO YOU DO?โ€ my radio blares as I pull up in front of Mindyโ€™s Place. Finally, after a few years of its being open, a lot of the people around town arenโ€™t calling it the Flaming Dragon building anymore, but the old nickname still sticks around.

Shutting off my truckโ€™s engine, I look inside, trying to decide whether I want to sit down and enjoy the atmosphere or if I want to grab โ€˜nโ€™ go. Itโ€™s not that I donโ€™t like the cafe, but at seven thirty in the morning, Iโ€™m in no mood to put up with pretentious bullshit, and sometimes, the local bankers like to turn Mindyโ€™s Place into Mini Wall Street. My jeans and work boots do not fit in with that crowd.

But they seem to still be asleep, and I remember that banks donโ€™t open until Iโ€™m already working today. I yawn, rubbing my eyes and feeling the intense need for caffeine. Getting out, I check my watch and decide Iโ€™ve got a few minutes to actually enjoy the cafe. Maybe Iโ€™ve even got time to enjoy a bagel. Not much more. Iโ€™ve got three jobs

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