Harlequin Desire January 2021--Box Set 1 of 2 by Maisey Yates (free biff chip and kipper ebooks .txt) π

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- Author: Maisey Yates
Read book online Β«Harlequin Desire January 2021--Box Set 1 of 2 by Maisey Yates (free biff chip and kipper ebooks .txt) πΒ». Author - Maisey Yates
βI am absolutely serious. Whatβs wrong with it?β
βIf the house is dilapidated, how bad is this going to be?β
She kicked open the door, and inside was⦠Well, pretty much nothing. There were bunks, but they looked like they were moldier than not.
βCricket,β he said.
Heβd slept in worse, that was for damn sure. But not for as long as a month.
βOkay,β she relented. βAll right, I have a better idea. You can sleep in the house.β
* * *
The look he gave her was full of skepticism, but his skepticism wasnβt her problem. She was enjoying talking to him. Trying to get a sense of what he thought. What he knew. If they were alike.
And when he had talked about his dadβ¦
She had wanted to know more. She was jealous. Because her own father had never cared for her at all. What would it have been like to grow up on the ranch? To have a place where she belonged. It had actually become something of a cherished fantasy.
The idea that James Maxfield wasnβt her father. The idea that she made sense.
βSleep in the house.β
βYes. Thereβs an extra bedroom.β
βGreat.β
They went back toward the house, him with his sleeping bag in tow.
βThereβs a quilt,β she said.
βIs it full of dust?β
βDonβt be silly.β She waved her hand. βI beat the blankets out. I looked that up online. Iβve got this, I really do.β
βRight.β
βThis place wasnβt totally unoccupied until recently. The older lady who lived in it passed away. I donβt really know why my dad owned it. He wasnβt charging her very much in rent, which honestly doesnβt seem like him. It leads me to believe that one of his business managers mustβve bought it and he didnβt remember. Or even know. That does sound like my dad. He doesnβt really notice people.β
It was weird to call James Maxfield her dad. She had suspected he wasnβt for at least six months. Not since she found out that the reason for the feud between the Coopers and the Maxfields was that her mother had once been in love with Cash Cooper.
It had all made so much sense then.
Her mother hadnβt felt like she could get married to Cash, because he was penniless. And so, she had chosen to marry James Maxfield, and signed on for a life of misery. But Cricket had long suspected that the reason she existed, the reason she was a late-in-life child, was not because her parents had suddenly found a way to rekindle their romance ten years after her sisters were born. No.
It made much more sense to her that her mother had gone straight back into the arms of Cash.
It was just Cricket wanted to tread lightly in finding out the truth. Because his wife had passed away not that long ago, and she imagined it would be very painful for Creed, Jackson or Honey to accept that their father had had an affair.
From her point of view, it was pretty romantic. But then, her father wasnβt heroic to her. Cash seemed much nicer. Though, she knew the Coopers loved their mother very much, and sheβd seemed like a nice woman. Cricket didnβt like the idea that Cash might have done her wrong.
For all that Cricket could see the affair as a forbidden romance, she imagined the Cooper children wouldnβt view it in quite the same way.
So she had to tread carefully. Treading carefully wasnβt her strong point. Never had been.
She tramped up the steps again. And Jackson cursed sharply. She turned just in time to see his foot go through the second step.
The only problem with all of her theories had been Jackson. And the way sheβd felt about him for the last ten years. And the way her suspicions had forced her toβ¦
Well it was a relief, really. Sheβd always hated how Jackson made her feel. Like her heart was too big for her chest and her breath was too big for her lungs. Sheβd felt connected to him, from the first moment sheβd laid eyes on him, and sheβd hated it. Especially as sheβd gotten older and seen how badly a relationship could hurt a woman. Her parentsβ marriage was toxic. Sheβd never wanted anything like that, but her heart had attached itself to Jackson all the same.
That connection had made a strange, dizzying sort of sense when sheβd realized. When sheβd figured it out. Because, of course.
Of course she wasnβt so foolish as to fall in love with him.
Of course love at first sight wasnβt real, especially not as a kid.
Of course that connection was something else.
Of course.
Cricket didnβt trade in uncertainty. And for years, the intensity of the emotions sheβd felt around Jackson Cooper had felt uncertain.
It was a relief to find certainty.
It was.
βIβve never had that problem,β she said.
βLike I said. Not more than a buck twenty-five soaking wet.β
βCanβt help it.β She scampered the rest of the way up the steps and into the house. He followed her, and she noticed that he didnβt lighten his footsteps at all to make allowances for the fact that some of the boards were iffy. He got what he got. If he ended up severing a tendon it wasnβt her fault.
βThank you for the wild goose chase around your property.β
βNo, that wasnβt a goose chase. Weβll goose chase later. Thereβs a pond.β
βDo geese favor a pond?β he asked.
βMine do.β
βYou have geese?β
βA few domestic. One Canada goose. He has a broken wing. Itβs flipped kind of upside down. He canβt fly.β
He frowned. βYou have a Canada goose?β
βI do. His name is Goose.β
βCreative.β
She arched a brow. βDo you have a problem with a Canada goose?β
βNo. Not at all. But you canβt exactly make a ranch off of them.β
βIβm not suggesting that it be a goose ranch. But my point is that tomorrow weβll go on an actual tour. No drama. This was just a walkabout.β
βI canβt believe you were going to throw
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