Total pages in book: 28
Estimated words: 25958 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 130(@200wpm)___ 104(@250wpm)___ 87(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 25958 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 130(@200wpm)___ 104(@250wpm)___ 87(@300wpm)
He chuckled as he led me out to his Audi. “You didn’t have to run, perrito.”
“I didn’t—” I puffed a breath—”want to make you late.”
He gently squeezed my hand as he opened the passenger door of his car. “Unless I tell you I need you to rush, you take your time.” He cupped my cheek and leaned in, softly kissing me. My heart flipped in my chest. “You are so fucking adorable for rushing for me though, perrito. It is not unappreciated.”
My cheeks warmed even more. Rico gently urged me into the car, and once he buckled me in, he closed the door and rounded the hood, slipping into the driver’s seat. Once we were on the highway, he reached over and grabbed my hand in his, settling our joined hands on the center console.
My heart skipped a beat in my chest, and I smiled to myself, unable not to.
When we pulled up to an old farmhouse, Rico shut the car off. “Stay where you are, perrito,” Rico ordered before he slipped out of the car, quietly shutting his door behind him. Jax emerged from the side of the barn we were parked near, and a young boy about my age followed him out. His hair was as blue as his eyes, and he was wearing eyeliner and a shimmery green eyeshadow on his eyelids. Lip gloss made his lips shimmer in the sunlight.
Rico rounded the car and opened my door, leaning in to unbuckle me. Grabbing my hand in his, he helped me out of the car, his fingers lacing through mine as he drew me close to his side.
Immediately, the boy with Jax’s eyes lit up. “Who is he?” he asked.
I didn’t know who he was asking, but when neither Rico or Jax opened their mouths to answer him, I shyly said, “I’m Anurak.”
Bento appeared behind me with Niran. “The weapons, sir?” Niran asked.
Jax looked at the boy. “Stay,” Jax ordered.
The boy scoffed. “You’re not my fucking dad, Jax.”
Jax arched a brow at him. “No, I’m not, but your Papa is only a phone call away if you want to be a fucking brat, Ace.” My eyes widened at the tone he took with Ace, and I stepped a little closer to Rico. Rico glanced down at me and then gently squeezed my hand, assuring me I was still safe, even if Jax was being mean to the other boy.
Ace scowled at him but kept his mouth shut. Rico chuckled. “You look like you’re doing good, kid,” Rico said.
Ace shrugged. “Hanging in there.” He moved closer despite Jax’s order not to move, and he didn’t stop until he was right in front of me. He didn’t reach forward to touch me, and I didn’t move either. Jax called Rico’s name, and Rico sighed, releasing my hand and looking at Bento. “Do not leave his fucking side.”
Bento nodded once, and Rico slipped away to go to the SUV Bento and Niran had ridden in. Ace looked at Rico’s back, then looked at me again, his lips twitching. “He’s so fucking whipped,” Ace snickered.
I frowned, not understanding. “Huh?”
Ace smiled at me, and wow, he was pretty when he smiled. Like, he was already really cute, but he was beautiful when he didn’t look like he hated the world, which was how he’d looked when he’d stepped out from around the barn with Jax. “Rico. You’ve got him wrapped around your pretty little finger.”
A blush burned at my cheeks. “I think it might be the other way around,” I said quietly. “He saved me. Most of the time, I feel like I can’t breathe without him.”
Ace nodded. “I feel like that with my Papa. He saved me, too. I almost died from hypothermia. He carried me to his cabin in the middle of the woods like the backwoods mountain man he is and nursed me back to health.” Warmth filled his gaze as he talked about his… Papa.
“Your Papa?” I asked, not understanding. I didn’t think a boy would be talking about his father that way, but what did I know? I barely remembered my parents. They passed away when I was a little kid, and then foster care fucked my life all to hell until I was kidnapped from school when my foster mother was late picking me up.
The man had assured me he was a friend of my foster mom’s, and she’d sent him to pick me up because she was stuck at a doctor’s appointment with another kid.
I never saw any of them again.
Ace nodded and leaned back against Rico’s car, patting the spot next to him. I cautiously leaned back beside him. Our arms accidentally brushed, and Ace frowned, his brows furrowing. Then, before I could think, he was intentionally grabbing my arm, blinking in surprise, his eyes widening. I froze, not understanding what was happening. When I glanced at Bento, he looked just as confused as I did.