When We Burn (The Blackwells of Montana #1) Read Online Kristen Proby

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: The Blackwells of Montana Series by Kristen Proby
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Total pages in book: 104
Estimated words: 102016 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 510(@200wpm)___ 408(@250wpm)___ 340(@300wpm)
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“Her dress is beautiful. You’ll be a lovely Tiana. Do you have a frog?”

Birdie laughs. “I have a stuffed one.”

“Perfect.” Dani winks at me, and then it’s time to circle back around to the barn. Once we’ve put the horses away and have given them treats and rubs, we make our way to the house for dinner.

“Can we see the chickens?” Birdie asks, and my gaze immediately goes to Dani, who’s gone pale.

“Are you guys back already?” Blake asks as he comes around the barn. He’s with both Brooks and Beckett, and they’re all grinning at us.

“I want to see the chickens,” Birdie tells him, and Brooks’s gaze immediately moves to Dani.

We all know that Dani and her sisters have a difficult past with animals on the ranch because we all experienced the many times when the Lexington girls would arrive at our house looking haunted. Fucking traumatized by their asshole father.

“Why don’t we take you?” Beckett offers my daughter with a grin. “Let’s see if the ol’ girls left anything for us, and then we’ll go inside and pull dinner together.”

“Okay,” Birdie says, letting Beck take her hand, and along with Brooks, they set off for the chicken coop behind the house.

Blake stops to brush his hand lightly over Dani’s hair. “You okay, gorgeous?”

I growl, but he ignores me. It may be stupid, but I don’t want any man touching her, even my brother.

“Sure.” Her voice is thready, and neither of us believes her.

Blake’s eyes turn to mine, and I nod, silently telling him that I have this.

We all love her and want to protect her.

So, my brother follows the others, and I take Dani’s hands in my own. Her eyes look glassy, like she’s somewhere else, and I press my lips to her forehead.

“Baby, are you really okay?”

“No,” she whispers, and I’m relieved that she trusts me enough to tell me the truth.

Without overthinking it, I scoop my girl into my arms and carry her to the house, up the steps of the wraparound porch, and settle her in my lap in one of the rocking chairs, holding her to me.

“You can tell me.” I kiss her head, run my hand down her arm, and hold on to her shaking hand. “Talk to me about the chickens, kitten.”

It took Holden a while, but somehow, he talked his father into only keeping the larger animals on the ranch.

“Something especially bad must have happened with the birds.”

She shivers and wraps her arms around my neck, burying her precious face in my neck, and a sob makes its way out of her that tears my chest wide open.

“Ah, baby.” I hug her close, rocking us back and forth, my lips pressed to her. It’s like she can’t get close enough to me, like she wants to be safe inside of me, and it makes me ache for her. “I’m so sorry, honey. I’m so fucking sorry.”

“He would p-p-pluck them”—my eyes close because I can guess where this is going—“while they were still alive. And they would scream so loud. And he would laugh.”

Fuck, I want to kill him. I want to raise that motherfucker from the grave and tear his guts out.

“He liked to make things bleed.” She’s still clinging to me, pressed as close as she can get, and I hold on tight, not letting her go. God, I’ll never let her go. “He liked to make them cry. God, Bridge, he was so damn mean.”

“And he liked to make you girls cry the most.” My voice is rough, and she nods.

“He never made me bleed.” It’s a whisper, and I have to listen closely to hear her. “But p-p-poor Darby.”

I feel my eyes widen. I had no idea that he made his oldest daughter bleed, and I wonder if Holden knows. Christ, I can’t imagine it. I can’t fathom putting my daughter through that.

I’d kill anyone who even tried to look at Birdie wrong.

“He hurt everything. Everyone,” she continues, her voice stronger now. “He got off on it. We had a cat once. I can’t go there. I can’t talk about the unspeakable things he did to those poor, defenseless animals. But the chickens, Bridge. They were the worst, and they were my chore.”

“What do you mean?”

“I was in charge of gathering eggs, and I had to go out there every day, and they were just so sad. And I couldn’t help them. If I tried to help them, he’d run the water over my face.”

Fuck me.

“I just can’t do the chickens, and I’m sorry for it. I wish I could, but I just can’t⁠—”

“Hey, you look at me.” I cup her face and urge her back so I can look in her pretty eyes. “Baby, you don’t ever have to see another chicken as long as you live if you don’t want to. Birdie’s fine out there with me or my family.”


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