Alaric (Golden Glades Henchmen MC #8) Read Online Jessica Gadziala

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC Tags Authors: Series: Golden Glades Henchmen MC Series by Jessica Gadziala
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Total pages in book: 80
Estimated words: 77236 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 386(@200wpm)___ 309(@250wpm)___ 257(@300wpm)
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I would be wasting time looking for it.

Someone else would have called, right?

Surely, the couple with the baby at least.

I could hear her screaming down the hall.

My gaze landed on something casually tossed on the bed then, and I flew at it like a lifeline.

A pair of scissors.

I rushed back to Kylo, cutting his arms and legs free as he hissed in pain.

“Oh, God. Oh, God,” I whimpered, grabbing a shirt a few feet away on the floor, my knees sliding around in his blood as I moved, then turning back to Kylo who’d rolled onto his back, eyes shut, face contorted in pain. “It’s okay. You’re going to be okay,” I told him as I pressed the shirt into his stomach where the majority of the blood seemed to be coming from. Though, there was an alarming stain on his thigh as well.

“You’re a bad liar, darlin’,” he said, voice rough.

“Hey!” another voice called, making me jump, and Kylo curse as I pressed harder on his stomach. “Everyone okay in there?”

I knew that voice.

The dad of the baby.

He had a gritty-sounding voice that I could always hear through the walls when he was talking on his phone as he left or came home in the morning.

“No!” I called out. “Call the police! Someone is shot.”

“I already called,” the voice said, moving closer. “Oh, fuck,” he hissed as he moved into the bedroom.

“Get her out of here,” Kylo ground out.

“No,” I said, glancing back at the father whose name I hadn’t bothered to learn. “He needs me to put pressure on his wounds.”

Right?

That was what you were supposed to do.

Keep the blood in as well as you could.

Even if the shirt seemed to be getting pretty saturated, the hot, sticky blood starting to stain my hands.

I reached back, grabbing another shirt, then pressing it into the wound on his thigh.

“You’re going to be okay, Kylo,” I said, blinking as tears flooded, then started to spill from my eyes.

“I’m not,” he said, shaking his head, resigned to his fate. “But you did good, darlin’,” he said, trying to give me a small smile. “Don’t feel guilty.”

“Stop talking like you’re dying. You’re not dying,” I said, even as he seemed to start to lose the battle with his heavy eyelids. “No. Stay awake,” I cried, pushing harder into his wounds, the pain making his eyes shoot open. “Hear that?” I asked. “That’s the paramedics,” I told him.

“I, ah, I’ll go lead them in,” the father said, and I could hear his footsteps retreating.

“Who can I call?” I asked. “To come sit with you as they patch you up?” I asked, sniffling hard.

“No one,” he said, shaking his head slightly. “I got no one.”

“You have me,” I insisted, feeling like he needed something positive to cling to. Even if we’d only shared a couple of sentences a month since he’d moved in. No one deserved to feel all alone when they were severely injured. “You have me, okay?” I asked, blinking a new flood of tears down my face.

“Not for long,” he said. “But thanks for trying,” he said as the cops came rushing in, gazes taking in the scene.

One of them reached for the walkie-talkie thing on his shoulder, speaking rapidly to… someone.

“See? They got here in time. You’re gonna be okay,” I said, trying to give him a smile, even if I knew it looked ridiculous with the tears running down my face.

“Paramedics are right behind us,” one of the cops said.

“See?” I said, speaking to Kylo who was looking dangerously pale. “Told you so,” I said, sniffling. “They’ll take you in, slap a Band-Aid on your baby wounds, and send you back out again,” I told him, voice quivering as the adrenaline continued to surge.

I heard the sound of the paramedics moving down the hall.

Sensing my time with him was waning, and despite my comments to the contrary, I didn’t know if he was going to make it, I leaned forward toward him, lowering my voice so only he could hear.

“Listen, you have to make it, okay? You’re, like, the only… friend I have.”

“That’s sad, darlin’,” he said, voice sounding weaker. “But same,” he added, his dark gaze looking empty.

The paramedics were shouldering me out of the way then, and a hand was reaching down to help me onto my feet, pulling me out of the way, then out of the bedroom.

“What’s your name, honey?” the older police officer asked. He had a round face and kind blue eyes.

“I, ah, Siana. Siana Young. I, um, I live across the hall,” I said. “I heard the… the shots… and I… I came to check on him. It’s really bad, isn’t it?” I asked, unable to see through the flood of tears in my eyes.

“He’s in good hands,” the officer said, not giving me any real reassurances. Even the best hands in the world wouldn’t save him if it was his time.



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