Better as It (Hellions Ride Out #10) Read Online Chelsea Camaron

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, Dragons, Insta-Love, Magic, MC Tags Authors: Series: Hellions Ride Out Series by Chelsea Camaron
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Total pages in book: 53
Estimated words: 52357 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 262(@200wpm)___ 209(@250wpm)___ 175(@300wpm)
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I don’t wait. I can’t. I don’t care if it pisses off Tripp. I can’t be this close to her and not end them all until she’s in my arms again. The first one never hears the bullet.

We move in fast. Clean. Hard.

While we are here, Swift, Jasper, a few other Hellions are with the Ravage MC and Sinsiter Sons MC who came up from Florida. By the end of this, there will not be a single man wearing Vulcan’s colors alive.

Gunfire cracks through the woods like thunder.

I take down the second with a shot to the leg before Tank finishes him off.

Tripp kicks in the door.

The third bastard grabs for a rifle—but I’m already moving.

Bang.

He drops.

I don’t think. I don’t breathe.

I just run.

Down a hallway. Through a metal door.

And there she is.

Dia, pale and shaking, crouched behind the cot. Her arms protectively wrapped around her belly, her eyes wild and locked on mine the second she sees me.

“Justin!”

I drop to my knees in front of her, hands flying to her arms, her face, her stomach.

“Are you okay? Did they hurt you?”

“I’m okay—God, I’m okay,” she chokes out, tears spilling over her cheeks. “They were going to take the baby. Justin, they were going to take him from me. She was going to take him.”

“Who baby? This was about the club.”

She shakes her head. “No, it was Benji’s mom. She wants my baby. She has to be stopped.”

“I know,” I whisper, pulling her to me. “I know. I’ll get it sorted, darlin’. Just breathe, please. I’m here. You’re safe now.”

She grips my jacket so tight it cuts into my skin. Her body trembles against mine.

Then she pulls back.

Her eyes search mine and go wide.

“Justin,” she whispers, voice suddenly sharp. “You’re, oh my God, you’re burning up.”

I sway.

Just a little.

My legs don’t hold like they should.

She catches me before I collapse completely.

“Justin?” she cries. “Hey. HEY!”

I manage a weak smile. “Guess adrenaline only goes so far.” Then it all goes black.

I wake up to the sterile white of a hospital room and the beeping of machines I hoped I’d never hear again.

Dia’s standing at the foot of the bed, arguing with a nurse.

“I’m not getting checked until you check him. I’m fine. The baby’s fine. You check him.”

I let out a hoarse laugh. Her head snaps toward me. Relief floods her face, then frustration right behind it.

“You scared the shit out of me,” she snaps, walking over.

“I told you not to worry.”

“You’re pale as a damn ghost. You could barely stand. You haven’t eaten in days.”

“They’ll give me Jell-O here I’m sure,” I joke weakly.

She glares. “Not funny.”

Then her expression softens. She climbs onto the hospital bed, big belly and all, and curls beside me like it’s the most natural thing in the world.

“Your cell counts are dangerously low,” she murmurs, pressing her forehead to mine. “Your immune system’s tanked. You can’t keep skipping treatment and not hydrating.”

“I didn’t mean to.” I give her a look. “Kind of had my mind on other things. Everything just moved fast.”

“I need you to fight,” she says, voice cracking. “Not just show up. You can’t save me if you don’t kick cancer’s ass. I need you. Stay. I need you to stay.”

Her words take me back to one of the early nights, me picking her up.

We’re on her porch. The silence between us is thick. I take one step backward. Inside I’m challenging her to invite me in, outside I’m trying to find the strength to walk away.

Dia stands there in front of me, leaning against her doorframe. Her expression is soft but not unreadable.

“You always this quiet?” She asks with curiosity dancing in her eyes.

I shrug, “not always. Just, when I’m thinking too much.”

“Whatcha thinkin’ about?”

I look down, then back to her. “You,” I tell her the truth.

Her breath catches. I hear it, sharp and light. Then she lets out a nervous laugh, “that’s dangerous, Hellion.”

“You don’t know the half of it,” I retort.

She leans her shoulder into the frame a little more, shifting and settling in for something, “try me.”

“You really want the truth?”

“Wouldn’t ask if I didn’t want to know.” She has fire in her. A quiet, burning confidence. Not a fake bravado, but a real soul deep acceptance of who she is. It’s sexy as hell.

I run a hand through my hair, debating what is too much to share with her. “I think about how easy it would be to mess this up. To say the wrong thing, make the wrong move. Cross the line.”

“What line?” she whispers.

I step up closer. We’re inches apart. I’m not touching her. God, I want to, but I don’t. “The line that keeps you safe from me.”

There is a pause. Her mouth parts, then closes without her speaking. She studies me like I’m a puzzle she’s trying to sort the pieces of. “Do I look scared of you?”



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