Half Buried Hopes – Jupiter Tides Read Online Anne Malcom

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Angst, Bad Boy, Contemporary Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 179
Estimated words: 170878 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 854(@200wpm)___ 684(@250wpm)___ 570(@300wpm)
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She was coping as well as a five-year-old who witnessed that could. She was Clara. Resilient. Happy. But I noticed the dull in her sparkle. The tentative way she moved around the room, the way she clung to her father and me.

I saw it all. And I knew Beau did too.

And Beau, above everything, was an excellent father. So he put Clara first. As he should have.

He brought her to the hospital every day. She colored with me. Did crafts. Snuggled and watched movies. Ate brownies from Nora’s bakery. When it was time for her to go home, Clara displayed what was the closest I’d ever seen her come to throwing a tantrum. Technically, what she did couldn’t be described as a proper tantrum. But there were tears, harsh words to Beau.

It killed me. Every time.

And I knew it hurt Beau too.

I knew Beau was struggling.

I hated that I was worried about Beau’s feelings after the way he’d hurt me. But it was impossible not to. Beau did nothing but take care of Clara and me. He didn’t ask me for a single thing. He just took care of me.

He came back alone, some nights. I knew Clara was having trouble sleeping. Every night, she asked in a small voice if she could stay with me. She promised she wouldn’t take up much room, that she’d go straight to sleep.

It had been physically painful to say no, to promise it wouldn’t be long until I was out.

I needed to get out. Even though I was getting taken care of by everyone in town. Cole flew down and stayed for days, basically holding vigil at my bedside. My brother was there—not for long because he felt uncomfortable. Because he didn’t know how to be there for me. And because he was fucking terrified of Beau.

I wasn’t pleased with Jack about his intervention, his part in my breakup with Beau. Not that I confronted him about that. It wasn’t exactly the time, nor did I have the strength. Also, it wasn’t his fault. He shouldn’t have been able to break us. Break Beau. He had breathed life into doubts and cracks that already existed.

He left, our relationship still strained, but I wasn’t going to discount it completely. Cole left soon after, with plans to come back once I was discharged from the hospital.

Which, every day for the past two weeks, I hoped would be the next day. I tried to heal my body out of sheer force of will, for Clara.

It didn’t work. Force of will clearly didn’t matter much against a gunshot wound.

But eventually, I was cleared to leave.

Beau came back on my last night in the hospital. He mostly just read as I slept.

“I’m sorry,” I whispered after I woke from a harrowing dream that wasn’t a dream at all. It was a memory.

Beau looked up from his book, instantly taking off his reading glasses. I wanted to tell him to keep them on because he looked so handsome.

But that wasn’t appropriate, given our non-romantic status.

“What in the fresh fuck could you have to apologize for?” he rumbled.

I wanted to smile. A glimpse at the grumpy Beau I’d once known, one I still loved, was comforting.

“That you’re here.” I waved my hand at the room. “That Clara is spending more time in a hospital when she shouldn’t have to see one for a long, long time.”

Beau grabbed my hand, lifting it up to his lips for a kiss.

Definitely not appropriate, given our non-romantic status. Yet I allowed it. My arm was tired. I didn’t have the energy to pull back.

“This is not your fault,” he said softly. “I will not hear another apology from your lips. I think it was you who told me women don’t apologize for the actions of men.”

I stared at him. He was tired, the circles under his eyes, the new pallor of his skin signified that. I swore he’d lost weight. But he was still Beau. Still devastatingly handsome. “You remember that?”

His gaze was unyielding. “I remember everything you’ve ever said to me, Hannah.”

My chest throbbed.

It had nothing to do with the bullet, the stitches, or the layers of ruined flesh.

I pulled my hand away.

Beau let me.

“I’m tired,” I said, voice flat.

He nodded. “Sleep, baby. I’ll be here.”

That shouldn’t have been comforting. I should’ve told him to leave. That I didn’t need him in order to sleep.

But that was a lie.

One last night. One last night in the hospital. One last night needing Beau. Then I’d be done.

It wasn’t a conversation about where I would go home to.

It was an argument.

“No way in fucking hell,” Beau barked when I’d informed him Finn was picking me up to go back to Lori’s as the nurses prepared me for discharge. I needed a lot of help still, which made it a little complicated going back to Lori who was pregnant and didn’t need to be taking care of me.


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