Look at Her and Die (Content Advisory #2) Read Online Lani Lynn Vale

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, Contemporary, MC, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Content Advisory Series by Lani Lynn Vale
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Total pages in book: 70
Estimated words: 69534 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 348(@200wpm)___ 278(@250wpm)___ 232(@300wpm)
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Then, when I’d gotten home, I’d gone to the fridge to make the kids lunch for school tomorrow—they got free lunch at the school, but tomorrow was fish stick day and they hated the fish sticks—and found that not only did we not have anything to make them lunch with, we didn’t have anything but expired condiments and a few stray baby carrots.

With my coupon binder in hand, I’d made my way to Walmart, which was where I was now, comparing two sizes of laundry detergent, and wondering how in the hell they thought that they could just add six less ounces into the Tide tubs and we wouldn’t notice.

After making sure to grab the oldest carton on the shelf that had the old amount of ounces in it, I was just contemplating getting a pack of dryer sheets when a cart ran into mine.

I blinked and looked up, surprised to see a very dirty-looking Posy staring at my cart that’d just ran into his.

“You know,” I drawled. “You can totally fit two carts down an aisle. You don’t have to run into the one that’s already here.”

“Sorry,” he muttered, sounding off. “Wasn’t paying attention.”

“I can see that,” I observed as I studied his face. He had dirt right underneath his left eye. And what looked like blood on the collar of his shirt. “You have blood on your t-shirt collar.”

He wrinkled his nose, which was surprisingly cute. “Got headbutted in the face by a calf.”

“You’re lucky it was a calf and not a grown cow at least,” I pointed out as my eyes trailed down the rest of him. He was wearing the same thing that he was wearing this morning, only a whole lot dirtier. And he had a piece of straw in his hair. “You have straw in your hair.”

He didn’t bother to reach to get it free.

“I’m sure I have straw in other places, too.” He looked down the aisle I was on. “Do you like that brand?”

He pointed at the Tide in my cart.

“I usually don’t get it, but it’s on sale this week, and I have a really good coupon for it,” I replied. “I generally go for making my own, but I’m only paying six bucks for this one.”

“I’d ask you how you made your own, but that sounds like torture to me when I already have barely any time to do stuff,” he muttered as he reached for one of the newer bottles of Tide.

“Not that one,” I pointed out as I pushed it back onto the shelf before he could get it free. “This one.”

I gave him the bigger ounced one.

“What’s the difference?” he asked.

“The difference,”—I pointed at the ounces—“is that they kept the size of the bottles the same, but gave you less product. This one has more.”

He grunted and put it into his cart.

I reached for a coupon out of my book and handed it to him. “It’s one per customer. This one will give you the same deal I’m getting.”

He eyed it. “Just do two transactions. Then you can get more.”

I didn’t tell him that I couldn’t afford more. If I got more Tide, then I couldn’t get the lunch meat that the kids would need to feed themselves the next week.

Instead, I shook the coupon at him more insistently.

He took it, then grabbed another bottle of Tide.

He shoved the coupon into his pocket, then fell into step beside me as I moved to the next aisle.

“Why are you here so late?” I asked him.

“Long ass day,” he said. “Got done, went inside to grab something, and saw that my fridge was empty.”

“Same,” I admitted. “The kids didn’t tell me that they’ve eaten literally everything. And since they don’t like the school’s lunch tomorrow, I had to come buy some food.”

With the generous tip you gave me!

Speaking of earlier, after Mr. Grumpy Pants had left, I’d learned that the girl on the back of Posy’s bike this morning was nothing to Posy. She was just a woman that ran into car trouble and asked Posy to pick her up.

It’d all been innocent, and I might’ve overreacted today.

Which was kind of eye opening seeing as I wasn’t completely sure how it’d happened, but I had a big, fat crush on the man.

There was something definitely wrong with me.

Posy had given me zero indication that he even liked me, let alone felt about me in a way that I did about him.

I should definitely get control of myself.

A man like Posy would never want anything to do with a woman like me.

Not to mention, I came with a lot of baggage.

Speaking of baggage, I came to a stuttering halt in the middle of an aisle when a familiar face popped up at the end of the aisle.

My mother.

“Mom!” I barked.

She whipped her head around, and her eyes widened.



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