Never Trust the Living (Battle Crows MC #7) Read Online Lani Lynn Vale

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Angst, Biker, MC, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Battle Crows MC Series by Lani Lynn Vale
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Total pages in book: 65
Estimated words: 64910 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 325(@200wpm)___ 260(@250wpm)___ 216(@300wpm)
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I looked at the girl to now see her staring at the ground as if just the sound of his voice alone sent her into a panic attack.

“Amon,” she muttered, not looking up. “What are you doing here? I thought you were working?”

“Good thing that I decided to set up a security system to keep my investments where they belong. It alerted me the moment you came down into the tornado shelter,” he mused.

Tornado shelter.

That made sense.

“He needs medical attention,” she tried.

Amon snorted. “I’m aware.”

I was aware, too.

You didn’t have to look further than my face to know that I needed medical attention.

“Let him go,” she gritted, still not forceful enough to make him do anything more than smile.

“I can’t do that,” he disagreed immediately. “Sadly, I’m not quite finished yet. I’ll be finished this evening, though. Then you can take him.”

I tried to move, but the agony in my entire left side was just too much.

If I moved around too much, I would pass out like I’d done last time.

“You can’t do this, Amon!” the girl whispered, sounding scared out of her mind. “This is going to be very, very bad for you.”

Amon, the goddamn freak of nature, looked at his sister a little too close for my comfort.

Like he knew that if he stared at her long enough, she’d back down.

God, I fuckin’ hoped that she didn’t back down.

Though it was apparent that Amon clearly thought she would. As in, she’d done it a hundred times before to get him to stop.

“I called the police,” she whispered fiercely. “Said I knew where the missing man was.”

Amon’s back straightened. “You what?”

“I called them,” she whispered. “They’re going to be here any second.”

God, I hoped that she was telling the truth.

“You called them to our house?” Amon asked curiously. “Why would you do that? You know that this is going to mean you’re homeless.”

“I haven’t lived here since I was eighteen,” she said quietly. “I don’t care if the damn thing burns to the ground.”

Amon smiled.

It was the weirdest smile I’d ever seen.

I’d never seen a smile look so good, and so bad at the same time.

It was as if he was happy on the outside, but inside, through his eyes, I could tell that he felt literally nothing.

“Let’s see.” He flicked his fingers, and I heard a lighter’s snick as the cap popped up.

Then I heard the telltale slide of the wheel against flint, and then there was a flame lighting up the room even more.

“Just kidding.” He laughed as he closed the cap. “I think that I’ll allow them to take me in this time. I’m curious if they can ‘fix me.’”

He put air quotes around ‘fix me’ and I wondered if he realized how creepy it made him sound.

Likely he did.

“Amon,” she said. “You…”

Just then we heard the sirens as they raced up to the house. Closer and closer they got until they were all right on top of us.

Why did I think it would’ve been better for them to come silently? Surprise the psycho with their presence?

“Just know this.” Amon looked over his shoulder as he climbed the stairs. “You’ll pay for going against family.”

I didn’t like the sound of that.

But I also didn’t much care at that moment in time.

Maybe I should have.

But I passed out the moment he disappeared into the sunlight.

• • •

The next time I woke, I was in a hospital bed, and there was a doctor at my bedside going over a list of what I assumed were my injuries.

“…Concussion, quite severe. We’ll have to watch him overnight for a few days just because of that,” the doctor was saying. “He has a broken left ulna, a broken nose, ten broken ribs. He has a mass of cuts and scrapes from what we assume was his tumble into the shelter.”

The list went on, but all in all, I’d gotten lucky with what was likely ‘easy’ things to fix.

Other than the possible aneurysm I could have if my concussion worsened.

The next time I woke, it was with my family whispering.

I also heard Mimi, my girlfriend, crying.

“Should have shot him in the face and killed him,” I heard my older brother say.

“That girl has tried to get in here three times to see him,” Mimi said. “Don’t you think that’s weird? Don’t you think it’s crazy for her to even consider coming in here? I mean, her brother tried to kill him.”

“Weren’t you friends with that girl?”

Jeremiah.

“Not really.” She hesitated. “We went out for drinks. She wasn’t even allowed to drink. But I think Lulu, our friend, felt terrible about it.”

“Lulu, the dead chick by the log truck?” Shine.

“Yeah, her.” She hesitated. “That girl came to me and told me that she thought her brother was responsible for Lulu and Della’s deaths. That she thought he might try to come after Bird next. She’d tried to go to the police, but they didn’t believe her.”



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