A Dirty Business (Kings of New York #1) Read Online Tijan

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Forbidden, Mafia, New Adult, Romance, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Kings of New York Series by Tijan
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Total pages in book: 129
Estimated words: 126580 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 633(@200wpm)___ 506(@250wpm)___ 422(@300wpm)
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He flashed me a smile, taking his seat and pushing the intercom button. “Hey! You look good. I see you got your VO.”

Visiting order.

I nodded, at the same time absorbing all of it because these days, I needed any moment of happiness I got. “Hey yourself. You’re looking good.”

He laughed, and his smile got wider. “You must’ve got the day off? Leo give you some ribbing?”

I only smiled, deciding not to tell him how Leo was almost a permanent fixture at our house because our mother was drinking every day, or how she never asked about our aunt, even though Leo told her one of the times she was sober that I’d gone to help out. Leo called the next day, asked how it went. I told him as much of the truth as I could, that she got on a bus and didn’t tell me where she was going to end up.

He got it. He never asked again, and it was another thing Trace was correct about: how little they would look for my aunt.

God. Trace. It’d been a month since I’d seen him.

I ignored the emotion filling me at just remembering him. I didn’t want to name that emotion.

“Tell me. What’s new with you? Still working? Still working at that club? Kelly still single and hot as fuck?”

I informed him about Kelly. She was a lighter conversation to have.

“Still working. Still at the club.”

He made a face. “I know someone in here who knows Anthony. He says that the owner has ties to—”

“I know.”

He frowned, his eyebrows dipping down. “You know?”

I nodded, but slowly because this was opening Pandora’s box. “I know.”

“Why are you still working there?”

“Because.” Because I liked Anthony. Because I’d worked there so long. Because . . . because if I left, then I’d have no contact with Trace, even though he’d followed my warning. I never saw him, but I swear, I swear that he was there and that he was watching me. I just never asked, and I never looked. It was a sick obsession at this point. “You know how it is. Work somewhere so long it becomes too familiar to leave. I know the workers. I like my supervisor, for the most part.”

Isaac grunted. “That guy I was telling you about? The one who knows Anthony, he says he knows dirt on your supervisor. He’s not the good guy you think he is.”

I gave him a look. “Anthony? A good guy?” I raised an eyebrow.

He laughed, sitting back. His shoulders lowered, and he rolled forward again, his head bobbing up and down. “Yeah. Yeah. I know. You know him. I didn’t tell that guy about you, though. Don’t want it getting around—”

I hit the intercom. “Hey.”

He stopped, looking up.

“I know.” Everyone had relatives, but sometimes a guy just needed to look for something to target another guy, and finding out his sister worked on the other team could make him an easy target. “It’s okay.”

He went back to bobbing up and down again, a steady nodding movement, before he propped an elbow on the table and raked his hand over his head. “There’s stuff coming down the pipeline in here, and it’s got to do with, you know, your other boss’s family. Anthony’s boss. They put out an order of protection on me.”

“They did what?”

He stopped, his eyes widening at my tone. “I thought you knew. It came out the day after I found out who your real bosses at the club were. I thought . . . Was I wrong?”

My stomach was twisted up in a knot again, one big motherfucker. The truth was that I had no idea.

Liar, liar. Pants on fire.

I cursed at my own inner voice calling me out.

You do too know. He said he’d help your aunt. He’s helping your brother too.

“You okay, Jess?”

I realized I’d been sitting here, quiet, glaring at my brother while I was having an argument in my own head, against myself. “Yeah. Sorry. I’m fine. I don’t know why they did that.”

He looked over his shoulder, checking the inmates and their visitors next to us. No one was paying attention, and he leaned closer to the plexiglass. “You think it’s about Dad? Because he was involved with them?”

My stomach rolled over, not wanting to hear about those days. I shook my head. “No. That was too long ago.”

“But—”

“If that was the case, you would’ve been protected since your first day here. You haven’t been, right?”

He shook his head. “No, just that one guard who looks out for me because of you.”

I clipped my head in another fast nod, because that didn’t need to be spoken out loud either. It was a corrections officer—or CO, as we referred to them. I knew him from taking the same parole officer training. He hadn’t passed, and I had. We got close anyway because we were from the same neighborhood. I gave him a call when my brother ended up in this prison, and he’d asked if I could keep an eye out for his family. It was an easy “I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine” sort of situation. His wife was a sweetheart, and the only time I had to look out for them was when their little boy got into trouble at school. I gave him a sort of “scared straight” scenario, one that didn’t break any rules. He met some parolees who never violated and remained on good terms with us, but their little boy hadn’t known that fact when he met them.


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