Kevlar To My Vest Read Online Lani Lynn Vale (Heroes of Dixie Wardens MC #3)

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC, Romance, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: The Heroes of The Dixie Wardens MC Series by Lani Lynn Vale
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Total pages in book: 69
Estimated words: 82282 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 411(@200wpm)___ 329(@250wpm)___ 274(@300wpm)
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“Oh, baby.” I said running one finger down his jaw.

He winced at the light touch.

“I’m sorry.” He rasped.

“For what?” I asked in concern.

“Tillie. I was asleep.” He groaned.

I smiled at him. “It’s okay, honey. I know how she is. Adeline told me all about her.”

He let out a relived breath, and then passed back out into his drug-induced haze.

“What happened?” I asked in concern.

“Doc said he has a concussion. Should be fine in a couple of days, but I poured a ground up pain pill in his shot of whiskey earlier. He passed out shortly after.” Foster said from the arm of the couch where he was sitting.

“What reason did they have to attack him?” I asked worriedly.

Grim faces followed that statement, and I got a very, very bad feeling I wasn’t going to like what they had to say.

Chapter 11

Sisters are like fat thighs…they stick together.

-Viddy to Adeline

Viddy

Phone ringing, I walked out of Trance’s room, and into the hallway so I wouldn’t disturb his sleep.

The poor man had been hit on the head while going back to get dressed at my apartment.

Apparently, Trance had parked near a panel van belonging to a cable TV provider. He’d seen the man bent into the back of the van sorting through tools, and hadn’t been paying attention to the other car he’d parked next to.

He heard the car door opening, but he was already stepping onto the curb to head into my apartment when he was hit from behind with a piece of firewood.

The man working out of the van heard the commotion, but only found Trance on the ground with the piece of wood on the concrete next to him.

He’d then called 911 and Sebastian had been the one to pick him up.

While in the ambulance, Trance had come to and refused transport to the hospital, so they’d taken him to the clubhouse instead.

Somehow, during the commotion, the person who’d been in the car had slipped away. Which was later found out to be stolen.

“Hello?” I answered quietly.

“Viddy?” Adeline sobbed. “I need you.”

I didn’t question her, instead I went back into the bedroom and slipped into my tennis shoes with no socks, walking back out into the living room to stand next to Foster’s chair before I answered.

“I’ll be there in a few. Same room?” I confirmed.

“Yes,” she said desperately. “Please hurry.”

When I hung up, I looked at Foster who was staring back at me with a raised brow. “I need a ride.”

***

“What’s the outlook here?” I asked the pediatrician who was standing at the foot of Adeline’s bed.

Adeline was holding the baby to her chest with tears leaking down her cheeks in torrents.

“Well, I’ve set up an appointment with a specialist for Friday. However, until she’s seen at that appointment, there’s not much more I can tell you. Overall, she’s a perfectly healthy little girl. She just didn’t respond well to the hearing test.” The doctor explained.

Kettle was sitting on the chair beside the bed with his hands buried in what little hair he had at the top of his head. Adeline’s face was closed off, as if she didn’t know what to think, and Dixie was sitting in the corner of the room, having arrived just after me.

Dixie was one of my favorite people in the world. One of the oldest members of The Dixie Wardens, he was one of the co-founders. Hence the name.

When I first met him, he’d introduced himself as Dixie Normus, grabbing my hand and shaking it rapidly. My sister had explained to me that Dixie nearly resembled Santa Claus, only in black leather. And he sure as hell did now that I could see him with my own eyes.

“Thank you, Doctor.” I said quietly and held the door open for him.

I walked to my sister’s bed and pulled her head into my chest. “It’s all right, honey. You don’t have a definitive diagnosis yet, so you haven’t a clue where this is going to lead.”

Dixie, who’d followed me over, sat on the edge of the bed. “Let me hold that girl.”

Adeline gave Saylor over reluctantly, but then giggled. “So has she been naughty or nice?”

Kettle snorted and finally looked up. His eyes were grave and hard and etched with worry.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about. This baby is perfect, and that’s all that matters.” Dixie said softly, running a pudgy finger down Saylor’s cheek.

Something in Kettle’s eyes seemed to change when he heard Dixie’s declaration, and when next he blinked, all of his doubt was gone. In its place was resolve and love.

I nodded at him and he gave a small smile back at me before standing and moving to the edge of Adeline’s bed, curling her into his side.

I moved my gaze from them, feeling like I was intruding on their moment, and instead settled my eyes on Dixie.

“You’re good with her.” I observed.

He smiled. “I have four kids, ten grandkids, and one great grandkid. I know my way around these babies.”

I looked at him closer, and noticed he still wore a wedding ring, even though I’d seen him with women that were most definitely not his wife, seeing as they were a third of his age.

He saw where my gaze was locked and chuckled. “I lost my old lady five years ago to stomach cancer. She’ll always stay with me, though. Right here.” He said touching a fist to his heart.

I wanted that. I wanted it so badly.

I cared deeply for Trance, and I knew I loved him, but there was no telling if the feelings were reciprocated or not.

“You’re a complex man, Dixie.” I said standing.

Turning to my sister, I watched as she gazed into Kettle’s eyes whispering softly to him for a few moments before interrupting.

“Okay, you sickos. I’ve got to get out of here. Let me know if you need me again, sissy.” I said hugging her to my boobs and shaking them in her face.

She cackled and pushed me away.

“My turn,” Kettle teased.

I rolled my eyes, walked over to my bag, and removed the lunchbox I’d brought from Trance’s house. “Here. I brought you a present.”


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