Michael – The Hawthornes (The Aces’ Sons #9) Read Online Nicole Jacquelyn

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC Tags Authors: Series: The Aces' Sons Series by Nicole Jacquelyn
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Total pages in book: 84
Estimated words: 82715 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 414(@200wpm)___ 331(@250wpm)___ 276(@300wpm)
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“Maybe next time,” I called back, chuckling.

“Keys?” Mick asked, holding his hand out across the hood of the car.

“I can drive.”

He just stared at me, his hand between us.

“It’s my car,” I huffed.

Mick looked down into the passenger seat, and I followed his gaze. It took me a moment to realize he wasn’t going to fit.

“I can try to push the seat back,” he muttered. “But I doubt it’ll do much good with Rhett’s car seat there.”

He was right. In order for Rhett’s car seat to fit, the passenger seat had to be pushed all the way forward. It was the entire reason he wasn’t behind the driver’s seat. I didn’t need much legroom, but I also didn’t enjoy being an inch from the steering wheel.

“Fine,” I conceded, tossing him the keys as I went back around to the passenger seat. Michael laughed at my glower as he passed me.

“Your mom’s poutin,’ Rhett,” he said as he opened the driver’s side door.

“Mama pout.”

“I am not,” I said, spinning to face Rhett as Mick closed my door. Rhett was giggling, his face pressed into his blanket.

“Mama pout,” Rhett teased, grinning at me in the little mirror.

“It’s like drivin’ a clown car,” Michael grumbled as he pushed the driver’s seat as far back as it would go. “Was it always this small?”

“That’s what she said,” I mumbled under my breath.

Michael’s surprised gaze shot to me. The joke was an old one, but I hadn’t ever said it. Back in the day, it had been his and Rumi’s favorite one-liner to make me giggle and scold them.

He cleared his throat. “I can’t believe you’re still drivin’ this thing.”

“She’s reliable.” I reached out and patted the dash. “Why would I get something new?”

“I remember when your parents bought it for you after graduation,” Mick said, backing out of the driveway. “I couldn’t tell if you were going to jump up and down with joy or cry.”

“I felt like doing both. It was ‘ah, freedom and I’m going to look like a fifty-year-old hippie librarian’ rolled into one. She’s been a good car, though, and I’ve got killer trunk space.”

“Drives nice,” he replied. “You’ve been keepin’ up on maintenance?”

“You sound like my dad,” I joked.

The words fell like an anvil between us. It was a generic teasing statement, but there was too much history there for it to be funny. I wasn’t even sure how to backtrack.

“Frances,” Rhett piped up from the back seat. “Frances!”

“Who’s Frances?” Mick asked, reaching up to adjust the mirror so he could look at Rhett.

Rhett patted the window. “Frances.”

“What is he talking about?” Mick asked me in confusion.

An embarrassed laugh made its way up my throat, and I struggled to keep it contained.

“You can do it, Frances,” I said, snorting, patting the dash. “Just a little bit further, old girl.”

“Jesus,” Mick muttered in amusement.

“Do it, Frances,” Rhett copied in the back seat, patting the door.

“I’ll put some more gas in as soon as we get to Eugene,” I continued, loving the sound of his chuckle as I rubbed along the dash. “Won’t that be nice?”

“Nice, Frances,” Rhett parroted.

“Coupla weirdos,” he said, shaking his head. “Hey, if you take it to the shop on Monday, I can have one of the boys make sure everything’s good after your road trip.”

“You don’t need to do that,” I said, relaxing back into my seat. “I had an oil change and my tires rotated before we left.”

“You need new tires,” Mick said easily. “The ones you’ve got are bald as fuck.”

“Bald fuck,” Rhett parroted.

“Michael,” I hissed.

“It just means the tires are gettin’ old,” Mick replied loudly like the volume of his words were going to make Rhett forget his fun new word. “You have to replace them when they could pop when you’re drivin’.”

“Pop. Fuck.”

“They’re not going to pop,” I sang, glaring at Mick. “They’re not that old.”

“Have you looked at ’em since you got here?”

“They’re fine.”

“Look at ’em when we get out of the car.”

“I don’t need to,” I said, rolling my eyes. “I just had them checked before we left.”

“Well, I don’t know what kind of route you took to get here, but they’re shit now.”

“Have you always been this controlling?” I asked in exasperation. “Because it’s really annoying.”

Michael looked at me. “Controllin’ would be takin’ the keys so you couldn’t drive my kid around on your bald ass unsafe tires,” he said flatly. “Not tellin’ you that they’re bald and you need to look into gettin’ new ones.”

“I think I can decide when I need new tires.”

“Fuck!” Rhett hissed in the back seat.

“Suit yourself,” Michael said with a shrug as we pulled into the familiar pancake house we’d gone to when we were kids. “Don’t call me when you’re stuck on the side of the road with a flat.”

“I won’t,” I shot back stubbornly.


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