Shameless (White Lies Duet #2) Read Online Lisa Renee Jones

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Erotic, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: White Lies Duet Series by Lisa Renee Jones
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Total pages in book: 111
Estimated words: 105708 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 529(@200wpm)___ 423(@250wpm)___ 352(@300wpm)
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“So she’s vanilla and you’re chocolate, and that shit will get old.”

“Faith is not fucking vanilla,” I snap.

He arches a brow. “Got it. Not vanilla. Not going to play with you at the club. Does she at least know it exists and that you own it?”

“No,” I say. “Now focus.” I slide the notepad I’ve been writing on in front of him.

He scans it, and his gaze rockets to me. “Faith is dangerous? When did your father say that Faith was dangerous?”

I open my briefcase and set the note in front of him. He studies it for several long beats before he glances at me. “You’re sure Faith—”

“Faith is not a killer,” I say tightly. “Assume I’m right on this because I am. Now. Where does that note lead you?”

“That your father wanted the winery, or something else, and she was in the way of him getting it.”

“Exactly my thoughts,” I concur. “But Meredith Winter. He was paying her. I can’t make sense of that in my head.”

“He clearly implies that Meredith was dangerous, as Faith was more dangerous, but the tone also implies that he had Meredith under control.”

“It’s almost impossible for me to conceive of my father paying someone off. But the evidence supports just that.”

He refills his glass. “What if he was getting something in exchange?”

“But what?”

“Ownership of the winery?”

“Faith would have had to sign off on that,” I remind him.

“Thus, she was a problem,” he says. “Or more dangerous to his plan than her mother. He had Meredith pinned down but not Faith.”

“But the bills were not being paid,” I argue. “Meredith received a million dollars from my father and allowed a section of the vines to go untreated and therefore become damaged.”

He thrums his fingers on the counter. “Could she have been trying to get Faith to sell? You know, making it seem that the winery wasn’t worth owning?”

“Faith was working at the winery. She knew how well it was doing.”

“And yet the bills weren’t being paid?” he confirms.

“Correct,” I say, “and finally, after trying to get her mother to come clean with her about what was happening, and failing, Faith took action. She hired an attorney and tried to take the winery from her mother.”

“I can’t say that I blame her. What was her mother’s response?”

“She hired my father, who nickel-and-dimed Faith into giving up.”

“I’m not sure that disproves my theory about Meredith wanting her to sell. Did she ever directly ask Faith to sell?”

“My understanding,” I say, “is yes. But all of this gets more interesting. I paid the bank off. You know that. And they still plan to hold up the execution of Meredith’s will while they get the property appraised.”

“Ouch. That’s not good. They have to have a document that says if it’s under the value of the note, they can take it,” he agrees. “Which would make anyone who signed that agreement royally stupid, but it happens.”

“Obviously I get my own appraisal, but why would the bank want a property that is under the value of the note anyway?”

“And why would your father want it?” He doesn’t wait for a reply. “There’s something about that property. Something that got your father and her mother killed.”

“I agree wholeheartedly,” I say, sticking the note back in my briefcase. “And I’d get my bank to buy out her note, but obviously, the bank isn’t going to let that happen if they feel they may own it outright, and with some back-end benefit we don’t know about.”

“You can try,” he says. “But you’ll have to disclose the bank’s intent to have the property assessed.”

“Agreed,” I say, aware of the liability doing otherwise could incur.

“What does Faith think about all of this?”

“She doesn’t have the luxury of knowing that my father and her mother are linked to truly evaluate the situation as we do.”

“Tell her.”

“If I tell her, she kicks me to the curb and I can’t protect her.”

“What does she know at this point?”

“She knows that my father represented her mother and that her mother was involved with him.”

“Well then. Both of them are dead and connected. Use that to convince her to exhume her mother’s body.”

“I’m not lying to her any more than I have to. And that plan would lead me to more lies.”

“Then just talk about her mother. Someone wants the winery. Her mother is dead. Have her do an autopsy.”

I shake my head and refill my coffee cup. “Negative again. I’m not putting her through that hell unless my father’s autopsy is suspicious. If there’s nothing to find in his reports, we won’t find anything in her mother’s.”

“While I agree,” he says, “time is critical when a killer is on the loose, and when does that killer turn to Faith or even you?”

“That PI I hired has someone watching Faith.”

“Does she know he’s watching her?”


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