When She’s Merry Read Online Ruby Dixon

Categories Genre: Alien, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Paranormal, Romance, Virgin Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 37
Estimated words: 34527 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 173(@200wpm)___ 138(@250wpm)___ 115(@300wpm)
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She’s the most incredible female I’ve ever met and I’m absolutely besotted with her. I just don’t know how to see if she’s interested in me back.

“Have you tried going to her place and talking to her?” Liesje asks, packing containers of noodles into her pantry. “That seems to me the easiest solution.”

It does sound easy. Too easy. What if Devin didn’t enjoy what we did? What if she has regrets and doesn’t want to see me again? Me showing up at her home might make her feel unsafe. It might trigger bad memories or feelings for her, and the last thing I want to do is bother her if she doesn’t want me around.

I just…thought there was something there between us.

Well, I know what it is on my side. That possessive mesakkah part of me is screaming that she’s my mate. That I’ll never want another now that I’ve had her hands on me, and that I should pick out curtains for the home we’ll be sharing together and raising children in. That part of me has already figured out which side of the bed I’ll be sleeping on (whatever side she wants me on) and how I’m going to work having a mate and eventually a family into my job (I need to ask for a raise).

But if Devin doesn’t want me…

The thought is crushing. My tail flicks agitatedly, knocking against another box. There’s not many left in this room, which makes me happy. I’m certain Liesje isn’t cured of her depression—it doesn’t work that way—but she’s starting to see this place as her home now. She’s letting me help her unpack, and she’s talked about what kinds of crops she wants to grow in the spring. I’ve dropped some subtle hints about some of the other workers in Port that don’t have anyone to look after them. I know a few of the dock employees are in the same situation as the rest of us—no family back home, which is why this remote outpost works so well for them. They’d love someone like Liesje to check in on them. Devin’s interfering has made me realize that depression isn’t something that the humans here have a monopoly on, and the humans have Bee to check in on them. I need to talk to Rektar about someone checking in on the other mesakkah stationed here.

I need to ask Rektar if Devin has come in while I’ve been out.

Or if she’s okay.

Or if she’s injured. I could check with the clinic and see. The thought’s a terrifying one, though. I rub the last of the fading bite marks on my neck, thinking about her. What if…Devin isn’t interested in more?

What if I’m not a good kisser? What if I’m not a good anything in bed and she wants nothing to do with me?

“Keffffffff,” I groan, flinging myself dramatically down on Liesje’s (now cleared) sofa. “What if she hates me, Liesje?”

“She didn’t hate you when she was leaving those marks all over your neck. I don’t see what would have changed now.” Her answer is practical, motherly. Amused at my agony. “I bet you can go visit her and ask her what she thinks.”

I stare up at the ceiling. I should. I really should. I just don’t want to push myself on her. Not if she’s feeling vulnerable or unhappy or regrets what we did together. At times like this, I wish I was more like Khex, comfortable with the females. He’s never anxious over a female, not like I am over this one.

I need a plan.

Glancing over at Liesje, I notice her positioning her tree in front of her window, touching the vibrant leaves with tender care. She waters it, smiling as she does, and I think about the holiday again, wishing there was something Devin liked as much as Christmas. I don’t want to wait until next year for the holiday to come around again. I eye the bunch of herbs tied to the ceiling that never got a kiss under them. I forget what Devin called them, but she said it didn’t matter. That they weren’t quite the same but it was the intention.

That makes me sit upright.

Maybe I do have a plan after all.

Chapter

Fifteen

DEVIN

One week post-Christmas

Sometimes my ideas are stupid ideas.

Not all of them, of course. I’m still rather proud of the whole Christmas thing I pulled together for Liesje. I’ve checked in on her throughout the week, and her mood seems improved. She even smiled at me the other day. I’m hoping that whatever funk she was in, she’s crawling her way back out.

But the idea I had to have Sinath come to me if he wanted a relationship? Perhaps not the best idea. I figured that after that snowy night at Liesje’s, if he truly wanted to pursue something, he’d seek me out. That he wouldn’t be able to stand it if I disappeared. And if it was just fooling around, neither one of us would have to have an embarrassing conversation. It seemed like a good idea at the time.


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