Doin' a Dime Vale, Lynn (best beach reads of all time txt) đ
Book online «Doin' a Dime Vale, Lynn (best beach reads of all time txt) đ». Author Vale, Lynn
Wyett frowned. âHow did you find this out?â
I rubbed my hands up the length of her arms. âYour fatherâs lawyer. He was really, really old school and didnât keep anything electronic for me to find. Until I decided to just grow a pair and talk to him in person.â
She gasped. âYouâre kidding.â
I winked at her.
It surprised the two of us because I had to agree with her silent words. âYes, I did go on my own. Thank you very much.â
She snickered and headed in the direction of the walkway, only to turn around again with the envelope and head back our way.
She tore into it and ripped the envelope in a careless disregard that wasnât like her.
The moment that the paper was revealed, she gasped.
âMy dad used to have stationary like this,â she whispered.
âItâs from your dad, baby,â I told her.
She looked at me with tears in her eyes, then shakily handed the letter to me.
Before I could pull it from her fingers, not only did I have my woman in my arms, but I also had the miles and miles of tulle swirling about my feet.
I caught her hand and led her to the chair that Iâd brought just for this occasion.
And then I pulled her into my arms and read the letter to her.
Wyett,
If youâre reading this, then it means that I have died.
I wish that it hadnât come to this, but unfortunately it has. I apologize profusely for not being there for all of your special days. Your graduation. Your wedding. The day you bring my grandchild into the world.
And though I didnât get to experience these things with you, I know that youâll do well.
And I know, without a shadow of a doubt, the man that you take as yours will treat you right. Or Iâll haunt his ass from the afterlife.â
I snorted hard at the way that her father spoke.
I would never test that.
Not ever.
The day that you were born, my entire world stopped spinning. One second it was all about your mom, and then it was all about you and your mom. The constant struggle to allow you the freedom to breathe, but protect you from the nasty things in life that I hope you never have to experience.
I love you. Your mama loves you. I canât wait to see you again.
But you live your life as long as you can, and weâll be here when youâre ready.
Love you,
Daddy
Wyett was officially bawling.
That was the photo we hung up in our bedroom. Her face buried in my neck, her arms around my shoulders. Her breasts pillowed against my chest.
âThank you so much, Hunt,â Wyett whispered. âYou have no idea how much that means to me.â
I kind of did based on how hard she was hanging onto my neck.
âLove you, Wyett,â I told her quietly. âYou mean the world to me.â
She pulled back so I could look into her watery eyes. âYou are the world to me.â
EPILOGUE II
You can either be happy, or help your child with their math homework. You canât do both.
-True facts of life
HUNT
Years later
âShit,â I grumbled as I saw the state trooper walking toward the carâs back door. âShit, motherfuckinâ shit, shit.â
I was going way too fast.
Why? Because I wasnât paying attention.
My head was thinking about something else, and everybody knew how I got when I was thinking about something else.
Needless to say, I shouldâve been focusing on my fucking speed. Not about whatever in the hell Iâd been focusing on.
Shit, shit, shit.
I rolled the windows down and placed my hands on the steering wheel, my fingers reflexively squeezing and relaxing on the cool leather beneath my hands.
Shit, shit, shit.
Iâd gotten a shit ton of tickets in my life, but this one was going to take the cake.
And letâs just say, Wyett was going to be pissed as hell, because I could see the food on the seat beside me cooling off second by second. Chick-Fil-A was only good hot.
And that meant that when I got there, she was going to lose her shit that it wasnât.
That was what happened when you had an eight-month pregnant wife at home that was on bed rest and couldnât leave the house for anything.
Luckily, Iâd only been going ten over, and that meant that I wouldnât be arrested or anything.
But heâd run my license, see the âfelonâ stamped on my sheet, and automatically start acting like a prick.
There would be no getting out of this ticket.
No way, no how.
Groaning low under my breath, I rolled the back window down also, and placed my hands back on the steering wheel, and then waited for him to walk up.
After about five minutes of him likely running my plates and seeing the three speeding tickets Iâd had in the last three yearsâsometimes I went a little fast on the bike because I damn well could. They were lucky I stopped at all since I could likely get away from them. He made his way up to my truck window.
He was at the tailgate, his eyes on mine in the side mirror, when I saw his hard eyes.
They werenât covered in glasses like the last two, showing me how hard and unyielding he was.
Yeah, I wasnât getting out of this ticket. Nope.
Just as the state trooper got close enough to the car that he could hear what was going on inside, my four-year-old, who was fucking smarter than me when it came to computers, started yelling.
âOh, God. Daddy! Itâs coming out of my ass!â he yelled. And when I say yelled, I mean screamed. âWhy did you pull over, Daddy? Itâs coming out!â
There was a moment of shocked and stunned silence as his words processed in my brain.
Then, I closed my eyes as horror
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