King's Treasure (Oil Kings Book 3) Marie Johnston (books to read to get smarter .txt) š
- Author: Marie Johnston
Book online Ā«King's Treasure (Oil Kings Book 3) Marie Johnston (books to read to get smarter .txt) šĀ». Author Marie Johnston
She lifted her pointed chin. āYou didnāt respect Pop and you donāt respect me. So you can go.ā
She shifted, and her cowboy boots, the same ones I was sure sheād worn this morning for chores, scraped against the wood floor of the funeral home. Her gaze darted around the empty space. I doubted anyone else was going to arrive. No one had liked Danny. The only person whoād given him their unfailing loyaltyāor loyalty of any kindāwas his daughter and I couldnāt figure out why. Blood ties? Pride? Or was she just like him? She could be mean as hell.
āPeople pay respects, Bristol Jane, even if they didnāt get along.ā
She tilted her head, her orange hair swaying. āIs that what you call our family feud? Your grandparents stole our mineral rights because they ādidnāt get alongā? Your family calls the police on mine because we ādidnāt get alongā? You come to a funeral home like itās a petting zoo because we ādidnāt get alongā?ā
āI donāt know. Is that why you didnāt come to my momās funeral?ā
She reared her head back like Iād slapped her and Iād never raised a hand to a woman in my life. Even my heifers got spoiled. āI was eight, asshole.ā
āSwearing in church is never recommended.ā
She looked at me like I couldnāt figure out how to chew bubble gum and walk at the same time. āItās a funeral home.ā
So it was. āWhenās the funeral?ā Fighting with Bristol used to be something I looked forward to, like a hobby I rarely got to engage in, but lately it was tiring. I only had a couple of months before I had to secure the trust so she didnāt get it and then I could forget sheād ever existed.
I could forget that we used to meet where her land bumped up against mine and crawl through the hills like explorers in new territory. I could forget that Iād helped her name their new dog and Iād held her hand when sheād cried after her dad had run that dog over on one of his many drunken trips home from the bar. I could forget how long Iād looked for her at Momās funeral and how sheād never shown.
āThere isnāt a funeral.ā Bitterness laced her voice and she clenched her jaw. āI didnāt even want thisāPop. He didnāt want this.ā
That surprised me. Iād ask more, but she wouldnāt tell me anyway.
I glanced around. The coffin lid was closed and I wasnāt surprised, and yet I was. Danny had looked more and more haggard every time Iād seen him. Yellowish skin without an ounce of fat, bags under his eyes, more missing teeth each time, breath reeking of stale booze, and a body long overdue for a meeting with a bar of soap. His clothes hadnāt been in much better shape.
Bristol was right and Iād never tell her. Iād come partly to make sure the boogeyman was dead. I could blame curiosity too. I had wondered how Bristol was taking her dadās death. The obituary hadnāt said how heād died, but we all knew. A liver could only take so much. Any living thing around Danny Cartwright could only take so much.
Bristol glared at me, her arms not quite crossed, but more hugging herself.
A tendril of concern snaked through my gut. Was she doing okay?
I shook my head and she narrowed her eyes, her lips lifting in a half sneer. Mean as always. What the fuck was I still doing here?
āIāll see you around then.ā I tipped my head, stuffed my cowboy hat on my head, and walked outside without looking back. I didnāt have to in order to feel the lick of her hot gaze between my shoulder blades, likely wishing she had her rifle sighted on that spot instead.
The bitter wind kicked around my body, picking up loose snow. Each footstep sent up a flurry. This winter had been a hard one and it didnāt look like it was stopping anytime soon.
I shivered and tucked my face into my Carhartt coat. Mama had always joked that she hoped the snow was melted by my birthday.
My summer birthday. My twenty-ninth birthday.
I didnāt have much time. Bristol would get every cent of my trust if I didnāt marry by then. Mama had told me that Bristol was like a daughter to her and if she could ever find a way to raise her instead of Danny, she would. But after sheād died, after the way Bristol had acted, like my mother had never existed?
I wouldnāt let her get a damn cent.
________
Will Dawson be more determined to keep the money or win Bristol? Find out in Kingās Country.
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About the Author
Marie Johnston writes paranormal and contemporary romance and has collected several awards in both genres. Before she was a writer, she was a microbiologist. Depending on the situation, she can be oddly unconcerned about germs or weirdly phobic. Sheās also a licensed medical technician and has worked as a public health microbiologist and as a lab tech in hospital and clinic labs. Marieās been a volunteer EMT, a college instructor, a security guard, a phlebotomist, a hotel clerk, and a coffee pourer in a bingo hall. All fodder for a writer!! She has four kids, an old cat, and a puppy thatās bigger than half her kids.
mariejohnstonwriter.com
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Also by Marie Johnston
Oil Kings
Kingās Crown
Kingās Ransom
Kingās Treasure
Kingās Country
Kingās Queen
Like hard-working men who are
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