Aequitas by Hope Anika (best ebook pdf reader android txt) đ
- Author: Hope Anika
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He couldnât seem to tell the difference, which only enraged her more.
So many casualties. She hadnât expected it to find her again. More fool her.
âWhat will we do?â Alexander demanded tightly. âRun forever?â
A valid question.
Luciaâs gaze flickered to Benjamin, who slept fitfully in his brotherâs arms, his ruddy cheeks flushed. She wanted so many things for them both, so many wonderful thingsâŠthings she would never be able to give them. These children, who had come so unexpectedly into her life, whom she hadnât expected to change her. To love. And Alexander was right: they deserved more than the nomadic existence she was damning them to, more than a life driven by uncertainty and a constant fear of discovery. A life spent running instead of living.
Because the one who would come for themâfor herâwould not stop. Not until she was dead. But the alternative was worse, and one she could not allow. No matter the price.
Destiny is not for the weak.
âHeâs going to find us,â Alexander said coldly, his belief absolute. âAnd then heâs going to kill you.â
Luciaâs hands tightened on the steering wheel until her knuckles ached. âHe is going to have to.â
For a sneak peek at Hope Anikaâs novel, The Bequest, keep readingâŠ
Cheyenne Elias has inherited a child. A boy she doesnât know and doesnât particularly want; a boy whose mother was once Cheyenneâs most hated person in the world. There are a million reasons to walk away: her anger, her past, her certainty that there is nothing benevolent in this act by a woman who almost killed her. But abandoning the boy to a system she barely survived is not an optionâŠ
Will Blackheart has lost everything. His SEAL team, his country, andâupon occasionâhis mind. Worse, heâs lost something that has the capacity to kill thousands. Left for dead in the Afghan desert, Will has risen solely for the purpose of regaining that which was taken...and to punish those who dared take it.
His only lead is the son of a dead woman. Her only goal is to save a child. As they come together in a clash of anger, mistrust and potent, unwanted desire, Will and Cheyenne must put aside their differences and navigate the endgame of a woman for whom nothing was tabooâŠ
âDead?â
âDead.â
âAs in...kicked the bucket? Bought the farm? Sleeping with the fishies?â
âErâŠyes.â
âHuh,â Cheyenne Elias said. âWell. Better late than never.â
The punctuated silence on the other end of her cell phone spoke for itselfâsilencing people was something at which Cheyenne was proficient. The sad fact of it was, shutting people up was ludicrously easy, because they were usually so full of foolish expectation.
Death brought the expectation of grief. But grief was a product of loss. And this wasâŠ
Plus column all the way, baby.
âI contacted you because you are named in Ms. Humboldtâs will,â the voice on the other end continued, rather doggedly. âTo inform you that you have been designated as guardian to her minor son.â
Shock jolted through Cheyenne.
Shoe meet other foot.
âHuh,â she said again. Which was better than Have you lost your goddamn mind? Or Ha ha ha! Suck it.
Grossly inappropriate, even for her.
âI quote: âIn the event that my son, Rafferty Humboldt, is a minor at the time of my death, I hereby appoint Cheyenne Elias to be the Guardian of his person. My Guardian shall be held solely to the standard of good faith in the performance of her duties, and shall exercise her authority without the necessity of obtaining the consent of any court.â â
Cheyenne filed through the words and tried to think of something to say. A toxic, jumbled mix filled her throat, unfit to speak. Her cell crackled, static filling the silence she couldnât.
Georgia Humboldt, dead. Six feet under and pushing up daisiesâŠ
Try hemlock.
âI realize this is probably a shock. Iâm sorry. I urged Miss Humboldt to contact you, to send you a copy of these documents, but she was insistent that you not be notified unless she...â
Died. Unless she died.
ââŠwell, only if it became necessary. Iâm afraid her reluctance has left her son a temporary ward of the State of Wisconsin, and if you decline to act as his guardian, he will remain so until his eighteenth birthday.â
Too bad, so sad.
âBalls,â Cheyenne said. Because she wasnât really that callous. She wasnât. No matter how easy it would be.
âYou can decline, of course. But Miss Humboldt had been confident you would take the boy in.â
Had she now? Well, wasnât that special?
âHardy-har-har,â Cheyenne said.
âIâm sorry?â
Talking to herselfâwhile simultaneously talking to someone elseâwas one of her worst tendencies. And old, bad habit of simply thinking out loud, born when there was no one listening. But sometimes people thought she was nuts, and according to Philâher anger management counselorâthat was the idea.
You deliberately put people off, Cheyenne. Why do you think you do that?
Because people are assholes, Phil.
âGeorgiaâs idea of a joke,â she clarified. âHysterical.â
The voice (whose name she couldnât rememberâSmith? Jones?âattorney at law) replied, but it was inaudible, courtesy of the fact that she was halfway up Sleeping Indian mountain, and backcountry trails were generally not good cell receptors. She smacked her phone once, twice, knowing it wouldnât help, but it felt good. Then a handful of words materialized. â..afraidâŠdonât followâŠmeaning?â
âYou wouldnât be the first,â she said and sighed.
Chuck, her three-legged blue heeler, stood a few feet ahead at the crest of the trailhead. He cocked his head at her as she muttered to herself, painfully aware that her peaceful existence had just been blown to smithereens. Again.
âShouldnât have answered the damn phone,â she told him.
What had possessed her? Answering an unknown number was a no-noâand something she never did. Because she hated dealing with people. Any kind of people, but especially strangers. You have the social skills of a leper, her publicist, Whitney, had once observed. Itâs like you were raised by hyenas.
Not exactly. But close.
âLook,â Cheyenne said, trying her best to sound reasonable. Human. âGeorgia and Iâwe werenâtâŠanything. You need to call someone else.â
âThere isnât anyone else,â came the reply, oddly clear. âYou are the sole guardian she named. If you wonât take the boy, he will go to the State.â
âNot my problem,â Cheyenne retorted bluntly. But she felt somethingâa ping? a pang?âthat might haveâmaybeâbeen shame. Dismissing Georgia was nothing, like throwing out holey underwear. But the kid⊠The Kid. Sheâd been The Kid, once.
âYou wonât reconsider?â
âHa,â she said, but thenâping! Damn it. âWhereâs his father?â
âI donât know. Miss Humboldt didnât see fit
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