Twisted Lies (CJ & Jae #1) Read Online Shandi Boyes

Categories Genre: Angst, Contemporary, Dark, Mafia, Virgin Tags Authors: Series: CJ & Jae Series by Shandi Boyes
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Total pages in book: 96
Estimated words: 89093 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 445(@200wpm)___ 356(@250wpm)___ 297(@300wpm)
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“How much?” I ask, pleased I held back the stutter this time around. It lingers when I’m uneased, but since I’m more angry than nervous, it won’t return any time soon. “Two, three million?” When he mocks me with a grunt, I snarl out, “Ten million?” A greedy flare darts through his eyes, forcing me to say, “Take it. Have it all. I’ll give you every fucking penny if you promise to walk away and never come back.”

I think I have him hook, line, and sinker, then I remember I don’t turn twenty-one for another two weeks. The settlement I was awarded by the state was placed into a trust fund so my father couldn’t squander it like he did the mammoth payment he received from the death of my mother. No one knows what he did with the money. They just know it’s gone.

“T-Two weeks. That’s a-all I need.” I’m not stuttering because my father’s smirk is a replica of the one he wore every time I spotted him sneaking out of my baby sister’s room. It’s because to men in this industry, two weeks is the equivalent of a lifetime. His wolfish sneer during the middle of my offer assures me of this, not to mention him gesturing to his goon for him to light the rag he doused in gasoline partway during my realization the three thousand dollars stuffed in the bottom of my toolbox is the only cash I have access to right now. “I-It’s two fucking weeks. I’m sure you c-can wait two f-fucking weeks.”

Ignoring my pleas, Mario, my father’s head honcho when it comes to dishing out punishments, tosses a lit rag under a stack of wood at the side of the workshop. With the varnish acting as an accelerant, thick black plumes of smoke fill the air and my lungs in a matter of seconds.

When flames lick at the wooden slats holding up the workshop’s roof, Old Man Stephens races outside with a fire extinguisher in his hands and a grave look on his face. He isn’t solely panicked his livelihood is about to go up in smoke, he’s also worried about the gun Mario directed at his head within a nanosecond of him interrupting our negotiation. Disobeying my father by any means is usually followed by Mario lodging a bullet into someone’s skull.

Since I don’t want that person to be Old Man Stephens, I stammer out, “I-I’ve got this. I can handle this.”

By ‘this,’ I mean my father. He didn’t arrive here for no reason. I have something he wants. I just need to work out what that is.

After straying my eyes from a man frozen by both fear and shock to my father, I ask, “What do you want?” When a familiar gleam brightens his icy blue eyes, I tack on, “I’ll do anything you ask… once the flames are extinguished.” It takes everything I have not to stammer when his conceited grin forces me to speak words he coerced out of me more than once during my childhood. “I swear on my mother’s grave I’ll do anything you ask.”

The smoke is almost at choking level before my father gives Old Man Stephens permission to smother the wood with white foam. The fire extinguisher does its job, but even someone not in the relic furniture industry still knows the damage is significant. Agarwood is hard to come by, and its expensive price tag reflects that.

Old Man Stephens lost more than a pile of wood today.

His very existence is on the line.

“I-I-I’ll pay you back. I swear to you, I will r-replace it all,” I promise while being led to my father’s blacked-out Audi by Mario, conscious it isn’t his fault he took a chance on a man not worthy of his time.

Mario’s grip on my elbow would have you convinced I’m the criminal of our trio. I can assure you I am not. I haven’t done a single illegal thing in my life. I haven’t even touched a drop of alcohol yet, and if the furling of my father’s lips when I slide into the back seat of his town car is anything to go by, I may not get the chance.

My eyes rip away from a dusty, blood-stained boxing ring in the middle of one of my father’s derelict warehouses to him. “I-I’m not a fighter.”

I fought many times during my teens, but not a single fight was my choice. I have a surname that causes controversy, a stutter that encourages bullies, and two younger siblings to defend. I either tell people to back off with my fists or watch Dimitri and Ophelia be relentlessly bullied like Roberto was most of his childhood, both at home and in school.

“I’ve never been professionally taught.”

“Neither has your competitor, so this will be a fair and just fight.”


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