Diamonds (Aces Underground #2) Read Online Helen Hardt

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Contemporary Tags Authors: Series: Aces Underground Series by Helen Hardt
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Total pages in book: 78
Estimated words: 77292 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 386(@200wpm)___ 309(@250wpm)___ 258(@300wpm)
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Alissa said she had some oversized T-shirts I could wear. I walk to her dresser, open the middle drawer.

Yes. T-shirts. But all in her size. I reach to the bottom and finally find an XL T-shirt, navy with a pattern of red mushrooms.

Not exactly my style, but it’ll do.

I’m not going to wear her underwear, so I’ll have to go commando. I’ll just put on the tux pants I was wearing last night. I changed into a set of gym clothes I had in the back of my car before we left for the park in Rosemont by the airport.

I run my fingers through my tousled hair and check myself in a full-length mirror in the corner of Alissa’s bedroom.

Not exactly GQ-worthy, but pretty decent given the circumstances.

Alissa is still sleeping. Should I wake her? It’s Monday morning. She probably has work today.

I have work today, too. But that seems to be a lost cause at this point.

If there were ever a reason to take a day off from the shop, it’s the night we had.

I give her shoulder a light squeeze. Her eyes flutter open, and she smiles up at me.

“Maddox. Good morning.”

I kiss her cheek. “Morning, baby.” I gesture to the clock. “We both overslept. Do you have work today?”

She sits up quickly. “Damn it. I’m not sure.” She looks around the room. “My phone. Where’s my phone?”

“Probably still in your purse,” I say. “I think you left it in the kitchen when we returned last night.”

“Right.” She rubs at her forehead. “Oh, no. Last night. Last night.”

“It’s okay, baby.” I rub her shoulders. “We made it to morning. Everything is going to be taken care of.”

“I need my phone.”

“I’ll grab it.” I walk into her living room, spy her purse on the loveseat, and grab her phone. I walk back into her bedroom and hand it to her.

She pulls up her calendar app and scans it. “Oh, thank God,” she sighs. “I’m not on until two thirty today.”

“Great.” I smile at her. “Would you like me to make you some breakfast?”

She frowns. “All I have in the fridge are eggs and bacon. And a few veggies. Red onion, bell peppers, tomatoes.”

“Omelets it is then,” I say. “You can stay in bed. I’ll take care of everything.”

She rubs at her stomach. “I’m not sure if I have an appetite after last night.” She bites her lip. “I mean, the park. What we did after was wonderful.”

“I know what you meant.” I cross toward her bedroom doorway. “But you need to eat. We both need to. I’m not particularly hungry either, but we need energy if we’re going to get through whatever the next couple of days brings.”

She nods. “Okay. You’re right.”

“Plus it’ll do us both some good to do something normal. It’s not like we can do a whole hell of a lot until we have May’s identity confirmed by Bill’s lab, anyway.”

She rubs at the back of her neck. “Make sense, I guess.”

I walk back into her kitchen. It’s nice. Her apartment is clearly a remodel. All stainless-steel appliances, polished to a shine. A large ceramic jar holds a set of pastel-colored cooking utensils.

I open her fridge. A half-dozen eggs, a new package of bacon, and a tomato and red bell pepper. I spy the red onion next to salt and pepper grinders on top of her fridge. I also grab a quart of whole milk from the fridge-door shelf.

I find a wooden cutting board in one of her lower cabinets and a vegetable knife in a block next to her stove. I dice the vegetables and lay a few strips of bacon across a skillet. Once the veggies are done, I take four of the eggs and whisk them together with salt, pepper, and a dash of the milk. Once the bacon is done, I pour half of the egg mixture in the skillet, right over the bacon grease. I sprinkle some of the diced veggies over the omelet and then drag the sides inward with the spatula until the entire thing is cooked through, and I gently fold it in half. I repeat the steps for a second omelet, cut the cooled bacon into bits, and sprinkle them over the food.

I walk back into Alissa’s room, presenting her breakfast with mock decorum. “Make way for the omelet!”

She frowns. “How can you joke around after what we’ve been through?”

“I think the only thing we can do is joke around.” I hand her the plate along with a fork. “We can either worry while we wait for news from Bill, or we can enjoy each other’s company to the best of our ability.”

She wrinkles her nose. “But it doesn’t seem right. We should find some way to honor May.”

“We’re doing what we can to see that Rouge—or whoever killed her—is brought to justice. That’s how we honor her.” I sit on the side of the bed and rub her shoulder. “But that doesn’t mean we can’t still enjoy the little things. We can live for May, for her memory.”


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