His Cowboy Heart – Love in Eden Read Online Sloane Kennedy

Categories Genre: Contemporary, M-M Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 106
Estimated words: 98643 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 493(@200wpm)___ 395(@250wpm)___ 329(@300wpm)
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“And you had all those things,” I offered.

“Not at first. I had no idea what my family was worth. Turned out that most of the stuff I got for special holidays and my birthday came from the staff with money from their own pockets. All the toys and stuff was from them. I also had an endless supply of books from my father’s library and a bunch of financial magazines that appeared like clockwork every month.” Jules paused before chuckling. “I thought my father was leaving the magazines as a surprise for me—like he wanted me to learn all the stuff in them so I’d be ready to join the business. Funny thing was that I had no clue what the family business even did. The magazines made no sense to me whatsoever at first but when I used my computer to start looking up all the terms and concepts, they started to make a little sense. I kept every one of those stupid magazines and spent hours every night reading them over and over. By the time I was old enough to drive, I knew more about stocks and hedge funds than any kid my age needed to know.”

When Jules fell silent, I kept my mouth shut and focused on trying to relax him again by caressing his back with large, slow circles while gently massaging his muscles at the same time. It wasn’t until he turned his head to look at me that I felt a measure of relief. Jules crossed his arms on my chest so he could rest his head on them while he watched me.

“We had such different lives, huh?” he asked.

“From the outside, yeah. But I think on the inside, we felt a lot of the same things. I at least had Frank to set me on the right path.”

“That’s what my Uncle Ray did,” Jules responded. “I’d met him a few times when I was a kid. As I got older and started getting in trouble at school or when I threw one of my wild, anything goes parties and the cops ended up getting calls from the pissed-off neighbors who lived in the apartment beneath mine, Ray was the one who fixed things.”

“Sounds like you were quite the little rebel,” I said.

Jules smiled. A genuine smile. “I tried to be, but only after being a saint didn’t work. I didn’t have many friends at school when I was little—I guess I really didn’t know how to make any. Turned out living people didn’t act like my stuffed animals.”

This time, I was the one laughing. “I’m sure that was quite the eye opener.”

“It was. When I heard kids talking about all the money their parents let them spend on stuff, I asked the butler, Alistair, if I had any money.”

“Wait,” I interrupted. “You had a butler. A real, live, ‘the butler did it’ butler?”

Jules nodded. “Yep. I didn’t know what his job was besides opening and closing the front door. I also wasn’t sure what all the staff were for when I was little. I figured they were like fairy godmothers… they were there to watch over me. I guess I was right because that’s what they did. I don’t think he was supposed to tell me, but Alistar explained that I had a lot of it in what he called a trust. All I had to do was ask for whatever amount I wanted and I got it.”

“So your Uncle Ray was the one who got you out of trouble,” I urged as I moved my hand from Jules’s back and began toying with a stray lock of hair that had just enough curl to it that the strands refused to be tamed when I tried to tuck them behind his ear.

“I don’t know why he showed so much interest in me, especially as I got older. He had his own son, so there was no reason for him to do things my father should have done. He’d take me and Miles to baseball games. We’d go to the park and explore or just toss a ball or frisbee back and forth. Miles didn’t like me from the start, and he had no interest in doing stuff with his dad as we got older. Uncle Ray had lost his wife, Miles’s mother, when Miles was a little kid. She was hit by a car that ran a red light while she was crossing the street. Anyway, Ray liked to do other stuff besides sports. He’d take me to the opera, Broadway plays and musicals, and my favorite, the ballet. I loved how graceful the dancers were. Their outfits, their makeup—I couldn’t get enough. That was when my interest in the family business all but disappeared. Videos of ballet performances replaced the financial magazines. Then I discovered all these videos of people explaining how to put on makeup. It wasn’t just girls doing it; guys were too. I guess from there I just naturally got interested in fashion.”


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