Where the Blame Lies (Where #1) Read Online Mia Sheridan

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Dark, Suspense, Thriller Tags Authors: Series: Where Series by Mia Sheridan
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Total pages in book: 115
Estimated words: 107766 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 539(@200wpm)___ 431(@250wpm)___ 359(@300wpm)
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“I’m here to make you another offer on the house. I can up it by five grand.”

“Thank you, but I told you I’m not interested in selling. Your mother left this house to me because she knew I had the same vision for it that she did. She knew I’d work hard to get it up and running again, back to its former—”

“My mother left you this house because she felt sorry for you. She pitied you like everyone else does.”

Josie swallowed, lowering her eyes. How quickly she could still be emotionally stripped. She was working on that. “Your mother was extremely kind to me when I needed it. She helped me after…” She sat taller. “This house is giving me purpose I didn’t even know I needed, Archie,” she said to appeal to any speck of kindness or empathy he might have inside his hulkish, overbearing body. “I believe your mother knew that.”

“My mother was practically a vegetable at the end. She didn’t know anything, including her own name.”

Josie took a deep breath. “Before the dementia…took her. Before that, she had moments of extreme lucidity.” You’d have known that had you ever bothered to visit.

He pointed at her. “Listen, Josie, I didn’t want to resort to this, but if you don’t sell to me, I’ll be forced to sue you. My mother was not of sound mind to change her will and give this property to you or anyone else. Whatever you did to manipulate her into it should be looked at by a judge. I was offering you money out of the kindness of my heart because I know you barely have a cent to your name, but if you force my hand, I’ll have no choice but to get the courts involved. Make this right.”

Make this right. Anxiety sparked inside Josie as she regarded him, recalling what Aunt Mavis had said about her own son. After his father died, Archie grew bitter, distant. I should have worked harder to draw him out, but I was suddenly a single mother, trying to support us both, trying to run a business… I lost his father, and I lost Archie then too. I didn’t realize that I’d never get him back. Her voice had been laced with sadness. Regret.

Oh, Aunt Mavis.

Perhaps she had lost her son, or perhaps some people were just born with a mean streak wider than others. A few were born evil…and she knew that well too. Despite the mild temperature, Josie shivered, rubbing her bare arms. But Aunt Mavis had had a part in saving Josie—her battered soul—and for that, she’d be forever grateful. And Josie understood what it was like to let your past, all the missing parts of yourself, rule your choices. She’d done it once too. Before.

But she couldn’t let this—possibly damaged, possibly mean, most likely both—man in front of her derail her now. The vision of this farmhouse shining under the morning light had kept her going when she didn’t think she could. She’d fought too hard to get here, and she still had a lot more fighting in front of her.

“Why do you even want this place, Archie? You have your own house, your own business. You do well. What do you want with a run-down farmhouse?”

“This was my father’s land before he died. It’s been in my family for four generations. It’s rightfully mine.”

“I’m family too. And I love it as much as you do.” More. He’d never been interested in this place. At least not when his mother was alive. She figured it was solely about possession, about greed, about Archie feeling like he’d been cheated in some way.

“I’d think you’d feel more content living in the city where there are lots of people around. Safer.” He gave her a meaningful look. “Do you really think guests are going to want to stay here when they find out what happened to you?” He leaned closer. “That sort of thing makes people very uncomfortable, Josie. Very uncomfortable. No one wants to think about it. No one wants it serving them breakfast in the morning.”

Josie stood suddenly, and Archie looked momentarily surprised before coming to his feet as well. He towered over her, a big brute of a man. A bully, his brash personality a perfect match to the thick lines of his physique. “Do what you have to do,” she said, trying her best to hide the fact that she’d begun shaking, trying to hide the anxiety trickling through her at the thought of a lawsuit, a lawyer she could not afford, the possibility of losing the house that was doing so much to heal her wounded soul. “But I will not sell.” She turned. “Goodbye.”

“You’ll regret this, Josie,” he called as she stepped quickly inside and locked the door behind her. She walked around the corner where he couldn’t see her through the glass window of the front door, sinking onto the bottom stair. Archie knocked once, calling her name, but she didn’t answer. A minute later she heard him swear and then his footsteps descending the steps, followed by his car door opening and closing. She exhaled, long and slow, as she listened to the sound of his engine fading away into nothing. Horrible man. Why was he so bitter? Why preempt failure?


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