Kylo (Golden Glades Henchmen MC #11) Read Online Jessica Gadziala

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, Contemporary, Mafia, MC Tags Authors: Series: Golden Glades Henchmen MC Series by Jessica Gadziala
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Total pages in book: 77
Estimated words: 74554 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 373(@200wpm)___ 298(@250wpm)___ 249(@300wpm)
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After years of burning out, Rue thinks she’s finally pieced her life together again. Her grandmother’s plant shop gives her purpose—soil under her nails, green things thriving in her care, and peace she’s fought hard to earn.

But when dangerous men force her to hide contraband in her shipments from South America, that peace withers fast.

Then Kylo walks in—tattooed, quiet, claiming he just wants to start a plant collection. She doesn’t know he’s a biker sent to see if she’s part of the arms trade invading his club’s territory. Under the guise of friendship—that quickly becomes more—he helps her reclaim pieces of her life.

But when his betrayal is exposed and the danger closes in, Rue has to decide if she can trust the man who broke her heart to save her life

*************FULL BOOK START HERE*************

CHAPTER ONE

Rue

“You’ve been a real pain in the butt this week,” I grumbled, ducking low to push with my legs, not my back. I’d already tweaked it earlier this week moving the absolutely massive monstera in its heavy clay pot out of the greenhouse since it decided on a random Wednesday that the spot that had been its home for the past four years was suddenly horribly insufficient and threatened to die on me.

Now I was moving it back into said greenhouse since it decided that the outside was even less up to its standards.

I was hoping it wasn’t time for another repotting.

The plant (with its ceramic pot, dirt, and support pole) easily weighed close to a hundred pounds. Even on a little rolling cart, it was difficult to work with. I was dreading the idea of having to take it apart to give it fresh dirt.

“Maybe I’ll make my life easier and take a sledgehammer to this stupid pot and put you in something lighter,” I told the plant with leaves larger than my head as I pushed it to the small greenhouse door. Even if, objectively, I knew the pot had to be big and heavy if I wanted it not to topple over.

I moved over to open and prop the door open.

The greenhouse was a living thing—warm, damp, and sweet with the scent of dirt.

Morning light filtered through the dusty glass room, golden rays gliding across the rows of hanging baskets.

There were soft clouds of mist drifting down from the automatic sprayers, and the low hum of the fans mingled with the chirp of a random cricket that had gotten trapped inside the day before.

This was what I affectionately referred to as my office. I spent the early mornings here before the shop opened, checking on the progress of transplants and the root growth of clippings from the larger mother plants that were in the store.

They were my little babies, proof of hours spent carefully tending to their needs.

Once they were strong enough, they would undergo a process I called “boot camp,” in which they would be abused in various ways (overwatering, underwatering, giving them too much or too little light), in the hopes that they would then be sturdy enough to go home with new plant moms and dads who were likely not going to meet their needs perfectly at first.

Sure, killing plants was an unfortunate part of being a plant collector. It took some work to figure out what kind of care different plants required. It just broke my heart a little at the idea of some of these very rare, incredibly expensive, plants not making it.

I had another smaller greenhouse called Plant Prison, where I kept the plants that came in on shipments once a month. The ones from garden centers or even imported from South and Central America. I couldn’t have possible infestations of spider mites or mealybug infestations ruining all of my other plants. So they went right into quarantine and usually got a preventative few weeks of treatments before they finally made it to the shelves in the store.

Going back behind the monstera that I couldn’t be too mad at since it had provided dozens of babies since I’d started cultivating her, I pushed her back into the greenhouse and set her back in her usual corner.

A long pothos vine tickled my face as I passed. Just the week before, it had been nearly touching the floor before I gave it a big haircut and made a solid three starter plants out of the clippings. Pothos, a basically unkillable houseplant, was always the first plant I offered to people new to keeping plants. I once had one in a dark, windowless bathroom for nearly a year, and the dang thing was still going strong.

I walked along the rows of plants in various states of growth, sucking in a deep breath, letting everything else drift away.

There was something holy about these mornings—the gentle drip of condensation, the whisper of life growing all around me. It made all the noise and ugliness of the world fall away.


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