Property of Mellow (Kings of Anarchy Alabama #3) Read Online Chelsea Camaron

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, MC Tags Authors: Series: Kings of Anarchy Alabama Series by Chelsea Camaron
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Total pages in book: 62
Estimated words: 61723 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 309(@200wpm)___ 247(@250wpm)___ 206(@300wpm)
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My eyes crack open to a wash of morning light and the sight of Lucy standing over me in a pale robe, one hand still on the doorknob, her hair sleep-mussed around her shoulders.

For half a second, I don’t move. She looks like an angel.

She stares.

I’m stretched out on her porch with my duffle bag under my head, one boot hooked over the other, cut folded beneath me to keep the wood from digging into my back. Not exactly my proudest visual. But I’ve slept in worse places. A lot worse actually.

It’s funny because I used to travel with a sleeping bag on my motorcycle. Traveling wherever the road led, I sometimes slept in parking lots or rest areas on the interstates. I still keep a duffle bag type of insert in the saddle bags of my bike with a spare set of clothes, toiletries, and things to get me by for a few days should the road call me to that lifestyle once again.

Lucy blinks once. Then again. “What are you doing?” Her voice comes out hushed, like she’s trying not to wake the whole street.

I push up onto one elbow and scrub a hand down my face. “Morning.”

She keeps staring. “Tucker.”

“Making sure you’re safe.” The words land between us and sit there.

Lucy glances out toward the yard, then the road, then back at me like maybe there’s a more normal explanation she just hasn’t reached yet.

“You slept on my porch.”

“Yeah.” I reply fighting the urge to say well, that’s obvious. I’m not sure Lucy would appreciate my brand of sarcasm this early in the morning.

“All night?”

“Mostly. I mean it was after two before you finally went to sleep.”

She folds her arms over herself, tightening the robe closed. “That is not normal.”

“No. Didn’t claim it was, babe.”

Her gaze narrows. “You couldn’t just leave?”

I sit up fully and swing my boots onto the porch boards. My back pops as I stretch putting my cut back on. Getting older is a bitch, and I ignore that thought on principle.

“I could’ve.”

She is still studying me seriously. “But you didn’t.”

“No.”

She exhales through her nose, not quite annoyed, not quite confused, but probably a lot more thrown off than she wants to show.

I get it. If I woke up and found me on my porch, I’d have questions too.

“You didn’t have to do that,” she says.

“Wanted to.”

Her mouth parts like she has a response ready, then she hesitates. I watch the moment she realizes she doesn’t know what to do with that answer.

Neither do I, if I’m being honest.

The air between us is cool with early morning damp, carrying the smell of cut grass and salt from the Gulf. Somewhere down the street, a truck starts up. Birds make too much noise in the trees.

Lucy shifts her weight. “I.” She starts but stops. She glances over her shoulder into the house, then back at me. “Do you want coffee?”

I study her face. There’s nerves there, sure. Caution. But underneath it something softer too. Gratitude maybe. Curiosity definitely. “Yeah,” I say, pushing to my feet. “Coffee sounds good.”

She steps back to let me in. This time when I cross her threshold, it’s in daylight.

And somehow that feels more intimate than last night. The house smells like laundry detergent and the faint sweetness of baked goods. She closes the door behind me and heads for the kitchen while I set my duffle by the wall and shrug out of my cut, hanging it over the chair.

“You can sit,” she says, not looking at me. “I just need a minute.”

I lean one shoulder against the doorway to the kitchen instead. “You always this nice to men you find on your porch?”

That gets me a glance over her shoulder. “Normally I call the police.”

“Thought about that. Probably a good idea, babe.” I joke.

She gives me a smile. “Why didn’t you leave before I saw you?”

I shrug. “Guess I fell asleep.” Then I smile back. “Or maybe I wanted you to find me.” I reply with a wink.

She gives me a look that says she doesn’t know whether to believe that or not.

Fair. I don’t really know why I stayed, other than it didn’t feel right.

She moves around the kitchen with sleepy efficiency—coffee grounds, filter, water, the familiar little rituals that make a place feel lived in. Real. There’s a lunchbox on the counter and a school folder half-zipped beside it. A tiny pair of sneakers under the table.

My gaze lands on them and stays there a second too long.

A soft thump of feet sounds from the hallway. Then a little girl appears in pajamas printed with strawberries, hair wild from sleep, clutching a stuffed rabbit by one ear.

She stops dead when she sees me. Big blue eyes. Sharp little face. Her mother’s mouth.

Well. There she is.

Lucy turns immediately. “Good morning, baby.”


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