Saved by the Silver Fox Marines – Military Mountain Men Read Online Stephanie Brother

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Erotic, Insta-Love Tags Authors:
Advertisement1

Total pages in book: 78
Estimated words: 75288 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 376(@200wpm)___ 301(@250wpm)___ 251(@300wpm)
<<<<891011122030>78
Advertisement2


Viper gets right to it. “We’re not just helping an abuse victim. We’re harboring a witness to federal crimes.”

Atlas nods once. “What’s the chatter?”

“Nothing. No mention of the wedding being canceled.”

“Missing persons report?”

Viper shakes his head. “Not a damn thing.”

The implication lands like a bomb, and my hands curl into fists. “Motherfucker wants to find her without anyone knowing.”

Atlas’s expression is grim. “After what she heard, there’s no way he’s going to let it drop.”

I glance toward the hall, cracking my knuckles. “Then we get ready for company.”

CHAPTER 8

KIRA

A night without bad dreams, at least none I remember, is a relief.

I’ve been sleeping surprisingly well since moving upstairs into the guest room. The top level of the house is a sort of loft overlooking the great room below, with the bedrooms arranged around the open space. Grizz’s room is next to mine, and Atlas’s and Viper’s are across the open span.

When I refer to the guest room, the men insist that it’s my room. I wonder how long they think I’ll be staying here.

I’m still healing, but I have more energy than I did a few days ago, and after what I’ve been through, I no longer take that for granted.

My strength is returning, too. My body feels less fragile and bruised, though I still need to take it easy.

Soft morning light spills across the floorboards and onto the pine walls on the opposite side of my room. The space is simple but cozy, with a quilt on the bed, and a rug that’s warm under my feet.

In the corner, there’s a cedar chest with white folded fabric on top that makes me shudder.

My wedding gown is neatly creased and carefully arranged, with the ripped seams tucked inward so the damage is mostly hidden. Someone, maybe all three of the men, handled it with unnecessary care.

Atlas was apologetic when he told me they had to cut me out of my clothing the night they found me. He sounded guilty, as if he’d ruined something precious.

I liked the dress well enough before my wedding day, but it was only a costume for a life that was never real.

Atlas also showed me where they’d stashed the jewelry I’d been wearing. The necklace and earrings were nestled in a towel inside the top dresser drawer. They’d left my engagement ring on my finger, but as soon as I was alone in this new room, I added it to the pile and closed it up out of sight. I should wedge the dress into the drawer, too, but I can’t bring myself to touch it.

I’d like to burn everything from that day. The thought of it all going up in flames is satisfying, but I suppose that would be wasteful. Maybe I can donate the jewelry to a charitable organization.

One of the things I wonder when I’m lying in bed trying to fall asleep is what Preston told our wedding guests. It wasn’t going to be a big wedding, about thirty attendees, most of them his family and friends, but a few of my old work associates were coming, too. And Brianna.

He’d said he wanted it to be an intimate affair, with no press there, and I thought that was romantic at the time. Now I wonder if he was embarrassed about the pregnancy, or maybe the whole event was a cover for whatever shady dealings he was doing.

A wave of guilt washes over me when I think of Brianna, her car, and how confused she must be. I intend to replace her car, somehow, when I can. My only consolation is that her husband was going to be arriving for the ceremony, so she won’t have been alone. I wish I could call her to explain, but I can’t risk putting her in danger, too.

I get out of bed slowly, gently stretching tight muscles. I pull on the robe I draped over a nearby chair last night, cinch it at my waist, and gather clothes to take into the bathroom.

It seems that new clothing and care items appear every few days, coinciding with the men’s trips into town. It’s usually Atlas, who shrugs it off by saying he just “picked up a few things.”

In addition to the unwanted wedding jewelry, the dresser now holds several sweaters, multiple pairs of leggings, warm socks, and underwear. There’s floral-scented body wash beside the new brush on top of the dresser, and a few books stacked near the edge: two classics and a romance novel.

Beneath it all, there’s a faint smell of lemon, as if someone dusted recently. The whole house is immaculately clean, with nothing out of place.

As soon as I step out into the hall, the rich aromas of coffee and bacon wafting up from downstairs make my stomach growl. On the floor below the bedrooms, there’s a great room space that includes an open kitchen, a dining area with a massive wooden table, and the living room, which is situated around a broad stone fireplace. The large patterned wool rug in front of the fireplace is one of the few soft touches I’ve seen in the men’s home so far.


Advertisement3

<<<<891011122030>78

Advertisement4