Dream Spinner (Dream Team Book 3), Kristen Ashley [reading eggs books txt] 📗
- Author: Kristen Ashley
Book online «Dream Spinner (Dream Team Book 3), Kristen Ashley [reading eggs books txt] 📗». Author Kristen Ashley
Praise for Kristen Ashley
‘Kristen Ashley’s books are addicting!’
Jill Shalvis, New York Times bestselling author
‘I adore Kristen Ashley’s books!’
Maya Banks, New York Times bestselling author
‘A unique, not-to-be-missed voice in romance’
Carly Phillips, New York Times bestselling author
‘I don’t know how Kristen Ashley does it; I just read the damn [Dream Man series] and happily get lost in her world’
Frolic
‘[Kristen] Ashley captivates’
Publishers Weekly
‘When you pick up an Ashley book, you know you’re in for plenty of gut-punching emotion, elaborate drama and sizzling sex’
RT Book Reviews
ALSO BY KRISTEN ASHLEY
The Dream Man Series
Mystery Man
Wild Man
Law Man
Motorcycle Man
The Colorado Mountain Series
The Gamble
Sweet Dreams
Lady Luck
Breathe
Jagged
Kaleidoscope
The Chaos Series
Own the Wind
Fire Inside
Ride Steady
Walk Through Fire
The Dream Team Series
Dream Maker
Dream Chaser
Copyright
Published by Piatkus
ISBN: 978-0-349-42588-7
All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Copyright © 2021 by Kristen Ashley
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
Excerpt from Dream Keeper © 2021 by Kristen Ashley
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.
The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.
Piatkus
Little, Brown Book Group
Carmelite House
50 Victoria Embankment
London EC4Y 0DZ
www.littlebrown.co.uk
www.hachette.co.uk
Contents
Praise for Kristen Ashley
Also by Kristen Ashley
Copyright
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter One: Ivan the Terrible
Chapter Two: I Blew It
Chapter Three: Don’t Give Up
Chapter Four: Whoosh
Chapter Five: Because We Love You
Chapter Six: Anytime
Chapter Seven: Worth It
Chapter Eight: Keep Putting in the Work
Chapter Nine: Porn Preferences
Chapter Ten: Us. Here. Finally.
Chapter Eleven: B
Chapter Twelve: Safe Place
Chapter Thirteen: Fireman’s Hold
Chapter Fourteen: Scratched the Surface
Chapter Fifteen: Back on Track
Chapter Sixteen: That Path Is Always Open to You
Chapter Seventeen: Two Drawers
Chapter Eighteen: Off
Chapter Nineteen: Setup
Chapter Twenty: Tripped
Chapter Twenty-One: Stolen Base
Chapter Twenty-Two: In Her Corner
Chapter Twenty-Three: She Was Mine Before
Chapter Twenty-Four: Fly Forever
Chapter Twenty-Five: Deviled Eggs
Chapter Twenty-Six: The Women
Epilogue
About the Author
For my ice-blue-eyed protective,
possessive alpha, Axl.
I miss you.
PROLOGUE
Right at Him
HATTIE
It happened on the opening night of the Revue.
I knew it when I finished my dance.
And I looked for him.
They were there, all the guys (and Evie) to cheer us on.
To support us.
But when my dance was done, I didn’t look to my friend Evie.
I didn’t look to Lottie’s man (and my friend) Mo.
I didn’t look to Evie’s guy (and also my friend) Mag.
I further didn’t look to Ryn’s fella (and yes, my friend too) Boone.
Or Auggie, who should be Pepper’s, but he was not.
I looked right at him.
Right at him.
At Axl.
And he was looking at me.
Of course, I’d just been dancing.
But it was more.
Because I’d picked that song.
And it became even more when my eyes went right to his.
I saw how his face changed when I did this, and I didn’t know him all that well, but I still read it.
I knew exactly what it meant, the way he was looking at me, and the fact, after I’d finished dancing to that song, I’d looked right at him.
And what it meant was …
I was in trouble.
CHAPTER ONE
Ivan the Terrible
HATTIE
It went well.”
“Tens of thousands of dollars on teachers, leotards, pointe shoes, payin’ for gas to drive you to class, recitals, competitions, and you’re sittin’ here tryin’ to convince me all that was worth it seein’ as you got the big promotion from being a stripper to being a burlesque dancer.”
“It’s not burlesque exactly. They’re calling it a Revue.”
“It’s a fuckin’ titty bar.”
I sat opposite my father and decided it was a good time to start keeping my mouth shut.
Dad did not make that same decision.
“You can try to dress it up however you want, Hattie, but you’re a glorified whore,” he went on. “Though, just sayin’, a whore’s more honest. Least she doesn’t take a man’s cash while she’s givin’ him nothin’ but a tease.”
I wish I could say Dad was in a rare mood tonight.
But he wasn’t.
It was just that it was more foul than normal.
A lot more.
“I think maybe I should go now,” I said quietly.
Dad shook his head. “You never could hack listening to reason. Or honesty. Or truth. I can see you’re too fat to be in New York or London, Paris or Moscow, but for fuck’s sake, not even the Colorado Ballet?” Again with the head shaking. “Instead, you’re onstage at Smithie’s strip club.”
Yes, whenever he got into calling me fat, it was time to go.
I got up and started clearing his dinner dishes.
“I can do that,” he snapped.
He couldn’t.
He could barely walk.
Mismanaged diabetes.
The mismanaged part being, when I was fed up with his abuse, I’d quit coming to give him his insulin, take his blood sugar, make sure he ate, and doctor his booze by watering it down so his drinking didn’t put his body out of whack.
None of which he did for himself.
Three trips to the hospital, and the subsequent medical bills, which meant selling his old house (something I saw to), downsizing (something I also saw to), and putting up with his complaints he had about having to move (something I listened to, though the move part, I saw to), meant I kept coming back.
Mom didn’t get it.
She’d washed her hands of him years ago. Even before she did it legally with the divorce.
But I simply could not do nothing and let my father die.
And I knew this would happen if I did not manage his health and his life.
I took his dishes to the kitchen, rinsed them, put them in the dishwasher, tidied and headed back to the living room to remove the TV tray from in front of Dad.
Then I was going to get my purse and go.
“Hattie, it’s just—” he started in a much less ugly tone as I was folding up the tray.
“Don’t,” I whispered.
All these years, he thought he could dig in and dig in and dig in because … whatever.
He didn’t like his job?
He didn’t like his marriage?
He didn’t like his health?
He didn’t like his life?
So
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