From Here to Eternity (Moonlit Ridge #1) Read Online A.L. Jackson

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Biker, Dark, MC, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Moonlit Ridge Series by A.L. Jackson
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Total pages in book: 135
Estimated words: 131916 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 660(@200wpm)___ 528(@250wpm)___ 440(@300wpm)
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Her nod was soft. “Okay.”

I wanted to keep her there, on the phone forever, but a text popped up at the top of my screen.

One from the group text labeled SS.

Swore, the tattoo on the back of my hand throbbed. The searing truth of who we were.

SS

We have a situation. Midnight.

It was all the information I needed to know what had to be done. I glanced at the time. Fifteen to twelve.

I looked back at the girl who was gazing back at me. “Sleep well, Little Runner. I’ll talk to you tomorrow.”

She nodded again before she lifted her hand and brushed her fingertips over the screen like she was physically trying to meet with me before she whispered, “Goodnight.”

I ended the call before I got stupid and said something else, and I scrubbed both palms over my face to break up the disorder the girl had left in me then sat up on the side of my bed.

I was still dressed, so I quickly worked to put my boots back on, and I crept from my room and out into the bare light of the hall. I paused at Nolan’s door, peered in where the kid was fast asleep, the lion he used to sleep with replaced with the stuffed puppy Charleigh had given him.

My heart squeezed. Squeezed so fucking tight I couldn’t see. Couldn’t see anything but the two of them.

Forcing myself to move, I pulled his door closed, leaving it open a couple inches, before I crept farther down to Raven’s room. I quietly tapped at the door with my knuckles.

“Yeah?” she called from inside.

I nudged it open. She was sitting up against her headboard, under the covers with her tablet on her lap. She looked up and smiled, though the smile fell off her face when she saw whatever must have been written on mine.

“What’s wrong?”

“Got a call.”

Worry flashed through her expression. “You have to go now?”

“Yeah. Can you keep an ear out for Nolan?”

Her brow pinched. “Of course.”

“Thank you.”

She bit down on her bottom lip and gave me a slight dip of her head. I went to back out, but the tremor in her voice stopped me. “Be careful, River. We need you.”

Blowing out a strained sigh, I pushed her door open a fraction. Enough that she could see me and understand that I meant it. “Told you I would never let anything happen to me. Not when I need to be here for you and Nolan.”

I needed to remember that. My duties. My calling.

I tried to as I hurried downstairs, grabbed my keys, and strode into the garage to my bike.

But the thoughts of Charleigh remained strident in my mind.

TWENTY-TWO

RIVER

My bike rumbled as I traveled through Moonlit Ridge beneath the cover of night. Stars blanketed the sky, so many that it felt as if the town were shrouded in a blanket of silver glitter.

Hardly a soul was out, and the air was cool as the wind whipped across my face and stirred my heart into chaos.

My pulse thudded hard, a thunder that rolled as I roared down Vista View. Heavy metal vibrated beneath me, and the pavement passed by in a blur. I slowed and made the left onto Culberry, and I wound my way up the road until the area became more congested as I hit downtown.

Kane’s was packed, as per usual. A mess of cars and trucks and bikes littered the huge gravel parking lot, rolling from the front of the old building all the way out to the street.

I pulled in, the engine chugging low as I made my way up the middle aisle to the bikes parked in a row at the front. Slowing to a stop, I put my feet out to balance the bike, and I used my heels to back myself in between Kane and Cash’s motorcycles. Otto and Theo’s were there, too, sitting front and center.

I killed the engine and swung from the bike, and I strode for the front door where Ty and Jonah were manning the door.

The two of them were brutes, ensuring that anyone who came through the doors playing the prick immediately found their asses tossed to the curb.

Ty jutted his bearded chin at me, dude covered in tats, a ton of them compliments of me. “River Tayte. Good to see you out and about. Rest of the boys are already inside.”

I gave him a clipped nod. “Thanks, brother.”

“Not a problem.”

He stepped aside so I could wind my way into the crowd.

Kane’s was set in an old church, the walls brick and the ceiling steepled. Long, slender stained-glass windows rested high on the walls, and the strobes from the stage where the band played struck against the glass and sent sparks of color glinting over the space.

A long bar ran the far-left side, and there were a slew of stools set up along it. The dance floor was in the middle with the stage at the back, and along the right side were a bunch of tables and booths tucked within the dim light and dancing shadows.


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