Misfits Like Us (Like Us #12) Read Online Krista Ritchie, Becca Ritchie

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire Tags Authors: , Series: Becca Ritchie
Series: Like Us Series by Krista Ritchie
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Total pages in book: 177
Estimated words: 174544 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 873(@200wpm)___ 698(@250wpm)___ 582(@300wpm)
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I don’t want to treat Luna like she’s an alt-version. She’s already insecure about it, and giving us matching tattoos is something I would’ve done with her before the amnesia. But they made me rethink the whole thing, and in the end, I can’t even say what’s right anymore.

I jostle and zip up. Not loitering outside on her birthday, I go back in, hand sanitize, and avoid the stares from Triple Shield bodyguards. Comms are off in my ear—that’s how much I don’t wanna hear them tonight.

The flashing neon lights are adding gasoline to a fire in my blood, and I try to breathe it out. When I reach the lane, Luna is collecting a bright orange ball out of the rack. Her turn to bowl. Xander is near a nacho table speaking to his dad. Safe, but I keep tabs on my little elf’s whereabouts.

On the chairs at the eighth lane, Maximoff, Farrow, and Baby Ripley watch Luna, and I join them. “She still killing it?” I joke since she’s been losing pretty badly.

“With a score of two,” Farrow says, popping bubblegum.

“Two!” Ripley holds up two fingers.

“Uh-oh, we got a mathematician on our hands,” I say.

“Uh-oh?” Ripley frowns up at Farrow, since he’s on his lap.

I laugh, and Farrow shakes his head at me with a rising grin.

Maximoff smiles over at his husband and son. “You counted correctly, Rip.”

Farrow tells his kid, “Your Uncle Donnelly is just teasing you.”

“It’s what I do,” I say, holding on to one of the chairs. Not sitting down. I’m still amped, and I need better distractions. “Jane and Thatcher couldn’t make it?”

Maximoff and Farrow exchange a cagey look, and I straighten off the chair. “Is it Maeve?” I ask. “Somethin’ happen?”

“No,” Maximoff says fast and cracks a knuckle. “It’s not that.”

Farrow sets Ripley on his own chair, then stands up to tell me more privately, “You’ll probably hear about it tomorrow, but he failed his psych eval.”

I’m off-balance. “What?”

He raises his brows. “Thatcher failed the test. He’s suspended until they clear him, and Jane wanted to be with him tonight.”

My head is spinning. “Thatcher?” He’s the epitome of a Mack truck. A military war tank. He bulldozes. Nothing runs him over.

“Man, he got shot this summer,” Farrow whispers. “Not to mention, he went through surgery, almost died, and missed the birth of his daughter.”

I rub my forehead. This isn’t the distraction I was searching for. ‘Cause now I’m just thinking if Thatcher fucking Moretti failed a psych eval, what are the chances that I’m gonna pass?

I’m fine.

I will pass.

I have to.

There is a key difference between me and Thatcher. He’s ethical. Moral. I’m not always those things. Not if being immoral helps me stay alive.

Farrow studies me in a sweep. “You worried?”

“No,” I say with the shake of my head. “You?”

“No,” he says honestly, inspecting me.

“Your son is making fart faces at you,” I tell him, but Farrow is still staring right into me. I gesture to my best friend. “You’re missing out, man. It’s cute as fuck.”

Farrow chews his gum slowly, looking me over. “Don’t lie during the eval.”

I’m going to.

“Doctor advice?” I ask.

“Friend advice.”

“Appreciation.” I sling an arm around his shoulders. Don’t worry about me. But as soon as I think it, I’m reminded of what Loren Hale told me, and I can’t say the words out loud.

“Gutter ball,” Luna sing-songs on her way over. “Farrow is up.”

While he heads for the lane, Luna swivels on a chair, sipping a cranberry vodka. Adorable in her alien waitress costume, and I’ve imagined coming inside her way too many times tonight. Hell, I’ve imagined picking her up and fucking her on the lane. Thank God her therapist can’t read my mind.

Maximoff asks her, “Are you calling him your boyfriend now?”

Luna goes motionless in the chair. “I, uh…” She’s avoiding my gaze.

My pulse picks up speed, and I’m glad I’m not sitting or else my knees would be jostling under me.

“No,” Luna shakes her head very slowly. “I barely know him.”

Shit.

Feels like I’m being buried alive, but the way her body reacts—chest tightening, breath shortening—I know she’s dumping dirt on herself too.

“Luna?” Maximoff says, worried.

“I didn’t mean it like that,” Luna says, more to me than to her brother.

“I know,” I nearly whisper. “It’s alright.” And I tell Maximoff, “Can I have a minute with her?”

“Yeah.” He sends me one brotherly warning. Not as threatening as his dad’s looks, but it does its job. He stands up. “Rip, you want to push that green ball?”

“Yeah!” Ripley cheers, taking his dad’s hand and joining Farrow at the lane. As they squat down to help their son, I take a seat beside Luna.

She might not be my girlfriend yet. We haven’t labeled anything, but she isn’t someone I ever want to lose. Not in my lifetime. “It’s alright,” I tell her again.


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