Proof (Targes Executive Protection #1) Read Online Sloane Kennedy

Categories Genre: Alpha Male Tags Authors: Series: Targes Executive Protection Series by Sloane Kennedy
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Total pages in book: 147
Estimated words: 137176 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 686(@200wpm)___ 549(@250wpm)___ 457(@300wpm)
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I’d also been waiting for the phone to ring.

Any phone. Sully’s cell, mine, the landline we still had in the house for some reason. I’d been desperate to hear Cass’s voice, even if it hadn’t been directed at me.

There’d been no call and as each hour had passed, I’d grown more and more restless. Even though I’d told Cass to leave, I was pretty sure he hadn’t. Not the area, at least. Cass was probably doing the same thing that Sully and I were.

Trying to identify the murderer and anyone who might have been linked to him.

Cass wouldn’t be searching to finally prove to the world that he’d been innocent all along—no, he wouldn’t be thinking about himself at all. He’d be focused on finding the person or people who’d killed a little girl, her mother, and a federal agent.

And me.

He’d be trying to find out who’d hurt me.

Who’d taken his JJ from him.

That wouldn’t be all, though. Cass had been protecting me from pretty much the moment he’d been released from prison, and he wouldn’t stop doing that just because I wasn’t the same JJ he’d cared so much for. He’d protect me because that was what Cass did.

What he’d always done.

It had been more than a week since Sully had picked me up from the motel. My brother and I hadn’t talked about anything other than the evidence he’d dug up in his own effort to find the suspect. Unfortunately, my memory loss hadn’t been limited to just the nights before and of the shooting. I hadn’t been able to remember anything from several months prior to that night. My last memory had been of Sully’s birthday shortly after the death of our father.

Despite our loss, Sully and I had upheld the tradition of celebrating special events by going to the same shitty Scottish pub our father had practically lived at during the final years of his life, and we’d drunk ourselves senseless. We’d even rehashed many of the stories our father had told us over and over as we’d grown up. They included the tale of how our parents had met and while it had brought up the painful memory of losing both our mother and father, the alcohol had given us the same loose tongues it’d given our father when he’d wanted to talk about his beloved wife.

As I grew closer to my destination, my heart began to pound even harder in my chest. The farther I left the safety of the house behind me, the more worried I became that my hunch wouldn’t pan out. I’d have a pissed-off Sully to deal with either way, so that part didn’t matter to me. I just needed to see Cass.

Just one more time.

This time, there would be nothing—no bullet, no assassin, no well-meaning family member—that would be able to take that time away from me.

As for my brother, I loved him to death for everything he had and was still trying to do to keep me safe, but there was no way I could make him understand that my world made even less sense now than it had before Cass’s return. Sully couldn’t fix that for me. Cass couldn’t fix it for me, either. I had to fix it, and I had to start at the place where only one thing did make sense.

I wanted Cass.

I wanted him to want me. The me that I was now. I didn’t deserve it, but now that I understood what had been truth and what had been lies, I wanted to try living the truth.

With Cass.

And if he didn’t want me, if he’d come to his senses and accepted I wasn’t the JJ he’d lost, I’d find a way to live with that. But if there was even a chance…

I reminded myself that I needed to stay focused on my surroundings. I’d understood everything Sully had drilled into me about not letting anyone in on the fact that I knew the truth about the night of the shooting, and I hadn’t disagreed with him.

Problem was, Sully had no understanding of Cass’s true suffering. How could he? I’d seen only a few shreds of the true suffering Cass had either allowed me to see or had inadvertently revealed. Sully was right in that Cass could take care of himself, but that was when it came to the physical stuff. What about all the rest of the shit that was locked away in his mind? The shit Sully and I had played a role in putting there. I’d never understood what needing to protect someone you cared about had really meant until I’d come face to face with Cass and watched him protect me time and time again despite the hatred he should have had for me.

Ironically, it was that understanding which had made it possible to forgive my big brother for everything that had happened. He’d had to choose my life over his best friend’s freedom, and it had been a decision he’d had to make entirely on his own. Sully had admitted that he’d never even considered the idea that Cass’s own family would abandon him. Even if Cass’s father had hated his own son, why hadn’t he protected the Ashby name by getting Cass the high-priced lawyers who would have been able to get the charges dropped altogether? From there, it would have just been a matter of putting Cass on a private flight to a country with no extradition agreement with the United States, and Cass and his piece-of-shit father would have happily parted ways for the rest of their lives.


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