Her Mafia Bodyguard Read Online J.L. Beck, Cassandra Hallman

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Dark, Mafia, Romance, Taboo, Virgin Tags Authors: ,
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Total pages in book: 109
Estimated words: 101985 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 510(@200wpm)___ 408(@250wpm)___ 340(@300wpm)
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A quick check of the time tells me I only have a few minutes before class ends, so I need to get myself together. The memory of my last job before Mia came to live with the boss is enough to defeat me. What a clusterfuck that was. For all I know, it could be the reason I was assigned this bullshit detail in the first place. Payback for dropping the ball and almost getting some of the family’s top men killed in the process. Everybody makes mistakes—at least I can say it was one of the very few I’ve made while working for Bruno Morelli.

Of course, people start getting their shit together before the instructor is even finished talking. One thing I’ve noticed about Mia: she waits until class is dismissed. She knows how to be polite, unlike these spoiled little shits. Half of them slump down in their seats and fall asleep during the lecture, for fuck’s sake. They can’t even be bothered to pretend to give a shit. It’s enough to make me want to ask them who the hell they think they are and whether they think they could survive five minutes in the world Mia and I come from.

I’d remind them how lucky they are, too, but the truly lucky never appreciate it.

Mia closes her laptop and slides it into her bag before standing. Right away, I notice the way a few of the guys nearby admire her ass. One of them, in particular, sets my teeth on edge. He’s always wearing pajamas and the same knit cap, always looking like he just came in from a party or from some girl’s bed. I bet if I got close enough to him, I’d smell pussy on his breath. And he thinks he has the right to look at her? To even be in the same room?

“Hey. Can you hear me?” Mia snaps her fingers close to my face, startling me out of staring at the douchebag, who’s now slinging a backpack over one shoulder.

“Don’t snap your fucking fingers at me,” I warn. “I am not in the mood.”

“Like you ever are.” She rolls her eyes at me. “I said your name, like three times, and you were too busy staring into space. What do you even do, sitting here all this time?”

“I pay attention to the instructor, obviously.” I follow her to the door close to my seat.

“Maybe I should send you to class instead of me on the days I don’t feel like going.”

“Right. Like I would leave you home alone.”

“Of course not. What was I thinking?” She’s hardly paying attention to what she’s saying, though, too busy watching a group of girls getting together outside the lecture hall. They’re all on their phones, laughing about something, and she can’t hide her sadness.

“Come on.” I tuck a hand around her elbow and pull her down the hall. “You know your dad doesn’t want you making friends with just anybody.”

“He doesn’t want me to make friends with anybody, period, and you know it.” Her heavy sigh threatens to work its way into my sympathy. “Why am I even here? What’s the point?”

“To get an education, obviously. Be glad somebody is looking to foot the bill.”

“Do me a favor and never say that again. I don’t need you to guilt-trip me.” We emerge from the building, stepping out into sunlight bright enough to make me reach for my sunglasses. At least it’s a pretty campus, the sort of thing you see in movies about rich, preppy kids. A bunch of guys is playing football on a grassy field in the center of the buildings surrounding it, and a cluster of girls are sitting around watching and laughing and taking video.

And for a second, I do feel sorry for Mia. It’s so obvious she wants to be part of it, but there’s no way. I have to make sure she hangs out with only the right people. How the fuck am I supposed to know what that even means? Does he want me to run a background check on everybody she meets? I guess a guy with so much on his mind can only think about so many issues at once. He didn’t think this part through.

I can’t believe I’m about to say this, but the look on her face is going to bug the shit out of me for the rest of the day if I don’t. “You wanna go over and watch with them? I can hang out nearby.”

She studies me with obvious doubt, and I can’t blame her. I’d want to know what was up if I was her. “You’re serious?”

“Yeah. What? You think I want to be the only person you talk to on this whole fucking campus? No, thanks. Find some friends or something.” I lift my chin in the direction of some girls I kind of recognize from her writing class. “Go ahead. Say hi or whatever people do when they’re trying to make friends. I wouldn’t know.”


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