The Unraveling Read Online Vi Keeland

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Suspense, Thriller Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 95
Estimated words: 91504 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 458(@200wpm)___ 366(@250wpm)___ 305(@300wpm)
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“Of course not.”

“Are you sure?”

I keep my eyes trained down. That’s not what I’m doing, is it? I don’t want to get caught, do I? Thoughts swirl inside my head. None of them makes sense. I have more questions than answers. But I don’t want to ask Dr. Alexander any of them.

Eventually, he shifts in his seat. “Meredith?”

Our eyes meet. “Yes?”

He tilts his head. “You said you’ve been looking for Gabriel’s family’s graves?”

I nod.

“Why?”

I look away, shaking my head. “I’m not sure.”

“I have to imagine it would be very upsetting to run across them. To read the short number of years a young child lived from her headstone?”

My eyes well up even thinking about it. “Of course.”

“Is that the reason, Meredith? You’re looking to punish yourself more? I’m not a magician. I don’t know what is going on in your head without you sharing with me. But I’m concerned that your actions are very self-destructive.”

Tears streak down my cheeks. Dr. Alexander picks up a box of Kleenex and leans forward.

I pluck a few tissues out and wipe my face with a sniffle. “Thank you.”

After a long bout of silence, Dr. Alexander clears his throat. “Do you have a daily routine?”

“Um, yes. I mean… sort of.”

“Tell me about it. What do you do each morning?”

I blow out a breath and tell him how I start my day. My schedule that revolves around Gabriel.

“Okay, tomorrow, instead of following him, I want you to come here. I want you to sit in my lobby and write in your journal. Do that every day for the next week. Get your head out of the current pattern.”

I nod and take a deep breath. “Okay.” I can do that. I can get my coffee and come here instead. It will be better than following Gabriel. Than risking discovery. Risking losing even more than I already have. “I joined a gym,” I say, as though that will somehow redeem me.

“Good. Come here and journal. Go there and use a treadmill to do the mileage you’ve been walking while following him. Let’s break the cycle, create a new routine.”

I meet his eyes and force a smile. Try to look confident, and as though this has given me hope. But I still can’t shake it. The need to see it. The need to see Gabriel Wright’s pain. Which I caused.

CHAPTER 8 Then

I believe these are yours.” A bag skidded across the kitchen table, stopping right in front of me.

One glance at the folded-up printout stapled to the front of the white packaging and I didn’t need to ask why my husband was snarling. Birth control.

I closed my eyes.

Connor had gotten back last night from traveling with his team for a game in Cincinnati. I’d been waiting for the right moment to talk to him about my going back on the pill. Unfortunately, it never came.

I met his icy glare. “I’m sorry. I should’ve spoken to you about it before now. I just thought—”

Connor interrupted. “That your husband is damaged goods? Not father material?”

“No, that’s not it at all.” I stood and walked around the table. When I attempted to put my hands on his chest, he took two steps back, out of reach.

“Sure it’s not.”

“You already have so much pressure. It doesn’t seem like it’s the right time to add to that with a pregnancy and a newborn baby.”

“It’s nice of you to decide that for us.”

I frowned. “You’re right. I’m sorry. I should have had a discussion with you before renewing my prescription. It’s just that I got my period last night, and there’s only a short window of time to start a new pack, so I called.” I was in the wrong here, so I should have stopped at that—an apology and explanation. But something occurred to me, and the question tumbled from my mouth before I could stop it. “Why were you at the pharmacy that you picked up my pills anyway?”

Connor’s jaw clenched. “The physical therapist prescribed me a cream for the swelling in my knee. I told you I stopped taking the pain meds last month.”

“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to imply…”

“Yeah, right.” He shook his head and tore his jacket off the back of the chair, storming toward the front door. “Enjoy your pills.”

“Where are you going?”

“Anywhere but here.”

Even though I’d watched him rip open the door and yank it shut behind him, I jumped when it slammed. I was so on edge these days. My heart constantly raced, and I felt permanently off-kilter. The only time I relaxed was when I was at work and could immerse myself in other people’s problems.

I stared at the closed door for a long time, not that I expected Connor to come back. He wouldn’t. I’d just given him a new excuse to spend hours at the bar getting drunk. At least today he had a legitimate reason to be upset. Lately, he just picked a fight about anything when I got home from work and then disappeared for hours, coming home smelling like a brewery. Sometimes if I was still awake when he returned, I pretended to be sleeping. The alcohol made him emotional, and he’d come back upset and apologize. Then he’d want to have makeup sex. But his overindulgence often had another effect—the inability to maintain an erection. Which made him angry all over again. It had become a vicious circle I wanted to avoid.


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