Free Read Novels Online Home

Tempting Sophia by Jessica Prince (34)

Chapter Thirty-Three

Dominic

Sophia had been amazing over the next couple of days. When we woke up from our nap after our heart-to-heart, she’d insisted that I come stay at her house so she could take care of me. I’d been relegated to a guest room, but that was fine with me; just being in her presence was enough. And when it was time for Lola and me to head to New York for the funeral, she’d strong-armed her way into the trip. Instead of going back to work after their suspension was over, Daphne and Sophia had taken vacation time so they could be there for their friend. And me.

“Wow.” Lola’s whisper echoed off the walls of the sanctuary once we stepped into the grand Catholic church my father had designated to hold his funeral. It was by far the grandest, most opulent church in Manhattan. Only the best for my old man. “I’m surprised I didn’t burst into flames the instant I walked in here.”

“Shh!” my mother hissed before doing the sign of the cross. “Lord, forgive her for she knows not what she does.”

I rolled my eyes at her dramatics, wondering again for the millionth time why she’d tagged along with us to her ex-husband’s funeral with her new husband, Maury, in tow.

“Pretty sure she knows exactly what she does,” Grayson muttered under his breath. “She just doesn’t seem to care.”

Daphne, Sophia, Maury, and I all laughed while my mom and Lola both shot him murderous glares.

“It’s enough that you two aren’t getting married in an actual church, but do you have to make jokes in the house of God?” Ma admonished.

“Well, this is gonna be fun,” Lola mumbled. “Why exactly are you here again, Ma?”

She placed her hands on her hips and stared my sister down. “Because in spite of my personal feelings for the man, he still gave me the two most precious gifts a woman could ask for—you and your brother. I’d like to pay my respects.”

“That and his lawyer called and asked her to come since her name was mentioned in the will,” Maury added, pulling at his necktie. Poor guy looked as uncomfortable as a whore in… well, in a church.

My back went straight as Lola loudly hissed, “You’re mentioned in the will?”

“Can you at least pretend that I taught you manners and keep your voice down?”

“Sorry,” she continued to whisper-yell. “I’m just… that’s insane!”

“Do you know what he could possibly have left you?” I asked, cutting into what would have easily degenerated into an Abbatelli girl fight.

“No clue.” Ma shrugged carelessly. “But curiosity has always been an unfortunate character flaw of mine.”

“Hence why we’re here,” Maury finished.

I felt a tug on my hand and looked down to see Sophia had wrapped her fingers around mine. “Hey,” she whispered so only I could hear. “You okay?”

“I don’t like this,” I responded just as quietly. “He made Ma’s life miserable. What if he put something in there to continue messing with her?”

She stepped closer until she was pressed right into my side. “It doesn’t matter. Whatever it is, we’ll cross that bridge if and when we come to it. We can handle it, okay? Besides, Maury wouldn’t let anything hurt your mother. He’s fierce like that.” Her beautiful smile melted away my concern. “Let’s just get through the next few days. The funeral, then the reading of the will tomorrow, and then we get to go back to Seattle where the worst thing that could happen is Lola getting the wrong flowers in her bouquet.”

I made my eyes go big as I asked, “I’m sorry, do you know my sister? Her getting the wrong flowers on her wedding day spells disaster of apocalyptic proportions.”

She giggled quietly and moved even closer. Damn, I love her. I wanted to say it out loud, but it was too soon. We still needed to talk about us, and where we stood, so I settled for “Thank you for being here. I don’t think I could’ve gotten through this without you.”

She lifted my hand and placed a kiss on my knuckles. I pulled my hand from her hold in order to sling my arm over her shoulders, then looked at the rest of our ragtag group and said, “Let’s get this over with.”

We took two steps into the sanctuary when I was hit by a force that broke my hold on Sophia and knocked me back two steps. “What the hell?”

With my arms spread out at my sides, I looked down at the top of a head full of fake blonde hair and froze solid.

I heard Lola growl, “You have got to be kidding me,” but I was too shocked by the fact that Chelsea was wrapped around my body like a goddamn python to process what was going on around me.

“Oh God, Dominic!” Chelsea sobbed against my chest, fisting my shirt and wrinkling it beyond compare. “I can’t believe he’s gone. I just can’t believe it. I’m so glad you’re here.”

“Jesus Christ,” I grunted as I reached down and tried to pry her claws out of my Armani button-down. “Have you lost your mind? Get off me!”

“I’m so sad,” she continued to sob. “I n-need you, Dom. I c-can’t do this without you.”

I pushed at her as best I could without making a scene, but she was like goddamn cling wrap, latching on to wherever she touched next.

“I’m serious, Chelsea. Let me go right fucking now.” I looked around for God knew what, seeing that most everyone with me looked as bewildered as I felt. All except for one.

“He said let go.” Sophia’s face was twisted in anger. I had no doubt that, had we not been in a church, attending my father’s funeral, she’d have gone off on the bitch.

She wrapped her fingers around Chelsea’s wrists and twisted so hard that the woman had no choice but to let go or risk being hurt.

She spoke quietly through clenched teeth in order not to draw unwanted attention. “This is a funeral, you tacky cow. I’d ask how pathetic do you have to be to make a pass at your dead sugar daddy’s son, but seeing as you already proved you’re a manipulative, selfish bitch, I’m not surprised you’d make this play.”

Excuse me?” Chelsea started, nowhere near as quiet. Not a shock, seeing as she craved any kind of attention, good or bad. “Who do you think you are? My boyfriend just died!”

People started staring and whispering, but Sophia was on a role and didn’t seem to care. “Oh please,” she scoffed. “Don’t try and play the grieving widow. It doesn’t suit you. I’m sure every single person in this room knows what a lowbred, white-trash moneygrubber you really are. You’re not fooling anybody. You’re here because your last meal ticket croaked and now you’re looking for a new one. The saddest part is you actually think Dominic would fall for it. For God’s sake, hasn’t he spelled it out for you enough? He. Doesn’t. Want. You,” she enunciated.

People all around us started snickering, giving the impression that my father hadn’t hidden exactly what Chelsea was.

She blanched white as her mouth opened and closed in an effort to retort. “I… I can’t believe you’d

“Believe it,” Sophia snapped, stepping closer. “Now, since the silicone from your chest has obviously seeped into your brain and made you slow, I’ll speak slowly so you understand exactly what I’m saying. You have no chance at getting your hands on him or his money. Dominic can’t stand the sight of you. You repulse him.”

I could see Chelsea shifting from the grief-stricken girlfriend to the vindictive shrew she really was right before my eyes. “He didn’t seem that repulsed the night he took me to bed,” she sneered.

“Please.” Sophia laughed. “You were nothing more than a body he used in an attempt to get me out of his head. Hell, he probably kept his eyes closed and pictured my face the entire time.”

“Holy crap,” Daphne whispered. “She just totally went there.”

“Oh damn,” Lola giggled. “That had to hurt.”

I gave her a look that clearly communicated her input wasn’t necessary.

“You never had a chance,” she continued, undeterred. “Not only because he saw you for what you were right off the bat, but also because you could never be me. Now do yourself and the rest of us a favor and scurry back into whatever hole you crawled out of. And if you even think about contacting Dominic again, it’ll be me you deal with.” She moved again, bringing her nose to nose with Chelsea as she threatened, “And next time I won’t be nice.”

She stepped back and turned her attention from the woman she’d just dressed down to me, holding out her hand. “You ready, honey?”

I took it and allowed her to lead me to the front pew as the rest of our entourage followed. I bit my lip to keep from laughing when I heard my mother whispering to her husband. “I’ve always liked her. Spine of steel, that one. I always said it would take a special girl to hold her own against my Dominic.”

“Are you serious?” Lola cried. “If I’d have said half of what Sophia just did, you’d be over there burning candles, praying for my soul!”

“Eh,” Ma muttered. “You didn’t need to put up with Dominic. You gave attitude for no good reason.”

My sister emitted a squeak. “Did you forget we lived in the same house for eighteen years? If I didn’t get an attitude, he’d have eaten me alive! He shaved off one of my eyebrows in my sleep when I was twelve! Do you have any idea the kind of psychological damage having just one eyebrow causes a middle school girl?”

“My sweet Lola,” Ma crooned. “Always so dramatic.”

At the sound of Grayson’s snort, I lost control and busted out laughing as we slid into our seats with Mom, Maury, and Daphne behind us. I covered my mouth to muffle it as the pews filled up all around us. Once I got control of it, I realized Sophia and I were still holding hands. I glanced down at our entwined fingers before looking up at her to discover she was already watching me. She smiled and clenched my hand.

“I’m sorry,” she said under her breath.

My forehead creased in confusion, “For what?”

Her cheeks heated in a blush that made her look adorable. “For how I acted just now. That was… I didn’t mean to embarrass you. I just really don’t like that woman, and she

Without thinking, I leaned in and silenced her with a kiss. It wasn’t anything inappropriate, just a hard and fast peck on the lips, but it still heated my blood. And when I pulled back to meet her gaze, I knew by the glazed-over look in her eyes that it affected her just as much as it did me.

Instead of acknowledging it, I turned to face the front to give her as much privacy as possible to process what she was feeling.

Fortunately, she left her hand in mine through the entire service, making attending my father’s funeral that much more bearable.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Jenika Snow, Bella Forrest, Madison Faye, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Mia Ford, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Penny Wylder, Piper Davenport,

Random Novels

Infamy (RiffRaff Records Book 3) by L.P. Maxa

Bad Bosses by Kristina Weaver

Dragon Eruption (Ice Dragons Book 1) by Amelia Jade

Saving Samantha (Sisters Before Misters Book 2) by S Cinders

Hail Mary by Vale, Lani Lynn, Vale, Lani Lynn

One Night (Nights Series Book 1) by A.M. Salinger

by Skye MacKinnon

Boy Toys: Hot Off the Ice at Christmas by A. E. Wasp

Forbidden Games by JB Duvane

Savage Kiss: BBW Paranormal Shape Shifter Romance (Savage Shifters Book 2) by Milly Taiden

The Vampire's Captive (Tales of Vampires Book 4) by Zara Novak

Secret Pleasure by Lora Leigh

Summer at Buttercup Beach: A gorgeously uplifting and heartwarming romance by Holly Martin

So (Very!) Much More than the Girl Next Door (An Extraordinarily Yours Romance Book 1) by J. Kenner, Julie Kenner

Hot Man Wanted by Tia Siren

Five Feet Apart by Rachael Lippincott, Mikki Daughtry, Tobias Iaconis

Madd Ink by Dani René

Cylo (Dragons Of Kelon)(A Sci Fi Alien Weredragon Romance) by Maia Starr

Black Belt Knockout (Powerhouse M.A. Book 4) by Winter Travers

Song Bear: A Shifters in Love Fun & Flirty Romance (Silverbacks and Second Chances Book 4) by Harmony Raines