Make Me Yours (Chicago Railers Hockey #1) Read Online Jennifer Sucevic

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Sports Tags Authors: Series: Chicago Railers Hockey Series by Jennifer Sucevic
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Total pages in book: 89
Estimated words: 90009 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 450(@200wpm)___ 360(@250wpm)___ 300(@300wpm)
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A steamy friends-to-lovers, off-limits, pro hockey romance from USA Today and Amazon top #26 bestselling author Jennifer Sucevic.

Steele Sanderson has always been my safe place.
My best friend.
My constant.
My person.
So when I walk in on my boyfriend—who also happens to be my boss—screwing a colleague on his desk, it’s Steele who picks up the pieces.

Now I’m living in his penthouse, crashing in his guest room, and working as his assistant while I figure out what’s next. Every day, I tell myself this is temporary. That just because he looks at me like I already belong to him doesn’t mean I actually do.

Except... Steele doesn’t see it that way.
To him, I’ve always been his.
The only one he’s ever wanted.
The only one he’s ever loved.
He’s protective.
Possessive.
And done waiting.

I keep telling myself that crossing the line could ruin everything—that risking our friendship isn’t worth it. But when he offers a friends-with-benefits arrangement, promising to give me everything I’ve secretly craved, how can I possibly say no?
It doesn’t take long for the lines between us to blur.

Now I have to decide—keep pretending nothing’s changed or finally give in to the man who’s been right in front of me all along.

Make Me Yours is a swoony, boy-obsessed, friends-to-lovers steamy romance with close proximity, undeniable tension, and a hero who has always been all in. It’s the first book in the Chicago Railers series and can be read as a standalone

*************FULL BOOK START HERE*************

1

LILAH

“Where are you, darling? You’re going to miss the start of the game,” Aunt Evelyn asks as I rush through the doors of the building where I’ve worked as a lawyer for the last three years.

“I know, I know.” I wrangle my Louis Vuitton bag onto my shoulder while digging around inside for my keycard. “I just need to fax some paperwork to a client for Devon. I found the file lying on the counter. Pretty sure he forgot to grab it this morning. It’ll take two minutes, tops. Promise. And then I’ll be over.”

“That man is lucky to have you,” she says lightly. “I certainly hope he realizes it.”

Even though she doesn’t tack on more, I’m sure she’s dying to.

My godmother is not Devon Peterson’s number one fan.

“He does,” I force out with more confidence than I currently feel. The sound of my voice echoes off the empty corridor as I give Mike, the night guard, a wave while striding to the bank of elevators and taking one to the twenty-fifth floor where our law offices are located. “He’s been working on a big case, and all his attention is focused there at the moment.”

“Seems like that’s how it always is, Lilah,” she says gently from the other end of the line. “Maybe, just once, his attention should be on you.”

“It is,” I reply, a little too quickly. The lie slips out before I can stop it, and I wince.

There’s a brief pause. The kind that says she heard everything I wasn’t saying. “I hope so, sweetheart. You deserve that. Whoever you’re with should make you feel like the most important person in the world.”

“He does.” Even as the words leave my lips, I realize they’re not true.

Devon’s life revolves around work. It always has. I knew that before we became a couple. Our families had been pushing us together since I was barely old enough to understand what dating meant. Once I started at his law firm, it just felt inevitable. Like the pieces had been arranged for us, and all we had to do was fall in line.

“Okay,” she says, dropping the topic. That’s one thing I love about Aunt Evelyn, she always senses when to back off, giving me the time and space to figure something out on my own.

Which is the opposite of my parents.

Even though I’m twenty-eight, they have a lot to say about my life. And most of it isn’t good.

As soon as that thought pops into my head, I push it aside. It’s been a long enough day already. I’m looking forward to unwinding at the game and watching the Chicago Railers demolish the Baltimore Baddies.

“Did you ever mention to Devon that you’re not very happy and have been thinking about doing something else?” Evelyn asks, her motherly concern warming my heart despite my rush. “You know I’d give you a job at the arena in a heartbeat. Wouldn’t that be fun? The two of us working together?”

“I doubt Hugh would be very happy about that.”

While Aunt Evelyn owns forty-eight percent of the Railers, Hugh Landry holds an equal stake in the team. For over twenty-five years, the two families have been at odds, which is why the remaining four percent, held by a third-party investor, often acts as the tiebreaker when they inevitably disagree. Aunt Evelyn never talks about it, but once upon a time, she and Hugh were engaged.

Until everything fell apart.

“That’s just an added bonus to sweeten the deal,” she says with a chuckle.

“You’re bad, Aunt Evelyn.”

“I know. It’s part of my charm.”

“Is he still trying to buy you out?”

“Of course. Although, that’s not about to happen. This is my team and my family’s name on the front of the building. I’m not going anywhere. Sooner or later, he’ll have to realize it.”

“Let’s just hope hell doesn’t freeze over first.”

She grumbles before saying, “Getting back to Devon… You should just tell him you’re not happy. If he loves you, he’ll want the best for you.”

“I haven’t made any decisions yet.” I chew my bottom lip as the elevator doors slide open and I step into the hallway. “What I need to do is find something I’m passionate about because law just isn’t it.”

“What about something that involves baking? You love puttering around in the kitchen.”

That’s more of a hobby, not a job.

“I need something I can make money at.” I pause before adding, “And as appreciative as I am of the job offer, I don’t think working at the arena is it either. I wish it were. It would make life so much easier.”

“Darling, it was just an idea. What I want most for you is to be happy. You’ll figure it out. Just give yourself time.”

“I’m almost thirty. It feels like I should have my life together by now.” My voice dips lower. “I thought by this point, I’d be married, have a couple of kids, maybe a house in the suburbs.”


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