Page 93 of Reluctant Love: Welcome to Emancipation

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“You only got three properties,” he pointed out.

“I’m saving my money,” I lied.

“You saving it for what? The rapture?”

My eyes narrowed. “I’m saving it for the right investment.”

My voice was all haughty, like I knew something he didn’t.

I didn’t know shit.

“Farrah, you missed three good opportunities already. If you need some help?—”

I would never admit that shit! I might as well keep lying. “That’s because the math wasn’t mathing.”

He stared at me.

“That don’t even mean anything,” he said flatly.

I turned my nose up at him. “Don’t worry about what it means.”

“I’m very worried. You make sure I review your retirement plan… when you get one.”

“You too emotional,” I said, waving him off. “Roll the dice.”

He scoffed. “That’s wild, coming from you.”

“I’m chill. Not emotional at all,” I denied.

“You chaotic as fuck, Little Thug.”

“I like to call it whimsical,” I argued.

“I like to call it delusional.”

I swear I couldn’t stand this man. “Roll the damn dice, Mekhi.”

He rolled and landed on his own property, of course. I stared at the board frowning.

“This game is racist.”

He laughed then, a real laugh. It was low and warm and rich. Man, I loved that sound. It made me feel like I was easing his mind, exactly what I wanted to do.

“Your turn,” he said.

I rolled. The dice clattered across the board, bumping a few houses before stopping. Onhisspace. Again. His most expensive one. That mothafuckin’ Boardwalk. With a hotel.

I froze.

He leaned back slowly, hands on his knees, eyes locked on me, smug with amusement.

“Go ‘head and run me my twelve hunnid, shorty.”

“Twelve hundred?” I screeched. “Why is a piece of cardboard costing twelve hundred American dollars?”

“Property value,” he said simply, shrugging those broad, beautiful, brown shoulders.

“You lying. You rigged this game,” I accused.