Read Twinsequences (A Twisted Twin Series) Online
Authors: Jennifer Foor
artists
there.
The
job
was
great
and
the
pay
was
pretty
good
too,
but
what
happened
at
the
shop
was
not
alright
with
me.
They
had
these
little
groupie
chicks
in
there
all
the
time.
They’d
just
hang
out
and
drink
with
the
older
guys
that
worked
there,
including
my
husband.
Of
course,
he
liked
the
attention,
and
last
year,
I
found
out
that
he’d
hooked
up
with
one
of
them
after
hours.
It
broke
my
heart.
Every
single
day
I
was
busy
busting
my
ass
trying
to
help
pay
the
bills
and
make
sure
our
children
were
taken
care
of,
while
he
was
out
sticking
his
dick
in
some
little
wall
banger.
It
made
me
sick.
I
wanted
to
leave
him,
but
without
my
parents
and
no
real
friends,
I
looked
at
my
children
and
knew
that
they
needed
stability.
It
was
bad
enough
that
all
of
the
other
kid’s
parents
talked
behind
our
backs
because
we
looked
different
than
them.
Gavin
had
used
my
arm
and
other
parts
of
my
body
as
a
human
canvas.
At
first,
all
of
my
tattoos
were
easily
covered,
but
after
he
finished
with
my
sleeve
was
when
I
really
started
to
hear
the
whispers
and
see
the
dirty
looks.
It
didn’t
matter
that
they
were
beautiful
flowers
or
my
children’s
names.
I
looked
different
and
they
hated
me
for
it.
I
was
never
asked
to
go
on
field
trips
or
to
join
the
PTA.
Even
when
I
volunteered
for
class
parties,
I
was
never
picked.
I
knew
the
reason,
but
it
not
only
hurt
my
children,
it
hurt
me
too.
I
was
a
damn
good
mother;
better
than
half
of
the
mother’s
in
my
children’s
classes.
Still,
they
saw
what
they
wanted
in
me
and
never
gave
me
a
chance
otherwise.
My
husband
and
I
had
tattoos.
I
had
my
nose
pierced.
So
what?
I
had
the
same
problem
with
finding
a
job.
Even
after
taking
a
bunch
of
college
courses
online
after
my
first
child
was
born,
people
just
wouldn’t
hire
me
for
anything
that
had
to
deal
directly
with
the
public.
I
ended
up
borrowing
money
from
my
father
to
complete
a
bartending
course.
It
worked
out
to
benefit
me
more
in
the
long
run.
I
had
a
great
clientele
and
made
pretty
good
money
doing
it.
Plus,
half
of
our
town
ended
up
at
the
bar
at
night.
In
the
past
six
months,
I
hadn’t
been
seeing
eye
to
eye
with
my
husband.
For
some
reason,
he
wanted
me
home
all
of
the
time.
I
was
registered
on
two
pool
leagues
that
I
shot
on
during
the
time
I
was
working.
If
the
league
fell
on
my
day
off,
I
would
still
show
up
to
be
able
to
socialize
and
not
have
it
be
part
of
my
job.
I
didn’t
have
real
friends,
none
that
I
would
call
trustworthy,
that
is.
The
problem
was
that
I’d
met
them
all
from
working
in
the
bar.
Getting
to
know
someone
at
that
kind
of
place
isn’t
exactly
a
good
thing.
Most
people
that
come
into
a
bar
alone
are
there
because
they
have
problems
that
they
want
to
drink
away.
I’d
heard
every
kind
of
story
and
at
the
end
of
the
day
my
team
consisted
of
two
town
drunks,
a
seventy
year
old
farmer
that
lost
his
wife
to
cancer,
and
three
brothers
that
were
more
focused
on
who
could
get
laid
the
fastest
each
week.
My
husband,
who
I
had
been
in
love
with
since
puberty,
didn’t
understand
why
I
needed
a
social
life
outside
of
work.
He
felt
that
my
line
of
work
was
the
only
socializing
I
would
ever
need.
In
fact,
he
said
my
real
job
was
maintaining
the
town
gossip
and
learning
everyone’s
dirty
secrets.
I
don’t
know
why
he
complained.
I
contributed
to
our
family
and
managed
to
make
things
work.
At
the
end
of
the
day,
I
loved
them
and
would
do
anything
to
make
sure
they
never
had
to
need
for
anything.
It
wasn’t
until
this
past
winter
when
things
started
to
really
fall
apart.
I’d
noticed
Gavin
was
being
distant.
He
would
come
home
all
giddy
and
want
to
spend
time
with
the
kids,
more
than
usual.
I
thought
maybe
he
just
wanted
to
be
a
better
father
at
first.
I
didn’t
mind
that
he
was
ignoring
me
for
the
kids.
They
were
the
most
important
anyway.
As
the
winter
months
passed,
we
communicated
less.
One
night,
I
sat
him
down
and
told
him
how
I
felt.
He
blamed
it
all
on
me
and
my
guilty
conscious,
claiming
that
I
wasn’t
going
to
let
his
one
indiscretion
go.
I
wanted
to
forget,
but
I
also
wanted
to
believe
that
I
was
still
a
desirable
woman.
I
had
needs
and
he
just
wasn’t
fulfilling
them.
One
day
I
went
and
talked
to
his
mother
for
a
few
hours.
She
suggesting
that
I
give
him
his
space
and
maybe
he
was
just
going
through
a
‘man
stage’.
I
got
back
into
the
rhythm
of
my
daily
routine
and
tried
to
brush
off
my
suspicions.
One
morning,
after
getting
the
kids
up
and
ready
for
school,
I
started
to
feel
lousy.
As
the
day
progressed,
so
did
my
health.
I
called
work
and
let
them
know
that
I
wouldn’t
be
able
to
come
in.
Since
I
rarely
ever
took
a
day
off,
they
were
great
about
it
and
wished
me
well.
I
took
some
cold
medicine
and
went
straight
to
bed.
When
I
woke
up,
got
the
kids
off
the
bus
and
finally
got
started
on
dinner,
Gavin
was
walking
in
the
door.
Right
away
he
noticed
that
I
wasn’t
dressed
for
work.
“What’s
wrong
with
you?
You
know
you’re
going
to
be
late?”
“I
called
out
sick.”
I
stirred
the
pot
of
soup
and
didn’t
look
up
at
him.
“That’s
just
great!
You
get
a
damn
stuffy
nose
and
suddenly
can’t
work.
Pathetic!”
I
heard
him
turn
around
and
head
out
of
the
kitchen.
His
words
hurt
me.
Even
when
I
was
sick,
I
still
did
everything
I
needed
to
do.
His
lack
of
compassion
rubbed
me
the
wrong
way.
Why
hadn’t
he
even
asked
if
I
was
okay,
or
what
was
wrong
with
me?
I
walked
right
into
the
living
room
and
found
him
sitting
with
the
kids.
“What
is
your
problem?
I
never
call
out
sick.
Don’t
you
even
care
if
I’m
okay?”
He
laughed
but
never
took
his
eyes
away
from
the
sports
channel.
“Whatever,
Ves.
You’re
obviously
fine
if
you
are
up
in
my
shit
about
it.
How
much
longer
before
dinner
is
ready?”
I
put
my
hands
on
my
hips.
I
knew
that
I
could
cry
or
I
could
get
pissed.
We’d
been
together
way
too
long
for
me
to
be
okay
with
the
way
he
was
acting.
“You’re
the
one
with
the
problem!
I’m
sick
and
you’re
busy
treating
me
like
crap.
Wow!
I’m
so
glad
that
you
don’t
give
a
damn
about
me
or
my
health.
What
would
you
do
if
I
just
dropped
dead
like
my
mother
did?
Would
you
even
care?”
Tears
filled
my
eyes
immediately
mentioning
her.
I
missed
her
so
much
and
it
was
days
like
this
that
I
needed
her
the
most.
I
made
my
way
into
the
kitchen
and
leaned
against
the
countertop
to
regain
my
composure.
Hands
wrapped
around
my
waist
and
I
felt
Gavin
breathing
against
my
ear.
“I’m
sorry.
I
had
a
shitty
day
and
told
some
of
the
guys
they
could
come
over
and
watch
the
game
tonight.
I
didn’t
mean
to
be
a
dick
to
you.”
I
turned
around
and
looked
into
his
eyes.
“Sometimes
I
feel
like
you
don’t
even
care
about
me
anymore.
It’s
like
you
don’t
even
consider
my
feelings.”
He
frowned
in
a
joking
kind
of
way.
“I’m
sorry.”
His
hand
slid
up
the
back
of
my
shirt.
Right
away,
it
gave
me
the
shivers.
When
he
reached
my
bra
line,
I
gasped
and
leaned
back
on
the
counter.
“Am
I
still
attractive
to
you?”
I
knew
I
wasn’t
ugly;
in
fact,
I
got
hit
on
all
the
time.
After
having
two
kids,
I
had
nice
curves,
but
was
still
petite
and
pretty
thin.
My
hair
was
long,
half
down
my
back,
with
different
colored
blonde
streaks
through
it.
I
didn’t
have
wrinkles
and
my
breasts
didn’t
sag.
I
could
spend
minimal
time
in
the
bathroom
and
feel
good
about
myself.
He
kissed
the
side
of
my
head
and
pulled
me
into
his
arms.
“Of
course
you
are.”
I
slid
my
hands
up
the
back
of
his
shirt
and
pulled
his
warm
body
against