CALL GIRL: Chrome Horsemen MC

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CALL GIRL: Chrome Horsemen MC Page 26

by Evelyn Glass


  “Sarah, Daisy would like a slice of your apple pie, warmed, with a scoop of ice cream,” he said as their waitress arrived to collect their plates.

  “I can’t! I’m stuffed!”

  “Bring two spoons, then,” he continued when Sarah hesitated.

  “You’re going to have to eat most of it,” she groaned.

  “We’ll see.”

  The pie arrived, steaming hot, with a generous scoop of vanilla ice cream on top. The pie was unlike any apple pie she’d ever seen. It was creamy smooth and appeared to be made from apple sauce, not apples. She cut off the end, added a dollop of ice cream, and after blowing it cool, popped it into her mouth.

  Dix grinned as her face lit up.

  “I’m impressed,” she said as she cut off another bite.

  “Everyone has the same reaction. I wish you could have seen your face. You were like, ‘What’s this? This isn’t apple pie.’”

  “It’s not like any I have had, but it is certainly good.” Even though she didn’t think she could eat another bite, she ate more than half of the slice. “Ugh…I hate you,” she groaned as she tossed her spoon into the bowl.

  “I didn’t make you eat it,” he replied with a grin.

  “Doesn’t matter. I still hate you.” She turned to her purse, pulling her wallet out. She hoped she’d enough cash on her to pay for her part of the meal.

  “I’ve got this,” he said as he picked up the ticket.

  “Dix, I can pay for my meal. You don’t have to do that.”

  “I invited you to dinner, I’m paying.”

  She watched his eyes a moment. Letting him pay would help stretch her meager funds. “Thank you.”

  He paid the ticket then escorted her outside. She heard the distant rumble of thunder as she donned the helmet, but they were only fifteen minutes from the motel and they should make it easily before it began to rain.

  He stopped beside her Bug and killed the rumbling bike as she dismounted. “Thank you for dinner, and for helping me get Riley back,” she said softly as she handed his helmet to him.

  He nodded. “We’ll start looking in the morning, say about eight?”

  “Eight is perfect.”

  “Okay, I’ll pick you up then,” he said as he put on the helmet. “We’ll have breakfast, then we’ll see if we can track down Leo.”

  “Thank you, again. It won’t cause you problems at work, will it?”

  He chuckled. “There’s nothing there that can’t wait a day or two.” He thumbed the bike to life. “See you at eight.”

  CHAPTER SIX

  The first fat raindrops began to fall, tinking on the metal roof of the shed as Dix backed his bike in. He stepped out and rolled the door down before hurrying to his trailer, wanting to get in before the rain began in earnest.

  Stepping into the small trailer, he went immediately to the fridge and pulled out a beer before sitting down and staring at the wall, sipping his beer. Daisy confused him. She was stunningly attractive, but there was more to her than that. He didn’t like how her husband had treated her, and he certainly didn’t like the fact her ex had taken their son. He hoped they found that asshole tomorrow because he wanted to take a measure of the man. Daisy’s story had the ring of truth, but he found it hard to believe someone would treat her the way she described. He’d never treat someone he cared about that way. If her story panned out, then he and Leo might have a frank exchange of ideas.

  He looked around the trailer then stood and retrieved three more beers from the small refrigerator. He stepped out of his trailer and walked along the path to Old James’s house. He stepped onto the porch and rapped on the door. “Want a beer?”

  A moment later the door opened to reveal a tall slender man with close cropped white hair standing there. “Don’t I always?” James asked as he stepped back from the door.

  Dix walked in, handed James one of the bottles, then moved on to the kitchen where he placed two in the refrigerator for later. James’s house was small but well kept, cluttered but not dirty, and full of metal knickknacks and racing memorabilia. Dix felt more at home here than he did anywhere else, including his own trailer.

  He returned to the living room and sat down in his chair, a supremely comfortable thing made from a seven series BMW bucket, and set his bottle on a turned piece of aluminum. “We got some news today. It answers a few questions about Kevin.”

  “What’s that?” James asked.

  “A girl showed up today claiming the Firechrome are going to make a move into town.”

  “Never heard of them.”

  “They’re a big outfit out of Portland. They have chapters in Eugene, Salem and Medford. They control the I-5 corridor and rumor has it they have their fingers in all kinds of stuff. Drugs, guns, prostitution, protection, the works.”

  “Nice guys,” James said as he took a pull from the beer. “She came to Douglas to tell you all that?”

  “In a way. Her husband is a Chrome and he kidnapped her son a few days ago. She tracked him to here. She wants our help to get her son back.”

  “Her husband did?”

  “Well, soon to be ex-husband.”

  “Ah, that makes a little more sense. You think the Firechrome are going to try to take over the racing and they shot Kevin as a warning?”

  “That’s the only thing I can figure. Seems rather stupid to tip your hand, though. If she hadn’t told us about the Chromes sniffing around, we wouldn’t even know until they made their move.”

  “Are you going to help her with her son?”

  “Yeah, I think so. I want to, anyway.”

  “Dix, you need to be careful. Family disputes can get nasty, and quick. Believe me, I know.”

  “I know, James. But what she’s gone through isn’t right. If what she told me is true, Leo, her husband, is a low life son-of-a-bitch.”

  “No. No it’s not, and maybe he is. But it’s not really your problem and you need to be careful. That’s all I’m saying.”

  Dix laughed. “I’m always careful.”

  “Right,” James drawled. “Tell that to someone who doesn’t know you as well as I do.”

  “I’ll be careful. Have I told you that you worry too much?”

  James nodded as he took another sip of beer. He wasn’t surprised Dix would want to help. The woman was pushing all his buttons, probably without even knowing it. Even though Dix hadn’t seen Roger and Silvia Montague in years, some wounds never fully heal.

  “Not since last week. So the Firechrome are bigger than the Cutthroats?” James asked to restart the conversation on a different subject. He could tell Dix was feeling his loneliness and just wanted some company.

  “Yeah, a lot bigger. Probably a hundred times our size, maybe more.”

  James whistled. “Thirty-five hundred members. That’s not a club; that’s a town.”

  “That’s just a guess, and that’s spread across four chapters, but yeah. They’re huge. Biggest outlaw club in the state probably.”

  “How are you going to handle them?”

  Dix snorted. “I don’t have any idea. I don’t think Cale does either. We obviously can’t go at them head on. They could wipe us out without blinking. Besides, the last thing we want a club war in town. We have friends and family here. Douglas is our home. We don’t want them coming in and shooting everything up.”

  “Glad you feel that way,” James said with a grin. “I may be getting on up there, but I’m not ready to kick the bucket yet.”

  “I pity the fool who tries to take a swipe at you,” Dix chuckled as he glanced at the Remington 870 twelve-gauge propped by the door. He knew it was loaded with double-ought buck and James knew how to use it. More than one thief had been sent running by a shot fired into the air.

  James smiled. “A helpless old man can’t be too careful.”

  “Helpless my ass!”

  “God created man. Samuel Colt made them equal,” James intoned solemnly, then drained the last of his beer. “Or in this case, Re
mington. Want the other?”

  “Sure, I’ll get it,” Dix said, emptying his bottle then picking James’s up as he passed. He chucked the two empties into the glass bin then returned a moment later with the two cold ones, handing one to James. One nice thing about working in a recycling yard, it was never a problem to dispose of the cans and bottles.

  “This girl, how long is she going to be in town?”

  “Don’t know,” Dix said, settling back into his chair. “A couple of days, probably. It depends on how quickly we find out if she’s right. I hope she’s not.”

  “But if she is?”

  Dix shrugged. “Then we’ll figure out how to deal with them. Maybe we’ll bring the bodies here and run them through the crusher,” he teased.

  “Just do it while I’m not around so I can honestly say I didn’t know anything about it.”

  “Make sure you’re not around, check. Wait a minute, when are you not around?”

  James grinned. “Good question. You seem to have a problem.”

  Dix chuckled. Talking to James always seemed to improve his mood when he was feeling down. He’d spent a long time talking to him after Kevin’s death, and apparently without even knowing, James had helped him begin to heal. His unwavering confidence, his steadfast refusal to believe he’d missed anything, and his absolute refusal to allow Dix to take responsibility for the accident had stopped the toxic spiral he was in.

  Daisy’s story had bummed him out a little, and he didn’t even know why. James was right: it wasn’t his problem, but he still felt an urge to help the woman. Nobody deserved to be treated like she’d been. By helping the Cutthroats he was helping her, so there was no reason not to help her. He understood James’s caution, especially after what he went through, but Daisy wasn’t part of his family.

  “I’m not going to be around much tomorrow. Daisy and I are going to ride through town and see if we can see anyone, or maybe a bike, she recognizes.”

  “Her name is Daisy?”

  Dix shrugged. “That’s what she said. Daisy…” He paused as he tried to remember her last name. “…Watson. That’s it. Daisy Watson.”

  James grinned and began to sing. “Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer do…”

  Dix laughed. “That was the first thing I thought of, too, when she told me her name. I’m sure she was never teased about it growing up. You know, like having the name Dix.”

  James smiled. He remembered how young Dixon Montague would get off the bus, upset by the name-calling. Kids could be cruel, and he knew that, but Dix’s parents were useless, ignoring their son’s pain and frustration. That’s when he began taking Dix under his wing.

  He’d discovered an amazingly bright boy who had an instinctual grasp of mechanics. There was nothing he couldn’t take apart and put back together. As he taught Dix to use the tools in the machine shop, he also took the time to instruct him in life, when to fight and when to let things roll off of him. He’d grasped his lessons well, both in the shop and in life, and he’d grown into a fine young man, a man who knew when to fight and when to care, a man he’d be proud to call son.

  James smiled. With the loss of his own son so many years before, taking Dixon under his care and raising him had healed him and filled a hole in his heart, and he loved him as he’d loved his own son. The yard may not look like much, but it was a very profitable operation, netting a couple of million a year. Dixon didn’t know it, but after James passed away, it would all transfer to him.

  They sat in companionable silence for a time, Dix smiling at the way Old James looked at him, as a father would look at a son. That suited him fine because as far as he was concerned James McGhee was dad even if Roger Montague was his father. The best thing to ever happen to him was when James invited the young Dixon into the shop after school and…mentored him. James taught him all the things fathers should teach their sons: how to be self-reliant and how to treat a lady, and he’d given him something his father couldn’t. Pride. Pride in who he was. There was nothing he wouldn’t do for that old man and he’d mourn grievously at his passing.

  “I have to go,” Dix said standing suddenly, the thought of James passing upsetting him.

  James nodded and rose as well, if a bit more slowly. “Hot date tonight, huh?”

  “Oh yeah,” Dix drawled. “I have them breaking down my door.”

  James chuckled. “You could if you would ever go out.”

  “I go out.”

  “I mean on a date. You know, with a girl.”

  Dix laughed. “Oh…one of those.”

  This time James laughed. “You should try it sometime. You might like it.”

  “Good night, James,” Dix said as he stepped out. It had rained while he was cozy in James’s house, but had stopped, at least for the moment.

  “Night, Dix.” He watched as he disappeared into the night then closed his door, shaking his head. He was no judge of male beauty, but if the admiring glances he noticed women giving him when they were out were any indication, Dixon wouldn’t be lacking for female companionship if he wanted it.

  Dix closed the door to his trailer. He knew James worried about him. Yes, he could have more women in his bed if he chose, but they would be nothing but casual hookups. He’d played the field for a while, sleeping with a couple different women a week sometimes, but those encounters had left him hollow. Now he had a couple of friends with benefits, women who enjoyed the excitement and speed of the races, who he’d call on if they, or he, had a need. They were beautiful and talented women, well-schooled in pleasing a man, but after the fucking was done, they would return to their separate lives until one of them needed an itch scratched again.

  He’d go to his grave before he admitted it, but he was jealous of Thad and Chuck and Cale, and most of the members of the Cutthroats. Especially Thad, and when he was alive, Kevin. Their wives were beautiful, sweet and supportive, and obviously head over heels for their men. That’s what he wanted, not the casual one-night stands or the friends with benefits.

  He pulled another beer from the fridge and sat down, leaning his head back and listening as it began to rain again. He sipped his beer, the patter of drops on the trailer roof relaxing him, until he became sleepy.

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  “You ready to go find your son?” Dix asked after Daisy opened the door to her room.

  “You bet! I can’t thank you enough for doing this for me.”

  “A deal’s a deal. You help us, we’ll help you.”

  “Your bike or my car?”

  “Bike. I saw your car running yesterday. If you drove all the way from Prineville in that, you’re a braver woman than I gave you credit for.”

  “Hey!” she said loudly, but with a smile. “That’s my baby you’re talking about!”

  “Baby, huh?”

  “Okay. It was all I could afford. It’s a temperamental beast, but has always gotten me to where I wanted to go.”

  He shook his head. He wouldn’t be caught dead owning a piece of shit like that. “Well, today, I think you can do a little better.” He handed her a helmet. “I even brought you your own helmet.”

  “You just happened to have an extra one lying around?” she grinned as she put it on. He probably had women wanting to go for a ride all the time, and not all of them on his bike. She grinned as she climbed aboard behind him. She had a good feeling about today, that she and Riley would soon be back together, and she’d slept better last night than she had in days.

  “Never know when you might need to give a lady in distress a ride.”

  She giggled as she tucked in close, feeling giddy. Just having him talk to her like he did, like an equal and with humor and warmth, made her all gooey inside. Her girlfriends talked about how great their sex lives were but she couldn’t understand it, until maybe now. Leo had taken her virginity and had been her only lover, and she knew sex was supposed to be fun and exciting, but with him it hadn’t been. Like everything else with Leo, she now suspected there was something be
tter than what she had and she wondered if Dix knew how to please a woman. Looking like he did, she suspected he could have all the practice he wanted.

  She’d let Leo take her whenever he wanted her, but she hadn’t wanted sex in years. Now, sitting on the back of the motorcycle with Dix, she felt a stirring, a yearning, she hadn’t felt in a long time…and it felt great.

  He slowed suddenly and pulled into the parking lot of motel. “See anything?”

  “No,” Daisy said as they slowly cruised through the parking lot of the motel. “I think the Chromes only ride Harleys. At least that’s all I ever saw.”

 

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