by Blair Grey
Red Eyes MC Box Set #2
Books 4 - 6
Blair Grey
Copyright © 2018 by Blair Grey
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Contents
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Not Anticipated
1. Braxton
2. Mia
3. Braxton
4. Mia
5. Braxton
6. Mia
7. Braxton
8. Mia
9. Braxton
10. Mia
11. Braxton
12. Mia
13. Braxton
14. Mia
15. Braxton
16. Mia
17. Braxton
18. Mia
19. Braxton
20. Mia
21. Braxton
22. Mia
23. Braxton
24. Mia
25. Braxton
26. Mia
27. Braxton
28. Mia
29. Braxton
30. Mia
31. Braxton
32. Mia
33. Braxton
34. Mia
35. Braxton
36. Mia
37. Braxton
38. Mia
39. Braxton
Epilogue
Not Controllable
1. Grant
2. Holly
3. Grant
4. Holly
5. Grant
6. Holly
7. Grant
8. Holly
9. Grant
10. Holly
11. Grant
12. Holly
13. Grant
14. Holly
15. Grant
16. Holly
17. Grant
18. Holly
19. Grant
20. Holly
21. Grant
22. Holly
23. Grant
24. Holly
25. Grant
26. Holly
27. Grant
28. Holly
29. Grant
30. Holly
31. Grant
32. Holly
33. Grant
34. Holly
35. Grant
36. Holly
37. Grant
38. Holly
39. Grant
Epilogue
Not Constructive
1. Cameron
2. Tara
3. Cameron
4. Tara
5. Cameron
6. Tara
7. Cameron
8. Tara
9. Cameron
10. Tara
11. Cameron
12. Tara
13. Cameron
14. Tara
15. Cameron
16. Tara
17. Cameron
18. Tara
19. Cameron
20. Tara
21. Cameron
22. Tara
23. Cameron
24. Tara
25. Cameron
26. Tara
27. Cameron
28. Tara
29. Cameron
30. Tara
31. Cameron
32. Tara
33. Cameron
34. Tara
35. Cameron
36. Tara
37. Cameron
38. Tara
39. Cameron
Epilogue
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Not Anticipated
NOT ANTICIPATED
By Blair Grey
This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places and incidents are products of the writer's imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales or organizations is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2018 Blair Grey
1
Braxton
There were a lot of things that felt different about life in New Mexico now that my twin brother, Landon, was living in Florida. I didn’t want to say that I felt like he had abandoned me, because I knew it wasn’t that simple. We’d gone to Sarasota for work, and he’d fallen in love with a girl. I couldn’t blame him for that. I didn’t really see what he saw in Anne because he and I had totally different tastes in women, but it was pretty obvious how much she meant to him, even before he had to face her being held at gunpoint by a rival motorcycle club.
I couldn’t blame him for staying behind, but things were just weird.
Landon and I had grown up together. Through thick and thin, we had always been there for each other. I hadn’t just lost my brother; I had lost my best friend. And nowhere was this more apparent than the first Red Eyes club meeting I had to go to without him. Sitting by myself on the couch that we normally occupied was strange. And there was no one next to me for me to crack jokes with. I felt totally lost.
I didn’t want to pity myself, but I definitely felt a little lonelier without him there.
“Yo, what happened to Landon?” Grant asked, coming into the clubhouse and stopping short when he saw the empty seat next to me.
“He’s still in Florida,” I said, not wanting to talk about it.
“Did something happen to him?” Grant pressed, clearly not getting the message.
I thought back to everything that had happened in Florida. We’d been there to help out one of Ray’s old friends, a guy who had once saved Ray’s life. The Sarasota chapter of the MC had been losing their hold on a bunch of the local businesses, even ones that had been loyal to them for years, and Neil hadn’t known what to do.
Landon and I had quickly found out that the other MC called themselves the Mambas, but it was less easy to track any of them down. They operated totally in secret, and we weren’t even sure how many of them we were dealing with. In the end, it turned out to be just a handful of members, which was lucky for us. Even though there were so few of them, things had gone pretty south at the end.
I would never admit this to anyone, but I’d still woken up a couple nights sure that there was something there in the dark with a gun pointed at my head again. Luckily, I’d been able to get out of there unscathed. Landon hadn’t been as lucky.
But the gunshot wound wasn’t the reason that he was still there in Sarasota. No, he was still there because he hadn’t wanted to leave Anne behind, and somehow, after everything that she had gone through with the Mambas because of him, she wanted him to stay.
I didn’t understand it. And I didn’t feel like talking about it.
“He just decided he wanted to stay there. He’s helping Neil grow the Red Eyes chapter there,” I said.
Fortunately, I was saved from the rest of the conversation by Ray’s arrival. Everyone who wasn’t already seated fell into place around the room, and everyone quieted down to listen to Ray.
I had to admit; I really hoped there wasn’t any bad news today. I was still getting used to being back home and being back without Landon. I couldn’t imagine having to do a mission without him. I had never had to before, and I wasn’t sure I was ready for that just yet.
But unfortunately, Ray opened the meeting talking about Landon.
“As I’m sure everyone’s noticed, we’re a member short,” he said, nodding toward the empty space next to me. “Landon has opted to stay in Sarasota to help out the Red Eyes chapter there as their new vice president.” He grinned wryly. “Of course, we could have used him in a similar position here, but I su
ppose there were other factors influencing his decision as well.”
“So what does that mean for us?” Cameron asked, looking around the room. “I mean, we’re not having any problems yet, but with him gone and Marcus up in the Northwest with his girl and Will focusing on his studies, that leaves us spread pretty thin for the level of business we’ve been doing lately.”
“I’m well aware,” Ray said, inclining his head toward our treasurer. “And rest assured, I’ll be keeping my eyes open for a replacement. I hope all of you will keep looking as well.” He turned to look at me. “For now, I think our best bet will be to have you working together with Grant, doing all your usual duties. You know I don’t like sending guys out there on their own, even veterans like you.”
“Oh come on,” I groaned, but Ray cut me off with a look.
“I would have thought that after everything in Florida, you would realize the wisdom of not having anyone out there on their own,” he said, arching an eyebrow at me. “Anyway, it’s not up for discussion. I already have a task for the two of you. I want you to go check on one of our businesses. They’re late on their payment, and I want to know why. I’ll give you all the details after the meeting.”
He continued to talk about various other club issues, but I mostly tuned him out. Inwardly, I was fuming. What, did he think that having Grant with me would make up for the fact that I had lost Landon? I didn’t want to work with Grant. He was a nice enough kid, but he was painfully young, only twenty-two, and pretty new to the MC as well.
He was soft. I honestly didn’t think he had what it took to last in a club like this. We tried to keep violence to a minimum so as not to piss off the local sheriff, and it wasn’t like we were caught up in anything too terrible. But all the same, you had to be willing to do whatever it took to protect the club’s best interests.
And put it this way, I just didn’t trust Grant to guard my back. He was almost too good of a guy, and he was bound to hesitate—that was how people ended up dead.
Ray was making it clear that he didn’t want to hear my protests, though. And I knew better than to try to argue with him. I knew that his real motive in this was probably to have someone train Grant into the business, to get him to quit hesitating. But personally, I didn’t think there was any way to train Grant to do well at this. He just didn’t have what it took.
After the meeting, we followed Ray back into his office. “Drinks?” Ray offered, as he pretty much always did when someone entered his office.
“Sure,” I said automatically.
Grant hesitated. “Aren’t we going to do a job this afternoon?” he asked.
I gave him an unimpressed look. “You’re going to be muddleheaded after one drink?” I asked.
“Of course not!” he said, sounding embarrassed. “But you know, your reflexes aren’t as sharp if you’ve been drinking. That’s just a fact.”
I rolled my eyes and accepted the drink that Ray held out to me. This whole working with goody-two-shoes thing was definitely going to get old fast. I hoped Ray could see that he and I weren’t compatible. But then again, same thing. Ray was probably just trying to get me to take the kid under my wing and get him to relax a little. Act like a normal person. Ugh.
I so didn’t need this. But there was no arguing with Ray.
“What business are we talking about here?” I asked.
Ray gave us all the details, and less than an hour later, we were over there. “Man, these things move fast,” Grant said as we pulled up. There was a frown between his eyebrows, like he wasn’t really sure if he was on board with this or not. “Don’t you give them some sort of warning first?”
I gave him an incredulous look. “We are the warning,” I told him.
“Aren’t you here to, like, rough him up a little, though?” Grant asked.
“Yeah,” I said. “And trust me, things will be a lot worse for him if he doesn’t take the hint and pay up.”
“What if he doesn’t have the money?”
“Then he shouldn’t have gone into business in Las Cruces,” I growled, hoping this conversation wasn’t a sign of how this meeting was going to go.
We headed inside, and it was pretty obvious that I needed to take the lead on this one.
“Rich, good to see you,” I said pleasantly as the owner himself came out from the back room.
He knew exactly who I was, and I could see the way he paled slightly. Meaning, this wasn’t just a lapse on his part. He hadn’t forgotten to pay us. He just didn’t intend to pay us. What I needed was to figure out why. If some other MC had come in here and demanded that he pay him, like the Mambas had done in Sarasota and like the Unknowns had done here in Las Cruces prior to that, I was going to flip out.
I didn’t need to start a war with some rival MC now, not when I had just finished cleaning up that other mess. And especially not with Grant at my side instead of my brother.
I pushed those thoughts aside and focused on finding out the truth. “Rich, what’s going on?” I asked, keeping my tone silky. “You were supposed to have your payment to Red Eyes by last Tuesday. But last I checked, we still haven’t received anything.”
Rich shook his head. “You guys know you charge too much to small businesses like mine. What am I supposed to do? I can’t keep up with my monthly payments. There’s got to be some way that we can cut a deal.”
I narrowed my eyes at him. “Try again, Rich,” I said, this time letting him hear the warning in my tone. “We all know that you just bought a new house. If you weren’t making enough money to pay your dues here, you wouldn’t have been able to afford that, now would you?”
Rich blubbered a little, clearly wanting us to pity him. He wanted us just to let him quit paying his dues, while still giving him all the protection of being one of the businesses loyal to us here in Las Cruces. Or else he wanted us to cut him some sort of deal so he could pay less than all of his neighbors. That wouldn’t do either.
I leaned in closer to him. “Rich, come on,” I said. “You don’t want to see what happens if we quit protecting you.”
Rich snorted, clearly unable to help himself. “I don’t know that I’ve ever needed your protection,” he said. “Who are you protecting me from?”
I raised an eyebrow at him. “Well, from the sheriff, for one,” I said pleasantly. “Or maybe this would go straight up to the federal level if the boys knew that you were not only fudging the amount of tips that come in here but also hiring people without the proper work papers. I don’t think that would go over too well given the current political state, do you?”
Rich was silent for a long moment. But I could still see the calculations behind his eyes. He still thought that he could get some sort of discount. What a fucking idiot.
Unfortunately, Grant was buying every bit of the act. “If he can’t afford his dues, I’m sure we can figure something out. Give him a break. Right, Braxton?”
I glowered at him and then grabbed Rich by the collar, forcing him back against the wall. “The only break you’re going to be getting are broken bones if you don’t pay up,” I growled. “Or do you want us to break into that fancy new house of yours? Threaten your wife and your daughter?” I flexed my muscles to make sure he knew the threat for what it was.
“All right!” Rich said, and the fear was clear in his eyes. “I’ll pay.”
I thrust him toward the cash register, and sure enough, he immediately had an envelope of cash in his hands. I counted it carefully, but it was all there. He had been expecting us. I smirked, trying not to think of how similar to the Mambas I felt. I shouldn’t have threatened his wife, and I definitely shouldn’t have threatened his daughter. That was a dirty move. I should have kept things between the two of us.
But it was too late for that now, and there was no point in dwelling on it. Anyway, we had the money. And there was no other MC sniffing around, trying to steal our business from us. I had to be grateful for that at least.
I turned, pocketing the envelope,
and stalked out the door, Grant following behind me. We got in the car, shutting the doors behind us. “Well, that was…” he began, trailing off. He clearly didn’t know how to finish.
“That was business,” I said harshly. I looked over at him. “You’ve got to nut up, man, if you want to be a part of this. If you’re going to be anything for Red Eyes. This isn’t the fucking Boy Scouts.”