by Nicole Fox
“We’ll deal with it if it comes. It won’t be the first fight, and I’m sure it won’t be the last. I have hopes that Stomper is smart enough to just leave.” He pulled his lower lip between his teeth and slowly let it out again. “I don’t like this any more than you do, Mina, but it’s all we’ve got for right now.”
“Okay.”
Animal was more than happy to do as his president requested, showing up at Park’s office as soon as he was called. The mission was explained to him, and he hung on to every word, salivating a little at the idea of representing the whole club. His dark eyes turned to her meaningfully when Park was done talking. “And what reward do I get for running this special errand?”
Mina rolled her eyes and was about to tell him off when her father cleared his throat.
“The knowledge of a job well done ought to be sufficient.” He gave Animal a glance that only Park could give, one that suggested he shut up if he knew what was good for him. “Just tell me everything you see, no matter how insignificant you might think it is. This is a delicate situation we’re handling here.”
“You can count on me.” With one last, lustful glance at Mina, he left and rode out.
Mina had never been so anxious for Animal to return to the clubhouse. She had avoided him like the plague ever since he’d propositioned her, and she’d never really liked him much anyway. Despite her father’s reassuring words, she still wasn’t convinced they should have sent him to talk with the Sons. Someone more diplomatic would have been better, but who? Grill was too passive. The perfect person would have been Skid, ironically.
She waited anxiously up in her room, where she had the best view of the road. Had she not been pregnant, and had Skid’s words about protecting their child not still been bouncing around in her head, she would have climbed up on the roof to watch for him. Animal was her one link to Skid right now, and it was one she wasn’t going to let go of.
When a small black dot could be seen in the distance, she stood and pressed her face to the glass. Let Animal think she was eager to see him when she came rushing down to the garage to greet him; she didn’t care as long as she knew what was happening with Skid. She barreled down the stairs, screaming for her father on the way there.
He joined her at the door to the garage as she pushed the button to lift the door. “What is it?”
“It’s Animal. He’s coming back. I saw him on the road.” But as the door lifted and the machine drew closer, she realized it wasn’t Animal at all. The man’s shoulders were wide, but he still fit through a doorway easily. His dark hair and the pitch-black tattoos on his arms were so well etched into her mind, and yet it didn’t make sense. “Skid?”
A crowd of other members had gathered in and around the garage, and they looked ready to fight when they, too, saw who had arrived. Park stepped forward as the motorcycle drew to a halt. He put out his hands to signal to his men to stand down. “Step into my office.”
There was only time for him to glance at Mina before he disappeared into the basement, but she saw everything in his eyes in just that one second. She saw the trouble that had boiled to the front of his mind over the last few weeks, the bad memories he thought he had left behind but which now plagued him. She saw the way he was fighting against it and hoping to return to her, but that everything just seemed futile. Most of all, Mina hoped she saw that the love she felt for him was returned. Skid had told her that he loved her, but he had left without a fight. She could only hope she and Park could get him back.
The two men spent over an hour installed in the president’s office, and Mina did her best not to pace right outside the door. She went upstairs with the pretense of going to her room, but there was nothing there waiting for her. Logic dictated that she should eat something, for the baby if not for herself, but her stomach revolted at every type of food. It wasn’t fair that she should be left out again. She thought she had moved past that, that Park was finally going to let her in on all his little club secrets. But whatever they had to discuss, they wanted to do it between the two of them.
Finally, as she wandered down the basement hallway to stare impatiently at the office door once again, it finally opened. Skid emerged and closed the door behind him. His eyes met hers, and his feet paused on the old linoleum.
“Skid …”
He came to her, but he grabbed her arm and pulled her away from the office. He said nothing until they were on the opposite side of the building, just below the stairs that led back up to the garage. “Mina, I’m sorry.”
“I don’t need to hear any of it,” she said quickly. “I just need you to know that I want you to come back. I don’t know what my father said in there, but he wants you to come back, too. We need you here.” Her reservations seemed to have been erased by the time without him, and everything she had thought about their relationship came flooding out. “I know it’s been hard on you to be around Stomper again. I can’t begin to understand what you went through in the army or how it affects you now, but it’s time to leave your past behind and concentrate on the future now.” She took his hand and pressed it gently against her stomach.
Skid closed his eyes for a moment, and when he opened them his look was intense. “I know. I’m working on it. Just give me a little time.” He folded her into his arms and pulled her close, kissing her passionately.
Mina turned to liquid, not realizing until that moment just how much the last two days had twisted her up inside. She kissed him back with everything she had, hoping she could make him understand that this was about so much more than rival clubs and old memories.
But it was he who finally broke away, giving her one final kiss on the forehead. “I’ve got to go.” He jogged up the stairs, and the sound of his motorcycle echoed through the building a moment later.
Confused and hurt, Mina wasn’t sure that she had gotten through to him. She trotted down the hallway to the office and opened the door without bothering to knock first. Park was at his desk, but he didn’t look up at her. He probably knew exactly who would be the first to come through his door. “What happened? Why is he leaving again?”
Park tipped back his chair ad looked at her for a long moment. “He’s setting up a meeting between myself and Stomper,” came the oversimplified answer.
“And?” she demanded. There was so much more to talk about. “Don’t make me pull teeth to get it out of you.”
“And that’s it for right now.”
“Didn’t you ask him to come back? Didn’t you tell him you had been completely wrong about him? And don’t sit there and tell me it isn’t that simple. You forget that I’ve grown up in this place. I’ve seen men beat the holy living shit out of each other one minute and go drinking together the next. There’s no reason the two of you can’t get along.” She stomped her foot to accentuate her point.
“Maybe so, in other situations. But the Sons of Chaos are involved, Mina. That complicates things in ways you can’t even imagine. Just because Skid hasn’t sworn his allegiance to them doesn’t mean he can just leave. We’ll see what happens with this meeting, and then we’ll go from there.”
“And what about Animal?” Mina had been so caught up in Skid’s arrival that she hadn’t even thought about the other man until this point. “I suppose he ran off and joined the Sons.”
“He’s dead,” Park said simply. The news didn’t seem to affect him.
“Oh.” She wasn’t sure what to say to that. But it was clear she wasn’t getting any real answers, and Skid was already gone. “When is this meeting supposed to take place?”
“Tonight, and don’t even ask because you aren’t going.” He rose from his chair and began straightening papers on his desk. “This doesn’t have anything to do with leaving you out of things, which I’m sure is what you’re thinking. But it could be very dangerous, and we can’t risk it.”
“I understand.”
“Now, don’t try to fight me on this, Mina. Skid agrees that … Wait. What?” He paused and looked at
her, shocked that she wasn’t arguing.
“I understand,” she repeated. “The safety of the baby is the most important thing right now. Just promise me that you’ll tell me what happened when you get back. And promise me that you’re coming back. I need you.”
Park smiled softly. “I can do that, kiddo.”
Chapter Eighteen
Skid
Stomper grinned and lit a cigarette. “I should have found you a long time ago, Skid. You’re proving yourself to be very useful.”
“I do my best.” It had been hard to come back to the Sons of Chaos. They were a filthy, rowdy, disgusting bunch compared to the men of Satan’s Legion, and the places they hung out where the same way. He missed the relative peace of the clubhouse and the fact that he could always find a good meal there. Most of all, he missed Mina.
It had been horrible to see her like that, with tears in her eyes as she begged him to stay. He had wanted to give her everything she asked for, but the timing wasn’t right yet. There was only a short window in which he could do what he needed to do, and Mina and the baby would have to wait. He hoped she would understand. He would make her understand.
“So, he didn’t try to make you agree to any silly terms like not showing up alone or anything?”
“Nope. It’s all on the up-and-up. Park’s like that, though. He would rather show his entire hand and let everyone know he has it than keep it a secret.” He and Park had discussed the various aspects of the meeting between the two clubs extensively, examining every possibility. It was like nothing had changed, except they both knew it had. They’d carefully skirted around the issue of Mina. It would be handled when they had time.
“And more the fool he is for it,” Stomper laughed. “Here’s how I imagine it: I’ll show up with a small contingency of men. Of course, I’ll have you at my side, which will be sure to piss him off. That’ll keep him off his guard. He’ll act like he wants to talk, but we both know that talking isn’t going to solve this problem. Just when he least suspects it, I’ll bring in the rest of my men. It’ll be the turf war to end all turf wars, and Satan’s Legion will be no more. I’ll take over everything they’ve got. You’ll get your girl.” He tipped his head back and stared at the blackness of the ceiling of The Billy Goat. “Tell me about the clubhouse. Is that old place worth keeping?”
Skid shrugged. “Nah, probably not. He’s had it a long time, and it’s falling apart at the seams.” That wasn’t true at all, but Skid was content to let Stomper think he had the upper hand in every aspect.
“He really is a damn fool. That’s exactly why we don’t stay in one place for a long time. It gets expensive, and I wouldn’t want to keep up with something like that. Besides, I like the open road. I’m eager to get back on it once this is all over.”
Nodding, Skid waved away the waitress when she tried to give him a beer. He needed his head clear. “He must not have really meant it when he sent Animal here to give you that message, anyway. I told him he was dead, but Park didn’t seem to care.”
“That’s a bad leader for you, not caring about his men. We’re not going to do it that way when we start our new club.”
Skid watched the room carefully, concerned that someone had heard him. The last thing he needed was a mutiny among the Sons this close to his escape. Fortunately, they were celebrating their upcoming victory prematurely. With the jukebox blaring and the beer flowing, nobody had paid any attention. There was nothing left for him to do but wait.
* * *
The lamps over the old parking lot flickered their yellow lights nervously as a small group of motorcycles rode in from the west side. The night was dark, and a sheen of water from an earlier rain shower had coated the old asphalt. It glittered like new in the dim light, the cracks and potholes hidden from view until someone ran over them.
Skid had chosen this place purposely. It was just a parking lot behind an abandoned mall, but it was a good middle ground between The Billy Goat and the clubhouse. It would keep Stomper’s men far from the clubhouse. The one thing Skid and Park had discussed was Mina’s safety and the fact that several of his most trusted men would be left behind to watch her and the other women. There was no telling what lengths Stomper might go to if this meeting went his way.
He pulled up beside Stomper and turned off his engine, watching carefully for any signs of Park and Satan’s Legion. It was nearly midnight, and he was ready to get this over with. He checked his watch.
“You think he’ll come?” Stomper was watching the place as well. He had ordered the largest part of his men to stay back in a parking lot just a block over. The men of Satan’s Legion wouldn’t see it coming from that direction. “I can’t wait to see the look on his face.”
“I’m sure he will.” Skid’s biggest concern was that Park had been successful in getting Mina to stay behind. He knew how she was, and that was going to be a bigger task than dealing with the Sons.
Soon enough, the rumble of engines sounded in the dark, and a massive group of headlights filed into the parking lot. Park was at the lead, and his men surrounded him when he pulled to a stop in front of Stomper. Unlike the Sons, who had parked without any certain order, the Legion arranged themselves in an offset grid pattern. Skid could see every one of their faces, and they looked like they had come ready for a fight.
Park waited until the commotion had died down. “You wanted to talk?”
“I sure did.” Stomper got off his bike with ease, striding up to the other leader. “You say you want me out of here?”
“I do.” Park was calm, and he didn’t bother getting off his bike, but he looked like he wasn’t going to back down. “We’ve been here for a long time. Other clubs that come through always talk to me first. If they’re polite enough to ask, then I usually give them my permission.” He raised one pale eyebrow.
“How very generous of you.” Stomper paced in a circle around Park’s bike, trying to intimidate him. “The thing is, I’m not the kind of guy who asks permission. I take what I want.”
“So I’ve noticed.” Park kept his eyes straight forward, not focused on anything. He wasn’t going to give Stomper the satisfaction of thinking he was getting to him. “All the more reason we should talk.”
“I think I’m done talking,” Stomper replied with a sneer.
“I’m not.” Skid kicked his bike to life and slammed the throttle. He turned and skidded to a stop amongst the crowd of Legion men, now facing the Sons. And Stomper. “You need to know before we get this whole thing started that my allegiance still lies with Park. He’s been my president for a long time, and I’m not going to let someone like you get in the way of that.”
“You what?” Stomper’s face bloomed red, visible even in the dim light. His fists curled and the muscles of his shoulders tensed. “You fucking bastard. Is this really how this is going down?”
“It is.” Skid risked a glance behind him at Park’s men, curious as to how they would receive him. To his relief, they nodded their approval. Things were going as planned, so far.
Stomper stormed back to his side of the lot. Only a few feet separated the two gangs, but that small distance made a difference. “I can’t believe this, you cocksucker. You know, I had my doubts about you from the very beginning. I wondered if this whole thing about you being my friend could be just an act to get information about my gang, but I tried to dismiss it. I wanted things to be like the good old days. I guess I was wrong.”
Skid knew that Stomper had never questioned him. He wasn’t the type of guy to think things through, not like Scar did. “Guess you should have listened to your VP,” he quipped. “And for the record, the old times weren’t that good. They’re better off left in the past.”
“If I were you, I would enjoy them while I can since you don’t have a future.” Stomper charged forward. His men were off their bikes and heading into the fray right behind him. The rest of the Sons came from around the corner, their motors whining and their knives flashing.
&nbs
p; The Legion was prepared. They hadn’t been foolish enough to bring knives to a gunfight. Pistols and sawed-off shotguns came out of vests and saddle bags. Flashes lit up the parking lot more than the dim lights could ever hope to, and Sons began to fall. The parking lot of that old abandoned mall had more action than it had seen in five years as bullets pierced denim and leather.
Suddenly, the roaring sound of engines overpowered that of the flying bullets. Stomper was screaming out orders, but they couldn’t be heard above the chaos. The remaining Sons were leaving, flying out of the parking lot as fast as they could go.
Park put his hand up as a signal to cease fire. His men obeyed immediately. They watched with satisfaction as the Sons of Chaos left, knowing that they wouldn’t be coming back. Stomper was bleeding from his shoulder, but he was whole enough to maneuver his bike out onto the road and slam the throttle.
Skid turned to Park. “Well, how was that?”